31
31
Jun 21, 2024
06/24
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 31
favorite 0
quote 0
thank you, melissa.hey would be gone now, out the door. he needs to take tough action, but is not even now saying if there's more involved. it's a total lack of leadership. i should say on the nigel farage interview, we've now had a response from the labour party, chris bryant saying on x, formerly known as twitter, "he's wrong, putin guaranteed the territorial integrity in the budapest protocols and installed them into crimea. vladimir putin is the aggressor and he doesn't need british apologies." that's after we've heard from nigel farage in a bbc interview where he said to the bbc, "the west provoked russia's invasion of ukraine by expanding the european union and nato military alliance eastwards," he was asked that by my colleague nick robinson. let's move onto another aspect the campaign. with the polls predicting a labour government, and many conservatives fearing an electoral wipe—out, rishi sunak and other senior tories are claiming, if sir keir starmer wins by a landslide, he'd "change the rules
thank you, melissa.hey would be gone now, out the door. he needs to take tough action, but is not even now saying if there's more involved. it's a total lack of leadership. i should say on the nigel farage interview, we've now had a response from the labour party, chris bryant saying on x, formerly known as twitter, "he's wrong, putin guaranteed the territorial integrity in the budapest protocols and installed them into crimea. vladimir putin is the aggressor and he doesn't need british...
22
22
Jun 21, 2024
06/24
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 22
favorite 0
quote 0
it is the same in the us, i guess, isn't it, melissa?— guess, isn't it, melissa?e have a big influence on culture i guess, isn't it, melissa? yes we| have a big influence on culture in the west, so losing tiktok would be a huge blow to that industry. perhaps that would be the reason why the us is hesitant to take that away. if they are to bring in a kill switch, that is something really to consider, to weigh up, that... i guess it is a negotiation tactic from tiktok as well, now that i think about it, but it is just interesting that the us government didn't take that option.— didn't take that option. also, joe, on that, didn't take that option. also, joe, on that. does _ didn't take that option. also, joe, on that, does it _ didn't take that option. also, joe, on that, does it show _ didn't take that option. also, joe, on that, does it show that - didn't take that option. also, joe, on that, does it show that some l on that, does it show that some of these tech companies are willing to cede to government? when i lived in america? i remember —— when i lived in amer
it is the same in the us, i guess, isn't it, melissa?— guess, isn't it, melissa?e have a big influence on culture i guess, isn't it, melissa? yes we| have a big influence on culture in the west, so losing tiktok would be a huge blow to that industry. perhaps that would be the reason why the us is hesitant to take that away. if they are to bring in a kill switch, that is something really to consider, to weigh up, that... i guess it is a negotiation tactic from tiktok as well, now that i think...
74
74
Jun 14, 2024
06/24
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 74
favorite 0
quote 0
melissa: the answer is yes. rates come down more buyers come into the marketplace because of increased affordability. therefore prices are likely to go up. even in the face of higher rates this year the average price of a home has increased by 4%. there are people who want to get in now and figure they can take a higher rate mortgage knowing he will refinance when the fed starts to cut rates and they will be able to take advantage of today's price point. there is more inventory. people have more time to look around and decide which homes they want to buy. this will be an opportunity. when the fed starts to cut rates mortgage rates will drop. more people will come in and prices will go up. abigail: a lot of commercial real estate folks sonali and i have talked to have talked about the tremendous sensitivity to rates within a week or two of big moves up or down can affect business. are you seeing that sort of sensitivity for residential even within the strength of florida? and talk about the tri-state area because
melissa: the answer is yes. rates come down more buyers come into the marketplace because of increased affordability. therefore prices are likely to go up. even in the face of higher rates this year the average price of a home has increased by 4%. there are people who want to get in now and figure they can take a higher rate mortgage knowing he will refinance when the fed starts to cut rates and they will be able to take advantage of today's price point. there is more inventory. people have...
192
192
Jun 28, 2024
06/24
by
KGO
tv
eye 192
favorite 0
quote 0
melissa mccarthy. have a great night. tomorrow' test. >> lou: from hollywood, it's "jimmy kimmel live" with guest host jiminy glick. tonight -- melissa mccarthy. nick kroll. and music from the warning. with cleto and the cletones. and now, jiminy glick! [ cheers and applause ] ♪ >> jiminy: how wonderful! wonderful! applaud yourselves! look at that, look at the band. oh! [ cheers and applause ] shut up! thank you! hello and welcome to "jiminy kimmel live." [ laughter ] ha ha ha! i'm your host jiminy glick. and let me just start -- [ cheers and applause ] thank you. this is amazing. let me just start by saying how excited i am to be host of a show i love so much. although i've never seen it. [ laughter ] but word gets back from those who have that it's wonderful. filled with edge. speaking of edge, look who's here, guillermo. [ cheers and applause ] guillermo, such an exotic look. you're like a cross between burt reynolds and a pikachu. [ laughter ] is it true that jimmy found you floating down a river in a basket? >> guill
melissa mccarthy. have a great night. tomorrow' test. >> lou: from hollywood, it's "jimmy kimmel live" with guest host jiminy glick. tonight -- melissa mccarthy. nick kroll. and music from the warning. with cleto and the cletones. and now, jiminy glick! [ cheers and applause ] ♪ >> jiminy: how wonderful! wonderful! applaud yourselves! look at that, look at the band. oh! [ cheers and applause ] shut up! thank you! hello and welcome to "jiminy kimmel live." [...
81
81
Jun 18, 2024
06/24
by
CNBC
tv
eye 81
favorite 0
quote 0
hey, steve. >> hey, melissa. yeah, there is a lot of fed speak, and i'll get to some new stuff in a second. let's talk about the softer than expected may retail sales report and a down april, dragging down the growth estimates for the second quarter. several economists saying under the hood, these retail numbers aren't that soft. take what barclays said after the number -- >> well, let's look at the details. headline, up less than expected. april revised to minus 0.2 from a flat line. gasoline was the big culprit here. restaurants and bars also down. but the core retail number, that's what needs into gdp. that was up 0.4%. it was revised down for april. motor vehicles up 0.8 and sporting goods up 2.8. we do have some fresh fed speak out with remarks from the fed governor, saying it's likely appropriate to ease policy later this year, and she says policy currenty is sufficiently restrictive. policy has more work to do, so she is in no hurry to reduce rates. she did see more progress toward the 2% inflation goal an
hey, steve. >> hey, melissa. yeah, there is a lot of fed speak, and i'll get to some new stuff in a second. let's talk about the softer than expected may retail sales report and a down april, dragging down the growth estimates for the second quarter. several economists saying under the hood, these retail numbers aren't that soft. take what barclays said after the number -- >> well, let's look at the details. headline, up less than expected. april revised to minus 0.2 from a flat...
191
191
Jun 23, 2024
06/24
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 191
favorite 0
quote 0
but andrew and melissa, you are not going anywhere. we still need to have a conversation because there's more that we want to talk to you about in the cases out there and it has to do with a challenge to the charges brought against somejanuary 6th rioters. this is "the weekend." k about it. boring is the unsung catalyst for bold. what straps bold to a rocket and hurtles it into space? boring does. boring makes vacations happen, early retirements possible, and startups start up. because it's smart, dependable, and steady. all words you want from your bank. for nearly 160 years, pnc bank has been brilliantly boring so you can be happily fulfilled... which is pretty un-boring if you think about it. -unnecessary action hero ... the nemesis. -it appears that despite my sinister efforts, employees are still managing their own hr and payroll. why would you think mere humans deserve to do their own payroll? because their livelihoods depend on it? because they have bills to pay? hear me now, paycom! return the world of hr and payroll to its rig
but andrew and melissa, you are not going anywhere. we still need to have a conversation because there's more that we want to talk to you about in the cases out there and it has to do with a challenge to the charges brought against somejanuary 6th rioters. this is "the weekend." k about it. boring is the unsung catalyst for bold. what straps bold to a rocket and hurtles it into space? boring does. boring makes vacations happen, early retirements possible, and startups start up....
37
37
Jun 15, 2024
06/24
by
KQED
tv
eye 37
favorite 0
quote 0
melissa: it will.ntioned about how much extra he will put into the nhs and he illustrated it with the pound coins or pennies and that was essentially what he was offering. the equivalent to one penny. i do not know how much more he can do. obviously he is inheriting a lot of troubles from the tory party. there is only so much he can do. on one hand, there is an element of what he is staying there saying and the element of truth that he can only do so much. he cannot get out a magic wand and change everything. it will take a long time. perhaps it will not even been done -- be done in the time he has as new prime minister. ben: that is the challenge that might lie ahead of him should he get that top job. whether he has prepared to be honest with the british public. about the difficult decisions that might need to be made. he is saying he is prepared to make enemies over issues like planning but is he prepared to make enemies of the electorate when he says we do not want to do that and we will cut spendin
melissa: it will.ntioned about how much extra he will put into the nhs and he illustrated it with the pound coins or pennies and that was essentially what he was offering. the equivalent to one penny. i do not know how much more he can do. obviously he is inheriting a lot of troubles from the tory party. there is only so much he can do. on one hand, there is an element of what he is staying there saying and the element of truth that he can only do so much. he cannot get out a magic wand and...
111
111
Jun 27, 2024
06/24
by
CNBC
tv
eye 111
favorite 0
quote 0
>> hey, melissa.residential terms is tough, and none tougher than comparing the trump and biden companies. presidents get the companies left by their press ed issors, and this race has the dramatic effects of the pandemic. biden beats trump on quarterly average gdp. trump's numbers improve if you take out the pandemic. and biden's come down a little bit. biden had lower average unemployment. biden created far more jobs, 15.6, minus 2.7 for trump. but question is, how much is trump responsible for those job losses? take out the pandemic effects, the losses narrow, and the national gains have biden still better. biden had stronger capital spending. but there it is, there's the inflation. a major knock on biden, a major concern for voters. prices up 19% during his presidency compared to prices being up just about 8% for trump. that's led to a decline in real or inflation adjusted hourly wages of 0.6% for biden, comparing to positive 7.1% under trump. biden had -- s&p rose 44%, trump, 68%. nasdaq doing be
>> hey, melissa.residential terms is tough, and none tougher than comparing the trump and biden companies. presidents get the companies left by their press ed issors, and this race has the dramatic effects of the pandemic. biden beats trump on quarterly average gdp. trump's numbers improve if you take out the pandemic. and biden's come down a little bit. biden had lower average unemployment. biden created far more jobs, 15.6, minus 2.7 for trump. but question is, how much is trump...
59
59
Jun 25, 2024
06/24
by
CNBC
tv
eye 59
favorite 0
quote 0
hey, frank. >> hey, melissa. shares are moving a lot higher partly on fedex saying they're conducting fedex freight and that's one of the reasons why fedex shares are popping and that's also a big reason for the stock's rise, fedex freight is a less than truckload business and the biggest in the nation that competes with xbo and old dominion and he sees both of those higher on the news and in the release the company says it will look at the role of freight in the portfolio. we'll look for more color on the call, of course. overall, a pretty strong quarter on guidance, as you mentioned was strong in line with estimates and we got confirmation the company plans to save $2.2 billion through its drive cost-cutting initiative program, but there are still quite a few questions about the impact of losing the post office air delivery contract. they pegged the profit impact of losing that contract and this fiscal year expecting more color on the call and all around, a pretty strong report and the one issue it could be mar
hey, frank. >> hey, melissa. shares are moving a lot higher partly on fedex saying they're conducting fedex freight and that's one of the reasons why fedex shares are popping and that's also a big reason for the stock's rise, fedex freight is a less than truckload business and the biggest in the nation that competes with xbo and old dominion and he sees both of those higher on the news and in the release the company says it will look at the role of freight in the portfolio. we'll look for...
69
69
Jun 8, 2024
06/24
by
CNNW
tv
eye 69
favorite 0
quote 0
melissa is gone. well, thank you. melissa, for blank with this. when you did, maybe i can sum it up with you. i thought it was important and also point in, even though it is about the geopolitical sphere and the dynamics here we heard from macron, who also said, he gave a nod to cinema, to literature to help to transportation. these are the various ways in which the relationship is integral between the united states and france i mean broadening it out, that it isn't real peace, peace time. liberty is important, but it isn't just about that, but there is a relationship and a continuation of relationship building through all of these venues and beyond well, what we hear today, what we hear in these speeches is the common ideas a common values of the two countries. what we are not seeing is what's happening in the private conversations are having. and there are some disagreements and the disagreements are on the degree on the tactics of support for ukraine by macron is, is advocating more of a presence on ukrainian soil. soil of western troops. but o
melissa is gone. well, thank you. melissa, for blank with this. when you did, maybe i can sum it up with you. i thought it was important and also point in, even though it is about the geopolitical sphere and the dynamics here we heard from macron, who also said, he gave a nod to cinema, to literature to help to transportation. these are the various ways in which the relationship is integral between the united states and france i mean broadening it out, that it isn't real peace, peace time....
72
72
Jun 13, 2024
06/24
by
CNBC
tv
eye 72
favorite 0
quote 0
>> and we're waiting, melissa.ht now, we're in the stage of the meeting where they're going through each of the shareholder proposals. there are people who are talking about whether they're for or against a proposal. there was one investor who spoke up about why he did not believe that elon musk should be awarded the $56 billion pay package, which, by the way, is now worth $46 billion, $47 billion, when you adjust it, compared to what it was originally when it was awarded back in 2018. so, after this, what will happen is, they will say, well, the polls are open, the polls are closed, those who are there can actually make their vote. those who have not already voted. and then we expect to get the results, melissa, so do we get it in 15, 20 minutes? remains to be seen. but they are working their way through each of the proposals right now. >> all right, phil, keep us posted. phil lebeau. >> will do. >> we know that the board has already backed this pay actpack. it's the advisory firms that are throwing up road blocks
>> and we're waiting, melissa.ht now, we're in the stage of the meeting where they're going through each of the shareholder proposals. there are people who are talking about whether they're for or against a proposal. there was one investor who spoke up about why he did not believe that elon musk should be awarded the $56 billion pay package, which, by the way, is now worth $46 billion, $47 billion, when you adjust it, compared to what it was originally when it was awarded back in 2018....
23
23
Jun 14, 2024
06/24
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 23
favorite 0
quote 0
melissa — think that is a interesting point. melissa talks about honesty as well.i think they have tried to be as honest— i think they have tried to be as honest as _ i think they have tried to be as honest as possible, voters want honesty, — honest as possible, voters want honesty, they have not put forward a manifesto _ honesty, they have not put forward a manifesto full of tax cuts like the conservatives and reform uk will do, so in shooting manifesto, and institute — so in shooting manifesto, and institute for festal —— be ensued for physical study says they will_ —— be ensued for physical study says they will have to make spending cuts, _ they will have to make spending cuts, the — they will have to make spending cuts, the courts, local government, places— cuts, the courts, local government, places that — cuts, the courts, local government, places that have had a real squeeze. keir starmer says he is not going to have a _ keir starmer says he is not going to have a return to austerity, but nonetheless the ifsc say they will have to _ nonetheless the ifsc say t
melissa — think that is a interesting point. melissa talks about honesty as well.i think they have tried to be as honest— i think they have tried to be as honest as _ i think they have tried to be as honest as possible, voters want honesty, — honest as possible, voters want honesty, they have not put forward a manifesto _ honesty, they have not put forward a manifesto full of tax cuts like the conservatives and reform uk will do, so in shooting manifesto, and institute — so in shooting...
122
122
Jun 30, 2024
06/24
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 122
favorite 0
quote 0
i want to say this to piggyback off of melissa's comments.foundation laid out, they have a plan to rescind. they have a plan to withdraw authorization of medication abortion. so when the court pumps these decisions on technicalities, they have opened the door for a trump admin to come in and take it all back. >> what you guys missed, because melissa came ■çin hot this morning. she said i know we are talking about abortion but we have to talk about this. and that is not your general energy. so let's talk about this. i think we have talked about a bunch of different things. talk to me about how chevron relates to what we are seeing out of idaho and relates to what we are watching for monday. >> i want to underscore that we have had this conservative super majority for about four years. in the last three terms, this united states supreme court has overruled one major precedent in each term. it was dobbs in 2022 overruling roe v wade. last year, overruling gruden versus belanger which upheld the limited use of race conscious admissions policy. an
i want to say this to piggyback off of melissa's comments.foundation laid out, they have a plan to rescind. they have a plan to withdraw authorization of medication abortion. so when the court pumps these decisions on technicalities, they have opened the door for a trump admin to come in and take it all back. >> what you guys missed, because melissa came ■çin hot this morning. she said i know we are talking about abortion but we have to talk about this. and that is not your general...
56
56
Jun 12, 2024
06/24
by
CNBC
tv
eye 56
favorite 0
quote 0
>> hey, melissa. it was a dovish morning followed by what you might call a hawkish afternoon for markets. and you can see the entire drama playing out in the bond market, where yields plunged on the two-year note with that better than expected inflation report this morning. then they bounced higher with a more hawkish fed statement. bonds did hold onto some of their gains as stocks seemed to ignore a good part of the -- what the fed did today. forecasts for the fed this year, for the funds rate went from three in march down to one right now for the full year. they did raise the neutral rate, suggesting they think they're less restrictive than they were before. they see higher inflation this year, and a modest nod in the statement to the recent inflation progress that we've seen. fed chair powell was maybe a bit more dovish than the statement and the projections. he suggested one or two cuts were still possible beginning in september, and that he welcomed today's inflation report. but he said to remain
>> hey, melissa. it was a dovish morning followed by what you might call a hawkish afternoon for markets. and you can see the entire drama playing out in the bond market, where yields plunged on the two-year note with that better than expected inflation report this morning. then they bounced higher with a more hawkish fed statement. bonds did hold onto some of their gains as stocks seemed to ignore a good part of the -- what the fed did today. forecasts for the fed this year, for the...
61
61
Jun 10, 2024
06/24
by
CNBC
tv
eye 61
favorite 0
quote 0
melissa? >> who is it approved for, angelica?e it, do they have to be scanned for tau? that was sort of seen as a barrier, because that would increase the cost, because you would have to have pet scans, et cetera. >> the drug is not currently approved, that's what we're waiting to see here, but the panelists were against the idea of scanning for tau, because they thought that it would make it inaccessible, particularly in communities, in rural areas, where they might not have access to this specific monitoring. so, the panelists recommended a broad approval for this drug, and no specific monitoring. >> okay, so, that's good news for lilly. angelica, thank you. so, we've discussed this before, and jared holz was just on this morning saying he thinks this is, in terms of the competitor in the market already, it's a good step, but it's not groundbreaking. >> no, it's not -- however, if, you know, lilly were to figure this out, that is the holy grail. that would make this valuation pale in comparison to what they would get. however,
melissa? >> who is it approved for, angelica?e it, do they have to be scanned for tau? that was sort of seen as a barrier, because that would increase the cost, because you would have to have pet scans, et cetera. >> the drug is not currently approved, that's what we're waiting to see here, but the panelists were against the idea of scanning for tau, because they thought that it would make it inaccessible, particularly in communities, in rural areas, where they might not have access...
25
25
Jun 20, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 25
favorite 0
quote 0
let me turn this to melissa. thank you for being here.he city of el paso, such asic border, the communities are interlinked. many would argue it is one community. we know you are on the front line of the crisis. what your nonprofit in el paso is doing to address the similar concern in a much different way. you are right across the border. how are you reacting to the policy changes? and the real humane decisions you arma day as migrants are coming across the border? >> thank you so much to naleo for having me.el paso, for those that don't know, it is largest binational community in the western hemisphere. it is a huge area for people to enter the country. one of the things that we learned. i should say el paso we are a legal services nonprofit. focused on helping those individuals that are arriving. legalize for a work permit or asylum. in 2023 we served 57,000 people through our organization. the need is fast. one thing we have learned as a community going back to 2016, is there is a real need for both local governments and ngos to work t
let me turn this to melissa. thank you for being here.he city of el paso, such asic border, the communities are interlinked. many would argue it is one community. we know you are on the front line of the crisis. what your nonprofit in el paso is doing to address the similar concern in a much different way. you are right across the border. how are you reacting to the policy changes? and the real humane decisions you arma day as migrants are coming across the border? >> thank you so much to...
67
67
Jun 11, 2024
06/24
by
CNBC
tv
eye 67
favorite 0
quote 0
i'm melissa lee. on the desk tonightapple's astow run. soaring 7% today, the best since november 2022. that move adding a whopping $215 billion to its market cap, that is more than one entire adobe for this now just $40 billion away from reclaiming most valuable company title from microsoft, a position it ceded backin january. apple was the top performer in the s&p, dow, and nasdaq 100. so, what changed for apple in just the past 24 hours? it was just 24 hours ago, guy, that we were all sitting here around the desk, lamenting how boring the deal was. >> look, i think that, i guess the market had a chance to digest certain things, you know, gene munster yesterday put out a very compelling case and then on twitter an hour or so ago said the crazy part of the factors driving apple shares today are just getting started. and maybe he's spot on. he's been spot on. i'll say this, though, i think the upgrade cycle was in place all along. i'm still not convinced this will add to it, however, the market seems to be maybe on the services side it giv
i'm melissa lee. on the desk tonightapple's astow run. soaring 7% today, the best since november 2022. that move adding a whopping $215 billion to its market cap, that is more than one entire adobe for this now just $40 billion away from reclaiming most valuable company title from microsoft, a position it ceded backin january. apple was the top performer in the s&p, dow, and nasdaq 100. so, what changed for apple in just the past 24 hours? it was just 24 hours ago, guy, that we were all...
74
74
Jun 20, 2024
06/24
by
CNBC
tv
eye 74
favorite 0
quote 0
melissa? >> pippa, thank you. yeah, i tell you, the c combination of where i think they were overdone on rate concerns, the fact there are some secular themes around power and power generate, the grid, and i think in the case of a next era, next era energy, there's been cases of a misperception about the underlying business. so, i think this is a great place to be. i think energy has pricing power, and i think there's a need to build out the grid. >> and not just for the weather, obviously -- >> a.i. >> a.i., yeah. >> and there's multiple levers that are going to need to be p pulled, and the energy demand are going to be multiples higher than what they are now, by -- exponentially higher. so, if you are in these names and you are earning -- you also have that rate of return while you're in these names, that's probably the least of it. the dividends that you are recouping are not going to be the real bull catalyst for this one going forward. >> real quick. pull up a five-year chart of vst. understand how this stock
melissa? >> pippa, thank you. yeah, i tell you, the c combination of where i think they were overdone on rate concerns, the fact there are some secular themes around power and power generate, the grid, and i think in the case of a next era, next era energy, there's been cases of a misperception about the underlying business. so, i think this is a great place to be. i think energy has pricing power, and i think there's a need to build out the grid. >> and not just for the weather,...
97
97
Jun 26, 2024
06/24
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 97
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> joining us as well is msnbc legal analyst melissa murray.s question about potential immunity, your thoughts on the outcome of this case and how long it's taking for the justices to deliver a decision. >> well, i think that, ana that the fact that they've taken so long suggests that there's a lot of infighting here. i think the chief justice will likely be pushing for unanimous opinion, that's going to be very hard to get. we've seen in the last couple of weeks that even in situations where the court has been relatively aligned, there have been a number of unanimous decisions and decisions where there is a strong majority there is still dissent. they're splitting hairs about certain things and that deliberation can take some time. i did want to go back to this murthy case that neal mentioned. justice alito is in the dissent here and he's joined by crust is thomas and gorsuch. it's incredibly critical of the biden administration. so this was a case about the biden administration's efforts to get social media platforms to stop highlighting info
. >> joining us as well is msnbc legal analyst melissa murray.s question about potential immunity, your thoughts on the outcome of this case and how long it's taking for the justices to deliver a decision. >> well, i think that, ana that the fact that they've taken so long suggests that there's a lot of infighting here. i think the chief justice will likely be pushing for unanimous opinion, that's going to be very hard to get. we've seen in the last couple of weeks that even in...
42
42
Jun 23, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 42
favorite 0
quote 0
melissa, if we can go back down this way.ntry, what would that be? melissa: as hard as this is to say, sitting at this table before we got on stage. you have to take politics out of the conversation. to be a conversation about what's happening in our community. ■v■band what can we do, regardls of how you feel about the issue, no matter which political party you are part of, there is a need in the entire community. you have to take of the equation. you have to have these discussions. the way that neo, ihs think wyatt was formed was to have conversations about issues that don't delve into the politics. focus on on the of the conversation.it rep. garcia: let's give her a big round of applause. marissa, what about you? >> just piggybacking off of that. to forget that we're talking about human beings,■t babies, ad people. when you are talking about that and taking politics out ofi wil. my parents were immigrants. we had just supported a shelterd by a nonprofit. they are completely taking it on by themselves. there was a mother chi
melissa, if we can go back down this way.ntry, what would that be? melissa: as hard as this is to say, sitting at this table before we got on stage. you have to take politics out of the conversation. to be a conversation about what's happening in our community. ■v■band what can we do, regardls of how you feel about the issue, no matter which political party you are part of, there is a need in the entire community. you have to take of the equation. you have to have these discussions. the way...
83
83
Jun 28, 2024
06/24
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 83
favorite 0
quote 0
>> oh, i thought we had melissa with us as well. forgive me.eah that it could prolong the proceedings because even if it doesn't technically change the gravity of the charges against donald trump as they're now constituted, look to this decision to be an excuse for donald trump's lawyers. if the indictment survives the presidential immunity ruling, for them to go back to judge chutkan and pretrial proceedings and say we need further briefing on whether or not these allegations can support a charge under this particular statute, because now the court has held that what counts as obstruction has to be understood as acts that impair the integrity of evidence or records, and not things like fisher was alleged to do, like forced entry or breaking windows or assaulting members of the united states. and all of that is part and parcel of the indictment against donald trump. literally everything from inspiring the violence at the capitol that day and doing nothing as it went on to his campaign and his alleged involvement in the fake electors scheme is p
>> oh, i thought we had melissa with us as well. forgive me.eah that it could prolong the proceedings because even if it doesn't technically change the gravity of the charges against donald trump as they're now constituted, look to this decision to be an excuse for donald trump's lawyers. if the indictment survives the presidential immunity ruling, for them to go back to judge chutkan and pretrial proceedings and say we need further briefing on whether or not these allegations can support...
67
67
Jun 21, 2024
06/24
by
CNBC
tv
eye 67
favorite 0
quote 0
>> hey, melissa.bridge collapse back in march is a fast motion version of processes that are going on in every state. 54,000 projects under the bipartisan infrastructure law, $1.5 -- half a trillion in new spending and pete buttigieg says it's not enough and we'll see what it means for the top state study every year coming up on "squawk on the street." did i read this? did i get eggs? where are my keys? memory and thinking issues keep piling up? it may be due to a buildup of amyloid plaques in the brain. visit morethannormalaging.com at pgim, finding opportunity in fixed income today, helps secure tomorrow. our time-tested fixed income suite, backed by over 145 years of risk experience, helps investors meet their goals. pgim investments. shaping tomorrow today. >>> it is that time of year again with less than a month to go from the big reveal of cnbc's annual top states for business. and this year for the first time, the most important category is one you might not expect. and it may be like this for
>> hey, melissa.bridge collapse back in march is a fast motion version of processes that are going on in every state. 54,000 projects under the bipartisan infrastructure law, $1.5 -- half a trillion in new spending and pete buttigieg says it's not enough and we'll see what it means for the top state study every year coming up on "squawk on the street." did i read this? did i get eggs? where are my keys? memory and thinking issues keep piling up? it may be due to a buildup of...
55
55
Jun 18, 2024
06/24
by
CNBC
tv
eye 55
favorite 0
quote 0
melissa lee is here. welcome, melissa. good to have you with us. i'm tyler mathisen.he boeing ceo testifying before congress with many expecting the airline executive to face a thrashing from lawmakers. more on that in a moment. >>> plus, doing it elfing right. bullish on elf beauty despite signs of an overall weaker consumer. that's further ahead. >>> and first, a check on the market. three major indexes are up ever so slightly, as you see right there. or as i can't see right there. trust me, they're up a little bit. the industrials, nasdaq and the s&p 500. treasuries moving on a back of the retail data as well today. >>> and check out the semis, the group overall higher adding to recent gains. micron leading the way. we have much more on those names later in the show. >>> check out shares of la-z-boy up 18%, releasing strong quarterly results. a lot of strong la-z-boys out there. >> sure are. >>> boeing, the ceo testifying right now. phil lebeau has been monitoring this. phil? >> it has not begun yet. but dave calhoun had just walked into the hearing room. we expect
melissa lee is here. welcome, melissa. good to have you with us. i'm tyler mathisen.he boeing ceo testifying before congress with many expecting the airline executive to face a thrashing from lawmakers. more on that in a moment. >>> plus, doing it elfing right. bullish on elf beauty despite signs of an overall weaker consumer. that's further ahead. >>> and first, a check on the market. three major indexes are up ever so slightly, as you see right there. or as i can't see right...
81
81
Jun 4, 2024
06/24
by
CNBC
tv
eye 81
favorite 0
quote 0
kre, melissa lee. if you look at the -- listen, again, i'm not calling for banks to explode or, but kre is not trading particularly well now for quite some time. this is something, it probably made its all-time high, sometime in 2022. we know what happened in '23 and it bounced. however, we're nowhere close to its prior all-time high with an s&p within an earshot. if you think about, small and regional banks are the life blood for small and medium-sized businesses, i think it's trying to tell a bit of a story here. as the market continues to go higher, kre sort of waning here is not particularly encouraging. >> one of the things that had been ailing kre is the exposure to commercial real estate, the concerns there. with rates coming down, and potentially, you know, coming down even more with a fed cut closer, rather than farther away, isn't that better -- >> yeah, you would have thought that, and the price action of large money centers, of home builders, of regional banks, especially -- we just had, yo
kre, melissa lee. if you look at the -- listen, again, i'm not calling for banks to explode or, but kre is not trading particularly well now for quite some time. this is something, it probably made its all-time high, sometime in 2022. we know what happened in '23 and it bounced. however, we're nowhere close to its prior all-time high with an s&p within an earshot. if you think about, small and regional banks are the life blood for small and medium-sized businesses, i think it's trying to...
21
21
tv
eye 21
favorite 0
quote 0
melissa chad. thanks for watching the conflicts crises, every single connection mapped out shows that you can disagree odyssey be on the board is what makes things to the way they are mapped out. navigating a changing world. now on youtube, as to what did you do before? i played tennis. she survived the ocean bits, thanks to music. she was the nazis favorite conductor.
melissa chad. thanks for watching the conflicts crises, every single connection mapped out shows that you can disagree odyssey be on the board is what makes things to the way they are mapped out. navigating a changing world. now on youtube, as to what did you do before? i played tennis. she survived the ocean bits, thanks to music. she was the nazis favorite conductor.
82
82
Jun 17, 2024
06/24
by
CNBC
tv
eye 82
favorite 0
quote 0
i'm melissa lee, coming to you live from studio b at the nasdaq.the desk tonight -- tim seymour, guy adami, julie biel and chris verrone. >>> and we start off with a possible reason to get even more bullish on the market, if that's possible. the s&p and nasdaq both notching free all-time highs today. the benchmark now up 15%, posting 30 record closes along the way, and that kind of run has analysts rushing to play catchup. goldman sachs upping their year-end target for the s&p to 5600, more than 2% higher from here. and julian emanuel going from 4750 to a whopping 6,000, making him the new biggest bull on the street. congratulations, julian. so, is this a case of analyst fomo, or is there really even more upside for stocks? guy? >> i can even be more bullish having not been bullish at all. >> good point by you. >> julian, 4750, raised it to 6,000, you saw mike wilson, not similar, but he capitulated a month and a half, two months ago, jpmorgan, i mean, they actually made some positive comments. goldman sachs, i think, the outside of their range, 63
i'm melissa lee, coming to you live from studio b at the nasdaq.the desk tonight -- tim seymour, guy adami, julie biel and chris verrone. >>> and we start off with a possible reason to get even more bullish on the market, if that's possible. the s&p and nasdaq both notching free all-time highs today. the benchmark now up 15%, posting 30 record closes along the way, and that kind of run has analysts rushing to play catchup. goldman sachs upping their year-end target for the s&p...
111
111
Jun 5, 2024
06/24
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 111
favorite 0
quote 0
>> reporter: melissa cohen biden angrily confronted garrett ziegler and called him a nazi and used an expletive. he is not just a former trump white house official, he's we did voted himself to exposing embarrassing information about hunter biden and the biden family, some of which was gained through that laptop that hunter biden left at the repair shop. really sensitive and embarrassing stuff that he's published, that he's spread around, and the biden family clearly does not like this man and melissa cohen biden made that very clear. >> what's your reaction, lisa? >> in addition to the personal angle on garrett ziegler and how much time and attention he's devoted to, in his view, exposing the biden family, there's another angle here. melissa cohen biden is jewish and garrett ziegler has repeatedly either reposted or posted things on his social media accounts that some may describe as anti-semitic, including saying in a telegram post at the time that kanye west was being ostracized for his own anti-semitic views, i support an honest conversation about the power of the adl, meaning the
>> reporter: melissa cohen biden angrily confronted garrett ziegler and called him a nazi and used an expletive. he is not just a former trump white house official, he's we did voted himself to exposing embarrassing information about hunter biden and the biden family, some of which was gained through that laptop that hunter biden left at the repair shop. really sensitive and embarrassing stuff that he's published, that he's spread around, and the biden family clearly does not like this...
15
15
tv
eye 15
favorite 0
quote 0
my name's melissa chance the . the untold story for detail is going to be funded here repos every weekend on d. w. cost about why does that mean? because like now i'm leaving the new host of.
my name's melissa chance the . the untold story for detail is going to be funded here repos every weekend on d. w. cost about why does that mean? because like now i'm leaving the new host of.
35
35
tv
eye 35
favorite 0
quote 0
i melissa can, thanks for watching dw, the, the untold story. i just want to point to the find it here repos every weekend on d w why do humming does not get drunk. why do gravitational waves squeeze all bodies.
i melissa can, thanks for watching dw, the, the untold story. i just want to point to the find it here repos every weekend on d w why do humming does not get drunk. why do gravitational waves squeeze all bodies.
72
72
Jun 24, 2024
06/24
by
CNBC
tv
eye 72
favorite 0
quote 0
i'm melissa lee, coming to you live from studio b at the nasdaq on the desk tonight -- tim seymour, dan nathan, guy adami, and savita. welcome. >> thank you >> and we start off with a third day of massive losses for nvidia sliding 7% today the biggest drop since mid-april. worst three-day decline since december 2022. it is now down 16% from the record highs hit just last thursday, shedding half a trillion dollars of market cap in that time today's move dragging down the rest of the chip sector. all seeing outsized losses but the rest of wall street seemed to shrug off this weakness the dow gaining more than 260 points, while the s&p 500 closed around the flat line so, this fear we had that the break in nvidia would take down the entire market, is that turning out to not be the case guy? >> one day does not a trend make, melissa, as you know but we flagged this last week and we talked about how it looked like something we saw in march and it took about a month-ish for the broader market to then subsequently catch up to the move to the downside in nvidia frankly, i think it will be a litt
i'm melissa lee, coming to you live from studio b at the nasdaq on the desk tonight -- tim seymour, dan nathan, guy adami, and savita. welcome. >> thank you >> and we start off with a third day of massive losses for nvidia sliding 7% today the biggest drop since mid-april. worst three-day decline since december 2022. it is now down 16% from the record highs hit just last thursday, shedding half a trillion dollars of market cap in that time today's move dragging down the rest of the...
35
35
Jun 20, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 35
favorite 0
quote 0
melissa, if we can go back down this way.re is one change that you think either we could make collectively as a country, or that our policymakers could make to assist in the humanitarian crisis in our country, what would that be? lissa: as hard as this is to say, but we were sitting at this table before we got on stage. you have to take politics out of the conversation. that has to be a conversation about what's happening in and what can we do, regardless of how you feel about the issue, because at the end of the day, no matter which political party you are part of, there is a need in the entire community. ta politics out of the equation. you have to have these discussions. the waytaleo, i think wyatt was f have conversations about issues that don't facts on the resource, and keep politics out of the conversation. rep. garcia: let's give her a big round of applause. marissa, what about you? >> just piggybacking off of that. not to forget that we're talking about human beings, babies, and people. when you are talking about tha
melissa, if we can go back down this way.re is one change that you think either we could make collectively as a country, or that our policymakers could make to assist in the humanitarian crisis in our country, what would that be? lissa: as hard as this is to say, but we were sitting at this table before we got on stage. you have to take politics out of the conversation. that has to be a conversation about what's happening in and what can we do, regardless of how you feel about the issue,...
26
26
Jun 18, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 26
favorite 0
quote 0
melissa borja.melissa is assistant professor of american culture in asian pacific islander american studies at the university of michigan. she is a historian of religion, race and politics and the author of follow the new way. america resettlement policy and religious change which and in that book if you don't mind she got the thomas wilson memorial prize. but it's also advised princeton's religion and forced migration initiative, and she is the lead investor later of the really virulent hate project. let me so first of all, it's a delight to see this book imprint, because there's in the middle of the pandemic of the things my. the other one let me try that over again. so the delight to be able to to talk about this book because in the midst of pandemic four years ago i learned that i had a fellowship at the the warren center, harvard, where i then was able to spend a year zooming in in my pajamas and talking about this with emily in its early stages. and she and i were to workshop our chapter and t
melissa borja.melissa is assistant professor of american culture in asian pacific islander american studies at the university of michigan. she is a historian of religion, race and politics and the author of follow the new way. america resettlement policy and religious change which and in that book if you don't mind she got the thomas wilson memorial prize. but it's also advised princeton's religion and forced migration initiative, and she is the lead investor later of the really virulent hate...
0
0.0
Jun 14, 2024
06/24
by
KGO
quote
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 1
melissa morano, who survived the las vegas shooting, said she's appalled by today's supreme court ruling>> i'm sad that our supreme court can't protect us. it's sickening, to be honest. >> whit: terry moran joining us now. the high court left the door open for a ban to be reinstated in the future? >> reporter: some people can buy bump stocks. the federal ban is gone, but several states have their own bans, although they're likely to be challenged under the second amendment. the only way a national ban could be reinstated is if congress passed a law to do it. given the track record there on this issue in recent years, the only thing that could get
melissa morano, who survived the las vegas shooting, said she's appalled by today's supreme court ruling>> i'm sad that our supreme court can't protect us. it's sickening, to be honest. >> whit: terry moran joining us now. the high court left the door open for a ban to be reinstated in the future? >> reporter: some people can buy bump stocks. the federal ban is gone, but several states have their own bans, although they're likely to be challenged under the second amendment....
72
72
Jun 20, 2024
06/24
by
KGO
tv
eye 72
favorite 0
quote 0
>> david: melissa adan amid the flooding there in corpus christi. melissa, thank you. >>> of course, we're also tracking this dangerous heat for the northeast, the midwest. 70 million americans across at least 15 states tonight again on alert, from kentucky all the way to the northeast to maine, about to get worse in some areas. now this chance for severe storms in the northeast, as well. damaging winds possible over the next 24 hours. more records falling today across the region. caribou, maine, tying its all-time record high temperature of 96 degrees. look at the him dome there. and in the west at this hour, wildfires in new mexico have now burned at least 1,400 homes and businesses. and the fires have now turned deadly. ginger has the heat forecast, and abc's stephanie ramos with the images tonight. >> reporter: tonight, the searing heat wave spreading deeper into the northeast and midwest, with no relief in sight. in new york city, thousands flocking to beaches to escape the heat. some forced to work under the blaring sun. others doing what they
>> david: melissa adan amid the flooding there in corpus christi. melissa, thank you. >>> of course, we're also tracking this dangerous heat for the northeast, the midwest. 70 million americans across at least 15 states tonight again on alert, from kentucky all the way to the northeast to maine, about to get worse in some areas. now this chance for severe storms in the northeast, as well. damaging winds possible over the next 24 hours. more records falling today across the...
85
85
Jun 6, 2024
06/24
by
CNNW
tv
eye 85
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> off the coast of normandy, seen as melissa bell is joining us right now, melissa, the historic invasion was actually delayed by some bad weather the choppy waters and low visibility would have made the amphibious assault nearly impossible today, a much different picture clearly set the scene for what the allied forces faced that day. melissa this is, as you say, wolfe, an extraordinary de that we have out here. as you can see, people have come in huge numbers to pay their attributes on the beaches themselves where there's crucial first battles with they've come out with their jeeps, their amphibious vehicles like the one we're standing on now, one of the ducts that front in resupplying the allied front lines as the men moved in. but on that day, very different conditions. in fact, this was a d-day that should have happened on the june. it happened to sound the sixth because of the inclement weather as they came on shorts, almost unimaginable. what the men would affect hey, so and in fact, the extraordinary losses of the americans on omaha beach, some 2000 men lost in those first few hou
. >> off the coast of normandy, seen as melissa bell is joining us right now, melissa, the historic invasion was actually delayed by some bad weather the choppy waters and low visibility would have made the amphibious assault nearly impossible today, a much different picture clearly set the scene for what the allied forces faced that day. melissa this is, as you say, wolfe, an extraordinary de that we have out here. as you can see, people have come in huge numbers to pay their attributes...
89
89
Jun 6, 2024
06/24
by
CNNW
tv
eye 89
favorite 0
quote 0
bells shot will try to get back to her if we get that sorted out, melissa. thank you so much still ahead. >> there's new cnn reporting on senator tim scott and his multi-million-dollar plan to woo more voters of color to the gop plus the cheeky response from south korean activists. >> after hundreds of bags of trash and filth floated across the border, sent from north korea. >> their response just moments away the increase in wildfires is exponential, unpredictable, uncontrollable with overwhelming the need to do something is urgent. slightly. with we have schreiber and good night on cnn, shop etsy until june 16, and get up to 30% off father's day gifts to go beyond the classic go-to save on personalized gear and other things. dads did when you want a one-of-a-kind gift has shown. he's number one etsy has it high, it's christina again, i'm here to tell you about an all new special offer from my friends at jacuzzi bathroom model that you don't want to miss you already know houthi has been making water-filled great for more than 65 years. >> and now they're br
bells shot will try to get back to her if we get that sorted out, melissa. thank you so much still ahead. >> there's new cnn reporting on senator tim scott and his multi-million-dollar plan to woo more voters of color to the gop plus the cheeky response from south korean activists. >> after hundreds of bags of trash and filth floated across the border, sent from north korea. >> their response just moments away the increase in wildfires is exponential, unpredictable,...
100
100
Jun 25, 2024
06/24
by
CNBC
tv
eye 100
favorite 0
quote 0
i'm melissa lee along with joe kernan.w. >> hello, hello. >> among today's top stories, federal reserve governor michelle bohman says it is not yet time to start lowering interest rates and she said that she would be open to raising rates if inflation does not pull back. bohman making those comments and prepared remarks at her speech in london. the european union accusing microsoft of breaching anti-trust rules with what it's calling abusive bundling of its teams and office products. this action echos one that regulators took yesterday against apple. microsoft could face fines of up to 10% of its global revenue. >>> and we'll end with a stock that we've been watching very closely, and that is nvidia. shares are pod this morning. a bit of a bounce back. they've been down for three days in a roy, including falling close to 7% yesterday. the move has helped nvidia relinquish the title of world's most valuable company. andrew? >> good morning, good morning. i'm here ins saspen again at th aspen ideas festival. in the next hour
i'm melissa lee along with joe kernan.w. >> hello, hello. >> among today's top stories, federal reserve governor michelle bohman says it is not yet time to start lowering interest rates and she said that she would be open to raising rates if inflation does not pull back. bohman making those comments and prepared remarks at her speech in london. the european union accusing microsoft of breaching anti-trust rules with what it's calling abusive bundling of its teams and office...
99
99
Jun 10, 2024
06/24
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 99
favorite 0
quote 0
i want to start with you, melissa, react and also imagine for a moment what the reaction would be ifr, sonia sotomayor had said something similar on the other side. >> i thought lauren did a great job getting this footage. it was alarming but certainly not surprising. anyone who has been reading justice alito's writings would not be surprised by some of the things he has said. what was surprised is he felt so free to be clear about his desire to return the country to a state of christian nationalism, if you will, and his sense that his moral view of the universe is the one that should hold sway, and your question is certainly a rhetorical one, a provocative one to some degree, but we know if justice sotomayor was saying things like this in a recorded conversation, there would be calls for her impeachment from the bench, and those calls would likely be from both sides of the aisle. that's what's missing today. we have plenty of democrats saying this is alarming and wrong, but no republicans with the courage to stand up and say this puts the court in a really terrible light. >> right,
i want to start with you, melissa, react and also imagine for a moment what the reaction would be ifr, sonia sotomayor had said something similar on the other side. >> i thought lauren did a great job getting this footage. it was alarming but certainly not surprising. anyone who has been reading justice alito's writings would not be surprised by some of the things he has said. what was surprised is he felt so free to be clear about his desire to return the country to a state of christian...
103
103
Jun 26, 2024
06/24
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 103
favorite 0
quote 0
dalia westbrook is here and plus mini timer is here and legal analyst and nyu law professor melissa murray is back and former obama policy director and dr. kavita patel here. it is an honor to you have here with us. dalia, sift through what this is and what we think happened? >> i think that this is, unlike the dobbs leak was a technical screwup that happened. somebody uploaded an opinion that was clearly not ready by its appearance to be sort of released today. and somebody uploaded it on to the court website. and the good people at bloomberg law said, hey, we see it. because all of us are busy going refresh, refresh, to see what else is coming. and so we've got a draft opinion. but i think this is more in the bucket of if the supreme court behaves like an ordinary transparent institution em bears things like this wouldn't happening and if they happen they get corrected quickly. then in the bucket of the catastrophic dobbs leek. it is still very embarrassing. >> yeah. i mean, i guess the problem with an institution whose public approval is plunging farther and faster than any other instit
dalia westbrook is here and plus mini timer is here and legal analyst and nyu law professor melissa murray is back and former obama policy director and dr. kavita patel here. it is an honor to you have here with us. dalia, sift through what this is and what we think happened? >> i think that this is, unlike the dobbs leak was a technical screwup that happened. somebody uploaded an opinion that was clearly not ready by its appearance to be sort of released today. and somebody uploaded it...
80
80
Jun 26, 2024
06/24
by
CNBC
tv
eye 80
favorite 0
quote 0
i'm melissa lee along with joe kernen. becky and andrew ross sorkin is off today. >> two days in a row, do you feel the effects? not getting up with me but getting up at 4:00 in this morning? >> yeah, sure. i'll still doing my show at 5:00. >> are you here tomorrow? >> i'm here again tomorrow. i cannot get enough of the place. >> i'm going to be really easy and nice tomorrow. that's three days in a row. three days in a row. >> very compassionate. >> yeah. you can say anything to me tomorrow. >> oh, really. >> no pushback. >> i'm taking viewer requests. if you have anything to say to joe, i shall say it tomorrow. let's get a check of u.s. equities at this hour. we're looking at a higher open on the s&p as well as the nasdaq, the dow falling by 209 points. the s&p 500 up, gaining about 0.4%. the nasdaq climbing up 4.2%. the biggest impact on the nasdaq, the turnaround on nvidia. it was up by almost 7%, bounszing back after three days of decline. it's up by another 2%. quite a climb from the highs. it's lost about 13% from hi
i'm melissa lee along with joe kernen. becky and andrew ross sorkin is off today. >> two days in a row, do you feel the effects? not getting up with me but getting up at 4:00 in this morning? >> yeah, sure. i'll still doing my show at 5:00. >> are you here tomorrow? >> i'm here again tomorrow. i cannot get enough of the place. >> i'm going to be really easy and nice tomorrow. that's three days in a row. three days in a row. >> very compassionate. >>...
74
74
Jun 2, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 74
favorite 0
quote 0
melissa winn is the marketing manager at american battlefield trust, the nonprofit organization dedicated to preserving america's hallowed battlegrounds. prior to that, she was the director photography for history net, a writer editor, preservation advocate, photographer and collector of civil war photographs. she is a member of both the professional photographers association and the center for civil war photography. and finally, our own jonathan white serves as vice chairman of the lincoln forum. he is professor of american studies at christopher newport university. and as if those two full time vocations were not enough in his spare time, he has authored or edited some 16 books. we got a salty splash of his shipwrecked book yesterday at the lincoln forum is very proud that our vice chairman is this year's winner of the lincoln prize for his work a house built by slaves, african-american visitors to the lincoln white house. i turn the stage over to the 2023 lincoln prize winner. our vice chair, john, who will serve as the moderator of this morning's distinguished panel and now recognize
melissa winn is the marketing manager at american battlefield trust, the nonprofit organization dedicated to preserving america's hallowed battlegrounds. prior to that, she was the director photography for history net, a writer editor, preservation advocate, photographer and collector of civil war photographs. she is a member of both the professional photographers association and the center for civil war photography. and finally, our own jonathan white serves as vice chairman of the lincoln...
124
124
Jun 8, 2024
06/24
by
CNNW
tv
eye 124
favorite 0
quote 0
melissa bell. thank you so much. i hesitated for a moment when we're looking at the pictures because we are waiting for the live pictures, the live entrance of president biden and the first lady. and what we just saw moment ago, it was earlier in the de when they were there at the lee a palace. but meantime, we looked blood pictures right now. meantime, let's continue this conversation. i want to bring in now cnn contributor frida ghitis. she is also a global affairs columnist, free to great to see you. i mean, there was so much symbolism over what has transpired during this five-day visit for a president biden while in france is this the moment this state dinner? is this the punctuation there is that its meaning, the punctuation of this relationship of re-establishing the commitment of the us, not just to france, but to all our allies. nato allies. is that what this is about? >> little your right there, there's been so much symbolism during this entire visit. we've seen these visits before. we've seen these d-day co
melissa bell. thank you so much. i hesitated for a moment when we're looking at the pictures because we are waiting for the live pictures, the live entrance of president biden and the first lady. and what we just saw moment ago, it was earlier in the de when they were there at the lee a palace. but meantime, we looked blood pictures right now. meantime, let's continue this conversation. i want to bring in now cnn contributor frida ghitis. she is also a global affairs columnist, free to great to...
82
82
Jun 22, 2024
06/24
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 82
favorite 0
quote 0
the guardrails did not really work. >> melissa, what is the solution to this? there may be no immediate solution right now, because obviously we would like to believe that we, that our ev supreme court is either strong and reliable, or can be made strong and reliable. what is your best sense of what happens after this? if joe biden wins re-election, does he need idto take more seriously reforms to the court? >> i think that has always been something that people have been pushing joe biden to do. in i mean, first to run on the court, to make clear that he actually has had a really good record of domestic progress. he has had student loan relief, he has achieved that. and those windsor borrowers got eventuated by this court. there are always those who have insinuated that running on the court is an impediment to its domestic progress. but even more serious steps might be taken going forward, in am thinking seriously about court reform, whether that is ur term limits or something more extreme. but this is a court that is kind of off the rails, and that needs to be
the guardrails did not really work. >> melissa, what is the solution to this? there may be no immediate solution right now, because obviously we would like to believe that we, that our ev supreme court is either strong and reliable, or can be made strong and reliable. what is your best sense of what happens after this? if joe biden wins re-election, does he need idto take more seriously reforms to the court? >> i think that has always been something that people have been pushing joe...
88
88
Jun 6, 2024
06/24
by
CNNW
tv
eye 88
favorite 0
quote 0
bell, melissa, you are in a remarkable spot if we can bring wallace up there, she is. i actually out on the waters, set the scene for us and tell us what would these men have seen on that day this case is one of those amphibious vehicles now alderman, 80 years ago today to make their way toward the beach and take those full trig steps towards what would be the liberation well, france and europe, you can see we've got a couple of french policeman here on our duck with us. >> but this is the water. these are the water's just also gold beach what's the beat? shantou, which mainly british servicemen made their way. juno is down there. omaha, down there were the american serviceman had such tremendous losses the zone that day, eight years ago. and as you can see on along this coast, the turnouts been really extraordinary. you can see us ceremony going on there in one mole led by serving serviceman now and a huge turnout. the people have come not just with amphibious vehicles like these but with a kind of jeep's that were used eight years ago to transport the men. >> the wea
bell, melissa, you are in a remarkable spot if we can bring wallace up there, she is. i actually out on the waters, set the scene for us and tell us what would these men have seen on that day this case is one of those amphibious vehicles now alderman, 80 years ago today to make their way toward the beach and take those full trig steps towards what would be the liberation well, france and europe, you can see we've got a couple of french policeman here on our duck with us. >> but this is...
72
72
Jun 6, 2024
06/24
by
CNBC
tv
eye 72
favorite 0
quote 0
i'm melissa lee, coming to you live from studio b at the nasdaq.the desk tonight -- tim seymour, dan nathan, guy ad adami, and lori calvasina. >>> silver surging more than 4% today, and crude and brent both pumping higher. the agricultural space growing, as wet. corn, oat, soybeans, sugar, oj all higher, but as that heads north, rates continue their recent downturn. yields lower across the board. the ten-year now at 4.28%, while investors turn their attention to tomorrow's big jobs report. so, what are these moves telling us about the markets right now? tim what do you say? >> well, i think the commodities markets have been ticking higher all year, for a couple years. i think there's structural reasons in the case some of the industrial metals, and there's fiscal reasons. there are budgetary reasons as it relates to precious metals. oil has been stable. we've had some volatility in the last couple of weeks, more around opec, less around fundamentals. paul sankey pointed out, it's not so great when you are having this price action in the deepest dem
i'm melissa lee, coming to you live from studio b at the nasdaq.the desk tonight -- tim seymour, dan nathan, guy ad adami, and lori calvasina. >>> silver surging more than 4% today, and crude and brent both pumping higher. the agricultural space growing, as wet. corn, oat, soybeans, sugar, oj all higher, but as that heads north, rates continue their recent downturn. yields lower across the board. the ten-year now at 4.28%, while investors turn their attention to tomorrow's big jobs...
66
66
Jun 15, 2024
06/24
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 66
favorite 0
quote 0
i am struck, melissa. statements, but to see her with her children for such a powerful reminder of all she is juggling in this moment? >> that's exactly right. and it also is, i think, something of a missed opportunity. this is a very private struggle, as many people know him up but as a publix figure, as the second most senior female member of the royal family, there is an opportunity here, as the king has done, to talk about this treatment, to bring awareness to the kind of cancer she has, the kinds of struggles that cancer patients face what it's like to survive cancer. that is the role of the royal family. to lead in society. to provide a forum to talk about things that are difficult, including illnesses of this kind. and the fact that she has been out of commission, but actually sidelined from public life has meant that instead of those productive conversations, we've had a lot of social media discussion and rumormongering, and that hasn't been nearly as productive. >> since we are all watching and wa
i am struck, melissa. statements, but to see her with her children for such a powerful reminder of all she is juggling in this moment? >> that's exactly right. and it also is, i think, something of a missed opportunity. this is a very private struggle, as many people know him up but as a publix figure, as the second most senior female member of the royal family, there is an opportunity here, as the king has done, to talk about this treatment, to bring awareness to the kind of cancer she...