Carolyn Miles, President and CEO of Save the Children, shares a disturbing new report on children living in conflict zones. The number of kids living in dangerous areas has gone up 75% since the early 1990s.
Miles says this rise is due in large part to the conflict in Syria, which is in its seventh year. Syria is also the most dangerous place on earth for a child to live. Save the Children is partnering with Dictionary.com for their word of the day, "SOS."
Miles says there's a serious psychological impact on these children. She encourages people to stand up and donate to peace building programs.
So much snow in the Northeast, Biden meets with Republicans on stimulus, stocks calm down, and Nike's new sneaker.
The short squeeze phenomenon for companies like GameStop and AMC started on Reddit has captured the attention of the financial world — and brought up questions about if anything needs to be done about it.
The Big Game ad features Shaggy alongside Ashton Kutcher and Mila Kunis in a comedic rendition of the classic hit 'It Wasn't Me' centered around Cheetos' new Crunch Pop Mix.
The erratic trading in shares of underdog companies like GameStop that turned markets combustible last week appears to have migrated to commodities, sending silver prices surging to an eight-year high.
The kathy ireland Health & Wellness CBD Solutions line, announced in May 2020, launched in mid-January as a partnership with CBD company Vertical Wellness.
Tom Moore, the 100-year-old World War II veteran who captivated the British public in the early days of the coronavirus pandemic with his fundraising efforts, has been hospitalized with COVID-19, his daughter said Sunday.
Jill and Carlo go a little long today to discuss the single most important question in the news: what is our *goal* when it comes to ending the pandemic? Plus, a big winter storm in the Northeast, Putin's problem not going away, and the point of short-selling stocks.
From Wall Street to Silicon Valley, these are the top stories that moved markets and had investors, business leaders, and entrepreneurs talking this week on Cheddar.
Christopher Kardatzke, the chief technology officer for Quiver Quantitative, joined Cheddar to discuss how hedge funds have started inquiring about its data-scraping tech in the wake of the GameStop short squeeze.
The wave of small investors who have ballooned the price of GameStop stock in an unprecedented short squeeze are calling on each other to hold their positions even as trading platforms freeze additional sales.
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