18 minutes
It’s soon going to be easier than ever to get your young children vaccinated.
It’s soon going to be easier than ever to get your young children vaccinated.
18 minutes

La devastación causada por los recientes terremotos en Venezuela ha despertado una profunda ola de emoción en Galicia, una tierra unida al país sudamericano por décadas de emigración, memoria y gratitud.

La devastación causada por los recientes terremotos en Venezuela ha despertado una profunda ola de emoción en Galicia, una tierra unida al país sudamericano por décadas de emigración, memoria y gratitud.
19 minutes
دونالد ترامپ، رئیس جمهوری آمریکا، روز چهارشنبه ۱۷ تیر در گفتوگو با خبرنگاران در هواپیمای اختصاصی ریاستجمهوری (ایر فورس وان) گفت مناقشه مربوط به ایران «واقعاً جنگ نیست»، بلکه تلاشی برای «خلع سلاح هستهای رژیم ایران» است.
دونالد ترامپ، رئیس جمهوری آمریکا، روز چهارشنبه ۱۷ تیر در گفتوگو با خبرنگاران در هواپیمای اختصاصی ریاستجمهوری (ایر فورس وان) گفت مناقشه مربوط به ایران «واقعاً جنگ نیست»، بلکه تلاشی برای «خلع سلاح هستهای رژیم ایران» است.
24 minutes

Hay futbolistas extraordinarios. Hay cracks capaces de decidir un encuentro con una jugada. Y después está Lionel Messi.

24 minutes
Hay futbolistas extraordinarios. Hay cracks capaces de decidir un encuentro con una jugada. Y después está Lionel Messi.
29 minutes
Democratic nominee Graham Platner dropped out of Maine’s U.S. Senate race on Wednesday, two days after an accusation of sexual assault tanked support from his party. “This is incredibly difficult because I know that some will think it’s an admission of guilt, and it most certainly is not,” Platner said in an 11 minute video […]
Democratic nominee Graham Platner dropped out of Maine’s U.S. Senate race on Wednesday, two days after an accusation of sexual assault tanked support from his party. “This is incredibly difficult because I know that some will think it’s an admission of guilt, and it most certainly is not,” Platner said in an 11 minute video […]
29 minutes

O Projor – Instituto para o Desenvolvimento do Jornalismo anuncia a oitava edição do Atlas da Notícia, projeto colaborativo que, desde 2017, mapeia o jornalismo local e identifica os desertos de notícias no Brasil. O novo censo vai atualizar a base de veículos e mapear as iniciativas jornalísticas que produzem e distribuem seus conteúdos prioritariamente […] O post Nova edição do Atlas da Notícia vai mapear os criadores de notícias e o jornalismo nativo de plataformas apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.

O Projor – Instituto para o Desenvolvimento do Jornalismo anuncia a oitava edição do Atlas da Notícia, projeto colaborativo que, desde 2017, mapeia o jornalismo local e identifica os desertos de notícias no Brasil. O novo censo vai atualizar a base de veículos e mapear as iniciativas jornalísticas que produzem e distribuem seus conteúdos prioritariamente […] O post Nova edição do Atlas da Notícia vai mapear os criadores de notícias e o jornalismo nativo de plataformas apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.
32 minutes

Apenas unas horas después de dar por agotada la vía del diálogo, Donald Trump autorizó una nueva oleada de ataques contra objetivos iraníes, elevando la tensión militar en una de las zonas más sensibles del planeta.

Apenas unas horas después de dar por agotada la vía del diálogo, Donald Trump autorizó una nueva oleada de ataques contra objetivos iraníes, elevando la tensión militar en una de las zonas más sensibles del planeta.
34 minutes

O modelo de jornalismo com o qual nos acostumamos a conviver já não consegue mais manter o fluxo necessário de informações e notícias no nível de confiabilidade exigido pela sociedade contemporânea. A pá de cal está sendo dada pela inteligência artificial (IA) porque ela aprofunda ainda mais o ciclo de mudanças na profissão, iniciado com […] O post A IA como pá de cal no jornalismo tradicional apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.

O modelo de jornalismo com o qual nos acostumamos a conviver já não consegue mais manter o fluxo necessário de informações e notícias no nível de confiabilidade exigido pela sociedade contemporânea. A pá de cal está sendo dada pela inteligência artificial (IA) porque ela aprofunda ainda mais o ciclo de mudanças na profissão, iniciado com […] O post A IA como pá de cal no jornalismo tradicional apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.
35 minutes
Tormenta Rampaging Run opens July 9 to those who dare — or those who want to watch those who dare.
Tormenta Rampaging Run opens July 9 to those who dare — or those who want to watch those who dare.
35 minutes
Federal officials have repeatedly claimed that criticizing immigration officials or identifying officers is unlawful and dangerous, despite clear First Amendment protections for both. Now, the government appears to be taking a disturbing new step: investigating Americans for posting information on social media that originally appeared in news reports.This tactic allows the government to kill two birds with one stone: censoring individual critics and limiting the reach of the press. If the government can deter people from sharing news reports through threats of investigation or prosecution, it can undermine the public impact of journalism without ever censoring a newsroom directly.Local news outlet Syracuse.com reported last month that federal agents tracked down a New York woman to demand she remove a social media post that they claimed threatened Immigration and Customs Enforcement personnel. Agents confronted the woman, Paigelynne Gonyea, where she worked at a polling place and demanded she sign a form letter stating she could be criminally prosecuted for threatening a federal officer.Gonyea told Syracuse.com that she believed agents were referring to a January Instagram post “where she named the ICE agent who shot protester Renee Good.” In the post, Gonyea shared a picture of the agent, Jonathan Ross, that The Minnesota Star Tribune used in its news report first identifying him as the shooter.Gonyea wrote, “BREAKING: The ICE agent who shot and killed Renee Good in broad daylight has been identified as Jonathan Ross by the Minnesota Star Tribune. I think today is a great day for Jonathan to be indicted!”The Department of Homeland Security later told The Associated Press that Gonyea also posted Ross’ home address, and a spokeswoman shared with the AP reporter a different, redacted social media post purporting to come from Gonyea’s account. But Gonyea denied posting Ross’ address, and DHS has not made the alleged post publicly available. Gonyea also told NPR that agents who came to the polling station had a copy of her Instagram post with the photo of Ross, which does not include his address.Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF) has filed a Freedom of Information Act request with ICE’s Office of Professional Responsibility, which investigated Gonyea and other incidents it claims amounted to illegal “doxxing” of ICE agents. We’re seeking records about whether the investigations of Gonyea and others are based on people reposting information from news outlets, or have otherwise targeted journalism.These records should be made public, especially because the agents’ legal warnings to Gonyea closely track similar threats the federal government has made to journalists. Administration officials have repeatedly claimed that journalists who photograph or name ICE officers are doxxing officers, inciting violence, or even committing violence. The First Amendment, however, protects publishing truthful, lawfully obtained information and photographing officers in public, whether it’s done by journalists or others.In addition, if Gonyea is right that agents confronted her over an Instagram post repeating information from the Tribune, then the government’s actions may reveal a new way it’s trying to suppress reporting. DHS may not be able to censor reporting by chilling journalists, but it can suppress the news if it can scare people out of reposting it.Another of the administration’s favorite tricks, intimidating journalists’ sources, stops newsgathering before it starts. But when a story slips through the cracks, bullying those who share it offers a censorship backup plan. Another of the administration’s favorite tricks, intimidating journalists’ sources, stops newsgathering before it starts. But when a story slips through the cracks, bullying those who share it offers a censorship backup plan. This strategy also allows DHS to avoid directly confronting news outlets and journalists, who are better positioned to fight back against unconstitutional censorship orders or other First Amendment violations. Regular people are more likely to be dissuaded by the threat of criminal prosecution and less likely to bring court cases that can result in precedent that checks government power.This undermines journalism’s ability to hold power accountable. Freedom of the press means little if no one can talk about a news story because they’re scared they’ll go to jail.We must also remain vigilant against other ways that the government may be going around journalists and outlets to suppress news published online. Gonyea’s experience raises the disturbing possibility that the government could be pressuring tech platforms to remove posts by people that reference news reports about ICE by claiming that they’re illegal.The Department of Justice has already coerced Facebook into removing at least one group that allowed people to report sightings of federal agents, arguing that it was inciting violence. It also pressured Apple and Google into removing ICE tracking apps based on similarly spurious claims.We don’t know whether this has happened in cases involving other types of online content, including with demands to remove posts that simply repeat information from news reports, because these requests are often invisible to the public.News outlets may raise alarms when platforms remove their reporting, but individual users are less likely to publicly object if their posts citing a news story are removed. Platforms’ transparency reports are too vague and high level to shed light on these demands. FOIA requests about the government’s demands for platforms can help, but often only if you have the ability to sue.Whether the government quietly coerces platforms into removing individual posts about the news or loudly pressures individual Americans into taking them down themselves, the effect is the same: The public’s ability to see, share, and discuss reporting that holds officials accountable is limited.These tactics must be recognized as a threat to press freedom, even if they don’t directly involve a newsroom. Freedom of the press can’t end when the news story is published. Defending a free press means defending everyone’s right to participate in the public conversation that allows that journalism to spread.
Federal officials have repeatedly claimed that criticizing immigration officials or identifying officers is unlawful and dangerous, despite clear First Amendment protections for both. Now, the government appears to be taking a disturbing new step: investigating Americans for posting information on social media that originally appeared in news reports.This tactic allows the government to kill two birds with one stone: censoring individual critics and limiting the reach of the press. If the government can deter people from sharing news reports through threats of investigation or prosecution, it can undermine the public impact of journalism without ever censoring a newsroom directly.Local news outlet Syracuse.com reported last month that federal agents tracked down a New York woman to demand she remove a social media post that they claimed threatened Immigration and Customs Enforcement personnel. Agents confronted the woman, Paigelynne Gonyea, where she worked at a polling place and demanded she sign a form letter stating she could be criminally prosecuted for threatening a federal officer.Gonyea told Syracuse.com that she believed agents were referring to a January Instagram post “where she named the ICE agent who shot protester Renee Good.” In the post, Gonyea shared a picture of the agent, Jonathan Ross, that The Minnesota Star Tribune used in its news report first identifying him as the shooter.Gonyea wrote, “BREAKING: The ICE agent who shot and killed Renee Good in broad daylight has been identified as Jonathan Ross by the Minnesota Star Tribune. I think today is a great day for Jonathan to be indicted!”The Department of Homeland Security later told The Associated Press that Gonyea also posted Ross’ home address, and a spokeswoman shared with the AP reporter a different, redacted social media post purporting to come from Gonyea’s account. But Gonyea denied posting Ross’ address, and DHS has not made the alleged post publicly available. Gonyea also told NPR that agents who came to the polling station had a copy of her Instagram post with the photo of Ross, which does not include his address.Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF) has filed a Freedom of Information Act request with ICE’s Office of Professional Responsibility, which investigated Gonyea and other incidents it claims amounted to illegal “doxxing” of ICE agents. We’re seeking records about whether the investigations of Gonyea and others are based on people reposting information from news outlets, or have otherwise targeted journalism.These records should be made public, especially because the agents’ legal warnings to Gonyea closely track similar threats the federal government has made to journalists. Administration officials have repeatedly claimed that journalists who photograph or name ICE officers are doxxing officers, inciting violence, or even committing violence. The First Amendment, however, protects publishing truthful, lawfully obtained information and photographing officers in public, whether it’s done by journalists or others.In addition, if Gonyea is right that agents confronted her over an Instagram post repeating information from the Tribune, then the government’s actions may reveal a new way it’s trying to suppress reporting. DHS may not be able to censor reporting by chilling journalists, but it can suppress the news if it can scare people out of reposting it.Another of the administration’s favorite tricks, intimidating journalists’ sources, stops newsgathering before it starts. But when a story slips through the cracks, bullying those who share it offers a censorship backup plan. Another of the administration’s favorite tricks, intimidating journalists’ sources, stops newsgathering before it starts. But when a story slips through the cracks, bullying those who share it offers a censorship backup plan. This strategy also allows DHS to avoid directly confronting news outlets and journalists, who are better positioned to fight back against unconstitutional censorship orders or other First Amendment violations. Regular people are more likely to be dissuaded by the threat of criminal prosecution and less likely to bring court cases that can result in precedent that checks government power.This undermines journalism’s ability to hold power accountable. Freedom of the press means little if no one can talk about a news story because they’re scared they’ll go to jail.We must also remain vigilant against other ways that the government may be going around journalists and outlets to suppress news published online. Gonyea’s experience raises the disturbing possibility that the government could be pressuring tech platforms to remove posts by people that reference news reports about ICE by claiming that they’re illegal.The Department of Justice has already coerced Facebook into removing at least one group that allowed people to report sightings of federal agents, arguing that it was inciting violence. It also pressured Apple and Google into removing ICE tracking apps based on similarly spurious claims.We don’t know whether this has happened in cases involving other types of online content, including with demands to remove posts that simply repeat information from news reports, because these requests are often invisible to the public.News outlets may raise alarms when platforms remove their reporting, but individual users are less likely to publicly object if their posts citing a news story are removed. Platforms’ transparency reports are too vague and high level to shed light on these demands. FOIA requests about the government’s demands for platforms can help, but often only if you have the ability to sue.Whether the government quietly coerces platforms into removing individual posts about the news or loudly pressures individual Americans into taking them down themselves, the effect is the same: The public’s ability to see, share, and discuss reporting that holds officials accountable is limited.These tactics must be recognized as a threat to press freedom, even if they don’t directly involve a newsroom. Freedom of the press can’t end when the news story is published. Defending a free press means defending everyone’s right to participate in the public conversation that allows that journalism to spread.
39 minutes

A nova batalha da mídia pela audiência na era da IA generativa já começou e segue aberta. Publishers e plataformas disputam a atenção de um público que quer ser escutado, compreendido e informado do jeito que quer, pelo meio que preferir. As plataformas de inteligência artificial, como ChatGPT, Claude, DeepSeek, tiram a fricção das buscas […] O post IA e mídia iniciam disputa por audiência e faturamento apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.

A nova batalha da mídia pela audiência na era da IA generativa já começou e segue aberta. Publishers e plataformas disputam a atenção de um público que quer ser escutado, compreendido e informado do jeito que quer, pelo meio que preferir. As plataformas de inteligência artificial, como ChatGPT, Claude, DeepSeek, tiram a fricção das buscas […] O post IA e mídia iniciam disputa por audiência e faturamento apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.
42 minutes
El diputado Jaime Bassa ingresó un segundo oficio de fiscalización contra el Ministerio de Vivienda y Urbanismo tras la paralización...
42 minutes
El diputado Jaime Bassa ingresó un segundo oficio de fiscalización contra el Ministerio de Vivienda y Urbanismo tras la paralización...
42 minutes
Norway’s historic World Cup performance has brought together Southern California’s relatively small, but spirited Norwegian community
Norway’s historic World Cup performance has brought together Southern California’s relatively small, but spirited Norwegian community
43 minutes

Há pouco mais de quatro anos, em junho de 2022, o assassinato do jornalista britânico Dom Phillips e indigenista brasileiro Bruno Pereira, no Vale do Javari, no Amazonas, escancarou os riscos de exercício do jornalismo na Amazônia. Ambos tinham muita experiência e conhecimento sobre a região, mas foram mortos numa emboscada durante uma viagem para […] O post Caso Dom e Bruno: Observatório da Imprensa debate as investigações e os riscos para o jornalismo no Brasil apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.

Há pouco mais de quatro anos, em junho de 2022, o assassinato do jornalista britânico Dom Phillips e indigenista brasileiro Bruno Pereira, no Vale do Javari, no Amazonas, escancarou os riscos de exercício do jornalismo na Amazônia. Ambos tinham muita experiência e conhecimento sobre a região, mas foram mortos numa emboscada durante uma viagem para […] O post Caso Dom e Bruno: Observatório da Imprensa debate as investigações e os riscos para o jornalismo no Brasil apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.
43 minutes

Financial support for the planning phase of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta tunnel has plummeted among Kern County agricultural water districts as they continue to seek definitive answers about water supplies and how the tunnel will operate. The Department of Water Resources (DWR) had been seeking $33 million from Kern districts to be paid in two […]

Financial support for the planning phase of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta tunnel has plummeted among Kern County agricultural water districts as they continue to seek definitive answers about water supplies and how the tunnel will operate. The Department of Water Resources (DWR) had been seeking $33 million from Kern districts to be paid in two […]
44 minutes
Shortages of gasoline and diesel have affected most of Russia’s regions, as well as the annexed areas of Ukraine, to one degree or another. Regional restrictions usually take the form of bans on filling canisters and limits on how much any one customer can buy. At some gas stations, there’s no gasoline or diesel at all; at others, lines stretch for miles, and drivers spend hours — sometimes dozens of hours — waiting.
Shortages of gasoline and diesel have affected most of Russia’s regions, as well as the annexed areas of Ukraine, to one degree or another. Regional restrictions usually take the form of bans on filling canisters and limits on how much any one customer can buy. At some gas stations, there’s no gasoline or diesel at all; at others, lines stretch for miles, and drivers spend hours — sometimes dozens of hours — waiting.
50 minutes
A Copa do Mundo de futebol inicia a fase de quartas de final nesta quinta-feira (9) nos Estados Unidos, com oito seleções, a maioria delas europeia. Entre elas França e Inglaterra, que também chegaram às quartas de final nas última duas edições - Rússia 2018 e Catar 2022. Completando o rol de equipes do Velho Continente estão Bélgica, Espanha, Noruega e Suíça. Assim como na Copa de 2002, em que o Brasil conquistou o pentacampeonato, apenas uma seleção sul-americana disputará vaga nas semifinais: a atual campeã Argentina. Por fim, Marrocos representará pela segunda vez consecutiva o futebol africano nas quartas. Notícias relacionadas:Federação egípcia critica VAR após derrota dramática para Argentina.Suíça bate Colômbia nos pênaltis e avança às quartas após 72 anos.Federação egípcia critica VAR após derrota dramática para Argentina.Round of 16 complete ✅ Here are the top players in the latest rankings.@aramco #FIFAWorldCup #FIFAPowerRankings — FIFA World Cup (@FIFAWorldCup) July 8, 2026 França x Marrocos O primeiro confronto terá de um lado a bicampeã França (1998 e 2018), vice na Copa do Catar, e do outro a seleção marroquina, que sonha com o título inédito. O Les Blues (Os Azuis), apelido da França, contam com Kylian Mbappé, vice-líder na artilharia da Copa, com sete gols, um a menos que o argentino Lione Messi. Já os Leões do Atlas podem entrar em campo sem a principal estrela, o meio-campista Ismael Saibari, artilheiro da equipe com três gols. Ele sentiu dores ao fim da partida contra o Canadá. O jogo está programado para às 17h (horário de Brasília) desta quinta (9), no Estádio de Boston. O embate tem tudo para ser um dos mais emocionantes desta fase, pois será uma reedição das semifinais do último Mundial. Na ocasião, os europeus levaram a melhor por 2 a 0, avançaram e chegaram à final contra a Argentina. Já equipe africana encerrou o Mundial em quarto lugar, o melhor desempenho do país em seis participações. Espanha x Bélgica As duas seleções voltam a se enfrentar em Copa do Mundo após um hiato de 36 anos. Considerada uma das favoritas ao título, a Espanha sonha levantar a taça pela segunda vez – a primeira foi na Copa da África do Sul (2010). No elenco talentoso da Fúria estão os atacantes Lamine Yamal, de apenas 18 anos, e Oyarzabal, que balançou a rede quatro vezes nesta edição. De olho no título inédito, a seleção belga chega embalada nas quartas após golear os Estados Unidos (4 a 1) nas oitavas e cravar vitória de virada sobre o Senegal (3 a 2) nos acréscimos da prorrogação na segunda fase (eliminatória). A equipe conta com jogadores experientes como Romelu Lukaku e Thibaut Courtois, e mais novos como o atacante Jérémy Doku, de apenas 17 anos. Fúria e Diabos Vermelhos entram em campo na sexta (10), às 16h, no SoFi Stadium, em Los Angeles. Inglaterra x Noruega Único duelo inédito em Mundiais colocará frente a frente a experiente Inglaterra, em sua 17ª participação em Copas, contra a Noruega, que chegou pela primeira vez na história a fase de quartas. De um lado estarão os Três Leões – apelido da seleção inglesa – que que sonham com o segundo título em Copas- o primeiro foi em 1966. Do outro, os Vikings - apelido da seleção Norueguesa – que voltaram ao Mundial em grande estilo, após amargarem 28 anos de ausência. A Noruega competiu apenas em três edições (1938, 1994 e 1998) e chegou às oitavas em 1938 e 1998. No retrospecto, ingleses e noruegueses já duelaram 12 vezes em outras competições, com sete vitórias para os britânicos, três empates, e dois triunfos dos Vikings. Em campo estarão dois dos melhores artilheiros do Mundial, o holandês Erling Haaland (sete gols) e britânico Harry Kane (seis). O confronto será no sábado (11), às 18h, no Hard Rock Stadium, em Miami. Argentina x Suíça A atual campeã mundial Argentina chega às quartas de final após uma virada épica contra o Egito (3 a 2), comandada por Messi, artilheiro do mundial. O último encontro de argentinos e suíços em Copa foi na edição de 2014, no Brasil, quando os hermanos levaram a melhor por 1 a 0 na prorrogação. Tricampeões mundiais (1978, 1986 e 2022), os argentinos nunca perderam para os suíços na história: em sete confrontos, venceram cinco e empataram dois. A seleção suíça mira uma classificação inédita às semifinais da Copa. Depois de 72 anos, a equipe europeia volta a disputar a fase de quartas, fato que só ocorreu em três oportunidade (1934, 1938 e 1954). A defesa bem armada é a principal estratégia da Suíça, conhecida pelo apelido de Ferrolho Suíço. O último duelo das quartas ocorrerá no sábado (11), às 22h, no Kansas City Stadium.
A Copa do Mundo de futebol inicia a fase de quartas de final nesta quinta-feira (9) nos Estados Unidos, com oito seleções, a maioria delas europeia. Entre elas França e Inglaterra, que também chegaram às quartas de final nas última duas edições - Rússia 2018 e Catar 2022. Completando o rol de equipes do Velho Continente estão Bélgica, Espanha, Noruega e Suíça. Assim como na Copa de 2002, em que o Brasil conquistou o pentacampeonato, apenas uma seleção sul-americana disputará vaga nas semifinais: a atual campeã Argentina. Por fim, Marrocos representará pela segunda vez consecutiva o futebol africano nas quartas. Notícias relacionadas:Federação egípcia critica VAR após derrota dramática para Argentina.Suíça bate Colômbia nos pênaltis e avança às quartas após 72 anos.Federação egípcia critica VAR após derrota dramática para Argentina.Round of 16 complete ✅ Here are the top players in the latest rankings.@aramco #FIFAWorldCup #FIFAPowerRankings — FIFA World Cup (@FIFAWorldCup) July 8, 2026 França x Marrocos O primeiro confronto terá de um lado a bicampeã França (1998 e 2018), vice na Copa do Catar, e do outro a seleção marroquina, que sonha com o título inédito. O Les Blues (Os Azuis), apelido da França, contam com Kylian Mbappé, vice-líder na artilharia da Copa, com sete gols, um a menos que o argentino Lione Messi. Já os Leões do Atlas podem entrar em campo sem a principal estrela, o meio-campista Ismael Saibari, artilheiro da equipe com três gols. Ele sentiu dores ao fim da partida contra o Canadá. O jogo está programado para às 17h (horário de Brasília) desta quinta (9), no Estádio de Boston. O embate tem tudo para ser um dos mais emocionantes desta fase, pois será uma reedição das semifinais do último Mundial. Na ocasião, os europeus levaram a melhor por 2 a 0, avançaram e chegaram à final contra a Argentina. Já equipe africana encerrou o Mundial em quarto lugar, o melhor desempenho do país em seis participações. Espanha x Bélgica As duas seleções voltam a se enfrentar em Copa do Mundo após um hiato de 36 anos. Considerada uma das favoritas ao título, a Espanha sonha levantar a taça pela segunda vez – a primeira foi na Copa da África do Sul (2010). No elenco talentoso da Fúria estão os atacantes Lamine Yamal, de apenas 18 anos, e Oyarzabal, que balançou a rede quatro vezes nesta edição. De olho no título inédito, a seleção belga chega embalada nas quartas após golear os Estados Unidos (4 a 1) nas oitavas e cravar vitória de virada sobre o Senegal (3 a 2) nos acréscimos da prorrogação na segunda fase (eliminatória). A equipe conta com jogadores experientes como Romelu Lukaku e Thibaut Courtois, e mais novos como o atacante Jérémy Doku, de apenas 17 anos. Fúria e Diabos Vermelhos entram em campo na sexta (10), às 16h, no SoFi Stadium, em Los Angeles. Inglaterra x Noruega Único duelo inédito em Mundiais colocará frente a frente a experiente Inglaterra, em sua 17ª participação em Copas, contra a Noruega, que chegou pela primeira vez na história a fase de quartas. De um lado estarão os Três Leões – apelido da seleção inglesa – que que sonham com o segundo título em Copas- o primeiro foi em 1966. Do outro, os Vikings - apelido da seleção Norueguesa – que voltaram ao Mundial em grande estilo, após amargarem 28 anos de ausência. A Noruega competiu apenas em três edições (1938, 1994 e 1998) e chegou às oitavas em 1938 e 1998. No retrospecto, ingleses e noruegueses já duelaram 12 vezes em outras competições, com sete vitórias para os britânicos, três empates, e dois triunfos dos Vikings. Em campo estarão dois dos melhores artilheiros do Mundial, o holandês Erling Haaland (sete gols) e britânico Harry Kane (seis). O confronto será no sábado (11), às 18h, no Hard Rock Stadium, em Miami. Argentina x Suíça A atual campeã mundial Argentina chega às quartas de final após uma virada épica contra o Egito (3 a 2), comandada por Messi, artilheiro do mundial. O último encontro de argentinos e suíços em Copa foi na edição de 2014, no Brasil, quando os hermanos levaram a melhor por 1 a 0 na prorrogação. Tricampeões mundiais (1978, 1986 e 2022), os argentinos nunca perderam para os suíços na história: em sete confrontos, venceram cinco e empataram dois. A seleção suíça mira uma classificação inédita às semifinais da Copa. Depois de 72 anos, a equipe europeia volta a disputar a fase de quartas, fato que só ocorreu em três oportunidade (1934, 1938 e 1954). A defesa bem armada é a principal estratégia da Suíça, conhecida pelo apelido de Ferrolho Suíço. O último duelo das quartas ocorrerá no sábado (11), às 22h, no Kansas City Stadium.
54 minutes
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(The Center Square) - Fires across the southwestern U.S. have picked up early this year, with over 400,000 acres burning just between Utah and Colorado. The quick and early spread of wildfires comes after a short and warm winter across many Western states. In total, over 546,000 acres are currently burning in wildfires across the U.S., with the vast majority in the West. That was about 146% of the average year-to-date acreage burn during the last 10 years, according to the National Interagency Fire Center. “We knew going into this season that large areas of the West had not received their normal snowpack and were struggling with drought,” said Al Nash, the public information officer for the Alaska Incident Management Team assigned to fight Colorado’s Aspen Acres Fire. “We know that that drought condition is an underlying reason for this fire to have started and grown like it has," Nash told The Center Square Wednesday. Utah has seen the worst of the wildfire season with over 239,000 acres burning, followed by Colorado at 187,000. The two states currently hold the undesirable title for the two largest wildfires across the U.S. Utah’s Babylon Fire passed 100,000 acres as of Wednesday morning, becoming the state’s largest fire in eight years. “We've been under a stretch of really hot, dry, and windy conditions for quite a long period now. And that's just been really drying out our fuels, making them a lot more receptive to combustion,” National Weather Service meteorologist Braeden Winters told The Center Square. Winters is based in NWS' Grand Junction, Colorado, office, which serves neighboring Utah in addition to Colorado. “Add to it the days around when it ignited, especially through that weekend of the 27th and 28th, we saw really strong winds and wind gusts down in that area," Winter said Wednesday about Utah. The fire, located 25 miles southwest of Monticello in southeastern Utah, has destroyed five structures. That’s according to the local U.S. Forest Service office, which also reported that over 1,300 people had been assigned to help put out the fire. They've contained 11% of the fire. To date, 22 helicopters, 68 wildfire truck engines, four bulldozers and 21 water tenders have been used to fight the Babylon Fire. The U.S. Forest Service reported that gusty thunderstorms had swept out much of the smoke and air quality remained good to moderate in communities near the fire. The Center Square was unable to determine a total cost for the wildfire suppression effort for the Babylon Fire, which started June 26. No deaths had been reported as of Wednesday afternoon. Live updates for the Babylon Fire can be found on the U.S. Forest Service-Manti-La Sal National Forest Facebook page. The Babylon Fire is currently the largest wildfire across the U.S., followed closely by Colorado’s 96,000-acre Aspen Acres Fire. The Colorado blaze was 15% contained as of Wednesday morning, according to the Colorado Division of Fire Prevention and Control’s assigned Alaska Incident Management Team. No lives had been lost, and no serious injuries had been caused by the wildfire as of Wednesday afternoon, according to the Incident Management Team. Total costs to fight the fire have grown to $17.9 million. “It's very hard to estimate how much this fire is going to cost in the end,” said Nash. “We've had some good success, but we've got a lot of people on this fire. There's a lot of work yet to do.” Over 1,600 people were reported to be working on the fire in Custer and Pueblo counties in Southern Colorado. The Center Square was unable to determine the exact number of evacuations, but the Incident Management Team said there had been roughly 10,800 in Pueblo County, with some evacuations in three other counties. A flash flood watch was in effect Wednesday as thunderstorms rolled across the wildfire area, which had already received a small amount of rain. The Incident Management Team said the additional rain could be helpful for the fire, but could also present new challenges to firefighters if it triggered a flash flood. “It's kind of like a double-edged sword, right?” National Weather Service meteorologist Clint Skelly told The Center Square Wednesday. “We want rain, of course, to help put out the fire," said Skelly, who's based in Pueblo, Colorado. "However, there's impacts coming from the rain that could be very dangerous for, say the the frontline workers who are working the fire.” At least 266 homes were believed to have been destroyed by the Aspen Acres Fire, which began June 29. “While it's grown every day, the amount of new growth has been slowing,” Nash said of the fire. Live updates for the Aspen Acres Fire can be found on the Aspen Acres Fire 2026 Facebook page. This year’s roaring fire season follows early heat waves across the Southwest. Paired with droughts, snowpacks crucial to preventing wildfires have been wiped out earlier than usual in the year, which opened the door to the sweeping wildfires being felt Wednesday. “We recognize that the conditions here are not unique, and that as we move through July into August and the fall, we can certainly expect to see additional large fires that are in part due to the lack of winter snowpack,” said Nash. Nevada is currently battling over 44,000 acres of wildfire, including the 26,000-acre Grapevine Fire in Southern Nevada, which has been 99% contained as of Tuesday. Over 27,000 acres of wildfire are being battled in Arizona. In Colorado, Skelly said the impact of fires last long after the last flame is extinguished. “Yes, the fire is ongoing, but the impacts of the fire are going to last many many years from now," the Pueblo meteorologist told The Center Square. "Flash flooding is going to be a risk at least for the next five years over the Aspen Acres burn scar.” Elsewhere in the West, California, Oregon and Wyoming have seen smaller fires than those in Colorado and Utah.
(The Center Square) - Fires across the southwestern U.S. have picked up early this year, with over 400,000 acres burning just between Utah and Colorado. The quick and early spread of wildfires comes after a short and warm winter across many Western states. In total, over 546,000 acres are currently burning in wildfires across the U.S., with the vast majority in the West. That was about 146% of the average year-to-date acreage burn during the last 10 years, according to the National Interagency Fire Center. “We knew going into this season that large areas of the West had not received their normal snowpack and were struggling with drought,” said Al Nash, the public information officer for the Alaska Incident Management Team assigned to fight Colorado’s Aspen Acres Fire. “We know that that drought condition is an underlying reason for this fire to have started and grown like it has," Nash told The Center Square Wednesday. Utah has seen the worst of the wildfire season with over 239,000 acres burning, followed by Colorado at 187,000. The two states currently hold the undesirable title for the two largest wildfires across the U.S. Utah’s Babylon Fire passed 100,000 acres as of Wednesday morning, becoming the state’s largest fire in eight years. “We've been under a stretch of really hot, dry, and windy conditions for quite a long period now. And that's just been really drying out our fuels, making them a lot more receptive to combustion,” National Weather Service meteorologist Braeden Winters told The Center Square. Winters is based in NWS' Grand Junction, Colorado, office, which serves neighboring Utah in addition to Colorado. “Add to it the days around when it ignited, especially through that weekend of the 27th and 28th, we saw really strong winds and wind gusts down in that area," Winter said Wednesday about Utah. The fire, located 25 miles southwest of Monticello in southeastern Utah, has destroyed five structures. That’s according to the local U.S. Forest Service office, which also reported that over 1,300 people had been assigned to help put out the fire. They've contained 11% of the fire. To date, 22 helicopters, 68 wildfire truck engines, four bulldozers and 21 water tenders have been used to fight the Babylon Fire. The U.S. Forest Service reported that gusty thunderstorms had swept out much of the smoke and air quality remained good to moderate in communities near the fire. The Center Square was unable to determine a total cost for the wildfire suppression effort for the Babylon Fire, which started June 26. No deaths had been reported as of Wednesday afternoon. Live updates for the Babylon Fire can be found on the U.S. Forest Service-Manti-La Sal National Forest Facebook page. The Babylon Fire is currently the largest wildfire across the U.S., followed closely by Colorado’s 96,000-acre Aspen Acres Fire. The Colorado blaze was 15% contained as of Wednesday morning, according to the Colorado Division of Fire Prevention and Control’s assigned Alaska Incident Management Team. No lives had been lost, and no serious injuries had been caused by the wildfire as of Wednesday afternoon, according to the Incident Management Team. Total costs to fight the fire have grown to $17.9 million. “It's very hard to estimate how much this fire is going to cost in the end,” said Nash. “We've had some good success, but we've got a lot of people on this fire. There's a lot of work yet to do.” Over 1,600 people were reported to be working on the fire in Custer and Pueblo counties in Southern Colorado. The Center Square was unable to determine the exact number of evacuations, but the Incident Management Team said there had been roughly 10,800 in Pueblo County, with some evacuations in three other counties. A flash flood watch was in effect Wednesday as thunderstorms rolled across the wildfire area, which had already received a small amount of rain. The Incident Management Team said the additional rain could be helpful for the fire, but could also present new challenges to firefighters if it triggered a flash flood. “It's kind of like a double-edged sword, right?” National Weather Service meteorologist Clint Skelly told The Center Square Wednesday. “We want rain, of course, to help put out the fire," said Skelly, who's based in Pueblo, Colorado. "However, there's impacts coming from the rain that could be very dangerous for, say the the frontline workers who are working the fire.” At least 266 homes were believed to have been destroyed by the Aspen Acres Fire, which began June 29. “While it's grown every day, the amount of new growth has been slowing,” Nash said of the fire. Live updates for the Aspen Acres Fire can be found on the Aspen Acres Fire 2026 Facebook page. This year’s roaring fire season follows early heat waves across the Southwest. Paired with droughts, snowpacks crucial to preventing wildfires have been wiped out earlier than usual in the year, which opened the door to the sweeping wildfires being felt Wednesday. “We recognize that the conditions here are not unique, and that as we move through July into August and the fall, we can certainly expect to see additional large fires that are in part due to the lack of winter snowpack,” said Nash. Nevada is currently battling over 44,000 acres of wildfire, including the 26,000-acre Grapevine Fire in Southern Nevada, which has been 99% contained as of Tuesday. Over 27,000 acres of wildfire are being battled in Arizona. In Colorado, Skelly said the impact of fires last long after the last flame is extinguished. “Yes, the fire is ongoing, but the impacts of the fire are going to last many many years from now," the Pueblo meteorologist told The Center Square. "Flash flooding is going to be a risk at least for the next five years over the Aspen Acres burn scar.” Elsewhere in the West, California, Oregon and Wyoming have seen smaller fires than those in Colorado and Utah.