When it comes to travel TV, few names are more well-known than Samantha Brown. Since the year 2000, she has hosted almost a dozen different travel series. Now she's back with her latest on PBS called "Samantha Brown's Places To Love." Brown says this time around she is taking a more personal look at travel.
Since 2000, Brown has traveled to over 260 cities in more than 60 countries. Her favorite place to visit? Southeast Asia. Brown says it's an entirely different world that contrasts so strongly--physically and culturally--from the U.S.
To make the most out of travel, Brown says, "don't go for the exclamation points. Look for the commas." The best experiences are in the side streets, not in the main squares.
Young people across the world are uniting, calling on policymakers to adress the climate crisis. 15-year-old Alexandria Villasenor, founder of Earth Uprising, talks launching the movement and an upcoming partnership with GAP Kids on a virtual rally, encouraging the youth to make their voices heard about issues they want fixed.
Kamala Harris previews the Biden campaign's strategy for the fall. Plus, a schism developing in college sports, restaurant industry in early stages of collapse, and the Great Showerhead Debate.
Federal authorities have charged three men with harassing and intimidating women who have accused R&B singer R Kelly of abuse.
CuriosityStream CEO, Clint Stinchcomb, talks about the company's plan to go public as it expands its global reach and also explains what sets his platform apart from others.
Sumner Redstone, who built a media empire from his family’s drive-in movie chain, has died.
Kamala Harris makes history as Joe Biden's VP pick, the Big 10 and Pac 12 bow out of a fall season, and the Phoenix Suns' shine in the NBA bubble.
New Zealand's prime minister says authorities have found four cases of the coronavirus in one Auckland household from an unknown source, the first cases of local transmission in the country in 102 days.
Carlo and Baker talk about the encouraging signs in air travel, another encouraging sign in Florida, plus Facebook's QAnon problem and what to do about college football.
Efforts have intensified in Mauritius to empty a stranded Japanese ship of an estimated 2,500 tons of oil before the vessel breaks up and contaminates the island’s Indian Ocean coastline.
Tony Petitti is leaving Major League Baseball after 12 years to become president of sports and entertainment for the video game and esports company Activision Blizzard Inc.
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