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His political podcast is No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen. In his YouTube channel, titled "Brian Tyler Cohen," [5] he interviews political figures, reports on politics, and live-streams events, including debates and election results. [6] As of January 2025, his channel has over 3.5 million subscribers and had received more than 3 billion views. [7]
Alfonso Vázquez de Acuña, Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Jaén and Bishop of Mondoñedo (b. 1474) Peter von Hagenbach, Alsatian knight and ruler (b. 1423) May 11 – John Stanberry, Bishop of Hereford [6] May 14 – Choe Hang, Korean politician (b. 1409) July 5 – Eric II, Duke of Pomerania-Wolgast (b. 1418)
The program was launched to cover American political news events ahead of the 2012 presidential election. [1] [2] The program continued airing weekly after the 2012 election, covering the week's news in American politics. [3] In 2017, the Planet Extra series was created, with episodes uploaded to Planet America's Facebook page. [4]
After being highlighted in a Medium article, the top-100 channel, which had over 8 million subscribers at the time, [11] was terminated for violating YouTube's child endangerment policy, which they had recently revised in response to media coverage of supposedly child-friendly videos containing disturbing content on YouTube.
Jubilee's YouTube content shifted towards politics after the 2016 U.S. Presidential election. Lee, "disappointed" by the division in the U.S., sought to create content encouraging political discussions across spectrums. According to Lee, the company is politically neutral and hires a producers and editors with a variety of different viewpoints. [3]
The Treaty of London (French: Traités de Londres) was an agreement between Charles the Bold of Burgundy and Edward IV of England signed on 25 July 1474. In the treaty, Charles agreed to support England militarily during an invasion of France, and to recognise Edward as the King of France. [1]
NowThis created a video titled "It looks like CNN is trying to help Hillary look good, even if that means deleting polls." PolitiFact found that CNN did not delete the poll in question and in fact displayed the results of the poll during its broadcast and also published the poll on its Facebook page. The claim was rated as "Pants on Fire" false ...