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Japanese organization Nihon Hidankyo wins 2024 Nobel Peace Prize

Japanese organization Nihon Hidankyo, a grassroots movement of atomic bomb survivors from Hiroshima and Nagasaki, also known as Hibakusha, won the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday.
Read full article on: nypost.com
What to watch with your kids: ‘Joker: Folie à Deux,’ ‘Piece by Piece’ and more
Common Sense Media also reviews “Tomb Raider: The Legend of Lara Croft” and “The Franchise.”
washingtonpost.com
Harris Town Hall Moderator Debunks Crazy New Teleprompter Claim
Justin Sullivan/Getty ImagesThe moderator for Kamala Harris’s Univision town hall personally debunked yet another teleprompter conspiracy theory cooked up by right-wing influencers.Conservative commentators claimed to have uncovered a “gotcha” moment when a Univision camera panning the room during Thursday’s event showed Harris speaking in front of a teleprompter with writing that then went black.“Watch them panic when they realized they were showing the prompter live on-air,” right-wing pundit Benny Johnson wrote on X—even though Harris was still speaking went the screen goes blank.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Diddy's Least Favorite Thing About Jail Is the Food, Apparently
Jane Rosenberg/ReutersSean “Diddy” Combs has one main complaint about life in jail, his lawyer suggested outside a pre-trial hearing for the disgraced mogul on Thursday. It’s not the indignity of sharing cramped unsanitary quarters with Sam Bankman-Fried, nor the threat of a new wave of sex-abuse lawsuits from another 120 of his alleged victims, nor even the broader reality of his legal situation. According to defense attorney Marc Agnifilo, it’s the menu at the Metropolitan Detention Center, where Diddy is currently awaiting trial, that his client can’t stand.“I think the food’s probably the roughest part of it,” Agnifilo informed reporters after the hearing, per People. According to a previous report from the magazine, the MDC serves inmates a 6a.m. breakfast consisting of items such as cereal, fruit, and some sort of cake, with coffee as a special extra on weekends. An 11 a.m. lunch might be hamburgers, tacos (beef), or baked fish, plus scrambled eggs and biscuits on weekends. Dinner is served at 4 p.m., with chicken fajitas, roast beef, some sort of pasta, and “heart-healthy” tofu or legumes—lentils, baked beans—as possible offerings. There’s also a long list of commissary items available for purchase from the Federal Bureau of Prisons. Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Trump Baffles Everybody With Bizarre ‘Biden Circles’ Babble
RSBNDonald Trump’s speech to Detroit business leaders Thursday night contained a truly bewildering riff about “Biden circles” and their beauty.The former president has made headlines over the course of his campaign with strange speeches about whether it’s better to be electrocuted or attacked by a shark and giving unintelligible, rambling answers to policy questions. Trump has defended his free-wheeling, sometimes unfollowable oratory style as a deliberate ploy he calls “the weave”—but his latest effort looked more like unraveling.During Trump’s speech at the Detroit Economic Club—which included a segment insulting the city of Detroit, prompting condemnation from the mayor—the Republican nominee was speaking about how American manufacturing can be affected by other countries’ tariffs before veering off-topic into a discussion about Elon Musk, rockets, and, for some reason, circles.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Remains of climber who vanished in 1924 found on Mount Everest
Andrew Irvine went missing in 1924 alongside climbing partner George Mallory as the pair attempted to be the first to reach Everest's summit.
cbsnews.com
The Stakes on Climate
We cover each presidential candidate’s climate policies.
nytimes.com
Love your job? Nominate your company to be recognized in 2025.
The popular Top Workplaces program in the DMV area features 250 of the best employers.
washingtonpost.com
Drownings of 2 Navy SEALS were preventable, military probe finds
Two U.S. Navy SEALs drowned as they tried to climb aboard a ship​ carrying illicit Iranian-made weapons to Yemen because of glaring training failures, a military probe of the January deaths found.
cbsnews.com
Voters question Harris' pitch as agent of change: POLL
Kamala Harris' positioning as a change agent is running into headwinds from her role in the unpopular Biden administration, a new ABC News/Ipsos poll found.
abcnews.go.com
Parents warned of disturbing kidnapping scheme using kids’ voice replicas
Phone scams have been around for a while, but recent advancements in artificial intelligence technology is making it easier for bad actors to convince people they have kidnapped their loved ones.
nypost.com
Agony and Relief After Milton, and the Nobel Peace Prize Is Awarded
Plus, the W.N.B.A.’s record-breaking season.
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nytimes.com
Trump Boasts Michigan ‘Man of the Year’ But Newspaper Says, ‘Never Happened’
Bill Pugliano/Getty ImagesDonald Trump faced an embarrassing takedown after claiming to have proof of the debunked claim that he was once given Michigan’s Man of the Year award.In a speech in which he trashed Detroit, the former president brandished a print-out of a story from the Oakland Press, saying he’d asked his staff to find evidence that he’d been honored with the accolade 11 years earlier.“It was like 19 years ago. It was a long time. But I was honored. And guess what? They found it. I was,” said Trump, unfolding the paper. “So here’s your article right here. It says, ‘Oakland County GOP to honor Donald Trump, former president, to speak at upcoming Lincoln Day fundraising dinner.’ And it says down here, ‘The county party gave Trump the Man of the Year award at the dinner, too.’”Read more at The Daily Beast.
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thedailybeast.com
Why Trump and RFK Jr. won't 'make America healthy again'
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. promises that a second Trump presidency would tackle chronic disease. But Trump's record in his first term suggests the opposite.
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latimes.com
Chargers vs. Denver Broncos: How to watch, prediction and betting odds
Everything you need to know about the Chargers playing on the road against the Denver Broncos on Sunday, including start time, TV channel and betting odds.
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latimes.com
Intense UCLA policing draws scrutiny as security chief speaks out on handling protests
UCLA's top security chief, hired after protest violence last spring, speaks out on campus safety plan amid faculty concerns about excessive police presence.
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latimes.com
Good news! The Mark Taper Forum is back. Bad news? ‘American Idiot’ misfires
CTG artistic director Snehal Desai makes his directorial debut at the company in a reimagined revival of the Green Day musical featured deaf and hearing actors in a collaboration with Deaf West Theatre.
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latimes.com
In a chaotic world, what can we learn from billion-year-old stones?
As Emily Dickinson knew, unfeeling rocks can remind us of death, but they can also provide perspective on our human troubles in the grand scheme of things.
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latimes.com
Younger daters are tired of swiping. A host of new L.A. startups is vying for their attention
As revenue growth slows for major dating apps such as Tinder and Hinge, startups seek to offer a new way to meet people online and in person.
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latimes.com
Our L.A. food critic's highly specific guide to San Francisco dining
Restaurant critic Bill Addison names new and nostalgic favorites in the ever-evolving City by the Bay.
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latimes.com
Much of the world is terrified by another Trump presidency. Here's why
As Trump's lies reverberate, our allies question not only U.S. policies but our nation's fundamental reliability as a partner in the world.
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latimes.com
T-Boy Wrestling is a sizzling showcase of trans masculinity — sweat, twerking and all
Cheeky slaps, hot and heavy make-out sessions and a wild drag show. This isn't your typical wrestling tournament.
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latimes.com
Report says ICE detention often fails to meet government standards
A government watchdog says ICE is hindered in its “ability to maintain a safe and secure environment for staff and detainees.”
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washingtonpost.com
Letters to the Editor: Show solidarity with Milton and Helene victims by demanding climate solutions
"Even if we stop the production of all greenhouse gasses, right now, the weather is going to get a lot worse," says a reader.
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latimes.com
The most Republican and Democratic cuisines, according to campaign funds
This week, we scour campaign finance reports to reveal strikingly partisan preferences for various restaurants, with few more polarizing than McDonald’s.
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washingtonpost.com
Trump downsized national monuments. Biden restored them. Project 2025 calls for reductions again
Trump reduced national monuments before Biden restored them. The Project 2025 blueprint says public lands need to remain open to a wide range of uses.
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latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: Worried about senior drivers? Wait until you hear about teens behind the wheel
Who are the problem drivers? All this attention on license renewal testing for seniors ignores the problems caused by phone use and teen drivers.
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latimes.com
Poll: If Trump wins the White House, Californians want their next senator to fight back
If Trump and Schiff both win, California's likely voters want to see the Burbank lawmaker continue to play an antagonistic role against Trump, poll data suggest.
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latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: The desert isn't a wasteland. Destroying it for solar energy is a travesty
Put solar panels on every last area of developed land — parking lots, warehouse roofs, freeways — before wiping out more of our deserts.
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latimes.com
'He's just that type of freak': Chargers have the NFL's only two-way player
The Chargers' Scott Matlock is the NFL's only two-way player, appearing in 36% of the snaps on offense, 19.7% on defense and 57.8% more on special teams.
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latimes.com
'Sideways' turns 20. A generation later, are the kids drinking Merlot?
The movie "Sideways" — and the line "if anybody orders Merlot, I'm leaving" — sparked a wine conversation that's still going strong.
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latimes.com
'There is no easy fix': Study reveals attitudes about lack of trees in South L.A.
Studies have laid bare the unequal distribution of L.A.'s tree canopy. A new report suggests historic inequities won't be a quick fix.
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latimes.com
How to have the best Sunday in L.A., according to Abby Wambach
Surfing, cold plunges and family. Soccer legend Abby Wambach, who co-hosts the podcast “We Can Do Hard Things” with her wife Glennon Doyle, shares her perfect Sunday in L.A.
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latimes.com
New hotel at SoFi Stadium to cater to athletes and fans
Construction is underway on a $300 million hotel next to SoFi Stadium, the latest addition to Rams owner Stan Kroenke's sprawling mixed-use development in Inglewood.
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latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: Israel has the right to defend itself and stop Iran from seeking its annihilation
The war between Hamas and Israel should end, but with a critical caveat: Israel must be safe from those who seek to destroy it.
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latimes.com
Mike Pence's story is crucial to the Jan. 6 case against Trump. Can Jack Smith still use it?
The former vice president's story is crucial to the federal case. Prosecutors argue that it should survive the Supreme Court's immunity ruling for several reasons.
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latimes.com
To craft the visual mood of 'Disclaimer,' Alfonso Cuarón turned to his 'alchemist'
Cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki, Cuarón's longtime friend and collaborator, was key to the creation of the director's Apple TV+ miniseries that stars Cate Blanchett and Kevin Kline.
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latimes.com
Los Angeles Times News Quiz this week: Melania Trump's memoir, Taylor Swift's net worth
Melania Trump publishes a new book, the L.A. mayor makes an announcement and Kim Kardashian pens an essay of support.
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latimes.com
Column: Elon Musk's courtship with MAGA has driven X into misinformation abyss
Elon Musk has turned the former Twitter from a social media staple into a fount of misinformation. Even former President Trump seems annoyed with the right's new cheerleader.
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latimes.com
LAPD rookie cops face hazing by shaved heads and other 'rites of passage,' report says
LAPD training officers have forced new hires to wear long-sleeved uniforms in hot weather, forbid them from speaking unless spoken to, and told them to "forget everything you learned in the academy," according to a new study by the department's inspector general.
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latimes.com
Opinion: I'm a rabbi and a former IDF soldier. This Yom Kippur I'm atoning for my part in the occupation
I was part of the military machine that allowed Israeli Jews to force Palestinians to live in constant fear. I feel a responsibility to model a different way of being Jewish.
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latimes.com
For Scott Speedman, 'Felicity' fame was a 'culture shock.' Now it works to his benefit
On 'Grey's Anatomy' and Peacock's new sci-fi thriller 'Teacup,' the actor keeps stretching himself — in part by playing off fan expectations of a former WB heartthrob.
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latimes.com
Dodgers vs. Padres: Ready for a Shohei Ohtani-Yu Darvish duel in Game 5?
How Shohei Ohtani and the Dodgers fare against Padres starter Yu Darvish, and the performance of the L.A. bullpen will be worth watching in NLDS Game 5.
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latimes.com
What was the first episode of 'SNL' really like? Fact vs. fiction in 'Saturday Night'
'Saturday Night' depicts the 90 minutes leading up to the very first episode of 'SNL' — but it takes some liberties with the truth. Here's what's fact and what's fiction.
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latimes.com
On a remote Alaskan island, a ‘strike team’ hunts a single elusive rat
A remote Alaskan island mobilizes a “strike team” to hunt a single elusive rat that may have come aboard a visiting ship.
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washingtonpost.com
Rumors on X Are Becoming the Right’s New Reality
A curious set of claims has recently emerged from the right-wing corners of the social-media platform X: FEMA is systematically abandoning Trump-supporting Hurricane Helene victims; Democrats (and perhaps Jewish people) are manipulating the weather; Haitian immigrants are eating pet cats in Springfield, Ohio. These stories seem absurd to most people. But to a growing number of Americans living in bespoke realities, wild rumors on X carry weight. Political influencers, elites, and prominent politicians on the right are embracing even pathologically outlandish claims made by their base. They know that amplifying online rumors carries little cost—and offers considerable political gain.Unverified claims that spread from person to person, filling the voids where uncertainty reigns, are as old as human communication itself. Some of the juiciest rumors inspire outrage and contradict official accounts—and from time to time, such a claim turns out to be true. Sharing a rumor is a form of community participation, a way of signaling solidarity with friends, ostracizing some out-group, or both. Political rumors are particularly well suited to the current incarnation of X, a platform that evolved from a place for real-time news and conversations into a gladiatorial arena for partisan fights, owned by a reflexive contrarian with a distaste for media, institutions, and most authority figures.[Read: November will be worse]When Elon Musk bought the platform, then known as Twitter, in 2022, he argued that it had become too quick to censor heterodox and conservative ideas. “For Twitter to deserve public trust, it must be politically neutral,” he said in April 2022, shortly after initiating his purchase, “which effectively means upsetting the far right and the far left equally.” But Musk quickly broomed out most of the Trust and Safety team that addressed false and misleading content, along with spam, foreign bots, and other problems. As Musk has drifted to the right—his profile picture now features him in a MAGA hat—the platform he rebranded as X has become the center of a right-wing political culture built upon a fantastical rumor mill. Although false and misleading ideas also spread on Facebook, Telegram, and Trump’s own platform, Truth Social, they move faster and get more views on X—and are likelier to find their way into mainstream political discussion.Many political rumors on social media begin when people share something they supposedly heard from an indirect acquaintance: The false narrative about pet-eating Haitian immigrants in Springfield started when one woman posted to a Facebook group that her neighbor’s daughter’s friend had lost their cat and had seen Haitians in a house nearby carving it up to eat. Others picked up the story and started posting about it. Another woman shared a screenshot of the Springfield post on X, to bolster her own previous claim that ducks were disappearing from local parks.Unbound by geography, online rumors can spread very far, very fast; if they gain enough traction, they may trend, drawing still more participants into the discussion. The X post received more than 900,000 views within a few days. Others amplified the story, expressing alarm about Haitian immigrants. No substantive evidence of the wild claims ever emerged.[Juliette Kayyem: The fog of disaster is getting worse]Rumors alleging that FEMA was abandoning Trump voters after Helene followed the same pattern: Friend-of-a-friend posts claimed that FEMA was treating Trump supporters unfairly. These claims became entangled in misinformation about what kinds of financial recovery resources the government would provide, and to whom. Claims about abandonment or incompetence were sometimes enhanced by AI-generated images of purported victims designed to tug on the heartstrings, such as a viral picture of a nonexistent child and puppy supposedly adrift in floodwaters. The image spread rapidly on X because it resonated with people who are suspicious of the government—and people who share misleading content rather than question it.The amplification of emotionally manipulative chatter is a familiar issue on social media. What’s more disconcerting is that Republican political elites—with Musk now among them—are openly legitimizing what the X rumor mill churns out when it serves their objectives. X’s owner has claimed that FEMA is “actively blocking citizens” who are trying to help flood victims in North Carolina, and that it “used up its budget ferrying illegals into the country instead of saving American lives.” J. D. Vance, the Republican vice-presidential candidate, elevated rumors of pet-eating Haitians to national attention on social media for days; Donald Trump did the same in a presidential debate. Influential public figures and political elites—people who, especially in times of crisis, should be acting as voices of reason—are using baseless, often paranoid allegations for partisan advantage.History shows that the weaponization of rumors can lead to devastating consequences—scapegoating individuals, inciting violence, deepening societal divisions, sparking moral panics, and even justifying atrocities. Yet online rumormongering has immense value to right-wing propagandists. In the 2020 election, Trump and his political allies set the narrative frame from the top: Massive fraud was occurring, Trump claimed, and the election would be stolen from him. The supposed proof came later, in the form of countless online rumors. I and other researchers who watched election-related narratives unfold observed the same pattern again and again: Trump’s true believers offered up evidence to support what they’d been told was true. They’d heard that impersonators were using other people’s maiden names to vote. A friend of a friend’s ballot wasn’t read because they’d used a Sharpie marker. These unfounded claims were amplified by influencers and went viral, even as Twitter tried to moderate them—primarily by labeling and sometimes downranking them. None of them turned out to be true. Even so, today, 30 percent of the public and 70 percent of Republicans still believe the Big Lie that Democrats stole the 2020 election from Trump. This simmering sense of injustice is powerful—it spurred violence on January 6, 2021—and continues to foster unrest.In Ohio recently, claims about supposed Haitian pet-eaters led to dozens of bomb threats, according to state’s Republican governor, Mike DeWine, who has attempted to correct the record. Local Republican business leaders who praised their Haitian workers received death threats for their troubles. Similarly, fire chiefs and local Republican elected officials pushed back on Helene rumors after FEMA workers were threatened. What of left-wing rumors? They exist, of course. After the assassination attempts on Trump, some commentators insinuated that they were “false flag” attacks—in other words, that his camp had staged the incidents to gain public sympathy for him. But mainstream media called out left-wing conspiracism and fact-checked the rumors. The people expressing them were overwhelmingly censured, not encouraged, by fellow influencers and elites on their side of the political spectrum.In contrast, when social-media companies stepped in to address false claims of voter fraud in 2020, the political influencers who most frequently spread them clamored for retribution, and their allies delivered. Representative Jim Jordan, one of the House’s most powerful Republicans, convened a congressional subcommittee that cast efforts to fact-check and label misleading posts as “censorship.” (Full disclosure: I was one of the panel’s targets.)Conservatives have reframed fact-checking as a censorship technique by “woke” tech companies and biased journalists. Musk abandoned the practice in favor of Community Notes—which, in theory, allow fellow users to add their own fact-checks and context to any post on the platform. Musk once described Community Notes as a “game changer for combating wrong information”—he understood, correctly, that opening up the fact-checking process to many different voices could better enable consensus about what the truth is. But Community Notes cannot keep up with the rumors roiling X. Notes are absent from some of the most outrageous claims about pet-eating migrants or FEMA malfeasance, which have millions of views. Even as Musk himself has become one of the most prominent boosters of political rumors, Community Notes on Musk’s own tweets have a way of disappearing.[Listen: Autocrats win by capturing the courts]Musk’s original vision for Twitter may have been just to nudge the platform a bit to the right—toward a more libertarian approach that would bolster it as a free-speech platform while preserving it as the best place to go for breaking news. Instead, figuring out what’s really happening is harder and harder, while X is becoming ever more useful as a place for powerful people to source outrageous material for political propaganda.Many people across the political spectrum are still on X, of course. The platform has a reported 570 million monthly users, on average. However much Musk’s changes annoyed people on the center and the left, network effects have kept many of them on the platform; those who don’t want to lose friends or followers are likely to keep posting. Yet the market is providing alternative options. Bluesky and Mastodon absorbed some of the extremely online left-leaning users who got fed up first. Threads, an offshoot of Instagram, quickly followed; although the others are still small, Threads has more than 200 million monthly active users. People have other places to go. So do advertisers.Still, today’s emerging alternative platforms are not a replacement for the Twitter of the late 2010s; real-time news is harder to find, and communities on each of the new entrants have gripes about curation and moderation.Users who miss the golden age of Twitter still have the option of counterspeech—trying to push back against rumors with good information, and hoping that X’s algorithm will lift it. The question is whether doing so is worth the potential personal cost: Why spend time refuting rumors if your efforts are likely to go largely unseen or bring the wrath of an (unmoderated) mob?Without a concerted push to defend truth—by leaders, institutions, and the public—the rumor mill will continue to churn, and its distortions will become the foundation of an irreparably divided political landscape. As Hurricane Milton roared across Florida, social-media users were fantasizing, absurdly, about government control of tropical cyclones and making death threats against weather forecasters. Whether Milton-related conspiracy theories will enter the national political discussion isn’t yet clear. But the broad cycle of rumors and threats is becoming depressingly familiar.Rumors have always circulated, but the decision by Republican politicians and Musk to exploit them has created a problem that’s genuinely new. In the modern right-wing propaganda landscape, where facts are recast as subjective and any authority outside MAGA is deemed illegitimate, eroding trust in institutions is not an unfortunate side effect—it is the goal. And for now, the result is a niche political reality wherein elites on the right, including the world’s richest man, amplify baseless claims without legitimate pushback.
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theatlantic.com
‘Lonely Planet’: Laura Dern and Liam Hemsworth under the Moroccan sun
Susannah Grant’s age-gap romance wants to flirt, but it’s missing the spark.
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washingtonpost.com
Tell The Post: Did you meet your partner in D.C. without an app?
Dating in D.C. can be notoriously difficult. We want to hear your success stories.
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washingtonpost.com
Mark Cuban’s attempt to blast Elon Musk appearance at Trump rally backfires in billionaire group chat: sources
The group chat -- which is normally filled with memes -- became fixated on Musk and his involvement with Trump's campaign.
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nypost.com