Mo News Talks To FEMA About Hurricane Response & Disinformation
Plus, Netflix bets on John Mulaney
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Good morning,
Netflix is making a bet on live TV. Comedian John Mulaney, whoβs done a few successful stand-up specials for the streaming platform, is set to host a weekly live variety talk show, launching in early 2025.
Netflix hopes the show will build off βJohn Mulaney Presents: Everybodyβs in LAββ a six-part live series from earlier this year.
Mulaney will be wearing a few hats as the host, executive producer, and co-showrunner.
Itβs the companyβs biggest push into late night, which has historically been a difficult nut to crack in streaming.
Another win for Netflix (and us!): βNobody Wants Thisβ got picked up for a second season.
Have a good one,
Mosheh, Jill, & Lauren
PS: Monday is Columbus Day/Indigenous Peoplesβ Day, so we will be back Tuesday!
PPS: Donβt forget to refer friends & family to subscribe to the Mo Newsletterβ¦ you could get free Mo News merch β DETAILS at the bottom of this newsletter!
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πΊ INTERNAL FIGHT & CONDEMNATIONS AT CBS NEWS OVER MORNING SHOW INTERVIEW
Hurricane Milton carved a path of destruction across Florida Wednesday night, leading to at least 12 deaths and leaving more than 3 million people without power.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis reported Thursday that the storm was significant, but the worst case scenario that many forecasters fearedβ including a 10 to 15 feet of storm surge in Tampa Bayβ did not materialize.
Itβs not to downplay the devastation: The hurricane spurred deadly catastrophic tornadoes across the state, an eight-foot storm surge, 18 inches of rain (a 1 in 1000 year event), and over 100 mph wind gusts.
Milton hit some parts of Florida that were still reeling from Hurricane Helene, which struck less than two weeks ago. Heleneβs trail of damage runs nearly 600 miles through Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia. Over 230 people were killed across the six states.
Interview: Mo News sat down with Keith Turi on Thursday, who is responsible for FEMAβs disaster and recovery response, to discuss the aftermath of the storms. He says these back-to-back hurricanes are not unheard of, but noted that recovery will take years.
π¨,Listen To/Watch Our Conversation via the Mo News Interview Podcast π¨
BUDGET QUESTIONS
Our interview comes as FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell said Wednesday that the agency has already blown through $9 billion of its $20 billion dollar annual disaster relief budget just a few days into the fiscal year.
Why is that? Turi says that has to do with previous disaster relief that was put on hold this summer due to previous budget constraints. The agency is still supporting rebuilding efforts for disasters going back a decade, and $8 billion of that $9 billion is for those projects. He assured us that urgent disaster recovery efforts for Milton and Helene are fully funded.
Turi also stressed that accusations from the right that money is being diverted from disasters to the Shelter and Services Program (SSP) to support migrants are false. Itβs a claim that has been amplified by former President Trump.
Turi noted the SSP is actually a Customs and Border Protection program that FEMA is merely managing the grants for (both agencies fall under DHS), and that it comes from a separate pot of money authorized by Congress.
A MISINFORMATION CRISIS
We discussed a number of false accusations circulating that FEMA is neglecting Republican areas, blocking aid, confiscating donations, and limiting support to $750 per family, etc. Turi pushed back on all of the above in our conversation, and noted that the agency has been facing increasing misinformation in recent years, especially after the fires in Maui, and the train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio.
Recovery and response efforts are a team sport, he said. Despite the disinformation, Turi reinforced that FEMAβs role is to help bring together federal, state, local and tribal organizations, and some of the accusations are not even possible given what is in FEMAβs purview. He thanked a number of Republican and Democratic leaders for speaking with one voice.
βIt's holistic in how we respond, and we've seen great support from many of our partners in helping get that information out, so it's something we're gonna have to continue to deal with unfortunately. We're not letting it distract us from responding and helping those that need it. But we'll keep looking at the most effective way to communicate as we move forward,β he said.
Turi has worked for FEMA for nearly 20 years, under both Republican and Democratic administrations, and assures us that the agency does not withhold support based on statesβ or Americansβ political affiliations. βThe men and women of FEMA are focused on helping people,β he said.
Meanwhile, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) doubled down on her false claims this week that officials can control the weather.
And just for the record, Mo News asked Turi about Greeneβs and othersβ claims that FEMA controls the weather. He said categorically: βUnfortunately, we don't have control over the weather.β And if they did, they would STOP hurricanes, not make them worse.
HOW TO HELP
Speaking of helping, Turi says that βdisaster response and recovery always takes the whole community to be able to support.β And, there is plenty of need in Florida after Helene and Milton:
Local non-profits: The Florida Disaster Fund is a way to donate $ to get distributed, the Florida Disaster Legal Aid helpline offers free legal information and FEMA assistance advice, Feeding Tampa Bay does just that. National orgs like World Central Kitchen and the American Red Cross do amazing work around the country.
β³ SPEED READ
π¨NATION
π Milton spares Daytona Beach factory that's a critical supplier of IV fluids (ABC NEWS)
π Afghan accused of plotting terror attack worked as CIA guard, officials say (NBC NEWS)
π Florida resident "Lieutenant Dan" recounts riding out Hurricane Milton on his sailboat: "I'm not scared of anything" (CBS NEWS)
π Republicans appear poised to take control of Senate, new poll shows (NY TIMES)
π AROUND THE WORLD
π Ukrainian reporter Victoria Roshchyna dies in Russian detention, official says (CBS NEWS)
π At least 22 people killed in Israeli airstrikes in central Beirut. A strike on Gaza school kills 27 (AP)
π Kate Middleton makes surprise public appearance alongside Prince William in first public engagement post-chemo (PEOPLE)
π The world's sixth 'Blue Zone': Why Singapore values both quantity and quality of life (BBC)
π±BUSINESS, SCIENCE & TECH
π TD Bank to pay $3 billion after breaking US money laundering rules (CBS NEWS)
π Tesla is ready to roll out its Robotaxis (WIRED)
π Common heart conditions raise the risk of dementia, experts say (CNN)
πGroceries are more affordable now than in 2019. So why are people still so mad about prices? (MARKET WATCH)
π¬ SPORTS & ENTERTAINMENT
π ABC airs anti-abortion ad with disturbing images during The View broadcast comparing show cohosts to Nazis (EW)
π The sex trafficking trial against music mogul Sean "Diddy" Combs is set to begin May 5, a judge announced Thursday (ABC NEWS)
π South Korean author Han Kang wins the 2024 Nobel prize in literature (GUARDIAN)
π Anne Hathaway apologizes to journalist known for string of viral awkward interviews (SALON)
π CHEERS TO THE FREAKIN WKND
WHAT WEβRE WATCHING: Jill: Ali Wong: Single Lady~ Netflix; Mosheh: The Menendez Brothers~ Netflix.
WHAT WEβRE READING: Jill: The Type of Love That Makes People Happiest~ The Atlantic; Mosheh: Nexus: A Brief History of Information Networks from the Stone Age to AI~ Yuval Noah Harari.
WHAT WEβRE EATING: Jill: Bagels, lox and cream cheese to break the Yom Kippur fast; Mosheh: Isle of Us, a cafΓ© in NYC.