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CBS Sunday Morning

CBS Sunday Morning / Jane Pauley
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November 4, 2018 10:30 am

CBS Sunday Morning

CBS Sunday Morning / Jane Pauley

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November 4, 2018 10:30 am

Civics lessons: What it means to be a citizen; Almanac: Walter Cronkite; “Big Bang Theory” creator Chuck Lorre on his Netflix series; A new leaf; Music to sleep by; Election civility; Jeff Goldblum; Surviving the Jonestown massacre. 

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Just two days to go until election day and uncertainty abounds uncertainty about who will win. And of course, but also uncertainty about how many of us will even bother to show up at the polls to counter apathy about our civic life. Many are arguing that what this country needs are some old-fashioned lessons about why it matters is Morocco will report cover story you might've heard there's an election this Tuesday, yet it's expected that more than half of us won't vote not voting is voting is voting the hand or power over to someone else to say thank you very much. People feel disengage from politics. And that's because they permitted themselves to be disengaged. We really don't have an option if you want to maintain our Republic maintaining our public and why it matters so much ahead on Sunday morning. My profile is of Jeff Goldblum actor with the style and persona uniquely his own talk with Anthony Mason reviews quirky charisma. Jeff Gobain became a surprise action movie star films like dressing Mark spread to my full lips always held the promise of something sensual that Mr. was bleeding. So what does the world look like to Jeff Goldblum who will try on his glasses to revenues and news and see that bit of interest to any of our viewers later on Sunday morning currently on display in many parts of our land a rainbow of colors, courtesy of nature with Connor Knighton going leaf peeping. If you've been out admiring the spectacular leaks display this fall.

You may have spotted mixed in among the yellows and oranges.

A man in the little red SUV. I can cover the distance of driving across the country. Basically, in one season. Just in New England photographer Jeff Folger.

He goes by Jeff foliage spends every autumn on the road sharing the secrets of where and when the best colors can be found.

Meet Paul's biggest fan ahead on Sunday morning, leaving on the last thing is the job of actors and TV situation comedies putting those shows on the air and the first place is the job of the man telling to couple is visited free to one on any chances are it's because this man glory thought it was funny. First, see company as though that's amusing how clever the wordplay was so sparkly I want to laugh later on Sunday morning, the Hollywood heavyweight whose life might just be worthy of a sitcom of its own. Tracy Smith takes us to a musical slumber party Steve Hartman finds rival candidates striking a harmonious court will hear from a witness to the 1978 Jonestown massacre and more coming up when our Sunday morning podcast continues. Remember these staying home on election day is a matter of choice, of course, but no American should forfeit their vote without first considering why it matters Morocco reports our cover story. There's no such thing is not voting right not voting is voting is voting the hand or power over to someone else to say thank you very much. Let me take that voice and that power and exercise. It in your name but in my interests make sense right. And yet less than half of eligible voters are expected to show up at the polls this Tuesday and that's a vexing problem. According to Eric Lu.

I think the greatest enemy years in different and indifference can take for various forms. One is the game is rigged so why should I bother paying my vote doesn't matter who doesn't matter. The other form is what you just complete.

No, not even apathy but complete ignorance across the country there's been a disinvestment in civic education, which is why Lou started sedition University program which travels the country, teaching Americans of all ages bring the lost art of civics, civic Saturday is about taking seriously our country's creed of liberty and equal justice. Now I know what you're thinking, civics didn't take that in high school. Well, if you're over the age of 60, probably did civics is simply put, the study of how to be a good citizen in back. That was the original mission of public schools creating good citizens part of that and just part of it was learning how government works of executive review.

The three main branches of our federal government been well documented that the partisan discord in our country followed up very closely on the heels of school stopping to teach civic education that Supreme Court Justice Sonja Sutter Mayor. She and fellow justice meal or search agreed to talk to us about their work promoting civic education. We talked about this a lot. Only about 25% of Americans can name the three branches of government. 1/3 of the kidney. Any branch of government 10% believe that Judge Judy is one of our colleagues with no disrespect to Judge Judy. She is not a member of the Supreme Court. But Sandra Day O'Connor was the retired Justice has led the drive to return civics to the classroom. I well remember having a lot of civics classes and I got pretty sick and tired to tell you the truth I thought it was miserable so she started I civics a more engaging curriculum to teach civics with the help of videogames. The most popular games I civics.org. Our first how to win the White House and the second most popular game is to I have clients come to so we can protect the rights as found in the amendments to the U.S. Constitution. Okay, very, very tough.

You know it's important if we the people are going to run our government. We know what it is, how it works and how we can participate now. A second important component of civics is civility's abilities and manners. You know that thing in short supply these days. You and I learning to disagree without telling each other's heads off. But that doesn't mean everyone agreeing on everything you sign the position of supporting this idea of getting rid of offensive mascots and I tell my students, I don't want you to come in here and hold hands and sing Kumbaya.

You know I want us to have better arguments. I want us to understand these complex issues that face our Republic West Chicago community high school's Maryellen Daniels wants her students to debate controversial topics. Without these mascots.

Many people would know the history of these Native Americans, I argue that it would be even more awkward to walk into a gym.

No as somebody with Native American history looking at what is supposed to be representing representative of your culture you're not shying away from what's actually happening right now. Now whether it's presidential tweets.

Whether it's fights on the floor of the house. To be honest I don't use the textbook in my classroom. Our textbook is the newspaper it's not about the conflict is not just about how you speak senior stimuli on Morales Spencer used Sabrina looked forget about and Rudy Munoz are currently in the course. How big a role as president from playing in your class the presidency. No infamous like twitter account, you know that that's just like in everyday Tuesday for most of us deal with a lot of drama every day high school and a lot of stuff goes down in the hallways where teenagers and we can be civil with each other, but in the in the professional world.

I don't see that you look at the TV and he yelled at the politicians and say you're making my job harder. I do also say sometimes. Thank you because you're an object lesson for my students. If you don't do this is what it looks like here's a view at the end of the road. Is this what you want and that brings us to the last big part of civics.

It's kind of the loftiest part putting country over yourself and yes, even over your own party.

This guy knows what I'm talking about. There been many moments in American history will with partisanship every bit as intense as right now.

Actually we saw great outcomes, great progress. We have different views.

We have different ideas we have arguments. That's good. That's the nature of a healthy democracy, but we also need to have something what holds us together. Harvard business school professor David Moss teaches the history of democracy. That's the part that I'm worried about. And I think the reason our partisanship looks less constructive than it once was. Maybe even destructive is that we don't have that glue holding us together and that glue is strong faith, a strong commitment strong belief in the democracy consider them that only 30% of Americans born after 1980 say that it's essential to live in a democracy, but Moss is an alarm. Yet the American democracy has been more resilient than many people expected, but can it break and the answer from the 1850s updating 60 and 61 is yes And so I think we have to just be careful with that.

There is no panacea here right how we can boost these numbers on belief in democracy.

I think bring civics back in school but not civics the student say is boring, but we want to look for things that engage students that are substantive and any of that they're excited about. If only life were as simple as those civics films of yesteryear well-known Washington we began our democracy a new job would have to be finished by the what you say to the people who there a lot of them, I think to say you know the reality of government doesn't match up with textbook civics and my answer is, what are you doing if you really care then you can't complain.

You have to do, then we can have a conversation. Our government go from here on CBS evening news with drug drug and now page from our Sunday morning almanac November 4, 1916, 102 years ago today. The day future CBS news correspondent Walter Cronkite was born in St. Joseph Missouri became a journalist at a young age as a reporter for the United press during World War II. Everyone enjoying CBS News in 1950, and in September 1963 he anchored a television news breakthrough first broadcast of the first television's first daily half hour news program just two months later Walter Cronkite would break into afternoon network programming with the bulletin while the chills us to this day Pres. Kennedy died 1 PM central standard time 2 o'clock Eastern standard Time, some 30 minutes ago in 1968 Walter Cronkite traveled to Vietnam and made headlines of his own. His assessment of the war is increasingly clear that the only rational way help you to negotiate as is and honorable people lived up to their pledge to defend best one hour and 16 minutes.

Then in July 1969, far happier moment that the first man's landing on the moon by phone at first it was called the Watergate caper Walter Cronkite's evenhanded and authoritative reporting earned him the unofficial title the most trusted man in America is always true and after nearly 2 decades in the evening news anchor chair.

He signed off one last time with his signature close Friday, March 6, 1991 Walter Cronkite died in 2009 at the age of 92.

The high standards he established guide CBS News.

To this day Jim Parsons, persistent doorknocking on The Big Bang Theory is known to leave them laughing.

Turns out the man behind that shell, and many other TV comedies did plenty of knocking on doors himself back in the day is Chuck Lori Tony to copal tells us takes comedy very seriously.

This is a core production is if you thought the classic American sitcom was dying and this is where you park your car. This is where I parked my car go visit Chuck Lori on the Warner Bros. lot in Los Angeles area has all but single-handedly kept the sitcom genre along producing some of the biggest hits of the past. Still your nerves from a cat on the freeway that not even got going on now. Stage XXV, page 20 is mom 19 is one of two stages for young children last season. Those three shows averaged more than 40 million viewers a week led by the single most-watched series on television Big Bang theory on CBS fundamental problem with elementary is that the Fourier transform extends the minus infinity in time down down down for me.

Show about a group of socially awkward sciences is in its final season. This is a heartbreaking were done. This is very very difficult 12 years smell that smell of new comic books. We was about people who don't fit it. One of who want to participate in life but don't know how that's a story worth telling and that is the secret to Chuck Lori success don't only try to be funny. Try to be honest, real family to real family. Most accurate pregnancy test on the mark until silly stories which is why perhaps the most successful sitcom creators since Norman Lear in the 1970s hates the word sitcom or situation comedy situation I think is appropriate word barrier which or if you come home from being an astronaut and you have a genie that's a situation and now 66-year-old Lori has a new show about the one situation all have in common getting older.

It's an amazing thing because internally there's still this 14-year-old. Looking out of this old face. He walked past the window in the store window and go all startling stars Alan Arkin and Michael Douglas is aging, holding with players start streaming this month on Netflix below will be listed go play talking about those little pictures on the Big Bang to make it a million bucks a week and his pablum is crappy. One of the all-time great acting coach was awesome you look like you do the works that the one of the reasons why wanted to do the Kaminski method was humor. I love humor is not my natural affinity but for me, I thought, here's an opportunity to work with the best in full Lori format feels completely new. After decades of filming in front of a live studio audience was around this holy ceases couple hundred people listed here and when they're not laughing it's horrifying and we rewrite the material we reshoot it, do whatever we can. So how do you trust that a moment that you think is working in your edit room on Kaminski's gonna work in people's living room. That's the word you just used is the whole thing it's trust you have to go on faith.

This is just a matter of I like this. I hope you do too well window up there on the right bedroom are laid out as a teenager and blow the pot smoke outside was oh so clever you could say Chuck Lori's first income took place on New York's Long Island.

12 years. The South where he grew up with a volatile mother and a father whose business was constantly in danger of failing reality.

I knew one person. Lori wishes he knew longer. Was his father, Robert, and I told you in a game of catch the will call work coworker died when Lori was just 24 missing all of his sons success. I give anything anything the have experienced some of the stuff with my after his father died.

Lori drifted spending the next decade as a struggling musician until something had to change for the sake of his children. There was no alternative other than make money. You must make money you have children, it's not really an option to survive.

He took a job selling radios, door to door in Los Angeles. One of those doors ended up leading to an animation company and I walked in there and there is bunch of people working I had the temerity to say hey this is your lucky day and I said a writer to do comedy yes but that's okay. Great.

I'm your guy is great power ignorance. I didn't know I couldn't. Lori's career took off. I worked on that show to what is some doors open.

Others slam shut. He was fired pushed out quit many of his early jobs and in 2006 entertainment weekly dumped him the angriest man in television anointing come to you authoritative are now clearly mellowed what happened. Try and try to have more perspective, this is more personal and I really want to get into on CBS Sunday morning but fear for me, exhibits his anger as I like to show you fear to show you anger occurs is how I grew up in.

That's what you present to the world that maybe becomes your reputation lately though Lori has worked to rewrite that reputation even says he'd be open to shaking hands with Charlie Sheen whose bizarre public downfall in 2011 threatened one of Lori's hits Two and a Half Men chicken just good common sense fighting the college is nothing you know you were so French proud of what we did there was RERUNS shows hold up that good stuff and we had a good time. There was a horrific thing that happened a long time ago. Moving on what Chuck Lori knows that even as he moves on with the Kaminski method is new perspective has limits. I got a stay grateful and not go down the road of whether or not I'm getting might do some whiny nonsense if I went down the road will happier philosophy of people are turning to Kaminski. These autumn leaves are out of here. Others are still very much on display, and I think that's John as the weather cools in the lease term comes the country lanes and lakes of New England around $3 billion is spent over the course of a typical New England fall as visitors from all around the world that often search of the most beautiful yellows and oranges and reds knowing exactly where to go check out go back to the light, make a right, but it's a session for one colorful character. I've had people go to fully feel that you recognize it. Just last name is really Folger but he goes by Jeff foliage and I would not be surprised if his veins run a full of chlorophyll more than anyone I've ever met Jeff loves leaves my niche in life is the fall colors in such a little present, it's like Christmas for me when I love unwrapping my presence and I'm running around New England finding all these wonderful colors with a presence at least are under a tree. Have to find the tree finding beautiful trees. This Folger specialty ever since he retired from the Air Force 15 years ago, he devoted his autumns driving around the Northeast with his wife, Lisa, photographs, and post the locations of the most scenic spots on his website and Facebook page so that he can share them with fellow fans of fall I will letter by no where they can find the best locations.

This is what New Hampshire has offer. Maine has offer. Vermont, Rhode Island work for the tourism Bureau forhis wise and important for you to share that being helpful Folger lives in Salem, Massachusetts. I can drive up to 5000 miles in a season when you look at the news and stuff. They show broad bands of color doesn't really tell the story just because an area claims to have the best foliage. Not every Grover hillsides going to just try to be specific, go to this bar.

This overlook. That's where the good stuff is it's around the bend. It's down the road a ways your to see it.

Everyone is obsessed with finding peak color. Folger included, but for him the journey is just as far I like the site it's really more about the experience of getting out in the woods exploring finding things that you really love and you can take home the memories Folger has a thing for old churches covered bridge. He can spend entire days wandering around the small town of North Conway, New Hampshire.

I like to stop and really savor when I finally say get a taste for it because that's what I'm yet the clock is ticking a few weeks from now this will all look entirely different way to lose thousand leaves of the tree overnight. The Windsor Road about 2030 miles an hour all very gauche Folger has an amazing level of fall recall part of the reason he takes pictures so he can remember his favorite days, long after the leaves of the left, 2012 to October 6 AM beaver pond in the North Woodstock 112 Lost River Gorge and it was just a beautiful morning the water on the pond. There is perfectly still and the reflection is just a mirror of everything on the hill and it was just glorious.

I've never things are part a set to music concept that actually encourages the audience to fall asleep. Tracy Smith settled in for the night. New York really needed this city that never sleeps.

That is unless New Yorkers listening something like this.

It's called sleep by composer Max Richter soothing instrumental piece that goes on for eight hours.

Yes eight hours. That's kind of like to see it through cell while Max is on stage. The audience is in fact sleep might be the first performance ever where it's okay if you sleep through it. Why intentionally compose a piece that puts people to sleep well where little bit right a little bit overloaded with 24 seven and I wanted to a kind of place to rest place it just kind of step of course, this isn't Richter's only gig is written music for stage and screen like this short on the nature of daylight the distraught looking woman and Richter's also scored some longer films. His latest is the upcoming Mary Queen of Scots. But sleep has well awakened some new interest to stay awake while everyone else sleeps.

Yes me this summer. Richter brought his new age slumber party to Los Angeles were more than 500 people paid around 80 bucks ahead under the stars.

Max the ground rules were simple. Bring your own bedding and try not to annoy anyone else here Lori is a neighbor of yours exploring is also slightly tried to stop snoring. Please notify no brawls or anything like that. Happily, when we met with brawling. Are you different experience and I think in your thinking on so many people and outside not intend that strange to be paying for a concert that you sleep through the music. Guide me music you snore. Everybody else is began around 1030 as the full moon rose dreamily over LA City Hall. Richter starts with a series of gentle tones within minutes. People started drifting on course Max had about seven hours to go you ever find yourself nodding off, nodding off, but it is really hot the beginning of 250 pages of 200 which is a lot of pages so you know it's physically very tough. Still, it was pretty easy listening for the audience. 90 minutes in most of them were totally blissfully zonked out if people snore that complements it is actually the I find it kind of comforting. If I hear snoring in the room or in the organs. It's like having a Ring you feel like things are settled. Things working six hours later, just as the light started coming up. The music got louder and more insistent like musical sunrise. The one person, the music didn't seem to affect at all.

Max himself, I can't sleep because if I'm music that I'm working on my brain is thinking about since this doesn't work on you, but it did seem to work on everyone else. In a world where so much is competing to keep us awake a lot about just really a lost cause.

In these partisan times, not necessarily Steve Hartman has found some political rivals striking a chord in Lamoille County Vermont fall colors are at their peak.

Everywhere you look so blue.

See Rogers green and Zach Mayo, red white and blue.

He's the Republican we don't need as much government yet and she's the Democrat and fit essentially focused on healthcare there competing first statehouse seat aggressively competing both visited or plan to visit every single home in the district of 2000, the local say they've never seen anything like all their talking to people knocking on doors. But this highly competitive race took a dramatic turn recently, it happened during the debate when the candidates asked for a few extra minutes at the to do something together based on their tables and began moving the furniture preparing for what appeared to be some kind of musical performance. I had no idea what moderator I don't believe what happened at the local library that night was completely unexpected totally unprecedented because I asked him if we could have a few minutes at the end's record to save the world. This is a better way is Democrat and Republican perfect part one enough tissues to go around. Very sweet. Just went to a different place marked a turning point song they played that night and for us is about yearning for a last will be on long way their rendition so folks here in northern Vermont we actually saw houses that had signs for both candidates clear indication that the winner of this race is already been decided. The landslide for stability, it Sunday morning on UBS and here again is Jane Hawley. Of course, is Jeff goal below in a quirky exchange with Samil 1993 dinosaur thriller Jurassic Park characters are Goldblum specialty as well say in our Sunday profile from Anthony Mason's life is like a jazz piece is acting in propositional. Here is your fingers that likes sparkles you style unpredictable.

I was strange figure is made an art of being offbeat, there's a cadence to your speech like a hearty laugh you. I like to hear you sing that voice I like to hear in South Pacific I would live Mason is a bright light is something sensitive I was hijacked this line of questioning. He starred into the 90s biggest block is a computer in Independence Day is a map is fights off dinosaurs in Jurassic Park last summer on the film's 25th anniversary. They erected a 25 foot statue of him in London. Several of these over your career, but this seems to be another difficult moment suddenly at 66 he's become a fashion icon honored by in style magazine just the night before.

He invited us one know anything about this all into his closet. I like to see you to examine his eye for the unusual, very handsome, like the vintage frames he bought for his part in grand Budapest Hotel, professorial sure, you know, and in that part. I had a hat and I go to even his skills as a musician are finally getting recognition for 20 years has played a weekly gig in LA jazz club with the Mildred Snitzer orchestra name for a family friend will release his first album next week when you get from early on Pittsburgh. I set my sights on obsessed with, but I love playing young Jeff frustrated music teacher when he brought this arrangement of alleycat with syncopation.

I felt inside like it was like that at 17 he took his talent almost immediately got apart and then saw me in that set me up for my first movie audition death wish. In 1973 was your very first film of yes or freak number one freak number one well research that's correct.

Early on I got some lucky opportunities and then Annie Hall, that's a funny line 1 line but it was a good one.

I got a good line you got to wear chaps and a cowboy hat in the adventures of bonsai is a brain surgeon select/adventure just like me and then the big chill, strange is first leading role was in the fly critic Roger Ebert wrote his natural oddness makes him perfect for the part I really don't know. All I've done is save the world.

If you can wait or I was interested early on in making sure that my quirks or whatever they were, didn't hold me back. You call them quirks. Yes, this I'm just curious how you perceive well, even as I sit here now, I'd be stupid and entirely unaware if even though not try to do anything for affect. This is authentic to me and I've developed whatever the group is pretending if I said I didn't know it was different than right now is a little funny here and there.

If you like it. It's just a couple. If not, don't salute the problem with the science of one party almost didn't get the role of Dr. Ian Malcolm in Jurassic Park director Steven Spielberg told him were working on the script and this last draft didn't include your character, your characters been cut out and I was like Mr. Spielberg, you know better than I do, but off the top my head. Here's what I think his character might be useful but wound up back in the end zone about that back in his closet on the wall has a gallery of his relatives. Here is my dad's father was a doctor to Pittsburgh Steelworkers. His mother worked in radio. There is of my sisters rendering of my mom block print though things are just a few years ago in her mid-80s here. My two brothers that are no longer with us like the riptide dreams 2319 when he died in the store. This Broadway show in New York that really rocked sure so. For the only time in our conversation you speechless like hats with electron Goldblum has lived in the same West Hollywood home for 30 years, high up on the hill in back.

He has a bench. He brought his wife Emily here just after they met the only noise other day met at the gym.

I walked up there and shows a great view from up there is no method go home and Emily Livingston, 35-year-old former Olympic gymnast married in 2014. Now at 66. He is the father for the first fascinated by reworded only be able to keep up.

Well, the question I that's very graciously put sunshine when I told Albert Brooks a few years ago I know baby you went your word of advice.

Look for schools with ramps ramps is so funny. New kids a new album and Jeff Goldblum says just only jewelry that my seventh grade teacher direct write on the blackboard's quote from Abraham Lincoln. I shall study and prepare myself so that was my chance comes I will be ready seventh grade but still you still remember and I remember it and I'm trying you feel ready.

What I'm saying is that this late blooming business in all aspects of my personage. I'm far and flour for fruit here than ever. Years ago this month, the gruesome images from the South American nation of Guyana shocked America and the world conference of members of an obscure religious cult transplanted from California and known as the People's Temple where dad victims of a coerced mass suicide dictated by cult leader Jim Jones.

Their deaths came not long after a deadly attack on a US Congressman's fact-finding mission to Guyana memories of that Jonestown visit still loom large for current California Congresswoman Jackie Spear story out of guy is like a nightmare that just won't quit. In November 1978 I was an attorney on the staff of Congressman Leo Ryan Hart the mission he brought to Guyana to investigate Jim Jones and the wildly charismatic leader of the People's Temple. We had received credible reports of his followers being abused and held against their will. The compound was impressive. Members of Jonestown were certainly saying all the right things, no matter how wrote that someone slipped us a note asking for help. I felt my stomach turn into hard knots of tear as we realized our worst fears about Jones were true when cameras were rolling. He spoke of how he loved his followers and would always have a place for them but off camera. He muttered about treason and liars.

He was cracking and all I wanted to do was get out of there. Ryan assigned me to escort the first airlift out of Jonestown.

As I was loading the factors on the two planes I tractor-trailer with seven gunmen arrived at the airstrip, gunmen opened fire on us at point-blank range.

Five bullets pierced my body.

Congressman Ryan and for others lay dead. But I didn't know then was that more than 900 followers of Jones including hundreds of children with later that night in just cyanide at his command and asked him call suicide but I called murder. I was helped into the baggage compartment for safety and later moved to a tent on the airstrip where I waited 22 hours for help to arrive.

Surviving against unimaginable odds can make every day that follows swell with a renewed sense of purpose. We don't get to choose our formative moments very often. Adversity and failure. Shape us more permanently than fortune and success that has certainly been the case in my life. Pain yields action. It can introduce a fervor to speak out for those whose voices are not heard surviving Jonestown crystallize what I needed to focus my energy.

It convinced me that I had a purpose to develop my career to fighting for the voiceless. I'm Jane Pauley. Thank you for listening and please join us again next Sunday morning, it's me Drew Barrymore all my goodness, I want to tell you about our new shout to his knees and each episode mean weekly, gastric and other quirky find inspiring and informative stories that exist because well and maybe you do to the newest interior design trend RV car to the right and wrong way to wash her arm. Also getting the things that you just kind of well probably not able to do in daytime television so watch out. Tristan is ever you get your podcast on the