Recommended Stories
- Kansas City Star
Sports world reacts to Derek Chauvin guilty verdict. ‘They finally got one case right’
“Justice served on all counts. Good. Still a ton of work to do.”
- The Independent
‘Racist lunatic’: Twitter lights up over Tucker Carlson’s diabolical laugh
Clip of Fox News host’s maniacal cackle goes viral and garners millions of views with social media users calling it ‘scary,’ ‘unhinged,’ and ‘unsettling’
- The State
Hornet LaMelo Ball thought injury was ‘nothing too big.’ Month later, he’s almost back
Charlotte Hornets rookie star LaMelo Ball discusses his recovery from a fractured wrist.
- The Independent
Supreme Court scraps last GOP election lawsuit, ending five-month challenge to results
The decision has wider implications for future elections
- The Independent
Republicans scramble to distance themselves from Marjorie Taylor Greene's 'America First' caucus
The congresswoman blames rogue staff for the platform document and said she never planned to launch anything
- Business Insider
A ransomware group says it stole Apple product blueprints, and is demanding the tech giant pay $50 million to get them back
Hacking group REvil says it stole product schematics. It first targeted Apple supplier Quanta with its ransom demand, but did not receive payment.
- The Week
European soccer's breakaway Super League collapses 48 hours after launch
European soccer was shaken by Sunday night's formation of a breakaway Super League of 12 elite soccer clubs, threatening the more-or-less egalitarian nature of the continent's favorite sport. On Tuesday, six of the teams — all from the English Premier League — pulled out of the potentially lucrative project, bowing to pushback from fans, Britain's government, and soccer's governing authorities. Chelsea and Manchester City were the first teams to say they were quitting the $4 billion enterprise, and Arsenal, Liverpool, Manchester United, and Tottenham soon joined them. The six remaining teams — Spain's Real Madrid, Atlético Madrid, and Barcelona, and Italy's Juventus, AC Milan, and Inter Milan — said in a statement Tuesday night that "given the current circumstances, we shall reconsider the most appropriate steps to reshape the project." The idea of a U.S.-style European soccer league, with a set number of teams splitting a huge pot of money, has been discussed for at least 20 years. What elite soccer teams "saw in the NFL was a model for making money from modern sports, complete with glitz, lionized dynasties, and lavish television contracts," The Wall Street Journal explains. "The odd crummy season wouldn't matter — the Super League could have its own New York Jets and that club would still make money." At least half of the 12 Super League teams are owned by foreign investors, including four American-owned franchises: Arsenal (L.A. Rams owner Stan Kroenke), Liverpool (Boston Red Sox investment group), Manchester United (the Tampa Bay Buccaneers' Glazer family), and AC Milan (Elliott Management Corp.). The Glazers were one of the key drivers of the Super League plan, the Journal reports, but Real Madrid President Florentino Perez is the public face. More stories from theweek.comThe new HBO show you won't be able to stop watchingAll 40 movies nominated for an Oscar this year, rankedMore than half of Republican voters back Biden's Afghanistan withdrawal plan, poll finds
- The Independent
Derek Chauvin news – live: Fox News, DeSantis and Taylor Greene attack verdict as Biden launches police review
Follow latest updates from Minneapolis
- The Independent
Marjorie Taylor Greene faces backlash for calling BLM greatest terrorist risk to US
‘It’s actually white supremacist extremists,’ says Star Trek actor George Takei
- The Independent
Tucker Carlson calls support for George Floyd an ‘attack on civilisation’
Fox News host uses show to question validity of Derek Chauvin verdict, asking: ‘Can we trust the way this decision was made?’
- Business Insider
Boris Johnson in lobbying scandal as leaked texts reveal he promised to 'fix' tax issue for James Dyson
Boris Johnson told James Dyson that "I am first lord of the Treasury and you can take it that we are backing you to do what you need."
- Axios
Super League in super trouble as clubs confirm withdrawals
The European Super League is on the brink before it even manages to launch.The state of play: Manchester City was the first to confirm Tuesday it "formally enacted the procedures to withdraw from the group developing plans for a European Super League. Liverpool, Arsenal, Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur and Chelsea followed suit.Stay on top of the latest market trends and economic insights with Axios Markets. Subscribe for freeThe big picture: The league has been met with withering backlash.Roughly 1,000 Chelsea fans protested their club's inclusion ahead of Tuesday's Premier League game against Brighton.When news broke of Chelsea's exit from the league, the fans jubilantly cheered, "We saved football!"Between the lines: Players on the member clubs didn't know they'd be in the league before it was announced."I can only say my personal opinion: I don't like it," said Liverpool's James Milner Monday. "Hopefully it doesn't happen."The bottom line: The league keeps the unfairness of the U.S. system, Axios' Felix Salmon wrote Monday morning, and takes away the elements that help to even things out.Soccer has seen no shortage of greedy owners buying trophies, but it's never been as brazen as this.More from Axios: Sign up to get the latest market trends with Axios Markets. Subscribe for free
- Reuters
Europeans see progress in Iran talks, major hurdles remain
PARIS (Reuters) -The European parties to the Iran nuclear deal have seen progress in the first two rounds of indirect U.S.-Iran negotiations to revive the 2015 accord but said on Wednesday that there were still major hurdles to overcome. The talks, aimed at bringing Iran and the United States back into compliance with the agreement by having Washington provide sanctions relief in return for Tehran curbing its nuclear program, will pick up again next week. Iran and world powers - Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia - have been meeting in Vienna to hammer out steps that would be needed if the agreement, which was abandoned by former U.S. President Donald Trump in 2018, is to be revived.
- The Independent
Basketball star Scottie Pippen pays emotional tribute after death of 33-year-old son
‘Antron suffered from chronic asthma and if he hadn’t had it, I truly believe he would’ve made it to the NBA’
- The Daily Beast
Indian Hospitals Run Out of Oxygen After Foreign Sales Boom
Danish Siddiqui via ReutersHospitals in the Indian capital of New Delhi are pleading that if they don’t get vital supplies of oxygen, they will run out within 24 hours, putting the lives of hundreds of COVID-19 patients in peril as many local media outlets claim the government exported oxygen supplies that could have averted the current disaster.India is gripped by one of the worst second waves in the world, topping more than 200,000 new COVID-19 cases a day for a week. Hospitals are horrifically overcrowded, with patients sharing beds in some cases. In the western state of Maharashtra, where nearly 60 percent of all COVID-19 cases have been reported, 22 patients died Wednesday after a leak caused the oxygen tank they were using to run out. “The oxygen tank had a leak while refilling, and that caused deaths of 22 patients,” Suraj Mandhare, health official in the Nashik district of Maharashtra, told Reuters. 50 Million People Allowed at Superspreader Festival so Modi Can Secure the Hindu VoteIndia’s Business Today newspaper reported that there has been a sharp rise in the amount of oxygen exported out of the country despite shortages at home. “Oxygen export data from the Department of Commerce showed that the country exported twice as much oxygen to the world during the first 10 months of FY21 in comparison to the previous financial year,” the newspaper reported. The exports consisted of liquid oxygen that can be used for both medical and industrial use, according to local media reports. Government officials have insisted the country did not export medical-use oxygen, though it is unclear why there was such a demand for global oxygen exports during the pandemic if not for medical use. The Indian government has also passed legislation that will ban some industrial use of processed oxygen from April 22 to ensure hospitals have enough to save patients’ lives. Government sources told India Today that the issue is not one of supply and demand but of distribution and delays in the supply chain that are not related to the pandemic.“The issue is that supply is available in places that are very far away from the demand,” Inox Air Products Director Siddharth Jain told the paper. “We are trying to find a way to transport the same.”Last week, the government ordered several cryogenic rail tankers dubbed the “oxygen express” to industrial areas to retrieve liquid oxygen that can be converted to medical oxygen for local hospitals. India’s prime minister Narendra Modi called the current crisis a “storm” and pleaded with citizens to comply with strict lockdowns and other measures in place to mitigate the spread. His government has been criticized for allowing religious ceremonies and political rallies to take place, including the month-long Kumbh Mela, or the pitcher festival, that attracted 50 million people to group bathe in the Ganges river to wash away their sins. “Oxygen demand has increased,” Modi said earlier this week in a taped address. “We are working with speed and sensitivity to ensure oxygen to all those who need it. The center, states and private companies, all are working together.”Read more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more.
- INSIDER
The 10 richest billionaire franchise owners in American sports
A breakdown of the 10 richest owners in sports, from Jerry Jones to Steve Ballmer.
- The Independent
Biden news: Bernie Sanders unveils free college plan as Merrick Garland launches police review
Rolling updates on the day’s news from Washington and beyond
- BBC
Apple event: AirTag, iPad and iMac lead line-up
Apple unveiled its version of a tile tracker to locate lost items, designed with privacy in mind.
- BBC
EU artificial intelligence rules will ban 'unacceptable' use
An outright ban on some AI systems, such as "social scoring" by governments, is proposed for the EU.
- Kansas City Star
NASA’s helicopter flight on Mars made history. Here’s how Kansas City’s Garmin helped
“You get kind of a thrill when you see somebody use one out in the wild,” said one Garmin engineer. “But for NASA to pick one up and shoot it into space and put it on Mars, that’s a little bit bigger thrill.”