GE

Apr 05 2026WEATHER

Storm aftermath: crews check Michigan neighborhoods for hidden damage

Southeast Michigan woke up Sunday to broken branches and scattered debris after a storm line rolled through late Saturday. The National Weather Service sent a crew to walk the affected neighborhoods and record what happened. So far, no injuries have been reported, but the damage is clear: roofs peel

reading time less than a minute
Apr 05 2026FINANCE

Stock Markets Rise Despite Hidden Unease in Oil and Bitcoin

On a spring day in April 2026, stock markets on Wall Street experienced their best trading session in months. The Dow Jones shot up over 1, 100 points, the S&P 500 climbed nearly 3%, and the Nasdaq surged almost 4%. Traders celebrated what they called a breakthrough, believing the conflict between t

reading time less than a minute
Apr 05 2026CRIME

Rapper Pooh Shiesty and His Team Face Heavy Charges After a Studio Confrontation Went Wrong

A high-profile music producer recently found himself caught in a bizarre and violent dispute after a rapper and his father allegedly forced him to sign a release from his record deal at gunpoint. The incident, which unfolded in a Dallas studio, quickly escalated when the producer was threatened with

reading time less than a minute
Apr 05 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Catch Up on The Rookie Before the Season 8 Finale

Nathan Fillion has been a familiar face on crime shows for years, but The Rookie stands out as his longest-running role in the genre. The series follows John Nolan, an older recruit who becomes a training officer by the end, showing his full journey at the LAPD. With the eighth season wrapping up on

reading time less than a minute
Apr 05 2026CRIME

How Age Guesses Shape Court Decisions in Sweden

Swedish courts often rely on age estimates when deciding criminal cases. Out of 61 reviewed rulings, these guesses played a big role at three key cutoffs: 15, 18, and 21 years old. The judges looked at different kinds of proof—like medical tests, witness statements, and official documents—to figure

reading time less than a minute
Apr 05 2026LIFESTYLE

When One Job Can’t Pay for Two Careers

A long illness can change everything. One partner’s health crash often becomes another family’s financial crash too. This couple moved so one could study music, banking on a degree to lift their future. But joblessness sticks around—no matter how many applications get sent. The sick partner is now b

reading time less than a minute
Apr 05 2026ENTERTAINMENT

AI in Indian films: cheaper, faster, but is it better?

India makes more movies than anywhere else, yet fewer people are buying tickets lately. Big names still fill seats, but crowds aren’t spending as much on tickets or snacks. Studios face a tough choice: lower prices or lose viewers completely. Some are trying a different fix—swapping real actors for

reading time less than a minute
Apr 04 2026WEATHER

Storms Leave Tornado‑Like Damage Across Northern Illinois

The National Weather Service has confirmed that a weak tornado, rated EF‑1, struck parts of Lee County last Thursday night. A survey team was dispatched to inspect the damage and is still checking sites in nearby Ogle County. Meteorologist Lee Carlaw reported that crews were on the move early Frid

reading time less than a minute
Apr 04 2026POLITICS

Government Shutdown Drama: A Tale of Politics, Money and Chaos

The U. S. government hit a pause button in the fall, shutting down for 43 days – the longest ever – until a deal let most agencies run through January. That stop‑gap was meant to ease into a longer agreement, but events in Minnesota shook the plans. Immigration agents killed Alex Pretti, and Senate

reading time less than a minute
Apr 04 2026POLITICS

State Lawyers Block Trump‑Era College Data Push

A federal judge in Boston has stopped the Trump‑era Department of Education from demanding years of race and gender data from public universities in 17 states. The order was requested by the Democratic attorneys general of those states, who are fighting a new survey that would have forced schools to

reading time less than a minute