I'm curious to hear about a day to day. You read/watch news all day, do your own research, form ideas at night, film first thing in the morning, edit and publish, rinse repeat? Do you expressly take Wed/Fri off because not enough happens in a day to fill an hour without blithering sensationally, or that you want to digest it, or is it simply a work/life balance desire? How much do you collaborate? It seems like you guys frequently make a point or cite an event that the other one hadn't heard before and you work it out live on air - which is cool! But then how did that happen?
Question is in the title. I was a republican for decades until Trump and also believe enough credible evidence shows insignificant election fraud. But 'stop the steal' is still a huge issue, so is this a widespread belief or just a noisy minority? Any good polling or research data?
Today I watched the exchange over carbon emissions and heard Saagar dismiss the U.S. contribution as trivial compared with that of China and India. It's important to consider per capita emissions where the U.S. is SIGNIFICANTLY higher than both of those countries. I think the larger point is that if those two most populous countries were to follow our model of self-indulgence without regard to consequences, the world is done. In many ways we try to set the example that other countries want to follow. In this regard we are not doing a good job. Care to reconsider your position Saagar?