Shares in the video game retailer more than doubled at one point after a prominent meme stock investor made his first online posting in about three years.
Washington Week is the longest-running prime time news and analysis program on television and was recognized for its journalism excellence with a 2008 Peabody Award, among other honors.
Stay in touch with the latest news and analysis from Springfield. CapitolView is the only weekly prime time broadcast television program covering the Illinois General Assembly. Thank you for supporting the best in public television.
-
The Pritzker Administration is trying to push through different revenue plans in the final weeks of the session. If those are unsuccessful, a letter to agency directors says there could be about $800 million less to spend.
-
Tazewell County Coroner Charles Hanley identified her Friday. He says 20-year-old Hailey Parks of Jacksonville was visiting relatives in the area.
-
The CDC has released a tool to help people assess personal risk during heat waves in preparation for another hot summer.
-
Delays and other problems with the Free Application for Federal Student Aid form and what it means for students looking to pay for college.
-
If you answer the phone and hear a recorded message instead of a live person, it's a robocall.
-
Services now in three agencies to be consolidated under one roof
-
A publishing company whose politically slanted newspapers have been derided as “pink slime” is being sued by Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul for illegally identifying birthdates and home addresses of “hundreds of thousands” of voters.
-
The contemporary Christian band We the Kingdom is on the road for the first time since lead singer Franni Rae Cash Cain's departure.
-
The Fourth District Appellate Court is upholding the 18-month prison sentence Jeffrey Reinking received for illegally returning to his son an AR-15 Bushmaster rifle that he later used in a Tennessee mass shooting that left four people dead.
-
The H5N1 bird flu has been common across wild bird populations for the last few years leading to the culling of millions of chickens in the United States. Now that it's showing up in dairy cows and milk samples, what does this mean for our food and transmission to humans? Experts say, your milk is safe, and as of now, the risk to human health is low.
-
There's a good chance your zone shifted when the USDA updated its plant hardiness map in 2023. Zoom in on what that means for your garden.
-
During the Rwandan genocide in 1994, Josephine Dusabimana smuggled ethnic Tutsis out of the country as neighbors attacked neighbors and almost a million people died.
-
Joy Diaz and her parents were dedicated to helping others. Then, they received some life-changing help themselves.
-
Almost half of the illicit fentanyl seized by law enforcement last year was pills made to look like prescription opioids, a new study says. The trend suggests a growing supply of illicit fentanyl.
-
Childhood myopia, or nearsightedness, is growing rapidly in the U.S. and around the world. Researchers say kids who spend two hours outside every day, are less likely to develop the condition.
-
Workers at Mercedes-Benz in Alabama start voting this week on whether to join the United Auto Workers union. Last month, Volkswagen workers in Tennessee voted overwhelmingly to unionize.
-
He is expected to bolster the prosecutors case that Trump falsified business records to pay off Stormy Daniels, the adult film star, with whom he is alleged to have had an affair