that you couldn t have on network television. - peoplele are realllly tryg to do something adventurous. [both gasp] alall: channelel 7, shame e on. - this is morere a celebrbration of c culture and opening the doors and allowing america to come on i inside. - therere s alwaysys somethg on t television,n, and sosome of it may b be ber than we e deserve. - [laughs]s] that wasas cool. [d[dramatic musisic] - listen to it. oh! [crowd cheering] they know when it hits the bottom, it ll be 1990. good-bye to the 80s in. all: ten, nine. all: eight. eieight! eight! eight! - oh, will this horribible year never enend? - when the 90s begin, we re starting to see a lolot of expererimentation. [gununshots] all:l: [quickly]y] seven, six, , four, three, two, , one! [cheerining] - anand the simimpsons, i ththink, in sosome sensess was s inspired by not necessarily a hatred o of television bubut a distrurust of a a lot of ththe ways in whichch televisioion was s talking toto us. - tv res
marianne rafferty is life with breaking information from a target insider. fox news digital is reportin some target employees are being told to move there lgbt cute pride displays to less prominen locations in the story to avoid customer backlash fraid so managers and district senior directors were on emergency calls on friday where they were told also that they could not have anything on manikins and n learned signage promoting those products read most of the locations affected our in rural southern stores according to that report. this comes just weeks after the company bud light came under fire for partnering with transgender influencer. sales plummeted 28.4 percent in the week ending may 13th alone pride in an interview last week target ceo brian cornell told fortunes leadership now podcast by promoting the lgbt cute friendly products is the right thing for society and a great thing for their brand. this year s target pride collection has renewed calls from conservative
ththe presidenent saying they n need to rededuce ththe deficit t as the government benefits from millions and much, much more hang in the balance. the deadliest fight of the ukraine war. russia in the center of bakhmut. but ukraine says it s not over. tim scott of south carolina, the latest republican to challenge front-runner donald trump for president. our exclusive interview. the suspect in the murders of four idaho college students in court inside bryan kohberger s approach as we learn of new evidence in the case. also tonight, we return to florida, devastated by hurricane ian. eight months ago. florida insurance companies accused of short changing homeowners, where damage claims altered. families still in limbo in uninhabitable homes. we investigate. plus, florida s massive tourism industry booming in some places. but struggling in others. and we met them right after ian hit. some left, some stayed. the steps forward big and small as ft. myers beach comes bac
believe the fbi possesses an unclassified internal document that includes very serious and detailed allegations implicatin the current president of the united states those are the words of the senate budget committee ranking member chuck grassley who is tapping his proverbial watches as time runs out for the fbi to put up or shut up and produce the documents that congressional leaders are looking for. it s mcconnell and house oversight committee chair james comber working together demanding the bureau to produce an unclassified record alleging a criminal scheme involving the vice president joe biden and a foreign national. document and ftb i generated form allegedly details an arrangement involving an exchange of money for policy decisions. it s going to be interesting to see what joe biden has to sa and he lied about the laptop he lied about his knowledge of his family s and business dealings and he lied about his involvement in his families shady business dealings and he
you know, there is an old saying in washington. it s not the crime, but the cover-up. so we already knew that the special counsel was looking into trump s handling of classified documents. we now know that they were looking to how they handled security footage in mar-a-lago, and whether it was tampered, whether was withheld. so that is a sign that the investigators are strongly looking into possible obstruction of justice charges. and then our fabulous colleagues, paul reid, and caitlin polantz found out that there are two senior trump level organization employees who are gonna go before the special counsel tomorrow. that s on the lookout for. and they are expected to be asked about that footage. and that reason why that was just so important, because they can really shed light on how this documents were handled. cnn reported that there is a footage of this other truncated who is running out boxes of documents from a storage closet. and so this is a very significant step in