
John Waters, connoisseur of quirky art
Look out, Baltimore: The local legend whose films celebrate outsiders is now an art world insider, with pieces from his weird and provocative art collection on display at the Baltimore Museum of Art.
Watch CBS News
Rita Braver is a national correspondent for "CBS News Sunday Morning," where she reports on everything from arts and culture to politics and foreign policy. Her assignments include a wide variety of topics, from meeting offbeat characters to discerning national trends.
Braver has interviewed presidents, cabinet secretaries and many celebrities. For "CBS Sunday Morning," she has done profiles of former President Bill Clinton, United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley and Federal Reserve Board Chair Janet Yellen. She has profiled authors including Phillip Roth, E.L. Doctorow and Dav Pilkey of "Captain Underpants" fame. And she has talked with entertainers such as James Taylor, Sheryl Crow, John Legend and Chrissy Teigen.
In recent years, Braver has also reported on national issues such as political correctness on campus and the resurgence of anti-Semitism in the United States. She has taken viewers to exhibits of famed artists such as Vermeer and Chagall, and introduced viewers to contemporary artists José Parlá and Kehinde Wiley.
Prior to joining "CBS Sunday Morning," Braver spent four years as CBS News chief White House correspondent (1993-1997). covering a broad range of foreign and domestic issues. She traveled the world on the White House beat, followed President Bill Clinton through his re-election campaign, and served as a floor reporter at the Democratic Convention. While covering the White House, she was a frequent guest, as well as a guest host of "Face the Nation."
Braver spent a decade as CBS News chief law correspondent (1983-93) reporting for the "CBS Evening News," the "CBS Morning News," "48 Hours," "Street Stories" and "Public Eye." Her beat included the U.S. Supreme Court, the Justice Department and all federal law enforcement agencies including the FBI and DEA. She covered the Iran-Contra case during the Reagan administration and the drug trial of Washington, D.C. Mayor Marion Barry. Braver broke the story of the Walker family spy ring, as well as the case of convicted spy Jonathan Pollard.
Braver has won nine national Emmy Awards, including one for investigative reporting and two for covering the assassination of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. She received the Joan Barone Award presented by the Congressional Radio and Television Correspondents' Association, and the Star Award from American Women in Radio and Television. She was also named an Outstanding Mother by the National Mother's Day Committee.
Braver grew up at CBS News, joining the Washington Bureau in 1972 as a news desk editor. She began her career in journalism at CBS affiliate WWL-TV in New Orleans. Braver is married to attorney Robert Barnett and is the proud grandmother of three. She was graduated from the University of Wisconsin.
Look out, Baltimore: The local legend whose films celebrate outsiders is now an art world insider, with pieces from his weird and provocative art collection on display at the Baltimore Museum of Art.
On Feb. 14, 2018, a gunman murdered 17 people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida. The co-founder of March for Our Lives talks about his life since, including death threats against himself and his family.
Disappointed Swifties have filed a lawsuit against the ticket seller and its parent company, Live Nation Entertainment, who control 70% of the market, while Congress and the Justice Dept. are looking into their business.
The architect's works have helped define the look of cities around the world, but it's their interiors where he makes remarkable use of light and space, through which Holl hopes to express "the joy from the creative act."
Fifty years after the death of Lyndon Baines Johnson, biographer Robert Caro, historian Mark Updegrove, and Luci Baines Johnson (LBJ's youngest daughter) discuss one of the most consequential, yet underappreciated presidencies in U.S. history.
The veteran broadcaster talks about her half-century tenure as a producer, law correspondent, White House reporter, and member of the "Sunday Morning" team, covering newsmakers and global events, and the inspiring stories of everyday people.
On the eve of Passover, the comedian talks about Philadelphia's new National Museum of American Jewish History
The dramatic story behind one of Australia's greatest architectural landmarks
The "Sunday Morning" correspondent reflects on motherhood - and grandmotherhood - on this special day
Program Helps Patients Change Weight-Gaining Ways, Studies Future Treatment of Growing Problem
How a Very Old Fireboat Found Its Way Back to Work, and Into the History Books
Rita Braver: Dreaming Of The Home Of The Future
Remembering Buchwald
Rita Braver on Bradley