The Latest In a new biopic, Michael Jackson is a saintly, forever well-intentioned man-child An estate-approved biopic of Michael Jackson is out this week. The music-infused drama Michael stars the King of Pop's nephew, Jaafar Jackson, with Colman Domingo and Nia Long playing his parents. Bob Mondello National Security The new homeland security secretary has a history of pushing election misinformation The new homeland security secretary, Markwayne Mullin, has for years amplified President Trump's false claims of a stolen 2020 election. Here's why that history matters this midterm year. Miles Parks Soundside's Weekend Warmup - Indie Bookstore Day, The Carnival of Cocktails, and the Seattle Torrent's final game of the season! Soundside presents the Weekend Warmup! Find all the events worthy of YOUR time off with host Jason Megatron Burrows. Jason Burrows Technology OpenAI is under scrutiny after two mass shooters used ChatGPT to plan attacks AI companies are under growing scrutiny over the potential harms chatbots can pose amid investigations into how mass shooters allegedly sought advice from the tools. Shannon Bond Politics Who's Trump listening to on Iran? NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with White House Correspondent Franco Ordonez and National Security Correspondent Greg Myre about how President Trump's Cabinet is shaping the process of the Iran war. Mary Louise Kelly Health First gene therapy for deafness approved by the FDA The FDA has approved the first gene therapy that can restore hearing to people who were born with a rare form deafness. Rob Stein Science In cities, wild things are hiding everywhere — if you put on your 'nature eyes' NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Amy Jaecker-Jones of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County about a worldwide community science project happening this weekend — the City Nature Challenge. Christopher Intagliata National WYOMING PRO-NATALISTS Backers of Wyoming's under-litigation abortion restrictions say the will help reverse a dwindling state population. Critics say it won't stop kids from leaving the economically challenged state. Hanna Merzbach Technology Maine might soon impose the country's first statewide pause on data centers Maine might become the first place to impose a statewide pause on big data center construction — if the governor signs the bill. Peter McGuire Business Meta will lay off 10% of its staff The cuts follow losses in two pivotal court cases and the company's push to invest in artificial intelligence. John Ruwitch Prev 22 of 1648 Next Sponsored
In a new biopic, Michael Jackson is a saintly, forever well-intentioned man-child An estate-approved biopic of Michael Jackson is out this week. The music-infused drama Michael stars the King of Pop's nephew, Jaafar Jackson, with Colman Domingo and Nia Long playing his parents. Bob Mondello
National Security The new homeland security secretary has a history of pushing election misinformation The new homeland security secretary, Markwayne Mullin, has for years amplified President Trump's false claims of a stolen 2020 election. Here's why that history matters this midterm year. Miles Parks
Soundside's Weekend Warmup - Indie Bookstore Day, The Carnival of Cocktails, and the Seattle Torrent's final game of the season! Soundside presents the Weekend Warmup! Find all the events worthy of YOUR time off with host Jason Megatron Burrows. Jason Burrows
Technology OpenAI is under scrutiny after two mass shooters used ChatGPT to plan attacks AI companies are under growing scrutiny over the potential harms chatbots can pose amid investigations into how mass shooters allegedly sought advice from the tools. Shannon Bond
Politics Who's Trump listening to on Iran? NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with White House Correspondent Franco Ordonez and National Security Correspondent Greg Myre about how President Trump's Cabinet is shaping the process of the Iran war. Mary Louise Kelly
Health First gene therapy for deafness approved by the FDA The FDA has approved the first gene therapy that can restore hearing to people who were born with a rare form deafness. Rob Stein
Science In cities, wild things are hiding everywhere — if you put on your 'nature eyes' NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Amy Jaecker-Jones of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County about a worldwide community science project happening this weekend — the City Nature Challenge. Christopher Intagliata
National WYOMING PRO-NATALISTS Backers of Wyoming's under-litigation abortion restrictions say the will help reverse a dwindling state population. Critics say it won't stop kids from leaving the economically challenged state. Hanna Merzbach
Technology Maine might soon impose the country's first statewide pause on data centers Maine might become the first place to impose a statewide pause on big data center construction — if the governor signs the bill. Peter McGuire
Business Meta will lay off 10% of its staff The cuts follow losses in two pivotal court cases and the company's push to invest in artificial intelligence. John Ruwitch