investigation into january 6th. and how white wing combat misinformation. the woman who is tasked to lead that effort, nina jankowicz, joins me exclusively, as all in starts right now. good evening from new york, i m chris hayes, the biggest worry from last night s primary elections, is that a full out insurrectionist coup plotter is now a stone s throw away from running one of the most important swing states in the country, pennsylvania. his name is doug mastriano, and he s essentially pledged that if the opportunity arises once again to actually successfully pull off a coup, you will be the first in line to do it. right now, he s won the republican gubernatorial primary, pretty handily, about 44% of the vote, about 20 points ahead of his closest competitor in a very crowded field. and when it trump ally wins by that kind of margin in the republican primary, we should all take notice. so let s keep in mind, again, trump almost got away with. it the only reason the coup did
cheribesaley won. madison cawthorn taken down by his party not for bringing guns on planes or calling ukraine evil or making hitler s home part of his vacation bucket list or alleged misconduct, no, no, but rather for snitching on the alleged republican cocaine orgies. we begin in pennsylvania with a reminder of how elections work. now, you see there are many different ways to vote. there is early voting and voting on election day and filling out mail-y ballots. anyone can vote by mail in pennsylvania but they cannot be counted until election day. that s why in 2020 it took a few days past election day for joe biden to be declared the winner. and the lead can change as you count more and later tallied votes. nothing nefarious about that. and yet donald trump and republicans used that perfectly normal process and its completely routine delays to cry voter fraud and stolen election which led to trump s lawyer rudy giuliani winding up holding that embarrassing press conference a
someone s home is rated. and the plea deals and up, i think, allowing for pretty lenient sentencing of officers, and for things not to be found out by the public. great reporting, roberto friedman, you can see more of his terrific reporting on this two part investigation to tonight and tomorrow all in with chris hayes starts now. tonight on all in.haye the danger for american democracy that hasn t fully sunk in yet. and he freedom loving americans in the house tonight? tonight, the threat the republican nominee for governor in pennsylvania could pose, and why democrats may be underestimating his chances of winning. then, as madison cawthorn exits congress, and doctor oz clanks to home, how trumpism, not trump, is winning elections. plus, congressman jamie raskin on the escalation of the doj
Back in the mid-1990s, every author —and their eager publicists— knew the value of a good or even bad review in the 'Bay Area Reporter.' One deserved standout was the work of Scott Heim.
The nearly 30 years that I have been writing The Lavender Tube TV column for the
Bay Area Reporter has been an evolution of both the medium and the message. In 1994, then-B.A.R. Arts Editor Chris Culwell asked me to write about TV for the paper. It began as an experiment: The early columns were meditative and musing. A lot of what-if so-and-so was gay about various TV characters like
The X-Files Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) and
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit s Olivia Benson (Mariska Hargitay).
I have had three terrific editors at B.A.R. Chris Culwell, Roberto Friedman and Jim Provenzano all of whom have given me leeway to highlight where we remain most lax in our community and society. Politics has been part of the TV column because being marginalized and excluded is a political act that must be countered with rebellion.