|
WTF, Daily
Wondering what the fuck is going on each day? Same.
Monday, April 20, 2026
|
|
Good morning — the Iran ceasefire expires tomorrow with the two sides still haggling over the length of a uranium moratorium, Snap has discovered that AI can replace a thousand employees but apparently not the CEO who hired them, and Congress has had the sort of week that makes C-SPAN genuinely unmissable. Here's what happened.
|
|
AI News
|
OpenAI Signs $20 Billion Deal With Cerebras, Presumably After Considerable Reflection
OpenAI has committed to paying Cerebras north of twenty billion dollars over the next three years for the privilege of using its chips to power its servers, a sum that represents either a shrewd strategic investment or the most expensive way yet devised to avoid building one's own infrastructure. The arrangement grants OpenAI access to Cerebras' formidable processing capacity, which its own ambitions have long since outpaced, and suggests that the AI arms race has entered a phase in which the contestants are spending money at a pace that would have made a Gilded Age railroad baron reach for his smelling salts. Analysts noted with practiced neutrality that the deal "underscores the critical importance of compute," which is analyst for "everyone needs more chips and no one has enough." One does begin to wonder whether the winner of the AI race will simply be whoever runs out of money last.
|
|
Snap Lays Off 1,000 Employees, Credits AI for Making Them Unnecessary
Snap CEO Evan Spiegel announced this week the elimination of approximately 1,000 jobs and the closure of over 300 open roles, with the company citing "rapid advancements in artificial intelligence" as the mechanism by which smaller teams may now accomplish what larger ones previously required. This is the sort of corporate communication that manages to deliver genuinely bad news to a thousand people while simultaneously sounding like a press release for a product launch. Snap's share price responded with the equanimity of a market that has long since made its peace with the notion that "efficiency" is a word that travels one-way. It is a peculiar feature of the AI moment that the technology's greatest demonstrated productivity gain appears to be in the production of polished layoff announcements.
|
|
|
Geopolitics
|
US-Iran Ceasefire Expires Tomorrow With a Deal Tantalizingly, Exhaustingly Out of Reach
The two-week ceasefire brokered by Pakistan between the United States and Iran expires tomorrow, April 21st, with negotiators describing the outstanding gaps as narrowing without quite managing to close — a condition familiar to anyone who has ever tried to park a large vehicle in a small space. The central sticking point remains uranium enrichment: Washington wants a twenty-year moratorium; Tehran has offered five; and the distance between those positions, measured in diplomatic time, is approximately the width of the Strait of Hormuz. President Trump has indicated he is "very close" to a deal and willing to extend the ceasefire if needed, the latter being the kind of flexibility that tends to arrive only after the original deadline has already done its work of concentrating minds. The world watches, oil markets breathe shallowly, and the negotiators in question are presumably surviving on very strong coffee.
|
|
Ukraine Records 206 Combat Engagements in a Day as the War Declines to Conclude
Ukraine reported 206 combat engagements over the past twenty-four hours, including 71 airstrikes, 7,767 kamikaze drones, and nearly 3,000 shelling attacks on populated areas — figures that have the quality of statistics one reads and immediately attempts to un-read. The front lines remain roughly where they have been for some time, which is to say that an enormous expenditure of men and materiel continues to produce the military equivalent of treading water. Hungary, meanwhile, remains a reliable source of complications, with Prime Minister Orbán continuing to block disbursement of the EU's €90 billion loan to Ukraine, a posture whose strategic logic remains opaque to most observers and perfectly clear to Moscow. That a land war of this magnitude has become, in some quarters, almost routine in its reporting is perhaps the most quietly alarming development of all.
|
|
|
Politics
|
Swalwell and Gonzales Resign From Congress Moments Before the Ceremonial Boot Arrives
Representatives Eric Swalwell of California and Tony Gonzales of Texas resigned from Congress this week, each arriving at the exit just ahead of the ceremonial boot that had been assembled in their honor by their respective colleagues. Swalwell faced allegations of sexual assault; Gonzales acknowledged an affair with a staffer who later died by suicide — a set of circumstances his Ethics Committee found sufficiently troubling to warrant action. The departures arrived at a moment when the House was also preparing proceedings against Representatives Cherfilus-McCormick and Cory Mills, the latter accused of threatening to release intimate images of a former girlfriend, making it a week in Congress that could fairly be described as brisk. The institution, one notes, appears to have discovered accountability; whether this discovery proves durable is a matter on which history counsels restraint.
|
|
Trump Raises Tariffs on Steel, Aluminum, and Copper to 50 Percent, Just to Keep Things Interesting
President Trump signed a proclamation earlier this month expanding Section 232 tariffs on imported steel, aluminum, and copper, with articles made substantially of those metals now subject to a flat 50 percent duty on their full customs value — a rate that, by the standards of recent tariff activity, barely registers as noteworthy. The revisions eliminated the previous system of parsing metal content from everything else, replacing it with the bracing simplicity of taxing the whole thing; products that are 15 percent or less metal were granted a reprieve, which is the sort of carve-out that suggests someone with a very specific product line had a very productive meeting in Washington. American manufacturers received the news with the philosophical resignation of people who have been updating their cost models on a monthly basis for the better part of two years. The tariff, one suspects, is not finished with any of us yet.
|
|
|
The Economy
|
IMF Cuts Global Growth Forecast, Blames War, Which Is Fair Enough
The International Monetary Fund has revised its 2026 global growth forecast downward to 2.4 percent, a reduction of half a percentage point attributed primarily to the conflict in the Middle East, which has introduced into the global economy the sort of uncertainty that financial models handle poorly and human beings handle worse. Energy prices have surged, inflation expectations have firmed, and the IMF noted with characteristic understatement that "a prolonged conflict could weaken growth and unsettle markets" — a sentence that, translated from economist, means things could get considerably worse before they get better. Emerging market and developing economies face the sharpest downward revisions, having the misfortune of being major energy importers and the least equipped to absorb the shock. The global economy, having spent several years recovering from one crisis, appears to have concluded that complacency is a luxury it cannot afford.
|
|
Markets Open Lower Monday as Investors Survey a Landscape Best Described as Bracing
US futures declined Monday morning — S&P 500 futures off 0.5 percent, Dow futures down 0.58 percent, Nasdaq off 0.46 percent — as investors surveyed a landscape featuring an expiring Iran ceasefire, fresh metals tariffs, and a geopolitical backdrop that has been described by more than one analyst as "not ideal." The combination of rising energy prices, inflation that has proved stickier than hoped, and a trade policy that changes faster than supply chains can adapt has produced the market equivalent of a man attempting to read a map while someone periodically adjusts the road beneath him. Corporate earnings season continues in the background, offering the welcome reminder that some companies are still, in fact, making money. Whether the week ends better than it begins depends, in no small part, on events occurring in rooms where neither investors nor their models are permitted to sit.
|
|
|
Culture
|
Patrick Muldoon, of Starship Troopers and Melrose Place, Dies at 56
Patrick Muldoon, the actor best known for his roles in Melrose Place, Days of Our Lives, and the 1997 science-fiction film Starship Troopers, died Sunday morning after suffering a heart attack at his Beverly Hills home at the age of 56. He is remembered by fans of a certain vintage as the handsome antagonist of several soap operas and at least one film involving giant bugs, which is the sort of résumé that sounds reductive in summary but represented a career of considerable popular affection. His girlfriend found him unresponsive after he did not emerge from the shower — a detail that serves as a reminder, if any were needed, that the mundane and the irreversible are never very far apart. Hollywood, which specialises in the theatrical, finds itself once again humbled by the plainly quiet nature of loss.
|
|
Netflix Returns to the Upside Down, This Time in Saturday Morning Cartoon Form
Stranger Things: Tales from '85 arrives on Netflix this Thursday, marking the franchise's expansion into animation — a medium modeled on the Saturday morning cartoons of the 1980s, with the creators citing He-Man, Scooby-Doo, and The Real Ghostbusters as touchstones, which is either an act of loving homage or an extremely clever way to sell the intellectual property to a generation of children who were not yet born when the original aired. The ten-episode series is set in Hawkins in the winter of 1985, between seasons two and three, and features none of the original cast in voice roles — a decision that will register differently depending on whether one considers the voice the soul of a character or merely the wrapping. Netflix has also announced an accompanying feature film, because once you have a franchise you do not leave the field until the audience physically asks you to stop. The Upside Down, one suspects, will prove a more permanent fixture of the culture than anyone originally intended.
|
|
|
Tech
|
Amazon Acquires Globalstar for $11.6 Billion and Declares War on Starlink
Amazon announced the acquisition of satellite operator Globalstar for approximately $11.6 billion this month, folding the company into its Amazon Leo network and inheriting Globalstar's fleet, its coveted slice of mobile spectrum, and — perhaps most significantly — Apple as a partner, since Globalstar currently powers the Emergency SOS feature on iPhones. The deal positions Amazon Leo as the most credible challenger yet to SpaceX's Starlink, which has until now enjoyed the comfortable life of a monopolist who has lapped the field so thoroughly that competition felt theoretical. Amazon also announced that future iPhones and Apple Watches will use Amazon Leo for satellite features, meaning that two of the world's largest technology companies have quietly decided the future runs through low Earth orbit. The satellite internet wars, long promised and long delayed, appear to have finally, decisively, begun.
|
|
Protesters in 24 States Turn Out Against AI Data Centers, Citing Bills, Water, Noise, and General Disruption
Activist groups in twenty-four states staged protests this month against the proliferation of AI data centers, citing rising utility bills, excessive water consumption, noise pollution, and the somewhat aggressive land-use practices of an industry that has discovered it needs rather a lot of real estate rather quickly. Polls show that 65 percent of Americans oppose new data center construction in their vicinity, a figure suggesting that the infrastructure undergirding the AI revolution has arrived at the "not in my backyard" phase of public opinion somewhat ahead of schedule. The facilities consume electricity at a rate that has caused several regional utilities to revise their twenty-year projections upward in ways that have attracted the attention of rate regulators, local officials, and the neighbors of anyone who has tried to sleep near a building full of cooling fans. Progress, it turns out, makes a tremendous amount of noise.
|
|
WTF, Daily
The news, without the nonsense. Mostly.
|
|