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tv   CBS News Sunday Morning  CBS  January 21, 2024 7:00am-8:31am PST

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costs to fighting climate change. shake up the senate - with democrat katie porter. i'm katie porter and i approve this message. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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good morning. jane pauley is off this weekend. i'm lee cowan. and this is "sunday morning." there is a good chance it was on your list new year's resolution. losing weight. trouble is, it was probably on last year's list, too. so many of us getting rid of those extra pounds and keeping them off is an intractable problem. but as you have probably heard, there is a new weapon in the battle of the bulge, new class of drugs that could radically control america's obesity epidemic and its costly impact on health care. susan spencer is weighing in. >> that was my heaviest weight, 250 pounds. >> reporter: weight has been a lifelong struggle for laquita clark. >> open it up. >> reporter: but last june everything changed. what was going through your mind when you opened that package? >> well, here we go. honestly, it was the best thing i could have ever done. life changing. >> reporter: the life changing
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impact of drugs like ozempic and the questions that surround them. coming up on "sunday morning." we know sharon stone for her film roles. but as i found out, there is a lot more to the picture. >> we are both very excited to be interviewed today. >> reporter: bandit, her dog, goes just about everywhere actor sharon stone goes, including lying at her feet while she paints and paints and paints. >> i don't think i'm just an actress or a writer or a painter. i think i'm just an artist. >> reporter: the new brushstrokes the oscar nominee is taking to her long career ahead on "sunday morning." two decades after finding himself in a groundbreaking role and a target of deadly threats, trailblazing episcopal bishop gene robinson is talking with ted koppel. >> blessed be the name of the
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lord. >> reporter: as the first openly gay bishop in all of christiandom, gene robinson expected some hostility. still a call from the vermont state police back in 2009 hit a little too close to home. >> we just arrested someone. he had a picture of you and your partner and he had scrawled across it save the church, kill the bishop. >> reporter: the recent death threats, but it's a hot issue. later on "sunday morning." also this morning, tracy smith is in conversation with emma stone along with the director of her buzzworthy new movie. with conor knighton we travel to sacred ground, some mysterious earthworks in central ohio now attracting worldwide attention. david pogue samples the work of an artist finding high art the bottom of a glass. plus, david martin on those rebel attacks in the red sea.
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commentary from historian mark updegrove and more. this is a "sunday morning" for the 21st of january, 2024. we'll be back in a moment. ♪ ♪
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this election is a choice between results or just rhetoric. californians deserve a senator who is going to deliver for them every day and not just talk a good game. adam schiff. he held a dangerous president accountable. he also helped lower drug costs, bring good jobs back home, and build affordable housing. now he's running for the senate. our economy, our democracy, our planet. this is why we fight. i'm adam schiff, and i approve this message.
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we try and mostly we fail to lose those pounds that have left some seven in ten americans overweight. but as you have seen in all those tv commercials, including on this network, there is a new class of drugs that could be a game changer. susan spencer looks into the pros and cons. >> reporter: what goes through your mind when you see yourself at that weight? >> totally different person. >> reporter: 44-year-old laquita clark says memories of being overweight and ridiculed go back to middle school. >> i remember sitting on the school steps with a group of my friends and just a group of other kids walking by, oh, my god, you're so fat. >> reporter: oh. >> it was very hurtful. that was my heaviest weight, about 250 pounds. >> reporter: over the years, clark, a nurse in nashville, tennessee, tried everything from fad dieting to kickboxing. nothing worked.
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>> it was almost like torture because of that relationship that i had with the food. these are things that i love. eating things that i love and it's giving me comfort at the moment. so why change that? >> there is one dose in each package? >> this is a month's worth. >> reporter: last june, everything changed. >> what you do is you open it up. >> reporter: when diagnosed as pre-diabetic, she was prescribed ozempic. with one small injection a week, her health improved and something else happened, too. when were you at your heaviest, what were you and how much weight have you actually lost since starting this drug? >> the heaviest wheight is 250 pounds. right now i'm at 164. >> reporter: that's life changing. tell me in a nutshell, how do these drugs work? >> these drugs are in a class of medicines that signal fullness to the brain and regulate blood
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sugar. >> reporter: dr. rekha kumar is chief medical officer at found. >> the reality is that people don't fail diets. diets fail people. >> reporter: the weight loss app that laquita clark uses to receive her care and to get her ozempic. if i'm taking one of these drugs, i will know when it's time to stop eating or what? >> so it's really amazing to see it when it works and people will say that it's the first time they have felt normal or it's the first time they felt full. >> reporter: wow. an obesity special list, she helped oversee early trials of glp-1 medications. they include ozempic and mounjaro, used for diabetes, and wegovy and zepbound, approved for weight loss. on average, people lose 10 to 20% of their body weight in the first year.
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for many of the roughly 74% of americans who are overweight or obese, that is almost unimaginable. >> this is a scientific breakthrough. not just because of weight control but cardiovascular risk reduction, treating diabetes. people are actually getting healthier. and that's the point of medicine. it isn't just to be thinner. >> reporter: but clearly, being thinner is what's causing all the bzz. >> it's all over social media, people are documenting their journeys, injecting on instagram, showing other people how to do it. >> reporter: doesn't this concern you? >> definitely. a lot of it concerns me. >> reporter: what's most concerning? >> we are seeing people want to get a hold of these medicines that don't need them at all. people trying to fit into dresses and wanting to lose the vanity weight. that's not really what these were made for. >> reporter: what are some of the most unusual places that you have heard of people being able to get these drugs? >> the hair salon. >> reporter: oh, come on.
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>> yeah. a colleague forwarded me an email from her hair salon basically saying come get a blow dry and wet your ozempic. >> reporter: that's not the only place where drugs like ozempic are making an impression. this is certainly not attention. simeon siegel is a senior analyst. he says glp-1 drugs could be a gold mine for investors. in terms of one product that had the potential to effect this many industries, have you ever seen anything like this? >> i don't know the numbers. i wonder if the iphone. >> reporter: the iphone? you think this could have as big an impact as the iphone? >> if it hits 40% of the people f this is as widely accessible, it should have a very large impact. >> reporter: with people thinner, he envisions a ripple effect. a potential boom in athleisure
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wear, even in gym memberships. it's sort of intuitive that ozempic might be the death knell for gyms. who needs a gym? >> my hypothesis and with anecdotal evidence is when someone who hasn't been fit becomes fit, they change their life to make sure they are protecting and truly being fit. >> reporter: instead of canceling the gym membership, they would tend to sign up? >> yeah. >> reporter: he says analysts even blue sky about a big boost for the airlines. since lighter passengers could mean lower costs. but all this depends on the drugs being widely available, which currently is far from a given. >> the exist biggest problem is access. there are people paying out of pocket. >> reporter: how much? >> sometimes up to $1,200 a month. so right now we are seeing maybe 30% of the time we are seeing coverage of these medicines, which is quite low considering
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we said 70% of the population might qualify. >> reporter: it used to be, what was the saying? you can't be too rich or too thin? now you can't be thin without being rich. >> it seems that way. >> reporter: beyond cost, there is the issue of side effects, like an upset stomach, sometimes severe. but the big lingering question about glp-1s, what do we know about the long-term effects tv? >> i think that's a concern that we doan have 100 years of data. we have 20 years of data. >> reporter: if taken purely for weight loss, how long do you have to take it? >> we don't know. >> reporter: what to i mean, we don't snow? >> we don't know. that's one of the active research questions going on around this class of medication now is what happens when you stop. we think that people tend to regain weight. >> reporter: that is not mara gordon's main concern. >> health is so much more complicated than the number on the scale.
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>> reporter: rather, she worries these drugs feed a serious prejudice in our society. >> the problem is fat phobia, right. the problem is a culture that discriminates against people based on body size. this is a really serious moral issue that our culture is facing. and ozempic is absolutely part of that. >> reporter: dr. gordon is an assistant professor at cooper medical school of rowan university in camden, new jersey. she calls herself a body positive doctor. >> basically, i don't bring up my patients' weight unless they want to. >> reporter: you have no qualms about prescribing ozempic or one of these drugs in cases where their health really is at stake? >> in patients who have diabetes, medications like ozempic can really help them. it can help improve their blood sugar, protect their heart. >> i think society is stuck on
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what your body looks like. not so much concerned about the inside or your health. >> reporter: and though she is quite happy with what her body looks like now, laquita clark says feeling better on the inside is the most important part. if that involves taking medication, so be it. >> my focus and my goal is being healthy, and being around for some years to see my children and grandchildren grow up. so, i don't care about what society thinks or what people are saying about it.
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great barrier reef to the great wall of china, many of the world's best known sites are unesco world heritage sites. the elite list is comprised of 1,200 properties with new additions voted on each year. >> congratulations to the united states of america. >> reporter: the last year's committee meeting held in saudi arabia a site in ohio was added to the list that many americans may not be as familiar with. >> the hopewell ceremonial earthworks are a series of eight gigantic earthworks built by the ancient indigenous hopewell culture built between a.d. 1 and 400. >> reporter: how are they moving the earth? >> with the simplest tools. pointed sticks. clamshell hose and baskets. >> reporter: archeologist brad lepper was one of several ohioans who worked on the unesco submission hoping an
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international stamp of approval might lead to a domestic appreciation for these earthworks scattered throughout central ohio. >> i grew up in west virginia. i never heard of these. does that surprise you? >> no. i know people who grew up in different parts of ohio, columbus, never heard of these and never been to them. they have been neglected. and i think now that the world heritage sites, we can start overcoming that stigma of just going piles of dirt. >> reporter: that's a dismissive criticism lepper heard before. the response i use is the earthworks are piles of dirt in the same way that the parthenon is a pile of rocks. >> reporter: the earthworks near newark, ohio, are the largest in the world. there is a great circle and an octagon which could easily hold four roman coliseums. they are believed to have been utilized by groups who traveled from several regions. why ohio? well -- >> we don't know. it's like having mecca and jerusalem but not having the
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c core an and the bible to fill in the details. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: the director of the newark earthworks center is a citizen of potawatomi indians. hirp scholars believe there was a likely spiritual connection. >> i think, frankly, that's probably the most persuasive way that you are going to get a whole bunch of people the work on a project like this, is to talk about the spiritual power of doing this. >> reporter: a shared sense of belief? >> exactly. >> reporter: certain points in the octagon line up with an 18.6-year lunar cycle zone as a lunar stand still in which the moon affairs pause in one place before heading in the opposite direction it demonstrates an impressive knowledge of astronomy and architecture. >> during the 19th century there were huge debates about whether
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indians could have built these places, that we weren't sophisticated enough, smart enough, hard working enough to do these things. so there became all sorts of theories. aliens, phoenicians, lost tribe of israel. >> reporter: peep thaliens were next option? >> right. >> reporter: the octagon earthworks site has been leased by the moundbuilder country club. the area was turned into a golf course. >> i usually don't come up here because it makes me feel excluded. it's a site that's meant for everybody. to have a private country club stacked on top of it is depressing to me. >> reporter: the newark golf course on top of an indigenous american earthwork is a step closer to being evicted. a state supreme court ruling in december 2022 has paved the way for the ohio history connection to buy out the value of the lease. several of the earthworks, including some burial mounds,
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protected as part of hopewell culture national historical part. the unesco recognition doesn't change anything legally, but it might inspire more visitation. >> now people have to accept it. okay, somebody thinks they are really important. why? >> reporter: visitors to the earthworks may not get the same picture postcard experience they might at a stonehenge or versailles, but for brad lepper that's part of the allure. >> here there is no single place you can stand to capture it all. you have to up mers yourself in it and walk through it to experience the grand you're. are you keeping as much of your investment gains as possible? high taxes can erode returns quickly. at creative planning, your portfolio is managed in a tax-efficient manner. it's what you keep that really matters. book your free meeting today at creativeplanning.com. ♪♪ stay ahead of your moderate—to—severe eczema, and show off clearer skin and less itch with dupixent.
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in recent weeks we heard a lot about the houthis. the group that's launched dozens of attacks on ships in the red sea. david martin has a "sunday journal." >> reporter: the houthis, the once obscure tribe from the mountains of yemen, have combined islamic revolution fervor with iranian slider weapons to disrupt global commerce and take on the u.s. military. >> they see this as a winning strategy for themselves. >> reporter: former u.s. ambassador to yemen, gerald feierstein, says the houthis, who tell their story on social media, have cast themselves as champions of the besieged people of gaza. >> they are battle-tested. they have been at war on and off since 2006.
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i don't think that anyone takes their military prowess lightly. >> reporter: the revolution the houthis started in yemen created a humanitarian disaster of civilian casualties, disease and malnutrition that was perhaps the worst in the world. until gaza. >> so when israel invaded gaza, how did the houthis react? >> well, you know, along with the most of the rest of the arab world, they were infuriated. early on the houthis tried to fire some missiles and drones at israel, but that effort was ineffective. and so beginning in mid-november, they started attacking shipping in the red sea. >> reporter: so these attacks on commercial shipping were, in essence, a fall back strategy? >> they were. i mean, if the houthis had been able to hit israel directly, they probably would have continued to do that. but targeting shipping in the
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red sea as we've seen is probably more effective in garnering international attention. >> reporter: the houthis only control 30% of yemen, but that's enough to launch drones and missiles into the shipping lanes leading to and from the suez canal. >> typically, there are weapons that are imported in whole or in part from iran, either by sea or by some other method, but the houthis are very good engineers. they tend to improve those weapons and they have seen that for several years. >> reporter: retired mane marine is former commander of u.s. forces in the middle east. >> houthis weapons can reach out and touch and hurt unarmed civilian shipping in this vital part of the world. >> reporter: this u.s.-owned vessel was never in danger of sinking b but the houthis have scared shipping companies into taking the long way around africa. in effect, rerouting the global supply chain. >> as we have said repeatedly, the houthis need to stop these attacks and that they will bear the consequences for any failure
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to do so. >> reporter: ten days ago, american and british aircraft along with classrooms from u.s. new year's eve ships went on the offensive, launching 150 weapons at houthi targets in yemen, widening the war which had begun with the hamas rampage through israel. >> it was probably the least of the bad options that were available to the biden administration. >> reporter: the u.s. now finds itself in a running gun battle with the houthis and no immediate end is in sight. >> are the airstrikes working? >> are they stopping the houthis? no. are they going to continue? yes. >> is this going to continue until the houthis run out of weapons? >> i think it's going to continue until the houthis run out of weapons or we take their weapons away from them by destruction. i suspect that their intent is to continue to do this until there is a ceasefire in gaza.
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♪ ♪ it's "sunday morning" on cbs and here again is lee cowan. >> she plays a woman who has been brought back to life in a "frankenstein"-inspired tale with a funny and a feminist edge. tracy smith is in conversation with emma stone and the director of her latest project, a movie that's getting plenty of award season attention. >> up top! >> reporter: if you have seen emma stone on any red carpets lately, and she is kind of hard to miss, you might have noticed a tall bearded man close by. he is greek film director yorgos lanthimos and it seems he and stone are in a professional sense joined at the hip.
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how much time have the two of you spent together? >> like hundreds of thousands of hours. >> reporter: and it's all magical. >> every second. like a dream. >> this is bella. >> reporter: it might be more like a fever dream. >> good evening. >> her brain and body are not quite sync raised. >> reporter: lanthimos directed stone in her latest film, "poor things" based on the alistair gray movele of the same name. an updated take on the "frankenstein" story. in this case, a brilliant scientist transplants a baby 'brain into a recently deceased woman, bella. she quickly evolves from being a really big toddler to a really smart adult who learns how to dance, how to read, and how to think. >> you are losing some of your adorable way of speaking. >> i am a changeable feast.
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apparently according to emerson. >> reporter: critics called the film fantastical and sumptuous. it's a clab between stone and lanthimos they say could be pretty intense. do you fight? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> reporter: about what? >> we won't right now. >> we don't fight, fight. we really communicate. strongly in those moments. i think we resolve it relatively quickly. >> we speak to each other freely. it helps. >> reporter: lanthimos breaks down inhibition by having cast members play theatrical rehearsals and he likes to keep the set quiet. >> you don't yell action? >> no, i don't. no. we like to ease into things. in general, try to create this atmosphere which doesn't create tension. >> reporter: and it all seems to have worked. lanthimos acquired the rights to "poor things" years ago.
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to studios, he got the cold shoulder. so then he made another film, one with a more conventional artistic conviction, starring rachel rachel and emma stone. >> my secret is safe with you? >> all of them. >> good. >> even your biggest secret. >> abigail. >> reporter: the favorite was also a favorite at the oscars with ten nominations and one win and lanthimos's reputation stored. did "the favorite" give you the juice to do this? >> yeah, people asked what do you want to do next, i was like "poor things." >> you can't let you go. >> reporter: and his patience seems to have paid often. the film already picked up a number of awards, but stone says her character was a challenge to play. was there ever a moment when you
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thought, oh, i don't know if i am going to get this? >> yeah. the whole time. yes, the entire time. >> reporter: seriously? >> yeah. >> reporter: why? >> i don't think there has been a day on set of any film of anything i have ever done where i have been like, i really got it today. that was exactly what it was supposed to be. i mean, i think that's for any creative person. you see something in your head or feel like should be a particular way and it has to come out of your body and all that and it never matches up to exactly what you have in your head and it's like a constant state of acceptance and for an actor, hopefully, presence. >> the golden globe goes to -- >> emma stone. >> reporter: of course, she needn't worry. the golden globe voters thought she got it just right. stone told us worried is her natural state of being and she has been that way since she was very young. do you still have that anxiety? >> oh, yeah. yeah. not to the level that it was
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when i was a kid because i have -- i have therapy or tools now to manage it in different ways. as the years go on, you start to learn more about managing what that is. but, yeah, i mean, that's my operating system. >> reporter: have you figured out how to kind of channel it for good? is that possible? if it is, please tell me. is there a way to channel anxiety for good? >> are you kidding me? anxiety is, like, i feel so lucky to be -- >> reporter: anxious? >> yeah. >> reporter: why? >> it be like a superpower sometimes. anxiety is very activating. it gets you out of bed. you kind of can't stay in one place. it forces you to keep moving. i don't know. i find a lot of positives from it. >> reporter: and it seems she's made the best of it. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: a case in point,
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her performance in "la la land," which she won an oscar. >> i still have a lot of growing and learning and work to do, and this guy is a really beautiful symbol to continue on that journey, and i am so grateful noor. >> reporter: and now stone and her latest movie are once again in the oscar conversation. but she says she tries not let it all get to her. is there a way that you get ready for it or something that you tell yourself to navigate these waters? >> no. just to hold everything lightly and not cling too much to any of it. also, you know, to not take yourself seriously through that. which i don't really struggle with. that's not an affliction that i struggle with, taking myself super seriously because, if you were me, you wouldn't take me seriously either. but it's, yeah, i think you can take your work seriously and not yourself seriously.
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>> reporter: she is serious about her partnership with yorgos lanthimos. they have another project in the works and more on the way. and, yes, their film may be called fantastical, but fantastic might better describe the real life of emma stone. you moved out here when you were 15 years old. is this career, this life kind of what you were dreaming of? >> it's so far beyond what i dreamt of. i feel so unbelievably grateful on a daily basis, truly. i really, really, really wanted to be on a sitcom. and i can't believe that i get to work with people that i admire and adore and trust and have been able to play roles that are just so far beyond what i ever imagined and it's nuts. yeah. and i am still open for sitcoms. if you've got anything?
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>> reporter: we will make sure to put that out there. >> okay, thank you. my name is sister monica claire. because of tiktok, i've created a community where people can feel safe asking questions about spirituality. i try to provide a really accessible way of them learning about religion and spirituality, that's not intimidating. somebody in the comments said, i have no idea how i got on nun talk, but i'm not mad about it. i'm going to teach you how to pray. i'm going to teach you how to meditate, how to connect with a higher power, because we need that. we need strength and comfort. for moderate to severe crohn's disease skyrizi is the first il-23 inhibitor that can deliver remission and visibly improve damage of the intestinal lining. serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections or a lower ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine or plan to. liver problems may occur in crohn's disease. control of crohn's means everything to me. ask your gastroenterologist about skyrizi. ♪ control is everything to me ♪
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largest corporate donor, helping expand access for all. ♪ ♪ ♪ just between us, always to face the camera, because when he
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turns profile, brother, he is the biggest thing on television. [ laughter ] >> grace, what about edelman? did he see the show? >> oh, yeah. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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not just any whiteboard... ...katie porter's whiteboard is one way she's: [news anchor] ...often seen grilling top executives of banks, big pharma, even top administration officials. katie porter. never taken corporate pac money - never will. leading the fight to ban congressional stock trading. and the only democrat who opposed wasteful “earmarks” that fund politicians' pet projects. katie porter. focused on your challenges - from lowering housing costs to fighting climate change. shake up the senate - with democrat katie porter. i'm katie porter and i approve this message.
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he was a man who preached
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peace and love, and he found himself caught up in a firestorm of hate. ted koppel is talking with gene robinson two decades after his elevation as the first openly gay bishop in the episcopal church. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: november 2003. as the episcopal church consecrated gene robinson the ninth bishop of new hampshire, he wore the customary vestments. he was also wearing a bulletproof vest. >> is it your will we ordain gene a bishop? >> reporter: what made the occasion controversial, indeed historic, was the church's acceptance of gene robinson as the first openly gay bishop in all of christiandom. >> there have been a lot of us. let's be clear. >> reporter: robinson is quick
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to point out that there always been gay bishops in the episcopal church. >> i am just the first openly gay one. >> a great thanksgiving -- >> reporter: almost certainly the first episcopal bishop with purple nail polish. this was, of course, a special occasion. a celebration late last fall commemorating his consecration as bishop 20 years ago. the congregation of st. thomas episcopal church in washington, d.c., is bishop robinson's parish these days. these are very much his people. and here he clearly feels more free perhaps to be himself. purple fingernails and all. >> it pleases me to no end. it's fanciful. i love purple. as you see, bishops where a lot of purple. i thought i'm 76 years old, i
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get my nails painted. >> reporter:. >> reporter: on a more serious note, he reflected back on the climate in which he had been labeled the most dangerous man in the anglican church. >> we forget what a big deal it was and how hard it was and how many people were opposed. and the pain it caused a lot of people. >> reporter: it had provoked immediate threats. >> one of the earliest times was the day ways elected. i got my first death threat before i got home that day. and that was to continue for two and a half years. >> reporter: what was the nature of that threat? >> i got a postcard and it began "you fornicating lecherous pig". >> reporter: at the time, robinson was living with his partner, mark andrew, who later became his spouse. robinson had previously been in a conventional marriage until he and his wife, isabella martin, decided to divorce.
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>> we were married for almost 14 years, and have two wonderful daughters and two granddaughters. i get to see her and chat with her all the time. >> reporter: how about the daughters? when did they learn that dad was different? >> so they were 4 and 8. and i sat with the 8-year-old. i said, you know what a lesbian is, right? so the 8-year-old says, oh, yeah. very casual. oh, yeah. most men like women and most women like men, but some men like men and some women like women. >> reporter: that's not bad. >> a+ right there. i said i learned i am one of those men who like men. and your mom and i have together decided that she deserves a chance to find someone who can love her in that special way and i deserve the opportunity to find someone to love in my way. >> reporter: it's all history now. almost 37 years since the divorce and since he came out
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publicly in his church. 20 years since he became a bishop. nine years since he and mark divorced. and through it all, bishop robinson has become something of an institution. the smithsonian wants to display his vestments. he is often invited to speak these days here at washington's national cathedral. what a dreadful life your are predecessors must have lived. the gay bishops who were not identified. >> yeah. >> reporter: as such? >> i can tell you from my own experience, and it's one of the things that led to my coming out, is it's an awful thing to stand in a pulpit and encourage people to live authentic lives when you another you are not going authentic. i felt god called me out of the closet. >> reporter: do you ever feel there is more me than my sexuality? >> i didn't want to be the gay
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bishop, i wanted to be a good bishop. but i realized i wasn't in control of that. the media was going to make me the gay bishop whether i liked it or not. so what i decided was if i was going to be the gay bishop, then i'd be the best damn gay bishop that i could ever be. >> we must not proceed with this terrible and unbiblical mistake -- >> reporter: controversial? oh, yes. >> it will break god's heart. >> reporter: hundreds of parishes left the episcopal church and it would be nearly seven years after robinson's election as bishop before mary glasspool, a lesbian, was elected assisting bishop of los angeles. now, though, there are five openly gay bishops, including bishop thomas brown of maine and bishop jeff mello of connecticut. bishop robinson, who is retired, refers to them as his legacy. as you look at the church today,
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how does it perceive the notion of a gay bishop? >> i remember two different senior clergy assuring me that the fact that i was gay was not a concern. and, of course, it was a concern. but compared to what it might have been like for mary and bishop robinson, it really wasn't a concern, that people had moved, that we got clear, that the church was not going to fall down. >> the people in maine, i show up every sunday at a different church. first thing they say is, where is tom? because they really want my spouse there. >> reporter: bishops glasspool and mello are also married. >> i was never told, if you're gay, it's going to be okay. but i heard over and over and over again, god loves you. my relationship with god got me through it all, and that's my greatest concern right now. when you say are we tired of
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talking about our sexuality, i am tired of it until i remember that there are still kids out there whose lives are being saved because they are seeing people who are living their lives openly. >> reporter: 50 years from now, what are they going to say about bishop robinson? >> he was prophet, he was courageous, and i think it costs a lot. >> reporter: just expand on that a little. >> there was a period in college where i thought maybe god hated me because i was feeling er rotically attracted to women. finally, kind of in the middle of the night, god said to me, no, you know, it's about love and i love you. if god hadn't said that to me, i don't think i'd be here. >> i think bishop robinson actually given the history of our church, i think in 50 years there will be a date on our calendar that will have his name
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to it, which is to say that he will be recorded in the calendar of saints. >> reporter: which brings us to the story of matthew's shepherd. >> an update on the brutal monitored of a gay college student in wyoming. >> reporter: in 1998, matthew was 21, gay and a devoted episcopalian. perhaps it was inevitable he would become something of a symbol, even a martner the eyes of that church's first openly gay bishop. refresh the public's memory. >> yeah. two young men took him out on to the prairie and beat him unmercifully. then they did a very strange thing. they literally hung him on a fence so that when the first person who discovered him at first thought it was a scarecrow. he died six days later. >> reporter: it was such a gruesome event, such a blatantly
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anti-gay hate crime, that matthew's parents buried his ashes for fear that the gravesite would be desecrated. ♪ >> reporter: it wasn't until 20 years later in 2018 that they turned to bishop robinson to ask if the national cathedral might take their son's ashes, and here they rest. >> and he is safe here from the grave being desecrated. >> reporter: there was a solemn ceremony presided over by bishop robinson. thousands attended. many from the lgbtq community, not always welcomed by their own churches. >> i have three things i want to say to matt. >> reporter: in addressing matt -- >> gently rest in this place. >> reporter: bishop robinson was
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also speaking to them. >> you are safe now. oh, yeah. and, matt, welcome home. amen. [ applause ] >> reporter: who were you crying for? >> oh, gosh. i was crying for all of my community who have died violently, punished for being who they are, loving who they loved. i feel like my whole life took me to is that moment because i have been living my whole life with a foot in the church and a foot in the gay community, trying to explain one to the other, trying to get them to come together again, and for that two hours it happened. >> reporter: bishop robinson's
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commitment to the gay community and to his church have already been memorialized at st. thomas episcopal church. nothing nearly as grand as the national cathedral, but this modest chapel has bin named for him. >> i am not sure what i would to if i walked into this kind of an area and -- >> feels strange to me, too. >> reporter: and saw my name up there. fortunately, it's not mine. it's yours. next to the chapel is a columbian, a repository for the ashes of select members of the congregation. there is a box with gene robinson's name on it. >> there is something just lovely knowing that's settled and it's just right next to the altar of the bishop gene robinson chapel. how could i want more than that? >> reporter: they kind of sanctified you. they are in danger of being sainted. >> it's really embarrassing. >> reporter: it is. >> and it's not helpful. >> reporter: saint gene?
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>> thou sayest. of course not, of course not. i feel like the least saintly person ever. but i know i'm not pure as the driven snow, but in my life, i'm happy with what i have done with what god has put in front of me.
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this election is a choice between results or just rhetoric. californians deserve a senator who is going to deliver for them every day and not just talk a good game. adam schiff. he held a dangerous president accountable. he also helped lower drug costs, bring good jobs back home, and build affordable housing. now he's running for the senate. our economy, our democracy, our planet. this is why we fight. i'm adam schiff, and i approve this message.
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our david pogue has discovered an artful dimension to that familiar toast. bottom's up. >> at this photography exhibit in las vegas, you may not know right away what you're looking at. >> i would think this one would be like a cross section of tree. >> i say in this one i see something maybe a moon effect or planet. >> reporter: but in fact these are photos of evaporated whiskey crud. so the title of the project is vanishing spirits. the dried remains of single malt
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scotch. after you have taken that last drop or sip of whiskey, the residue dries in the bottom of the glass and leaves me these wonderful patterns. >> reporter: earn any button's day job is speech pathology. his hobbies include photography and drinking scotch whiskey in the evening. that's how this began in 2008. >> when i went to collect the glasses in the morning morning, i noticed a film in the bottom of the glass. when i held it up to the light i saw fine repetitive patterns. i am like, i can try to do something with this. >> reporter: tell me about the color. the whiskey didn't look like that? >> it did not. i put different colored lights, different colored gels in from behind. so that's what's giving the purple and the blues and the orange. >> reporter: before you do that, what would it look like? >> it would look relatively whitish gray. so, yeah, nature is giving me the pattern. i am giving it the light. >> reporter: these days, he experiments with different kinds of drinking glasses, sheets of
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glass, and whiskeys from different parts. world. hve you ever tried chocolate milk? have you tried 7 up? >> i tried a lot of different alcohols. i found that they have to be ached in a cask.pthey have to b, you know, taking in all the organic material from the wood into that spirit that was put in there. >> reporter: tequila? >> that will work. that will give me interesting images. vodka won't. >> reporter: you have an area of knowledge that probably nobody in the world has. >> yeah. not sure what to do with it, but. >> reporter: in fact, he has done plenty with it. his whiskey photos featured in "the new york times" and in national geographic. they inspired a published scientific paper and they are published in a coffee table art book. is there a takeaway? is there a lesson? >> the ignored or overlooked can
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not just any whiteboard... ...katie porter's whiteboard is one way she's: [news anchor] ...often seen grilling top executives of banks, big pharma, even top administration officials. katie porter. never taken corporate pac money - never will. leading the fight to ban congressional stock trading. and the only democrat who opposed wasteful “earmarks” that fund politicians' pet projects. katie porter. focused on your challenges - from lowering housing costs to fighting climate change. shake up the senate - with democrat katie porter. i'm katie porter and i approve this message. ♪ ♪
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look, i don't really feel like talking anymore. >> listen, lady, we can do this downtown if you want. >> so read me my rights and arrest me, then i'll go downtown. >> announcer: it's "sunday morning" on cbs and here again is lee cowan. >> she had some classic roles in movies like "basic instinct" among others. then sharon stone suffered a near fatal health issue. she had to reset both her career and her life. the results are now on display. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: there is a world where char cold colored makes coiled through clouds of pink and blue, banyan trees hover almost translucent, where colors curve and nature unravels. a world of acrylic on canvas. but you might be surprised to
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learn comes from the brushstrokes of activist and actor sharon stone. >> nature is almost like this free hand of god, if you will. flowers. tulips. dandelions. you don't have to paint a dandelion exactly like that. you know what i mean? >> reporter: be what you want it to be? >> yeah. it can be the feeling of the dandelion. >> reporter: she knows it's easy to be cynical about celebrities trying their hand in the art world. at 65, she has heard all of the whispers. >> everybody feels like, well, because she is old, because she is old and she is too old to be a sex symbol anymore. she is too old to do that. so we can dismiss her into her painting thing. >> reporter: the reaction so far has been far from negative.
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last year, stone was invited to have a gallery showing in los angeles. >> this is how i love the wind. >> reporter: then came this show called "welcome to my garden." it's currently on view at the c. parker gallery in greenwich, connecticut. >> you don't want people to ever really totally figure out a painting. >> reporter: the show have excited critics and collectors. her works are now selling for tens of thousands of dollars. >> now it's just a full-on business. >> reporter: kind of by accident? you didn't intend it to be? >> no, i didn't have any real intentions except just following my passion. >> reporter: did you does it matter whether they are buying it because they love the work or because it's sharon stone the actress? >> people come to see my art now, first just because it's me. but i feel just fine about that because i've earned being me.
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but, no, i'm totally comfortable. if you want to buy my work because it matches yours sofa, am good with that. >> there is no smoking in this building, miss tremmell. >> what are you going to do? >> reporter: when she hit it big in the '90s with movies like "basic instinct" it was clear that there was nor stone than just her looks. she proved she could hold her own against the likes of gene hackman in a western. >> you are not fast enough for me! >> today i am. >> reporter: and there were few chip fits like the one stone threw in casino. that roll got her an oscar nomination. but stone says even back then acting was only a small piece of her personal puzzle. >> i can't do that. >> ye, you can. come on. i'll take you.
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>> everybody told me to stay in h any lane. and my lane started to get so narrow. >> you are the best assignment i ever had, really. >> i'm honored. >> i don't think i'm just an actress or a brighter or a painter. i think i am just an artist. >> i can hear the defense now. your honor, detective stabler sexually aroused my client to elicit a confession. he was raped at "svu." >> reporter: the last time we met was in 2018. >> and i smelled fantastic. >> reporter: and given the severity of the brain hemorrhage she told us she suffered two decades ago, it's actually a miracle stone's doing anything, let alone painting. >> there was a 5% chance of me living. >> reporter: so it affected your peach? >> my speech, my hearing. >> reporter: walking? >> walking. >> reporter: fast forward to 2020, during the pandemic, a friend of hers gave her a
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paint-by-numbers kit and she found herself at anisele in her bedroom. she posted the result on instagram. >> actually, it looks like something. which i find completely remarkable. i did the paint by numbers with a lot of diligence because i wanted to get my brushstrokes together. it to have them perfect and flawless is a really painstaking, irritating, complicated -- >> reporter: exercise really? >> exercise. it really is a pain in the ass. >> reporter: but that posterior painting pain did awaken something very familiar. stone has been painting for most of her life. she started as a young girl growing up in rural pennsylvania where her aunt taught her almost everything she knew. you were how old? >> i have to show you a picture of her. she was really something. >> reporter: oh, look at her. >> right? >> reporter: was there any piece
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of advice in terms of painting that you still call on? >> just that you're not wrong. there is no wrong. >> reporter: while attending edinboro university of pennsylvania on a writing scholarship, stone not only majored in art, but made art to support herself. >> i sold every painting i made. i was selling them for like 25 bucks in college just to eat. >> reporter: you lived the life of a starving artist for a while? >> oh, my god, yeah. i feel what's coming through the canvas here now. >> reporter: to bawatch her wor all these years later -- >> it's okay to not know, you know? and it's also okay to go with not knowing. >> reporter: is to watch someone in an almost trans-like state. open to whatever moves her. >> i am letting it start to evolve and tell me what it wants to be. i think if you listen to the highest consciousness and follow
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that voice, how do you go wrong with that? >> reporter: so you've got to get out of your own way? >> mm-hmm. >> reporter: all these paintings in a back room of her beverly hills home are getting ready to be shipped to berlin where stone will open her very first international show next month. she certainly is not done with acting. for now at least, sharon stone has traded the red carpet for a palette with every color under the sun. >> i'm fully and wholly immersed in it and i love it and i have to. it's because i rather do it than anything else. and this is my cbs painting. painted just for you.
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two prominent men, britain's king charles and defense secretary lloyd austin have revealed they are dealing with prostate issues. reason enough to ask our dr. jon lapook for this prostate users guide. >> so what is the prostate? and why does it cause so many problems for men? it's a topic most people don't want to discuss and are not used to hearing about on television. but it can have a big impact on your life. the prostate is a small organ that sits just beneath the bladder. it's main function is to provide a nourishing fluid that transports sperm. as men age, the prostate tends to increase in size and as the gland enlarges, it can block the flow of urine from the bladder. in plain english, that can make it harder to pee and lead to mid of the night trips to the bathroom. that's what king charles has, enlarged prostate. also called bph, or benign prostatic hyperplasia if you want to get technical about it.
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the key word is benign with symptoms that are rarely life-threatening. a bigger problem is when the prostate becomes cancerous. prostate cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death in many and it's what secretary austin was diagnosed with. what makes this tricky is that while one in eight maen will be diagnosed with prostate cancer, it grows so slowly that 80% of those men, if untreated, would end up dying of another cause, including old age. but sometimes prostate cancer is fast growing and a real threat. so what to do. you may be familiar with the screening blood test, psa, prostate specific antigen. there are limitations to using psa testing to screen for prostate cancer since this protein is made by both bph and enlarged prostate and cancerous prostate tissue. since both bph and prostate cancer lead to increasing levels of psa, there are concerns psa screening leads to overdiagnosis and overtreatment.
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that, in turn, prompted disagreement among medical professionals about the benefits. tests can sometimes yield a false/positive. you suspect you have cancer when you actually don't, leading to an unnecessary biopsy, or you diagnosis and overtreat a slow-growing cancer. bottom line, talk to your health care provider and have a careful discussion about the risks and benefits of screening. taking it to account individual factors like family history, age, race, and more. if your psa is elevated, other tests may help decide if a wie biopsy is needed. if cancer is tsuspected that ca confirm it, from active surveillance, monitoring the test to see if the cancer growso to zapping the part of the prostate where consistency has been found to removing or destroying the entire gland. in secretary austin's case, his cancer led doctors to remove his prostate entirely. prostate cancer is more common in black men.
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for king charles, the enlarged prostate will be treated in the hospital this coming week and he should be fine. two men, two common diagnoses and two very different treatments which offer lessons for all of us. (♪♪) access to opportunity isn't always equal. but at the massmutual foundation, we believe tha— you know, it doesn't really matter what we believe. what matters is what ruth, marcus and michelle believe. that kendall believes he has a say in his future. that these neighbors believe there's opportunity in their neighborhood. at the massmutual foundation, we don't believe. we know things get better when we invest in each other. (♪♪) i won't let me moderate to severe plaque psoriasis symptoms define me... emerge as you. with tremfya®, most people saw 90% clearer skin at 4 months... ...and the majority stayed clearer, at 5 years.
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try align probiotic. (christina) with verizon business unlimited, i get 5g, truly unlimited data, and unlimited hotspot data. so, no matter what, i'm running this kitchen. (vo) make the switch. it's your business. it's your verizon. (vo) it's ultimate endless shrimp with another limited-time flavor drop. new crispy salt & vinegar shrimp. it's all that... and a batch of shrimp. now one of seven endless choices. only at red lobster. welcome to fun dining. now it's on to new hampshire. tuesday voters in the granite state head to the polls for the first presidential primary of 2024. historian mark updegrove has some thoughts. >> democracy is messy. winston churchill famously reminded us that it has been said that democracy is the worst form of government except all those other forms.
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it's fraught with partisan rancor, name-calling and finger-pointing. especially true in a presidential election year and more so this year given the fractured state ever our union. would could blame those who are turned off and tuned out. a recent study shows that 38% of americans say that they often or sometimes avoid the news due mainly to the depressing nature. yet there is also never been a more important time to pay attention to what's happening in our country and to show up at the polls. in a democracy, every election counts. a government of the people, by the people, and for the people depends on the people. the insurrection at the u.s. capitol three years ago recent measures to make voting more difficult, openly authoritarian language by the leading republican presidential candidate and polls suggesting that americans think democracy isn't working are warning signs that our democracy is not an inalienable right.
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rather, it is in the hands of every generation to preserve and make stronger for the next. last century, we fought two global wars to make the world safe for democracy. this century was ushered in by terrorist attacks on 9/11, threatening our very way of life. we overcame those challenges through our resilience and resolve to protect our liberty and democratic values. now those same values are being questioned and tested at home. as americans, these are threats we can't afford to ignore. in his book "profiles in courage," john f. kennedy wrote, in a democracy, every citizen, regardless of his interest in politics, is in a position of responsibility. the kind of government we get depends upon how we fulfill those responsibilities. the choice of what kind of government we get is up to us. but we must elect to make the choice. ( ♪♪ ) we're still going for that nice catch.
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not for my leftovers. that's a big one, people. we leave you this sunday with ladybugs gathering for the winter at reinhardt redwood regional park in oakland, california.
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i'm lee cowan. join us when our trump again next sunday morning. enjoy the rest of your weekend. ♪ ♪ i'm margaret brennan in washington. this week on "face the nation" -- we'll talk exclusively with one of the two candidates standing between donald trump and the republican nomination. former south carolina governor nikki haley. plus, democrats ramp up their efforts to motivate voters on the issue of reproductive rights. with just hours to go before the polls open in the first in the nation primary, former president trump actually isn't exaggerating. >> this is a big deal. the whole world is watching now in new hampshire.

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