Latest Episode
May 4 Overnight Brief
In U.S. news
Congress is looking at a federal minimum wage proposal that would lift the floor to $25 an hour by 2038, with large employers on a faster timeline than smaller firms. If it survives the legislative process, it would be the biggest wage overhaul since 2009, which is a long time for a system to pretend inflation is just a lifestyle choice.
In New York, Rudy Giuliani has been hospitalized in critical but stable condition after a sudden health emergency, according to his representatives. They have not said what caused the admission.
In Philadelphia, police say a woman was shot and killed after allegedly breaking into a home in North Philadelphia. Investigators have not released further details.
And in Arizona, firefighters are working to contain a wildfire estimated at 558 acres.
In health and the courts
The abortion pill mifepristone is back before the Supreme Court after a Fifth Circuit panel blocked the FDA’s 2023 rule allowing telemedicine prescriptions. The manufacturers are asking for interim relief while the broader legal fight continues, because apparently this drug can still find a new lawsuit hiding around every corner.
In international news
Britain is being told it may need to pay about £1 billion a year if it wants closer access to the EU single market. The talks could also pull the UK toward sector-specific alignment on issues like chemicals, pharmaceuticals, cars, and food standards, while London is weighing the political price of being a little more European without fully signing up for the full package.
The UK is also close to joining the EU’s loan program for Ukraine, as London and Brussels look to deepen defence ties and keep support for Kyiv moving.
Off West Africa, three passengers have died and at least three others have needed medical treatment on a cruise ship after a suspected hantavirus outbreak.
Taiwan’s coffee community is protesting after the World Coffee Championships required its competitors to register as “Chinese Taipei” instead of Taiwan.
In tech and security
Security agencies from the U.S., U.K., Australia, New Zealand, and Canada are warning that agentic AI is too risky to deploy quickly. Their guidance is to slow down, harden systems, and assume the tools will misbehave before they help anyone.
In England and Wales, the Home Office has announced £115 million for a new Police.AI centre to expand AI use across all 43 police forces. Critics say the oversight rules are still fragmented, while supporters say the tools can save time. The usual balance, in other words, between efficiency and handing powerful systems a badge.
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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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