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Fox News - Video

Fox News - Video

2026-07-03 08:00:54 (1 day ago)

Iran is an expert in misinformation: Dakota Meyer

Marine combat veteran Dakota Meyer offers his perspective on the ongoing tensions with Iran. He asserts President Trump is pursuing a deal, not war, noting Iran's desperation and expertise in misinformation, and highlights U.S.

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Fox News - Opinion

Fox News - Opinion

2026-07-03 08:00:51 (1 day ago)

The unwinnable war America's Founding Fathers fought and won changed human history forever

The Declaration of Independence is a revolutionary document that transformed governance from monarchy to democracy and established that all people are created equal.

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Fox News - Top Stories

Fox News - Top Stories

2026-07-03 08:00:50 (1 day ago)

BRET BAIER: This July Fourth, let’s find awe in the places that tell America’s story

Mount Rushmore, Mount Vernon, and national parks take center stage as America marks its 250th anniversary with renewed conservation efforts.

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Al Jazeera - Top Stories

Al Jazeera - Top Stories

2026-07-03 08:00:44 (1 day ago)

Mourners pay respects as Iran’s slain leader Ali Khamenei lies in state

Iran begins seven-day state funeral for late ayatollah as some 100 foreign delegations arrive under a tense ceasefire

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Fox News - Top Stories

Fox News - Top Stories

2026-07-03 08:00:33 (1 day ago)

Republican unveils Declaration of Independence bill ahead of America's 250th birthday

Rep. Matt Van Epps said his bill reaffirming the Declaration of Independence directly responds to socialist candidates gaining ground in primaries.

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Fox News - Top Stories

Fox News - Top Stories

2026-07-03 08:00:28 (1 day ago)

Cities brace for holiday weekend teen takeovers putting bystanders at deadly risk, former prosecutor warns

Police departments are using drones, curfews and social media monitoring to prevent teen takeovers from disrupting the Fourth of July weekend.

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The Guardian - World News

The Guardian - World News

2026-07-03 08:00:28 (1 day ago)

It’s America’s 250th birthday. And Black Americans are sitting out the celebrations | Morgan Jerkins

The 250th anniversary is arriving among Black communities as a whisper instead of a roar

Not soon after Donald Trump’s 2025 inauguration, there emerged a viral illustration of four Black women sitting at the top of a building while watching the world burn at a distance. They are observing with coffee cups in hand. An American flag hangs over the edge. If that exhaustion hadn’t been made clear enough, Black people, particularly across TikTok and Threads, have urged one another to “not give them a reaction”.

The “them” is white people who find Black rage exciting and lucrative for their own personal gain. We’re not allowing our anger to become spectacle. We’re not shouting any more. What is most important is to stay alive, take care of one another, and to allow ourselves to step to the forefront for the rights that they have taken for granted as we’ve risked our lives to protect them. There is an old African American proverb: “If you can’t hear, then you must feel.”

Morgan Jerkins is a senior writer, race and equity, at the Guardian US

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The Guardian - World News

The Guardian - World News

2026-07-03 08:00:28 (1 day ago)

Cocktail of the week: Society Manchester’s Salford fog – recipe | The good mixer

A refreshing Mancunian twist on two classic British gin-based drinks, infused with elderflower liqueur and earl grey

This is a reimagining of two classic British drinks, the English garden and the London fog, but with a Mancunian twist. It brings together gin, earl grey, elderflower and honey in a refreshing, lightly floral cocktail that’s perfectly suited to drinking in the garden on a hot day. We like to champion local producers, so use Salford Distillery’s gin, but any well-balanced, citrus-forward dry gin will work.

Lucy Bryant, Society, Manchester

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The Guardian - World News

The Guardian - World News

2026-07-03 08:00:28 (1 day ago)

‘Suddenly I was a celebrity. I didn’t want to be!’ Sue Johnston on fame, loneliness and her new robot pal

She’s been a soap icon, a Royle and even a zombie pensioner. Now the actor is starring in Ann Droid, Diane Morgan’s madcap comedy about an elderly woman and her cybernetic companion

Sue Johnston is the kind of actor who usually can’t stand seeing herself on screen, but for Ann Droid she made an exception. The new sitcom by Diane Morgan and Sarah Kendall stars the 82-year-old as a recent widow whose son hires a humanoid robot called Linda (played with delightful uncanniness by Morgan herself) to assist her after he moves out. The results are initially farcical: Linda is a dated – and therefore relatively cheap – model who lacks the intelligence of newer variants and attempts to cheer people up by blasting Cotton Eye Joe at them. Yet the pair soon become inseparable. Johnston describes the show as “rich with humour and love”. When she watched it back, she found it so absorbing that “I forgot it was me – I very rarely do that and I just enjoyed it.”

Ann Droid is worth raving about on its own terms – it’s rambunctiously funny and exceptionally poignant – but it is clear Johnston’s enthusiasm stems from somewhere else too. “I’m proud of Diane and I just want it to work for her,” she says with feeling. The pair met on the set of the Sky sitcom Rovers before Morgan made it big with Philomena Cunk and Motherland and kept in touch. “Which you don’t with everyone. We’re both silly about our dogs; we just made a connection.” She was thrilled to reunite. “There’s a lot about Diane that reminds me of Caroline Aherne. They’ve got that northern, straight-face, cut-through humour. And they’re geniuses.”

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The Guardian - World News

The Guardian - World News

2026-07-03 08:00:28 (1 day ago)

‘I saw Herbie Hancock play with D’Angelo, and got my head blown off!’: the festival keeping alive jazz’s golden age

From Miles Davis to Count Basie and Etta James to Prince, Rotterdam’s North Sea jazz festival has hosted the biggest names in music. As the event turns 50, musicians and organisers share their favourite memories from past years – and tell us why jazz isn’t dead

For a weekend in July each year, a vast warehouse complex in the port city of Rotterdam becomes home to the biggest names in jazz. Under the banner of the North Sea jazz festival, the labyrinthine, windowless space has played host to performances from the likes of Miles Davis, free jazz pioneer Ornette Coleman, singer Etta James, saxophonist Wayne Shorter and even Prince.

“We’ve had every major figure in jazz play for us over the past five decades,” senior programme manager Sander Grande says. “It’s the place where all the musicians want to hang and where audiences come to see art that is true and beautiful.”

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RT News - Top Stories

RT News - Top Stories

2026-07-03 08:00:19 (1 day ago)

British MPs demand ban on Russian children’s cartoon

Preview British MPs have called for action against the Russian cartoon Masha and the Bear, claiming it may be used as a tool of “soft power”
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