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Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailParamount is a melting ice cube, and the future is not good, says NYT's Jim StewartJames Stewart, New York Times columnist, joins 'Money Movers' to discuss the ordeal around Paramount, whether opportunities were left on the table for Paramount, and much more.
Persons: Jim Stewart James Stewart Organizations: Paramount, Jim Stewart James Stewart , New York Times Locations: Jim Stewart James Stewart ,
JD Vance and Donald Trump Jr. have developed a close friendship and communicate "nearly daily," per The Times. Vance was once a critic of former President Trump but has become a champion of the ex-president. AdvertisementWhen Republican Sen. JD Vance of Ohio arrived in the Senate last year, he was already a well-known figure, boosted by his best-selling memoir "Hillbilly Elegy" and its subsequent film adaptation. For many GOP figures, Vance represents the future of the party, one that embraces the more isolationist "America First" worldview advanced by former President Donald Trump. This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers.
Persons: Vance, Donald Trump Jr, Trump, , Republican Sen, JD Vance, Donald Trump Organizations: Times, Service, Republican, Business Locations: Ohio
Ten years ago this week, The New York Times introduced the Upshot, a section devoted to explaining “politics, policy and everyday life.” That’s a wide scope, by design. As a result, more than 5,000 articles later, the Upshot has been many things to many readers. To mark our 10th birthday, we’ve collected 100 stories that embody the Upshot. WordleBot Eden Weingart/The New York Times When Wordle first became popular, several people on the internet claimed, plausibly, that they had come up with the “best” opening word. Force of Ship Impact Was on the Scale of a Rocket Launch Erin Schaff/The New York Times We think of the Upshot as a place where back-of-the-envelope calculations can be both helpful and welcome.
Persons: , Nate Cohn’s, we’ve, Kevin Quealy, John Branch, John, Patrick Thomas, tut, Trump, pollsters, Obamacare, Leif Parsons, We’re, Jason Henry, Tony Luong, Jordan, , Ruth Fremson, Laurel, ’ Rodrigo Corral, Alex Welsh, Paul Romer, Tim Enthoven, Barack Obama, epidemiologists, It’s, you’re, WordleBot Eden, Wordle, Lila Barth, McCabe, Tom Brady, ChatGPT, , Erin Schaff Organizations: New York Times, Facebook, Yankees, Red, State Newspaper, ESPN, The Athletic, The Times, You’re, Voters, Trump, Mr, Times, Siena College, Walmart, The New York Times, Jordan Siemens, Health, New, Nike, Democratic, Twitter, America, Iowa, Iowa Democratic, Cancer, Hit, Biden, Insurance, Roe America, Disorders, Republican, Republican Party of, U.S, Budget, NASA, National, Traffic, Administration, Yorkers, Force Locations: It’s, Red Sox, State, America, Dakota, Ireland, Chipotle, Japan, U.S, United States, Siena, New Pennsylvania, District, Iowa, Covid, York City, New York, Pennsylvania, Roe, Tonga, Arizona, York, Holland
I feel as if I’ve always known who Salman Rushdie is. In August of 2022, more than 30 years after the fatwa, a fanatic with a knife attacked and tried to kill Rushdie. His latest book, “Knife: Meditations After an Attempted Murder,” is about the attack and its aftermath. This is what I now understand after reading “Knife,” what I now understand after I went and read, for the first time, “The Satanic Verses”: I have never known who Salman Rushdie is. How many people out there do I wrongly think that I know?
Persons: , Ezra Klein, I’ve, Salman Rushdie, , Ruhollah Khomeini, Rushdie, it’s, It’s Organizations: Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, Google Locations: Iran
A man was caught trying to leave Ukraine via the Dniester River — on an air mattress. Ukrainian border agents found him paddling with his arms in an attempt to reach Moldova. AdvertisementUkraine's border service said on Wednesday that it caught a man attempting to cross into Moldova by "swimming" on an inflatable mattress in the Dniester River. The border service did not say if the man on the mattress was trying to dodge the draft. This isn't the first time the Ukrainian border service has caught someone in an air mattress-related incident.
Persons: Organizations: Service, State Border Service, Dnipro, dodgers, The New York Times, BBC, NATO, Agents Locations: Ukraine, Moldova, Romanian, Russia, Ukrainian, Hungary, Kyiv
But it’s the crucial step in the creative process that takes work that’s decent and can turn it into something great. [You can listen to this episode of “The Ezra Klein Show” on the NYT Audio app, Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, Google or wherever you get your podcasts.] Adam Moss is widely known as one of the great magazine editors of his generation: He remade The New York Times Magazine in the late 1990s and early 2000s, and during his 15 years as editor in chief of New York magazine, shaped that outlet into one of the greatest print and digital publications we have. It’s a celebration of the hard, human work that goes into the creative act. It’s a book, really, about editing.
Persons: , Ezra Klein, Adam Moss, he’s Organizations: Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, Google, New York Times Magazine, New York
San Francisco celebrated a new public loo with a mini-carnival complete with games, lemonade, and a live band. The public toilet initially cost $1.7 million with a multi-year deadline but had its price slashed to $200,000. AdvertisementThe scandal over a public toilet in San Francisco that cost $1.7 million has ended in celebration after the new loo opened on Monday with a much-discounted price tag of $200,000. That's according to The New York Times, CBS News, and The San Francisco Chronicle, who sent reporters down to the toilet's launch in the Noe Valley Town Square. AdvertisementCity officials said they were weighed down by high construction costs in San Francisco, as well as the need for environmental reviews and checks from multiple commissions.
Persons: , Mario, Luigi, Leslie Crawford, Gavin Newsom, Chad Kaufman, Vaughn Buckley, Buckley, San Francisco Mayor London Breed Organizations: Service, The New York Times, CBS News, San Francisco Chronicle, Residents, People, NYT, CBS, SF Chronicle, San, Chronicle, California Gov, Company, San Francisco Mayor London Locations: Francisco, San Francisco, Noe, California, Nevada, Pennsylvania, Kaufman
How TikTok Changed Us
  + stars: | 2024-04-19 | by ( Sapna Maheshwari | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +4 min
In the coming days, Congress may advance a bill to ban TikTok or force its sale to an American company. A few schools have removed bathroom mirrors because so many students were leaving class to film TikTok videos there. For 14 percent of American adults, TikTok is a regular news source, up from 3 percent in 2020. People who don’t have traditional backgrounds in journalism, akin to bloggers for the TikTok era, aggregate and share information in snappy videos. Organizations including The New York Times are also making short-form videos in which reporters talk to the camera about their stories, the TikTok way.
Persons: who’ve, It’s, , Brooks Barnes, Natasha Singer, Becky Hughes, TikTok, Taylor, mocktails, you’ve Organizations: Sony, Hollywood, The New York Times Locations: American, United States, Hollywood
But, as they try to claim that mantle, many of those same forces in media and politics are behind a disturbing wave of book bans sweeping the nation. PEN America, a non-profit organization committed to protecting free expression, published an alarming report Tuesday indicating that the “book ban crisis” is only getting worse. “There were over 4,000 instances of book bans in the first half of this school year—more than all of last school year as a whole. In doing so, they have also disproportionately targeted books by women and nonbinary authors,” PEN America said. Ted Shaffrey/APSuch brazen book bans — unprecedented in modern American history — is at its worst in the red states of Florida and Texas.
Persons: New York CNN —, Nikole Hannah, Margaret Atwood’s, ” Amy Reed’s, Rupi, , , ’ ‘, Ted Shaffrey, Ron DeSantis, Abdi Nazemian, I’ve, ” Nazemian, “ I’ve, ” Kasey Meehan, Read, we’re Organizations: New York CNN, PEN America, The New York Times, ” PEN America, Central Library, Brooklyn Public Library, PEN Locations: New York, USA, birthed, , New York City, Florida, Texas, In Florida, In Texas, Iranian, Iowa
New York CNN —Did Donald Trump fall asleep in court? As the first criminal trial of a former American president commenced Monday, The New York Times’ Maggie Haberman delivered a stunning report from the Manhattan courtroom. “This is 100% Fake News coming from ‘journalists’ who weren’t even in the court room,” a Trump campaign spokesperson later insisted. The Trump campaign forcefully denying Haberman and other reporters’ accounts quickly created two versions of events for people at home to choose to believe: Trump or Haberman. One of the concerns has been that by welcoming the public into the courtroom, cases will transform into public spectacles, similar to the O.J.
Persons: Donald Trump, Maggie Haberman, Trump, , , Susanne Craig, Joe ”, snooze, , Haberman, Simpson Organizations: New, New York CNN, The New York Times, Trump, Republican, MSNBC, Fake, Fox News Locations: New York, American, Manhattan, Trump, Haberman, Federal
There is so much we need to build right now. The housing crunch has spread across the country; by one estimate, we’re a few million units short. And we also need a huge build-out of renewable energy infrastructure — at a scale some experts compare to the construction of the Interstate highway system. [You can listen to this episode of “The Ezra Klein Show” on the NYT Audio App, Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, Google or wherever you get your podcasts.] Jerusalem Demsas is a staff writer at The Atlantic who obsesses over these questions as much as I do.
Persons: , Ezra Klein Organizations: Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, Google Locations: Jerusalem
Back in 2018, Dario Amodei worked at OpenAI. He and his colleagues decided to study it, and they found that the A.I. Amodei is now the chief executive of his own A.I. company, Anthropic, which recently released Claude 3 — considered by many to be the strongest A.I. And he thinks we’re on the steep part of the climb right now.
Persons: Dario Amodei, didn’t, , Ezra Klein, Claude, , we’re Organizations: Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, Google Locations: OpenAI
Besides the soap, FAA auditors say they saw Spirit mechanics use a hotel key card to check a door seal. In March, The Times reported that Federal Aviation Administration's (FAA) auditors saw Spirit AeroSystems' mechanics applying soap to a door seal. AdvertisementAccording to Buccino, Spirit also tried using other household products such as Vaseline, cornstarch, and talcum powder as a lubricant before settling on liquid Dawn soap. Buccino said the Dawn soap became their top choice because it didn't cause the door seal to degrade over time. Representatives for Boeing, Spirit, and the FAA did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider sent outside regular business hours.
Persons: Spirit AeroSystems, , Joe Buccino, Buccino, Spirit, Sean Black, Black, Dave Calhoun, Jennifer Homendy Organizations: Boeing, Spirit, FAA, Service, New York Times, The Times, Aviation, Times, Alaska Airlines, National Transportation Safety Board, NTSB, Business Insider
Four years after a racial reckoning roiled Condé Nast's Bon Appétit, insiders worry that planned cuts could undo a fragile rebuilding effort. Included in that figure are 94 members, or 17%, of Condé Nast Union, which covers around 550 people across a dozen titles, including Vanity Fair, Vogue, and GQ. The Test Kitchen also benefited from a home cooking boom in the pandemic. But by August 2020, 10 of 13 members of the Test Kitchen had left. Members of the BA Test Kitchen in February 2020.
Persons: Bon Appétit, Condé, Roger Lynch, Adam Rapoport, that'll, Claire Saffitz, Brad Leone, Roy Rochlin, Rachel Gurjar, Kendra Vaculin, Dawn Davis, Sonia Chopra, Davis, Monica Schipper, they'd, Jamila Robinson, James Beard, Jeff Schear, Condé Nast, Lynch, Robinson, Slack, Delia Cai, Ina Garten Organizations: Condé, Condé Nast Union, Vogue, Business, YouTube, Labs, James, The New York Times, Philadelphia Inquirer, Union, New York, Employees Locations: Condé Nast, New York City, Caribbean, Seoul, Hollywood
CNN —A former interpreter for Los Angeles Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani is in negotiations to plead guilty to federal crimes related to accusations he stole millions from Ohtani and used it for gambling, the New York Times reported Wednesday, citing three people familiar with the matter. Ippei Mizuhara was fired last month after Ohtani’s lawyers accused him of stealing from Ohtani and placing bets with a bookmaker who is under federal investigation. Ohtani later alleged Mizuhara stole the money from his bank account. “I’m very saddened and shocked that someone who I’ve trusted has done this,” Ohtani, Major League Baseball’s only two-way player, said. ESPN’s Tisha Thompson, citing multiple unnamed sources, said on CNN’s “The Lead” last month at least $4.5 million was withdrawn via wire transfer from Ohtani’s bank accounts, though it was unclear who initiated the transfers.
Persons: CNN —, Shohei Ohtani, Mizuhara, Ohtani, Michael Freedman, , ” Ohtani, I’ve, ESPN’s Tisha Thompson, gambles, CNN’s Raja Razek, De la Fuente, Steve Almasy, Dalia Faheid, Elizabeth Wolfe Organizations: CNN, Los Angeles Dodgers, New York Times, Prosecutors, Dodgers, MLB, ESPN, Los Angeles Times, baseball’s, Dodger, League Baseball’s, Internal Revenue Service, Major League Baseball, American League Locations: Ohtani, South Korea, Seoul, Korea
Do a Google search, and there are so many websites now filled with slapdash content contorted just to rank highly in the algorithm. Facebook, YouTube, X and TikTok all used to feel more fun and surprising. And into this weakened internet came the flood of A.I.-generated junk. TikTok videos of A.I.-generated voices reading text pulled from Reddit can be churned out in seconds. content will break the internet as we know it.
Persons: , Ezra Klein, Nilay Patel Organizations: Facebook, Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, Google
Former President Donald Trump recently spoke to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, per the NYT. Trump once called the Saudi ruler "a friend of mine" whom he'd protected from congressional scrutiny. AdvertisementFormer President Donald Trump recently spoke to his old "friend" and de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, The New York Times reported on Wednesday. Related storiesThat Trump has carried on his relationship with the Saudi ruler isn't too surprising. AdvertisementTrump also claimed that he'd protected the Saudi Crown Prince from congressional scrutiny following the brutal murder of American journalist Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul in 2018.
Persons: Donald Trump, Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Trump, , Trump's, isn't, Jared Kushner, Jamal Khashoggi, Bob Woodward Organizations: MBS, Saudi Consulate, Service, The New York Times, White, The Times, Times, Representatives, Trump, Saudi, Trump Organization, Reuters, Business Insider Locations: Saudi, American, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Istanbul
Opinion | How Should I Be Using A.I. Right Now?
  + stars: | 2024-04-02 | by ( The Ezra Klein Show | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
There’s something of a paradox that has defined my experience with artificial intelligence in this particular moment. So I wanted to understand what I’m missing and get some tips for how I could incorporate A.I. This conversation covers the basics, including which chatbot to choose and techniques for how to get the most useful results. But the conversation goes far beyond that, too — to some of the strange, delightful and slightly unnerving ways that A.I. responds to us, and how you’ll get more out of any chatbot if you think of it as a relationship rather than a tool.
Persons: Ethan Mollick, University of Pennsylvania who’s, , Ezra Klein, chatbot Organizations: Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, Google
The NYT Connections game has players in an uproar. For those unfamiliar with the game, players are tasked with finding the connections between four groups of words. And the new-look emoji game has left some users confused and even a little angry when they went to play Connections. "nyt connections editor I am in your walls," one post read. And one person on X pointed out, "No one is forcing you to do the NYT connections, by the way."
Persons: , sarah 💛🤎 Organizations: Service, New York Times
Elon Musk took aim at Disney CEO Bob Iger in an apparent April Fools' Day joke posted to X. "Excited to join @Disney as their Chief DEI Officer," Musk wrote in the early hours of April 1. AdvertisementElon Musk took aim at Disney CEO Bob Iger in an apparent April Fools' Day joke which, it turns out, wasn't that original. "Excited to join @Disney as their Chief DEI Officer," Musk wrote on X, formerly Twitter. "Can't wait to work with Bob Iger & Kathleen Kennedy to make their content MORE woke!
Persons: Elon Musk, Bob Iger, Musk, Musk's, , Kathleen Kennedy, Can’t, — Elon, Tesla, Konstantin Kisin, Kisin, 😂, ingle, ince, ake, lon, ina, haring, ike, olitical Organizations: Disney, @Disney, Service, TRIGGERnometry, BBC, ust Locations: lon, usk, ife
Donald Trump can seem like a political anomaly. You sometimes hear people describe his connection with his base in quasi-mystical terms. But really, Trump is an example of an archetype — the right-wing populist showman — that recurs across time and place. And there’s a long lineage of this type in the United States too. And why does this set of qualities — ethnonationalist politics and an entertaining style — repeatedly appear at all?
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, , There’s, Boris Johnson, Javier Milei, , Ezra Klein, John Ganz, David Duke, Pat Buchanan Organizations: Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, Google, , Republican Party Locations: Brazil, Britain, Argentina, United States
Earlier this week, Amazon said it'd commit a further $2.75 billion to the San Francisco-based company as part of its efforts to get ahead of other Big Tech competitors in the AI arms race. AdvertisementSo, what's the deal behind the company Amazon is betting billions on? Related storiesDuring its early days, Anthropic focused on research, training, and testing efforts to ensure its AI model acted in a way that aligned with human values. Since the initial launch, Anthropic has released a slate of new AI models. Moving forward, Anthropic plans to release more updates to its Claude 3 model family and make its AI more suitable for companies.
Persons: , Amazon, Claude, OpenAI's ChatGPT, it'd, Anthropic, Dario Amodei, Daniela Amodei, OpenAI, Amodei, Face's, Sam Bankman, what's, Swami Sivasubramanian, Anthropic didn't Organizations: Service, San, Big Tech, Business, New York Times, Google, CNBC Locations: Anthropic, San Francisco
For more audio journalism and storytelling, download the NYT Audio app — available to Times news subscribers on iOS — and sign up for our weekly newsletter.
For a long time, the story about the world’s population was that it was growing too quickly. Fertility rates have declined dramatically, from about five children per woman 60 years ago to just over two today. About two-thirds of us now live in a country or area where fertility rates are below replacement level. Why, as societies get richer, do their fertility rates plummet? For a long time, a big, boisterous family has been associated with a joyful, fulfilled life.
Persons: , Ezra Klein Organizations: Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, Google Locations: Silicon Valley
Donald Trump said in a Fox News interview that he's considering a national ban on abortion. Related storiesBut one question Trump hasn't openly addressed is how he landed on the timeline for a national abortion ban. South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham introduced a piece of legislation in 2022 that would institute a federal abortion ban. Those respondents consisted of 52% of men saying they strongly or somewhat support the 16-week national ban, and 54% of women saying they strongly support or somewhat support the same ban. "As President Trump has stated, he would sit down with both sides and negotiate a deal that everyone will be happy with.
Persons: Donald Trump, , Fox News's Howard Kurtz, Trump, Roe, Wade, Trump's, — Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett —, Trump hasn't, South Carolina Sen, Lindsey Graham, Evan Siegfried, He's, Siegfried, they're, President Trump, Karoline Leavitt, Biden Organizations: Fox News, New York Times, Service, The New York Times, Fox, NBC News, Pew Research Center, South, The Times, Business, Trump Locations: South Carolina
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