Latest Episode
July 2 1200 UTC Brief
In Ukraine
Kyiv is mourning after what officials called Russia’s largest drone and missile attack on the capital, with at least 18 people killed. The scale of the strike is grimly consistent with Moscow’s habit of treating civilians as a messaging platform.
In the U.K.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer has issued a formal apology to victims of the forced adoption scandal, calling it a stain on the country’s history. He said mothers were wrongly judged unfit, children were taken from them, and the harm can’t be undone, only acknowledged.
Separately, the Home Secretary says the government accepts the inquiry’s finding that fundamental failures contributed to the Southport attack.
In the U.S.
A Massachusetts truck driver has been charged over a crash that killed a Pennsylvania state trooper on Interstate 81 in Schuylkill County. In a separate case, the FBI says some ransom notes in the Nancy Guthrie kidnapping case are still being treated as potentially genuine.
And congressional Republicans are reportedly considering a fairly novel tactic, using the prospect of Trump administration probes to give a future House minority more leverage in investigations. That is one way to plan for the next election, and not a subtle one.
In business and technology
The AI data center boom is forcing a rethink of climate targets, with big tech companies reporting higher emissions as electricity demand climbs. Amazon says its emissions have risen for two straight years and are likely to keep rising for years, while the EU is reportedly easing some climate rules to speed data center construction.
In Germany, researchers say they have set a new record for tandem solar cell efficiency, reaching 25.5 percent in a certified device just over one square centimeter. They also scaled the design into a mini-module, which is the sort of unglamorous step that usually matters more than the headline number.
Elsewhere, plans to merge South Korea’s Lotte Cinema and Megabox have collapsed after Megabox owner JoongAng Group ran into a liquidity crisis. Principal Asset Management also says it plans to launch a Sharia-compliant U.S. private credit fund aimed at Gulf investors.
In rescue and crime news
Emergency crews in Venezuela are still trying to free Hernán Gil, who has been buried since the earthquakes eight days ago and is being kept on an IV drip while rescuers work. In the U.K., Shabir Ahmed, known to victims as “Daddy,” has been released from prison after serving a 22-year sentence.
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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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