At a special taping of Yahoo News’ “Skullduggery” podcast on Thursday, three panelists discussed the legal perils that Donald Trump is facing.
Jared Kushner boasted in mid-April that President Trump was “back in charge” of the federal response to COVID-19, “not the doctors.”
In a wide-ranging interview on the Yahoo News "Skullduggery" podcast Thursday, Woodward said the president's efforts to undermine the public's confidence in the election could result in his refusal to leave office.
In a wide-ranging live interview on the Yahoo News “Skullduggery” podcast Thursday, the “Rage” author said the president does not have the capacity “to assess what's real and what's unreal.”
The author and investigative journalist sat down with the Yahoo News “Skullduggery” podcast for a wide-ranging discussion conversation about “Rage,” his new book on the Trump presidency.
President Trump told journalist Bob Woodward that he was deliberately downplaying the risks of the coronavirus in the early months of the pandemic. What impact will these statements have?
President Trump on Wednesday acknowledged that he misled the American public about the threat of COVID-19 earlier this year in order to "reduce panic" about a virus that has so far killed nearly 200,000 people in the U.S.
The president answered questions about his embattled Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh on the White House lawn Tuesday.
The president battles hurricanes and public perception.
Bob Woodward is defending the use of anonymous sources in his new book about President Trump.
People who have spent time around Defense Secretary James Mattis are divided over the plausibility that he disparaged President Trump.
In response to Bob Woodward’s book about the Trump White House, the president has resorted to one of his favorite tactics: an implied threat to bring a libel suit over reporting he doesn’t like.
The New York Times publishes an anonymous essay it says was written by a member of the administration.
President Trump continues to fume over Bob Woodward’s explosive new book that paints a dysfunctional picture of his presidency.
The president blames the media for not sharing all the good news that's fit to print.
But the famed former Washington Post investigative reporters whose Pulitzer Prize-winning work ultimately led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon differ on their reasons.
“Streaming is beginning to look an awful lot like the old-fashioned analogue TV it was supposed to replace.”
“Streaming isn’t going away … You’re still going to have a lot of choice for a long time.”
“In the future, [streaming] likely will cost more, have a little less library content and cancel more shows more quickly.”
“Streaming is still a game of content … It’s not a matter of who’s spending more, it’s who’s spending smartly.”
“Streamers are retreating from any sort of creative risk in favor of humdrum, lowest-common-denominator shows.”