Santa Barbara County News and Events

Elon Musk’s SpaceX acquires xAI, merging his two most ambitious companies

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A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from launch pad 40 at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Base on December 9


CNN

By Chris Isidore, CNN

(CNN) — SpaceX has acquired xAI, the company announced on Monday, merging two of Elon Musk’s most ambitious companies into the most valuable private company in the world.

“This marks not just the next chapter, but the next book in SpaceX and xAI’s mission,” Musk said in a statement on SpaceX’s website.

The merger could be seen as an indication of the cash xAI needs to compete in the fast-growing field of AI, as well as the technology’s importance in future of space exploration.

SpaceX was valued at $800 billion as of a secondary share sale in December 2025, and xAI was valued at $230 billion as of their most recent funding round in January, according to PitchBook, a research firm that tracks the valuation of private companies.

The move also shows the scramble tech giants like Musk’s companies are going through to secure more computing resources to power artificial intelligence advancements.

“Current advances in AI are dependent on large terrestrial data centers, which require immense amounts of power and cooling,” Musk wrote. “The only logical solution therefore is to transport these resource-intensive efforts to a location with vast power and space.”

AI data centers in space

SpaceX sought permission on Friday from the Federal Communication Commission to launch a constellation of 1 million satellites into orbit. The filing said the aim is to provide a network of solar-powered data centers to “accommodate the explosive growth of data demands driven by AI.”

Musk said he estimates that the “lowest cost way to generate AI compute will be in space” within two to three years.

Musk is the latest tech leader to call for more computing power in the age of AI. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang told CNBC last year that next-generation AI models will require “100 times” more power than older models. AI is expected to spike data center power demand by 165% by 2030, according to Goldman Sachs.

And tech giants have been pouring billions into AI-related infrastructure to meet that demand. Microsoft last week reported it spent $37.5 billion in the last quarter of 2025 on capital expenditures like data centers, while Meta spent $22.14 billion.

At the same time, some US residents have reported seeing their electricity bills surge. A Bloomberg News analysis last year found that in areas near data centers, electricity costs rose as much as 267% compared to five years ago.

But higher electric bills isn’t the only concern about the technology.

Musk’s xAI also owns his social m

What Bad Bunny’s Grammy wins mean for Latinos in the US

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By Maria Santana, CNN

(CNN) — When Bad Bunny’s album “Debí Tirar Más Fotos” won album of the year at this year’s Grammy Awards, the moment changed history.

For the first time, a Spanish-language album took the Recording Academy’s most prestigious prize in an industry that has long treated Latino music as a category, not a centerpiece.

For millions of US Latinos, the win from Bad Bunny – who on Sunday will headline the Super Bowl halftime show – is more than a musical milestone. It is an affirmation of visibility, and proof of belonging.

“It’s beyond inspirational,” said Jeffrey Vargas, a Nuyorican from Bushwick, Brooklyn.

“It’s validating and ground-shifting in a moment when it feels like we’re all under attack. The album was more than a vibe. It was a spiritual uplift and a balm for the aching soul,” Vargas told CNN.

Across social media and Latino communities nationwide, similar sentiments poured in: pride mixed with relief, celebration layered with resilience, after Bad Bunny clinched three Grammys total this weekend, including best global music performance.

“As a Puerto Rican woman, I am beyond proud to see our culture, language, and history elevated globally. We are joyous, defenders of humanity, and our music is infectious,” said Lucria Ortiz, a Puerto Rican community leader from New Bedford, Massachusetts.

For many Latinos, Bad Bunny’s success has always felt intimate. The Puerto Rico-born superstar never switched languages to break into the mainstream. He never softened his accent. He never diluted his musical and cultural references.

“Instead of watering himself down to be more palatable, he added more sofrito to the pot,” said Liz Arreola, a Mexican-American content creator based in Houston, referencing the popular Caribbean/Latino seasoning blend used to build flavor.

In her social media post, Arreola said she was incredibly proud of Bad Bunny’s win and the dignified way he is representing Puerto Ricans and Latinos on the global stage.

“You can earn the world’s respect by being authentic to yourself, your people, your roots, your culture, your music, your island. That album was so authentic and so real, and it was precisely that authenticity that made the rest of the world connect and fall in love with it,” Arreola said in the post.

For decades, Latino artists have been told that “crossing over” required crossing out parts of themselves: less Spanish, fewer regional sounds, more “universal” themes.

But Bad Bunny did the exact opposite. He centered Caribbean rhythms, street slang and political commentary in an unapologetic celebration of Latino and Puerto Rican pride, which carried over into his acceptance speeches on Sunday night.

That matters, says longtime political consultant, activist, philanthropist and producer Luis Miranda.

“Bad Bunny’s win, and ‘Buena Vista Social Club’s,’ is recognition that Spanish-language music is part of the fabric of this country,” said Miranda, a producer of the hit Broadway musical whose original Spanish-language cast recording won the 2026 Grammy for best musical theater album.

“Our music, our language, our people, have been here forever and will continue to thrive, forever,” Miranda said.

The artist’s victory also comes at a time when Latino communities are facing intensified political rhetoric, immigration crackdowns, and perceived cultural erasure.

Accepting the award for best música urbana album, Bad Bunny began his speech saying, “Before I say thanks to God, I’m gonna say: ICE out! We’re not savage, we

Desde Vega Baja, los puertorriqueños celebran el éxito de Bad Bunny en los Grammy: “Todavía siguen hablando de nosotros”

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Por Rafy Rivera y Rocío Muñoz-Ledo, CNN en Español

En Vega Baja, el municipio donde nació Benito Martínez Ocasio (Bad Bunny), el nombre del artista puertorriqueño se pronuncia como el de uno de los suyos: alguien que habla por su gente, en su idioma, desde su historia. A una semana de encabezar el medio tiempo del Super Bowl y un día después de su poderoso mensaje en los Grammy contra las acciones de ICE, los vecinos dicen sentirse orgullosos de verlo llevar la identidad boricua a los escenarios internacionales.

“La pregunta es qué otro premio le vamos a otorgar a Bad Bunny o a Benito, cuando prácticamente ya ha acaparado todos los premios que existen en el planeta Tierra”, dice a CNN Rubén Marzán, residente de Dorado, un municipio vecino de Vega Baja, en la costa norte de Puerto Rico.

Para Marzán, el mayor mérito de Bad Bunny no está solo en los premios internacionales, sino en poner a Puerto Rico en el mapa y despertar curiosidad sobre la isla y su cultura en todo el mundo. “Puerto Rico no la ha dejado caer. Todavía siguen hablando de nosotros”, insiste y recuerda cómo personas que nunca habían oído hablar de la isla ahora quieren conocerla.

Para su gente en Vega Baja, Bad Bunny ha llevado la cultura y las raíces de Puerto Rico a cada escenario que pisa y esa visibilidad atrajo a miles de visitantes de todo el mundo en el verano de 2025. Los 30 conciertos que Bad Bunny ofreció en el Coliseo de Puerto Rico generaron cerca de US$ 200 millones para la economía de la isla, impulsando el turismo, la hotelería y otros sectores locales.

“Gente que ni sabía de Puerto Rico vino para acá”, recuerda Nomina Galloza, residente de Vega Baja. Desde allí observa ahora la reacción negativa de los sectores conservadores en Estados Unidos, en especial del mundo MAGA, ante la idea de que Bad Bunny cante completamente en español durante el Super Bowl.

“Ahora estamos yendo para el Super Bowl. Eso está súper porque la gente está criticando de que va a cantar en español. Pero, ¿sabes qué?”, dice Galloza con orgullo, “su música es tan pegajosa que, aunque no entiendas lo que canta, igual te va a gustar”.

La discusión sobre el idioma y la identidad se intensificó tras su discurso en los Grammy, donde Bad Bunny hizo historia al ganar el premio a mejor álbum urbano por “Debí tirar más fotos”, un disco completamente en español. En su mensaje, lanzó un contundente “¡Fuera ICE!” en inglés y defendió a la comunidad inmigrante. “No somos salvajes, no somos animales, no somos aliens. Somos humanos y somos americanos”, dijo ante una audiencia que respondió con aplausos.

Además, Martínez Ocasio se llevó el premio más importante de la noche: mejor álbum del año. Emocionado, volvió al escenario y habló en español: “Quiero dedicar este premio a todas las personas que han tenido que dejar su país”. Luego repitió el mensaje en inglés y agregó: “Para todos los que han perdido un ser querido y han tenido que seguir adelante. Para todos los latinos que merecían estar en esta tarima, recogiendo este premio”.

Para muchos en Vega Baja, ese mensaje fue un reflejo de lo que ellos sienten y defienden. “Él es un ídolo demasiado y muy grande. Esto es inolvidable, algo nuevo para mucha gente latina que no solamente es de Puerto Rico, sino de esos lugares hispanos que escuchan en la música latina y siempre, siempre, siempre, cuando él habla y saca un tema, lo pega y lo pega duro”, dice Luis Álvarez, residente de Yabucoa, en la costa sureste de Puerto Rico.

Otros, como Ángel Rivera, van más allá: “Lo considero un embajador de Vega Baja, no solo de Puerto Rico. Ha puesto este

The McHurley Film Center prepares for Ribbon-Cutting

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SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) It's a big day for the Santa Barbara International Film Festival and philanthropists Nora McNeely Hurley and Michael Hurley.

Their combined names and donation made The McHurley Film Center possible.

Thanks to generous donors and an ongoing donation campaign the former Fiesta Five has been transformed into a theater hub just in time for the 41st Santa Barbara International Film Festival.

Supporters are scheduled to gather outside the Film Center on the 900 block of State Street for a photo-op ribbon-cutting starting at 5:30p.m.

Your News Channel will have more on the special occasion tonight on the news.

The post The McHurley Film Center prepares for Ribbon-Cutting appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

From clash to dialogue: Petro arrives in Washington for key encounter with Trump after year of tensions

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By Uriel Blanco, Gonzalo Zegarra, Michael Rios, CNN

(CNN) — After a year of insults, threats, tariffs and sanctions, the leaders of the US and Colombia will meet in Washington on Tuesday in an apparent attempt to put their bitter feud behind them.

Colombian President Gustavo Petro accepted the invitation from Donald Trump last month following a cordial phone call that dramatically reversed their war of words.

The meeting comes at an important moment for Petro. His government intends to prove to Washington that it has an effective grip on drug trafficking following the unprecedented US military operation in neighboring Venezuela that led to the capture of its President Nicolás Maduro, whom the US accused of cartel ties. Petro is also aiming to have US sanctions against him overturned.

The US president said Monday that he was looking forward to a “good meeting” with Petro.

Petro arrived in Washington on Monday using a special visa. His previous one was revoked in September by the State Department after a speech to a pro-Palestinian crowd in which Petro called on American soldiers to disobey Trump.

Here is how their public quarrel unfolded:

Deportations and tariff threats

The US-Colombia relationship is often considered one of the most stable in the Americas, especially in terms of security and defense. But it showed signs of stress as early as January 2025, the month Trump began his second presidential term.

As part of his crackdown on illegal immigration, one of Trump’s first moves was to launch a mass deportation campaign, which included the use of military planes to expel immigrants, sometimes with their hands tied.

Angered by the way deportees were being returned, Petro blocked two of those flights from landing in his country, saying he would “never allow Colombians to be brought back in handcuffs on flights.”

However, Petro backtracked later that day after the Trump administration threatened to impose tariffs and sanctions. Colombia announced that it would accept “all” of Trump’s conditions, including the “unrestricted acceptance of undocumented immigrants” who entered the US.

‘Friends’ of Tren de Aragua

In March 2025, during a meeting in Bogotá, US Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem claimed that Petro had referred to members of the Venezuelan criminal organization Tren de Aragua as “his friends” and described them as misunderstood people who simply needed “more love and more understanding.”

Petro denied making those comments and suggested the confusion may have stemmed from a misinterpretation of his words due to his limited English proficiency.

Tren de Aragua, designated a foreign terrorist organization by the Trump administration, is a transnational criminal gang that originated in a Venezuelan prison and has slowly expanded its reach across the continent in recent years.

Decertifying Colombia and revoking Petro’s visa

The United States is Colombia’s main trading partner, and Bogotá is considered one of Washington’s key allies in the fight against drugs and narco-terrorism.

However, the Trump administration said in mid-September that Colombia had failed in its obligations to combat drug trafficking and decided to decertify the country as a counternarcotics partner. Decertification entails a series of restrictions by the US, although American authorities said they would continue to provide funding to Colombia.

The Trump administration blamed Petro for the alleged failures, but Petro insisted that Colombia was helping the US and that drug use was an American societal problem and not a Colombian one.

“The US decertified us after dozens of deaths among police officers, soldiers, and civilians who we

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