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Anderson Cooper, Jesse Waters and Rachel Maddow: Stream the top news shows on Sling

Anderson Cooper, Jesse Waters and Rachel Maddow: Stream the top news shows on Sling

USA Today25-02-2025

Anderson Cooper, Jesse Waters and Rachel Maddow: Stream the top news shows on Sling
— Recommendations are independently chosen by our editors. Purchases you make through our links may earn us and our publishing partners a commission.
Cutting the cord doesn't mean you have to cut your favorite news shows.
Sling TV doesn't just give you access to live TV and breaking news, but you can also stream your favorite news programs, like America's Newsroom with Bill Hemmer and Dana Perino, or The Rachel Maddow Show on MSNBC.
Sling is a fully customizable TV package that starts with 40 channels, but customers can add-on more. But, what makes Sling different from watching cable the old-fashioned way is that there's no long-term contract.
Sign up for Sling today
What news shows are available on Sling?
Sling offers live TV on at least 40 channels, which includes live breaking news from FOX News, CNN, MSNBC, ABC News, and Bloomberg TV. Local news channels are also available in select markets. But, Sling offers far more than live TV.
America's Newsroom with Bill Hemmer and Dana Perino - America's Newsroom with Bill Hemmer and Dana Perino covers current events happening in the U.S. and around the world. Hemmer and Perino bring in guests relevant to the news topics of the day. They also address viewer emails, which guests are given the opportunity to address as well.
America's Newsroom with Bill Hemmer and Dana Perino covers current events happening in the U.S. and around the world. Hemmer and Perino bring in guests relevant to the news topics of the day. They also address viewer emails, which guests are given the opportunity to address as well. Anderson Cooper 360 - CNN's Anderson Cooper goes in-depth on current events and beyond the headlines to hold those in power accountable. Cooper also has a comedic segment that provides news of the day in a tongue-in-cheek commentary style.
CNN's Anderson Cooper goes in-depth on current events and beyond the headlines to hold those in power accountable. Cooper also has a comedic segment that provides news of the day in a tongue-in-cheek commentary style. Jesse Waters Primetime - Jesse Watters uses a clear and direct approach on this FOX News show to speak with newsmakers of the day. Primetime includes news of the day, politics, current events, and opinion.
Jesse Watters uses a clear and direct approach on this FOX News show to speak with newsmakers of the day. Primetime includes news of the day, politics, current events, and opinion. The Rachel Maddow Show on MSNBC - Rachel Maddow covers current political events, focusing on accountability and transparency in leadership. Maddow uses over 20 years of experience to provide in-depth reporting on the news of the day. Guests may also appear on The Rachel Maddow Show to help provide perspective on current events.
Rachel Maddow covers current political events, focusing on accountability and transparency in leadership. Maddow uses over 20 years of experience to provide in-depth reporting on the news of the day. Guests may also appear on The Rachel Maddow Show to help provide perspective on current events. Special Report with Bret Baier - Bret Baier is the former Fox News chief White House correspondent. He uses that experience to host this nightly show that focuses on politics and the White House.
More: Stream 'The White Lotus' Season 3 on Max with Sling
Does it cost extra to stream news on Sling?
Sling's basic plans, like Sling Blue, gives you access to live news and streaming options. With more than 45 channels, Sling Blue caters to a wider audience with major networks like FOX, NBC, Bravo and National Geographic. This package is perfect for those who enjoy a nice mix of news, reality television and lifestyle programming. Sling Blue allows streaming on up to three devices. Save 50% on your first month and pay just $25.50.
Now, if you wanted to include the 'News Extra' add-on, which includes additional channels like Newsmax, BBC World News, FOX Business, CNBC, and Weather Nation. There is an additional cost for the add-on, but if you sign up for Sling today, you will get your first month for free. Save an additional 50% on the first month of Sling Blue.
DEAL: Sling offers a bundle with Max for more options
Sling TV has several add-on packages that allow you to customize your at-home streaming experience with more sports, movies and entertainment. Get your first month of Sling for 50% off right now and get $5 off per month after that when you sign up for the Sling Blue and Max bundle. Your first month of Sling Blue and Max add-on will start at $37.49 (normally $62.98) and includes access to the Max app, HBO Channels and On Demand. Prices will vary depending on other add-ons and offers you select.
Max has additional news offers, including Last Week Tonight with John Oliver. Oliver takes the host spot after writing for The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. Now, the British comedian reviews a week's worth of current events, with a focus on satirical comedy.
Get the Sling bundle with Max today
Prices were accurate at the time this article was published but may change over time.

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Democrats are spending $20 million to learn how to talk to men. Here's what they should do instead
Democrats are spending $20 million to learn how to talk to men. Here's what they should do instead

San Francisco Chronicle​

time2 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Democrats are spending $20 million to learn how to talk to men. Here's what they should do instead

It sounds like a joke, but it isn't. Democrats are spending $20 million on a program called SAM, or 'Speaking with American Men,' to help them learn how to communicate with the demographic that is shifting the political landscape in the Trump era. 'Above all,' it urges, 'we must shift from a moralizing tone.' But that's what Democrats do best! The Dems could have saved that money and gotten better advice on winning back voters by spending $30 on UC law school professor Joan C. Williams' new book, 'Outclassed: How the Left Lost the Working Class and How to Win Them Back.' Bay Area liberals — and those like them around the country — are part of the problem. She calls them 'the cultural elites.' College-educated voters who are in the upper 20% of income-earners in this country. You know the type. Perhaps you are the type. The virtue-signaling, sign-posting, Facebook-oversharing, holier-than-thou tsk-tskers among us. 'That's us, most of us in this room,' Williams said during a recent book reading in Berkeley. 'Too often, we don't rail against economic elites, but we also fuel that narrative that we look down on people in the middle over time. They're 'deplorables' (Hillary Clinton's description of some Donald Trump supporters) 'clinging to guns and religion' (Barack Obama's line). They're 'stupid Trump voters who don't understand their own self-interest' (typical liberal Facebook post, an allusion to Thomas Frank's 'What's the Matter With Kansas?'). These are all class insults that just fuel the far right.' All those pulldowns do, Williams said, is 'reinforce the right's populist scripts that elites are looking down on you.' And that script is playing nonstop on your favorite conservative media outlet. Williams cites a study showing that former Fox News host Tucker Carlson mentioned the term 'ruling class' in 70% of his episodes from 2016 to 2021. Yes, Carlson is an annoying, bow tie-wearing dweeb, but he also hosted a top-rated cable news show. And his relentless messaging was echoed across the conservative world, including by Donald Trump. It was effective. Two-thirds of non-college-educated voters — once the base of the Democratic party — have consistently backed Trump. Meanwhile, only 20% of ads run by Democratic House candidates in competitive districts in 2022 'critiqued economic elites in any way whatsoever,' Williams writes. Williams notes there are two kinds of populism: 'The left's version of populism: 'They're robbing you blind.' Where the villains are the economic elites, the 1% as we like to call them. And then there's the right's version, which is 'They (the cultural elites) look down on you.'' Republicans do the bidding of the 1% (like the Trump tax bill that disproportionately rewards wealthy taxpayers) by co-opting the working class voters onto their side through culture wars against the cultural elite. 'We keep walking into the same old traps over and over,' Williams said. For 40 years. Nevertheless, Williams doesn't scold liberals. Instead, she suggests ways to win back working-class voters. Here's the most important: 'Make them feel seen.' Feelings rule among progressives, she said. She cites the virtue-signaling yard signs that are everywhere in the Bay Area: 'In this house, we believe: Black lives matter / Women's rights are human rights / No Human is illegal / Science is real / Love is love / Kindness is everything. 'But that empathy and connection is strictly optional when it comes to working-class people,' Williams said, guessing what a liberal might say about them: 'They're just dumb people who are trashing democracy, who are duped by the right.' Said Williams: 'We are very upset about how people are disadvantaged by race and gender — and completely blind, or largely blind, to people who are disadvantaged by class,' she said. 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Prices of eggs and gas are down. Does Trump deserve credit, or is something else going on?
Prices of eggs and gas are down. Does Trump deserve credit, or is something else going on?

San Francisco Chronicle​

time2 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Prices of eggs and gas are down. Does Trump deserve credit, or is something else going on?

President Donald Trump ran on promises to bring down prices for Americans. Today, prices of eggs and gas are down from their peaks of the past few years. Can he take credit? Nope, experts say. In both cases, prices were expected to come down as external factors abated. There's no compelling, recently implemented federal policy that had much impact on either commodity. First, let's look at the numbers. A year ago, the average national price of a gallon of unleaded gas was $3.47, according to AAA, and $4.88 a gallon in California. So far this month, the average price is $3.14 a gallon nationally and $4.77 in California. (Gas prices are higher in California for a combination of reasons, including regulatory issues, the special type of gas required to be sold here, and the highest gasoline taxes in the country.) • Got money questions? Here's how to send them to our California budgeting advice columnist. Doug Johnson, a spokesperson for AAA Northern California, said gas industry experts predicted prices were going to come down this year 'no matter who would've won the 2024 election.' Egg prices have fluctuated a lot since the most recent bird flu outbreak began in 2022. A year ago, the average price of a dozen eggs was $2.35. Prices skyrocketed from $2.11 in October to an all-time high of $8.17 a dozen in March. As of this week, the average price has dropped to $2.54 a dozen — only 8% higher than a year ago — and is likely to continue dropping as bird flu detections decline. 'Eggs have come down 400%,' Trump declared, wrongly, in a White House interview on Fox News. Going from $8.17 to $2.54 would work out to a 68.9% decrease. 'Price of eggs has dropped 61% since Trump took office,' declared Fox Business in a piece comparing January and June egg prices. A headline on the right-wing news and opinion site Daily Caller said, 'Grocery Prices See Biggest Drop In 5 Years As Trump's Policies Take Effect.' But, again, experts say Trump's policies aren't driving the price decreases. So what actually is behind them? Why gas prices have come down in California Gas is down 13 cents a gallon just from last week in the Bay Area, said Patrick De Haan, the head of petroleum analysis for cost comparison website GasBuddy. That's more than the drop we've seen at the national level — only 2 cents compared with the previous week. Most of the recent drop here is because refinery issues in California have begun to resolve, De Haan said. However, refinery repairs are ongoing, so the decline may be only temporary, he added. Though Trump ran on 'drill, baby, drill' and his administration has discussed opening public lands for oil and gas drilling, federal policy takes a long time to work its way to the price at the pump, De Haan said. 'It really takes years for those types of policies to have a broad significant impact,' he said. Both California and national gas prices are up from January, when Trump took office. Why eggs are getting cheaper again Though the current bird flu outbreak, now in its third year, is not over, it's not as bad as it was at the start of 2025. Detections of bird flu in commercial and backyard flocks have decreased by a lot, which is part of the reason egg prices have dropped, said Daniel Sumner, a professor of agricultural economics at UC Davis. This isn't the first time bird flu has hit chicken farms in the United States. The most recent outbreak was in 2015. Like ebola, bird flu is endemic, Sumner said: Somewhere in the world, there's always a wild bird that is carrying the virus. What's different about this outbreak is how long it's lasted. Often, like many pandemics humans have faced before, an outbreak hits and then fades away. That hasn't been the case yet with this incidence of bird flu. Bird flu was first detected in a flock in Dubois, Ind., in February 2022. A year ago, when eggs were $2.35 a dozen, there were 12 confirmed bird flu detections in the U.S. The virus was detected more frequently in commercial and backyard flocks throughout late 2024 and early 2025: 16 in October, 62 detections in November, 122 in December, a peak of 133 in January. When bird flu is detected in a flock, even if it's found in only one chicken, industry practice dictates that the entire flock should be culled — agriculture-speak for killed. Some of those flocks consist of thousands, even millions, of birds. That has translated into a grim toll: More than 174 million poultry, including commercially farmed chicken and backyard flocks, have died or been killed because of bird flu, according to a CDC estimate. The abrupt drop in supply contributes to price increases. However, only 12 instances of bird flu were detected in May 2025, according to the USDA, and the agency said it hasn't been detected in any flock in California since February. Members of the Trump administration laid out a number of potential policy changes to tackle the bird flu epidemic: increasing imports, boosting biosecurity and exploring vaccination. Sumner dismissed the foreign imports as 'publicity' and said the other suggestions haven't been put into effect at a broad scale since Trump took office. 'There have been no significant changes to egg policy,' he said. The other two pieces of the pricing puzzle relate to how grocery stores get eggs to put on the shelves and how egg demand works compared with other products. Grocery stores typically have contracts with specific farms to get their eggs, Sumner said. If the egg farmer can't perform — in other words, if they have no eggs to sell because they've culled their herd because of an outbreak — the contract usually lets the retailer find another source for eggs. So grocery store chains have been able to use alternative providers. At the same time, farmers that did have to cull their herds have now had enough time to restart their flocks: Chickens can begin laying eggs when they're around 4 months old. Egg demand is typically known as inelastic — it doesn't change much. That's because there aren't a ton of good substitutes for eggs, Sumner said. Though bird flu can hit a flock of chickens being raised for meat as easily as it can hit a flock of egg-layers, we haven't seen the same price surge in chicken breasts and thighs as we have for eggs. Sumner said to think of the difference like this: If chicken meat goes up in price, grocery shoppers will swap in pork, beef, beans, tofu or other protein sources. But it's tricky to find a suitable one-to-one substitute for eggs in a baking recipe or an omelette. That's part of why shoppers have been so sensitive to the price of eggs. That said, persistent high prices have curbed some of America's appetite for eggs. A recent report on the egg market from the USDA described consumer demand as 'lackluster' and 'sluggish.' People have found alternatives. This year, Sumner said, his grandchildren's Easter eggs were the plastic variety.

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