PBS News Hour - World - ‘Something’s going to happen,’ Trump says as Greenland threats rattle NATO allies
The Gist - Chuck Klosterman: Football Isn’t a Game—It’s the Last American Monoculture
Author Chuck Klosterman joins the show to discuss his new book, Football, and how football's strange mechanics, from hidden labor to stop-start pacing,and its resistance to casual play, have helped turn it into the last true monoculture. He also makes the case that future critics will misread football as decadence, missing what it actually revealed about the era that embraced it. Also, the double pardon of the same woman convicted twice for fraud, including a scheme selling counterfeit 5-Hour Energy drinks. Plus a Spiel on how Donald Trump and Stephen Miller make reckless promises of protection that can get supporters hurt or killed.
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Video and Social Media by Geoff Craig
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PBS News Hour - World - Gaza families dig through rubble searching for loved ones’ remains
PBS News Hour - Art Beat - ‘Miracle Children’ explores admissions scandal that exposed inequalities in education
Marketplace All-in-One - The global trade status quo is shifting. Will the U.S. be left out?
After decades of globalization, the U.S. may be paying a political price: International leaders are forging new trade agreements independent of American influence. In this episode, as some countries no longer see the U.S. as a reliable trade partner, will the global economy leave America behind? Plus: Sellers outnumber buyers in parts of the housing market, Georgetown’s Dorothy Brown discusses her new book about reparations, and we preview Fed governor Lisa Cook’s upcoming Supreme Court hearing.
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The Source - The new front line in the science of aging
CBS News Roundup - 01/20/2026 | Evening Update
Before leaving for a meeting of world leaders in Davos, Switzerland, President Trump takes questions from reporters regarding NATO and Greenland.
Stock markets nosedive on fears the president will impose tariffs on countries who don't agree with his Greenland ambitions.
Justice Department subpoenas Minnesota officials, including the governor, over investigation into obstruction of ICE activities.
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Newshour - Greenland tensions continue at Davos
The World Economic Forum in Switzerland has been dominated by President Trump's ambition to take control of Greenland and his threat to impose tariffs on European countries that resist. President Macron of France accused the US of trying to weaken and subordinate Europe.
Also in the programme: A new ceasefire announced in Syria; and we hear from the Ugandan opposition leader, Bobi Wine.
(Picture: France's President Emmanuel Macron at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Credit: REUTERS/Denis Balibouse)
WSJ What’s News - Trump’s Threats Over Greenland Send Stock Markets Diving
P.M. Edition for Jan. 20. European leaders and U.S. markets were rattled by President Trump’s doubling down on his desire to take over Greenland. Plus, an AI tool called Claude Code, from Anthropic, is exciting developers and hobbyists alike as it speeds up their work. But as WSJ deputy tech editor Brad Olson tells us, it’s also got some of them worried. And Netflix reports higher revenue and profit in the fourth quarter. Alex Ossola hosts.
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