TechCrunch / Maxwell Zeff
Google unveiled an AI-powered TV that summarizes the news for you at CES 2025 →“By asking Gemini to play your ‘News Brief,’ the AI assistant will scrape news stories from across the internet and YouTube video headlines posted by trusted news channels, and produce a brief summary to catch you up on the day’s events … Google plans to release these new Gemini capabilities for new and existing Google TV devices toward the end of 2025.”
The Washington Post / Ben Strauss
The Atlantic / Charlie Warzel and Mike Caulfield
January 6 and the triumph of the justification machine →“Lately, our independent work has coalesced around a particular shared idea: that misinformation is powerful, not because it changes minds, but because it allows people to maintain their beliefs in light of growing evidence to the contrary. The internet may function not so much as a brainwashing engine but as a justification machine. A rationale is always just a scroll or a click away, and the incentives of the modern attention economy—people are rewarded with engagement and greater influence the more their audience responds to what they’re saying—means that there will always be a rush to provide one.”
The Canadian Press / Tara Deschamps
The New York Times / Nico Grant
Amazon Prime will release a Melania Trump documentary →“The company and its founder, Jeff Bezos, who also owns The Washington Post, had a rocky relationship with Mr. Trump during Mr. Trump’s first presidential term. But in recent months, Amazon and Mr. Bezos have taken steps to repair it.”
Press Gazette / Charlotte Tobitt
The New Yorker / Jordan Salama
On TikTok, every migrant is living the American Dream →“Like many of the migrants I spoke with in New York, María and Mercedes said that their decision to leave Colta was at least partly influenced by TikToks they’d seen—videos very similar to the ones they were making now.”
Columbia Journalism Review / Norman Pearlstine
The Washington Post / Jeremy Barr
A Florida jury will decide if CNN defamed security contractor →“While most defamation lawsuits against media companies are either settled out of court or dismissed in their early stages, the Young case represents a rare example of a case actually going to trial, putting the network in the uncomfortable position of seeing its journalists, producers and executives being forced to take the stand.”