Airing on Tuesday, January 23, 2024, at 11:00 Pm on PBS, viewers can expect in-depth analysis and comprehensive coverage of “The New Hampshire Primary” in a PBS News Special Report. Hosted by Amna Nawaz and Geoff Bennett, the special promises to provide a thorough examination of the political landscape surrounding this crucial primary.
As the political drama unfolds, columnist David Brooks and The Cook Political Report’s Amy Walter will offer insightful analysis, bringing their expertise to break down the intricacies of the primary results. With a focus on delivering balanced and informed reporting, the PBS News Special Report aims to keep audiences abreast of the latest developments, making it a must-watch for those keen on understanding the political dynamics of the New Hampshire Primary.
Tune in at 11:00 Pm to PBS for a comprehensive and insightful look at “The New Hampshire Primary,” as the special report unfolds with expert commentary and analysis from seasoned political commentators.
As the political drama unfolds, columnist David Brooks and The Cook Political Report’s Amy Walter will offer insightful analysis, bringing their expertise to break down the intricacies of the primary results. With a focus on delivering balanced and informed reporting, the PBS News Special Report aims to keep audiences abreast of the latest developments, making it a must-watch for those keen on understanding the political dynamics of the New Hampshire Primary.
Tune in at 11:00 Pm to PBS for a comprehensive and insightful look at “The New Hampshire Primary,” as the special report unfolds with expert commentary and analysis from seasoned political commentators.
- 1/16/2024
- by Jules Byrd
- TV Everyday
Have you heard it’s cold in Des Moines? The subzero temperatures are making Monday’s caucuses in Iowa the coldest on record, a running theme of coverage throughout the day and into this evening. It’s not trivial, as the frigid weather may very well impact turnout.
As Iowa’s first votes of the 2024 presidential race come in, expect a lot of analysis, punditry and prediction, even if the results represent just a sliver of the primary electorate. The Hawkeye state’s primacy as the first-in-the-nation often obscures the peculiarities of the caucus system, unless there is some kind of glitch, which is what happened four years ago with the Democrats.
That said, networks see the caucuses as the kickoff of what is hoped a spike in viewer interest in the presidential contest, as was seen in 2020 and 2016. All of the broadcast networks are planning for ongoing coverage of...
As Iowa’s first votes of the 2024 presidential race come in, expect a lot of analysis, punditry and prediction, even if the results represent just a sliver of the primary electorate. The Hawkeye state’s primacy as the first-in-the-nation often obscures the peculiarities of the caucus system, unless there is some kind of glitch, which is what happened four years ago with the Democrats.
That said, networks see the caucuses as the kickoff of what is hoped a spike in viewer interest in the presidential contest, as was seen in 2020 and 2016. All of the broadcast networks are planning for ongoing coverage of...
- 1/15/2024
- by Ted Johnson
- Deadline Film + TV
Join Amna Nawaz and Geoff Bennett for an insightful journey into the heart of American politics with “The Iowa Caucus — A PBS News Special Report.” Scheduled to air at 11:00 Pm this Monday, January 15, 2024, on PBS, this special coverage brings you an in-depth analysis of the Iowa Caucus, a pivotal event in the political landscape.
Anchored by Nawaz and Bennett, the program features an expert panel, including David Brooks and Amy Walter, who offer valuable insights into the caucus’s implications and significance. Viewers can expect a comprehensive breakdown of the political dynamics, discussions on key candidates, and predictions for the road ahead.
Whether you’re a political enthusiast or simply interested in understanding the pulse of American democracy, “The Iowa Caucus” on PBS guarantees a night of informed analysis and thoughtful commentary. Tune in at 11:00 Pm to stay informed and engaged with the unfolding political narrative on this PBS News Special Report.
Anchored by Nawaz and Bennett, the program features an expert panel, including David Brooks and Amy Walter, who offer valuable insights into the caucus’s implications and significance. Viewers can expect a comprehensive breakdown of the political dynamics, discussions on key candidates, and predictions for the road ahead.
Whether you’re a political enthusiast or simply interested in understanding the pulse of American democracy, “The Iowa Caucus” on PBS guarantees a night of informed analysis and thoughtful commentary. Tune in at 11:00 Pm to stay informed and engaged with the unfolding political narrative on this PBS News Special Report.
- 1/8/2024
- by Jules Byrd
- TV Everyday
The first Republican debate of the 2024 presidential election primary cycle is Wednesday, August 23 beginning at 9 p.m. Et, airing live from Milwaukee exclusively on Fox News Channel and streaming on FoxNews.com, Fox Nation and Rumble.
Fox News’ Bret Baier and Martha MacCallum will moderate the two-hour debate at Fiserv Forum, the site of the 2024 Republican National Convention in July.
Wednesday is the first of two scheduled GOP primary debates so far, with the second set for September 27 at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library & Museum in Simi Valley, CA. That debate will air live on Fox Business.
Related: Donald Trump Confirms Tucker Carlson Interview As Former President Seeks To Upstage First Republican Debate
A total of eight GOP candidates have qualified for the podium at the opening debate Wednesday after meeting polling and fundraising thresholds, as well as agreeing to sign a pledge to support the party’s eventual nominee.
Fox News’ Bret Baier and Martha MacCallum will moderate the two-hour debate at Fiserv Forum, the site of the 2024 Republican National Convention in July.
Wednesday is the first of two scheduled GOP primary debates so far, with the second set for September 27 at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library & Museum in Simi Valley, CA. That debate will air live on Fox Business.
Related: Donald Trump Confirms Tucker Carlson Interview As Former President Seeks To Upstage First Republican Debate
A total of eight GOP candidates have qualified for the podium at the opening debate Wednesday after meeting polling and fundraising thresholds, as well as agreeing to sign a pledge to support the party’s eventual nominee.
- 8/24/2023
- by Patrick Hipes
- Deadline Film + TV
Following Mitch McConnell’s incident last week in which the Senate Minority Leader stopped speaking and stared off into space in front of cameras, Sunday’s panel on “Meet the Press” discussed the possibility of an age limit amendment to the constitution that would disqualify lawmakers from serving once they hit 75 or 80 years old.
“We have age minimums, which frankly are ridiculous, right? And the only way there’d be an age maximum is you’d have to make it a constitutional amendment, there’s no doubt in any legal scholar’s mind,” host Chuck Todd said to the panel. “Do you think there’d be momentum for that? You put it at 80, you apply it to the federal judiciary? Something tells me there could be bipartisan momentum for that.”
“I think there would be support for that, but yet all of us know somebody who has everything clicking at age 80,” panelist Amy Walter,...
“We have age minimums, which frankly are ridiculous, right? And the only way there’d be an age maximum is you’d have to make it a constitutional amendment, there’s no doubt in any legal scholar’s mind,” host Chuck Todd said to the panel. “Do you think there’d be momentum for that? You put it at 80, you apply it to the federal judiciary? Something tells me there could be bipartisan momentum for that.”
“I think there would be support for that, but yet all of us know somebody who has everything clicking at age 80,” panelist Amy Walter,...
- 7/30/2023
- by Adam Chitwood
- The Wrap
Broadcast networks are devoting their primetime hours to coverage of next week’s midterm results, underscoring the stakes and interest in this year’s election. But the night is also a bit of a prelude to 2024, as all of the news divisions and cable news outlets hope that audiences will return for another momentous presidential election.
Related Story Jake Tapper To Return To Daytime Show After Midterm Stint In Primetime Related Story Midterms 2022: Kathy Hochul Projected To Win Race For New York Governor, Gretchen Whitmer In Michigan — Update Related Story NewsNation's Chris Stirewalt On Why "Everyone Needs To Just Cool It A Bit" About The Meaning Of The Midterms
The biggest questions Tuesday — whether Democrats retain control of Congress, and whether Donald Trump-backed election deniers win key statewide posts — will have an impact on the next cycle. And speculation of who will enter the field in 2024, and...
Related Story Jake Tapper To Return To Daytime Show After Midterm Stint In Primetime Related Story Midterms 2022: Kathy Hochul Projected To Win Race For New York Governor, Gretchen Whitmer In Michigan — Update Related Story NewsNation's Chris Stirewalt On Why "Everyone Needs To Just Cool It A Bit" About The Meaning Of The Midterms
The biggest questions Tuesday — whether Democrats retain control of Congress, and whether Donald Trump-backed election deniers win key statewide posts — will have an impact on the next cycle. And speculation of who will enter the field in 2024, and...
- 11/8/2022
- by Ted Johnson
- Deadline Film + TV
Meghan McCain drew controversy when she joined NBC’s “Meet the Press” as a panelist on Sunday morning, in her first television appearance since her departure from “The View.”
McCain was featured on a panel about President Joe Biden’s domestic spending plan, along with Amy Walter, editor-in-chief and publisher of the Cook Political Report; Leigh Ann Caldwell, NBC News Capitol Hill correspondent; and Eddie Glaude, Jr. of Princeton University. Many viewers expressed their surprise at McCain’s appearance on social media, causing her name and “Meet the Press” to trend on Twitter.
“It’s good to have a McCain back on ‘Meet the Press,'” host Chuck Todd said when welcoming McCain to the panel. “Nice to have you here.” McCain’s father, the late Sen. John McCain, held the record for the most appearances on the show with 73.
McCain served as the conservative perspective on the panel, saying...
McCain was featured on a panel about President Joe Biden’s domestic spending plan, along with Amy Walter, editor-in-chief and publisher of the Cook Political Report; Leigh Ann Caldwell, NBC News Capitol Hill correspondent; and Eddie Glaude, Jr. of Princeton University. Many viewers expressed their surprise at McCain’s appearance on social media, causing her name and “Meet the Press” to trend on Twitter.
“It’s good to have a McCain back on ‘Meet the Press,'” host Chuck Todd said when welcoming McCain to the panel. “Nice to have you here.” McCain’s father, the late Sen. John McCain, held the record for the most appearances on the show with 73.
McCain served as the conservative perspective on the panel, saying...
- 9/26/2021
- by Ellise Shafer
- Variety Film + TV
President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris will give his acceptance speech Saturday night at 8 p.m. Et/5 p.m. Pt, capping a tumultuous election week that hit its apex Saturday. That’s when Pennsylvania was called for the Democratic challenger, pushing him past the 270 electoral vote threshold to overtake President Donald Trump.
As they have done all week, the broadcast networks will carve into primetime to cover Biden and Harris, who will speak tonight from Wilmington, De, with Harris first up before introducing Biden, according to reports. You can watch the entire event on Deadline here via PBS NewsHour:
Among the changes to tonight’s primetime lineup, NBC said today that it will moves its coverage of the Notre Dame-Clemson college football game to USA Network to make room for the Biden-Harris coverage. The game will return to NBC after the coverage ends.
Here’s how the...
As they have done all week, the broadcast networks will carve into primetime to cover Biden and Harris, who will speak tonight from Wilmington, De, with Harris first up before introducing Biden, according to reports. You can watch the entire event on Deadline here via PBS NewsHour:
Among the changes to tonight’s primetime lineup, NBC said today that it will moves its coverage of the Notre Dame-Clemson college football game to USA Network to make room for the Biden-Harris coverage. The game will return to NBC after the coverage ends.
Here’s how the...
- 11/7/2020
- by Patrick Hipes
- Deadline Film + TV
This is it, finally, the end of the 2020 presidential election cycle. But we’still got Nov. 3 itself, and the final showdown between Joe Biden and Donald Trump, to get out of the way. PBS NewsHour will be there, as it always is, with a huge dedicated programming bloc on Tuesday’s Election Night that will be freely available to stream so long as you’ve got an internet connection and a device that can access it.
The PBS NewsHour Election Night special — which doesn’t have any kind of grandiose, catchy name — will begin at 6 p.m. Et/3 p.m. Pt, an hour before the first polls close on the East Coast and the results start to roll in. NewsHour managing editor Judy Woodruff will be running the show.
But she won’t be alone — far from it. We’ll also see Amna Nawaz, Lisa Desjardins and Amy Walter in...
The PBS NewsHour Election Night special — which doesn’t have any kind of grandiose, catchy name — will begin at 6 p.m. Et/3 p.m. Pt, an hour before the first polls close on the East Coast and the results start to roll in. NewsHour managing editor Judy Woodruff will be running the show.
But she won’t be alone — far from it. We’ll also see Amna Nawaz, Lisa Desjardins and Amy Walter in...
- 11/2/2020
- by Phil Owen
- The Wrap
There’s a little TV event taking place tonight that you might have heard about. President Donald Trump and his Democratic challenger Joe Biden will square off in their first debate of the 2020 election season. Deadline is offering the C-span livestream above, but there are numerous other ways to watch.
Moderated by Fox News’ Chris Wallace, the 90-minute tussle starts at 9 p.m. Et from Case Western Reserve University and Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland. The Fox News Sunday host already has laid out what tonight’s topics will be, in no particular order: the Trump and Biden records, the Supreme Court, Covid-19, the economy, race and violence in our cities and the integrity of the election.
All the major broadcast and cable news networks and their radio and online outlets will carry the feed, while it will be shown on online platforms ranging from Roku to Twitter.
Here’s a...
Moderated by Fox News’ Chris Wallace, the 90-minute tussle starts at 9 p.m. Et from Case Western Reserve University and Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland. The Fox News Sunday host already has laid out what tonight’s topics will be, in no particular order: the Trump and Biden records, the Supreme Court, Covid-19, the economy, race and violence in our cities and the integrity of the election.
All the major broadcast and cable news networks and their radio and online outlets will carry the feed, while it will be shown on online platforms ranging from Roku to Twitter.
Here’s a...
- 9/30/2020
- by Erik Pedersen
- Deadline Film + TV
And then there were seven!
PBS on Thursday plays host to the sixth Democratic primary debate, live from Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, Calif. For the first time this election cycle, less than 10 candidates — seven, to be exact — qualified for the three-hour matchup, which is set to get underway at 8 pm Et.
More from TVLineDemocratic Debate No. 6: Who Stood Out From the Seven-Candidate Pack?Democratic Debate No. 5: Who Is Now the Frontrunner to Challenge Trump?TVLine Items: Disney+'s Puppet Talk Show, gen:lock Renewed and More
Those who did qualify for the final debate of 2019 will appear...
PBS on Thursday plays host to the sixth Democratic primary debate, live from Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, Calif. For the first time this election cycle, less than 10 candidates — seven, to be exact — qualified for the three-hour matchup, which is set to get underway at 8 pm Et.
More from TVLineDemocratic Debate No. 6: Who Stood Out From the Seven-Candidate Pack?Democratic Debate No. 5: Who Is Now the Frontrunner to Challenge Trump?TVLine Items: Disney+'s Puppet Talk Show, gen:lock Renewed and More
Those who did qualify for the final debate of 2019 will appear...
- 12/20/2019
- TVLine.com
With the government shutdown behind us for now, Donald Trump is indeed getting to deliver his State of the Union address Tuesday night — and literally every network and their mother will be broadcasting the speech and the response from the Democrats live. And that, of course, includes PBS NewsHour.
If you’re looking for a more sedated evening of coverage and analysis than you might get from the cable networks, PBS NewsHour might be the channel for you. And PBS is making it easy for you to check out its coverage, as it will be livestreaming its broadcast on Twitter, Facebook and YouTube. You can check out the YouTube stream in the embed at the top of this post. All of PBS NewsHour’s streams will be available for free.
PBS NewsHour’s coverage will begin at 9 p.m. Et/6 p.m. Pt, which is also the scheduled start time for Trump’s speech.
If you’re looking for a more sedated evening of coverage and analysis than you might get from the cable networks, PBS NewsHour might be the channel for you. And PBS is making it easy for you to check out its coverage, as it will be livestreaming its broadcast on Twitter, Facebook and YouTube. You can check out the YouTube stream in the embed at the top of this post. All of PBS NewsHour’s streams will be available for free.
PBS NewsHour’s coverage will begin at 9 p.m. Et/6 p.m. Pt, which is also the scheduled start time for Trump’s speech.
- 2/5/2019
- by Phil Owen
- The Wrap
The Mueller investigation is yielding more heat than light, much of it caused by President Donald Trump’s propensity to take to Twitter and vent.
That was the conclusion by the media panel on this week’s Meet The Press. Led by moderator Chuck Todd, the group included David Brooks, columnist for The New York Times; Amy Walter, national editor of The Cook Political Report; Danielle Pletka of the American Enterprise Institute; and Eugene Robinson, columnist for The Washington Post.
Brooks led off the discussion by noting, “I’m actually getting more uncomfortable with this whole deal, thinking that maybe we’re getting a little ahead of ourselves. And I’m bothered by the lack of emerging evidence about the underlying crime, that there was actually collusion or coordination between the Trump White House.”
The ongoing Mueller investigation has surrounded the president with a “legal minefield, and Donald Trump being Donald Trump,...
That was the conclusion by the media panel on this week’s Meet The Press. Led by moderator Chuck Todd, the group included David Brooks, columnist for The New York Times; Amy Walter, national editor of The Cook Political Report; Danielle Pletka of the American Enterprise Institute; and Eugene Robinson, columnist for The Washington Post.
Brooks led off the discussion by noting, “I’m actually getting more uncomfortable with this whole deal, thinking that maybe we’re getting a little ahead of ourselves. And I’m bothered by the lack of emerging evidence about the underlying crime, that there was actually collusion or coordination between the Trump White House.”
The ongoing Mueller investigation has surrounded the president with a “legal minefield, and Donald Trump being Donald Trump,...
- 6/17/2018
- by Bruce Haring
- Deadline Film + TV
A panel of pundits on Sunday’s NBC News show Meet The Press said the National Football League’s decision to insist players on the field stand for the national anthem could be decided by court order.
The NFL decision this week came in response to last season’s hodgepodge of player protests, which saw players kneel, stay in the locker room, sit on the bench, or raise fists during the pre-game national anthem. The season-long protests were a lightning rod for fan anger, sponsor anguish, and advertiser distress, while TV ratings plummeted.
Players insist the protests reflect their anger at police mistreatment of black Americans. Others, most prominently President Donald Trump, claim the protest is anti-American and disrespects the country.
This week, the league attempted a solution: it changed its rule that players “should” stand for the anthem into a mandate that any player on the field stand. It...
The NFL decision this week came in response to last season’s hodgepodge of player protests, which saw players kneel, stay in the locker room, sit on the bench, or raise fists during the pre-game national anthem. The season-long protests were a lightning rod for fan anger, sponsor anguish, and advertiser distress, while TV ratings plummeted.
Players insist the protests reflect their anger at police mistreatment of black Americans. Others, most prominently President Donald Trump, claim the protest is anti-American and disrespects the country.
This week, the league attempted a solution: it changed its rule that players “should” stand for the anthem into a mandate that any player on the field stand. It...
- 5/27/2018
- by Bruce Haring
- Deadline Film + TV
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