đ Got lunch plans? We hope they donât get derailed for 40+ years. A plumber recently found a metal lunchbox featuring a cartoon cat while working at a Virginia elementary school. It once belonged to Tracy Drain, who lost it in 1982. The thermos still smells like hot chocolate, apparently, which is far more pleasant than we were expecting.
đ§ On the pod:As the US cracks down on short-term rentals, Airbnb is looking to expand globally.
NEWS FLASH
đ Being chicken is a good thing. Taco Bell has a new menu offering that doesnât quite fit in with its Mexican-inspired dishes: chicken nuggets. The chain launched the new item this week for a limited time, testing its hand in a menu category âwhere chicken nugget loyalty runs deep.â Whether it can win consumers from competitors like McDonaldâs, Wendyâs, and Chick-Fil-A remains to be seen, but a move toward poultry is a smart bet. Taco Bellâs sales at stores open at least a year spiked 5% in the quarter it released its Cantina Chicken Menu, and ~50% of all fast-food restaurants offered chicken tenders as of Q3 2024, up 5.7% from 2019.
đźď¸ New AI time waster: Googleâs Whisk is a new AI experiment from Google Labs for generating images using image prompts. Users can upload or use a text prompt to generate pictures to specify a subject, scene, and style for a new desired image and Whisk will attempt to create it using Googleâs Imagen 3 image generation model. Google admits itâs not for âpixel-perfect editsâ and might not generate exactly what someone wants, but users can iterate on the images with additional image or text prompts. Whisk is currently available to US users only.
đĽ Bluey takes the silver screen: BBC Studios and the Walt Disney Co. are partnering on an animated movie based on the star of âBluey,â the uberpopular kidsâ TV show. The movie will be produced by Australian studio Ludo, which makes the TV series; financed by BBC Studios; and released by Disney, which licenses the series for Disney+ and cable, in 2027. While Disney rarely releases movies it doesnât own, âBlueyâ is likely worth it: The show was streamed for 50B+ minutes by US viewers in 2024, making it the No. 1 streaming show, per Nielsen.
MORE NEWS TO KNOW
A Senate investigation alleges that Amazon manipulated its workplace injury data to appear safer, when in reality its warehouse workers were ~2x as likely to be injured as other companiesâ due to the retailerâs âextremely fast and often dangerous pace.â Amazon has denied the reportâs findings.
Waymo is sending ~25 of its autonomous vehicles to Japan in 2025 to gather mapping and Japanese driving data. A local taxi operator will manually drive the cars at first, before eventually transitioning to hands-free mode with a safety driver at the wheel.
The Federal Trade Commissionannounced a new rule that bans hidden junk fees for live events, hotels, and vacation rentals, and prohibits âbait-and-switch pricingâ targeting consumers.
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Northeastern US residents have been enthralled by an odd mystery: a bunch of drones floating overhead.
Theyâve been asking all the usual questions: What are they doing? To whom do they belong? Are they harmful? Is it aliens?
Hereâs what we know
There are 1m+ legally registered machines in the US, including commercial, hobbyist, and law enforcement drones.
The FBI has received 5k+ reports of drone activity in the northeastern US since Nov. 18, including 3k+ in New Jersey â but not all were drones.
Some reports pertained to manned aircraft, helicopters, and even stars mistaken for drones, per a federal report.
Agencies including the Department of Homeland Security are investigating, but thereâs currently no evidence of foreign surveillance or criminal activity.
Itâs possible the uptick in reports relates to an FAA rule change that allows drones to fly at night.
So, why is everyone freaking out?
Despite dronesâ use in everything from hobbyist videos to pharmacy delivery and âfireworksâ shows, itâs still a relatively new technology.
Vijay Kumar, dean of engineering at the University of Pennsylvania, told CNN that people may have anxiety surrounding drones due to their association with military operations, terrorism, and surveillance.
And where thereâs uncertainty, conspiracy theories and hoaxes follow: in this case, doctored images and talk of foreign attacks, chemtrails, and Project Blue Beam, a â90s theory that the government would fake an alien invasion to distract the public.
In the meantime, New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy has asked residents to âcalm downâ and not attempt to shoot them down â dangerous for myriad reasons â or point lasers at them, as they could blind a pilot in a manned aircraft.
BTW: In 1938, Orson Wellesâ radio broadcast of author H.G. Wellsâ The War of the Worlds â a novel about an alien invasion â was so convincing, it created mass panic.
AI video just went mainstream: OpenAIâs Sora is now availableto (almost) everyone.
In America, bigger is better. Hereâs why every new house in your neighborhood has gotten huge.
NEWSWORTHY NUMBER
The net worth of the median US renter as of 2022, per a report from the Aspen Institute, which is extra depressing when compared to the median US homeownerâs net worth of $400k.
Renters are often locked out of homeownership due to skyrocketing housing prices and high mortgage rates, which in turn prevents them from growing their wealth as they instead line someone elseâs pockets month after month. They are also more likely to have debt, student loans, and less in savings than homeowners.
Is there any good news? Well, rent prices may be dropping in the US, and Katherine Lucas McKay, associate director at the Aspen Instituteâs Financial Security Program, told CNN that renters can still build wealth through investment and retirement accounts.
AROUND THE WEB
đŚ On this day: In 1961, The Tokensâ âThe Lion Sleeps Tonightâ became a No. 1 hit. The song originated in South Africa with Solomon Linda and the Evening Birds, a group of Zulu singers and dancers, but Linda was largely cut out of the millions the song made for US music publishers.
đľ Thatâs cool: Japanese band Electronicos Fantasticos plays music with barcodes â like this.
𧳠Thatâs interesting: The worldâs âMost Traveled Peopleâ is a group of adventurers who want to visit every country on Earth.
đ˛ Chill out: with this relaxing time-lapse of a pine cone becoming a pine tree.
đ Aww: Have you ever seen an eastern quoll? You should.
SHOWER THOUGHT
There needs to be an ad blocker for the postal service.SOURCE
Today’s email was brought to you by Juliet Bennett Rylah and Sara Friedman. Editing by: Ben “Will there be a âBlueyâ popcorn bucket?” Berkley.