Never sat down for an extended, wideranging interview with an American Broadcast Network until now. [bell tolls] [whispers] wow. Buongiorno, your holiness. Tonight, our global exclusive with pope francis. He may be the 266th pope, but he is a man of firsts. Are we okay to start . Pope francis [speaking spanish] si si, como no . We have a new pontiff. Norah elected to the papacy in 2013. Born Jorge Mario Bergoglio in argentina, hes the first pope to hail from the americas and from the Southern Hemisphere. This is incredible, to hear the crowd there that has jammed into st. Peters square. The 87yearold is the first pope to choose the name francis, after Saint Francis of assisi, known for his simplicity and humility. Hes the first jesuit pope. The pope of the holy see. Norah and the first pope to address the u. S. Congress. Pope Francis America continues to be, for many, a land of dreams. [applause] norah pope francis took charge of the Roman Catholic church at a crossroads. Between the c
Of these games. Jeff we conclude with heidi ewing and her new movie one of us. We began with an Organization Called footsteps and footsteps has been helping people transition into a more secular lifestyle. They guard it ferociously and they are not listed on the website and its a private space where people thinking of leaving come for help. And so we started talking to footsteps and took them about six months to agree that we could come and hang out in their lob e and in the inside footsteps with no camera and talk to people. And through those months and months of showing up and talking to people, we were able to find it. Jeff bitcoin, the chicago cubs and the Netflix Documentary one of us when we continue. And by bloomberg, a provider of multimedia news and Information Services worldwide. Captioning sponsored by Rose Communications from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. Bitcoin, the worlds first significant and most popular crypto currency set records this month. Pri
And by contributions from your pbs stations from viewers like you. Thank you. Waeltlter isaacson have wrin biographies son some of the mos famous many history and his latest is on the life of Leonardo Da Vinci. It is great to be back. Why Leonardo Da Vinci . All the one you mentioned of people who smart, smart people what really counts is being creative. Thats what ben franklin was because he loved art and science and steve jobs, was always at the intersection of beauty and engineering so i thought i am going to do leonardo because hes the ultimate example, somebody that crosses all disciplines and sees the beauty and pattern in nature until he can be an engineer and scientist and artist and understands all of creation and including how we fit into it. What have you learn of studying these persons and your research broadly, talk about your value of creativity and imagination creativity comes in kacuriou and being able to connect your knowledge. Steve jobs is very imaginative. He knew h
Of obamacare. We talk to al hunt of Bloomberg View and robert costa of the washington post. When the president visited the capitol Tuesday Morning he had an exchange with mark meadows of North Carolina the chairman of the House Freedom caucus and said we may go after you. He said it in a joking way but a lot of people told me they saw it as a veiled threat. Trump likes to keep the house g. O. P. On edge. He may not go after them. He may not be angling to have primary challenges but he wants them to know hes an unpredictable president and he needs a win and he has a threat out there, even if its a chuckle, he wants it to still be out there. Rose we continue with a conversation with Jessica Chastain. Her latest film, the zookeepers wife. She loved every living creature. She lived alongside animals. Theyd go in and out of her house. Her children grew up with animal brothers and sisters and the film xplorers what does it mean to be in a cage. The warsaw ghetto is a cage. Also, what does it
And by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. Thank you. Joined tonight by jeremy scahill, investigative reporter, war correspondent, author and editor of the online news, the intercept. Good to have you here. Thank you. Before i jump into particulars about the speech, you had a chance to read it, of course, over the years. What do you make of the parallels of the remarks king made 50 years ago and where we are now . First of all, if you really read the speech and listen to it, this was a meticulous, political, analysis that was being offered by dr. King. It was, like many sophisticated analysis, it was prophetic and timeless. The war at home and the war on brown people and poor people and people of color around the world. If you look at our political context today, we have a president in donald trump, who is gutting social programs and exponentially increasing the military budget. What is the most fundamentally true aspect of that speech is dr. King talked about an a