The NewsWorthy - Pence vs. Harris, Wisconsin Outbreak Grows & Scientists Make History – Thursday, October 8th, 2020

The news to know for Thursday, October 8th, 2020!

We're talking about:

  • highlights from last night's vice-presidential debate
  • Hurricane Delta: what happened in Mexico and how Louisiana is preparing
  • a history-making Nobel prize
  • a new Instagram-like feature coming to Slack
  • new rules for The Oscars

All that and more in just 10 minutes

Head to www.theNewsWorthy.com/shownotes to read more about our guest or any of the stories mentioned.

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Sources:

VP Debate Recap: WaPo, Politico, WSJ, AP

Trump Returns to Oval Office: Reuters, CBS News, NY Times, Trump Tweet

White House Outbreak: ABC News, WaPo, USA Today, NBC News

COVID-19 Cases Rising in 39 States: USA Today, Johns Hopkins

Wisconsin to Activate Field Hospital: Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, AP, Reuters

Hurricane Warning in Louisiana: Weather Channel, CNN, WaPo, AP, NHC

Hottest September on Record: NY Times, NBC News, Reuters

History-Making Nobel Prize in Chemistry: CBS News, AP, NY Times

Facebook Bans Post-Election Political Ads: The Verge, CNBC, Politico, Axios, Facebook

Slack Getting Instagram-like Stories: The Verge, Engadget, 9to5Mac

Drive-In Movies will now Qualify for 2021 Oscars: USA Today, Variety, Deadline

Thing to Know Thursday: What Happens if a Presidential Candidate Dies? AP, WaPo, Vox

What A Day - Veeping With The Enemy

Last night was the first and only vice presidential debate, with Senator Kamala Harris and VP Mike Pence facing off. Their conversation covered police killings of Black Americans, Trump’s response to the pandemic, Roe v. Wade, and more. We discuss a debate that was a lot more measured than the last one, but still very frustrating. 

Trump went back to the Oval Office yesterday and released another long-winded video in which he said contacting COVID-19 was a “blessing from God” and described the antibody cocktail he received as a “cure.” Outside of DC, there are still over 40,000 new cases being identified daily, with the Dakotas and Wisconsin as particular hot spots.

And in headlines: George Floyd killer Derek Chauvin is released on $1 million bail, a Greek neo-fascist political party is found guilty of running a criminal organization, and SNL pays their audience.

The Daily Signal - Mary Vought on Religion and Confirmation Hearings

Today's Daily Signal Podcast features an interview from the great “Problematic Women” podcast.  As Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett prepares for Senate hearings next week, many are wondering whether she’ll again face harsh questions about her Catholic faith.

Mary Vought, executive director of the Senate Conservatives Fund and wife of Russell Vought, director of the Office of Management and Budget, joins us to explain why this line of questioning is unconstitutional. Her husband, she recalls, faced similar scrutiny in his own Senate confirmation hearing.


We also cover these stories:


  • Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is speaking out against attacks on Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett.
  • President Donald Trump says he no longer feels any symptoms of COVID, according to his doctor, Sean Conley. 
  • Derek Chauvin, the Minneapolis police officer who knelt on George Floyd’s neck, has been released from jail after posting a million dollar bail.



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The Gist - Too Big to Govern?

On the Gist, a vice presidential debate starring plexiglass.

In the interview, Mike hosts a roundtable discussion with journalist Richard Kreitner and Vox’s Matthew Yglesias to talk about how each of their new books address the problem of an ever-increasing American population. They debate if the U.S. should split into more manageable nations, or if the country should keep pushing population growth. Yglesias’ book is One Billion Americans: The Case for Thinking Big, and Kreitner’s latest is Break It Up: Secession, Division, and the Secret History of America’s Imperfect Union.

In the spiel, Delco, South Philly, and NY tri-state area Italian Americans for Joe Biden.

Email us at thegist@slate.com

Podcast production by Daniel Schroeder and Margaret Kelley.

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This Machine Kills - 10. This Movie Kills: A Scanner Darkly

Cold open: What does a scanner see? Welcome to the first installment of This Movie Kills! This week we discuss the film A Scanner Darkly (2006), an adaptation of Philip K. Dick’s novel. What do you get when you shake together drug psychosis, police paranoia, distorted perception, atmospheric anxiety, and identity crisis? Bad vibes all around! Or, maybe just another day in “a world getting progressively worse.” The story is from the seventies, the movie feels like the 90s, but the themes are all about today. Hosted by Jathan Sadowski (twitter.com/jathansadowski) and Edward Ongweso Jr. (twitter.com/bigblackjacobin). Production / Music by Jereme Brown (twitter.com/braunestahl).

Consider This from NPR - Millions Of Americans Can’t Afford Enough To Eat As Pandemic Relief Stalls In D.C.

Two years ago, about 12% of American households reported they didn't have enough food. Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, that number has nearly doubled. It's even more severe for Black and Hispanic families.

Texas Public Radio's Paul Flahive reports on a giant food bank in San Antonio that can barely keep up with the growing demand.

Experts say the problem of food insecurity in America needs bigger, longer-term solutions. Erthain Cousin, former U.S. Ambassador to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, tells NPR's Michel Martin the country needs to think bigger than food banks and start investing in businesses that can improve nutrition in low-income communities.

And Jim Carnes of Alabama Arise, an organization working to end poverty in Alabama, explains that food insecurity goes hand in hand with poverty. And the main factor driving poverty in the U.S.? Medical expenses.

Listen to a special episode of All Things Considered all about food insecurity during the pandemic.

In participating regions, you'll also hear a local news segment that will help you make sense of what's going on in your community.

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Ologies with Alie Ward - Condorology (CONDORS & VULTURES) with Jonathan C. Hall

To kick off SpooOoktober, we’re looking at huge birds that DEVOUR DEATH: the giant, majestic and critically endangered California condor. Condorologist Dr. Jonathan C. Hall’s work helps monitor populations, tracks flight data, and keeps tabs on how well this small population is rebounding after going extinct in the wild in 1987. We chat carcasses, wingspans, beaks, bald heads, and more. By the end, you’ll want to gaze at the skies hoping for a sighting. Also: condor romance gossip! And accomplices vs. allyship. Dr. Hall is just amazing.

Dr. Jonathan C. Hall’s website https://bit.ly/DrJCH

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Reset with Sasha-Ann Simons - Covid-19 Stimulus In Limbo, Kurt Elling Celebrates 25 Years With Streamed Concerts

Millions of people and thousands of businesses are desperate for some help from the federal government because of the pandemic, but congress and the president can’t seem to get a package together. Later, Internationally recognized jazz vocalist Kurt Elling rolls out a series of livestreamed shows to mark the 25th anniversary of this first album’s release. We’ll talk about his quarter century in jazz, how he’s changed as an artist, and why he’s so excited to be back living in Chicago after a dozen years in New York