
Arts
Fake art exhibit
Just in time for April Fools' Day, there's a new art exhibit featuring art reproductions. Charles Osgood reports.
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Just in time for April Fools' Day, there's a new art exhibit featuring art reproductions. Charles Osgood reports.
Correspondent Tracy Smith sits with the young and talented Zac Efron, to talk about his graduation from the teen hit "High School Musical" films to "The Lucky One," in which he plays an Iraq War veteran.
She was one of the top models in the world of high fashion, but her own experience inspired her to launch a cosmetics business. Iman sits down with correspondent Rita Braver to talk about her past, present and future.
During the darkest days of the Great Depression, a sudden splash of color brightened homes across the country with the introduction of Fiesta dinnerware. Correspondent Elaine Quijano travels to the Fiesta factory to see where it all started.
Making Irish music flourish has been a lifelong passion for Paddy Maloney. The Chieftains - the group he founded a half-century ago - is still innovating and embracing a new generation of talent. Correspondent Richard Roth reports.
Computer gaming is not commonly thought of as art, but that's how video games are being treated in a new exhibit at the Smithsonian American Art Museum. Correspondent Rita Braver reports.
Web extra: Eric McCormack discusses his character in the Broadway revival of Gore Vidal's political drama "The Best Man," and tells Mo Rocca how relevant it is to today's campaign scene.
Some replicas may seem larger than life, but no creature is too big for the Ozark craftsman who recreates life for museum displays. Correspondent Faith Salie has proof of that.
Film critic David Edelstein offers predictions on who will take home Academy Awards - and solace for those who weren't even nominated.
"Sunday Morning" host Charles Osgood takes a look at three of the five contenders for the Academy Award in the Best Animated Short Film category.
Movie attendance has been declining, with 2011's box office the lowest in 15 years. But the trend may be changing. Could the movie theater as we've known it survive? Correspondent Tracy Smith considers the prospects.
Thirty-sixty years after Peter Frampton hit the jackpot with his live album, "Frampton Comes Alive!" British rocker is back on tour. Correspondent Anthony Mason hits the road with him, and is treated to the amazing story of Frampton's reunion with his prized Gibson Les Paul guitar, lost in a cargo plane crash in 1980.
MTV's Bill Flanagan offers an appreciation of the life and talent of Whitney Houston, who from childhood was the object of enormous expectations - and who ended up battling her demons in the public eye.
Singer Whitney Houston was found dead on her Beverly Hills hotel room just hours before she was set to perform at the annual Clive Davis pre-Grammy gala event. The brilliance of her talent and the troubles she encountered in life are known around the world. Bill Whitaker takes a look back at the golden girl with the golden voice.
Glen Campbell and his wife, Kim, talk about how difficult it was in the early years of their marriage to get him off alcohol and drugs.
A look at the features for this week's broadcast of the Emmy-winning program, hosted by Jane Pauley.
A look at the features for this week's broadcast of the Emmy-winning program, hosted by Jane Pauley.
In the late 1970s, a group of university students in West Texas, wanting a place to study with a view, hauled a desk to the top of Hancock Hill in the town of Alpine. Today, the desk is a pilgrimage for hikers seeking a meditative place.
The former "Parks and Recreation" star heads the surreal, critically-acclaimed series about workers at a mysterious corporation whose brains are altered to create distinctly separate personalities in and out of the office.
Whimsical and romantic, the music of Icelandic singer and cellist Laufey Lín Bing Jónsdóttir blends pop, jazz, classical and bossa nova – a "mishmash," she calls it. Her latest album is "A Matter of Time."
For more than 40 years, glaciologist Mauri Pelto has been measuring shrinking glaciers in Washington State. He's been joined by his daughter, artist-scientist Jill Pelto, whose watercolors provide another view of the drastically-changing landscape.
A look at the features for this week's broadcast of the Emmy-winning program, hosted by Jane Pauley.
The humorist has some thoughts about gratuities, especially when they're pre-programmed onto a screen.
More than six decades after the Kennedy assassination, the existence of unreleased documents from the investigation has continued to fuel questions - and conspiracy theories - in search for a "smoking gun." What did the recent release of thousands of documents reveal?
Billy Wilder's caustic tale of Hollywood, obsession and murder, in which a fading star of silent pictures tries to recreate her fame, is back in its full dark glory.