On the market unchanged, at least from now, since an Emergency Order from the Supreme Court back in april. What does todays decision mean exactly, joining me now is nbc news senior Legal Correspondent Laura Jarrett. Good to have you here. So youve read through it. Speed reader, whats up. Short story is the case is going back to the Supreme Court. Nothing will change as of right now, but things could get tricky depending on what the Supreme Court does with this. All of this started in april when a federal judge in texas blocked access to the pill nationwide, gutting the original approval of the drug that had been on the market, the most commonly used abortion pill, had been approved since 2000. The drug actually has been, again, used widely since that time. The judge actually in the fifth circuit there, got it blocked in full by the Supreme Court back in april. Supreme court said lets just press pause on everything and allow the natural Court Process to play out. That process involves g
the prequel thing, movie with tommy shelvey and pgi on our faces, wrinkles and everything. are you not seen it? robert downey jr. a little creepy. that s okay. it can t end. by the way, west coast, top of the hour. fourth hour of morning joe just started. right now. we re talking with the star and executive producer of bad sisters on apple tv plus. watch it. it will improve your backswing. for me, i was, like, i had no hair. thank you so much. let me ask, you just said something that s fascinating. two of my favorite shows over the past decade, i m not going to name them because i know the creators and i love the creators. two of the best shows just had dismal finales. i was, like, oh, my god. guys, what were you doing? so, talk about the pressure of hitting the landing. like, how much of your energy, your creative thought process, was, like, we have to get this right? especially for a limited series. all of it. i think it had about ten different ver
are expected to run. hello and welcome if you re watching in the uk or around the world. a prince harry reportedly claims he was physically attacked by his brother william during a row over his marriage to meghan. the guardian has obtained a copy of spare, the highly anticipated book from the duke of sussex, days before it s due to hit the shelves. the bbc are yet to see a copy. aru na iyengar reports. there is stringent prelaunch security around this book but the guardian has published extracts of a copy of spare it has viewed. in the book, prince harry describes a meeting in 2019 at his home in london with prince william to discuss their faltering relationship. a furious row broke out, according to the book, during which prince william, now the prince of wales, described meghan, the duchess of sussex, as difficult, rude and abrasive. harry accused his brother of parroting the press narrative about his wife. the row escalated, and then, according to the book, harry claims he
un- crude capsule tomorrow morning that will stay in space for about a month or so. going further than any spacecraft design for humans is ever gone. there were some safety concerns though yesterday went lightning strikes as you can see hit the launchpad area. officials say now, all systems are go. coxey bottom line is we look really good. there are no concerns, no constraints from the lightning events at this point. but we are trying to be very proactive looking ahead and evaluating those things and adjusting as required. knowing we ll get some weather as we head to the last few days. before the excitement is on and jonathan serrie at the space center with the very latest. hey there eric, behind me see the rocket on launchpad at 39 to be getting ready for what they will be lift off tomorrow morning. the artemis one mission has a two hour launch window opens at 8:30 3:00 a.m. eastern time. at the start of that window is only 20% chance of whether it will cause any sort of d
primary defeat, saying she s thinking about running for president. the congresswoman is one of donald trump s fiercest critics, and lost to a candidate hand picked by mr trump. now on bbc news, three engineers at the forefront of reimagining the carjoin kevin fong at the science museum in london. applause. hello and welcome to the science museum. i am kevin fong and this is the engineers: the future of ca rs. i am in the information age gallery, sat in front of an object called the rugby tuning coil, and 100 years ago, this big wheel of copper wrapped in wood was the most powerful transmitter in the world. so it is an appropriate place for us to have this broadcast which brings in an audience from five different continents through the magic of our video link, as well as a large audience here in the gallery for a programme that will be broadcast on bbc world service, on radio and television. the climate catastrophe and the sheer weight of traffic on our roads and the horrific