ReportWire

Tag: CBS

  • Historic L.A. cafeteria serves nostalgia

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    It opened in 1935, billed back then as the world’s largest cafeteria. Following decades of decay and declining business, Clifton’s is getting more than a fresh coat of paint. Restaurateur and developer Andrew Meieran has had a crush on Clifton’s for the longest time and now he’s turning it into the go-to spot for comfort food. Lee Cowan reports on the resurrection of a classic Downtown Los Angeles eatery.

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  • 10/28: CBS Evening News

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    Jamaica takes direct hit from Hurricane Melissa, among most powerful storms ever recorded; Why this Kansas town celebrates Neewollah

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  • Abandoned Connecticut village auctioned for $1.9 million

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    For weeks, the sale of a ghost town generated hype and fear about its future. The village of Johnsonville died along with its owner 20 years ago. Some say the remains are haunted by the man. Michelle Miller takes a look at the town’s past and what many hope could breathe new life into the area.

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  • 10/27: CBS Evening News

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    Jamaica braces for Hurricane Melissa landfall; Baby pinned under car after wreck rescued by officers, bystanders

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  • 10/26: CBS Weekend News

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    Hurricane Melissa, now Category 4, begins assault on Jamaica; Touring the city by the Bay with the Vampiress of San Francisco

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  • 10/25: CBS Weekend News

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    Jamaica braces for Hurricane Melissa after it passes by Dominican Republic; Paris cemetery draws millions to American rock star’s grave

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  • The story of the Wright Brothers

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    In 1903 the Wright Brothers, Wilbur and Orville, successfully flew a heavier-than-air powered machine. The story of these aviation pioneers is now told in a new book. Rita Braver spoke with the author, historian David McCullough.

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  • Flying high: Remembering Pan Am

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    It was an aviation pioneer, and became a symbol of America during the Golden Age of air travel. But while Pan Am no longer flies the friendly skies, many of the women who proudly wore the Pan Am uniform talked with Conor Knighton about the glory days – when flying was glamorous, complete with gourmet food on board.

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  • The Great Brain Robbery

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    Economic espionage sponsored by the Chinese government is costing U.S. corporations hundreds of billions of dollars and more than two million jobs. Lesley Stahl reports.

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  • 10/24: CBS Evening News

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    U.S. sending aircraft carrier strike group to Latin America; Students throw surprise wedding for their beloved principal.

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  • 10/23: CBS Evening News

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    What we know about major FBI busts of alleged gambling schemes involving NBA players; Misty Copeland takes final bow with American Ballet Theatre

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  • Jade Janks and the Secret Photos

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    A woman discovers explicit photos of herself on her stepfather’s computer. Soon after, he’s found dead. Jade is a likely suspect, but did she do it? “48 Hours” correspondent Tracy Smith reports.

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  • The Pact

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    A 15-year-old boy goes to a dance and never returns. Teen killers keep a secret for 40 years – until one of them cracks. “48 Hours” correspondent Richard Schlesinger reports.

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  • Investigator claims to know location of stolen art from 27-year-old heist

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    Boston’s Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum has doubled its reward to $10 million to help solve the biggest art heist in history. Thieves made off with 13 masterpieces 27 years ago, and the stolen artwork is valued at around half-a-billion dollars. Seth Doane spoke to the art investigator who claims he knows where the art is today.

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  • New security video shows huge London jewelry heist in progress

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    Police in London released surveillance video showing the men who pulled off a shocking jewelry heist over Easter weekend. CBS News is also learning that police may have passed up a chance to catch the burglars in the act. Charlie D’Agata reports from New Scotland Yard, London’s police headquarters.

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  • 10/22: CBS Evening News

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    Trump administration plans to demolish White House’s entire East Wing; Kayaker delighted by group of monkeys leaping into water around her

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  • 10/21: CBS Evening News

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    Pardoned Capitol rioter charged with threatening to kill Hakeem Jeffries; How goats are solving the invasive plant problem on Tennessee River island

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  • Country Music Competition ‘The Road’ Might Be an Omen of CBS’s Conservative Future

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    For the last few months, CBS has been using cryptic ads to promote The Road, a new reality show co-created by Taylor Sheridan and hosted by Blake Shelton and Keith Urban. The ads featured tour buses, clouds of dust, scenes of Shelton and Urban flanked by other country stars like Lainey Wilson, the Brothers Osborne, Gretchen Wilson—and not much else. Since the series shares a name with Cormac McCarthy’s 2006 postapocalyptic classic, it was easy to imagine this might be some sort of countrified Squid Game. Instead, Sunday night’s premiere revealed the series as a contemporary answer to the American Idol–esque mid-aughts reality competition Nashville Star.

    The Road gathers 12 country singer-songwriters, all of whom will open for Urban on a tour of small clubs. Amid product placement from sponsors Crown Royal and rodeo clothier Ariat, each contestant plays an original song, and the audience rates them using an iPhone app. One musician will be eliminated weekly until a single singer wins a slot at the Stagecoach Music Festival, a record deal, and a cool $250,000.

    Contestants on Idol or The Voice aren’t necessarily professionals—but everyone competing on The Road is a working musician. The show’s tension comes from the sense that we’re watching a group of dreamers perform for a judgmental audience of both country fans and their idols. After spending 23 seasons as a coach on The Voice, Shelton knows how to look like he’s having a good time as he watches the contestants, even when he winces at a missed note. Urban, on the other hand, occasionally looks like he’s experiencing regret and despair—similar to how he’s acted recently when asked about his divorce from Nicole Kidman. On The Road, his impassive response to the performers renders him an enigmatic, even baffling figure. It’s not a surprise that Urban gets the task of sending the losing contestant home at the end of each episode.

    Though Sheridan is new to the reality TV genre, he has a long history of putting real Nashville stars on screen, casting Tim McGraw and Faith Hill as the leads in 1883 and giving Lainey Wilson her first acting role as a singer on the rise. Over the last decade, the western drama Yellowstone established the writer, producer, and occasional actor as the Hollywood voice who could speak directly to “real America”—and he’s made CBS’s parent company Paramount plenty of money doing it. (He’s currently responsible for four other shows with high-profile stars on Paramount+: Billy Bob Thornton’s Landman, Kidman’s Special Ops: Lioness, Sylvester Stallone’s Tulsa King, and Jeremy Renner’s Mayor of Kingstown.)

    The Road is an early sign that the Sheridan sensibility may soon be even more foundational to the Tiffany Network. After decades focused on winning over America’s middle-class middlebrow, CBS now seems to be making a bid for an explicitly conservative viewership, following the network’s acquisition by David Ellison’s Skydance Media. Then again, Sheridan doesn’t seem terribly interested in being a culture warrior; those who didn’t actually watch Yellowstone might be surprised to find out the show was something of a Trojan horse for progressive ideals, though they were never expressed in an overtly “woke” way. Ultimately, the Sheridan Cinematic Universe operates on the principle that you don’t necessarily have to cater to a paranoid, conservative audience so long as you omit anything that might offend them.

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    Erin Vanderhoof

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  • 10/20: CBS Evening News

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    Man brought rifle to airport and threatened to “shoot it up,” police say; Behind the decline of the American paddlefish

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  • 10/19: CBS Weekend News

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    Israel accuses Hamas of attacking IDF soldiers, launches retaliatory strikes; London hosts major sumo wrestling tournament, second ever outside of Japan

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