Love Island is so messy and we are so here for it.
There are typically 30+ episodes each season and we are only 12 episodes in so far, but the inevitable end is coming and you need a standby to watch when it’s over! Love Island is all about trying to find connections in a sea of people who either haven’t had relationships before, are bad at relationships, or who really just seem like all they want to do is hook up and be on their way. So, if you’re looking for shows to watch that have that same vibe, keep reading!
Netflix
This is a newer show by Netflix that flew in under the radar. Sneaky Links: Dating After Dark is about six singles who check into a love hotel to find a meaningful connection and relationship, but unfortunately for them, what they find is not exactly that. These singles don’t know it, but their most recent situationship is also invited. The goal of Sneaky Links is to get these situationships to give a true connection and relationship a try, or explore other options and let their after dark connection go for good.
Peacock
Peacock is stepping up to the plate with spicy dating shows, and pulls no punches in Temptation Island. This show is about four couples who are at a crossroads in their relationships. Whether there are issues of infidelity in the past, wandering eyes, or questioning the strength of the relationship, Temptation Island is here to expedite the issue and put these couples through the gauntlet. The original couples all take a break from each other and couple up with another partner to live together and see if they really do want their original relationship, or if they’re ready for something else.
Perfect Match
Netflix
Netflix really has all the trashy reality dating shows of anyone’s dreams, and Perfect Match is no exception. A bunch of singles are grouped together on an island (shocker) and are put through a matchup of tests and challenges to see who is perfect for who. These singles are featured from other reality dating shows like Love Is Blind, Too Hot To Handle, and The Mole. So, Perfect Match is even more interesting because it hopes to take where those shows failed and really get these singles paired up into the relationship of their dreams.
Tommy and Ben tackle the big question: will Trump be stupid enough to drag the United States into another war in the Middle East? They dig into the various right-wing forces arguing for and against US involvement, discuss why following Benjamin Netanyahu into yet another regime change war in the region is insane, and how this conflict has ballooned from strikes on nuclear infrastructure to a full-on push for regime change. They also talk about the DC blob and media’s cheerleading for these disastrous wars, the eerie similarities between the current moment and the runup to the war in Iraq, and Trump’s willful disregard of our own intelligence. Finally, they cover the efforts in Congress to try to prevent the US from wading into the conflict and why Democrats need to stand firmly against it. Then, Tommy is joined by Congressman Greg Landsman. Landsman supports the US joining the fight against Iran and has been a vocal defender of the war in Gaza, so they debate each policy. Landsman also discusses the terrifying news that he was on the so-called “hit list” found in the Minnesota shooter’s car.
At first glance, it seems like Silicon Valley executives have the perfect life, what with the unimaginable wealth and power and such. But what if they’re sad they don’t get to put on big boy pants and pretend they’re warfighters? What then, America?
Thankfully the Army has invented a way to give tech execs participation trophies—surely that is the best and most noble use of our armed forces.
A new Army initiative titled “Detachment 201: The Army’s Executive Innovation Corps” promises to “fuse cutting-edge tech expertise with military innovation.”
Will they do that by tapping 18F, the federal agency dedicated to working with other agencies on technology products, staffed by people with expertise in both government and tech? Heavens, no. Not since President Donald Trumpdisbanded that agency because Elon Musk thought it was too woke.
President Donald Trump is seen saluting during his birthday military parade on June 14.
No, instead they will do it by making some tech execs part-time lieutenant colonels in the Army Reserve while retaining their current full-time jobs. Welcome yournewest recruits: Andrew Bosworth, CTO of Meta; Shyam Sankar, CTO Palantir; Kevin Weil, CPO of OpenAI; and Bob McGrew, OpenAI’s former research chief and current advisor to Thinking Machines Lab.
The whole thing feels like nothing more than a make-believe outing meant to make some tech bros feel important. The Army already does these sorts ofdirect commissions, where civilians are directly appointed to officer positions. But that’s usually used for people wanting to serve in themedical corps, not for getting a pretend Army gig to steer federal contracts to your private company.
The Army announced the initiative the same day the four execs were sworn in, which makes it look a lot like they invented this “detachment” as a way to bring Silicon Valley moguls in-house without officially doing so. This way, the Trump administration didn’t have to appoint or hire any industry titans, and they didn’t have to give up their incredibly lucrative day jobs.
“Detachment 201” would look a lot less sketchy if the Army hadn’t only tapped executives from companies that have donated millions to Trump. OpenAI’s CEO Sam Altmandropped a million on his inauguration, as did Palantir CEO Alexander Karp and Meta. Palantir even went above and beyond,sponsoring Trump’s pathetic military parade.
These four execs were sworn in on June 13, and it only took until June 16 for the Defense Department toannounce it had awarded a $200 million no-bid contract to OpenAI to “develop prototype frontier AI capabilities to address critical national security challenges in both warfighting and enterprise domains.”
Just in case this conflict of interest wasn’t blatant enough, Katrina Mulligan, former chief of staff to the Army secretary, posted more big news on LinkedIn Monday, announcing that, since being rewarded its $200 million contract, OpenAI is now bringing her on to run a new initiative, “OpenAI for Government,” which will supposedly “help accelerate the U.S. government’s adoption of AI.”
A cartoon by Clay Bennett.
Similarly, Palantir has already been the recipient of more than $100 million in taxpayer dollars since Trump took office in January. And just last month, The New York Times published a detailed account of government use of Foundry, a Palantir tool for organizing and analyzing data. As everyone knows, this is because the Trump administration wants to create a unifiedmaster database of government data to better torment immigrants. But Palantir wants you to know it’s definitely not building a unified master database, and how dare you ask.
Meta, meanwhile, hasn’t yet reaped its rewards, but don’t worry—it’s getting there. The company is activelycourting the military for contracts and haspartnered with Palmer Luckey’s Anduril Industries to design, build, and field products for the military to “provide warfighters with enhanced perception and enable intuitive control of autonomous platforms on the battlefield.”
Notably absent from the list of Big Special Boys with Big Special Army Jobs is Musk and any of his companies. In the halcyon days of the Trump-Musk alliance, he was gettingliteral billions in government contracts, awarded with no oversight and no regard for the obvious conflict of interest.
SpaceX was on track to help build the Golden Dome missile shield, a Trump fixation and boondoggle thatwill not work but will nonetheless cost somewhere between $119 billion and $6.4 trillion. But now there’s nary a mention of SpaceX while Golden Dome missile shield partner Palantir’s star is rapidly ascending.
Clearly, Trump’s gratitude for the $250 million Musk spent to get him elected is now exhausted, in part thanks to their tacky, messy blowup, but also because Trump requires constant infusions of both money and fealty.
But other billionaires are eager to fill that void and ready to reap the riches. And, unlike Musk, they get to play soldier, too!
New York City comptroller and mayoral candidate Brad Lander was arrested outside an immigration courtroom Tuesday. Lander has been volunteering as an observer and escort for people with immigration hearings in recent weeks. In this case, while accompanying a man named Edgardo, a group of ICE agents approached the two men, who were walking arm in arm. Lander asked repeatedly to see a judicial warrant before being handcuffed and detained. Lander was later released after New York Governor Kathy Hochul condemned the arrest and visited New York City to lobby for his release. Five other mayoral candidates also condemned Lander’s arrest, although current Mayor Eric Adams has stayed silent. Adams “has sold this city out to Donald Trump to try to get his own pardon,” says Lander. “Let’s be clear: It’s only himself he cares about, and he is putting New York’s immigrants in harm’s way.”
The Supreme Court has upheld Tennessee’s ban on gender-affirming care for minors, in an opinion by Chief Justice John Roberts over dissent from the court’s Democratic appointees.
The Republican-appointed majority said Wednesday that the state law isn’t subject to heightened scrutiny under the Constitution’s equal protection clause. Reasoning that the law doesn’t discriminate based on sex, Roberts wrote that it “prohibits healthcare providers from administering puberty blockers and hormones to minors for certain medical uses, regardless of a minor’s sex.”
Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote in dissent for the three Democratic appointees that the law plainly discriminated on the basis of sex, and so it deserved greater scrutiny from the court. “By retreating from meaningful judicial review exactly where it matters most, the Court abandons transgender children and their families to political whims,” she wrote.
The appeal presented national implications for other states with similar laws and for transgender rights more broadly. According to KFF, which tracks health policy, 27 states have laws or policies limiting youth access to gender-affirming care.
The justices took the case at the urging of the federal government during the Biden administration. Its petition noted that states across the country have laws that bar transgender adolescents from receiving certain treatments but don’t restrict those same treatments for any other purpose. Those laws “classify based on sex and transgender status,” the petition argued.
Defending the law, the state said it’s “not unconstitutional discrimination to say that drugs can be prescribed for one reason but not another.” The state further argued that its law doesn’t classify people based on sex but rather creates two groups: “minors seeking drugs for gender transition and minors seeking drugs for other medical purposes.”
After Donald Trump won the 2024 presidential election, the federal government told the court in February that its Biden-era stance “no longer represent the United States’ position.” Still, the government didn’t ask the justices to dismiss the appeal, citing several factors including that the court’s resolution of the case would affect many pending cases in the lower courts.
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
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