An Area 51 emergency?

Marvel's Spider-Man fans are freaking out, and actual spiders are, in a way, also freaking out. It's Ashley. Here's the news you need to know Wednesday.

But first, arachnids 🕷: Hurricanes are apparently making spiders more aggressive. So that's terrifying.

There's (maybe) an invasion (of humans) coming to Area 51

Remember the “Storm Area 51” Facebook event, when more than 2 million people RSVP’d to “see them aliens” on Sept. 20? A rural Nevada county is readying for what’s to come: Commissioners in Nevada's Lincoln County voted to pre-sign an emergency declaration before the mysterious “event” that could draw thousands to the desert. But really, nobody has any idea how many attendees – if any – actually plan to come. “We have no pickin' idea what we're going to face – if anything,” said District D Commissioner Kevin Phillips. That's exactly what I’d be saying every day if I lived anywhere near Area 51.

Another 'nasty' woman – this time in Greenland

President Donald Trump was really, actually, truly thinking about buying Greenland. The Danish prime minister said thanks but no thanks, and it’s been a bit tense ever since. Trump called Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen "nasty" Wednesday after she rebuked discussions about a sale of Greenland to the U.S. as “absurd.” "All she had to do was say no," Trump said, adding that Frederiksen was "not very nice" in her refusal. Side note: Curious about how much the U.S. would have had to pay for Greenland, the world’s largest island? One estimate says half a trillion dollars.

Trump admin moves to detain migrant kids indefinitely

The Trump administration said Wednesday it was taking steps to allow it to indefinitely detain undocumented children with their families while their immigration cases are pending. The move would end a 20-day limit on detaining children and families – keeping kids and parents together, albeit in custody, rather than separating them. President Donald Trump said fewer migrants will try to enter the country illegally once they realize that security is tightening on the southern border. "Very much I have the children on my mind. It bothers me very greatly," Trump said, calling on Congress to close loopholes in asylum law. Homeland Security officials expect the new rule to be challenged in federal court.

What everyone’s talking about

Amazing: Spider-Man, caught in a web, will exit Marvel films

People on the internet are losing their minds over the Marvel Cinematic Universe parting ways with Spider-Man: Tuesday, negotiations broke down between Disney and Sony Pictures for future Spider-Man films, sending fans into a panic. As a Hollywood divorce looked imminent, Twitter had a meltdown imagining the fate of its beloved teenage superhero. The Twitter hashtag #SaveSpiderMan, however steeped in irrational emotion, went viral. Marvel actors were right behind the movement: "Avengers" actor Jeremy Renner, who plays Hawkeye, and "Deadpool" star Ryan Reynolds took to social media to voice their support for keeping Spider-Man, played by Tom Holland, in the franchise.

Tom Holland, who plays Spider-Man, looks as shocked as the rest of us feel.
Tom Holland, who plays Spider-Man, looks as shocked as the rest of us feel.

Real quick

Just how the internet fuels hate

For years, social media fueled the rise of white supremacy by giving young white males places to freely spew hate. Since the El Paso shooting Aug. 3, a lot of focus has been on 8chan, the renegade message board where suspects in three recent mass shootings uploaded white supremacist screeds, but racists remain active all across the web – including on major social media sites. Can tech companies do more to curb violent extremism?

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Trump, Denmark, Spider-Man, Area 51, DWTS: Wednesday's news