Joe Biden's age has fueled concerns about a second term. Here are seven key Democrats who could step in if Biden exits the 2024 presidential race.
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If Biden bows out, these Democrats could step up in the presidential election
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The 9 best things to stream this weekend, from a new season of ‘The Bear’ to a heartbreaking Celine Dion doc
FX, Abanti Chowdhury/BI
- "The Bear" and "The Mole" both returned with new seasons this week.
- "Killers of the Flower Moon" star Lily Gladstone stars in a new movie that's now streaming.
- Netflix also has a new reality show about luxury realtors.
What do "The Bear" and "The Mole" have in common?
Aside from both having the name of an animal in their title, they're also both back with new episodes this week.
FX's critically acclaimed dramedy starring Jeremy Allen White as a young chef in Chicago returned for its third season. Over on Netflix, the reality competition series "The Mole" is back for its second outing on the streamer, with the first five episodes of the season out now.
There are also two new documentaries about powerful women worth checking out.
Here's a complete rundown of all the best movies, shows, and documentaries to stream this weekend, broken down by what kind of entertainment you're looking for.
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Microsoft AI CEO explains why the economics of information are about to ‘radically change’
Mustafa Suleyman predicts a "true inflection point" in human history just 15 to 20 years from now. PATRICK T. FALLON
- AI will cut the marginal costs of producing information, Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman says.
- Suleyman predicts near-zero marginal cost for new knowledge production in 15-20 years.
- Suleyman believes these changes will mark a "true inflection point" in human history.
If the internet dramatically cut the costs of producing information, AI is bound to eliminate them.
That's according to Mustafa Suleyman, the CEO of Microsoft AI.
"The economics of information are about to radically change," Suleyman said in an interview with journalist Andrew Ross Sorkin at the Aspen Ideas Festival this week. "In 15 or 20 years' time, we will be producing new scientific, cultural knowledge at almost zero marginal cost."
Marginal cost is the change in the total cost of production when the quantity is increased. By then, he added, information will also be open-sourced, which means it'll be available to everyone.
In Suleyman's view, that's a net positive because humans' core function is to produce knowledge, and AI is just going to "turbocharge" that.
"I think that is gonna be, you know, a true inflection point in the history of our species," he said, "because what are we, collectively, as an organism of humans, other than a knowledge, an intellectual production engine."
Suleyman has long been considered one of the top minds in AI. He co-founded DeepMind, an AI lab acquired by Google in 2010 that has made significant progress, particularly in healthcare. He joined Microsoft in March and has said his main goal is to "uplevel the quality of Copilot," which is the company's version of an AI assistant that works with business applications.
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60 British phrases that will confuse anybody who didn’t grow up in the UK
You don't want to be called "a few sandwiches short of a picnic." Martin Rüßler/EyeEm/ master1305/Getty Images
- From "chockablock" to a "full Monty," the Brits have a wide range of interesting slang words.
- You don't want to be described as "dim," "a mug," or "a few sandwiches short of a picnic."
- If you're "zonked" or "cream crackered," you might want to take a nap.
Brits have an interesting vernacular that includes words and phrases that might confuse many Americans.
Some terms, like "dim," "a mug," or "a few sandwiches short of a picnic," can be used as colorful insults, while being called "cheeky" can be either negative or positive, depending on the context.
In a business setting, you might want to avoid certain words or phrases while conversing with Brits so as not to offend them, or incorporate their terms into your presentations or marketing materials if you want to relate with British clients or customers.
Here are 60 British phrases that will confuse anybody who didn't grow up in the UK.
An earlier version of this story was written by Bobbie Edsor.
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Even Biden knows he flopped at the debate
President Joe Biden conceded that some of his skills have diminished over time. Allison Joyce/Getty Images
- President Joe Biden conceded his first debate did not go well.
- "I don't debate as well as I used to," Biden said during a rally, listing off other skills that have diminished.
- But Biden remained clear he's not going anywhere.
President Joe Biden on Friday admitted what the nation already knew: he bungled his first debate against former President Donald Trump.
"I don't debate as well as I used to," Biden told supporters at a rally in North Carolina.
To be fair, even Vice President Kamala Harris admitted that her running mate got off to "a slow start."
Biden conceded that his debate skills aren't the only thing that has diminished.
"I know I'm not a young man, to state the obvious," Biden said, his voice growing louder. "I don't walk as easy as I used to. I don't speak as smoothly as I used to. I don't debate as well as I used to."
But the president remained emphatic that he remains the best option to defeating Trump this November.
"But I know what I do know: I know how to tell the truth," he said. I know right from wrong. And I know how to do this job. I know how to get things done. And I know like millions of Americans know, when you get knocked down you get back up."
Biden reiterated his long-held belief that he's up to the job.
"I would not be running again if I did not believe with all my heart and soul that I can do this job," he said.
During a disastrous Thursday night debate, Biden gave raspy and sometimes meandering responses. At one point, Trump even mocked him stating, "I really don't know what he said at the end of that sentence. I don't think he knows what he said either."
It wasn't just Republicans.
After the debate, Democrats began sounding the alarm and reconsidering whether they could get the president to step aside or even push him off the ballot. Biden's performance, as Democrats pointed out, was particularly disastrous because it underlined the biggest concern Americans already had about his standing as the nation's oldest president seeking reelection to a term that would leave him at 86 years old at the end of it.
"There are going to be discussions about if he should continue," David Axelrod, a former senior Obama White House advisor, said on CNN following the debate.
A snap poll of debate watchers also proclaimed Trump the clear winner. According to the CNN poll, 67% of viewers thought the former president won, compared to just 33% for Biden.
No current major elected Democrats have called on the president to step down. Senior Democrats and others in the party offered mostly curt responses to reporters on Capitol Hill when asked about Biden's standing.
"From a performance standpoint it wasn't great, but from a values standpoint, it far outshone the other guy," former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told reporters, per The New York Times.
As if Biden's rally speech wasn't a clear enough message to anxious Democrats, the president walked off the stage with Tom Petty's defiant hit, "I Won't Back Down" playing in the background.
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Marilyn Monroe’s Los Angeles home has been saved from demolition. Here’s what it looks like today.
Marilyn Monroe's former home is safe for now. Alfred Eisenstaedt/The LIFE Picture Collection via Getty Images/Getty Images
- Marilyn Monroe's home in Brentwood, California, was ruled a landmark by the LA City Council.
- The current owners sued the city for the right to demolish it to expand their home next door.
- Monroe died inside the home in August 1962.
In 1962, Marilyn Monroe, one of the most iconic figures in American culture, was found dead inside her home in Brentwood, a neighborhood in Los Angeles. She was 36.
Sixty-two years later, the Los Angeles City Council ruled that her former home should be declared a historical cultural monument, as Variety reported.
The decision came after a May 2024 lawsuit from the current owners, Brinah Milstein and Roy Bank, who sued the City of Los Angeles to tear down the home, alleging "illegal and unconstitutional conduct and abuse of power by the city." The Los Angeles Times reported the couple bought the home in July 2023 for $8.35 million.
However, after this latest decision, Monroe's home will remain standing.
Here's everything you need to know about the home, its past, and what will happen now.
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You’re probably missing out on this international travel hack that saves time at the airport and costs nothing
Mobile Passport Control is a Global Entry alternative that allows many international travelers arriving in the US to skip the long customs line for free. Joey Hadden/Business Insider
- Mobile Passport Control lets travelers skip customs lines with a free app on their phone.
- The app, available since 2014, is underused despite being available at 33 major US airports.
- Global Entry is faster and more widely used but costs $100 and requires an interview.
Global Entry isn't the only way international travelers can skip long lines at US Customs and Border Protection (CBP).
The popular program that allows travelers reentering the US to breeze through customs has a $100 application fee and requires an in-person interview at an airport or government building for approval, according to the CBP website.
"It's a great option for those who frequently travel internationally, but it doesn't make sense for everybody," Sean Cudahy, an aviation reporter at The Points Guy who has Global Entry and has already flown 65,000 miles this year, told Business Insider.
For occasional international travelers, there's a free way to save time at CBP, and no application or interview is required — all you need is your phone.
Mobile Passport Control
International travelers use Mobile Passport Control to get through customs. Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Mobile Passport Control is an app available on Google Play and the Apple App Store. It allows many travelers to submit their CBP forms electronically and enter a shorter customs line upon arrival in 33 major international US airports, including John F. Kennedy, Phoenix Sky Harbor, and Dallas Fort Worth, according to the CBP website.
"On any given day, you might see a 30-minute line for customs, and most of the people that are standing in that line are eligible for the Mobile Passport Control line, which is sometimes only a couple of people at any given moment." Cudahy, who recently reported on the program, told BI. "It's available to a wide range of travelers."
US citizens, Lawful Permanent Residents, Canadians with a B1/B2 visa, and permanent citizens of the 41 countries included in the Visa Waiver Program who have been to the US before can use the app when arriving in the US.
It's not exactly Global Entry
"Nothing is as fast as Global Entry," Cudahy said. "I've been through Global Entry probably a dozen times in the last eight or nine months, and on most of those occasions, it's so fast that my feet barely even stop moving."
While Mobile Passport Control users access a shorter line to talk to CBP officers, Global Entry members don't talk to an officer at all.
"You get off the plane, go right to a kiosk, it recognizes your face, and you're on your way in a matter of seconds," Cudahy said of Global Entry.
A Global Entry passenger uses a kiosk to get through customs. Chris Hondros/Getty Images
Global Entry is also available in twice as many US airports as Mobile Passport Control, and it includes TSA PreCheck access for the duration of the membership.
While it's a more useful perk than Mobile Passport Control, not every international traveler wants to pay $100 and go to the airport for an interview. But they can still avoid long wait times.
An underrated hack
Mobile Passport Control has been available since 2014, but not many people use it — especially compared to Global Entry. According to a CBP press release, 4 million travelers used Mobile Passport Control in 2023.
Meanwhile, more than 10 million travelers either enrolled in or renewed their Global Entry memberships in the same year, according to the CBP. And the regular customs line remains long.
Global Entry and Mobile Passport Control lanes. Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Cudahy told BI that CBP wants more travelers to use Mobile Passport Control.
How to use the app
Once your flight lands in the US, open the Mobile Passport Control app.
The app will ask you to select the airport you've arrived at.
Next, you'll be prompted to add travelers to your trip. Up to 12 travelers in your household can enter their information on the same phone, making it easier and more efficient for families traveling together.
Each traveler will scan their passport, enter their personal information and customs declaration forms, and take a selfie.
Once you submit the forms through the app and deplane, follow the signs for Mobile Passport Control to the shorter customs line.
Customs lanes for Global Entry and Mobile Passport Control. Joe Raedle/Getty Images
A customs officer will take only one traveler's photo to pull up everyone's information in your group.
First-timer tips
The process is simple, but Cudahy has a few tips for first-time users.
First off, download the app before your trip rather than after landing.
"Sometimes, when you take a phone off airplane mode, it could be a little wonky at first," he said.
When you download the app in advance, Cudahy suggests getting comfortable with it before your trip.
"Don't submit any declarations on the application until you're ready, but you can play around with it and familiarize yourself so you're ready to go when you land," he said.
The Mobile Passport Control app presented on an iPhone. Joey Hadden/Business Insider
And lastly, if you're traveling with family, make sure everyone knows about the selfie.
"Just have them all aware of the fact that everybody's going to need to take a selfie on the one person's phone," he said. "That way, you can do it in an efficient manner once the plane lands."
Once you deplane and see that short line next to rows of travelers in the regular customs line, you'll be glad you're in on this underrated hack.
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A Yale professor who struggled with stress created a concrete guide to being happy. Here’s how it works.
Dr. Laurie Santos, a psychology professor at Yale and "happiness expert." Laurie Santos/Isabel Fernandez Pujol/BI
- Dr. Laurie Santos teaches "Psychology and the Good Life" at Yale University.
- She came up with the course after seeing students struggle with their mental health.
- Recently, she shared her own obstacles to happiness on her podcast, "The Happiness Lab."
At an annual checkup, Dr. Laurie Santos' tests all looked good — except one.
Her CRP levels, which measure inflammation, came back a little higher. Her doctor said one of the triggers could be heightened stress.
It made sense. Santos, a Yale professor, oversaw over 500 students during the pandemic, ran a university lab, and led a podcast, she said in a recent episode.
But there was some irony to her high stress levels: Santos is also known as a "happiness expert." After becoming head of Yale's largest residential college in 2016 and witnessing depression and panic attacks among her students, she created "Psychology and the Good Life," a course that explores how to improve well-being.
It became the most popular class in Yale's history and was eventually adapted into an online course with over 4.7 million students worldwide.
Recently, Santos decided to open up about her struggles.
In new episodes of her podcast, Santos tackles how she "flunks her own class," from being a perfectionist to fearing boredom.
"Some people really think I'm this walking happiness emoji," Santos said. "But of course, I'm human." She shared some of the lessons she learned.
Curb self-comparison
Santos said one of her biggest problems is perfectionism. In one episode, Ryan Dilley, her podcast producer, said that Santos constantly strives for flawless results in her work.
"Sometimes it's not possible, but it's so hard to watch," Dilley said to Santos. "You're horrible to yourself sometimes."
She told BI that "existential perfectionism" haunts her students, too, who strive to have ideal grades, looks, jobs, and relationships.
"There's no domain in which perfectionism is sparing young people," she said, adding that much of it is driven by frequent self-comparison via social media.
She said this chase for perfection is one of the biggest things people get wrong about happiness. "We have all these theories about the things that will make us feel better," she said, whether it's making more money or scoring that dream job.
"By and large, the research seems to show that our circumstances don't matter for our happiness as much as we think," she said. "We'd be much better off changing our behavior and mindsets."
Question your need for busyness
Santos said most of her issues arise from "trying to navigate busyness and busy culture" as a professor and podcaster. While she loves what she does, she also recognizes how much work it is to balance both responsibilities.
She wants to create "healthier standards for what counts as work," but said it's a struggle because her busyness also greatly contributes to her career success.
Part of what keeps her (and many of her students) so busy is a perceived glamour around hustling. "There's a sort of social status to being busy," she said. Becoming healthier means pushing back against common cultural norms.
Reframe negative emotions
Santos found ways to look at negative emotions through a different lens in multiple episodes.
For example, she learned that boredom isn't something to run from. While it's a feeling she never liked and something her students "definitely avoid at all costs," she also told BI that it's crucial for "coming up with their best creative ideas."
In the episode on stress, she spoke to David S. Yeager, a psychology professor at UT Austin. He taught her that how one frames stress impacts their body's reaction to it: people who learn to view stress as a helpful adrenaline boost or performance enhancer are less likely to be debilitated by it.
"That was really profound for me, because stress really felt like it's just this biological phenomenon," Santos said. "But even there, our mindset really seems to matter."
Take small, daily steps
If there's any big takeaway to get from her course or recent podcast episodes, Santos said it's that "happiness takes work."
In her class, she has students complete surveys to track their happiness at the beginning and end of the semester — a practice she follows in her own life. "You're not going from zero to 100," she said. The goal is to create small changes that amount to a 10-15% positive increase in your mood.
For example, if you're intensely self-critical, that work might look like tracking and challenging your thoughts with a daily journal instead of absorbing negativity. "That's pushing against the habit that feels really natural," she said.
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A grinding Russian assault appears telling about Putin’s plan to defeat Ukraine
A Ukrainian service member with the 24th Brigade fires an 82mm mortar as fighting continues near Toretsk. Wolfgang Schwan/Anadolu via Getty Images
- Russia is on the offensive, but not contributing all it can into the assault, reflecting Russia's plans.
- Putin's strategy focuses on attrition and limiting Ukraine's counteroffensive capabilities.
- ISW experts warn that delays in Western aid could lead to Ukraine's collapse and Russian victory.
Russian forces are making a push along an axis between Chasiv Yar and Avdiivka but not throwing their full weight into it. War analysts say that the tactics appear to reflect Russian President Putin's theory of victory in Ukraine, revealed earlier this month.
"Russian forces have committed only limited forces to this operation so far, which suggests that Russian forces continue to prioritize gradual advances through consistent grinding assaults over operationally significant gains through rapid maneuver," analysts at the Institute of the Study of War assess.
Speaking at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum on June 7, Putin said that speed is unnecessary, explaining that Russian forces can gradually "squeeze" the Ukrainians out of territories Moscow seeks to control.
Putin theorized that the gradual progress Russian forces make will allow them to achieve the Kremlin's aims, as it prevents Ukraine from conducting effective counteroffensive tactics.
Slow, steady, grinding operations in the Toretsk direction are a goal for Russian forces, as they believe it will block Ukraine from gathering critical resources, as well as personnel, and drain what it already has. And that, ISW experts said, may be more important than seizing territory.
Analysts from the Washington-based ISW predict that Russia's approach to this conflict, which aims to "win a war of attrition against Ukrainian forces," could take anywhere from months to years to accomplish. At the forum this month, Putin said he was confident the plans to make gradual gains will come to fruition.
ISW analysts advise that Western partner nations supply Ukraine's military with the resources it needs to "liberate significant swaths of occupied Ukraine and challenge Putin's belief that he can gradually subsume Ukraine."
Ukraine has overcome some of the dangerous shortfalls it faced earlier in the years as partners step up support, but the pace at which Ukraine is currently receiving aid is limited and enforces Putin's strategy, which is focused on outlasting Ukraine.
ISW experts noted that the end of Western assistance for Ukraine could lead to a total collapse of its front line and an all-out, complete victory for Russia.
"Ukraine should contest the initiative as soon as possible because Russian forces are reaping a variety of benefits from holding the initiative, including their ability to pursue a strategy of attritional warfare," the analysts concluded.
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Photos show Americans’ horrified reactions to the Biden-Trump debate
A patron reacted during a watch party for the first presidential debate of the 2024 presidential election. JOSH EDELSON/AFP via Getty Images
- Joe Biden and Donald Trump faced off in the first 2024 presidential debate.
- Biden's poor performance sparked panic among Democrats, and Trump lied throughout.
- Photographers across the US captured viewers' reactions to the debate ranging from dread to alarm.
Across the US, many viewers of the first 2024 presidential debate between Joe Biden and Donald Trump appeared to find the spectacle difficult to watch.
As Biden's convoluted answers and poor performance sparked panic among Democrats, Trump dodged questions in favor of offering lies and misleading statements about his own political record. At one point, the candidates argued about who was a better golfer.
Photographers across the US captured Americans' reactions to the debate, ranging from shock and disappointment to frustration and alarm.
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