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Wednesday, June 24, 2026
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Good Morning! On this day in 1947, pilot Kenneth Arnold reported seeing mysterious objects near Mount Rainier, Washington. The sighting helped launch the modern UFO era and popularized the term “flying saucer.”
Yesterday, we asked if tipping in America has gotten out of hand, and 84% of you said yes in our poll and stormed the comment section on our podcast’s YouTube page. One reader said even her dryer repairman asked for a tip, and so did the guy who cleaned her carpets. Another clocked the gas-station checkout screen swiveling around for a gratuity on a self-serve soda. A sharper one advised deducting the tax before you tip, because there’s no need to tip the state. The consensus: pay servers a real wage, tip for actual service, and stop turning every touchscreen into a guilt machine.
In case you missed it: Some of the biggest retirement changes of the past year happened with almost no public attention. On Saturday’s episode of The Flyover Podcast, Amy Hess broke down three little-known rule changes that could affect your Social Security benefits, retirement savings, and even whether you’re owed money the government has withheld for decades. If you haven’t listened yet, this episode is worth catching up on. Listen now!
Amazon Prime members: See what you could get, no strings attached, through special offers from today’s sponsor, FinanceBuzz.
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Trump and Iran Clash over Nuclear Deal
President Trump and Iran are openly clashing over whether Tehran agreed to international nuclear inspections, a flashpoint in the fragile deal meant to end their four-month war.
Iran’s foreign ministry said there are no plans to let inspectors examine its bombed nuclear sites, contradicting Vice President JD Vance, while Trump insisted Tehran “fully” agreed.
Meanwhile, a United Nations maritime agency launched a plan to evacuate more than 11,000 seafarers stranded in the Persian Gulf, as traffic through the Strait of Hormuz slowly returns.
At home, the Senate voted 50-48 to rebuke Trump over the war, with four Republicans joining Democrats to direct him to withdraw U.S. forces, though the measure is symbolic.
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US to Loan $17.5B for 10 Nuclear Reactors
The Energy Department announced Tuesday that it will loan $17.5 billion to fast-track 10 large nuclear reactors, betting on surging electricity demand from the data centers powering artificial intelligence.
The money would back five projects, each building two reactors using Westinghouse’s AP1000 design, and marks one of the largest efforts by the agency’s revamped financing office, which earlier this year canceled nearly $30 billion in clean energy loans approved under former President Biden.
Energy Secretary Chris Wright said the financing would drive down costs and could speed deployment by up to 3 years, calling the risk to taxpayers very low.
Officials hope construction begins by 2030, with the reactors coming online in the mid-2030s.
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Pilot Describes Iran Jellyfish Drones
Newly surfaced details from an April incident reveal a U.S. fighter pilot shot down over Iran told debriefers he saw Iranian drones hovering and moving as one, in a formation that resembled a jellyfish.
The airman, downed in enemy territory before his rescue, described a “minefield of drones” overhead, comparing the sight to something out of an alien encounter.
One drone expert said Iran may have used a “mothership” that flies high, then drops smaller attack drones, and warned that Tehran is adapting its war technology faster than the U.S.
It marked the first time Iran shot down a U.S. jet over its own soil during the war, and intelligence analysts remain divided over what the concussed pilot actually saw.
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The following stories are featured exclusively on The Flyover Podcast—a daily show that gives you the most important headlines in under 15 minutes. Clicking the links will take you directly to these stories:
➤ Savannah Guthrie made a tearful on-air plea as new details emerge in her mother’s disappearance. (Listen Here)
➤ Should weight-loss drugs be banned in sports? Serena Williams reignited the debate. (Hear More)
➤ These are the 20 highest-paying jobs in America that aren’t doctors. (Tune In)

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➤ The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that a Rastafarian man cannot sue Louisiana prison guards for damages after they handcuffed him and shaved his decades-long dreadlocks, despite his religious objections. (See Details)
➤ President Trump and Senate Republicans were headed into a tense Wednesday meeting over the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act and his Iran peace deal, with GOP frustration building for weeks. (See Details)
➤ The Senate passed a sweeping bipartisan housing bill 85-5, aiming to lower costs by easing construction rules and curbing Wall Street firms from buying up single-family homes. (More)
➤ A federal judge blocked the Trump administration from letting five states bar food stamp recipients from buying soda and candy, ruling the Agriculture Department overstepped its authority. (See Details)
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Flying together with our sponsor

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➤ The PGA Tour approved a sweeping restructuring that will split the circuit into two tiers starting in 2028, with a top-level Championship Series and a lower Challenger Series connected by promotion and relegation. (More)
➤ The Milwaukee Bucks agreed to trade former NBA MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo and Bobby Portis to the Miami Heat for Tyler Herro, Kel’el Ware, Jaime Jaquez Jr., Kasparas Jakucionis, and three first‑round picks. (More)
➤ The NCAA Division I Cabinet voted on an age-based eligibility model that would give college athletes five seasons of competition over five years, replacing the current system of redshirts and waivers. (More)
➤ The Washington Wizards selected BYU wing AJ Dybantsa with the No. 1 pick in last night’s NBA Draft, followed by Kansas guard Darryn Peterson at No. 2 to the Jazz and Duke forward Cam Boozer at No. 3 to the Grizzlies. (See Full Draft)
➤ Cristiano Ronaldo became the first men’s soccer player to score in six different World Cups on Tuesday, burying a right-footed finish off a João Cancelo cross in the sixth minute of Portugal’s match against Uzbekistan in Houston. (See Goal)
➤ Yesterday’s results: World Cup | MLB | WNBA
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Daily Market Report 06/23/2026
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NASDAQ National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations |
25,587.04 |
-2.21%
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SPX S&P 500 |
7,365.46 |
-1.44%
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DJI Dow Jones Industrial Average |
51,666.84 |
-0.09%
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BTC Bitcoin |
$62,387.22 |
-2.45%
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GOLD Per Ounce |
$4,127.70 |
-1.30%
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SILVER Per Ounce |
$61.54 |
-6.08%
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OIL West Texas Intermediate Crude |
$73.39 |
-1.91%
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PRIM Primoris Services |
$84.73 |
-21.79%
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Bitcoin, gold, silver, and oil are traded 24 hours a day.
➤ Big Stock Move: Primoris Services shares crashed almost 22% Tuesday, its worst day in over a year, after the infrastructure firm roughly halved its 2026 profit outlook and an operating chief departed. (See Details)
➤ Meta launched its own AI smart glasses starting at $299, undercutting its Ray-Ban line by $80, as it races Google, Samsung, and Apple into wearables. (More)
➤ Speaking of Ray-Bans, a 31-year-old heir is pushing an $11.5 billion bid to buy out two siblings and seize control of the family eyewear fortune, days before a key shareholder vote. (See Details)
➤ Dairy Queen is rolling out three new Blizzard flavors and a “Stars & Stripes” slush float on June 29, courting summer foot traffic by tying the launch to the World Cup and America’s 250th birthday. (See Flavors)
Flying together with our sponsor
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➤ President Trump signed two executive orders boosting U.S. quantum computing and requiring federal agencies to adopt quantum-resistant encryption by 2031, guarding against future “harvest now, decrypt later” threats. (See Details)
➤ Menopause triggers a profound “renovation” of the female brain, researchers say, as plunging estrogen sparks an energy crisis that may help explain women’s higher Alzheimer’s risk. (See More)
➤ Archaeologists in Egypt unearthed a near-complete funerary cache, including suspected solid-gold earrings and scarab-inscribed vessels, at Heliopolis, the ancient city named in the Book of Genesis. (See Photos)
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Wisdom Wednesday is brought to you by:

➤ A behavioral scientist breaks down why people give friends razor-sharp advice but freeze on their own near-identical decisions. One small reframing trick changes everything. (See How)
➤ A Stanford leadership expert says good luck is not random or rare. After 27 years of teaching it, she names five habits that reliably tilt the odds. (See Them)
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➤ New York Gov. Kathy Hochul launched a committee to explore a 2042 Winter Olympics bid co‑hosted by New York City and Lake Placid, whose Olympic venues recently received $750 million in state upgrades. (More)
➤ A 96-year-old grandma with millions of online followers got a formal warning from her Connecticut nursing home for partying too hard. Her response: she tore it up. (See More)
➤ An AI startup is sending free cleaners and chefs into New York apartments, rigged with head cameras, to train future household robots. Privacy experts are alarmed. (See How)
➤ A 1-year-old cat named Billy has correctly called the winner of all 19 decided World Cup matches so far, paw-picking flags to his owners’ delight. (Watch Video)
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Daily Quote
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“I love to party. You can’t stop me.”
— Lillian “Grandma Droniak”, the 96-year-old TikTok star who refused to stop partying despite her nursing home’s warning
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Today’s Trivia
Four U.S. states begin with the same letter as their capital city. Can you name all four?
Show me the answer
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