tackle most important issues, including crime, the economy and inflation. you re watching fox and friends first s, on monday morning, i m carley shimkus. ashley: i m ashley strohmier, in for todd piro. house speaker nancy pelosi is downplaying the importance. it is about getting out to vote, everything else is a conversation compared to that. i hear people talk about inflation, we have to change that subjects, inflation is global phenomenon. ashley: this as america fays one of the worst inflationary periods we ve seen in years under the biden administration, even senator bernie sanders is expressing concern about voter turnout. i am worried about the level of voter turnout among young peep and he will working people voting det crammic and i think again what democrats have to do is contrast their economic plan with the republican. i think it is important to take the attack to republicans, what do they want to do other than complain? carley: we spoke with candidate c
in its protests in the uk, because they say very little has changed . now on bbc news, it s hardtalk. welcome to hardtalk, i m stephen sackur. britain mourned the death of queen elizabeth in ways that combined the intimate and the personal with the grand and ceremonial. for most of us, of course, death and grief remain a very private affair. an irreversible, life altering shock when we lose someone close for which there is no guide or preparation. my guest today is the one time pop star turned church of england vicar, the reverend richard coles, whose frank account of his own grief has struck a chord with many. why did grief nearly break him? richard coles, welcome to hardtalk. britain has just lived through a rather extraordinary, momentous experience, the death of queen elizabeth, the mourning that came with it. and many people have said that the death of the queen revived very sharp memories for them of their own losses and how they felt during their own losses. you ve ju
to his predecessor. the former pontiff will be lying in state from today, until his funeral on thursday. now on bbc news, it s hardtalk with stephen sackur. welcome to hardtalk. i m stephen sackur. britain mourned the death of queen elizabeth in ways that combined the intimate and the personal with the grand and ceremonial. for most of us, of course, death and grief remain a very private affair. an irreversible, life altering shock when we lose someone close for which there is no guide or preparation. my guest today is the one time pop star turned church of england vicar, the reverend richard coles, whose frank account of his own grief has struck a chord with many. why did grief nearly break him? richard coles, welcome to hardtalk. britain has just lived through a rather extraordinary, momentous experience, the death of queen elizabeth, the mourning that came with it. and many people have said that the death of the queen revived very sharp memories for them of their own losse
christmas is well, it s about the best time of the whole year. no matter when they take place, modern era or period, christmas movies and television specials are always about someone who has lost their faith in humankind regaining it, saved by other people being kind because it s christmas. christmas is the landscape that everybody wants to paint on. everyone who tells stories is attracted to the heightened emotions that it brings. nostalgia plays such a huge part in christmas because it is part of so many people s childhoods. and being able to go back and relive those feelings every year by watching holiday movies is just joy. a christmas story is one of the best movies about nostalgia, family, and christmas. jingle bells, jingle bells. jingle all the way. a christmas story. i watch it every year at least twice. it s like the script of my life. can we go now? can we go now? yes. yes, we can go now. come on. it brings out every childhoo
his downstairs neighbor told the new york post the following, it seemed like he never slept, he was doing something all night, i don t know how he could have killed someone, he doesn t look that tough. there are reports he is a recovering heroin addict. now the families speaking out and rushing to his defense friday saying we have fully cooperated with law enforcement in attempt to seek the truth and promote his presumption of innocence rather than make erroneous assumptions. he drove 2000 miles from idaho to pennsylvania in order to allegedly hide at his parent s homes in the poconos. the murder weapon has not been recovered. todd: here is jonathan gilliam on the case. if they have the d.n.a. and we don t know what other evidence they have, typically if they can put a person using the cell tower information and the d.n.a. evidence, once a start building a motive and picture of his movement and evidence that puts him there at the time of the scene, it will be easier cas