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  • Crypto Markets Grapple With Volatility as ETFs Shed $177M Last Week

    Crypto Markets Grapple With Volatility as ETFs Shed $177M Last Week

    In brief

    • Last week’s drop in Bitcoin’s price coincides with crypto ETF outflows spiking to $177 million.
    • Bitcoin is up 7% since February 28, when the war began, outperforming the S&P 500 (-4.6%) and gold (-17%).
    • Experts eye $80,000 as “key inflection point” for altcoin rotation; Trump announces potential Iran ceasefire.

    Bitcoin’s drop from its peak above $75,000 last week has solidified its month-long sideways price action. While the leading cryptocurrency remains sensitive to immediate geopolitical headlines, broader market sentiment was tempered by last week’s $177 million outflows from exchange-traded funds across the crypto sector.

    The weekly pullback, which saw Bitcoin dip to a low of $68,500, according to CoinGecko data, highlights the choppy nature of the current market. Over a broader time horizon, however, the asset’s resilience remains a focal point. The top crypto has significantly outperformed gold and the S&P 500 index since the onset of the U.S.-Iran war on February 28.

    That divergence is due to Bitcoin’s “several rounds of deleveraging” since its October 2025 all-time high of $126,080, experts previously told Decrypt.

    Bitcoin holding well despite geopolitical escalations is encouraging, Richard Usher, director of trading at financial infrastructure provider OpenPayd, told Decrypt, anticipating a bullish second quarter. “The risk is clearly a prolonged conflict which could negatively affect sentiment in all risk assets, but my base case remains that neither side wants, or frankly can tolerate, a drawn-out conflict, so I remain cautiously upbeat for Q2,” he said.

    Ignacio Aguirre Franco, CMO of cryptocurrency exchange Bitget, echoed Usher’s outlook. “If macro conditions stabilize, even without a bullish catalyst, that could be enough to push the market into a recovery phase in Q2,” the Bitget analyst told Decrypt.

    Though altcoins are at the behest of Bitcoin’s price action and volatility, a recovery in its price beyond $80,000 could be a “key inflection point” that triggers a capital rotation into Ethereum, XRP, and the broader crypto market, Ryan Lee, chief analyst at Bitget, told Decrypt.

    Adding a geopolitical twist to the start of this week, Bitcoin spiked to an intraday high above $71,000 after U.S. President Donald Trump announced “productive” conversations with Iran and a five-day pause on planned strikes targeting the country’s energy infrastructure.

    Leading cryptocurrencies including Ethereum and XRP jumped alongside Bitcoin, though all three remain down on the week.

    The news catalyzed bullish sentiment, with users’ chances of Bitcoin reaching $84,000 before $55,000 jumping by 9% on prediction market Myriad, owned by Decrypt’s parent company Dastan. Myriad users also assign a 20.7% chance to a U.S.-Iran cease-fire, up from 12.8% earlier today.

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  • Kirsten Dunst Joins ‘The Housemaid’ Sequel With Sydney Sweeney

    Kirsten Dunst Joins ‘The Housemaid’ Sequel With Sydney Sweeney

    Kirsten Dunst is set to star in “The Housemaid‘s Secret” alongside Sydney Sweeney.

    The film is the follow-up to 2025’s box office hit “The Housemaid,” which has generated nearly $400 million to date. Based on Freida McFadden’s bestselling novel, the twisted story follows Sweeney as Millie, a young woman with a mysterious past who is hired as the live-in maid for a wealthy family with a dark secret. In the sequel, Millie returns, and per the plot description, she takes a job “keeping house for a woman she’s never allowed to see — only to discover the truth behind the locked door that threatens to expose secrets far darker than her own.”

    “It is a privilege to bring ‘The Housemaid’s’ next chapter to the screen with Kirsten Dunst,” said Lionsgate’s motion picture group president Erin Westerman. “She is an icon. Her career reflects extraordinary range and fearlessness. Opposite the ever-magnetic Sydney Sweeney, she will be an electrifying force in a world where nothing is ever quite as it seems.”

    Paul Feig will direct “The Housemaid’s Secret,” returning alongside screenwriter Rebecca Sonnenshine, who adapted the first book. Michele Morrone will also return as the groundskeeper Enzo, reprising his role from the first film. Amanda Seyfried and Brandon Sklenar, who play the husband and wife whose perfect life is far from what it seems in the original, won’t be back for the sequel as the story focuses on a new family.

    Producers will include Hidden Pictures’ Todd Lieberman; Feig, who produces through his Pretty Dangerous Pictures, and his partner, Laura Fischer; and Sweeney through her Fifty-Fifty Films banner. Carly Elter, who oversaw the first movie for Hidden Pictures, is returning as executive producer. Alex Young of Hidden Pictures will also executive produce. Fifty Fifty’s Kaylee McGregor will co-produce. Chelsea Kujawa and Maria Ascanio are overseeing the project for Lionsgate.

    Dunst recently joined the cast of “A Minecraft Movie 2,” which is slated to release next June. She will also star in director Ruben Östlund’s next film “The Entertainment System Is Down.” Dunst, an Oscar nominee for “The Power of the Dog,” was last seen in “Roofman” with Channing Tatum and “Civil War” from Alex Garland. Deadline first reported the news of her casting in “The Housemaid’s Secret.”

  • Curating a JFK Jr.-Inspired Wardrobe This Spring? Men’s Wearhouse Has You Covered

    Curating a JFK Jr.-Inspired Wardrobe This Spring? Men’s Wearhouse Has You Covered

    If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Variety may receive an affiliate commission.

    The aftershocks of Hulu’s “Love Story” are being felt far beyond the streamer’s record-breaking viewership numbers. Since the series premiered, a new fixation on John F. Kennedy Jr.’s wardrobe has also taken hold.

    Search interest in Kennedy’s style has spiked in recent weeks, while editors and stylists have begun pointing to a broader return to the kind of unfussy, all-American dressing he made look second nature in the 1990s. On screen, the show leans heavily into that image as Paul Anthony Kelly’s Kennedy moves between sharply tailored suits and off-duty staples of jeans, oxford shirts and well-worn knits.

    If you’re looking to curate your own JFK Jr.-inspired wardrobe this spring, Men’s Wearhouse offers one of the most affordable places to find staple pieces.

    The suits are the most obvious entry point. Kennedy dressed almost exclusively in classics: two-button navy suits, crisp white shirts, striped ties, navy blazers, straight-leg denim. In general, he favored classic American cuts consisting of natural shoulders and moderate lapels. Men’s Wearhouse’s core suiting, particularly from labels like Joseph Abboud offer similar options in avy and charcoal hues.

    From there, it’s a matter of layering in the essentials: white and pale blue oxford shirts (ideally in cotton), alongside silk ties in stripes or subtle patterns.

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    Off-duty, the formula barely changed. He was often photographed on the streets of New York (or riding his bike) in slightly faded Levi’s 501s, a button-down, a crewneck sweater slung over the shoulders or layered under a jacket. In colder months, he often opted for a dark overcoat; in transitional weather, a Harrington or a simple windbreaker.

    At Men’s Wearhouse, quarter zip pullovers, high-quality raincoats and cozy cable-knits offer a versatile way to replicate the same lived-in look. Plus, the site is currently having a 75% off clearance sale.

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  • GLP-1 Drugs Like Ozempic, Wegovy May Help Treat Anxiety, Depression

    GLP-1 Drugs Like Ozempic, Wegovy May Help Treat Anxiety, Depression

    Pensive young male leans against a wallShare on Pinterest
    New research suggests that GLP-1s could offer dual benefits for treating both metabolic and mental health issues. Catherine Falls Commercial/Getty Images
    • A new study found that people taking GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy had a lower risk of worsening depression and anxiety.
    • The participants also had fewer hospitalizations and required less sick leave from their jobs.
    • Experts say the drugs’ effects on dopamine signaling and brain inflammation could account for the benefits.
    • It’s too soon to recommend GLP-1s as a primary treatment for mental health disorders. Further clinical trials are still needed.

    Researchers say people living with diabetes often face a higher risk of developing mental health conditions.

    Now, a large national study from Sweden found that certain medications commonly prescribed for diabetes and weight loss — specifically GLP-1 receptor agonists like Ozempic and Wegovy — may also help reduce the risk of worsening mental illness in people with anxiety or depression.

    The findings, published in the April issue of The Lancet Psychiatry, offer hope for dual benefits in treating both metabolic and mental health issues. While promising, the researchers caution that further clinical trials are needed.

    The study analyzed health data from 95,490 people in Sweden who were diagnosed with depression, anxiety, or both, and were also prescribed diabetes medications between 2009 and 2022.

    The study compared periods when individuals were taking these medications to periods when they were not, using a “within-individual” design. This approach means each person acted as their own control, reducing the influence of factors like age, gender, or overall health that do not change over time.

    Data were gathered from national electronic health registers, including hospital admissions, sick leave records, and death registries, allowing researchers to track worsening mental health events.

    The primary outcome was a composite measure that included psychiatric hospitalizations, extended sick leave for psychiatric reasons, hospitalization due to self-harm, or death by suicide.

    Secondary outcomes examined worsening of depression or anxiety separately, substance use disorders, and self-harm incidents.

    The study also compared GLP-1 receptor agonists with other second-line diabetes medications like empagliflozin (Jardiance), dapagliflozin (Farxiga), and sitagliptin (Januvia) to see how these medications stacked up against each other in terms of mental health effects.

    Statistical models adjusted for time-varying factors such as the order and duration of medication use and concurrent treatment with other psychiatric or antidiabetic drugs.

    The aim was to isolate the effects of GLP-1 receptor agonists on mental health as much as possible within the observational data.

    Over an average follow-up of 5.2 years, about 23.5% of the cohort used GLP-1 receptor agonists, with semaglutide and liraglutide being the most common.

    The study revealed that use of semaglutide was associated with a 42% lower risk of worsening mental illness compared to periods when the same individuals were not taking GLP-1 receptor agonists.

    Liraglutide also showed a beneficial effect, though less pronounced, with an 18% reduced risk. In contrast, exenatide and dulaglutide did not show significant associations with mental health outcomes.

    When looking at specific mental health conditions, semaglutide use was linked to significantly lower risks of worsening depression, anxiety, and substance use disorders. Liraglutide was associated primarily with reduced risk of worsening depression. Additionally, GLP-1 receptor agonists as a group were associated with a lower risk of self-harm.

    Compared directly with other second-line antidiabetic medications, semaglutide was again associated with better mental health outcomes, suggesting its benefits extend beyond glucose control alone. The study also found that these associations held true even when accounting for factors such as sex and the type of mental health diagnosis at study entry.

    Additionally, the reduced risk of worsening mental illness was reflected not only in fewer psychiatric hospitalizations but also in reduced sick leave due to mental health reasons, which has implications for work capacity and quality of life.

    The researchers took care to rule out potential biases, such as effects due to the sequence of medication use or carryover effects between treatment periods. Their analyses remained consistent when excluding initial days after starting or stopping medication and when focusing on medication use after official approval dates.

    Lauren Grawert, MD, clinical advisor at The Garden New Jersey, said it’s believed that GLP-1 medications can provide psychiatric benefits because they can cross the blood-brain barrier and bind to brain regions associated with the reward system. Grawert wasn’t involved in the study.

    “These medications may affect the way the brain responds to dopamine signals in these areas, decreasing the overactive reward response that drives impulsivity and cravings for substances,” she told Healthline.

    Still, GLP-1s may also exert anti-inflammatory effects on the central nervous system, reducing brain inflammation, which has been linked with depression and anxiety, Grawert said.

    “As a result, semaglutide may help stabilize mood and improve emotional regulation by addressing these underlying biological processes in addition to its effects on metabolism,” she explained.

    Looking at the implications for treating patients, Jason Kirby, Chief Medical Officer at Recovery Centers of America, said that GLP-1 medications could help people with metabolic and psychiatric disorders, possibly reducing hospitalizations and functional impairment associated with conditions like depression and anxiety. Kirby wasn’t involved in the study.

    “However, this was an observational study, so it does not establish causality, and GLP-1 agents should not yet be considered primary treatments for depression or anxiety,” he told Healthline.

    According to Kirby, these findings reinforce the importance of integrated care. He said the research represents “a promising avenue for future research at the intersection of psychiatry, addiction medicine, and metabolic health.”

  • Wing expands its drone delivery service to the Bay Area

    Wing’s drone deliveries are coming full circle after adding Bay Area to its service locations. The drone delivery startup has been rapidly expanding to metro areas across the US, but is now targeting the tech-friendly Silicon Valley region.

    Going back to its inaugural deliveries, Wing ferried office supplies across Google’s Mountain View campus in the Bay Area with its automated drones. It was still a startup out of Google’s X, The Moonshot Factory incubator at the time, but early users were already asking for home delivery services, according to Wing. Now, Wing’s latest delivery drones can deliver groceries, food, or whatever else fits in a small package weighing up to five pounds in 30 minutes or less to Bay Area residents.

    It may not be that common to spot a Wing drone yet, but the company expanded its service to 150 more Walmart locations across the US, including Los Angeles, St. Louis, Cincinnati and Miami, earlier this year. The drone delivery company also extended its hours of operation to 9 AM to 9 PM in its Charlotte and Dallas-Fort Worth metros, with approval from the Federal Aviation Administration. Beyond the recent Bay Area expansion, Wing has previously mentioned Orlando and Tampa as potential markets to enter.

  • Apple will reportedly start stuffing ads into the Maps app

    Apple is reportedly planning on inserting ads into the Maps app, according to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman. An announcement could come as soon as this month, with the ads themselves appearing on iPhones this summer.

    This will likely work similarly to ads in Google Maps and Yelp, which lets retailers and brands bid for coverage with particular search queries. I’ve personally never found the ads in Google Maps to be that annoying, so let’s hope Apple’s implementation is similar.

    This potential ad revenue could seriously bolster Apple’s services business, which currently generates $100 billion a year for the company. This division accounts for around 25 percent of annual revenue but faces challenges in both the short-term and long-term, as regulators around the world push for changes to App Store policies.

    Apple has yet to comment on the matter. This idea has been floating around since last year, with rumors going all the way back to 2022. The company already displays ads on the App Store and on the News app, so the jump to Maps isn’t coming out of left field.

  • Whale, Considered One of the Best Traders of His Era, Dumped a Massive Amount of an Altcoin Today

    Whale, Considered One of the Best Traders of His Era, Dumped a Massive Amount of an Altcoin Today

    One of the most notable transactions in the cryptocurrency market came from High Stakes Capital, dubbed “the best trader of the FTX era.”

    The trader’s large sell order, executed within the last two hours, has become the focus of market participants.

    According to on-chain data, High Stakes Capital sold a total of 300,000 $HYPE tokens in approximately two hours. These sales, conducted at an average price of $38.17, generated a total value of $11.45 million.

    However, it appears the trader still holds a significant amount of $HYPE in their portfolio. According to current data, High Stakes Capital continues to hold approximately 302,421 $HYPE tokens. The current market value of these assets is around $11.54 million, while the trader’s total unrealized profit is reported to be over $33.2 million.

    High Stakes Capital, known for its high-risk transactions in the cryptocurrency world, had particularly attracted attention with its performance during the FTX era. Frequently ranking at the top of PNL (profit/loss) lists during that period, the trader was considered one of the successful names among independent investors.

    After a period of silence following the collapse of FTX, High Stakes Capital made a strong comeback to the market by becoming active again on platforms such as Bybit and Hyperliquid.

    *This is not investment advice.

  • Update Set to Bring Major Changes to a Surprise Altcoin Has Been Approved

    Update Set to Bring Major Changes to a Surprise Altcoin Has Been Approved

    A significant development has occurred in the Aave ($AAVE) ecosystem, one of the decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols.

    The Aave community has officially approved the ARFC (Aave Consultation Forum) proposal, which envisions the deployment of Aave V4 on the Ethereum mainnet.

    According to information shared on the Aave management page, the proposal aims to deploy Aave V4 on the Ethereum mainnet with a “security-first” approach. In this context, conservative risk parameters will be applied initially, and the system will operate with a Hub & Spoke architecture. Initially, Aave V4 will provide service through a dedicated interface.

    In the later stages of the process, it is planned to submit an AIP (Aave Improvement Proposal) that includes full risk parameters. This step will formally complete the code distribution and system activation.

    Aave V4 stands out with its modular structure. In the new architecture, the “liquidity hub” will host shared liquidity, while the sub-structures called “branches” will define specific lending environments and risk levels limited by governance. According to the initial deployment plan, three different hubs will be created: Core, Prime, and Plus.

    Supported assets include prominent cryptocurrencies and tokenized products such as $AAVE, GHO, wstETH, weETH, cbBTC, USDC, USDT, LINK, and XAUt.

    *This is not investment advice.

  • Lottery ticket picked by store clerk wins $40,000 a year for 25 years

    Lottery ticket picked by store clerk wins $40,000 a year for 25 years

    Odd News // 1 month ago

    Ohio man buys lottery ticket for wrong drawing, wins $50,000

    Feb. 20 (UPI) — An Ohio man attempting to play Mega Millions accidentally bought a ticket for the wrong lottery drawing — and ended up winning a $50,000 prize.

  • A dispute over a ‘foreign-sounding’ name heats up an California judge’s race

    A court battle over the use of a judge’s middle name on the ballot is heating up a normally sedate Orange County judicial race, with one candidate accusing his opponent of “hiding behind a misleading name” and an attorney for an incumbent judge questioning whether she is being targeted for a “foreign-sounding name.”

    Charles Pell, in a lawsuit filed against the Orange County Registrar of Voters, is challenging his opponent’s effort to appear on the ballot as “Ami S. Sagel” rather than her full name of Amy Sheth Sagel. Pell is challenging Sagel for the Orange County Superior Court judge position that Sagel currently holds.

    Pell, a veteran federal prosecutor, alleges that Sagel is “attempting to appear on the June 2, 2026, primary ballot under a previously unused name that is not the one voters know,” contending that she has “for years been known professionally, publicly and judicially” as ‘Ami Sheth Sagel.”

    Sagel, in her own court filings, counters that the “use of one’s proper middle initial is not misleading.” Sagel also alleged in court records that a decade ago, Pell advised a colleague “that the way to win a judicial election was to target judges with ‘f—-d up names,’ ” adding that “Ten years later, he is trying to take his own advice.”

    County Registrar Bob Page’s office has not taken a side in the lawsuit but has asked for a prompt court decision in order for the office to get the county’s voter information guide printed and released on time.

    The lawsuit was assigned to a San Bernardino judge to avoid any conflict of interest in the Orange County courts.

    During a hearing Friday afternoon, Sagel’s attorney, Mark Rosen, told Superior Court Judge Wilfred J. Schneider Jr., “We think it’s an open-and-shut case” because there is no violation of election law …

    “The candidate gets to choose which name is on the ballot, not the opponent,” as long as there is no intent to mislead, Rosen said.

    “This is such a trivial lawsuit,” Rosen continued. “She is being picked on because she used a foreign-sounding name, and we can only wonder what the motivation is.”

    Rosen later said outside court that he believes Orange County voters, who have elected lawmakers such as Rep. Young Kim and Rep. Dave Min, would not likely reject Sagel for her national origin.

    Sheth is of Indian origin, Sagel said after the hearing. Her parents were born in the Asian country, she said.

    Pell’s attorney, Bradley W. Hertz, told Judge Schneider that there was no racist intent behind their challenge to Sagel’s ballot designation.

    “The name could be Jones or Smith or any other name,” Hertz said. “We believe the use of the name should be consistent.”

    Pell, in an interview after the hearing, said he believes Sagel should use the name by which she is known as a judge: Amy Sheth Sagel. that’s how it is listed in the Orange County Superior Court judicial assignments.

    Pell said he initially planned to stay retired.

    “I still looked out there and I saw the opportunity,” Pell said. “She was one of the only ones that was recently appointed (2023). She had bad ratings (from people who appeared before her in Family Law Court). So that’s why I focused on her. Our whole argument is this: If you choose to invoke the position you have, judge of the Superior Court, then you should have to use that (name).”

    There was also discussion about Pell’s ballot designation, which has been approved as Federal Criminal Prosecutor. Pell retired in September 2025

    Hertz suggested a compromise: Pell would change his designation to retired federal prosecutor if Sagel would use her full name on the ballot.

    “It’s not really splitting the baby,” Hertz told the judge. “It’s giving everybody a baby.”

    Rosen rejected the offer.

    Deputy Orange County Counsel Suzanne Shoai told Schneider that they needed the ruling by March 27. Schneider said he hoped to post his ruling online by Monday.

    Pell and Sagel are both long-time members of the local legal community, who have crossed professional paths during tenures at the local U.S. Attorney’s Office.

    Sagel was a federal prosecutor for five years before starting her own private legal practice and then being appointed as a judge in the Orange County Superior Court by Gov. Gavin Newsom in 2023.

    Pell spent 20 years as a federal prosecutor, in recent years leading public corruption cases against former Orange County Supervisor Andrew Do and former Anaheim Mayor Harry Sidhu.

    In response to Pell’s lawsuit, Sagel wrote in her own court filings that her maiden name is Ami Harshad Sheth, but that she took her husband’s last name when they were married in 2013. Her husband, Brett Sagel, is also a veteran federal prosecutor known for high-profile white-collar-crime cases who previously worked in the same U.S. Attorney’s Office as Pell.

    Sagel wrote that she sometimes uses her full name — such as on legal documents — and sometimes uses Ami Sagel or Ami S. Sagel, “consistent with how all of us exercise control over how our names are rendered in different contexts.”

    Pell — in contending that Sagel is using a “never-before-used variant” of her name “created solely for this election” — contends in his court filing that he wasn’t challenging a “minor formatting issue,” but instead arguing that “voters in a judicial race are entitled to accurate identifying information.” Pell accused Sagel of “running away from her record,” which he alleged “paints a picture of someone who doesn’t have a good temperament.”

    Another former colleague of Pell’s in a written statement to the court submitted by Sagel recalls that in February 2016, Pell gave her the unsolicited advice that she should consider running for election against a sitting judge with “a f—-d up name.”

    Sagel wrote that she was “deeply troubled” by Pell’s argument since she was “generally aware of the historic practice of highlighting a candidate’s foreign-sounding name as a disadvantage in elections and of placing at issue how a woman’s name should appear on a ballot.”