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  1. Watch the latest from 60 Minutes Overtime on CBSNews.com. Check out more 60 Minutes Overtime video, featuring the latest in-depth coverage from our news team.

    • Original

      Watch the latest 60 Minutes Overtime Original videos on...

    • Rewind

      60 Minutes traveled to Madagascar in 2012 to report on...

  2. 30sec. Each year, about one million Americans receive a bill from the Social Security Administration, saying they were paid too much in benefits and must pay it back. Even if the error is not their fault, they often still have to pay.

    • 30 sec
  3. Liam Neeson and Anderson Cooper have a heart-to-heart about living with grief after the death of a loved one; then, Convicted art forger Wolfgang Beltracchi imagined that the ghosts of artists past stood over his shoulder and spoke to him as he forged their works; and, Back in the 1970s, Morley Safer interviewed art forger David Stein, who ...

    • 30 min
    • Overview
    • What it takes to report from Ukraine (2/26/23)
    • Journalists and the hijab debate (11/12/23)
    • Israelis advocate for hostages still held by Hamas in Gaza (12/17/23)
    • Recreating Notre Dame's iconic spire (4/9/23)
    • Searching for Cambodia's stolen crown jewels (12/17/23)
    • White Helmets help rebuild northwest Syria after earthquakes (4/23/23)
    • The photographer who helped inspire Anderson Cooper to become a journalist (5/7/23)
    • Saving Ukraine's art collections from Russian aggression (11/12/23)
    • Following the breakthroughs in prosthetics (3/26/23)

    For more than five decades, 60 Minutes has covered it all—from headline news to quiet human stories—fit neatly in one hour. Now in the digital age, we have more time and use novel approaches to report the news. 60 Minutes Overtime tells the story behind the story.

    To mark the one-year anniversary of the war in Ukraine, CBS News producer Erin Lyall and foreign correspondent Holly Williams in February reported from Kherson, the Ukrainian city that had been under Russian occupation for eight months. Although the city had been liberated, Kherson remained under fire from Russian forces that were positioned on the opposite bank of the Dnipro River. 

    Lyall and Williams have been reporting from Ukraine since 2014. That year, protests rocked the capital city Kyiv, Russia annexed the Crimean Peninsula, and Russian-backed separatists took over areas of the Donbass region. The CBS team was there for it all.

    For a 60 Minutes story about Iran's Assassins, correspondent Lesley Stahl met Masih Alinejad, an Iranian activist living in Brooklyn who has been targeted by the Iranian regime for encouraging women in Iran to stop wearing headscarves. Protests over hijab laws took hold in Iran last year after 22-year-old Mahsa Amini died while in the custody of Iran's morality police. Amini had been arrested on the charge of wearing a hijab improperly.

    In Brooklyn, Alinejad's activism has made her a target of the Iranian regime. As Stahl was interviewing her about the threat against her life, Alinejad brought up another subject: Stahl's interview with Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi last year, during which Stahl covered her own head. Alinejad told Stahl she should not have worn a headscarf during her interview with Raisi.

    For the last six weeks, Meirav Leshem Gonen has slept in a makeshift encampment in a Tel Aviv plaza. On the outside of her silver tent, she has hung one of her favorite photos of her daughter. Nearby, a clock with bright orange numbers keeps the only time that matters to Leshem Gonen: how long it has been since her daughter, Romi, was abducted by Hamas militants and taken to Gaza.   

    For now, the clock keeps ticking. A temporary cease-fire agreement late last month facilitated the release of more than 100 hostages back to Israel, and although they were predominantly women and children, Romi was not among them. Now, Leshem Gonen has joined the families of some of the more than 100 hostages still believed to be in Gaza to keep attention on their loved ones. The group, known as the Hostages and Missing Families Forum, has committed to camping out until the hostages have returned home.

    Four years ago, a raging fire burning at Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris shocked people around the world. On the streets of Paris, an audible gasp rippled through the crowd as the cathedral's flame-engulfed spire toppled over.

    In April, Bill Whitaker traveled to Paris to report on how French engineers are rebuilding the iconic spire of Paris' Notre Dame Cathedral after the devastating 2019 fire—and what Victor Hugo has to do with it.

    Anderson Cooper and a 60 Minutes team traveled to Cambodia to report on the looting of ancient artifacts from temples across the country and track their journey to prestigious museums. 

    Crowns and precious jewels believed to have been worn by ancient Khmer royalty were recovered in an unlikely place: a pub parking lot.

    A series of powerful earthquakes hit southern Turkey and northwest Syria in the early morning of Feb. 6, causing mass devastation in its wake. These earthquakes further exacerbated the destruction already caused by Syria's ongoing civil war, killing thousands of people, destroying tens of thousands of buildings and costing billions of dollars in damages. 

    Correspondent Scott Pelley traveled to northwest Syria and revisited the Syrian Civil Defense, a volunteer organization dedicated to responding and rebuilding after such devastations. The group is better known as the White Helmets. "When we first met the White Helmets, it was sort of a loosely organized group of volunteers. The only thing they seemed to have joining them was the color of their helmets," Pelley told 60 Minutes Overtime. "Now they're one of the bravest organizations I've ever had the pleasure to see working in a situation like this."

    "There are many ways of telling stories, but a still photo has a power that is unlike anything else," 60 Minutes correspondent Anderson Cooper said to renowned war photographer James Nachtwey. For more than 40 years, Nachtwey has used his camera to show humanity a reflection of itself, often photographing war scenes and reporting from areas of conflict.

    Nachtwey showed Cooper dozens of photos from his archive that document everything from the fall of the Berlin Wall to the use of Agent Orange in Vietnam. "Without a doubt you have been the person who made me interested in wanting to do this line of work," Cooper told Nachtwey, discussing the impact the photographer had on his life.

    With Ukrainian cultural centers under attack, correspondent Bill Whitaker traveled to Ukraine to investigate what Ukrainians say is Russia's ongoing campaign to deliberately destroy their cultural institutions. 

    Churches, cathedrals, museums and libraries across the country have been bombed, burned and shelled. Museum employees have been arrested and kidnapped by Russian soldiers. And thousands of paintings, antiques and artifacts have been stolen from museums, looted by invading Russian forces. Whitaker visited one museum in Kviv which is taking extra precautions to guarantee the safety of its collection for future generations.

    60 Minutes correspondent Scott Pelley has been tracking advancements in prosthetics for more than a decade, watching as artificial hands went from using a rudimentary hook to complex robotics. In 2009 he interviewed engineer and inventor Dean Kamen, whose inventions at that point included the Segway and dozens of medical devices. Kamen and his team of engineers spent a year working on the problem of revolutionizing the prosthetic arm. Kamen quickly saw it was an enormous undertaking. The human hand, he explained to Pelley, is a very complex machine.

    Today, the technology has advanced. Now, not only can people with spinal cord injuries and amputations control prosthetic limbs with their minds—including grasping objects—some advanced prosthetics can also return a sense of touch to their brain.

    • 6 min
  4. High Velocity | Sunday on 60 Minutes. Help. 38sec. Following the massacre at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, Scott Pelley revisits a 2018 report on AR-15 style weapons, whose rounds cause such devastating and often lethal wounds that first responders and emergency rooms are changing their protocols and preparing for the worst.

    • 38 sec
  5. www.youtube.com › 60-minutes › overtime60 Minutes - YouTube

    "60 Minutes," the most successful television broadcast in history. Offering hard-hitting investigative reports, interviews, feature segments and profiles of people in the news, the broadcast began ...

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