you are mischaracterizing what i said. >> what you just described in the monocle with tip o'neill and the president -- >> right. those were sanguine times and there were times before that that weren't like that. >> that's what i'm saying. >> i'm telling you it's cyclical -- >> it's not cyclical. it's donald trump. >> no, it's not. you're absolutely overestimating it. this is the way politics works. >> see, this is why i'm saying you're saying this is the way politics works like it's always been that way. it hasn't always been that way. the way the president is behaving when a man is dying because he's criticized him, it's childish. i mean it's petty. >> this is not the first time in history. it's not the first time in america. it's not even the first time in the last ten years. >> all right. let's just leave it there. kirsten powers, michael caputo, i appreciate it. i want to check in with chris to see what he's working on for "cuomo prime time" in seven minutes. >> news makers, baby. we've got kristin davis on tonight. she's going to tell us what is it like to be in there with mueller?
sacha baron cohen's new show quickly becoming must-see tv for all the wrong reasons. politicians and news makers in the crosshairs of a provocateur who has made a career of tricking people into hairs. comedian known for borat now back with new characters, a israeli -- remember to point puppy pistol's mouth rite at the middle of the bad man. >> on sunday they gave a fake training class to jason spencer telling him to scream a forbidden n word to ward off a terrorist attack. [ beep ] >> this world is disgusting. >> got it.
decades ago. the 72-year-old is committed of 50 killings and rapes between 1986 and has not entered a plea to the murder charges. eight months after hurricane maria, thousands of people in puerto rico still do not have power. hurricane season has officially begun now. so part of the question here is how prepared is the island and the government this year? we a going to talk about that. news makers, hard hitting interviews. do not miss cuomo prime time cnn on week nights 9:00 p.m. eastern starting tomorrow night. almost $800 when we switched our auto and home insurance. with liberty, we could afford a real babysitter instead of your brother. hey! oh, that's my robe. is it? when you switch to liberty mutual, you could save $782 on auto and home insurance. and still get great coverage for you and your family. call
>> sandra: fears of a global trade war ease off wall street. the dow rebounding 669 points yesterday. the biggest single-day point gain in about a decade. i'm joined by maria bartiromo. you are talking to the news makers every single day, six days a week, in fact, maria. what are they saying about the market? what's the overall trend? >> there's going to be nervousness and people were concern about trade changes and nafta with the election but as we've seen ore and over again with donald trump he likes to negotiate. he put out this thing about aluminum and steel and then has exemptions. everybody gets the china story.
after this? >> i don't see him coming back to cbs this morning or "60 minutes." he's only suspended while they review the matter. it's just impossible to imagine him back at the table. it's also very hard to imagine him returning to his nightly iconic talk show where he interviewed news makers for decades. charlie rose has a lot of questions to answer, but in the wake of the "washington post" story, more women have come forward speaking to other news outlets of other allegations. it's reminiscent of what we have seen, once a first news story comes out and then there's a flood of other allegations that follows. >> "the new york times" has spoken to additional women and there are more. i was speaking to somebody about this last night and they said to me, how could this go on for so long? how could this continue to happen? i said, well, if you are a new parent, for example, you have little kids at home and you are
brian: all right. back with your headlines right now. foreign hackers may have stolen information from white house chief of staff john kelly's personal cell phone. this according to politico. they have not walked it back from the white house. kelly told tech support staff that his phone had not been working properly poor months. the white house says kelly no longer uses that phone. they might have found something on it. and russian based hackers may have stolen highly sensitive government documents as far as back as 2015. this according to the "wall street journal." hackers accessed the information through the popular antivirus software called kasperski on nsa contractor's home computer. he wasn't horizonned to store the data at home. of course it did. it's unclear if he is facing prosecution. i say yes. that's a quick look at what is happening. steve: meanwhile, here on the program we always try to get absolutely the best news makers the people in the news to come on our show and talk about their jobs.
particularly by the russians. >> at the hearing, what do you want to know. >> i think twitter has got to turn over to us their accounts. that they have identified as being fake muse. i think we should also take advantage of the oxford study that was released this morning about 1% of twitter accounts for the last few days of the election, but suggests that 40% of what was put on twitter during that time was fake news. since most of those were on twitter, are either news sources, news makers are news outlets. that becomes just an echo chamber for bad data being spread publically. >> little bit of a slippery slope.
seconds for a quick anecdote. after a long day of covering riots, i went out for some dinner and a beer late night the other night in a restaurant a few blocks from here. there was one other customer. a good old boy at the bar being waited on by an african american waitress. she said that's a good drink. he said it's an instant diabetes drink. she said it's on the house. he said i'll drink anything. it was a relief to hear the conversation after covering the violence. you know what it's like when you get a horde of tv cameras here. you gather news makers, snake oil salesmen and revel rousers. when you move away, you see a city that is functioning normally, blacks, whites, asians, brown people working together, socializing and working together. they'll be glad when the national media leaves. >> shepard: probably glad when the neo-nazis get out of there, too. president trump sent out a treat
rotated out. new people rotated in. how is that affecting all of this? >> well, for the stories that are dealing, again, with the palace intrigue, the more people you have that are in and out of the trump white house, the more sources that reporters have of people who are kind of more easily gettable to. when you talk about national security leaks, you really have a more close community of journalists and news makers. of people who know them. these sources and figures just are not as well-known to the public. if you knew who some of them were, you wouldn't know them, as opposed to people who are more or less in front of a camera or who have been in the news. so there's -- when you have a big investigation like this, one of the other things, you have lawyers for a variety of people. lawyers have clients and different purposes in getting things out. so if you're a journalist, you