Global News Podcast - The Happy Pod: Love, cake, and a long-lost mother

We hear how a man's search for his birth mother ended in an unexpected but familiar place - his favourite local bakery. Vamarr Hunter was shocked to discover that the bakery's owner, whose company and motherly advice he'd enjoyed for years, was the woman who'd given him up for adoption when she was 17. Lenore Lindsey says being reunited has made her a warmer person and it feels like they were never separated.

Also: The international football star who cycles to work, uses public transport and wears second-hand clothes. Héctor Bellerín, who plays for Real Betis in Spain, uses his profile to champion greener choices - arguing that with power comes responsibility.

Green turtles have recovered from the brink of extinction, in what scientists are describing as a major conservation victory. They've been classed as endangered since the 1980s but their numbers are bouncing back.

The winner of one of the world's most prestigious prizes describes how he initially thought his wife was playing a joke on him. Fred Ramsdell missed the official announcement that he'd been awarded the Nobel Prize for Medicine because he was on a hiking trip.

Plus the cafe that's providing work as well as food for the homeless, and a kind stranger who drove hundreds of miles just to return someone's lost bag.

Our weekly collection of inspiring, uplifting and happy news from around the world. (Photo credit: Lenore Lindsey)

CoinDesk Podcast Network - BITCOIN SEASON 2: Bitcoin Miners Don’t Care About The Filter Debate

At North American Blockchain Summit in Dallas, where 30% of Bitcoin's hashrate is decided, nobody talks about Core v30. Miners care about steel, electrons, and profit—not technical debates. The disconnect between Bitcoin Twitter and real mining is massive.


We're reporting live from the North American Blockchain Summit in Dallas, Texas, where roughly 30% of the world's Bitcoin hashrate is decided. The shocking reality? Bitcoin miners don't care about Core v30 or technical debates. They care about electrons, steel, aluminum, and profit. We break down how Foundry became the largest pool with 0% fees, why miners prefer FPPS revenue certainty over block variance, and the massive disconnect between Bitcoin's technical community and the mining industry.

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Notes:

• Foundry controls ~30% of Bitcoin's hashrate

• Mining pools dropped fees from 2% to near 0%

• FPPS model is “addicting” for miners

• Texas becoming finance capital with new exchange

• Most miners don't know their pool's Core version

• Future fee markets could disrupt pool dominance

Timestamps:

00:00 Start

00:28 NABS vibes

01:41 Miners don't care about Core V30

03:48 Miners care about profitability

04:44 Pools

08:59 Predictable revenue

13:10 Miner incentives

-

👋Bitcoin Season 2 is produced Blockspace Media, Bitcoin’s first B2B publication in Bitcoin. Follow us on Twitter and check out our newsletter for the best information in Bitcoin mining, Ordinals and tech!

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The Daily Signal - The Daily Signal Presents “The “Signal Sitdown – Congressman Completely Debunks Democrats’ Government Shutdown Narrative | Rep. Dusty Johnson

The Democrats⁠ and their allies in the corporate media have been lying through their teeth about the government shutdown and their ridiculous demands to reopen the government.


This week, Rep. Dusty Johnson, R-S.D., joins ⁠“The Signal Sitdown”⁠ to debunk the Left’s chosen narratives about the government shutdown.


”They're big mad about Donald Trump,” Johnson tells The Daily Signal. “That's the 'A' answer. The 'B' answer is that [Senate Minority Leader] Chuck Schumer has a base problem, and this is a base management exercise for him.”


Johnson went on to explain why Schumer’s base pressured him into shutting down the government when the measures that the Senate is currently considering to end the shutdown are essentially appropriations levels set during the Biden administration, levels Congress voted to continue in March. “Chuck Schumer got rolled,” in that March funding battle, Johnson says.


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WSJ What’s News - What’s News in Markets: Tariff Fear, Delta Soars, AMD + OpenAI

What set off Wall Street’s “fear gauge”? And how did Delta’s earnings affect airline stocks? Plus, how did markets react to AMD’s new partnership with OpenAI? Host Francesca Fontana discusses the biggest stock moves of the week and the news that drove them.


Sign up for the WSJ's free Markets A.M. newsletter.

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The NewsWorthy - Special Edition: Science of Scrolling & How to Stop

Are our phones rewiring our brains?

Americans now spend more than four hours a day on their phones — and check them hundreds of times without even realizing it. So why is it so hard to stop scrolling, and what is all that screen time actually doing to our brains, our bodies, and our relationships?

Neuroscientist Dr. Julie Fratantoni explains the science behind smartphone addiction — and how we can reverse the damage. Then, psychotherapist and author Shannon Algeo shares practical strategies from his “digital liberation” retreats — including one simple step you can try today that could make a big difference.

 

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Join us again for our 10-minute daily news roundups every Mon-Fri! 

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CBS News Roundup - 10/11/2025 | Weekend Roundup

On the "CBS News Weekend Roundup", host Allison Keyes gets details on the Israel Hamas ceasefire deal from CBS's Debora Patta and Courtney Kealy. We'll hear from CBS's Taurean Small about how things are going with the government shutdown and how that may affect you going forward. In the "Kaleidoscope with Allison Keyes" segment, a discussion about the terrible dangers facing children in Haiti.

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The Intelligence from The Economist - The Weekend Intelligence: The trial of Yevgenia Berkovich

In May 2024, Yevgenia Berkovich and Svetlana Petrichuk, the director and writer of an experimental play, became the first Russian artists since Soviet times to be put on trial for the content of their work. It was a show trial. Like all show trials its outcome was preordained. But when professional actors took the stand, it turned it into a different kind of show—one that put the spotlight on a radical ideology that has gripped the Russian state.


In a bonus episode of our Next Year in Moscow series, The Economist’s Russia editor Arkady Ostrovsky presents a dramatisation of that trial to find out why the Russian state needed to make an example of a fringe production and, more importantly, its director.


Listen to what matters most, from global politics and business to science and technology—Subscribe to Economist Podcasts+


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Global News Podcast - Trump threatens additional 100% tariff on China

President Trump has said he will impose additional 100% import tariffs on Chinese goods by next month, and put export controls on any and all critical software. He said this was in response to China placing new restrictions on exports of crucial rare earth minerals. The news led to US stock markets registering their biggest one-day fall in months. Also: Palestinians in Gaza returning to their homes following the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas say they've been shocked by the scale of destruction; the French president, Emmanuel Macron, has reappointed Sebastien Lecornu as prime minister, just four days after he resigned from the role; the green turtle has been rescued from the brink of extinction in what scientists are calling a major conservation victory.

CBS News Roundup - 10/10/2025 | World News Roundup Late Edition

19 people are missing and feared dead after an explosion at a Tennessee explosives plant.

Layoffs begin at federal agencies as the government shutdown drags on.

Cease fire holds in Gaza as some Palestinians begin to return home.

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Consider This from NPR - Jake Sullivan tried to get a Gaza peace deal. Here’s what he thinks of Trump’s

A ceasefire is now in effect between Israel and Hamas, and the Israeli military has pulled back from certain positions in the Gaza Strip. In the coming days, a hostage and prisoner exchange is set to begin, and hundreds of humanitarian aid trucks are expected to be allowed into Gaza.


It’s all part of President Trump’s 20-point peace plan – a plan that closely resembles the plan President Biden unveiled in the final days of his administration. 

Jake Sullivan, Biden’s national security advisor, helped negotiate the last ceasefire between Hamas and Israel, which ultimately fell apart. Have circumstances on the ground in Gaza – and a change in U.S. presidential leadership – set the groundwork for a different path this time?

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This episode was produced by Kathryn Fink and Linah Mohammad, with audio engineering by Ted Mebane. It was edited by Christopher Intagliata, Nadia Lancy and Tara Neill. Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.

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