Brangham all that and more on tonights pbs newshour. Major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by moving our economy for 160 years. Bnsf, the engine that connects us. And the william and flora hewlett foundation, helping people build immeasurably better lives. And with the ongoing support of these institutions and individuals. This program was made possible by the corporation for public broadcasting. And by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. Thank you. Brangham the tumult at the white house continues to churn at a pace unprecedented in an american presidency. Anthony scaramucci, just 10 days on the job of Communications Director is out. The move comes on john kellys first day as President Trumps chief of staff. Our own Lisa Desjardins is here to walk us through these shake ups at the top. Welcome, lisa. Thank you. Pretty busy set of days here. Walk us through the time like of how we got here. To do that, west go back to ten days ago. Thats when we saw A
Well talk to one row about that. Power lunch starts right now. And happy tax deadline day, by the way, today the last day to send your money to uncle sam, maybe that is impacting your stocks, too, stocks down for the fourth time in five days, keep in mind as michelle said, Goldman Sachs along with j j, taxing the dow, those two stocks responsible for most of the dows losses today. Well have much more on your money and impacting on stocks. We begin with facebook, and in san jose, california, where Mark Zuckerberg is expected to take the stage at any moment to deliver a keynote address to facebooks conference. Well discuss the Facebook Post of a man being murdered in cold blood. Well talk about the suspect who killed himself today during a police chase. Reporter that is right, brian, we expect Mark Zuckerberg to take the stage any moment right now. He will listen carefully to see what he says about plans to ramp up facebooks review process for offensive videos or changes policy. This aft
Shaw look for these titles in bookstores and watch for the authors on booktv and on booktv. Org. Booktv continues with robert spoo. He talks about the clash between literary pirates over copyrights going back to 1790 and discusses how it has shaped the copyright laws that we have today and this is about one hour. [applause] thank you so much. As the dean indicated, most of us and a large number of legal scholars, you might be surprised to learn that an area that is not compelled by law, something that is informal but very organized, and it has grown up to fill the various needs and the various cracks in the wall of law and i am going to be talking about one of those major cracks in the law today and i will be focused on the 19th century in the United States and particularly on authors and publishers in america, really from the 1820s and 30s amah up to lease the end of the century where, as you will see, the world is really kind of turned upside down where publishing is concerned. Lawfu