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    ‘SNL’ Recap, Season 49, Episode 18: Dua Lipa

    Photo: Rosalind O’Connor/NBC

    A couple of weeks ago, an activist accosted Alec Baldwin in a coffee shop, phone-camera first, demanding the actor speak out on behalf of Palestine — right there, on the spot. As Baldwin demurred, the activist needled and provoked him with deeply personal insults until the actor smacked the phone out of his hand. It’s only a slightly heightened microcosm of what it must feel like at this moment to be anyone with a high-profile platform as the world’s biggest, most combustible, hardest-to-civilly-argue-over news story drags on into its eighth month.

    Since Saturday Night Live has provided a running commentary of topical comedy for 49 years, the show is saddled with unfair expectations of inventing the perfect thing to say about the Israel-Hamas War — or at least taking a clear position. For reasons wisely left unarticulated to the media, it has never quite done the latter. (Although Ramy Youssef did so on the show’s behalf during his recent turn as host.) As the season winds down, with the first of three final episodes, the show has gotten no better at finding neutral ways to address the war that has loomed large over the whole season. It has, however, found a clever way to say something about not saying anything.

    “It’s wrong to stay silent, but it’s also wrong to say too much. I just wish there was a way to split the difference!” an unnamed Heidi Garner character laments in a sketch mocking the very expectations the show and its performers face. The solution? “Teeny, tiny statement pins” — ones so small, they make those ceasefire pins that dotted the Oscars’ red carpet look like Flava Flav’s clock necklace. Earlier on, though, the show demonstrates what it actually looks like to join the conversation and say nothing. 

    The cold open focuses on the wave of controversial college protests that dominated news coverage this past week from the perspective of those students’ parents. It’s like watching a circus contortionist bend her body at improbable angles, the way this scene manages to avoid offending or validating anyone whatsoever. In the context of leading with a sketch like this one, the statement pin sketch that follows felt like a nod to the difficult position the writers find themselves in — and to their awareness of how it comes across.

    Elsewhere in the show, pop star and burgeoning actor Dua Lipa pulls double duty after making a splash in a sketch during her most recent appearance as a musical guest. Following a charming monologue, blessed by a cameo from her fabulous parents, Dua is too often relegated to the sidelines and given far too few punchlines. Whenever she gets the spotlight, though, her off-the-charts stage presence more than justifies the choice to have her host. Although hampered somewhat by a pair of unnecessary sequel sketches, the episode is elevated by some big swings that are as audacious in their own right as the show’s topical humor this season isn’t.

    Here are the highlights:

    Dua Lipa stars as a high-society lady inexplicably drawn to the freakish titular “Anomalous Man,” played by — who else? — Sarah Sherman. The sketch takes its sweet time getting to a twist that flies in the face of its 1897 London setting, with minimal audience applause along the way. However, what saves it from being a misfire is the daring to air it at all. It would have been so easy for the pre-recorded portion of this episode to lean on Dua Lipa’s hook-mastery for a jokey music video. Instead, she flexes her performance chops with some capital-A acting in a wild riff on The Elephant Man, a film her fanbase of twenty-something clubbers may not be familiar with. Also working in the sketch’s favor: the line, “I’m gonna ride your face until it’s normal.”

    What starts as an awkward ode to lily-white local TV hosts forced to discuss the Kendrick-Drake rap beef eventually descends into utter delirium. Not since Dave Chappelle forced Mikey Day to talk like a cartoon pimp in a 2022 meta-sketch has SNL broadcast anything as racially uncomfortable (in a fun way!) as Day and Gardner puppeteering Drake and Kendrick Lamar face masks to dare each other into saying the n-word. It’s a rare, thrilling moment on this show where viewers might not quite believe what they’re seeing.

    The episode’s standout sketch blends two current cultural obsessions: those creepily sexual Sonny Angel dolls and Zendaya’s hyper-horny tennis flick, Challengers. It’s a zany premise, brought to zanier life by inventive staging and Bowen Yang’s coquettish performance as the bottomless doll who doubles as Dua’s “little boyfriend.” (Don’t ask; just watch.)

    The chameleonic Chloe Fineman has been making impressions of JoJo Siwa for at least four years, so Siwa’s new persona is a perfect occasion for a parallel Fineman revamp. Although she and Colin Jost trade barbs about Siwa’s new look (“like if Mad Max was on Broadway”), there is some affection woven into the mockery. Rather than just make fun of Siwa personally, Fineman is more sending up the way that any 20-year-old with a new look tends to act like they invented the concept of a reinvention.

    And finally, we come to the most WTF sketch in a night with its fair share of them. Kenan Thompson plays a ribmaster at a BBQ joint who has made a late-career pivot into gynecology. The straight face he employs while treating a pregnant woman’s body like a brisket—inside and out—challenges Ego Nwodim’s ability to fend off a laugh attack. (Punkie Johnson then enters the scene late, cracking up immediately upon entry.) It’s gross and unhygienic, but for those craving edgy comedy, it’s just what the doctor ordered.

    • Will be hard to not pronounce Dua Lipa’s name from now on the way Yang does in the monologue. (“Du-AHH.”)

    • For those who enjoyed the producer tag sketch, here’s the first one from last season, with Ana de Armas. For those who enjoyed the jingle pitch sketch, here’s the first one from last season, with Jenna Ortega. It might be difficult to spot the differences between iterations of either.

    • Calling ASAP Rocky “as soon as possible Rocky” is a nice touch in the Good Morning, Greenville sketch.

    • Penne Alla Vodka truly is the least objectionable pasta in the world, and it took this sketch to make me realize that this is not necessarily a compliment.

    • Marcello Hernandez’s desperate concentration as he presses the buttons to communicate is the peak of his performance as Kristi Noem’s other dog.

    • Jerry Seinfeld may be correct in suggesting that Ryan Gosling, like Seinfeld himself, is in danger of doing too much press; the difference between the two, though, is that Gosling’s press strategy does not involve complaining in such an annoying way that it generates a secondary wave of earned media for his Pop Tarts movie.

    • I’d rather see no Please Don’t Destroy than a so-so Please Don’t Destroy video, but this episode really could’ve used a Please Don’t Destroy video.

    Lifestyle advice from general practitioners and changes in health‐related behaviour in Australia: secondary analysis of 2020–21 National Health Survey data

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    Lifestyle factors — smoking, alcohol consumption, inadequate dietary levels of fruit and vegetables — are major risk factors for chronic medical conditions.1 The importance of clinicians encouraging people to modify their lifestyles is emphasised in many guidelines.2 A study that included 4716 American adults found that patient‐reported lifestyle advice from their doctors was associated with corresponding behavioural changes (weight reduction, increased physical activity).3 How often Australian general practitioners provide their patients with lifestyle advice and whether such advice is effective are unknown.

    To investigate these questions, we undertook a secondary analysis of data collected by the 2020–21 National Health Survey, a nationally representative Australian Bureau of Statistics household survey.4 The survey included questions about demographic and socio‐economic characteristics, health conditions, lifestyle risk factors and behaviours, and health care services use. Participants were asked whether they had received lifestyle advice from general practitioners during the past twelve months — including about reducing or quitting smoking; drinking alcohol in moderation; reaching a healthy weight; increasing physical activity; and eating healthy food or improving diet — and about their alcohol consumption, smoking, and eating behaviour (composite of fruit and vegetable consumption) compared with twelve months ago.4 Sampling weights were applied to responses to estimate proportions weighted to the total Australian population. We examined associations between receiving lifestyle advice from general practitioners and changed behaviour in logistic regression analyses adjusted for potential confounders, using R 4.0.2 (R Foundation for Statistical Computing); we report adjusted odds ratios (aORs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). The Bond University Human Research Ethics Committee approved the study (CD03279).

    Of 13 281 survey respondents (7026 women, 50.5%) (Supporting Information, table 1), 2701 reported that their alcohol intake exceeded the recommended maximum level (20.1%), 851 currently smoked (9.1%), and 12 009 did not meet the minimum recommended combined intake of fruit and vegetables (91.9%) (Supporting Information, table 2). Of all respondents who reported exceeding recommended alcohol consumption limits, 238 had been advised to reduce it (8%), and 540 had reduced their alcohol use over the past twelve months (21%). Of 804 people who smoked, 228 had been advised to quit (27%), and 282 had reduced their smoking levels over the past twelve months (34%). Of all respondents with lower than recommended fruit and vegetable consumption, 1072 had been advised to increase it (9%), and 2153 had improved their consumption over the past twelve months (19%) (Supporting Information, table 3). Respondents who had received lifestyle advice from general practitioners were more likely to change their behaviour than those who had not (alcohol intake: aOR, 1.64; 95% CI, 1.22–2.21; smoking: aOR, 1.85; 95% CI, 1.26–2.72; diet: aOR, 1.63; 95% CI, 1.38–1.94) (Box).

    Limitations to our study include the fact that we examined national health survey data, self‐reported information collected at a single time point (snapshot or cross‐sectional); our findings are therefore subject to recall and social desirability biases, and should be interpreted cautiously.

    We found that lifestyle advice from general practitioners may influence their patients’ health‐related behaviour, but the proportions of people who recalled receiving their advice were small. This finding is similar to those of studies in the United States3 and England.5 As general practitioners may not have time to deliver brief lifestyle interventions for all their patients,6 interventions that prioritise effective lifestyle advice are needed.

    Go ahead, say it: Anthony Edwards looks a lot like Michael Jordan right now

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    With the Denver Nuggets on the ropes, their home crowd seized with panic, Anthony Edwards took his time as Kentavious Caldwell-Pope — a champion and one of the league’s best on-ball defenders — shadowed his every move. With help defenders lurking, Edwards pointed for Minnesota Timberwolves teammate Karl-Anthony Towns to cross to the weak side.

    Edwards and KCP are friends, fellow roses bloomed from the red clay of Georgia. Their closeness is the context for the scene that followed. There was 1:40 on the clock when Towns vacated. Minnesota was up nine in the fourth quarter. And Edwards was being intentional about, as he said, trying to “kill everything in front of me.” Homies included. Once he got Caldwell-Pope on his back, and room to work on the left wing, his dribble changed. It had a rhythm as he backed down the Nuggets’ best defender with baby steps. Bounce. One-two. Bounce. One-two. Bounce. One-two. But instead of the next bounce, Edwards spun back toward the baseline. His fluid pivot allowed him to lift off smoothly.

    Caldwell-Pope has an inch on Edwards, per NBA data. But at the release of the shot, Edwards was a towering figure over his Nuggets counterpart. Edwards’ turnaround, fade-away jumper splashed, Denver was cooked for Game 1 and we all had a moment to marvel.

    “I’m not saying who, Reg,” Jamal Crawford, NBA legend in his own right, said to broadcast partner and Hall of Famer Reggie Miller on TNT. “But it looks kiiiiiinda familiar. Late game, takeover in the mid-post, fade-away style.”

    “Say who Jamal,” Miller replied. “What you talkin’ ‘bout?”

    “I’m getting there, Reg. I’m getting there.”

    We’re there. We’ve seen enough. That’s it. We need — in the same room, ASAP — Michael Jordan, Anthony Edwards and Maury Povich with a sealed envelope.

    We’ve got to know.

    In the era of touch fouls and 3-pointers, who choreographs a soaring fadeaway jumper as the signature of his 43-point performance? Unless you’re the long-lost son of the GOAT and don’t even know it.

    In all seriousness, before hyperbolic jokes trend offensive, let’s be clear. Edwards’ biological father is Roger Caruth and his mother is Yvette Edwards. Pops wasn’t around. His mother tragically died from cancer in January 2015, when he was 14. His grandmother died seven months later from cancer. During the most critical times of his development, his older siblings, Antoine and Antionette, were his father figures.

    He didn’t switch to No. 5 this season as a subliminal claim as Jordan’s heir (though 2+3 = 5 all day). He did it to honor his late mother and grandmother, both of whom reportedly died on the fifth day of the month.

    So, it must be acknowledged, he has a family. One that’s poured all it has into him, molding the foundation of the Goliathan figure we’re witnessing emerge.

    Still, the resemblance is uncanny. The way the wristband sits below his left elbow and his left calf is covered. Just like Jordan. The way each step has a little bounce to it, and how he glides when he’s in the air. Just like Jordan. The brashness of his facade, and how he smiles in moments and at his opponents with a certainty he has yet to earn.

    Remember Game 4 against Phoenix? He punctuated his career night, and the series sweep, by taking off for a “Kiss the Rim” dunk over Kevin Durant. You just know, wherever they were, Alonzo Mourning, Patrick Ewing, Sam Perkins and many others randomly ducked out of nowhere.

    In his last two playoff games, Edwards has scored 40 points and then a career-high 43. Both produced a Jordan-esque moment to get the zeitgeist percolating.

    For some, the comparison is sacrilege. Jordan is a basketball deity whose name should never be used in vain. Comparisons to His Airness can only be sparked by the most miraculous basketball performances. Or, “until I see him drop 63 in the Garden …” as my colleague, Hall of Famer David Aldridge, who watched Jordan live, says repeatedly on our Hoops Adjacent podcast, referencing Jordan’s huge night in a 1986 first-round game in Boston.

    The sentiment is legit. Count me among that legion. I’m a dedicated Jordan sentimentalist who regards my youthful memories of his “Come Fly With Me” days as spiritual experiences. But, to borrow from the wisdom of Maya Angelou, when people show you who they really are, believe them.

    I began seeing the light in 2021 when he told Stephen Curry to his face he was going for 50. Who does that? Unless …

    No, Ant hasn’t yet had that all-time-great performance, not one jaw-dropping enough to conjure Jordan comparisons. But he’s got time. He’s only 22. Jordan was 23 when he torched the Celtics.

    And, at this current rate, Edwards could be dancing on the Boston parquet in about a month. Because the Nuggets, the defending champions, are in trouble. Minnesota is a problem. Mostly because Edwards is good enough to match Nikola Jokić. He’s looking as unsolvable for his opponent as Jokić is — which gives the advantage to the Timberwolves’ other weapons and depth.

    As it stands right now: Only two players 22 or younger have scored 40 or more in consecutive playoff games — Edwards and Kobe Bryant, the original Michael Jordan heir.

    Side note: Michael Jordan’s first back-to-back games with at least 40 came when he was 23. He scored 49 in Game 1 at Boston then 63 in Game 2. I know that doesn’t help my argument.

    But the Edwards-Jordan correlation isn’t quite about ability as much as similarity. It’s less a comparison of substance and more one of style. The urban myth that Edwards is Jordan’s long-lost son is but a nod to the sense of déjà vu when watching him. A reminder of Jordan’s transcendence and the sustainability of his aura. Maybe even a mirage crafted by our hopes to see such a figure again.

    He looks like Jordan. He moves like Jordan. He talks that talk like Jordan.

    “I love that guy, man,” Edwards said of Kevin Durant, his favorite player growing up, after eliminating the Suns. “I’m excited to play with him this summer, man. Talk a little trash. Let him know I sent him home.”

    He’s elevated a lowly franchise like Jordan. He infuses his ethos into his teammates like Jordan. He’s must-see TV like Jordan. Increasingly, he’s leaving opponents in his wake like Jordan. He’s controlling games late, bending the floor and the defense to his will, like Jordan.

    This summer, he’s going to Paris to play on what many are calling the greatest USA men’s basketball collection since the Dream Team in 1992. Back then, Magic Johnson and Larry Bird were the incumbent superstars. But when they left, Michael Jordan had the throne.

    This time, Durant, LeBron James and Steph Curry go as the old guard. Who are you expecting to come home with a gold medal and the crown as America’s basketball king?

    Go ahead, say who. You’ll get there too.

    GO DEEPER

    Wolves-Nuggets opener shows Minnesota was built to stop Jokić

    (Photo of Anthony Edwards: Matthew Stockman / Getty Images)

    Starlink-Starliner doubleheader? SpaceX, Boeing Starliner target Monday

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    SpaceX is targeting a Monday morning mission that could create a high-profile Starlink-Starliner launch doubleheader within 11 hours or fewer from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, navigational warnings indicate.

    Though SpaceX has not publicly announced this mission, National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency and Coast Guard maritime safety bulletins show a Starlink launch window will open Monday from 11:34 a.m. to 4:05 p.m. EDT. SpaceX launches Falcon 9 rockets on its Starlink missions deploying satellites into low-Earth orbit.

    Hours later, odds of favorable weather should be 95% for Monday’s headline event: the 10:34 p.m. liftoff of the first crewed Boeing Starliner spacecraft for NASA’s Commercial Crew Program.

    For the latest on both launches, go to floridatoday.com.

    Cape Canaveral: Is there a launch today? Upcoming SpaceX, NASA, ULA rocket launch schedule in Florida

    “We are still a few weeks away from our summer thunderstorm season here in East-Central Florida,” Brian Cizek, Space Force 45th Weather Squadron launch weather officer, said Friday during a NASA pre-launch news conference.

    “And although we are in a bit of a summer-like pattern with an Atlantic high ridge of pressure in control, we don’t have the moisture and instability that we might have in a June-July-August,” Cizek said.

    NASA astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore will lift off inside Starliner on a test-flight trip to the International Space Station atop a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket from Launch Complex 41.

    Monday night’s mission will mark only the sixth time that NASA has flown a new crewed transportation spacecraft, NASA broadcaster Megan Cruz said during the news conference.

    “The first time humans have flown on a new spacecraft started with Mercury, then with Gemini, then with Apollo, the space shuttle, then Dragon — and now Starliner,” NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said.

    About 26½ hours after liftoff, Williams and Wilmore should dock with the ISS at 12:46 a.m. Wednesday, said Steve Stich, NASA’s Commercial Crew Program manager.

    Once Butch and Suni are on board, they’ll be there for a little bit over a week. Their primary activities that week are focused on Starliner itself,” said Dana Weigel, NASA’s ISS program manager.

    “They’ll put it through its paces. They’ll look at configuration of the emergency equipment in their spacecraft. They’ll also do some other activities that will verify operations that we will ultimately need for some of the longer-duration missions,” Weigel said.

    For the latest news from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station and NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, visit floridatoday.com/space.

    Rick Neale is a Space Reporter at FLORIDA TODAY. Contact Neale at Rneale@floridatoday.com. Twitter/X: @RickNeale1

    Space is important to us and that’s why we’re working to bring you top coverage of the industry and Florida launches. Journalism like this takes time and resources. Please support it with a subscription here.

    Young woman’s period lasts for 4 months

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    A UK woman who once had a period that lasted four months has told how her menstrual cycles are ruining her life.

    Izzy Hawksworth, 21, experiences excruciating cramps, becomes really bloated and has extremely heavy periods that can last from five days to a couple of months.

    Almost every type of contraception has made her ill and she once had a period that lasted a whopping four months when she was on the implant.

    Izzy Hawksworth has had a period last for four months, leading doctors to scratch their heads. Izzy Hawksworth / SWNS

    Izzy has had ultrasounds, MRI scans and a laproscopy — a surgery used to examine a woman’s pelvic organs and stomach — to find the cause of her symptoms. 

    But she’s tested negative for endometriosis, a disease where tissue lining grows outside the uterus and adenomyosis, where it grows into the uterus muscular wall.

    Doctors also thought Izzy might have a chronic illness called pelvic congestion syndrome or uterine arteriovenous formations, a rare cause of heavy bleeding.

    Izzy Hawksworth, 21, has an extremely heavy period that can last anywhere from a week to a few months. Izzy Hawksworth / SWNS

    But she’s also tested negative for this, which has baffled medics and left Izzy feeling ‘lonely’ and like she’s the only person in the world experiencing the mystery pains.

    Izzy, a writer, of Sheffield, South Yorks., said: “In a way, I feel quite lonely because nobody understands how I’m feeling. 

    “None of my friends or family have periods that are like mine, so I feel like it’s just me who is in this situation.

    “I’m also petrified that I’ll decide I want a baby in the future but then I’ll have fertility issues because of all of my symptoms.

    “I feel like my period actually ruins my life — I’m in constant pain and there’s nothing that I can do to relieve that pain.

    Izzy’s intense periods leave her feeling lonely because no one else knows her level of pain. Izzy Hawksworth / SWNS

    “My cramps even wake me up in the night and I get so bloated that I sometimes look pregnant.

    “It also really affects my mental health – I am constantly looking in the mirror crying because I can’t believe I’ll have to go through this forever.

    “I try my best to keep living my life as normal but it’s so hard when I have to go everywhere with a hot water bottle on my stomach.”

    Izzy says her constant period pains ruin her life. Izzy Hawksworth / SWNS

    Izzy began having painful periods when she was just 11 and started using the contraceptive patch when she was 16.

    Since then, she’s tried numerous types of the pill, the implant and the injection, but they have all made her bleed irregularly and left her in severe pain.

    After asking her GP to refer her to a gynecologist numerous times, she was forced to go private through her dad’s healthcare insurance. 

    Izzy said: “The doctors never listened to me about my symptoms.

    “I would make an appointment with them because I was bleeding and they would just make me change the type of contraception I was on. 

    “I went on the implant and it absolutely ruined my life – I was on my period for months and never got a break.

    Izzy has seen a number of doctors and undergone several procedures without many results. Izzy Hawksworth / SWNS

    “I felt like my pain was constantly being dismissed, I would be begging them for a referral and they wouldn’t do it.

    “They only agreed to refer me when they realised I had tried every type of contraception available to me and there was nothing else they could give me.”

    Izzy has now been told she needs to try and find a type of contraception that helps her manage her periods.

    But she added: “I had an appointment with the surgeon and he asked me what my fertility plans were. 

    “I’m 21, I don’t have any plans to have a child anytime soon. 

    “I’ve essentially got to manage my symptoms until I decide to have a baby as they’ve said my periods could be better after that – but that just feels impossible to do. 

    “I don’t know how I will be able to survive another 10 years of feeling like this, it actually feels impossible.”

    Janet Lindsay, chief executive of Wellbeing of Women, says that women have been dismissed with their period pain for ‘far too long.’

    She said: “For too long women and girls have been dismissed despite experiencing severe pain and heavy bleeding which can disrupt their lives, relationships, school and careers. 

    “They are not receiving the treatment, care and emotional support they need to manage these common yet debilitating problems despite effective treatment options being available. 

    “Our “Just a Period” campaign seeks to address the unacceptable normalisation of heavy and painful periods, and make sure there is good information and education available for anyone who needs it.”





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    Warren Buffett says AI may be better for scammers than society. And he’s seen how

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    Doubling down on his cautionary words from last year, Buffett told the throngs he recently came face to face with the downside of AI. And it looked and sounded just like him. Someone made a fake video of Buffett, apparently convincing enough that the so-called Oracle of Omaha himself said he could imagine it tricking him into sending money overseas.

    The billionaire investing guru predicted scammers will seize on the technology, and may do more harm with it than society can wring good.

    “As someone who doesn’t understand a damn thing about it, it has enormous potential for good and enormous potential for harm and I just don’t know how that plays out,” he said.

    EARNINGS BEFORE MUSINGS

    The day started early Saturday with Berkshire Hathaway announcing a steep drop in earnings as the paper value of its investments plummeted and it pared its Apple holdings. The company reported a $12.7 billion profit, or $8.825 per Class A share, in first the quarter, down 64% from $35.5 billion, or $24,377 per A share a year ago.

    But Buffett encourages investors to pay more attention to the conglomerate’s operating earnings from the companies it actually owns. Those jumped 39% to $11.222 billion, or $7,796.47 per Class A share, led by insurance companies’ performance.

    None of it that got in the way of the fun.

    Throngs flooded the arena to buy up Squishmallows of Buffett and former Vice Chairman Charlie Munger, who died last fall. The event attracts investors from all over the world and is unlike any other company meeting. Those attending for the first time are driven by an urgency to get here while the 93-year-old Buffett is still alive.

    “This is one of the best events in the world to learn about investing. To learn from the gods of the industry,” said Akshay Bhansali, who spent the better part of two days traveling from India to Omaha.

    A NOTABLE ABSENCE

    Devotees come from all over the world to vacuum up tidbits of wisdom from Buffett, who famously dubbed the meeting ‘Woodstock for Capitalists.’

    But a key ingredient was missing this year: It was the first meeting since Munger died.

    The meeting opened with a video tribute highlighting some of his best known quotes, including classic lines like “If people weren’t so often wrong, we wouldn’t be so rich.” The video also featured skits the investors made with Hollywood stars over the years, including a “Desperate Housewives” spoof where one of the women introduced Munger as her boyfriend and another in which actress Jaimie Lee Curtis swooned over him.

    As the video ended, the arena erupted in a prolonged standing ovation honoring Munger, whom Buffett called “the architect of Berkshire Hathaway.”

    Buffett said Munger remained curious about the world up until the end of his life at 99, hosting dinner parties, meeting with people and holding regular Zoom calls.

    “Like his hero Ben Franklin, Charlie wanted to understand everything,” Buffett said.

    For decades, Munger and Buffett functioned as a classic comedy duo, with Buffett offering lengthy setups to Munger’s witty one-liners. He once referred to unproven internet companies as “turds.”

    Together, the pair transformed Berkshire from a floundering textile mill into a massive conglomerate made up of a variety of interests, from insurance companies such as Geico to BNSF railroad to several major utilities and an assortment of other companies.

    Munger often summed up the key to Berkshire’s success as “trying to be consistently not stupid, instead of trying to be very intelligent.” He and Buffett also were known for sticking to businesses they understood well.

    “Warren always did at least 80% of the talking. But Charlie was a great foil,” said Stansberry Research analyst Whitney Tilson, who was looking forward to his 27th consecutive meeting.

    NEXT GEN LEADERS

    Munger’s absence, however, created space for shareholders to get to know better the two executives who directly oversee Berkshire’s companies: Ajit Jain, who manages the insurance units; and Abel, who handles everything else and has been named Buffett’s successor. The two shared the main stage with Buffett this year.

    The first time Buffett kicked a question to Abel, he mistakenly said “Charlie?” Abel shrugged off the mistake and dove into the challenges utilities face from the increased risk of wildfires and some regulators’ reluctance to let them collect a reasonable profit.

    Morningstar analyst Greggory Warren said he believes Abel spoke up more Saturday and let shareholders see some of the brilliance Berkshire executives talk about.

    Abel offered a twist on Munger’s classic “I have nothing to add” line by often starting his answers Saturday by saying “The only thing I would add.”

    “Greg’s a rock star,” said Chris Bloomstran, president of Semper Augustus Investments Group. “The bench is deep. He won’t have the same humor at the meeting. But I think we all come here to get a reminder every year to be rational.”

    A LOOK TO THE FUTURE

    Buffett has made clear that Abel will be Berkshire’s next CEO, but he said Saturday that he had changed his opinion on how the company’s investment portfolio should be handled. He had previously said it would fall to two investment managers who handle small chunks of the portfolio now. On Saturday, Buffett endorsed Abel for the gig, as well as overseeing the operating businesses and any acquisitions.

    “He understands businesses extremely well. and if you understand businesses, you understand common stocks,” Buffett said. Ultimately, it will be up to the board to decide, but the billionaire said he might come back and haunt them if they try to do it differently.

    Overall, Buffett said Berkshire’s system of having all the noninsurance companies report to Abel and the insurers report to Jain is working well. He himself hardly gets any calls from managers anymore because they get more guidance from Abel and Jain.

    “This place would work extremely well the next day if something happened to me,” Buffett said.

    Nevertheless, the best applause line of the day was Buffett’s closing remark: “I not only hope that you come next year but I hope that I come next year.” ___

    For more AP coverage of Warren Buffett look here: https://apnews.com/hub/warren-buffett. For Berkshire Hathaway news, see here: https://apnews.com/hub/berkshire-hathaway-inc. Follow Josh Funk online at https://www.twitter.com/funkwrite and https://www.linkedin.com/in/funkwrite.

    Trump trades the courtroom for RNC retreat in Florida

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    Palm Beach, Florida
    CNN
     — 

    Former President Donald Trump this weekend traded a New York courtroom for Florida banquet halls, where he mingled with his vice presidential contenders and wealthy donors during the Republican National Committee’s spring retreat.

    The former president was the main attraction at a fundraiser luncheon hosted at his Mar-a-Lago club on Saturday, where Trump courted his deep-pocketed supporters as he attempts to catch up to the Biden campaign’s ever-growing war chest.

    Top GOP donors and high-profile party leaders first gathered at the Four Seasons on Friday for a welcome reception with Trump’s daughter-in-law and RNC co-chair Lara Trump, House Speaker Mike Johnson and House GOP conference chair Elise Stefanik, according to sources familiar with the weekend itinerary.

    While the annual weekend retreat typically serves as a meeting place for the GOP elite, this year’s special guests included a series of Republicans on Trump’s VP shortlist. Some of them received praise from the former president during Saturday’s luncheon, a source with knowledge of the event told CNN. Trump called to the stage Stefanik, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, Florida Rep. Byron Donalds, Ohio Sen. JD Vance, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott and North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, among others.

    Trump praised Stefanik as “an amazing talent” and said Rubio was doing a great job.

    Other notable guests included Florida Sen. Rick Scott, Tennessee Sen. Marsha Blackburn, Indiana Rep. Jim Banks, Texas Rep. Wesley Hunt, Pennsylvania Senate candidate Dave McCormick and Ohio Senate candidate Bernie Moreno.

    South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem — who has spent the last week attempting to do damage control regarding a recently published excerpt from her upcoming book, in which she detailed how she shot and killed her dog, Cricket — was also in attendance.

    Trump is not expected to announce his running mate anytime soon, his senior advisers tell CNN, with his VP shortlist remaining long and in flux, despite his team having already begun the vetting process. He plans to make his official decision public closer to the Republican National Convention in July.

    “We’ll be making that decision, I think, closer to Wisconsin time,” Trump told a Fox affiliate in Wisconsin on Wednesday. “It’s very early right now.”

    On Sunday, Trump is planning to attend the Miami Grand Prix.

    Campaign trail and courtroom

    Advisers for Trump’s campaign told donors at the retreat Saturday that the campaign and its aligned groups raised $76.2 million in April, two attendees told CNN.

    In a presentation to donors, Trump campaign managers Susie Wiles and Chris LaCivita, as well as Trump pollster Tony Fabrizio, walked through the fundraising figures and presented a case for Trump’s electoral path that suggested Trump could compete in Virginia and Minnesota, two states that have leaned toward Democrats in recent elections.

    The Biden campaign brushed off the idea. “Trump doesn’t have a campaign operation in a single battleground state,” Biden campaign spokesperson Lauren Hitt said in a statement to CNN.

    In their presentation, the Trump campaign advisers also previewed two upcoming trips on Trump’s schedule for fundraising events in Ohio and Kentucky on May 15 and Texas on May 22, both of which will take place on a Wednesday — the former president’s one weekday that he is not required to appear in a New York courtroom for his criminal hush money trial.

    On Friday, top Trump allies including Johnson, Stefanik, RNC chairman Michael Whatley and Lara Trump, as well as a number of senators, including Rubio, Tim Scott, and Blackburn, among others, delivered presentations to the more than 200 people gathered at the Four Seasons, according to attendees of the event.

    The presentations featured discussions over how to message on abortion, something they acknowledged was a key vulnerability ahead of November, their latest internal polling, and the Trump campaign’s strategy to expand the electorate among Black and Hispanic voters.

    One of the presenters also privately admitted the hush money trial “is bleeding money,” according to one attendee with direct knowledge of the remarks, referencing the millions of dollars being siphoned away from the Trump campaign to cover the former president’s legal bills.

    Johnson’s attendance at the retreat serves as an opportunity for him to showcase his relationship with Trump ahead of a critical vote to strip him of his speaker’s gavel.

    Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene announced on Wednesday that she plans to force a vote on Johnsons ouster when members return to the Capitol next week, a move that comes after Democrats have said they will vote to kill the effort and ensure Johnson doesn’t lose his job.

    Trump, who has yet to publicly weigh in on the intraparty feuding, has been annoyed by the saga, telling his advisers and others in his inner circle that he views it as a distraction that is hurting the party’s image at a time when he wants the full focus, and force, of the GOP behind him, according to two sources with direct knowledge of the comments.

    Some of his quiet annoyance was on display this week, when Trump tapped Whatley, the newly elected RNC chairman, to travel to Capitol Hill to convey to the House Republican conference that he has no interest in a divided party, sources familiar with Whatley’s comments said.

    Whatley, acting as Trump’s emissary, also met separately with Greene, and privately signaled to her to cease the drama, one of the sources said.

    Johnson has previously used his relationship with Trump in an effort to show solidarity amid threats to his job. Last month, he flew to Mar-a-Lago for a news conference, which his team arranged, alongside the former president, during which Trump praised Johnson and acknowledged the difficulty he was facing in Congress.

    “We’re getting along very well with the speaker, and I get along very well with Marjorie. We have a speaker who was voted in, and it was a complicated process. And I think very, it’s not, not an easy situation for any speaker,” Trump told reporters at the time.

    This story has been updated with new reporting.

    CNN’s Aaron Pellish, Kristen Holmes and Melanie Zanona contributed to this report.

    Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway reports steep earnings drop

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    OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Warren Buffett cautioned the tens of thousands of shareholders who packed an arena for his annual meeting that artificial intelligence scams could become “the growth industry of all time.”

    Doubling down on his cautionary words from last year, Buffett told the throngs he recently came face to face with the downside of AI. And it looked and sounded just like him. Someone made a fake video of Buffett, apparently convincing enough that the so-called Oracle of Omaha himself said he could imagine it tricking him into sending money overseas.

    The billionaire investing guru predicted scammers will seize on the technology, and may do more harm with it than society can wring good.

    “As someone who doesn’t understand a damn thing about it, it has enormous potential for good and enormous potential for harm and I just don’t know how that plays out,” he said.

    EARNINGS BEFORE MUSINGS

    The day started early Saturday with Berkshire Hathaway announcing a steep drop in earnings as the paper value of its investments plummeted and it pared its Apple holdings. The company reported a $12.7 billion profit, or $8.825 per Class A share, in first the quarter, down 64% from $35.5 billion, or $24,377 per A share a year ago.

    But Buffett encourages investors to pay more attention to the conglomerate’s operating earnings from the companies it actually owns. Those jumped 39% to $11.222 billion, or $7,796.47 per Class A share, led by insurance companies’ performance.

    None of it that got in the way of the fun.

    Throngs flooded the arena to buy up Squishmallows of Buffett and former Vice Chairman Charlie Munger, who died last fall. The event attracts investors from all over the world and is unlike any other company meeting. Those attending for the first time are driven by an urgency to get here while the 93-year-old Buffett is still alive.

    “This is one of the best events in the world to learn about investing. To learn from the gods of the industry,” said Akshay Bhansali, who spent the better part of two days traveling from India to Omaha.

    A NOTABLE ABSENCE

    Devotees come from all over the world to vacuum up tidbits of wisdom from Buffett, who famously dubbed the meeting ‘Woodstock for Capitalists.’

    But a key ingredient was missing this year: It was the first meeting since Munger died.

    The meeting opened with a video tribute highlighting some of his best known quotes, including classic lines like “If people weren’t so often wrong, we wouldn’t be so rich.” The video also featured skits the investors made with Hollywood stars over the years, including a “Desperate Housewives” spoof where one of the women introduced Munger as her boyfriend and another in which actress Jaimie Lee Curtis swooned over him.

    As the video ended, the arena erupted in a prolonged standing ovation honoring Munger, whom Buffett called “the architect of Berkshire Hathaway.”

    Buffett said Munger remained curious about the world up until the end of his life at 99, hosting dinner parties, meeting with people and holding regular Zoom calls.

    “Like his hero Ben Franklin, Charlie wanted to understand everything,” Buffett said.

    For decades, Munger and Buffett functioned as a classic comedy duo, with Buffett offering lengthy setups to Munger’s witty one-liners. He once referred to unproven internet companies as “turds.”

    Together, the pair transformed Berkshire from a floundering textile mill into a massive conglomerate made up of a variety of interests, from insurance companies such as Geico to BNSF railroad to several major utilities and an assortment of other companies.

    Munger often summed up the key to Berkshire’s success as “trying to be consistently not stupid, instead of trying to be very intelligent.” He and Buffett also were known for sticking to businesses they understood well.

    “Warren always did at least 80% of the talking. But Charlie was a great foil,” said Stansberry Research analyst Whitney Tilson, who was looking forward to his 27th consecutive meeting.

    NEXT GEN LEADERS

    Munger’s absence, however, created space for shareholders to get to know better the two executives who directly oversee Berkshire’s companies: Ajit Jain, who manages the insurance units; and Abel, who handles everything else and has been named Buffett’s successor. The two shared the main stage with Buffett this year.

    The first time Buffett kicked a question to Abel, he mistakenly said “Charlie?” Abel shrugged off the mistake and dove into the challenges utilities face from the increased risk of wildfires and some regulators’ reluctance to let them collect a reasonable profit.

    Morningstar analyst Greggory Warren said he believes Abel spoke up more Saturday and let shareholders see some of the brilliance Berkshire executives talk about.

    Abel offered a twist on Munger’s classic “I have nothing to add” line by often starting his answers Saturday by saying “The only thing I would add.”

    “Greg’s a rock star,” said Chris Bloomstran, president of Semper Augustus Investments Group. “The bench is deep. He won’t have the same humor at the meeting. But I think we all come here to get a reminder every year to be rational.”

    A LOOK TO THE FUTURE

    Buffett has made clear that Abel will be Berkshire’s next CEO, but he said Saturday that he had changed his opinion on how the company’s investment portfolio should be handled. He had previously said it would fall to two investment managers who handle small chunks of the portfolio now. On Saturday, Buffett endorsed Abel for the gig, as well as overseeing the operating businesses and any acquisitions.

    “He understands businesses extremely well. and if you understand businesses, you understand common stocks,” Buffett said. Ultimately, it will be up to the board to decide, but the billionaire said he might come back and haunt them if they try to do it differently.

    Overall, Buffett said Berkshire’s system of having all the noninsurance companies report to Abel and the insurers report to Jain is working well. He himself hardly gets any calls from managers anymore because they get more guidance from Abel and Jain.

    “This place would work extremely well the next day if something happened to me,” Buffett said.

    Nevertheless, the best applause line of the day was Buffett’s closing remark: “I not only hope that you come next year but I hope that I come next year.” ___

    For more AP coverage of Warren Buffett look here: https://apnews.com/hub/warren-buffett. For Berkshire Hathaway news, see here: https://apnews.com/hub/berkshire-hathaway-inc. Follow Josh Funk online at https://www.twitter.com/funkwrite and https://www.linkedin.com/in/funkwrite.

    Trump Campaign Tells Donors It Raised $76 Million in April

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    Donald J. Trump’s campaign advisers told donors during a presentation at a Republican National Committee retreat on Saturday that Mr. Trump’s campaign and the party were projected to raise $76.2 million in April, according to two people who attended the briefing.

    Mr. Trump’s three top advisers — Susie Wiles, Chris LaCivita and Tony Fabrizio — briefed donors, presented a slide show and took questions afterward, the attendees said. The attendees were not authorized to speak publicly about the event, which was a closed-door briefing and gathering for party donors.

    Mr. Trump’s advisers presented a bullish case for the candidate that included the possibility of expanding the electoral map to include the Democratic-leaning states of Minnesota and Virginia. They also noted that Mr. Trump has remained mostly ahead in polls even while being outspent by President Biden, just as the former president was outspent in the primary by his rivals.

    The Federal Election Commission will not receive fund-raising reports until later this month, meaning the numbers can’t be verified until then. In March, Mr. Trump and his allied groups reported raising $65.6 million — a significant amount, but still well below what President Biden and his affiliated outside groups have raised.

    The donor event comes at a highly unusual juncture in the 2024 campaign. Mr. Trump is both the Republican Party’s presumptive nominee and also spending four days a week in a Manhattan courtroom in a criminal trial related to falsified business records intended to conceal hush-money payments made to a porn star in the 2016 campaign.

    Mr. Trump was scheduled to speak to donors midday on Saturday. A spokesman for Mr. Trump did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    The slide show presentation included three different electoral college maps, the attendees said. The first was dismissed as “the media’s version,” which included seven swing states: Nevada, Arizona, Georgia and North Carolina across the Southwest and the Sun Belt, plus Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin in the industrial north.

    A second slide described “the actual current reality” as only having three swing states: Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin.

    And a third slide described an “expanded reality” in which both Minnesota and Virginia would be in play for Mr. Trump — an ambitious view of states not widely seen as among the most competitive, but in which the Trump team insists the former president has gained ground.

    Campaign officials also outlined how Mr. Trump would be spending two upcoming Wednesdays — the lone days when his criminal trial is not scheduled to be in session — with fund-raising events in Ohio and Kentucky on May 15 and a trip to Texas on May 22.

    Mr. Trump’s advisers also described some of their strategy for the general election in the presentation, including reaching 2016 levels of support with white voters and expanding support among Black and Latino voters, particularly among urban men.

    The campaign strategists also outlined a plan to prevent the kinds of losses that occurred in 2022 that have been linked to the issue of abortion and the backlash from the Supreme Court’s overturning of federal abortion rights before the midterm elections.

    Mr. Trump has proudly claimed ownership of the end of Roe v. Wade as the president who appointed a conservative supermajority to the highest court in the country. But he has struggled to answer questions about it since, waffling in discussions with advisers about whether to back a national ban, before ultimately saying in a video he posted a few weeks ago that it’s up to states to decide how to handle the issue.

    Skydance, Paramount Exclusive Talks End; Sony, Apollo Deal On Table

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    UPDATED with latest on Paramount merger talks: A one-month exclusive negotiating window between Paramount Global and Skydance ended at midnight last night and has not been renewed. But the David Ellison company is still in the mix as a special committee of Paramount’s board meets today. The group is considering how to approach a very different all-cash offer from Sony and Apollo.

    Deadline hears that the committee may be lookin at a so-called “go shop” provision, which allows a public company to explore competing offers even it’s already has a firm purchase offer in hand. The duration of a go-shop period is usually one to two months. 

    Par’s controlling shareholder Shari Redstone has favored a deal with Skydance, backed by Larry Ellison and Gerry Cardinale’s RedBird Capital, although other investors have been been hating on it for over a month now since, even a sweetened offer. It would leave the company public. Sony and Apollo have lobbed a preliminary offer of about $26 billion but haven’t yet had access to the books.

    Agents, managers and others in Hollywood fear a Par-Sony hookup which — if it passes regulators — would reduce the number of big players for shopping projects and doing business.

    PREVIOUSLY: The clock is ticking down to midnight, the end of a month-long exclusive negotiating window between Paramount Global and Skydance Media. The David Ellison company has been circling Paramount for months and lobbed several offers to buy out Shari Redstone’s controlling stake, backed by Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison and Gerry Cardinale’s RedBird Capital.

    The Skydance team spent the past month taking a close look at the books. In the face of clamorous objections from other Paramount shareholders on the initial deal structure, it sweetened the pot for owners of the common stock. The revised offer is said to be Skydance’s best and last (although it still got a thumbs down from other investors).

    The timing was tight to clinch a deal in a month but there had been talk of a possible extension. It’s not clear if that’s happening now, maybe unlikely, because Paramount now has another offer on the table from a team of Sony Pictures Entertainment and private equity giant Apollo. After waiting a bit, the partners formally asked to discuss a cash deal potentially worth $26 billion. They still need to do their own due diligence.

    Paramount had set up a special board committee to explore offers. It can receive and acknowledge another offer during an exclusive window, but it cannot engage with the other party. So Skydance would need to cool its heels for a bit while Paramount examined the other offer. The question is will it wait, or bail?

    Meanwhile, the leadership of Paramount Global changed abruptly earlier this week. Chief executive Bob Bakish left and was replaced by three top division heads in a new office of CEO. The company also declined to take questions on its quarterly earnings call, a rare occurrence and the latest twist in an unpredictable ride at Paramount this year.

    A deal with Sony would mean taking Paramount private in a merger of two big studios, not a popular prospect in Hollywood since it means one less place to shop projects. It would also likely split the company up since Sony of Japan can’t own U.S. broadcast assets. Skydance would keep it public, with a cash infusion and a restructuring.