

Apple News Today
Apple News
Join Shumita Basu every weekday morning as she guides you through some of the most fascinating stories in the news — and how the world’s best journalists are covering them.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Apr 20, 2023 • 3min
Sneak Peek: Why Sienna Miller and Scott Z. Burns made a climate-catastrophe show
What would a future look like where climate change has become a truly unavoidable part of all of our daily lives? This is one of the questions the new Apple TV+ show Extrapolations tries to answer. Series creator Scott Z. Burns was a producer of the 2006 documentary An Inconvenient Truth and the writer behind the eerily prescient 2011 film Contagion, about a global pandemic. Burns, along with one of the stars of the series, Sienna Miller, spoke with Apple News In Conversation host Shumita Basu about the making of Extrapolations — and how dystopian portrayals of the future can mobilize and motivate people to take serious action. This is a preview of that converstion.

Apr 20, 2023 • 8min
Rent? Buy? New data shows the market’s weird for all of us.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s medical absence is limiting Democrats’ ability to move Biden’s judicial nominations through. The Washington Post has the story.
New data shows a slowdown in apartment building, the latest twist to a very unusual housing market for renters and buyers alike. MarketWatch reports.
After 25 years, Netflix’s DVD-by-mail service is coming to an end. The Wall Street Journal has a look back.

Apr 19, 2023 • 10min
Election lies cost Fox News $787.5 million. Now what?
The Washington Post reports on the impact of Fox News’s $787.5 million settlement of the Dominion defamation case.
There’s new criticism of Missouri’s self-defense laws in the wake of the Ralph Yarl shooting. The Kansas City Star has the story.
The Wall Street Journal explains why climate change is making heavy turbulence more common during air travel.

Apr 18, 2023 • 11min
The felony charges in the shooting of a Black Missouri teen
Prosecutors charged a man in the shooting of 16-year-old Black student Ralph Yarl, who had mistakenly gone to the wrong house to pick up his younger siblings. The Kansas City Star has the story.
The trial for a landmark defamation suit against Fox News by Dominion Voting Systems is scheduled to get underway today. Brian Stelter, former CNN chief media correspondent, joined In Conversation to explain what the plaintiff is seeking to prove. He’s also covering the trial for Vanity Fair.
A Vox journalist reveals what volunteering to do other people’s taxes taught him about America’s challenging tax code.
The Guardian has the story of a photographer who rejected a prestigious prize because his image was AI-generated.

Apr 17, 2023 • 9min
Deadly new conflict just broke out in Sudan. Here’s why.
CNN explains origins of the deadly new conflict in Sudan.
Next-generation treatments can be complicated to test and administer. The Wall Street Journal reports on the race to get doctors trained on the medicines of the future.
Last night the lights went down on Broadway’s ‘The Phantom of the Opera’ for the final time. The Wall Street Journal profiles the guy who flipped the switch.

Apr 14, 2023 • 10min
How a landmark trial against Fox News could change libel law
A landmark defamation trial against Fox News begins next week. Legal observers say the outcome could have a big impact on libel laws. Brian Stelter discusses the implications with Shumita Basu on this week’s Apple News In Conversation.
Federal authorities arrested Jack Teixeira, a 21-year-old Air National Guard member, in connection with a leak of highly classified U.S. intelligence documents. The Guardian has more.
Town & Country looks at real-estate developers’ plans to build on the moon. Yes, the moon.
For weeks now, some of the NBA’s biggest stars have been benched. The Wall Street Journal explains why.

Apr 13, 2023 • 11min
Inside the EPA’s most ambitious car-pollution plan ever
New vehicle-pollution rules proposed by the EPA would require two-thirds of cars on the market to be EVs by 2032. Vox looks at what’s in the plan and its prospects for implementation.
NPR reports on its decision to cease posting to Twitter after the social-media platform labeled it first “state-affiliated media,” then “government-funded media.” The BBC asks Twitter CEO Elon Musk about the thinking behind his company’s decision in a wide-ranging interview.
The Wall Street Journal reports on how consumers are rethinking their relationship to subscriptions — and why it might soon get easier to cancel.

Apr 12, 2023 • 10min
What to know about the apparent U.S. intelligence leak
Images of what appear to be highly classified U.S. intelligence documents recently turned up on a social platform popular with gamers. The Wall Street Journal has more about the Pentagon team looking into the apparent leak and the fallout. The Journal also has the biggest questions and takeaways from the incident.
The SIG Sauer P320 is one of America’s most popular handguns. The Trace details how more than 100 people say their P320s discharged unexpectedly.
Individuals who make Forbes’ 30 Under 30 list are often praised as disrupters. Several have since been arrested for fraud and scams. The Guardian has more.
The Washington Post explains how warmer temperatures due to climate change are making homers more common in Major League Baseball.

Apr 11, 2023 • 11min
How soldiers accused of violent crimes avoid trial
The Army is increasingly allowing service members who face criminal charges for violent crimes to circumvent trial by being discharged from the military. ProPublica investigates.
In recent layoffs, some employees were affected while on parental or medical leave. NPR spoke to a few.
Makers of fortune cookies are debating whether artificial intelligence has a role in their industry. The Wall Street Journal has more.

Apr 10, 2023 • 10min
Who is responsible when artificial intelligence lies?
ChatGPT invented a sexual-harassment scandal and named a real law professor as the accused. Who’s at fault? The Washington Post investigates.
Home prices in the West are falling as prices in the East boom. The Wall Street Journal takes a closer look this unusual pattern.
Bloomberg looks at how one man figured out a winning strategy for a seemingly unbeatable casino game: roulette.


