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Trump returns to court today for Day 3 of his New York criminal trial

Seven New Yorkers were selected​ on Tuesday to serve as jurors in the first criminal trial of a former president in U.S. history.
Read full article on: cbsnews.com
'Stranger Things' star blasts anti-Israel protesters blocking students on campus: 'They should be expelled'
"Stranger Things" actor Brett Gelman blasted schools for not cracking down on the anti-Israel protests sweeping college campuses across the nation.
foxnews.com
What not to do before closing on a house, experts say
Don't let these common mistakes throw off your home financing.
cbsnews.com
Trump asks if college riots are intentional to distract from ‘millions’ of migrants ‘pouring into our country’
Former President Donald Trump asked Wednesday on Truth Social whether the continued unrest on college campuses is meant to distract from the illegal immigration crisis at the border.
foxnews.com
98-year-old in Ukraine escapes Russian troops by walking for miles, with slippers and a cane
Lidia Stepanivna Lomikovska, a 98-year-old woman in Ukraine, escaped Russian-occupied territory by walking nearly 6 miles alone, according to officials.
foxnews.com
Dose of adversity gives Dylan Crews a new perspective in Class AA
His first injury and a mounting strikeout total leave the Nationals’ top prospect with work to do for Harrisburg.
washingtonpost.com
Lemon poppy seed pancakes are a bright, textured delight
These light, lemony pancakes are ideal for a festive brunch -- or any time of year.
washingtonpost.com
Cal Poly forced to change commencement in wake of anti-Israel protests, unrest on campus
Cal Poly Humboldt announced a change to its commencement later this month in the wake of anti-Israel demonstrations that resulted in the agitators occupying buildings.
foxnews.com
I Am a Weinstein Victim. Here’s What Happens to Me Whenever He’s Back in the News
What does this mean about the “future of #MeToo” anyway?
slate.com
Teen arrested in connection with Sydney bishop's stabbing applies for release on bail
One of the teenagers who was arrested and charged in the stabbing of a bishop in Sydney, Australia, has applied for release from custody due to exceptional circumstances.
foxnews.com
The Dodgers bullpen was turning a corner. Now, a spate of injuries has cut into its depth
The Dodgers are nowhere near having their full complement of relievers at the moment. At least in the near future, situations similar to Tuesday might not be all that rare.
latimes.com
Lulu Cheng and Lacey Benard talk bilingual learning with Bitty Bao books and toys
In our "Changing the Game" series, we celebrate Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month by spotlighting Lulu Cheng and Lacey Benard. After identifying a gap in Chinese learning resources for children, they founded Bitty Bao in 2020. Their company has since produced 15 bilingual board books and innovative educational toys like a Hot Pot kit.
cbsnews.com
Left-wing university leaders helped create anti-Israel campus chaos. We don't need to bail them out
The spectacle of masked Antifa-style protesters occupying campuses over a foreign conflict and supporting Hamas-style 'decolonization' does not offer a clear and significant upside.
foxnews.com
Formula One champ Lewis Hamilton on fulfilling dream of driving on Fifth Avenue
The eye-catching stunt was part of a promotional effort to spotlight the partnership between Hamilton's Mercedes F1 team and WhatsApp.
cbsnews.com
Emory University police arrest convicted felon who crossed state lines to join anti-Israel protests
Emory University has announced the arrest of Derek Zika, a convicted felon who allegedly traveled from North Carolina to take part in anti-Israel protests.
foxnews.com
Emily Oster tackles pregnancy complications in new book
Author Emily Oster, known for her influential book "Expecting Better," introduces her fourth book, "The Unexpected: Navigating Pregnancy During and After Complications."
cbsnews.com
8 tasks for your May home maintenance checklist
Take advantage of the beautiful May weather by focusing on outdoor chores this month.
washingtonpost.com
Occupation, lockdown, tree sit-in: How Cal Poly Humboldt became California’s epicenter of pro-Palestinian student activism
At least 25 protesters were arrested Tuesday on the small CSU campus after a weeklong occupation of an administrative building.
latimes.com
Judi Dench talks Shakespearean journey, new book
In her seven-decade career, Dame Judi Dench has played nearly every female character in William Shakespeare's plays, from Juliet to Cleopatra. Dench and her late husband even used to refer to Shakespeare as "the man who pays the rent." That's also the title of her new book, written with her friend Brendan O'Hea. First on "CBS Mornings", she shares stories from a lifetime of iconic Shakespearean roles and much more with Anthony Mason.
cbsnews.com
Here Are the 14 New Books You Should Read in May
From Brittney Griner's memoir to Kevin Kwan's glitzy new novel.
time.com
Jeff Goldblum refuses to leave money to his kids Charlie, 8, and River, 6: ‘Row your own boat’
Jeff Goldblum is ready for his kids to get jobs.
nypost.com
Mets fan removed from $1 hot dog night after fans throw wieners at him in wild scene
Apparently this fan did a little too much hot doggin'.
nypost.com
Those ‘choose a tip amount’ prompts might be scamming you into tipping more
According to a video that has gone viral on social media, there's allegedly a new scam that has customers tipping more than they think.
nypost.com
Anti-Israel university protests live updates: Arrested Columbia students cheered on as they’re released after spending night in jail
Follow The Post's live updates for the latest news on pro-terror protests at Columbia and other universities across the country.
nypost.com
Meghan Markle Meeting Beyoncé Goes Viral
At the very moment Meghan was meeting "Queen Bey," Prince Harry appeared to be pitching his wife as a voice-over actor to Disney chief executive Bob Iger.
newsweek.com
Mysterious Vial Washes Up on Texas Beach, Sparks Theories: 'Put It Back!'
"If video games have taught me anything you should drink it," joked one commenter.
newsweek.com
Fitness influencer got 11 years in prison for 'terrorist offenses,' Saudi Arabia confirms
Saudi Arabia sent a letter to the UN confirming that Manahel al-Otaibi, a popular online fitness influencer, was sentenced to 11 years in prison for "terrorism offenses."
foxnews.com
'Election interference': GOP senator launches push to shut down noncitizen voting in DC elections
Legislation introduced by a Republican lawmaker would require citizenship for Washington, D.C., residents to vote in municipal elections, after a legislative change in the city.
foxnews.com
Greece bolsters firefighting arsenal to cope with country's growing heat risk
Greece is bracing for an intense wildfire season as temperatures rise and fires start earlier each year by doubling the number of firefighters in specialized units.
foxnews.com
Greene says she will force vote next week on ousting speaker
Rep. Marjorie Tyalor Greene has dangled the threat of dethroning Johnson since late March after he relied on Democrats to push through a $1.2 trillion spending bill to avert a government shutdown.
cbsnews.com
‘The Contestant’ Star Nasubi Says He Was Paid Less Than $1000 For 15 Months of Reality TV Torture
"Looking back, did I get enough? That, I’m not sure," the former Japanese reality star told Decider.
nypost.com
May is National Masturbation Month: Embrace the new self-love technique for your zodiac sign
The Post talked with an award-winning adult filmmaker for advice about this carnal exploration (and more).
nypost.com
Trump Floats Nuts Conspiracy Theory About Campus Protests
Curtis Means/ReutersWe regret to inform you that Donald Trump is just asking questions about the true motives behind the pro-Palestinian protests currently taking place on campuses across the country.“Do you think that the Radical Left Lunatics that are causing all of the CHAOS at our Colleges and Universities are doing so in order to take the FOCUS away from our Southern Border, where millions of people, many from prisons and mental institutions, are pouring into our Country?” the former president posted on his Truth Social platform on Wednesday morning. “Just askin’…???”Trump’s latest comments about the protests against Israel’s war in Gaza followed remarks made in a Fox News interview on Tuesday night, in which he claimed that he believes there are a “lot of paid agitators” among the demonstrators. Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
What Marijuana Reclassification Means for the United States
Would the move legalize recreational cannabis? What would it mean for research? What happens next?
time.com
Iran University Offers Scholarships to Expelled US Students
Shiraz University said it would act in solidarity with pro-Palestinian demonstrators on U.S. campuses.
newsweek.com
New York City Mayor Eric Adams addresses protests at Columbia University
New York City Mayor Eric Adams talks about the protests at Columbia University after pro-Palestinian demonstrators were removed by police from an academic building on campus.
cbsnews.com
‘Bachelorette’ alum Jason Tartick meets new girlfriend Kat Stickler’s daughter
The 29-year-old TikTok star shares daughter Mary-Katherine, nicknamed "MK," with her ex-husband, Mike. The former couple divorced in 2021.
nypost.com
Lewis Hamilton talks iconic Formula One drive down Fifth Avenue
New Yorkers got a front-row seat to a one-of-a-kind show by one of racing's biggest stars yesterday. Seven-time Formula One World Champion Lewis Hamilton sped down Fifth Avenue, even stopping to do donuts right outside the iconic Empire State Building. The stunt was planned to promote a partnership with WhatsApp and Hamilton's Mercedes F1 team, and their growth here in the U.S. Gayle King sat down exclusively with the global superstar right after the stunt.
cbsnews.com
Florida’s six-week abortion ban takes effect with few exceptions
A new abortion law goes into effect in Florida on Wednesday. It will sharply restrict the procedure after six weeks. Florida’s new law includes exceptions for rape, incest, fetal abnormalities and the life of the mother.
cbsnews.com
DOJ to reclassify marijuana as less dangerous drug in a historic shift
The Drug Enforcement Administration is recommending marijuana be classified down from a Schedule I drug to a Schedule III drug. It would not legalize marijuana for recreational use.
cbsnews.com
Guidance updated for breast cancer screenings
The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force is recommending women get a mammogram every other year, starting at age 40. Dr. Celine Gounder, a CBS News medical contributor and editor-at-large for public health at KFF Health News, explains.
cbsnews.com
Where Is Barron Trump Going to College? Everything We Know
Barron Trump's plans for college have drawn speculation.
newsweek.com
UK police officer faces terror charge for allegedly supporting Hamas on WhatsApp
A British police officer from West Yorkshire is facing a terror charge for allegedly sharing images supporting Hamas, a banned terrorist group in the UK.
foxnews.com
This bestselling 15-Piece Knife Set from Henckels nearly 60% off on Amazon
Slice into savings today on Amazon!
nypost.com
Starbucks Stock Plunge Cheered Amid Pro-Palestinian Boycott
Starbucks share prices sank in after-hours trading following a disappointing quarterly earnings report.
newsweek.com
The End of Cultural Arbitrage
In the spring of 1988, I made a lifelong friend thanks to a video-game cheat code. As preparation for a family move to Pensacola, Florida, I visited my new school. While there, I casually told a future classmate named Tim that the numbers 007 373 5963 would take him straight to the final fight of the very popular Nintendo boxing game Mike Tyson’s Punch Out. My buddies and I in Oxford, Mississippi, all knew this code by heart, but it turned out to be rare and valuable information in Pensacola. Years later, Tim revealed to me that it was my knowledge of the Punch Out cheat code that made him want to be friends.I wouldn’t have understood this at age 9, but I had just engaged in a successful act of cultural arbitrage. If financial arbitrage involves the acquisition of commodities in a market where they are inexpensive and selling them for profit in a market where they are expensive, cultural arbitrage is the acquisition of information, goods, or styles in one location where they are common and dispersing them in places where they are rare. The “profit” is paid out not in money but in esteem and social clout. Individuals gain respect when others find their information useful or entertaining—and repeated deployments may help them build entire personas based on being smart, worldly, and connected.In the past, tastemakers in the worlds of fashion, art, and music established careers through this sort of arbitrage—plucking interesting developments from subcultures to dangle as novelties in the mass market. The legendary writer Glenn O’Brien, for example, made his name by introducing the edgiest downtown New York bands to suits at record labels uptown and, later, by incorporating elements from punk rock, contemporary art, and underground S&M clubs in the creation of Madonna’s scandalous 1992 book, Sex.But the internet’s sprawling databases, real-time social-media networks, and globe-spanning e-commerce platforms have made almost everything immediately searchable, knowable, or purchasable—curbing the social value of sharing new things. Cultural arbitrage now happens so frequently and rapidly as to be nearly undetectable, usually with no extraordinary profits going to those responsible for relaying the information. Moreover, the sheer speed of modern communication reduces how long any one piece of knowledge is valuable. This, in turn, devalues the acquisition and hoarding of knowledge as a whole, and fewer individuals can easily construct entire identities built on doing so.There are obvious, concrete advantages to a world with information equality, such as expanding global access to health and educational materials—with a stable internet connection, anyone can learn basic computer programming from online tutorials and lectures on YouTube. Finding the optimal place to eat at any moment is certainly easier than it used to be. And, in the case of Google, to “organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful” even serves as the company’s mission. The most commonly cited disadvantage to this extraordinary societal change, and for good reason, is that disinformation and misinformation can use the same easy pathways to spread unchecked. But after three decades of living with the internet, it’s clear that there are other, more subtle losses that come with instant access to knowledge, and we’ve yet to wrestle—interpersonally and culturally—with the implications.To draw from my own example, there was much respect to be gained in the 1980s from telling friends about video-game cheat codes, because this rare knowledge could be obtained only through deep gameplay, friendships with experienced gamers, or access to niche gaming publications. As economists say, this information was costly. Today, the entire body of Punch Out codes—and their contemporary equivalents—can be unearthed within seconds. Knowledge of a cheat code no longer represents entrée to an exclusive world—it’s simply the fruit of a basic web search.Admittedly, an increased difficulty in impressing friends with neat tips and trivia hardly constitutes a social crisis. And perhaps benefitting from closely kept secrets was too easy in the past, anyway: In my Punch-Out example, I gained a disproportionately large amount of esteem for something that required very little effort or skill. But when these exchanges were rarer—and therefore more meaningful—they could lead to positive effects on the overall culture. In a time of scarcity, information had more value, which provided a natural motivation for curious individuals to learn more about what was happening at the margins of society.[Read: Why kids online are chasing “clout”]Arbitrageurs would then “cash in” by introducing these artifacts to mainstream audiences, which triggered broader imitation of things once considered niche. This helped accelerate the diffusion of information from the underground into the mainstream, not only providing sophisticated consumers with an exciting stream of unfamiliar ideas but also breathing new life into mass culture. The end result of this collision was cultural hybridization—the creation of new styles and forms.This process helps explain the most significant stylistic shifts in 20th-century pop music. Living in the port city of Liverpool, where sailors imported American rock-and-roll records, the Beatles leveraged this early access to the latest stateside recordings to give themselves a head start over other British bands. A decade later, the music producer Chris Blackwell, who co-founded Island Records using his upbringing in Jamaica and knowledge of its music, signed Bob Marley and turned reggae into a globally recognized genre. Over the past 15 years, Drake has picked up this mantle as music’s great arbitrageur, using his singular celebrity to produce collaborations with then-emerging talent such as Migos and the Weeknd that cemented his own reputation as a tastemaker. Creative ideas appear to be impressive innovations to average consumers only once they get a foothold in wider society, which requires a difficult jump from so-called early adopters (who are curious to find new products and art forms) to the more conservative mainstream (who tend to like what they already know). And in the cultural marketplace, arbitrage succeeds more than pure invention because it introduces works that feel novel yet have proven track records of impressing others somewhere else. Before importing reggae to the United States and the United Kingdom, Blackwell knew that this music delighted Jamaicans—and that its popularity within a community that was fighting oppression would appeal to countercultural sympathizers as well.That global platforms such as Spotify, YouTube, and Wikipedia reduce the glory of acquiring deep information has not stopped the hunt. Instead, it’s pushed everyone to solve a much more narrow set of information inequalities in their own, smaller communities. Big-league influencers may have trouble looking for the big score, but “day traders” in niche fan groups can achieve minor status boosts by being the first to deliver news about their favorite idols to fellow fans. Arguably, individual fandoms have never been stronger—yet because information moves so quickly, these communities exert less influence on larger audiences that have less time or inclination to keep up with every micro-development. And though such superfans may claim to reject public opinion, they secretly need their insights to be respected outside the group in order to feel like something other than just dedicated hobbyists.At the same time, the hyper-politicization of culture on the internet has constrained arbitrage from a different angle: The previously common practice of being influenced by minority communities now elicits charges of appropriation. Such moral judgments are not new: The Nigerian musician Fela Kuti initially accused Paul McCartney of intending to steal “Black man’s music” after the former Beatle went to Lagos to record the Wings album Band on the Run. A greater awareness of the issue in recent years, however, means that third parties now actively police the exact moments when inspiration becomes theft. When the white influencer Charli D’Amelio boosted her own fame by popularizing the “Renegade” dance on TiKTok, the journalist Taylor Lorenz traced its origin back to its Black creator, Jalaiah Harmon. In this case, the heightened sensitivity toward appropriation had arguably positive effects: Harmon’s dance became world-renowned, and she eventually received proper credit for it. But these new standards make arbitrage a much weightier undertaking than it used to be, potentially requiring groundwork in coordinating permission and approval from originators.[Read: How Ariana Grande fell off the cultural-appropriation tightrope]In the past decade, some observers have wondered whether cultural innovation is slowing down. They’ve pointed to the stultifying effects of legacy IP at the box office, the way fast fashion has flattened any genuine sense of clothing trends, the indefatigability of Taylor Swift’s ongoing pop-chart dominance. The devaluing of cultural arbitrage—and the decrease in instances of hybridization—is certainly an additional factor to be considered. This is not just a problem for hipsters, however; it ends up affecting everyone who enjoys participating in popular art with other people. The wider entertainment industry always needs new ideas, and with reduced instances of cultural arbitrage, few that come to mainstream consumers now feel particularly valuable.Some countervailing trends might organically reenergize cultural arbitrage over time. The move from billion-user platforms back to balkanized networks on clubbier apps such as Discord could allow savvy individuals to step in and bridge distinct worlds. We also may seek to reduce the amount of information shared online—keeping information exchange personal and limited to real life may restore some value to what tastemakers know. Restaurant reservations have become valuable for this very reason: There are limited seats in a real place. The Canadian indie-music project Cindy Lee recently released a double album, available for download only on GeoCities and as a YouTube stream rather than on streaming sites such as Spotify. The self-created scarcity gave the album palpable buzz, and the lack of easy access didn’t get in the way of critical reviews or online discussion.The internet arrived at a time when we gained social clout from arbitraging information, so our first instinct was to share information online. Perhaps we are now entering an era of information hoarding. This may mean that, for a while, the most interesting developments will happen somewhere off the grid. But over time, this practice will restore some value to art and cultural exploration, and bring back opportunities for tastemaking. Whatever the case, we first must recognize the role that arbitrage played in preventing our culture from growing stale while literally making us friends along the way. Winning respect by sharing video-game cheat codes may be a thing of the past, but we need to promote new methods for innovators and mediators to move the culture—otherwise it may not move much at all.
theatlantic.com
Paul Auster’s Best Books: A Guide
The novelist played with reality and chance in tales of solitary narrators and mutable identities. Here’s an overview of his work.
nytimes.com
Cinco de Mayo: 7 picks to help host your celebration
Host a festive Cinco de Mayo celebration in your backyard with these 7 party essentials.
foxnews.com
2 House Republicans announce plans to oust Speaker Johnson 6 months after he took gavel
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., announced her intention to introduce a motion to vacate against House Speaker Mike Johnson on Wednesday.
foxnews.com