Before Bush vs. Gore: Bill Bradley’s Presidential Bid and the Book That Followed

25 years ago many people thought Bill Bradley was going to be our next president.

Not only had he served 20 years in the United States Senate, representing New Jersey, but he’s also in the Basketball Hall of Fame after a 10-year career with the New York Knicks.

Bill Bradley is also an Olympic gold medalist, a Rhodes Scholar, and a military veteran.

What he did not have, however, was the backing of the powerful Democratic establishment. That belonged to Al Gore.

Get your copy of Bill Bradley’s book

Bradley gave Gore a pretty good run for his money. But after defeats in Iowa, New Hampshire, and on Super Tuesday, Bradley bowed out.

It was later that year, as the Bush-Gore battle was at its peak, that Bradley published a book, called The Journey From Here. He and I met to talk about his book, just hours before the first presidential debate of the 2000 campaign.

So here now, from 2000, Bill Bradley.

Bill Bradley is 82 now. He hosts a weekly show on Sirius satellite radio.

His Art Define the ’60s Counterculture: Peter Max in His Own Words

Close your eyes and imagine the 1960s. Imagine the art of the ‘60s, especially the rich colors of psychedelic-inspired posters and murals and paintings.

Chances are what you just imagined was the work of renowned artist Peter Max.

Max was born in Germany in 1937, but over the next 16 years his family moved first to China, Been Israel, a brief stop in Paris, and finally to New York City.

Young Peter was a creative sponge, absorbing cultural and aesthetic influences from every place he lived to enhance his natural talent.

He opened his first small art studio in Manhattan in 1962, and as the ‘60s progressed his interest in astronomy and counterculture coalesced in his art.

By 1970 Peter Max was already a cultural icon, that’s only published his first book. But shortly after that he went on a long hiatus, and many even thought he had ended his career.

He had not, of course, and In 2002 he was ready to publish a long retrospective of his work, a big coffee table book called The Art of Peter Max.

I met him when he was on a tour promoting the book in the fall of 2002. And what an incredible creative mind he has. Be sure and listen in the second half of this interview when he describes exactly how he creates a work of art.

So here now, from 2002, Peter Max.

Peter Max will be 88 next month. Doctors say he has Advanced dementia. He lives in New York.

A War Correspondent’s Struggle for Survival: Kimberly Dozier’s Inspiring Story

CBS TV correspondent Kimberly Dozier was never under any illusion that covering the war in Iraq was going to be a walk in the park.

But before her experience in Iraq was over, doctors were telling her she may never walk again.

May 29, 2006 Was Memorial Day here in the U.S. Dozier, her cameraman and her sound technician were with an Army patrol in a residential neighborhood in Baghdad.

That’s when a remotely detonated car bomb exploded. Dozier’s crew was killed, as well as an Army captain and an Iraqi translator. Dozier herself was gravely injured.

Get your copy of Kimberly Dozier’s book

After being transported to Germany, then back to the U.S., Dozier underwent some two dozen major surgeries over the next two months. Doctors treated extensive head wounds, burns, and badly broken legs. They told her she may never walk again.

But Kimberly Dozier proved them wrong. By 20:08 she was participating in the Marine Corps marathon in Washington. And that’s also the year she wrote a searing memoir called Breathing the Fire.

I met with her at CBS News headquarters in Washington almost two years to the day after her injuries, to talk about the book.

So here now from 2008, Kimberly Dozier.

Kimberly Dozier is 59 now. Today she works as a contributor on CNN.

Wrestler Bret “The Hitman” Hart’s Story, In His OWn Words

They called him The Hitman. Wrestler Bret Hart was born into a wrestling family. His father was the renowned Stu Hart who often would bring other big name wrestling stars home with him when Bret was just a little boy.

Get your copy of Bret Hart’s book

By the time he was a teenager Bret Hart still wasn’t convinced that he wanted to become a wrestler himself but he changed his mind by his early 20s. And by the time he retired some 25 years ago Bret Hart had become one of the best known, most popular, and most highly regarded wrestlers in the world.

He was not without controversy, of course, including an Infamous incident in Montreal that has come to be known as the “Montreal screw job.”

In 2008 Hart wrote an autobiography called My Real Life in The Cartoon World of Wrestling. I met him one afternoon in the crowded downtown Washington DC hotel lobby to talk about his book when he was on a book tour.

He Cooked Lunch in My Studio: Remembering Chef Paul Prudhomme

If you enjoy Creole or Cajun cuisine, you should probably thank Chef Paul Prudhomme. As the founder and head chef of K-Paul’s Louisiana Kitchen in New Orleans, Prudhomme introduced the region’s food to the rest of America.

Paul Prudhomme was the youngest of 13 kids in his family. His father was a farmer, his mother’s family included early Cajun settlers.

Chef Paul opened his first restaurant when he was just 17. It was a hamburger joint that lasted just a few months, but which launched his professional food career, culminating in 1979 with the opening of K-Paul’s.

Get your copy of Paul Prudhomme’s book

In 1984 Prudhomme published what became his signature cookbook, Chef Paul Prudence Louisiana Kitchen. Ten more cookbooks would follow, over the next 20 years.

Chef Paul also created a line of spices and sauces that can still be found in millions of kitchens today.

I met him for lunch one day in 1989. Well, to be accurate, he came to my studio and made lunch, and that’s what you’re about to hear in this interview.

So here now, from 1989, Chef Paul Prudhomme.

Paul Prudhomme’s wife Kay died in 1993. Chef Paul died in 2015 at age 75.

The Power of Judyism”: A 1991 Interview with Comedy’s Accordion-Wielding Goddess Judy Tenuta

I thought about whether I should put a perennial advisory on this interview. And back in 1991, when I did the interview, I probably would have. By 2025 standards, however, much of Judy Tenuta’s comedy now seems rather tame.

Judy was one of nine kids, born in 1949 in the Chicago area. That’s where she grew up, went to college and began her comedy career.

By the 1980s Judy Tenuta was a rapidly rising star, as her “goddess” persona, quirky comedy set, and her accordion set her apart from all of the more conventional stand-up comics.

Get your copy of Judy Tenuta’s book

Judy wrote two books during her career. I met her and interviewed her for the second of those books, called The Power of Judyism.

We did this interview in the fall of ‘91, the day after her 42nd birthday. But it was certainly not a conventional interview, at least not the kind I normally do.

So here now, from 1991, Judy Tenuta.

Judy Tenuta died in 2022, just a month before her 73rd birthday.