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U.S.A. News
U.S.A. News
Nicolás Maduro Fast Facts
Read CNN's Fast Facts about the life of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.
edition.cnn.com
House kills motion to vacate Johnson from speakership
House Speaker Mike Johnson is expected survived a vote over his ouster, an effort led by GOP Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia. Follow here for the latest live news updates.
edition.cnn.com
'Congressional version of temper tantrum': GOP lawmaker reacts to MTG's move to oust Johnson
Republican lawmakers react on the steps of Capitol Hill after Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) called up a resolution to remove Republican Speaker Mike Johnson on the House floor, a move that starts the clock to force a vote over ousting the Louisiana Republican from his leadership post.
edition.cnn.com
Watch Apple Trash-Compactor Human Culture
Here is a nonexhaustive list of objects Apple recently pulverized with a menacing hydraulic crusher: a trumpet, a piano, a turntable, a sculpted bust, lots and lots of paint, video-game controllers.These are all shown being demolished in the company’s new iPad commercial, a minute-long spot titled “Crush!” The items are arranged on a platform beneath a slowly descending enormous metal block, then trash-compactored out of existence in a violent symphony of crunching. Once the destruction is complete, the press lifts back up to reveal that the items have been replaced by a slender, shimmering iPad.The notion behind the commercial is fairly obvious. Apple wants to show you that the bulk of human ingenuity and history can be compressed into an iPad, and thereby wants you to believe that the device is a desirable entry point to both the consumption of culture and the creation of it. (The ad is for the latest “Pro” model of the iPad, the price of which starts at $999 and goes as high as $2,299, depending on its configuration.) Most important, it wants you to know that the iPad is powerful and quite thin.But good lord, Apple, read the room. In its swing for spectacle, the ad lacks so much self-awareness, it’s cringey, even depressing. This is May 2024: Humanity is in the early stages of a standoff with generative AI, which offers methods through which visual art, writing, music, and computer code can be created by a machine in seconds with the simplest of prompts. Apple is reportedly building its own large language model for its devices, and its CEO, Tim Cook, explicitly invoked AI in his comments about the new tablet: The iPad Pro features, he said, an “outrageously powerful chip for AI.” Most of us are still in the sizing-up phase for generative AI, staring warily at a technology that’s been hyped as world-changing and job-disrupting (even, some proponents argue, potentially civilization-ending), and been foisted on the public in a very short period of time. It’s a weird, exhausting, exciting, even tense moment. Enter: THE CRUSHER.Apple is very good at defining the zeitgeist as it relates to how humans use technology to interact with the world. Announced with a Super Bowl commercial in 1984, the Macintosh ushered in the era of personal computing by presenting streamlined hardware and a pleasant graphical interface; iTunes and the iPod augured a world of limitless media; and the iPhone delivered on its promise to fit the entire universe in our pocket. There is about a 0 percent chance that the company did not understand the optics of releasing this ad at this moment. Apple is among the most sophisticated and moneyed corporations in all the world. (The company did not respond to a request for comment.)But this time, it’s hard to like what the company is showing us. People are angry. One commenter on X called the ad “heartbreaking.” Three reasons could explain why. First: Although watching things explode might be fun, it’s less fun when a multitrillion-dollar tech corporation is the one destroying tools, instruments, and other objects of human expression and creativity. Second, of course, is that this is a moment of great technological upheaval and angst, especially among artists, as tech companies build models trained off of creative work with an ultimate goal of simulating those very peoples’ skilled output. It is easy to be offended at the ad’s implication, and it is easy to be aghast at the idea that AI will wipe out human creativity with cheap synthetic waste.[Read: These 183,000 books are fueling the biggest fight in publishing and tech]The third-order annoyance is in the genre. Apple has, essentially, aped a popular format of “crushing” videos on TikTok, wherein hydraulic presses are employed to obliterate everyday objects for the pleasure of idle scrollers. Arguably the company thought that copying this specific motif would be fun, but something is grim about Apple trying to draft off a viral-video format to sell units. It’s unclear whether some of the ad might have been created with CGI, but Apple could easily round up tens of thousands of dollars of expensive equipment and destroy it all on a whim. However small, the ad is a symbol of the company’s dominance.The ad remains, in some sense, great marketing. Everyone is talking about the iPad, a mainstay in Apple’s lineup that nonetheless gets far less attention than the iPhone. But this sudden interest offers room for a genuine appraisal of the device 14 years after its release. The iPad was one of Steve Jobs’s final products, one he believed could become as popular and perhaps as transformative as cars. That vision hasn’t panned out. The iPad hasn’t killed books, televisions, or even the iPhone. The commercial hails the new Pro model as “the most powerful iPad ever,” but its bravado is mostly unearned. The iPad is, potentially, a creative tool. It’s also an expensive luxury device whose cheaper iterations, at least, are vessels for letting your kid watch Cocomelon so they don’t melt down in public, reading self-help books on a plane, or opting for more pixels and better resolution whilst consuming content on the toilet.In the day and a half since the ad was released, people have only gotten angrier. Cook’s tweet featuring the commercial has been viewed more than 29 million times, and the unhappy responses are piling up. Odds are, people aren’t really furious at Apple on behalf of the trumpeters—they’re mad because the ad says something about the balance of power. Apple is a great technology company, but it is a legendary marketer. Its ads, slickly produced keynotes, and even its retail stores succeed because they offer a vision of the company’s products as tools that give us, the consumers, power. The fundamental flaw of Apple’s commercial is that it is a display of force that reminds us of this sleight of hand. We are not the powerful entity in this relationship. The creative potential we feel when we pick up one of their shiny devices is actually on loan. At the end of the day, it belongs to Apple, the destroyer.
theatlantic.com
WATCH: Man proposes to girlfriend while scuba diving off Fiji coast
One man got the answer of a lifetime from his now fiancée when he took the plunge — both literally and figuratively — and proposed to the new bride-to-be while scuba diving in Fiji.
abcnews.go.com
Marjorie Taylor Greene booed on House floor
GOP Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene was met with boos after she called up a resolution to remove Republican Speaker Mike Johnson on the House floor.
edition.cnn.com
Rory McIlroy will not rejoin PGA Tour player board after 'uncomfortable' response from other members
Rory McIlroy confirmed this week that he will not be returning as a member of the PGA Tour Player Board after receiving pushback from some members.
foxnews.com
House squashes Marjorie Taylor Greene's motion to oust Speaker Johnson
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene's attempt to force a vote to oust Speaker Mike Johnson failed on Wednesday.
foxnews.com
House quickly kills Marjorie Taylor Greene's effort to oust Speaker Johnson
Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene officially triggered a vote on her motion to vacate House Speaker Mike Johnson.
abcnews.go.com
Shohei Ohtani's former interpreter Ippei Mizuhara agrees to plead guilty to federal bank, tax fraud charges
Ippei Mizuhara will plead guilty to charges of felony bank fraud and after authorities learned that he embezzled nearly $17 million from Shohei Ohtani.
foxnews.com
Mike Johnson's New Bill Gives States 10 Days to Change Voter Registration
The House Speaker announced a new bill on Wednesday that would enact changes to the federal voter registration process.
newsweek.com
Flight attendants smuggled $8M in drug money through JFK in international scheme: feds
Four flight attendants used their security clearance to smuggle illegal drug proceeds through JFK airport and to traffickers in the Dominican Republic, federal investigators said Wednesday.
nypost.com
Marjorie Taylor Greene Booed by Republicans
The Georgia congresswoman shot back at the heckling, saying, "This is the uniparty, for the American people watching."
newsweek.com
Callum Robinson, Australian surfer slain in Mexico, left girlfriend heartbreaking voice mail before death: ‘Just thinking about you’
“Hope you’re having a phenomenal start to your day. I’m sensing a big grin on your face for some reason today. I hope you’re full of positivity and smiles."
nypost.com
Hyundai finance unit accused of illegally seizing U.S. soldiers' cars
Justice Department accuses Hyundai Capital America of failing to obtain court orders before repossessing service members' cars.
cbsnews.com
Wife of ex-top Biden DOJ official now prosecuting Trump has donated thousands to Biden, Obama
The wife of an ex-Biden DOJ official, who is targeting former President Trump, donated thousands of dollars to President Biden’s 2020 campaign.
foxnews.com
Khloé Kardashian dropped 80 pounds post-pregnancy by cutting out this product
The "Kardashians" star got candid about how her years-long fitness journey helped her slim down after welcoming her daughter in 2018.
nypost.com
'Not a chance’: Experts weigh likelihood of Trump's Georgia case going to trial before 2024 election
Some legal experts say there is little to no chance the case will go to trial before the November election in light of a Georgia Appeals Court decision.
foxnews.com
‘Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes’ review: Man, these monkeys still kick ass
The film continues this damn dirty science-fiction franchise's reign as one of the best out there.
nypost.com
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene moves forward with vote to oust House Speaker Mike Johnson after weeks-long delay
One day after making several demands of Johnson (R-La.), the Georgia congresswoman surprised colleagues by triggering the resolution to oust him that she had filed on April 22.
nypost.com
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene files motion to oust House Speaker Mike Johnson
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) officially filed her motion Monday to oust Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) as leader of the House, starting a two-day clock for lawmakers to decide his fate.
washingtonpost.com
Stock Market Today: Dow Closes Higher for 6th Day in a Row
Uber, Lyft and Reddit were among the day's biggest movers.
newsweek.com
There isn’t a ‘best’ day to book the cheapest flight — it depends on the airline, travel expert reveals
You may be myth-ing the mark.
nypost.com
Marjorie Taylor Greene calls for vote to oust House Speaker Mike Johnson
The move marked a reversal from a day earlier, when Greene appeared to retreat from her threat to trigger a vote to remove Johnson as speaker.
cbsnews.com
Alvin Bragg Should Follow Key 'Roadmap' in Trump Trial: Alan Dershowitz
Dershowitz, a former member of Trump's impeachment legal team, argued that the case against the ex-president is "corrupt."
newsweek.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Dark Matter’ On Apple TV+, Where A Man Gets Abducted Into An Alternate Version Of His Life
Joel Edgerton, Jennifer Connelly, Jimi Simpson and Alice Braga star in Blake Crouch's adaptation of his 2016 novel.
nypost.com
Otro milagro: Real Madrid remonta y vence al Bayern para alcanzar la final de la Champions
Con otra remontada cuando parecía desahuciado, el Real Madrid doblegó el miércoles 2-1 al Bayern Múnich y se clasificó a la final de la Liga de Campeones por tercera vez en tres temporadas.
latimes.com
Steve Albini Was an Icon of Punk-Rock Purity—but He Also Showed How You Could Evolve
The legendary producer, dead at 61, was more than just a rigid minimalist.
slate.com
Young black bear sighted in Northeast D.C.’s Brookland
Officials suspect it is the same bear that has been seen roaming across Maryland in recent days.
washingtonpost.com
Elite special forces protect the Olympic flame as it arrives in France for the 2024 Paris Olympics – PHOTOS
Thousands watch the closely guarded Olympic flame arrive into the Old Port of Marseille, on May 8, 2024.
nypost.com