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    • Massive storm alert warns of dangerous wind chills for U.S.

      Winter storm alerts were in place for least 23 million Americans across 17 states on Sunday, with rain, sleet, snow and ice forecast from California to Maine.

      Potential flooding in Alabama »
      • Outrage after police kill 26-year-old Atlanta activist

      • Why accessory dwelling units are gaining popularity

      • 2 cuts 'off the table' in debt limit negotiations: McCarthy

      • Freight truck and bus collide in fatal New York crash

      • Iowa police won't release videos of teen being shot

    • Business
      Yahoo Finance

      Housing market: Jason Oppenheim warns of an 'armageddon' in the real estate industry

      The real estate industry could soon be upended, says star broker Jason Oppenheim. Oppenheim – who leads a team of glamorous agents on Netflix (NFLX) reality series "Selling Sunset" – recently sat down with Yahoo Finance to talk about the current state of the U.S. real estate market. During the far-ranging conversation, he warned that the industry's commission structure could soon change forever.

    • Politics
      INSIDER

      Sen. Marco Rubio says it's 'absurd' that the media has details on the classified documents found at Biden's and Trump's residences but the intelligence committee still doesn't have clear information

      Senate Intelligence Committee members said they don't have a timeline as to when they'll obtain Biden's and Trump's classified documents. Classified documents were found at both Trump and Biden's private residences over the past several months. Sen. Marco Rubio told CBS it is "absurd" that the press had more info on the vague contents of the documents.

      • Warner and Rubio: The press knows more about classified documents than Congress
        The Hill
      • Sharing Biden, Trump Documents Could Complicate Investigations, DOJ Says
        The Wall Street Journal
    • U.S.
      Patriot Ledger

      Third Clancy child dies of injuries suffered at Duxbury home

      BOSTON − The 8-month-old boy who was seriously injured inside his Duxbury home Tuesday night has died at a Boston hospital, the Plymouth County district attorney's office said. Police responded to a 911 call Tuesday night reporting a woman's attempted suicide on Summer Street in Duxbury. Callan Clancy, the 8-month-old boy, was taken to the hospital with serious injuries.

      • DA: Infant hospitalized after being found unconscious in Duxbury home has died
        WFXT
      • Lindsay Clancy’s baby dies three days after Massachusetts mom allegedly strangled her three children
        Fox News
    • World
      Reuters

      Turkey alerts citizens to risk of attack in United States, Europe on heels of Western warnings

      Turkey warned its citizens on Saturday against "possible Islamophobic, xenophobic and racist attacks" in the United States and Europe after its Western allies cautioned their citizens in Turkey about possible terror attacks. In two separate travel advisories, the Turkish foreign ministry recommended its citizens in the United States and European countries "act calmly in the face of possible xenophobic and racist harassment and attacks" and to "stay away from areas where demonstrations may intensify." Recent increases in "anti-Islam and racist acts" reflect the dangerous dimensions of religious intolerance and hatred in Europe, the ministry said.

    • U.S.
      Business Insider

      A Florida OnlyFans model is suing her local school district, saying sexually explicit images of her were shared among staff at her children's school

      A Florida OnlyFans model is suing her local school district. She says in a complaint that explicit images of her were shared among staff at her children's school. She's claiming cyber-harassment and invasion of privacy, among other things, per the complaint.

    • World
      The New Voice of Ukraine

      300 wounded Wagner mercenaries brought to hospital in Luhansk Oblast, but ‘doctors refuse to treat them’

      The General Staff said in its regular morning report that the doctors in Yuvileine refuse to provide medical assistance to the Wagner mercenaries due to the fact that most of them are carriers of such diseases as HIV/AIDS, syphilis, tuberculosis and pneumonia. According to the General Staff, the Russians are actively converting hospitals in the occupied territories into military hospitals. Meanwhile, local residents are being refused medical aid, due to the fact that hospitals are full of wounded invaders.

    • U.S.
      Associated Press

      Snow leads to massive pileup in Wisconsin, dozens injured

      Dozens of people were injured in a massive traffic pileup amid snowy conditions in southern Wisconsin on Friday, which blocked Interstate 39/90 for hours, authorities said. Beloit Memorial Hospital said at least 27 people were treated for injuries sustained in the crash, WIFR-TV reported. State Patrol officials said snow, ice and whiteout conditions were factors in the crash.

      • Massive 85-vehicle Wisconsin pileup injures 27, blocks major interstate for hours in both directions
        Fox News
      • Up to 50 vehicles involved in Wisconsin pileup amid whiteout conditions
        AccuWeather
    • U.S.
      TheStreet.com

      Elon Musk Apologizes to Nancy Pelosi's Family

      Last October, Paul Pelosi, husband of Nancy Pelosi, the former Speaker of the House of Representatives, was violently attacked in his house in San Francisco. Many Democratic leaders, including Hillary Clinton, attributed the attack to to America's deepening political divisions and to hate speech by some politicians. More to This Story Than Meets the Eye' Musk, who had announced Republican support a few months earlier, disagreed with that explanation.

      • SEC investigates Elon Musk’s claims in Tesla vehicles’ self-driving capabilities
        Yahoo Finance Video
      • Nancy Pelosi: 'No intention' of watching video of husband's attack
        Associated Press Videos
    • Politics
      Time

      Trump Delivers Bitter Speech Filled With Falsehoods in New Hampshire

      SALEM, N.H.— On Saturday, President Donald Trump pushed false claims about his own electoral losses and suggested foreign leaders shared his doubts about the outcome of the 2020 vote during his Saturday drop-by in the first-in-the-nation primary state. Speaking to activists in southern New Hampshire, the ex-President revived his greatest hits as he joined his first campaign event of his 2024 chase of the Republican Party's White House nomination and tested a new idea—that every day in Joe Biden's America is a cruel April Fools Day joke.

      • Trump opens 2024 run in New Hampshire, says he’s ‘more committed’ than ever
        WFXT
      • Trump Kicks Off 2024 Campaign Travel With New Hampshire, South Carolina Visits
        The Wall Street Journal
    • U.S.
      Associated Press

      Police: 1 of 2 boys recovered after Amber Alert has died

      One of the twin Ohio boys who became the center of a statewide AMBER Alert that garnered nationwide attention last month has died, authorities said. Columbus police said officers were sent to a home shortly before 11 p.m. Saturday on a report of a baby not breathing. Columbus police said they were “actively investigating.”

    • U.S.
      Sacramento Bee

      Medieval Italian bridge was pedestrian-only — until California tourist arrived, cops say

      Italy's Ponte Vecchio Bridge has withstood centuries of heavy use, a retreating destructive army in WWII — and tourists. The medieval bridge was constructed in 1345 and stretches across the Arno River in Florence, according to Britannica. The pedestrian-only bridge has a lower level with shops and an upper level with walkways connecting art galleries and palaces on either side of the river.

    • World
      Reuters Videos

      Iranian military factory 'hit by drone attack'

      STORY: Official news agency IRNA described it as an ammunition factory. The defense ministry said the explosion caused only minor damage, no casualties, and that air defenses had destroyed three attacking drones. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the blast.

    • Politics
      Associated Press

      Concerns over prayer breakfast lead Congress to take it over

      The National Prayer Breakfast, one of the most visible and long-standing events that brings religion and politics together in Washington, is splitting from the private religious group that had overseen it for decades, due to concerns the gathering had become too divisive. The organizer and host for this year's breakfast, scheduled for Thursday, will be the National Prayer Breakfast Foundation, headed by former Sen. Mark Pryor, D-Ark. Sen. Chris Coons, a regular participant and chairman of the Senate ethics committee, said the move was prompted in part by concerns in recent years that members of Congress did not know important details about the larger multiday gathering.

    • Science
      The Daily Beast

      Why More Physicists Are Starting to Think Space and Time Are ‘Illusions’

      This past December, the physics Nobel Prize was awarded for the experimental confirmation of a quantum phenomenon known for more than 80 years: entanglement. As envisioned by Albert Einstein and his collaborators in 1935, quantum objects can be mysteriously correlated even if they are separated by large distances. Coincidentally, just a few weeks before the new Nobel laureates were honored in Stockholm, a different team of distinguished scientists from Harvard, MIT, Caltech, Fermilab and Google reported that they had run a process on Google's quantum computer that could be interpreted as a wormhole.

    • U.S.
      Business Insider

      A defense attorney for one of the Memphis cops charged with fatally beating Tyre Nichols said 'no one' 'intended' for him to die. Nichols' family isn't buying that argument.

      An attorney for one of the cops charged in Tyre Nichols' death said nobody "intended" for him to die. Prosecutors say Nichols was brutally beaten by police in Memphis, Tennessee, earlier this month. A defense attorney for one of the five fired Memphis, Tennessee, police officers charged in the beating death of Tyre Nichols said the cops never "intended" for the young Black motorist to die.

      • Grizzlies, NBA speak out after video of Tyre Nichols' beating by Memphis police is released: 'It’s devastating'
        Yahoo Sports
      • Photos: Protesters demand justice for Tyre Nichols across U.S. after Memphis police bodycam footage is released
        Yahoo News
    • World
      Associated Press

      Pope clarifies homosexuality and sin comments in note

      Pope Francis has clarified his recent comments about homosexuality and sin, saying he was merely referring to official Catholic moral teaching that teaches that any sexual act outside of marriage is a sin. Francis first made the comments in an interview Jan. 24 with The Associated Press, in which he declared that laws criminalizing homosexuality were “unjust” and that “being homosexual is not a crime.” As he often does, Francis then imagined a conversation with someone who raised the matter of the church's official teaching, which states that homosexual acts are sinful, or “intrinsically disordered.”

    • U.S.
      HuffPost

      Jim Jordan's Fearmongering Question Prompts Withering 1-Word Reply From Stephen King

      Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) is doubling down on his recent fearmongering about which freedoms are supposedly on the chopping block in the U.S. “First, they came for your guns. Then, your gas stoves.

    • U.S.
      TheStreet.com

      Donald Trump's Las Vegas Strip Hotel Gets a Dubious Honor

      Architect Frank Lloyd Wright designed some of the most famous and visually appealing buildings in the United States and the world, including Fallingwater in Mill Run, Pa., and the Guggenheim Museum in New York. U.K. building supply company Buildworld did some research on buildings around the world that are often said to be ugly and tracked down all the design-themed tweets they could find on the buildings on Twitter. The ugliest buildings around the world, but outside of the U.S., included the No. 1 ugliest building, Scottish Parliament Building in Edinburgh, Scotland.

    • Business
      Reuters

      Boeing's 747, the original jumbo jet, prepares for final send-off

      Boeing's 747, the original and arguably most aesthetic "Jumbo Jet", revolutionized air travel only to see its more than five-decade reign as "Queen of the Skies" ended by more efficient twinjet planes. The last commercial Boeing jumbo will be delivered to Atlas Air in the surviving freighter version on Tuesday, 53 years after the 747's instantly recognizable humped silhouette grabbed global attention as a Pan Am passenger jet. "On the ground it's stately, it's imposing," said Bruce Dickinson, the lead singer of Iron Maiden who piloted a specially liveried 747 nicknamed "Ed Force One" during the British heavy metal band's tour in 2016.

    • U.S.
      UGA Wire

      Report: Stetson Bennett arrested for public intoxication in Dallas

      Former Georgia quarterback Stetson Bennett was reportedly arrested in Dallas, Texas on Sunday morning on a public intoxication charge, according to WFAA News. The arrest took place at 6 a.m. in Old East Dallas after the police were notified of a man banging on doors. WFAA confirmed the arrest with the police, but there is no confirmation as to whether or not Bennett was the one reportedly banging on the doors.

      • Georgia QB Stetson Bennett arrested for public intoxication in Dallas
        Yahoo Sports
      • Georgia's Bennett arrested in Texas for public intoxication
        Associated Press
    • Politics
      CBS News Videos

      DOJ working to brief senators on Trump and Biden documents

      In a letter obtained by CBS News, a Justice Department official said prosecutors are working to brief lawmakers on potential risks to national security after the discovery of classified documents at the homes of both former President Donald Trump and President Biden.

    • U.S.
      Associated Press

      Oregon pins hopes on mass timber to boost housing, jobs

      Inside a warehouse at the industrial Port of Portland lies what some believe could be the answer to Oregon's housing crisis — a prototype of an affordable housing unit made from mass timber. Once mass-produced at the factory being planned at the port, the units ranging from 426 square feet (40 square meters) to 1,136 square feet (106 square meters) could be deployed across the state to be assembled in urban and rural communities alike, potentially alleviating a critical housing shortage that has driven Oregon's high rates of homelessness.

    • U.S.
      Sacramento Bee

      Skydiver with failed parachute slams into roof of home, California firefighters say

      A skydiver survived an uncontrolled fall over Oceanside when his parachute failed to fully open, California firefighters told news outlets. The man, in his 30s or 40s, hit the roof of a two-story house and fell to the ground between two homes at about 5 p.m. Friday, Jan. 27, firefighters told KSWB. Firefighters from Oceanside and Carlsbad responded to 911 calls and airlifted the skydiver to a hospital, KGTV reported.

    • U.S.
      Modesto Bee

      ‘Occupants must be white: no Negroes, Mexicans, Hindus, Filipinos’ | Opinion

      At last, after decades of silence, the California Association of Realtors is apologizing for its role in promoting our state's racist housing policies. Leaders of several California real estate organizations gathered at a press conference Oct. 21, 2022, to focus on next steps to correct years of discriminatory acts that segregated our cities, reduced the ability to build affordable housing and promoted redlining. In 1964, the association attempted to prevent the passage of the Rumford Fair Housing Act that removed discriminatory practices in housing.

    • U.S.
      Associated Press

      Man gets prison for attacking Capitol officer who later died

      A New Jersey man who joined a mob's attack on the U.S. Capitol was sentenced Friday to more than six years in prison for using pepper spray to assault police officers, one of whom died a day after the siege. Julian Khater didn't mention the death of Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick or address the officer's family in a written statement he read aloud before U.S. District Judge Thomas Hogan sentenced him to six years and eight months of imprisonment. Khater wasn't charged in the officer's death.

      • N.J. rioter sentenced to more than 6½ years in prison over pepper spraying of Capitol Police officer who died a day later
        MarketWatch
      • Capitol Rioter Who Attacked Officer Brian Sicknick Is Sentenced To More Than 6 Years
        HuffPost
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    Is the streaming TV ‘golden age’ over?
    • “Streaming is beginning to look an awful lot like the old-fashioned analogue TV it was supposed to replace.”

    • “Streaming isn’t going away … You’re still going to have a lot of choice for a long time.”

    • “In the future, [streaming] likely will cost more, have a little less library content and cancel more shows more quickly.”

    • “Streaming is still a game of content … It’s not a matter of who’s spending more, it’s who’s spending smartly.”

    • “Streamers are retreating from any sort of creative risk in favor of humdrum, lowest-common-denominator shows.”

    Read the 360
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