Author: rb809rb

  • ‘Harry Potter’ Trailer Surpasses 277M Views, Becomes Most-Watched in HBO History

    Fans are tuned in to see the Boy Who Lived back on screen.

    Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone, a TV series reimagining J.K. Rowling’s seven-part book series and part of the Warner Bros. franchise, which starred Daniel Radcliffe as its title character, released its first trailer on Wednesday. After the first 48 hours, it had reached more than 277 million organic views across platforms, making it the most-watched trailer in HBO and HBO Max history.

    The first season of the multiseason series is set to follow Rowling’s first novel, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, and each season will presumably focus on another book.

    “I’ve always wanted to know about my parents,” Harry says in the trailer to Hagrid (Nick Frost), who responds: “Your parents were the kindest, bravest people I have ever met. They were funny and clever and they stood up for what they believed was right. The next time I see you will be at Hogwarts.”

    The trailer shows Harry meeting, who will become his best friends, Ron Weasley (Alastair Stout) and Hermione Granger (Arabella Stanton), picking up the sorting hat, attending Herbology class and playing Quidditch in, of course, team Gryffindor apparel.

    Here is the official logline: “There is nothing special about Harry Potter — at least that’s what his Aunt Petunia (Bel Powley) always says. On his 11th birthday, a letter of admittance to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry opens up a hidden world for Harry: one of fun, friendship and magic. But with this new adventure comes great risk as Harry is forced to face a dangerous enemy from his past.”

    The series also stars John Lithgow as Albus Dumbledore, Janet McTeer as Minerva McGonagall, Paapa Essiedu as Severus Snape, Rory Wilmot as Neville Longbottom and Lox Pratt as Draco Malfoy, among others.

    Francesca Gardiner (Succession) is the showrunner and Mark Mylod (Game of Thrones) will direct several episodes.

    Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone premieres Christmas 2026 on HBO and will stream exclusively on HBO Max.

    Watch the trailer below.

  • How the US-Israel war on Iran unfolded in its first four weeks

    How the US-Israel war on Iran unfolded in its first four weeks

    Al Jazeera revisits major military, political and economic developments that took place in first month of the conflict.

    One month into the United States and Israel’s war on Iran, the Middle East is starting to look significantly different — and the effects are being felt across the world.

    Energy prices are soaring, violence is intensifying across the region, and efforts to reach a diplomatic off-ramp are offset by bellicose rhetoric and threats of further escalation by both sides.

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    Experts say the past 28 days have also ushered in new political, security and economic realities. Many top-level leaders in Iran have been killed, and the US has been struggling to rally allies to its aid.

    The death toll in Iran sits at more than 1,937 people, and more have been killed around the Middle East, including US military members.

    Here, Al Jazeera revisits the events of the past four weeks to look at how the war has unfolded so far.

    Week 1

    The war started with enormous US-Israeli strikes against Iran on February 28, which the Pentagon said amounted to twice the firepower of the “shock and awe” campaign that kicked off the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

    Military developments:

    • The opening Israeli strikes killed Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who served as the country’s de facto head of state as well as the top spiritual authority for millions of Shia Muslims across the world.
    • The initial attack also included the assassination of several top officials, including top general Abdolrahim Mousavi; Mohammad Pakpour, the commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC); and Ali Shamkhani, an adviser to Khamenei.
    • The Iranian response was quick. Hundreds of missiles and drones were launched against Israel and US assets across the region, as well as civilian and energy targets in the Gulf.
    • Tehran also succeeded in swiftly blocking the Strait of Hormuz, a key waterway for the global oil trade.
    • After the initial onslaught, the US and Israel continued to strike Iran daily, with aides for US President Donald Trump saying that Washington was raining “death and destruction” on the country.
    • The US military announced the first casualties from the war: Six soldiers were killed in an attack on a base in Port Shuaiba, Kuwait.
    • The US military said three US fighter jets were accidentally shot down by friendly fire over Kuwait.
    • Less than 48 hours into the conflict, Hezbollah entered the fray by firing rockets at Israel, which it said was in response to the killing of Khamenei and daily Israeli attacks in Lebanon, in violation of a 2024 ceasefire.
    • Israel started a bombing campaign and a ground invasion in Lebanon.

    Political developments:

    • Gulf states condemned the Iranian attacks as a violation of their sovereignty, stressing that they have been neutral in the war and emphasising their right to respond.
    • Trump said the aim of the military campaign was to bring “freedom” to the Iranian people, but US officials later outlined more narrow goals, including destroying Iran’s military capabilities.
    • Despite the decapitation of its leadership, the Iranian government did not collapse.
    • Iran also did not see any major defections or antigovernment protests.
    • In the US, Trump’s Democratic critics questioned the legality of the strikes, which were launched without congressional approval.
    • Early public opinion polls suggested that only one in four people in the US supported the war.
    • Trump said he would like to be involved in choosing Iran’s next supreme leader, an assertion that was met with ridicule from Iranian officials.
    Two women mourn as they hold a photo.
    People mourn the victims of a strike on a school in Minab, Iran, on the day of their funeral on March 3, 2026 [Amir Hossein Khorgooei/Reuters]

    Civilian cost:

    • By the end of the first week of the war, US and Israeli attacks had killed 1,332 people in Iran.
    • The most jarring attack was the bombing of a girls’ school in the southern city of Minab, which Iranian officials say killed more than 170 people, mostly children.
    • The violence in Lebanon displaced hundreds of thousands of people and killed hundreds.

    Economic impact:

    • By the end of the first week of the war, the price of a barrel of oil had surpassed $90, up from about $70 before the conflict broke out.
    • Civil aviation was scaled back across most of the region, which hosts some of the world’s largest airports.

    Week 2

    By the time the war had entered its second week, it was clear that the Iranian regime had not collapsed and that the conflict was not going to be a brief, one-and-done operation akin to the US abduction of Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro in January.

    Military developments:

    • A US military refuelling aircraft fell over Iraq, killing all six crew members. Iran-allied Iraqi groups took responsibility for downing the jet, but the US military said the crash was not “due to hostile fire or friendly fire”.
    • The US and Israel continued to strike Iran, hitting oil storage depots in Tehran for the first time. The attacks caused huge plumes of smoke that produced black rain over the city of nine million people.
    • Hezbollah and Iran launched coordinated rocket attacks against Israel.
    • The Israeli military bombarded Beirut and its southern suburbs, known as Dahiyeh, as it deepened its invasion of southern Lebanon.
    • Several vessels were targeted near the Strait of Hormuz as Iran solidified its control over the strategic waterway.
    • Though Trump pledged escorts for tankers stalled near Hormuz, the US military acknowledged that it was not ready to accompany ships through the strait.
    • Iran intensified its assault across the Gulf with an attack on Saudi Arabia, killing two people.

    Political developments:

    • Iran chose the late Khamenei’s son Mojtaba as its new supreme leader in a show of defiance against US demands, after Trump had rejected the 56-year-old as an option.
    • In a written message, Mojtaba Khamenei said Iran would fight on against the US and Israeli attacks, emphasising the importance of closing the Hormuz Strait.
    • Trump said the war would end “soon”, but Israeli officials stressed that the conflict has no limits.
    • Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem said his group is ready for a “long confrontation” with Israel, describing the war as “existential”.

    Civilian cost:

    • Iran said nearly 10,000 civilian sites were damaged in the US and Israeli attacks.
    • The number of displaced people in Lebanon topped 800,000 as Israel issued forced evacuation orders for large parts of the country.
    • Israeli attacks killed more than 770 people in Lebanon by the end of the second week of the war.

    Economic impact:

    • Oil prices spiked past $110 per barrel on March 8 before dropping to between $90 and $100 later in the week.
    • The International Energy Agency agreed to release a record 400 million barrels of crude oil in response to the disruption to global fuel supplies.
    • Trump suggested the US will benefit from rising oil prices since the country is a major energy producer, despite the increasing consumer costs and a risk of accelerating inflation.

    Week 3

    In its third week, the war saw major escalations beyond the routine air strikes and rocket attacks. Israel carried out major assassinations inside Iran and bombed a gasfield, risking an all-out energy war across the region.

    Military developments:

    • Israel assassinated Iran’s security chief Ali Larijani and the head of the Basij paramilitary force Gholamreza Soleimani.
    • Two heavy missiles from Iran penetrated Israel’s multi-layered air defences, causing widespread damage in the southern cities of Dimona and Arad.
    • Israel struck Iran’s South Pars gasfield in a major escalation that expanded the war to energy infrastructure.
    • Iran responded by attacking energy facilities across the region, including the Ras Laffan liquefied natural gas facility in Qatar and an oil refinery in Israel.
    • The US said it deployed 10,000 interceptor drones to the Middle East to counter Iranian attacks.
    • Iran-allied groups in Iraq struck a US logistics support camp near Baghdad in successive attacks.
    • Hezbollah intensified its rocket fire against Israel, with one launch reaching more than 200km (125 miles) deep into Israeli territory.

    Political developments:

    • Trump distanced himself from the Israeli attack on the Iranian gasfield, saying that he told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to stem such strikes.
    • Iran laid out its conditions for ending the war, which included assurances that the attacks would not be renewed, compensation for damages and recognising Iran’s “rights”.
    • Before he was killed, Larijani issued a six-point message to Muslim-majority nations decrying the lack of support for Iran and reasserting that his country is not going to relent in its fight against the US and Israel.
    • Qatar declared the Iranian embassy’s military and security attachés as personae non gratae after the Ras Laffan attack.
    • Joe Kent, the director of the US National Counterterrorism Center, resigned in protest against the war. He argued that Iran posed no imminent threat to the US when the conflict erupted.
    • Saudi Arabia said “the little trust that remained in Iran has been completely shattered”, after its energy infrastructure and military bases came under Iranian attack. Some strikes appeared to be targeted at US assets at the bases.

    Civilian cost:

    • The Iranian Red Crescent said at least 204 children were killed by the war, as the death toll exceeded 1,444 people.
    • In Lebanon, the death toll from Israeli attacks climbed past 1,000, and the number of displaced people rose to more than one million.

    Economic impact:

    • Iranian ⁠attacks knocked out ⁠17 percent of Qatar’s liquefied natural gas export capacity, causing an estimated $20bn in lost annual revenue, QatarEnergy said. The losses threatened repercussions for energy markets in Europe and Asia.
    • The price for one gallon (3.8 litres) of petrol in the US reached more than $3.90, nearly $1 more than before the war started.

    Week four

    The fourth week of the war saw the US claim it had been in diplomatic contact with Iran for the first time since hostilities began. The announcement signalled that Trump might be looking for an off-ramp as the war turns into a protracted conflict.

    Military developments:

    • Trump said he would “obliterate” Iran’s power plants if it fails to fully reopen the Strait of Hormuz within 48 hours, but he later extended the deadline by five days and then for 10 more days.
    • The US moved thousands of troops to the Middle East, raising the prospect of ground operations inside Iran.
    • Israel bombed Iranian steel factories and a nuclear reactor, prompting Iran to threaten industrial sites across the region.
    • Qatar says seven people, including three Turkish service members, died after a military helicopter crashed due to a technical malfunction.
    • Israeli forces attacked the Qasmiyeh Bridge, a key crossing that links Lebanon’s south to the rest of the country.
    • Hezbollah said it hit dozens of Israeli tanks, claiming numerous attacks daily against invading troops.

    Political developments:

    • Trump insisted that Iran is “begging” to reach a ceasefire deal, but Iranian officials denied direct contact with Washington.
    • The US sent a 15-point ceasefire plan to Iran, but Tehran rejected the proposal as maximalist.
    • Qatar called for resolving the conflict through diplomacy, saying that “total annihilation” of rivals in the region “is not an option”.
    • The United Arab Emirates took an increasingly confrontational tone against Iran, with Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayed saying that his country will “never be blackmailed by terrorists”.
    • Israel’s Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said that “the new Israeli border must be the Litani River”, suggesting that his country would annex about 20 percent of Lebanon’s territory.
    • Yemen’s Houthi group, which has remained on the sidelines, said it is ready to join the war if the Red Sea is used to stage attacks against Iran or if the conflict escalates further.

    Civilian cost:

    • The death toll in Iran approached 2,000, with 25 deaths across the Gulf.
    • In Israel, Iranian and Hezbollah attacks killed 20 people in the first month of the war.
    • Israeli attacks killed at least 121 children in Lebanon as the country’s death toll reached 1,116, according to its Health Ministry.
    • United Nations experts warned that Lebanon, where the Israeli invasion and bombardment have displaced more than 1.2 million people, is facing the risk of a “humanitarian catastrophe”.

    Economic impact:

    • Oil prices surpassed $112 per barrel, the highest since 2022, amid supply fears.
    • The US stock market sank amid economic uncertainty linked to the war, with major indexes, including the S&P 500 and NASDAQ, seeing major losses.
  • Monterey County man accused of auto theft arrested after driving stolen vehicle to his own court hearing

    SALINAS — A man from Soledad was arrested Tuesday morning, after showing up to a court hearing at the Salinas Courthouse in a stolen vehicle.

    Ricardo Otero, 41, arrived to the Salinas Courthouse at around 11 a.m. Tuesday, where members of the Multi-Agency Detail Combating Auto Theft saw Otero driving a vehicle that had been reported stolen from San Jose.

    Otereo was scheduled to appear for a pending auto theft case, according to a press release from the Monterey County Sheriff’s Office.

    He was taken into custody without incident and transported to the Monterey County Jail, where he was booked for unlawful driving or taking of a vehicle, commission of a felony while released on bail/own recognizance and driving with a suspended license.

  • Bitcoin Dips Under $67K as Geopolitical Uncertainty, Treasury Yields Spook Traders

    Bitcoin Dips Under $67K as Geopolitical Uncertainty, Treasury Yields Spook Traders

    In brief

    • Bitcoin dropped under $67,000 as Middle East tensions and rising yields pressured risk assets.
    • Over $1.33 billion was liquidated this week, with heavy leveraged positions stacked between $70,000 to $75,000.
    • Experts expect choppy near-term action with potential relief rally contingent on easing macro pressures.

    Bitcoin and the broader crypto market continue to stack losses this week as March comes to a close, with experts anticipating rangebound price action and increased volatility in the near term.

    The leading crypto dropped to lows of $66,400 Friday, Bitcoin’s lowest level since March 9. It is currently trading at $66,633, down 3.9% in the past 24 hours and 5.6% on the week, according to CoinGecko data.

    Bitcoin’s drop this week is primarily driven by macroeconomic risk-off conditions resulting from the geopolitics, involving the Middle East war, Andri Fauzan Adziima, research lead at cryptocurrency exchange Bitrue, told Decrypt.

    The ripple effects of this war have raised oil prices, leading to fears of sticky inflation. Though Bitcoin continues to outperform gold and the U.S. stock market since the war began on February 28, it dropped over 6% from over $75,000 to below $70,000 as the U.S. Federal Reserve kept the interest rates steady last week.

    “Like all other macro assets, Bitcoin is trading to geopolitical headlines,” Thahbib Rahman, research analyst at crypto research platform Block Scholes, told Decrypt. “Trump’s uncertain tone yesterday around the likelihood of a ceasefire coincided with Bitcoin falling to $67,000.”

    In addition to geopolitical pressure, 10-year U.S. Treasury yields rose for four consecutive weeks in response to the confusing mixed messages around the U.S.-Iran war.

    The U.S. dollar index rose 0.57% this week to 100.148, continuing to weigh down on risk assets, including Bitcoin.

    Despite Bitcoin’s relatively tiny range, extending from $72,000 to $66,200, over $1.33 billion has been liquidated this week, CoinGlass data show. That reflects “heavy leveraged positions stacked above current levels, especially $70,000 to $72,000, and up to $73,000 to $75,000, with thinner liquidity on the downside, Adziima said.

    Users of Myriad, a prediction market owned by Decrypt’s parent company Dastan, turned bearish on Bitcoin’s outlook, putting a 56% chance on its next move taking it to $55,000, up 10% on the day.

    Experts continue to expect heightened volatility and a potential choppy price action in the near term, with a potential relief rally in the mid-term, contingent on easing macro and geopolitical pressures.

    “Thin weekend volume raises odds of a quick liquidity sweep lower toward $67,000 to $68,000 support first,” Adziima explained.

    From a macro perspective, Myriad users assign a 66% chance that oil’s next move could see it rally to $120, underscoring the uncertain geopolitical landscape.

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  • Morning Minute: Fannie Mae Accepts Crypto for Mortgages

    Morning Minute: Fannie Mae Accepts Crypto for Mortgages

    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 fall hard overnight on escalating war+oil concerns; BTC -4% at $66.6k
    • Fannie Mae to accept crypto collateral for mortgages w/ help from Coinbase
    • Mara sold $1.1B in Bitcoin as it pivots to AI, still holds $2.75B worth
    • Tether selects KPMG for its first official audit
    • Strategy CEO reveals that retail investors prefer STRC over MSTR

    🌎 Bitcoin Falls Ahead of Iran War “Final Blow”

    BTC fell below $67,000 overnight after Axios reported the Pentagon is actively preparing plans for a “final blow” in Iran, including ground forces and a massive bombing campaign.

    Trump posted on Truth Social that he’s extending the military pause to 10 days, citing ongoing diplomatic talks that are “going very well,” which led to a brief rebound in prices before the deeper selloff overnight.

    Now the week closes with three convergent events in a 24-hour window: a $15B options expiry on Deribit Friday morning at 8am UTC, PCE inflation data, and the expiration of Trump’s original diplomatic window.

    It’s going to be a rocky Friday.

    Key Details:

    • Bitcoin dipped to $67K Friday morning, with ETH sub-$2k; Oil +3% to $97
    • Trump posted on Truth Social extending the strike pause to 10 days, citing an Iranian government request and talks “going very well”
    • $15B in BTC options expire Friday at 8am UTC on Deribit, along with PCE data

    🏠 Fannie Mae Just Accepted Crypto as Mortgage Collateral

    The $12 trillion US residential mortgage market just formally recognized Bitcoin as a legitimate asset.

    Coinbase and Better Home & Finance launched the first Fannie Mae-conforming mortgage that lets borrowers pledge BTC or USDC as down payment collateral instead of selling.

    The primary mortgage is a standard conforming loan with all of Fannie Mae’s usual protections. Where crypto comes in is via a separate, overcollateralized loan that covers the down payment. And it has no margin calls and no forced selling on price drops.

    Here’s an example of how it works: On a $500,000 home requiring a $100,000 down payment, the buyer can pledge $250,000 in BTC to Coinbase Prime custody, receive a $100,000 loan against that collateral, use it as the down payment on a conventional $400,000 Fannie Mae mortgage. Note that the interest rates are 0.5% to 1% higher than standard.

    The Bitcoin stays intact (no sale, no taxable event) and is returned once the loan is repaid or refinanced.

    Liquidation triggers only on a 60-day payment delinquency, same as any mortgage.

    Key Details:

    • Coinbase and Better launched the first Fannie Mae-conforming crypto-backed mortgage; borrowers pledge BTC or USDC as collateral for a separate down payment loan without selling their assets
    • The structure: two loans: a standard Fannie Mae primary mortgage plus a separate overcollateralized crypto-backed loan to fund the down payment; Fannie buys the primary loan just like any conforming mortgage
    • No margin calls: if BTC drops, mortgage terms are unchanged; liquidation only triggers on 60-day payment delinquency, same as conventional mortgages
    • Rates run 0.5-1.5% higher than a standard 30-year; cold wallets excluded; collateral must be held on a US-regulated exchange (Coinbase)
    • Better CEO Vishal Garg estimates the company missed “$40 billion more of consumer demand over the past few years” without this product; 41% of American families lack the cash for a down payment despite holding other assets

    ⛏️ MARA Sold $1.1B in Bitcoin

    Bitcoin miner turned AI infrastructure player MARA sold 15,133 BTC between March 4 and March 25 for approximately $1.1B.

    The company used those proceeds to buy back roughly $1B of its own convertible notes at a 9% discount, capturing approximately $88 million in value in the process.

    The concerns here from Bitcoin enthusiasts are twofold:

    • Mara has another $2.75B in Bitcoin (38,689 BTC), still the second-largest public corporate Bitcoin holder behind Strategy’s 762,099 BTC.
    • Many other miners have also pivoted to AI data centers and infra strategies over the last year – and they may become sellers as well

    Key Details:

    • MARA sold 15,133 BTC between March 4 and March 25 for ~$1.1B; proceeds used to retire ~$1B in convertible notes
    • BTC holdings drop from 53,822 to ~38,689 BTC; MARA remains the second-largest public corporate holder behind Strategy
    • MARA stock jumped 10% in premarket Thursday

    🔒 Crypto Got Its Green Light, Privacy Developers Did Not

    Coin Center says crypto privacy tool developers are in a “very bad state” despite the most pro-crypto administration in US history.

    The DOJ continues to actively prosecute Tornado Cash developer Roman Storm and the Samourai Wallet developers as unlicensed money transmitters, despite the Trump administration dropping enforcement actions against exchanges and rolling back Biden-era crypto policy across the board.

    The House version of the Clarity Act included explicit developer protections that would have prevented exactly this. The Senate let them die.

    If the Clarity Act passes without those developer shields, the message to anyone building privacy infrastructure in the US is clear: proceed at your own risk.

    Key Details:

    • Coin Center says crypto privacy developers are in a “very bad state” despite the most pro-crypto administration in US history
    • DOJ continues prosecuting Tornado Cash developer Roman Storm and Samourai Wallet developers as unlicensed money transmitters — cases that predate Trump but have not been dropped
    • Coin Center’s argument: treating software publication as financial crime creates chilling uncertainty for US open-source development and drives builders offshore

    ₿ Retail Is Choosing STRC Over MSTR

    Strategy’s CEO revealed Thursday that retail investors own 80% of STRC versus 40% of MSTR common stock.

    At a $5B market cap, that’s $4 billion of retail capital in the 11.5% annual dividend product engineered to trade near its $100 par value. Strategy has raised $1.5B via STRC just this month.

    The product is available on Robinhood, Kraken, and Webull, common platforms for retail investors. Benchmark-StoneX analyst Mark Palmer said this makes sense from a risk-adjusted lens because Institutions tend to prefer MSTR’s liquidity and asymmetric upside, while retail investors are accustomed to thinking about yield.

    STRC fits that mental model. And notably, the product is starting to show up on other Bitcoin treasury firms’ balance sheets as a reserve asset – so it’s not just a consumer product.

    Key Details:

      • Strategy CEO revealed 80% of STRC is owned by retail vs. 40% of MSTR; at $5B market cap, retail holds ~$4B in the dividend product
      • MSTR is down 56% over the past six months to $134; STRC holds near $100 par and pays 11.5% annually (~$0.9583/share monthly)
      • Strategy has raised $1.5B+ via STRC this month alone – its fastest issuance pace since the product’s $2.5B public debut last July

    🌎 Macro Crypto and Markets

    • Crypto majors are red again as war, energy concerns escalate; BTC -4% at $66.6k; ETH -4% at $1,990; SOL -5% at $83; HYPE -2% at $38.40
    • M (+4%), STABLE (+4%) and CC (+4%) led top movers
    • Oil +3% at $97; Gold -1% at $4,410
    • David Sacks stepped down as White House AI and crypto czar after hitting the 130-day limit for special government employees; he will stay involved as co-chair of the Science Council alongside Zuckerberg, Huang, and Andreessen
    • Tether named KPMG as the auditor for its first-ever full independent audit of USDT’s $184B in reserves; the company also engaged PwC to prep its internal systems for the processOKX said it won’t rush a US IPO, with CMO Haider Rafique telling the Digital Asset Summit “we will go public when we have confidence that we can give back shareholder value”

    Corporate Treasuries & ETFs

    Meme Coin Tracker

    • Meme majors were mostly red; DOGE -2%, SHIB -3%, PEPE -4%, TRUMP -4%, PENGU -5%, SPX -4%, FARTCOIN -3%
    • Either (+72%), Hachi (+50%) and Wojak (+20%) led top movers

    💰 Token, Airdrop & Protocol Tracker

    • X Money hired Benji Taylor as its new crypto-savvy design lead, former CPO at Aave Labs and design head at Coinbase’s Base
    • Ripple is rolling out AI-assisted red team security testing across the XRP Ledger

    🚚 What is happening in NFTs?

    • NFT leaders were mostly red; Punks -1% at 29 ETH, Pudgy -1% at 4.1 ETH, BAYC even at 5.25 ETH; Hypurr’s even at 409 HYPE
    • Pixel Pups (+35%) led notable movers

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  • James Tolkan, ‘Top Gun’ and ‘Back to the Future’ Actor, Dies at 94

    James Tolkan, ‘Top Gun’ and ‘Back to the Future’ Actor, Dies at 94

    James Tolkan, best known for roles in “Top Gun” and the “Back to the Future” franchise, died on Thursday in Saranac Lake, N.Y. He was 94. 

    News of Tolkan’s death was announced by Michael Klastorin, a unit publicist on “Back to the Future Part II” and “Back to the Future Part III,” as well as by writer-producer Bob Gale and on the franchise’s website.

    Tolkan’s career spanned more than five decades. His first TV credit was for the 1960 series “Naked City” and his last credit was for the 2015 film “Bone Tomahawk.” Though Tolkan is perhaps most recognized for his work in the “Back to the Future” trilogy, in which he played principal Mr. Strickland in the 1985 original and 1989 sequel. In 1990, he returned as the grandfather of his character for the third film.  

    Tolkan is also known for his appearance in “Top Gun.” In Tony Scott’s 1986 action film, Tolkan played Commander Tom Jardian, also known by the nickname Stinger, alongside stars Tom Cruise, Val Kilmer, Meg Ryan and more. 

    He also had roles in films including “WarGames,” “Stiletto,” “Abduction,” “They Might Be Giants,” “The Amityville Horror,” “Off Beat,” “Armed and Dangerous” and more. He had roles in TV shows like “Leverage,” “A Nero Wolfe Mystery,” “The Pretender,” “Early Edition,” “Nowhere Man,” “Cobra” and “The Wonder Years,” among others. 

    Tolkan was born on June 20, 1931 in Calumet, Michigan and attended Coe College and the University of Iowa after joining the U.S. Navy. He ultimately traveled to New York, where he studied at The Actors Studio with Stella Adler and Lee Strasberg.

    Tolkan is survived by his wife, Parmelee, whom he met on the set of “Pinkville,” an off-Broadway play, in 1971. 

    An obituary on the Back to the Future website asked for donations to your local animal shelter, animal rescue organization or Humane Society chapter.

  • ‘Animal Friends,’ With Ryan Reynolds and Jason Momoa, Moves to Next Year

    ‘Animal Friends,’ With Ryan Reynolds and Jason Momoa, Moves to Next Year

    Animal Friends,” the live action-animated hybrid film from Warner Bros, has moved from a planned June 5 release to Jan. 22, 2027, the studio announced Friday. Ryan Reynolds voices Pony while Jason Momoa voices Bear in the story of two fugitive animals.

    Peter Atencio directs the adult-targeted road trip adventure that co-stars Aubrey Plaza as a DEA agent, Addison Rae, Dan Levy as a Fish and Wildlife ranger, Lil Rey Howery as the voice of a bird and Ellie Bamber.

    Pony has been described as a tiny narcissist, while the large Bear is conflict-averse. They head out on an adventure across America to find the ranch they once lived on while being pursued by an equally odd couple DEA agent and Fish & Wildlife ranger.

    Kevin Burrows and Matt Mider wrote the screenplay for Legendary, Maximum Effort and Prime Focus Studios.

    “Animal Friends” has been hopping around the schedule like a fluffle of rabbits. First set for Aug. 15, 2025 through Columbia, it moved to Warner Bros. after Legendary’s distribution deal with Sony ended. Warners skedded the hybrid film for Oct. 10, then May 1 and June 5.

    The June 5 date vacated by “Animal Friends” still has several other releases planned, including “Masters of the Universe” from Amazon/MGM, Nick Jonas and Paul Rudd starring in Lionsgate’s “Power Ballad” and “Scary Movie” from Paramount/Miramax.

    Reynolds has action comedy “Mayday” coming out in September, while Momoa starred in “The Wrecking Crew” in January and has both “Street Fighter” and “Dune: Part Three” set for later in 2026.

  • Eating the Same Meals Every Day Could Help You Lose More Weight

    Eating the Same Meals Every Day Could Help You Lose More Weight

    Three meals in glass containersShare on Pinterest
    A new study suggests that eating repeat “go-to” meals could aid weight loss. Image Credit: helpSKC/Stocksy
    • A recent study has found that eating the same meals each day could lead to greater weight loss.
    • The findings suggest that consistent caloric intake helps with weight loss.
    • The study doesn’t establish a cause-and-effect relationship, but it does show a correlation between having “go-to” foods, consistent calorie intake, and weight loss.

    Having the same “go-to” meals and eating a consistent amount of calories each day may help people to lose more weight, according to a new study.

    Participants who followed a routine eating pattern lost more weight during a 12-week behavioral weight loss program than those who followed a more varied diet.

    “There’s compelling evidence to consider here that consistency and predictability in eating may help some individuals eat better and lose weight — but it’s important to note the limitations, including self-reported data, a highly structured program environment, and an observational study design,” said Kristin Kirkpatrick, registered dietitian at The Cleveland Clinic Department of Wellness & Preventive Medicine and president of KAK Consulting. Kirkpatrick was not involved in the study.

    The study analyzed real-time, detailed food logs from 112 adults with overweight or obesity who were enrolled in a structured behavioral weight loss program.

    The participants tracked everything they ate each day using a mobile app. They also had daily weigh-ins using a wireless scale. To ensure the data reflected consistent habits, the researchers focused on the first 12 weeks of the program. This is a period when people are generally the most engaged and accurate in tracking their food habits.

    The researchers measured how routine each person’s diet was in two ways:

    • caloric stability, or how daily calorie intake fluctuated from day to day and between weekdays and weekends
    • dietary repetition, or how often individuals tracked the same meals and snacks over time

    The research team found that individuals who repeated the same foods rather than eating a wide variety of foods lost an average of 5.9% of their body weight. This is compared with a 4.3% loss among those with a more varied diet.

    “Consistency works best when the foundation is strong. If meals are nutrient-dense, they can reinforce high quality nutrition. But if they’re missing key nutrients, you may consistently fall short,” said Kirkpatrick.

    “In the real world, with travel, stress, and changing schedules, that level of consistency isn’t always realistic without structure or support,” she said.

    The study also found that greater consistency in calorie intake was associated with greater weight loss results. For every 100-calorie increase in daily fluctuation, individual weight loss decreased by around 0.6% during the study period.

    The findings suggest that simplifying food choices may help individuals to build sustainable, healthy habits, even in challenging food environments. This might include rotating “go-to” meals and maintaining a steady calorie intake.

    “Most people eat the same 20 to 30 foods repeatedly each week,” said David Cutler, MD, board certified family medicine physician at Providence Saint John’s Health Center in Santa Monica, CA. Cutler was not involved in the study.

    “It is not surprising that successful weight controllers limit their food choices as well. And certainly, limiting those foods to healthier choices and recognizing their calorie contents will assist in losing weight,” Cutler told Healthline.

    Despite the promising results, the study doesn’t show a cause-and-effect relationship, but rather a correlation. Factors such as motivation or self-discipline may also play a role in results.

    Still, the findings suggest that when it comes to weight loss, consistency may be more important than variety.

    According to the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Disease (NIDDK), over 70% of adults in the United States have overweight or obesity.

    Not every process will work the same for everyone. Ask your doctor about the best way to lose weight based on your circumstances and health status.

    “The best place to start is with a truly personalized plan — ideally developed with a registered dietitian — that considers your preferences, labs, medications, genetics, and lifestyle,” said Kirkpatrick.

    “There’s no one-size-fits-all approach. The most effective plan is the one that works for you and your life,” she continued.

  • Kash Patel’s personal email account was accessed by hackers linked to Iran

    A hacking group called Handala has gained access to FBI Director Kash Patel’s email account, Reuters reports. The group published content from Patel’s email on their website as proof, including photos of Patel “sniffing and smoking cigars” and “making a face while taking a picture of himself in the mirror with a ​large bottle of rum.”

    TechCrunch was able to independently confirm that at least some of the emails Handala stole were from Patel’s account by checking information used by mail delivery systems that’s stored in an email’s header. Several stolen emails included a cryptographic signature that linked them to Patel’s account. The FBI has also separately confirmed that the Director’s account was hacked. “The FBI is aware of malicious actors targeting Director Patel’s personal email information, and we have taken all necessary steps to mitigate potential risks associated with this activity,” the Bureau told TechCrunch. “The information in question is historical in nature and involves no government information.”

    The FBI is offering up to $10 million in rewards for more information about the hackers who targeted Patel’s account. Handala presents as a pro-Palestinian hacking group online, but is believed to be one of several aliases used by cyberintelligence units working for the Iranian government, Reuters writes. Groups affiliated with Iran have targeted officials in the US before. In August 2024, the FBI shared that a separate group, APT42, was trying to gain access to both the Trump and Harris campaigns. Three men associated with APT42 were later charged that September.

    Handala has appeared to become more active during the current conflict between the US, Israel and Iran. According to Reuters, the group claimed to be behind a cyber attack on Stryker, a medical devices company, earlier in March. Handala also said it accessed and published personal data from Lockheed Martin employees stationed in the Middle East.

  • Verizon waives late fees for federal workers affected by partial DHS shutdown

    Verizon will waive late fees and offer flexible payment arrangements for workers affected by the partial government shutdown. The carrier has made similar offers in the past, like during the COVID-19 pandemic when it gave customers extra mobile data at no additional cost.

    The Department of Homeland Security has been hit the hardest by the partial shutdown, but Verizon’s offer covers any federal worker who’s able to offer employment verification. Verizon says employees can call 1-800-Verizon (1-800-922-0204) to get their late fees waived and set up a payment plan.

    The partial government shutdown started in February after Congress failed to pass a new DHS funding bill. The lack of funding has not affected all of DHS’ sprawling organizations equally, however. While the Transportation Security Administration is no longer able to pay its employees — leading to significant delays in airport security lines over the last week — both Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection have been spared thanks to a separate funding pool established by a previous bill.

    Lawmakers continued inability to fund DHS also happens to hinge on both agencies. Democratic senators and congresspeople are demanding ICE agents wear body cams and remove masks before making arrests, among other restrictions, and refusing to fund DHS until those restrictions are worked into the bill. Both Republicans and Democrats have also separately proposed funding the entire department except for ICE and CBP, but while that bill passed in the Senate, it hasn’t been taken up in the House.