CBS Sports' Lesley Visser has broken barriers for more than 40 years in the male-dominated field of sports reporting. In 1995, she was the first woman to report from the sidelines of the Super Bowl, and in 2009, she became the first female NFL analyst on TV. Visser, a contributor to "We Need to Talk," the first nationally televised all-female sports show, joins "CBS This Morning" to discuss her new memoir, "Sometimes You Have to Cross When It Says Don't Walk," and the advice she'd offer young people who want to get into the business.
Researchers at Northwestern University analyzed nearly 500 stories on an anti-cyberbullying and sexting campaign's website and found that more than two-thirds of girls ages 12 through 18 say they had been asked for explicit images of themselves. Researchers say the girls faced persistent requests, anger and threats from boys to send those pictures. Psychologist and CBS News contributor Lisa Damour joins "CBS This Morning" to discuss the changing conversations around sexting among teens.
The Eurasia Group, the world's leading political risk research and consulting firm, published a list of the top geopolitical risks facing the globe in 2018. Eurasia Group president Ian Bremmer joins "CBS This Morning" to discuss how China is engaging in a geopolitical vacuum and why Russia didn't make the list. Read the full list on EurasiaGroup.net.
Time's Up, a new initiative led by some of Hollywood's most powerful women, is vowing to fight what it calls "systemic inequality and injustice in the workplace" -- from Hollywood to blue-collar industries. A legal defense fund will help less-privileged women protect themselves from sexual misconduct. CBS News contributor and New York Times reporter Jodi Kantor joins "CBS This Morning" to discuss how the group formed and what they hope to accomplish.
Crude is posting its strongest annual start since 2014 as anti-government rallies in Iran spread
California is the latest state to make recreational marijuana legal, and on New Year's day, hundreds of Californians lined up to buy some. But pot is not yet available throughout the state. Mireya Villarreal reports.
An alternative to a potentially deadly chemical found in common paint strippers faces hurdles to reach consumers. Dozens of people who used methylene chloride died. Last month, the EPA indefinitely postponed a ban on that chemical, proposed by the Obama administration. Anna Werner spoke to researchers who developed what they call a less-harmful product.
Social media star Logan Paul is apologizing after fans blasted him for posting a video of a suicide victim over the weekend and making light of the situation. Paul, one of the most popular people on YouTube with more than 15 million subscribers, many of them children, was wandering around in Japan’s so-called "suicide forest."
A California man could be brought to court Tuesday, accused of a prank 911 call in Kansas that led to a deadly police shooting. Tyler Barriss, 25, was arrested in Los Angeles Friday, one day after police shot and killed a man at a house in Wichita. Jericka Duncan reports.
President Trump returned from his Mar-a-Lago resort on Monday, facing more hot rhetoric from North Korea and a burst of anti-government demonstrations in Iran. Meanwhile, South Korea is offering the first high-level talks with North Korea in more than two years. Major Garrett reports.
Iran's supreme leader accused the country's "enemies" of causing the largest protests against the Islamic regime in nearly a decade. Nine more people died in the violence, and so far, the demonstrations have claimed at least 20 lives. More than 400 have been arrested. Elizabeth Palmer reports.
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Crash killed all 12 people on board, including a family from New York and another from Florida