Thursday, October 6, 2016

Evening Edition: ‘Extremely dangerous’ Hurricane Matthew strengthens to Category 4

A detailed breakdown of the severe threat to Florida's east coast; Trump's use of debts and tax laws spurs concerns about his methods; Fox News' Sean Hannity, Megyn Kelly trade testy exchanges over Trump interviews; The Fix: Clinton is WAY overcompensating for Kaine's poor debate performance; Technology to fight gun crime hobbled by skepticism and disuse; Facebook is talking to the White House about giving you 'free' Internet. But it's not without controversy.; Trump tells Page Six that he won't bring up Bill Clinton's sexual history in next debate; How Trump is — and isn't — helping Democrats retake Congress; The Fix: Almost every Asian stereotype you can think of, in one Fox News segment; What they said, what they meant; Pentagon investigators cite Ash Carter's former aide for nightclub visits, 'improper' interactions with women; Those babies who got kissed by presidential candidates? Here's who they became.; When a high school football team has 300-pound players, the opponents don’t even bother playing;
 
Evening Edition
The day's most important stories
 
 
'Extremely dangerous' Hurricane Matthew strengthens to Category 4
The strongest storm system to threaten the U.S. in a decade roared toward landfall in Florida. More than 2.5 million people were under evacuation orders from Florida to South Carolina. "This storm will kill you," Florida Gov. Rick Scott warned. "Time is running out."
A detailed breakdown of the severe threat to Florida's east coast
It is likely to become a multibillion-dollar disaster given all of the infrastructure in its path.
 
Trump's use of debts and tax laws spurs concerns about his methods
Voters are being asked to reconcile two diametrically opposed views of Donald Trump: his own narrative that he is a financial wizard who simply used the laws of the country to protect himself, and Hillary Clinton's contention that he is a rapacious and unrestrained capitalist who "games the system."
 
Fox News' Sean Hannity, Megyn Kelly trade testy exchanges over Trump interviews
The public exchange between Sean Hannity and Megyn Kelly was an unusual breach of interoffice decorum and a sign of some bitter jockeying among the two primtetime stars in the final stretch of the presidential campaign.
 
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The Fix: Clinton is WAY overcompensating for Kaine's poor debate performance
Saying he was amazing doesn't make him amazing.
 
Technology to fight gun crime hobbled by skepticism and disuse
More than $300 million has been spent on a program to link gun crimes through shell casings, yet only a few hundred of the nation's 18,000 police departments use the database.
 
Facebook is talking to the White House about giving you 'free' Internet. But it's not without controversy.
The program would target low-income and rural Americans who cannot afford reliable, high-speed Internet at home or on smartphones.
 
Trump tells Page Six that he won't bring up Bill Clinton's sexual history in next debate
The GOP candidate said in an email to Page Six: "I want to win this election on my policies for the future, not Bill Clinton's past."
 
How Trump is — and isn't — helping Democrats retake Congress
Republican operatives continue to believe that the party's congressional majorities can survive a close Trump loss, and they are not yet hitting the panic button.
 
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The Fix: Almost every Asian stereotype you can think of, in one Fox News segment
There was nothing magical about Jesse Watters's man-on-the-street report from New York's Chinatown neighborhood, in the eyes of many journalists who watched it.
 
What they said, what they meant
Sign up to have The Fix's Aaron Blake text you the highlights of each debate as it unfolds.
 
Pentagon investigators cite Ash Carter's former aide for nightclub visits, 'improper' interactions with women
The secretary of Defense unexpectedly removed Army Lt. Gen. Ronald F. Lewis from his post last November for unspecified "misconduct."
 
Those babies who got kissed by presidential candidates? Here's who they became.
Kissing a baby is humanizing for the candidate. But we generally don't know about the lives these babies go on to lead, or how they ended up in the political spotlight in the first place.
 
When a high school football team has 300-pound players, the opponents don’t even bother playing
In its first three games, Archbishop Murphy's football team outscored its competitors 170-0. The opposition forfeited the next three games.
 
 
     
 
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