The Headlines - Trump’s Approval Drops to New Low, and Condom Prices Rise Because of the War
Episode Date: April 24, 2026Plus, your Friday news quiz. Here’s what we’re covering: Meta to Cut 10% of Work Force in A.I. Push, by Mike Isaac and Eli Tan Trump Says Israel and Lebanon Agree to Extend Cease-Fire by Three W...eeks, by Chris Cameron Disapproval of Trump Hits Highest Level of His Second Term, by Ruth Igielnik World’s Top Producer of Condoms Raises Prices as Iran War Rattles Supply Chains, by Zunaira Saieed Soldier Used Classified Information to Bet on Maduro’s Ouster, U.S. Says, by Benjamin Weiser and Jonah E. Bromwich New Gene Therapy Enables Children With a Rare Form of Deafness to Hear, by Gina Kolata 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 Tracy Mumford. Today's Friday, April 24th. Here's what we're covering.
For decades out here, the old saying that everyone at every tech company used was learn to code.
It was like this insurance policy almost. If you know how to write software, you're safe for good.
And that is now very quickly going obsolete.
My colleague Mike Isaac covers Silicon Valley, which this week has been rocked by major layoff plans as the rush to build.
AI upends the tech industry. The Times got access to an internal memo that was sent around yesterday
at Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram. It announced it's going to cut 10% of its
workforce, about 8,000 people. It's also going to leave another 6,000 open roles unfilled.
Part of this is specific to Meta. They spent the past 10 years building virtual reality
headsets for the Metaverse and happened to miss the huge way.
of artificial intelligence that hit the Valley a few years ago.
And they need to find ways to cut their spending in a big way
in order to build better AI systems.
But I think this is really also indicative of a broader trend
across Silicon Valley right now.
You have basically every big tech company working on building AI
that could do coding and software engineering on its own
rather than requiring engineers necessarily to do that,
which ultimately means it
could be putting a lot of the people that are building these products out of the job.
You also have every big tech company from Google to Amazon to Microsoft
spending billions of dollars on data centers,
the stuff that essentially powers AI and makes it work.
That stuff costs a lot of money.
And all of these companies are trying to reduce the number of employees that work for them
in order to continue affording to pay for what they think will be the future.
Mehta's internal memo acknowledged that the need for new investments is driving these cuts,
with an executive writing, quote, this is not an easy tradeoff.
Yesterday, Microsoft also signaled it's trying to lower its headcount as it goes all in on AI.
It said it was offering buyouts to 7% of its workforce.
And in the last few months, Amazon trimmed roughly 30,000 corporate jobs.
At the White House yesterday...
I'm told this is a rather historic...
President Trump announced a three-week extension of the ceasefire intended to stop the fighting
between Israel and Hezbollah, the Iran-backed militant group in Lebanon.
They've agreed to an additional three weeks of, I guess, no firing ceasefire, no more firing.
Trump was flanked by diplomats from Israel and Lebanon, but the success of any truce will
also depend on the cooperation of Hezbollah, which was not part of the talks.
After the original ceasefire began a week ago, Israeli airstrikes and Hezbollah attacks largely dropped off, though they did not stop completely.
In one deadly incident, Israeli strikes killed a reporter and injured a photographer in southern Lebanon.
According to Lebanese officials, Israeli forces targeted the journalists, first striking a car right in front of them, then hitting a nearby house they took shelter in.
First responders said their rescue teams had to retreat after they came under fire when they tried to try to.
to reach the journalists.
A spokeswoman for the Israeli military said it hadn't prevented rescuers from reaching the journalists
and said the car that was hit in the initial strike had emerged from a building used by Hezbollah.
Now, two other quick updates on the war in the Middle East.
First, with the conflict driving up gas prices and rattling the economy, polling shows that Americans are growing more dissatisfied with President Trump.
The Times analyzed recent polling from dozens of organizations.
and found that 58% of Americans now disapprove of Trump's job performance,
his worst results this term.
Financial concerns seem to be what's driving that.
In a recent Fox News poll, 70% of voters said they felt the economy was getting worse.
Despite that, Trump still largely has the backing of his party,
with another poll showing that the vast majority of Republicans approve of his performance.
And last update on the war,
It sounds random, but it's not.
The world's top producer of condoms says it has to raise prices because its supply chains have
been scrambled by the chaos in the Strait of Hormuz.
Karex, which is based in Malaysia, produces about 5 billion condoms a year, supplying huge brands
like Trojan and Durex.
The company's chief executive told the times that higher freight costs, due to surging
fuel prices, are hitting them hard.
And the conflict has also driven up the cost of some rammed.
like synthetic rubber and foil for packaging.
As a result, Karex is raising prices by up to 30 percent,
and the executive warned that if the war continues,
a shortage of even a single material could ripple through the company's factories
and stop production altogether.
Back in January, people taking a look at the online betting platform, Polymarket,
noticed something they said seemed a little suspicious.
Just before U.S. forces swept into Venezuela and seized the U.
country's president, Nicholas Maduro, someone had placed a big bet that Maduro would soon be, quote,
out. That person made more than $400,000, setting off widespread speculation that they'd had
insider information about the military's plans. Now, federal authorities have charged an Army
Special Forces soldier involved in the Maduro operation with using classified information to wager on it,
and the details in the indictment suggest it's related to that January bet. The authorities
Alleged that the soldier tried to hide his proceeds by moving them through various cryptocurrency
vaults and tried to delete his polymarket account after all the chatter about the very well-timed
bet. The indictment underscores the potential national security risk of government employees
using sensitive information to try and make money on online prediction markets, which have
exploded in recent years and let people bet on just about anything.
People suspect that there's inside of trading happening on these prediction markets around the
war. Well, you know, the whole world, unfortunately, has become somewhat of a casino.
The White House even issued a recent warning to its staff about not using inside info about the war
in Iran to place wagers. And more broadly across the country, there continue to be a lot of
eyebrow-raising incidents connected to this kind of betting. Earlier this week, the platform Kalshi
announced that it suspended the accounts of three political candidates in Virginia, Texas, and
Minnesota, who tried to gamble on their own elections. One of them said he'd actually placed the bet
as a kind of stunt hoping to be caught so he could draw attention to the markets because he says
they're, quote, dangerous to our democracy. Late last month, legislation was filed in both houses
of Congress to limit how government officials can use the sites. And finally, this week marked a major
milestone in treating deafness. The Food and Drug Administration has now approved the first
ever therapy that can restore hearing in some children who were born deaf. There are about 150
known causes of congenital hearing loss. This treatment zeroes in on a condition where the tiny hairs
that transmit sound from the ear to the brain are defective. It's caused by a single mutated gene.
Until now, the only treatment for people with that kind of deafness was a cochlear implant,
an electronic device placed in the inner ear that had major limitations. For example, people with those
implants have difficulty in noisy environments, and things can sound tinny or robotic.
With the new therapy, doctors basically inject a functioning copy of the critical gene
into the inner ear, and the results can be profound. One of the patients the gene therapy was
tested on was a 13-month-old named Miles, whose hearing loss was so intense he couldn't hear
a jet engine if it were next to him. Less than a year after getting the treatment, his hearing was
normal. Overall, about 30% of the kids who've gotten the therapy had a similar outcome to
Miles, according to a researcher connected to the treatment, while the rest might continue to need
some kind of hearing aid. Still, doctors say we're entering a new era for using specialized gene
therapy to tackle hearing loss, and researchers hope this will open the door for more
breakthroughs in the future. Those are the headlines. If you'd like to play the Friday
News Quiz, stick around. It's just after these credits. This show is made by Will Jarvis,
Margaret Cedifa, Jake Lucas, Jan Stewart, and me, Tracy Mumford. Original theme by Dan Powell.
Special thanks to Isabella Anderson, Larissa Anderson, Sam Dolnik, Anjali Liston, Miles McKinley,
Zoe Murphy, and Ted Tay. Now, time for the quiz. Every week, we ask you a few questions about
stories the Times has been covering. Can you get them all? Here we go. First up.
I want to present to you, Mr. President, the letter I sent to the Nobel Prize Committee.
We present this vote proud to you on this joyous occasion.
It is not at all a secret that during President Trump's second term,
countries around the world have been trying all kinds of things to curry favor with him.
Thank you again. Fantastic. We'll put it up in a place of honor.
Recently, officials in one country have even been floating naming part of their territory after him,
calling it Donnyland.
Your question, what country is it?
A hint to get you started, the area they have in mind for Doniland is not that easy to visit right now.
The answer?
Ukraine.
The Times has learned that Ukrainian officials have been specifically floating Donnyland as a name for part of the Donbos, a region that Russia has been trying to seize.
It started in part as a joke, but also as a way to get the Trump administration more invested.
and encouraged the U.S. to push back on Russia's demands.
Apparently, one Ukrainian official win as far as creating a flag for Donnyland,
gold was one of the colors, naturally, and a national anthem using ChatGBT.T.
It's not clear, though, if those were ever shared with the U.S.
Next one.
I was actually in the car with my friend, and I looked at her and I was like, did you see that?
Lately, there has been a surge of sightings.
of a certain phenomena in the sky.
And scientists don't totally agree on why this is happening.
Your question, what are people seeing more of?
The answer?
Fireballs.
The American Meteor Society says that the number of sightings in the first few months of this year
was double what people usually report in that time period.
An amateur astronomer with the society told the Times,
quote, it's a shooting gallery.
There's stuff flying all over the place.
NASA was a little more measured, though.
They put up a post saying that, well, it may seem like sightings have been more frequent recently.
It's not out of the ordinary.
One of the reasons there's been in uptick in sightings in general in the last few years
could be because of the rise of cameras everywhere.
Now you've got dash cams and video doorbells catching phenomena 24-7.
And last one.
In Britain, researchers are trying to document some of the most,
unique parts of the language there, especially the insults and curse words. That, one expert said,
is where the real character and creativity of a language can come out. So they've been asking
people to send them their favorite spicy local phrases so they can document them all.
For the quiz, let's see if you can spot the real British insult mixed in with some fake ones.
We're going to go a few rounds here, and I've recruited a 100% very British, very insulting person
to read the options for us, though full disclaimer, even he hadn't heard of most of these
regional jabs.
Scenario 1.
You might say, I've had it up to here with this insufferable...
Gaffter.
Wazook.
Welk.
Bellsprout.
It's Wazzak.
That is the real insult.
That's what someone around Yorkshire might call a foolish or annoying person.
Scenario two, you might find yourself saying,
cheer up.
There's no need to be a...
Marty Git. Blunderbuss. Cumberbatch. Mogwipe.
Marty Git. Git is a dig all in its own. You add the Marty part. That means you're sulky or moody.
Scenario three. Stuart is always tattling on people. He's the village's worst...
Crumpet. Clipe. Spoony bard. Wattle-snipe.
The answer.
Stuart's a clipe. That's a Scottish term for a snitch.
And last scenario, your cousin was talking absolute blank at the pub last night.
Crumble bore.
Splink, bobbins, gloin.
It's bobbins.
That is slang around Manchester for nonsense.
Okay, you crumble boring, spoony-barting, bell-sprouting,
gaffer, gloaning, rambling, sour logs.
That is it for the news quiz.
I'm Tracy Mumford.
The show will be back on Monday.
For a little bonus, I did ask.
Ask my British colleague, Alex Marshall, what his favorite insult was.
Some of my personal favorite childhood insults are Spanner and Plank and Johnny No-Mates.
I have no idea who the unfortunate Johnny is, and I hope today he is thriving.
