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Commuter rail service in Spain disrupted by theft of copper cables near Barcelona None - Spanish rail authorities say commuter rail service serving Barcelona and northeastern Spain has suffered major disruption because of the theft of copper cables from a train installation Commuter rail service in Spain disrupted by theft of copper cables near Barcelona By The Associated Press BARCELONA, Spain -- Commuter rail service serving Barcelona and northeastern Spain has suffered major disruption because of the theft of copper cables from a train installation, Spanish rail authorities said Sunday. Thousands of commuters were stranded at train stations in and around Barcelona after trains couldn't run on several commuter lines. The disruption to local transport came while more than 5.7 million voters were eligible to participate in a regional election in Catalonia. Spain’s state-owned railway authority ADIF said that the theft of electrical cabling from a station just north of Barcelona in the town of Montcada caused “several fires in the cables of the signaling system.” It said that the incident around 4 a.m. local time (0200 GMT) caused a “serious” impact to the local train service and affected all the rail lines. Catalonia’s commuter rail service suffers regular delays, some because of similar acts of theft.
Uber, Shopify fall; Lyft, Arista Networks rise, Wednesday, 5/8/2024 None - Stocks that traded heavily or had substantial price changes on Wednesday: Uber, Shopify fall; Lyft, Arista Networks rise The Associated Press By The Associated Press NEW YORK -- Stocks that traded heavily or had substantial price changes on Wednesday: Uber Technologies Inc., down $4.03 to $66.40. The ride-hailing company reported a surprising first-quarter loss and disappointing bookings results. Shopify Inc., down $14.32 to $62.73. The cloud-based commerce company gave investors a disappointing update to its financial forecast. Arista Networks Inc., up $17.68 to $291.67. The cloud networking company beat Wall Street's first-quarter earnings and revenue forecasts. Twilio Inc., down $4.75 to $58.62. The cloud-based communications company's revenue forecast for the current quarter fell short of Wall Street expectations. Rivian Automotive Inc., rose 2 cents to $10.27. The electric vehicle maker's first-quarter loss was bigger than Wall Street expected, but its revenue beat forecasts. Match Group Inc., down $1.69 to $29.82. The owner of Tinder, Match and other dating sites gave investors a disappointing revenue forecast for the quarter. Lyft Inc., up $1.18 to $17.78. The ride-hailing company beat analysts' first-quarter financial forecasts. Dutch Bros Inc., up $3.35 to $31.77. The drive-thru coffee chain raised its revenue forecast for the year.
Rebels kill at least 4 people during an attack on a Central African Republic mining town None - Authorities say that anti-government rebels in the Central African Republic have carried out an attack in a village known for gold mining Rebels kill at least 4 people during an attack on a Central African Republic mining town BANGUI, Central African Republic -- Armed rebels on Sunday attacked a Chinese-run gold mining town and killed at least four people in Central African Republic, authorities said. Maxime Balalu, a local government spokesperson, told The Associated Press that the Coalition of Patriots for Change, an alliance of rebel groups aligned with former President Francois Bozize, had carried out the attack in Gaga, a village roughly 125 miles (200 kilometers) from the capital, Bangui. He said the death toll might rise and included several individuals who worked at the nearby mine. Several others were injured in the attack, Balalu said. Central African Republic has been in conflict since 2013, when predominantly Muslim rebels seized power and forced the President Francois Bozize from office. Mostly Christian militias fought back. A 2019 peace deal only lessened the fighting, and six of the 14 armed groups that signed later left the agreement. The Coalition of Patriots for Change was founded in 2020 in the aftermath of the agreement. The country remains one of the poorest in the world despite its vast mineral wealth of gold and diamonds among others. Rebel groups have operated with impunity across the embattled country over the past decade, thwarting mining exploration by foreign companies. Many of those now operating in the country are Chinese-run and have faced security challenges. Last year, nine Chinese nationals were killed at another gold mine in Central African Republic during an attack that the government blamed on the same rebel alliance. In 2020, two Chinese nationals died when local residents led an uprising against a Chinese-operated mine in Sosso Nakombo.
A police officer was killed in Pakistan-held Kashmir during protests against price hikes None - A protest against rising costs of food, fuel and utility bills has turned violent in Pakistani-controlled portion of Kashmir, leaving a police officer dead and dozens of people injured ISLAMABAD -- A protest against rising costs of food, fuel and utility bills turned violent in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir, leaving a police officer dead and dozens of people injured, officials said Sunday. Traders in some of the cities in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir pulled their shutters down on Saturday while protesters burned tires to express their anger. A police officer was killed in Dadyal town, authorities said. Police have detained several demonstrators across Kashmir, which is divided between Pakistan and India. Chaudhry Anwarul Haq, the prime minister in Pakistan-held Kashmir, said he was ready to consider the demands of the protesters but urged them not to indulge in violence. Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari on Sunday convened a meeting to discuss how to calm the protests. Pakistan last year narrowly avoided a default on the payment of foreign debts when International Monetary Fund and several friendly nations came to its rescue by giving it loans. Pakistan’s monthly inflation rate at one point reached over 40%, but authorities say it had come down to 17% ahead of the talks with IMF for a new bailout. Pakistan plans to get at least $6 billion from IMF when it reaches a deal expected in the coming months.
Met Gala hauls in record sum of more than $26 million to fund Costume Institute None - The 2024 Met Gala raised more than $26 million, a record sum for the party that has become an annual gathering for mega-celebrities in fashion, film, TV, sports, music, business and more Met Gala hauls in record sum of more than $26 million to fund Costume Institute NEW YORK -- The 2024 Met Gala raised more than $26 million, a record sum for the party that has become an annual gathering for mega-celebrities in fashion, film, TV, sports, music, business and more, the museum said. Monday evening's gala, a fundraiser for the museum's Costume Institute, was sponsored by TikTok and the fashion label Loewe. It was overseen as usual by influential Vogue editor Anna Wintour, who was joined as host by Jennifer Lopez, Bad Bunny, Zendaya and Chris Hemsworth. Tables of 10 started at $350,000 for the dinner. The theme was “The Garden of Time” and the fairytale motif was everpresent in the decor, which included a 32-foot “whimsical tree” centerpiece in the museum's Great Hall. The gala launched the costume institute's spring exhibit, “Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion,” which opens to the public on Friday.
Congo military releases 2 Kenya Airways staffers held for 2 weeks over cargo dispute None - Kenya says the Republic of Congo's military has released two Kenya Airways staffers who were detained for two weeks in a cargo dispute NAIROBI, Kenya -- The Republic of Congo’s military has released two Kenya Airways staffers who were detained for two weeks in a cargo dispute, Kenya's foreign ministry said Monday. The staffers' detention had led Kenya Airways to suspend flights to Congo, but the state-owned airline said flights would resume Wednesday. The airline said it had rejected the cargo because it didn’t have the required documentation. The nature of the cargo, described as “valuable,” hasn’t been disclosed. Congo’s military had arrested the staffers from the airline’s offices in the main airport in the capital, Kinshasa. A military court granted the airline’s application for their release but the military continued to hold them. Kenya and Congo have cordial relations, with Kenya participating in U.N-backed peacekeeping missions in Congo. The Kenyan Embassy in Congo negotiated for the release of the staffers, Foreign Ministry Principal Secretary Korir Singoei had said. Colleagues and embassy officials were only granted a few minutes with the two. Singoei met the family of one of the detained staffers and assured them that their kin would be safe and “fairly treated” by the authorities in Congo.
How to save money on buying products that other shoppers return None - How to save money on buying products that other shoppers return The National Retail Federation estimates $743 billion worth of merchandise was returned last year. Buyers and sellers can't wait to get their hands on the products at bin stores, where the rejected items of others get a second lease on life, for a fraction of the price.
'He lied for the benefit of Donald Trump not for himself': Michael Cohen's attorney speaks out None - 'He lied for the benefit of Donald Trump not for himself': Michael Cohen's attorney speaks out Lanny Davis, attorney and communications advisor for Michael Cohen, joins Andrea Mitchell, Katy Tur and Chris Jansing to weigh in on his client's testimony in former President Trump's New York hush money trial.May 13, 2024
Andrew Weissmann attends Trump trial: 'I don't usually see the defendant asleep' None - MSNBC legal analyst Andrew Weissmann reports on what he saw from former President Trump and his "unusual reaction" to closing his eyes as Michael Cohen testified in the hush money trial.May 13, 2024
'He needs to be like Stormy Daniels': Weissmann offers on-air advice for star witness Michael Cohen None - 'He needs to be like Stormy Daniels': Weissmann offers on-air advice for star witness Michael Cohen Jen Psaki is joined by legal experts Andrew Weissmann and Kristy Greenberg to discuss the upcoming week of former president Donald Trump's hush money trial - including testimony from star witness, and former Trump fixer, Michael Cohen. May 12, 2024
Cohen testifies about meeting over National Enquirer's coverage of Trump None - Prosecutors are questioning Michael Cohen about a meeting he had with David Pecker and discussions for the National Enquirer to run positive stories about former President Trump and negative stories about his Republican primary opponents in 2015.May 13, 2024
China and US envoys will hold the first top-level dialogue on artificial intelligence in Geneva None - High-level envoys from the United States and China are set to meet in Geneva for talks about artificial intelligence China and US envoys will hold the first top-level dialogue on artificial intelligence in Geneva GENEVA -- High-level envoys from the United States and China are set to meet in Geneva on Tuesday for talks about artificial intelligence, including the risks of the fast-evolving technology and ways to set shared standards to manage it. The meeting, billed as an opening exchange of views, is the first under an intergovernmental dialogue on AI agreed upon during a multi-faceted meeting between U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping in San Francisco in November. Both the U.S. and China see AI as crucial for national security and economic growth, with Biden administration officials saying they plan to focus on the development of safe, secure and trustworthy AI. The officials insisted on anonymity to preview the meeting on a phone call with reporters. They also said the U.S. would outline how it was addressing possible risks from the technology by creating voluntary commitments with the sector’s leading companies and requiring safety tests of AI products. The U.S. government also sees efforts undertaken on AI by China as possibly undermining the national security of the United States and its allies, and Washington has been vying to stay ahead of Beijing on the use of AI in weapons systems. China’s official Xinhua news agency, citing the Foreign Ministry, said that the two sides would take up issues including the technological risks of AI and global governance. Sam Bresnick, a research fellow at Georgetown University’s Center for Security and Emerging Technology, said both the U.S. and China are investing heavily in AI for civilian and military applications, but China has been “reluctant” to discuss the risks around AI with the United States. “These meetings present an opportunity for U.S. officials to get a better sense of China’s approach to defining and mitigating AI risks,” Bresnick, who focuses on AI applications and Chinese technology policy, said in an email. He played down any immediate prospect of binding agreements to ease risks linked to AI, but the talks “may help the two sides build trust” and understanding around AI issues. The National Security Council at the White House said that the U.S. team is being led by presidential adviser and senior director for technology and national security, Tarun Chhabra, and the U.S. State Department’s acting special envoy for critical and emerging technologies, Seth Center. The meeting underlines the wider race by governments around the world to figure out how to rein in artificial intelligence even as the technology makes rapid advances and is poised to transform many aspects of daily life, from education and the workplace to copyright and privacy. Government leaders from a number of countries are expected to meet in Seoul next week for the second edition of talks on the safety of cutting-edge AI models, after a first round last year at a former wartime codebreaking base in Britain. ___ Josh Boak in Washington, Emily Wang in Beijing, and Kelvin Chan in London, contributed to this report.
OpenAI announces new version of AI language model that fuels ChatGPT None - The model eliminates lag in response time and allows for user interruption. OpenAI announced a desktop version of its conversation bot ChatGPT on Monday as well as the latest iteration of the AI language model that fuels the chatbot. The fresh model offers improved speed and interactive capability when compared with the company's previous model GPT-4, OpenAI Chief Technology Mira Murati said at an event livestreamed by the company. Known as GPT-4o, the latest version eliminates lag time in the response from ChatGPT and allows users to interrupt the conversation bot with a new query that in turn elicits a modified response, Murati said. The improved capacity, Murati added, functions in response to text, audio and visual prompts. "We're looking at the future of our interaction between ourselves and the machines, and we think that GPT-4o is really shifting that paradigm," Murati said. "This is the first time we're making a huge step forward when it comes to the ease of use." An OpenAI researcher performed a live demonstration in which the new product identified the pace of his breathing and offered him advice on how to relax, and another in which the product provided immediate translation allowing for a conversation between someone speaking Italian and another speaking English. In a separate demo, the product viewed a researcher's attempt at solving a math equation through his phone camera and provided real-time guidance. GPT-4o will be released over the coming weeks, Murati said, adding that the company will make the product available gradually in an effort to prevent abuse. "Our team has been hard at work building in mitigation against misuse," Murati said. "We continue to work with stakeholders." OpenAI has sought to release fresh products and upgrades since the November 2022 release of ChatGPT, which reached 100 million app users within two months. That performance set a record for the fastest-growing app user base. In March 2023, Open-AI released GPT-4, the latest version of its AI language model. Days after the release of GPT-4, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman told ABC News that the product scored in the 90th percentile on the Uniform Bar Exam. It also scored a near-perfect score on the SAT Math test, and it can proficiently write computer code in most programming languages. GPT-4 could be "the greatest technology humanity has yet developed" to drastically improve our lives," Altman told ABC News at the time. The announcement on Monday arrives three months after OpenAI unveiled its video-generation tool Sora. Sora composes videos, lasting up to one-minute long, based on user prompts, just as ChatGPT responds to input with written responses and Dall-E offers up images. The video-generator is in use by a group of product testers but is not available to the public, OpenAI said in a statement in February. Sam Altman speaks onstage during A Year In TIME at The Plaza Hotel in New York City, Dec. 12, 2023. Mike Coppola/Getty Images for TIME The risks posed by AI-generated content have stoked wide concern in recent months. Fake, sexually explicit AI-generated images of pop star Taylor Swift went viral on social media in late January, garnering millions of views. A fake image of pop singer Katy Perry at the Met Gala circulated widely online last week, even fooling Perry's mother OpenAI posted a statement online in February outlining measures taken by the company to prevent abuse of Sora. "We'll be taking several important safety steps ahead of making Sora available in OpenAI's products," the company website says. "We are working with red teamers -- domain experts in areas like misinformation, hateful content, and bias -- who will be adversarially testing the model." In response to growing scrutiny over AI-produced content, tech platforms have taken steps to regulate such posts ahead of the November election. Meta announced in February that it would begin labeling images created by OpenAI, Midjourney and other artificial intelligence products. Social media site TikTok said in an online statement last week that it would also start labeling such images. The series of major product releases in recent years has coincided with leadership turmoil at OpenAI. Altman abruptly stepped down in November 2023 from his role as CEO of OpenAI. After an employee revolt and a public apology from one of the company's board members, Altman was rehired for the position just four days later. The decision included a condition for OpenAI to reconfigure its board of directors. Altman's return appeared to involve input from Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, whose company made a $10 billion investment in OpenAI last year. At the end of the event on Monday, Murati hinted at a forthcoming product announcement. "We also care a lot about the next frontier," Murati said. "Soon we'll be updating you on our progress toward the next big thing." ABC News' Victor Ordonez contributed to this report.
Argentina will get next installment of bailout as IMF praises Milei's austerity policies None - The International Monetary Fund, Argentina’s biggest creditor, has agreed to release the next tranche of loans due under a bailout program Argentina will get next installment of bailout as IMF praises Milei's austerity policies BUENOS AIRES, Argentina -- The International Monetary Fund, Argentina's biggest creditor, agreed Monday to release the next tranche of loans due under a bailout program, endorsing government austerity measures so severe they even surpass the terms of its $43 billion loan. The IMF deal follows the completion of its review of Argentina's compliance record and confirms the next $792 million payment will become available to the government in June, reassuring markets and boosting confidence among bankers about Argentina’s prospects as it goes through its worst economic crisis in two decades. The decision by the fund's technical staff still requires final approval from the IMF’s executive board, which could take weeks. Argentina’s annual inflation rate reached 287% in March, among the highest in the world, deepening poverty and spurring strikes and protests. But the IMF praised President Javier Milei's libertarian government for a number of economic successes — Argentina's first quarterly fiscal surplus in 16 years, falling monthly inflation and surging sovereign bond prices. To overhaul the beleaguered economy, Milei has slashed public sector wages, eliminated thousands of state jobs, frozen public works projects and and cut subsidies. He has also devalued the nosediving peso currency by over 50%, helping it stabilize but causing the prices of basic goods to skyrocket. Although brutal for Argentina's poor and middle classes, the market-friendly overhaul has “resulted in faster-than-anticipated progress in restoring macroeconomic stability and bringing the program firmly back on track," the IMF said, thanking Argentine authorities for “the decisive implementation of their stabilization plan." The praise marks a dramatic turn-around from the past six decades during which Argentine politicians showed little interest in enacting reforms stipulated as part of borrowing agreements. Previous left-leaning governments fell far short of IMF targets and relied on central bank money printing to finance treasury spending, pushing the country's IMF program — launched in 2018 and refinanced in 2022 — to a breaking point. The international lender remains deeply unpopular in Argentina, where the public blames it for an economic implosion and debt default in late 2001. The IMF later acknowledged it made mistakes contributing to the collapse. It's rare for a country to have the IMF as its biggest creditor. Argentina is in the strange position of relying on money lent by the fund to repay the fund itself.
Video Roaring Kitty is back and so are meme stocks None - Roaring Kitty is back and so are meme stocks The man at the center of the pandemic meme stock craze returned to the social platform X for the first time in three years and sent prices of those stocks surging overnight.
Incyte, Squarespace rise; Chimera Investment, Amazon fall, Monday, 5/13/2024 None - Stocks that traded heavily or had substantial price changes on Monday: Incyte, Squarespace rise; Chimera Investment, Amazon fall The Associated Press By The Associated Press NEW YORK -- Stocks that traded heavily or had substantial price changes on Monday: Incyte Corp., up $4.54 to $57.60. The specialty drugmaker announced plans to buy back up to $2 billion of its stock. Squarespace Inc., up $5.06 to $43.25. The software company Squarespace is being taken private in $6.9 billion all-cash deal with private equity firm Permira. Tencent Music Entertainment Group, up $1.46 to $14.80. The China-based music streaming platform beat analysts' first-quarter revenue forecasts. Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc., up 93 cents to $18.12. The drugstore chain is reportedly discussing a potential sale of historic British pharmacy Boots. Intel Corp., up 66 cents to $30.51. The chipmaker is reportedly in advanced talks on an $11 billion investment from Apollo Global Management. Chimera Investment Corp., down 25 cents to $4.36. The mortgage investor announced a 1-for-3 reverse stock split later this month. Precision BioSciences Inc., up 86 cents to $11.50. The gene editing company beat analysts' first-quarter financial forecasts. Amazon.com Inc., down 91 cents to $186.57. The internet retail giant’s self-driving robotaxi unit is the target of an investigation after two vehicles were in crashes with motorcycles.
Roaring Kitty is back and so are meme stocks. GameStop and AMC surge like it's 2021 None - The man at the center of the pandemic meme stock craze returned to the social platform X for the first time in three years and sent prices of those stocks surging overnight Roaring Kitty is back and so are meme stocks. GameStop and AMC surge like it's 2021 The man at the center of the pandemic meme stock craze appeared online for the first time in three years, sending the prices of thee quirky and volatile shares sharply higher Monday. Keith Gill, better known as “Roaring Kitty,” posted an image Sunday on the social platform X of a man sitting forward in his chair, a meme used by gamers when things are getting serious. He followed that tweet with a YouTube video from years before when he championed the beleaguered company GameStop saying, “That’s all for now cuz I’m out of breath. FYI here’s a quick 4min video I put together to summarize the $GME bull case.” GameStop in 2021 was a video game retailer that was struggling to survive as consumers switched rapidly from discs to digital downloads. Big Wall Street hedge funds and major investors were betting against it, or shorting its stock, believing that its shares would continue on a drastically downward trend. Gill and those who agreed with him changed the trajectory of a company that appeared to headed for bankruptcy by buying up thousands of GameStop shares in the face of almost any accepted metrics that told investors that the company was in serious trouble. That began what is known as a “short squeeze,” when those big investors that had bet against GameStop were forced to buy its rapidly rising stock to offset their massive losses. At Monday's opening bell it appeared that Gill had reignited the phenomenon as shares of GameStop more than doubled. At midday, shares were trading 60% higher. It's the biggest intraday trading jump for GameStop since the meme craze of early 2021. Other meme stocks like the theater chain AMC were jolted higher as well. Trading in GameStop was halted eight times before noon on Monday due to volatility. Gill became a cause célèbre in 2021 after his posts on the Reddit subcategory Wallstreetbets ignited a David vs. Goliath battle with large hedge funds that were betting heavily against the survival of GameStop. The small guys won, at least for a while, driving shares of GameStop up more than 1,000% in 2021 and other meme stocks as well. The struggling movie theater chain AMC jumped 2,300% in a very short span of time in the same year. Some big traders posted collosal losses as GameStop raced from less than $20, to close to $400 each. Citron Research, Melvin Capital and other well-known hedge funds lost an estimated $5 billion, according to analytics firm S3 Partners. Some of those new and smaller investors believed, at least in part, that Ryan Cohen, co-founder of Chewy.com, could push the traditional retailer in a more online direction. Cohen built up a stake in GameStop before eventually joining the board and last year becoming its CEO. Joining the meme surge Monday was AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc., which leapt 33%. Koss Co. a headphone manufacturer, spiked 25% and BlackBerry, the one time dominant smartphone maker, rose 7%. The retailer Bed, Bath & Beyond, another meme stock, sought bankruptcy protection last year. Some meme stocks, including GameStop and AMC, had been climbing earlier this month, and rapidly. Shares of GameStop Corp., which have faded steadily since 2021, had already risen 57% this month. In January, GameStop reported its first annual profit since 2018, although it’s still unclear if Cohen’s turnaround plan will succeed. AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc., had risen 10% over the past 30 days. Those companies broke out Monday following Gill's tweet. The dynamics of the market as far as companies like GameStop are concerned have changed, however. When Gill and an online army of retail investors began buying up shares of GameStop, more than 140% of the company's tradeable shares were being shorted. You arrive at that distorted number because some traders were borrowing against already shorted stocks to build even bigger bets against the company, vastly increasing their losses when the stock began to climb. The short positions against GameStop's tradable shares now stand just over 24%, slightly more than the 22.5% recorded in January. Gill reaped a big profit investing in a troubled video-game company, but denied when he appeared virtually at a Congressional hearing that he used social media to drive up GameStop's stock price. He told lawmakers at the time simply, “I like the stock.” As Roaring Kitty, Gill had vanished from messaging boards after posting a video in June 2021 of kittens going to sleep. The story of Roaring Kitty and the meme stock craze was turned into a movie last year called “Dumb Money.”
This Week: Producer prices, inflation check, April retail sales None - The Labor Department releases producer price data for April on Tuesday, and its April report on consumer prices on Wednesday Inflation foresight The Labor Department releases producer price data for April on Tuesday. The producer price index measures inflation at the wholesale level, before businesses pass costs on to consumers. Wholesale inflation jumped in March, the latest sign that inflation pressures in the economy remain elevated. Analysts are forecasting that inflation edged higher in April. Producer price index, annual percent change, seasonally adjusted: Nov.: 0.8 Dec.: -1.1 Jan.: 1 Feb.: 1.6 March: 2.1 April (est.) 2.2 Source: FactSet. Price check The Labor Department releases its April report on consumer prices on Wednesday. Analysts expect inflation at the consumer level edged lower to 3.4% in April. It rose to 3.5% in March and has been ticking higher in 2024. The rate of inflation had been cooling heading into 2024, but progress has seemingly stalled. That has created uncertainty about when and how much the Federal Reserve will cut its benchmark interest rate this year. Consumer price index, annual percent change, not seasonally adjusted: Nov.: 3.1 Dec.: 3.4 Jan.: 3.1 Feb.: 3.2 March: 3.5 April (est.): 3.4 Source: FactSet. Retail sales update The Commerce Department releases its latest monthly tally of U.S. retail sales Wednesday. Analysts expect that retail sales rose 0.4% last month after jumping 1% in March. Shopping by consumers accounts for nearly 70% of the U.S. economy and retail sales are watched closely as a measure of economic health. Consumer spending has been driving economic growth, despite high inflation. Retail sales, monthly percent change, seasonally adjusted: Nov.: 0.1 Dec.: 0.4 Jan.: -1.1 Feb.: 1 March: 1 April (est.): 0.4 Source: FactSet.
George Stephanopoulos on his new book, the dangers of a second Trump term None - Kathleen Hanna on 'Rebel Girl' and how friends, humor keep her going
Joe: Trump can't remember Jimmy Carter's last name None - Kathleen Hanna on 'Rebel Girl' and how friends, humor keep her going