
- BusinessYahoo Finance
Moderna CEO offers a bleak assessment of COVID-19: Virus to stay with the world 'forever'
While Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel said his company's vaccine remains effective against coronavirus variants, a reoccurring booster shot could be likely.
- HealthINSIDER
People with COVID-19 should avoid exercise, even if they don't have symptoms, experts say
Even asymptomatic people with COVID-19 should limit exercise to a walk at most. Anyone with symptoms should wait a week post-recovery to work out.
- NewsKCRA - Sacramento Videos
VideoCalifornia assemblymember criticizes Newsom’s decision to life statewide stay-at-home order
Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Monday that the statewide stay-at-home order was lifted, reverting all counties back to the colored tiered system for reopening guidelines. This does not comes as good news to all, as Assemblyman Jim Patterson, R-Fresno, questioned his decision to do so. He demanded in a news release that the governor reveal the data that led the state to loosen reopening guidelines. See more in the video above.
- PoliticsThe Telegraph
Behind the scenes of the Trump circus: what three years reporting from Washington taught me
The first thing you notice about Donald Trump in the flesh is his size. He has a rugby player build: 6ft 3in and 17 stone. His sheer physicality is never quite captured on television. Neatly cut suits hide his bulk from the camera, but in person - especially side-on - it is unavoidable. The second thing is the hair, swept across and back and fixed in place. It is like a crashing wave frozen in motion. And then there is the skin complexion. A warm, yellow hue that draws your eyes after all the speculation about sunbed use. At least, that is the order I remember when seeing him first after moving to Washington DC as The Telegraph’s US Editor in October 2017. After years covering Westminster, I had been sent to try to unpack the Trump phenomenon to British readers, the nature of his appeal and how he was wielding power. For the next three years and four months my working life revolved almost entirely around the president - his moods, his decisions, his controversies, his tweets. There were rallies across America, where he was welcomed like a saviour. There were foreign trips to Hanoi, Singapore, Brussels, Helsinki and London, where he was treated with caution. Most of the time you simply felt swept along by an unrelenting current of news, much of it directed by Mr Trump himself, a master media manipulator.