As much as I'd like to wake up at 11:30 AM on
Sundays and go straight to a plate of corned-beef hash and eggs, I'm noticing that my body doesn't agree with that
view; as I get older, I get up earlier. So, when I flick on the TV at around 9 AM, my choices are limited. More often
than not, I chose to watch CBS Sunday Morning, hosted by Charles Osgood.Why? Because they talk about interesting topics and interview interesting people. And the subjects are not chosen because of their newsworthiness; they're chosen because there is something interesting about their lives that no one seems to explore. For instance, if they decided to interview a newsworthy guy like Brad Pitt, they wouldn't ask him about Jen or Angelina; they'd ask him about his love of architecture. I mean, who even knew that Pitt was an architecture buff?
This interesting article by Jon Friedman at Marketwatch sheds some light on how the show, which has changed little since its debut in 1979, picks its topics, and how it tries to keep an upbeat tone (not "happy talk," mind you, which is what irritates me about most morning news shows. They just have an optimistic tone to most of their stories).
In an 













