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Trader Joe’s basil linked to salmonella outbreak — what to know about the foodborne illness

Fresh basil sold at Trader Joe's locations across the country have been voluntarily recalled after being linked to a spike in salmonella infections.
Read full article on: nypost.com
Millions of Americans May Get Their Medicare Advantage Benefits Cut
Humana said it would be ending some plans and cutting benefits for patients in 2025.
newsweek.com
Travis Kelce says he canceled deliveries to his house because people send him ‘random s--t’
Travis Kelce's home address was leaked online recently, leading to fans sending him "random s--t." It got so bad he had to cancel deliveries.
foxnews.com
World awaits Hamas response to Israel cease-fire, hostage release proposal
Israel has submitted a proposal for a potential temporary cease-fire and hostage release deal that Hamas has not yet replied to. CBS News foreign correspondent Ramy Inocencio has more on the negotiation efforts.
cbsnews.com
Protesters gather outside Columbia University
Protesters are returning to manifest outside Columbia University Wednesday after a tense night of violence and arrests in New York City. CBS News correspondent Lilia Luciano has more.
cbsnews.com
What the Fed's interest rate pause means for your credit card debt
The Federal Reserve kept its federal funds rate unchanged. Here's what that means for your credit card debt.
cbsnews.com
Parents, students livid as colleges move classes online amid anti-Israel violence: 'Very unsettling'
Parents and students who pay thousands of dollars in tuition each year are frustrated as colleges move to remote learning amid the spread of anti-Israel unrest.
foxnews.com
2-year-old dead in Arizona after bounce house was swept away by wind
One child was killed and a second injured in Casa Grande, Arizona, after a bounce house was swept up by strong winds, according to local authorities.
foxnews.com
1 injured in Oslo knife attack
Norwegian police said Wednesday that a man brandishing two knifes stabbed one person and threatened multiple others in the center of Oslo.
foxnews.com
Colombia's president says country will break diplomatic relations with Israel over war in Gaza
As tensions escalate between Colombia and Israel over the Israel-Hamas war, Colombian President Gustavo Petro has announced his government will break diplomatic relations with Israel.
foxnews.com
Indianapolis-area police fatally shoot suspect who slashed officer's face
Police in Beech Grove, Indiana, fatally shot a knife-wielding suspect Wednesday after he reportedly used the blade to slice an officer's face open.
foxnews.com
Stock Market Today: Powell Reassures on Rate Hikes, Starbucks Plummets
The Fed kept interest rates unchanged while noting "inflation is still too high."
newsweek.com
Amy Schumer calls out 'razor-sharp' scrutiny on Jewish people, 'but not on Hamas'
Comedian Amy Schumer said she believes that Jewish people get far more scrutiny than Hamas and its supporters in the public discourse these days.
foxnews.com
Why Maria Georgas Used a Fake Excuse to Leave Joey Graziadei's Season of 'The Bachelor'
Maria Georgas admitted to making up an "excuse" in order to leave the show.
newsweek.com
AEW's Tony Khan Teases On-Site 'Line of Succession' After Attack
After sporting a neck brace at the NFL Draft, Tony Khan plans to run AEW from Jacksonville and teases on-site "line of succession."
newsweek.com
Campus Protesters Mocked for Wearing COVID Masks
Jonathan Greenblatt, president of the Anti-Defamation League, said Columbia University should allow "no masks on campus."
newsweek.com
How to watch the Los Angeles Kings vs. Edmonton Oilers NHL Playoffs game tonight: Game 5 livestream options, more
Here's how and when to watch Game 5 of the Los Angeles Kings vs. Edmonton Oilers NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs series.
cbsnews.com
Deion Sanders Gets Into Ridiculous Social Media Fight Involving Son
Deion Sanders has gotten deep into a social media fight involving his son for a ridiculous reason.
newsweek.com
America Can’t Stop Watching Creepy Robot Videos
The robot is shaped like a human, but it sure doesn’t move like one. It starts supine on the floor, pancake-flat. Then, in a display of superhuman joint mobility, its legs curl upward from the knees, sort of like a scorpion tail, until its feet settle firmly on the floor beside its hips. From there, it stands up, a swiveling mass of silver limbs. The robot’s ring-light heads turns a full 180 degrees to face the camera, as though possessed. Then it lurches forward at you.The scene plays out like one of those moments in a sci-fi movie when the heroes think for sure the all-powerful villain must be done for, but somehow he comes back stronger than ever. Except it’s a real-life video released last month by the robotics company Boston Dynamics to introduce its new Atlas robot. The humanoid machine, according to the video’s caption, is intended to further the company’s “commitment to delivering the most capable, useful mobile robots solving the toughest challenges in industry today.” It has also freaked out many people, and the video has garnered millions of views. “Impressive? Yes. Terrifying? Absolutely,” wrote a reporter for The Verge. Terminator and I, Robot memes abounded. Elon Musk suggested that it looked like it was in the throes of an exorcism.You might think that such reactions would concern Boston Dynamics, that it would seem bad for the public to associate your product with dystopian sci-fi. But the company is used to this. Over the past decade-plus, Boston Dynamics has become arguably America’s most famous robotics company by posting unnerving viral videos that elicit a predictable cascade of reactions: things like “Could you imagine this thing chasing you?” and “We’re doomed.” When the company posts a video like the one of the new Atlas, and viewers get worked up, it all appears to be part of the plan.Even if you don’t know Boston Dynamics by name, there is a good chance you have seen one of its videos before. Clips of robots running faster than Usain Bolt and dancing in sync, among many others, have helped the company reach true influencer status. Its videos have now been viewed more than 800 million times, far more than those of much bigger tech companies, such as Tesla and OpenAI. The creator of Black Mirror even admitted that an episode in which killer robot dogs chase a band of survivors across an apocalyptic wasteland was directly inspired by Boston Dynamics’ videos.The company got into the viral-video game by accident. Now owned by Hyundai, Boston Dynamics was founded in 1992 as a spin-off of an MIT robotics lab, and for years had operated in relative obscurity. In the 2000s, someone grabbed a video off the company’s website and uploaded it to YouTube. Before long, it had 3.5 million views. That first YouTube hit is when “the light went on—this matters,” Marc Raibert, the founder, has said. (Boston Dynamics did not provide an interview or comment for this story.) In July 2008, the company created a YouTube channel and began uploading its own videos. Almost every one topped 1 million views. Within a few years, they were regularly collecting tens of millions.Many of Boston Dynamics’ videos seem engineered to fuel people’s most dystopian fantasies, such as the one in which it dressed its humanoid robot in camo and a gas mask. But the company is careful not to lean too far in this direction. Alongside videos of the robots looking creepy or performing incredible feats, it has offered ones in which the robots failed spectacularly, were bullied by their human makers, or did silly dances; in response, people professed to feeling “sorry for” or “emotionally attached to” these robots. The company’s recent farewell video for its old Atlas model, retired days before the new one was released, included clips of the robot toppling off a balance beam and tumbling down a hill. “What we’ve tried to do is make videos that you can just look at and understand what you’re seeing,” Raibert told Wired in 2018. “You don’t need words, you don’t need an explanation. We’re neither hiding anything nor faking anything.”Boston Dynamics has not said much publicly about how it trains its robots. But when viewers watch videos of the recently retired hydraulic Atlas doing parkour, they might well assume that if it can execute such complex maneuvers, then it can do pretty much anything. In fact, it has likely been programmed to perform a handful of specific tricks, Chelsa Finn, an AI researcher at Stanford University, told me last year. As I wrote then, robots have lagged behind chatbots and other kinds of generative AI because “the physical world is extremely complicated, far more so than language.” The company posted its first video of Atlas doing a backflip in 2017; more than six years later, the robot still is not commercially available. “The athletic part of robotics is really doing well,” Raibert told Wired in January, “but we need the cognitive part.”The actual business of Boston Dynamics is comparatively mundane. Currently, its humanoid robots are purely for research and development. Its commercial products—a large robotic arm and a small robotic dog—are used mainly for moving boxes and workplace safety and inspections. “The perception of how far along the field is that we get from these highly curated, essentially PR-campaign videos … from different companies is a bit distorted,” Raphaël Millière, a philosopher at Macquarie University, in Sydney, whose work focuses on artificial intelligence and cognitive science, told me. “You should always take these with a grain of salt, because they’re likely to be carefully choreographed routines.”The company, for its part, has gestured at the limits of its robots in press releases and YouTube descriptions. But it still keeps posting dystopian videos that keep freaking people out. “They probably made a calculated decision that actually this is not bad press,” Millière said, “but rather, it makes the videos more viral.” The company recognizes that we love fantasizing about our own demise—to a point—and it supplies regular fodder. The strategy has paid off. Now pretty much all the top robotics companies post video demonstrations on YouTube, some of which are more advanced than Boston Dynamics’. Its video introducing the new Atlas robot garnered more than twice as many views as this frankly far more impressive video from the lesser-known robotics company Figure.In recent years, AI companies seem to have taken a page out of the Boston Dynamics playbook. When OpenAI CEO Sam Altman talks about the existential threat of superhuman AI, he is in effect deploying the same strategy. So, too, are the other executives who have invoked the “risk of extinction” that AI poses to humanity. As my colleague Matteo Wong has written, AI doomerism functions as a fantastic PR strategy, in that it makes the product seem far more advanced than it actually is.Boston Dynamics is poised to benefit from the revolution those companies have delivered. Hardly a week after the launch of ChatGPT in late November 2022, the company announced the creation of a new AI Institute. Last month, it posted a video about using simulations and machine learning to teach its robot dogs how to move through a range of real-world environments. And the press release for the new Atlas robot explicitly talked up the company’s progress in AI and machine learning over the past couple of years: “We have equipped our robots with new AI and machine learning tools, like reinforcement learning and computer vision, to ensure they can operate and adapt efficiently to complex real-world situations.” In normal English, Atlas might soon not just look but actually be, in a certain sense, possessed. Now that would really be scary.
theatlantic.com
Air Force prepares additional charges against Jack Teixeira, who leaked Pentagon classified documents
The U.S. Air Force is preparing to file additional charges against Jack Teixeira, who in March pleaded guilty to leaking classified military documents about the Russia-Ukraine war.
foxnews.com
Sen. Kennedy: President Biden Has Jumped the Title IX Shark | Opinion
President Biden ought to hide his head in a bag if he allows his administration to destroy decades of progress for women by turning Title IX into a weapon.
newsweek.com
House COVID committee calling for criminal probe into gain-of-function virus research in Wuhan
EcoHealth Alliance President Dr. Peter Daszak appeared before the subcommittee on Wednesday to testify on the work of his organization before and throughout the COVID-19 pandemic.
foxnews.com
Hundreds of Sea Lions Suddenly Appear on California Pier
About 1,000 sea lions have appeared at Pier 39 in San Franciso, California, in the past week.
newsweek.com
The best graduation gift ideas in 2024: From the latest tech to memorable presents they'll cherish for a lifetime
Discover the perfect gift ideas for a high school or college graduate.
cbsnews.com
Brown U caves to anti-Israel protesters, agrees to deal on divestment in exchange for encampment closure
Anti-Israel protesters declared victory at Brown University on Tuesday after they struck a deal with leadership to end the encampment there if the board
foxnews.com
3 things to do (and 3 things to avoid) with interest rates paused
You can make higher interest rates work for you by making these three moves (and avoiding these three mistakes) now.
cbsnews.com
Fallen Chicago officer's family requests Mayor Johnson not attend funeral: report
Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson did not make an appearance at the funeral of fallen police officer Luis Huesca this week after the family of the deceased told him he was not welcome.
foxnews.com
Marjorie Taylor Greene says she'll force vote to oust Speaker Johnson
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Republican from Georgia, says she still plans to force a vote to vacate Mike Johnson from the House speakership. CBS News congressional correspondent Nikole Killion is following the latest from Capitol Hill.
cbsnews.com
Why It’s So Weird That Dave & Buster’s Is Getting Into Sports Betting
Does a place oriented toward kids really need this?
slate.com
Biden Cancels $6B in Debt for Former Students of the Art Institutes
The Biden administration said it will cancel $6 billion in student loans for people who attended the Art Institutes, a system of for-profit colleges.
time.com
Group of 10 anti-Israel protesters arrested at University of South Florida, including one with gun: police
Police at the University of South Florida said 10 people were arrested during an anti-Israel protest on campus on Tuesday.
foxnews.com
White House on anti-Israel protests: 'Forcibly taking over a building is not peaceful'
The White House is defending President Biden's response to anti-Israel protests while slamming demonstrators for the forcible takeover of college buildings.
foxnews.com
Popular traditions of the Kentucky Derby, from mint juleps to large headwear
The Kentucky Derby's history goes back to 1875, when it was started by Meriwether Lewis Clark Jr.. The event brings thousands to Churchill Downs each year.
foxnews.com
Outspoken pro-abortion governor gets speaking slot at Vatican summit
Despite his social progressive stands on abortion and transgender issues, Gov. Gavin Newsom is invited to the annual Vatican climate summit in mid-May.
foxnews.com
Tiger Woods explains why daughter Sam has a ‘negative connotation’ to golf
When appearing on the "Today" show Wednesday, Woods explained why his teenage daughter has a "negative connotation" to the sport.
nypost.com
G7 nations commit to phasing out coal power by 2035
The group of nations in the G7 have announced an agreement to phase out coal power plants by 2035. CBS News senior national and environmental correspondent Ben Tracy reports.
cbsnews.com
Biden admin. considers allowing some Palestinians refugees in U.S., documents say
U.S. officials are considering allowing some Palestinians from the war-torn Gaza Strip to enter the country as refugees, according to internal documents. CBS News immigration and politics reporter Camilo Montoya-Galvez reports.
cbsnews.com
Astros send Jose Abreu to Triple-A as abysmal start to season continues
It's been a disastrous start for the Houston Astros, and their heralded 2023 free-agent acquisition is heading to AAA to figure things out.
nypost.com
For a high school baseball star with MLB potential, a decision awaits
Freedom (South Riding) senior Griffin Burkholder has attracted major league attention with a big swing and serious speed.
washingtonpost.com
Arizona Republicans Repeal Abortion Ban—It's Still Going Into Effect Though
Despite Arizona's Senate vote to repeal its near-total abortion ban, the 1864 ban could stay in effect through the summer or fall.
1 h
newsweek.com
Businesses Are Moving to 6 Day Work Weeks
A new report found many companies might require workers to add on an additional day of work.
1 h
newsweek.com
‘Dance Moms’ star Abby Lee Miller admits she was too ‘harsh’ on kids that ‘didn’t have the talent’
The reality star said she wasn’t trying to “hurt anyone’s feelings” with her intense teaching methods but just wanted her dancers to reach their full potential.
1 h
nypost.com
Georgia governor signs controversial bail fund restrictions, expands cash bail
Gov. Brian Kemp signed a bill that would criminalize state bail funds and expand the list of charges that require cash or property bail.
1 h
abcnews.go.com
White House claims Biden ‘monitoring’ college anarchy — as president goes nine days without an on-camera comment
WASHINGTON — President Biden is privately “monitoring” a wave of pro-terror, anti-Israel demonstrations on college campuses across the country, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Wednesday — nine full days since the chief executive last made an in-person statement on the unrest. “He is monitoring the situation closely, so is his team,” Jean-Pierre said...
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nypost.com
The Democrats Have Turned on Dr. King. It's Time to Return the Favor | Excerpt
As we sat on the bus traveling through Alabama, John Lewis and some of his fellow Freedom Riders shared firsthand accounts of what they experienced.
1 h
newsweek.com
Mandisa's father gives eulogy: Singer's death showed 'no signs' of self-harm
The gospel singer and 'American Idol' alumna, who won a Grammy for her album "Overcomer: The Greatest Hits," was found dead in her Tennessee home on April 18. She was 47.
1 h
latimes.com
Can the world really engineer its way out of climate change?
Readers are skeptical. They’re also eyeing their recycling bins with dismay, dreaming of gardens full of native plants and cheering on the EPA.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
Secret burial pits, bones and kids' notebooks found in Mexico City
It marks the first time in recent memory that anyone claimed to have found such a body disposal site in the capital.
1 h
cbsnews.com
California May Have to Release Water From Reservoirs
The state is forecasted to get up to 24 inches of snow in some areas this weekend.
1 h
newsweek.com