The longtime correspondent, who is also a CNN anchor and host, said he wanted to spend more time with his family.
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Anderson Cooper to Leave CBS News’s ‘60 Minutes’
AP men’s college basketball Top 25 poll breakdown
The Arizona Wildcats enjoyed a nine-week run atop the AP Top 25 — then came back-to-back losses at Kansas and against Texas Tech.
Now the Michigan Wolverines take over, riding 10 straight wins to their first No. 1 ranking of the season — just in time for big matchups at Purdue (Tuesday) and against Duke in Washington D.C. (Saturday).
Below is the full edition of the latest AP poll, featuring a stat to know and what’s next for each team.
All times Eastern. All stats courtesy of ESPN Research unless otherwise noted.
Previous polls: Week 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14

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Previous ranking: 2
2025-26 record: 24-1
Stat to know: Michigan notched its 10th 30-point win with its victory over UCLA on Saturday — the most in Division I. It was also the Wolverines’ 20th double-digit win of the campaign.
What’s next: Tuesday at Purdue, 6:30 p.m., Peacock
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Previous ranking: 3
2025-26 record: 23-2
Stat to know: Houston is on a six-game win streak, adding its 18th straight home victory with Saturday’s win over Kansas State.
What’s next: Monday at Iowa State, 9 p.m., ESPN
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Previous ranking: 4
2025-26 record: 21-2
Stat to know: Duke notched its 29th straight home win with Saturday’s victory over Clemson, joining Miami (Ohio) and Akron for longest active home win streak in Division I.
What’s next: Monday vs. Syracuse, 7 p.m., ESPN
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Previous ranking: 1
2025-26 record: 23-2
Stat to know: Arizona became the third Division I team in the past 40 years to lose consecutive games immediately following a 20-0 or better start, joining this season’s Nebraska team (started 20-0) and 2013-14 Syracuse (started 25-0).
What’s next: Wednesday vs. BYU, 9 p.m., ESPN
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Previous ranking: 6
2025-26 record: 24-2
Stat to know: Alex Karaban upped his career 3-point total to 264, putting him within striking distance of surpassing Christian Vital (265) and Rashad Anderson (276) for the most in program history.
What’s next: Wednesday vs. Creighton, 7 p.m., TNT/HBO Max
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Previous ranking: 5
2025-26 record: 22-3
Stat to know: Iowa State snapped Kansas’ eight-game win streak with the Cyclones’ biggest victory against the Jayhawks since 1973.
What’s next: Monday vs. Houston, 9 p.m., ESPN
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Previous ranking: 13
2025-26 record: 21-4
Stat to know: Braden Smith notched his 12th game with 10 or more assists this season with his 12-assist effort in Saturday’s win over Iowa and now sits sixth on the all-time career assists list for Division I with 980.
What’s next: Tuesday vs. Michigan, 6:30 p.m., Peacock
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Previous ranking: 9
2025-26 record: 18-5
Stat to know: Flory Bidunga recorded his ninth double-double of the season while Melvin Council Jr. had his third game with 20 or more points en route to Kansas’ upset of Arizona last Monday.
What’s next: Wednesday at Oklahoma State, 9 p.m., Peacock
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Previous ranking: 7
2025-26 record: 22-3
Stat to know: Pryce Sandfort recorded his 11th 20-point game on Saturday with 29 points against Northwestern.
What’s next: Tuesday at Iowa, 9 p.m., Big Ten Network
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Previous ranking: 8
2025-26 record: 21-5
Stat to know: With his 25 points against Indiana on Saturday, David Mirkovic joined Keaton Wagler as the first Illinois freshmen in the last 25 years to record multiple 25-point games in a season.
What’s next: Wednesday at USC, 10 p.m., Big Ten Network
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Previous ranking: 12
2025-26 record: 25-2
Stat to know: Graham Ike recorded his WCC-leading 13th double-double of season in Saturday’s win over Santa Clara, passing Drew Timme for the most games with at least 20 points and 10 rebounds (16) by a Gonzaga player in the last 30 seasons.
What’s next: Wednesday at San Francisco, 11 p.m., ESPN2
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Previous ranking: 14
2025-26 record: 19-6
Stat to know: Rueben Chinyelu had his SEC-leading 15th double-double of the season in Saturday’s win over Kentucky — Florida’s first home victory against the Wildcats since 2018.
What’s next: Tuesday vs. South Carolina, 7 p.m., SEC Network
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Previous ranking: 16
2025-26 record: 19-6
Stat to know: JT Toppin joined former North Carolina star Luke Maye as the only players in AP poll history (since 1948-49) to have a 30-point double-double in a road win over the AP No. 1 team with a 31-point, 13-rebound effort against Arizona on Saturday.
What’s next: Tuesday at Arizona State, 11 p.m., ESPN2
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Previous ranking: 15
2025-26 record: 22-3
Stat to know: Virginia is off to its best start through 25 games since 2018-19, when it opened that campaign 23-2 before going on to win that season’s national championship.
What’s next: Wednesday at Georgia Tech, 9 p.m., ACC Network
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Previous ranking: 10
2025-26 record: 20-5
Stat to know: Michigan State’s 21-point loss to Wisconsin on Friday was its largest since Feb. 22, 2022 (26-point loss at No. 25 Iowa). It was also the Spartans’ fourth-largest loss as a top-10 team in the AP poll era (since 1948-49).
What’s next: Tuesday vs. UCLA, 8:30 p.m., Peacock
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Previous ranking: 11
2025-26 record: 20-5
Stat to know: In their first game since losing Caleb Wilson to a fractured hand, four Tar Heel players recorded at least 15 points for the second time this season: Seth Trimble (19), Jarin Stevenson (19), Luka Bogavac (15) and Zayden High (15).
What’s next: Tuesday at NC State, 7 p.m., ESPN
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Previous ranking: 17
2025-26 record: 20-5
Stat to know: After recording its 11th straight win with Saturday’s victory over Providence, St. John’s is now tied with Winthrop and Stephen F. Austin for the fourth-longest active streak in Division I behind Miami (Ohio) with 25, Saint Louis with 18 and Liberty with 15.
What’s next: Wednesday at Marquette, 9 p.m., TNT
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Previous ranking: 18
2025-26 record: 24-1
Stat to know: Saint Louis’ 18 straight wins represent the second-longest active streak in Division I this season — and just one short of the program record (19) set in 2013-14.
What’s next: Tuesday at Rhode Island, 7 p.m., ESPN+
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Previous ranking: 19
2025-26 record: 21-4
Stat to know: Vanderbilt’s 21 wins surpass last season’s win total (20-13) and are tied for the program’s most wins in a 25-game span since 2007-08.
What’s next: Wednesday at Missouri, 9 p.m., SEC Network
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Previous ranking: 21
2025-26 record: 19-6
Stat to know: Darius Acuff Jr. became the first SEC freshman to reach 500 points and 150 assists in a season since 2017-18, when Shai Gilgeous-Alexander did it at Kentucky and Tremont Waters did it at LSU.
What’s next: Wednedsday at Alabama, 7 p.m., ESPN
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Previous ranking: 24
2025-26 record: 19-6
Stat to know: Mikel Brown Jr.’s 74 points over the last two games are the most in a two-game span by any ACC player since Jerome Robinson had 75 for Boston College in February 2018.
What’s next: Tuesday at SMU, 7 p.m., ESPN2
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Previous ranking: 23
2025-26 record: 25-0
Stat to know: The only unbeaten team in Division I, Miami (Ohio) leads the nation in scoring with 92.6 points per game.
What’s next: Tuesday at Massacusetts, 7 p.m., ESPN+
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Previous ranking: 22
2025-26 record: 19-6
Stat to know: With Richie Saunders sidelined for the season with an ACL tear, Robert Wright III finished with a career-high 39 points in Saturday’s overtime victory against Colorado — just one game after setting a previous career-high 30 points at Baylor (his previous school).
What’s next: Wednesday at Arizona, 9 p.m., ESPN
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Previous ranking: Unranked
2025-26 record: 18-7
Stat to know: Wisconsin’s 21-point win over Michigan State on Friday was its largest against an AP top-10 opponent in program history — and third victory against an AP top-10 opponents this season, the most in Division I.
What’s next: Tuesday at Ohio State, 8:30 p.m., FS1
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Previous ranking: Unranked
2025-26 record: 18-7
Stat to know: Latrell Wrightsell became the third player in Division I to score 21 or more points in multiple games this season.
What’s next: Wednesday vs. Arkansas, 7 p.m., ESPN
Elana Meyers Taylor brings home monobob gold for USA

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New program launches in Santa Fe County aimed at curbing youth violence

SANTA FE COUNTY, N.M. (KRQE) – A new program in Santa Fe County called Youth ARISE recently launched, aimed at helping at-risk youth up to age 24 stay out of trouble. This comes in response to a rise in youth violence in Santa Fe and throughout the state. “They can come in from the youth district […]
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MAYNARD JAMES KEENAN Reacts to ALEX HONNOLD’s Taipei 101 Free Solo Soundtracked By TOOL
When Alex Honnold free soloed Taipei 101 last month, the world watched with collective clenched buttholes as it was streamed live on Netflix. What nobody quite expected was that the soundtrack to the whole thing would lean so heavily on Tool.
Tool, A Perfect Circle and Puscifer frontman Maynard James Keenan has now weighed in on his indirect role in Honnold‘s death-defying climb, after the climber revealed he’d powered through the skyscraper ascent with a carefully curated playlist — one dominated by Tool‘s catalog.
That playlist, since shared publicly, includes eight Tool tracks: “Forty Six & 2,” “Ænema,” “The Grudge,” “Lateralus,” “Schism,” “Parabola,” “Invincible” and “Pneuma.” Other artists on the playlist included Linkin Park, NOTHING MORE, The Used, Chevelle, The Offspring and Senses Fail, but yeah – lotta Tool.
Speaking to ABC about Honnold‘s accomplishment — and his own unintentional contribution to the moment — Keenan leaned into the absurdity. “Not everybody and their mother texted me every three seconds telling me about it or anything,” he joked.
The awe, though, was real. “What the heck were you thinking, dude?” Keenan continued. “It’s impressive! It’s extremely impressive, but, I mean, I wouldn’t make it past the first floor. I would fall to my death.”
Asked whether he’d ever be tempted to get more directly involved if Honnold attempts another high-profile climb, Keenan was quick to shut that down. “I’ll be the guy down below eating french fries making fun of him,” he said, firmly positioning himself as moral support only.
The timing of the comments is fitting. Just yesterday, February 6, Puscifer released their latest studio album, Normal Isn’t, adding another chapter to Keenan‘s ever-expanding musical universe. One that apparently now doubles as extreme-sports fuel.
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Nancy Guthrie’s Family Cleared as Suspects in Disappearance
The Pima County sheriff said rumors that her children or their spouses were involved were wrong and cruel.
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Real Madrid vs. Benfica live stream: Where to watch Champions League online

The second year pf the new format of the UEFA Champions League, brought plenty of chaos on the final day of the league phase as 18 matches kicked off at the same time. Storylines can get muddled along the way during a jam-packed period of action but one stood out above the rest, fully embodying the drama of the day.
Real Madrid started the day well-positioned to finish in the top eight and book a direct spot in the round of 16, a favorable match against a Benfica team who were poised for elimination awaiting them. The script fully flipped, though — Benfica came out with an improbable 4-2 win, rounded out by a red card for Real Madrid’s Raul Asencio and the final goal of the game coming from shot-stopper Anatoliy Trubin. Benfica, coached by ex-Madrid boss Jose Mourinho, snuck their way into the knockout phase playoffs while Los Blancos were doomed to play another two games in the hopes of booking a spot in the last 16.
It makes for an unusual but perfect set-up for a rematch three weeks later, a painful reward for Benfica despite their hard work and a golden opportunity for Real Madrid to fully put that Matchday 8 defeat behind them.
How to watch Benfica vs. Real Madrid, odds
- Date: Tuesday, Feb. 16 | Time: 3 p.m. ET
- Location: Estadio da Luz — Lisbon, Portugal
- Live stream: Paramount+
- Odds: Benfica +280; Draw +290; Real Madrid -115
Get ready for the Knockout Stage like never before with the UEFA Champions League Bracket Games! Create a pool to compete against friends or enter our Bracket Challenge for a chance to win a dream trip to London, including 2 UCL tickets and a tour of the UCL Today set! Plus, see how you stack up against UCL Today’s own Jamie and Micah. Sign up now before brackets are unlocked after the Round of 16 draw, or play on the CBS Sports App!
“They are wounded,” Mourinho said in his pre-match remarks on Monday, “and a wounded king is dangerous. We will play the first leg with our heads, with ambition and confidence. We know what we did to the kings of the Champions League … Real Madrid is Real Madrid, with history, knowledge, ambition. The only comparable thing is that we are two giants. Beyond that, there is nothing else. But football has this power and we can win.”
The circumstances could see Mourinho change his approach from the teams’ last meeting, too. Benfica were more forward-thinking than usual in their win over Los Blancos, in large part because they simply needed to score to even have a shot at advancing, but the calculus is usually different over a two-legged tie. A team can attempt to grind the opponent down in an attempt to lock their attack out, something Mourinho teams have done time and time again. Benfica’s attack-focused approach on Matchday 8 was atypical to their Champions League experiences since Mourinho took over after a Matchday 1 loss to Qarabag – they performed well above their average of 14.1 shots per game and 1.5 expected goals, instead taking 22 shots and generating 3.01 expected goals. Even with the 3-2 defeat to Qarabag factored in, Benfica are a solid defensive side – they have conceded just 10.1 nonpenalty expected goals against in eight games.
The question, then, is if this imperfect version of Real Madrid can find a way to break through a tough defense. Even in a season full of ups and downs, it feels hard to bet against the Spanish giants. They rank inside the Champions League’s top five for goals with 21 and expected goals with 18.99, their sheer ability to score papering over a handful of cracks. That is especially true since Xabi Alonso’s January ouster as the coach, his mission to build a more balanced Real Madrid abandoned despite the progress he made. Since Alvaro Arbeloa took charge, Los Blancos have fully switched to a strategy in which Kylian Mbappe and Vinicius Junior share the field at the same time, kicking the can down the road on the longstanding question about the pair’s compatibility.
Both in Spain and in Europe, Real Madrid’s inherent attacking might is enough to survive their own inconsistencies and notch enough wins to keep them in the conversation for silverware. Mbappe himself is on pace for a career-best season with 39 goals across all competitions so far, while Vinicius has delivered since Arbeloa took charge with four goals and two assists in his last seven matches. Individually, the pair are a cheat code as Los Blancos continue to sort through their issues and will be enough of a challenge for Benfica’s defense over the next week and change.
The team, though, has received a boost in the return of Trent Alexander-Arnold, who notched his first start since December in Real Madrid’s 4-1 win over Real Sociedad on Saturday. He will provide some attacking balance for a team that is at times overly reliant on Mbappe, already providing a preview of what’s to come with an assist over the weekend. The England international is a uniquely creative player as a right back, though his range of passing and positional awareness means he can kickstart an attack from just about every area of the pitch.
For all their flaws, Real Madrid have a perfect opportunity to put a sizable loss behind them, even if they are still unwilling to answer the big problems that plague their squad – and their pursuit of trophies, for that matter.
With gold medal win, Elana Meyers Taylor is the most decorated U.S. female bobsledder
Elana Meyers Taylor won the Olympic gold medal for Team USA in women’s monobob on Monday, making her the most decorated U.S. female bobsledder out there.
She beat out Germany’s Laura Nolte. Fellow American, Kaillie Armbruster Humphries, who’s won gold three times, took home the bronze.
Meyers Taylor, a 41-year-old five-time Olympian, previously won silver three times and bronze twice. She also has more medals to her name than any Black athlete in Winter Olympics history, according to Team USA.
With Monday’s gold, she’s also tied speed skater Bonnie Blair for the most medals by a female U.S. Winter Olympian. Speed skater Apolo Anton Ohno, who earned eight medals across three Winter Olympics, holds the overall top spot for U.S. Winter Olympians.
Meyers Taylor is also now the oldest American woman to ever win gold at the Winter Games.
“I love going fast and I love being able to control this thing that should be out of control, that should be uncontrollable,” she told CBS News before the race. “It’s just so much fun to me and when you hit the curves right and when you’re gliding, it feels like being a superhero.”
Meyers Taylor also competes in two-woman bobsled.
Last year, she took home bronze in the world championships. Overall, she’s earned 10 medals across her years competing in the world championships.
Meyers Taylor originally had hopes of competing in the Summer Olympics as a football player, but told CBS News she “had a disaster of a tryout.” Her parents, who’d seen bobsledding on TV, suggested she give it a shot.
Husband Nic Taylor is a former Olympic bobsledder.
A mom of two, Meyers Taylor is also an advocate for children who have disabilities. Both of her sons, Nico and Noah, are deaf and Nico also has Down Syndrome. In addition to training for the Olympics, she’s also juggled normal parenting responsibilities and learning sign language.
Olympic US women’s hockey beats Sweden, advances to final
The U.S. women’s hockey team won 5-0 against Sweden in the semifinals at the Milan Cortina Olympics, putting them in line for gold as they head into the final.Cayla Barnes, Taylor Heise, Abbey Murphy, Kendall Coyne Schofield and Hayley Scamurra all scored in the game, making three goals in less than 3 minutes in the second period.The Americans continued their roll through the tournament by improving to 6-0, and outscoring their opponents by a combined 31-1. The U.S. has yet to trail or be tied after 0-0, and in position to become the third women’s team to do so over the entire tournament, joining Canada in 2006 and 2010.The U.S. also extended its shutout streak to 331 minutes, 23 seconds, going back to Czechia’s Barbora Jurickova beating Frankel on a breakaway in the second period of a tournament-opening 5-1 win.The win over Sweden sets up a seventh gold-medal showdown against Canada on Thursday. The defending Olympic champion Canadians defeated Switzerland in the day’s other semifinal game.The U.S. already beat Canada 5-0 in a preliminary round game last week. The Americans won Olympic gold in 1998 and 2018, with Canada winning the other five tournaments.Sweden will play for bronze on Thursday in an effort to medal for the third time in team history, and first since winning silver at the 2006 Turin Games after upsetting the U.S. in the semifinals.Among those in attendance was former NFL center Jason Kelce, who was shown on the scoreboard applauding the goal initially credited to Edwards. Kelce is from Edwards’ hometown of Cleveland Heights, Ohio, and he and his brother, Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, contributed to a GoFundMe drive to help pay for Edwards’ family to attend the Milan Cortina Games.Sweden enjoyed a breakthrough this year with a young, talented group that features seven players competing in the U.S. college ranks. Sweden went 4-0 to win Group B, and then upset Czechia 2-0 in the quarterfinals.Though the Swedes kept the game close through 35 minutes, the Americans eventually wore them down.The U.S. will face Canada in the final on Thursday.The Associated Press contributed to this report. PHNjcmlwdCB0eXBlPSJ0ZXh0L2phdmFzY3JpcHQiPiFmdW5jdGlvbigpeyJ1c2Ugc3RyaWN0Ijt3aW5kb3cuYWRkRXZlbnRMaXN0ZW5lcigibWVzc2FnZSIsKGZ1bmN0aW9uKGUpe2lmKHZvaWQgMCE9PWUuZGF0YVsiZGF0YXdyYXBwZXItaGVpZ2h0Il0pe3ZhciB0PWRvY3VtZW50LnF1ZXJ5U2VsZWN0b3JBbGwoImlmcmFtZSIpO2Zvcih2YXIgYSBpbiBlLmRhdGFbImRhdGF3cmFwcGVyLWhlaWdodCJdKWZvcih2YXIgcj0wO3I8dC5sZW5ndGg7cisrKXtpZih0W3JdLmNvbnRlbnRXaW5kb3c9PT1lLnNvdXJjZSl0W3JdLnN0eWxlLmhlaWdodD1lLmRhdGFbImRhdGF3cmFwcGVyLWhlaWdodCJdW2FdKyJweCJ9fX0pKX0oKTs8L3NjcmlwdD4=
The U.S. women’s hockey team won 5-0 against Sweden in the semifinals at the Milan Cortina Olympics, putting them in line for gold as they head into the final.
Cayla Barnes, Taylor Heise, Abbey Murphy, Kendall Coyne Schofield and Hayley Scamurra all scored in the game, making three goals in less than 3 minutes in the second period.
The Americans continued their roll through the tournament by improving to 6-0, and outscoring their opponents by a combined 31-1. The U.S. has yet to trail or be tied after 0-0, and in position to become the third women’s team to do so over the entire tournament, joining Canada in 2006 and 2010.
The U.S. also extended its shutout streak to 331 minutes, 23 seconds, going back to Czechia’s Barbora Jurickova beating Frankel on a breakaway in the second period of a tournament-opening 5-1 win.
The win over Sweden sets up a seventh gold-medal showdown against Canada on Thursday. The defending Olympic champion Canadians defeated Switzerland in the day’s other semifinal game.
The U.S. already beat Canada 5-0 in a preliminary round game last week. The Americans won Olympic gold in 1998 and 2018, with Canada winning the other five tournaments.
Sweden will play for bronze on Thursday in an effort to medal for the third time in team history, and first since winning silver at the 2006 Turin Games after upsetting the U.S. in the semifinals.
Among those in attendance was former NFL center Jason Kelce, who was shown on the scoreboard applauding the goal initially credited to Edwards. Kelce is from Edwards’ hometown of Cleveland Heights, Ohio, and he and his brother, Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, contributed to a GoFundMe drive to help pay for Edwards’ family to attend the Milan Cortina Games.
Sweden enjoyed a breakthrough this year with a young, talented group that features seven players competing in the U.S. college ranks. Sweden went 4-0 to win Group B, and then upset Czechia 2-0 in the quarterfinals.
Though the Swedes kept the game close through 35 minutes, the Americans eventually wore them down.
The U.S. will face either Canada in the final on Thursday.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Robert Duvall, Hollywood Legend and ‘The Godfather’ Star, Dies
Perennial Hollywood star and Academy Award winner Robert Duvall has died. According to his wife, Duvall passed away in Virginia on Sunday. He was 95 years old.
“To the world,” Duvall’s wife, Luciana Pedraza, said in a statement, ”he was an Academy Award-winning actor, a director, a storyteller. To me, he was simply everything. His passion for his craft was matched only by his deep love for characters, a great meal, and holding court. For each of his many roles, Bob gave everything to his characters and to the truth of the human spirit they represented. In doing so, he leaves something lasting and unforgettable to us all. Thank you for the years of support you showed Bob and for giving us this time and privacy to celebrate the memories he leaves behind.”
Born in California in 1931, Duvall served in the Army during the Korean War, then studied theater in New York City under the famous acting teacher Sanford Meisner alongside future stars like James Caan and Dustin Hoffman. After getting some early work in New York, his film debut came in 1962’s famed movie version of Harper Lee’s novel To Kill a Mockingbird, where he played the mysterious Boo Radley.
READ MORE: The Best Movie Every Year Since 1970
It is impossible to imagine the great Hollywood movies of the 1970s without Duvall. He appeared in many of the period’s greatest films — including The Godfather and The Godfather Part II, M*A*S*H, Network, and Apocalypse Now.
In The Godfather and The Godfather Part II, Duvall played Tom Hagen, the consigliere and lawyer to Vito Corleone and the Corleone family. Duvall reprised the role for director Francis Ford Coppola two years later, in The Godfather Part II. The first Godfather earned Duvall the first of his seven Academy Award nominations.
Although Duvall had many memorable roles across a decades-long career, his most famous performance arguably came in another Coppola movie, 1979’s Apocalypse Now. He only had a handful of minutes of screen time as the merciless Lt. Kilgore, but he made them count. His delivery of the famous line “I love the smell of napalm in the morning” went down in history as one of the great quotes in film history
Duvall earned his second Oscar nomination for Apocalypse Now, but he didn’t win an Academy Award until four years later, when he starred in Bruce Beresford’s soft-spoken drama Tender Mercies. Playing a washed-up country singer, Duval’s Mac Sledge tries to clean up his life and begins a relationship with a Texas widow. This scene, between Duvall and co-star Tess Harper, is another quietly devastating career highlight.
This is just a small sampling of Duvall’s greatest moments onscreen; a full accounting wouldn’t take 95 years, but it’d come pretty close. Duvall was also nominated for Oscars for his work in The Great Santini, The Apostle, A Civil Action, and 2015’s The Judge, and his other notable films include George Lucas’ THX 1138, The Outfit, Days of Thunder, Ron Howard’s The Paper, Sling Blade, and Deep Impact. His final onscreen role came in 2022’s The Pale Blue Eyes — exactly 50 years after his debut in To Kill a Mockingbird.
The man had an incredible career and produced an enviable body of work. He will be missed, but if he had appeared in half as many iconic ’70s and ’80s movies as he did, he would be remembered forever.

Essential Movies on Netflix Every Film Lover Should See
If you have a Netflix subscription, and you love movies, here are 20 titles you absolutely have to see.





