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La millonaria apuesta de Netflix por México: sus nuevas series y películas para 2026

Kraig Pakulski 0 27 Article rating: No rating

Por Erick E. Beltran, CNN en Español

Netflix dio conocer los próximos proyectos con los que planea materializar la histórica inversión que actualmente mantiene en México. A inicios de 2025, la compañía anunció una inversión de más de US$ 1.000 millones destinados a la producción de series y películas en el país durante los próximos cuatro años.

El anuncio se realizó en el evento titulado “¿Qué sigue?”, donde la plataforma presentó un amplio catálogo de series, películas, documentales, realities y eventos en vivo producidos en México que llegarán a lo largo de 2026. La apuesta incluye producciones originales de múltiples géneros —romance, acción, drama, documental y entretenimiento— y refuerza la estrategia de Netflix de impulsar el talento y la industria audiovisual local.

Entre los títulos confirmados se encuentran:

“La Captura”, una película protagonizada por Alfonso Herrera y Noé Hernández, en donde se pondrá a prueba a dos agentes de la policía mexicana que deberán encarar a criminales altamente peligrosos.

“La ley de Alicia”, una serie que tendrá como personaje estelar a Fernanda del Castillo interpretando a una abogada que debe de sobreponerse a las acusaciones en contra de su marido por corrupción y un escándalo sexual.

“Mal de amores”, una serie basada en la obra literaria de Ángeles Mastretta que retrata a una mujer que crece durante la Revolución Mexicana, brindando su visión de la historia, la política del país y que debe de lidiar con enamorarse de dos hombres en la complicada época.

“El Círculo”, también será una serie basada en un libro, en este caso de Jorge Zepeda Patterson, en donde se expone la delgada línea entre la justicia y la corrupción. Los actores que aparecerán en esta producción serán Michel Brown, Zuria Vega, Osvaldo Benavides y Raúl Briones.

“Contra el huracán”, una película que retratará la lucha que enfrentarán unos hermanos para poder sobrevivir al poderoso huracán Otis en Acapulco.

“Santita”, representará la primera colaboración de Gael García Bernal con Netflix, es descrita como “una historia de amor poco convencional” y será una serie que mostrará la historia de una mujer que luego de un accidente automovilístico tuvo que permanecer en sillas de ruedas y enfrentar sus decisiones en el amor.

“México 86” es un largometraje de ficción, protagonizado por Diego Luna, Karla Souza y Daniel Giménez Cacho, que desde el humor negro imagina de forma satírica cómo México habría logrado convertirse en la sede del Mundial de 1986.

Netflix también prepara un documental sobre Saúl “Canelo” Álvarez, centrado en la histórica trilogía de peleas frente a Gennady “GGG” Golovkin y en las presiones, críticas y desafíos que marcaron uno de los momentos clave de su carrera.

Además, el catálogo para 2026 incluirá otros títulos como “El otro padre”, “No tengo miedo”, “Un hijo propio” —documental dirigido por Maite Alberdi— y el reality “Habilidad física 100: México”, adaptación del exitoso formato coreano.

A esto se suma “Supernova: Genesis”, el primer evento en vivo de Netflix en Latinoamérica, que reunirá a celebridades e influencers en combates de boxeo con presentaciones musicales.

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The post La millonaria apuesta de Netflix por México: sus nuevas series y películas para 2026 appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

‘F**k yourself’: Former MPD officer who was beaten during Jan. 6 riot tells GOP lawmaker

Kraig Pakulski 0 18 Article rating: No rating

By Holmes Lybrand

(CNN) — As Republican Rep. Troy Nehls attempted to place blame for the January 6, 2021, riot on Capitol Police officials and not on President Donald Trump, former Washington, DC, police officer Michael Fanone — who was severely beaten by protestors that day — interrupted with a cough and a quick message.

The incident occurred during a Thursday hearing where Jack Smith, the former special prosecutor who led two failed prosecutions against Trump, publicly testified before the House Judiciary Committee.

“I can tell you gentlemen, that the fault does not lie with Donald Trump,” Nehls, of Texas, said, addressing several law enforcement officers attending the hearing who responded to the riot that day.

Nehls said the fault of the attack lies with “the US Capitol leadership team.”

“We know they had the intelligence,” Nehls said before Fanone, after a loud cough, interrupted.

“F**k yourself,” Fanone, who was dragged out and beaten in a crowd of rioters during one of the most violent clashes that day, said loudly.

Nehls concluded: “There was going to be a high propensity for violence that day.”

Fanone sat in the audience during the hearing with three other officers deployed at the Capitol that day, Aquilino Gonell, Harry Dunn, and Daniel Hodges, each of whom have become Trump critics since the insurrection.

Smith, in his first public appearance before lawmakers, said he was “shocked” when he saw the attack on the Capitol.

He warned that there are potentially “catastrophic” ongoing threats to US democracy because of the failure to hold Trump accountable for his “criminal” attempts to overturn the 2020 election.

“If we don’t hold people to account when they commit crimes, that it sends a message that those crimes are okay, that our society accepts that … it can endanger our election process, it can endanger election workers, and ultimately our democracy,” Smith said.

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

The post ‘F**k yourself’: Former MPD officer who was beaten during Jan. 6 riot tells GOP lawmaker appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Trump dice que habló este jueves con la líder opositora venezolana María Corina Machado

Kraig Pakulski 0 24 Article rating: No rating

Por Alejandra Jaramillo, CNN

El presidente Donald Trump dijo que habló hoy con la líder opositora venezolana María Corina Machado, aunque continuó expresando su apoyo a la presidenta encargada del país, quien asumió después de que Estados Unidos capturara a Nicolás Maduro.

“También hablé con María hoy, y saben, me cae muy bien”, dijo Trump a los periodistas a bordo del Air Force One.

Cuando se le preguntó si permitiría que la presidenta encargada de Venezuela, Delcy Rodríguez, permaneciera en el poder, el presidente también ofreció una evaluación positiva de ella.

“Pero ella ha mostrado un liderazgo muy fuerte hasta ahora, debo decir, y estamos trayendo a Estados Unidos millones de barriles de petróleo mientras hablamos”, dijo Trump sobre Rodríguez. “Bueno, ahora mismo tienen un liderazgo muy fuerte. Quiero decir, están mostrando un liderazgo muy fuerte”.

Trump se reunió con la líder opositora la semana pasada en la Casa Blanca, y ella le entregó al presidente su Premio Nobel de la Paz. Pero incluso entonces, la Casa Blanca dijo que él mantenía su afirmación de que ella no tenía suficiente apoyo para liderar el país.

CNN ha pedido comentarios a la Casa Blanca sobre la llamada.

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The post Trump dice que habló este jueves con la líder opositora venezolana María Corina Machado appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

What are ‘exploding trees’? The winter phenomenon may not be what you think

Kraig Pakulski 0 28 Article rating: No rating

By Jacqueline Howard, CNN

(CNN) — John Seiler was strolling across Virginia Tech’s campus with his students Thursday morning when something stopped them in their tracks: a sweet cherry tree with an unusual jagged scar running along its trunk.

Seiler, a professor and tree physiology specialist at the university, knew immediately that the scar was the aftermath of what social media has dubbed a “tree explosion.”

The tree “had broken open in the cold,” he said.

As more than half of the United States braces for a powerful winter storm, some meteorologists on social media are warning that these “exploding trees” are possible.

But while heavy snow, ice and bitter cold can absolutely wreak havoc on trees, Seiler said there’s one important thing to clear up: They’re not actually exploding, at least not in the way the phrase suggests.

What some people call “tree explosions,” scientists call “frost cracks,” Seiler said.

They happen when temperatures drop suddenly or trees don’t have time to adjust to the cold, and the sap or water inside starts to freeze.

“That water expands as it freezes, and it can happen usually under very, very drastic drops in temperature,” said Doug Aubrey, a professor at the University of Georgia’s Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources.

That expansion puts intense pressure on the bark, which sometimes causes it to crack or split apart, producing a loud bang that may sound like an explosion.

“It’s more of a sound like a gunshot, a really loud crack,” Seiler said. “You know when sometimes you’re in a hurry to get a cold Coke, and you put it in the freezer, and you forget about it and the can splits open? That’s what’s happening with the tree.”

There are “numerous historic and current observations” of trees exploding due to extreme cold, according to the National Forest Foundation.

Seiler said these types of events aren’t necessarily dangerous for passersby or the tree itself.

“It’s going to be loud, but it’s not dangerous. Wood doesn’t go flying through the area,” he said. “And for the tree, when it splits open like that, that’s not going to kill it. … But because the bark split open, it could be killed by insects getting inside, or infections from like a fungus or bacteria.”

Additionally, Aubrey said, “if the bottom of a stem freezes, then the entire tree might die, but that also depends on the species since many trees can grow new stems from buds underground. If freezing occurs in a branch, then perhaps everything on that branch might die, but the tree will survive.”

During the storm, there is higher risk of heavy branches falling from trees due to the weight of ice or snow, Aubrey warned. A heavy tree branch could harm a home, a vehicle or even a person.

“Tree size factors into the types of impacts that you can have,” Aubrey said.

“Longleaf pine trees, which have longer needles, have the potential to accumulate more ice on them than a loblolly pine tree or something that has shorter needles,” Aubrey said. “In terms of branches breaking, large trees that are more open-grown tend to have more large branches and leaf area, compared to a dense forest where the trees are closer together.”

Seiler agreed that people should be more worried about heavy ice accumulation on trees, which could cause branches to fall or the tops of trees to snap.

“If there’s a heavy ice accumulation and wet snow accumulation, you don’t want to have a branch fall on your head,” Seiler said. “That’s extremely, extremely dangerous.”

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