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Murdoch Podcast Fantasies, World Cup Jitters, G.O.P. Trump Discontent
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Happy Memorial Day and welcome back to The Daily Courant, your afternoon guide to Puck’s best new reporting.
Here’s what you need to know… and stick around for the latest on Google’s A.I. search bombshell.
P.S.: A reminder that subscribers to Puck’s Inner Circle—our highest tier of membership—now also receive complimentary access to Air Mail. Click here to sign up for the most essential reporting from Puck and our elegant sister brand, a haven of weekly cultural reportage.
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- In the Room: Publishers are reeling over Google’s latest A.I.-powered search overhaul as major platforms continue to abandon the open web and fortify their walled gardens. Julia Alexander uncovers how A.I. executives and media publishers are hunkering down for this new era. [Read More]
- The Best & The Brightest: Many Hill Republicans have reached a breaking point with Donald Trump after his revenge endorsement of Ken Paxton, push for a $1.8 billion slush fund for supporters, and demands for a $1 billion ballroom—none of which is playing well with voters.
Leigh Ann Caldwell gets inside the G.O.P.’s mini-rebellion and the midterm reckoning that members fear is coming. [Read More]
- Line Sheet: Despite a yearslong effort from tech and eyewear giants to make smartglasses a
thing, the category has yet to break into the cultural mainstream. Malique Morris chats with Warby Parker co-C.E.O. Neil Blumenthal about the brand’s $150 million push to convince consumers they won’t look like cyborgs while wearing them. [Read More]
- Wall Power: The latest semi-annual New York auction cycle ended on a harried final afternoon, in which three day sales unfolded around the same time. Marion Maneker peruses the top lots, surprise records, and historical-over-contemporary trend that defined the week. [Read More]
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- The Varsity: John Ourand rings up fan fave Andrew Marchand to debate whether Apple’s iPhone MLS broadcast is the future of sports production or a gimmick, before turning to the mounting headwinds facing the 2026 World Cup. [Listen Here]
- Impolitic: John Heilemann and Atlantic staff writer Josh Tyrangiel discuss his new book, A.I. for Good; the verdict in Elon Musk’s $150 billion lawsuit against Sam Altman; and Tyrangiel’s surprising take on Palantir.
[Listen Here]
- The Powers That Be: Peter Hamby and Jon Kelly chew over the second- and third-order effects of James Murdoch’s
Vox acquisition, before reading between the lines of Jeff Bezos’s Washington Post warning. [Listen Here]
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And now, a little more on Google’s A.I. search bombshell…
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Last week, at Google’s annual developers conference, C.E.O. Sundar Pichai declared that
search was getting an update for the A.I. future. Going forward, Google A.I. will personalize every query with follow-up questions while surfacing the results inside an interactive box, with a small roundup of links on the side. In other words, the 10 blue links we’ve grown accustomed to will be displaced by more A.I. Overviews, YouTube Shorts, and ads. Technologists cheered; publishers passed the antacids.
As Julia reports, the announcement was further confirmation that we’ve fully
entered the era of Google Zero—the term that describes the looming death of search traffic. For publishers, the emerging challenge is to figure out how to monetize the agentic era’s robot crawlers. (OpenAI’s Sam Altman has suggested micropayments, while Cloudflare’s Matthew Prince is already implementing a “pay-per-crawl” service.) But as Julia noted, the publishers most likely to survive this revolution are those that double down on what A.I. can’t replicate:
networking, obsessive analysis, and community. After all, less than 10 percent of U.S. adults reportedly use A.I. chatbots for news, and about half of those users don’t trust the results. Ironically, in an agentic-first internet, authoritative sites may be more important than ever.
Click here to read Julia’s full story.
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| Leigh Ann Caldwell
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Trump has spent his second term largely getting what he wants from Congress as he’s launched wars, imposed tariffs, and accumulated crypto
wealth with little scrutiny. But last week, he encountered more resistance from his party on the Hill than at any point since his second swearing-in.
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| Malique Morris
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Neil Blumenthal, co-founder and co-C.E.O. of the Millennial-beloved eyewear brand, discusses its big, Google-backed bet on A.I.-powered
smartglasses—and how he plans to get people to wear them.
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| Marion Maneker
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A timely look at the market themes, top lots, and various peculiarities of a short, buoyant New York auction cycle that still seemed
unusually long.
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| John Ourand
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The Athletic’s Andrew Marchand joins John to discuss Apple’s use of numerous iPhone 17 Pros to produce a live soccer match, and whether
iPhone broadcasting could become the norm. They also get into the 2026 World Cup and whether issues like ticket pricing, immigration concerns, and stadium occupancy will significantly impact the event. Finally, they discuss Netflix’s acquisition of the Women’s World Cup.
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| John Heilemann
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John welcomes former Bloomberg Businessweek editor and current Atlantic staff writer Josh Tyrangiel to discuss his new
book, A.I. for Good: How Real People Are Using Artificial Intelligence to Fix Things That Matter. Tyrangiel, who until recently wrote a column on A.I. for The Washington Post, weighs in on the verdict against Elon Musk in his $150 billion lawsuit against Sam Altman and OpenAI; why the wannabe kings of the A.I. industry are less interesting than the question of what—today and in the future—A.I. is actually good for; and why, despite enraging both the left and parts of the
military establishment, Palantir isn’t so bad after all.
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| Peter Hamby
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| Jon Kelly
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On a very special Memorial Day episode, Jon Kelly rejoins the show to discuss a plethora of pressing digital-media agenda items: the
second- and third-order effects of James Murdoch’s Vox acquisition; Barbara Peng’s ouster from Business Insider; and the between-the-lines on Jeff Bezos’s warning shot about The Washington Post during his CNBC sit-down.
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