Kevin Hayes, executive editor of The Weather Channel, discusses the website's year-long climate change project. Highlighting stories from all 50 states, the project shows how communities are grappling with the impact of climate change.
Hayes says the project focuses on stories rather than facts because of how difficult it can be to understand climate science. Telling stories that show real issues real people are facing makes it easier to understand climate change. For example, the dry climate in Nebraska is making it difficult to grow barley which in turn makes it difficult to produce beer.
Hollywood’s video game performers are going on strike, throwing part of the entertainment industry into another work stoppage.
Some of the smallest stocks on Wall Street have shown much more life recently. but professional investors still aren’t convinced.
Global shares have dropped as pessimism set in over Wall Street's nose-dive related to Big Tech's pullback.
Google’s corporate parent Alphabet Inc. delivered another quarter of steady growth amid an AI-driven shift in the ubiquitous search engine.
Warner Bros. Discovery informed the league Monday that it will match the $1.8 billion per year offer by Amazon Prime Video to air NBA games.
U.S. House leaders are calling on CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz to testify over the global tech outage.
U.S. stocks are ticking higher and clawing back some of the losses from their worst week since April. The S&P 500 ticked up 1.0% on Monday.
The Olympics’ ever-expanding quest to draw in young fans is meeting them where they are — on Roblox.
Amazon says it had its best Prime Day sales event ever this week with $14.2 billion spent online on Tuesday and Wednesday, up 11% compared to last year.
As image-generating AI continues to evolve, artists are increasingly fighting against what they see as an existential threat to their craft.
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