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The Republican-controlled Senate passed a $740.5 billion defense spending bill requiring the removal of Confederate names from military bases, setting up a fight with Trump who has threatened to veto the measure.
"I am someone's daughter, too:" Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and over a dozen House Democrats took to the House floor to call out a "culture" of sexism in Congress.
Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey apologized for the massive hack that compromised some of the social media company's most prominent users, the latest in a hectic week that also saw the large-scale banning of accounts associated with the QAnon right-wing conspiracy theory.
Pres. Trump's former personal lawyer Michael Cohen is ordered to be released from prison and sent to home confinement. A federal judge found that Cohen was sent back to prison as retaliation for refusing to agree to not write a book about Trump, violating his First Amendment rights.
Superstar rapper T.I. has a new gig at a historically Black Atlanta college and he's imparting one of life's key lessons: Be purposeful.
Some of the most highly-anticipated films of the year, including the live-action Mulan and Christopher Nolan's Tenet, had their cinematic release delayed indefinetely in a sign that Hollywood is far from being back to normal.
Today's Must-Read
As the nation convulsed with police brutality protests this spring, TV cop shows started to catch a lot of flak. Reality shows that glorify the police were the first to go. Then attention turned to Dick Wolf. The Law & Order creator, an alumnus of shows like Hill Street Blues and Miami Vice, is the king of scripted television crime drama.
The global uproar strikes at the heart of a lucrative business Wolf has been building since the first Law & Order episode aired in 1990. The prolific producer has created one of TV's most valuable libraries that includes his original crime drama, its 10 domestic and international spinoffs, and scripted and unscripted series, generating hundreds of millions of dollars in profits every year for NBCUniversal.
"We have always adapted to current events in a non-political way and our viewers can expect us to keep doing so," the 73-year-old Wolf told Senior Editor Dawn Chmielewski after agreeing to answer emailed questions, his first comments to the media about the crisis. "We are listening to everything going on right now."
Wolf commands as much as $200,000 per episode. His studio deal with Universal Television—a "Spielberg deal"–entitles him to half of his shows' profits. That has put Wolfe on the path to becoming the rarest of Hollywood creatures: the creator billionaire.
"You can look at the entire Wolf library and not find an episode that has been on the wrong side of history," Wolf says. Read the full story here.
Across Forbes
Forbes Advisor: When you notice that another bank's savings account offers a higher APY, it can be tough to decide whether to go to the trouble of switching to another bank.
MONEY
Where's My Money? What You Need To Know About The Next Big Stimulus Bill The Republican proposal is still just a draft, but it will have the exact same stimulus check provisions as the CARES Act, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said Thursday.
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VIDEO: SCIENCE
There Could Be Life In The Cloud Tops Of Venus Here's how the closest place to "hell" in our Solar System might actually be home to life.
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