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Apr 24 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Catching Every Marlins Game Without Breaking the Bank

Watching baseball doesn't have to mean paying for expensive cable packages. The Miami Marlins make most of their games available through streaming services, but figuring out the best deal takes some planning. Local fans have a few budget-friendly options, while those outside Florida need different s

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Apr 24 2026CRYPTO

Another crypto clash: Justin Sun's lawsuit and the banana that started it all

A crypto billionaire has taken legal action against a Trump-linked financial platform, and the details are raising eyebrows. Justin Sun, known for his work with the Tron blockchain, filed a lawsuit against World Liberty Financial (WLFI), a company connected to the Trump family. The case centers on W

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Apr 24 2026CRYPTO

How a $292 million hack forced DeFi into quick action mode

The recent $292 million exploit in decentralized finance (DeFi) wasn’t just another crypto headline—it exposed how fragile these systems can be when trust breaks. The attack centered on rsETH, a token that represents staked ether, and left Aave—the biggest lending platform in DeFi—with a massive gap

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Apr 24 2026CRYPTO

Bitcoin Surges, But Is the Crypto Market Getting Too Excited?

Bitcoin took a big leap recently, jumping close to $80, 000 after a strong 6% gain in just one day. This pushed a popular fear and greed tracker to its highest point in over three months. The index, which measures how nervous or confident people feel about crypto, climbed 14 points to 46 out of 100.

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Apr 24 2026CRYPTO

Crypto in 2026: When hackers got smarter, and wallets got colder

In 2026, North Korea-linked groups quietly made off with almost $600 million across a handful of flashy heists. The biggest headline grabber was Kelp DAO where a single “oops” in how two blockchains talk to each other let the thieves walk away with $293 million. A few weeks later, Drift Protocol los

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Apr 24 2026CRYPTO

Why a big Ethereum freeze is making people doubt crypto’s core promise

When a big hack happened on Arbitrum this week, the team in charge didn’t stay quiet. They locked up more than $71 million worth of stolen Ethereum right away. That sounds smart—stopping thieves isn’t usually controversial. But what they did next reveals a quiet truth about modern crypto: even syste

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Apr 24 2026POLITICS

Two Americans Die in Mexico: What Really Happened?

A recent accident in Mexico’s Chihuahua state has raised serious questions about a secret operation involving US officials. Two Americans—reportedly CIA officers—died when their car crashed while traveling with Mexican officials. The US government confirmed the deaths but avoided naming the agency t

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Apr 24 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Behind the Scenes of Crime Shows That Actually Work

A well-known crime series just came back on streaming, and it’s not following the usual flashy formula. Instead of focusing on magic or tech gadgets, this show dives into messy real-life detective work. The first season got mixed reactions from viewers, even though critics loved it completely. Now,

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Apr 24 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Gerard Butler’s old heist movie jumps to Netflix

Gerard Butler has played a lot of tough guys—kings, soldiers, heroes—but in one 2018 film he played someone just as tough, only on the wrong side of the law. In Den of Thieves he led a gang of ex-soldiers planning to rob a downtown Los Angeles bank. The story pits Butler’s crew against a detective t

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Apr 24 2026HEALTH

Rethinking HIV Laws: Are Strict Rules Really the Best Defense?

Public health debates often clash over how to handle diseases like HIV. Russia once took a hard stance, making it a crime to spread HIV through actions like unprotected sex or needle sharing. The idea was simple: punish those who put others at risk to slow the epidemic. But over time, experts began

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