KCBS In Depth: Our weekly half-hour news interview. On air: Saturdays 5:30a.m.; Sundays 8:30 a.m., 8:30 p.m. Face the Nation: On air: Sundays at 9:30 am and 9:30 pm.
60 Minutes: On air: Sundays at 7 pm.
Listen to the current interview or archived programs on our News on Demand page.
GUESTS AND TOPICS FOR NOVEMBER 1, 2009
KCBS IN DEPTH:
Topic: Parking Meters and Parking Policy
Guest: UCLA Urban Planning Professor and Parking Expert Donald Shoup
60 MINUTES:
H1N1 VACCINE - Scott Pelley reports on the manufacture, distribution and safety of the H1N1 flu vaccine. David Gelber and Michael Radutzky are the producers.
YAKUZA - How does a foreigner jump the line in America for a life-saving liver transplant? It might be because he is a high-ranking member of Japan's mafia, known as the Yakuza, whose criminal influence is worldwide. Lara Logan reports. Howard L. Rosenberg is the producer.
THE MOVIE PIRATES - They are the bane of Hollywood: criminals who copy films - sometimes before the movies even reach the theater - and distribute them illegally on the Internet, costing Hollywood billions in lost revenue. Lesley Stahl reports. Tom Anderson is the producer.
FACE THE NATION:
David Axelrod, White House presidential adviser;
Sen. Joe Lieberman, I-Conn.
Our weekly half-hour news interview. Plus, Face the Nation, the CBS Weekend Roundup and 60 Minutes. (On air: In Depth, Sundays 8:30am, 8:30pm; Face the Nation, Sundays 9:30am, 9:30pm; CBS Roundup, Sundays 1:30am, 6:30am; 60 Minutes, Sundays 7pm) Click here for this weekend's guest information (posted by Friday)
60 Minutes - Nov. 1
The H1N1 flu vaccine; how the Japanese mafia may help foreigners jump the line in the US for a life-saving liver transplant; and Hollywood Pirates. (11/1; 42:03)
Face the Nation
White House Senior Advisor David Axelrod spoke with Bob Schieffer the Right-Wing media's criticism of President Obama. Plus; Sen. Joe Lieberman. (11/1; 29:00)
60 Minutes - Oct. 25
Medicare and Medicaid fraudsters are cheating U.S. taxpayers out of an estimated $90 billion a year. More Americans suffer from epilepsy than Parkinson's, cerebral palsy and multiple sclerosis combined. (10/25; 42:37)