The Young Turks' Francis Maxwell and CRTV's Nate Madden discuss the biggest stories in Washington in this week's edition of "Agree to Disagree."
We talk to the 23-year-old Texas State House candidate using memes as a central pillar of his campaign strategy. Richard Wolf says his memes are a cost-effective way of reaching the state's younger voting base.
We also talk about all the political messages and major moments from the Oscars.
New York State Assembly Majority Leader Crystal Peoples-Stokes believes 2021 is the year that the Empire State will get marijuana legalization done.
Cheddar has pulled together a rough timeline of the GameStop tale, from its inauspicious beginnings to becoming one of the biggest stories out of Wall Street since the crash of the housing market.
What was Ted Cruz thinking? The senator is back from a quick but eventful trip to Mexico. Vaccine reinforcements are coming. A space milestone of epic proportions. Plus, Love, Hate, Ate featuring the best commercial on TV.
A NASA rover has landed on Mars in an epic quest to bring back rocks that could answer whether life ever existed on the red planet.
Power was restored to more homes and businesses in Texas after a deadly blast of winter this week overwhelmed the electrical grid and left millions shivering in the cold.
In 1856, a chemistry student named William Henry Perkin accidentally created a strange substance with a rich purple hue. That accident turned out to be the world’s first synthetic dye.
People have taken thousands of cold-stunned sea turtles to a convention center in South Texas in hopes of saving them during the unusually chilly weather.
Cheddar looks at the players in the GameStop stock saga taking part in the House Committee on Financial Services hearing.
Carlo and Baker discuss the latest from Texas as another winter storm is making bad things worse, what to watch in today's big hearing on GameStop, the moment of truth on Mars, and Serena's Open exit.
Anger over Texas' power grid failing in the face of a record winter freeze is mounting. Nearly 3 million customers in the energy capital of the U.S. woke up Wednesday still without power.
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