depending on whatever you just v said to the tv. it s s been busy becausee . been on tour. it s been a great year for blond women who yell during air travel. since july, i ve been to nine different cities from midland, texas, to saint louis, missourit. louis , and i still havet, don t 13 more to go before the end of the year. but don t worrthis isny, this it going to be a monologue where i just repeat over and over th to all my shows are available now at the real kat timpf .com. lkattimpi want to talk about whe learned visiting so many different parts of the countryd . for one, going to the the continental breakfast and just pajama conti bottoms and a is frowned upon. even at a motel six.. anyway, to be clear, all ofclea these placesr, are different. in saint louis, i talkedr with an uber driveabour about ha cool it is that nelly and ashanti are back togethe arr in texas. my uber driver said, what s an ashanti? but i ve learned that as different as all of these conversati
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
with bernie mcguirk and you will i mean, he he was likee a brother. quick story. a i was struggling with cancer.n i had been in touch with them. and last time i talked to him, he starts a hannity. but , it s cardinal o connor. we did all that. yeah. oh, no. lau he started he he we ve lost a lot of wonderful people lately and incredible americans. in was one of them. crle ameriand i just concur with everything you said. but sean thinks he s going to be missed, too. he was an amazing man.great show imus in the morning. ey are great show.esse and yeah, they re they re all missed. it s sea i did radio. i did radio because of that show. otherwise,t show i didn t. t seventeen years in radio. went into ra yeah. that was the reason i went intoi radio because ofon the being a t on that show. so. yeah. so that s, that s where i learned it. so sean, thank you.aura: all right.wet great show.to all right. we have a lot to get to tonight. i m laura ingram . this is the ingraham an
americans and their governmentm. a decade ago. the new york times admitted this. the times markedis the anniversary of 9/11 by publishinhed a piecg a piece on the rise of domestic surveillance abuses which explode after the 9/11 attacks. the patriot act, according to st the new york times, quote, govem quickly became a sort of shorthand for government abusenh and overreaching, which, quote, inflicted collateral damage on political dissent, religiousl liberty and the freedom of association, end quote. that is still true, in fact, truer than it s ever been,trage. and it is still a tragedy. what s fascinating is that stopd the new york times has stoppedi acknowledging it. in fact, remarkablity, there wae not a single mention oft page o the 9/11 anniversaryf yesterday. on the front page of yesterday s paper, the paper that purports to represent new york , the epicenter of the 9/11 attacks. now, why would the new york times ignore 9/11? ignore well, good question, be the new york
watters along with judge jeanine pirro, jessica tarlov kennedy and greg gutfeld. it s 5:00 in new york city,this and this is the five which wasmt among the democrats climate change scam. just got a huge reality hug m one of the world s richest men, the al gore s in the aoces of te world loved to exaggerate the effects of global warming, constantly warning how boiling oceans are going to doom humanity soon. g ocea and the only existential threat humanity faces evenmore more frightening than a and a nuclear war is global warming going above 1.5 degrees in thea next 2010 years. i ve heard young leader i vs talk with me about a term they ve coined climate anxiety ,right, which is fear of thesen future and the unknown it whether it makes sense fou r you to even think about having children, whether it makes sense for you to think about aspiring youo tht to buy. but what will this climate be? climate change clima is the crir of our lifetime. we have an obligation to futureo