biden racking up the lowest poll numbers of his presidency. only 37% of americans approve of the job that he s doing. and that assumes biden is actually doing his job. turns out, he only works part-time as president. most of biden s public events happen between 10:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. which amounts to a 30-hour work week. meanwhile, his screw-up son, hunter, can t seem to get out of the headlines. this week, the first son s attorneys met with doj prosecutors to discuss resolving their criminal investigation. hunter s also got some child support problems. he s being forced to appear in person in court next week after claiming poverty relating to his four-year old daughter. it is the case involving the grand dialed that president biden refuses to acknowledge. i have six grandchildren, and i m crazy about them. i speak to them every single day. not a joke. hunter s out of wedlock daughter makes it seven. but the media would rather mock hunter s scandals as some right wing o
brian: this reminds me wlir, the cure, of the depesh mode era. your prime my prime? don lemon is here, ladies and gentlemen, you will be looking for a job. i knew there was a fill-in. will: like this is your heyday, right? brian: college. yeah. don t act that astounded. to me lar used to be this thing and i don t know why another station hasn t done this. new bands emerge and u2 and then they are the biggest ever, it was cool. they never replace that, they roll out classic rock, which we re sick of. we re done with classic rock. will: no, incorrect. ainsley: who was your college singer? will: i m never good keeping up with the trends, even in the 90s, my college years. ainsley: mine, too. you remember alanis morset. will: smashing pumpkins. brian: sorry, it is done with it. will: you are done with credence clear water revival? brian: move on in life, don t keep going back. i don t have victrola. my walkman is done. we have interview with cardina
slipped across border agents. the northern border on the rise. a tough situation for border patrol, they need to step up. lori lightfoot dancing into the final month of her reelection campaign. in the windy city, crime and chicago has spiked. looking for a push from behind touchdown! philadelphia eagles dumped the san francisco 49ers. lining up green and white drawing outrage from new y new yorkers. brian: it is set here at the super bowl, the philadelphia eagles will be taking on kansas city chiefs. after a controversial and exciting game yesterday with the kansas city chiefs won with last-minute field goal. the philadelphia eagles ran all over the san francisco 49ers. there was your matchup, san francisco and casey. it was 2022 the very end and the bengals lost 23-20. steve: the bengals trailed halftime and tied the game up. with 2 minutes left. this would be it. looking to move the ball welcome a big return and then a late hit and suddenly patrick mah
the 27 year old s guilty plea came after his lawyers failed to have the charge dismissed on mental health grounds. now on bbc news, it s time for hardtalk. welcome to hardtalk, i?m stephen sackur. the war in ukraine is stuck in a form of bloody winter stalemate. but the expectation is major military offensives are coming as both russia and ukraine seek a game changing shift in the dynamic of the conflict. putin has a clear numbers advantage when it comes to fighting an all out war, but will that be enough given russia s evident vulnerabilities? my guest is vetreran russian foreign policy analyst and kremlin adviser sergey karaganov. is putin s invasion turning into a longterm disaster for russia? sergey karaganov in moscow, welcome to hardtalk. good afternoon. good afternoon and welcome, and let me ask you a simple question. after almost a year of war in ukraine, is russia ready to acknowledge that it is going badly wrong? it is a war. and we will be winning the war, there is