Watch Morning Joe Highlights: August 2 | MSNBC

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Reddit Comments
Captions
we begin though in what was a overall very difficult weekend for the united states in the ongoing fight against the coronavirus the new wave is taxing hospital emergency rooms again with the health officials warning things could get a lot worse nbc political correspondent von hilliard has more [Music] the united states topping one hundred thousand new coronavirus cases just friday a stunning fourth wave with the number of infections and seriousness of the moment rising each day things are going to get worse if you look at the acceleration of the number of cases the seven day average has gone up substantially the virus surging in states from the west to the east cases doubling in more than 40 of them over the last two weeks this is a class five hurricane more florida residents tested positive for covid this weekend than at any other point during the pandemic hospitals in jacksonville and orlando are already breaking previous hospitalization records in neighboring alabama more than 1200 people are currently hospitalized and coveted unit doctors say august will be even worse the number of cases by labor day will be more than twice the number of cases we saw at the worst time in january that's what we're about to face and the public isn't ready for that and in texas overwhelmed hospitals struggling to hire additional nurses and staff they're not finding the uptake even dramatically increasing the pay they pay 40 percent of the country is still not fully vaccinated and those individuals are making up more than 90 percent of covet hospitalizations forcing hospitals today to build out new coveted units this one in baton rouge in the last 24 hours we opened up our fourth covet icu because of the surge of patients requiring critical care the younger and sicker quicker they're just getting sick very quickly among the 100 million unvaccinated some encouraging news vaccination rates doubling this week in several hot spots this may be a tipping point for those who have been hesitant to say okay it's time a small town in massachusetts has become one of the country's biggest delta variant hot spots but it is also direct evidence the vaccine is keeping people safe a cdc study released on friday cited a cluster of new cases in provincetown as a key factor in its decision to issue new indoor mask guidance less than two weeks after a busy fourth of july weekend the town's coveted 19 positivity rate reached 15 percent the new york times says most of the new cases came from men who had made doctors appointments for other reasons and were surprised by their positive tests that's because 74 of those patients were fully vaccinated according to the cdc of those infected the cdc says few became seriously ill no deaths were reported and just seven people were hospitalized and in the case for the vaccines as evidence in the national numbers look at this overall 99.9 of vaccinated americans have not tested positive and .001 percent of vaccinated americans have died from the virus these numbers should help people along people who are struggling with the science of this these numbers are proving the vaccines can keep you alive if the numbers don't convince people the individual stories might for example 55 days on a ventilator alone might change the way you view kovid and that's exactly what happened to one tennessee lawmaker back in june of 2020 state lawmaker republican david byrd accused the quote mainstream media of sensationalizing the pandemic and later attended a multi-day retreat without masks amid surging infections but on friday after a bruising bout with coronavirus he acknowledged that covet is quote a disease that wants to kill us as the washington post reports his illness ravaged his memory muscles and organs and led him to having a liver transplant this is just one of the many stories emerging about those who regret not being vaccinated a new piece for the new york times is documenting how people who once rejected the vaccine or simply waited too long are now grappling with the consequences among them utah's mindy green who says she read all kinds of things about the vaccine and was scared her husband however fell victim to the virus and was put on life support green posted on facebook quote if i had the information i have today we would have gotten vaccinated and this tragic story out of las vegas where a father of five spent one of his final moments sending this text message from the hospital oh my blanking god this is terrible i should have gotten the damn vaccine michael friede died on thursday his widow says quote my kids don't have a dad anymore because we hesitated i would take a bad reaction to the vaccine over having to bury my husband i would take that any day there is some good news in all of this in areas where the delta variant is surging vaccination rates are going up people are hearing the message in the past two weeks at least 4.7 million americans have been vaccinated according to the washington post's vaccine tracker more than 856 000 doses were administered on friday the highest the highest daily figure since july 3rd many of the new vaccinations are taking place in covid hot spots on friday multiple media outlets reported that louisiana had seen a 114 percent increase in vaccinations arkansas saw a 96 percent increase alabama saw a 65 percent increase and missouri had a 49 percent increase another report now from nbc's vaughn hilliard on the rising rate of vaccinations across the country the country's hottest infection spots this month are now also leading the country in new vaccinations that was the time across the u.s a 31 percent jump this week in first doses administered some of the state's most responsible places like georgia missouri and texas those with the country's lowest vaccination rates with the delta variant sweeping through doctors began pleading we really need your help to help us and republican governors taking a louder stand it's time to start blaming the unvaccinated folks now data's showing progress this weekend in alabama vaccinations are up 159 percent compared to three weeks ago and florida up 78 percent a local pharmacist in delwood missouri encouraged by the new demand i can comfortably say it's gonna buy at least 50 percent now from where it was end of june but why now what took you these many months to finally decide to get the shot um because i saw the cases arising because i've seen more people of my family and friends have taken it and they're okay one entire family in st louis decided to roll up their sleeves before school starts i wanted to get the shot because i wanted to protect myself and i also wanted to protect other people we do know some that are close that have passed in some states offering 100 dollars with the shot the more i research about it you know the pros outweigh the crons so that's why i decided to get it an urgent push from the fda saying it's all hands on deck as it works to formally approve the pfizer vaccine elevating it from its current emergency use status if that means that additional people will feel comfortable getting vaccinated i think that's a good outcome florida is quickly becoming the epicenter of this fourth wave of infections accounting for about a fifth of all the new cases in the u.s yesterday the state broke a previous record for current hospitalization set more than a year ago before vaccines were available hospitals across the state are once again becoming overwhelmed in jacksonville for instance hospitals have more coveted patients than ever before despite the availability of vaccines the new york times spoke to health care workers in florida who feel a sense of disbelief that they must endure another surge one nurse said we are scared of seeing what we saw and this time affecting the younger population this is the hardest thing i've ever done in my entire career another nurse told the times quote it is the worst feeling ever when you watch someone looking at you like i can't breathe help me and that's the worst image that i have in my mind and i never forget it a recent survey conducted by the florida hospital association found 96 percent of hospitalized covid patients are unvaccinated we'll turn to alabama now where the delta variant cases are spiking but suddenly so are vaccinations alabama still has the lowest vaccination rate in the country but the cdc reported a 63 percent rise in the number of residents getting vaccinated last week that is so hopeful it came after the state's republican governor k ivy tore into alabama's unvaccinated population saying they were to blame for the rise in cases let's bring in professor of medicine and infectious diseases and virality at the university of alabama at birmingham dr michael sag he has a new op-ed in the washington post entitled delta is worse this time around alabama is facing a two-front war dr sag what is the two-front war well the war first off is against the virus and we've just been talking about that for the last two minutes or so the second war is against misinformation and that's the reason why a lot of people aren't getting vaccinated i had a patient just this week on friday who came in sick with covid and i said have you gotten vaccine he said no but i was thinking about it i said well what kept you from getting it he said well i was about to get the pfizer vaccine and then i read uh that that there were all kinds of problems with the fives or vaccines so i hesitated i said how do you feel about that now he said i wish i'd gotten it that's the kind of that's the war we're fighting it's two fronts it's the virus and it's misinformation and where do you think they're getting the misinformation what are you hearing from patients as to where they're getting this information that is dead wrong yeah a lot of it's coming off of social media i think facebook in particular i'm not trying to throw them under the bus but there is just anything can be posted there and if to get into a link or a groove of of information coming at you there's no way to really validate it so people read it they get scared and they say ah maybe i'll wait a little longer we can't afford that anymore we have to have trusted voices not get assassinated in social media so that when people come on tv or they write op-eds or whatever they do the people will listen and they have a source of solid information we really need that in a big way right now when you have a family member who is on facebook all the time if you could just tell them what the doctor just said anything can be posted there and anything is it's not news it's not facts it's not a good place to get information try and save their lives doctor do you think what k ivy the governor did by coming out strongly against the unvaccinated and really making a push for vaccines has helped in terms of public health has helped turn the tide toward more people getting vaccines i think it was a very important step but i think also the numbers are kind of scary to people in may 18 000 deaths in the united states 17 850 of those were among unvaccinated people the vaccines work and people are seeing friends and relatives getting sick some and going into the icu and as you said earlier in the program just now the kids in children's hospital here in alabama we didn't have hardly any cases in the last wave of children going into the hospital with coveted pneumonia now we have 27 in the hospital and five or six in the icu we didn't see that before and as you said earlier with kids going back to school which i want to see happen to send them in without mask is like sending kids out into a car without a car seat this has to be done we have to find a way to protect kids if we want the privilege of sending them to school we have to have protections for them in my opinion right now so uh with kids so many kids you've got to be incredibly concerned what do you think of a of a a state governor banning mass mandates specifically in school right now in a state like florida i think it's governance malpractice frankly you have to be able to give the people in this school systems the counties the authority and the ability to do what they think they need to do to protect kids why take that away i cannot imagine outside of political motivation there's no public health reason to do that in fact it's the opposite so i think we have to sit down and drill into the florida governor's ban on that and ask the question why there's no medical reason it can only be politics and he's playing to his base and i think he probably has a lot of future political aspirations what's he what's it costing the state of florida to follow that in contrast governor avi is getting out in front and doing the right thing hey doctor good morning it's jonathan lemire we just talked about there's a hopeful rise in the vaccination rates across the state um but we are of course hearing from people who have gotten to the hospital heartbreaking stories who've gotten there then asked for the shot and of course you're being told it's too late uh you know you have to go on a ventilator and people are obviously in very dire shape you just mentioned something i want to circle back to uh about children can you walk us through just terms of the different populations of people you're seeing be serious seriously ill this time is it indeed skewing younger tell us how how sick are these children but also just the range of people that you're seeing there it's not senior citizens anymore these are younger folks yeah they are jonathan the bottom line is that the older folks are kind of wise right they got vaccinated so 80 percent are vaccinated we're not seeing them in the hospital the vaccine works we're seeing 20 year old 30 year olds 40 year olds coming in that's the majority of our cases and of course the few in that 20 percent who were not vaccinated are the ones having problems and so we're seeing the vast majority of cases are in young adults and mid-level adults the difference in the kids is is striking simply because we didn't see it before and we're seeing it now and that's what has all of us sort of jumping back a little bit and saying this could get bad the other thing that i'd like to emphasize is that there was a study by dr suzanne judd here at the school of public health and what she showed was that using projections in the slope of the curve by labor day we will have two to three times a number of cases in alabama overall then we saw at the peak the worst time in january 2021 two to three times and that's all in my opinion coming back from july 4th when everybody went out sparked the flame now we have a wildfire so we are seeing doctors some prominent voices in your state the governor football coach nick saban has been outspoken throughout this pandemic about the need to mask up and then get the vaccine but what are you seeing at more of the local level can it make a difference are you are you talk are you hearing from ministers you know clergymen you know local leaders in are they also speaking out against this or you know we've talked on the show a lot about the evangelicals and how some have been raging against the vaccine while others have struck a more note recently like saying look this is important you need to do it what are you seeing anecdotally in your communities about who's pushing for the vaccine who's opposing it what difference is it making i think it's kind of a all fronts approach you're right the folks like nick saban coming out strongly in favor i think helps but at the end of the day i think it's a one-on-one conversation that people have as they're getting to the point where they're thinking about really going in and getting a vaccine it could be a clergy it could be a lot of times their their physician or their their provider who says it's really important i do that in my clinic all the time and it's amazing how just a few words of encouragement answering a single question and the next day or even that day they're going out and getting their vaccine so it's one-on-one conversation sometimes it's family i've heard tragic stories of where someone has died in the family and the the surviving son or daughter says to the parent you're not going through this i'm going to make you get the vaccine you don't have a choice because it takes that kind of tragedy and it's boiling out one-on-one that's how we're seeing people changing their minds but everyone needs to pull together in the same direction that's what we need right now and it's urgent professor of medicine and infectious diseases and virology at the university of alabama at birmingham dr michael sag thank you very very much and the wall street journal reports christians are more resistant to taking the vaccine than other major religious groups that's according to newly released data from the public religion research institute evangelicals of all races make up about one quarter of the u.s population the study shows 24 percent of white evangelicals said in june they wouldn't be vaccinated the journal cites one former evangelical pastor who says some evangelical leaders are afraid their churches will lose members or donations if they openly support vaccination franklin graham one of the country's most prominent christian leaders told the journal quote i don't think i've ever seen anything that has been so controversial as this vaccine and it's so puzzling to me because the vaccine makes sense it's somehow it's gotten political it uh mike barnacle it doesn't make any sense i mean are all of those people with children who don't go to school because you got to get like five vaccines to go to school so what are these all homeschooled kids that aren't vaccinated it's crazy vaccines are part of our life here in america and they help prolong life and they help save life and yet these christians are refusing a vaccine well you know maker a vaccine and individual choice i mean the interesting thing about the history of vaccines in this country is uh the sock vaccine to fight polio that was just created by dr jonas salk and i think in the early 1950s millions of americans most americans receive the sock vaccine if the belief about vaccines that exists now existed then probably two-thirds of this country would be on crutches still the vaccine has become an element of politics that's our basic problem that's what we're talking about here every day and it's the slow destruction of the republic really it's the disbelief in the government it's the disbelief in the vaccine a vaccine that has been proven to be helpful in in many many cases life saving to americans and people around the world now it's a matter of politics masking is an element of politics instead of people stopping to think about what the vaccine does for their health for their families immediate health and most importantly now as we start to go back to school throughout the country the health of their children unless we stop to think about the reality of the vaccine and it's very simple vaccines help save lives this vaccine is a lifesaver even if you do get the delta variant if you're vaccinated it's been proven medically repeatedly that your life will exist longer than if you have no vaccine but there's only so much you can do to people who have been imbued and fused and filled up with misinformation on facebook anecdotally talking to their neighbors listening to certain tv networks listening to certain people on tv believing that what they say is the real news that what they dictate on their programs and on their facebook pages is legitimate it's not the only thing legitimate that we're talking about here this morning and that we talk about every morning is the vaccine get it and save your life and earlier in the hour we told you one of the heartbreaking stories from the new york times piece entitled they spurned the vaccine now they want you to know they regret it reading more now from that report quote some people who were quick to embrace the vaccines are now choosing to speak out about family members who did not it was a role kimberly jones never wanted but one she embraced after her daughter erica thompson 37 a mother from saint louis died on july 4 nearly three months after she had what she thought was a bad asthma attack i want to be a voice for her said miss jones who got vaccinated as soon as she was able to i really think my daughter would want me to say go get vaccinated her mother said miss thompson had been leery of how quickly the moderna and pfizer biontech vaccines had rolled out the culmination of decades of scientific research she also believed that the government-run campaign was a plot against black people like her according to her mother let's bring in the reporter behind that new york times piece national correspondent jack healey also with us staff writer for the los angeles times brittany mejia she's covering the reasons why it's taken some people so long to get vaccinated but jack back to that case of that mom where was her daughter getting her information like a lot of people she was getting information from social media and there has obviously been just a welter of disinformation and misinformation circulating that has encouraged people's hesitations it has led to people having their all of their doubts uh reinforced and in this case there was nothing her mom could do to convince her to get the vaccine even though her mom got it and basically in this case her daughter said you know i'm just not certain i'm just not certain and her mom tried to tell her nothing in this life is really certain but this is the best we've got but ultimately she didn't listen she didn't get the vaccine and she ended up in the hospital and it was really heartbreaking because what kimberly told me was that her daughter didn't want to be sedated didn't want to go on a ventilator and the day that they finally had to do it uh her mom said i'll be there when you wake up and sang to her as they sedated her and put her under and of course she just she never really woke up until her her last moments when they finally took her off the vent in early july and she passed away um and what kimberly told me her daughter's last words were mama i can't breathe and it's just these stories are just absolutely heartbreaking and the reason i wrote this piece is that families are trying to speak out to say basically don't be like us um you know don't go through this don't go through this journey that we've been forced to go through and every time the answer is the same in terms of where the bad information came from it's from social media from places like facebook which are carrying tons of bad information every day jack reading more from your piece quote in springfield missouri where coronavirus cases spike this summer russell taylor sat in a hospital gown an oxygen cannula draped across his face to offer a pro-vaccine testimonial in a hospital video i don't see how i could not get it now he said and jack also described one woman's hesitancy to speak out in fear of kova deniers quote in a shaking voice a hospital clinic administrator in rural utah described how she had been pummeled by double pneumonia and sepsis after choosing not to get vaccinated the woman stormy said it had taken weeks to summon the nerve to speak out in a video post by posted by her local health department she did so using only her first name because she worried that covid deniers would say she was making it all up i was absolutely fearful of the negative aspects that could come from it she said in an interview this week i was part of a problem that i was trying to avoid and so brittany to your piece which is entitled why haven't you been vaccinated with covet 19 raging people explain what took so long what took so long yeah i feel like my biggest take away from going to this pop-up clinic in a mostly latino community is that the unvaccinated are not a monolith um there's just so many varying reasons and a lot of what i was hearing was were actually latinos who had already gotten coveted and so in their mind they were like i don't understand if i do need to get it again do i have immunity so that was one that kept popping up um along with that i had other people who didn't have time to take off of work and who happened to give up their lunch hour that friday to get vaccinated so there was a desire to get the vaccine it was just about access and convenience and i think that's something we have to consider it's easy and what we've been hearing more lately is people getting called selfish uh for being unvaccinated but there's varying reasons for why that is and it's easier to call someone unselfish than do the work to try and understand why this is happening acceleadoria gutierrez held off getting vaccinated over the last few months to see how other people reacted to it gutierrez said she had recently watched a man on spanish language tv talk about how he had waited and finally decided to get vaccinated but got sick before he could get his shot he said vaccinate yourselves don't keep thinking about it gutierrez said that motivated me i didn't want to keep thinking about it um so there's and you also write about marco figueroa who had completed five deliveries for work when he saw the sign that he'd been waiting for vaksuna dukovid gratis free covet his sister and brother got vaccinated in may but the 42 year old wanted to avoid taking a day off from work luego luego he would tell his siblings when he asked when he'd go later later when he spotted the poster board affixed to a utility pole he decided to give up his lunch hour to get vaccinated his co-worker parked their work truck in a loading zone on 12th street and waited as figueroa headed to the blue tents where two registered nurses were giving vaccines as he waited the 10 minutes for workers to prep the pfizer vaccine he gripped the sides of the black folding chair where he sat not because he was scared he said but because he was worried about falling behind on the deliveries he had left so britney i guess the issue is as much as possible this vaccine needs to be made available i know the binding administration was committed to trying to make vaccines available within five miles of most americans but it's still hard for those living paycheck to paycheck to get the time to do it yeah definitely that is exactly what's happening it was interesting after this piece ran also the um craig towerman who actually heads this non-profit he told me that after hearing the marco's story he was inspired to actually you know do this at home depot and britain i think the big push is bringing the vaccine to the people and having conversations about this very thing i mean i was hearing from people telling me that they heard misinformation in their own homes and i thought jack's piece was so great because it really touched on all of that and shared these stories which really do make a difference i think when people hear about others who waited and got the delta variant and got sick it's a motivating factor that was a big push for a lot of people also who came to the clinic that day to get vaccinated hey jack your piece was very powerful and we're hearing more of these stories it seems like in recent days of people who who it's too late for them to get that vaccine people who are seriously ill perhaps dying but encouraging others or at least their families are telling others hey don't be like us encouraging others to get those shots that's the thesis behind what they're doing we are seeing a rise in cases but also rise in vaccinations in some of the states that are being hardest hit is your sense are these personal appeals working the people that you've talked to do you have a sense whether they're friends relatives cousins co-workers neighbors whoever it might be are they seeing these stories of suffering and deciding okay now i will get the shot some of the people who are closest to the families that i've been talking to it absolutely made a difference for them um a cousin uh or a neighbor who watched some of these families go through what they've gone through but and and i think what was so great about brittany's story is also that it really kind of all this encompasses like what a house to house family to family battle this is at this point like it's it's just convincing people by people and the amount of effort that it takes um you know to break through this hesitancy or the lack of access um i talked to some public health experts who really were skeptical though about whether even stories of like incredible suffering and even deaths from people who had gone through this would penetrate the layers of you know determination and misinformation and just resistance that have have really hardened over these last months with a like a large large segment of the population and if a story of watching you know someone who used to be vaccine resistant um you know having their loved ones fall sick or or die if that doesn't break through then what's it going to be so i and that was a real real tough question for some of these public health experts the new york times jack healey and the l.a times brittany mejia thank you both for your reporting this morning and up next most americans are dining out again and restaurants are welcoming the return of customers but with the good comes the bad we'll explain that next one of the immediate impacts of covet 19 centered around renters who faced huge struggles making their rent payments every month when the pandemic hit in early 2020. at the time the federal government stepped in to prevent people from getting evicted but the federal freeze on most evictions enacted last year expired on saturday as nbc news correspondent ali vitale reports it has become a major battle on capitol hill i'm behind four months and the landlord is at this point just waiting i guess um for the sheriffs sierra green is just waiting for a knock on her door to them i'm already evicted green is one of six million americans behind on rent because of the pandemic with the national eviction moratorium now lapsed she's among the millions who could be put out on the street but house lawmakers left town for a six-week recess we need to be brought back to this house to finish this work so that people don't end up on the street while we go vacation house speaker nancy pelosi looking to the centers for disease control so we would like the cdc to expand the moratorium that's where it can be done the white house meanwhile looking to the states urging them to dole out billions in emergency rental funds that have been slow getting out the door that money is there they need to move that money to those renters and those landlords immediately landlords out 21 billion dollars over the last year in the meantime experts urging renters and landlords alike to work together if you know that the dollars are going to be coming and the person is actually working with you cooperatively it doesn't make any sense to evict and the congresswoman that you saw in that report corey bush joins us now she has been protesting the end of the eviction ban spending the past several nights on the steps of the capitol congresswoman bush uh thank you for your efforts uh the last sort of buck that was passed and the piece that we just aired was that it's for the states to use the money that is set aside to help with uh perhaps rent in future months is that where it stands is there money available for people who won't be able to pay their rent as this moratorium comes to a close uh thank you mika yes there's over 40 billion dollars that is just sitting waiting for people to use it people who have the need right now who have had this need for a year or more or at least a few months we have to get that money out to the people but i don't think that that's the standalone i believe that we should have orders that come down from the white house and the cdc to go ahead and go ahead and pin the executive order at least give us some time to get the votes in congress to pass chairwoman maxine waters bill to have this to have this moratorium go through december 30 30th 31st mike arnica so congresswoman uh not that long ago in my life uh i confronted being unable to pay rent years ago so i have great sympathy for people on the edge of being evicted and to your point that the eviction ought to be extended december 31st i would suppose that many people would support that especially the renters but my question to you is how long can this go on because on the other side of this story there are landlords not all of them big landlords some landlords who might not be able to pay their mortgages for lack of getting their rent so what do we do about them yes well that 40 over 40 billion dollars can go to them this has already been accomplished and successful we here in texas so if we need to streamline the procedure how the how this is supposed to happen and just say um just put it into the text that we need to make it the the money should go directly to landlords if that's what needs to happen let's do something i think that we're we we should be thoughtful enough to try to figure this thing out so that anywhere from 7 million people to 11 million people don't end up on the street because look we haven't fixed the housing crisis that we already have how do we put more people on the street and then in the in a deadly global pandemic that is surging we keep talking about it get the get the shots and arms and all of this but how do we do that because the other thing is this let's remember that the research has just shown us that the communities that have the highest number of um of filings for uh evictions also have the lowest vaccination rates and we're talking about communities of color we're talking about the black community um disproportionately being affected and so i won't stand alone and be quiet right now i'm exhausted i'm sleep deprived my body is physically hurting but it's nothing in comparison to what will happen to those who are actually put out on the street and have to stay there congresswoman it's jonathan my question to you is how do we get here this is certainly a white house and a democrats uh in on capitol hill for the most part have worked very well together since january and on friday it was striking to see them blame each other for this impasse with the white house pointing to the supreme court decision justice kavanaugh saying this solution has to come through the legislature so what broke down here at the end of this period and to lead these you know retros into this dire predicament and what can be done quickly to rectify it right so this is not a hot potato game it seems like it's hot potato like pasta you know keep passing it no it it it's urgent like we need to move now um so whether it's the white house and the cdc working together to get this executive order done or if it's the house i've been asking we've been calling for the house leadership to go ahead and come and reconvene us have us come back look the chairman of the house rules committee jim mcgovern came to capitol hill on the steps with us and said look i support you all the rules committee is ready in a nanosecond if we get the 218 votes we're back and we're ready to go and then also the senate is still is still in session um you know i don't understand why yesterday we were watching the senate we were watching their cars pull up but they didn't do anything to help let me say this housing is infrastructure so the breakdown is just leadership has to do more because we're talking about the people who elected them and those that may not have but they still signed up to serve all of the people congresswoman corey bush thank you very much uh for your heartfelt appearance on the show this morning we really appreciate it [Music] you
Info
Channel: MSNBC
Views: 742,051
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: MSNBC, MSNBC latest, Politics, News, Morning Joe, Joe Scarborough, Mika Brzezinski, Willie Geist, MSNBC news, MSNBC live, MSNBC TV, news, breaking news, current events, US news, politics, politics news, political news, elections, morning joe full, morning joe live, morning joe today
Id: 9f325bt6MD4
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 40min 10sec (2410 seconds)
Published: Mon Aug 02 2021
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.