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Tax season scams surge as filing confusion grows
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Quotes displayed in real-time or delayed by at least 15 minutes. Market data provided by Factset . Powered and implemented by FactSet Digital Solutions . Mutual Fund and ETF data provided by LSEG . FBI director defends Georgia election probe, touts'historic' crime drop Why Trump's lawsuit against the IRS is'something you don't see every day' Inside the FBI's investigation into paid protest groups Tech expert warns social media execs sound like'drug lords' as addiction trial begins FBI Director Kash Patel calls capture of two top fugitives a'historic moment' Christian gaming company says its mission invites children'into a world of hope and God's truth' Fox News Flash top headlines are here.
'Coffee is just the excuse': the deaf-run cafe where hearing people sign to order
The video menu at Dialogue Cafe teaches hearing people how to order a drink using sign language. The video menu at Dialogue Cafe teaches hearing people how to order a drink using sign language. 'Coffee is just the excuse': the deaf-run cafe where hearing people sign to order W esley Hartwell raised his fists to the barista and shook them next to his ears. He then lowered his fists, extended his thumbs and little fingers, and moved them up and down by his chest, as though milking a cow. Finally, he laid the fingers of one hand flat on his chin and flexed his wrist forward.
The Brazilian Director Who's Up for Multiple Oscars
Kleber Mendonรงa Filho wants his films to reclaim lost history. For Kleber Mendonรงa Filho, filmmaking is an act of both provocation and preservation. Mendonรงa was born in 1968, in the early years of a ruthless military dictatorship--a time when cinema, like much else, was harshly constrained. His mother, Joselice Jucรก, was a historian who studied Brazil's abolitionist movement, and she taught him that filling gaps in the cultural memory was a way to expose concealed truths. His relationship with film is inextricably linked with his home town, Recife--a port city where attractive beaches and high-rise developments coexist with sprawling favelas and rampant crime. In his youth, Mendonรงa was fascinated by the city's grand cinema palaces. He carried a Super 8 camera to the tops of marquees and shot dizzying images; he spent hours in projection booths, learning the mechanics of how films reached the screen. Over time, Mendonรงa watched those theatres fall into decline, an experience that he likened to being aboard a ship as it wrecked. But even as Recife lost its allure, he made the city a fixture of his films--a way of vindicating its place in history. His first narrative feature, "Neighboring Sounds," takes place on a street where he lived as a child, a setting that he spent years documenting. Later, he made "Pictures of Ghosts," a documentary about Recife told largely through its cinemas.
Gavin Newsom Is Playing the Long Game
He catches nascent changes in the political weather. "During early, he kept telling me, 'Crime--there's something here,' " DeBoo told me. DeBoo studied the latest crime statistics and saw nothing unusual. He brushed off the worry. Then new numbers came out, showing a large pandemic spike in shoplifting and car theft, and concerns about crime exploded into the headlines. Last March, judging the winds, Newsom launched a podcast, "This Is Gavin Newsom."
The Information Networks That Connect Venezuelans in Uncertain Times
The people of Venezuela have spent years learning resilience in the face of censorship, disinformation, and repression. They now rely on those tools more than ever. In the early morning hours of Saturday, January 3, the roar of bombs dropping from the sky announced the US military attack on Venezuela, waking the sleeping residents of La Carlota, in Caracas, a neighborhood adjacent to the air base that was a target of Operation Absolute Resolve. Marina G.'s first thought, as the floors, walls, and windows of her second-story apartment shook, was that it was an earthquake. Her cat scrambled and hid for hours, while the neighbors' dogs began to bark incessantly.
'Misrepresent reality': AI-altered shooting image surfaces in U.S. Senate
'Misrepresent reality': AI-altered shooting image surfaces in U.S. Senate Backdropped by posters with images of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, the two U.S. citizens recently shot and killed by federal immigration officers, a resident of Minneapolis mans a corner to keep an eye out for ICE agents near a school where some students were recently arrested in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on Thursday. Washington - An AI-manipulated image depicting the moments before immigration agents shot an American nurse spread across across the internet, eventually making its way onto the hallowed floor of the U.S. Senate. Social media platforms are awash with graphic footage from the moment U.S. agents shot and killed 37-year-old intensive care nurse Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, Minnesota -- a moment that sparked nationwide outrage. One frame from the grainy footage was digitally altered using artificial intelligence, according to AI experts. In a time of both misinformation and too much information, quality journalism is more crucial than ever.
'Trauma does not define us': Living with loss in wartime Ukraine
Could Ukraine hold a presidential election right now? Will Europe use frozen Russian assets to fund war? How can Ukraine rebuild China ties? 'Ukraine is running out of men, money and time' 'Trauma does not define us': Living with loss in wartime Ukraine She pauses, looking up at the photograph fixed to the gravestone. His face bears a striking resemblance to hers.