Another retailer looking at bankruptcy it is tuesday, april 21. You are watching Worldwide Exchange here on cnbc good morning, good afternoon, good evening with el come from wherever in the world you may be watching. Im Brian Sullivan welcome. I hope you are having a great tuesday. The stock futures looking like it is continuing off yesterdays decline for the dow futures in the red right now indicated down about 200 points yesterday, a rough day all but two dow names were down. Each falling 6 in the red it has been the action in the Global Oil Market that has really captivated the worlds attention and the Historic Development around crude trading yesterday negative for the first time ever. Thats right the may contract which expires today. At one point, this is not a miss print, trading at negative 40 a barrel the lowest on record not only zero, it is below zero. A lot of you question why would oil or any commodity trade in the red and go inverted . That is relatively simple, when you o
Two biggest economies. As part of major the United Nations has accused timetable changes on britains the police and army in chile of committing serious Human Rights Violations in their response railways. To recent Anti Government and in sport, and christmas comes demonstrations, in which nearly early for liverpool fans 30 as managerjurgen klopp signs a contract extension, people keeping him were at the killed. Club until 2024. And ahead of tonights strictly final well ask our very own magic mike bushell more now on the election which couple he thinks will waltz off with the as the Scottish National party swept to victory across scotland, glitter ball trophy. Taking 48 out of 59 seats, the future of the union good morning, this is again in sharp focus, with Nicola Sturgeon asserting that weekend we are borisjohnson has no right to stand in the way of another looking at a blustery weekend of sunshine and referendum on scottish independence. Showers. Snow our scotland editor sarah smith p
We start in hong kong, with activists still under siege inside the Polytechnic University. But around 100 protesters, including 50 under 18s, have been led from the buildings as part of a deal negotiated by a group of headteachers. Theres been more violence as police try to keep the activists trapped inside. Some have tried to escape by abseiling onto the highway. Outside the University Protesters have tried to break police lines. Police responded with rubber bullets and teargas. Our correspondent Rupert Wingfield hayes has the latest. For a few minutes today it looked like the siege of Hong Kong Polytechnic University might end peacefully. The young protesters began streaming down the stairway that on sunday was set aflame to block the police storming the campus. But seconds later, riot police began firing tear gas grenades, sending the young protesters scattering in confusion. Some did not escape. The clear message from the police today if you surrender, you will be arrested. Hundred
We had the coldest night of the season so we had the coldest night of the season so far and, you may be glad to here, the coldest night of the week. 10 in parts of aberdeenshire, the milder able try to push in over the milder able try to push in over the next three days. Symbols stay below freezing in parts of scotland. Many in lower single figures into the afternoon. Ten to 12 degrees in wales, South West Wales and Northern Ireland, but cloudy skies and indices around penzance, the wind is whipping them up. Quite a breeze blowing, touching gale force around the coast, and we will see cloud and outbreaks of rain stop the far north will brighten up later. Into tonight, while many staff and i dry, we will see some further rain pushing on to other western areas, particularly western scotland, other parts of wales in the south west. Nothing too substantial. With the cloud in place and the breeze picking up, not as cold tonight. There will be thrust and ice across parts of scotland, norther
so here we are in milan, the fashion and industrial powerhouse of italy. i ve only been to milan a few times and always in passing. i ve never stayed here long enough to really get a sense of it. the first thing that strikes you about milan is its dynamism. no wonder espresso was invented here. i think i might need a few of these just to keep up with the rhythm of the city, but do the hard-working milanese bring as much to the italian table as they do to the country s economy? i m stanley tucci. i m italian on both sides and i m travelling across italy to discover how the food in each of this country s 20 regions is as unique as the people and their past. that s delicious. here in milan, the menu is nothing like you expect. up here in the north, forget about pasta and pizza. oh my god, that s so beautiful. perfecto . this is the land of rice and polenta. -polenta in the ancient time, it was like the bread. -people from south of italy call us polentoni . [tucci] there isn t e