>
The Hidden Secrets of Natural Milk
Diddy Trial Drama: Star Witness Vanishes Ahead Of Explosive Testimony
PTSD treatment that excites a nerve in your neck wipes symptoms completely
High-tech lactation pad measures medication in mothers' milk
Cab-less truck glider leaps autonomously between road and rail
Can Tesla DOJO Chips Pass Nvidia GPUs?
Iron-fortified lumber could be a greener alternative to steel beams
One man, 856 venom hits, and the path to a universal snakebite cure
Dr. McCullough reveals cancer-fighting drug Big Pharma hopes you never hear about…
EXCLUSIVE: Raytheon Whistleblower Who Exposed The Neutrino Earthquake Weapon In Antarctica...
Doctors Say Injecting Gold Into Eyeballs Could Restore Lost Vision
Dark Matter: An 86-lb, 800-hp EV motor by Koenigsegg
Spacetop puts a massive multi-window workspace in front of your eyes
MSNBC star Rachel Maddow humbly admitted that her successor Jen Psaki will host a better show than her after the liberal icon wrapped her run of Trump's first 100 days.
Maddow ended her nightly weekday stint - which she took a rumored $5 million pay cut to keep - and handed the reigns over to Joe Biden's former White House Press Secretary.
She had returned to a five-nights-a-week schedule to cover Donald Trump's first 100 days of his second term. Maddow will return to her weekly Monday night show.
Psaki secured the Tuesday to Friday primetime show as the network's ruthless new boss conducts a major lineup overhaul amid plummeting ratings.
MSNBC saw a decline in total viewers during primetime and total day for the week of April 28, reported AdWeek.
Maddow confessed that Psaki's show will be better than hers because the former press secretary has actual news connections.
'The thing she has which I do not have, which is going to make 9 o'clock better with Jen Psaki than it is with Rachel Maddow, is that she both knows people and knows how to talk to people,' Maddow told People.
'I really am a weird little hermit who works great with my staff, but I don't know anybody in Washington. I don't know anybody in the news, and it's on purpose.
'I am not great at interacting with people. I'm not a great interviewer and I'm not great at cultivating sources. It's not my thing. I'm a reader, not a talker.'
Maddow expressed her support in Psaki as her successor, claiming she believes Psaki will be immune to the 'television curse that turns decent people into monsters.'
'I don't know anybody else who really can do that the way that she does,' Maddow said. 'She's not been susceptible to that wizardry. She's a good person.'
In February, MSNBC announced that Psaki would anchor the 9pm hour for Tuesdays through Fridays, ending Alex Wagner's time at the helm.
While Psaki will host the 9pm slot four days a week, the network's biggest star, Maddow, will host one day a week. Her namesake show will return to Mondays at 9 pm following the first 100 days of the Trump Administration.
Psaki's apparent promotion is the latest in a slew of changes by new MSNBC president Rebecca Kutler.
Kutler axed Joy Reid and canceled her namesake show The ReidOut, which has been a fixture of MSNBC's evening programming since 2020.