Author: rb809rb

  • Michael Tilson Thomas, Renowned Conductor, Dies at 81

    Michael Tilson Thomas, the charismatic conductor and composer who won 12 Grammys and presided over the San Francisco Symphony for 25 years, the London Symphony Orchestra and the Los Angeles Philharmonic, has died. He was 81.

    Tilson Thomas died Wednesday in his home in San Francisco of glioblastoma, it was announced on his website. He underwent brain surgery to remove a tumor in 2021 after being diagnosed with glioblastoma multiforme and announced the tumor had returned in February 2025.

    Two months later, he conducted his final concert with the San Francisco Symphony.

    A pianist and protege of West Side Story composer Leonard Bernstein, Tilson Thomas was known for his energetic interpretations of Austria’s Gustav Mahler. He specialized in music from Russia and work by Americans George Gershwin and Aaron Copland as well.

    The 2010 National Medal of Arts recipient and 2019 Kennedy Center honoree also had a reputation as a bad boy of classical music, once leaving the stage at the Hollywood Bowl to protest noise from a police helicopter.

    Tilson Thomas served as the San Francisco Symphony’s 11th music director from 1995 until he resigned following the 2019-20 season. His work as a composer included From the Diary of Anne Frank, a UNICEF commission that premiered in 1991 and was narrated by Audrey Hepburn.

    Tilson Thomas was born in Los Angeles on Dec. 21, 1944. His father, Theodor Thomashefsky, was a producer who worked for Orson Welles’ Mercury Theater Company and later for Roy Rogers cowboy serials, and his mother, Roberta, was a researcher at Columbia Pictures. Grandparents Boris and Bessie Thomashefsky were founding members of the Yiddish Theater in America.

    Tilson Thomas started playing the piano at age 3, had a musical epiphany by 13 when he listened to Mahler — “I was so shocked to discover that it described the shape of my own unresolved life,” he told The Guardian in 2012 — and at 19 was named music director of L.A.’s Young Musicians Foundation Debut Orchestra.

    Later, he conducted the full L.A. Phil for youth concerts and studied at USC under Jascha Heifetz and Gregor Piatigorsky. He first met Bernstein in 1968, and the two began working together in New York.

    In his mid-20s, he became assistant conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and was a sensation after making his New York debut at Lincoln Center.

    Tilson Thomas was a guest conductor of the L.A. Phil in the 1980s and the principal conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra from 1988-95, taking it on tours in Europe and the U.S. In 1987, he co-founded the Miami-based New World Symphony to prepare young musicians around the world for careers in classical music.

    In 2009, he created the YouTube Symphony Orchestra, made up of young players from 30 different countries, to give a concert that could be watched on the internet.

    Joshua Robison, his husband and manager, died in February at age 79.

    “I think I’m somewhere between a director and a sports coach,” Tilson Thomas told The Guardian. “You recognize how uniquely talented the different musicians are and try to imagine how they can come to the fore in performance. No good director, working with a particular cast, would try and force them to be something other than what they are. Nor would a good director say to an actor, ‘Say the first three words quickly, then the next two slowly,’ and so on for the whole of the play.

    “The point is that the actor must become the role. It’s the same with music. You try to show the musicians ways they can make the most out of the music and get the most out of each other.”

  • Tana Mongeau Makes ‘Brand Safe’ Era Official With Launch of Podcast Series: “It’s Still Honest”

    Tana Mongeau Makes ‘Brand Safe’ Era Official With Launch of Podcast Series: “It’s Still Honest”

    Tana Mongeau has been teasing a new era for weeks but it’s now official.

    The internet’s onetime lovably messy provocateur has indeed turned over a new leaf, personally and professionally, and entered her Brand Safe era. That’s the title of Mongeau’s new podcast series, which is set to debut with its first episode on May 9.

    Brand Safe follows Mongeau’s wildly popular Cancelled, a podcast she hosted with Brooke Schofield. The series ended last September after 130 episodes, successful tours and a distinction of regularly charting in the top 10 of podcast rankings. Their tear-filled finale has been viewed 1.5 million times on YouTube. And the emotions weren’t relegated to the end, as the premise of the show often found the pair covering high drama from their lives, pop culture, famous friends and more.

    But with Brand Safe, Mongeau is charting a more intentional path. “Brand Safe isn’t the Tana people might expect,” Mongeau said in a statement. “It’s still honest — sometimes brutally so — but it’s also about growth, self-awareness and actually sitting with the reality of my life instead of just reacting to it.”

    Fans, of which Mongeau has millions (9 million on TikTok; 2.4 million on X; 5.5 million on Instagram; 5.5 million on YouTube), can expect a mix of solo episodes and guest interviews that span entertainment, culture and her inner circle. Per official intel, Brand Safe is designed as “a more intimate extension of her day-to-day life,” by puling directly from her world.

    Topics she will cover include family, relationships, sobriety, career evolution, and the behind-the-scenes realities. Mongeau, who has long been unfiltered and honest, has made a promise to reveal more about her deals, shoots and the moments she hasn’t shared on camera. “It’s still me,” she said. “Just recalibrated.”

    Mongeau rose to fame on YouTube where she amassed a loyal following drawn to her authentic brand of storytelling, which she might’ve called rambling back in the day. She has had a knack for building audiences across the platform of the moment, migrating to Instagram and TikTok, OnlyFans and X. As her influence grew, so did her empire as she launched a talent agency and more. But Mongeau has long said that her style of celebrity never made her a hot commodity for brand deals like her influencer counterparts. (On the subject of OnlyFans, she announced on TikTok Wednesday that she’s “shutting it down” amid the new brand safe time in her life.)

    However, that all changed in the wake of Cancelled as she gradually stepped into this new era. Underscoring just how impactful (and lucrative) this new corporate-friendly Mongeau has been, she recently posted product videos promoting Medicube and Peter Thomas Roth. The former, which featured Medicube’s PDRN Pink Collagen Gel Mask, has been viewed 22.8 million times, while the latter, promoting the Water Drench Hyaluronic Cloud Cream Hydrating Moisturizer, snagged 12.3 million.

    Brand Safe will be found on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Spotify and other podcast platforms. Mongeau’s new era is supported her team: WME, Brillstein Entertainment Partners’ Brittny Turner and ICON PR.

  • 3 things to watch in Knicks-Hawks Game 3

    Down 12 entering the 4th quarter, Atlanta goes on a tear to take down New York and shock the MSG crowd and tie the series.

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    Coming off a stunning, fourth-quarter comeback in Game 2 of their first-round series against the New York Knicks, the Atlanta Hawks are looking to maintain home-court advantage with the series moving to Atlanta.

    The Hawks won 14 of their last 15 regular-season games at State Farm Arena, but the one loss (Apr. 6) was to the Knicks, who won their first five road games (by a total of 10 points) in last year’s playoffs.

    Here are three things to watch with both teams looking to take a 2-1 series lead in Game 3 on Thursday (7 p.m. ET, Prime Video).


    1. Bench play

    Starters’ minutes are extended in the playoffs, but one big difference between the Knicks’ win in Game 1 and the Hawks’ win in Game 2 was how the teams performed with reserves on the floor …

    • In Game 1, the Knicks outscored the Hawks by six points in Jalen Brunson’s 11:36 on the bench.
    • In Game 2, they were outscored by four points in Brunson’s 11:53 on the bench.

    Karl-Anthony Towns was also on the bench for almost all (11:22) of that 11:53 that Brunson rested in Game 2, and the Knicks scored just 16 points on 23 offensive possessions in that time. His bench ranked third this season, which is a small sample size, but small sample sizes are all you get in the playoffs. Coach Mike Brown may choose to stagger (or extend) his All-Stars’ minutes a little more on Thursday.

    For the Hawks, Jonathan Kuminga is an X-factor. After a quiet night in Game 1, the 23-year-old played almost 35 minutes in Game 2, scoring 19 points and adding two steals and a block on defense. And he was on the floor instead of All-Defense candidate Dyson Daniels as the Hawks held the Knicks to just six points on nine clutch possessions.

    With backup center Jock Landale out, the Hawks may be undersized and outmanned at the five, but can play bigger at the other positions, especially with the Knicks using three small (and/or slight) guards – Jordan Clarkson, Miles McBride and Jose Alvarado – off the bench.


    2. Late-clock execution

    The Knicks had one of the best (and most-used) late-clock offenses in the league. They ranked second in effective field goal percentage (51.2%) in the last seven seconds of the shot clock and fourth in the percentage of their shots (22%) that came in the last seven seconds.

    It’s good to be good late in the clock, but it’s better not to have so many long possessions. Every team’s effective field goal percentage was much lower in the last seven seconds of the shot clock than it was otherwise.

    In this series, the Knicks have struggled late in the clock. They’re just 12-for-46 (including 4-for-16 from 3-point range) in the final seven seconds of the shot clock through Game 2. That’s an effective goal percentage of just 30.4%, compared to 63.8% through the first 17 seconds.

    Here was a critical possession late in Game 2 where the Knicks walked the ball up the floor and couldn’t get the ball to Towns in the post. So the ball remains 30 feet from the basket and ends up in the hands of Josh Hart with six seconds left on the clock …

    Knicks late-game possession in Game 2

    Hart has been a much-improved 3-point shooter this season, but his shooting a pull-up 3 with three seconds left on the clock is a pretty good result for the Hawks …

    Knicks late-game possession in Game 2

    The Hawks haven’t been as efficient early in the clock, but they’ve had to work late about half as often…

    Shooting in the last 7 seconds of the shot clock

    Team FGM FGA FG% 3PM eFG% %FGA
    New York 12 46 26.1% 4 30.4% 29%
    Atlanta 8 25 32.0% 2 36.0% 15%

    eFG% = (FGM + (0.5 * 3PM)) / FGA
    %FGA = Percentage of total FGA

    Credit the Hawks’ defense for some of the Knicks’ struggles late in the clock. Nickeil-Alexander Walker has had some timely stops against Brunson, and they’ve all been pretty disciplined when he gets into the paint, staying down on pump fakes and contesting his shots without fouling.

    The Knicks should still have better success late in the clock as the series continues. But they should also play with a bit more pace to avoid so many late-clock situations.


    3. Towns in the post

    The Knicks were trying to get the ball to Towns in the post against Kuminga in that possession illustrated above. But Kuminga denied the entry pass and the Knicks were left scrambling late in the clock.

    Onyeka Okongwu has been the Hawks player who has defended Towns the most, but he’s also been matched up with a lot of smaller Hawks. Sometimes it’s been Dyson Daniels, so Atlanta can switch the Brunson-Towns pick-and-roll.

    Towns has, at times, taken advantage of those mismatches on the glass. But according to tracking data, he’s had just four post-ups over the two games, the same number as Brunson.

    Okongwu forced him into a tough shot in the fourth quarter on Monday, but Towns’ other three post-ups were against Kuminga (who fouled him) and Mouhamed Gueye. Against Gueye, he made a short jump hook and missed a short turnaround.

    We could see the Knicks be a little quicker to get Towns the ball in the post when he’s matched up with a smaller defender in Game 3. And if he can take advantage of his size inside, that could open things up elsewhere on the floor.

    * * *

    John Schuhmann has covered the NBA for more than 20 years. You can e-mail him here, find his archive here and follow him on Bluesky.

  • Derrick White wins 2025-26 NBA Sportsmanship Award

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    Boston Celtics guard Derrick White has been named the 2025-26 NBA Sportsmanship Award winner, earning the Joe Dumars Trophy.

    Presented annually since the 1995-96 season, the NBA Sportsmanship Award honors a player who best represents the ideals of sportsmanship on the court.  The trophy is named for Naismith Basketball Hall of Famer and two-time NBA champion Joe Dumars, who won the inaugural NBA Sportsmanship Award and played his entire 14-year career with the Detroit Pistons.

    Each NBA team nominated one of its players for the 2025-26 NBA Sportsmanship Award.  From the 30 team nominees, a panel of league executives selected six finalists (one from each NBA division).  Current NBA players then voted to select the winner from those finalists.  The complete voting results are available here.

    White has won the NBA Sportsmanship Award for the first time.  The Celtics have now had recipients in consecutive seasons after Jrue Holiday earned the honor last season.

    A nine-year NBA veteran, White is a two-time Kia NBA All-Defensive Team selection and an NBA champion with Boston (2023-24).  He also helped the Austin Spurs win the NBA G League championship during his rookie season with the San Antonio Spurs (2017-18).  White won a gold medal with the USA Men’s National Team at the 2024 Paris Olympics.

  • US to ‘shoot and kill’ Iranian boats laying mines in Hormuz, Trump says

    US to ‘shoot and kill’ Iranian boats laying mines in Hormuz, Trump says

    President Donald Trump has said he ordered the United States Navy to “shoot and kill” any Iranian boat laying mines in the Strait of Hormuz, a move that could jeopardise the fragile ceasefire between the two countries.

    The US president also said on Thursday that the military will heighten its efforts to remove explosives from the strategic waterway.

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    “I have ordered the United States Navy to shoot and kill any boat, small boats though they may be (Their naval ships are ALL, 159 of them, at the bottom of the sea!), that is putting mines in the waters of the Strait of Hormuz. There is to be no hesitation,” Trump wrote in a social media post.

    “Additionally, our mine ‘sweepers’ are clearing the Strait right now. I am hereby ordering that activity to continue, but at a tripled-up level!”

    Iranian officials have repeatedly promised that their country would defend itself and respond to any US attack.

    Hormuz – which had been open without interruption before the war – has emerged as a major point of contention in this war.

    Iran closed down the strait in response to the US-Israeli military campaign, and it is now suggesting that it has rights to the passage that links the Gulf to the Indian Ocean – parts of which go through Iranian territorial waters.

    The closure of Hormuz has spiked oil prices, putting political pressure on Trump at home in the US, where the price of one gallon (3.8 litres) of petrol has surpassed $4, up from $3 before the conflict.

    Iran boats
    A satellite image shows a fleet of small boats at sea, north of the Strait of Hormuz near the Kargan coast, Iran, April 22 [File: European Union/Copernicus Sentinel-2/Handout via Reuters]

    Dueling blockades

    About 20 percent of the world’s oil and natural gas flowed through Hormuz before the war.

    After a two-week ceasefire came into effect last month, Trump announced a naval siege on Iranian ports and kept it in place even after Tehran announced reopening Hormuz in response to the inclusion of Lebanon in the truce.

    Iran has set lifting the blockade as a precondition for resuming talks with the US.

    Trump extended the ceasefire that was set to expire on Wednesday, but Washington has kept its blockade on Iran-linked ships.

    The Pentagon said on Thursday that the US military conducted a “maritime interdiction and right-of-visit” to a tanker carrying Iranian oil in the Indian Ocean.

    Earlier this week, the US military also said it seized an Iranian vessel and ordered dozens of others to turn around.

    Meanwhile, Iran has also captured foreign commercial vessels around the Hormuz Strait, which it said were in violation of naval regulations.

    The duelling blockades risk re-igniting the war. The US has not set a deadline for the extended truce.

    The White House said on Wednesday that Trump is “satisfied” with the siege on Iran.

    Trump says Hormuz ‘sealed up tight’

    Although Iran has all but halted vessel traffic in the waterway, Trump said on Thursday that the US has “total control over the Strait of Hormuz”, adding that the passage is “sealed up tight”.

    The US president also reiterated his claim that the Iranian leadership is divided.

    “Iran is having a very hard time figuring out who their leader is! They just don’t know!” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.

    “The infighting is between the ‘Hardliners’, who have been losing BADLY on the battlefield, and the ‘Moderates’, who are not very moderate at all (but gaining respect!), is CRAZY!”

    Earlier in the day, Trump shared a post by conservative commentator Marc Thiessen, calling for the assassination of Iranian officials who oppose diplomacy with the US.

    “If there are two factions in Iran, one that wants a deal and one that doesn’t, let’s kill the ones who don’t want a deal,” it said.

    Despite Trump’s repeated claims, there has been no evidence of a rift within the leadership in Iran.

    Although US and Israeli strikes killed Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and several top officials, there have been no major defections within the ruling system.

    Last month, Khamenei was replaced by his son Mojtaba, who had been wounded in US attacks, according to the Pentagon.

    Mojtaba Khamenei is yet to make a public appearance since he succeeded his slain father, raising speculation about his health.

    But Iranian officials, including the lead negotiators – Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf – have voiced a unified position in rejecting the US blockade.

    Iranian leadership also agreed to the ceasefire and enforced it earlier this month.

    On Thursday, Iran’s Foreign Ministry praised the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), the ideologically driven military branch spearheading the war effort.

    “We salute the noble defenders and guardians of the homeland, and honour the memory of the crimson-shrouded martyrs of the IRGC,” Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei said in a post on X, marking the anniversary of the establishment of the Revolutionary Guard.

  • Morning Minute: Bitcoin Clears $79,000, Then Reverses

    Morning Minute: Bitcoin Clears $79,000, Then Reverses

    Morning Minute is a daily newsletter written by Tyler Warner. The analysis and opinions expressed are his own and do not necessarily reflect those of Decrypt. And check out our new daily news show covering all of the top stories in 5 minutes or less, downloadable on Apple Pod or Spotify.

    GM!

    Today’s top news:

    • Crypto majors rally then reverse as oil concerns mount; BTC -1% at $77,300
    • The US Government discloses that it’s operating a Bitcoin node
    • Justin Sun sues WLFI to unfreeze his tokens
    • Andre Cronje’s Flying Tulip introduces a “circuit breaker” for DeFi
    • MegaETH gets 10th app launch with Xeet, TGE expected in May

    📈📉 Bitcoin Clears $79,000, Then Reverses

    Bitcoin crossed $79,000 Wednesday morning, reaching its highest level in 11 weeks after President Trump announced he was extending the US-Iran ceasefire indefinitely.

    The move came after Iran refused to send negotiators to a second round of talks in Islamabad, and Trump said the extension would hold until Tehran submits a “unified proposal” to end the war.

    But the price action was shortlived, with Bitcoin falling back to $77,300 overnight as oil concerns mount and the IEA Chief called that “We are facing the biggest energy security threat in history.”

    Oil jumped another 4% to $94/barrel and stock futures have moved into the red after making another new ATH yesterday.

    ⚖️ Justin Sun Sues Trump’s World Liberty Financial Over Frozen Tokens

    Justin Sun filed a federal lawsuit in California on April 21 against World Liberty Financial, the Trump family-backed DeFi project, alleging fraud, breach of contract, and unjust enrichment.

    The complaint centers on a hidden blacklist function that WLFI quietly added to its token smart contract in August 2025 – without a governance vote or any disclosure to investors. Sun alleges WLFI used that function to freeze approximately 2.9 billion of his WLFI tokens in September 2025 after he moved roughly $9 million worth of holdings, a transfer he says was routine. At the time of the freeze, his stake was worth over $100 million.

    WLFI fired back publicly: “We have the contracts. We have the evidence. We have the truth. See you in court.” Eric Trump went even further, commenting on Justin Sun’s $6M banana purchase. Well, I’ll let you read his comments for yourself 👇

    🗳️ Kalshi Fines Congressional Candidates for Betting on Their Own Races

    Prediction market platform Kalshi announced Wednesday that it had fined and suspended three congressional candidates for “political insider trading” – betting on their own elections.

    The three are Ezekiel Enriquez, a Republican who ran in Texas’ 21st Congressional District primary; Matt Klein, a Democrat running in Minnesota’s 2nd Congressional District primary; and Mark Moran, who ran in Virginia’s Democratic Senate primary before switching to an independent campaign.

    Fines were small, ranging from $539 to $6,229.30. All three were banned from the platform for five years. Two cooperated with Kalshi’s investigation though Moran did not.

    Moran made clear the stunt was intentional. He wrote on X: “I traded $100 on myself, knowing this would happen… and the attention it would create to highlight how this company is destroying young men.” He said as a senator he would “go after Kalshi and impose significant penalties – 25%, a vice tax – to pay down our national debt.”

    The plot thickens…

    ₿ The US Government Is Running a Bitcoin Node

    Admiral Samuel Paparo, commander of US Indo-Pacific Command (INDOPACOM), disclosed Wednesday that the US government is actively running a Bitcoin node and conducting operational network security tests using the Bitcoin protocol.

    This followed his Tuesday Senate Armed Services Committee testimony, where he told lawmakers that “Bitcoin shows incredible potential as a computer science tool that, through the proof-of-work protocols, actually imposes more costs than just the algorithmic securing of networks.” He described Bitcoin as “a peer-to-peer, zero-trust transfer of value” with “really important computer science applications for cybersecurity.”

    Notably, the framing tracks directly with the Jason Lowery thesis that proof-of-work can function as a physical-cost cyberdefense layer, analogous to conventional military deterrence. Paparo’s testimony marks the first time a combatant commander has publicly characterized Bitcoin as a national security asset in congressional testimony.

    💸 André Cronje’s Flying Tulip Brings Circuit Breakers to DeFi Lending

    André Cronje, the developer behind Fantom, Yearn Finance, and Solidly, is addressing one of DeFi’s most pressing issues with his newest project.

    Flying Tulip, Cronje’s new AMM and lending protocol, has introduced a programmatic circuit breaker module designed to rate-limit capital outflows during abnormal withdrawal events.

    The circuit breaker works by monitoring outflow velocity in real time. When withdrawals exceed a defined threshold, whether triggered by a smart contract exploit, oracle failure, or a large coordinated position unwind, the system automatically throttles the rate at which capital can exit the protocol.

    Cronje has been vocal for years about DeFi’s need for TradFi-style risk infrastructure without TradFi’s centralization trade-offs. Circuit breakers are standard in equity markets (the NYSE halts trading when the S&P drops 7%, 13%, or 20% in a session) but have been largely absent from DeFi because they require either centralized admin keys or complex governance coordination to trigger. Flying Tulip’s implementation is fully programmatic, with no admin override, which means it operates the same way regardless of who is watching.

    Of course the timing is notable after last week’s $292M KelpDAO exploit and accelerating issues with Defi protocols being hacked. Perhaps a DeFi-wide circuit breaker would ease the pain…

    🌎 Macro Crypto and Markets

    • Crypto majors are red as oil concerns rise; BTC -1% at $77.7k; ETH -3% at $2,330; SOL -3% at $86; HYPE even at $41.10
    • Stable (+18%), DEXE (+8%), and M (+7%) led top movers
    • Oil +4% at $94; Gold -1% at $4,700
    • Stock futures are red after making another new ATH yesterday
    • GSR launched the first actively managed multi-asset crypto ETF in the US on Wednesday, the GSR Crypto Core3 ETF (BESO) on Nasdaq, offering exposure to Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana with weekly rebalancing and staking rewards on ETH and SOL holdings
    • Russia’s State Duma passed the first reading of its long-awaited crypto bill Wednesdayrecognizing cryptocurrency as property and permitting its use in foreign trade settlements, explicitly as a mechanism to bypass Western sanctions; domestic use of crypto for payments remains banned, with the ruble staying the sole legal tender inside Russia
    • Robinhood Ventures Fund I (NYSE: RVI) closed a $75 million investment in OpenAI common stock on April 17, making it one of the fund’s largest positions to date
    • OpenAI launched workspace agents in ChatGPT Wednesday, replacing custom GPTs with a more powerful team-oriented successor powered by Codex; workspace agents can handle complex, long-running tasks like preparing reports, writing code, and responding to messages, while operating within organization-set permissions and role-based access controls

    Corporate Treasuries & ETFs

    Meme Coin Tracker

    • Meme leaders were red on the day; DOGE -2%, SHIB -2%, PEPE -4%, TRUMP -5%, BONK -3%, PENGU -3%, SPX -3%, FARTCOIN -6%
    • uncraft (+100x), Burnie (+77%) and Noob (+180%) led notable movers
    • Pumpcade rebounded 30% to $25M

    💰 Token, Airdrop & Protocol Tracker

    • Andre Cronje’s Flying Tulip project introduced a “circuit breaker” for DeFi using a programmatic module to limit outflows in extreme scenarios
    • MegaETH had its 10th app launch with Xeet, meaning that the MEGA TGE should indeed happen soon
    • Axie Infinity’s Ronin blockchain set May 12 as the date for its migration from Ethereum sidechain to full Layer-2 network on the OP Stack; the shift cuts RON token inflation from over 20% to under 1% and jumps marketplace Treasury fees 2.5x from 0.5% to 1.25%
    • Believe App founder Ben Pasternak was arrested for assault and strangulation

    🚚 What is happening in NFTs?

    • NFT leaders were mostly green again; Punks +3% at 28.9ETH, Pudgy +5% at 4.69 ETH, BAYC -5% at 8.64 ETH; Hypurr’s -3% at 375 HYPE
    • Azuki (+19%), Elementals (+33%) and Doodles (+17%) led notable movers; Meebits also up 14%
    • Nouns jumped 160% after the founder announced that the 1 Noun/per day streak had finally been broken after 1,700+ days
    • An 8-Punk sweep kicked off a big day of Punk action that led to 16 overall sales, the most in weeks

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  • ‘Excellent Window’ for Strategic Accumulation as Bitcoin Risk Indicator Flips Bullish

    ‘Excellent Window’ for Strategic Accumulation as Bitcoin Risk Indicator Flips Bullish

    In brief

    • Market intelligence firm Glassnode’s risk index and moderate strategy trackers have aligned, hinting at a “cleared risk” environment for Bitcoin.
    • Analysts called the current setup “an excellent window for strategic accumulation” pointing to a new all-time high for Bitcoin by year-end.
    • Glassnode warns 54% of recent buyers are in profit, with realized profit spiking to $4.4 million, a level that has marked every local top in 2026.

    Bitcoin’s sustained bullish market structure over the past three weeks has triggered a clear risk landscape signal that could hint at an extension of the ongoing rally.

    The Risk Index—Glassnode’s proprietary metric that quantifies systemic risk on a scale of 0 to 100—is hovering at zero, the lowest possible level, indicating a “cleared risk landscape,” according to a Thursday Telegram post from the market intelligence firm. It also serves as a primary gauge of market health, with a 25 threshold that distinguishes between low- and high-risk regimes.

    The Moderate Strategy, which captures upside momentum and exits when conviction fades, has flipped from “Moderate” to “High Confidence.”

    The alignment of these models signals a bullish regime, analysts told Decrypt, underscored by sustained inflows into Bitcoin ETPs and aggressive demand from spot buyers.

    “This is an excellent window for strategic accumulation rather than chasing deeper dips,” Lacie Zhang, research analyst at Bitget Wallet, told Decrypt. Zhang added that the firm maintains, “a strong conviction for a positive close to 2026, supported by improving market structure and institutional conviction that should drive Bitcoin to a new all-time high.”

    “As the US-Iran conflict subsides, bullish bets will continue to propel the market upward in the near term,” Jeff Mei, COO of BTSE, told Decrypt.

    As a result, Bitcoin hit $79,388 on Wednesday, its highest level in over three months.

    Investor sentiment has also seen considerable improvement, resulting in the Fear and Greed Index jumping from “extreme fear” at the start of April to “fear.” Likewise, users on prediction market Myriad, owned by Decrypt’s parent company Dastan, see a 74% chance that Bitcoin extends its rally toward $84,000 next,up from lows of 62% at the start of the week.

    A similar outlook can be seen with Ethereum, with users assigning a 54% chance that the second-largest crypto by market cap pumps to $3,000 next.

    “Breaking and holding above $80K would act as a major technical and psychological catalyst, clearing the path for further recovery toward $90K and potentially $100K,” Zhang said.

    Both Bitcoin and Ethereum are down 0.5% and 2.9%, respectively over the past 24 hours, according to CoinGecko data. Bitcoin is currently trading at around $77,800, while Ethereum is around $2,330.

    What’s next?

    Despite Glassnode’s risk indicator and the underlying bullish developments, investors need to exercise caution, analysts argued.

    “Risks include the resumption of hostilities in the Middle East, restriction of oil flows, and elevated inflation that could lead to rate hikes,” Mei added.

    Geopolitical uncertainty remains a key concern, experts previously told Decrypt.

    Additionally, the recent uptrend has pushed 54% of recent buyers into profitable territory, according to Glassnode’s latest report. These buyers are now at a threshold that has historically exhausted bear market rallies.

    Short-term holders’ realized profit has spiked to $4.4 million, Glassnode analysts noted. That number is three times the $1.5 million threshold, which “ marked every local top year-to-date, signaling caution in the absence of a meaningful demand catalyst.”

    The missing piece remains a fundamental catalyst—whether it’s the CLARITY Act, Fed rate cuts, or a lasting Middle East truce. Until then, the risk landscape may be cleared, but the path above $80,000 is not.

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  • Hollywood Petition to Block Paramount-Warner Bros. Merger Tops 4,000 Names as Robert De Niro, Sofia Coppola, Holly Hunter and More Join the Fight

    Hollywood Petition to Block Paramount-Warner Bros. Merger Tops 4,000 Names as Robert De Niro, Sofia Coppola, Holly Hunter and More Join the Fight

    The $111 billion deal that would see Paramount Skydance swallow up Warner Bros. Discovery took another step closer to reality Thursday after WBD shareholders overwhelmingly voted in favor of the merger.

    But the pact isn’t over the finish line — and a new batch of Hollywood A-listers including Robert De Niro, Sofia Coppola and Holly Hunter have signed on to an open letter opposing the Paramount-WBD combination, citing the threat of lost jobs, higher costs for consumers, and fewer TV shows and movies.

    As of Thursday morning, the letter had 4,194 total signatories after launching on April 13 with 1,000 names. Organizers said the list of film and entertainment industry union members, actors, and directors includes more than 75 Oscar winners and nominees. The group is hoping to sustain opposition the Paramount-Warner Bros. deal, which is still pending approval by regulators in the U.S. and Europe — and could be subject to litigation seeking to stop the merger by state attorneys general.

    The coalition behind the open letter also organized a rally outside WBD’s Manhattan headquarters at 9 a.m. ET ahead of the shareholder vote. In addition, they’re planning to stage a protest Thursday at 5:30 p.m. ET in Washington, D.C., outside of a private dinner that Paramount Skydance CEO David Ellison is hosting “honoring” President Donald Trump and CBS News White House correspondents. The Ellison function is being held at recently renamed “The Donald J. Trump Institute of Peace.”

    “As filmmakers, documentarians and professionals across the movie and television industry, we write to express our unequivocal opposition to the proposed Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery merger,” the letter states in part. “This transaction would further consolidate an already concentrated media landscape, reducing competition at a moment when our industries — and the audiences we serve — can least afford it. The result will be fewer opportunities for creators, fewer jobs across the production ecosystem, higher costs, and less choice for audiences in the United States and around the world. Alarmingly, this merger would reduce the number of major U.S. film studios to just four.”

    Other signatories to the letter include: Florence Pugh, Pedro Pascal, Edward Norton, Atsuko Okatsuka, Joaquin Phoenix, Ben Stiller, Kristen Stewart, Adam McKay, Alan Cumming, Alyssa Milano, Boots Riley, Bryan Cranston, Cynthia Nixon, Damon Lindelof, David Fincher, Denis Villeneuve, Elliot Page, Glenn Close, Jane Fonda, JJ Abrams, Jason Bateman, John Leguizamo, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Margaret Cho, Mark Ruffalo, Noah Wyle, Patti Lupone, Ramy Youssef, Rosario Dawson, Rosie O’Donnell, Ted Danson, Tiffany Haddish, Tig Notaro, Yorgos Lanthimos and Yvette Nicole Brown.

    Organizers of the BlockTheMerger.com open letter include the Writers Guild of America (WGA), Film Future Coalition, Democracy Defenders Fund, Jane Fonda’s Committee for the First Amendment, and the American Economic Liberties Project.

    RELATED: Mark Ruffalo Blasts Paramount-Warner Bros. Merger at Senate Hearing: ‘Don’t Trust Empty Promises from Billionaires’

  • Diana Ross Scenes Cut From ‘Michael’ Due to ‘Certain Legal Considerations,’ Says Actor Kat Graham

    Diana Ross Scenes Cut From ‘Michael’ Due to ‘Certain Legal Considerations,’ Says Actor Kat Graham

    Diana Ross will no longer appear in “Michael” due to “certain legal considerations,” according to Kat Graham, who was hired to play the legendary Supremes singer in the upcoming music biopic about Michael Jackson.

    “Ahead of the April 24 release of the Michael Jackson film, I want to share that certain legal considerations affected a few scenes, including the ones I filmed with an incredible cast,” Graham posted Thursday morning on social media. “Unfortunately, those moments are no longer part of the final cut, though the team worked hard to preserve as much of the story as possible.”

    “Michael” underwent major reshoots after the third act of the film was deemed unusable. The initial screenplay had recounted a 1993 lawsuit that accused Jackson of child sexual abuse, which he denied. After the movie was shot, producers discovered a clause in the settlement with the young accuser that barred the depiction or mention of him in film or television. Although Graham didn’t specify, her part in the film was likely axed due to these creative changes. Janet Jackson, the performer’s famous sister, is not a character in the movie, either.

    Jaafar Jackson, the real-life nephew of Michael Jackson, is portraying the King of Pop in the film, with Colman Domingo and Nia Long playing his parents, Joe and Katherine Jackson. Directed by Antoine Fuqua, “Michael” focuses on the singer’s early years including his relationship with his domineering father, who doesn’t want his son’s solo career to come at the expense of the family’s Motown group the Jackson 5.

    “Michael” is poised to electrify the box office over the weekend, with estimates of at least $70 million domestically and $150 million globally in its debut. Those ticket sales would rank as the largest opening ever for a musical biopic, as well as the biggest hit for Lionsgate in more than a decade.