let s have a look at what is on the show. a crisis forcing governments to invest billions to avert a catastrophe. it is not the banking crisis, though. it is the climate crisis. as europe goes head to head with the united states on subsidies for green investment we will ask what it means for business, international trade, and the future of the planet. i will discuss that with these two, gareth from the energy and climate intelligence unit and international trade expert from the university of sussex. and we will assess the impact on business with wayne griffiths the big boss of the car maker seat, which has just announced an electric car battery plant in spain. he willjoin me for an exclusive interview. and later in the programme, the man behind the cinema magic. i will speak to the boss of visual effects giant framestore, sir william sargent. i will ask him about working on the world s biggest movies and what the future holds for film, tv and gaming. wherever you arejoining m
the witness did not pick up when trump called. committee members say it raises concerns this was not someone trump would routinely communicate with and the attempted call came after cassidy hutchinson s explosive testimony. the alarmed witness contacted an attorney. january 6th committee member lorraine la rei can t says the panel is taking this seriously. we take very seriously the safety of any witnesses, anyone that comes forward to the committee and likewise, you know, their privacy in this case, any speculation about who this person might have been and a lot of people trying to tie it together, the committee will just say that we want to protect this witness, but we also want to hold people accountable who have potentially broken the law. katelyn polantz and legal analyst and former special counsel to house democrats in the first trump impeachment norm eisen. caitlin, first to you. this reporting, white house staff support member. that s indeed right, john and br
woman being stabbed at an l.a. hotel when they were shot by this man, justin flores. he had a long rap sheet. his girlfriend accused him of assault just one day before the shooting. he served two stints in prison and he was facing a third for possessing a firearm as a felon. that weapons charge could have sent him back to prison for three years. but under the liberal policies of los angeles da george gascon he was instead sentenced to two years probation and 20 days of time served one year later. after that, he slaughters two police officers. up until this week, corporal morales served 22 years. he now leaves behind a wife, daughter and a son. officer santana had only been on the police force for seven months. he leaves behind a wife, a daughter and twin boys who were reportedly born just this year. those are just two of the more than 150 officers shot in the line of duty this year. at least two dozen of those shootings have been deadly. tommy, i come to you first. not just b
has the industry changed in the way you thought it would? did you ever foresee that you would be creating the sort of stuff when you founded the business? we set up eight people in a room and wanted to be big in soho and then we wanted to be big in london but we always set out to be big in the world because film was where the action was. and that was hollywood. hollywood didn t know that london existed 37 years ago. 0ur aspirations were global and ambitious and it is about storytelling and enabling story and so we look at now what will be happening in the next five years. and we can see it. it is all there in front of us. it is about will someone pay for it now? will someone take the financial risk? because it all comes back to the consumers buying something that then makes it financially feasible to do something different in storytelling. it sounds really exciting. thank you so much for being with us, thank you forjoining us from la.
get himself that relates to the prequel. it s hard if you pars that show, theres a definite political uncorrectness to it which makes it a standoff in that regard. if it s not that reason i don t know what it possibly could be. it s beautiful to watch, it s funny to watch, it s interesting to watch, the acting is terrific. i have no other rationale that i can offer other than they don t want a red state western. what do you think? i think i have a friend who appeared in one episode of yellowstone , he got beat up in the episode and he s proud of it, but didn t die so there is the possibility that he could come back in a later episode. that s what i care about. i want to see that. look, i think that it should be honored. i m with you, michael. i don t know about the reasoning behind it, but it does really stand out and it is so popular and it is a stunning show. it s not like hollywood didn t produce it. it s not like hollywood doesn t care about yellowstone they are the on