What Next | Daily News and Analysis - The Mayoral Scandal Gripping Baltimore

On May 2nd, Catherine Pugh resigned as mayor of Baltimore - making her the second mayor in less than ten years to leave office amid corruption allegations. The scandal forcing her to step down involved a children’s book, an FBI raid, and a host of ethically dubious business relationships at the highest levels of city government. What happens next for Charm City?

Guest: Luke Broadwater, reporter at the Baltimore Sun.

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The NewsWorthy - Trump Jr. Subpoena, Magic Mushrooms & Archie Harrison (+ Talking Pregnancy & Postpartum Care) – Thursday, May 9th, 2019

The news to know for Thursday, May 9th, 2019!

We're talking about why the president's son was just subpoenaed, the new thing drug companies will have to tell you on TV, and the first U.S. city to give the OK to so-called magic mushrooms.

Plus: a big Bitcoin hack, the royal baby name, and Tyra Banks makes a comeback.

Those stories and many more in less than 10 minutes!

Then hang out after the news for Thing to Know Thursday's bonus interview about a new CDC report on pregnancy-related medical issues, the new drug for postpartum depression and the advice to new moms everywhere. You'll hear from Dr. Alison Stuebe as well as postpartum care practitioner Natalie Telyatnikov.

Award-winning broadcast journalist and former TV news reporter Erica Mandy helps breaks it all down for you.

 You can also go to www.theNewsWorthy.com to see story sources and links in the section titled 'Episodes' or see below...

Today's episode is brought to you by the American Beverage Association. Go to www.BalanceUS.org to learn more.

Become a NewsWorthy Insider! Click here: 

https://www.theNewsWorthy.com/insider

 

 

  

 

Sources:

Trump Jr. Subpoena: CNBC, NPR

Executive Privilege: NYT, AP

Contempt Vote: The Hill, CNN

Pregnancy-Related Deaths: CBS News, Axios

Magic Mushrooms OK: Forbes, Denver Post

Drug Prices on TV: ABC News, Bloomberg, NYT

Tobacco Age: CNBC, Reuters

Bitcoin Hackers: CNN, Wired, Binance

Buy a Bird: Tech Crunch, The Verge

Tyra Banks SI Cover: CBS News, People

Royal Baby Name: BBC, USA Today, People

 

The Gist - Who Makes The Gist?

On The Gist, maybe Trump wants to be impeached? 

Then it’s a change of format as all the former and current producers of The Gist gather together for a roundtable. Founding producer Andrea Silenzi discusses the origins of The Gist, past producers Chris Berube and Mary Wilson talk about the thrills of covering the presidential debates, and current producers Pierre Bienaimé and Daniel Schroeder join in to dish on what it's like working with Mike. 

In the Spiel, Mike reevaluates his mistakes from the past five years.

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The Best One Yet - Google’s $399 smartphone, Crocs’ comeback, and GM’s robotaxi Cruise snags $1B

Google’s I/O event day enjoyed protests, AI tech to screen fake calls, and a $399 Pixel phone. General Motors acquired self-driving car startup Cruise when it was worth $1B — Now it’s worth $19B, and wants robotaxis on streets this year. And Crocs shares have nearly doubled in the past year, so we look at why. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Intelligence from The Economist - Nuclear diffusion: Iran

Exactly a year after President Donald Trump pulled America out of the Iran nuclear deal—and days after America moved warships into the Persian Gulf—Iran has announced it will break the terms of the deal. Is it more than just sabre-rattling? We examine an impressive new effort to get inside the minds of those unable to speak. And, why is it that British food gets such a bad rap? The answer stretches back to the Industrial Revolution.

What Next | Daily News and Analysis - The Constitutional Tug-of-War Is Just Getting Started

The House Judiciary Committee is set to vote on holding Attorney General William Barr in contempt of Congress, for failing to provide a full and unredacted copy of the Mueller report. It’s the latest in a series of clashes between the legislative and executive branches—clashes that don’t show any signs of letting up. Was our 230-year-old Constitution designed for this highly partisan, highly confrontational moment?

Guest: Noah Feldman, Harvard Law School professor and host of Deep Background, available on Luminary.

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