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10.06.2025 1:07
Calendar: Week of March 19 From the birthday of a "Star Trek" star, to the student-led March For Our Lives, "Sunday Morning" takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Jane Pauley reports.

10.06.2025 1:10
Adam Grant on meditation and its discontents Meditation is exploding in popularity, but recent studies have concluded that the science behind it is spotty, with zero evidence that meditation was better than exercise or relaxation at reducing stress. New York Times bestselling author Adam Grant has some fighting words for people who try to push meditation on the less meditative.

10.06.2025 1:11
10.06.2025 1:17
Altered states: Can LSD contribute to mental health? Faith Salie reports on how LSD and "magic mushrooms" are being studied for their ability to help patients conquer anxiety and depression without the psychedelia long associated with mind-altering drugs. Salie talks with author Ayelet Waldman, who microdosed LSD and overcame a deep depression, and with NYU professor Tony Bossis, who conducted a clinical trial of cancer patients treated for depression with a one-time dose of the psychedelic Psilocybin.

10.06.2025 1:18
Nature: Maine We leave you this Sunday Morning in a snowfall in Maine. Videographer: Mauricio Handler

10.06.2025 1:20
A brush with madness Vincent Van Gogh is just one of scores of artists, writers, musicians and other creative people who are known or believed to have suffered from mental illness. What goes on in the brain that might create a relationship between mania and creativity? Rita Braver reports.

10.06.2025 1:21
The fate of a Confederate flag Several years ago, in Summerville, South Carolina, Annie Caddell stirred heated emotions from across her predominantly black neighborhood when she raised a Confederate flag outside her home. Protests led to counter-protests, which made international news. But now Caddell has done an about-face, and taken down the flag, helping move her divided community a little closer together. She explained to Stave Hartman why she believes her new position is the more honorable one.

10.06.2025 1:23
Almanac: The Luddites An anti-technological innovation movement was born on March 11, 1811, when textile workers in Nottingham, England, destroyed machines they believed threatened their livelihoods. Jane Pauley reports.

10.06.2025 1:25
Sly Stone: 15 Essential Songs The Sly & the Family Stone leader has died at 82. Here’s what to know about his brilliant career and crushing addiction.

10.06.2025 1:26
RuPaul on what he learned from his family In this web exclusive, RuPaul, renowned as a celebrity drag queen, talks about his mother (a "rebel"), his father (the "life of the party"), his sisters (who were his universe growing up), and why he describes himself as "an introvert masquerading as an extrovert."

10.06.2025 1:34
Jared Leto on his other career: Investor In this web exclusive, actor and singer Jared Leto talks with correspondent Anthony Mason about his other sideline: investing in start-up companies. He talks about some of his biggest successes, including Uber, Airbnb and Slack, and what fascinates him about the process.

10.06.2025 1:36
Art of the sell: Iconic movie posters by a master "Sunday Morning" visits a living legend of Hollywood: 97-year-old Bill Gold, who was responsible for designing some of the most innovative movie posters in film history, created during a career that spanned more than six decades - from "Casablanca" to "The Exorcist" and the films of Clint Eastwood.

10.06.2025 1:36
Kennedy guts CDC’s independent vaccine panel The 17 members of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s independent vaccine advisory committee are being removed from their posts, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

10.06.2025 1:41
From 1988: Bill Geist and the art of curling Missing the Winter Olympics? In this report originally broadcast on "Sunday Morning" on January 11, 1988, correspondent Bill Geist travels to the frigid Iron Range of Northern Minnesota, where the sport of curling is a way of life.