Tag: Joe Biden

  • HBO US to air documentary on Joe Biden’s first year as US President

    HBO US to air documentary on Joe Biden’s first year as US President

    Mumbai: In the recently released trailer, HBO announced a documentary, Year One: A Political Odyssey, which chronicles Biden’s first year as US president.

    The documentary is directed by Emmy-winning filmmaker John Maggio, executive produced by Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times journalist David Sanger, and produced by Caroline Cannon and Caroline Pahl. HBO’s Nancy Abraham and Lisa Heller serve as executive producers, while Tina Nguyen is the senior producer. It is set to debut on 19 October on HBO and HBO Max.

    Bookended by Inauguration Day 2021 and the state of the union speech of March 2022, this is a front-seat account of the Biden administration’s tense first year, marked by security threats both at home and abroad. Assuming office only two weeks after the 6 January 2021 attack on the Capitol, Biden’s presidency entered the maelstrom of an ongoing global pandemic, renewed conflicts with Russia and China, and America’s international standing in decline.

    The documentary follows the US President’s inner circle, taking viewers inside the White House, the State Department, the CIA, and the Pentagon, while it dives deep into America’s response to a number of unfolding historical events: the effort to immunise a nation against an ever-morphing pandemic; continued divisiveness following 6 January; the withdrawal from Afghanistan; the rise of autocratic regimes across the globe; and increasingly adversarial relations with two nuclear superpowers: Russia and China. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February of 2022 became the crucible by which America’s fragile alliances were measured-and created new forms of nuclear menace. The documentary explores each developing situation with chronological immediacy and intimate, unprecedented access to Biden’s cabinet members, tracing history as it happens.

    It combines archival news footage with revealing insider interviews with key players from Biden’s cabinet, providing contemporaneous accounts of history in the making. Participants include secretary of state Antony Blinken; national security advisor Jake Sullivan; secretary of defence Lloyd Austin; CIA director William Burns; White House chief of staff Ron Klain; special presidential envoy for climate John Kerry; White House press secretary Jen Psaki; counsellor to the president Jeff Zeints; representatives Adam Schiff and Jim Jordan; senator Chris Coons; journalists; global ambassadors; and covid-19 advisors. David E. Sanger of The New York Times guides the interpretation of the fast-moving events in global politics.

  • Donald Trump barred from Facebook ‘indefinitely’

    Donald Trump barred from Facebook ‘indefinitely’

    NEW DELHI: Facebook has indefinitely banned US president Donald Trump from its platform after he tried to incite violence at the US Capitol earlier this week.

    Mincing no words, a far cry from the social media giant’s prior treatment of Trump with kid gloves, Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg stated that the president intends to use his remaining time in office to undermine the peaceful and lawful transition of power to his elected successor, Joe Biden.

    “We believe the risks of allowing the president to continue to use our service during this period are simply too great,” he wrote in a community post. As a result, he said, Facebook and its photo-sharing site Instagram would extend blocks on Trump’s ability to post “until the peaceful transition of power is complete.”

     

    The shocking events of the last 24 hours clearly demonstrate that President Donald Trump intends to use his remaining…

    Posted by Mark Zuckerberg on Thursday, 7 January 2021

    Trump is also banned from using Instagram.

    Earlier in the day, when Trump made false claims about election fraud and the legitimacy of the next US president Joe Biden, nearly all social media platforms – Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and Snapchat — locked his account for a brief period. Facebook imposed a ban for 24 hours and Twitter for 12 hours. The latter also asked the US president to remove three tweets for severe violation of its civic integrity policy, and failing to do so would lead to permanent suspension of his account.

    Trump’s Twitter account had been unlocked at the time of filing this report.

    The diverging actions showed how social media companies were still grappling with how to moderate one of their most powerful and popular users. Trump has routinely used his online mouthpieces to attack others, rile up supporters and disseminate disinformation, and these social media platforms had offered platitudes of “upholding free speech” to defend their inaction in the matter of not curtailing such provocative posts.

    YouTube had also removed the video where Trump told his supporters who had broken into the Capitol ‘I love you’ and described the agitators as patriots. The platform also cited that the video violated its policies. 

    The march was partly organised online, including on Facebook groups and pages. Facebook has mentioned that it was looking for and removing content that had incited or supported the storming of Capitol Hill. The violence at the US Capitol led to the death on one person and several injured.