Category 1

This week on

The Emmy Award-winning "CBS News Sunday Morning" is broadcast on CBS Sundays beginning at 9:00 a.m. ET.  "Sunday Morning" alsostreams on the CBS News appbeginning at 11:00 a.m. ET. (Download it here.)

CBS News

Hosted by Jane Pauley.

Tourists crowd onto the Ponte di Rialto bridge in Venice, April 3, 2026. The Italian city, a UNESCO World Heritage treasure, draws more than 20 million visitors annually; about 50,000 people reside in the city's historic center. / Credit: Emanuele Cremaschi / Getty Images

COVER STORY: Overtourism: Too much of a good thing?Tourism represents 10% of the global economy. But many travel destinations (and the people who live there) are reeling from increasing numbers of tourists, spurred in large part by social media. Correspondent Seth Doane travels to Amsterdam, Paris, Venice and Portofino to look at the impacts that tourism is having on cities, resorts and natural attractions, and why some people are resisting visitors – or redefining tourism – in some of the world's most popular and fragile destinations.

READ AN EXCERPT:"The New Tourist" by Paige McClanahan

For more info:

"The New Tourist: Waking Up to the Power and Perils of Travel"by Paige McClanahan (Scribner), in Hardcover, Trade Paperback, eBook and Audio formats, available viaAmazon,Barnes & NobleandBookshop.orgPaige McClanahan(Official site)Tours That Matter, AmsterdamWe Live Here, AmsterdamJasper van Dijk, economist, Utrecht University School of EconomicsDiscover AmsterdamPortofino Tourism

ALMANAC: May 3"Sunday Morning" looks back at historical events on this date.

Army veteran Tony Mendez with a therapy horse, at Endeavor Therapeutic Horsemanship, New York's Westchester County.  / Credit: CBS News

HEALTH: Horse power: How horses are therapeuticHorses can form powerful bonds with people owing to their ability to sense and feel human emotions. Endeavor Therapeutic Horsemanship, in Bedford Corners, N.Y., has programs that help people with disabilities, veterans with PTSD, and the incarcerated through interactions with their horses. "60 Minutes" correspondent Lesley Stahl reports.

For more info:

Endeavor Therapeutic Horsemanship, Bedford Corners, N.Y.

An installation view of the exhibition

ARTS: Mozart: The man and the legendA new exhibition on the life of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, at the Morgan Library and Museum in New York City, illuminates the man and his immortal works – from his first compositions created at age 5, to personal objects, manuscripts and letters, to the instruments upon which he composed his immortal music. Jane Pauley reports.

For more info:

"Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Treasures from the Mozarteum Foundation of Salzburg,"Morgan Library and Museum, New York City (through May 31)Catalogue:"111 x Mozart: Exhibition Edition,"edited by the International Mozarteum Foundation (Verlag Anton Pustet)Salzburg Mozarteum Foundation, Salzburg, AustriaMozart performance footage courtesy of Carnegie Hall+ and Unitel. VisitCarnegie Hall+to learn more

The Brain Care Score allows you to identify traits and lifestyle habits that can impact your brain health.  / Credit: Global Brain Coalition

HEALTH: A tool to help keep dementia in checkMany people fear that a family history of dementia dooms them to inevitably suffer the condition themselves. But a new tool, the Brain Care Score, shows how lifestyle changes can be beneficial, cutting the risk of dementia. National Public Radio correspondent Allison Aubrey talks with neurologist Dr. Jonathan Rosand about how making changes to your daily habits might just be the prescription needed.

For more info:

Take the Brain Care Score (Global Brain Care Coalition)Understanding your Brain Care ScoreDr. Jonathan Rosand, McCance Center for Brain Health at Massachusetts General HospitalLauren Sprague

PASSAGE: In memoriam"Sunday Morning" remembers some of the notable figures who left us this week.

When Pez were first introduced in the United States, they failed - but then character heads were attached to the pop-up dispensers, and a candy legend was born.  / Credit: CBS News

CANDY: PezLuke Burbank reports.

For more info:

Pez.comPez Visitor Center, Orange, Conn."Pez: From Austrian Invention to American Icon"by Shawn Peterson (The History Press), in Hardcover, Trade Paperback and eBook formats, available viaAmazon,Barnes & NobleandBookshop.org

HARTMAN: Neighbors

Sting starring in his musical,

MUSIC: Sting embarks on "The Last Ship"For centuries the English city of Newcastle was a hard-scrabble industrial powerhouse that built ships. It was also the hometown of the rock musician Sting, who as a young man witnessed the city's shipbuilding business dry up. He's paid homage to his town's heritage by writing and starring in a musical, "The Last Ship," which he's now taking on an international tour. He talks with Mark Phillips about his long career, and why he can't stop working.

Advertisement

For more info:

"The Last Ship"(Official site)Sting's"The Last Ship"at the Metropolitan Opera, New York City (June 9-14)Sting(Official site)

Tom Coyne shows correspondent Lee Cowan around the 170-acre golf course he began running in New York's Catskill Mountains.  / Credit: CBS News

SPORTS: Becoming an "accidental" golf course ownerTom Coyne, editor of The Golfer's Journal, has played some of the most exclusive golf courses in the world. But when he visited a nine-hole course in New York's Catskills that had seen better days and was up for sale, he took on a new challenge: running the course for a year to see if he could turn it around. Coyne talks with correspondent Lee Cowan about his efforts to preserve a rural community's beloved course, and about his new book, "A Course Called Home: Adventures of an Accidental Golf Course Owner."

READ AN EXCERPT:"A Course Called Home" by Tom Coyne

For more info:

"A Course Called Home: Adventures of an Accidental Golf Course Owner"by Tom Coyne (Avid Reader Press), in Hardcover, eBook and Audio formats, available May 5 viaAmazon,Barnes & NobleandBookshop.orgThe Golfer's JournalSullivan County Golf Club, Liberty, N.Y.Thanks toPebble Beach Golf Links, Pebble Beach, Calif.

COMMENTARY: David Sedaris on dogs and the people who obsess over themReflecting on a certain encounter in a New York City dog park, the humorist has thoughts about the friends of Man's best friend.

For more info:

"The Land and Its People: Essays"by David Sedaris (Little, Brown & Co.), in Hardcover, Large Print Trade Paperback, eBook and Audio formats, available May 26 viaAmazon,Barnes & NobleandBookshop.orgdavidsedarisbooks.com

NATURE: Big horn sheep in Washington State

WEB EXCLUSIVES:

MARATHON:Iceland, land of fire and ice (YouTube Video)Enjoy these "Sunday Morning" stories about the history, people and spectacular scenery of the North Atlantic island nation. Featuring:

The origins of Iceland, and the country's unique genealogical history (2004)Conor Knighton travels the Ring Road (2014)Nature: Scenes from Iceland (2021)Icelandic operatic tenor Kristjan Johannsson (1994)Iceland's unique response to its banking collapse (2016)Rescuing puffins (2018) Nature: Puffins (2018)

FROM THE ARCHIVES:How Georg Baselitz turned the art world upside-down (YouTube Video)German-born Neo-Expressionist artist Georg Baselitz, whose trademark was inverted paintings that depict their subject upside-down, died April 30, 2026 at age 88. In this 2018 "Sunday Morning" profile, correspondent Serena Altschul talked with Baselitz, who was then the subject of a career retrospective at the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington, D.C.

GALLERY:Notable Deaths in 2026

The Emmy Award-winning "CBS News Sunday Morning" is broadcast on CBS Sundays beginning at 9:00 a.m. ET. Executive producer is Rand Morrison.

"Sunday Morning": About us

DVR Alert! Find out when "Sunday Morning" airs in your city

"Sunday Morning" alsostreams on the CBS News appbeginning at 11:00 a.m. ET. (Download it here.)

Full episodes of "Sunday Morning" are now available to watch on demand on CBSNews.com, CBS.com andParamount+, including via Apple TV, Android TV, Roku, Chromecast, Amazon FireTV/FireTV stick and Xbox.

Follow us onTwitter/X;Facebook;Instagram;YouTube;TikTok;Bluesky; and atcbssundaymorning.com.

You can also download the free "Sunday Morning" audio podcast atiTunesand atPlay.it. Now you'll never miss the trumpet!

Do you have sun art you wish to share with us? Email your suns to SundayMorningSuns@cbsnews.com.

This week on "Sunday Morning" (May 3)

The Emmy Award-winning "CBS News Sunday Morning" is broadcast on CBS Sundays beginning at 9:00 a.m. ET.  "Sunday Morning...
USS Ford aircraft carrier will be heading home after record-breaking deployment

WASHINGTON (AP) — The world's largest aircraft carrier, the USS Gerald R. Ford, will be heading home following arecord-setting deploymentof more than 300 days that included participating in thewar against Iranandcapture of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, two U.S. officials said Wednesday.

Associated Press

The Ford will be leaving the Middle East in the coming days and returning to its home port in Virginia in mid-May, according to the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to detail sensitive military movements. The Washington Post reported the development earlier.

The arrival of the USS George H.W. Bush to the region last week meant three American aircraft carriers were deployed to the Middle East — a number not seen since 2003 — during a tenuous ceasefire in the Iran war.USS Abraham Lincoln also has been in the regionsince January as tensions with Tehran ramped up.

This month, the Ford broke the U.S. record for the longest post-Vietnam War deployment, a nearly 10-month span after leaving Naval Station Norfolk in June.

The ship’s 295th day at sea surpassed the previous longest deployment by an aircraft carrier in the past 50 years, when the Lincoln was sent out for 294 days in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to data compiled by U.S. Naval Institute News, a news outlet run by the U.S. Naval Institute, a nonprofit organization.

The Ford's long deployment has raised questions about the impact on service members who are away from home for long periods as well as increasing strain on the ship and its equipment, with the carrier already enduring a fire that forced it to undergo lengthy repairs.

Asked about the Ford's long deployment in a hearing Wednesday before the House Armed Services Committee, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said he consulted with the Navy and those officials did mention readiness and maintenance tradeoffs.

Advertisement

"Multiple times the operational requirements — whether it was down in Southcom or up to Centcom — demanded additional assets in real time, which through a tough decision-making process led to an extension,” Hegseth said, referring to U.S. Southern Command, which oversees Latin America, and U.S. Central Command in the Middle East.

The Ford began its deployment by heading to the Mediterranean Sea. It was thenrerouted to the Caribbean Seain October as part of the largest naval buildup in the region in generations.

The carrier took part inthe military operationto capture Maduro. Then it would see more battle,heading toward the Middle Eastas tensions with Iran escalated.

The carrier took part in the opening days ofthe Iran warfrom the Mediterranean Sea before going through the Suez Canal and heading into the Red Sea in early March.

However, a fire in one of its laundry spaces forced the carrier to turn around and return to the Mediterranean Sea for repairs, leaving hundreds of sailors without places to sleep.

The Ford’s 295-day deployment falls short of the longest deployment during the Cold War, a record held by the now-decommissioned USS Midway. It was deployed for 332 days in 1972 and 1973.

More recently, the crew of the USS Nimitz was on duty and away from home for a total of 341 days in 2020 and 2021. However, that included extended isolation periods ashore in the U.S. meant to help prevent the spread of COVID-19.

USS Ford aircraft carrier will be heading home after record-breaking deployment

WASHINGTON (AP) — The world's largest aircraft carrier, the USS Gerald R. Ford, will be heading home following arecord-setting depl...
Lauren Burnham Reveals Why She Doesn’t Like ‘Call Her Daddy’ Host Alex Cooper: ‘Took It Too Far’

Lauren Burnhamis clarifying why she’s not a huge fan of “Call Her Daddy” podcast hostAlex Cooper.

Us magazine Lauren-Burnham-Explains-Why-She-Doesnt-Like-Alex-Cooper.jpg

Posting viaher TikTok accounton Friday, May 1,The Bacheloralum, 34, said she wanted to “clear the air” and “give you the short and not-so-sweet information” about why she had a strong dislike for Cooper.

Burnham says the beef stems from when the “Call Her Daddy” podcast previously had a recurring segment to make fun of her then-unborn daughter Alessi, 6, whom she shares with husbandArie Luyendyk Jr.(The couple are also parentsto 4-year-old twins Senna and Lux and 7-month-old daughter Livvy.)

“They had this regular segment ongoing and they thought it would be funny to make fun of our unborn baby,” Burnham explained.

Alex Cooper Breaks Her Silence on Alix Earle Feud: ‘I Have Nothing to Hide’

Burnham said she didn’t care if she and her husband were mocked, but her unborn child was crossing a line.

“Make fun of us, don’t care. But they took it too far. They made a regular segment before she was born and after she was born where they were sexualizing our child and talking very inappropriately and disgustingly about her,” Burnham added.

The reality TV alum said the comments reached the point that she and Luyendyk considered taking legal action against Cooper but ultimately chose not to.

Advertisement

GettyImages-2188252101Lauren-Burnham-Explains-Why-She-Doesnt-Like-Alex-Cooper.jpg

“We thought it would blow over. She just kept going on forever. Eventually she stopped and we kind of forgot about it and now that it’s resurfacing again, it still makes me so furious,” Burnham added. “I just hope that all of this controversy that’s hanging around her right now causes her to rethink the level that she is willing to stoop to to get attention, views, whatever it is that she’s looking for because it’s not okay and that’s all I have to say about that.”

Us Weeklyreached out to Cooper’s representative for comment.

Alix Earle Responds to Alex Cooper’s Request to Air Their Drama Publicly: ‘On It!’

Burnham previously spoke about her fury over the comments during an episode of the “Unplanned” podcast in 2023.

“I was really upset because they would mention her and then make inappropriate comments right after. It was so classless,” she said at the time.

Burnham continued, “Arie was like, ‘Don’t do anything about it.’ I was about to hire a lawyer. Honestly, they should be in big trouble for doing that. It’s not OK. I never said anything because he felt like if we addressed it publicly, it would only make it bigger. That’s what they want.”

Earlier this week,Burnham declaredshe was throwing her support behindAlix Earleamid the influencer'sdrama with Cooper.

“Team @alixearle all the way,” Burnham wrote via her Instagram Stories on Thursday, April 30. “It’s about time Alex Cooper gets called out. & yes, it's personal.”

Lauren Burnham Reveals Why She Doesn’t Like ‘Call Her Daddy’ Host Alex Cooper: ‘Took It Too Far’

Lauren Burnhamis clarifying why she’s not a huge fan of “Call Her Daddy” podcast hostAlex Cooper. Posting viaher TikTok accounton...
Prosecutors release video of armed suspect storming correspondents’ dinner

Prosecutors have released new surveillance video showing suspected shooter Cole Allen storming past security at the White House Correspondents' Dinner on Saturday (25 April).

The Independent US

In the video, 31-year-old Allen can be seen disappearing behind a door before rushing back out, a rifle in hand as he runs past guards. One officer quickly draws his service weapon and fires at Allen, with the suspect also appearing to take aim.

Advertisement

After the suspected shooter vanishes out of frame, other security guards rush to the scene, weapons drawn.

Allen has been charged with attempting to assassinate PresidentDonald Trump.

Prosecutors release video of armed suspect storming correspondents’ dinner

Prosecutors have released new surveillance video showing suspected shooter Cole Allen storming past security at the White House Corresp...
An American pope, a presidential clash and what it means in the pews

VILLANOVA, PA – It's been nearly 1,000 years since King Henry IV stoodbarefoot in the Italian snowto beg forgiveness after clashes with Pope Gregory VII and over two centuries sinceNapoleon imprisoned Pope Pius VIIin France. Now, anew battle is underwaybetween a pope and a world leader, this time in America.

USA TODAY TOPSHOT - Pope Leo XIV waves to the crowd from the main balcony of St. Peter's basilica for the Urbi et Orbi message and blessing to the city and the world as part of Easter celebrations, at St Peter's square in the Vatican on April 5, 2026. (Photo by Alberto PIZZOLI / AFP via Getty Images)

It's thewar of words between President Donald Trump and Pope Leo XIV.And for dozens of U.S. Catholics interviewed by the USA TODAY Network across the nation, it's Leo who has the upper hand in the crusade. A year into his historic papacy he has given them hope for the future of the Catholic Church.

At Villanova, where Leo graduated in 1977, Catholic convert Jacob Adams, 25, said outside the campus' St. Thomas Church that young people don’t have much appetite for war. Hence, they appreciate Leo's strong words in defiance ofTrump's recent comments about destroying “a whole civilization”in the Iran war.

“Right or left, there are people calling for peace,” said Adams, a former evangelical who supported Trump in 2020 and 2024. “I like what (Leo) is doing to hold (Trump) accountable.”

With the pontiff about to finish year one in his papacy, the USA TODAY Network spoke with Catholics nationwide about their views of Leo and found their responses overwhelmingly upbeat. Many say Leo is palpably different fromPope Francis, with an everyman affability they believe is helping fuel a global resurgence in Catholicism - especially among the young.

The pope’s firm push for peace amid the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran has rankled the president, igniting sparks at times that have tested the loyalties of conservative Catholics. The rhetoric has also pulled others into the fray, including Vice PresidentJD Vanceand theU.S. Catholic Conference of Bishops.

At one point, Trumpcalled Leo weak on crime and "terrible on foreign policy,"though he later said hewasn't fighting with the pontiff.For his part, Vance, a Catholic convert, urged the pope to"be careful"when talking about theology.

While Leo’s statements have triggered some backlash, his forcefulness hasn’t diminished his standing. “It hasn’t undermined his credibility because most feel it comes from a place of pastoral sincerity,” said John Cavadini, director of the McGrath Institute for Church Life at the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana. Leo’s statements, he said, reflect gravitas and precision, leaving little room for misinterpretation or divisiveness.

“He’s got a kind of presence that I find edifying and elevating,” said Cavadini, a professor of theology. “His articulations tend to be unifying. They’re not stated in ways that are alienating or dismissive.”

As parishioners poured from churches across the country on April 26, those who spoke with USA TODAY agreed that Leo has deftly handled the discord, leaning into the gospel to strike a moral rather than political tone.

Pope Leo XIV meets U.S Vice President JD Vance and U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio at the Vatican, May 19, 2025.

“He’s done a beautiful job of showing us how to respond in nonviolent ways to very harmful and degrading language,” said Margaret Sebern, 74, a retired nursing professor who attended Mass at St. Paul the Apostle Church in Manhattan’s Upper West Side.

Many view the pope as a unifying and revitalizing force who, like Francis, has advocated for the world’s marginalized while treading cautiously around more prickly Catholic issues such asordination of womenand the blessing ofsame-sex unions. They praised Leo’s support of immigrants and refugees in the United States and noted his appointments of bishops reflecting such backgrounds in California, Florida and Louisiana. Gallup International’s 2025end-of-year surveyfoundPope Leo XIVits most positively viewed leader by far. In the United States, a survey conductedin Novemberfound more than two-thirds of American Catholic voters hold a favorable opinion of the pope, while a poll conducted this month byReuters/Ipsosshowed 60% of Americans overall approve of Leo.  For U.S. Catholics, the pope’s relatability is heightened by a sense that Leo, a Chicago native who loves Peeps and theWhite Sox, is one of them. The pope is no longer an obscure Vatican figure but a homegrown reality.

White smoke rises from the chimney on the roof of the Sistine Chapel indicating that the College of Cardinals have elected a new Pope during their fourth vote on the second day of their secret conclave on May 8, 2025 in Vatican City, Vatican. White smoke was seen over the Vatican early this evening as the Conclave of Cardinals took just two days to elect Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost, who will be known as Pope Leo (Leone) XIV, as the 267th Supreme Pontiff after the death of Pope Francis on Easter Monday. Newly elected Pope Leo XIV, Cardinal Robert Prevost of the United States appears on the balcony of St. Peter's Basilica, at the Vatican on May 8, 2025. People gather with US flags at St Peter's square with the St Peter's Basilica in the background on the day Pope Leo XIV leads the Regina Caeli prayer, in the Vatican, on May 11, 2025. A bird flies by as Pope Leo XIV on his popemobile tours St. Peter's Square at the Vatican prior to the inaugural Mass of his pontifcate, Sunday, May 18, 2025. Pope Leo XIV greets people as he holds his first general audience in St. Peter's Square, at the Vatican on May 21, 2025. Pope Leo XIV blesses a baby on the day of his first general audience in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican on May 21, 2025. Pope Leo XIV arrives to lead a prayer vigil, ahead of Pentecost Sunday, in St. PeterÕs square at the Vatican on June 7, 2025. Pope Leo XIV wears a Chicago White Sox cap, on the day of his general audience in St. Peter's Square, at the Vatican on June 11, 2025. Pope Leo XIV holds a monstrance at the start of a procession following a mass outside Saint John Lateran archbasilica in Rome, on June 22, 2025. U.S. pilgrims gesture on the day of general audience in St. Peter's Square, at the Vatican on July 30, 2025. Pope Leo XIV waves as he arrives before leading a mass in the Tor Vergata district of Rome, as part of Jubilee of Youth, on Aug.t 3, 2025. The Nuns hold an amigurumi doll depicting the pope, ahead of a general audience held by Pope Leo XIV in the Paul VI hall at the Vatican on Aug. 13, 2025. Pope Leo XIV greets the faithful at the end of the weekly general audience in the Paul VI Hall at the Vatican on Aug. 27, 2025. Pope Leo XIV sits on a BMW motorbike on the day of his general audience in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican Sept. 3, 2025. Pope Leo blows a candle as he marks his 70th birthday with with cardinals, Christian representatives and dignitaries after a commemoration for the Martyrs and Witnesses of Faith of the 21st century at the Basilica of St. Paul in Rome, Italy Sept.14, 2025. Former Kansas City Royals player Mike Sweeney and his wife Shara present Pope Leo XIV with a special baseball jersey and a personalised baseball bat, during the general audience at Saint Peter's Square at the Vatican on Oct. 1, 2025. Pope Leo XIV blesses a child on the day of the Mass for the Jubilee of the Missionary World and Jubilee of Migrants in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican on Oct. 5, 2025. Pope Leo XIV greets the pilgrims from Croatia at St Peter's Square in The Vatican on Oct. 7, 2025. Pope Leo XIV greets people at the end of the meeting with the participants at the Jubilee of Consacrated Life in the Paul VI Hall at the Vatican on Oct. 10, 2025. Pope Leo XIV presides over a Prayer Vigil and Rosary for Peace, in Saint Peter square at the Vatican on Oct. 11, 2025. Pope Leo reacts as he stands with a purebred Arabian horse named Proton given as a gift by Andrzej Michalski, owner and founder of the Michalski Stud Farm in Kolobrzeg-Budzistowo, in Poland, at the Vatican Oct. 15, 2025. Pope Leo XIV walks on the day he celebrates a Mass for the Feast of the Dedication of the Basilica of St. John Lateran in Rome, Italy Nov. 9, 2025. Pope Leo XIV, alongside Greek Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew I (R), is seen as he departs to travel to a farewell ceremony at AtatŸrk Airport on Nov. 30, 2025 in Istanbul, Turkey. Pope Leo XIV is making his first foreign trip on a six-day visit to Turkey and Lebanon. During his trip, the Pope is scheduled to meet with faithful from local Catholic communities, as well as political and religious leaders, drawing attention to regional issues. Pope Leo XIV gestures as he arrives to hold an audience for the Jubilee in Saint Peter's Square at the Vatican, Dec. 20, 2025. Pope Leo XIV waves to faithfull as he arrives aboard the popemobile ahead of addressing the Urbi et Orbi message and blessing to the city and the world as part of Christmas celebrations, at St Peter's square in the Vatican on Dec. 25, 2025. Pope Leo XIV holds a general audience in St. PeterÕs Square at the Vatican on Dec. 31, 2025. Pope Leo XIV performs the Pope Leo XIV holds a candle as he arrives to lead the Easter Vigil in Saint Peter's Basilica at the Vatican on April 4, 2026. Pope Leo XIV greets the faithful from the popemobile after delivering his Urbi et Orbi (to the city and the world) message, in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican on April 5, 2026. Pope Leo XIV meets Harlem Globetrotters during the weekly general audience in Saint Peter's Square at the Vatican on April 8, 2026. Imam Al-Mahdi scouts hold portraits of Pope Leo XIV as they wait for his arrival in Beirut's southern suburbs, a packed residential area known as Dahiyeh, which is also a Hezbollah bastion, on Nov. 30, 2025. Pope Leo XIV arrived in Lebanon with a message of peace for the crisis-hit nation, still reeling from a war between Israel and Hezbollah and the conflict's lingering aftereffects.

Look back as Pope Leo marks his first year as pontiff

Catholic schoolteacher Elizabeth Baldacci, 55, has a framed newspaper article about Leo’s announcement as pope on her classroom wall. “It’s really fun and nice for the kids,” Baldacci said after Mass at Chicago’s Saint Mary of the Lake and Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church. “He’s more real to them because he’s from here, so he’s more human – like, ‘Wow, this man grew up in Chicago like I did.’”

At the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, freshman Teresa Iannitello was among the students who packed into a cramped basement for free brunch after Sunday Mass at the school’s Newman Center ― a visual reminder thatGen Z is flocking to the faith. For many college-age Catholics, Leo’s election in the May 7-8, 2025, conclave was the first they were old enough to understand and follow.

“It was so funny to hear him speak the first couple weeks, hearing his voice,” said Iannitello, 19. “I remember thinking, 'oh my gosh ― he sounds like me.'”

University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee freshman Teresa Iannitello talks about Pope Leo's first year at the Newman Center, 3001 N. Downer Ave. in Milwaukee, April 26, 2026.

At Manhattan’s St. Paul, Christopher Browner, 31, said “it’s been an exciting time to be an American Catholic, with an American pope. [It’s] something I never thought I would see in my lifetime.”

Robert L’Europa, a chiropractor and longtime parishioner attending Mass at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Cranston, Rhode Island, agreed, saying Leo’s papacy has given him reason for optimism. “It’s become more personal to me now,” he said.

Pope Leo 'bringing us back to true north'

In Washington, DC, Henry Huot was among the many who’d filled the pews for Mass beneath the massive, shimmering domes of the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, North America’s largest Roman Catholic Church.

The Arlington, Virginia, retiree said he’s been glad to see Leo adhere to Francis’ teachings and priorities. “We need a voice like Pope Leo’s that will remind everyone, especially those on the world stage, that there are values that need to be upheld,” Huot said.

Catholic observers say Leo has indeed largely embraced Francis’ vision while charting his own path. Nicholas Hayes-Mota, a social ethicist and public theologian at California’s Santa Clara University, said Leo, like Francis, has embraced the collaborative practice ofsynodality, favoring “a church that moves by listening to its members rather than unilaterally.”

Pope Leo XIV gestures, on the day he holds a holy Mass at Malabo Stadium, on the last day of his apostolic journey, in Malabo, Equatorial Guinea, April 23, 2026. REUTERS/Guglielmo Mangiapane

“It was clear that he was going to continue much of the substance of Francis’ papacy but with a different style and priorities,” Hayes-Mota said. As Francis did, Leo has stressed the church’s mission to care for the poor and marginalized, but he’s done so “more uncompromisingly than any of his predecessors. … He not only picked it up but carried it further.”

While maintaining continuity, Leo’s more deliberate leadership style and manner have served as a sort of rebalancing, Hayes-Mota said. Francis’ off-the-cuff nature often endeared him to people ― such as his viralselfieswith young Catholics or his well-known “who am I to judge?”remarkregarding gay priests ― but also alienated some put off by such spontaneity.

“One of the ongoing tensions in Francis’ papacy with traditional members of the church was a fear that he was changing too many things too fast,” Hayes-Mota said. “Leo has tried to extend olive branches to those alarmed by that, saying this is your church as well.”

At the basilica in Washington, that view was echoed by Brian Dimatteo, who was visiting from New Jersey. While Francis “took us a little bit away from biblical standing,” he said, Leo is “bringing us back to true north.”

At St. Martin de Porres Catholic Church in Jensen Beach, Florida, retired computer scientist Mark Gooley praised both the pope’srecent visitto several nations in Africa, where the church is rapidly expanding, and his rebuke ofGerman bishopswho’ve pushed for the church to formally bless same-sex unions.

“He does seem to be holding to church tradition,” said Gooley, 64. “He’s been firm with the German bishops. Africa is a big area of growth, and he’s been very sympathetic to Africans and their views. The Africans tend to be traditional.”

Others said they weren’t clear about the new pope’s stance beyond continuing Francis’ work. In Boca Raton, Florida, Eric Knight, a 27-year-old graduate student at Florida Atlantic University, sees Leo as “a continuity of Pope Francis, rather than a rupture… I’m still kind of waiting to see what’s distinctively Pope Leo and not just the greater church tradition.”

Appealing to young Catholics

Jonathan Tan, a professor of Catholic studies at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, said while Leo lacks the flair and flamboyance of predecessors like Francis and PopeJohn Paul II, he’s revived hope for many U.S. Catholics who’ve lost faith in the political process and previously saw the church as detached from everyday realities.

In Worcester, Massachusetts, Celeste Mahaney, of nearby Charlton, echoed that point, saying she feels the pope is plugged in.

In Worcester, Massachusetts, Celeste Mahaney of nearby Charlton spoke about the first year of Pope Leo XIV.

“It’s nice to see our pope having a real interest in the day-to-day issues that affect people, not only in America but across the globe,” she said at Christ the King Church. “He really has a finger on the pulse.”

Advertisement

In the greater Cincinnati area, interior decorator Abby Jahnigen said she believes Leo can fill “a God-sized hole” in the United States, bringing people back to the Catholic faith.

“He feels more casual and more approachable,” said Jahnigen, 46, as she left Mass at St. James of the Valley Church in Wyoming, Ohio. “He has, like, a ‘regular guy’ vibe.”

Some said that vibe has helped Leo appeal toyoung Catholics. One of them is Iris Le, a 14-year-old freshman at Xavier College Preparatory in Phoenix, who was attending a Saturday evening Mass at Saints Simon and Jude Cathedral Church in north Phoenix with her mother, Kim Tran.

Fr. Tomas Zamora lives the Gospel before the Gospel reading while celebrating Mass at James of the Valley church in Wyoming, Ohio, on April 26, 2026.

"I believe he was the right choice," Iris said about the 70-year-old pope's selection. "He seems like he has a very good moral compass."

In Westerville, Ohio, a bleak, chilly Sunday morning had brought gray skies to what had been a welcome early spring for the greater Columbus region, but that didn’t keep Kristi Lethenstrom, 48, from attending early Mass at St. Paul the Apostle Catholic Church.

The church’s young population has grown, she said, and as a kindergarten teacher personally invested in her community’s littlest parishioners, Lethenstrom enjoys Leo’s more youthful style of leadership. “I just think his message resonates more," she said.

At St. Paul Roman Catholic Church in Philadelphia, Kayleen Bodnar, 34, said she’s found the pope's leadership inspiring.

“I think for a lot of people my age, Catholicism had become very polarizing,” Bodnar said. “He’s doing a great job of bringing young people back to church with the way that he leads.”

Meanwhile, as he spoke outside Saint Anastasia Roman Catholic Church in Teaneck, New Jersey, retired engineer Jacque Alexandre said Francis' successor is reaching a cross-section of generations, genders and cultures.

The new pope “makes me feel the future of the Catholic Church is very bright,” said Alexandre, 71. “The younger generation are seeing a resurgence because they’re seeing what’s going on all over the world, and they see a relatability and relevance in Pope Leo.”

People attend the Easter Mass led by Pope Leo XIV in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican, April 5, 2026. REUTERS/Remo Casilli TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

Advocating for those on the margins

At St. Vincent de Paul Church, the only historically Black parish in the Diocese of Nashville, the seven-member women’s choir led parishioners through hymns infused with gospel sound. Deacon Bill Hill spoke about local Catholics’ role in school desegregation and the Civil Rights Movement, reflecting the church’s founding principle of social justice.

A floor below, a pantry brimmed with food donated by parishioners and nearby churches, a sign of the community engagement central to St. Vincent’s identity throughout a 94-year history that has seen nine popes come and go. Last year, St. Vincenthosted a “Know Your Rights” trainingwith an immigrant rights group and more recently helped organize a rally protesting U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement actions.

With Leo exhibiting many of the same values they hold dear, church members say this moment is especially exciting. “It’s a reassurance,” said deacon Harry Guess. “I take from all of that that there is this hope for us to do the right thing and to help others do the right thing. But we won’t get there if we don’t say anything. And he is saying something.”

Tan, of Case Western Reserve, said Leo’s background as bishop in an impoverished rural area of northern Peru and his visits to Augustinian communities around the world “have made him more attuned to the life experiences of those living in the margins.”

That’s an important factor for people like Catherine and Bill Odell, of South Bend, Indiana, who were leaving late morning Mass at St. Therese Little Flower Catholic Church. The couple said it’s important that the new pope is carrying on Francis’ legacy of environmental advocacy and addressing poverty.

“We’re in a country in which the poor are seen as kind of in the way,” said Bill Odell, 83. “I think he’s going to be a voice for the poor. He’s going to be a voice for the very people that Jesus talked to and about in the Sermon on the Mount. ... I hope he lives a long life.”

'He's exactly what we need'

Many Catholics are awaiting the imminent release of Leo’s first major encyclical, expected to address moral questions surrounding artificial intelligence, while Hayes-Mota of Santa Clara University is curious to see how Leo will address the complicated relationship between the United States and the Americas.

“He’s seen by many in the Latin American Catholic church as someone who understands them very well,” he said. “Especially given the tensions surrounding migration, and the geopolitical challenges raised by the Trump administration’sintervention in Venezuela, the question of how the U.S. relates to the Americas as a whole is an important one.”

Hayes-Mota said Leo has successfully straddled a line between conservatives unhappy with his views on immigration and war and progressives hoping to see quicker reforms.

“There will be frustrations and tensions, but so far he has remained a popular and less polarizing figure,” Hayes-Mota said. “There will be more opportunities for consensus-building and deescalating tensions, but so far he has managed to keep most of the church behind him, and that’s no easy task.”

But the quality most of those interviewed by the USA TODAY Network said they appreciated about Leo is his commitment to pursuing peace, especially as the conflict with Iran has raged on. The pope's firmpush to end hostilities, some said, has provided a counterbalance to Trump, even as their exchanges have fueled a divide believed to be the most contentious between the papacy and a secular leadersince medieval times.

“He’s exactly what we need,” said engineer Anthony Zamorro, who attended Mass with his two sons at Christ the King in Worcester. Though Zamorro leans politically conservative, he said, “we need someone who stands up for people and says war is bad for humanity. … If your pope isn’t speaking out against war, you don’t have a very good pope.”

Caroline Zengel, 44, who’d attended Mass at the Church of the Immaculate Conception in Knoxville, Tennessee, said the pope is “a strong, quiet presence for our church.”

“He’s outspoken when he needs to be, but he’s very wise when he speaks,” said Zengel, a stay-at-home mom and former nurse. “We’re neither Democrat nor Republican. We’re Catholic, and that’s what comes first. I think his statement that he’snot afraidof the Trump administration was so powerful, and I loved that.”

Lawyer Abigail Hemnes, 43, speaks about Pope Leo XIV outside the Cathedral of the Holy Cross in Boston.

In Boston’s South End, organs thrummed as incense filled the cavernous nave of the Cathedral of the Holy Cross. As her 7-year-old daughter tugged at her dress after a 90-minute-long Mass, Boston lawyer Abigail Hemnes, 43, said she admired how Leo has responded to the situation.

“I really appreciate the way that Pope Leo has handled it, just staying true to the core beliefs of Catholicism, which is that Jesus lives in peace,” Hemnes said.

Boston musician Jon Ryan, 55, agreed.

“I feel like Pope Leo hasn’t really ‘taken the bait,’” Ryan said. “People want to politicize what the pope does. But the pope’s job is to evangelize the gospel and be a leader of the church, not to be a political figure. The Church and the pope are not Democrat or Republican.”

Besides, he said, those “little tiffs” have made people more aware of Leo ― “and that’s a good thing.”

Contributing: Keith Burbank, Treasure Coast News; Rayleigh Deaton, South Bend Tribune; Jose Gonzales, Arizona Republic; Hope Karnopp, Milwaukee-Journal-Sentinel; Amethyst Martinez, USA Today; Keenan Thomas, Knoxville News Sentinel; Scott Wartman, Cincinnati Enquirer; Emma Wozniak, Columbus Dispatch; Deena Yellin, The Record; Kinsey Crowley, USA Today; Kaitlyn McCormick, USA Today; Sarah Perkel, USA Today; Jonny Williams, Providence Journal; Paris Barraza, USA Today, Shane Brennan, News Journal; Marissa Meador, Indianapolis Star; Eileen Zaffiro-Kean, Daytona Beach News-Journal.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Pope Leo XIV, his first year, and clashes with President Donald Trump

An American pope, a presidential clash and what it means in the pews

VILLANOVA, PA – It's been nearly 1,000 years since King Henry IV stoodbarefoot in the Italian snowto beg forgiveness after clashes ...

 

COSMO NEWS © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com