Thursday, January 9, 2025
Happening Now

Author Archives: Stonecom Interactive

Ted Danson on his new comedy series “A Man on the Inside”

“Cheers” actor Ted Danson’s latest series is the Netflix comedy “A Man on the Inside,” in which he plays a retired widower-turned-investigator who goes undercover in a nursing home. Correspondent Tracy Smith talks with Danson and series creator Mike Schur (“The Good Place”) about how the show takes a clear-eyed look at aging. Danson also talks about aging gracefully, living life fully as long as you can, and why he feels “complete” in his life now. Source

Share

Honoring a Civil War veteran who was lost to history

Researching her family history, Cheryl Wills found she was related to a former slave who served in the Civil War with the United States Colored Troops, which led her to a distant relative, a former plantation, and ultimately to Private Sandy Wills’ remains. Source

Share

Martha Stewart prepares dishes from her 100th book

In 1982 Martha Stewart published her first book, “Entertaining.” Now, the lifestyle entrepreneur has released her 100th, “Martha: The Cookbook,” which contains some of her favorite recipes. She demonstrates for “Sunday Morning” viewers how to prepare two of them: Alexis’s Chopped Salad, and Potato and Buttermilk Soup. Source

Share

Remembering Quincy Jones

“Sunday Morning” looks back on the life of a music giant: producer, composer and arranger Quincy Jones, who died last Sunday at age 91. Source

Share

Passage: Remembering Quincy Jones

“Sunday Morning” anchor Jane Pauley looks back on the life of a music giant: producer, composer and arranger Quincy Jones, who died last Sunday at age 91. Source

Share

T Bone Burnett: Music is “my religion”

The Grammy- and Oscar-winning music producer has worked in the studio with many of the greats. But after releasing “The Other Side,” his first album of new music in 18 years, T Bone Burnett has found himself in a rare setting: on tour. Source

Share

T Bone Burnett on “The Other Side”

Grammy- and Oscar-winning music producer T Bone Burnett has worked in the studio with many of the greats, from Bob Dylan and Greg Allman, to Robert Plant and Alison Krauss. But after releasing “The Other Side,” his first album of new music in 18 years, Burnett has found himself in a rare setting: on tour. He talks with correspondent Anthony Mason about performing in public again; the process of recording; and the surprising place where he first fell in love with sound: On a golf course. Source

Share