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For $25, which wound up being $30 because she didn't have change, Jessica told me my fortune. That psychic is also a pet psychic, which is not Katy's jam. Once, after an accident on her block in Chicago, Katy used a psychic to ensure the person had crossed over. Another time, she bought a bunch of bath oils in New York after a psychic told her she was cursed. In a consumerist society, of course some people are willing to pay to commune with the afterlife.
Persons: I'm, Jessica, IBISWorld, upselling, It's, that's, spellwork, Lisa Stardust, who's, Neil Dagnall, Ken Drinkwater, Dagnall, Drinkwater, , Jane Risen, Risen, it's, what's, they're, Cleo, Peter Popoff, they'd, Ralph Lewis, There's, we're, Lewis, I've, Katy who's, Katy, Taylor Swift, Emily Stewart Organizations: Pew Research Center, what's, Manchester Metropolitan University, University of Chicago's Booth School of Business, Federal Trade Commission, intel, University of Toronto, Business Locations: Manhattan, New York, Chicago
Democrat candidate, U.S. President Joe Biden, and Republican candidate, former U.S. President Donald Trump, attend a presidential debate in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S., June 27, 2024. "Yes, it was a bad performance," South Carolina's Democratic Rep. Jim Clyburn, a close Biden ally, said on CNN's "State of the Union." Biden and Trump are scheduled for a second debate on Sept. 10, though it is unclear whether both candidates will follow through. In the meantime, the Biden campaign has been raking in large fundraising hauls in the wake of the debate. As of Sunday morning, the campaign had raised $33 million since Thursday, $26 million of which came from grassroots donors, according to Biden campaign spokesperson Kevin Munoz.
Persons: Joe Biden, Donald Trump, cringing, Jim Clyburn, Biden, Trump, Clyburn, Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Hakeem Jeffries, Sen, Chris Coons, Raphael Warnock, Nancy Pelosi, we've, David, Kevin Munoz, Munoz Organizations: Republican, Sunday, Carolina's Democratic, South, South Carolina Democrat, Biden, ., Democratic, CBS, Voters, Trump, Convention, NBC News Locations: Atlanta , Georgia, U.S, South Carolina, East Hampton, N.Y
Atlanta CNN —Larry Malinconico went to bed worried about President Joe Biden’s debate performance. “I’m extremely concerned,” Malinconico said just after the CNN debate Thursday night. She is still planning to vote Biden, but her reaction was also quite telling. “Why not allow Kennedy on stage,” he said of independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who failed to meet the CNN debate criteria. — Trump supporters approved of his debate performance but there was no evidence in our group that he gained support.
Persons: Larry Malinconico, Joe Biden’s, “ I’m, ” Malinconico, , Biden, , Malinconico, , Pat Levin, Levin, Kamala Harris, Gavin Newsom, Biden –, “ Biden, ” Levin, ” Michael Pesce, Trump, ” Pesce, , Pesce, I’m, Davette Baker, Donald, Matt Vrahiotes, Vrahiotes, Kennedy, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, ’ ”, Antonio Munoz, – –, Christine Ngyuen, Anushka Jalistagi, — Trump, Kim Cavaliere, ” Ibrahim Ghazal, “ Trump, ” Ghazal, ” Linda Rooney, Rooney Organizations: Atlanta CNN, CNN, Trump, California Gov, Reagan Republican, Biden, Republicans, Democratic, Wayne State University, , of Michigan, College Democrats, , Hamas, Republican Locations: Northampton County , Pennsylvania, Northampton County, California, Bucks County, Philadelphia, Northampton, African American, Milwaukee, Hall County , Georgia, America, Vegas, Atlanta, Decatur, , Detroit, Palestinian, Israel
Key lines from CNN’s presidential debate
  + stars: | 2024-06-28 | by ( Zachary B. Wolf | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +17 min
CNN —In CNN’s presidential debate, President Joe Biden was halting and, at times, trailed off and confused words, feeding a nagging narrative about his fitness for the presidency. Trump said Biden couldn’t drive a golf ball 50 yards, and Biden challenged Trump to a golf match but only if Trump carries his own clubs. We’ve got to take a look at what I was left when I became president, what Mr. Trump left me. -TrumpBiden said Trump deserves blame for watching the riot at the Capitol unfold for hours without doing anything to intervene. They’ve had meetings and they voted who’s the worst president in American history.
Persons: Joe Biden, Donald Trump, overinflated, Trump, Biden, ” Trump, , , Trump’s, Jake Tapper, Dana Bash, We’ve, Biden Trump, Trump Trump, We’d, I’ve, , , Roe, Wade, You’ve, It’s, Trump Biden, ” Biden, Beau, John Kelly, Vladimir Putin’s, Putin, Volodymyr, Zelensky, There’s, Gaza Biden, Israel, “ I’ve, Tapper, we’re, We’re, Hunter, Joe, you’re, Biden Biden, E, Jean Carroll, Daniels, ” –, reimbursements, Hitler Biden, Hitler’s, flabbergast Biden, They’ve, That’s Organizations: CNN, Trump Biden, Trump, Medicare, Social Security, Republicans, Trump Trump, Biden, Democrats, White House, Ukraine Trump, Ukraine, Hamas, Bash Locations: Atlanta, freefall, Iraq, France, Ukraine, Soviet Union, Israel, Gaza, Palestinian, United States, New York, Charlottesville , Virginia,
The study, published this month in the journal Pediatric Research, shows that parents’ screen use is associated with increased adolescent screen time – along with problematic social media, video game and mobile phone use. The data revealed that 72.9% of parents said they use screens around their adolescents. “Even if parents think their kids are not paying attention, the data shows one of the biggest predictors of preteen screen use is what their parents do with screens in front of them,” Nagata said. In the US, the surgeon general has called for warning labels on social media apps to mitigate “significant harms” associated with their use. “There’s going to be a lot more guidance for parents to help their children navigate social media,” Nagata said.
Persons: it’s, Jason Nagata, ” Nagata, Ken Ginsburg, , ” Ginsburg, Nagata, Susan Tomopoulos, , Ginsburg, Dr, Sanjay Gupta, There’s, Ken Ginsburg’s Organizations: CNN, Pediatric Research, University of California, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, American Academy of Pediatrics, NYU’s Grossman School of Medicine, Center, Parent, Communication, CNN Health Locations: San Francisco, China,
For Goldman Sachs' investment bankers, the answer may just be over the horizon. Top Goldman executives told Business Insider that the investment bank is poised to roll out a series of generative AI tools to its workforce as soon as next year. Lee, a Goldman partner, said it could take years for the consequences of this tech on the bank's workflows to be fully understood. But he is overall optimistic about how generative AI, an advanced type of machine learning, will impact its workforce. Many junior bankers spend time on tasks that can sometimes feel "relatively routine," Lee said.
Persons: , Goldman Sachs, Goldman, George Lee, cohead, Lee, it's, Jamie Dimon, Alison, Tim Ingrassia, Gene Sykes, dealmakers, David Solomon, Ingrassia, Reed Alexander Organizations: Service, Business, Goldman Sachs Global Institute, JPMorgan, Goldman, New York Times, Deutsche Bank
In fact, I outperformed nearly all draft prospects in certain categories of this test, floundering on only one. Related storiesFor many years, the standard-bearer for evaluating the brains of NFL athletes was the Wonderlic, a short IQ test with a series of increasingly difficult questions. Stroud, then favored to be the first player selected in the NFL draft, over the Alabama quarterback Bryce Young. But then Stroud, the alleged dolt, went on to have one of the best rookie campaigns of any NFL quarterback, while Young struggled all year. Unfazed by the controversy over Stroud, S2 has begun selling its tests to other sectors.
Persons: Pong, Jack Marucci, Marucci, we've, Brandon Ally, Scott Wylie, Ally, Wylie, Patrick Mahomes, Lamar Jackson, John Michel, C.J ., Bryce Young, Young, Stroud, Stroud's, Aaron Rodgers, That's, Myers, Briggs, Goldman Sachs, Alberto Miranda, that's, Michel, Scott Nover Organizations: National Football League, SEC, Louisiana State University, NFL, Loyola University Maryland, Ohio State, Alabama, Athletic, Jets, Athletic Intelligence, intuit, Boeing, Meta, BI Locations: Tennessee, Nashville, C.J . Stroud, Stroud, Columbus , Ohio
Who Won the Debate? Biden Stumbles Left Trump on Top
  + stars: | 2024-06-27 | by ( Alan Rappeport | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
In the first presidential debate of the year between the leading Democratic and Republican candidates, President Biden and former President Donald J. Trump clashed on inflation, taxes, Ukraine and the future of democracy. A halting performance from Mr. Biden and a relatively steady and measured delivery by Mr. Trump left Democrats deeply concerned about Mr. Biden’s prospects. On cable news and social media, strategists from both parties wondered if Mr. Biden could continue in the race against Mr. Trump. “It was a really disappointing debate performance from Joe Biden. His biggest issue was to prove to the American people that he had the energy, the stamina — and he didn’t do that,” Kate Bedingfield, Mr. Biden’s former White House communications director, said on CNN.
Persons: Biden, Donald J, Trump, Mr, Joe Biden, ” Kate Bedingfield, Biden’s Organizations: Democratic, Republican, Mr, White House, CNN Locations: Ukraine
"Do what you know" is common career advice, but not everyone agrees it's wise. Virgin Group co-founder and billionaire Richard Branson says it's the worst career advice he's ever received. In fact, Branson broke through by doing the opposite, he discussed on a recent episode of the Work Life with Adam Grant podcast. Branson — who has a $2.6 billion net worth, according to Forbes — built his career and fortune from the Virgin Group, a venture capital and holding company. While Branson sold the music label for nearly $1 billion in 1992, the Virgin Group now owns companies in sectors ranging from airlines and hotels to media and spaceflight.
Persons: Richard Branson, he's, Branson, Adam Grant, Branson —, Forbes —, Grant Organizations: Virgin Group, Branson, Virgin Records, Rice University Locations: Wharton
People are losing the cognitive and social skills they need for a thriving personal and professional life, says organizational psychologist Richard Davis. "We are at risk of losing this essential capability that I call receptivity," says Davis, the managing director of Toronto-based leadership consulting firm Russell Reynolds Associates. "It's the ability to have good judgment, to have insight about people, and it's a major concern." "It's a cognitive ability that you need to actually exercise in order to not lose it," he says. People's ability to talk to and connect with each other is similarly at risk, he says.
Persons: Richard Davis, Davis, Russell Reynolds, Waze Organizations: Russell Reynolds Associates Locations: Toronto
Read previewBefore becoming the oldest man in America, Morrie Markoff technically died — but not for long. But not only was he revived, Markoff went on to live more than a decade more, authoring a book and passionately pursuing his lifelong love of learning. At 110 years old, he was the oldest living American man prior to his death in early June. AdvertisementNow, he's set another record, this time as the oldest healthy brain donation on record. America's oldest living man Morrie Markoff, pictured with his grandson, was 110 when he died in early June.
Persons: , Morrie Markoff, Judith Hansen, Markoff, he's, Hansen, Betty, " Hansen Organizations: Service, Business, LA Times, Pan Locations: America, Mexico, Eastern Europe, Japan, China
But, not all AI startups are created equal. AdvertisementBusiness Insider surveyed nine VCs who invest in AI startups at firms like Bain Capital Ventures, Flybridge, and Sapphire Ventures. Startups building AI's "picks and shovels" are a better bet than yet another LLMStep aside, OpenAI and Anthropic. In contrast, unstructured data encompasses various formats such as text documents, images, audio files, emails, social media posts, and videos. Some AI investors say they're shying away from point solutions—think online payment processing or project management—in favor of full-stack solutions.
Persons: , Harvey, Navin Chaddha, Chip Hazard, they're, Kahini Shah, there's, Rak Garg, Garg, Shah, Lauri Moore, Moore, Chaddha, Capital's Moore, she's Organizations: Service, Accel, Business, Bain Capital Ventures, Flybridge, Sapphire Ventures, Google, Meta, Mayfield Fund, Flybridge Capital Partners, Obvious, Investors, Obvious Ventures, Foundation, Dig Ventures Locations: Mayfield, Hazard, Flybridge
Read previewThe hiring process seems to have become increasingly complex in recent years, with job seekers facing new tests, more interviews, and months of waiting to hear back from prospective employers. Job seekers have been taking to social media to complain about jumping through various hiring hoops just to secure an entry-level job. He said that in recent years, the hiring process has slowed down as the number of interview rounds has increased: "It reflects a lack of understanding by employers about what they're actually looking for." Advertisement"Many interviews and job assessments now take place online, which means candidates need to adapt to virtual interactions and later demonstrate their skills remotely," she said. When job interviews started to be done on Zoom and managers had fewer opportunities to evaluate candidates, more employers began using cognitive and psychometric assessments as part of their hiring process.
Persons: , Chris Abbass, Abbass, Peter Cappelli, Wharton, They've, Cappelli, Nikita Gupta, they're, Gupta Organizations: Service, Business, school's, Human Resources, Harvard Business, Big Tech
Read previewA 64-year-old grandmother-of-11 has become one of the buzziest names in the longevity world by beating billionaires at anti-aging with a simple and inexpensive routine. The rest of her longevity routine costs little or nothing to follow, and there's good science to suggest her habits have helped keep her young and healthy. Hardison said she's been a health-conscious eater since she was a teen, watching fad diets come and go. And I cook because if I'm going to eat, I want it to be good," Hardison said. They include ingredients like:AdvertisementMagnesium, which research suggests is good for healthy bones and regulates blood pressure and blood sugar.
Persons: , Amy Hardison, Bryan Johnson, Hardison's, Hardison, she's, Ginger, isn't, I'm Organizations: Service, Business
It seems obvious but survivorship bias is everywhere in society. We’re currently studying over 65-year-olds who have maintained unusually high levels of exercise into older age and have maintained excellent health. READ MORE: Why married people live longerWhile we know that their lifelong exercise is associated with their unusually good health into older age, we can’t directly say one causes the other yet. But often, like in survivorship bias, we’re not looking at all the data, and so finding patterns where there are none. Bradley Elliott receives funding from the Physiological Society, the British Society for Research on Ageing, the Altitude Centre, and private philanthropic individuals.
Persons: Bacon, Abraham Wald, Wald, , , That’s, We’re, Bradley Elliott Organizations: CNN, Physiological Society, British Society for Research, Ageing
Doug Burgum, a possible Trump vice presidential pick, tried to reset the balance on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday. Fewer voters worry about the cognitive health of Trump, who is only three years younger at 78. “He beat Paul Ryan,” Trump said, referring to the vice presidential debate in 2012 when Biden dispatched Republican nominee Mitt Romney’s running mate. There is growing speculation about Trump’s approach after his hyper-aggressive and angry performance in the first debate against Biden in 2020 backfired. Unlike Trump, who spent the weekend creating headlines, Biden hunkered down at the presidential retreat in Catoctin Mountain Park north of Washington.
Persons: Joe Biden, , Donald Trump, Trump, George W, Bush, John Kerry, Roman rhetorician Cicero, Doug Burgum, He’s, Nixon, ” Trump, Biden, Roe, , Michael Tyler, , lambasting Biden, David “, he’d, Paul Ryan, Mitt Romney’s, “ I’m, ” Burgum, Kaitlan Collins, we’ve, We’ve, Karoline Leavitt, David Axelrod, , we’d, , won’t, Florida Sen, Marco Rubio, Kristi Noem, Joe Biden’s, Ron Klain, Mike Donilon, Bruce Reed, Anita Dunn, Steve Ricchetti, Bob Bauer, Harris Organizations: CNN, Democratic, Atlanta . North Dakota Gov, Trump, Biden, David, Republican, , Union, South Dakota Gov, NBC’s, White House, Obama White House, Team Biden Locations: Atlanta ., “ State, New York, Maryland, Washington ,, Philadelphia, State, Wisconsin, Italy, Florida, Catoctin, Washington, Atlanta
Among the most fraught questions about this election is the health of the aging candidates themselves. President Biden is 81 and former President Donald Trump is 78; the major presidential parties have never before put forth candidates who are as old. Both men have been seen as showing signs of cognitive decline, leading to calls for greater disclosure about the health of our presidential candidates. It is natural to assume that physicians might have a better understanding than other voters of how healthy either Mr. Trump or Mr. Biden is. But they are even more pressing today, as social media amplifies questions about the health and fitness of public officials.
Persons: Biden, Donald Trump, Trump, it’s, Franklin Roosevelt, John Fetterman of, Trump’s Locations: John Fetterman of Pennsylvania
The Promise of Weight-Loss Drugs
  + stars: | 2024-06-24 | by ( Dani Blum | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
In the past two years, Ozempic has become a synonym for weight loss. Ozempic was weight loss; weight loss was Ozempic. Scientists believe the drugs are about to revolutionize several fields of medicine, such as cardiology and endocrinology. If these trials prove successful, the drugs may extend many lives by years, save billions in medical costs and divide public health into before-and-after epochs. These drugs, called GLP-1s (glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists), mystify even the scientists who study them.
Persons: Ozempic, slimmed, we’ve, mystify Organizations: Food and Drug Administration
6 types of depression identified in Stanford study
  + stars: | 2024-06-20 | by ( Kristen Rogers | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +11 min
Some 30% to 40% of people with depression do not experience symptom improvement after trying one treatment, according to the study. And about 30% of people diagnosed with depression go on to experience treatment-resistant depression when the disorder doesn’t improve after multiple treatment attempts. Mapping depression in the brainThe authors used data from 801 adult participants who were previously diagnosed with depression or anxiety, and 137 healthy control group participants. The grant supports a five-year project involving 4,500 participants, which is centered on the development of a better diagnosis and treatment tool for depression biotypes. This method isn’t intended to replace or be the primary choice for assessments of individual cases of depression, Williams said.
Persons: biotypes, , Leanne Williams, Vincent V.C, Woo, Williams, Anhedonia, Jun Ma, Ma, Beth, George Vitoux, , Richard Keefe, wasn’t, Keefe, Jonathan Alpert, Dorothy, Marty Silverman, Alpert, ” Keefe, you’re Organizations: Lifeline, CNN, Nature Medicine, Psychiatry, Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford Center, Precision Mental Health, Wellness, Medicine, University of Illinois, Duke University Medical Center, Montefiore Medical, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Psychiatric Association’s Council, Research, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes, Health’s, Mental Health Initiative Locations: California, United States, University of Illinois Chicago, North Carolina, New York City, Stanford
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How Heat Affects the Brain
  + stars: | 2024-06-19 | by ( Dana G. Smith | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
In July 2016, a heat wave hit Boston, with daytime temperatures averaging 92 degrees for five days in a row. Some local university students who were staying in town for the summer got lucky and were living in dorms with central air-conditioning. He had 44 students perform math and self-control tests five days before the temperature rose, every day during the heat wave, and two days after. “Many of us think that we are immune to heat,” said Dr. Cedeño, now an assistant professor of environmental and occupational health and justice at Rutgers University. “So something that I wanted to test was whether that was really true.”It turns out even young, healthy college students are affected by high temperatures.
Persons: Jose Guillermo Cedeño Laurent, , Cedeño Organizations: Rutgers University, A.C Locations: Harvard
But what about the guilt parents feel from letting their kids use screens? Their research focused parental guilt over letting their kids use screens more than developmental psychologists say they should. Not surprisingly, parents who feel guilty about their kids’ screen use are more stressed and less likely to report positive relationships with their kids, according to the data. CNN recently talked with Walter about his research, how parents can change their thinking about kids’ screen use, and the impact of screen time guilt on the family system. CNN: What is the trickle-down impact of parents feeling guilt over screen time?
Persons: Nathan Walter, Walter, It’s, Covid, There’s, you’re, Jonathan Haidt, I’m, , there’s, Let’s, Matt Villano, Read Organizations: CNN, US, New York University, Northwestern University, Media, don’t Locations: Haidt, Northern California, whalehead.com
The following day, the body of an American tourist was found on Mathraki, a small island west of Corfu. As climate change fuels longer and more severe heat waves, scientists are trying to unravel how our brains will cope. But as heat increases, it can have serious effects, including lowering the fluids in the body and decreasing blood flow to the brain, Bailey said. Extreme heat can disrupt typical brain activity, said Kim Meidenbauer, a neuroscientist at Washington State University. Someone who is very fit understands the dangers and carries plenty of water is still gambling if they decide to go on a hike in very high temperatures, Bailey said.
Persons: Michael Mosley, Albert Calibet, ” Petros Vassilakis, , Damian Bailey, Bailey, ” Bailey, Jeff Nerby, Mike De Sisti, Kim Meidenbauer, “ You’re, , ” Meidenbauer, don’t, Jose Guillermo Cedeño Laurent, Ethan Hickman, Jeff Roberson, Stephanie Halasz, Issy Ronald Organizations: CNN, Reuters, University of South, It’s, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, USA, Network, Washington State University, Rutgers School of Public Health Locations: Symi, Greece, Samos, American, Corfu, University of South Wales, Crete, Milwaukee , Wisconsin, Boston, Weldon Spring , Missouri
Do We Need Language to Think?
  + stars: | 2024-06-19 | by ( Carl Zimmer | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
For thousands of years, philosophers have argued about the purpose of language. Starting in the 1960s, Noam Chomsky, a linguist at M.I.T., argued that we use language for reasoning and other forms of thought. “If there is a severe deficit of language, there will be severe deficit of thought,” he wrote. Dr. Fedorenko went on to become a cognitive neuroscientist at M.I.T., using brain scanning to investigate how the brain produces language. And after 15 years, her research has led her to a startling conclusion: We don’t need language to think.
Persons: Plato, , Noam Chomsky, Evelina Fedorenko, Chomsky’s, Fedorenko
Jon Stewart came out swinging on Monday about how he thinks the POTUS race has devolved. Stewart said it's now "boiled down to each candidate accusing the other of having soup where there should be brain." download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . In his Monday monologue on "The Daily Show," Stewart kicked off his segment by giving a "quick state of play." "I guess the election has basically boiled down to each candidate accusing the other of having soup where there should be brain," Stewart quipped.
Persons: Jon Stewart, Stewart, it's, Biden, Trump, , Jon Stewart isn't Organizations: CNN's Atlanta, Service, Business
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