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  • terrell williams

    Terrell Williams and the Accidental Global Revolution Nobody Signed Up For By Our Correspondent in a Café That Still Accepts Cash PARIS—Somewhere between the third espresso and the fourth existential crisis, the bartender leaned in and whispered, “You heard about Terrell Williams?” The name, apparently, has become a kind of international shibboleth: say it in…

  • new covid strain

    A Variant by Any Other Name: The World’s Latest Microscopic Plot Twist By Our Bureau of Recurrent Déjà Vu GENEVA — Just when you thought the planet had finally exhausted its supply of novelty, Virology’s favorite franchise has dropped Season Four, episode “XBB.2.3.1-π” (pronunciation optional, fear mandatory). The World Health Organization, whose travel budget now…

  • jasmine paolini

    Jasmine Paolini, the 5’4″ Italian who punches above her weight class and below the net-cord, is presently the best proof that the universe occasionally enjoys a good underdog story—provided it’s scheduled between a geopolitical meltdown and a climate catastrophe. While diplomats in Brussels bicker over whose turn it is to save the euro and the…

  • porto

    Porto: Europe’s Forgotten Belle Finds New Suitors—Again By our correspondent, still nursing an espresso and a grudge in the Ribeira They arrive in droves now—Singaporean venture scouts, Californian angel investors, Berlin art-school dropouts with a blockchain for bacalhau—descending on Portugal’s second city like bargain hunters who’ve just heard the outlet mall is giving away free…

  • chuba hubbard

    Chuba Hubbard, the Canadian running back whose name sounds like a Bond villain’s accountant, is having a moment. While the NFL’s global marketing department is busy slapping team logos on cricket bats in Mumbai and bao buns in Shanghai, Hubbard quietly reminds the world that the league’s future passport stamps might actually be earned between…

  • amazon prime lawsuit settlement

    Amazon’s $8.5 Million Prime Settlement: The World Watches a Subscription Circus Pack Up Its Tent International Correspondent: Dave’s Locker, Geneva Bureau The news arrived on a Tuesday—because bad news always prefers Tuesdays, when the coffee’s lukewarm and hope has already filed for bankruptcy. Amazon, the digital colossus that once promised to deliver everything from A…

  • kobe bryant

    Kobe Bryant Is Still the World’s Most Overqualified Ghost The helicopter came down on a fog-soft hillside in Calabasas, California, but the impact reverberated from Manila’s midnight basketball courts to Lagos traffic jams where hawkers still sell bootleg Lakers jerseys like Vatican relics. Kobe Bean Bryant—five-time NBA champion, Oscar winner, alleged rapist, youth-academy benefactor, #GirlDad…

  • messi

    Messi: The Last Messiah of a Dying Sport By our man in the cheap seats, Buenos Aires → Doha → Everywhere When Lionel Messi finally hoisted that gold-plated egg-on-a-stick in Lusail, half the planet exhaled while the other half checked how much the moment had inflated their crypto-betting slips. Argentina’s 4-2 penalty farce against France…

  • payton tolle

    Payton Tolle and the Global Butterfly Effect: Why One Wichita State Pitcher Now Owns a Piece of Your Pension Fund By the time most Europeans were stirring their second espresso on Monday, a 21-year-old right-hander in Kansas had already yanked the international capital markets into a mild tizzy. Payton Tolle—surname pronounced, regrettably, like the German…

  • tyrone taylor

    The Ballad of Tyrone Taylor, or How One Man’s Bat Became a Geopolitical Barometer Tyrone Taylor does not negotiate trade deals, broker cease-fires, or lecture the G-20 on supply-chain resilience. He stands in right field for the Milwaukee Brewers, a city most Europeans still confuse with a brand of power tools. Yet, in 2025, Taylor’s…

  • austin weather

    Austin Weather: When a Texan Heatwave Becomes a Global Mood Ring By Dave’s Foreign Correspondent, still sweating in yesterday’s linen It is 104°F (40°C for the metrically civilized) on South Congress and the air smells of brisket, sunscreen, and lightly sautéed ambition. Tourists queue for overpriced breakfast tacos while their phones flash red weather alerts…

  • turkish airlines

    Istanbul—Somewhere between the scent of cardamom and the existential dread of a 23-minute connection, Turkish Airlines has quietly become the geopolitical equivalent of a frequent-flyer program: everyone complains, yet everyone keeps swiping the card. The carrier now flies to more countries than any airline on earth—131 at last count, or roughly every sovereign patch of…