Podcast

Latest Episode

May 4 Overnight Brief

In business and housing

PJM Interconnection says more than 800 power projects are now seeking grid connection as it reopens its review process for the first time in four years. The queue includes gas, battery storage, nuclear, solar, wind, and even one planned fusion plant in Virginia, because apparently everyone wants a piece of the grid before the grid collapses under data-center demand.

Separately, U.S. single-family housing starts rose in March to their highest level for that month since 2022, though new permits fell from a year earlier and existing home sales slipped. Builders may have been encouraged by warmer weather and hopes for steadier rates, but the pipeline still looks tight.

In Europe

A senior German MEP says Donald Trump’s threat of a 25 percent tariff on EU cars appears aimed squarely at Germany, after Chancellor Friedrich Merz criticized the U.S. position on Iran. He says the move would likely violate the trade deal struck last summer, which would be a charming way to start a transatlantic argument.

In Rome, Mayor Roberto Gualtieri is warning that Europe’s housing crisis has become an emergency, as a coalition of mayors prepares to press the European Commission and Parliament for action. At the same time, Armenia is hosting the European Political Community summit, where leaders are expected to scrutinize U.S. trade and defense moves.

Public safety and transport

Residents are being allowed back into a Bristol neighborhood after police declared the area safe following an explosion that killed two people. Authorities had been securing the site while they assessed the damage.

In New Jersey, a United Airlines flight struck a light pole on final approach and then damaged a tractor-trailer below. The truck driver was taken to hospital with minor injuries.

In global health and migration

Two women have died and three other people are critically ill after a small boat carrying 82 migrants ran aground in northern France during a failed attempt to cross the Channel. It is another grim reminder that the route stays dangerous even when the headlines move on.

Meanwhile, three passengers have died after a hantavirus outbreak on the Hondius cruise ship in the Atlantic, and another passenger is in intensive care in South Africa. Health authorities say one case is confirmed and five more are suspected, while investigators try to determine how the exposure happened.

In U.S. news

Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani is hospitalized in critical but stable condition, according to a spokesman. President Trump called him a true warrior.

In entertainment

Shakira drew an estimated 2 million people to a free concert on Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro, with city officials projecting a major boost for the local economy. Not every public event needs a security briefing, but this one practically came with traffic planning for a small nation.

About

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.

Subscribe

Spotify / Apple / Amazon / iHeart / Pandora / Pocket Casts / Deezer / Google / Podcast Index / RSS