Values of fairness, dignity, and opportunity. With just five weeks to Election Day, Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Trump make their pitch to voters on the economy and immigration with strikingly different approaches. He prefers to run on a problem instead of fixing a problem. You have to get them the hell out. You have to get them out. Whose message is resonating in this final sprint . Steve kornacki has the results of the latest poll. Plus, faceoff. Are you better off now than you were four years ago . Senator Jd Vance and Tim Walz get ready to meet for the Vice President ial debate this week. This is not about power. This is about public service. Will the Vp Nominees have the last word before Election Day . My guests this morning, republican Senator Marco Rubio of florida and democratic Senator Mark kelly of arizona an wrongfully convicted man and the 20year journey that changed both of their lives. I am not an anomaly. There are hundreds of thousands of wrongfully
You buy some money there, you do something there, you drive, you help, and then you see as news how in ukraine , it has increased from the division of fopa to luxury class cars , that is, cars without middle class, so to speak, conditionally, on the contrary, the segments fall and then you see this, then you see example another piece of information that is published there, thank god we broke through this Public Council about the ministry of defense another piece of information about how godless it is to continue robbing the budget , which is 60 formed at the expense of western taxpayers, this concerns the ministry of defense, friends, it is important that we understand the essence of our war too already we lead directly at the expense of western money, and you can see that, well, im trying , well, how to vote for yourself, you have to talk about it , but still do, do what you do. You dont think about what it takes, well, its just, how is it possible at all, that is, when the best peopl
on the bbc s hardtalk program in 2014 when he was 105. love, honesty, decency. ..ethics. that standard of life. i believe in ethics. and if everybody believes in ethics, we d have no problems at all. 26 years earlier, another bbc programme, that s life, thrust him into the spotlight after it was handed a wartime scrapbook. that tv show told the true story of how nicholas winton had saved the lives of 669 mainlyjewish children. so we told her about him. she said. i tried very hard to find out who had rescued us. i even tried the archbishop of canterbury to see if he knew. but i drew a blank. i would very much like to meet nicholas winton to thank him for saving my life. if it hadn t been for this man, i wouldn t be here to tell the tale. vera gissing is with us here tonight. hello, vera. and i should tell you that you are actually sitting next to nicholas winton. hello. applause hello. that story has gone from the small screen to the big in the feature film one life.
30 seconds to on air! 0k, and you are just here. couldn t i sit farther back? sir anthony hopkins playing an ordinary man with an extraordinary story. sir nicholas winton was just 29 in 1938 when he embarked on a campaign to bring hundreds of refugee children from prague to london. for 50 years, he didn t talk about his efforts until they were revealed by the bbc tv programme that s life. if they hadn t been rescued and brought over to england, these children would have been killed by the nazis. i m the bbc s culture editor, katie razzall, and for this edition of the arts interviews, i interrupted sir anthony s busy filming schedule to talk to him about his role in one life. is everybody happy? are you happy, sir anthony? yes. tony. i think this whole story has affected me and has actually stayed with me throughout the whole of my life, really. i also speak to the younger nicky winton actor, johnny flynn. the experience of making it will never leave me. ..and 90 year old rena
30 seconds to on air! 0k, and you are just here. couldn t i sit farther back? sir anthony hopkins playing an ordinary man with an extraordinary story. sir nicholas winton was just 29 in 1938 when he embarked on a campaign to bring hundreds of refugee children from prague to london. for 50 years, he didn t talk about his efforts until they were revealed by the bbc tv programme that s life. if they hadn t been rescued and brought over to england, these children would have been killed by the nazis. i m the bbc s culture editor, katie razzall, and for this edition of the arts interviews, i interrupted sir anthony s busy filming schedule to talk to him about his role in one life. is everybody happy? are you happy, sir anthony? yes. tony. i think this whole story has affected me and has actually stayed with me throughout the whole of my life, really. i also speak to the younger nicky winton actor, johnny flynn. the experience of making it will never leave me. ..and 90 year old rena