SoulCycle is closing 20 stores across the nation
The high-intensity indoor cycling is skidding to a halt, with Peloton also announcing two rounds of layoffs this year.
The high-intensity indoor cycling is skidding to a halt, with Peloton also announcing two rounds of layoffs this year.
The belts may not properly restrain a passenger in a crash, increasing the risk of injury, regulators said.
Thunderstorms around the Florida panhandle caused several waterspouts, which look like tornados in the ocean, to form Tuesday morning.
"I want to apologize to everyone that I have alarmed and upset with my past behavior," Miller said.
The Supreme Court's decision ending the constitutional right to an abortion served as a springboard for Democratic candidates to share their personal experiences.
Just the soot from a week-long nuclear war would cause a "global catastrophe," researchers said.
More than 200 state, local, and federal partners and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children conducted 391 operations over a two-week period in August.
Member states have haggled over the terms of new international laws to protect international waters from exploitation since 2017. Could they finally reel it in?
The bill passed the House and Senate along party lines last week.
The Department of Justice has asked a judge to keep the affidavit used in the FBI search at Mar-a-Lago sealed. The search has led to a spike in threats of violence against law enforcement from supporters of former President Trump. CBS News homeland security and justice reporter Nicole Sganga joined Nikki Batiste and Vladimir Duthiers to discuss the latest details in the case.
Republican Congresswoman Liz Cheney is far behind a Trump-backed challenger in the polls ahead of Tuesday's primary for Wyoming's at-large congressional seat. CBS News politics reporter Aaron Navarro looks at the challenges facing Cheney, as well as latest on Sarah Palin's run in Alaska's primary.
U.S. regulators have finalized a long-awaited rule that's expected to allow millions of Americans to buy hearing aids without a prescription.
Allen Weisselberg, who spent decades in a top financial role in the Trump Organization, is expected to plead guilty to tax fraud charges in a New York courtroom on Thursday. CBS News investigative reporter Graham Kates has details on the case.
Former Trump Organization CFO Allen Weisselberg has reached an agreement with Manhattan prosecutors and is expected to enter a guilty plea in a criminal tax fraud case. Plus, there are new developments in the Georgia grand jury probe into alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election. CBS News congressional correspondent Scott MacFarlane and and CBS News investigative reporter Graham Kates have more on the two probes.
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Weisselberg is not expected to provide information about Trump or the company as part of the deal.
A federal bankruptcy judge filed an order this week that allows another defamation case against Jones to continue in Connecticut.
CBS News foreign correspondent Imtiaz Tyab takes a closer look at how women's rights have been curtailed in Afghanistan under Taliban rule. Then Wall Street Journal congressional reporter Natalie Andrews joins us with details of a new report from the House Foreign Affairs Committee on the U.S. withdrawal, one year later.
Justice Department wants to keep Trump FBI search warrant affidavit sealed; Summer cooldown brings below-average temperatures
Wyoming is one of two states holding primary elections Tuesday, and Republican Rep. Liz Cheney hopes to garner enough of her party's support to defeat Trump-backed opponent Harriet Hageman and keep her U.S. House seat. Early polling shows Cheney trailing behind Hageman. CBS News chief election and campaign correspondent Robert Costa joins "CBS News Mornings" to discuss.
The planned test had been postponed after House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's visit to Taiwan; China reacted to the visit by announcing live-fire exercises in the waters surrounding the island.
From California to Maine, some Americans are getting financial help in the face of higher food and gas prices.
While interest rates at some banks have barely budged, some institutions are offering more generous returns for savers.
The company is cutting prices to get rid of excess inventory after a huge shift in how Americans spend.
The discovery is a one-in-2 million find, according to the New England Aquarium.