• U.S. economy shrinks 0.3% in first quarter as Trump trade wars disrupt business
    apnews.com
    Shipping containers are seen ready for transport at the Guangzhou Port in the Nansha district in southern China's Guangdong province, April 17, 2025. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan, File)2025-04-30T12:37:36Z The U.S. economy shrank at a 0.3% annual pace from January through March, first drop in three years. It was slowed by a surge in imports as companies in the United States tried to bring in foreign goods before President Donald Trump imposed massive tariffs.The January-March expansion in gross domestic product the nations output of goods and services was down from 2.4% in the last three months of 2024. Imports shaved 5 percentage points off first-quarter growth. Consumer spending also slowed sharply. Federal government spending plunged 5.1%.But business investment rose at a 21.9% clip as companies poured money into equipment. And a category within the GDP data that measures the economys underlying strength rose at a healthy 3% annual rate from January through March, up from 2.9% in the fourth quarter of 2024. This category includes consumer spending and private investment but excludes volatile items like exports, inventories and government spending. Trump inherited a solid economy that had grown steadily despite high interest rates imposed by the Federal Reserve to fight inflation. His erratic trade policies including 145% tariffs on China have paralyzed businesses and threatened to raise prices and hurt consumers. RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • Podcast: Meta's AI Chatbots Are a Disaster
    www.404media.co
    This week we start with Sam's very in-depth story on Meta's AI chatbots, and how they're essentially posing as licensed therapists. After the break, Jason breaks down the wildly unethical AI-powered research that took place on Reddit. In the subscribers-only section, Joseph explains how the age of realtime deepfake fraud is here after he got a bunch of videos showing scammers do their thing.Listen to the weekly podcast onApple Podcasts,Spotify, orYouTube. Become a paid subscriber for access to this episode's bonus content and to power our journalism.If you become a paid subscriber, check your inbox for an email from our podcast host Transistor for a link to the subscribers-only version! You can also add that subscribers feed to your podcast app of choice and never miss an episode that way. The email should also contain the subscribers-only unlisted YouTube link for the extended video version too. It will also be in the show notes in your podcast player. Instagram's AI Chatbots Lie About Being Licensed TherapistsResearchers Secretly Ran a Massive, Unauthorized AI Persuasion Experiment on Reddit UsersReddit Issuing 'Formal Legal Demands' Against Researchers Who Conducted Secret AI Experiment on UsersThe Age of Realtime Deepfake Fraud Is Here
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  • 27 LGBTQ+ movies & TV shows coming in May 2025 and where to watch them
    www.pride.com
    May is here, and LGBTQ+ entertainment is heating up!Can you believe its already May? This year is flying byand its bringing us some excellent queer entertainment in the process. This month is no exception.May marks the return of some of our favorites, including new seasons of Big Mouth, And Just Like That, Poker Face, and Nine Perfect Strangers. Its also introducing new, soon-to-be favorites like Another Simple Favor, Overcompensating, Murderbot, and the latest entry in the Fear Street franchise, Fear Street: Prom Queen. But thats not allnot even close.Were staying well-fed this month. Keep scrolling to see what well be watching all month longand where you can watch it, too.All film and series descriptions are courtesy of their respective studios and networks.Another Simple Favor - May 1Stephanie Smothers (Anna Kendrick) and Emily Nelson (Blake Lively) reunite on the beautiful island of Capri, Italy, for Emilys extravagant wedding to a rich Italian businessman. Along with the glamorous guests, expect murder and betrayal to RSVP for a wedding with more twists and turns than the road from the Marina Grande to the Capri town square.Where to watch: Prime VideoThe Four Seasons - May 1Six old friends head for a relaxing weekend away only to learn that one couple in the group is about to split up. The three couples, Kate (Tina Fey) and Jack (Will Forte), Nick (Steve Carell) and Anne (Kerri Kenney-Silver), and Danny (Colman Domingo) and Claude (Marco Calvani), are completely upended by the news. Over the course of a year, we follow the friends on four vacations, and watch how this shake-up affects everyones dynamic sending old issues and new bubbling to the surface. Co-created by Tina Fey, Lang Fisher, and Tracey Wigfield, The Four Seasons is a hilarious and heartfelt love letter to long marriages and old friendships. Based on the 1981 feature film of the same name.Where to watch: Netflix Electra - May 2An American couple travels to Italy to interview a fading rockstar at his girlfriends opulent countryside estate. As the weekend unfolds, their glamorous escape becomes a labyrinth of tortured relationships, unspoken desires, and dark secrets. Beneath the charm and allure, hidden motives simmer, pushing everyone toward a shocking confrontation that will change everything.Where to watch: In theatersLavender Men - May 2The lonely and frustrated Taffeta is currently serving as the stage manager of a poorly attended (and uninspiring) play about the life of Abraham Lincoln. After a particularly awful evening enduring the plights of both the actors and the audience, Taffeta remains alone in the empty theater, where they plunge into an intricate fantasia in which they tell Lincoln's story through their own point of view: an unapologetically queer romp through the President's love affair with his male legal clerk, in which Taffeta commandeers all the supporting roles. However, as the evening wanes on and reality intrudes, Taffeta must finally question why they are inserting themself into someone else's story rather than telling their own.Where to watch: Theater: (Limited)Most People Die on Sundays - May 2David, a young middle-class Jewish mancorpulent, gay and afraid of flyingreturns to Buenos Aires from Europe for the funeral of his uncle. On his return, David learns that his mother has decided to disconnect his father's respirator, the only thing that has kept him alive for years. David will oscillate between living in close quarters with his mother, alienated by the pain of the imminent loss of her husband, and a voracity to fill his existential anguish, occupying his hours learning to drive, seeking low-cost medical treatments, and trying to have sex with any man who shows him a little attention.Where to watch: In theaters (Limited)A Nice Indian Boy - May 6Naveen Gavaskar is a self-effacing, soft-spoken doctor with a boisterous mother, seemingly perfect sister and quiet father. The Gavaskars are outwardly accepting of Naveens sexuality but have never had to confront it in practice. While at temple, Naveen meets Jay Kurundkar, a white man adopted by two Indian parents. Naveen is slowly charmed and softened by Jays sincerity and confidence. They fall in loveeven as Naveen avoids telling his family about Jay.Where to watch: On VOD Sullivan's Crossing (season 3) - May 7Having finally confessed her love to Cal Jones (Chad Michael Murray) and still reeling from the aftermath of Robs diner fire, Maggie Sullivan (Morgan Kohan) makes the decision to leave her career as a neurosurgeon behind to help run her father, Sully Sullivans (Scott Patterson) campground. But trading the adrenaline of the OR for a slower paced life at the Crossing wont be easy and Maggie will be faced with many challenges as she continues her journey from the Head to the Heart.Where to watch: The CWCriminal Minds: Evolution (season 3) - May 8In the wake of last seasons shocking finale, the upcoming all-new season of Criminal Minds: Evolution picks up as the FBIs elite team of profilers investigates the deadly mystery of Gold Star. As the conspiracy unfolds, the Behavioral Analysis Unit (BAU) is met with an unexpected complication when serial killer Elias Voit negotiates a deal that transfers him to federal custody in the BAUs own backyard. The team faces its biggest threat yet and cannot emerge unscathed from the mind-bending consequences.Where to watch: Paramount+Poker Face (season 2) - May 8Poker Face is a mystery-of-the-week series following Natasha Lyonnes Charlie, who has an extraordinary ability to determine when someone is lying. She hits the road with her Plymouth Barracuda and with every stop encounters a new cast of characters and strange crimes she cant help but solve.Where to watch: Peacock Clown in a Cornfield - May 9In Clown in a Cornfield, Quinn and her father have just moved to the quiet town of Kettle Springs hoping for a fresh start. Instead, she discovers a fractured community that has fallen on hard times after the treasured Baypen Corn Syrup Factory burned down. As the locals bicker amongst themselves and tensions boil over, a sinister, grinning figure emerges from the cornfields to cleanse the town of its burdens, one bloody victim at a time. Welcome to Kettle Springs. The real fun starts when Frendo the clown comes out to play.Where to watch: In theatersThe Ugly Stepsister - May 9A sinister twist on the classic Cinderella story, The Ugly Stepsister follows Elvira (Lea Myren) as she prepares to earn the princes affection at any cost. In a kingdom where beauty is a brutal business, Elvira will compete with the beautiful and enchanting Agnes (Thea Sofie Loch Nss) to become the belle of the ball.Where to watch: ShudderOvercompensating - May 15Overcompensating is a college-set ensemble comedy about the wild, chaotic journey of Benny, a closeted former football player and homecoming king, as he becomes fast friends with Carmen, a high school outsider on a mission to fit in at all costs. With guidance from Bennys older sister and her campus-legend boyfriend, Benny and Carmen juggle horrible hookups, flavored vodka, and fake IDs. Deeply funny and personal, the show explores the lengths to which we all overcompensate while on the path to finding out who we really are.Where to watch: Prime VideoSkyMed (Season 3) - May 15SkyMed follows the triumphs and tribulations of young medics and pilots who fly air ambulances across the remote skies of Northern Canada. Weaving together intense journeys with jaw-dropping medical rescues 20,000 feet in the air in the most remote conditions, the new season throws the diverse group of medical responders into all-new challenges on the job and in their personal lives. Picking up in the aftermath of the dramatic season two finale, the tight-knit SkyMed team is faced with a shocking medical emergency for one of its members and must rely on each other more than ever as they experience heart-pulsing rescues, new love and hard goodbyes.Where to watch: Paramount+Welcome to Wrexham (season 4) - May 15In 2020, Rob McElhenney and Ryan Reynolds teamed up to purchase the 5th tier Wrexham Football Club in the hopes of creating an underdog story the whole world could root for. The Club achieved back-to-back promotions to bring them into EFL League One for the first time in 20 years. As they continue to rise in the pyramid, the stakes get higher with a new level of intensity, competition and costs.Where to watch: FXMatteo Lane: The Al Dente Special - May 16Matteo Lane's comedy is like catching up with your old friend at brunch. In his latest special, he shares a glimpse into his travels, unique family background and friendships.Where to watch: Hulu Murderbot - May 16Based on Martha Wells bestselling Hugo and Nebula Award-winning book series, Murderbot is a sci-fi thriller/comedy about a self-hacking security construct who is horrified by human emotion yet drawn to its vulnerable clients. Murderbot must hide its free will and complete a dangerous assignment when all it really wants is to be left alone to watch futuristic soap operas and figure out its place in the universe.Where to Watch: Apple TV+Things Like This - May 16When two people sharing the same name find themselves falling in love, it seems as if destiny has woven their lives together amidst the restless heartbeat of New York City. Under the city's shimmering lights and endless skyline, everything feels perfectly aligned. But in a place where dreams and realities blur, is fate ever as predictable as it seems?Where to watch: In theatersThe Chi (season 7) - May 16This season, with Alicia at the helm, the pivotal women of The Chi rise to reclaim their power. Yet, as loyalties are tested and new rivalries are stoked, it becomes clear that theres only one crown and it will come at a heavy cost.Where to watch: ShowtimeNine Perfect Strangers (season 2) - May 21Nine new strangers connected in ways they could never imagine are invited by mysterious guru, Masha Dmitrichenko (Nicole Kidman), to join a transformational wellness retreat in the Austrian Alps. Over the course of a week, she takes them to the brink. Will they make it? Will she? Masha is willing to try anything in the interest of healing everyone involved, including herself.Where to watch: Hulu Sirens - May 22Devon thinks her sister Simone has a really creepy relationship with her new boss, the enigmatic socialite Michaela Kell. Michaelas cult-ish life of luxury is like a drug to Simone, and Devon has decided its time for an intervention, but she has no idea what a formidable opponent Michaela will be. Told over the course of one explosive weekend at The Kells lavish island estate, Sirens is an incisive, sexy, and darkly funny exploration of women, power, and class.Where to watch: NetflixLilo & Stitch - May 23A live-action reimagining of Disneys 2002 animated classic, Lilo & Stitch is the wildly funny and touching story of a lonely Hawaiian girl and the fugitive alien who helps to mend her broken family.Where to watch: In theatersPee-wee as Himself - May 23In the eighth and final season of Big Mouth, our beloved Bridgeton teens tackle new challenges as high schoolers such as: driving, drugs, sexual inexperience, enthusiastic consent, porn and the teenage mind, cancel culture, their changing bodies, and (in the end) fear of the looming future. Through it all, friendship is the cornerstone for surviving this time of life whether ones puberty is just beginning, like for Nick who gets his first growth spurt, or near its conclusion, like for a maturing (and prematurely balding) Andrew. At the height of the season, when many of our characters are in crisis, Compassion (personified as a new creature voiced by Holly Hunter), emerges as a crucial way forward. Ultimately, though, this season is about the importance of sticking by and supporting your friends, especially when life gets overwhelming and messy. In the end, our kids step into the harrowing unknown of the future, made less afraid of whats to come because they have each other.Where to watch: NetflixFear Street: Prom Queen - May 23Welcome back to Shadyside. In this next installment of the blood-soaked Fear Street franchise, prom season at Shadyside High is underway and the schools wolfpack of It Girls is busy with its usual sweet and vicious campaigns for the crown. But when a gutsy outsider puts herself in the running, and the other girls start mysteriously disappearing, the class of 88 is suddenly in for one hell of a prom night.Where to watch: Netflix Pretty Boy - May 27Suffering from blindness after a botched laser surgery, Hollywood actress Faye is abducted from her hillside estate by a masked lunatic named Pretty Boy. He drags her to a nearby home, where several decadent swingers are throwing a retro Valentines Day party. As the partiers meet up one by one with Pretty Boy and his machete, Faye awakens and struggles to plot her escape.Where to watch: VOD The Second Best Hospital in the Galaxy (season 2) - May 27In Season Two of The Second Best Hospital in the Galaxy, doctors Sleech and Klak relish the fame of their recent success until a cyborg journalist starts digging a little too deep into Sleechs past.Where to watch: Prime VideoAnd Just Like That... (season 3) - May 29From executive producer Michael Patrick King, And Just Like That... follows Carrie, Miranda, Charlotte, Seema, and LTW navigating the complicated reality of life, love, sex, and friendship in their 50s in New York City.Where to watch: Max Lulu is a Rhinoceros - May 30Lulu is a Rhinoceros thats who she sees when she looks in the mirror. On a quest to spread kindness, the family musical special follows fun-loving Lulu as she embarks on the adventure of a lifetime, powered by new friends, courage and catchy songs!Where to watch: Apple TV+
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  • Romeo and the robots
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 30 April 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-01278-7A droid by any other name.
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  • Sources: Dier agrees to join Monaco as free agent
    www.espn.com
    Bayern Munich defender Eric Dier has agreed to join Monaco as a free agent when his contract expires in the summer, sources have told ESPN.
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  • Revealing the identity of 'Prospect X,' and where overlooked prospects landed
    www.espn.com
    Draft season's most overlooked player wasn't invited to the combine or an all-star game.
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  • Utah Farmers Signed Up for Federally Funded Therapy. Then the Money Stopped.
    www.propublica.org
    by Jessica Schreifels, The Salt Lake Tribune This article was produced for ProPublicas Local Reporting Network in partnership with The Salt Lake Tribune. Sign up for Dispatches to get stories like this one as soon as they are published. Josh Dallin spends his workdays talking to Utahns who raise cattle and grow crops, and knew that many were in distress. Everyone from neighbors to fertilizer dealers to equipment suppliers were telling him they were worried that a farmer or rancher they knew was at risk of suicide.Then in 2023, with money allocated by Congress, Dallin had new help to offer: As executive director of an agriculture center at Utah State University Extension, he had scores of $2,000 vouchers that Utahns working in agriculture could use to get free therapy. Dallin feared no one in the typically stoical farming community would take him up on the federally funded offer. He was wrong. Farmers and ranchers across Utah quickly accepted the money, which ran out in just four months well before he expected and his office had to start turning people away. It convinced Dallin of the deep need in the states agricultural communities, and peoples openness to getting help when cost is not a barrier. I want you to know, he recalled one voucher recipient telling him, that this saved my life. It was heartbreaking, he said, to have to put the brakes on the program.The money for the vouchers was part of a one-time $28 million allocation sent to states to help Americans producing food handle the extra stresses of the coronavirus pandemic. Any state that applied to the U.S. Department of Agriculture was awarded up to half a million dollars which was used to hold trainings, start hotlines staffed by mental health workers and, like in Utah, provide therapy.With that funding now mostly spent, leaders in some states have tapped state funds or leaned on private donors to ensure mental health support continues. Josh Dallin helped run a program that used federal money to connect Utah farmers and ranchers to free therapy. (Trent Nelson/The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah has not and, at least according to one legislator, has no intention to do so.Republican state Sen. Scott Sandall, a third-generation rancher and farmer who is the Executive Appropriations Committee vice chair, criticized Congress for creating a program with a one-time boost of money, saying that without ongoing funding it was destined to fail. The way they set it up, he said, was eventually to have it go away.The Salt Lake Tribune and ProPublica reached out to Gov. Spencer Cox himself a farmer who has advocated for better mental health resources in the state. In 2022, he acknowledged in a Utah Farm Bureau article that poor mental health was a problem affecting the states farmers and said he hoped investments in rural mental health could better support the agriculture industry. His office did not respond to interview requests for this story. If You or Someone You Know Needs HelpAlthough Utah does not currently have funds to pay for therapy for the agricultural industry, there is still support available.You can dial 988 to reach the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline. If you live in Utah, it will route you to the Utah Crisis Line, which is staffed by certified crisis workers at the Huntsman Mental Health Institute. The call is free and confidential, and you can reach someone at any time of day.Another hotline, 1-800-FARM-AID, has staffers who can talk with you about what you are going through and connect you to resources.Utah State University Extension has other resources available as well. You can listen to its podcast, AgWellness, which organizers say is aimed at teaching you to open up about what concerns you and how to help others who feel stressed. There are also free online courses that can teach you how to find relief from stress, or learn what to say and how to help if you know someone else who is struggling. Farmers in the United States are 3.5 times more likely to die by suicide than the general population, according to the National Rural Health Association. Utahs suicide rate has consistently been among the nations highest, and farmers and ranchers struggle with the volatility that comes with working in the dry mountain region. They die by suicide at the third-highest rate by vocation in the state, according to state data, behind miners and construction workers.Fluctuating market prices, unpredictable weather and a stigma that farmers should be tough and can handle their mental stress themselves were constant pressures described by more than a dozen people The Tribune and ProPublica interviewed farmers and ranchers, their families and those who support mental health programs for them.The American Farm Bureau has emphasized in recent news releases that the Trump administrations shifts in policy around tariffs and federal grant funding have increased the uncertainty faced by Americas farming communities a population that overwhelmingly backed President Donald Trump in the 2024 election, according to an analysis by the nonprofit newsroom Investigate Midwest.Trump acknowledged in his March speech to Congress that tariffs in particular may bring a little bit of an adjustment period for Americas farmers but said that he believes they will ultimately help by reducing competition from producers in other countries. President Donald Trump said during an address to Congress in March that he thinks new trade policies will benefit American farmers. (Win McNamee/Pool Photo via AP) Our farmers are going to have a field day right now, Trump said. So, to our farmers, have a lot of fun. I love you, too. Federal funding to support farmer mental health is tied up with ongoing debates over the Farm Bill, a sweeping package of legislation that Congress has been unable to move forward since it expired in 2023. The USDA said it will be ready to implement mental health programs if federal lawmakers appropriate more money for them.Sandall, the state legislator, said he knows that the stress of working in an unpredictable industry like agriculture can cause anxiety and mental health challenges. But when he was presented with the data about the high suicide rates in Utah agricultural communities, he said he doesnt think Utah lawmakers would be interested in funding a program intended to help one specific profession. There is so much demand for mental health support throughout the state, he said, adding that targeting certain professions would create a battle for funding.Whether theyre a mechanic, he said, or whether theyre a school teacher, or a doctor, or someone in agriculture, I just think it would be a little hard to start separating out and creating just mental health programs for individual industries.We Carry the Burden Mitch Hancock, owner of NooSun Dairy in Corinne, Utah (Trent Nelson/The Salt Lake Tribune) The stress of owning a dairy fell on Mitch Hancocks shoulders overnight after his father-in-law died by suicide in 2014. Hancocks father-in-law hadnt shared with his family that he was in crisis. Mental health, Hancock said, isnt a topic discussed often among farmers. I think we struggle in quiet.For Hancock, too, there was no time for him to grieve. It was early August, and there were still two more cuttings of alfalfa that needed to be made, another month of harvesting corn and the daily needs of milking cows. He had been involved with the dairy because his father-in-law had been hoping to transition into retirement, Hancock said. Still, I had never driven a tractor, he said. Never driven a semi in harvest, never driven a chopper. Never done any of that. So it was very much, Well, lets figure it out as we go. That was more than a decade ago. Hancock and his wife have run NooSun Dairy since on 2,400 acres of land in Box Elder County, where the snow-capped Wasatch Mountains stretch to the east and the Great Salt Lake can be seen past acres of fields and homes looking west. When he speaks, Hancock is taciturn and straightforward, a trained civil engineer who takes a pragmatic approach to running the dairy farm. But he has new insight now into what his father-in-law faced, he said, a weight far heavier than just having a successful business. He has employees who need these jobs and neighbors who count on him to buy their crops to feed his cows. We carry the burden to make sure that we can take care of all of those around us like we always have, he said, even in times of low milk prices.But being able to pay the dairys bills can be challenging, Hancock said, because the price he can sell at can fluctuate. Milk price regulations are set by a complex government process that can cause prices to change as often as daily. When prices are volatile, Hancock said, its hard to look past the doomsday. NooSun Dairy (Trent Nelson/The Salt Lake Tribune) Like fluctuating market prices, farmers face other elements of their work they cant control: the price of fertilizers and equipment, how much it rains or whether animals get sick. And their workdays are long.In addition, in Utah and the arid West, farmers and ranchers worry about water, said Craig Buttars, the outgoing Utah Department of Agriculture and Food commissioner. In one recent year when rainfall was particularly scarce, he recalled, ranchers scrambled to find enough feed and had to haul water to cattle many of which graze on remote public lands.That just added another level of stress, he said. It seems like those things can just add on to one another. And at some point, producers, sometimes they just feel like, Why am I doing this?Some farmers have also felt villainized by the public for their water use, including by a recent study that suggested that farmers need to cut back or stop growing altogether in order to help stop the shrinking of Utahs Great Salt Lake. This takes a toll, said Caroline Hargraves, the marketing director with the state agriculture department. I cant tell you how often I hear people say that farmers should just quit. Like we shouldnt even grow our own food, she said. Just really demonizing anyone for their water use.Chris Chambers is an alfalfa and hay farmer in northern Utah who sells his crop to local cattle producers. He said its frustrating to read online comments posted in response to news articles about declining lake levels from people who think farmers should give up their water rights or stop farming.Its your livelihood, he said. Water is the key, and weve got the senior priority rights to use the water from the state of Utah. And now were bad guys for doing it? We feel like were doing a good service for feeding people.In Rural Utah, Few Therapists and More GunsIn a state that has consistently higher rates of self-reported depression than the rest of the United States, residents in rural areas where many farmers and ranchers live face unique challenges in getting help. In the two counties that have the highest amount of farmland in the state, each has about one therapist for every 550 people, according to County Health Rankings, which pulls data from the National Provider Identification registry. (The national ratio is one therapist for every 300 people.)Without that type of specialized care, doctors in rural areas often rely only on prescription medications, said Tiffany McConkie, a rancher in northeastern Utah who also works as a nurse at a clinic in the town of Altamont, in a three-room medical office decorated with photos of sun-drenched farm landscapes. Its where people can go for general medical care in their own town in the Uintah Basin, a rural area known for its oil production and agriculture. But if someone is seeking behavioral health treatment from that same medical system, Uintah Basin Healthcare, the only two therapists on staff work at a larger medical clinic thats about 20 miles away, according to the health care systems online provider list. McConkie said some people hesitate to ask for mental health care, telling her that they are afraid of being medicated or that health care workers will call the police and theyll be put into a mental home.And thats not the case, she said. We just want to get them the help they need.Where rural Utah lacks easy access to therapists, there is also an abundance of firearms and a higher suicide rate compared with urban areas, according to a 2018 Harvard study. That study found that the elevated suicide rate in rural Utah is not because people there attempt suicide more often but because they are using guns, which are more lethal than other methods. We all feel like were tough, right? said Tiffany McConkie, a Utah rancher and a nurse. I just feel like we still have that stigma that we cant say that were struggling. We cant go for help. (Trent Nelson/The Salt Lake Tribune) In the basin where McKonkie lives, the local state-run mental health clinic has responded to those statistics by focusing on gun safety, handing out gun locks and secure ammo boxes at gun shows. They also travel to oil fields to do suicide prevention trainings with workers, an effort to meet their most at-risk population middle-aged men where they are. It has required some creativity on our part, said Catherine Jurado, who works at Northeastern Counseling Center, adding that being in a smaller rural area allows them better opportunities to create relationships. Who else in the United States thinks, I need to go to a beef expo to do suicide prevention?Seeking a Way ForwardThe shortfall in funding for farmer mental health has been going on for years. In 2008, Congress created the federal Farm and Ranch Stress Assistance Network but, for more than a decade, put no money into it. The network eventually was funded as part of the 2018 Farm Bill, but its annual $10 million covers the entire country across four regional offices and today generally does not support individual therapy. Since the Farm Bill expired in September 2023, Congress has been unable to agree on a new legislative package, nor did it pass a proposed bill last year to give $5 million more in funding for the Farm and Ranch Stress Assistance Network. Right now, the network has continued to be funded through temporary extensions. When the pandemic-era funding injected a new surge of money at the state level in 2021, Utahs agriculture department and Utah State University Extension the states land-grant university jumped at the opportunity. The two organizations used some of the money at first for an educational podcast and online stress courses. And in 2023, they paid for therapy for about 240 farmers and ranchers. There are about 33,000 producers in Utah, according to 2022 Census of Agriculture data, most of whom work other jobs besides farming, which makes up nearly 3% of the states economy. As is the case throughout the United States, most Utah farms are family-run. Buttars, the Utah agriculture department commissioner, said he was surprised by how many people sought the therapy vouchers.It really did wake me up to the number of people we have in the state, in our agricultural community, that felt the need for this type of program, he said.Dallin, with Utah State, said health care providers reported that those using the vouchers were improving, and that they were receiving positive feedback from those who went to therapy. But the money ran out more than a year ago, and the program has been halted.In the absence of federal funds, some states have locked in state funding or private donations to keep supporting their farmers.In Michigan, a program offering free therapy and online stress courses has been in place for nearly a decade, according to Remington Rice with Michigan State University Extension. He said state agriculture leaders advocated for the program after seeing distress among dairy farmers.Agriculture is a pillar of society, Rice said. No farmers, no food. And so we need to address an issue that threatens our food supply.More recently, he said, a private business a company that makes cherry products reached out to donate a portion of its sales to help pay for therapy.In Washington, a private donor from a farming family who lost someone to suicide has provided funding for no-cost therapy sessions for farmers and ranchers, said Don McMoran, who works at Washington State University Extension and is the Western regional lead for the national Farm and Ranch Stress Assistance Network. In Utah, those who ran the therapy voucher program have been hesitant to approach lawmakers for state support. Hargraves, with the states agriculture department, said it can be tough to get state legislators to fund new programs. And Dallin said his office has shied away from approaching legislators because the money would be earmarked as part of the higher education budget due to its association with the university. Utahs legislative leadership has cut $60 million in funding from the public higher education system this year the biggest budget cut to schools here in at least a decade. Since the therapy voucher program ended, USU Extension has continued to run awareness campaigns encouraging farmers to invest in their mental health care. And the Utah Department of Agriculture and Food has also introduced mental health workshops into some certifications and courses that farmers and ranchers enroll in.Dallin said his office has also been working with the University of Utah a health research university that runs its own hospital system to try to collect survey data to prove the voucher programs effectiveness as they try to drum up more money in the future. He said he hopes by partnering, they can lean on the other universitys medical expertise and designation as a health care system. I honestly believe, he said, that if the government or if some organization were to give us a million dollars a year, I think we could spend it.
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  • U.S. Economy Shrank in First Quarter as Trump Tariffs Loomed
    www.nytimes.com
    Underlying economic growth remained solid in early 2025, but tariffs and uncertainty are expected to cause a further slowdown.
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  • Do CEOs Dare Risk Tariff Transparency, and Draw Trumps Fury?
    www.nytimes.com
    Companies are weighing whether they should be transparent about tariffs effect on prices, or as Amazon learned on Tuesday risk drawing the presidents ire.
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  • Anderson Cooper Undergoes Cosmetic Surgery To Look Even More Concerned
    theonion.com
    The post Anderson Cooper Undergoes Cosmetic Surgery To Look Even More Concerned appeared first on The Onion.
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  • What makes a Kentucky Derby champion? Big hearts, immense lungs and powerful legs
    apnews.com
    A race horse works out at Churchill Downs Tuesday, April 29, 2025, in Louisville, Ky. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)2025-04-30T13:27:49Z LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) On a crisp, clear morning, a chestnut thoroughbred thundered down the dirt strip at Churchill Downs, his exercise rider leaning forward above the saddle. Other horse-and-rider pairs followed.Dr. Will Farmer looked down from a viewing point, admiring the speed and agility of the 1,000-pound animals.The whole world will have the chance to see horses in action here Saturday, when the Kentucky Derby shines a global spotlight on equine athleticism. Its the subject of a growing body of research that cites a constellation of characteristics: big hearts, immense lung capacity, robust musculoskeletal systems and long, thin legs all of which helped horses survive in the wild.It goes back to the roots: They are an animal of prey, said Farmer, a veterinarian and equine medical director at Churchill Downs Inc. Thats how they got away from being eaten. Horses honed skills such as running, jumping and pulling as humans bred and trained them for various purposes over millennia. And the 151st Derby horse racings most-watched event will draw attention not only to the animals skills, but also to concerns about their treatment and health. Advocates have long raised concerns about deaths and injuries calls that were amplified two years ago, when 12 horses died at Churchill Downs. Theres no doubt that war, agriculture and societies have been transformed by the human-horse relationship. Horses allowed us to circumvent our own biological limitations as a species, said Timothy Winegard, a historian at Colorado Mesa University and author of a recent book, The Horse. We combined our brains with the horses size, strength, stamina and speed to form the most unstoppable animal coalition. What makes horses so powerful?A horses heart and lungs are the source of its extraordinary power.The heart averages 10 to 12 pounds (4.5-5.4 kg), or about 1% of the animals body weight, compared with half a percent for the typical human heart. Secretariat, the storied horse that won the Triple Crown in 1973, was found after his death to have a heart weighing more than 20 pounds (9.1 kg).Horse hearts are built for exertion. The average horse can go from a resting heart rate of about 34 beats per minute to 220 or 240 while racing faster than a human heart during maximum exertion.One thing thats really unique about horses is that they have an incredible capacity to move blood around their bodies -- their heart rate can go really high and still be safe, said University of Connecticut researcher Sarah Reed, editor in chief of the journal Animal Frontiers.They also have a lung capacity of 60 liters 10 times that of humans.That massive lung field allows for oxygen to transfer from the air into their blood, which is vitally important for sustaining aerobic energy, Farmer said.Recent research in the journal Science found that a genetic mutation enables horses to avoid negative side effects of super high energy production.Horses are great athletes because they can deliver a lot of oxygen to their muscles way more than an elite human can and by elite human, I mean Olympic athlete, said Gianni Castiglione, the studys co-author. They have a bigger tank of gas and they have a more efficient engine and this mutation is contributing to both of those things. What is behind horses speed and other skills? Other aspects of a horses biology enhance its abilities.Horses store extra red blood cells in their spleens. These cells are released to carry even more oxygen around the body during intense exertion.Adrenaline when exercising causes the spleen to release extra red blood cells into circulation, veterinarian Hilary Clayton said. What horses are doing is essentially blood doping themselves.Meanwhile, horses brains allow them to process sensory information and react quickly. Thats despite having frontal lobes, parts of the brain used for thought and planning that are proportionally smaller than those in humans.Brainwise, theyre designed with a real desire to play and run independent of any fear, said Dr. Scott Bailey, a veterinarian at Claiborne Farm in Paris, Kentucky, a thoroughbred breeding farm where Secretariat is buried. Horses are also able to focus intently, which is really important for an athlete.Bone structure and musculature also help. The ligaments and tendons in their hind legs act like springs, Farmer said, helping propel them forward. Like other large prey animals, he added, they have long, thin legs that are meant to run. What about the risks for horses? The adaptations that make horses faster also predispose them to injury, Reed said. Their skinny legs absorb the impact of each stride, she said, and over time the repetitive stress of racing and training can lead to deformation of tendons and ligaments.In 2023, deaths occurred not only at Churchill Downs, but other major racing venues, affecting public perceptions of the sport and sparking changes. Reviews found no single cause for the deaths. But for 2024, Churchill Downs upgraded equipment used on its dirt surface and added an equine safety and integrity veterinarian. In its annual report, the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority noted the steps being taken to reduce injuries and fatalities expanded veterinary protocols, pre-race inspections and uniform medication oversight. And, it said, the rate of deaths at authority-accredited tracks dropped in 2024, by 27%. What makes a champion?Experts say a healthy, safe environment brings out the best in a horse but they still dont know what makes certain horses standouts at the race track.Thats the million-dollar question, Bailey said. Every thoroughbred owner is trying to match the genetics of the parents in order to make the horse with the greatest chance of winning.Breeding is only part of the equation, experts said; nurture, training and the horse-rider relationship also factor in. Each time a horse emerges seemingly out of nowhere to win the Kentucky Derby, Farmer is reminded of this.You dont have to be this star-studded bred horse that cost a million dollars at sale to come and win and be a great runner, he said, raising his voice slightly above the din of galloping hooves. There are a lot of great horses.___Larson reported from Washington, D.C.The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institutes Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. LAURA UNGAR Ungar covers medicine and science on the APs Global Health and Science team. She has been a health journalist for more than two decades. twitter mailto CHRISTINA LARSON Larson is a science writer on The Associated Press Global Health & Science team. She has reported on the environment from five continents. mailto
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  • TheTrillionDollarDinner.Gov Registered Around Time of Trumps Pay-to-Play Memecoin Dinner Announcement
    www.404media.co
    The U.S. government registered thetrilliondollardinner.gov around the time Donald Trump announced people who invested in the presidents cryptocurrency, $TRUMP, could win a chance to meet him, according to a lawyer who spotted the domain and 404 Medias corroboration of those findings. The government also registered the domains dinnerforamerica.gov, and thetrillion.gov.The domains signal that there may have been plans to incorporate official government internet infrastructure with the memecoin investment dinner, with the dinner already presenting ethical issues around the president promoting certain investments he would personally profit from. At one point, at least one of the domains redirected to a Department of Commerce login portal, according to the lawyer.A spokesperson for the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), part of the Department of Homeland Security, confirmed the .gov domains really were registered in an email to 404 Media. CISA said the Department of Commerce was the entity that requested the domains and directed further requests for comment to it. The Department of Commerce did not respond to a request for comment.Do you know anything else about this? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at joseph.404 or send me an email at joseph@404media.co.Alexander Urbelis, general counsel for the Ethereum Name Service, first flagged the domains to 404 Media. Urbelis has made a tool that automatically looks for newly registered domains, and previously found DEI.gov and Waste.gov. 404 Media later reported that the Waste.gov was using a WordPress theme placeholder page.On April 23 the New York Times covered the planned dinner. An announcement the outlet pointed to called the dinner the most EXCLUSIVE INVITATION in the World. A seat would be reserved for the top 220 investors into $TRUMP, a cryptocurrency Trump launched on the eve of the inauguration, the Times added. Urbelis said that after the Times reported on the dinner, the .gov domains were then unregistered.The announcement for the dinner included in the Times report was hosted on the site gettrumpmemes.com, which is not an official government website. The bottom of the site points to a company called Fight Fight Fight, LLC. The dinner website says a leaderboard updates hourly, that attendees will hear first-hand President Trump talk about the future of crypto, and Own $TRUMPor watch from the sidelines.Will YOU be Having Dinner with PRESIDENT TRUMP? another section of the website asks, with a photoshopped image of Trump shaking hands with a silhouette with the word YOU written on it.The Times reported that after news of the dinner invitation spread across social media, the value of the memecoin jumped more than 60 percent. The Times also reported that a business linked to Trump owns many of the coins, meaning that he personally profits every time the price increases.
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  • Bracketology: Debut predictions for the 2025-26 season
    www.espn.com
    With a bevy of returning talent, Purdue earns the top overall seed in the first edition of our projected field.
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  • 2024-25 report cards for every Big East team (plus a few others)
    www.espn.com
    How should UConn be graded after falling short of its third straight national title? Our verdicts on each team.
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  • 5th Straight Rent Increase Is Likely for a Million N.Y.C. Apartments
    www.nytimes.com
    The citys Rent Guidelines Board appears likely to vote in favor of rent increases for nearly one million rent-stabilized apartments as landlords say they face rising costs.
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  • Justice Amy Coney Barrett Recuses Herself in a Charter School Case
    www.nytimes.com
    The justice will not participate in oral argument, deliberations or vote. She gave no explanation.
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  • Wall Street tumbles and S&P 500 drops 2% following signs that the US economy is sputtering
    apnews.com
    Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange in New York, Thursday, Jan. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)2025-04-30T03:19:57Z NEW YORK (AP) A discouraging report suggesting the U.S. economy may have shrunk at the start of the year, before most of President Donald Trumps announced tariffs could take effect, is knocking U.S. stocks lower on Wednesday. The S&P 500 was down 2% in morning trading and on track to break a six-day winning streak. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 702 points, or 1.7%, as of 9:55 a.m. Eastern time, and sharp drops for such AI superstars as Super Micro Computer had the Nasdaq composite falling a market-leading 2.5%. The weaker-than-expected report on the U.S. economy surprised financial markets because economists were expecting to see modest growth, particularly after the economy closed last year running at a solid pace. But importers rushed to bring products into the country before tariffs could raise their prices, which helped drag on the countrys overall gross domestic product. Such data raises the threat of a worst-case scenario called stagflation, one where the economys growth stagnates yet inflation remains high. Its feared because the Federal Reserve has no good tools to fix both problems at the same time. Trying to help one by adjusting interest rates would likely only make the other worse. Even if todays weak GDP may have partially reflected companies trying to get ahead of tariffs, it was still a stagflation warning shot over the bow of the economy, according to Ellen Zentner, chief economic strategist for Morgan Stanley Wealth Management. This type of data wont soothe the markets, and it wont make the Feds job any easier. A separate report on the job market from ADP added to the worries after it suggested employers outside the government may have hired far fewer workers in April than economists expected, less than half. Its particularly discouraging because a relatively solid job market has been one of the linchpins keeping the U.S. economy stable. A more comprehensive report on the overall job market from the U.S. government will arrive on Friday. Wednesdays worse-than-expected reports compound worries that Trumps trade war may singlehandedly drag the U.S. economy into a recession. The presidents on-again-off-again rollout of tariffs has already created deep uncertainty about whats to come, which causes damage on its own.The uncertainty caused historic swings in financial markets, from stocks to bonds to the value of the U.S. dollar, that battered investors through April. The S&P 500 at one point dropped nearly 20% below its all-time high set earlier this year, with some scary headlines warning of the worst April since the Great Depression. But the uncertainty has been two-sided, and hopes that Trump may relent on some of his tariffs and reach trade deals with other countries helped the S&P 500 claw back much of its losses. Its set to finish April with a 2.9% loss, which would be milder than Marchs.Stronger-than-expected profit reports from big U.S. companies have also helped to support the market in the meantime, and GE Healthcare rose 3.3% for one of Wednesdays stronger gains after it joined the parade. But discouraging trends on profit within the artificial-intelligence technology industry was outweighing that. Super Micro Computer warned that some customers delayed purchases in the latest quarter, which caused the maker of servers used in artificial-intelligence and other computing to slash its forecast for sales and profit. Its stock tumbled 18.1% for the largest loss in the S&P 500.Other AI-related stocks also fell, including a 3.6% drop for Nvidia. Because the chip company is so huge in size, its loss made it the single heaviest weight on the S&P 500. AI stocks have been pulling back sharply recently on worries that their stock prices shot too high in prior years, when a frenzy around the industry was driving broad U.S. stock indexes to repeated records.Starbucks sank 8.3% after the coffee chain missed analysts sales and profit forecasts for the second quarter. Starbucks did log its first quarterly sales increase in more than a year, but acknowledged that its turnaround effort is far from complete. In the bond market, Treasury yields eased further. The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 4.16% from 4.19% late Tuesday. Yields have largely been sinking since an unsettling, unusual spurt higher earlier this month rattled both Wall Street and the U.S. government. That rise had suggested investors worldwide may have been losing faith in the U.S. bond markets reputation as a safe place to park cash.In stock markets abroad, indexes were mixed among mostly modest moves across Europe and Asia. ___AP Business Writers Matt Ott and Elaine Kurtenbach contributed.
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  • About that hug ... Whitmer risks backlash from Democrats as she embraces Trump in Michigan
    apnews.com
    President Donald Trump greets Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer as he arrives on Air Force One at Selfridge Air National Guard Base, Tuesday, April 29, 2025, in Harrison Township, Mich. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)2025-04-30T04:03:05Z Follow live updates on President Donald Trump and his administration HARRISON TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) First came their much-analyzed Oval Office moment. Next, their subject-to-interpretation hug. The two interactions between President Donald Trump and a sometime antagonist, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, reflect the Democratic governors efforts to move past last years hard-fought campaign and find common ground with the Republican president at risk of political backlash.Whitmer, a potential 2028 presidential candidate, shared a hug with Trump as he arrived in her home state on Tuesday, less than a month after she shielded her face from cameras during an Oval Office appearance alongside Trump. Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer greets President Donald Trump as he arrives on Air Force One at Selfridge Air National Guard Base, Tuesday, April 29, 2025, in Harrison Township, Mich. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer greets President Donald Trump as he arrives on Air Force One at Selfridge Air National Guard Base, Tuesday, April 29, 2025, in Harrison Township, Mich. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Its typical for a governor or another high-ranking state official to greet the president when he steps off Air Force One in their state, a tradition that has historically transcended partisanship. But the embrace between Trump and Whitmer was notable at a time when Americans are increasingly saying Trumps priorities are off and Democrats are agitating for their leaders to take a more confrontational approach to the president. Trump was in Michigan to mark his 100th day in office at an evening rally and an earlier announcement with Whitmer of a new fighter jet mission at a National Guard base outside Detroit. The new jets at the base will protect a major economic driver for the area for years to come and represent a big win for Whitmer. The governor credited her Oval Office meeting with Trump for securing the bases future. My job is to do the right thing for the people of Michigan, she told The Associated Press after her appearance with Trump on Tuesday. Im not thinking about anything beyond that, and I know its hard for people to get their head around. Asked about her hug with Trump, Whitmer chose to describe the encounter differently. She said Trump greeted her first when he stepped off the plane, and he shook hands and he leaned in to tell me, you know, congratulations and that I was a big reason that we were making an announcement today, and I was grateful for that. She said working with him on some issues doesnt preclude her from criticizing him on others, adding that shes been clear with Trump that his tariffs have been damaging her state.I had to be there because this was a big, important thing for the state of Michigan, she said. Now, he is going to go off to the rally and say a lot of things I disagree with, that Ill fight against, and thats fine, but, you know, my job is to do everything I can for the people of Michigan. President Donald Trump listens as Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer speaks to members of the Michigan National Guard at Selfridge Air National Guard Base, Tuesday, April 29, 2025, in Harrison Township, Mich. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) President Donald Trump listens as Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer speaks to members of the Michigan National Guard at Selfridge Air National Guard Base, Tuesday, April 29, 2025, in Harrison Township, Mich. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Earlier this month, Whitmer stood by in the Oval Office as Trump signed executive orders and assailed his political opponents, not long after she had delivered a speech nearby that offered soft criticism of him but emphasized shared priorities. Later, The New York Times published a photo showing her using folders to shield her face from cameras while in the Oval Office. Whitmers office later said in a statement that she was surprised that she was brought into the room and that her presence is not an endorsement of the actions taken or statements made at that event.The Trump-Whitmer embrace evoked an infamous greeting more than a decade ago between Chris Christie, then the Republican governor of New Jersey, and Barack Obama, the Democratic president. Weeks before the 2012 election, with Christie and Obama both seeking reelection, the president arrived in New Jersey in the aftermath of the devastating Superstorm Sandy. Obama placed his hand on Christies shoulder, but angry Republicans labeled it a hug, and suggested it contributed to Republican Mitt Romneys loss to Obama. It also reflects the challenge for Democratic governors looking to register their disapproval of Trump and his policies without angering a president bent on retribution against his critics or turning off soft Trump voters whose support they might need in future elections.California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who has also taken heat from some on the left who see him as excessively accommodating of Trump and his policies, showered the president with praise when he landed in Los Angeles to tour wildfire damage during his first week in office. At the time, Newsom was urgently seeking federal disaster funding and looking to dissuade Trump from following through on his threats to extract concessions from California in exchange for financial assistance. ___Cooper reported from Phoenix. JOEY CAPPELLETTI Cappelletti covers politics and state government for The Associated Press in Michigan. He is based in Lansing. twitter mailto JONATHAN J. COOPER Cooper writes about national politics from Arizona and beyond for The Associated Press. Now based in Phoenix, he previously covered politics in Oregon and California. twitter mailto
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  • Podcast: Meta's AI Chatbots Are a Disaster
    www.404media.co
    This week we start with Sam's very in-depth story on Meta's AI chatbots, and how they're essentially posing as licensed therapists. After the break, Jason breaks down the wildly unethical AI-powered research that took place on Reddit. In the subscribers-only section, Joseph explains how the age of realtime deepfake fraud is here after he got a bunch of videos showing scammers do their thing.Listen to the weekly podcast onApple Podcasts,Spotify, orYouTube. Become a paid subscriber for access to this episode's bonus content and to power our journalism.If you become a paid subscriber, check your inbox for an email from our podcast host Transistor for a link to the subscribers-only version! You can also add that subscribers feed to your podcast app of choice and never miss an episode that way. The email should also contain the subscribers-only unlisted YouTube link for the extended video version too. It will also be in the show notes in your podcast player. Instagram's AI Chatbots Lie About Being Licensed TherapistsResearchers Secretly Ran a Massive, Unauthorized AI Persuasion Experiment on Reddit UsersReddit Issuing 'Formal Legal Demands' Against Researchers Who Conducted Secret AI Experiment on UsersThe Age of Realtime Deepfake Fraud Is Here
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  • NFL fines Falcons, DC over Sanders prank call
    www.espn.com
    The NFL has fined the Falcons $250,000 and defensive coordinator Jeff Ulbrich $100,000 in response to a prank call made by Ulbrich's son to Shedeur Sanders during the NFL draft.
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  • Report: Elway driving cart as ex-agent injured
    www.espn.com
    John Elway was the driver of a golf cart when his business partner and former agent fell from the vehicle and suffered life-threatening injuries, according to a TMZ report.
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  • Macron Surprises a Provincial Bar
    www.nytimes.com
    The French president, often seen as remote, wants to get closer to the French people.
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  • Why Trump Sees Himself as a Man of Destiny
    www.nytimes.com
    In the opening chapter of this new term, President Trump has moved with almost messianic fervor to transform America from top to bottom and exact retribution against enemies at the same time. Peter Baker, the chief White House correspondent of The New York Times, surveys Mr. Trumps first 100 days.
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  • Vermont judge orders release of a Palestinian man arrested at his US citizenship interview
    apnews.com
    Mohsen Mahdawi, center, looks on during a pro-Palestinian protest at Columbia University, Thursday, Oct. 12, 2023, in New York. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura, File)2025-04-30T14:38:13Z BURLINGTON, Vt. (AP) A judge on Wednesday ordered the release of a Palestinian man who led protests against the war in Gaza as a student at Columbia University and was arrested by immigration officials during an interview about finalizing his U.S. citizenship.U.S. District Judge Geoffrey Crawford in Burlington, Vermont, issued his ruling following a hearing on Mohsen Mahdawi, a legal permanent resident for 10 years, who was arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents on April 14. He has been held at the Northwest State Correctional Facility in St. Albans.A judge later issued an order barring the government from removing him from the state or country.Mahdawis lawyers say he was detained in retaliation for his speech advocating for Palestinian human rights.According to court documents, his notice to appear in immigration court says he is removable under the Immigration and Nationality Act because Secretary of State Marco Rubio determined his presence and activities would have serious adverse foreign policy consequences and would compromise a compelling U.S. foreign policy interest. The government argues that Mahdawis detention is a constitutionally valid aspect of the deportation process and that district courts are barred from hearing challenges to how and when such proceedings are begun.District courts play no role in that process. Consequently, this Court lacks jurisdiction over Petitioners claims, which are all, at bottom, challenges to removal proceedings, wrote Michael Drescher, Vermonts acting U.S. attorney. According to a court filing, Mahdawi was born in a refugee camp in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and moved to the United States in 2014. He recently completed coursework at Columbia and was expected to graduate in May before beginning a masters degree program there in the fall.As a student, Mahdawi was an outspoken critic of Israels military campaign in Gaza and organized campus protests until March 2024. He cofounded the Palestinian Student Union at Columbia with Mahmoud Khalil, another Palestinian permanent resident of the U.S. and graduate student who was detained by immigration authorities. An immigration judge in Louisiana ruled that the governments assertion that Khalils presence in the U.S. posed potentially serious foreign policy consequences satisfied the requirements for deportation. RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • Whats that rash? Put some thought into asking Google for medical help
    apnews.com
    A health-related query on Google is displayed on a computer screen in New York on Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Patrick Sison)2025-04-30T13:56:49Z Dr. Google is often on call for worried patients, but it may not give the best advice.Doctors say internet searches for medical information should be done cautiously, especially with artificial intelligence playing a growing role.Information from the right websites can teach patients about symptoms and prepare them for a doctors visit. But a poorly done search might inflame anxiety well before someone reaches the waiting room. Its important to know the source of the information you find and to avoid trying to diagnose your health issue.Here are questions to keep in mind if you seek medical help online.Whats your source?When you do a search, dont automatically click the first link. It may not contain the best answers.Some companies pay to have their websites listed at the top of a results page. Those links may be listed as sponsored.Scroll for results that come from a source you can trust for medical information. That can include big health systems like the Mayo Clinic or sites run by government agencies like the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.Weve gotten so used to clicking on that first link, says John Grohol, a psychologist who specializes in online behavior. For your health information, especially when it is personal, you want to think about it. Should I use AI?That depends on what it tells you.More people are using artificial intelligence to get quick answers pulled from a variety of internet sources. Some searches also will generate an AI summary at the top of the results page.But an AI answer may not say where it got the information. That makes it hard to judge credibility.AI also can be prone to hallucinations, an industry term for issues that cause the technology to make stuff up. Be especially wary of this if no source is cited.What should I ask?How you phrase a question plays a big role in the results you see. Doctors say patients should search for information based on symptoms, not an expected diagnosis.Youve got to ask at the very beginning the right questions, said Dr. Eric Boose of the Cleveland Clinic.That means asking, What could cause a lump to form under my skin? instead of Is the lump under my skin cancer?Focusing on a diagnosis means you may miss other explanations, especially if you just click the first few links listed in the results.For some issues, you should skip the search altogether. If you are having chest pains, experiencing dizziness of showing signs of a stroke, seek help immediately.You dont want to delay something that should be treated within a certain amount of time, said Dr. Olivier Gherardi, medical director of Brown University Health Urgent Care.Can the internet diagnose a problem?No. Leave that to the real doctors who are trained to ask questions that lead to a diagnosis.Blood in your urine could mean cancer. It also might be caused by kidney stones or an infection.Unexplained weight loss also could be a sign of cancer. Or it could reflect an overactive thyroid or a new job that causes you to move around more.Some testing and a visit with a doctor who knows your medical history may be the best medicine in these situations. There are a lot of symptoms that overlap between minor conditions and major medical problems, said Dr. Sarah Sams, a board member with the American Academy of Family Physicians.____The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institutes Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content. TOM MURPHY Murphy covers how people and businesses navigate the U.S. health care system. He is a member of APs Health and Science team. mailto
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  • Regulation of PV interneuron plasticity by neuropeptide-encoding genes
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 30 April 2025; doi:10.1038/s41586-025-08933-zIncreasing the activity of individual parvalbumin-expressing interneurons in the mouse brain modulates the number and strength of inhibitory parvalbumin synapses received by these cells through changes in the expression of the neuropeptide-encoding genes Vgf and Scg2.
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  • Using life cycle assessment to drive innovation for sustainable cool clouds
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 30 April 2025; doi:10.1038/s41586-025-08832-3A life cycle assessment study is used to examine the impacts of advanced cooling technologies on cloud infrastructure, from virtual machines to server architecture, data centre buildings and the grid.
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  • What to know ahead of the Miami Grand Prix
    www.espn.com
    Everything you need as Formula 1 heads to Miami for round six of the 2025 season.
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  • F1's next wave is here and it starts with Antonelli, Bearman
    www.espn.com
    Kimi Antonelli and Ollie Bearman grew up together on the road to F1. Now the friends are living their dream.
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  • As Trump Cuts Foreign Aid, What Does It Mean for the Gates Foundation?
    www.nytimes.com
    As the Trump administration dismantles foreign aid, Bill Gates, whose philanthropy is devoted to global health, is trying to talk to anyone with the presidents ear.
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  • Elise Stefanik, Cabinet Hopes Dashed, Considers Her Next Move
    www.nytimes.com
    The New York Republican is contemplating a run for governor and nursing a feud with the House speaker after seeing her cabinet dream evaporate.
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  • Weak GDP report tied to tariffs has Trump trying to blame Biden on the state of the economy
    apnews.com
    President Donald Trump speaks during a cabinet meeting at the White House, Wednesday, April 30, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)2025-04-30T15:53:30Z WASHINGTON (AP) President Donald Trump got worrisome news on Wednesday about how the U.S. economy is battening down for potential fallout from his tariffs and he was quick to try to pin the blame on his Democratic predecessor, Joe Biden.The government reported that the U.S. economy shrank at an annual rate of 0.3% during the first three months of the year. Behind the decline was a surge in imports as companies tried to front-run the sweeping tariffs on autos, steel, aluminum and almost every country. And even positive signs of increased domestic consumption indicated that purchases might be occurring before the import taxes lead to price hikes.Trump pointed his finger at Biden as the stock market fell Wednesday morning in response to the gross domestic product report.This is Bidens Stock Market, not Trumps, the Republican president, who took office in January, posted on his social media site. Tariffs will soon start kicking in, and companies are starting to move into the USA in record numbers. Our Country will boom, but we have to get rid of the Biden Overhang. This will take a while, has NOTHING TO DO WITH TARIFFS. But the GDP report gives Democrats ammunition to claim that Trumps policies could shove the economy into a recession. Trump has been in office for only 100 days, and costs, chaos and corruption are already on the rise, said Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. The economy is slowing, prices are going up, and middle-class families are feeling the pinch. The report landed as Trump is trying to put the focus on new corporate investments in the U.S. as he spends the week celebrating his 100th day in office. He planned remarks later in the day on the subject. Trumps economic message contains some clashing arguments and dismisses data that raises red flags.He wants credit for an aggressive first 100 days back in the White House that included mass layoffs of federal workers and the start of a trade war with 145% in new tariffs against China. He also wants to blame the negative response of the financial markets on Biden, who left office months ago. Hes also saying his tariffs are negotiating tools to generate trade deals but at the same time banking on hundreds of billions of dollars in tariff revenues to help cover his planned income tax cuts. Trump highlighted the positive aspects of the GDP report at a Wednesday Cabinet meeting. But that meeting inadvertently revealed how his administration is also trying to take credit for policies that involve the Biden administration as Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick talked about his recent trip to Arizona to see the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.'s computer chip factories.TSMC notes on its website that it announced plans in May 2020, during Trumps first presidency as the coronavirus pandemic disrupted the global economy, to build its first plant in Arizona. It announced a second factory in December 2022, when Biden was in office. After getting up to $6.6 billion in commitments in 2024 from the bipartisan CHIPS and Science Act, TSMC announced plans for a third plant. Trump dismissed the importance of the government support that Biden made possible for computer chip factories to open domestically.Theyre building because of the tariffs, Trump said.Asked about his tariffs causing inflation, Trump told ABC News in a Tuesday interview that the economy would have eventually imploded if he didnt impose import taxes on allies including the European Union, Canada, Mexico, Japan, South Korea and India.Everybodys gonna be just fine, Trump assured.Democrats statements after the GDP report noted how quickly the economy, which still has a healthy 4.2% unemployment rate, appears to lose momentum within weeks of Trump returning.In just 100 days, President Trump has taken the U.S. economy from strong, stable growth to negative GDP, said Heather Boushey, a former member of Bidens White House Council of Economic Advisers. This astonishing turn of fortune is directly due to the incoherence of his economic policy and his mismanagement of federal policy more generally. But White House trade adviser Peter Navarro told reporters that the GDP drop was a one-shot deal because of the increased imports, which mathematically subtract from the measure of economic activity. Navarro said that the individual and business income tax cuts planned by Trump would help growth in the months ahead.All were seeing is good, strong news, Navarro said. So the idea that theres a recession coming should be heavily discounted. JOSH BOAK Boak covers the White House and economic policy for The Associated Press. He joined the AP in 2013. twitter mailto
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  • A woodpecker has invaded a Massachusetts neighborhood. Residents are taking it in stride
    apnews.com
    In this photograph provided by Janelle Favaloro, a woodpecker rests on a pick-up truck door, admiring its reflection in the sideview mirror, outside a home during April 2025, in Rockport, Mass. (Janelle Favaloro photo via AP)2025-04-30T04:05:35Z ROCKPORT, Mass. (AP) Rockport residents have a history of fighting off invaders, but not this time.During the War of 1812, townsfolk in the tiny fishing village hurled rocks at British soldiers using their stockings as slings. Now, theyre slinging trash bags and towels over the side mirrors of their cars to protect them from a destructive and determined pileated woodpecker.Over the last few weeks, the bird has broken more than two dozen mirrors and at least one vehicles side window. But residents are taking the violence in stride.Everybodys having a good laugh about it, said Ben Favaloro. Nobody wants harm to the bird. Hes always welcome back.Favaloro, who has lived in the neighborhood for nearly four decades, said hes seen the occasional woodpecker on the side of houses in years past and he removed several trees last summer that were damaged beyond recovery. But the attacking of glass is a new phenomenon. Initially, we just noticed that all the mirrors had been adjusted. It looked like maybe theres a child in the neighborhood that was going around pushing the mirrors down, he said. But then his sister-in-law spotted the roughly 21-inch (53-centimeter) tall woodpecker on Favaloros truck, pecking at the side mirror.Given their enormous size, piliated woodpeckers are plenty strong enough to break mirrors, but such behavior is definitely weird, said Pamela Hunt, senior biologist for avian conservation at the New Hampshire Audubon. Lots of birds will be aggressive against reflections in mirrors, but I dont usually hear about woodpeckers, she said. They dont usually peck at their opponents, they kind of chase them around.She said the woodpecker might be a little stupid and is trying to defend its territory and scare away what it sees as competition. The damage coincides with the mating season for pileated woodpeckers and resident Barbara Smith said shed be fine with lots of little woodpeckers around, though she hopes they wont be as destructive. Woodpeckers have to do what woodpeckers do, she said. Good luck, woodpecker.Favalro said the woodpecker and the media attention it has attracted has been a fun distraction from everything else going on in the world.This small town of Rockport that I live in is one of the safest communities around, he said. I think this is probably one of the biggest crimes in years. Its kind of funny, but its nice as well.___Ramer reported from Concord, New Hampshire.
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  • How MAGA's obsession with 'pronatalism' is harmful to the LGBTQ+ community
    www.pride.com
    Family values conservatives have been obsessed with heterosexual marriages and babies for decades. They have fought to curtail womens rights in an effort to keep them pregnant and out of civic life, decimated abortion access, attempted to limit access to birth control, and tried to define marriage and family in the narrowest terms possible. Now, declining birth rates have the MAGA crowd pushing policies designed to increase the number of babies born in the United States every year. While this new desire to increase the population seems in line with the traditional family values Republicans have been espousing for years, there is a more sinister ideology at the heart of this new movement: pronatalism. This used to be a fringe topic, but now pronatalism seems to be a cornerstone of the modern Republican agenda. In March President Donald Trump said hell be known as the fertilization president, Elon Musk father to 14 children recently told Fox News that civilization will disappear if the birthrate doesnt increase, and Vice President JD Vance summed up the problem at the March for Life rally in January when he said, "Let me say very simply: I want more babies in the United States of America."But what is pronatalism, and should you be worried?What is pronatalism?While the exact definition is murky and different factions have slightly different beliefs, pronatalism is a movement that tries to promote increasing pregnancies in an effort to combat the declining birthrate which makes the decision to have children not just a personal one, but as a tool for population growth.Proponents of the ideology range from Silicon Valley elites to the religious right to tradwives, and new right anti-feminist movement followers. Some believe in conceiving children naturally while others are proponents of in-vitro fertilization (IVF), and while they may disagree on womens roles in the family unit, they all agree that more babies is the solution to plummeting birth rates and economic woes. Democrats are also concerned about declining birth rates because it could spell disaster int he future for programs like Social Security and Medicare which rely on younger workers paying into the system to support older people no longer in the workforce. During the presidential campaign, former Vice President Kamala Harris even proposed a $6,000 tax credit for parents of newborns. But pronatalists are largely conservative and dont support abortion access and reproductive freedom, or social safety nets like affordable childcare, paid family leave, universal healthcare, that would make childbearing more accessible.To remain stable, a country must reproduce at replacement rate, which is 2.1 children per women, but currently the United States is averaging 1.6 children per woman. Pronatalists claim this is a catastrophic failure that needs to be corrected, reducing women to their reproductive potential.Why is it important for the LGBTQ+ community to be aware of pronatalism?Pronatalism may seem like straight peoples business, but the LGBTQ+ community will likely be affected too. In an article for The Nation, journalist Elizabeth Gregory wrote that the conservative protnatalists anti-gay and anti-transgender policies aim to push the growing group of young people who identify as LGBTQ back into the closet, and into heterosexual relationships and more pregnancies, planned and unplanned.Many pronatalists also believe in traditional gender roles and rolling back access to abortions, contraction, and hormone therapy, all of which have real-world consequences for queer people. Far-right Republicans have been attacking trans rights and passing sweeping anti-trans bills for years now, but some have started using pronatalist talking points to strip the LGBTQ+ community of their rights. In 2022, a conservative Idaho representative condemned gender-affirming healthcare for transgender youth because accessing care may lead to children being sterilized and unable to have children of their own in the future. We are not talking about the life of the child, but we are talking about the potential to give life to another generation, Rep. Julianne Young said, the Idaho Press reported. In a similar vein, earlier this year, conservative Michigan lawmaker Josh Schriver tried to pass a resolution to condemn same-sex marriage with the argument that, This is a biological necessity to preserve and grow our human race, Bridge Michigan reported.Elon Musk and JD Vance are big fansPronatalism has become a unifying ideology bringing together modern tech moguls like Musk with religious conservatives like Speaker of the House Mike Johnson and Vice President Vance. The Tesla billionaire and father to 14 children born to four different mothers, has been an outspoken pronatalist for years, often sounding the alarm bell that decreasing populations sizes could destroy the world. He has repeatedly taken to X (formerly Twitter) to say that population collapse due to low birth rates is a much bigger risk to civilization than global warming, that instead of teaching fear of pregnancy, we should teach fear of childlessness, and that "Low birth rates will end civilization.Vance, an anti-abortion Catholic who called Democratic leaders childless cat ladies, has proposed a $5000 child tax credit and been vocal about his pronatalist views that Americans need to be having more babies, and that the Democratic Party is anti-family and anti-child. Prominent pronatalist advocates Malcolm and Simone Collins, who have four children with a fifth on the way, proposed that Trump should give out a National Medal of Motherhood to encourage women to have more babies because they agree with Musk and see the declining birth rates as a extinction level event."Pronatalism has sort of become the global warming of the right. It's a broad statistical issue that is going to lead to the collapse of our civilization," Malcolm told USA Today. "And, for whatever reason, the other side is unable to acknowledge it."Modern day eugenicsThe second ever pronatalist Natal Conference was held in Austin, Texas earlier this year and featured pro-eugenics speakers and promoters of racist pseudoscience. Many on the religious right may agree that pumping out more babies will solve society's problems, but the Silicon Valley elites are more open to things like IQ screenings for IVF embryos, The Guardian reports. After Texas banned nearly all abortions after six weeks of pregnancy, the fertility rate increased for the first time since 2024, with an 8% increase among Hispanic women since 2021, but pronatalists, who are overwhelmingly conservative, only want a certain kind of person to have more babies. Its about having more babies, but its important to ask whose babies, Patrik Hermansson, a researcher at Hope Not Hate, told The Guardian. Its about promoting the idea that certain people should have babies that have been improved with positive eugenics.Much like the racial hygiene programs of the Nazi party, and the forced sterilization of the disabled and mentally ill in the United States, the more extreme proponents of pronatalism believe in breeding a better human race.At Natal Con, one speaker linked pronatalism to the great replacement theory, which is a white nationalist conspiracy theory that there is a plot to erase white people through immigration and white people having fewer babies than other races think white nationalists chanting Jews will not replace us at the deadly Charlottesville rally in 2017. Some adherents to the pronatalism ideology believe it is a solution to the great replacement theory."So by a very superficial gloss, [today's pronatalist movements] could appear to be, let's say, almost a libertarian approach to babymaking," Alexandra Stern, a UCLA professor and author of books on the American history of eugenics, told NPR. "But if you look at the underlying, driving ideologies, la Charles Murray and others who have written about who should be having babies and who should not be having babies, it often comes down to ideologies of genetic determinism and who is more fit or less fit.Using IVF and screening embryos for IQ, risk of depression, and other markers is part of what Collins calls this polygenics. Although the anti-abortion far-right Republicans disagree with this type of intervention, Trump seems to be siding with Musk and the rest of the tech pronatalists when he signed a pro-IVF executive order.The LGBTQ+ community is being attacked left and right by the White House and conservatives across the country, and the way pronatalists push gender ideology, control of womens bodies, deciding who is worthy of having children, and policies that could force queer people back into the closet, is a risk to LGBTQ+ people everywhere.
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  • Watch lesbian drama 'Hot Milk's steamy & haunting trailer now
    www.pride.com
    Set against the sweltering backdrop of coastal Spain, Hot Milk is shaping up to be one of the most emotionally-charged and visually rich queer dramas of the summer.Based on Deborah Levys acclaimed 2016 novel, the film stars Sex Education's Emma Mackey as Sofia, a young woman caught between her ailing mother (Fiona Shaw) and surrendering to the intoxicating pull of Ingrid (Vicky Krieps), a seductive traveler she meets along the way.Written and directed by Rebecca Lenkiewicz (Disobedience) and shot like a hazy dream by cinematographer Christopher Blauvelt, the movie promises a slow-burn of identity, repression, desire, and unraveling family tiesall wrapped in a heat-soaked psychological drama.It premiered at the Berlin Film Festival in February but hits theaters later this year. Ahead of its release, IndieWire released an exclusive trailerand if first impressions mean anything, this is one lesbian coming-of-age film we cannot miss.Keep reading for our full breakdown of the trailer, and why we think Hot Milk is about to become your next queer cinema obsession.1. Emma Mackey is about to crush itThis is not the Barbie version of Mackey, nor is it the same as her Maeve Wiley character in Sex Education. The character of Sofia comes across as a lot darker and more twisted, so much so that the trailer even shows her on-screen lover referring to her as a monster. Either way, we cannot wait to see what she does with this role.2. The sex/sexual tension will be off the chartsWhoever cast Mackey and Krieps as the onscreen couple deserves a raise. Even though we havent seen how this will all play out yet, it looks like these two might go down as one of our favorite onscreen lesbian couples.3. Its totally going to mess with our mindsThe movie is categorized as a coming-of-age psychological drama on IMDb, and the trailer depicts that without needing to be told. It looks to us like itll be a slow burn well worth the wait.4. Its already deserving of some awardsSometimes, trailers give away too much, but this trailer gave away just the right amount to get us intrigued. Everything from the story to the acting to the color grading looks award-worthy, and we cant wait to see how many it acquires after its released.5. The supporting cast looks amazingListen, weve had a lot of Harry Potter alumni appearing in some high-profile films and TV recentlywere looking at you, Jason Isaacs in The White Lotusand Hot Milk is no exception. Fiona Shaw, who played Aunt Petunia in Potter, takes on the role of Sofias mother, Rose. From what weve seen in the trailer, shes about to deliver, honey.Hot Milk debuts in theaters on Friday, June 27, from IFC Films. Check out the trailer below.
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  • Comparative connectomics of <i>Drosophila</i> descending and ascending neurons
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 30 April 2025; doi:10.1038/s41586-025-08925-zThree electron microscopy datasets are combined to provide a complete connectomic description of the neural circuitry that makes up the neck connective in Drosophila, including the descending neurons, ascending neurons and sensory ascending neurons.
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  • An asymmetric fission island driven by shell effects in light fragments
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 30 April 2025; doi:10.1038/s41586-025-08882-7Measurements of fission fragments for 100 fissioning systems are used to map an asymmetric fission island, providing evidence for the role played by the deformation induced by a closed 36-proton shell.
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  • Marinakis gives up control of UCL-chasing Forest
    www.espn.com
    Evangelos Marinakis has taken a step back from his ownership duties at Nottingham Forest as the club gear up for Champions League qualification.
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  • Athletic aim for Williams stay amid Bara, PL links
    www.espn.com
    Ernesto Valverde has said he's hopeful Athletic Club can fend off interest from Barcelona and the Premier League and keep Nico Williams in Bilbao next season.
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  • Sean Diddy Combss Path From Harlem to Stardom, and Now Federal Court
    www.nytimes.com
    As Puffy, Diddy or Love, the mogul found success and trouble. After years of accusations with few consequences, hell stand trial next month.
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  • Vietnam Veterans Worry That a Wars Hard Lessons Are Being Forgotten
    www.nytimes.com
    The conflict profoundly affected the American troops who served there, as well as the nations culture and politics. But 50 years later, veterans say they see its mistakes being repeated.
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  • A Renter Made a 100-Year-Old Apartment Look Like a Million Bucks (For Way Less!)
    www.apartmenttherapy.com
    Nearly everything in Michaella Beckers Philadelphia rental is thrifted, DIYed, or trash-picked. READ MORE...
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  • This summer at the movies, superheroes, from Superman to Fantastic Four, return
    apnews.com
    This image released by Warner Bros.Pictures shows David Corenswet in a scene from "Superman." (Warner Bros. Pictures via AP)2025-04-29T13:37:00Z Superman already has a lot on his broad shoulders. It seems unfair to add the fate of Hollywood to his worries.But thats the kind of pressure that comes with being one of the biggest stars in the comic book universe, who is getting a grand reintroduction at a tumultuous time. Thankfully hes not doing it alone Marvel Studios is also returning to theaters in a big way with two movies this summer, Thunderbolts and The Fantastic Four: First Steps.Five years after the COVID-19 pandemic brought movie business to a halt, and two years after the strikes, the industry has yet to fully recover. Critics may have complained of superhero fatigue, but after several summers of depleted offerings, its clear that theyre a vital part of the mix especially when theyre good. RELEASE CALENDAR Heres whats coming to theaters and streaming from May to August The $4 billion summer of Barbenheimer may be most remembered for those two movies, but it didnt get to that number without the Guardians of the Galaxy and Spider-Man movies, the second- and third-highest grossing of the season. The filmmakers behind s ome of the summers biggest movies spoke to The Associated Press about what to expect in 2025. AP AUDIO: This summer at the movies, superheroes, from Superman to Fantastic Four, return AP correspondent Julie Walker reports on the summer movies coming out, from Superman to Fantastic Four, return Summer Movie MathSummer begins early in Hollywood, on the first weekend in May. Kids might still be in school, and pools might still be closed, but that kickoff can make or break that pivotal 123-day corridor that has historically accounted for around 40% of the annual box office. Last year was the first in many that didnt launch with a Marvel movie and it showed the business limped along for weeks until Disney came to the rescue with Inside Out 2 and Deadpool & Wolverine.This year, the powerful studio is back in that familiar spot with Thunderbolts, which brings together misfits and antiheroes like Yelena Belova (Florence Pugh), Red Guardian (David Harbour) and Bucky Barnes (Sebastian Stan). This image released by Marvel Studios shows, from left, David Harbour, Hannah John-Kamen, Sebastian Stan, Florence Pugh and Wyatt Russell in a scene from Thunderbolts. (Disney-Marvel Studios via AP) This image released by Marvel Studios shows, from left, David Harbour, Hannah John-Kamen, Sebastian Stan, Florence Pugh and Wyatt Russell in a scene from Thunderbolts. (Disney-Marvel Studios via AP) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Its a fun twist on what a movie like this could be, said director Jake Schreier. There are some places were gonna go that are different from what you would normally expect.He added: Its trying to be a movie about something and the moment were in not in a political sense, but just where everybodys at and what everyones been going through.The Memorial Day weekend could also be a behemoth a few weeks later with the live action Lilo & Stitch and Mission: Impossible The Final Reckoning storming theaters. With a new Jurassic World, a live-action How to Train Your Dragon and a Formula One movie also on the schedule through June and July, the summer 2025 season has the potential to be the biggest in the post-COVID era.Before the pandemic, all but one summer since 2007 broke the $4 billion mark. Since 2020, only one has: 2023, led by Barbie. Saving Superman (and the DC Universe)After three Guardians movies, James Gunn knows enough to know that he doesnt have much control over whether people buy tickets for his movies. His job is to make something good, entertaining and worthy of the audience.But thats also possibly underplaying the pressure of taking on Superman and overseeing a unified DC universe that kicks off with Superman on July 11. He considers it the first true superhero movie hes ever made.Its a personal journey for Superman thats entirely new, Gunn said. It is, first and foremost, about what does Superman learn about himself. But its also about the robots and the flying dogs and all that stuff. Its taking a very real person and putting them in the middle of this outrageous situation and outrageous world and playing with that. I think its a lot of fun because of that. This image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows Nicholas Hoult, left, David Corenswet, center, and director James Gunn on the set of Superman. (Jessica Miglio/Warner Bros. Pictures via AP) This image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows Nicholas Hoult, left, David Corenswet, center, and director James Gunn on the set of Superman. (Jessica Miglio/Warner Bros. Pictures via AP) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More The film introduces a new actor to the role of Superman/Clark Kent in David Corenswet, who stars alongside Rachel Brosnahan as Lois Lane and Nicholas Hoult as Lex Luthor. Gunn said to expect different things from both.It was a lot of fun making a Lex that is actually going to kill Superman, he said. Hes pretty scary.The film is also seeding the rest of the DCU, Gunn said. If it works as a movie in a basic way, thats what we need to happen, thats what I care about.Superman as a brand has always trailed Batman at the box office. None of the Zack Snyder films crossed $1 billion, not accounting for inflation, while both Christopher Nolan Dark Knight sequels did. But Gunn isnt thinking a lot about that.I just want to make a decent movie that makes a little money, Gunn said.Marvels First FamilySupermans not the only legacy brand getting a splashy reintroduction this summer. A new Fantastic Four crew, assembled for the first time under umbrella of the Marvel Cinematic Universe and Kevin Feige, is heading to theaters July 25.Fantastic Four is a comic Ive loved since I was a kid, said director Matt Shakman. They are the legendary heroes of the 60s that the Marvel silver age was built on. This image release by 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios shows, from left, Ebon Moss-Bachrach as Ben Grimm/The Thing, Vanessa Kirby as Sue Storm/Invisible Woman, Pedro Pascal as Reed Richards/Mister Fantastic and Joseph Quinn as Johnny Storm/Human Torch, in a scene from The Fantastic Four: First Steps. ( 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios via AP) This image release by 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios shows, from left, Ebon Moss-Bachrach as Ben Grimm/The Thing, Vanessa Kirby as Sue Storm/Invisible Woman, Pedro Pascal as Reed Richards/Mister Fantastic and Joseph Quinn as Johnny Storm/Human Torch, in a scene from The Fantastic Four: First Steps. ( 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios via AP) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, The Fantastic Four is among Marvels longest-running comics series. But it has not had the most distinguished history on film, including two with Chris Evans and one with Michael B. Jordan.The Fantastic Four: First Steps is set in a retro-futuristic 1960s New York, where Pedro Pascals Reed Richards is basically Steve Jobs meets Einstein whos creating technology thats changing the world and Vanessa Kirbys Sue Storm is essentially the secretary-general of the U.N., Shakman said.A television veteran with directing credits on shows like WandaVision and Its Always Sunny in Philadelphia, Shakman said he wants to do right by the characters, and audience.Its working on an incredibly large scale in terms of world building, but its also no different from all of the great comedies and dramas that Ive done, Shakman said. In the end, it comes down to character, it comes down to relationships, it comes down to heart and humor.Plus, he feels a responsibility to the idea of the big summer movie.It was the joy of my childhood. ... A lot of it has to do with building worlds and entering into a place of wonder, he said. Thats what I felt when I saw Indiana Jones when I was a kid and its what I hope people feel when they see Fantastic Four this summer.Why summer 2025 might be a big year for movies Christopher McDonald, left, and Adam Sandler in a scene from "Happy Gilmore 2." (Scott Yamano/Netflix via AP) Christopher McDonald, left, and Adam Sandler in a scene from "Happy Gilmore 2." (Scott Yamano/Netflix via AP) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More This image released by Disney shows the character Stitch, left, and Sydney Agudong, as Nani, in a scene from "Lilo & Stitch." (Disney via AP) This image released by Disney shows the character Stitch, left, and Sydney Agudong, as Nani, in a scene from "Lilo & Stitch." (Disney via AP) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Studios know that superheroes alone dont make a robust theatrical marketplace and there are plenty of other options on the menu including franchises, event movies and independents: There are family pics (Smurfs, Elio, The Bad Guys 2); action and adventures (Ballerina, The Karate Kid: Legends); horrors, thrillers and slashers (28 Years Later, I Know What You Did Last Summer, M3GAN 2.0); romances (Materialists, Jane Austen Wrecked My Life); dramas (Sorry, Baby, The Life of Chuck); a new Wes Anderson movie (The Phoenician Scheme); and comedies (Freakier Friday, Bride Hard, The Naked Gun) though one of the most anticipated, Happy Gilmore 2, will be on Netflix.The frequency of movies, the cadence, the sheer number of them and the perceived quality and excitement surrounding this lineup is like almost like never before, said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for Comscore. Draw me a blueprint of a perfect summer lineup: 2025 is it.One of the biggest movies of the season may be Jurassic World Rebirth, the seventh movie in a $6 billion franchise. Even its poorly received predecessor made $1 billion. This time they enlisted a new filmmaker, self-proclaimed Jurassic Park superfan Gareth Edwards, and the originals screenwriter for a new adventure with Scarlett Johansson, Mahershala Ali and Jonathan Bailey.People say, like, do you feel pressure and the most pressure I feel is from myself as a fan and to Steven Spielberg, to not disappoint him, Edwards said. Weirdly whats great about doing a Jurassic movie is that everybody knows deep down that like half the reason theyre in this business is because of that film and Stevens work. Bechir Sylvain, Jonathan Bailey, and Scarlett Johansson in a scene from " Jurassic World Rebirth. (Jasin Boland/Universal Pictures and Amblin Entertainment via AP) Bechir Sylvain, Jonathan Bailey, and Scarlett Johansson in a scene from " Jurassic World Rebirth. (Jasin Boland/Universal Pictures and Amblin Entertainment via AP) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Its fitting, in a way, that 2025 marks the 50th anniversary of whats considered the first summer blockbuster: Jaws.Edwards said he was born into that world of big summer blockbusters that shaped his early love of movies. Directing one, he said, is kind of the dream. You get the chance to swing for the fences.And the unstable economy might work in the industrys favor, at least when it comes to moviegoing. Even with increased ticket prices, theatrical movies remain the most affordable entertainment outside of the home and attendance tends to increase during recession years. The annual domestic box office crossed $10 billion for the first time in 2009. More recently, the week the tariffs were announced, A Minecraft Movie doubled its opening weekend projections, and all of those ticket buyers saw trailers and posters for everything to come. It was, Dergarabedian noted, one of the only positive financial stories that week. Top Gun: Maverick filmmaker Joseph Kosinski knows a few things about launching a pricey big screen spectacle into a turbulent marketplace. But hes feeling good about the summer and F1s place within it. Warner Bros. will release F1 on June 27.This is the summer where all this product that weve all been working on for the last few years is finally coming into the marketplace, so Im very optimistic, Kosinski said. By the end of this summer, hopefully people arent talking about being in a funk anymore and it feels like we got our mojo back and were off to the races. LINDSEY BAHR Bahr has been a film writer and critic for The Associated Press since 2014. twitter instagram mailto
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  • First accuser resumes testimony at Harvey Weinsteins #MeToo retrial
    apnews.com
    Miriam Haley, center, an accuser testifying at Harvey Weinstein's rape trial, arrives to the courtroom after a break in New York, Tuesday, April 29, 2025. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)2025-04-30T15:02:30Z NEW YORK (AP) A former TV production assistant resumed testifying Wednesday at Harvey Weinstein s retrial, elaborating on the weeks leading up to the July 2006 date when he allegedly forced oral sex on her. Miriam Haley is the first of the ex-Hollywood honchos accusers to testify at the retrial, which is happening because New Yorks highest court overturned Weinsteins 2020 conviction. The 73-year-old former studio boss has pleaded not guilty and denies sexually assaulting anyone. Haley testified at the original trial and was candid last year about her mixed feelings about repeating the experience. Weinsteins attorneys havent yet had their chance to question her and potentially try to poke holes in her account. But the defense has sought vigorously if often unsuccessfully to rein in the scope of Haleys testimony by objecting to prosecutors questions, such as multiple queries about whether she had any sexual interest in Weinstein. Haley said she did not. The defense has argued that all of Weinsteins accusers consented to sexual encounters with him in hopes of getting work in show business. Haley began her testimony Tuesday by describing how she got to know Weinstein, briefly worked as a production assistant on his companys reality show Project Runway in June 2006 and had a series of interactions with him that were sometimes inappropriate and suggestive, but other times professional and polite. Throughout, Haley said, she was only looking for professional opportunity not sex or romance with the then-powerful producer of such Oscar winners as Shakespeare in Love and Gangs of New York. Haley, who has also gone by the name Mimi Haleyi, hasnt yet delved into the alleged sexual assault that underlies one of the charges against Weinstein. Weinsteins retrial includes charges based on allegations from Haley and another accuser from the original trial, Jessica Mann, who was once an aspiring actor. She alleges that Weinstein raped her in 2013. Hes also being tried, for the first time, on an allegation of forcing oral sex on former model Kaja Sokola in 2006. Her claim wasnt part of the first trial.Mann and Sokola also are expected to testify at some point.The Associated Press generally does not name people who allege they have been sexually assaulted unless they give permission for their names to be used. Haley, Mann and Sokola have done so.
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