616 episodes

Three news stories a day, one sentence of summary and one sentence of context, apiece.

Each episode is concise (usually less than 5 minutes long), politically unbiased, and focused on delivering information and understanding in a non-frantic, stress-free way.

OSN is meant to help folks who want to maintain a general, situational awareness of what's happening in the world, but who sometimes find typical news sources anxiety-inducing, alongside those don't have the time to wade through the torrent of biased and editorial content to find what they're after.

Hosted by analytic journalist Colin Wright.

onesentencenews.substack.com

One Sentence News Understandary

    • News

Three news stories a day, one sentence of summary and one sentence of context, apiece.

Each episode is concise (usually less than 5 minutes long), politically unbiased, and focused on delivering information and understanding in a non-frantic, stress-free way.

OSN is meant to help folks who want to maintain a general, situational awareness of what's happening in the world, but who sometimes find typical news sources anxiety-inducing, alongside those don't have the time to wade through the torrent of biased and editorial content to find what they're after.

Hosted by analytic journalist Colin Wright.

onesentencenews.substack.com

    One Sentence News / May 24, 2024

    One Sentence News / May 24, 2024

    Three news stories summarized & contextualized by analytic journalist Colin Wright.
    China’s youth unemployment eased in April
    Summary: New data from the Chinese National Bureau of Statistics indicate that the jobless rate amongst the country’s 16-to-24-year-old demographic (excluding those enrolled in school) dropped to 14.7% in April, which is down from 15.3% in March.
    Context: Youth unemployment has been a persistent problem in China for years, and it’s being seen as both a consequence of and contributor to the county’s relatively woeful economic figures, which lopsidedly improved a little bit last month, overall; the country’s government stopped publicly providing youth unemployment figures in June of last year after reporting 21.3% that month, but it started divulging these numbers again in January after changing their formula to exclude folks in that age-demo who were still in school—which is different from how many other wealthy nations do things, but seems to have lowered this figure enough that they feel comfortable reporting it, again.
    —The Wall Street Journal
    One Sentence News is a reader-supported publication. To support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

    The first crew launch of Boeing’s Starliner capsule is on hold indefinitely
    Summary: A helium leak in the propulsion system of Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft has led to another delay in the craft’s launch, it’s most recent intended launch day, this upcoming Saturday, nixed, its launch now put on indefinite hold until they can find and fix the problem.
    Context: There’s a chance the Starliner craft could launch as soon as next week, if they’re able to quickly and convincingly solve this new problem, which is just the most recent of several high-profile issues that have scrapped launches since 2019; if they can’t sort it out soon, there’s a chance the launch will be delayed until sometime in late summer; Boeing products, including several models of their airliners, have seen a slew of very public and embarrassing failures, of late, and the company has come under new scrutiny, and become the target of much criticism, for its alleged focus on market valuation and leadership compensation, rather than safety and innovation.
    —Ars Technica
    Microplastics found in every human testicle in study
    Summary: A new study that looked at the composition of 23 testicles from the bodies of men who died between the ages of 16 and 88, those bodies preserved in 2016, and 47 testicles from neutered pet dogs, found microplastics in all the tested testes, and that the human testicles contained nearly three-times as much plastic as the dog testes.
    Context: The most common microplastic found in these testicles was polyethylene, which is most commonly found in disposable plastic products like bags and water bottles, followed by PVC, which is found in pipes, credit cards, and cable insulation, among many other use-cases; this follows another, smaller 2023 study in China that found microplastics in human testes and semen samples, and recent research indicates that mice that were exposed to microplastics suffered reduced sperm count, abnormal sperm quality, and hormone disruptions, which supports—though doesn’t confirm—concerns that microplastics may be contributing to the notable decrease in human sperm count over the past several decades, that decrease correlated with a decrease in fertility numbers, and linked to other chemical products, like pesticides, as well.
    —The Guardian
    There’s a notable age-gap in which Americans are more likely to support Israel and which are more likely to support Palestinians, with young people more likely to favor the latter, and older folks (especially those 50-and-up) a lot more likely to support the former.
    —Axios
    51
    Median age of MTV, a station that was previously (and famously) youth-focused, but which in recent decades has pivoted—like much of non-streaming television—to serve its predominant

    • 4 min
    One Sentence News / May 23, 2024

    One Sentence News / May 23, 2024

    Three news stories summarized & contextualized by analytic journalist Colin Wright.
    Spain, Norway and Ireland recognize a Palestinian state
    Summary: On Wednesday, Spain, Norway, and Ireland announced that they would formally recognize Palestine as an independent state—a move that’s being seen as a statement against Israel’s actions in the Gaza Strip.
    Context: Dozens of countries have long recognized Palestine as a sovereign nation, and this new wave of recognition, like those that came before, is mostly symbolic, but because few Western European nations have thus far recognized Palestine and because Israel’s invasion of Gaza has brought renewed attention to the matter of Palestinian statehood—and for context, Gaza, like the West Bank, is currently an occupied territory of Israel—and because there are burgeoning concerns that Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu is aiming for some kind of military government in the region, which would do away with the possibility of a near-future two-state solution, the issue of statehood is being seen as newly relevant.
    —The New York Times
    One Sentence News is a reader-supported publication. To support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

    Severe turbulence during Singapore Airlines flight leaves several people badly injured and one dead
    Summary: A Singapore Airlines flight between London and Singapore that was carrying 211 passengers and 18 crew members experienced significant turbulence over the Indian Ocean on Tuesday, leaving dozens of people injured, a half-dozen severely, and one person—a 73-year-old British man—dead.
    Context: The plane descended around 6,000 feet, which is about 1,800 meters, in about three minutes, and the turbulence was so bad that people were slamming into the overhead bins, in some cases—according to reports from people aboard—denting the bins, or breaking through the portions of the ceiling containing the lights and masks; the flight diverted to Bangkok in the wake of this tumult, and while turbulence can arise anywhere at any time, extreme cases of it are becoming more common along popular airline routes.
    —The Associated Press
    The International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea rules carbon dioxide is an ocean pollutant
    Summary: The International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, a court created by the United Nations to rule on maritime-related matters, has found that greenhouse gases count, for legal purposes, as marine pollution, and that global governments thus have a responsibility to mitigate their effects on oceans.
    Context: The United Nations Convention on the Laws of the Sea was established in May of 2023 and has 168 signatory nations, and this treaty basically says that those nations have to prevent oceanic pollution that harms marine life, and this ruling has added greenhouse gas emissions to the list of marine-life-harming pollutants, because of their impact on the climate, which in turn negatively impacts marine life; this court’s rulings are non-binding, so the degree to which this outcome will matter is in question—all of those nations can interpret the results however they like—but it does add heft to the argument that greenhouse gas emissions are contributing to the deterioration of marine ecosystems, which could help spur more such cases in other courts, and impact the decisions to which those courts ultimately arrive, as this marks the first time such a legal body has linked what’s happening in the atmosphere with what’s happening in the ocean in this way.
    —ABC News
    Despite booming profits and a slew of mergers and acquisitions in recent years, the International Energy Agency still believes that global oil demand will peak this decade, based mostly on structural changes and a significant shift toward renewables in many parts of the world (including major oil consumers, like China).
    —Axios
    53%
    Portion of the human population that’s unable to speak freely (as of 2023), according to a new report

    • 3 min
    One Sentence News / May 22, 2024

    One Sentence News / May 22, 2024

    Three news stories summarized & contextualized by analytic journalist Colin Wright.
    Hims & Hers is now selling Ozempic-like weight loss drugs for $199
    Summary: Hims & Hers Health, a telehealth company that specializes in providing everything from hair-loss to erectile dysfunction to skin-care products, online, announced on Monday that it is now offering a compounded version of semaglutide, which is the active ingredient in weight loss drugs like Ozempic and diabetes drugs like Mounjaro.
    Context: Semaglutide-based drugs, though rife with side effects, some of them substantial, have surprised the medical community by proving incredibly effective for helping folks who have traditionally had trouble losing weight, lose substantial amounts of it, and new studies have shown that it can reduce the risk of major cardiovascular events and the risk of severe liver disease, as well, alongside other benefits; compounded drugs, like the one Hims & Hers is offering, are basically mixed versions of a more standardized, FDA-approved drug, and they are not reviewed by the FDA, and are generally frowned-upon if a standardized, reviewed version—like Ozempic—is available, because of that lack of oversight; the branded versions of these drugs have been in very short supply since they began to boom in popularity and use, though, and this custom version costs a fraction of the price of Ozempic (about $199 per month compared to around $1,000), which is why Hims & Hers’ stock boomed following the announcement of this new offering, and why we’ll likely see more compounded versions of this drug from other companies in the coming months.
    —Quartz
    One Sentence News is a reader-supported publication. To support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

    Ex-South African leader Zuma, now a ruling party critic, is disqualified from next week’s election
    Summary: The former President of South Africa, Jacob Zuma, is not qualified to run for Parliament in next week’s election because of an earlier criminal conviction, according to a ruling by the country’s Constitutional Court.
    Context: This will almost certainly complicate the election, in part because the ruling was handed down so last-minute, but also because Zuma—who was sentenced to 15 months in prison in 2021 for refusing to testify during an inquiry into governmental corruption, and who was forced out of power in 2018 under a tidal wave of corruption allegations—has become a prominent force in local politics, having started a new party last year and having become a critic of his former party and the person who replaced him in office, current President Cyril Ramaphosa; the country’s governing party, the ANC, is facing its most significant challenge since it took power decades ago, and some analysts are expecting it’ll have to form a coalition government for the first time if it wants to hold onto its majority.
    —The Associated Press
    Scarlett Johansson says OpenAI chatbot voice 'eerily similar' to hers
    Summary: Scarlett Johansson, an actress who, among many other prominent roles, provided her voice to an artificial intelligence in the movie Her, has accused OpenAI of creating a voice for its ChatGPT tool that sounds a lot like her, despite her not having approved her voice for that use.
    Context: The voice in question was pulled from OpenAI’s offerings following the actresses’ accusations, and while OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has said no effort was made to create a copy of Johansson’s voice for their product, he’s previously said that Her is his favorite movie, posted the word “her,” without context, on the social platform X two days before the new voice options were announced, and apparently asked Johansson to license her voice for ChatGPT purposes in September, and then again a few days before the release, which she declined; though OpenAI contends that they hired a different voice actress without considering how similar she sounds to Johansson, this is being

    • 4 min
    One Sentence News / May 21, 2024

    One Sentence News / May 21, 2024

    Three news stories summarized & contextualized by analytic journalist Colin Wright.
    Iranian President and Foreign Minister killed in helicopter crash
    Summary: Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi, the country’s Foreign Minister, and seven other people have died in a helicopter crash in a remote and mountainous part of the country, seemingly due to bad weather conditions.
    Context: Raisi was sometimes called the “Butcher of Tehran” for involvement in the execution of thousands of Iranian political prisoners in the late 1980s, and he was a reliable ally of the country’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, in the country’s non-religious political structure; many of Iran’s allies and neighbors have expressed condolences and declared periods of mourning, and new presidential elections will take place within 50 days, Iran’s vice president stepping into the role of president in the meantime.
    —The Wall Street Journal
    One Sentence News is a reader-supported publication. To support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

    International Criminal Court prosecutor requests warrants for Netanyahu and Hamas leaders
    Summary: Karim Khan, the prosecutor for the International Criminal Court, has announced that he’s requested arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu, Israel’s defense minister, and three Hamas leaders for war crimes and crimes against humanity, related to the attack on Israel on October 7, and the subsequent attacks on Gaza by Israel.
    Context: This request still has to be approved by judges before those warrants are issued, and Israel doesn’t recognize the ICC’s jurisdiction, nor is Hamas likely to care overmuch about what the Court has to say, but this is still embarrassing for Netanyahu in particular, and could complicate travel for those who are being targeted by these warrants, if they’re issued, as it means they could be arrested if they travel to one of the 124 countries that are members of the Court, which doesn’t include the US, but does include most European nations.
    —The New York Times
    New Taiwanese president calls on China to stop its threats
    Summary: In his inauguration speech, the new president of Taiwan, Lai Ching-te, said that peace was the only choice in the region, and asked China to stop making military and political threats against the island, which China claims as its own, but which operates independently.
    Context: Lai’s accession to the presidency has been a cause for concern amongst some of Taiwan’s allies, as he’s been a proponent for formal, overt independence for the island, which China has signaled could trigger some kind of attack; Taiwan currently operates in a sort of superposition enabled by a lack of clarity about its status, most of its allies assuming it to be independent, but seldom saying it outright, to avoid triggering a response from China, while China says it belongs to them, but doesn’t do much beyond posturing to show that this is the case; there are concerns that Chinese leader Xi could be planning to more formally claim Taiwan sometime this decade, and that too much talk about independence, especially from Taiwan’s government, could provide justification for such an attack.
    —Reuters
    New research shows that around 38% of all webpages that existed in 2013 were no longer accessible in 2023, and that this has led to a lot of dead links and missing references and research across journalistic and government websites, among others.
    —Pew Research
    $73 million
    Sum laundered (“at least”) from defrauded victims by two Chinese nationals who were charged by US authorities last Friday.
    These fraudsters were arrested at the Atlanta airport in April and allegedly engaged in a type of crypto scam called “pig butchering,” which involves manipulating targets into depositing money into accounts set up for the purpose before laundering it into bank accounts in the Bahamas.
    —Reuters
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    One Sentence News / May 20, 2024

    One Sentence News / May 20, 2024

    Three news stories summarized & contextualized by analytic journalist Colin Wright.
    Israel’s wartime government frays as frustration with Netanyahu grows
    Summary: A politically centrist member of Israel’s war cabinet, Benny Gantz, announced over the weekend that he would leave the government if Prime Minister Netanyahu doesn’t present a plan for the future of the war in Gaza by June 8.
    Context: This ultimatum is being seen as an indication that the temporary alliance of necessity between political parties in Israel following Hamas’ attack on the country on October 7 is beginning to fray, and that Netanyahu’s seeming lack of a plan for what happens after Israeli forces root out the last of Hamas’ leadership in the Gaza Strip is a broad cause for consternation; the country’s defense minister recently demanded that Netanyahu make a pledge to not establish a military government in Gaza, which he worries is where things are headed, and which is a situation he says would be untenable for many reasons; Netanyahu, in response, has accused Gantz of supporting Israel’s defeat in the conflict against Hamas.
    —The New York Times
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    UN urges US to stop forced returns to Haiti after latest deportation flight
    Summary: The UN refugee agency has asked the US government to stop forcibly returning Haitian refugees to Haiti, as doing so puts those refugees at life-threatening risk due to widespread gang violence.
    Context: This call for a change in policy came after the US’s most recent deportation flight last week, and the concern is that Haiti is basically under the control of a slew of gangs, which unified against the government in recent months; the UN estimates that 362,000 people, about half of them children, are internally displaced in Haiti right now, and the UN’s refugee agency is asking the US to redesignate Haiti for a temporary protective status which grants Haitian refugees temporary permission to stay and work in the US—this status is currently set to expire in early August.
    —Al Jazeera
    France mobilises police to regain control of New Caledonia airport road
    Summary: In the wake of several days of at times violent and destructive riots, French police have cleared barricades from the main road leading to the airport in the New Caledonian capital city, Noumea, though officials say it will still be a few days before all the debris has been cleared.
    Context: The French territory’s main airport is still closed because of unrest, and these protests, which sparked the rioting, were catalyzed by a constitutional amendment that would allegedly dilute the vote of indigenous people by allowing French people who had lived in New Caledonia for ten years to vote in provincial elections—something pro-independence (from France) indigenous groups say is an attempt to prevent their movement from ever resulting in a decoupling from European governance.
    —Reuters
    According to a new survey, Americans are reporting being more stressed on average, and the number for women is substantially higher than for men across four major age-groups, though young women in particular are reporting the highest levels of stress across all age and gender demographics.
    —Gallup
    40,000
    Milestone (in points) that the Dow Jones Industrial Average reached late last week for the first time.
    The surge in money flooding into Dow-listed companies is being attributed to new data that showed annual inflation in the US has eased a bit, following three months of less-than-ideal inflation news—suggesting the Fed could still lower their interest rate sometime this year.
    —NPR News
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    One Sentence News / May 17, 2024

    One Sentence News / May 17, 2024

    Three news stories summarized & contextualized by analytic journalist Colin Wright.
    Former Kazakh minister gets 24 years in prison for murdering wife
    Summary: The former economy minister of Kazakhstan has been sentenced to 24 years in prison for murdering his wife, following a trial that was broadcast live over the past seven weeks, and which has stoked discussions and outcries about women’s rights in the country.
    Context: Kuandyk Bishimbayev was found guilty of torturing and then murdering his wife, and there was CCTV footage of him assaulting her in the lead-up to all of that, alongside videos from his phone in which he abused her in various ways; the President of Kazakhstan has said he wants to improve rights for women in the country, and this case led to new demands for a law that criminalizes domestic violence, which passed last month; government data shows that one in six women in Kazakhstan have experienced some form of violence from their partner.
    —Reuters
    One Sentence News is a reader-supported publication. To support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

    Biden signs Russian uranium ban
    Summary: US President Biden has signed a bill that bans the import of Russian enriched uranium, but which allows some companies to continue importing it until 2028.
    Context: This was a bipartisan bill that’s meant to keep the $1 billion or so that the US sends to Russia for uranium, each year, from enriching Russia’s coffers; this uranium is used to fuel nuclear power plants, and it’s part of a larger effort to disentangle the US economy from Russian fuel exports, which included a ban on oil, gas, and coal soon after Russia invaded Ukraine in February of 2022; Russia currently supplies about 20% of the enriched uranium US energy companies use for this purpose, and that allowance to keep importing until 2028 is meant to give said companies some leeway as they find new sources from US companies, or those located in less antagonistic nations.
    —Axios
    Fires used as weapon of war in Sudan destroyed or damaged 72 villages last month, study says
    Summary: A new study by UK-based Sudan Witness indicates that fires were used as a weapon of war in Sudan in at least 72 instances last month, alone, and that fire has been used in this way at least 201 times since fighting originally broke out between the Sudanese military and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces in mid-April of 2023.
    Context: The RFS has been especially enthusiastic in its use of arson in this conflict, in many cases setting entire villages on fire in order to kill, punish, and force people to flee; hundreds of thousands of people have been internally displaced as a result, and more than 14,000 people have been confirmed killed, so far; the capital city of North Darfur, el-Fasher, reportedly faces imminent attack from the RFS, raising concerns that those numbers, both of people killed and displaced, will rise still further in the near-future.
    —The Associated Press
    Nearly 10% of TV-viewing time in the US in April of this year was spent watching YouTube’s smart-TV app, according to new data from Nielsen, marking a transition (for many, at least) for the platform from “place to watch quick videos in between doing other things” to “something like a channel where one might watch a bunch of stuff over long periods.”
    —The Wall Street Journal
    20%
    Percent by which heart attack, stroke, or death due to cardiovascular disease was reduced in participants of a study that tested the impact semaglutide had on these conditions.
    Semaglutide is best known as the active ingredient in diabetes and weight-loss medications like Wegovy and Ozempic, but new studies are increasingly showing its efficacy in treating or preventing other diseases and conditions, as well.
    —The Guardian
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