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CBS News names '60 Minutes' veteran Tanya Simon as broadcast's new top producer

CBS News names '60 Minutes' veteran Tanya Simon as broadcast's new top producer

Washington Post24-07-2025
CBS News said Thursday it has selected Tanya Simon as the top producer at '60 Minutes,' elevating a respected insider in a closely-watched appointment given the turmoil that enveloped the newsmagazine with the settlement of President Donald Trump's lawsuit.
Simon, daughter of the late '60 Minutes' correspondent Bob Simon, becomes only the fourth executive producer of the influential newsmagazine since it was invented by Don Hewitt in the late 1960s.
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Hulu's days are numbered, and Disney just made it official
Hulu's days are numbered, and Disney just made it official

Fast Company

time2 minutes ago

  • Fast Company

Hulu's days are numbered, and Disney just made it official

Mickey Mouse and Love Island will soon live under the same roof. The Walt Disney Company announced Wednesday plans to sunset standalone Hulu streaming app to integrate its content to the entertainment company's flagship app Disney+. News of the integration came during Disney's third quarterly earnings report and is part of the company's ongoing focus on streaming entertainment, including an upcoming Aug. 21 release of an ESPN streaming service. 'The company is taking major steps forward in streaming with the upcoming launch of ESPN's direct-to-consumer service, our just-announced plans with the NFL, and our forthcoming integration of Hulu into Disney+, creating a truly differentiated streaming proposition that harnesses the highest-caliber brands and franchises, general entertainment, family programming, news, and industry-leading sports content,' Disney CEO Bob Iger said in the report. While Hulu isn't disappearing as a brand, its set to fold into the existing platform. This quarter, Disney+ and Hulu subscriptions grew to 183 million, up by 2.4 million from the previous quarter. Despite growth in subscriptions, and beating earning projections, the entertainment giant's stock was down 2% at the time of publishing. Closing out a decades-long effort Hulu was initially founded in 2007 as a joint venture between 21st Century Fox (then News Corporation) and NBC Universal, with The Walt Disney Company and others later joining as stakeholders. Disney acquired 21st Century Fox's entertainment assets in 2019, giving the company controlling interest of the streaming platform ahead of of Disney+'s debut. Since, Disney has tried to acquire the remaining 33% of stakes in Hulu owned by Comcast (which bought NBC Universal). In June this year, both companies reached an agreement, with Disney set to pay $439 million to take full control of the platform. A Hulu integration unto the existing app had already been teased back in 2023, when Disney rolled out a beta version featuring Hulu's content inside the Disney+ app. Goodbye'Star+,' hello new homepage Users outside of the US might already be familiar with Hulu's programming available on the Disney+ app, under the tile dubbed 'Star+.' Until last year, Star+ served Latin America with its standalone app and platform featuring shows from FX, ABC, Hulu originals, and more. The standalone app folded into Disney+ last july, integrating as a tile within the app. Starting in the fall, the Star tile will now be replaced in Disney's international markets by Hulu's logo. Additionally, imporvements to the existing app are underway, the company revealed during their earnings call. 'Over the coming months, we will be implementing improvements within the Disney+ app, including exciting new features and a more personalized homepage,' Iger said. 'All of which will culminate with the unified Disney+ and Hulu streaming app experience that will be available to consumers next year.'

The real meaning behind that viral Department of Homeland Security painting
The real meaning behind that viral Department of Homeland Security painting

Fast Company

time2 minutes ago

  • Fast Company

The real meaning behind that viral Department of Homeland Security painting

In recent months, The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has used its social media platforms to promote its vision of an ideal country. In between posts celebrating mass deportations and defending ICE, the department has taken on the role of curator, posting a series of artworks that appear to communicate an idealized, Eurocentric concept of the American dream. The department's artistic choices haven't been subtle, but none can compare to the overt messaging of its most recent art choice. On July 23, DHS posted a painting titled American Progress, alongside the caption, 'A Heritage to be proud of, a Homeland worth Defending.' The 1873 painting by John Gast shows a group of white pioneers traveling west, forcing a group of Indigenous people out of frame. 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And, Sandweiss says, it represents a whitewashing of the past that might signal a desire to exclude non-white Americans in the present. The fraught history of John Gast's 'American Progress' Gast's work on American Progress began in 1872, when he was commissioned to make a work for George Crofutt, an American publisher of several different guides promoting westward expansion. The image shows settlers traveling by stagecoach, conestoga wagon, and railroads, guided by a giant allegorical female figure of America, who holds a schoolbook in one hand and places a telegraph wire in the other. While these figures are glowing in a bright light, the fleeing Indigenous people are shrouded in darkness. 'On the one hand, [Crofutt] needs a set of ideas that his readers will readily respond to and are, in a sense, already familiar with,' Sandweiss says. 'In addition, he's using the picture as a kind of propaganda. 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In contrast, he writes, the lefthand side of the image 'declares darkness, waste and confusion.' The Indigenous people in the image are visually grouped with fleeing wild animals like a herd of bison and a black bear, all shown, per Crofutt, 'as they flee from the presence of the wondrous vision.' 'It doesn't reflect reality in any way' According to Sandweiss, it's no coincidence that American Progress shows trains in conjunction with the displacement of Native peoples. By 1872, it had been three years since the completion of the first transcontinental rail line, and several other lines were already underway. In the coming decades, Indigenous people would be forcibly located away from these routes. advertisement 'Absolutely, when the large reservations were created in the late 1860s, it was in part to move Native peoples away from the prospective railway lines so that they would not pose a threat to either the railroad companies or the settlers that the railroads would bring west,' Sandweiss explains. American Progress, Sandweiss says, is an idealized version of the American settler story. Encoded in the image is the idea that white Europeans were the sole people living in the American West, while, in actuality, the region was primarily settled by people of Spanish origin who arrived from Mexico. 'It doesn't reflect reality in any way,' she says. 'It doesn't reflect the multiple sources from which non-Native people came into the West. It doesn't depict the more complex racial identity of people who came into the West, which, by 1872 is including more free people, is including people coming north from Mexico, and it doesn't convey the role of women and families in the settlement of the Western landscape.' The press office of California Governor Gavin Newsom also reposted the painting with the response, 'This painting is housed at the Autry Museum of the American West in Los Angeles. The museum heavily features Native American history and intentionally embraces a more honest, inclusive understanding of Western history—a concept the Trump administration fails to understand.' This painting is housed at the Autry Museum of the American West in Los Angeles. The museum heavily features Native American history and intentionally embraces a more honest, inclusive understanding of Western history — a concept the Trump administration fails to understand. — Governor Newsom Press Office (@GovPressOffice) July 23, 2025 Whitewashing of the past leads to whitewashing of the present Many American schoolchildren will be familiar with American Progress because, for decades, textbooks have used it as a visual explanation of the Manifest Destiny concept. The image's themes of divine conquering, the spread of technology, the superiority of European settlers, and patriarchal structure capture the complex dynamics at play within this belief system. For the DHS to post this painting through an uncritical lens, Sandweiss says, signals 'a broader ignorance of American history on the part of the current administration'; an ignorance that she sees reflected in the administration's efforts to alter the historical information shared by agencies like the Smithsonian and the National Park Service. 'If you overly simplify the past—if you pretend that the only important people in the story were white men—you not only distort the past and dishonor the many other kinds of people who were part of American society at that moment, you also suggest that there's not a space for different kinds of people in the present,' Sandweiss says. 'Whitewashing the past makes it easier to whitewash the present, and pretend that people who are not like the people we see in this painting have never had a part in the American nation.' The early-rate deadline for Fast Company's Most Innovative Companies Awards is Friday, September 5, at 11:59 p.m. PT. Apply today.

Get Coffee-Shop Quality Espresso Drinks at Home and Save $300 on This Philips Coffee Machine
Get Coffee-Shop Quality Espresso Drinks at Home and Save $300 on This Philips Coffee Machine

CNET

time2 minutes ago

  • CNET

Get Coffee-Shop Quality Espresso Drinks at Home and Save $300 on This Philips Coffee Machine

If you're a coffee person, you know the difference between a mediocre and a great coffee drink. And sure, you can brew a satisfactory cup of joe with any number of good coffee makers. But if you're a coffee connoisseur and you want a little variety in your morning routine, then this deal's for you. Right now Amazon has Philips excellent 3200 Series espresso machine on sale for a hefty 38% off, which translates to $300 in savings. That puts the sticker price at $500, an amount we've seen during Black Friday 2024 and July's Prime Day event. Typically, the espresso machine hovers at around $800 when it isn't on sale, so that should give you an idea of how good a bargain you're getting. Heading to Amazon is certainly the easiest way to get the discount. Even considering the savings, $500 is a lot, so let's dive into what this espresso machine can do. Philips says it can make coffee in five different ways, including regular coffee, espresso, cappuccino, americano and latte macchiato. You may notice that some of those require frothing milk, which the machine can also do. There's a milk frother attachment that doesn't use any tubes or hidden pieces, which makes it easy to clean. The frother attachment is included, so you don't have to shop around for one. Along with the five types of coffee, you also have a hot water option if you want to make tea or some other toasty beverage. There are also two cleaning settings, along with some other options. The device boasts a 12-step ceramic grinder, so you can choose how fine your grind is. The reason it didn't make our list of the best coffee makers is mostly due to price. It has all the chops and features to be included otherwise. CNET can help you find deals. Sign up for our free texts. They're fast, easy, and will let you continue living life while we do the work in finding you deals. We understand, though, if you're looking at the price and thinking it's still not low enough. Along with our coffee maker list linked above, we have an espresso machine list with a less expensive option. Why this deal matters There are a bunch of coffee makers out there, so what makes the Philips model stand out? For starters, its ability to make espresso and regular coffee, along with the other types of drinks, gives you an all-in-one solution you can use for almost anything. Plus, the milk frother attachment is a lot easier to use than some others. Also, Philips includes a two-year warranty, so you'll have plenty of time to break it in without worrying about replacing it. The mixture of versatility and customization, the 12-step ceramic grinder, the ease of the froth attachment, and the deep discount make this an enticing offer, even if it's still a bit on the expensive side. Plus, this is the same low price we saw during Prime Day back in July. We don't anticipate it lasting long at this price point and don't expect to see it dip this low for some months to come.

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