Stories that are getting the most attention from our readers this month.
A ProPublica investigation, based on interviews with over a dozen Secret Service whistleblowers, exposes critical lapses in the agency's preparation and response during the July 2024 assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. Whistleblowers allege that supervisors ignored warnings about unsecured rooftops, understaffed perimeter teams, and delayed communications, with some agents describing a "culture of complacency" enabled by political pressures. The report includes internal memos and radio transcripts showing real-time awareness of the threat but no decisive action until shots were fired.
OpenAI unveiled GPT-5 on March 9, 2026, featuring advanced multimodal processing that handles text, images, video, and audio seamlessly. The model outperforms predecessors in reasoning, creativity, and real-time interaction, with built-in safeguards against misuse. Early demos showed it composing music, editing videos from voice commands, and solving complex engineering problems. Access is rolling out via ChatGPT Plus and API for developers, priced at $20/month for consumers.
Taylor Swift revealed plans to extend her record-breaking Eras Tour into 2027 with 20 additional stadium shows across North America, Europe, and Australia, following massive ticket demand. The announcement came during a livestream from Tokyo, where she teased new setlist additions and guest appearances. Tickets go on sale March 15, with presales for fan club members starting tomorrow.
LeBron James, the NBA's all-time leading scorer, announced his retirement on March 9, 2026, after 23 seasons, with the Los Angeles Lakers committing to build a statue in his honor outside Crypto.com Arena. James cited family time and physical toll as key reasons, reflecting on four championships and his global impact. The announcement came hours after the Lakers' win over the Clippers, marking an emotional farewell.
Long layovers plague American travelers, but seasoned flight attendants have 10 insider hacks to transform downtime into productive, cost-saving opportunities. We reveal strategies like booking affordable day-use hotel rooms for rest, accessing airport lounges via day passes without elite status, and using public transit to explore nearby cities. Families can discover safe kid-friendly attractions, while professionals stay sharp by minimizing jet lag with quick showers and workspaces. Our analysis shows these tips cut expenses on overpriced airport food and transport by up to 50%, boost daily efficiency, and turn hassles into mini-adventures. Ideal for busy parents and career builders balancing work trips and family vacations, these hacks ensure smoother journeys across U.S. and international hubs.
The U.S. Department of Education has allocated $10 billion in emergency grants to address critical teacher shortages in K-12 schools, driven by a post-pandemic enrollment boom and retirements. Funds will support hiring incentives, training programs, and salary boosts in high-need districts. The initiative targets 15,000 understaffed schools, with applications opening immediately.
California's Air Resources Board approved a regulation requiring all new passenger vehicle sales to be zero-emission by 2035, building on earlier targets with stricter enforcement and incentives for heavy-duty trucks. The policy aims to cut transportation emissions, which account for nearly 40% of the state's greenhouse gases, amid ongoing droughts and wildfires exacerbated by climate change. Automakers like Tesla and GM have pledged compliance, though some warn of supply chain challenges.
NASA has officially delayed the Artemis III mission, which aims to land the first woman and next man on the Moon, from its previous 2026 target to no earlier than late 2027. The postponement stems from ongoing issues with the SpaceX Starship Human Landing System, including heat shield failures during test flights and software integration problems. This follows a series of technical hurdles and safety reviews, marking the second major delay for the program.
In an op-ed, National Review argues that President Trump's proposed reciprocal tariffs—matching duties imposed by trading partners on U.S. goods—are essential to correct decades of unbalanced trade practices that have hollowed out American manufacturing. The piece contends these tariffs will protect domestic jobs and force fairer negotiations, citing examples like China's subsidies and EU agricultural protections. Critics' free-trade dogma is dismissed as outdated, with data showing U.S. trade deficits exceeding $1 trillion annually.
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