and it haunts this white house. and i talk to my sources there every day. they just wonder how can they escape the shadow. and what are you hearing? especially among republicans who must wake up and have a catch before they take in their first breath and look at their device. well, they know that this president is driven by his gut instinct. and while he s working with members of congress and house speaker paul ryan said tonight to his friend bill bennett he s spoken to the president, this is still a president who operates in an isolated fashion in many respects. he is digesting the news, cable news, newspapers, print editions, doesn t use a computer on his own. making his conclusions on his own. and those who deal with him day-to-day, privately acknowledge to me that this is the dynamic, they re confronting. as much as there are a lot of people swirling around him, it s trump himself making the decisions. trump himself really analyzing information on his own.
the papers in the frame of all of this ran a headline after the conservatives won an election in 1992 against all odds that the sun s headline the next day was it s the sun what won it and at the time there were few political commentators that disagreed. the tabloids, enormous circulation. just to give you a measure. the new york times has give or take a million copies in print a day. of course, now tens of millions of people who read us on the web, but to talk about the print editions, a million a day, a little bit more than that on sunday. murdoch has counted his circulations at the news of the world until relatively recent times, it was close to 8 million. now considerably lower than, that all newspaper circulations have shrunk, but even now he s talking about 2.6 million copies being sold every sunday or he did until this sunday until he, of course, killed the paper.
companies sell more digital copies of their publications and replace some of the revenue that s disappeared over the past few years as customers migrate away from print editions. there you go. all right. that s a look at the news. now time for sport. the verizon iphone, you got it. any dropped calls? none. i need one. i need to get one. there s still some in stores, i think, right? i don t think they all flew off the shelves. i believe you can still get one. he can get you anything. whatever you need. all right. excuse me. let s go to sports. always one bridge too far, mike. always. westminster dog show. final day of the 135th annual westminster dog show, 2,600 dogs, 179 breeds. so cute. competing on the floor of the madison square garden, the arena in new york city. best in show, at the end of the
through the wall of a house and what was going on with the driver? we ll tell you what police say and forget about heavy backpacks, students in one school ditching textbooks for a high-tech alternative. will other schools turn the page on their print editions, too? we ll take a look. stay close. [ male announcer ] one look can turn the everyday into romantic.
respects. he is digesting the news, cable news, newspapers, print editions, doesn t use a computer on his own. making his conclusions on his own. and those who deal with him day-to-day, privately acknowledge to me that this is the dynamic, they re confronting. as much as there are a lot of people swirling around him, it s trump himself making the decisions. trump himself really analyzing information on his own. jeremy, let s talk about john huntsman. he is a lot of things. he was a very refreshing politician for people who saw him on the national stage. he is a patriot. i think moderate republican is the way to put it. this must be reassuring, especially to fellow republicans who wanted to see a hint of normalcy going back to normalcy in the u.s./russia relation. yeah, he s considered an independent. i visited him when he was u.s. ambassador in beijing. he carried that portfolio very responsibly.