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Instagram’s Uneasy Rise as a News Site
  + stars: | 2024-02-22 | by ( Sapna Maheshwari | Mike Isaac | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
On a recent Wednesday in Brooklyn’s Dumbo neighborhood, Mosheh Oinounou, a former producer for CBS, Bloomberg News and Fox News, swiped through Instagram. Then he spent much of the day turning many of the articles into posts on his Instagram account, under the handle Mo News. The content has earned Mo News 436,000 Instagram followers, turning what had been a pandemic side project into an enterprise with three full-time employees and a bigger spotlight. In December, the State Department offered Mo News an interview with Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken. Mr. Oinounou said the agency had told him, “We understand how people are getting their news.”
Persons: Will, Oinounou, Biden, Antony J, Blinken, , Organizations: CBS, Bloomberg News, Fox News, Mo, Republican, Mo News, State Department Locations: Instagram, New Hampshire
TEGUCIGALPA (Reuters) - Several hundred migrants have gathered at a bus terminal in northern Honduras in preparation to head towards the United States, local television reported on Friday, seeking to flee poverty and a lack of jobs in the Central American nation. Hoy Mismo news channel estimated that about 300 people had gathered at the Gran Terminal bus station in the northern city of San Pedro Sula, largely young people and families holding children. The caravan, expected to leave on Saturday, would mark the first such group of Honduran migrants traveling north during the administration of leftist President Xiomara Castro, who took office at the start of 2022. The government of Honduras estimates that about 64% of the country's 10 million inhabitants live in poverty. The Honduras migration and security ministries did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Persons: Hoy, San Pedro Sula, Xiomara Castro, Wilfredo Bonilla, Gustavo Palencia, Sarah Morland, Edmund Klamann Organizations: Central, Gran Locations: TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras, United States, Central American, San Pedro
Heinz gave Elvis Francois another $9,900 this week on top of the almost $15,000 it donated in April. Francois survived weeks at sea on ketchup in January and Heinz wanted to help him get a new boat. The company paid Elvis Francois $26,761 East Caribbean dollars ($9,900) on Tuesday so he could complete work on his boat. Elvis Francois plans to paint a Heinz bottle on his new boat. A Heinz representative told Insider: "We're happy that Elvis is safely able to get back on water."
Heinz appealed to the internet to find a fisherman who survived 24 days at sea on ketchup. Heinz said the "ketchup boat guy" preferred cash so he could get a new boat more quickly. The company offered to give fisherman Elvis Francois a new boat complete with a navigation system after learning he'd survived 24 days lost at sea on just ketchup and seasonings. Francois told Insider he could only afford to buy a small used boat and engines as the money Heinz gave him "wasn't enough" for a sailboat. He spent EC$18,000 on a small boat and EC$20,000 on two motors.
Elvis Francois says he survived being stranded at sea for more than three weeks by eating ketchup. Elvis Francois told Insider on Saturday he'd heard from many people that Heinz was trying to find him, but he didn't have a phone. He says he survived by eating ketchup three times a day with garlic powder and stock cubes for 24 days. Colombian Navy personnel attend castaway Elvis Francois after he was rescued in January. Colombian Navy/APEating ketchup for 24 days hasn't put him off the condiment, as Francois told Insider he still used it.
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