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📝 Good afternoon and welcome to Notes on the News. Here’s what you should know today, May 18: It was another terrible day for stocks, a Russian soldier admitted to committing a war crime, and Martin Shkreli is out of prison. Notes on the News is getting a new name and look later this month. We’ll still land in your inbox at the same time to catch you up on the biggest headlines—and help you make sense of them. We’ll also bring you more ways to connect with our journalism, advice for making better decisions, an easier-to-read format and a surprise or two. We can’t wait to hear what you think! |
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| Covid-19 testing in New York’s Times Square earlier this month. PHOTO: SPENCER PLATT/GETTY IMAGES |
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4. U.S. women’s soccer players will earn the same as the men. After years of legal pressure, the United States Soccer Federation has reached landmark collective-bargaining agreements with its men’s and women’s national teams to pay all players equally for appearances and game bonuses. The labor pacts give players on both teams significant raises. |
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📰 Enjoying this newsletter? Get more from WSJ and support our journalism by subscribing today with this special offer. |
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| A 21-year-old Russian tank-unit officer pleaded guilty to firing several shots at an unarmed man, in Ukraine’s first war-crimes trial since Russia’s invasion. Moscow has denied targeting civilians. PHOTO: VLADYSLAV MUSIIENKO/REUTERS |
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30% — Drop this year in an exchange-traded fund tracking companies that have merged with SPACs. The poor performance of special-purpose acquisition companies has slowed the creation of new ones. Existing SPACs are running out of time to find companies to take public and risk being saddled with sizable losses. $300 million — Funding raised by the owner of Popular Science in a round led by private-equity firm Blackstone. Recurrent Ventures, which also owns Outdoor Life, Saveur and 21 other publishing brands, said it plans on using the funding to buy additional media properties. 25% — The amount by which meat shrinks when it cooks. A lawsuit alleges McDonald’s and Wendy’s use undercooked patties in their advertisements, allowing them to showcase burgers that are about 15% to 20% bigger than the ones served. |
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| What Everyone Wants To Know |
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| ILLUSTRATION: DAISY KORPICS/THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, GETTY (2) |
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There’s a new media mogul tearing up Hollywood. David Zaslav, the new CEO of Warner Bros. Discovery, has wasted no time putting his stamp on the company and isn’t afraid to ruffle the industry’s elite. He and his team have abandoned projects they consider costly and unnecessary, including pulling the plug on CNN+ a month after it launched and canceling a DC Comics superhero movie in development. “It’s not show friends, it’s show business,” he told movie-studio executives in a meeting about recent box-office flops, quoting from the 1996 Tom Cruise movie “Jerry Maguire.” |
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| Melanie Hughson, with her daughters Kaitlyn and Audrey, visited a cenote in Mexico. PHOTO: MELANIE HUGHSON |
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Go book a vacation without knowing where you’re going: More than a dozen companies offer versions of surprise travel, taking care of all the details of an itinerary down to the destination. Travelers may receive a weather report and packing list a week in advance but often don’t find out where they’re headed until they arrive at the airport. But be warned: Like a blind date, a surprise trip can be a match made in heaven or a total dud. |
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Today's newsletter was curated by Liz Webber in New York, in collaboration with publishing editor Rich Bellis in New York. We hope you’re enjoying Notes on the News. If you would prefer to receive a different newsletter, please check out all your options to keep up with the latest on markets, economics, politics and more. For members, we recommend The 10-Point. |
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