JetBlue CEO to Washington: FAA shutdown "criminal"
David Barger points to congressional budget bickering, says businesses don't hire when there's that kind of uncertainty
Scott Pelley, one of the most experienced and awarded journalists today, has been reporting stories for 60 Minutes since 2004. The 2024-25 season is his 21st on the broadcast. Scott has won half of all major awards earned by 60 Minutes during his tenure at the venerable CBS newsmagazine.
As a war correspondent, Pelley has covered Ukraine, Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria and Sudan. On Sept. 11, 2001, he was reporting from the World Trade Center when the North Tower collapsed. As a political reporter, Scott has interviewed U.S. presidents from George H.W. Bush to President Biden.
Scott has won a record 51 Emmy Awards, four Alfred I. duPont-Columbia Silver Batons and three George Foster Peabody Awards.
From 2011 to 2017, Scott served as anchor and managing editor of the "CBS Evening News." By 2016, Pelley had added 1.5 million viewers, the longest and largest stretch of growth at the evening news since Walter Cronkite.
Pelley is the author of "Truth Worth Telling: A Reporter's Search for Meaning in the Stories of Our Times" (Hanover Square Press, 2019) in which he profiles people, both famous and not, who discovered the meaning of their lives during historic events of our times.
Pelley began his career in journalism at the age of 15 as copy boy at the Lubbock (Texas) Avalanche-Journal newspaper. He was born in San Antonio and attended journalism school at Texas Tech University. Scott and his wife, Jane Boone Pelley, have a son and a daughter.
David Barger points to congressional budget bickering, says businesses don't hire when there's that kind of uncertainty
BET founder and RJL CEO Robert Johnson's message to Washington: "Sacrifice your political job for the job that American people want you to do"
Howard Schultz says the key to creating jobs is a long-term debt deal to encourage investment, and a renewal of faith in American brands
Starbucks chairman Howard Schultz urges a national boycott until President Obama and Congress find agreement on the deficit
Caterpillar CEO Doug Oberhelman gives his take on how to dig America out of its economic mess
The memorial, located in the footprint of the World Trade Center, will open to 9/11 families this Sunday
Pennsylvania town throws it arms around the families of the victims of United Flight 93
Those who worked in the toxic smoke and dust of Ground Zero are still being treated for chronic illnesess
New York City Police Commissioner Ray Kelly says there will be "additional security layers in place. But we have no specific threat that we're aware of at this time."
Ray Kelly says counter-terrorism preparations help in mobilizing large numbers of police officers
Mercy Corps aid worker warns of a huge crisis and the outbreak of diseases like measles and cholera
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton tells Scott Pelley "we certainly can afford to do what is necessary"
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton says the Obama administration has been working "very hard to marshal international opinion" against the Assad government
Population of Kenya's Dadaab Refugee Camp swells to over 400,000; the size of Cleveland
The UN says more than 3.5 million are in danger of starvation