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  1. Slovakia's prime minister underwent another operation. He remains in serious condition Slovakia's Prime Minister Robert Fico remains in serious condition and has undergone another operation after being shot multiple times earlier this week in the town of Handlova.
    foxnews.com
  2. In Cannes, Francis Ford Coppola talks Trump, self-financing 'Megalopolis' and why he has no regrets Francis Ford Coppola spent $120 million of his own money to make 'Megalopolis,' selling part of his winery business to help finance the passion project he has been pondering for years.
    foxnews.com
  3. Ex-Baltimore prosecutor and convicted fraudster Marilyn Mosby appeals to Biden for help Marilyn Mosby, the former Baltimore state's attorney, is asking President Biden for a pardon before she is sentenced in federal court this month.
    foxnews.com
  4. Why the Internet Is Boring Now This is an edition of The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here.Ian Bogost has lived through more than a few hype cycles on the internet. The Atlantic contributing writer has been online, and building websites, since the early days of the World Wide Web. I spoke with him about what happens when new technologies age into the mainstream, how the web has in some ways been a victim of its own success, and the parts of the internet that still delight him.First, here are three new stories from The Atlantic: The spat that made Congress even worse The “America First” chaos caucus is forcing a moment of truth. Your childhood home might never stop haunting you. The Web Is FineLora Kelley: Is it fair to say everything online is deteriorating? Or is that too dramatic?Ian Bogost: It’s easy to focus on the stuff that seems bad or broken, because it is noticeable and also because the internet is built for complaining about things. And it’s natural that one of the things we like to complain about the most on the internet is the internet itself. But there’s a lot of stuff online that’s really amazing, and we should be careful to keep that in mind.The things that feel like deterioration are the result of a saturated market. There’s no longer any incentive for tech products to be as good for consumers as they once were. That’s in part a cost issue—a lot of tech was effectively subsidized for years. But also, the delightful or even just straightforwardly functional services created years ago don’t have to be quite so friendly and usable. Because of their success, there’s not as much of a need to satisfy people anymore.These products are now like a lot of other things in our offline lives—fine. When you go to buy a car or a mattress or whatever, it’s just kind of the way it is. We’ve reached that level of cultural ubiquity with computers.Lora: Is it inevitable that products will become boring once they become the mainstream? Is there any way around that, or are we stuck in a cycle of novelty to boredom?Ian: That’s the cycle, and it’s good. Boredom means that something is successful. When things are new, they feel wild and exciting. We don’t know what they mean yet, and there’s a lot of promise—maybe even fear.But for something to truly become successful at a massive scale—for millions or billions of people to develop a relationship with a product or service—the product has to recede into the background again and become ordinary. And once it reaches that point, you stop thinking about it quite so much. You take it for granted.Lora: You have written about your experience using, and building websites on, the internet in the ’90s. What parallels do you see between the early web and this current moment of generative AI?Ian: I remember living through the early days of the web, and we never had any idea that millions and billions of people would be using these data-extraction services. None of that occurred to us at the time. I don’t think there’s a very strong cultural memory of the early days of the web. We have a lot of stories about the excesses of the dot-com era, but the more ordinary stuff didn’t get recorded in the same way.Everything that we did, we had to convince some old-world business that it was worth doing. It was a process of bringing the offline world online. In the decades since, technologists have started disrupting the legacy businesses and sectors through innovation. And that worked really well from the perspective of building markets and building wealth. But it didn’t necessarily make the world better.Generative AI feels more like those early days of the web than social media or the Web 2.0 era did. It’s my hope that maybe we’ll go about this in a way that draws from the lessons learned over the past 30 years—which, of course, we probably won’t. Technologists shouldn’t be trying to blow things up; rather, they should make use of what technology allows in order to do things better, more equitably, and more effectively.Lora: In 2024, do you still find the web to be a site of wonder?Ian: Being able to talk to family and friends as much as I want, for free, is still historically unusual and delightful. The fundamental feature of the internet still exists: I can look out and get a little buzz of delight just from seeing something new.Related: The web became a strip mall. Social media is not what killed the web. Today’s News A New York Times report found that an upside-down flag, a “Stop the Steal” symbol, flew at Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito’s house in January 2021, when the Supreme Court was considering whether to hear a 2020 election case. The man who bludgeoned Nancy Pelosi’s husband in 2022 was sentenced to 30 years in federal prison. He is awaiting a state trial later this month. Daniel Perry, a former Army sergeant who was convicted of murdering a Black Lives Matter protester in 2020, was released from prison yesterday after Texas Governor Greg Abbott granted him a pardon. Dispatches The Books Briefing: Alice Munro’s death was an occasion to praise her life as a writer as much as her actual work, Gal Beckerman writes. Explore all of our newsletters here.Evening Read Illustration by Max Guther The One Place in Airports People Actually Want to BeBy Amanda Mull On a bright, chilly Thursday in February, most of the people inside the Chase Sapphire Lounge at LaGuardia Airport appeared to be doing something largely absent from modern air travel: They were having fun. I arrived at Terminal B before 9:30 a.m., but the lounge had already been in full swing for hours. Most of the velvet-upholstered stools surrounding the circular, marble-topped bar were filled. Travelers who looked like they were heading to couples’ getaways or girls’ weekends clustered in twos or threes, waiting for their mimosas or Bloody Marys … While I ate my breakfast—a brussels-sprout-and-potato hash with bacon and a poached egg ordered using a QR code, which also offered me the opportunity to book a gratis half-hour mini-facial in the lounge’s wellness area—I listened to the 30-somethings at the next table marveling about how nice this whole thing was. That’s not a sentiment you’d necessarily expect to hear about the contrived luxury of an airport lounge. Read the full article.More From The Atlantic Graeme Wood: The UN’s Gaza statistics make no sense. Many Indians don’t trust their elections anymore. Giant heaps of plastic are helping vegetables grow. Culture Break Illustration by The Atlantic. Source: Getty. RIP. The dream of streaming is dead, Jacob Stern writes. The bundles are back.Pick apart. The sad desk salad, a meal that is synonymous with young, overworked white-collar professionals, is getting sadder, Yasmin Tayag writes.Play our daily crossword.Stephanie Bai contributed to this newsletter.When you buy a book using a link in this newsletter, we receive a commission. Thank you for supporting The Atlantic.
    theatlantic.com
  5. Video appears to show Sean "Diddy" Combs assaulting Cassie The 2016 footage, which was obtained and published by CNN, appears to show the rap mogul hitting, dragging and kicking the singer known as Cassie.
    cbsnews.com
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  7. How much are BottleRock Festival tickets to see Pearl Jam, Stevie Nicks, more? Ed Sheeran, Megan Thee Stallion and Norah Jones are just a few of the other huge headliners on the stacked lineup.
    nypost.com
  8. Dow closes above 40,000 for first time, notching new milestone Wall Street investors are increasingly confident of a soft landing for the U.S. economy, pushing financial markets to new highs.
    cbsnews.com
  9. Ben Affleck ‘house-hunting’ in LA according to buzz, Jennifer Lopez seen doing the same as split rumors swirl Rumors have recently surfaced that the couple is on the rocks, but their reps so far have not commented.
    nypost.com
  10. 4 cold case murders in Canada linked to U.S. serial rapist Police said Gary Allen Srery might also be linked to other unsolved murders and sexual assaults in Western Canada.
    cbsnews.com
  11. Biden draws the (US-Mexico border) line at 4,000: Letters to the Editor — May 18, 2024 NY Post readers discuss reports President Biden is weighing an executive order to shut down the US/Mexico border.
    nypost.com
  12. 5 Takeaways From the First Week of Robert Menendez’s Corruption Trial A lawyer for the New Jersey senator pinned much of the blame on his wife. A government official explained halal meat certification.
    nytimes.com
  13. CONMEBOL aumenta de 23 a 26 jugadores por selección en Copa América La CONMEBOL anunció el jueves que amplió de 23 a 26 jugadores la lista de buena fe de cada selección que competirá en la Copa América de Estados Unidos.
    latimes.com
  14. Scottie Scheffler praises police for being 'our protectors,’ describes interactions with them while in custody Scottie Scheffler was "pretty rattled" in the wake of his arrest on Friday, but it was the police who played a role in calming him down.
    foxnews.com
  15. OpenAI disbands safety team focused on risk of artificial intelligence causing ‘human extinction’ A departing executive who co-led the group warned Friday that safety has “taken a backseat to shiny products” at the company.
    nypost.com
  16. Ukraine Asks U.S. to Provide More Intelligence on Targets in Russia American officials say they do not want U.S. weapons used in cross-border attacks or intelligence reports used to strike inside Russia.
    nytimes.com
  17. Agencia deportiva de Bad Bunny demanda a gremio de peloteros por veto. Anuncia a Acuña como cliente La agencia de representación deportiva de Bad Bunny demandó el jueves a la asociación de peloteros y solicitó una orden cautelar contra el gremio para poder seguir trabajando con los clientes de la firma — un grupo que ahora incluye al astro Ronald Acuña Jr.
    latimes.com
  18. Person of interest in custody after Steve Buscemi assaulted in New York City A person is in custody more than a week after actor Steve Buscemi was punched in an apparent random attack in New York City.
    cbsnews.com
  19. Best deals at LG's huge Memorial Day appliance sale: Save up to 35% Kick off the summer with fabulous new appliances from LG that are currently on sale for up to 30% off.
    cbsnews.com
  20. Scottie Scheffler fans wear T-shirts with his mug shot at PGA Championship after arrest Some supporters were seen in "Free Scottie" T-shirts as Scheffler completed his second round at Valhalla following his detainment.
    nypost.com
  21. Dow closes above 40K milestone for the first time ever — its fifth straight weekly gain Strong corporate results and inflation and other economic data have bolstered investor hopes for Fed rate cuts this year.
    nypost.com
  22. CNN's Zakaria says first debate with Trump will be 'make-or-break' for Biden's campaign CNN host Fareed Zakaria made a guest appearance on "CNN Newsroom," where he argued why President Biden needs to win the first debate to keep the presidency.
    foxnews.com
  23. Protester Whose Testicle ‘Exploded’ When Shot by Cop Wins $1.5M Settlement From City Jason Armond/Getty ImagesThe Black Lives Matter protester whose testicle exploded when he was shot with a hard-foam projectile by a LAPD officer has won $1.5 million in a settlement with the city.The settlement doesn’t admit liability on the part of the LAPD or the city of Los Angeles, the L.A. Times reported, but it does close a lawsuit brought by the protester, Benjamin Montemayor, alleging excessive use of force and other civil rights violations against the city and its police.“This settlement shows that there are repercussions for police misconduct against the people they have sworn to protect,” Montemayor said Friday in a statement provided by his attorneys.Read more at The Daily Beast.
    thedailybeast.com
  24. Bayer Leverkusen sueña con una campaña invicta y la inmortalidad El técnico del Bayer Leverkusen Xabi Alonso y sus jugadores han pasado toda la temporada restándole importancia a sus increíbles logros.
    latimes.com
  25. All of Billie Eilish's senses are alive on the ravishing 'Hit Me Hard and Soft' The pop star's new album gives the impression of someone who’s accepted the unnatural demands of stardom and wants to figure out how to lead a full life in spite of them.
    latimes.com
  26. NYC brute kicks 79-year-old in face, knocking him out, in vicious unprovoked attack: cops The victim said he can only remember buying food — and then waking up in the hospital.
    nypost.com
  27. The hate driving antisemitism, Bragg destroys democracy to save it and other commentary “The ideology of anti-whiteness that has generated what [President] Biden denounces as campus anti-Semitism also governs Biden’s executive branch,” fumes Heather Mac Donald at Spiked.
    nypost.com
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  29. FDNY firefighter seriously injured after battling blaze in the Bronx The injury happened after a blaze at a home on White Plains Road Friday afternoon.   
    nypost.com
  30. VP Harris grilled for saying Inflation Reduction Act is working via gov't giving out 'trillions of dollars' Social media users criticized Vice President Kamala Harris for making an "ironic" claim about how the Biden administration is spending "trillions of dollars" to boost the economy.
    foxnews.com