A former Trump Organization staffer described Donald Trump's inexperience with the internet and claimed that, years ago, the real-estate mogul had him print out his Twitter mentions and read them aloud, according to a New York Magazine report published Friday. Justin McConney, the Trump Organization's director of new media from 2011 to 2017, told New York Magazine that Trump would order people to reply to people who tweeted him.
"For this year, we assume no MAX deliveries in 2H March and all of 2Q 2019, but that all of those deliveries catch up in 2H19," says Goldman analyst Noah Poponak in the research note. Poponak maintained his "neutral" rating on Boeing while reducing his price target from $425 to $393. The stock was down 1.2% at $370 a share early Tuesday. ADVERTISEMENT
Despite the fallout surrounding the crashes, Poponak has found most discussions with investors expressing "
April 20, 2015 11:38 AM EDT
Tesla Motors is flying high these days, with a backlog of orders for its Model S electric car and a stock price above $200. But two years ago, the company was reportedly in such dire straits that it was nearly sold to Google.
An excerpt of an upcoming biography of Tesla CEO Elon Musk published by Bloomberg explains that Musk was on the verge of selling his unprofitable electric car company to Google early in 2013.
In November, Lucas Hartwell, a high school senior in Grand Blanc, Mich., noticed something strange about his school district’s newest board member.
Amy Facchinello’s Twitter feed was full of apocalyptic images and skulls made of smoke. There were cryptic calls for fellow “patriots” and “digital soldiers” to join an uprising, and vows that nothing could “stop what is coming.” In the posts she shared, the COVID-19 pandemic was cast as a dark plot engineered by Bill Gates, while George Floyd’s killing was “exposed as deep state psyop.
President Donald Trump is causing controversy at the University of Alabama even before he arrives on campus Saturday for the big game against Louisiana State University.
A memo from the Alabama student government warning students against “disruptive behavior” during the game was met with an angry reaction from some on campus, who interpreted it as a ban on protesting the President.
The memo, from Jason Rothfarb, the student government’s vice president of student affairs, said additional security would be in place during the game.
Chumbawamba singer Dunstan Bruce ponders his relevance a quarter-century after 'Tubthumping.'
It’s one thing to grapple with having been a one-hit wonder, and another when that singular smash may have given the world a wrong impression of what you were all about … or just represented a moment in which selling out was quickly succeeded by flaming out.
Washington’s Evening Star reported one day last week that Boston Big Shot Bernard Goldfine paid posh Burning Tree Club, where White House staffers golf, for the expensive set of Spalding clubs used by Presidential Assistant Sherman Adams. White House Press Secretary James Hagerty efficiently checked with Boss Adams, quickly assured reporters that the whole thing was a false alarm. Sure, Adams got the clubs for nothing, but not from his “old and dear friend” Goldfine, donor of the vicuña coat and the $2,400 Oriental rug.
Profession: 20th US President
Political Party: Republican Political Titles: Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Ohio's 19th district Presidential Term: March 4, 1881 - September 19, 1881
Preceded By: Rutherford B. Hayes
Succeeded By: Chester A. Arthur
Biography: The 20th President of the United States (1881). His presidency lasted just 200 days, from March 4, 1881, until his death on September 19, 1881, as a result of being shot by an assassin earlier in the year.
Food of the future wasn't supposed to be concerned with good carbs or trans fats. Instead, the act of eating was itself supposed to go away, replaced with taking a pill. Characters from George Jetson to Leela on Futurama popped pills with the full taste, and sometimes the indigestion, that comes with a typical meal. Imagine the possibilities feeling full and getting the right nutrients without ever cooking or worrying about calories.
August 7, 2017 8:15 PM EDT
The Trump Administration is no longer treating Florida’s Miami-Dade County as a so-called “sanctuary city,” after the county began extending the detentions of local inmates who are being sought for deportation — a practice in accordance with President Trump’s immigration policies.
Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos Gimenez, a Republican, said Saturday that he had received a letter from Acting Assistant U.S. Attorney General Alan Hanson confirming the county’s compliance, according to the Miami Herald.