
Disability Stories
A free gym for people with disabilities
This former athlete opened up a gym for people with disabilities, and ended up changing people's lives by helping them take their first steps.
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This former athlete opened up a gym for people with disabilities, and ended up changing people's lives by helping them take their first steps.
Bruno will be voiced by actors with autism in the U.S., U.K. and Italy, with storylines written by neurodivergent writers.
The Beautiful Lives Project is a nonprofit traveling America this year to stage sports events for people with disabilities. Scott MacFarlane went to a game in York, Pennsylvania, to meet some young fans.
Lissa Bachner began losing her vision at a young age but didn't let it stop her passion for horseback riding. "CBS Mornings" lead national correspondent David Begnaud speaks with the inspirational equestrian about her journey and book, "Milo's Eyes: How a Blind Equestrian and Her 'Seeing Eye Horse' Rescued Each Other."
"I didn't think I would be able to race this season," Tai told BBC Sport.
July marks Disability Pride Month, so CBS News interviewed three people on the different ways they shed light on why they're proud to be disabled, 365 days a year.
CBS News correspondent Omar Villafranca talks with Desmond Blair – a Texas man born without hands who creates art.
John Furniss is a woodworker whose creations are a combination of his unique outlook on life and his power tool prowess. Jamie Yuccas met with Furniss at his home to find out how his dark past helped lead to a brighter future.
His latest project in partnership with the Abrons Arts Center is a 45-minute performance called "Vitruvian Man."
As COVID precautions are being lifted nationwide, many disabled and immunocompromised Americans are feeling forgotten. Around seven million Americans are immunocompromised, putting them at higher risk for contracting severe COVID and dying. CBS News spoke to three disabled people about feeling left behind as the nation seems to be moving on from the pandemic.
The "Hannah Montana" actress-turned-Grammy-winning pop star talks about her album "Something Beautiful," sobriety, and reconnecting with her dad through music.
She has been in the public eye for most of her life, but you may not really know the "Hannah Montana" actress who became a Grammy-winning pop star. Miley Cyrus talks with Tracy Smith about her latest album, "Something Beautiful"; gaining sobriety; and how she reconnected with her estranged dad, singer Billy Ray Cyrus, the best way she knew how: through music.
The singer-songwriter who renamed himself Yusuf Islam talks about his new memoir, "Cat on the Road to Findout," his lifelong spiritual quest, and about trying to find and understand himself as an artist.
Belva Davis, believed to be the first Black female TV reporter in the western United States, died on Sept. 24, 2025 at age 92. In this "Sunday Morning" profile of Davis that aired on Feb. 26, 2023, "60 Minutes" correspondent Bill Whitaker (who, like many journalists, walked in her footsteps) looked back at her career, and described how making a dream a reality became her legacy.
Rev. Yehiel Curry, 53, is only the fifth presiding bishop of the ELCA, a predominantly white denomination.
An admirer of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, Sanae Takaichi is a protege of the ultra-conservative vision of former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.
The Rev. Sarah Mullally was appointed as the 106th archbishop of Canterbury and will soon be the spiritual leader of over 85 million people who practice the Anglican faith globally.
Taylor Swift's 12th studio album, "The Life of a Showgirl," was released at midnight Friday. Swift wrote and produced the album with Swedish producers Max Martin and Shellback.
In the new book "Born Lucky," NewsNation anchor Leland Vittert writes about his experience on the autism spectrum while not knowing about his diagnosis until college. Vittert joins "The Takeout" to discuss his experiences.
Among the fundraisers that have cropped up in the wake of the deadly mass shooting at a Michigan church last weekend, one aims to raise money not for the victims but, instead, for family members of the accused shooter. And it appears to have the backing of many LDS members.