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Quote of the Day

"Thoughtfully, but bravely"

— How the company approached the Brawny Man’s new look. Tough on spills, soft on the eyes.  

What's Happening

Emergency room
Reproductive Rights

Kept 'Alive' by Law

What's going on: A heartbreaking case in Atlanta, Georgia, raises new concerns about the consequences of abortion bans. Adriana Smith, 30, has been on life support for more than 90 days — not because doctors think she’ll recover, but because she was nine weeks pregnant when they declared her brain dead. Georgia law bans abortions after about six weeks, with exceptions to protect the mother’s life. Though Smith is legally deceased, her family says doctors have explained the hospital is required by law to keep her body functioning until the fetus reaches viability — likely another two months away. The law recognizes a fetal heartbeat as a legal “personhood” marker, effectively removing decision-making power from Smith’s family. Her mother, April Newkirk, says she’s being forced to keep her daughter on a ventilator to support a fetus that may not survive. “It’s torture for me,” Newkirk told NBC affiliate 11Alive. Emory Healthcare didn’t comment on Smith’s specific case, citing privacy rules, but said it uses “consensus from clinical experts, medical literature, and legal guidance” to help providers make treatment recommendations in compliance with Georgia’s laws.

What it means: Analysts say Smith’s case underscores the human cost of laws that strip away bodily autonomy. Critics argue policies like the one in Georgia force families to watch loved ones suffer — not for medical reasons, but political ones. This case also shows how so-called “exceptions” to abortion laws often fall short in complex situations. It comes as Texas lawmakers scramble to clarify the state’s near-total abortion ban amid rising maternal deaths, and just as Missouri lawmakers advanced a referendum to ban most abortions — despite voters backing abortion access six months ago. As Smith’s family faces emotional and financial strain from mounting medical bills, they’re sharing their story: “I think every woman should have the right to make their own decision,” Newkirk said. “And if not, then their partner or their parents.”

Related: RFK Jr. Ordered the FDA To Review Regulations on the Abortion Pill (The Guardian)

Politics

SCOTUS Sorta Heard Arguments on Birthright Citizenship

What's going on: The Supreme Court heard arguments Thursday in a case that could curb judges’ ability to block presidential executive orders. The dispute stems from a nationwide injunction that stopped President Donald Trump’s birthright citizenship order. The Court isn’t deciding whether the policy itself is constitutional — just whether a single judge’s ruling should apply across all 50 states. Nationwide injunctions have blocked major policies under both parties, fueling years of debate over whether they protect constitutional rights — or tie the hands of presidents before courts fully review their policies. A decision in the case is expected by June.

What it means: The Supreme Court’s ruling could significantly change how challenges to presidential actions play out. Several justices appeared torn between the two different issues: Skeptical of giving one judge the power to freeze executive actions nationwide, but also uneasy about the legal and practical fallout of limiting them. While critics say limits to nationwide injunctions could lead to “unprecedented chaos,” Trump’s legal team argued that the broad rulings unfairly block presidential authority. If the Court agrees, it could become much harder to pause major executive actions — on immigration, health care, voting rights, and more — before they take effect. Legal experts widely believe Trump's birthright policy will eventually be struck down, but this case could limit how fast and how far courts can step in.

Related: Separated Immigrant Families Will Soon Get New Lawyers — From Trump’s DOJ (Politico)

Health

A Tiny DNA Fix, a Giant Leap for Rare Disease

What's going on: Nine-month-old KJ Muldoon just made medical history. He’s the first person to receive a personalized gene-editing therapy, designed specifically to correct the tiny genetic glitch that put his life at risk. KJ has a rare condition that affects just one in 1.3 million babies and can be fatal within days. With no time to spare, doctors in Pennsylvania created a treatment in just six months. They used a next-gen form of CRISPR (a gene-editing tool) to swap out a single faulty “letter” in his DNA without cutting the strand — a safer, more precise fix. Since his first treatment in February, KJ can now eat more normally, takes half as much medication, and is hitting developmental milestones. Now, his parents are getting ready to take him home.

What it means: This isn’t just a win for one baby — it’s a breakthrough that could change the future of medicine for millions. Scientists say the same gene-editing method could be used to treat ultra-rare diseases and more common ones like cystic fibrosis and muscular dystrophy. KJ’s treatment cost about the same as a liver transplant — with researchers saying future versions are expected to be ten times cheaper. Experts say this case proves personalized medicine doesn’t have to take decades or break the bank. “Seeing him reach milestones that are important for any infant as they're developing blows us away,” KJ’s mom told NPR. And it’s a reminder that investment in new scientific research can have a monumental impact.

Related: Florida Bans Fluoride in Drinking Water (NBC)

Quick Hits

📰 James Comey’s now-deleted IG post is under investigation after Trump supporters said it threatened the president’s life.


✈️  It’s not just Newark — Denver air traffic controllers experienced a communications outage this week.


🚆 The country’s third-largest transit systemwent on strike,derailing hundreds of thousands of commutes. Silver lining: solid excuse to WFH.


🔥 Can your tastebuds handle the beautiful abomination that is Jalapeño wine?


🧑‍⚖️ The It Ends With Us drama is taking a toll on Blake Lively and Taylor Swift's friendship, according to People.


📰One of The New York Times' most popular word games had an error, and the internet did what it does best. 


👜 Olivia Rodrigo always keeps a specific emergency item inside her bag. We prefer a block of Jarlsberg, but to each their own.


🏖️ “Mini-retirements” might be the secret to work-life balance.


theskimm good for you awards 2025

Welcome to our second annual Good for You Awards. Over the past several months, our editors have consulted with experts and tested hundreds of wellness products across seven categories. Now we’ve chosen the winners that actually made a difference in how we feel. Start with:

Just Trust Us

Here are today’s recs to help you live a smarter life…

One woman opened up to us about her journey with Sjögren’s disease and how she received her diagnosis. Read all about it.*


Until June 2, LaserAway is taking 70% off treatments (yes, you read that right) on small areas, like brows and lips. As longtime LaserAway devotees, we're getting in on this.


Need a new bra? We're willing to bet that’s a yes. Soma is running its now-famous $29 sale through May 19, so now's the time to stock up.


In honor of its fourth birthday, Soft Services is taking 10% off orders of $65+, and offering a free gift with purchase. We're grabbing this status-symbol hand cream.

Psst…love our recs? Follow @skimmshopping on Instagram for more products, gifts, and services that are actually worth the hype (and the price tag).

Settle This

A copy of the Magna Carta

Harvard bought a copy of the Magna Carta that turned out to be a rare one worth millions. How much did they pay for it?

Extra Credit

Real Women Have Curves

See

The Great White Way just got a little more gutsy. Real Women Have Curves — based on the 2002 film and Josefina López’s play — follows Ana García, a first-gen Mexican-American teen with big NYC dreams and an even bigger family pull. When her mom’s garment shop lands a do-or-die order, Ana’s stuck stitching together ambition and obligation. Set in ’80s East LA and starring Tatianna Córdoba in her Broadway debut, the vibrant musical blends politics with humor, heart, and some seriously show stopping numbers.

Game Time

Pile-Up Poker cards animation

Kick your weekend off with Pile-Up Poker, a brand-new game where poker meets solitaire. Create as many poker hands as possible to earn cash and climb the leaderboard. We’re all in.

Meet Us On The Leaderboard

Flipart | Spelltower | Crossword | Typeshift | Pile-Up Poker

This is worth your money

Spotlight on

🥳 Some Birthdays

Michele Aprati (IL), Tyler Aprati (IL), Teddy Wasserstrum (NY), Noah Schneider (NY), David Schneider (NY), Brooksie Voss (CA), Mike Minikes (NY), theSkimm's Olva Timorry (MA), theSkimm's Martha Upton (NY)