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A company tied to conspiracy theorist Alex Jones filed Monday to dispute the sale of the Infowars website to the parody site The Onion, calling it improper and unfair. In the morning, First United American Cos., a limited liability company that runs Jones’ online supplements store, filed an emergency motion to disqualify the winning bid of The Onion’s parent company, Global Tetrahedron,’ to purchase the Infowars media empire and other assets. The company running Jones’ online store had placed a competing bid against The Onion to purchase the estate. Infowars was briefly shut down after the sale was announced, NBC News reported, but it has resumed operating since. The proceeds from the sale of Infowars and Jones’ other assets will go toward his estate creditors, including the families of Sandy Hook victims.
Persons: Alex Jones, Cos, Jones, , Sandy Hook, FUAC, , , Infowars, ” Jones, Elon Musk, Donald Trump, Ben Collins —, ” Collins, InfoWars Organizations: Global, NBC News, X Corp Locations: United, Connecticut, Infowars
Attorneys for X Corp., the firm established by Elon Musk to take over Twitter, filed a notice of appearance on Thursday in the bankruptcy case of Alex Jones and his Infowars platform. The new owners of satirical news site The Onion had been declared the successful bidders for Jones’ controversial platform, alongside families of the Sandy Hook massacre victims. Musk has allowed Infowars to broadcast on X while Infowars’ fate is in limbo. Jones has used Infowars as a platform to promote conspiracy theories, far-right ideologies and misinformation. Jones’ bankruptcy stems from his obligation to pay $1.5 billion in damages to families of Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting victims, who filed defamation lawsuits over his false claims that the massacre was a hoax.
Persons: Elon Musk, Alex Jones, Jones, Sandy, , Christopher M, Lopez, Mother Jones, Donald Trump, Musk, Ben Collins —, ” Collins, Infowars Organizations: X Corp, Elon, Twitter, Bloomberg, Sandy Hook Elementary, NBC Locations: Texas
In the lawsuit, Kuvshynova's family alleges that the book contains a "false account" of her death. Related storiesThe Fox News crew received multiple warnings to avoid Irpin, a town northwest of Kyiv, and the adjacent suburb of Hostomel, the lawsuit alleges. The crew found a different driver after their initial driver refused to go into the area, the lawsuit alleges. The lawsuit alleges that Zakrzewski had a satellite phone that allowed him to stay in contact with Fox management. To this day, Fox News continues to withhold information about Kuvshynova's death, the lawsuit alleges.
Persons: , Sasha, Kuvshynova, Shane Thomson, Andriy Kuvshynov, Sasha's, Pierre Zakrzewski, Benjamin Hall, Kuvshynova's, Fox, Ben Hall, Harper Collins —, Sasha Kuvshynova, Brent Renaud, Shane, Trey Yingst, Yingst, Duncan Gordon, Zakrzewski, Hall, Mia Jankowicz Organizations: Service, Fox News, Business, Fox, HarperCollins, Hall, Ukrainian, Fox News &, Ukraine's, Brigade Azov Locations: Ukrainian, Ukraine, New York, Kyiv, Russian, Hostomel, Irpin's, US, Irpin, Bucha, SEPAR, Azov, Horenka
Read previewCleveland Cavaliers big man Tristan Thompson has been suspended without pay from the NBA for 25 games. The two drugs found in Thompson's system — ibutamoren and LGD-4033 — can be used for performance enhancement purposes and may have dangerous side effects. Ken Blaze-USA TODAY SportsAccording to the NIH, ibutamoren is a growth hormone secretagogue, or a substance that promotes the production of growth hormones. Heightened growth hormone in one's system can increase muscle mass, limit body fat, and improve exercise tolerance, per Mayo Clinic. And in 2019, John Collins — then with the Atlanta Hawks — spent 25 games on the sidelines after the league found pralmorelin, another growth hormone secretagogue, in his system.
Persons: , Tristan Thompson, Ken Blaze, Ibutamoren, Thompson, Knick Joakim Noah, Joakim Noah, Nick Wass, Jodie Meeks, John Collins — Organizations: Service, Cleveland Cavaliers, NBA, Business, NIH, ibutamoren, FDA, NCAA, Doping Agency, New York Knicks, AP, Washington Wizards, Atlanta Hawks —, The Cavaliers, Eastern Conference Locations: Mayo, LGD, New, Cleveland
The mass shooting in Lewiston, Maine, coupled with a conservative Democratic congressman’s reversal on an assault weapons ban, has turned the spotlight on the state’s two senators, Susan Collins, a moderate Republican, and Angus King, a Democrat-leaning independent, both of whom are skeptical about banning military-style rifles. Representative Jared Golden, among the most conservative Democrats in the House, rushed back to his Lewiston district on Thursday, as a gunman who killed 18 people in his hometown remained at large. He then stunned constituents in his traditionally pro-gun district by declaring that it was time for him “to take responsibility” for his “failure” to back a ban on assault weapons, “like the one used by the sick perpetrator of this mass killing.”Mr. Golden’s reversal is likely to put pressure on Maine’s senators, both of whom boast of occupying the political center and have used that position to forge significant bipartisan compromises in the past, including gun safety legislation passed last year after the murder of children in Uvalde, Texas. Ms. Collins, in particular, has taken heat from Democrats who say her professions of moderation have faltered at crucial times. Mr. King, who is standing for re-election in 2024, joined Republicans — including Ms. Collins — on Wednesday to back an amendment to a spending bill that would prohibit the Department of Veterans Affairs from automatically sending veterans’ personal information to the federal firearms background check system if they are deemed mentally unfit to manage their benefits.
Persons: Susan Collins, Angus King, Jared Golden, , , ” Mr, Collins, . King, Collins — Organizations: Democratic, Republican, Democrat, Republicans —, Department of Veterans Affairs Locations: Lewiston , Maine, Lewiston, Uvalde , Texas
Dollar loiters at two-month peak ahead of Powell speech
  + stars: | 2023-08-25 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +3 min
The U.S. dollar sat at an over two-month peak on Friday, on course for its sixth straight week of gains as markets await a speech from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell to gauge the path of monetary policy. Investors will parse through Powell's address on monetary policy at the Jackson Hole Economic Policy Symposium at 10:05 a.m. The dollar index , which measures the U.S. currency against six rivals, rose 0.019% to 104.11, the highest since June 7. "He does not need to be dovish but a less hawkish speech could see dollar ease off." The Australian dollar eased 0.05% to $0.642, while the New Zealand dollar fell 0.02% to $0.592.
Persons: Jerome Powell, Powell, Christopher Wong, Wong, Patrick Harker, Susan Collins —, Tom Hopkins, I'd Organizations: U.S, Federal, Jackson, Federal Reserve, Fed, Boston Fed, BRI Wealth Management, New Zealand Locations: U.S, Singapore
Eliza Collins — Reporter at The Wall Street Journal
  + stars: | 2023-08-18 | by ( Eliza Collins | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Eliza CollinsEliza Collins is a national political reporter for The Wall Street Journal based in Phoenix. She joined the Journal in 2019 and was based in Washington, where she covered Congress and elections. Her coverage focused on the effects of the war in Ukraine on Europe. Previously, she was a national political reporter focused on the 2020 election. Before joining the Journal, Eliza was a political reporter for USA Today and Politico.
Persons: Eliza Collins Eliza Collins, Eliza, Arthur Burns Organizations: Wall, Journal, USA, Politico Locations: Phoenix, Arizona, Washington, Germany, Ukraine, Europe
There has been deepening criticism of AI companies from across the media and entertainment industries. Over 8,000 authors — including Margaret Atwood and James Patterson — have signed an open letter demanding compensation from AI companies for using their works to train AI without permission. The letter is addressed to OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Stability AI CEO Emad Mostaque, IBM CEO Arvind Krishna, and Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella. AI systems are trained on large volumes of data, much of which is text scraped from the internet. These authors aren't alone in voicing collective discontent towards AI companies.
Persons: Margaret Atwood, James Patterson —, Sam Altman, Sundar Pichai, Mark Zuckerberg, Emad Mostaque, Arvind Krishna, Satya Nadella, Guild's, Dan Brown, Suzanne Collins —, OpenAI, Sarah Silverman, aren't, , Sarah Andersen —, they've, Insider's Matthew Loh Organizations: Morning, Microsoft, Wall Street Journal, Google, IBM
Trump was back on CNN primetime during a town hall appearance on Wednesday night. And CNN certainly seemed to be eager for conservative buy-in during the Wednesday town hall, filling the room with a mixture of New Hampshire Republicans and effectively independent voters. The former president's advisor told other outlets that the town hall was an effort to underline Trump's 2016 strategy of reaching beyond the traditional GOP coalition. During the Wednesday town hall, Trump called Carroll a "whack job," echoing the very falsehoods that landed him with a defamation charge this week. "The predictably disastrous @cnn town hall was indeed disastrous," former broadcast exec and current dean of the Lawrence Herbert School of Communication at Hofstra University, Mark Lukasiewicz tweeted.
CNN's town hall audience cheered for and thanked Donald Trump after Wednesday's event. Throughout the night, Trump touted election lies and criticized E. Jean Carroll. In the video, posted multiple times to Twitter, Trump is seen personally addressing CNN's audience as they cheered him on, thanked him, and laughed with him. Trump also took swings at E. Jean Carroll, who on Tuesday won a sexual abuse and defamation lawsuit against Trump. The audience often cheered on Trump's lies and criticisms throughout the night.
Property values in Austin have soared over the past 25 years, an analysis from SmartAsset found. The study analyzed average home value data in metro areas from 1998 to 2022. The study analyzed average home value data in 400 metro areas between 1998 and 2022, calculating collective increases to measure growth and drops in value to measure stability. Two areas in Colorado — Boulder and Fort Collins — also saw above-average home value growth. Here are the metro areas that have seen the biggest property value growth in the last 25 years:
They experimented with other ventures, including a hookah lounge, before focusing on real estate. Along the way, the entrepreneurs opened a hookah lounge and a bar before committing to real estate full-time in 2019. While they had a real estate agent showing them homes, Khosravi and Blue found their first property on their own. "I was visiting some friends at ASU and there was a hookah lounge there. At the time, "we were making $35,000 a year, if that, from the hookah lounge," added Khosravi.
CEO David Zaslav is expected to provide an update of the company's financials and outlook for the year ahead. WBD also shed more than half its stock price since the merger deal closed April 8, before a more recent partial recovery. But optimism around the company seems to be based on the feeling that things can only go up from here. Discovery to $20 from $16, assuming the heaviest cost cutting is done and despite the fact that the near-term ad outlook is poor. Legacy Warner ad salespeople in particular are frustrated over this approach and worried it'll cost them in the form of a smaller annual bonus than they've come to expect in years past.
The new Congress, which begins this week, will have five politically-split Senate delegations. But in the new Congress, which begins this week, only five states will have split Senate delegations: Maine, Montana, Ohio, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. AP Photo/Matthew BrownMontanaDemocratic Sen. Jon Tester and Republican Sen. Steve DainesTester was first elected to the Senate in 2006 and secured reelection in both 2012 and 2018. Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty ImagesWest VirginiaDemocratic Sen. Joe Manchin and Republican Sen. Shelley Moore CapitoManchin is perhaps the nation's most recognizable moderate Democrat, having single-handedly scuttled Biden's Build Back Better agenda in December 2021. WisconsinRepublican Sen. Ron Johnson and Democratic Sen. Tammy BaldwinThe Badger State is often home to some of the closest races in the entire country.
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