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Jun 05 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Why yearly sports games keep feeling like the same old game

Back in the day, sports video games arrived like clockwork every year, and fans bought them without hesitation. Today, those same fans pause before checking out the latest edition. Case in point: Madden 27 shows off the Tush Push play, a real-life NFL move that turned into a video game highlight. Fa

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Jun 05 2026SPORTS

Why College Football Trailers Make Us Stop and Think

A new video trailer for an upcoming football game puts a coach instead of a star player front and center, which is unusual. The trailer mixes real game clips with Coach Curt talking about why players love the sport. Instead of just showing big hits and touchdowns, it asks fans to remember what footb

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Jun 05 2026POLITICS

Court Backs FCC on Data Fines Against Big Telecom

The U. S. Supreme Court recently sided with the Federal Communications Commission in a case about how the agency punishes companies that mishandle customer data. By an 8-1 vote, the court rejected arguments from AT&T and Verizon that the FCC’s penalty system violates their constitutional right to a

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Jun 05 2026ENVIRONMENT

Forests Fading: Why Trees Keep Disappearing in Anne Arundel County

Back in 1609, when English settlers first arrived, the Chesapeake Bay area was almost entirely covered in forests. Over time, trees were cut down for farms and buildings, especially for growing tobacco. By the late 1800s, farming slowed down in some areas, letting forests grow back. But by 1950, ano

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Jun 05 2026POLITICS

The cost of war vs. the promise of tax cuts: Where does the money really go?

Politicians often highlight their achievements to win votes, but some promises start to look weak when the bigger picture comes into view. One senator has been talking up a tax relief plan that sounds helpful at first glance. It promises to ease the burden on working families while boosting border s

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Jun 05 2026POLITICS

Senator changes mind on long-standing Senate rule after winning election

Pennsylvania Senator John Fetterman showed up to his first Senate term with big plans for changing how the chamber works. In 2022, he campaigned on getting rid of the filibuster rule that lets a small group block most laws. This rule often stops big changes, even when many Americans want them. Back

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Jun 05 2026POLITICS

How US Science Funding Might Change Under New White House Plans

A fresh government plan could reshape how America funds science by giving political leaders more control over which studies receive federal money. Scientists worry this shift might push aside long-standing expert review processes that have shaped major breakthroughs in medicine, climate understandin

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Jun 05 2026WEATHER

How Missouri's Summer Heat Affects Storm Patterns

Summer in Missouri often brings sunny skies and high temperatures, but it also changes how storms behave. During spring, severe storms are more common because of the polar jet stream, which adds energy to the atmosphere. This jet stream moves air at different speeds and directions at various heights

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Jun 05 2026TECHNOLOGY

Smart rings and data risks: what happens when fitness trackers get hacked?

Smart rings promise deeper health insights than wristbands, but their tiny computers also collect sensitive data like sleep patterns, heart rate, and stress levels. Ultrahuman, an India-based company behind popular smart rings, recently admitted hackers accessed customer wellness records. The breach

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Jun 05 2026HEALTH

Public health tools weakened after COVID backlash

After COVID-19, many states cut back on tools used to fight outbreaks. Laws in over half the states now make it harder to declare emergencies. Some states even need lawmakers to approve health orders. This slows down responses when diseases spread fast. Staff cuts and funding drops weakened health

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