PBS News Hour - Art Beat - Rose Byrne on her Oscar-nominated performance as an unraveling mother
PBS News Hour - Art Beat - Michael Harriot and Geoff Bennett rethink Black history on ‘Settle In’
The Gist - Not Even Mad: Austin Berg & Andrew Egger
Austin Berg (Chicago Policy Center) and Andrew Egger (The Bulwark) join Mike to dissect Trump's marathon State of the Union: was it a missed opportunity to reach the median voter, or a "clip farming" masterclass? They also unpack the awkwardly timed Supreme Court tariff ruling that derailed his economic pitch, and the high-stakes standoff between the Pentagon and AI giant Anthropic over autonomous weapons. Finally, Goat Grinders tackles the agony of vinyl record tariffs, the performative scourge of handheld lavalier mics, and how Twitter ruins the Winter Olympics.
Produced by Corey Wara
Video and Social Media by Geoff Craig
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Marketplace All-in-One - A private credit market boom
The private credit market has grown fivefold since 2008 — it’s somewhere near the $2 trillion-mark globally. In this episode, we explain why policies aimed at alleviating the Great Recession triggered an explosion of non-bank lenders, and why their loans are riskier for the economy than traditional loans. Plus: Analysts expect wholesale inflation cooled a bit in January, retailers fret over a late-winter slump, and stock market predictions are sort of like baking a cake.
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Marketplace is more than a radio show. Check out our original reporting and financial literacy content at marketplace.org — and consider making an investment in our future.
Newshour - Hillary Clinton gives evidence to a Congressional committee investigating Jeffrey Epstein
In a published opening statement, Mrs Clinton said she had no recollection of ever meeting Epstein and castigated the committee for failing to question people who did have dealings with him, including President Trump.
Also on the programme: as Iran and the US resume nuclear talks in Geneva, Iranians fear it's the last chance for diplomacy. And how our two eyes evolved from a cyclopean ancestor,
(Picture: Chairman of the House Oversight Committee James Comer speaks to the press ahead of US former First Lady and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's scheduled testimony. Credit: Federova / EPA)
Consider This from NPR - Why Tim Kaine is pursuing a war powers resolution – again
With the U.S. military amassing in the Middle East ahead of possible strikes in Iran, a Democratic lawmaker explains his effort to limit the president.
The United States Constitution empowers Congress, not the president, to declare war.
That hasn’t stopped plenty of presidents from commanding military combat.
It didn’t stop President Trump from ordering airstrikes on Iran’s nuclear sites last year – and building up the U.S. military in the Middle East while he mulls further action this year.
So far in this Trump administration, efforts to reclaim that Congressional authority have failed.
Sen. Tim Kaine, Democrat of Virginia, explains why he is still pursuing a war powers resolution.
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This episode was produced by Alejandra Marquez Janse and Karen Zamora, with audio engineering by Ted Mebane.
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CBS News Roundup - 02/26/2026 | Evening Update
White House confirms Americans were on the speedboat that exchanged fire with Cuban forces off the island's coast.
Columbia student arrested by Homeland Security officers posing as NYPD officers has been released.
Hillary Clinton says in deposition she had no knowledge of Jeffrey Epstein's crimes.
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WSJ What’s News - Why Record Numbers of Americans Are Leaving the U.S.
P.M. Edition for Feb. 26. Last year, the U.S. had net negative migration for the first time since the Great Depression: More people left than came. Record numbers of American citizens left the country. WSJ world enterprise chief Joe Parkinson discusses what’s driving these departures. Plus, Warner Bros. Discovery says Paramount’s revised offer to buy it is superior to the deal it has with Netflix. And in a closed-door, videotaped deposition in front of a GOP-led House committee, Hillary Clinton said she has no information about Jeffrey Epstein. Alex Ossola hosts.
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Motley Fool Money - NVIDIA Posts Earnings. Wall Street Says “That’s It?”
NVIDIA has been the belle of the quarterly earnings ball for quite some time. Investors have been waiting to see how much NIVIDA beat earnings estimates. Even though earnings did beat expectations, the market reaction was “meh”. The gang breaks down NVIDIA’s earnings and investigates into some of the challenges for the future
Tyler Crowe, Matt Frankel, and Jon Quast discuss:
- NVIDIA’s earnings
- The evolving landscape for CPUs and GPUs
- The bull vs. bear look at MercadoLibre's earnings
- The Trade Desk’s quarterly results
Companies discussed: NVDA, AMD, GOOG, MELI, AMZN, TTD, WMT, ROKU
Host: Tyler Crowe
Guests: Matt Frankel, Jon Quast
Engineer: Dan Boyd
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