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Governor Gavin Newsom Highlights Super Bowl 2026’s Economic Impact, Points to SoFi Stadium as Next Host

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The Super Bowl LX in San Francisco helped generate nearly $500 million in economic impact to businesses in the Bay Area, 49ers CEO Jed York said during a press conference […]

The post Governor Gavin Newsom Highlights Super Bowl 2026’s Economic Impact, Points to SoFi Stadium as Next Host appeared first on edhat.

Paramount mejora su oferta para frenar el acuerdo entre Netflix y Warner Bros.

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Por Andrew Kirell, CNN

Paramount volvió a mejorar este martes su oferta por Warner Bros. Discovery, intensificando su intento de descarrilar la adquisición pendiente de la compañía por parte de Netflix.

El imperio de entretenimiento liderado por David Ellison dijo que pagaría a los accionistas de Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) aproximadamente US$ 650 millones por cada trimestre en que el acuerdo con Netflix no se cierre, a partir de 2027.

Paramount también dijo que pagaría “de forma completa y rápida” la tarifa de US$ 2.800 millones que Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) debería pagar a Netflix si su acuerdo se cancela, según una nueva presentación ante la SEC.

La presentación se produce mientras WBD avanza hacia el cierre de su acuerdo por US$ 83.000 millones para vender sus estudios y activos de streaming a Netflix. El mes pasado, Netflix revisó su oferta para que fuera completamente en efectivo. (Las redes de cable restantes de WBD, incluida CNN, se escindirían en una empresa separada llamada Discovery Global).

Paramount no aumentó su oferta actual de US$ 30 por acción, totalmente en efectivo, por toda la compañía, incluida CNN.

Pero las nuevas “mejoras”, dijo Ellison en un comunicado, buscan ofrecer a los accionistas de WBD “certeza en el valor, una vía regulatoria clara y protección frente a la volatilidad del mercado”.

Las acciones de WBD abrieron con un alza cercana al 1 % tras la noticia. Sin embargo, hasta ahora hay poca evidencia de que los accionistas estén respaldando a Paramount en números suficientes. WBD dijo recientemente que “más del 93 %” de sus accionistas están “rechazando el esquema inferior de Paramount”.

Se espera que los accionistas de WBD celebren una reunión especial a finales de marzo o comienzos de abril.

Mientras tanto, Netflix ha intensificado su batalla de relaciones públicas contra la oferta hostil de Paramount.

Durante una entrevista el lunes en Fox Business Network, el principal responsable global de asuntos públicos de Netflix, Clete Willems, advirtió sobre la propuesta de Paramount y dijo que la compañía “ha identificado US$ 6.000 millones en sinergias en la oferta que hizo, lo que es un código para decir US$ 6.000 millones en recortes de empleo”.

Willems también abordó las preocupaciones sobre una investigación del Departamento de Justicia sobre las prácticas empresariales de Netflix, reportada por primera vez por The Wall Street Journal.

Este tipo de revisiones, dijo Willems, forman parte del “curso totalmente ordinario de los negocios” al examinar una fusión.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

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Lindsey Vonn’s Olympic dream was crushed. Here’s how she will recover

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By Michal Ruprecht, CNN

(CNN) — Lindsey Vonn’s right arm snagged a bright, neon-red slalom gate on Sunday, snapping the Alpine skier into a violent tumble during the women’s downhill final at the Games. The three-time Olympic medalist underwent two surgeries to treat a fracture of the lower leg and is in “stable condition.”

It’s an injury severe enough to topple Vonn’s Olympic dream — what even a ruptured ACL had not.

“Similar to ski racing, we take risks in life. We dream. We love. We jump. And sometimes we fall,” Vonn wrote on Instagram. “Sometimes our hearts are broken. Sometimes we don’t achieve the dreams we know we could have. But that is … the beauty of life; we can try.”

Experts CNN spoke with said a fracture would have likely happened regardless of an ACL injury.

“I think she was so well aware of the risk of injury,” said Dr. Anthony Petrosini, an orthopedic surgeon at Hackensack Meridian Health who has not treated Vonn. “I don’t think this injury tells you that she made the right or wrong decision.”

Vonn said her past injuries “had nothing to do with [the] crash whatsoever.”

“While [Sunday] did not end the way I had hoped, and despite the intense physical pain it caused, I have no regrets,” the athlete wrote. “Knowing I stood there having a chance to win was a victory in and of itself. I also knew that racing was a risk. It always was and always will be an incredibly dangerous sport.”

What is a tibial fracture?

Vonn announced on Monday that she suffered a complex tibial fracture. Vonn and the United States Ski and Snowboard Team did not share any additional information. The team declined to comment and directed CNN to Vonn’s Instagram post.

The tibia — also known as the shinbone — is the large, weight-bearing bone between the knee and ankle. Breaking the tibia takes immense force — the kind seen in car crashes and pedestrian collisions. In skiing, high speeds generate similar forces, which are often transmitted to the leg just above the edge of the ski boot.

“It’s what’s called a stress riser,” Petrosini said. “That lower part of the bone is protected, and right where it transitions to the unprotected part is where the fractures tend to occur.”

Why did Vonn undergo two surgeries?

According to Reuters, Vonn underwent two surgeries. The hospital where she was treated issued a statement to Reuters, stating that the first surgery stabilized the fracture.

Petrosini says that typically happens using internal fixation — a metal rod inserted into the bone to stabilize it — rather than external fixation — a metal frame attached to the outside of the leg that holds broken bone pieces together.

CNN could not confirm the nature of the second surgery or whether Vonn experien

Earth’s core may contain as much as 45 oceans’ worth of hydrogen, scientists find

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By Mindy Weisberger, CNN

(CNN) — Picture all of Earth’s oceans, which cover about 70% of the planet and are mostly made of hydrogen. Now multiply that by nine. That may be the amount of hydrogen in Earth’s core, possibly making it the planet’s largest hydrogen reservoir, researchers recently estimated.

And nine hydrogen “oceans” is the low end of their calculation; there could be as much as 45 oceans’ worth of hydrogen locked in the core. Put another way, hydrogen may make up roughly 0.36% to 0.7% of Earth’s total core weight, scientists reported Tuesday in the journal Nature Communications. This suggests that Earth acquired most of its water — the planet’s main source of hydrogen — as the planet formed, rather than later through comet impacts that would have left water on the planet’s surface as some scientists have suggested, said lead study author Dongyang Huang, an assistant professor in the School of Earth and Space Sciences at Peking University.

“Earth’s core would store most of the water in the first million years of Earth’s history,” Huang told CNN in an email. Next in water abundance is the mantle and crust. “The surface — where life resides — contains the least,” he said.

More than 4.6 billion years ago, rocks, gas and dust around our sun collided to form a young planet. Over time, these collisions shaped Earth’s core, mantle and crust. In Earth’s deep interior and under enormous pressure, a dense, hot and fluid metal core began to churn. Made mostly of iron and nickel, it powers Earth’s protective magnetic field.

“Hydrogen can only enter the core-forming metallic liquid if it was available during Earth’s main growth phases and participated in core formation,” said Rajdeep Dasgupta, a professor of Earth systems science in the department of Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences at Rice University in Texas. Dasgupta was not involved in the new research.

Studying the origin and distribution of hydrogen is key to understanding planetary formation and the evolution of life on Earth. Scientists have long wondered how much hydrogen might be buried in Earth’s molten metal engine, and have analyzed chemical interactions in iron to try to estimate the metallic core’s hydrogen reservoir. But the core is too deep for direct observation, and its high-pressure conditions are challenging to replicate in a lab.

In general, hydrogen is difficult to quantify “because it is the lightest and smallest element, meaning its quantification is beyond the capacities of routine analytical methods,” Huang said.

Low density in the core previously hinted at an abundance of hydrogen, though it was tricky for scientists to pin down the amount compared with other known core elements that were somewhat easier to measure, such as silicon and oxygen. Prior research inferred the amount of core hydrogen by using X-ray diffraction to look at the lattice structure in iron crystals, which expands more when hydrogen is present. But these interpretations varied widely, ranging from 10 parts per million by weight to 10,000 parts per million (or 0.1 oceans to more than 120 oceans), according to the study.

Observations at the atomic scale

“The technique is fundamentally different from earlier methods,” Huang said. Researchers sharpen samples into needlelike shapes with diameters of about 20 nanometers (0.0000007874 inches), then place them under finely controlled high voltage. Next, the samples’ atoms are ionized and counted one at a time, he explained.

To create the new estimate, scientists conducted experiments replicating core temperatures and pressures, using iron as a stand-in for the liquid metal core. They melted the iron with lasers in a high-pressure device called a diamond anvil cell, then directly observed hydrogen and other core elements using atom probe to

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