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A new TV series from The New York Times, bringing unparalleled journalism to the screen. On and .
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The Weekly 22 Std.
He’s worked at the GM plant in Lordstown, Ohio, for 25 years. Now that it's closing, he worries about his future. “Without the ability to feed my family and pay for my children or feed my children, what am I as a man?” shares his story.
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The Weekly 10. Juli
GM is making a big bet on two new cars: an electric car called the Bolt EV and a fully autonomous car that it says will be included in ride-sharing fleets. examines how the company’s evolution is affecting workers.
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The Weekly 9. Juli
After GM decided to close the plant, one worker said, “We need competitive manufacturing jobs.” Of the presidency, he said, “I really don’t care if it’s Democrat or Republican, male, female, black, white — I don’t care.”
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The Weekly retweetete
Sharon LaFraniere 8. Juli
More fallout related to Trump's inaugural committee, which we examined in last week's episode :
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Mark Mazzetti 9. Juli
Federal investigation into Elliott Broidy intensifies. Watch episode of to see backstory of Broidy's ties to Trumpworld and Gulf rulers.
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The Weekly 9. Juli
After the financial crisis, GM received more than $50 billion in government assistance. Today, the company isn’t living up to its promise to American workers, tells NYT.
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Kenneth P. Vogel 9. Juli
Antwort an @TheWeekly @hulu
While ELLIOTT BROIDY was courting a $64M contract with Angola, he invited Angolan officials to exclusive inauguration events. In , we identified one of his invitees, Angola’s intel chief, on the red carpet at TRUMP's candlelight dinner. On :
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The Weekly 8. Juli
“I think what big business in this country has done to the American worker is equivalent to treason,” a GM worker told after the company decided to shutter his plant. GM says it needs to evolve to survive.
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The Weekly 8. Juli
Amid a changing industry, GM ’s workforce needs to transform, CEO Mary Barra tells . She’s confident it will. “The company will look different; it looks different than it did 10 years ago. We’re much more of a software company now.”
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The Weekly 8. Juli
While reporting this story about the closing of the GM plant in Lordstown, Ohio, met many people who couldn’t imagine life without the plant. “If this plant sinks, that community sinks. In fact, the entire valley sinks,” one man tells her.
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The Weekly 8. Juli
In March, the GM plant in Lordstown, Ohio, stopped production. Here's more reporting on what happens to a factory town when the factory shuts down.
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The Weekly 8. Juli
To show the Lordstown plant’s history in this episode, our team, including associate producer , collected photos and videos from the early days of production about 50 years ago to the last day of production on March 6.
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The Weekly 8. Juli
The GM plant is in Trumbull County, Ohio, which voted for Trump in 2016. It was the first time the county voted Republican since 1972, said. “Many workers I talked to voted for Trump for the same reason they voted for Obama — because he was a change guy.”
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The Weekly 8. Juli
Our correspondent and camera crew were among the first to tour GM’s 4.3 million square-foot Orion Assembly Plant near Detroit, where the company is assembling its self-driving car, and other vehicles.
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The Weekly 8. Juli
One frigid day, team drove by the Lordstown GM plant where a man stood on the road with a sign demanding the plant be saved. His name is Werner Lange and he told he’d been standing on the side of the road every afternoon for months.
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The Weekly 8. Juli
The GM plant in Lordstown, Ohio, employed nearly 12,000 people at its peak in the 1980s, and those jobs paid better than most in the county. When visited to report for , it was down to 1,500.
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The Weekly 8. Juli
In a few minutes, will begin on on the West Coast. Our reporter traveled to Ohio to see how GM’s big tech move is leaving behind thousands of autoworkers.
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The Weekly 8. Juli
President Trump’s inauguration was the most expensive ever in U.S. history. uncovers where the money came from, where it went and why it matters now.
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The Weekly 8. Juli
Thanks for watching , about the closing of the GM plant in Lordstown, Ohio — and what that means for workers and the company. You can learn more about the people you met in the show here
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Brennan Cusack 8. Juli
To show the Lordstown plant's history in this episode, we collected photos and videos that spanned from its early days of production to its very last on March 6th
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