The Headlines - The Key Players in the U.S.-Iran Talks, and the Deadly Rise of Giant Trucks and S.U.V.s
Episode Date: June 22, 2026Plus, the “Steven Spielberg of sitcoms.” Here’s what we’re covering: Live Updates on the U.S.-Iran Talks, by The New York Times Three Men Are Key to Iran’s Approach to U.S. Talks, by Yegan...eh Torbati Trump Says Reflecting Pool Will Likely Need to Be Drained, by Minho Kim Live Updates: Starmer Announces Resignation as Prime Minister, by The New York Times The Deadly Rise of Giant Trucks and S.U.V.s, by Michael H. Keller, Eli Murray, Danielle Ivory and Irineo Cabreros James Burrows, Master of the TV Sitcom, Dies at 85, by Glenn Rifkin On a New ‘Frasier,’ James Burrows Has a Joke for You, by Alexis Soloski Tune in every weekday morning, and tell us what you think at: theheadlines@nytimes.com. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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From the New York Times, it's the headlines.
I'm Will Jarvis in for Tracy Mumford.
Today's Monday, June 22nd, here's what we're covering.
What the president has asked us to do is turn over a new leaf to transform our relationship with the people of Iran and to extend an outstretched hand.
Last night, Iran and the U.S.
wrapped up their first round of negotiations over how to turn a pause in the war into a lasting peace.
What today really represents is the beginning of a technical,
negotiation that's not going to solve every disagreement, but is it going to allow us to sit together.
Vice President J.D. Vance led the U.S. delegation in the talks, which were held at a lakeside resort in
Switzerland. Meanwhile, Iran is being represented by the country's Speaker of Parliament, a brigadier
general who is a key figure overseeing Iranian forces in the war, along with the country's foreign
minister, Abbas Araghchi. Arrogchi played a big role in the nuclear deal Iran struck with the
Obama administration about a decade ago, and the leader of the U.S. side in those talks called him a,
quote, very tough negotiator. Coming out of the negotiations this weekend, some of the thornyest issues,
including sanctions on Iran and the country's nuclear program, remain unresolved. But mediators
said there was some encouraging progress. That included a temporary line of communication to help
ensure the safe passage of ships through the Strait of Hormuz, along with what they described as a new
effort to wind down the fighting in Lebanon. The conflict there, between Israel and the Iran-backed
militia Hezbollah is one of many potential tripwires that could threaten the fragile 60-day
ceasefire between Iran and the U.S. that was announced a week ago. Another factor that could
complicate things is President Trump, who issued new threats against Iran this weekend, even as Vance
was talking about turning over a new leaf. Trump told Fox News that after the ceasefire expires, he can do, quote,
whatever I want. As of this morning, it's not clear exactly what the next steps in the peace
talks will be. According to Iranian state media, the country's top officials are now on their
way back to Tehran, but more technical discussions are continuing in Switzerland.
On the National Mall, the reflecting pool, one of the key pieces of President Trump's effort
to remodel the nation's capital, is rapidly deteriorating. The pool has suffered from leaks and algae blooms
decades, and earlier this year, the administration gave two companies no-bid contracts to carry out
renovations. One was for a firm with ties to Trump, which repainted the bottom of the pool,
and the other company, which worked on the water purification system, is directly connected
to a Trump donor who lives next to Mar-a-Lago. But since the companies finished their work,
the algae has returned, turning the pool soupy and green, and large chunks of the new paint
have started floating to the surface.
Over the weekend, President Trump claimed without evidence that vandals had caused the problems,
and the Times spoke to one man who was arrested.
He's a three-time Olympian who said he'd just stopped by to have a look at the pool during a bike ride,
reaching down to touch a bit of the peeling paint when he was taken into custody and charged with
destroying government property.
He said, quote, I guess I was there at the wrong place, wrong time.
The White House and U.S. Park Police did not respond to her
requests for comment. On social media, Trump said he'd met with contractors on Saturday to discuss
the state of the reflecting pool, and that the problems had become so severe that the pool would
likely have to be at least partially drained for repairs again.
Every decision I've taken has been about putting the country I love first. That is why I will
resign as leader of the Labor Party. In London this morning, the British Prime Minister Kier-Starmor
announced his resignation.
And I will do everything I can to ensure an orderly handover of power.
Starmar took the post in 2024, after the left-leaning Labor Party won an election that was
dubbed a loveless landslide.
Since then, the party has struggled to deal with economic stagnation, government debt,
and underfunded defense and health care systems.
And the country has faced a growing wave of anti-immigrant populism.
Against that backdrop, Starmor was increasing.
seen as weak and indecisive.
Polls showed he was one of the least popular prime ministers in modern British history.
Now, he could be replaced as soon as next month, with his most likely successor being
Andy Burnham, the former mayor of Greater Manchester.
Burnham is also a member of labor, but many lawmakers in the party think he's more authentic
and charismatic than Starmer and would be able to bring new energy to British politics.
One political expert there told the times that, quote,
if the sausage isn't going to change, Burnham might at least add some sizzle.
For decades, American roads were steadily getting safer for pedestrians.
But around 2009, the trend reversed.
And since then, pedestrian fatality rates have increased by nearly 80%.
And that increase is unique to the United States.
Other countries haven't seen a similar surge, suggesting that possible culprits like
the rise of smartphones don't tell the whole story.
So what happened?
Michael Keller is an investigative reporter at the Times.
He says that Americans' taste for big trucks and SUVs may be killing pedestrians
as more and more people trade in their sedans for larger vehicles.
As part of the Times investigation, Michael and his team poured through accident records
and car schematics, crunched nearly a decade's worth of data, and built visual simulations
of crashes with dummies.
When hit by a sedan, the dummy is first struck in its lower body, below,
its center of gravity, sending it over the hood and often onto the windshield.
In contrast, when the dummies hit by the truck, it's hit above its center of gravity.
It's knocked violently to the ground and is dragged under the vehicle.
And that difference in hood heights can result in two wildly different types of crashes
and injuries.
The result of being hit by a vehicle with a taller hood is that you're more likely to have
serious injury or more likely to be killed.
Michael says that hood height is not the only problem. As vehicles have gotten bigger and heavier,
manufacturers have made their frames thicker to support that weight and keep people inside safe.
But that has made blind spots worse. In some cases, way worse, with the bigger frame around the
windshield completely blocking pedestrians from view during left-hand turns. Taking all this into
account, my colleagues estimated that if today's vehicles were roughly the same size as they were
two decades ago, up to 400 pedestrian lives would be saved each year in the U.S.
In response to questions from the Times, automakers said blaming larger vehicles for pedestrian
deaths overlooks other issues like the design of American roads, and they said that new technology
designed to detect and avoid pedestrians would help improve safety.
For the full investigation, including how car companies are now making nearly all their profits
from bigger vehicles, go to n.witimes.com.
And finally, I do laugh when I'm in rehearsal because it helps them know where the audience
is going to laugh and where the writers are going to laugh.
James Burroughs, a master of the TV sitcom and the director behind many of America's most
famous shows like Cheers and Will & Grace, has died at 85.
Known as the Steven Spielberg of sitcoms, Burroughs won 11 Emmys and directed more than
thousand episodes of TV.
This is everybody. This is Chandler and Phoebe and Joey.
And you remember my brother Ross?
Sure.
He worked on everything from Friends to Frasier.
Look, me, I'm a nervous wreck.
I can't do something to calm down.
Doble him press for, please.
The son of a Broadway playwright, Burroughs got his start in the theater,
before realizing he could use his skills in TV,
since sitcoms were basically short plays in front of a camera.
His career exploded in the early 1980s,
when he helped create a sitcom about a bar in Boston
where everybody knows your name.
Afternoon, everybody?
Not enough.
He directed almost all 275 episodes of Cheers,
including its last ever,
which was one of the most watched finalies in TV history.
What's most remarkable about Jimmy Burroughs
was that he had impeccable taste
in terms of what was funny.
When he looked at a page, he could tell what would get laughs.
And when he was in the room shooting, he could tell the take that would work.
He could tell where the body should be in space for the joke to land.
My colleague Alexis Sulaski is a culture reporter for the Times.
She says beyond his natural instinct for comedy, Burroughs also had a gift for nurturing actors
and turning individuals into ensembles.
Part of his genius was that on the surface, it seemed like he worked on a lot of workplace sitcoms.
Cheers is a workplace sitcom. Taxi is a workplace sitcom. News radio, one of my favorites, that's a workplace sitcom.
But his idea was that, no, these aren't workplace shows. These are family shows. And that is what he felt he did. He felt that he made families.
Those are the headlines.
Today on the Daily, a look at the growing movement in the U.S. to deprescribe and get patients off of antidepressants.
You can listen to that in the New York Times app or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Will Jarvis. The headlines will be back tomorrow with Tracy Mumford.
