When Inclusion Trips Over Its Own Paperwork: Long Beach Pride Festival’s Last‑Minute Shutdown
Long Beach Pride Festival was canceled 30 minutes before opening, leaving vendors and fans in the lurch as missing permits derailed the event. Meanwhile, the city-funded parade marches on.
OpenAI’s Privacy Policy Pulls the ‘Subscribe and Spill’ Move: Your Data Is Now a Billboard
OpenAI has updated its privacy policy, letting marketing partners access your data—just not your private chats. But opting out requires a treasure map.
Your Amazon Order Has Been Recalled’: When Recall Panic Is a Scam Boutique
Scammers have found a new battleground for consumer panic: your phone. Fake Amazon recall texts are circulating, aiming to steal your credentials while Amazon calmly assures us they’d never text recalls.
Dust Permit or Dust Storm: Project Blue’s Subcontractor Faces Dusty Violations
A Project Blue subcontractor’s dust issues spark a bureaucratic boondoggle in Pima County.
EPA’s ‘Forever Chemicals’ Softening Is a Poisoned Gift to Communities That Already Breathed Too Easy
The EPA’s plan to roll back Biden’s PFAS water limits is a wet blanket on festive clean water promises.
The Wrong Culprit: MAGA Crystal Ball Fumble
My MAGA pals were certain that casting a vote for Kamala Harris was like inviting the Four Horsemen to your backyard BBQ. They warned…
Post Malone Delays Tour, Rezz Cancels for Health: When the Music—and the Invoice—Don’t Align
Post Malone postpones his tour for art, while Rezz pauses for health. Both decisions hit fans, but the ‘invoice’ moment highlights different tales from the music world.
Bank of America’s New Arbitration Clause: Opt Out by May 18, or Forfeit Your Right to Sue
Bank of America has quietly updated its Online Banking Service Agreement to include a binding arbitration clause with a class-action waiver. Users should opt out if they want to retain their right to sue.
When ‘Finding Lost Dogs’ Becomes Big Brother in Your Backyard
Ring’s charming dog-search ad turned dystopian when privacy concerns erupted, highlighting fears over surveillance and safety.
Court Holds Medicine (and Our Sanity) Hostage—Supreme Court Hits Pause on Abortion-Pill Snafu
With Justice Alito’s latest stay, the Supreme Court keeps telehealth and mail access to abortion pills hanging until Thursday. This game of judicial ping-pong leaves providers and patients in legal limbo.
When the Invoice Sings ‘Under the Bridge’: Red Hot Chili Peppers Sell Their Masters to Warner for $300M Encore
In a music biz plot twist, Red Hot Chili Peppers sell their entire recorded catalog to Warner, sparking encore economics and deja vu among fans. The masters change hands, and Warner hits its own repeat button.
Cost-Plus Chaos at Sea: GAO Finds Shipbuilding Programs Years Late, Billions Over Cost—Who’s Picking Up the Tab?
A GAO report reveals the Navy and Coast Guard are billions over budget and years behind schedule. Taxpayer money is evaporating, with corroding ships and incomplete designs leaving a financial fog.
Political Aisle 5: Biden-Harris Check Out Pro-Worker Policies
In a bold twist, the Biden-Harris administration has decided to hand out political promises like coupons at a checkout line, daring to turn governance…
Audit Uncovers 175 Control Failures in Memphis-Shelby County Schools—Records-Room Thunder at Scale
A forensic audit reveals a procedural abyss within Memphis-Shelby County Schools, highlighting missing forms, misplaced millions, and a room with absent doors.
Sen. Rosen Goes Full Coffee-Spill Mode on the Billion-Dollar Ballroom
Sen. Jacky Rosen throws a wrench into Republican plans by proposing to redirect $1 billion from Trump’s ballroom security to local police grants, igniting a political spectacle.
DOJ Admits ICE Misled Courts, Turning Legal Hearings into Arrest Traps
The Department of Justice recently confessed to citing a non-relevant ICE memo to justify courthouse arrests, catching immigrants off guard. DHS insists the policy remains unchanged despite this blunder.


