Latest Episode
June 30 0400 UTC Brief
In Venezuela
Authorities say the death toll from the twin earthquakes that hit on 24 June has climbed above 1,700, with 5,034 injured and as many as 68,000 missing. UN-backed rescue work is still under way in La Guaira, while people in the hardest-hit areas are accusing the government of neglect and saying the response has been too slow and too thin.
In the U.S.
House Republicans moved ahead with a plan to tie the Pentagon funding bill to the SAVE America Act, pushing a combined package that would attach elections legislation to must-pass defense spending. The Rules Committee approved the procedural step along party lines, sending the plan toward floor debate. Washington’s favorite hobby, apparently, is making one big bill out of two separate fights.
President Trump said U.S. negotiators are heading to Doha for talks with Iran, calling the meeting potentially important and offering no further details.
In Philadelphia, Temple University student Bryce Wolfe was killed in a hit-and-run on Kelly Drive, with police saying the driver kept going after striking him and dragged him for more than a mile. His parents are asking for help as investigators try to identify the driver.
The San Francisco Archdiocese has agreed to a $395 million settlement with hundreds of survivors of clergy sexual abuse, according to lawyers announcing the deal.
In business and housing
Ford says it has brought back hundreds of experienced quality control workers after its push to rely more heavily on artificial intelligence failed to catch vehicle defects as well as expected. The company is restoring the human expertise it had cut, which turns out to remain useful when cars are involved.
In Britain, construction leaders are urging the government to act on what they describe as an urgent housebuilding crisis, while new research says more than half of first-time buyers now need help from family to get on the property ladder. Separately, nearly 50,000 British citizens have officially moved to Portugal, drawn by lower living costs, tax benefits, and better weather.
In Europe
Police in Monaco are searching for a suspect after a makeshift bomb exploded outside a residential building and seriously injured three people. One of the injured is reportedly a Ukrainian oligarch.
In Germany, mourners lit candles near the site of a shooting at a shelter that killed six staff members. The investigation is still ongoing.
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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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