How does Twitter make money? Most of its 230 million users don't know that the answer is advertising. Poppy Harlow sits down with Matt McCall and Rachel Sklar to find out why the brand getting lots of love is short on the ad dollars.
Congress has got a sickness: the bickering bug. Christine Romans searched high and low for the best opinions on the nasty affliction, assembling a crack team of a hostage negotiator, a relationship expert, a pawn broker, a sports agent, and a poker player. They've concocted a cure, here's their dose of negotiation potion. Listen up, Washington.
The economy added 204,000 jobs in October, far more than the 120,000 economists had expected. The Labor Department says the 16-day government shutdown had a negligible impact on their estimates. The unemployment rate ticked up to 7.3%, but economists say that rise is likely to be a blip. Read more from CNNMoney
Leather-bound books, the scent of rich mahogany, and... Dodge Durangos? Will Ferrell reprises his infamous "Ron Burgundy" character in a new set of car commercials. Anchorlady Christine Romans tells the hosts of New Day why milking it isn't a bad choice.
SAC Capital, a successful hedge fund, agreed to plead guilty to insider trading charges Monday. Preet Bharara, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, announced the company will pay a record $1.8 billion fine and cautioned Wall St. against excessive greed.
Gun sales, low wages, workers’ rights. Some of the most divisive issues in America all seem to have one thing in common – Wal-Mart. Christine Romans sits down with the CEO of the company’s U.S. Operations, Bill Simon, who recently announced thousands of new promotions for Wal-Mart employees.
He posted the first tweet. Ever. And that's not even his biggest accomplishment. Jack Dorsey's knack for tech innovation and investing has made him a billionaire. Christine Romans discovers what's really behind the business of being Jack Dorsey.
Members of Congress grilled Health Secretary Kathleen Sebelius about the disastrous rollout of healthcare.gov. The Congress members' bizarre questions made it clear that the hearing's purpose was more political theater than anything else. So stick this on your bumper: nuance is necessary.