bronze. you ran in the 30 rock. i don t remember. the game has changed a lot from 6:00 to 8:00. i think when you guys are training, it s more like machine and men and women. you all like the training regiment when you went through in 68, we could not dream of having that technology your water station is unfiltered camel and donut holes and you keep going. also, i ran with chuck taylor. we didn t know. we thought - eugene robinson, i hear you laughing there. you see pictures of basketball stars in the nba in the 1960s, they re wearing the converse all-stars. i love them. it s canvas and this is assault right here. you wonder how they did not blow up their knees every night. exactly, you can t imagine how they did not do it. i guess they were pretty good athletes. it s how you run, joe. yeah. we used to run in marathon in exactly, jean and i. they kicked me out of the olympics and jean showed solidarity. yeah, exactly. mike compares me to i think
the dead two. and it s alive with day of the dead parades, the dead parades, commemorations return to mexico after a year off due to the pandemic. cheering and applause. hello, thanks for joining hello, thanks forjoining us. it s the last best chance, one minute to midnight, the last chance saloon, the descriptions surrounding this long awaited climate summit cop26 are certainly dramatic and world leaders, scientists and advisers are gathering in glasgow for 12 days of negotiations with the aim of a global reduction in carbon emissions to avoid a climate catastrophe. they do so as the world meteorological organisation has published its annual global climate report. it states the past seven years have been the hottest on record. rebecca morelle has more details. a gloomy start to proceedings in glasgow, but there are high hopes for a sunnier outcome. in a socially distanced conference centre, a reminder we re still in a time of covid, as alok sharma formally takes the r
than a madison avenue version of reality. all in starts right now. good evening from new york. i m chris hayes. a story that joe biden likes to tell and it s one that we like to tell as well probably for the same reasons is about the vaccine policy over at fox news. see last month after president biden announced a new sweeping plan to get millions of people vaccinated and safely back to work, fox news started attacking him nonstop for ushering a new era of toll tall takerian tyranny. we can tell you the shutdown of southwest airlines over the weekend was a direct consequence, it was a reaction to joe biden s vaccine mandate. we had to elect this rotting bag of oatmeal to get a real tyrant zblcht he s not mad at the taliban anymore. he s angry at you. or at least the 80 million americans who haven t been vaccinated. vaccine mandates were so popular, why the hard sell? why the shaming? why set up the covid cast system that you re doing? the actual story, the one tha
thursday president biden asked congress for $33 billion in additional aid to ukraine, a dramatic increase. we need to contribute arms, funding, ammunition and economic support to make their current sacrifice have purpose. i will ask ukrainian president zelensky s top aide, andriy yermak, if ukraine is getting what it needs to win. then looking east. will putin s invasion inspire china to attack taiwan? that is the big question, and i put it to taiwan s foreign minister in a fascinating exclusive interview. but, first, here s my take. at first glance the war in ukraine would seem to confirm president biden s oft express view that the world today is marked by a contest between democracies and autocracies. after all, autocratic russia is waging a savage assault on democratic ukraine and the latter enjoys the staunch support of western democracy. on closer examination, however, that framework turns out to be neither accurate nor helpful as a guide for american foreign p
can kyiv actually emerge victorious? british prime minister boris johnson said maybe not but on thursday president biden asked congress for $33 billion in additional aid to ukraine, a dramatic increase. we need to contribute arms, funding, ammunition and economic support to make their current sacrifice have purpose. i will ask ukrainian president zelensky s top aide, andriy yermak, if ukraine is getting what it needs to win. then looking east. will putin s invasion inspire china to attack taiwan? that is the big question, and i put it to taiwan s foreign minister in a fascinating exclusive interview. but, first, here s my take. at first glance, the war in ukraine would seem to confirm president biden s oft expressed view that the world today is marked by a contest between democracies and autocracies. after all, autocratic russia is waging a savage assault on democratic ukraine and the latter enjoys the staunch support of western democracy. on closer examination, how