up. daniel dale and nickel hemmer both standing by and we have the first tv interview with kathleen kingsbury from the new york times opinion pages and she ll be here in a moment. but first, let s talk about a better way to understand what is broken in american politics. i was going to start today by walking through all of the big and little lies of the week. but the truth is we only have an hour. and repeating the garbage just makes everybody feel dirty. so let s skip that. no more burger b.s. instead, let s ask why? why are there so many nonstories, so many nothing-burger narratives spread by right wing media outlets. why were there so many false and misleading claims after president biden s address to congress? why do so many republicans insist that the biden didn t really legitimately win the election he won? what is the root cause of all of this? what is causing all of the desperate little lies and in arizona, the attempts to prove the big lie about the election. maybe
don t worry, senator rubio, nobody noticed. that you gave a speech. welcome to cbs this morning. charlie rose is on assignment, so james brown is with us. as we come on the air in the west, olympic track store and double amputee oscar pistorius is under arrest this morning, accused of murder. his girlfriend was found shot in his home in south africa overnight. mark phillips has more on the stunning news about the paraolympic runner. this isn t so much as a whodunit but what happened. only two people involved oscar pistorius the blade runner and the woman who was killed. we can confirm there was a shooting incident this morning at the home of the well-known paraolympic athlete oscar pistorius. oscar pistorius and reeva steenkamp had been an a-list celebrity couple since autumn. she was a frequent covergirl with supermodel looks. by the sound of the tweets she sent out the romance seemed to be going well. it should be a day of love for everyone, she said just a da
Finding a long-term partner is trickier than ever, argues Paul C Brunson, a lead researcher at Tinder. David Robson asks him how cultural and technological shifts are changing our relationships.