was for the pandemic. and according to researchers. with higher prices and added service charges that many restaurants say are vital to keep them running. more restaurants are offering takeout and delivery services. they re booming. in short restaurants have had to adapt and evolve in order to survive. one of the establishments that didn t survive is bobby flay s restaurant, gato. he s a well-known chef and host of the food network, which is owned by cnn s parent company. he closed the doors of gato just days after lockdown began, and that experience led him to think about who made it through the pandemic and why. over the next hour, bobby flay takes us to restaurants from around the country from oregon, kentucky, new york, introducing us to some of the leading chefs and experts in the food world. he said dining out has changed for good. march 2020. states were shutting down restaurants. that s an industry sector that has literally switched overnight. like so many in th
- so let s get rolling. - oh, my god. - what hurts? - yeah! - aww! - [laughs] [upbeat rock music] both: i took a walk through this beautiful world felt the cool rain on my shoulder found something good in this beautiful world i felt the rain getting colder - la, la - sha la, la, la, la sha la, la, la, la - sha la, la, la - sha la, la, la, la sha la, la, la, la, la - what if we just get dino s, and go to edgefield, and then go to robert s? - i d say dino s. - the only thing is edgefield closes at midnight. - you gotta see have you been to robert s? . what if i get a good edge, go to roberts. i m not trying to. you re going to see that. that s the starter and that s it. so, the hotel. what do i know? [ [laughter]] . time e out. stopop. stop. stop. y you ve nevever hung in nashvilllle? no. > you re e going to h have time. . i havave no dououbt. [laughterer] . n nashville, , if youou ha been there, , you p probably k i
illusive deal. senators race to find an immigration compromise before christmas. we are making significant progress. and how will president biden balance the needs on the border with pushback from his own party. a return to failed trump era policies is not the solution. plus, abortion struggle. a case in texas hits a nerve. any comment on the kate cox decision in your state? senator cruz? do you support that kate cox decision? could republicans coalesce behind a coherent message. and impeachment saga. the gop plows ahead as hunter biden strikes back. there is no fairness or descentency in what these republicans are doing. and new reporting on the threat that speaker johnson faces from the right. we have to go back to doing things the right way. today was a abysmal failure. inside the corridors of power, inside politics sunday starts now. good morning, and welcome to inside politics sunday. i m manu raju. it is been a busy weekend on capitol hill. w
i am anderson cooper. while the u.s. is the most expensive country when it comes to tkgiving birth, it s also th safest. the statistics are more dire when it comes to giving birth for black women. the question is why do black women face more risks when they go to the hospital to give birth? that s the question that cnn anchor and new mom, abby phillip, has been asking since the birth of her daughter two years ago. abby made unconventional choices when it came to her own childbirth experience, and since then she has been surprised to meet so many other women that made the same choices that she did. over the next hour she takes us to hospitals and birthing centers around the country to show us why more and more black women are turning away from traditional health care and finding other options when it comes to giving birth. hi. hi, baby. reporter: this is the sound of new life being brought into the world. the e kind o of momement mosostt women drdream of.. yet t this is
school classmate and the powerful connection these girl scouts share that s inspiring america. this nbc news nightly news with lester holt. good evening and thank you for joining us we are on somewhat of a legal watch tonight vo involving former president trump somewhat in that the growing expectation has been fueled mainly by mr. trump himself with his unverified claim over the weekend that we be that he would be arrested on tuesday. the office has not commented on the timing of a decision on whether to prosecute. in the absence of news, key republicans have been rushing to mr. trump s defense and vilifying democrat prosecutor alvin bragg. but tonight even many of his loyalists are discouraging trump supporters from taking up the former president s call to protest. it s where we start tonight, with garrett hake reporter: the manhattan d.a. s office tonight on the verge of a fateful decision, whether to indict a former president for the first time in history, a case c