Author: rb809rb

  • Kathleen Kennedy on Lucasfilm Handoff, AI Boundaries and the One Power Grogu Won’t Have in New ‘Mandalorian’ Movie

    Kathleen Kennedy on Lucasfilm Handoff, AI Boundaries and the One Power Grogu Won’t Have in New ‘Mandalorian’ Movie

    Kathleen Kennedy, the venerable filmmaker and former president of Lucasfilm, spent her Sunday singing the praises of American sound designers.

    The prolific producer-turned-executive received an honorary award from the Motion Picture Sound Editors at the group’s annual Golden Reel Awards in Los Angeles — marking a distinguished career responsible for indelible movie moments across titles like “Jurassic Park,” “Back to the Future” and “Schindler’s List.”

    “Sound helps root the story. It helps represent where characters are, not only geographically, but emotionally. It helps foreshadow the intent of a character or define what they’re going through. In short, it takes the audience on the journey of the film,” said Kennedy, accepting the prize from iconic sound designer Ben Burtt (films, series and games in the Star Wars universe) at the Wilshire Ebell Theater.

    “I’ve been incredibly lucky in my career to work with some of the absolute titans of this craft, people who taught me very early on that sound isn’t just pasted on at the end, it’s the heartbeat of the story that should be conceived and designed and refined from the earliest stages of the process,” Kennedey said.

    Steven Spielberg’s “E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial” was an important lesson, the producer said, on which Ishe worked with Burtt. 

    “[Steven and I] spent so much time worrying about how E.T. was going to look, but it wasn’t until we heard those heavy, shuffling footsteps and the raspy, melodic breathing that E.T. became real. He wasn’t a puppet anymore, he was a friend,” said Kennedy. “That friend’s voice came from recording a woman named Pat Welsh, who smoked two packs of Kools cigarettes every day. Ben overheard her at a photography store in San Anselmo, and waited outside on the sidewalk for her to come out. He asked her if she’d like to be an alien in a movie.”

    Backstage, Kennedy spoke with Variety about the upcoming May release of “The Mandalorian & Grogu,” which she greenlit and also serves as producer. Asked what it was like the first time she heard Grogu (aka Baby Yoda), speak, she shared that the little green guy is “another perfect example of a character that has to emote and you have to feel connected to, and he never speaks a word.”

    Kennedy said audiences will fall deeper in love with the popular character “on the big screen, and he never says a word.” She confirmed that, despite Yoda’s oft-quoted broken English, Grogu will not gain the power of speech in the new film.

    The exec also reflected on handing over the reins to Lucasfilm in January to longtime deputies Dave Filoni (now president and chief creative officer) and Lynwen Brennan (co-president).

    “It didn’t just happen six months ago. I spent 10 years talking Dave into gradually stepping into live action. He had so much experience in animation. He’s so knowledgeable about Star Wars and loves it so much, it’s really been a 10-year mentoring process for both of them. Lynwen came out of Industrial Light & Magic. She was my GM the entire time. I would argue that the transition has been really pretty seamless,” she said.

    Patton Oswalt hosted Sunday’s Golden Reels ceremony. Following Kennedy’s acceptance speech, the comic joked that she had gone backstage for a ritual “freeing her from the nerd mafia she’s been trapped with for years.” Regarding the fervent (and occasionally toxic) Star Wars fandom, Oswalt said Kennedy had been “freed from the comments section.”

    Backstage, Kennedy reflected on her time at the top of Lucasfilm in relation to the fanbase.

    “I really segued into [that job] when the fan expectations collided with social media. That really has created a kind of explosion. It’s alway has been important to Lucasfilm, that the fans are huge part of what the franchise is. So that was something that was new to me and something that grew over time, but it’s remained incredibly important to the company,” she said.

    She concluded on-stage remarks with a tribute to people behind sound design, making reference to her film “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” the first in the Indiana Jones franchise. 

    “What I love most about sound designers and editors is your curiosity. You’re the only people I know who can hear the scrape of a toilet lid and think that’s it. That’s it! That’s the sound of the Ark of the Covenant opening,” she said.

    In a recent interview about her Disney exit, Kennedy said was interested exploring the possibilities of AI as it relates to filmmaking. She clarified to Variety that she wished “it was called augmented reality, not artificial intelligence. Many of us in the industry absolutely are committed to human beings and a human point of view. [We’ll see] if these tools can end up augmenting that process, speed things up and find a place in the flow of creativity. That’s what I find quite intriguing about some of these tools. But, to actually replace human beings in the process? No.”

    Kennedy has received eight Oscar nominations over her career. Films released on her watch include the highest-grossing domestic film of all time, “Star Wars: The Force Awakens,” as well as “Rogue One,” “The Last Jedi” and “Solo.” Her remaining projects as a producer at Lucasfilm include the imminent release of “The Mandalorian and Grogu,” and the forthcoming Ryan Gosling-led Star Wars vehicle “Star Fighter.”

    Prior to joining the Disney label, Kennedy served as producer or executive producer more than 70 feature films, collectively garnering 120 Academy Award nominations and 25 wins. Those titles include “Jurassic Park,” “E.T. The Extra Terrestrial,” “The Sixth Sense,” the “Back to the Future” trilogy, “Who Framed Roger Rabbit,” “Gremlins” and “The Goonies.

    Kennedy’s other accolades include a BAFTA fellowship and a CBE Award. She’s served as board chair for the AFI, and was one of the founding Council Members of the Hollywood Commission to Eliminate Sexual Harassment and Advance Equality. Kennedy is currently on the board of the LA Promise Fund, Library of America and USC’s School of Cinematic Arts.  

  • Top NFT Sales of the Week, Flying Tulip Takes Top Spot

    Top NFT Sales of the Week, Flying Tulip Takes Top Spot

    The $NFT sector has witnessed notable sales over the past 7 days. In this respect, the total $NFT transfers have hit the 591,222 mark, showing a 10.19% rise over the week. As per the data from CryptoSlam, Flying Tulip PUT, $XAI BRC-20 NFTs, and CyrusPosition have gained the top positions among the leading $NFT sales of the past week. The other names on the top-10 list include STRIKE_PERP_POSIT, 0xbb5…, Patrick Mahomes II, 1997 #94 Gengar-Holo PSA 10 Japanese Fossil Pokemon, and more.

    Flying Tulip PUT Claims Top Position among Leading Weekly $NFT Sales with $689,151

    At the top of the list of the top weekly $NFT sales is the Ethereum-based Flying Tulip PUT. Its #8196 $NFT was sold 6 days ago for a staggering $689,151. In addition to this, the Bitcoin blockchain-based $XAI BRC-20 NFTs collection’s $NFT “#13f87c…227i0” has become the 2nd top player among the $NFT sales, with its price reaching $595,716. This $NFT sale also took place six days ago.

    Following that, the BNB Chain-based Cyrus Position $NFT collection has taken the 3rd place among the week’s key sales. Its $NFT “#10002” has generated $64,400 in its sale 6 days ago. Subsequently, the Cardano-based $NFT collection “STRIKE_PERP_POSIT” is the 4th among the top $NFT sales. Its $NFT “#asset1akxe…” was sold three days ago for $51,204.

    Subsequently, the Base blockchain-based $NFT collection “0xbb5…” is the 5th on the list. Specifically, its $NFT “#5800” has earned $14,999 up to 11 hours ago. Additionally, the Panini blockchain-based Patrick Mahomes II collection has generated $10,015 in its $NFT sale that occurred six days ago. Moreover, the Solana-based “1997 #94gengar-Holo PSA….Pokemon” collection’s $NFT “DL4i7…R1jH6” has gained $5,972 in its sale.

    AI Goanna Bottoms List of Week’s Key $NFT Sales by Generating $1,238

    Moving on, CryptoSalm’s list of top weekly $NFT sales adds the Flow blockchain-based NBA Top Shot collection’s “#50706496” $NFT as the 8th name. The $NFT sale resulted in the earning of up to $5,500 3 days back. Additionally, Ronin blockchain-based Axie Infinity collection has made $3,821 via its $NFT “2149.” Furthermore, the Algorand-based AI Goanna $NFT collection’s “#445445646” $NFT was the 10th top $NFT sale of the week, with $1,238 generated through it.

  • Why Crypto Market Is Falling Today (March 8, 2026)

    Why Crypto Market Is Falling Today (March 8, 2026)

    Today, the total crypto market cap dropped, as the global world risk sentiment was weakened by macroeconomic uncertainty and geopolitical tensions. Bitcoin and the other top altcoins dropped with the conventional markets as investors responded to the equity volatility, interest-rate expectations and stronger U.S. dollar.

  • ‘Yellowstone’ Skeletons Haunt Kayce Dutton in Second Episode of ‘Marshals’

    [This story contains spoilers from the second episode of Marshals and the series finale of Yellowstone.]

    How much of Yellowstone will loom over Marshals? The second episode of the new CBS series starring Luke Grimes gave viewers a good idea of how Marshals plans to walk that line.

    The sequel-spinoff that premiered March 1 sees Grimes reprising his role as Kayce Dutton, the surviving son to the late Dutton patriarch played by Kevin Costner on the megahit Paramount Network series. Yellowstone was the most popular show on television when it signed off in December 2024. So, when we recently asked showrunner Spencer Hudnut if he will be servicing the fans of Yellowstone or catering to a potentially new audience, he had an easy answer.

    “It would be really foolish to turn our back on that,” he told The Hollywood Reporter heading into the premiere, citing not only the flagship show’s uber-success but also the richness of the Dutton backstory. He also noted that Kayce is still living on the Montana land of the Dutton family’s ranch — just now in the corner of it that he calls home with his son Tate (Brecken Merrill) following the unexpected death of his wife Monica Dutton (played by Kelsey Asbille in Yellowstone). Monica’s death was revealed in the premiere, and it’s the tragic hook that convinced Grimes to reprise the role, and co-creator Taylor Sheridan to jump on board and executive produce Marshals, which Hudnut wrote.

    “The balancing act was building off of Yellowstone, but in a way where people who didn’t watch that show can still follow along. And then over time, as we get to know the non-Yellowstone characters more, they can carry the story more,” said Hudnut. “But I think we will always have that connective tissue to Yellowstone. It’s what makes the show unique, so I think we will always try to service that.”

    Even viewers who have never seen Yellowstone will have caught wind of Kayce squirming in this week’s second episode at the mention of the “Zone of Death,” which is the real Idaho section of Yellowstone National Park just outside of Wyoming where there are no citizens and no law enforcement so, therefore, crimes committed there go unpunished.

    “Local legend has it that it’s been a dumping ground for the region’s most depraved criminals,” says Harry (Brett Cullen), the chief of the Montana U.S. Marshals unit that Kayce has taken up with, in the episode. When Harry then asked Kayce if he’s heard the tale, since his family has been in the area for a century, Kayce said this: “First I’m hearing of it.”

    Yellowstone viewers know that’s a lie.

    In Yellowstone proper, the Zone of Death was called “the train station.” Over the series’ five seasons, the violent Dutton family dumped many dead bodies there and would communicate with each other by saying they had taken someone to the train station. Most notably, Kayce and his sister Beth Dutton — played by Kelly Reilly, who will be starring in the upcoming Dutton Ranch spinoff with Cole Hauser‘s Rip — dumped the dead body of their brother, Jamie Dutton (Wes Bentley), in the Zone of Death in the series finale, leaving a big Dutton cliffhanger for any series that would continue to follow this Montana family.

    So now comes Marshals, where Jamie’s “disappearance” is mentioned several times in the second episode that aired Sunday night. Harry, who is clearly not a fan of the vengeful Dutton family, pressed Pete (Logan Marshall-Green), Kayce’s former Navy SEAL buddy who brought him on, about what Kayce knows about his fugitive brother. Even fellow agent Andrea (Ash Santos) questioned Kayce on the whereabouts of Jamie, who seems to have just vanished.

    Kayce remains a man of few words when asked, but time will tell how he can continue to evade the question over the course of this first season’s 13 episodes. “We certainly end the season in a propulsive way that paints us into a corner and demands us coming back for season two,” Hudnut had teased to THR, also saying he was open to a Beth Dutton crossover — should the spinoff shows’ stars align.

    Marshals releases new episodes Sundays at 8 p.m. on CBS, streaming on Paramount+ the next day.

  • ‘Sinners,’ ‘Adolescence’ Among MPSE Golden Reel Awards Winners

    ‘Sinners,’ ‘Adolescence’ Among MPSE Golden Reel Awards Winners

    Motion Picture Sound Editors on Sunday announced the winners for the 73rd annual MPSE Golden Reel Awards, which honor outstanding achievement in sound editing, sound design, music editing and Foley artistry in film, TV and gaming.

    In the TV categories, Adolescence, Alien: Earth and Love, Death + Robots scored wins, while in the film categories, Sirat, Sinners and Frankenstein were honored. Zootopia 2 received an animation win, while Deaf President Now! won in the documentary category.

    This year’s awards show took place at the Wilshire Ebell Theatre in Los Angeles, hosted by Patton Oswalt for the fourth time. As previously announced, Kathleen Kennedy received the Filmmaker Award and supervising sound editor Mark Mangini was honored with the Career Achievement Award.

    A full list of winners follows.

    Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing – Broadcast Animation

    Love, Death + Robots: “400 Boys”
    Netflix
    Supervising Sound Editor: Brad North MPSE
    Sound Effects Editors: Craig Henighan MPSE, Matt “Smokey” Cloud MPSE
    Foley Editors: Matt Manselle, Lyndsey Schenk MPSE
    Foley Artist: Brian Straub MPSE

    Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing – Broadcast Long Form Dialogue / ADR

    Adolescence: Episode 2
    Netflix
    Supervising Sound Editor: James Drake
    ADR Editor: Emma Butt
    Dialogue Editor: Michelle Woods

    Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing – Broadcast Long Form Effects / Foley

    Alien: Earth: “Neverland”
    FX on Hulu
    Supervising Sound Editors: Lee Gilmore MPSE, Bradley North MPSE
    Supervising Foley Editor: Beso Kacharava MPSE
    Sound Designers: Nolan McNaughton MPSE, Justin Davey MPSE, Chris Terhune MPSE, Craig Henighan MPSE
    Sound Effects Editors: Tim Walston MPSE, Alec Rubay
    Sound Editors: Matt “Smokey” Cloud MPSE, Albert Romero
    Foley Editors: Alexander Sanikidze, Rati Chkhetiani, Levan Tserediani
    Foley Artist: Biko Gogaladze
    Foley Artists: Stefan Fraticelli, Brandon Bak, Jason Charbonneau

    Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing – Broadcast Short Form

    Murderbot: “All Systems Red”
    Apple TV
    Supervising Sound Editor: Tyler Whitham MPSE
    Supervising ADR Editor: Danielle McBride MPSE 
    Sound Effects Editor: Craig MacLellan
    Dialogue Editor: Ève Corrêa-Guedes
    Foley Artist: John Elliot

    Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing – Feature Animation

    Zootopia 2
    Walt Disney Animation Studios
    Supervising Sound Editor: Jeremy Bowker
    Supervising Dialogue Editor: Brad Semenoff MPSE
    Supervising Music Editors: Stephen M. Davis, Earl Ghaffari
    Sound Designer: Jeremy Bowker
    Sound Effects Editors: Luke Dunn Gielmuda, Joel Raabe MPSE, Kimberly Patrick, Cameron Barker
    Dialogue Editors: Jacob Riehle, Angela Ang
    Foley Editor: Jordan Myers
    Foley Artists: Ronni Brown MPSE, Sean England MPSE 

    Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing – Feature Documentary

    Deaf President Now!
    Apple Original Films
    Supervising Sound Editors: Eilam Hoffman, Nina Hartstone MPSE, Jacob Bloomfeld-Misrach MPSE
    Foley Supervisor: Adam Méndez
    Sound Designers: Samir Foco, Eilam Hoffman, Nina Hartstone MPSE, Michael Harte, Tom Sayers MPSE
    Sound Editor: Adam Armitage
    Dialogue Editor: Greg Francis
    Foley Editor: Rob Davidson
    Foley Artist: Oli Ferris

    Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing – Feature International

    Sirât
    NEON
    Supervising Sound Editor: Laia Casanovas
    Sound Effects Editors: Oriol Donat i Martos, Claudi Dosta Ivanow
    Dialogue Editor: Irene Rausell
    Foley Editor: Diego Staub
    Foley Artist: Miguel Barbosa, Xes Dieguez

    Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing – Feature Dialogue / ADR

    Sinners
    Warner Bros.

    Supervising Sound Editor: Benjamin A. Burtt
    Supervising Dialogue/ADR Editor: David V. Butler MPSE
    Dialogue/ADR Editor: Jason W. Freeman MPSE

    Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing – Feature Effects / Foley

    Frankenstein
    Netflix
    Supervising Sound Editor: Nathan Robitaille MPSE
    Sound Designer: Nathan Robitaille MPSE
    Sound Effects Editors: Paul Germann MPSE, Scott Hitchon MPSE, Craig MacLellan, Dashen Naidoo
    Foley Editors: Jenna Dalla Riva, Chelsea Body
    Foley Artists: Goro Koyama, Sandra Fox MPSE

    Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing – Non-Theatrical Animation

    Predator: “Killer of Killers”
    Disney+
    Supervising Sound Editors: Chris Terhune MPSE, Will Files MPSE
    Supervising Dialogue Editor: Jessie Anne Spence MPSE
    Sound Designers: Justin Davey MPSE, Lee Gilmore MPSE, James Miller MPSE
    Sound Editors: Luis Galdames MPSE, Nolan McNaughton MPSE, Steve Neal MPSE, Matt Yocum MPSE, Matt “Smokey” Cloud MPSE
    Dialogue Editors: Julie Diaz MPSE, Ailene Roberts MPSE
    Foley Editors: Kailyn Jenkins, Jacob McNaughton, Samuel Munoz, Nick Neutra
    Foley Artists: Noel Vought, Adam Decoster

    Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing – Non-Theatrical Documentary

    Love + War
    National Geographic
    Supervising Sound Editor: Deborah Wallach
    Sound Effects Editor: Nick Caramela
    Dialogue Editor: Matt Rigby
    Foley Editor: Chris White
    Foley Artists: Leslie Bloome MPSE, Shaun Brennan

    Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing – Non-theatrical Feature

    The Gorge
    Apple TV
    Supervising Sound Editors: Ethan Van der Ryn, Erik Aadahl MPSE, Paul Hackner MPSE
    Dialogue / ADR Supervisors: Stephanie Brown MPSE, David V. Butler MPSE
    Supervising Foley Editors: Jonathan Klein, Roni Pillischer
    Sound Designers: David Farmer MPSE, Dane A. Davis MPSE, Bill R. Dean MPSE, Frederic Dubois MPSE, Darren Maynard MPSE
    Sound Effects Editors: Christopher Battaglia MPSE, Javier Bennassar, Goeun Lee Everett MPSE, Jon Greasley MPSE, Jason W. Jennings MPSE, Nolan McNaughton MPSE, Peter D. Lago MPSE
    Dialogue Editors: James Morioka MPSE, Kira Roessler
    Music Editor: Sally Boldt

    Foley Editor: Chris White
    Foley Artists: Leslie Bloome MPSE, Shaun Brennan, Curtis Henderson

    Outstanding Achievement in Music Editing – Broadcast Long Form

    Étoile: “The Hiccup” 
    Amazon Prime
    Music Editor: Annette Kudrak

    Outstanding Achievement in Music Editing – Broadcast Short Form

    Wolf King: “The Rise of the Wolf”
    Netflix
    Lead Music Editor: Thomas Haines
    Music Editor: Steve Bond

    Outstanding Achievement in Music Editing – Documentary

    Billy Joel: And So It Goes: Part 1
    HBOMax
    Supervising Music Editor: Shari Johanson
    Music Editor: Debora Lilavois

    Outstanding Achievement in Music Editing – Feature Motion Picture

    Sinners
    Warner Bros.
    Music Editor: Felipe Pacheco

    Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing – Game Dialogue / ADR

    Death Stranding 2: On the Beach
    Sony Interactive Entertainment 
    Supervising Dialogue Editor: Justin Scott Wilson MPSE 
    Senior Dialogue Designer: Jaime Marcelo MPSE 
    Dialogue Designers: Masashi Takada, Ayako Higuchi, Katelyn Limber, Monet Gardiner MPSE, Briana Villarreal
    Dialogue Editors: Benjamin Gendron-Smith, Paolo Pavesi, Dominic Roocroft, Kyel Allen, Luke Elliot
    Lead Technical Sound Designer: Hiroyuki Nakayama 
    Lead Sound Programmer: Kotaro Mori

    Outstanding Achievement in Music Editing – Game Music

    Ghost of Yōtei
    Sony Interactive Entertainment
    Supervising Music Editors: Andrew Buresh, Sonia Coronado, Ted Kocher, Scott Shoemaker
    Music Directors: Peter Scaturro, Keith Leary
    Music Editors: Andrew Karboski, Yuen Man Chung Kelvin, Monty Mudd, Udit Srivathsan

    Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing – Game Effects / Foley

    Death Stranding 2: On the Beach
    Sony Interactive Entertainment 
    Lead Technical Sound Designer: Hiroyuki Nakayama 
    Lead Sound Programmer: Kotaro Mori 
    Sound Design Supervisors: Emile Mika, Stephen Schappler, Glen Gathard, Erick Ocampo
    Sound Design Leads: Noburo Masuda, Derrick Espino, Andres Herrera, Alex Previty MPSE
    Senior Sound Designers: Aaron Sanchez, Ash Read, Chris Kokkinos MPSE, Danny Hey, Lorenzo Valsassina, Maria Rascon, Nick Tomassetti, Pete Reed, Robert Castro MPSE, Satsuki Sato, TJ Schauer, Tsubasa Ito, Juuso Tolonen
    Sound Designers: Yuji Yamagishi, Minoru Tsuchihashi, Taiga Teshima, Charlie Ritter MPSE, Daniel Ramos MPSE, Danny Barboza MPSE, David Goll, Edward Durcan, Kei Matsuo MPSE, Brad Reese, Emiliyan Arnaudov, Chris Norrish, Federico Modanese, Rebecca Heathcote MPSE, Tim Walston MPSE, Jay W. Jennings MPSE, Goeun Lee Everett MPSE
    Sound Editors: Nat Allam, Tom Holmes, Florian Titus Ardelean, Jamey Scott MPSE
    Senior Foley Editor: Blake Collins MPSE
    Foley Editors: Nick Seaman, Austin Creek
    Senior Foley Artist: Joanna Fang MPSE

    Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing – Student Film (Verna Fields Award)

    Oneiros
    National Film & Television School
    Supervising Sound Editor: Jingman Anita Xu

  • Binance Denies $1.7 Billion in Iran Sanctions Violations Amid US Senate Probe

    Binance Denies $1.7 Billion in Iran Sanctions Violations Amid US Senate Probe

    In brief

    • Binance denied violating Iran sanctions with more than $1.7 billion in transactions in a new letter to Senator Blumenthal.
    • The Senator opened an investigation into the firm following reporting that it had enabled $1.7 billion in transactions and 2,000 Iran-linked accounts on its platform.
    • The exchange previously pleaded guilty to U.S. anti-money laundering laws and violating sanctions in 2023.

    Leading crypto exchange Binance denied violating Iranian sanctions compliance in a letter sent in reply to U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn), who recently launched a probe into the firm following media reports on purported violations.

    Blumenthal’s probe followed a Wall Street Journal report that alleged that Binance allowed $1.7 billion worth of transactions tied to Iranian entities and sanction-evading trades from Russia to occur on the platform. 

    “Binance takes its legal obligations seriously and shares your interest in the safety of its platform,” the exchange wrote in the letter. “The recent reporting on which your inquiry relies, however, is demonstrably false, unsupported by credible evidence, and defamatory in several material respects.” 

    The alleged infractions identified two Hong Kong-based partners, Hexa Whale and Blessed Trust, that allegedly facilitated sanctions-evading transactions and approximately 2,000 other accounts associated with Iranian entities, according to the Wall Street Journal reporting.

    But according to Binance, after law enforcement requests about those two firms, additional internal investigations led to offboarding of their accounts. 

    “After receiving the requests, Binance investigators initiated a comprehensive review to determine not only Binance’s exposure to the wallets implicated by the outreach, but any other Binance users with such exposure,” the firm said of its investigation into Hexa Whale. It offboarded the account in August 2025, it said. 

    A similar internal investigation followed for Blessed Trust, and once more led to the offboarding of the account in January 2026. 

    “Once again, Binance appropriately investigated and addressed these issues,” the exchange said.”

    In disputing the alleged reporting inaccuracies, Binance also backed its compliance processes, noting that it has “invested hundreds of millions of dollars in compliance infrastructure to build a strong compliance program,” which it said boasts more than 1,500 employees worldwide. 

    “Binance has a rigorous compliance program that is consistently growing stronger. When there is credible risk information, Binance investigates, mitigates, offboards accounts, and reports to appropriate authorities,” it wrote. “With respect to the matters described in the letter, that compliance process was, in fact, effective.” 

    The recent allegations against the firm come after it pleaded guilty to violating U.S. anti-money-laundering laws and sanctions requirements in 2023. At that time it agreed to pay $4.3 billion penalty, and its co-founder and former CEO Changpeng “CZ” Zhao was sentenced to four months in prison for his role.  

    Zhao was pardoned by President Donald Trump last October after serving his sentence in 2024.

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  • Starting 5: Shai shoots OKC to 50th win, Tatum vs. Harden starts Sunday ft. Wemby, Luka, Knicks

    Starting 5: Shai shoots OKC to 50th win, Tatum vs. Harden starts Sunday ft. Wemby, Luka, Knicks

    The MVP’s dagger 3 secured win No. 50 for OKC.

    The champs are 5-0 since Shai’s return.

    Read on for everything you need to know for a busy Sunday in the Playoff push.


    5 STORIES IN TODAY’S EDITION 🏀

    March 8, 2026

    ABC Sunday: Celtics, Cavs showcase key additions with Tatum’s first road test at Harden’s new home

    Also On ABC: Knicks look for defensive edge in scoring showdown with Luka’s Lakers

    Sunday Night Basketball: West contenders Rockets & Spurs meet with differing approaches to big expectations

    Clutch Closers: SGA secures OKC’s 50th win, Jalen Johnson ices Philly, Nets take down Pistons

    Saturday’s Stars: Kawhi keeps Clips hot, Giannis stuffs stats, Bane & Banchero beat Ant


    BUT FIRST … ⏰

    Sunday packs nearly 12 hours of hoops

    Scores & Schedule

    A 10-game Sunday awaits with four national opportunities to see eight Playoff contenders:

    ABC Sunday: Action starts early with the new-look Celtics and Cavs (1 ET, ABC | Tap To Watch), followed by an L.A. matinée between the Knicks and Lakers (3:30 ET, ABC | Tap To Watch).

    Sunday Night Basketball: Texas rivals clash as the Rockets travel to face the Spurs (8 ET, NBC/Peacock | Tap To Watch), and a nightcap in the desert between the Hornets and Suns (10 ET, Peacock | Tap To Watch).


    1. ABC SUNDAY: TATUM, HARDEN BOOSTING TWO OF EAST’S TOP CONTENDERS

    Jayson Tatum, James Harden

    Brian Babineau + Nick Cammett/NBAE via Getty Images

    Contenders, upgraded.

    Since Jan. 28, the Cavs and Celtics have been right there alongside the much-discussed Pistons and Knicks in the top half of the East.

    They were never on the outside looking in, but they each emphasized their win-now opportunities with big swings.

    Now, 2-seed Boston and 4th-seeded Cleveland are implementing team-altering additions that could reshape the Eastern Conference’s path to the Finals.

    Today on ABC (1 ET), they’ll measure up those upgrades face-to-face, with Jayson Tatum playing his first road game of the season at James Harden’s new Cleveland home.

    • Two Of The Best Got Better: Since Jan. 1, the Celtics (22-9) and Cavaliers (20-8) hold the 2nd and 4th-best records in the NBA, respectively
    • Boston welcomed Tatum back Friday, who settled in with an impactful 27 minutes (15 pts, 12 reb, 7 ast) that had TD Garden rocking
    • With The Beard: Harden’s arrival and pairing with Donovan Mitchell has lifted Cleveland to the 4th-best offensive rating (119.4)
    Jayson Tatum, James Harden

    Brian Kolin/NBAE via Getty Images

    While Tatum’s first step in returning was to begin rebuilding his own confidence, Harden’s time in Cleveland has been all about building up others.

    • Affecting Allen: Jarrett Allen has more 25+ point games since Harden’s Feb. 7 arrival (4) than in this season’s 39 games prior (3)
    • “It’s so much fun,” Allen said of playing with Harden. “He finds me on every pick-and-roll… he’s just getting back into his bag. Everybody’s meshing well together.”
    • Rest Vs. Rust: The Cavs closed February with 5 games in 7 nights (3-2) after All-Star Weekend, and started March 2-0 before four days of rest
    • Head To Head: Cleveland has also had Boston’s number this season, holding a 2-0 edge in the series

    But both squads are different now, and with 19 games remaining apiece until the Playoffs, each battle will be a critical crash-course in chemistry.


    2. ALSO ON ABC: KNICKS TEST DEFENSE VS. LEADING SCORER LUKA, LAKERS

    Jalen Brunson, Luka Dončić

    Jim McIsaac/NBAE via Getty Images

    142 points in Denver for the league’s 3rd-ranked offense.

    44 points in three quarters for the league’s leading individual scorer.

    On Friday, the high-powered Knicks and the Luka-led Lakers each put on head-turning offensive displays. Today on ABC (3:30 ET), they’ll fight fire with fire, head-to-head, in an L.A. matinée.

    • Mile-High Efficiency: New York’s 142-point outburst was its 2nd-highest scoring game this season, made more impressive by a 57.9% shooting clip from the field
    • Quantity & Quality: Luka’s 44-point Friday was his league-leading 10th 40+ point game of the season, and matched his 4th-highest output of the campaign

    But as The Athletic’s James L. Edwards III writes for NBA.com, it’s the Knicks’ commitment to the league’s best-rated defense since Jan. 20 that could give them an edge in showdowns like Sunday’s, and beyond:

    “It was after that loss to Dallas on Jan. 19 that things changed, like a flipped switch, but no one was able to credit one person for turning the lights on.

    The team started to funnel ballhandlers to the sideline and baseline more often, after having funneled teams to the middle more often. That method left the Knicks vulnerable to drive-and-kicks and slow rotations, and teams often made them pay. 

    Outside of that tweak, though, no one has copped to any other structural changes. As trivial as it sounds, they say they just started caring more. The team has defended with more physicality, and communicated louder and with more regularity. The help defender is getting help.

    In short, pride and trust took over.

    …Now, New York is in a different conversation — one that could propel this team to the NBA Finals if it remains committed to the bit.” | Read More

    • Luka’s Leverage: However improved New York’s defending is, Dončić has a history of going off against the Knicks, averaging 30.5 ppg, 10.2 reb and 8.8 ast in his career against them

    Will New York’s two-way attack overtake L.A., or can Dončić crack the Knicks’ lockdown ways to lead the Lakers to victory?


    3. SNB: SPURS, ROCKETS APPROACH PLAYOFFS AND EXPECTATIONS

    Kevin Durant, Victor Wembanyama

    Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images

    Expectations abound in Texas as time runs down on the regular season.

    San Antonio’s group, often deemed “ahead of schedule,” has a leader who knows it.

    “I know I’m in MVP conversations. Of course, it’s one of my goals,” Wembanyama said last month. “I’m also conscious that I need to press the gas a little bit in the last games of the season.” 

    The third-place Rockets — no stranger to meteoric rises, after winning 22 games just 3 years ago — have their sights set high, too. And this year, they have the veteran leadership of Kevin Durant to help.

    “I feel like when you put huge expectations on anything, it’ll never meet up to your standards,” Durant said. “So I try to just take it a day at a time and truly assess… the process itself.”

    How either team handles that pressure will determine a Texas-sized chunk of what happens in the Playoffs.

    Rockets at Spurs (8 ET, NBC/Peacock): As second-place San Antonio continues its surge toward the top of the standings, Houston fights to stay at the front of the West’s enmeshed middle seeds.

    Kevin Durant, Victor Wembanyama

    • Well-Timed Surge: San Antonio has won 14 of its last 15 games, its best stretch in a decade, to clinch its first postseason appearance of the Wemby era
    • Built To Rise: The Spurs’ rapid ascent has been fueled by a series of key additions — drafting Wembanyama in 2023, selecting Stephon Castle and adding Harrison Barnes in 2024, acquiring De’Aaron Fox and developing Dylan Harper and Carter Bryant in 2025
    • Familiar Fire: Devin Vassell and Keldon Johnson were part of the Spurs’ Play-In appearances in 2021 and 2022, and are key to prepping the young core for the NBA Playoffs’ all-or-nothing atmosphere

    The Rockets shoot to even the season series with their in-state rivals today at two wins apiece.

    • Key Mile Marker: With a Wolves loss returning the Rockets to 3rd place, an H-Town win today would make them the fourth West team to reach 40 this season

    It was Houston who was considered ahead of schedule last year, finishing one spot behind West winner OKC — right where San Antonio is now.

    Which of the two takes that next step first? To find out, they’ll have to get past each other Sunday.


    4. CLUTCH CLOSERS: SGA’S DAGGER, JALEN JOHNSON’S TAKEOVER, NETS’ UPSET

    A five-game sprint in Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s return has made OKC the season’s first 50-game winner.

    And the reigning MVP hit the biggest shot of the night to make it happen.

    Thunder 104, Warriors 97: OKC never trailed Golden State but found themselves in a one-possession game with under a minute to play, calling on Shai for the dagger step-back triple to secure a fifth straight win and bolster the league’s best record. | Recap

    “On that play, Draymond was forcing me [to] my right, so I knew I’d be able to get that shot off, regardless,” Shai said postgame. “Stepped into it with confidence.”

    • Wilt’s One Away: SGA (27 pts, 5 reb, 5 ast) eclipsed the 20+ point mark for the 125th straight game and is now just one game from Wilt’s all-time record
    • Without starters Chet Holmgren (illness), Jalen Williams (hamstring) and Isaiah Hartenstein (leg), Shai carried the day, with OKC improving to 5-0 since his Feb. 27 return (abdomen)
    • Fittingly in the Bay, the Thunder became the first team since the 2016-17 and 2017-18 Warriors to win 50 of their first 65 games in consecutive seasons

    Gui Santos logged a career-high 22 points to lead the Warriors without Steph Curry.

    Hawks 125, Sixers 116: Jalen Johnson (35 pts, 10 reb, 7 ast) took over for 11 points in Atlanta’s 23-14 4th-quarter closeout to pull away from Tyrese Maxey (31 pts, 5 ast, 4 stl) and Philly and secure a season-best six-game win streak. | Recap

    • Stacking Stats: JJ collected his 10th game of the season with 30+ pts, 10+ reb, 5+ ast — most in a single season by a Hawks player in 64 years (Bob Pettit, 14x)
    • Second Scorers: Nickeil Alexander-Walker (24 pts, 6 ast, 4 3s) supported Johnson, while Philly got a big night from Quentin Grimes (26 pts, 6 reb)
    • Big Domino: Atlanta’s win knocked Philly down from 6th to 8th place, with the 9th-place Hawks a game and a half back amid the Play-In positions

    Nets 107, Pistons 105: Ziaire Williams (23 pts, 5 3s) came up double-clutch and Michael Porter Jr. (30 pts, 13 reb) led the way in Brooklyn’s 23-point 2nd-half comeback past a short-handed Pistons squad, snapping a 10-game skid. | Recap

    • Finishing Flurry: Williams hit two clutch triples within a minute to erase a four-point gap and give Brooklyn the final lead, its first since it was 8-7
    • Throwback Comeback: The 23-point rally was the Nets’ largest since March 3, 2023, executed, in part, by holding Detroit to 43 2nd-half points
    • Tobias Harris (18 pts, 10 reb) and Jalen Duren (17 pts, 14 reb, 3 blk) led the way for Detroit, which was without Cade Cunningham (quad) and Ausar Thompson (ankle)

    5. SATURDAY’S STARS: KAWHI DELIVERS, GIANNIS SHINES

    Clippers 123, Grizzlies 120: LA’s trade deadline acquisitions had big nights (54 combined points) in support of Kawhi Leonard (28 pts, 5 reb) as the Clips outlasted Ty Jerome (23 pts, 7 ast, 3 stl) and the Grizzlies for a fourth win in five games. | Recap

    • Quick Catchup: Leonard unloaded 15 points in the 2nd quarter to erase an early 19-point hole and key a back-and-forth 2nd half of 13 lead changes
    • Darius Garland scored 11 of his 21 points in the 4th for his first 20+ point performance with LA, and Bennedict Mathurin matched his 21 points
    • Clips’ Climb: LA is now one game under .500 and the same distance away from Golden State in 8th place, among the West’s Play-In teams

    Magic 119, Wolves 92: Desmond Bane (30 pts) and Paolo Banchero (25 pts, 15 reb) teamed up to overpower Anthony Edwards (34 pts, 5 3s) as Orlando surged late to seal the road win and snap Minnesota’s five-game win streak. | Recap

    • Road Runs: Orlando finished the 1st half on a 19-2 run that included 14 unanswered points, built a 20-point lead with a 17-4 3rd-quarter run, and opened the 4th with a 7-1 edge to ice the W
    • Clamp Down: The Magic held Minnesota to 35.7 FG% and its second-lowest score of the season, limiting their opponent to just 14 4th-quarter points
    • Level Up: Orlando moves from Play-In position into the 6th and final guaranteed Playoff spot by a percentage point over Miami, after Philly’s loss
    Giannis Antetokounmpo

    Patrick McDermott/NBAE via Getty Images

    Bucks 113, Jazz 99: Giannis had his highest-scoring night since returning Mar. 2 (calf), with an efficient 27 points in 27 minutes and Kyle Kuzma scored half of his 18 points in the Bucks’ 13-2 closeout of Utah to help snap a four-game skid. | Recap

    • Giannis (9 reb, 8 ast) and teammates Ryan Rollins (13 pts, 11 reb, 8 ast) and Ousmane Dieng (11 pts, 8 reb, 9 ast) all came within a few plays of triple-doubles
  • CFO Gets Prison Time After Losing $35 Million of Company Money in Crypto Side Hustle

    CFO Gets Prison Time After Losing $35 Million of Company Money in Crypto Side Hustle

    In brief

    • A Washington man has been jailed for two years for diverting $35 million in company funds to a DeFi platform he operated.
    • Nevin Shetty was found guilty of wire fraud last November for secretly moving the funds to HighTower Treasury.
    • Following the Terra collapse, the value of the funds crashed to near zero, with the impact on Shetty’s employer causing it to lay off 60 people.

    A Washington man has been sentenced to two years in prison after diverting $35 million in funds from his former employer to his own DeFi platform—and losing nearly all of it.

    Nevin Shetty, 42, was found guilty of wire fraud last November for taking and misusing funds from the private software company at which he worked.

    Shetty, who drafted a “conservative” company investment policy, secretly moved $35 million in company funds to his side business HighTower Treasury, after being told in April 2022 that his role as CFO would end due to performance issues. Those funds were then invested in high-yield DeFi lending protocols that promised returns of 20% or more.

    Per the DOJ’s statement, Shetty planned to pay his employer a “comparatively small, fixed amount,” keeping the remainder of the returns for HighTower. Initially, the scheme paid off, earning some $133,000 in its first month for Shetty and his HighTower business partner.

    The wheels came off in May 2022, following the Terra collapse and the subsequent crypto winter, with Shetty’s HighTower crypto investments plummeting in value from $35 million to near zero.

    After confessing to colleagues at his employer, Shetty was fired from the company, which, according to trial judge Tana Lin, suffered “significant and severe effects” as a result of his theft, adding that his actions “almost put the company out of business.”

    Shetty’s two-year prison sentence is significantly lower than the nine years requested by the prosecution, which urged for “stern punishment” to reflect the “web of lies” and impact on the company, which was forced to lay off 60 people in order to adapt to the “massive loss” caused by his fraud.

    Shetty was ordered to pay $35,000,100 and will be placed on supervised release for three years after prison. Judge Lin also imposed a special condition blocking him from serving as an officer or director of a company without prior permission from the probation office.

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  • We, the American people, have had enough of endless wars

    We, the American people, have had enough of endless wars

    The United States has once again been dragged into a catastrophic war in the Middle East. The US military is now attacking Iran not because our nation faces an imminent threat but because the Israeli government has long sought confrontation with Tehran and has finally found a willing partner in Washington.

    This war is unnecessary, unjustified, unconstitutional, in violation of international law and entirely against the will of the American public.

    Under the constitution, the power to declare war rests with Congress, not the president. Therefore, President Donald Trump’s decision to launch air strikes and pursue regime change in another country without congressional authorisation is illegal. It echoes the darkest chapters of post-9/11 American foreign policy when fear and deception were used to rush our nation into disastrous wars, the price of which we are still paying today.

    On the global scale, attacking a sovereign nation – or as wanted war criminal Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu calls it, launching a “preemptive strike” – without an imminent threat violates the United Nations Charter and fundamental principles of international law. The bombing campaign – which is taking place during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, a time of increased spirituality and reflection – has already stained our national conscience.

    On the first day of the war, a US air strike killed about 165 schoolgirls in the city of Minab. American weapons have once again made us complicit in the killing of children abroad.

    And for what?

    We are told this is about “security”. We are told this is about stopping Iran’s nuclear ambitions. But we’ve heard this before. For more than 30 years, Netanyahu has insisted that Iran is “weeks away” from a nuclear bomb. Those weeks have stretched into decades. Fear has been recycled as policy.

    Let’s also be honest about something else: Iran, with all its objectionable and often detrimental regional ambitions, is not an imminent military threat to the United States. The American public understands this. Poll after poll shows Americans are weary of endless wars in the Middle East. Our communities want investments in healthcare, education, infrastructure and job creation – not another trillion-dollar conflict that sends our soldiers into harm’s way and destabilises yet another region.

    So why is an American president who campaigned on “America First” governing as if he embraces “Israel First”? Why are American troops, American tax dollars and American credibility being placed on the line to fulfil the longstanding ambitions of a foreign government?

    This is not a healthy alliance. It is a toxic dynamic in which the United States provides money, weapons, diplomatic cover and unconditional political support while being dragged into wars that make us less safe.

    We are told this war is about human rights. About women’s rights. But bombs do not liberate people. Air strikes do not advance democracy. Slaughtering schoolgirls is not “feminist” foreign policy.

    If human rights were truly the concern, our government would not selectively apply them based on geopolitical convenience. Our own ally, Israel, is engaged in a genocide that has killed and wounded more than 200,000 Palestinians, most of them civilians. Not funding that mass murder of children would have been a good start for our humanitarian concerns.

    And Americans are right to ask these questions. At a time when transparency and accountability are demanded at home, especially as it pertains to the release of the Jeffrey Epstein files, why are we instead being thrust into another foreign war? The American people deserve honesty, not distraction.

    This war will not bring stability. It will inflame the region, harm civilians, endanger US soldiers and potentially trigger a wider conflict with global consequences. It risks American lives and American security for objectives that do not serve the American public.

    Congress had a chance to uphold its constitutional responsibility and stop unauthorised military escalation but failed to pass the war powers resolution sponsored by Representatives Thomas Massie and Ro Khanna. This vote reflects the strong influence of the Israeli lobbying group AIPAC and its money along with a troubling unwillingness by some lawmakers to stand up to powerful lobbying interests and unchecked executive power.

    Congress, especially those members who claim to oppose endless wars, must continue pursuing every available avenue to reassert its authority and prevent further escalation; the stakes are far too high for elected officials to remain silent.

    The American people do not want this war. It is time for our government to serve them, not the agenda of a foreign leader desperate to cling to power and evade accountability.

    The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.

  • Trump vows control over Iran leaders as officials seek to calm oil concerns

    Trump vows control over Iran leaders as officials seek to calm oil concerns

    United States President Donald Trump has again promised to exert influence over who is selected as Iran’s next Supreme Leader, saying that, without Washington’s approval, whoever is picked for the role is “not going to last long”.

    The statement on Sunday came just hours after a member of Iran’s Assembly of Experts said the clerical body had selected the replacement for Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was killed in the hours after the US and Israel launched the war with Iran on February 28.

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    “He’s going to have to get approval from us,” Trump told ABC News, referring to a new supreme leader. “If he doesn’t get approval from us, he’s not going to last long.”

    Trump added that he didn’t want future administrations to have “to go back” in the years ahead, an apparent reference to future military action.

    “I don’t want people to have to go back in five years and have to do the same thing again, or worse, let them have a nuclear weapon,” he said.

    Officials in Iran, which has launched retaliatory attacks across the Middle East, have repeatedly rejected the notion of Washington asserting influence over the selection.

    Earlier on Sunday, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Aragchi again vowed “we will allow nobody to interfere in our domestic affairs”.

    “This is up to the Iranian people to elect their new leader,” he said, adding that Iranians had elected the Assembly of Experts, which will select the next supreme leader.

    Oman says nuclear talks were ‘making progress’

    Trump’s comments came as the war entered its ninth day, with the death toll in Iran rising to 1,332, with at least 11 killed across the Gulf, 11 killed in Israel, and six US soldiers killed to date.

    The US president has offered shifting justifications for the war, repeatedly pointing to Iran’s nuclear ambitions, its ballistic missile programme, as well as the totality of Iran’s actions in the region since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

    Critics, including the majority of Democratic US lawmakers, have said Trump has provided scant evidence to prove Iran posed an immediate threat.

    On Sunday, Oman Foreign Minister Badr Albusaidi, who had been overseeing indirect US-Iran talks on Iran’s nuclear programme, again rejected US officials’ claims that Tehran had not entered into the negotiations in good faith.

    Speaking during a ministerial meeting of the Arab League, Albusaidi said diplomatic initiatives seeking a “fair and honourable solution were making progress” when the US-Israeli attacks began.

    He further warned that the region is facing “a dangerous turning point” as fighting escalates.

    ‘Short-term disruption’

    Attacks from both sides appeared to have widened, with the US and Israel for the first time striking oil storage and refining facilities in Tehran, and Iran launching more strikes across the Gulf, including a drone attack that caused material damage to a desalination plant in Bahrain.

    Both Bloomberg and Axios news have reported that the US and Israel have considered a special ground operation to seize Iran’s enriched uranium, with Israeli Ambassador to the US Yechiel Leiter telling CBS’s Face the Nation news programme that securing the nuclear fuel is “on our radar screen and we’re going to take care of it”.

    For their part, top Trump administration officials spent Sunday seeking to alleviate concerns over the war’s knock-on effects on global oil and gas prices.

    Rapidly rising prices represent a particular political vulnerability for Trump as his Republican Party faces legislative midterm elections in November.

    Speaking to Fox News, White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said the administration was responding to what she called a “short-term disruption”.

    She said the administration was “tapping into our newfound market in Venezuela”, referring to access US companies had gained to the South American country’s oil industry in the wake of the January 3 US abduction of Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro.

    Energy experts have said that rebuilding Venezuela’s oil industry would likely be a multi-year process, and have questioned what immediate impact it could have in offsetting current shortages.

    Speaking on CBS’s Face the Nation, Energy Secretary Chris Wright also maintained that the war would not drag on and that any economic fallout would be fleeting.

    Trump, who came into office vowing to end so-called “endless wars”, has said the operations against Iran could last “four to five weeks”, but he also said the conflict has “no time limit”.

    Wright pointed to “a temporary period of elevated energy prices”, but denied there was an energy shortage “at all in the Western Hemisphere”.

    He also underscored that the US has 400 million gallons of oil in the strategic oil reserves and the administration is “more than happy to use that if it’s needed”.

    “What you want is emotional reactions and fear that this is a long-term war,” Wright said. “This is not a long-term war; it’s a temporary movement.”