Latest Episode
May 24 1600 UTC Brief
In the Middle East
The United States and Iran are said to have reached a tentative understanding to wind down the fighting and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, but nothing is signed, several terms are still unresolved, and both sides are leaving plenty of room for confusion, a diplomatic art form. President Trump says sanctions on Iran will stay in place until a deal is actually reached. In Lebanon, civil defence officials say an Israeli strike destroyed a facility in Nabatieh, collapsing the building and damaging vehicles and equipment.
In U.S. news
The Secret Service says a man opened fire near a White House security checkpoint on Saturday evening and was shot and killed when officers returned fire. One bystander was wounded. Separately, a man was hospitalized after an officer-involved shooting in Kensington, after police say he raised a gun and was struck in the wrist and chest.
A new Wall Street Journal poll shows Trump’s approval rating down to 41 percent, with Democrats holding an 8-point lead on the generic congressional ballot. Strong approval among Republican voters also fell sharply.
In business
Truck drivers at Iowa 80 say higher fuel prices are already biting into their margins after the U.S. strikes on Iran. Regular gasoline was reported at $4.26 a gallon and diesel at $5.72, with drivers warning the summer jump could filter through to consumers before long.
In Turkey
Turkish riot police used tear gas and forced their way into the Ankara headquarters of the main opposition CHP party after a court removed its leadership. Supporters had blocked the entrances and refused to leave.
In China
China has launched its Shenzhou-23 crewed mission to the Tiangong space station, sending three astronauts into orbit. One will spend a full year there for the first time, as Beijing pushes toward a planned crewed moon landing by 2030.
In Britain
Reform UK’s Danny Kruger is calling for a major Whitehall overhaul, including abolishing the Cabinet Office and scrapping the Cabinet Secretary role. He says the prime minister should be in charge, not senior civil servants, which is quite a pitch for “less bureaucracy” from a party that discovered bureaucracy exists.
In Delaware
A historic Black church in Wilmington has found a temporary home after fire heavily damaged the Mother African Union Church. The congregation has resumed services at the Congo Legacy Center while investigators look into the cause and leaders try to raise money for rebuilding.
In culture
At Cannes, exiled Russian director Andrey Zvyagintsev used his Grand Prix acceptance speech to urge Vladimir Putin to end the war. The film, Minotaur, is set in Russia in 2022.
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This podcast is a fully automated experiment in AI-generated content. Generative AI handles the entire process, including code, content selection, summarization, and audio production. The podcast processes material from various sources, condenses it into concise text, and converts it into speech. No human intervention is involved in the production process.
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