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Entertainment Jun 07, 2026

The Podcast Explaining America Through 100 Unlikely Items

Roman Mars, creator of the popular podcast 99% Invisible, is launching a new podcast called A Histo…
The LeadRoman Mars, the creator of the popular podcast 99% Invisible, is launching a new podcast called A History of the United States in 100 Objects, a sequel to the series A History of the World in 100 Objects that aired on Radio 4 in 2010. The Event DetailsMars's new series, co-produced by BBC Studios, SiriusXM, and 99% Invisible, comprises 100 episodes airing across two years, each highlighting objects and designs that tell the broader story of the United States. The podcast aims to explore American history through unusual items, such as the screw thread, the Bundy Clock, a gold coin recovered from the SS Central America, and the Billy Possum. The Data AnalysisMars has been researching the series for months, reading multiple books at once and listening to audiobooks at double speed while walking his dog. He believes that the experience has been akin to "putting myself through an American Studies major". The Impact AnalysisThe podcast is timed to coincide with the 250th anniversary of the US Declaration of Independence. Mars hopes to approach American history from a different perspective, using design as a lens to look at certain objects and ask what they say about America. The PredictionMars believes that his broadcasting career would not have taken off without the rise of podcasting. He notes that his voice is not a good fit for traditional radio, which prefers a clear and clipped tone. However, he has found his voice and become very relaxed behind the microphone, and he prefers to be the voice in listeners' heads rather than on video.
#Roman Mars #99% Invisible #A History of the United States in 100 Objects
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Culture Jun 07, 2026

Preserving the Legacy of HBCU Radio Stations

The HBCU Radio Preservation Project is working to save the archives of radio stations at Historical…
The HBCU Radio Preservation Project After Shaw University's WSHA radio station went on air in 1968, several other historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) followed the North Carolina school's lead, launching a wave of their own. For decades, the students who worked on these channels used them to inform listeners about happenings on campus, while also playing musical selections and offering cultural programming. Preserving the Archives The HBCU Radio Preservation Project is working to ensure that the irreplaceable archives at these institutions are saved and accessible. As a result of the project's efforts, WSHA's archives are available through the American Archive of Public Broadcasting. Several other universities, including Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee, have had their radio archive preserved for future generations. How the Project Works While working to preserve the archival collection of WYSO, a public radio station in Yellow Springs, Ohio, Jocelyn Robinson began wondering what collections at HBCU radio stations might include. She created a project that surveyed the radio stations to find out. Developed profiles of all the radio stations, including their founding, format, and broadcast footprint Wrote a report with recommendations for preserving radio stations in the campuses Remembering the History There is an oral history project component to the team's efforts, which is "where the storytelling becomes even more important and more apparent in the work". One of the very first oral history captures they did was with David Linton, a program director at WCOK at Clark Atlanta University, in Atlanta, Georgia, whose career started at WSHA at Shaw. Returning the History Celebrating the stations' histories helps different groups – from current students who might not be active listeners to family members of previous radio employees – understand the importance of the channels. Digitized over 1,125 hours of archival audio Visited nearly two dozen HBCU campuses Interviewed over 90 people, recording more than 140 hours of oral histories
#HBCU Radio Preservation Project #Black US culture #Historically Black Colleges and Universities
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Entertainment Jun 07, 2026

MC Escher Review – Hallucinatory Insights from the Master of the Mind‑Bending Staircase

The new MC Escher exhibition at Somerset House (5 June‑6 September 2026) turns the historic venue i…
Opening the Escher Metaverse at Somerset HouseThe new MC Escher exhibition, running from 5 June‑6 September 2026, transforms the historic London venue into a mind‑bending journey through the artist’s “metaverse” of impossible architecture and mathematical wonder.Immersive Installations Reveal the Mathematical Roots of Escher’s WorkVisitors encounter large‑scale video projections, giant metal spheres, chessboard floors and interactive sculptures that let them step inside iconic prints such as Belvedere (1958) and Waterfall (1961). The show also highlights Escher’s wartime diploma design of 1945 and his early fascination with tessellation after seeing the Alhambra.Video walls that animate the shifting staircases of RelativityMetal spheres echoing the convex‑mirror motifChessboard floor that reacts to foot trafficWhy the Exhibition Redefines the Intersection of Art and ScienceBy linking Escher’s visual paradoxes to the insights of physicist Roger Penrose and the broader pop‑culture legacy (e.g., Pink Floyd’s Ummagumma cover), the show demonstrates how mathematical concepts can inspire both fine art and popular media.What the Future Holds for Escher’s Legacy in Digital SpacesCurators suggest that the immersive format could evolve into virtual‑reality experiences, allowing global audiences to explore Escher’s impossible worlds online, keeping his “language of mathematics” alive for new generations.
#MC Escher #Somerset House #London
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Environment Jun 07, 2026

Little Terns Thrive Thanks to Lindisfarne’s New Netting and Wardens

Lindisfarne National Nature Reserve has installed electrifiable netting fences and hired seasonal w…
The Lead: Little Terns Find a Lifeline at Lindisfarne On Ross Sands in Northumberland, a little tern sprinted toward a group of visitors, urging them away from its scrape. Senior manager Andrew Craggs of Lindisfarne National Nature Reserve explains the bird’s behaviour is a natural alarm against perceived predators – a sign that the reserve’s new protection tactics are already influencing bird behaviour. Electrifiable Netting Fences Shield Nesting Sites The reserve has erected 3 miles (5 km) of short, perforated, electrifiable netted fences across eight patches of beach and dunes. The design lets terns and ringed plovers move in and out freely while preventing people, dogs and larger predators from entering the vulnerable nesting areas. Fences are short‑wired and can be turned off when birds are not present. Installation covers the most heavily used breeding zones on Ross Sands. Staff can deploy additional sections wherever birds settle during the season. Breeding Numbers Reveal a Steep Decline Data from the British Trust for Ornithology’s Seabird Monitoring Project show a worrying trend: Little tern breeding abundance fell 19% between 1986 and 2024. Arctic tern numbers dropped 25% over the same period. Common tern populations plummeted 63%. These declines underscore why Lindisfarne’s interventions are critical for the species that migrate thousands of miles from West Africa each spring. Human Disturbance and Climate Threats Reshape Shorebird Survival Experts cite two primary pressures: Human disturbance – increased car ownership, outdoor recreation, and dogs on beaches force terns into fewer, larger colonies, making them easy targets for predators. Climate change – rising sea levels and coastal flooding threaten the low‑lying sand dunes and mudflats that host nesting sites. Ginny Swaile, deputy director for Northumbria at Natural England, notes that terns often choose open, exposed spots, making accidental trampling common. Tony Juniper, chair of Natural England, adds that visitor numbers now approach one million annually, amplifying disturbance risk. Future Outlook: Scaling Protection and Community Engagement The reserve’s strategy combines physical barriers with education. Seasonal wardens, funded by the EU Life environmental programme, provide on‑site guidance, enforce leash rules for dogs, and explain the sensitivity of the habitat to the public. If the current model proves successful, it could be replicated along other vulnerable UK coastlines, offering a template for balancing tourism with wildlife conservation.
#Lindisfarne National Nature Reserve #Little Tern #Andrew Craggs
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Economy Jun 07, 2026

A Good Life for the 99% Isn't a Pipe Dream: How to Achieve Global Prosperity by 2100

A new Global Justice Report outlines a vision for a more equitable and sustainable future where 90%…
The Vision for a Just and Sustainable FutureImagine a future in which everyone enjoys high levels of wellbeing; where 90% of the world's population doubles their income but works half the hours we work today. A world in which the bottom half of humanity sees its share of global wealth rise from just 2% today to 30%; a world where we consume enough, but nobody over-consumes. And imagine achieving this on a planet that can comfortably sustain human life without its climate breaking down.Against the bleak techno-authoritarian futures now being sold to us, a radical new vision for global progress in the 21st century feels urgently needed. The most credible vision is one in which the habitability of the planet is a precondition for human development and equality.The Three Pillars of Global TransformationOur new report examines the conditions required for the world to progress towards this ambition on an economically and ecologically compatible path, by the end of the century. Its conclusion? A global transformation that reconciles planetary habitability and high standards of wellbeing for all is possible – as long as three conditions are simultaneously met.Fast decarbonisation of energy systems is necessary. But we also need a major shift away from overconsumption towards 'sufficiency'. This would involve a sharp reduction in labour hours and the use of raw materials, along with big changes in consumption patterns, food habits, land use and forest cover. Financing and politically sustaining decarbonisation and sufficiency will require a drastic reduction in inequality of income, wealth and power, between countries and within them.Quantifying the Path to Global JusticeThe Global Justice Report is the first attempt to propose a fully quantified plan for this transition. It combines four dimensions that today's debates often treat separately: redistribution at the world scale; a deep reform of the international financial and economic order; a radical transformation of energy systems; and substantial shifts in consumption patterns. Compared with most climate scenarios (including those of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change), the main novelty is that we model all four dimensions together – and place inequality and sufficiency at the centre of the analysis.The Economic Convergence by 2100What would this transition deliver? At its heart is convergence between countries. Average per capita national income, today separated by a 16-fold gap between the poorest (€290 a month in sub-Saharan Africa) and richest (€4,590 in North America/Oceania) regions of the world, would rise towards a common level of about €5,000 a month in all countries by 2100.But this convergence is not just monetary. Annual working hours per employed person would fall from roughly 2,100 to about 1,000, continuing the long shift towards shorter working time; while the share of global working hours devoted to education and health would rise from 11% to 43%. Women and men would converge on equal pay and on an equal share of economic and domestic labour.Climate and Wealth TransformationAll of this would unfold within a habitable climate. Thanks to sustainable convergence and fast decarbonisation, global heating would reach 1.8C, against more than 4C on current trends.None of this will be possible without a deep contraction of inequality. The income scale between individuals would narrow to a ratio of one to five and the wealth scale to one to 10, prolonging what western and Nordic Europe achieved over the 20th century. The share of global wealth held by the poorest half of humanity would rise from 2% to 30%, while the share held by the billionaire class would fall from 6% to 0.05%.Financing the Global Justice TransitionThese shifts would be financed and governed through new institutions. A global justice fund would spend an average of 10% of world GDP a year from 2026 to 2060 on country dividends and investment, against the less than 0.4% that aid and the combined budgets of the UN, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank represent today.Its resources would come from a world sovereign fund holding 10% of the world capital stock, a global wealth tax rising to 20% a year on billionaires and a global income tax rising to 90% at the very top, each touching about 1% of the world's population.The Political Path ForwardThe result is not a transfer from many to few but a gain for almost everyone. Close to 90% of the world's population would double their income between 2026 and 2100, and once leisure and a habitable planet are counted, more than 99% come out ahead.Our report is part of a broader international agenda for planetary habitability, social justice and reform of the global financial architecture – including the Bridgetown agenda launched by Barbados in 2022, the Sevilla Commitment on development finance, the UN tax convention process, and G20 initiatives led by Brazil and South Africa on global inequality.A habitable, equal and prosperous 21st century is materially possible. The carbon budget allows it and history offers precedents at comparable scales: universal suffrage, the universalisation of healthcare and education, the halving of working hours and the sharp compression of inequality over the 20th century. Technical impossibility is not what is standing in the way, but rather the absence of a shared vision of social progress, at once concrete and radical. What it will take instead is political choice, and the hard work of coalition-building behind it.
#Thomas Piketty #Global Justice Report #Economic Inequality
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Tech Jun 07, 2026

Nothing Phone 4a Pro review: A premium aluminium smartphone with quirky design

The Nothing Phone 4a Pro is a mid-range smartphone with a premium aluminium body, quirky design, an…
The Nothing Phone 4a Pro: A Departure from Glass-Clad Designs Nothing’s latest smartphone, the Phone 4a Pro, marks a significant departure from its previous glass-clad transparent designs. The new device boasts a solid aluminium body, a rare sight in the world of Android phones, and a touch of those elements in the camera island at the top. Design and Display The Phone 4a Pro features a 6.83in OLED screen with a high 144Hz refresh rate, making it ideal for watching videos on the commute. The slim aluminium body feels great, but the phone is quite large, making it a two-handed affair most of the time. Specifications Screen: 6.83in 144Hz QHD+ OLED (450ppi) Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 7 Gen 4 RAM: 8 or 12GB Storage: 128 or 256GB Operating system: Nothing OS 4.1 (Android 16) Camera: 50MP main, 50MP 3.5x tele and 8MP ultrawide, 32MP selfie Connectivity: 5G, eSIM, wifi 6, NFC, Bluetooth 5.4 and GNSS Water resistance: IP65 (25cm depths for 20 minutes) Dimensions: 163.6 x 76.6 x 7.9mm Weight: 210g Mid-range Power with Solid Battery Life The Phone 4a Pro is equipped with a Qualcomm Snapdragon 7 Gen 4 chip, which handles daily tasks efficiently but may not win any raw processing awards. The battery lasts a solid two-plus days between charges with the screen in active use for more than seven hours across a mix of wifi and 5G for general messaging, browsing, watching video and using various apps.
#Nothing #Phone 4a Pro #Smartphone
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Politics Jun 07, 2026

The CBSE Exam Scandal: A Crisis of Trust for the Modi Government

A massive technical failure in India's Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) 'On-Screen Marki…
The Collapse of the On-Screen Marking SystemFor millions of Indian students, the high-stakes CBSE examinations are the gateway to higher education and future careers. However, the recent release of results for over 1.7 million students has been marred by a systemic failure that has shattered public trust. The introduction of a digitized evaluation process, intended to streamline grading, instead introduced blurry scans, server outages, and allegations of incorrect marking. This technical fiasco has evolved from a simple administrative error into a full-blown political scandal, with students accusing the government of prioritizing digital efficiency over the integrity of their futures.The Technical and Political Origins of the CrisisThe core of the controversy lies in the rushed implementation of the On-Screen Marking system. The CBSE, which oversees over 30,000 schools, faced difficulties securing a bidder for the project. In a move criticized for cutting corners, the board relaxed technical requirements and awarded the contract to Coempt Edu Teck, a Hyderabad-based company with a controversial history. This company previously operated as Globarena Technologies, a firm implicated in the 2019 Telangana exam scandal where 20 students died by suicide due to mass failures.Rushed Implementation: The system was implemented with only six months to prepare before exams began.Controversial Vendor: The company was previously linked to a mass failure scandal that resulted in student suicides.Whistleblower Exposure: High school student Vedant Srivastava exposed that scanned copies did not match his handwriting, sparking a viral investigation.Student Outrage and Statistical ImpactThe revelation of the technical flaws has mobilized a generation of students, who are using social media to expose alleged discrepancies in their grading. The outrage is not merely about lost marks but about the perceived theft of their hard work and the denial of due process. The incident has highlighted a broader trend of institutional indifference.Viral Discontent: A single post by Vedant Srivastava was reshared over 13,000 times, triggering a cascade of similar complaints.Systemic Vulnerabilities: Teenager Nisarga Adhikary demonstrated how the CBSE portal could be compromised, allowing unauthorized access to grading systems.Historical Context: This is not the first time the National Testing Agency has faced questions about paper leaks and exam integrity.Political Fallout and Institutional ErosionThe scandal has rapidly become a political liability for the Modi government. Opposition leaders, including Rahul Gandhi and Arvind Kejriwal, have seized the moment to accuse the administration of incompetence and a cover-up. The government's response—transferring the CBSE chairman and secretary—has been viewed by critics as a deflection rather than accountability. The incident has exacerbated a growing sentiment among the youth that dissent is criminalized and that institutions are designed to fail them.The Future of Digital Evaluation in IndiaAs the dust settles, the CBSE scandal is likely to trigger a comprehensive review of digital evaluation policies across India. The government will face immense pressure to conduct an independent inquiry and potentially overhaul the current digital infrastructure. For the students involved, the psychological impact of the scandal will linger, potentially influencing their political engagement and trust in government institutions for years to come. The crisis serves as a stark reminder that without robust security and transparency, digitizing critical infrastructure can have devastating real-world consequences.
#Narendra Modi #Dharmendra Pradhan #CBSE
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Politics Jun 07, 2026

The Lobito Corridor as a Strategic Anchor in US-Africa Relations

The confirmation of Frank Garcia as US Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs marks a str…
The Strategic Pivot in US-Africa DiplomacyThe recent confirmation of veteran naval officer Frank Garcia as the new Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs signals a definitive shift in Washington's engagement strategy. Garcia, speaking before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, explicitly praised the administration of Donald Trump for prioritizing 'trade and investment for mutual benefit' over traditional humanitarian aid. This marks a departure from previous diplomatic approaches, framing economic security as the core of US national interests in the continent.Reimagining the Colonial Route: The Lobito CorridorThe centerpiece of this new strategy is the Lobito Corridor, a 1,300km rail and transport route linking Angola's Atlantic port of Lobito to the mineral-rich Copperbelt of the DRC and Zambia. Historically, this infrastructure traces back to a colonial trade corridor established in 1902, which suffered significant damage during Angola's civil war. After a 27-year reconstruction period, the railway was renovated by China as part of a $2bn rail-for-oil programme. Today, the corridor is managed by a consortium including Trafigura and Mota-Engil, operating under a 30-year concession.Infrastructure Status: Less than 3% was operational after the civil war; now upgraded for high-volume transport.Strategic Geography: Connects Central Africa's critical minerals to the Atlantic Ocean, bypassing congested ports.Historical Context: Originally built by British mining companies for European markets; now repurposed for global energy transition supply chains.Investment and the Geopolitics of Critical MineralsThe economic engine driving this initiative is the global surge in demand for critical minerals such as copper, cobalt, lithium, and nickel. The US government has committed billions to the project, with the International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) signing a $753m financing package. This investment is part of a broader $200bn US pledge within a $600bn G7 infrastructure initiative. The data underscores that this is not merely infrastructure development but a calculated move to secure supply chains for electric vehicles and clean energy technologies, directly countering Chinese dominance in the region.The 'America First' Infrastructure PlayWhile the Biden administration framed the corridor as a climate-transition project, the Trump administration has rebranded it as a geopolitical instrument. The focus has shifted from environmental sustainability to national security and economic sovereignty. By discarding the climate narrative, Washington aims to present the Lobito Corridor as a viable alternative to Chinese Belt and Road Initiative projects. The DFC's CEO, Ben Black, emphasized that these investments are designed to 'prevent monopolization by China and other strategic competitors,' signaling a hardening of the US stance against Beijing's expanding influence in Africa.Risks of a Geopolitical ShortcutDespite the strategic rationale, the Lobito Corridor faces significant headwinds that could undermine its long-term success. Critics argue that the project serves external strategic interests rather than local development. Mike Jennings of SOAS University of London warns that the corridor could exacerbate regional instability, particularly in the DRC, where resource extraction has historically fueled conflict. Furthermore, satellite analysis by Global Witness suggests that up to 6,500 people could be displaced by the project's expansion. The UN has also highlighted potential human rights risks and land conflicts, raising questions about whether this infrastructure will truly benefit the communities it passes through or simply serve as a conduit for external extraction.
#Frank Garcia #Lobito Corridor #Angola
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Business Jun 07, 2026

Meta Cuts 8,000 Jobs in Global Layoffs

Meta is cutting 8,000 jobs, or 10% of its global workforce, in a series of layoffs. The cuts, which…
The Layoff Details Meta has launched a wave of layoffs that will affect 10 percent of the company’s global workforce, representing about 8,000 people. The cuts, which began on Wednesday, are planned to occur in three waves, beginning at 4am local time for those affected. Severance Packages and Company Restructuring Workers in the United States will receive 16 weeks of severance pay, in addition to an extra two weeks for every year they have been employed at the company. In addition to the cuts, the parent company of WhatsApp, Facebook and Instagram said it would cancel plans to hire 6,000 people and shift 7,000 other employees into artificial intelligence (AI) workflow-related roles. The Impact on Morale and AI Development This comes amid reports of declining morale at the Mark Zuckerberg-led company following the launch of an AI tracking programme for workers. According to the Wall Street Journal, more than 1,500 people signed a petition demanding that the company not collect their data. Investing in AI Zuckerberg, who is the world’s sixth-richest person according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, is not averse to investing in the business. However, that spending has focused on AI development, including the Meta Superintelligence initiative. Capital expenditures are forecast to hit $125bn to $145bn for the year, an increase of more than double since 2025.
#Meta #Mark Zuckerberg #Layoffs
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