
2/2: CBS Evening News
Dow plummets, suffering worst week in 2 years; Washing machine collector takes a whirl back in time
Watch CBS News
Dow plummets, suffering worst week in 2 years; Washing machine collector takes a whirl back in time
3rd Amtrak train derails in less than 2 months; Football's biggest night is here
Nor'easter slams the East Coast, leaves thousands without power; NFL players help save man's life after hiking accident.
Trump keeps options open on Iran nuclear deal; Shaquem Griffin, linebacker with one hand, inspires youth with journey to NFL.
NFL to players: Stand for the anthem or stay off the field; Vegas Golden Knights close to winning Stanley Cup
Video of duck boat's final moments show it struggling to stay afloat; Homeless teen tries to give back to the man who changed his life.
Bob Woodward's book "Fear" describes "nervous breakdown" within Trump administration; Stolen ruby slippers from "Wizard of Oz" found years later
House of Representatives moving toward impeaching Trump; Former refugee's new video game promotes peace.
NFL player and Atlanta Falcons tight end Hayden Hurst is one of the more than 50 million Americans living with a mental illness. Hurst is also talking openly about his own battles with depression and suicide, and putting his name behind a foundation hoping to encourage others to get help and stop the stigma around mental illness. Warning: This piece includes mention of suicide and may be difficult for some to hear.
Some of the biggest names in the NFL were back on the field this weekend. Meanwhile, U.S. Olympic gold medal winning gymnast Suni Lee says she and her friends were pepper-sprayed in a racist attack. And South Carolina women's basketball coach Dawn Staley is inspiring other Black female leaders in the NCAA. CBS News special correspondent and host of "The NFL Today" and "Inside the NFL" James Brown joins CBSN to discuss the latest headlines in sports.
Roethlisberger recently said on "The Dan Patrick Show" that he is vaccinated, making him eligible to return in week 11.
In the suit, Gruden accuses the NFL and Goodell of "a Soviet-style character assassination."
Green Bay Packers Quarterback Aaron Rodgers has been sidelined after contracting COVID-19. Rodgers is under fire for telling reporters in August that he was "immunized," despite not taking one of three CDC-approved coronavirus vaccines. Josina Anderson, senior NFL insider for CBS Sports HQ, joins CBSN's Lana Zak for more.
From the regular season to the Super Bowl, here's what football fans need to know about 2021 NFL live streaming
Prosecutors allege former Raiders wide receiver Henry Ruggs was driving 156 mph and had a blood alcohol level twice the legal limit before a fatal crash.
Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers is sidelined after testing positive for COVID-19. There are questions about whether he violated the NFL's COVID protocols. Vladimir Duthiers reports.
While the NFL reports 94.1% of its players are vaccinated, Rodgers is not one of them, NFL Network reports.
Police said Ruggs "showed signs of impairment" and was transported to a local hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.
Harrison suffered a non-life-threatening injury when he was struck in the leg by a stray bullet on Sunday, his team said.
Executive's salary, revealed during an owners meeting in New York, exceeds those of the league's top-paid players.
Chung's next court date is set for November 7.
Roger Goodell said the league wanted to protect the roughly 150 former employees who spoke to outside counsel.
The NFL is refusing to release a final report of its investigation into alleged misconduct in the Washington Football Team organization, which critics say hides evidence of bad behavior. Former Washington Football Team employee Emily Applegate, one of the first people to speak up about the team's toxic culture, joins CBSN to discuss.
Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi, a Democrat from Illinois, and Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney, a Democrat from New York, want the NFL to turn over evidence and findings from its investigation into harassment and other allegations of workplace misconduct against the Washington Football Team. Copies of emails leaked to the New York Times revealed racist, homophobic and misogynistic comments were sent to the team's former general manager. Anne-Marie Green and Vladimir Duthiers spoke with Krishnamoorthi on CBSN about what he's trying to find out and how House Democrats are feeling about the ongoing negotiations on President Biden's infrastructure and social spending plans.
Officers broke open a window, removed Madsen from the vehicle and performed chest compressions until the fire department arrived, police said.
Congress returns this week from its August recess staring down a deadline to fund the government and avert a possible shutdown by month's end.
China's Xi Jinping has invited Vladimir Putin and North Korea's Kim Jong Un for a display of power, and the rising tide of anti-Western sentiment.
The climate experts say the July report from the Trump administration fails to "adequately represent the current scientific understanding of climate change."
Jerry Nadler, 78, who was first elected to Congress in 1992, told The New York Times in an interview that he plans to retire in 2026.
A doctor in Afghanistan's earthquake zone tells CBS News the "destruction is overwhelming," with people still trapped under the rubble of their homes.
Kraft Heinz is splitting back up into two companies a decade after they joined in a massive merger that created one of the biggest food conglomerates on the planet.
When Congress decided this summer to eliminate $1.1 billion allocated to public broadcasting, it left some 330 PBS and 246 NPR stations to figure out what that means.
Three dockworkers were charged over 1,116 pounds of cocaine found hidden behind a false wall in a shipping container on the Sydney waterfront, police saiid.
Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro on Monday claimed eight U.S. military vessels "with 1,200 missiles" were targeting his country.