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Maggie Rogers on her long-form music: “I’ve always loved art that takes time”

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In a nondescript building in a tiny Pennsylvania town, Maggie Rogers was getting ready for her big moment. Lititz, Pa., is where arena acts come to rehearse their shows before heading out on national tour, and every detail matters. “Sunday Morning” caught up with Rogers there, just weeks away from her concerts at Madison Square Garden.

In a career-defining event, she sold out the New York City venue. “Twice!” she laughed. “I don’t know how to, like, compute that in my brain. I don’t understand it fundamentally!”

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Maggie Rogers in rehearsal, and then performing before a sell-out crowd at New York City’s Madison Square Garden. 

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To be clear, it wasn’t Rogers’ first time on a big stage; she’d already shared them with the likes of Bruce Springsteen, Joan Baez, and a stint opening for Coldplay. She was also a 2020 Grammy-nominee for best new artist.

But for Rogers, who studied music at New York University, playing Madison Square Garden was a homecoming of sorts. Walking through Washington Square Park, not far from her former dorm room, she pointed out the benches where she used to write songs. It was at NYU where Rogers got what you might call her big break – or at least a big break, when superstar producer and musician Pharrell Williams visited her class. Rogers played him a song she’d been working on called “Alaska.” “What I remember is really just staring at my shoes and, like, holding on tight,” she said.


Pharrell Williams Masterclass with Students at NYU Clive Davis Institute by
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Williams’ response: “Wow! Wow! I have zero, zero, zero notes for that, and I’ll tell you why: you’re doing your own thing. It’s singular.”

The video clip of Williams’ master class went viral, but Rogers – who actually started out studying music engineering – still needed to learn the craft of writing and performing, which is just what she did. “I’ve played, like, every bar and club on the Lower East Side, and every DIY venue in Brooklyn that existed in my time here,” she said.

Now, at the age of 30, Rogers has built a close relationship with her fans, many of whom watched her go from small clubs to being an artist that record labels were fighting over.

Remember that demo she played for Pharrell Williams as a college student? So far, the music video of the finished version of “Alaska” has been viewed more than 23 million times.


Maggie Rogers – Alaska (Official Video) by
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It’s all been an incredible journey, considering Rogers says she didn’t actually play music publicly all that much as she was growing up on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. Her interest was more personal, private and quirky: “Basically, as soon as I could ask for music lessons, all I wanted to do was play the harp,” she said. “My first CD purchase was a double-purchase of the orchestral score to ‘Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone,’ and Britney’s ‘Baby One More Time.’ Which, like, maybe is all you need to know about me!”

And you hear it in her songs – a pop sensibility with a tremendous intellect behind it. Rogers says the whole arena thing is fun, but what she’s really hoping to do is form a deep, long-term connection with her listeners along the themes of love and heartbreak and the weird wondrous thing that it is just to be alive. “I really prefer to work in long form,” Rogers said. “And I really feel a lot of gratitude for listeners that want to have an active listening practice, and who also have the patience to want to spend an hour of their time listening to the way that I, you know, sequence the record, or who has appreciation for those things. I’ve always loved art that takes time.”

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Singer-songwriter Maggie Rogers. 

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Something else that separates Rogers from your typical pop star: Back in 2021, she took time away from her music to enroll in a graduate program at Harvard University focusing on religion and public life. “I really needed a second,” she said. “I needed to sort of reorient my life, and I needed to be new at something. I had been living in a world where everything was about me and my career for, like, five years, and then applying that to music, and to concerts, and to these really large public gatherings.”

Large public gatherings that have become, for both Rogers and her fans, something almost spiritual: “This couldn’t have happened in any different way,” she said. “Like, I’m reaching Madison Square Garden and stepping on that stage, and being like, ‘I’m really ready for this.’ And that, in itself, is such a gift that I’ve sort of tried to keep from contextualizing this for myself. Because as soon as you figure out what it is, it changes, you know? I’m always at the eye of the storm! It’s really calm where I sit. And I’ll never, ever be able to know what it looks like from the outside. But what I can know is when I’ve really dedicated myself to my art, and when I think I’m at my best. And I like to think that I’m doing both of those things as much as possible.”

You can stream Maggie Rogers’ 2024 album “Don’t Forget Me” by clicking on the embed below (Free Spotify registration required to hear the tracks in full):

     
For more info:

       
Story produced by Julie Kracov. Editor: Remington Korper. 



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Cindy McCain says hunger is a “national security issue” amid global conflicts

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Cindy McCain says hunger is a “national security issue” amid global conflicts – CBS News


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Cindy McCain, the executive director of the U.N. World Food Programme, tells “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan” that “hunger is on the forefront” of global conflicts, making it a “national security issue” when people are hungry.

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Joy in Syria after Assad’s fall but also fears that Islamist victors will rule as al Qaeda 2.0

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Joy in Syria after Assad’s fall but also fears that Islamist victors will rule as al Qaeda 2.0 – CBS News


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There is celebrating in the streets of Damascus after dictator Bashar al-Assad fled to Moscow, while crowds poured into Sednaya prison, where political prisoners were held. But although the Islamist victors say there will be elections in March, fears persist that they will rule like al Qaeda 2.0. Elizabeth Palmer reports from Damascus.

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Transcript: Sen. Amy Klobuchar on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan,” Dec. 15, 2024

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The following is a transcript of an interview with Sen. Amy Klobuchar, Democrat of Minnesota, on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan” that aired on Dec. 15, 2024.


MARGARET BRENNAN: And we’re joined now by Minnesota Democratic Senator Amy Klobuchar. Good to have you here. 

SEN. AMY KLOBUCHAR: Great to be back on Margaret, thanks. 

MARGARET BRENNAN: Well, Senator, I do want to ask you about these drones on the East Coast, because we looked at your record and you actually co-sponsored legislation a few years ago trying to expand authorities to deal with them. Why do you need an act of Congress to deal with this, and why didn’t the Democrats move on it? 

SEN. KLOBUCHAR: Well, first of all, the administration has repeatedly assured people that they are safe. However, one, we need a briefing for the members of the Senate to figure out what’s going on here. Two, we need more transparency and three, I appreciated some of the Congressman’s words, because what he is talking about is we need to have a new regulatory rules in place here. Right now, you have to register a drone if it’s over a half pound, and there are penalties if you don’t do that. Well, I think we have to make sure that regime is enforced with local and state authorities, and then we’ve got to figure out, do we really want all these drones, because while these may be safe, who knows what happens in the future, and they have to be within 400 feet, so these things are going to be what? Flying over people’s family picnics and over their homes and over beaches? Like this is not going to be a good future if we see too many of these. So I think I was pleased that he said he wanted to move forward on some rules and finding a way to regulate these in a better way, because this just can’t be. No one knows why this huge drone is right over their house.

MARGARET BRENNAN: So you might bring this up in the new Republican controlled Senate? 

SEN. KLOBUCHAR: Yes. 

MARGARET BRENNAN: Moving on. You sit on the Judiciary Committee, so you’re going to have a key role in overseeing law enforcement under the Trump administration, and you’ll get to question his selectee to run the FBI Kash Patel, who has published in his book a list of enemies, vowed retribution. I want to play something for you that Republican Senator Murkowski said just a few days ago.

SEN. LISA MURKOWSKI: The approach is going to be, everybody toe the line. Everybody line-up. We got you here, and if you want to survive, you better be good. Don’t get on Santa’s naughty list here, because we will primary you.

MARGARET BRENNAN: That is a remarkable thing for a Republican senator to say on the record, as clearly as she said. She said they are being threatened if they don’t get in line and vote for some of these nominees. Are you getting the sense from your Republican colleagues on judiciary they will get in line and vote through Kash Patel?

SEN. KLOBUCHAR: Sadly, there is some of that going on, but then you have other people, like Lisa Murkowski, who has always been a thoughtful, independent voice. She believes her job is to do what our Constitution tells us, advice and consent, and also that we take an oath to support and defend the Constitution of the United States. So we have to do our due diligence and make decisions. I voted for a number of the past Trump nominees for many different jobs. I looked at them and decided if I thought they were qualified, and could they perform the mission of the agency, and did they have integrity? That’s what has to happen here. And so when you look at someone like Kash Patel, who would be replacing Christopher Wray, who I believe embodied- he was a Trump appointee, went through Biden and embodied the mission of the FBI, which is fidelity, bravery, integrity. And so now you have someone who says he’s on a revenge mission when we should be on a national security safety mission here, when we look at cyber security attacks that you just talked to the congressman about and various other things. He says he wants to dismantle the FBI headquarters and turn it into a museum. To me, this is not the direction we need to go. So I appreciate Senator Murkowski’s words and also her demand and other Republicans. It’s going to be their decisions on these nominees. We may vote against them or for them, but in the end, it’s their decision to demand for FBI reports and making sure that these are not recess appointments and there must be open hearings.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Right because they have enough votes, essentially, to move on these on their own. I want to ask you about President Biden. This past week, he had this record number of commutations, 1500 Americans more than any president in any single day. Among them, though, there was a judge involved in a so called “Cash for kids” scheme– 

SEN. KLOBUCHAR: I did not like that one. Nope. 

MARGARET BRENNAN: –that sent thousands to jail for millions of dollars, a man who committed tax fraud at a cost of more than $1.6 billion described as “the most prolific, pernicious, utterly unrepented tax cheat in U.S. history,” a woman who was involved in a $26 million scheme to defraud Medicare. Are you comfortable with some of these decisions? 

SEN. KLOBUCHAR: No. There’s also a man in Duluth that was running a major drug house, basically, and had all this money under his bathroom tiles was also commuted. So the way I look at is this- I also didn’t agree with the pardon of the president’s son. I also have not agreed with a number of pardons that President Trump gave. So I believe, and I’ve long advocated for this, that while the pardon ability is part of our Constitution, we’re not going to change that right? Go way back to President Lincoln, who made hard decisions himself about deserters from the army, things like that. That’s been going on a long time, but we should have some kind of an outside board that governors have. Governors have the ability to give mercy to people after years have gone by, but a lot of them have boards that make recommendations and other things, instead of people just doing it in the middle of the night and people in the White House. This makes no sense to me–

MARGARET BRENNAN: Well, this is what was so surprising, because the White House described it as just based on a broad category and not the specifics of the case. Was that prudent? 

SEN. KLOBUCHAR: Exactly. And so, I have no doubt there were some righteous pardons in this group. Okay, let’s say that. Now I believe that there were, but there were a number that I think make no sense at all. So instead of doing a whole category, why don’t in a coming year before the end of a president’s term, if that’s when they’re mostly going to do these, that a board looks at these and looks at them individually, when people petition for them based on the facts, instead of just in a large group. So large groups have been done before, I believe, but I just, I think that this whole process cries out for reform, because otherwise you undermine the justice system. And again, I emphasize, this also happened in a big way under President Trump, and you undermine the work of these line FBI agents, these line prosecutors who have taken on these cases, followed the sentencing guidelines and made a decision. Might you want mercy 10 years later? Yes, you might. But let’s at least look at these on a factual basis and a risk basis, instead of just in the middle of the night a month before a president leaves.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Senator Klobuchar, thank you for being here today. 

SEN. KLOBUCHAR: It was great to be on Thank you, Margaret. 

MARGARET BRENNAN: We’ll be right back with a lot more face than nation. Stay with us.



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