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Elon Musk’s SpaceX unveils filing for blockbuster IPO | Elon Musk News

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SpaceX has taken off the wraps off its IPO filing, opening the books of the company that has already revolutionised rocket technology, with even larger ambitions to colonise Mars and build AI data centres in space.

A successful sale could value the company at a record-setting $1.75 trillion, which would put its founder on track to become the first trillionaire in history, validating years of defying accepted logic through the development of rockets that can land and be flown again.

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The listing, unveiled on Wednesday, could set the stage for a number of monumental IPOs in the coming months, among them potentially technology giants OpenAI and Anthropic. The sale would immediately cement SpaceX as one of the world’s most valuable publicly traded companies, the second in Elon Musk’s sprawling business empire to surpass $1 trillion in market value, after Tesla.

SpaceX has grown into the world’s largest space business since its founding in 2002 by launching thousands of Starlink internet satellites.  Most of its $18.67bn in revenue last year came from its network of about 10,000 satellites, which offers broadband internet to consumers, governments and enterprise customers.

Its pioneering use of reusable rockets has transformed the economics of space, forcing competitors like Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin to play catch-up as the race to commercialise space has intensified and private companies compete to slash launch costs, deploy satellite networks and secure government contracts.

While much of SpaceX’s future growth hinges on artificial intelligence-related businesses, its nascent xAI unit still loses money, according to the filing.

The company’s regulatory disclosure comes during a critical week for the rocket maker, which is preparing to launch a test flight of its next-generation Starship rocket.

Musk’s plans for lunar and Mars missions and to expand its Starlink satellite internet business depend on the new rocket. The test launch, originally scheduled for Tuesday, is now expected later this week.

The board has given Musk control over the company, but ties much of his compensation to audacious targets of establishing a permanent human colony on Mars and building space data centres with compute capacity powered by the equivalent of 100 terawatts, or 100,000 one-gigawatt nuclear reactors.

The share sale is expected as early as June 11, with a listing aimed for the next day.

Celebrity persona

Musk’s CEO celebrity persona may matter more to some investors than SpaceX’s underlying business fundamentals, analysts and academics said, because there are no other comparable companies against which to benchmark its valuation.

The company said it was targeting a potential total market of $28.5 trillion across its businesses, with a majority of that possible revenue tied to AI.

The figures, disclosed for the first time to the public in its S-1 regulatory filing, show how SpaceX depends on its Starlink-driven revenue base, but believes its long-term prospects centre around AI and related infrastructure operations that are currently unprofitable.

The $1.75 trillion valuation target, if achieved, would eclipse Saudi Aramco’s 2019 offering, which set a record for the world’s biggest IPO when it debuted on Riyadh’s exchange at a value of $1.7 trillion. SpaceX had planned to try to raise more than $75bn in the offering, the Reuters news agency previously reported.

The scale of the offering has drawn attention to the increasingly interconnected structure of Musk’s business empire, often dubbed the “Muskonomy”, which includes leading electric vehicle company Tesla, as well as his businesses in AI and brain-chip implants.

SpaceX merged with Musk’s xAI in a deal that valued the rocket company at $1 trillion and the developer of the Grok chatbot at $250bn.

Concerns about Musk’s ability to juggle multiple companies with combined market values exceeding trillions could weigh on investor sentiment, analysts said.

SpaceX plans to earmark a significant portion of shares for retail investors.

The company is expected to list on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol ‘SPCX’.

Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America, Citigroup and JP Morgan are the bookrunners.



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Cocaine worth $10M found hidden in Kim Kardashian’s SKIMS shipment in UK


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A truck driver in England was sentenced to more than 13 years in prison after authorities said they found nearly $10 million worth of cocaine hidden inside a shipment of Kim Kardashian’s SKIMS clothing brand.

Investigators said the SKIMS shipment itself was legitimate and that neither the exporter nor importer was accused of wrongdoing. Representatives for SKIMS and Kardashian did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s requests for comment.

Jakub Jan Konkel, 40, was sentenced Monday to 13 years and six months in prison following an investigation by the United Kingdom’s National Crime Agency, according to the agency.

Border Force officers stopped Konkel on Sept. 5 at the Port of Harwich in Essex after he arrived on a ferry from the Hook of Holland in the Netherlands.

ALABAMA OFFICER’S MINOR TRAFFIC STOP LEADS TO DISCOVERY OF COCAINE BEING TRAFFICKED BY ILLEGAL ALIENS

Mugshot of Jakub Jan Konkel

Jakub Jan Konkel pleaded guilty to smuggling cocaine hidden inside a shipment of SKIMS clothing, authorities said. (National Crime Agency)

Authorities said the truck was carrying 28 pallets of SKIMS clothing when officers discovered a concealed compartment built into the rear trailer doors. Investigators said the vehicle had been specially modified to hide the drugs inside the trailer.

Inside the hidden compartment were 90 kilogram-sized packages of cocaine with an estimated street value of about $9.6 million, authorities said.

Authorities said trafficking groups often hide narcotics inside legitimate commercial shipments to avoid detection.

FORMER CBP OFFICER SENTENCED TO 15 YEARS IN PRISON FOR ROLE IN DRUG TRAFFICKING SCHEME AT SOUTHERN BORDER

Kim Kardashian wearing a dress with fur-trimmed neckline in New York City

A truck driver was busted and sentenced in England for smuggling cocaine hidden inside a shipment of Kim Kardashian’s SKIMS clothing brand. (XNY/Star Max/GC Images)

Organized crime groups use corrupt drivers like Konkel to move Class A drugs often hidden on entirely legitimate loads such as this,” NCA Operations Manager Paul Orchard said.

Investigators also said Konkel’s vehicle records showed an unexplained 16-minute stop before reaching the port, where authorities allege the drugs were loaded into the truck, with only Konkel and the smuggling group aware of the operation.

Konkel initially denied knowing about the cocaine, but later pleaded guilty to drug smuggling, admitting he agreed to transport the drugs in exchange for €4,500, or roughly $5,200, according to the NCA.

Orchard said investigators seized “a significant amount of cocaine” and disrupted the criminal group behind the smuggling attempt.

SKIMS-branded clothing placed in evidence bag

SKIMS clothing is shown inside an evidence bag after U.K. authorities said they uncovered nearly $10 million worth of cocaine hidden in a truck shipment. (National Crime Agency)

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Border Force Assistant Director Jason Thorn said the seizure deprived criminal networks of millions in profits.

“These drugs destroy lives and inflict misery on our communities,” Thorn said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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Trump may see himself in Ahmadinejad but having him lead Iran was a perplexing idea | Iran

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For all their outward differences, there always seemed to be things that linked Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Donald Trump.

A visit to the then Iranian president’s rather humble Tehran neighbourhood nearly 20 years ago highlighted cost of living problems that prefigured those facing Trump now.

Amid soaring prices, the grocer at the end of Ahmadinejad’s street in the Narmak district was no longer stocking tomatoes, saying customers could not afford them and voicing a wish to close down. Shoppers at a nearby fruit and vegetable market complained at the cost of potatoes, onions and fish.

It seemed to represent a failure on the kitchen table issues that the populist leader had pledged to tackle. Trump critics will surely hear an echo.

Two decades later, that reporting trip has uncanny resonance amid reports that Israeli strikes on a security post were designed to free Ahmadinejad from house arrest and lead to his installation as Iran’s new leader.

The New York Times, citing official sources, reported that the US and Israel had identified the anti-western and anti-Zionist former president as the person they wanted to lead Iran after the regime’s presumed collapse in their face of their military onslaught.

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad delivers a speech in Tehran in 2012 in which he said Iran had broken the ‘idol’ of the Holocaust. Photograph: Atta Kenare/AFP/Getty Images

The plan went awry almost immediately. The strikes, on the first day of the war on 28 February, killed the guards and injured Ahmadinejad, who was initially reported by Iranian media to have died. The former president, it is said, went to ground afterwards, having become “disillusioned” with the US-Israeli scheme. His whereabouts is not known.

There are several other mysteries as to how such a divisive figure became the poster boy for regime change in what has long been the west’s leading adversary in the Middle East.

On one level, a mutual attraction between Trump and Ahmadinejad is not so far-fetched. The pair share a populist, headline-grabbing communication style; similarities in their autocratic governing style have also been noted.

Cynics may add that the two have a common taste for overturning democratic election results. Compare Ahmadinejad’s hugely controversial 2009 election win – widely assumed to have been stolen – with Trump’s efforts to overturn Joe Biden’s victory in 2020.

But the real headspinner is Israel’s apparent choice of Ahmadinejad as a man it could do business with.

Styling himself as an Islamist populist, the former provincial mayor was arguably the key figure who set Iran and Israel on a long path to war after he was elected in 2005. Within weeks of taking office, he set the tone at a “World Without Zionism” conference in Tehran with remarks that were roughly translated as calling for Israel to be “wiped off the map”.

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad calls for a world without Zionism in a speech in 2005. Photograph: Behrouz Mehri/AFP/Getty Images

Ahmadinejad revelled in the backlash and his baiting of Israel became relentless. His government organised exhibitions and conferences satirising and challenging the veracity of the Holocaust. Amid it all, Ahmadinejad loudly championed the resumption of Iran’s nuclear programme, which had been stalled to allow negotiations and to build trust with the west.

It was a recipe for fear, hostility and mounting tensions – a toxic mix that has led to open warfare. And the man chosen to clear the air is the same one who did so much to pollute the atmosphere in the first place. How did it happen?

Washington policy insiders point to “a transformation” Ahmadinejad underwent after leaving office in 2013. He became increasingly disenchanted with the Iranian regime and fell out with the supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, his one-time mentor who was killed on the opening day of the war.

In a measure of his alienation from the regime, he was rejected three times by a candidate vetting body when he tried to regain the presidency in 2017, 2021 and 2024.

A former White House adviser on Iran said: “He is a true populist and even when he was president, he would be focused much more on the nationalistic sides of Iran, the history and the Persian heritage stuff that the Islamic republic had mostly been dismissing. He was pretty public about his dissatisfaction with the trajectory of the Islamic republic and developed this really brilliant social media campaign.”

Regime-imposed restrictions on Ahmadinejad’s movements – which were not widely known about – may have been triggered by contacts with Israel, which some speculate could have occurred when he travelled to Hungary in 2024 and 2025 to speak at a university associated with the far-right government of Viktor Orbán.

“My understanding is that he showed some level of recognition that his antics [on Israel] were not helpful, and that he was willing to do things differently,” the former US official said.

It is not clear how Ahmadinejad would have taken over after the regime’s expected collapse – and whether he would have been accepted by a public that protested against him after the disputed 2009 election.

Alex Vatanka, head of the Iran programme at the Washington-based Middle East Institute, said: “If this was a genuine effort to go regime change, in many ways it is not a bad idea. Ahmadinejad certainly did start speaking as a very different man than he was first in 2005 when he became associated with his Holocaust denial rhetoric. [But] I do question whether he had the level of popularity to pull it off.”

More intriguing, said Vatanka, was why Ahmadinejad’s role as an agent of change was emerging now when hopes of toppling the regime appeared all but lost.

He added: “My first question is who leaked it and why? Are they trying to make the regime panic about the level of infiltration. Is this going to create a sense of anxiety and paranoia inside the regime in transition?

“This is a regime that has been badly infiltrated across the board for years. It was focused in the past on nuclear and military officials. Now a relative political heavyweight has been implicated. If you can tap into Ahmadinejad, who else can you tap into?”



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Ella Langley gives fans behind-the-scenes look at her ACM Awards night


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Ella Langley gave her fans an inside look at her time at the Academy of Country Music Awards.

In an Instagram reel shared on Wednesday, the 27-year-old country music superstar let fans in on how she spent her day at the ACM Awards, including clips of her arriving to the venue, getting her hair and makeup done and getting carried out to the car when the night was over.

“Welcome to today,” she says at the start of the video. She can be heard telling the camera later in the video that “this job is not something that you can kind of half a–. You just have to full force. Don’t be afraid of embarrassing yourself.”

The video also showed her entourage’s reaction to her award win and watching her accept the award on a TV backstage. While celebrating, her friends can be heard yelling at the TV for her to cry and “get vulnerable.”

Ella Langley walking backstage at the ACM Awards in Las Vegas, Nevada in May 2026.

Langley posted a behind-the-scenes video of her preparing for the ACM Awards. (Ella Langley Instagram)

COUNTRY MUSIC STAR ELLA LANGLEY JOINS SYDNEY SWEENEY AS AMERICAN EAGLE’S NEW ‘DENIM DARLING’

“Y’all I’ve never cried when I won an award,” she told the camera, while getting ready. “For all of you who get upset when I don’t cry, here’s your chance!”

Fans got a glimpse of Langley goofing off in the makeup chair after finding out her song, “Choosin’ Texas,” is “the perfect beats per minute for CPR,” singing the song as she pretended to give someone CPR.

Ella Langley getting her hair done prior to the ACM Awards in Las Vegas, Nevada in May 2026.

Langley shared video of her goofing off as she got her hair and makeup done. (Ella Langley Instagram)

“God I love you so much, your personality is everything 😍🙌,” one fan wrote in the comments section. Another added, “This is why I love you girl, you’re as real as they come.”

“As a nurse, I will definitely be singing Choosin’ Texas next time I have to do CPR 🤠,” a third fan wrote.

Ella Langley with curlers in her hair at the ACM Awards in Las Vegas, Nevada in May 2026.

Langley pretended to do CPR after finding out her song, “Choosin’ Texas” is the perfect beats per minute to match the rhythm of CPR. (Ella Langley Instagram)

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Langley took home seven ACM Awards on Sunday, breaking the previous record of most awards won in a single year, which was set by Garth Brooks, Faith Hill and Chris Stapleton, who each took home six awards in one night at the show in 1991, 1999 and 2016.

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The singer won every award she was nominated for, including female artist of the year, song of the year, single of the year, artist-songwriter of the year, visual media of the year, for which she took home two awards, and music event of the year.

Ella Langley being carried outside the ACM Awards in Las Vegas, Nevada in May 2026.

Langley was carried out of the venue at the end of the night. (Ella Langley Instagram)

She first gained attention when her song, “If You Have To” went viral on TikTok, which led to her getting signed with Columbia Records/Sony Music Nashville. She later gained further mainstream success when her song, “You Look Like You Love Me” from her 2024 debut album, “Hungover,” went viral on TikTok.

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“Everyone told me that song was not going to work. They were all like, ‘What?’” she said on an episode of “This Past Weekend with Theo Von” in April about the hit 2024 song. “After we cut it, [the label] was like, ‘We really think you need to go back in and sing these verses.’ I was like, ‘I’m not singing it.’ And they were like, ‘You need to sing it.’”

Ella Langley in a white dress inside the ACM Awards in Las Vegas, Nevada in May 2026.

Langley shared she had to fight the record label to record her hit song, “You Look Like You Love Me.” (Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for ACM)

She went on to say that she “fought ’em really hard on it” and they told her it would “be the worst-performing song on the record.” It went on to be her first song to chart on the Billboard Hot 100 and won many awards at the CMA and ACM Awards.

Her song, “Choosin’ Texas” gained her even more mainstream popularity, spending 10 weeks at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 list, making her the first female country singer to top the Hot 100, Hot Country Songs, and Country Airplay charts at the same time.

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Burnham to back Shabana Mahmood’s immigration changes, allies say | Andy Burnham

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Andy Burnham is backing Shabana Mahmood’s controversial changes to the immigration system, his allies have said, in a blow to those in Labour who hope to soften them.

The Greater Manchester mayor is understood to be keen to reframe the changes but supportive of the home secretary’s attempts to limit legal and illegal migration, which have been criticised by some senior Labour MPs as un-British and mimicking Trump.

Burnham faces a tough fight to return to Westminster against Reform UK, which has already called him “open-borders Andy”. But those close to his campaign say he will not seek to dilute the government’s curbs on migration, which include ending the right to permanent refugee status.

“For Andy, migration is a moral issue as much as anything, showing people who’ve lost faith in politics that we do have control and we can do good,” one source said.

“We need to tell a positive story about the contribution of migration to our country, but we cannot do that unless people trust that the people they vote for have control over our borders.”

Spokespeople for Burnham and Mahmood declined to comment.

Burnham was confirmed as Labour’s candidate for the Makerfield byelection earlier this week, and is widely expected to seek to run for the party leadership if he wins the seat, either by challenging Keir Starmer or persuading him to step down.

But Labour MPs who have canvassed in the constituency say it will be a very difficult fight in a seat where Reform’s support surged at the local elections.

“Andy is fighting the most important byelection in half a century in the Labour-held seat with the largest Reform vote in the country,” a source close to the campaign said.

“Immigration is the second most important issue there. He must show decisive leadership on this and reframe but back the reforms to restore control over our borders and create a firm but fair migration system.”

A Reform sign in the window of a house in Ashton-in-Makerfield. Photograph: Temilade Adelaja/Reuters

The Conservatives announced on Wednesday that they would also stand a candidate, Michael Winstanley, despite calls from some prominent Tories to give Reform a free run at the seat in an attempt to defeat Burnham.

With the local campaign barely under way, Burnham’s policy positions are already being picked over by supporters and opponents for signs of what he might do in government.

He backed away from his previous support for the idea of rejoining the EU earlier this week, saying it was not something he wanted to see in the immediate future.

Many in Labour are now pushing him to make his stance on migration clear, given the scale of the changes that Mahmood is pushing through.

She set out a major package of changes earlier this year that included scrapping permanent refugee status and removing government support from asylum seekers who are deemed not to need it or who break the law. Anyone who has been granted asylum but whose country is then deemed to be safe will be asked to leave.

She also promised to double the length of time it takes for some people to achieve settled status in the UK from five years to 10, a measure which officials say will apply to many already in the country. That is due to come in later this year once the government has completed a consultation on which groups should be exempted from the longer timetable.

Mahmood told the Guardian earlier this year that Labour MPs should back her or risk a government led by Nigel Farage deporting refugees “to certain death”.

Despite her pleas, however, many including several key Burnham allies – greeted her proposals with outrage.

Sarah Owen, a leader of the Tribune group of centre-left Labour MPs, said at the time that the idea of deporting children mimicked Trump’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention of minors in the US.

Angela Rayner, the former deputy prime minister, has called the retrospective changes to indefinite leave to remain un-British.

Burnham’s closest allies in the party seem broadly comfortable with his position. In an email to MPs on Wednesday, his team announced that two prominent MPs from the soft left – his close friend Anneliese Midgley and the former transport secretary Louise Haigh, another leading member of Tribune – would run the campaign in Makerfield.

Despite the criticism from prominent MPs, Labour members, who will vote in any future leadership election, are more divided on the issue.

Polling from YouGov published on Wednesday suggested that more than half of party members say they want the same or more restrictive immigration policies. Just 26% said they wanted a more liberal approach, 44% backed Mahmood’s changes and 18% said they would prefer an even tougher approach.

The poll shows roughly half of Labour members believe the party faces a greater risk of losing votes to Reform. Just 15% think vote losses to the Greens are the bigger issue, and 27% said both pose an equal threat.

Burnham has previously said he backed changes to the immigration system and especially efforts to reduce the use of asylum hotels.

In an interview with the Guardian’s Politics Weekly podcast last year, he said: “Immigration control has weakened as a result of Brexit. We’ve replaced one form of immigration with a very different form of immigration that is more long-term.”

He has expressed reservations, however, about the idea of reassessing asylum seekers’ status if their home countries become safer for return.

Speaking on the Today programme last year, he said Mahmood was “right to grasp this nettle and have root and branch reform of the system. I agree with that.

“I do have a concern about leaving people without the ability to settle, one of the concerns being if there is a need to constantly check up on the status of countries where people have come from, that might limit the ability of the Home Office to deal with the backlog.”



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‘Dutton Ranch’ star Cole Hauser says rattlesnakes once shut down Texas filming


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Filming in the rugged Texas terrain can have its flaws, at least according to “Dutton Ranch” star Cole Hauser.

During a recent appearance on “The Kelly Clarkson Show,” the 51-year-old actor — who was joined by co-star Kelly Reilly — opened up about the common safety concern that once shut down production early.

Eight months, 3,400 rattlesnakes in fact,” Hauser told Clarkson, who brought up the startling rattlesnake population in Fort Worth, Texas.

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Cole Hauser standing at Paramount Network's Yellowstone season 5B premiere in New York City

Cole Hauser said the “Dutton Ranch” cast and crew have encountered 3400 rattlesnakes within eight months.  (Noam Galai/Getty Images for Paramount)

Weren’t you filming down somewhere I know there was like a [rattlesnake] den,” Reilly asked Hauser.

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“That particular location we were at, we actually were going to go from there at night and got turned away. Christina [director/cinematographer] found like, I don’t know, 40 or 50 rattlesnakes.”

Kelly Reilly as Beth Dutton and Cole Hauser as Rip Wheeler standing in Dutton Ranch

Kelly Reilly portrays Beth Dutton and Cole Hauser plays Rip Wheeler in episode 8 of season 1 of “Dutton Ranch.” (Emerson Miller/Paramount+)

This isn’t the first time a cast member from Taylor Sheridan’s productions has dealt with harsh filming conditions.

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During an appearance on the LA Times podcast, “In Conversation: The Madison,” Michelle Pfeiffer — who stars as Stacy Clyburn in Sheridan’s latest Paramount+ TV show — opened up about working around the brutal filming conditions in Montana and Texas.

“You may as well be in a tent because, you know, there is no bathroom,” Pfeiffer said of filming scenes in the open terrain. “Even the outhouse is not real. So there’s no AC, there’s no plumbing, there isn’t anything. But it is breakthtakingly glorious.”

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“It took a while [to get used to] because they built that cabin. It was all a little bit rushed for everyone and so there weren’t certain accommodations set up,” she later said. “We didn’t really have trailers there because they were shooting 360 [degrees]. So, they couldn’t have a bunch of trailers around.”

Michelle Pfeiffer as Stacy Clyburn standing on a hillside overlooking a valley in The Madison series

Michelle Pfeiffer portrays Stacy Clyburn in episode 5 of season 1 of the Paramount+ series “The Madison.” (Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images)

“There was really no place for us to sit,” she continued. “There was no bathroom nearby. There was no food. And in the winter, it was cold. It was like, ‘Could we have a heater?’ And in the summer, it was like, ‘Could I get an umbrella because the sun’s really intense?’ It took us about halfway through to figure all of that out.”



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UK radio station apologises for accidentally announcing death of King Charles | Radio

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A radio station has apologised for “any distress caused” after accidentally announcing that King Charles had died.

The erroneous announcement was made on Tuesday afternoon due to a computer error at Radio Caroline’s main studio in Essex.

Station manager Peter Moore wrote on Facebook: “Due to a computer error at our main studio, the Death of a Monarch procedure, which all UK stations hold in readiness while hoping not to require, was accidentally activated on Tuesday afternoon (19 May), mistakenly announcing that HM the King had passed away.

“Radio Caroline then fell silent as would be required, which alerted us to restore programming and issue an on-air apology.

Radio Caroline’s station manager Peter Moore apologised for any distress caused. Photograph: David Sillitoe/The Guardian

“Caroline has been pleased to broadcast Her Majesty the Queen’s, and now the king’s, Christmas message and we hope to do so for many years to come.

“We apologise to HM the king and to our listeners for any distress caused.”

The post did not say how long it was before the mistake was discovered but on Wednesday afternoon, playback for Tuesday’s broadcast between 1.58pm and 5pm was unavailable on the station’s website.

The incident came as the king and queen were in Northern Ireland, where they joined a folk group for a performance.

Charles and Camilla also watched dancers and sipped Irish whiskey in Belfast’s Titanic Quarter on the first day of their trip.

Established in 1964, Radio Caroline is a former pirate radio station that operated from ships off the English coast.

After legislation in 1967 forced many pirate broadcasters to close, it continued intermittently before ending offshore broadcasts in 1990.

Caroline and other similar pirate stations inspired the 2009 comedy film The Boat that Rocked starring Bill Nighy and Philip Seymour Hoffman about a group of eccentric DJs living and working together at sea.

On Tuesday, the BBC apologised after a scheduling error meant that listeners to Elaine Paige’s show heard a repeat of the previous week’s programme.

The singer and actor hosts a show on Radio 2 every week called Elaine Paige On Sunday.

An error meant listeners heard the wrong second hour of her show last Sunday.

A BBC spokesperson said: “Unfortunately, due to a scheduling error, the incorrect second hour of the show was broadcast yesterday.

“We apologise to listeners and are currently looking into how this occurred.

“The correct programme is now available on BBC Sounds.”



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New poll finds 60% oppose Iran war as Trump economic pessimism deepens



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Voters are increasingly pessimistic about the economy and President Trump’s handling of key issues, while a majority opposes continued U.S. military involvement in Iran even as most believe the U.S. is winning the war. That’s according to a new Fox News national survey.

Affordability continues to dominate the political landscape.

Fifty-eight percent flag the cost of living as their top economic worry, up from 50% in February. This eclipses other issues, such as government spending (16%), jobs (8%) and tariffs (8%).

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More than three-quarters also say the economy is in bad shape (77%), worse than last month (73%) and a year ago (71%). Only 23% rate it positively, the lowest in more than a year. 

The pessimism is personal too. A slim majority of voters (51%) say their family’s finances are worse now than two years ago. Before the 2022 midterm elections, 44% said the same. 

FOX NEWS POLL: 56% DOUBT WHITE HOUSE’S COMPETENCE AT MANAGING GOVERNMENT

All that helps explain the deterioration in Trump’s ratings on the economy.  A year ago, 56% of voters disapproved and last month it was 66%; now, it’s 71%.  The increase since April comes from a 7-point rise in disapproval among Republicans. 

Notably, approval of Trump on the economy among non-MAGA Republicans (36%) is more in line with independents (18%) than with MAGA Republicans (74%).  The president’s overall approval on handling the economy stands at just 29%, down from 34% in April. 

Trump gets his lowest ratings on inflation, where only 24% approve — down from 35% in January. Inflation marks a rare issue where a slim majority of Republicans (51%) disapprove of Trump. It reaches 85% among independents and 96% among Democrats.

His job numbers are also net negative on foreign policy (38-62%). Until this month, border security was the one issue where Trump received a positive rating. Now voters are split (49-51%) on his border security performance, pushing his ratings underwater for the first time this term. That shift comes even as 45% of voters say border security is better today than two years ago, while 29% say it’s worse.

Approval of Trump’s overall job performance is 39%, down 3 points since last month and 10 points since his second term started — and only 1 point above his lowest in October 2017.  A record 61% disapprove of the job he’s doing, including 48% who strongly disapprove. 

Since April, approval has declined among some of his key constituencies, such as rural Whites (-6 points), White men without a degree (-5), and Republicans (-3). 

Trump approval is at all-time lows among Republicans (80%), non-MAGA Republicans (54%), Whites (43%) and rural voters (43%).

“Despite consistently strong GOP support, the president’s numbers are leaking a bit,” says Republican pollster Daron Shaw, who conducts the Fox News Poll with Democrat Chris Anderson. “Make no mistake; it’s all about affordability. Independents jumped ship in 2025, and now non-MAGA Republicans and other core constituencies are wavering.”

Plus, in the long run, more voters think Trump’s policies will hurt the country (57%) than help it (34%). The share saying “hurt” is up 6 points since last April. Fully 88% of MAGA Republicans say his policies will help, while only 43% of non-MAGA Republicans agree.

Meanwhile, gas prices are squeezing voter budgets: 86% call rising prices a problem, including 51% who label them a “major” problem. Concern is nearly universal for the broader economy, where 96% see gas prices as a problem and 75% call it “major.”

When assigning blame for gas prices, voters aimed heavily at domestic factors, with about 8 in 10 pointing to Trump’s policies, domestic oil companies, and government regulations. However, they overwhelmingly view the Iran war as the primary driver, with 91% saying it is responsible.

Iran

Two-thirds think the U.S. is winning the war in Iran, yet opposition to U.S. military action increased to 60%, up from 55% last month. 

Half think the war will last a year (18%) or more (33%), unchanged since March, while 6 in 10 favor a limited timeframe for U.S. involvement in Iran, including 3 in 10 war supporters and 4 in 10 Republicans. 

Almost all Republicans (89%) and two-thirds of independents believe the U.S. is winning the war, while more than half of Democrats say Iran is winning (56%). Generationally, voters under age 30 are the most likely to believe the U.S. is winning (79%), yet they are also some of the most opposed to the war (67%).

Among voters who have served in the military, 55% support the U.S. action against Iran and 72% believe the U.S. is winning the war.

Last summer, voter concern about Iran getting a nuclear bomb was at a record high 78%.  Today, it’s at a record low 56%, down from 66% in March.  Concern since March is down among Democrats (-13 points), independents (-11), and Republicans (-6).

Poll-pourri

While 45% approve of Trump’s handling of the U.S.-China summit, a 54% majority disapproves.

That matches views of the negotiation’s outcome: 52% believe Chinese President Xi Jinping got more of what he wanted compared to 46% for Trump.  More than a quarter of Republicans (27%) join majorities of Democrats (75%) and independents (56%) in thinking Xi won the summit, as do nearly a quarter of those who otherwise approve of Trump’s handling of the trip (24%). 

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Conducted May 15-18, 2026, under the direction of Beacon Research (D) and Shaw & Company Research (R), this Fox News survey includes interviews with a sample of 1,002 registered voters randomly selected from a national voter file. Respondents spoke with live interviewers on landlines (109) and cellphones (635) or completed the survey online after receiving a text (258). Results based on the full sample have a margin of sampling error of ±3 percentage points. Sampling error for results among subgroups is higher. In addition to sampling error, question wording and order can influence results. Weights are generally applied to age, race, education, and area variables to ensure the demographics are representative of the registered voter population. Sources for developing weight targets include the most recent American Community Survey, Fox News Voter Analysis, and voter file data.

Fox News’ Victoria Balara contributed to this report.



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US lawyers say man on death row could be executed with expired lethal drugs | Death Penalty News

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Lawyers for a Tennessee death row inmate say they are concerned the state may be planning to use expired lethal injection drugs at his execution on Thursday, amid growing concern across the country as states work to keep most information about their drugs secret.

Tony Carruthers’s lawyers twice asked the Tennessee Department of Correction (TDOC) last month whether it had secured the appropriate drugs for his execution date and to ensure the drugs had not expired.

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Assistant Attorney General John W Ayers’s response did not directly answer, but said the department will comply with its lethal injection protocol, which includes regular inventory of the drugs to monitor expiration dates.

Carruthers, 57, was sentenced to death after being found guilty of the 1994 kidnappings and murders of Marcellos Anderson, his mother Delois Anderson and Frederick Tucker.

The Tennessee Department of Correction declined to answer on Wednesday when asked by The Associated Press news agency whether the drugs they plan to use to kill Carruthers are expired. Governor Bill Lee’s office did not immediately respond to a similar inquiry.

Federal Public Defender Amy Harwell said in an email that expiration dates reflect when a drug can no longer be safely relied upon to obtain the desired result.

“In the execution context, this may mean a slow, lingering death without a reliable loss of consciousness, as the body painfully and fitfully shuts down,” Harwell wrote.

A mugshot of Tony Carruthers
This Tennessee Department of Correction photo shows inmate Tony Carruthers [File: Tennessee Department of Correction via AP Photo]

Public opposition to executions has made it difficult for prisons to obtain execution drugs, among the lingering issues for those who use lethal injection. Some states have been forced to speed up executions or stop them entirely due to expiration dates on drugs.

In South Carolina, executions were on hold for 12 years while the state struggled to obtain drugs. They were able to get them only after the state passed a shield law that kept the supplier’s identity secret.

Tennessee has argued in court that its shield extends to revealing expiration dates. Just before the December execution of Harold Nichols, Tennessee Deputy Attorney General Cody Brandon offered instead to provide a declaration “attesting that the chemicals to be used in Mr Nichols’ execution will not expire before his execution and have not expired”, according to a transcript of the proceedings.

“The fact that TDOC was willing to provide such assurances to Mr Nichols, but not Mr Carruthers, raises serious concerns that TDOC is, in fact, intending to use expired drugs,” Harwell wrote in a May 18 follow-up to Ayers’s letter.

Arkansas and Idaho have faced challenges

In 2017, Arkansas’s then-Governor Asa Hutchinson issued death warrants for eight prisoners on the state’s death row in an effort to beat the clock on a batch of lethal injection drugs that were set to expire. The state executed four of the men, but four others were granted stays.

Arkansas has not had any executions since then, in part because of the difficulty in obtaining drugs.

A group of Texas inmates in 2023 unsuccessfully tried to stop the state from using drugs they alleged were expired and unsafe. Prison officials denied their claims and said the state’s drug supply was safe.

Lawyers for Idaho’s death row inmates raised similar concerns in 2024, when the state planned to take a second try at executing Thomas Creech after the first attempt was botched.

The Federal Defender Services of Idaho told a federal judge that prison officials apparently failed to even check the expiration date of the execution drugs before obtaining a death warrant for Creech in October 2024. Nine days later, the drugs were returned to the supplier because they were expired, according to court documents. A new Idaho law has changed the state’s primary execution method to firing squad in part because of the difficulty of getting lethal injection drugs.

Tennessee’s problems with execution drugs

Tennessee has a history of problems with its execution drugs. In 2022, Oscar Smith came within minutes of being executed before Tennessee Governor Bill Lee issued a surprise reprieve that revealed the state’s lethal injection drugs were not being properly tested for purity and potency. Executions were on hold for two years to allow for an independent investigation into the problems.

The state attorney general’s office was also forced to concede in court that two of the people most responsible for overseeing Tennessee’s lethal injection drugs at the time “incorrectly testified” under oath that officials were testing the chemicals as required.

Tennessee released a new lethal injection process in December 2024 and restarted executions in 2025. Several death row inmates have sued over the new protocols, arguing that the Correction Department did not follow the recommendations from the investigation.

Meanwhile, the new process has not been completely smooth. When Byron Black was executed by lethal injection in August, he said he was “ hurting so bad”. Prison officials have offered no explanation for what might have caused the pain.



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3 in 10 voters believe Trump White House assassination attempt was staged



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Three in 10 voters believe the recent assassination attempt against President Donald Trump at the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner was staged, according to a Fox News national survey. 

Thirty percent say the shooting was fabricated, including 13% of voters who think it was “definitely” staged. That said, a narrow 52% majority believes the attack was real, with nearly one-third saying it “definitely” happened (31%). 

One in five is unsure whether it was real or fake (18%). 

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The alleged gunman behind the April 25 attack, Cole Tomas Allen, has pleaded not guilty to the four felony charges filed against him by the Justice Department. The incident marked the third attempt on Trump’s life, following two separate assassination attempts in 2024.

Public attitudes surrounding the attack suggest the erosion of a shared reality may have reached a critical tipping point.  Most notably, the partisan divide on the attack’s authenticity is stark.  The survey finds almost half of Democrats (49%) and voters who backed Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris in 2024 (48%) believe the shooting was staged, while just 10% of Republicans say the same.

Meanwhile, 79% of Republicans believe the event was real, as do 77% of 2024 Trump voters.  That number climbs to 87% among Republicans who identify as MAGA supporters.  By comparison, just 31% of Democrats agree the attack was real.

Views among independents are mixed: 41% say it was real and 34% believe it was staged.

Uncertainty about whether the incident was real or not is highest among independents, with one quarter unsure (25%), followed by 2 in 10 Democrats (21%), and 1 in 10 Republicans (11%).

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Republicans under age 45 are more than five times as likely as older Republicans to think the shooting was staged (22% vs. 4%). 

Republican pollster Daron Shaw, who conducts Fox News polls with Democrat Chris Anderson, stresses that the assassination attempt was undoubtedly real, warning that a growing denial of facts threatens the political process.

“When partisan polarization and political cynicism prevent us from agreeing on a common and obvious set of facts, it undercuts our ability to diagnose problems and develop policy solutions,” Shaw says. “This is especially troubling given that younger voters are among the most cynical about our politics and institutions.”

“These findings show what happens when public skepticism becomes embedded in the political culture,” adds Anderson. “When people are told that every major event could be manipulated or manufactured, disbelief itself becomes the default reaction.”

Voters under age 35 are nearly twice as likely as those ages 65 and over to think the shooting was fabricated (38% vs. 20%), as seniors are among those most likely to say it was real (65%).

There’s also a gender gap, as more women (35%) than men (25%) consider it staged. 

More than 6 in 10 White evangelical Christians believe the shooting happened, while 2 in 10 don’t.

Conducted May 15-18, 2026, under the direction of Beacon Research (D) and Shaw & Company Research (R), this Fox News survey includes interviews with a sample of 1,002 registered voters randomly selected from a national voter file. Respondents spoke with live interviewers on landlines (109) and cellphones (635) or completed the survey online after receiving a text (258). Results based on the full sample have a margin of sampling error of ±3 percentage points. Sampling error for results among subgroups is higher. In addition to sampling error, question wording and order can influence results. Weights are generally applied to age, race, education, and area variables to ensure the demographics are representative of the registered voter population. Sources for developing weight targets include the most recent American Community Survey, Fox News Voter Analysis, and voter file data.

Fox News’ Victoria Balara contributed to this report.



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