-
Virtual van Gogh
Overtime Original »
Virtual van Gogh
Join Morley Safer for a virtual journey through the paintings of Vincent van Gogh
Keeping up with NFL super agent Drew Rosenhaus
He's the fast-talking, fast-texting man behind the scenes, the NFL super-agent who makes the deals and, he says, keeps the sport alive and thriving. And he does it all at a very fast pace.
His name is Drew Rosenhaus, and as you'll see on Overtime this week, even "60 Minutes" producer Nicole Young - herself a high-energy person capable of texting, talking, and walking at the same time -- struggled to keep up with him. "The man was moving 1,000 miles an hour every second of every day," Nicole says.
GE's Jeff Immelt: The controversy over U.S. jobs
The role of the jobs czar in this country is to get Americans back to work, so it makes sense that the title is now being held by the CEO of one of America's largest corporations: GE's Jeffrey Immelt.
But Immelt's success is only partially built on American jobs. Half his workforce is overseas and he is unapologetic for it, as you'll see in Lesley Stahl's "60 Minutes" piece this week, "The Jobs Czar."
Steve Jobs, 1955 - 2011
Continue Reading »
The best of Andy Rooney
Andy Rooney has done well over 1,000 essays for "60 Minutes." As he steps down from his regular role on the show after 40 years, there is perhaps no better way to celebrate America's favorite curmudgeon than to let Andy do the talking. That's why this week at "Overtime" we offer a selection of some of his best commentaries.
Continue Reading »Dude: The quirky world of Alex Honnold
It is both a pun as well as the truth to call Alex Honnold a rock star. Alex climbs rock walls thousands of feet high with no ropes and no margin for error. It is hard to imagine a more dangerous sport than "free-soloing," or a more accomplished and ambitious athlete than Alex.
Filming mountain climber Alex Honnold
With no fear, no ropes, and no margin for error, Alex Honnold climbs mountains higher than the Empire State Building. A single mistake means certain death.
Watching Alex move spider-like up a sheer mountain face - with only his fingertips and toes keeping him from falling a thousand feet or more -- is terrifying, even for some of our bravest reporters: 60 Minutes correspondent Lara Logan and producer Jeff Newton.
The man who stopped the tsunami
"A black wave, darker than a nightmare," is how Bob Simon describes the tsunami that hit coastal Japan in March 2011. On 60 Minutes this week, Bob travels to Otsuchi, Japan, a town literally erased by the tsunami. Out of a population of 15,000, ten percent are missing - assumed to have been washed away, as were almost all the town's homes and structures.