Report. Its time to put away the harsh rhetoric, lower the tonight, see each other again, listen to each other again. Reporter oh, if only president elect joe biden could pull that off. I think the vast majority of people in this country really dont want to think about politics 114 of the time. Reporter for now, though, a look back o at our fraught election this sunday morning. Pauley from there, it is on to one of the enduring legends of the silver screen. She is sophia loren, and shell be talking with our seth doane. Reporter the word legend may be over used, but with sophia loren, it is warranted. And this week she is returning to the screen. There is some oscar buzz around this film . Oscar, i already have one. For me, it is enough to have made my film. Thats what i really believed in. More things, if they come, they come. If they dont come, thats life, huh . Reporter loren on life, family, and her definition of beauty, later on sunda sunday morning. Pauley after which we talk with
Republicans and rankandfile members on capitol hill. Early this morning i was communicating with senior staffers in congress who are part of the socalled negotiations. They were perplexed about the president social media posting yesterday calling off the stimulus deal. Meanwhile Mitch Mcconnell reportedly saying he feels Speaker Pelosi has been disingenuous in terms of the piecemeal budget approach, calling for there to be more immediate stimulus. President trump says they would like to get more of a piecemeal approach, but it is unclear whether or not that will happen. David one thing that is clear is we will have a Vice President ial debate tonight. Is it going to be all about covid19 as a practical matter . Kevin that will likely be one of the 910 minute segments debate moderator susan page will likely discuss. She has not disclose the topic of the debate publicly or to either of the campaign. Meanwhile, the candidates as well as the moderater will be standing 12 feet three inches a
Stimulus watch and of course, palantir, we are awaiting the opening trade set to begin really at any moment. Alex karp, the ceo will join us right here on cnbc immediately following the first trade, jon as we said, its been a long road a lot of filings. A lot to read about the company, voting structure, privacy, you name it. And the Business Model at large. Yeah. And its another big, big ipo but very different from snow flake, which we saw which has a ton of customers, large and small and kind of this very broad play on data in the cloud. This is a company thats dealing with big data and has just a few really huge customers, carl. And thats where well start this morning, jon. Josh lipton has more on what to expect once the first trade happens. Hey, josh. Carl, a master of creativity. That is how Ceo Alex Karp describes his company, palantir. A data miner, its software ahows customers to integrate volumes of data into a central platform where it can then be securely analyzed and interpr
Remember that year . I know you know but for those who dont that was the introduction of the iphone. Literally it changed the way we use devices with those multimedia functions and it enabled and opened up several doors of opportunity for us to have this conversation today. But on a regulatory front which is more in line with your question in that 1980s the fcc launched its first cell phone spectrum ban and through a series of those decisions, based on that we are now seen and that marked the global, mobile revolution. Of course, revolution often happen in different phases at different stages. So now in terms of mobile revolution or evolution we are talking about the sixth phase in some ways but not in all communities and thats another topic for another time but the fifth wave or evolution when it comes to mobile phones. What we saw around the third wave or so is these devices becoming smaller, more nimble, less expensive and more ubiquitous so you have the pop up of a lot of these ver
That phone and the light with the device chain in 2007 and you remember that year . I know you know but for those who dont that was the introduction of the iphone. Literally it changed the way we use devices with those multimedia functions and it enabled and opened up several doors of opportunity for us to have this conversation today. But on a regulatory front which is more in line with your question in that 1980s the fcc launched its first cell phone spectrum ban and through a series of those decisions, based on that we are now seen and that marked the global, mobile revolution. Of course, revolution often happen in different phases at different stages. So now in terms of mobile revolution or evolution we are talking about the sixth phase in some ways but not in all communities and thats another topic for another time but the fifth wave or evolution when it comes to mobile phones. What we saw around the third wave or so is these devices becoming smaller, more nimble, less expensive a