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PBS NewsHour Full
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PBS NewsHour Full
Show Today
PBS NewsHour
Latest Episode
PBS NewsHour
June 28 2022
Full Episodes PBS
Org
PBS NewsHour
Live Online
PBS NewsHour
Jul-30 2021
PBS NewsHour
Aug 16 2021
PBS NewsHour
Funding Version 2
PBS NewsHour
July 17 2021
PBS NewsHour
Funding Credits 2000
PBS NewsHour
Funding Credits 2001
PBS NewsHour
Funding Credits 1989
PBS NewsHour
Funding 2007
PBS NewsHour
1991
PBS NewsHour
Funding Credits 1998
PBS NewsHour
July 28 2020
PBS NewsHour
Funding
PBS NewsHour
Funding Credits 1992
PBS NewsHour
Funding 2013
2:30
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PBS NewsHour
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Friday that it’s up to Ukraine and Russia to hammer out a deal to end the ongoing war, which started in 2022 with Russia's full-scale invasion.
PBS NewsHour. . U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Friday that it’s up to Ukraine and Russia to hammer out a deal to end the ongoing war, which started in 2022 with Russia's full-scale invasion. “In the end, it's up to them to make a deal. We can't force Ukraine to make a deal. We can't force Russia to make a deal. They have to want ...
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5 months ago
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Special correspondent Reza Sayah said it was "a bleak, grim and scary day for the people of Iran" after the U.S and Israel launched attacks in Iran. Sayah joined PBS News Hour co-anchors Amna Nawaz and Geoff Bennet from Tehran to share more about how the attacks unfolded and what Iranians are saying now. | PBS NewsHour
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They’re called “zombie mortgages” — debts that homeowners thought were forgiven or satisfied long ago, only to learn that they still exist and that they could cost them their homes. Economics correspondent Paul Solman and producer Diane Lincoln Estes report on these back-from-the-dead debts, in partnership with the documentary news group Retro Report, a documentary news group that delves back into major events of the past to understand their relevance today. | PBS NewsHour
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Special correspondent Reza Sayah said it was "a bleak, grim and scary day for the people of Iran" after the U.S and Israel launched attacks in Iran. Sayah joined PBS News Hour co-anchors Amna Nawaz and Geoff Bennet from Tehran to share more about how the attacks unfolded and what Iranians are saying now. | PBS NewsHour
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PBS NewsHour’s Full Episode on YouTube: Must-Watch News!
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9 months ago
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They’re called “zombie mortgages” — debts that homeowners thought were forgiven or satisfied long ago, only to learn that they still exist and that they could cost them their homes. Economics correspondent Paul Solman and producer Diane Lincoln Estes report on these back-from-the-dead debts, in partnership with the documentary news group Retro Report, a documentary news group that delves back into major events of the past to understand their relevance today. | PBS NewsHour
579.1K views
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3:17
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said Wednesday that the Trump administration's recent military action in Venezuela "appears to be a power grab" that lacks further planning to avoid "another endless foreign war." "The future of Venezuela should be decided by the Venezuelan people, nobody else," Jeffries told PBS News Hour's Amna Nawaz. "It doesn't appear that the Trump administration has a plan to effectuate that." The Democratic leader's comments came one day before the Senate advanced a r
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Our new show, Horizons, dives into the science, health, technology and environmental issues making headlines each week. Host William Brangham explores these topics through in-depth discussions with leading experts and professionals. In our inaugural episode, Brangham speaks with three professionals about the intersection of food and health in the U.S., the Make America Healthy Again movement and updates to the federal nutrition guidelines. Ashley Gearhardt is a professor of psychology and clinic
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New York Times columnist David Brooks and Jonathan Capehart of MS NOW joined PBS News Hour's Geoff Bennett on Friday to discuss the week in politics, including President Donald Trump’s attempts to address his sinking approval ratings on the economy, the Department of Justice beginning to release the Epstein files and the renaming of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. | PBS NewsHour
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WATCH: 'This is fabulous,' House Speaker McCarthy says in aftermath of debt ceiling deal
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WATCH: Civilian deaths rise as generals fight for power in Sudan
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What's the best way to deal with political fatigue? Sociologist Tressie McMillan Cottom recommends getting more involved. "We are getting so much passive information, and we have so few opportunities to act," she told PBS News' Geoff Bennett. "We are tired then, not from doing too much, but from doing too little." "The more time you spend doing something, ... the less exhausted you are by the onslaught of information that really wins when it can convince you that the only thing you can do is wat
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Donald Trump's presidency has revealed the "baldly honest" way institutions have worked in the United States, says sociologist Tressie McMillan Cottom. "The idea of social progress blinded us to, I think, the dangers and the rigors of the places in our institutions that were absolutely capturing wholesale communities," she told PBS News' Geoff Bennett. "What has happened under Trump is that the gap between our illusion about social progress and how institutions function has collapsed," she added
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This Sunday was the final broadcast of PBS News Weekend, at least for the foreseeable future. PBS cancelled the show due to the loss of federal funding for public media. As our team signs off the air, PBS News Weekend anchor John Yang looks back at some of our top stories and highlights over the years. | PBS NewsHour
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WATCH: Former chief justice would have dropped Second Amendment
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As many people try to stick with their New Year's resolutions, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Charles Duhigg says focusing on "small wins" is what can lead to real change. "It's these small baby steps, it's the science of small wins that convinces us that we can change," Duhigg told PBS News' Amna Nawaz. "When we convince ourselves that we can change, the change becomes much more easy to achieve." Duhigg, author of "The Power of Habit," sat down with Nawaz for the latest episode of PBS News'
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The Trump administration last week was sued for a sweeping pause of immigrant visa processing for people from 75 countries. The freeze, which started last month, was aimed at nations "whose migrants take welfare from the American people at unacceptable rates," the administration said. The news comes on top of full or partial travel and visa restrictions on citizens from 39 countries, which federal officials say are necessary to prevent overstays and protect national security. The travel bans and
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Protests against the Trump administration's immigration crackdown continued on Thursday as hundreds took to the streets in Minneapolis to express outrage over the fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good. Demonstrators marched through freezing rain, chanting "ICE out now" and "Kristi Noem has got to go." Good, a U.S. citizen, was shot by a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent on Tuesday. The shooting sparked national outrage, with protests also in Houston, Cincinnati, Philadelphia and other
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Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Charles Duhigg says "small patterns" can have a big impact on our lives. "If you go and you run just 10 minutes today, you are 10 minutes healthier than if you had not run," he told PBS News' Amna Nawaz. "Not only that, but if you run 10 minutes today, next week it's gonna be a lot easier to run 15 minutes." "It's important to give ourselves the grace to find the small patterns in our life because those small patterns compound," he added. Duhigg, author of "The
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Michael Harriot says the fight over history, and how it is told, is part of a pattern that reverberates throughout time. "We are prone to thinking that we're living or experiencing something unique when there's always been an effort to kind of return to the era of times when white people were comfortable," Harriot, a journalist and writer, told Geoff Bennett. "After every period of, you know, the expansion of freedom, there is always this contracting backlash by the majority," he added. "Part of
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Steve Martin & Martin Short on relevancy
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Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine has entered its fifth year. The war is a brutal, bloody stalemate and diplomacy appears deadlocked. Retired Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg was President Donald Trump's special envoy to Ukraine until the end of 2025 and is now the co-chair of American security at the America First Policy Institute. Compass Points host Nick Schifrin sat down with Kellogg for an inside look at the Trump administration's strategy for ending the war, how we got here and what's ahead. “
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PBS News is debuting two new shows this weekend. “Horizons from PBS News,” hosted by William Brangham, will explore the forces shaping our daily lives, from science to health and technology. “Compass Points from PBS News,” hosted by Nick Schifrin, will unpack global events and what they mean here at home. Viewers can watch these programs on YouTube and PBS. | PBS NewsHour
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President Donald Trump posted on social media earlier this week that Iranians demonstrating in their country should “keep protesting” and that “help is on its way.” Yet, a former national security and defense official who worked in the Clinton and both Bush administrations, says it is "morally wrong to encourage protesters to run physical risks when you are not actually going to protect them." "I think the president established a red line that he then is walking away from, and people are going t
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PBS NewsHour
8:09
The Trump administration's plan to end temporary protected status for Haitians in the U.S. was blocked Tuesday by a federal court in Washington, D.C. The program, which allows Haitians to live and work legally in the U.S., was set to expire yesterday. Letting the program expire would have left roughly 350,000 people vulnerable to deportation. The Trump administration plans to appeal the court's ruling. Stephanie Sy reports on how the uncertainty has one Ohio city bracing for what's next. | PBS N
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PBS NewsHour
1:19
Russia attacked Ukraine's capital city Kyiv with a barrage of ballistic missiles and drones overnight Friday and into Saturday, hitting several apartment buildings and key energy infrastructure facilities. At least one person was killed and nearly 30 others were injured. It came just a day before President Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy were set to meet in Florida to talk about prospects for peace. "This attack is, again, Russia's answer on our peace efforts, and this r
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5 months ago
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PBS NewsHour
2:10
President Donald Trump said he wants to prevent Iran from having a nuclear weapon during his State of the Union address Tuesday. The U.S. has been building up its largest military presence of American warships and aircraft in decades in the Middle East, as the Trump administration plans to restart talks with Iran over its nuclear program. “I will never allow the world's No. 1 sponsor of terror, which they are by far, to have a nuclear weapon,” the president said. “Can't let that happen.” | PBS N
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2:20
Science correspondent Miles O’Brien says the Challenger disaster 40 years ago was a "collective tragedy." "This was something everyone saw instantly, was broadcast live on CNN, and the world watched it," O'Brien told PBS News' Geoff Bennett. "Children were connected to it. There was a profound sense of loss of innocence, I think, for NASA, which at that point, really in the public's mind, could do no wrong." On Jan. 28, 1986, the Space Shuttle Challenger exploded just after takeoff, killing all
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As immigration crackdowns spread to new cities across the country, Americans overwhelmingly disapprove of the actions of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, according to a new PBS News/NPR/Marist poll. Lisa Desjardins joins William Brangham to discuss how public opinion is shifting and how it may play into the debate on Capitol Hill. | PBS NewsHour
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1:53
The ice in the Arctic and Antarctica plays critical roles in maintaining life on Earth. They are the biggest reservoirs of freshwater on the planet and help steer ocean currents, which are major drivers of our weather. But if enough of that ice melts, sea levels could rise all over the world. That’s why a team of scientists is studying the Thwaites Glacier, nicknamed the "Doomsday Glacier," which is roughly the size of Florida and melting fast. PBS News Hour’s science correspondent Miles O’Brien
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4 months ago
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