>> Live from NPR News, I'm Kyle Snyder, President Trump is facing a backlash ...
Republicans.
“They've left town for the Memorial Day recess to laying a vote on a measure to fund immigration”
enforcement over the next three years.
The delay comes after Trump created a nearly $1.8 billion fund that may grant money to
January 6 rioters. Here's in Paris, Eric McDaniel. >> The fund out of the Department of Justice nearly $2 billion meant to pay folks who've been victimized by the government. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche told Congress that might include people who attacked lawmakers
and police on January 6, 2021 as President Trump tried to remain empowered despite losing the 2020 presidential election. As you might imagine, that upset some folks, which when both chambers have nearly the smallest majorities you could have is a problem. >> Republican resistance has also emerged over the $1 billion in ballroom funding the White
House of Seeking. Comedians, Stephen Colver, hosted CBS's a late show for a final time Thursday night, signing
“off after 11 seasons with Paul McCartney as his final guest, Colver, talked about being”
forced from CBS, which canceled the show last year's signing financial reasons.
California Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom has signed an executive order to help protect workers from AI and Pierce John Rooch reports. >> The forecast can be dire when it comes to the effect of AI on jobs, and it's something a lot of people are worried about according to polls. Newsom's executive order directs the state to dig into the issue within a half a year
for instance, the labor and workforce department must submit a review of policies and practices that provide workers with a safety net. It also has to come up with a plan for expanding enrollment in employment insurance and make recommendations for how to boost worker training. Newsom directed part of the government to team up with the University of California and
Stanford to develop ways to help AI advance the public good and address problems facing society.
Newsom says California has led the way on innovation and now it needs to reimagine work, governance,
and how people prepare for the future. >> On Rooch and PR news.
“>> Eli Lilly studying an ex-generation obesity drug not on the market yet, but a new study”
results show it help people lose more weight than obesity may injections and drugs already on the market. >> Eli Lilly is researching right a true tide, unlike with Govi and Zepbound which target the GLP-1 hormone, this new drug works on three hormones, GLP-1, GIP, and Glucagan. The company says that in the clinical trial, people taking it for 80 weeks lost in average
of more than 70 pounds at the highest dose. That's compared with five and a half pounds for the patients taking a placebo over the same time period, and people taking Eli Lilly's experimental drug lost more weight than people taking Zepbound or Wagovi over a similar time period in other studies. Common side effects were similar to other GLP-1 drugs including nausea and other gastrointestinal
issues. Eli Lilly has not yet submitted retry tide for food and drug administration approval. Sydney Lupkin and PR news. >> This is in PR news. SpaceX has it made try again later today the private space company scrubbed a test launch
and Texas serves the evening for a bigger version of the company's Starship. The countdown clock got within 40 seconds of the launch before the decision to scrub was made. A series of problems forced to delay at SpaceX prepares to go public and what could be the largest IPO ever.
The premiere of the Canadian province of Alberta Danielle Smith as voters will be asked this fall whether it's time to leave Canada. In a prime time address Thursday night Smith said the referendum will not trigger separation, but rather it would start the legal process toward a binding vote she said her preference is to remain.
AI is quietly making its way into some therapy offices as tools to record sessions and generate clinical notes, critics worry AI could undermine trust as impures when Sir Johnston reports. >> Molly Quinn says her therapist recorded her using an AI note taking tool without her consent. >> If that like a violation and the more that I thought about it, I just started getting
like more and more sick to my stomach. >> Many therapists are increasingly using AI tools to transcribe sessions to generate notes for insurance and medical records. >> Norse Cohen is a couple's therapist in New York who refuses to use the technology. >> Lions know like something is listening to them and that can alter their disclosure.
>> Therapist Kim Tulson says the technology can reduce clinician burnout. >> The amount of time we spend on the admin is giving therapists her lives back. >> Molly Quinn eventually found a new therapist, one who doesn't use AI. >> You're listening to NPR news shows new music new movies keeping up with pop culture sometimes feels like a full time job.
Thankfully over at pop culture happy hour, it's literally our job. We break down what's actually worth watching listening to and pretending you already knew about. So the next time someone says did you see that, you can say yeah, obviously follow NPR's pop


