also carolers hit the halls for fox news for a festive sing along. i love that. plus, back by popular demand is our naughty and nice list and a brand new segment we re revealing favorite childhood christmas stocking stuffers and annual secret santa gift exchange that will blow your mind. don t miss it. but first, time for a christmas edition of the fastest. first up, holiday get togethers are a prime location for asking embarrassing questions. a new survey says one in three people dread awkward conversations at family gatherings like have you put on weight? have you found a partner yet? when are you going to have a baby? why aren t you married yet? i m always asking these, jesse. glad you came dressed in holiday apparel. guess you come dressed for talk shows. i do. are you the one that asks the awkward question s? jesse: no, everyone is marry is marriedand has babies and tas politics. greg: you re a family of libs. jesse: yeah, it gets awkward. greg: people know not to ta
the average family home. cory practices her violin. christian plays with his cars. and mike and carol worry over the bills. we went into the 1980s in pretty much the same technology that s been in place for a couple of decades. typewriter. calculators, tv, oven. a car. you listen to music on a big old stereo system with a turntable. maybe you had a digital watch, and that was the only thing that was going to be digital that you actually owned. hello? i m not here now, but my faithful machine is. there was a handful of technology at that time. one was the telephone answering machine. you d be driving home and you d say, i can t wait to check my messages. you know, it had become part of the day. honey, i m checking my messages. from the noisy streets of new york to the laid-back tranquility of california, americans are tuning out and tuning in. when i think of technology in the 1980s, i think of the walkman. the walkman was huge. it s the latest fad. tiny st
thanks for watching everyone. i ll be back tomorrow night. don lemon tonight starts right now. he doeleman. how are you doing a laura, great show i always call you buy your first and last name i just don t know what s about, it but don lemon has asian. don t upfront me, you know i don t speak french, out there you? i, pretend i m from louisiana, so i pretend. but you, know people do that a lot, it s always hageman, hey don lemon very few people just call me don, so, you know. now you do. all right, laura coates, i ll see you tomorrow. that i get it right? over. she, never mind. by. by. this is don lemon tonight. benny thompson is the committee chair. he tells cnn that the january six committee hasn t decided whether to subpoena mike pence or try to call donald trump to testify. watch this. i think we would benefit from that testimony. they both have, i would think, significant knowledge about what goes on. but we have a committee, and will work through t
banning sales of new gas powered cars by 2035. how that will work ahead. we begin this morning with our top story. at any moment a redacted version of the affidavit used to justify the fbi s august 8th search at former president trump s florida home will be unsealed to the american public. the new york times summarized the ruling as a significant legal mile post in an investigation that has swiftly emerged as a major threat to mr. trump, whose lawyers offered a confused and at times stumbling response. the judge s order to release the document comes after the doj submitted its proposed redactions in an effort to protect the safety and privacy of witnesses in the on going investigation. the doj has noon 9:00 eastern, noon pacific to unseal it. the fbi seized 11 sets of classified documents, some labeled top secret. trump said he s as innocent as a person can be and slammed it as politically motivated. joining us is ken, phil rutter, deputy national editor and msnbc politic
the average family home, cory practices her violin, christian plays with his cars and mike and carol worry over the bills. we went in with pretty much the same technology that s been in place for a couple of decades. typewriter. calculators. tv. oven. a car. you listen to music on a big old stereo system with a turntable. maybe you had a digital watch and that was the only thing that was going to be digital that you actually owned. hello? i m not here now but my faithful machine is. there was a handful of technology at that time. one was the telephone answering machine. you would be driving home and you would say i can t wait to check my messages. you know, it becomes part of the day. honey, i m checking my messages. from the noisy streets of new york to the laid-back tranquility of california, americans are tuning out and tuning in. when i think of technology in the 1980s, i think of the walkman. the walkman was huge. it s the latest fad. tiny stereo casset