Contributor: Trump’s empty bluster worked until he took on the pope and Iran

Until recently, President Trump always found a way to fail forward, through a combination of spin, threats, payoffs and bluster.

OK, that’s the simplistic interpretation. The fine print tells a less-glamorous story: a man born on third base who spent decades insisting he’d hit a triple.

Still, it’s hard to argue with success. When Trump entered politics, he redefined the rules of the game. Rivals who tried to outflank him on policy detail, ideological consistency and institutional norms found themselves either vanquished or assimilated by the Borg.

By my lights, only once during Trump’s admittedly chaotic first term did he run into something that his playbook couldn’t at least mitigate or parry: the COVID-19 pandemic. For the final year of his presidency, reality refused to negotiate, and political gravity reasserted itself. It turns out, viruses aren’t susceptible to the Art of The Deal.

But then, miraculously, Trump wriggled through legal jeopardy, bulldozed his way past more conventional Republicans and Democrats, and re-emerged victorious in 2024.

If anything, that comeback reinforced the idea that Trump could survive anything by virtue of his playbook.

By the start of his second term, he’d made impressive headway in co-opting not only individuals but also major institutions within big tech, the media and academia.

Even in foreign affairs, Trump’s sense that any problem could be solved via force, intimidation or money was confirmed when he captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and installed Maduro’s vice president, Delcy Rodríguez, as a sort of puppet leader. Everyone has a price, right?

Unfortunately for Trump, no. Not everyone does.

Lately, the president has encountered a different kind of resistance — adversaries motivated by something bigger and more transcendent than money, power or the avoidance of pain.

In dealing with Iran, for instance, Trump has confronted people operating under a wholly different set of incentives. It’s a regime guided by a mix of ideology, radical religious doctrine and long-term strategic interests that don’t always align with short-term material gain.

(Now perhaps, having punished Trump enough already, Iran will finally come to the negotiating table. But even if that happens, it will have occurred after exacting a steep price — so steep, in fact, that it may already be too late for Trump to plausibly claim a win.)

It turns out, you can’t easily intimidate or pay off a true believer who isn’t afraid to die and believes they have God on their side.

A similar (though obviously not morally equivalent) dynamic is now also on display in the form of Trump’s skirmish with Pope Leo XIV, a man who commands moral authority. He opposes the war in Iran (“Blessed are the peacemakers”) and has demonstrated a stubborn refusal to back down to Trump’s attempts at bullying.

“Woe to those who manipulate religion and the very name of God for their own military, economic and political gain, dragging that which is sacred into darkness and filth,” Leo said during a tour of Africa. It’s a remark that the American pope seemed to implicitly be aiming at the American president.

Here’s what Trump doesn’t understand: There are still pockets of the world where concepts like faith and national identity outweigh tangible incentives. Where sacrifice and suffering are an accepted part of the plan.

When facing these sorts of foes, Trump’s usual operating system starts to look less like a cheat code and more like a category error.

But he can’t see this because Trump is always prone to a sort of cynical projection — of assuming everyone views the world in the same base, carnal, corrupt way he sees it.

Whether it was his incredulity that Denmark wouldn’t sell Greenland, rhetoric that seemed to discount the motivations of those who serve and sacrifice in the military, or his affinity for nakedly transactional gulf states, the pattern is familiar: a tendency to view decisions through a cost-benefit lens that not everyone shares.

To be fair, that lens has often served him well. In arenas where power, money and leverage dominate, Trump’s approach is eerily effective.

But after years of taming secular, “rational” opponents, he is fighting a two-front war against people who see their struggles as moral and spiritual.

They aren’t stronger in a conventional sense. But they are, in a very real sense, less susceptible to Trump’s methods.

For perhaps the first time in his life, Donald Trump finds himself facing adversaries who aren’t just immune to his usual Trumpian playbook but are playing a different game altogether.

Matt K. Lewis is the author of “Filthy Rich Politicians” and “Too Dumb to Fail.”

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Robert MacIntyre not fazed by criticism of Masters behaviour

MacIntyre stopped short of apologising, but believes he has the right set-up in place to perform well as he seeks a third PGA Tour victory.

“I’ve got my family, friends and team, they are the ones I really listen to,” he said. “If I’ve done something wrong, they’ll tell me.

“That’s how I go about life. I just do what I want, how we want, not just personally, but with my family and friends and we go about our business the way we want to do it.

“Some people like it, some people don’t, but at the end of the day it’s a job and I come out here to perform the best I can.”

After six birdies and a solitary bogey at Harbour Town, MacIntyre feels his game is in a good place.

“Coming off last week, a disappointing performance, to come into this week I was comfortable with the golf course, comfortable with my game,” he said.

“I tried to put as much of last week behind me as I could. I’m driving it beautifully off the tee. I’m being aggressive off the tee which gives me lots of wedges round here.

“I didn’t take many chances in the middle part of the round, which was a bit disappointing, but five-under par is always good to start.”

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Lee hails S. Korean oil tanker exiting Red Sea

President Lee Jae Myung, seen here at the Blue House on Friday, shared a news report that a South Korean oil tanker exited the Red Sea for the country’s first shipment since the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. Photo by Yonhap

President Lee Jae Myung on Friday shared a news report that a South Korean oil tanker exited the Red Sea, marking the first shipment of crude oil to the nation since the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.

Earlier in the day, the nation’s fisheries ministry reported that the tanker carrying crude oil from Saudi Arabia exited the Red Sea, as the Strait of Hormuz has been effectively closed amid the prolonged war in the Middle East.

“It is good news that our vessel is transporting crude oil via the Red Sea for the first time since the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz,” Lee wrote in his social media post.

He described the safe passage as a “valuable achievement” made possible through close coordination among relevant ministries and the dedication of seafarers under difficult circumstances.

“The government is mobilizing all available resources to address the crisis stemming from the war in the Middle East,” Lee said, pledging to safeguard people’s livelihoods and national interests.

South Korea has been exploring ways to ship crude oil via the Red Sea, an alternative route, as the Strait of Hormuz, a critical maritime chokepoint, has been effectively closed amid the Middle East conflict.

Copyright (c) Yonhap News Agency prohibits its content from being redistributed or reprinted without consent, and forbids the content from being learned and used by artificial intelligence systems.

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Lebanese return to devastated south as fragile 10-day truce takes hold | Israel attacks Lebanon News

Hezbollah warns it has its ‘finger on the trigger’ in case of Israeli violations of the temporary ceasefire.

Displaced Lebanese have begun cautiously returning to their homes in the south after Lebanon and Israel agreed to a 10-day truce, even as the Lebanese army calls on residents to delay their return and Hezbollah warns it has its “finger on the trigger” in case of Israeli violations.

Tens of thousands of people poured into areas of southern Lebanon on Friday morning hours after the truce went into effect, many heading back to homes and villages battered by more than a month of Israeli attacks.

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“People just couldn’t wait,” reported Al Jazeera’s Zeina Khodr from Nabatieh, one of the hardest hit areas.

“Even if it’s 10 days, they want to return to their homes. Some of them are just coming to see what remains of their homes, what remains of their lives.

“They want to show that they don’t want to give up their lands,” added Khodr.

While the ceasefire largely appeared to hold, Lebanon’s army accused Israel of several early violations on Friday, including intermittent shelling of ‌southern Lebanese villages.

Lebanon’s National News Agency also reported that unexploded ordnance killed a boy in the town of Majdal Selem, while rescuers uncovered the bodies of at least a dozen people killed in earlier attacks in Tyre.

French President Emmanuel Macron warned that the ceasefire “may already be undermined by ongoing military operations” and called for “the safety of civilians on both sides of the border”.

Hezbollah said its fighters “will keep their finger on the trigger because they are wary of the enemy’s treachery”.

Israeli air strikes and a ground invasion of parts of southern Lebanon have killed more than 2,100 people and displaced some 1.2 million in the latest round of fighting, according to Lebanese authorities.

Hezbollah attacks, meanwhile, killed two Israeli civilians, while 13 Israeli soldiers were killed in Lebanon, according to Israel.

Israeli officials have said they intend to maintain control over Lebanese territory extending to the Litani River as a “buffer zone” against Hezbollah.

‘Unliveable’

As residents assessed the damage to their hometowns, some pledged to stay, while others – finding nothing to return to or fearing the fragile truce could collapse – said they would leave again.

“There’s destruction and it’s unliveable. Unliveable. We’re taking our things and leaving again,” said Fadel Badreddine, who returned to Nabatieh with his young son and wife. “May God grant us relief and end this whole thing permanently – not temporarily – so we can return to our homes and lands.”

Al Jazeera’s Khodr said “wherever you look you see damage, destruction” in Nabatieh. “So much has been lost in this conflict in the past 46 days.”

If the ceasefire holds, it could ease one of the main points of tension in US-Iran negotiations. Iran and mediator Pakistan had maintained that Lebanon should be covered in a separate US-Iran ceasefire framework, while Israel claimed it was not part of that deal and continued its attacks.

Ali Akbar Dareini, a researcher at Iran’s Center for Strategic Studies, said the Israel-Lebanon ceasefire had removed one obstacle to wider negotiations between the US and Iran because Tehran views the regional conflict as interconnected, describing this as a “unity of fronts”.

Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, whose country hosted last week’s ceasefire talks between the US and Iran, welcomed the Israel-Lebanon truce on Friday and expressed “hope that it will pave the way for sustainable peace”.

He also praised the mediation role of US President Donald Trump, who has invited Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Lebanese President Joseph Aoun to the White House for “meaningful talks”.

“Pakistan reaffirms its unwavering support for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Lebanon, and will continue to support all efforts aimed at lasting peace in the region,” Sharif said on X.

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‘Erupcja’ review: Charli XCX should definitely continue acting

Film buffs understand that nearly every movie is, at heart, a travelogue — even if it occurs in your neighboring town — and that most travelogues can come across like love stories, whether anyone ends up together or not. That’s the whimsical, charged appeal of the Charli XCX-starring “Erupcja,” a mélange of romance, escape and disruptive coincidence in modern Warsaw from American micro-auteur Pete Ohs.

If you put footage of a smoke-spewing volcano under that Polish title, you’ll gather what the word means, which is exactly what Ohs does at the beginning, color-tinting his boxy frame ’60s-arthouse-style and adding a vintage Mancini-esque track from a Polish chanteuse. All the better to seed the belief that we’re about to experience something dreamy and convulsive.

That said, a volcano isn’t why British couple Bethany (Charli XCX) and Rob (Will Madden) have arrived in Warsaw. That rumbling you hear could also just be suitcases rolled over ancient streets. Besotted Rob’s surprise plan was to propose to Bethany in Paris — as revealed to us in omnipotent voice-over (by Jacek Zubiel) that fills in the feelings and backstories of our protagonists.

Bethany chose Warsaw, however, because she has a rekindling in mind, in the form of her longtime friend Nel (Lena Góra), a florist for whom Bethany’s unprompted arrival under her balcony one night — stealing away from her Airbnb with Rob — is complicated and exciting. With the news breaking that Italy’s Mount Etna has just erupted, grounding planes across Europe, a mighty passion they forged as teenagers, fueled by drugs, clubbing, heart-to-hearts and poetry, has once more been unleashed. It’s just their thing: Whenever Bethany and Nel connect, a volcano announces itself somewhere in the world. Woe be to the moony boyfriend or, in Nel’s case, exasperated girlfriend (Agata Trzebuchowska), left behind to dust off the ash.

“Erupcja,” which Ohs also photographed and edited with impressionistic verve, unfolds as if Jacques Rivette’s playful air of mystery and Roberto Rossellini’s earthy melancholia had somehow come together to form a zillennial with a restless heart. Ohs makes movies with the in-the-moment creative participation of his cast — he, Charli, Madden, Góra and playwright Jeremy O. Harris, who portrays a friendly American artist, are the credited writers and the whole enterprise goes down like a cocktail of ruminations and swerves invented on the spot, but not haphazardly.

You get the buzz (music by Charlie Watson and Isabella Summers plays a big part), the hangover, but also an aura of remedy and renewal. It’s all very human, evident in the pop star’s subtly frisky portrait of someone drawn to abandon (Charli should definitely continue acting), but also in Madden’s unshowy, mature hurt and in how Góra suggests the more grounded half of a self-mythologizing duo. Ohs works in evocative details: inserted frames of color, like mood flashes, or a shot of a lonely phone ringing, never getting picked up.

He leaves it up to you to wonder if Bethany and Nel have ever been more than friends — “It’s not Romeo and Juliet,” Nel coolly declaims from her balcony upon glimpsing Bethany waiting below — but what’s fun is how that’s ultimately beside the point. The edgy appeal of “Erupcja” is in the way it maps humans as molecules and electrons, fizzed by location, inspired by connection, driven to hover, fuse and release. The characters may get bounced around a bit and some will feel stranded, but you’ll know you’ve been taken somewhere new by this charming indie.

‘Erupcja’

In English and Polish, with subtitles

Not rated

Running time: 1 hour, 12 minutes

Playing: Opens Friday, April 17 at Landmark’s Nuart Theatre

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Rand Merchant Bank: Cautious Optimism

Rob Leon, Co-Head of Investment Banking at Rand Merchant Bank, which won Best Investment Bank in Africa, explains Africa’s opportunities to become a global investment hub.

Global Finance: What does the African deal-making landscape look like, and how do you see it evolving?

Rob Leon: Africa’s deal-making landscape is marked by cautious optimism. Despite geopolitical uncertainty and global economic headwinds, investment opportunities are expanding in key sectors, with infrastructure being central. Interest in natural resources—particularly critical minerals needed for clean energy—is also growing, and private equity and venture capitalists are becoming increasingly active. Notably, reforms in several countries are improving investor confidence. Egypt, Morocco, South Africa, Kenya, and Nigeria dominate due to their large consumer bases, diversified economies, and reform momentum.

Over the coming years, deal activity is expected to be deeply driven by regional integration, policy reforms, and the demographic dividend. The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) will unlock cross-border opportunities, making pan-African mergers and acquisitions more viable.

In the short term, we expect moderate growth in deal volumes, led by the energy and digital sectors. In the medium term, AfCFTA will lower trade barriers and harmonize regulation, creating conditions for larger cross-border deals. Beyond 2030, Africa could emerge as a global investment hub if political stability and regulatory harmony are sustained.

GF: What has made RMB a top investment bank, and how critical are broader Africa markets?

Leon: Our diversified portfolio, together with a disciplined approach to balancing risk, return, and growth, have let RMB deliver consistent returns in a very competitive market. Besides that, we differentiate ourselves through a collaborative, client-centric, and entrepreneurial approach.

Broader Africa is central to our growth strategy. RMB has a deal footprint in 35 countries as well as an international presence. That network matters because many of our clients are regional or internationally connected businesses that need capital, risk management, and advisory solutions across jurisdictions.

GF: How can Africa deepen its underdeveloped corporate debt market?

Leon: Africa’s corporate debt markets have developed meaningfully over time, but their depth and breadth still vary considerably across countries, sectors, and currencies. In many markets, the issue is not a lack of demand for capital. It is that the available pools of capital, the range of issuers, and the array of funding instruments are not yet broad or deep enough to meet the demand. A key consideration is currency. Many corporates’ revenues are denominated in local currency, yet a meaningful share of available funding is hard currency-based.

On the positive side, domestic institutional capital is growing and should support deeper and more diversified debt markets over time. This is encouraging, with borrowers taking a strategic approach to funding, including engagement from a broader set of investors and growing demand for solutions that go beyond traditional bilateral lending.

GF: Equity-market activity remains subdued. What can Africa do to change this?

Leon: While 2025 was a stellar year for many African equity markets, we still see muted capital raising activity, with companies preferring debt financing or private equity. To change this, Africa needs a mix of structural reforms, market deepening, and investor confidence-building measures. Currently, many markets are underutilized. Exchanges remain small, with limited trading volumes; listing is burdensome; and volatility and perception often deter long-term investors. That said, a few stock exchanges are highly sophisticated, with deep liquidity, diverse listings, and advanced infrastructure.

To revitalize equity capital raising, Africa must strengthen market infrastructure by modernizing its trading platforms and settlement systems and encourage cross-listings and regional exchange integration. There is also a need for policy and regulatory reforms and strengthening of corporate governance standards. Africa should also leverage AfCFTA to create pan-African capital markets and pool liquidity across exchanges to attract larger listings.

GF: How large a role is sustainable finance assuming in Africa? Leon: Sustainable finance is a rapidly growing market that creates access to large reservoirs of capital and a diverse set of investors. RMB is at the forefront of advancing this market, having facilitated $12 billion in sustainable and transition finance. This includes blended finance structures to mobilize capital for early-stage projects and innovative technology. The bank has committed to facilitate $26.8 billion in sustainable and transition finance by 2030.

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How to have the best Sunday in L.A., according to Paul W. Downs

Paul W. Downs can’t help it that even on the weekends, his life intersects with “Hacks,” the HBO comedy he co-created and co-showruns with his wife, Lucia Aniello, and their friend Jen Statsky. (He also appears on the show as Jimmy LuSaque Jr., the besieged manager of its two stars, played by Emmy winners Jean Smart and Hannah Einbinder.) The fifth and final season of “Hacks” premiered last week, but on Downs’ days off, he often finds himself at its previous filming locations or hanging out with cast members who have become like family.

In Sunday Funday, L.A. people give us a play-by-play of their ideal Sunday around town. Find ideas and inspiration on where to go, what to eat and how to enjoy life on the weekends.

Downs moved to Los Angeles in 2011, but soon after, he and Aniello were hired to write (and for him to act) on the über-New York show “Broad City,” keeping them away from the West Coast for years. Now the couple live in Los Feliz, which they enjoy with their young son.

“I love Los Feliz because it’s a real neighborhood with restaurants and bars, but also feels close to nature with Griffith Park,” Downs says. “Also it’s very central to my Eastside friends and Westside agents.”

And if he had to live at a local mall, like the character Ava Daniels did in the third season of “Hacks,” which would he choose?

“It would be the Americana, obviously.”

Here’s how he’d spend a perfect day in L.A.

10 a.m.: A late rise and a li’l barista

I’m sleeping in if I can, which I can’t because I have a toddler, but let’s say I can sleep ’til 10. That would be insane.

Then I’m making coffee at home. I’m making it with my 4-year-old because he likes to make my coffee now. He always wanted to help, now he really wants to do it on his own. I’m still there to supervise, but he does do a lot of it.

I do batch brew. I’m doing Verve Coffee that I’m grinding there, and then I’m brewing four cups because I need my coffee. I had a Moccamaster for a long time, but I recently got a Simply Good Coffee. There’s no plastic — it’s all glass and metal.

11 a.m.: Chocolate croissants for everyone

We’re driving to Pasadena and we’re going to [Artisanal Goods by] CAR, which is the place to get the best chocolate croissant, I think, in the world. I don’t just think in L.A., I think they’re better than Paris. I’m going there with my wife and my kid and I’m having another coffee and some pastry. We’re ordering three [chocolate croissants]. We’re not doubling up.

11:45 a.m.: The family business

We’re driving to Fair Oaks in Pasadena. There’s a place called T.L. Gurley. We shot “Hacks” there, actually. Not only in Season 1, but also full circle in Season 5. We’re going to shmay around and look at antiques. My kid is going to want to play a vintage pinball machine. We’re going to find a little piece of art for the house or what have you. It’s not necessarily that I’m on the hunt. It’s to pass the time and to have some fun. If I could do anything and have a leisurely day and take my mind off work, that’s what I’m doing.

People love to interact with my kid when he’s there. We’re really training him to appraise things at a young age. My parents are part-time dealers of antiques. My grandmother bought and sold antiques. It’s kind of a family business.

1:30 pm.: Baguettes and books

We’re driving to Larchmont and we’re getting a sandwich at Larchmont Village Wine, Spirits & Cheese. I’m doing prosciutto-mozzarella-basil on a baguette.

Then we’re going to Chevalier’s Books. What’s sad is that I’m often not looking for leisure material. I’m looking for something that I’m interested in learning more about or writing about, or that they’re turning into a show I want to audition for. But we’re also doing Little Golden Books for my son. He’s obsessed. We’re not huge on screen time, so we really encourage the book-buying.

2:30 p.m.: Cast pool party

We’re having some family fun in the pool and we’re doing that until evening. We invite people over all the time. My sister-in-law is a New Yorker, but she actually wrote last season on “The Rooster” and she’s often writing on shows in L.A., so she’s often here and she’ll have a couple friends come over. I know this sounds like a piece of PR or something, but we’ll really literally have Hannah [Einbinder] and maybe Mark Indelicato from “Hacks” come over to swim. Jen, our co-creator of “Hacks,” will come over.

6:00 p.m.: Family dinner

Sometimes we’ll order Grá to the house, which is a pizza place in Echo Park — excellent sourdough crust pizza. But if we don’t do that, an ideal evening is an early dinner at All Time on Hillhurst in Los Feliz. We’re ordering the ceviche and my son is having all of it and not sharing with anybody at the table.

8:45 p.m.: A thrilling ending to the day

After putting my kid to bed, my wife and I, in an ideal world (full disclosure: we haven’t done this in two years), we’ll watch something together that we’ve been meaning to watch. We have a long list of movies and we either want to revisit or that we haven’t seen that we need to watch.

We don’t watch a lot of comedies. It’s a dream to watch a “Black Bag” or a little espionage thriller. We really like that because it’s so different than the stuff that we’re working on in the day.

Often the things we watch are things that we admire. We like deconstructing it as fans of film and television. We do like talking about the making of it, but it’s less of a critique and more of a listing of the things we appreciated about it.

10:30 p.m.: No work tomorrow

And then it’s lovemaking ’til morning on a perfect Sunday. If it’s a perfect Sunday, there’s also a Monday that’s off.

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F1: What is it really like trying to reach Formula 1?

“Without Williams’ support when I initially went into Formula 3, it would have been very, very difficult for me to even do one season,” the 21-year-old said.

Despite being in the Williams Driver Academy, he was expected to cover part of the costs himself.

“Williams were very aware of my financial struggles,” he said. “Of course, they only contribute a certain amount to my season and that came very early in the year, as is quite normal.

O’Sullivan added that it is “down to the driver to bring the funding”, meaning sponsors are “critical” but difficult to find.

He explained: “I think any sponsorship you get is either from an act of extraordinary kindness, or family, friends, or someone who’s very, very passionate about racing or believes in the driver.”

He described a phenomenon that he called “motorsport inflation”, adding that he is “amazed” by the number of people able to race with the current costs.

“There are very few regulations controlling how much you can spend,” he said. “So the top teams perform the best because they have the most money.

“For as long as you have people wanting to race and with the finances to race, the teams can set their price. And if people pay, they’ll keep upping their price.”

For example, a top level, race-winning kart chassis can cost upwards of £4,000 – and that’s without an engine.

O’Sullivan said that in his time in European karting, the top teams had budgets of about £180,000 a year, but that has now increased.

“That’s now up to around £300,000 with motorsport inflation, which doesn’t really follow the global trends,” he said.

O’Sullivan believes “there’s no hiding away from” elitism within motorsport, adding: “There’s a few cases of drivers making it without the funds but you have to be able to get to a level where you’re recognised by Formula 1 teams, which is normally European karting, which is very expensive.”

Having left F2 before the end of 2024, he says that “realistically” F1 is no longer the goal for him and he currently races in Japan in the Super Formula series.

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Iran war’s big winners: Wall Street, weapons firms, AI and green energy | Business and Economy News

The International Monetary Fund has downgraded its global growth forecast for 2026 from 3.3 to 3.1 percent, citing the impact of the United States-Israeli war on Iran and the shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz on the world economy.

The war has damaged energy infrastructure across the Gulf, while critical exports like oil, gas, chemicals and fertiliser remain largely stranded by Iran’s shutdown of the strait and the subsequent US naval blockade of Iranian ports.

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In the worst-case scenario of a prolonged war, the IMF said global growth could fall to 2.5 percent in 2026, with low-income and developing economies hit the hardest by soaring commodity and energy prices. The global shipping and logistics industry is facing a separate crisis.

But every economic crisis also has beneficiaries: despite the dire macroeconomic outlook, some corners of the global economy are thriving on the uncertainty.

Here’s a look at five industries that are doing well either despite – or because of – the darkening economic outlook.

Wall Street investment banks

Global investors have been on a rollercoaster since the start of US President Donald Trump’s second term last year. The president’s erratic decision-making, where he often issues an ultimatum one day and then changes it the next, has led traders to coin the term “TACO trade”, where TACO stands for “Trump Always Chickens Out”.

The recent volatility has made some investors anxious, but it’s been a boon to investment banks, which make millions in commissions and revenue from the surging volume of trade, according to Sean Dunlap, a director of equity research at Morningstar Research Services.

“Clients want to reposition, so they trade frequently,” he told Al Jazeera. “Spreads tend to increase, which increases the profitability for trade intermediaries like banks.”

First-quarter results for 2026 – released this week – showed that Morgan Stanley reported a profit of $5.57bn, up 29 percent year on year, while Goldman Sachs reported a profit of $5.63bn, up 19 percent year on year.

JP Morgan Chase also reported major gains, with first-quarter earnings of $16.49bn, up 13 percent year on year. The banks all cited high levels of trading, deal-making, and “robust client engagement” as the reasons behind surging profits.

The boomtime for banks could reverse course, however, if volatility persists for too long, Dunlap warned, because investors may become increasingly cautious and less willing to borrow money to make trades.

Prediction markets

As mainstream Wall Street banks reap profits, the crypto-based prediction platform Polymarket has been earning upwards of $1m a day since the start of the month by letting users make peer-to-peer bets on everything from sports tournaments to elections.

Polymarket has been doing well since the start of the war, but it revised its fee structure on March 30 to cash in even more on its popularity.

Rival platforms like Kalshi, Novig and Robinhood also follow the same business model, but Polymarket has been the standout winner of 2026 because it controversially allows users to bet on the outcome of conflicts like the Iran war.

Polymarket revised its fee structure on March 30 to cash in on its popularity. The change has already netted the platform more than $21m in fees since April 1, up from $11.6m for all of March and $6.23m for all of February, according to DefiLlama, a website that provides data analysis for decentralised finance platforms.

If the current trend continues, Polymarket could make $342m in fees this year alone, according to DefiLlama’s analysis.

Anonymous users have also made millions correctly predicting the dates of major events like the US-Iran ceasefire, but the outcomes for rank-and-file users are typically less impressive.

Researchers found that the top 1 percent of Polymarket users captured 84 percent of all trading gains, according to a new report released this month analysing 70 million trades from 2022 to 2025. The returns are so high that US federal regulators have pledged to crack down on insider trading in prediction markets following suspiciously well-timed bets on Iran war outcomes.

Aerospace and defence

Unsurprisingly, the aerospace and defence industries are booming this year due to major conflicts in Ukraine, Iran, Sudan, Gaza and Lebanon and a surge in global defence spending.

About half of the world’s countries have increased their military budgets over the past five years, according to an April report from the IMF, which means they are also buying everything from drones to missiles — more than ever before. Demand is growing particularly fast in Europe, where NATO countries have committed to raising defence spending to 5 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) by 2035.

The defence industry has, in turn, seen major gains on the stock market. The MSCI World Aerospace and Defence Index – which tracks aerospace and defence stocks across 23 global markets – reported net returns of 32 percent year on year at the end of March.

The defence index outpaced the MSCI World Index, which tracks 1,300 large and mid-cap companies across the same 23 markets. The index, which gives a broader overview of global stock markets, reported net returns of 18.9 percent over the same period.

Artificial intelligence

Last year, the United Nations Trade and Development (UNCTAD) office predicted that the AI industry would grow from $189bn in 2023 to $4.8 trillion by 2033, and the Iran war does not seem to have dented the outlook.

“Despite the shocks from the Iran war, we’re still seeing resilience in a lot of sectors like artificial intelligence and renewable energy,” said Nick Marro, lead analyst for global trade at the Economist Intelligence Unit.

One metric for the AI boom has been the high volume of semiconductor chips still being exported out of East Asia, he said. At the top of the chart is chipmaking powerhouse Taiwan, which reported record-breaking merchandise exports of $80.2bn in March, up 61.8 percent year on year, according to EIU analysis.

The surge was led by exports to the US, which grew by 124 percent year on year, the EIU said.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, the world’s top chipmaker better known by its acronym “TSMC,” on Thursday posted a net income of 572.8 billion New Taiwan Dollars (NTD) ($18.1bn) for the first three months of 2026 – up 58 percent year on year in NTD.

Another metric, initial public offerings or “IPOs,” also shows that the industry is confident for the moment, with industry leaders Anthropic and OpenAI both planning to go public this year.

Renewable energy

The Iran war has highlighted the need to transition from fossil fuels not only for environmental reasons, but also for reasons of energy security. The war marks the third major energy shock this decade, following the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.

The Iran war has “boosted” renewable energy “given the urgency to switch away from fossil fuels and diversify towards renewable sources,” Marro of the EIU said.

Even before the Iran war began, the International Energy Agency reported that global governments were already taking active measures to invest in renewable energy for geopolitical reasons.

According to an IEA report released this month, “150 countries have active policies to advance renewable and nuclear deployment, 130 have energy efficiency and electrification policies, and 32 have policies to incentivise supply chain resilience and diversification across critical minerals and clean energy technologies.”

The Iran war has triggered another flurry of policymaking in Asia, which typically buys 80 to 90 percent of the oil and gas that transits through the Strait of Hormuz. Since the shutdown, the region has been struggling to find alternative sources of energy, forcing governments to deploy emergency measures like fuel rationing and price caps.

South Korea, Thailand, India, Cambodia, Indonesia, Vietnam and the Philippines have all announced a variety of measures from tax breaks for at-home solar panels to commissioning new renewable energy projects – and even restarting nuclear reactors.

The surge in policymaking has been good for the renewable industry. The S&P Global Clean Energy Transition Index, which tracks 100 companies that produce solar, wind, hydro, biomass and other renewable energy across emerging and developed markets, is up 70.92 percent year on year.

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Rapper d4vd arrested on suspicion of murdering 14-year-old girl | Crime News

Arrest comes after police found the body of Celeste Rivas in a car registered to the musician last year.

American rapper David Anthony Burke, known by his stage name d4vd, has been arrested on suspicion of murdering a 14-year-old girl whose dismembered body was found in a car registered to him.

Los Angeles police took the 21-year-old singer into custody on Thursday “for the murder of Celeste Rivas”, the city’s police department said in a statement. He is being held without bail.

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Burke’s arrest comes seven months after police uncovered Rivas’s badly decomposed body in the trunk of an impounded Tesla registered in his name.

Investigators found two black bags in the vehicle – one holding a decomposed head and torso and the other containing other body parts, according to a court filing. An autopsy revealed that Rivas “appeared to have been deceased inside the vehicle for an extended period of time before being found”. The discovery occurred one day before Rivas would have turned 15.

The LA County District Attorney’s office will review the case against Burke on Monday for formal charges, according to police.

Burke’s lawyers issued a statement saying they would “vigorously defend” his “innocence”.

“Let us be clear – the actual evidence in this case will show that David Burke did not murder Celeste Rivas Hernandez and he was not the cause of her death,” lawyers Blair Berk, Marilyn Bednarski and Regina Peter said in a statement quoted by NBC News.

Burke, from Queens, New York, shot to internet fame in 2022 when his Romantic Homicide became a breakout hit on TikTok.

Last year, the musician cancelled the last part of his US and European tours amid growing fallout from the investigation into Rivas’s death.

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Ari Shaffir brings back the storytelling show that launched comedy careers, but says this is ‘The End’

Back when late-night TV sets were still the primary route for a comedian to reach a mainstream audience, Ari Shaffir found a different way to make his mark. It started with creating a show where comics could tell completely uncensored, unhinged real-life stories. What started as a live show grew into “This Is Not Happening” on Comedy Central, and later, into “Ari Shaffir’s Renamed Storytelling Show,” building a loyal fan base along the way, with clips still making the rounds 15 years later.

Supporting shows leads to new opportunities, and while Shaffir’s latest chapter may close the book on his storytelling run, his final offering is certainly a strong one. Aptly titled “The End,” and taped live at the Box NYC, this seven-part series will be released and available for purchase through YMH Studios on Thursday , and it’s jam-packed with comedians that quite literally might kill you. Especially one.

The lineup is too stacked to leave anyone out, so buckle up for wild, unforgettable stories from Shaffir, Tom Segura, Ali Siddiq, Nate Bargatze, Tony Hinchcliffe, Ms. Pat, Shane Gillis, Sam Tallent, Steph Tolev, Jim Breuer, Robert Kelly, Chris Distefano, Big Jay Oakerson, Jordan Jensen, Joe List, Steve Simeone, Mark Normand, Duncan Trussell, Roy Wood Jr., Jessa Reed, Sarah Tollemache, Dan Soder and Colum Tyrrell.

Dan Soder, left, and Shane Gillis appear in Chapter 6.

Dan Soder, left, and Shane Gillis appear in Chapter 6.

(Troy Conrad)

Everyone’s stories are so nextlevel, and I almost choke-laughed and died during Ms. Pat’s. It also looks incredible, tell me everything about the room.

Ari Shaffir: The room is called the Box, and it’s this burlesque place. Or maybe you call it modern burlesque because it’s not just those feathers. I really don’t know, but I feel like burlesque has evolved and that’s what this place is. It’s kinda crazy, and it’s definitely a night out. Dave Chappelle used to have these “comedian balls,” which were so cool because he would just invite comics. Like, all of the comics. He’d invite everyone out and pretty much without saying it was like, talk to each other and trade ideas about the industry. It was just so cool in there, and we scouted a bunch of places, but the look of this place, it was just right.

It makes so much sense that the room is called the Box now, visually.

What you saw wasn’t even color-corrected, so I appreciate it. I went to test the sound because we put the stage in a different place. It moves around and we just thought it looked better with all the red, but I wanted to hear what the sound was like when they were not on the stage too. They were like, oh the emcee will have a cordless as they move around, and I watched it, and it was great. But man, I was so f— up on molly that I was grinding my teeth so hard that I cracked a molar, so yeah, that place rules!

Ali Siddiq appears in Chapter 7.

Ali Siddiq appears in Chapter 7.

(Troy Conrad)

Well, the room took my breath away, kinda like the lord took your solid tooth away. It’ll make sense to fans of your podcast You Be Trippin’ that ‘The End’ is produced by YMH Studios, but how did this series even end up happening?

Tom [Segura] and I have a relationship, we were openers for Rogan together, and we were kinda broke together, so we just talk about things. He’s so funny and prolific and I like talking things out with him. I talked to him about doing my special “Jew” too, but they were busy with the show, and you know back then, people weren’t jumping on getting into YouTube specials. So I had a chance to think about doing this show over the pandemic and finally was like, alright, let’s start working on this, and they said, “Come talk to us about it because we can help you now.” They have a great infrastructure there, and a streaming service too, so it’s like they already have everything built in, and Tom was like, “Dude, this show meant a lot to me, and we should make it again.” It’s not going to be a huge moneymaker for Tom, you know, it’s like pro bono work for lawyers, so it’s really cool of them. Another cool thing about this is the way the staff kicked in too. They’re all super talented, and kind of wasting their time on podcasts because they’re more talented than that, but it’s cool to work with a family and I liked the way they really took ownership of the work they did.

They’re a well-oiled machine of fun over there! With so many wild stories in the mix, is there anyone you are especially excited for people to see?

I’m excited to show some people new people. Even with the live shows, it’s always like, let me show you two headliners you know, a mid-level guy you’ll know and let me show you two people that you just don’t know. That’s what stand-up is in New York, L.A. and even Austin. There are some killers no one has ever heard of, and they’re destroyers. So I’m excited to show people Colum Tyrrell because he rules, he’s so funny, and his story is great. Tony Hinchcliffe’s story was really good, he’s just a monster storyteller in every sense of the word now. I just rewatched all of these a few times in a row for sound, and Roy Wood Jr. is so smooth it makes me feel like I’m needy and insecure on the stage. He’s just so calm and so good you’re like, “Damn, I’ve never been this smooth.” Sam Tallent is going to be one people talk about, Jim Breuer is so great, Steph Tolev crushed it with something fun and interesting and wow, this is really tough. Every time I’m doing a promo for this show it’s like, but what about this person, and this one?

It was also nice to see past killers on, definitely love to see the classics doing something new.

Yeah, having Big Jay [Oakerson] back was a key because he’s on the Mount Rushmore of this show, and we have three of those on “The End.” Jay, Ms. Pat and Ali Siddiq. We couldn’t get Sean Patton out because he was shooting something, and Bert [Kreischer] had a movie or something with his daughter moving or maybe it was a graduation…

Group of comedians on "The End" (Left to right): Ms. Pat, Ari Shaffi, Dan Soder, Duncan, Shane Gillis, Colum.

Ms. Pat, from left, Ari Shaffir, Dan Soder, Duncan Trussell, Shane Gillis and Colum Tyrrell.

(Troy Conrad)

What a funny world, though, if Bert Kreischer paid to have a graduation moved so he could do your show.

Yes! Just pay the school to move the graduation for a week! Don’t you make like $50 million a year? It’s so funny how it used to be crazy to think of someone making $100 million and now there are like 10 comics who make at least half of that. And without doing press! It is really cool, though, I haven’t paid for lunch in so long. And Ali Siddiq has become so huge, he’s like the success story of this storytelling show in its entirety. Everyone got helped a little bit, but Ali kind of broke off of these stories and to see him so successful and still so smooth, it’s really cool. You can’t be “niche” doing arenas, and there’s this independent boom that’s not going to wait for anybody. So it’s another big win for us, it’s our turn in the whole story of this.

So then is this really “The End” or could it be a new start?

There is a very, very small percentage of a chance that it comes back. The plan is that this is it, and that’s why we called it that. I’m just glad you liked the show. I’m glad you liked the look and the intimacy, and that you picked up on all of that. It feels so long ago that you forget, but that’s so awesome to hear because it was a lot of fun. I think comedy fans that knew about the show before will want to see more of it because it’s just this funny televised storytelling, and they missed it. And everything turns over every five years anyway, so new people can now be like, actual stories being told like this in front of an audience? What is this cool new thing?

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Kings (vs. Avalanche) and Ducks (vs. Oilers) face tough first-round task in NHL playoffs

The Kings looked nothing like a playoff team heading into the NHL’s trade deadline. They had lost six of their last eight games, had just fired their coach and had saw their second-leading scorer go down with a broken leg in the Olympic tournament.

They were backing away from the playoffs, not heading toward them. So general manager Ken Holland did the prudent thing and largely stood pat, trading a couple of veterans for draft picks and making only a pair of minor acquisitions.

Turns out he wasn’t waving a white flag but rather a green one because the Kings hit the gas after that, gathering points in 16 of their final 20 games, finishing the regular season as one of the hottest teams in the NHL. That earned them a fifth straight trip to the playoffs and a first-round meeting with the Colorado Avalanche, the league’s winningest team, beginning Sunday in Denver.

The Ducks, meanwhile, advanced to the postseason for the first time since 2018 but they stumbled in, losing eight of their last 10 and blowing a five-point lead in the Pacific Division and the home-ice advantage that went with it over the final three weeks. The Ducks, the third-place team in the Pacific Division, will start on the road in Edmonton on Monday.

Kings interim coach D.J. Smith during a game in March in Boston.

Kings interim coach D.J. Smith during a game in March in Boston.

(Charles Krupa / Associated Press)

“It’s been a climb. Probably didn’t look very good a while ago,” said Kings interim coach D.J. Smith, who could lose the interim part of that title after going 11-6-6 after replacing Jim Hiller behind the bench with 23 games to play. “It’s a credit to the guys, the leadership. They played playoff hockey for a while now. And it’s allowed us this opportunity.”

Actually, crediting the Kings with playing playoff hockey isn’t necessarily a compliment since the team hasn’t won a postseason series since hoisting the Stanley Cup in 2014. But it’s been more than a decade since the Kings have entered the playoffs carrying this kind of momentum and they have a few people to thank for that.

Anton Forsberg has been key for the Kings down the stretch.

Anton Forsberg has been key for the Kings down the stretch.

(Ronald Martinez / Getty Images)

Journeyman goaltender Anton Forsberg, who spent most of his first season in Los Angeles backing up Darcy Kuemper, won five straight starts in April to key the Kings’ fast finish. Russian winger Artemi Panarin, acquired from the New York Rangers just before the Olympic break and a month before the trade deadline, contributed nine goals and 18 assists in 26 games, helping make up for the loss of forwards Kevin Fiala and Andrei Kuzmenko to injuries. And Quinton Byfield scored 10 times in his final 13 games to set a career high with 24 goals.

“Since the break I feel like we’ve really come together as a group,” Byfield said.

The team displayed uncommon grit as well, going to overtime an NHL-record 33 times. (They lost 20 of those games; if they have gotten the second point in just a third of those, they would have won the division.)

And finally, the Kings were also fueled by a desire to give captain Anze Kopitar one more chance at a title. Kopitar, who announced in September that this season would be his last, gave an emotional good-bye speech to the fans after the final regular-season home game. His teammates were determined to give him an encore in the playoffs.

“That had a lot to do with it,” Smith said. “Guys were playing for him. He gets one more chance to play at home.

“We found a way.”

Kopitar, however, credited his coach for the team’s fast finish.

“Once Smithy came in, he just changed the energy a little bit and we’re trying to be a little more aggressive versus sitting back,” said Kopitar, the Kings’ all-time leader in games, points and assists.

Anaheim Ducks left wing Cutter Gauthier stands on the ice during.

Cutter Gauthier is the first Duck to score 40 goals in a season since Corey Perry in 2013-14.

(Melissa Majchrzak / Associated Press)

For the Ducks, they’re not only returning to the playoffs for the first time in eight seasons — only the Detroit Red Wings have a longer active postseason drought — but they also posted a winning record for the first time since 2018.

Troy Terry, who played two games as a rookie that season, is the only Duck remaining from that team.

“This year has just felt different from the start,” he said. “It was less question marks about the potential of the team. We knew what we could be.”

Which isn’t to say it’s been easy. The team had two seven-game winning streaks but also weathered losing streaks of nine and six games.

“We had a couple of roller coasters there, starting and then slowing down and getting back on it,” said coach Joel Quenneville, who has taken five teams to the NHL playoffs, winning three Stanley Cups in Chicago.

The Ducks’ 273 goals this season are the most in franchise history but the 288 they allowed is third-worst all time, leaving the team with the second-highest goal differential of any playoff team. (Only the Kings are worse at -22.)

Speaking of history, winger Cutter Gauthier, with 18 goals in the final 23 games, is the first Duck to score 40 goals in a season since Corey Perry in 2013-14. At 22, he’s also the second-youngest to get there, trailing only Paul Kariya.

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Judge halts above-ground White House ballroom construction

April 17 (UPI) — All above-ground construction of the White House ballroom must be stopped amid litigation, a federal judge ordered Thursday, reprimanding the Trump administration for trying to justify continued work on the building as necessary for national and presidential security concerns.

“National security is not a blank check to proceed with otherwise unlawful activity,” U.S. District Judge Richard Leon said.

The ruling comes almost three weeks after Leon issued a preliminary injunction against the $400 million project, finding that construction at the White House requires congressional approval. While ordering the construction halt amid appeal, Leon carved out an exception for the government to continue underground work deemed necessary for the White House’s safety and security.

That prompted litigation over the scope of the carve-out and the Trump administration argue that construction of the ballroom above ground was needed as security elements ran through the entire facility.

“Defendants argue that the entire ballroom construction project, from tip to tail, falls within the safety-and-security exception and therefore may proceed unabated. That is neither a reasonable nor a correct reading of my order!” Leon said Thursday.

“It is, to say the least, incredible, if not disingenuous, that defendants now argue that my order does not stop ballroom construction because of the safety-and-security exception!”

The federal government has filed an appeal against the Thursday ruling.

“We are pleased the court upheld the preliminary injunction and halted above-ground construction of the White House ballroom until Congress approves the project,” Carol Quillen, CEO and president of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, which filed the initial lawsuit, said in a statement.

Trump has said building a White House ballroom has been his dream since before he was president, and has said its price tag, which has ballooned from an initial $200 million, is to be covered by private donors.

In December, as construction was underway following the October demolition of the East Wing, the National Trust for Historic Preservation sued to stop the project, arguing U.S. law mandates the project be authorized by Congress, resulting in the March 31 injunction and the Trump administration filing an appeal.

After the Thursday ruling, Trump chastised Leon in a series of posts on his Truth Social platform, calling him an “out of control Trump hating” judge whose ruling “severely jeopardizes the lives and welfare of the people who work, and will be working, at the White House.”

“The underground doesn’t work, isn’t necessary and would indeed be useless without the above-ground section,” he said in a Truth Social post.

“This highly political Judge, and his illegal overreach, is out of control, and costing our Nation greatly,” he said in another statement.

“This is a mockery of our Court System! The Ballroom is deeply important to our National Security, and no judge can be allowed to stop this Historic and Militarily Imperative Project.”

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Super-Adaptable Mayhem 10 Swarming Drone Evolved From The Switchblade

  • Mayhem 10 is a versatile evolution of Switchblade. AeroVironment’s new drone system offers modular payloads for diverse missions, enhancing adaptability in combat scenarios.
  • Rapid deployment and reconfiguration capabilities. Mayhem 10 can be assembled and launched in under five minutes, with a range of 62 miles and 50 minutes of flight time.
  • Designed for collaborative swarm operations. The AV_Halo Command architecture enables Mayhem 10 to operate in swarms, enhancing coverage and coordinated effects.
  • Advanced autonomy and resilience features. AI-driven processors and secure communication systems ensure functionality in contested environments.
  • Production readiness and scalability. AeroVironment is prepared to produce up to 2,000 units annually, targeting the U.S. Army’s LE-SR program.

Bottom line: AeroVironment’s Mayhem 10 drone system advances the Switchblade lineage with modularity, rapid deployment, and swarm capabilities, positioning it as a versatile option for the U.S. Army and other customers in an increasingly crowded marketplace.

AeroVironment has unveiled a new entrant in the rapidly evolving launched effects space, introducing the Mayhem 10 system as a further evolution of its combat-proven Switchblade family. While pitching Mayhem 10 toward U.S. Army requirements, the manufacturer anticipates considerable demand and has already started to develop a production line that will be able to push out as many as 2,000 examples of the vehicle annually. The price of a Mayhem 10 has not been disclosed.

Revealed yesterday at the Army Aviation Association of America’s Army Aviation Warfighting Summit in Nashville, Tennessee, the Mayhem 10 is intended to equip air, ground, and maritime platforms and to be capable of being rapidly deployed and reconfigured in the field.

Mayhem 10 Launched Effects | One System. Multiple Effects. thumbnail

Mayhem 10 Launched Effects | One System. Multiple Effects.




At its core, Mayhem 10 is an autonomous launched effects system with a heavy focus on modularity. Its payload architecture allows operators to swap between lethal and non-lethal configurations depending on mission needs. That includes intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR), electronic warfare, communications relay, deception/decoy, and precision strike roles. As such, commanders can rely on a single platform that can pivot as conditions evolve.

According to company leadership, the focus is on compressing the sensor-to-shooter timeline while reducing risk to personnel and high-value assets. “Mayhem 10 sets a new standard for operational versatility and survivability on the modern battlefield,” said Wahid Nawabi, AeroVironment’s chairman, president, and CEO, emphasizing its ability to operate effectively even in heavily contested environments.

A head-on view of the Mayhem 10 at the Army Aviation Association of America’s Army Aviation Warfighting Summit in Nashville, Tennessee. Jamie Hunter

The system draws heavily on the lineage of AeroVironment’s Switchblade family, but is intended to push beyond traditional loitering munitions in terms of scale and flexibility. The Mayhem 10 name reflects the fact that it can carry a payload of up to 10 pounds. It has a range of roughly 62 miles and can remain airborne for up to 50 minutes. Notably, it is designed for rapid deployment, with assembly and launch said to be achievable in under five minutes.

Speaking to TWZ at the summit, Austin Johnson, AeroVironment’s business development director for U.S. Army programs, stressed that, while Mayhem is an evolution of Switchblade, “it’s not a Switchblade.”

A video showing the Switchblade 600 loitering munition being used in combat in Ukraine:

Ukraine’s Best Weapon? The Switchblade 600 thumbnail

Ukraine’s Best Weapon? The Switchblade 600




“Mayhem is not just leave-the-tube, find-the-armor, kill-the-armor, kill-the-enemy. Mayhem is any mission, anywhere, anytime. So right now, we launch out of a Common Launch Tube. We can air and ground launch,” Johnson added.

A Common Launch Tube. Systima

Physically, the system incorporates a removable forward section — seen in the video embedded below — to speed up integration of new payloads. More than eight different payloads have been integrated so far, Johnson said. Its launcher is self-contained and adaptable, so it can be used by dismounted troops as well as from vehicles, aircraft, and other mobile platforms. In terms of aircraft, the same promotional video shows the Mayhem 10 being launched from tubes carried on the stub wings of an H-60 Black Hawk series helicopter.

Another difference with Switchblade is Mayhem 10’s use of rocket-assisted takeoff, rather than using a gas generator. This reflects the Army’s pivot toward rocket-assisted launch, the company told us.

Kevin Williams, the chief engineer for Mayhem, told TWZ another way in which Mayhem 10 differs from Switchblade.

“Mayhem 10 is highly optimized; this is purpose-built for the launched effects mission, as opposed to a Switchblade, which is very much purpose-built for a singular anti-tank, anti-armor mission,” Williams explained. “Modularity is at its very core.”

A rendering of the launch of a Mayhem 10 from a tracked uncrewed ground vehicle. AeroVironment

Thanks to its modular open systems approach (MOSA), Mayhem 10 can receive upgrades and have third-party payloads integrated without major redesign.

“The modularity is really the main point here,” Johnson said. “We held a payload conference about a year and a half ago. We brought multiple vendors in, from across the spectrum, with different payloads. We shared our ICD, our interface control document, and then they came back. We wanted to make this as open architecture as we could for the Army, and it shares a lot of that same open architecture design that we’ve already incorporated with our P550,” — AeroVironment’s autonomous Group 2 eVTOL uncrewed air system, which is already in service.

A video showing the AeroVironment P550 UAS:

AeroVironment's P550 eVTOL: Rapid Deployment and Enhanced Situational Awareness thumbnail

AeroVironment’s P550 eVTOL: Rapid Deployment and Enhanced Situational Awareness




Among the payload options, Johnson brought attention to one that “effectively can act as a HARM missile, meaning that we can identify, detect, and kill an emitter.”

Williams described one real-life scenario in which the company ran a hackathon to prove the payload modularity. The result was payload designers getting access to the interface control model, which can even be done via QR code, to get a full understanding of electrical, mechanical, and data interfaces. In at least one instance, the resulting payload was then physically integrated within 90 minutes of the supplier showing up at the AeroVironment facility.

Meanwhile, operators interface with the system through AeroVironment’s Tomahawk Grip and the AV_Halo Command environment, which are optimized for networked and distributed operations.

The AeroVironment Tomahawk Grip TA5. The Grip TA5 is an eight-inch tactical controller designed to combine situational awareness and precision strike capabilities. AeroVironment

Perhaps most significantly, the AV_Halo Command architecture allows Mayhem 10 to operate in collaborative swarms. By networking multiple systems together, units can expand coverage, saturate defenses, and execute coordinated effects across a wide area. Brian Young, the company’s senior vice president for loitering munitions, framed this as a shift in how combat power is generated, scaling effects without concentrating forces or increasing platform risk.

The @USArmy @usarmyrccto has selected Kinesis – part of our AV_Halo Command open, modular software ecosystem – as the lead command and control software for the Human-Machine Integrated Formations (HMIF) program. Kinesis will give warfighters a unified interface to field and… pic.twitter.com/04wxsGlPHJ

— AV (@aerovironment) October 20, 2025

“We can complete multiple missions in one swarm,” Johnson continued. “They can communicate with each other and complete it. They can jam the enemy with EW payloads. We have multiple kinetic payloads, so we can run a full mission profile with multiple Mayhems.”

On the autonomy side, Mayhem 10 leverages an AI-driven processor, which the manufacturer says ensures operations in denied or degraded environments. It is designed to have resilience against jamming, spoofing, and loss of traditional navigation signals. Secure positioning and communications are enabled through M-Code GPS and a Silvus datalink, while a MANET-based mesh network provides command-and-control connectivity at ranges of roughly 16-25 miles.

A pair of Mayhem 10 vehicles in a promotional image from the manufacturer. AeroVironment

At this point, AeroVironment has conducted over 50 internally funded flight tests with Mayhem 10. These have included live ordnance, EW, and Link relay flight tests, with various payloads.

“We’re approaching TRL 8 [Technology Readiness Level 8, meaning it has been tested and flight qualified] with this system this summer and entering low-rate initial production later this year,” Williams explained.

Considering that the Army is yet to place a contract, that might seem like jumping the gun, but AeroVironment says they wanted to go fast, to have a reliable product ready for when the service started to look to buy them.

“We’re entering the competitions,” Williams said. “We wanted to go fast, reliably, though. We didn’t want to come in and have a lesser product. We’re delivering a weapon system, not an experimental system.”

Currently, the company is mainly using Mayhem 10 to target the U.S. Army’s Launched Effects-Short Range (LE-SR) program, but stresses that this is part of a new family of products, so additional variants will likely appear in the future.

The Uncrewed Aircraft Systems Project Office is running the Army’s Launched Effects-Short Range (LE-SR) program. Photo Credit: David Hylton

Should the Army choose Mayhem 10, the company has already made preparations to ramp up production. While low-rate initial production is being handled at a production line in Simi Valley, California, the company is establishing a new manufacturing facility in Salt Lake City, Utah. This will have the capacity to scale production up to between 1,000 and 2,000 units annually.

Taken together, Mayhem 10 reflects a clear trajectory in modern warfare: smaller, smarter, and more networked systems that can be fielded quickly, easily adapted, and employed in large numbers to overwhelm an adversary. At the same time, it is entering the market that is fast becoming saturated with similar products, and there will be no shortage of rivals for future Army orders.

Jamie Hunter contributed to this story.

Contact the author: thomas@thewarzone.com

Thomas is a defense writer and editor with over 20 years of experience covering military aerospace topics and conflicts. He’s written a number of books, edited many more, and has contributed to many of the world’s leading aviation publications. Before joining The War Zone in 2020, he was the editor of AirForces Monthly.




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‘Real Housewives’ star Lisa Hochstein arrested for alleged spying

The Real Housewives of Miami” star Lisa Hochstein has been charged with a felony for allegedly spying on her ex-husband.

Hochstein, 43, and her former partner Jody Glidden, 52, were booked on felony charges of unlawfully intercepting oral statements from the Miami housewife’s ex-husband Leonard “Lenny” Hochstein.

Hochstein turned herself in at Miami-Dade’s Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center on Wednesday morning, according to NBC Miami. The embattled star’s bond was initially set for $5,000, but she was released on her own recognizance later the same day. NBC spoke with Hochstein as she left the Miami-Dade jail and asked, “How was it in there?”

Hochstein’s attorney, Jayne Weintraub, walked alongside the reality star and intercepted questions, answering, “Five stars!”

Hochstein repeated, “Yes, five stars.”

Glidden, who also appeared on “Real Housewives,” was arrested April 12. He has since been released. Hochstein and Glidden have pleaded not guilty. Her arraignment is scheduled for April 20.

According to a March 17 arrest warrant obtained by People, Hochstein and Glidden allegedly placed a recording device in Leonard Hochstein’s Mercedes-Benz following an acrimonious split back in March 2023.

The outlet reported that Leonard Hochstein loaned his car to the “Real Housewives” star after she said she wanted to take it for a test drive because she was thinking of getting one for herself. When the car was returned, Leonard Hochstein allegedly found a suspicious device in the driver‘s side floorboard, covered with tape and hidden from view. The South Florida plastic surgeon contacted his lawyer, who then brought in experts who were able to pull recordings from the device.

A total of 98 recordings were recovered, according to the affidavit, and “one of the last recordings from before the vehicle was returned to the victim depicts Lisa Hochstein and Glidden holding a discussion and the distinct sound of a device such as the hidden recorder being wrestled into place.”

Hochstein can allegedly be heard saying “done.” The warrant also states that Glidden ordered two recording devices of the exact same make and model on Amazon three months prior.

The Hochsteins’ divorce played out on Season 5 of the Bravo reality series after Leonard Hochstein admitted he was in a relationship with another woman and planned to divorce Hochstein during a hot-mic moment that shocked audiences and Hochstein alike.

After the divorce was finalized last year, Hochstein told Entertainment Tonight, “I am very happy right now. It took a long time to get here, a lot of ups and downs, highs and lows, but I’m finally on the other side, and it feels so good.”

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Stock index futures muted as Trump signals Iran war may end soon (SPX:)

Apr 17, 2026, 4:19 AM ETS&P 500 Futures (SPX), INDU, US100:IND, , , , , , , , By: Sinchita Mitra, SA News Editor
The New York Stock Exchange on the Wall street sign

Dmitry Vinogradov

Stock index futures were muted on Friday as President Donald Trump signaled that the U.S. and Iran could hold talks over the weekend, boosting optimism that Middle East tensions may be easing.

Dow futures (INDU) rose 0.27%, while S&P 500

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UK travel company goes bust with all holidays cancelled

A TRAVEL company in the UK has gone into administration after nearly 20 years.

Regen Central Ltd, a travel company that specialises in package holidays to the likes of Europe, South East Asia and the Middle East has entered liquidation with all holidays cancelled.

Two plastic travel suitcases in an airport hall.
A UK-based travel company has cancelled all bookings Credit: Alamy

The specific number of Brits impacted by the announcement is currently unclear.

However, some Brits might not get refunds if they had a holiday booked.

Records show that the company’s ATOL protection was withdrawn on January 13.

ATOL is the UK government-backed financial protection scheme that comes into place when travellers book a package trip that includes a flight.

Read more on travel inspo

CHEAP BREAKS

UK’s best 100 cheap stays – our pick of the top hotels, holiday parks and pubs


TAKING OFF

I’ve visited 50 countries & this much-loathed budget airline is the world’s best

The licensing is required for all tour companies in the UK and guarantees that customers get a refund if the company collapses.

The UK-based travel agency launched back in 2009 and is Hertfordshire based and was known for selling holidays to the likes of Italy, Bali, Thailand and Dubai.

A spokesman for the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) said: “We understand the company had no outstanding ATOL-protected bookings.

“Bookings sold as accommodation only, non- flight packages, and flight only bookings for which tickets were issued are not protected by the ATOL scheme.

“As there are no outstanding ATOL-protected bookings, no refunds will be issued.”

The CAA also confirmed that any travellers seeking a refund for ATOL-protected bookings must do this through its claims process.

However, many bookings such as accommodation-only, non-flight packages and ticketed flight only deals, might not be covered by the ATOL protection scheme.

In simpler terms, this could mean for holidaymakers that have booked with Regen Central Ltd, they might not get a refund.

The spokesperson for the CAA added: “If you believe you are owed a refund for an ATOL-protected booking, under Regen Central Ltd’s ATOL, please contact us via email at claims@caa.co.uk.”

The company was officially ordered to wind-up – a court ruling that forces a company into compulsory liquidation – in May last year, with the process commencing in August.

In other travel news, a major airline has cut flights to and from UK as fuel crisis bites ahead of busy summer period.

Plus, a closed UK airport reveals more details about being able to reopen as part of a huge £193million project.

Young Asian woman in a trench coat pulling a suitcase and looking at her smartphone in an airport terminal.
But Brits might not get a refund Credit: Getty

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High school baseball and softball: Thursday’s scores

HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL, SOFTBALL SCORES

Thursday’s Results

BASEBALL

CITY SECTION
Angelou 17, West Adams 6
Collins Family 26, Central City Value 1
Fremont 10, Port of Los Angeles 4
Granada Hills Kennedy 5, San Fernando 4
Hollywood 10, Los Angeles 2
King/Drew 13, Locke 0
LA Marshall 10, Bravo 0
Maywood CES 4, Torres 3
Sotomayor 11, Maywood Academy 0
Sun Valley Magnet 15, Valor Academy 1
Sun Valley Poly 3, North Hollywood 0
Sylmar 8, Verdugo Hills 4
Triumph Charter 25, Community Charter 8
Valley Oaks CES 9, Bert Corona 4

SOUTHERN SECTION
ACE 8, Silver Valley 5
Adelanto 5, Silverado 2
Agoura 4, Newbury Park 3
Anza Hamilton 11, Sherman Indian 1
Aquinas 10, Ontario Christian 0
Bloomington 2, Eisenhower 0
Buckley 6, YULA 0
Cajon 14, Redlands East Valley 0
Calvary Baptist 23, NSLA 0
Carter 10, Jurupa Hills 9
Castaic 5, Quartz Hill 4
Cerritos Valley Christian 6, Whittier Christian 1
Chaparral 3, Murrieta Valley 0
Chino 11, Chaffey 10
Citrus Valley 9, Redlands 5
Colton 6, Arroyo Valley 3
Corona del Mar 6, Los Alamitos 4
Desert Christian 12, PACS 11
Desert Christian Academy 12, SJDLCS 3
Elsinore 10, San Jacinto 0
Environmental Charter 12, Animo Leadership 7
Fontana 13, Rim of the World 0
Foothill Tech 9, Grace 0
Granite Hills 7, Victor Valley 6
Hillcrest 3, Citrus Hill 1
Indio 7, Yucca Valley 4
Kaiser 6, Rialto 1
La Quinta 3, Rancho Mirage 1
La Salle 10, Alhambra 0
Leuzinger 11, Hawthorne 0
Los Amigos 5, Rancho Alamitos 0
Maranatha 11, Village Christian 3
Milken 13, de Toledo 3
Montclair 5, Don Lugo 4
Norwalk 3, Long Beach Poly 2
Oaks Christian 19, Thousand Oaks 5
Ontario 4, Diamond Ranch 3
Orange County Pacifica Christian 1, Capistrano Valley Christian 5
Palm Desert 9, Shadow Hills 2
Palm Springs 13, Xavier Prep 1
Pasadena Poly 10, Chadwick 4
Royal 7, Camarillo 0
San Dimas 2, Los Altos 1
San Jacinto Valley Academy 2, Nuview Bridge 0
San Marino 15, South Pasadena 4
Santa Ana Foothill 4, Villa Park 3
Santa Fe 10, La Habra 3
Segerstrom 9, Godinez 5
South El Monte 21, El Monte 0
South Hills 3, Colony 0
St. Bernard 5, Culver City 3
St. Bonaventure 5, Buena 0
St. Monica 7, Bishop Montgomery 6
Summit 4, Grand Terrace 3
Temescal Canyon 10, West Valley 0
Torrance 4, Millikan 3
Trinity Classical Academy 5, Santa Clarita Christian 0
Twentynine Palms 6, Coachella Valley 4
United Christian Academy 10, California Lutheran 0
Vista Murrieta 7, Murrieta Mesa 2
Westlake 18, Calabasas 5
Yucaipa 5, Beaumont 2

INTERSECTIONAL
HMSA 15, Vistamar 11
Shalhevet 3, Ambassador 2

SOFTBALL

CITY SECTION
Alliance Levine 22, East College Prep 7
Bert Corona 28, Valor Academy 11
Carson 11, Wilmington Banning 0
Fremont d. Harbor Teacher, forfeit
Garfield 7, LA Marshall 6
Hollywood 35, RFK Community 1
Lakeview Charter 18, Discovery 17
LA Roosevelt 12, Bell 7
Legacy 15, South Gate 4
Narbonne 23, Gardena 1
Northridge Academy 20, Panorama 1
Port of Los Angeles 14, King/Drew 0
San Pedro 15, Rancho Dominguez 0
Smidt Tech d. Rose Kohyang, forfeit
SOCES 23, Grant 0
South East 13, Huntington Park 3
VAAS 17, Vaughn 16

SOUTHERN SECTION
Agoura 11, Thousand Oaks 10
Alemany 6, Flintridge Sacred Heart 0
Alhambra 33, San Gabriel 0
Anaheim Canyon 7, Cypress 1
Antelope Valley 15, Palmdale 4
Anza Hamilton 20, California Lutheran 9
Arroyo Valley 6, San Gorgonio 0
Beaumont 6, Redlands East Valley 5
Bellflower 9, Firebaugh 4
Bishop Amat 11, San Dimas 8
Buena Park 15, Westminster 6
California 15, El Rancho 0
Calvary Baptist 27, NSLA 0
Camarillo 4, Royal 0
Capistrano Valley 5, Mission Viejo 3
Cerritos Valley Christian 12, Maranatha 2
Chaffey 8, Chino 5
Channel Islands 24, Hueneme 17
Citrus Valley 4, Cajon 2
Colton 8, Summit 7
Crescenta Valley 6, Arcadia 1
CSDR 13, Sherman Indian 12
Don Lugo 12, Montclair 1
Edison 6, Newport Harbor 0
Elsinore 16, West Valley 1
El Toro 4, Beckman 3
Environmental Charter 32, Lennox Academy 23
Esperanza 11, Crean Lutheran 5
Etiwanda 12, Rancho Cucamonga 2
Fillmore 17, Nordhoff 0
Flintridge Prep 10, Mayfield 0
Garden Grove Pacifica 3, El Modena 0
Glendale 17, Hoover 2
Great Oak 12, Chaparral 2
Hart 14, Valencia 3
Highland 10, Eastside 0
HMSA 17, Animo Leadership 1
Huntington Beach 15, Corona del Mar 0
Indio 11, Yucca Valley 0
Irvine 6, Northwood 3
Jurupa Hills 16, Eisenhower 0
Kaiser 6, Rialto 1
La Mirada 2, Gahr 1
La Salle 11, Bishop Conaty-Loretto 0
La Serna 6, Santa Fe 3
Leuzinger 10, Hawthorne 8
Linfield Christian 8, Ontario Christian 0
Long Beach Wilson 23, Long Breach Cabrillo 1
Los Altos 5, Colony 1
Lynwood 22, Dominguez 8
Marina 3, Fountain Valley 0
Marymount 15, Immaculate Heart 5
Mary Star of the Sea 10, Cantwell-Sacred Heart 9
Millikan 6, Long Beach Poly 1
Muir 22, Pasadena 2
Murrieta Mesa 3, Temecula Valley 0
North Torrance 9, West Torrance 5
Oaks Christian 23, Calabasas 0
Ontario 10, Diamond Ranch 4
Paraclete 11, Bishop Montgomery 0
Paramount 8, Norwalk 1
Quartz Hill 13, Knight 2
Riverside Notre Dame 16, Fontana 5
Rosary Academy 2, Irvine University 1
Sacred Heart of Jesus 6, St. Genevieve 1
San Clemente 4, Tesoro 0
San Jacinto Valley Academy 23, Nuview Bridge 1
San Juan Hills 13, Dana Hills 3
Santa Ana Foothill 10, Trabuco Hills 5
Santa Paula 18, Carpinteria 0
Saugus 9, Canyon Country Canyon 1
Schurr 21, Montebello 0
Shadow Hills 14, Palm Desert 8
Sherman Oaks Notre Dame 7, Harvard-Westlake 4
Sierra Canyon 11, Louisville 0
Silverado 20, Adelanto 8
Simi Valley 4, Moorpark 1
Sonora 8, Brea Olinda 4
South El Monte 7, El Monte 1
South Hills 9, Alta Loma 4
St. Bonaventure 19, Bishop Diego 2
St. Monica 8, Ramona Convent 7
St. Paul 6, Lakewood St. Joseph 4
St. Pius X-St. Matthias Academy 16, St. Mary’s Academy 4
Sunny Hills 9, Troy 2
Tahquitz 15, San Jacinto 12
Temecula Prep 18, California Military 0
Temescal Canyon 8, Ganesha 7
United Christian Academy 22, La Sierra Academy 2
Upland 5, Los Osos 1
Vasquez 15, Desert Christian 0
Victor Valley 9, Granite Hills 3
Viewpoint 10, Archer 0
Vista Murrieta 12, Murrieta Valley 10
Warren 7, Downey 0
Westlake 5, Newbury Park 2
West Ranch 19, Castaic 1
Whittier Christian 12, Heritage Christian 0
Windward 17, Oakwood 1
Yorba Linda 8, Villa Park 5
Yucaipa 14, Redlands 1

INTERSECTIONAL
Golden Valley 16, Van Nuys 6

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On This Day, April 17: Explosion at Texas fertilizer plant kills 15

1 of 4 | Remains of a fertilizer plant and other buildings smolder after the plant exploded in West, Texas on April 17, 2013. File Photo by Larry W. Smith/EPA

April 17 (UPI) — On this date in history:

In 1421, the sea broke the dikes at Dort, Holland, drowning an estimated 100,000 people.

In 1521, the Roman Catholic Church excommunicated Martin Luther after he refused to admit to charges of heresy.

In 1790, U.S. statesman, printer, scientist and writer Benjamin Franklin died in Philadelphia at age 84.

File Photo by Kevin Dietsch/UPI

In 1912, the sister ship of the doomed RMS Titanic, the Olympic, radioed in that survivors of the ocean liner sinking were rescued and safely on board the RMS Carpathia.

In 1961, a force of anti-Castro rebels began the Bay of Pigs Invasion in an attempt to overthrow Cuba’s new communist government.

In 1964, Jerrie Mock of Columbus, Ohio, became the first woman to complete a solo flight around the world.

In 1969, a jury found Sirhan B. Sirhan guilty of first-degree murder for the assassination of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.

File Photo by Ron Bennett/UPI

In 1970, with the world anxiously watching on television, Apollo 13, a U.S. lunar spacecraft that sustained a severe malfunction on its journey to the moon, safely returned to Earth.

In 1989, the Polish labor union Solidarity was granted legal status after nearly a decade of struggle and suppression — clearing the way for the downfall of the country’s Communist Party.

In 1993, a federal jury convicted two Los Angeles police officers and acquitted two others of violating the civil rights of Rodney King during his 1991 arrest and beating.

In 2004, the Israeli army confirmed it had killed Abdel Aziz Rantisi, Hamas co-founder and its leader in Gaza, in a missile strike. Two others also died with Rantisi, who had opposed any compromise with Israel.

In 2012, U.S. investor Warren Buffett, one of the world’s wealthiest people, said he had been diagnosed with prostate cancer.

File Photo by Molly Riley/UPI

In 2013, an explosion at a West, Texas, fertilizer plant killed 15 people, injured dozens and caused massive property damage in the community.

In 2018, former first lady Barbara Bush died at the age of 92 after refusing medical treatment for her failing health. Her husband, former President George H.W. Bush, died less than one year later.

In 2024, Russian missile strikes targeting the northern Ukrainian city of Chernihiv killed more than a dozen people and injured scores more.

File Photo by State Emergency Service/EPA-EFE

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U.S. Pursuing Iranian-Linked Ships All Over The World In Addition To Its Blockade (Updated)

The U.S. military is not limiting its efforts to interdict Iranian vessels to the Middle East. Air Force Gen. Dan Caine, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters today that this is a global campaign.

“Let me be clear, this blockade applies to all ships, regardless of nationality, heading into or from Iranian ports,” he said. “The U.S. action is a blockade of Iran’s ports and coastline, not a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. Enforcement will occur inside Iran’s territorial seas and in international waters.”

“In addition to this blockade, the joint force, through operations and activities in other areas of responsibility, like the Pacific Area of Responsibility, under the command of Admiral [Samuel] Paparo, will actively pursue any Iranian-flagged vessel or any vessel attempting to provide material support to Iran,” he added. “This includes Dark Fleet vessels carrying Iranian oil. As most of you know, Dark Fleet vessels are those illicit or illegal ships evading international regulations, sanctions or insurance requirements.”

Caine added that no Iranian ships have been boarded in the CENTCOM region so far, but he did not say if any have been interdicted outside the CENTCOM region. We have reached out to his office for more details. It should be noted that early in Epic Fury, a U.S. Navy submarine sunk an Iranian frigate in the Indian Ocean.

.@thejointstaff Chairman Gen. Dan Caine: “Let me be clear: this blockade applies to ALL ships, regardless of nationality, heading into or from Iranian ports. The U.S. action is a blockade of Iran’s ports and coastline, not a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. Enforcement will… pic.twitter.com/xGIclPQHmi

— Rapid Response 47 (@RapidResponse47) April 16, 2026

Caine was one of three top military leaders to brief reporters this morning on the currently paused Operation Epic Fury and the ongoing blockade. Here are some highlights from the press conference, which also included War Secretary Pete Hegseth, and CENTCOM commander, Adm. Brad Cooper.

  • Caine explaining how the Navy is enforcing the blockade:

“This map is a pull from our common operating picture that we use to allow commanders and key leaders to see what is happening in near real time, we just grabbed screen grabs to highlight the actions and activities,” Caine noted. “What is not shown is how incredibly congested this area is and the incredible work that our sailors are doing to ensure that they can work in and around an incredibly busy water space. What is also not depicted here is the massive, massive force of fighters, intelligence aircraft, helicopters and other embarked forces, to include aerial refueling tankers that are up overhead this blockade area. You’ll note that U.S. forces are in blue. Iranian ships are in red.”

  • Caine on how the Navy communicates with ships approaching the blockade:

“At each point, the United States Navy will transmit a warning. A young sailor, normally on the bridge of one of those destroyers – a junior officer – picks up that mic and transmits, and I quote, ‘do not attempt to breach the blockade. Vessels will be boarded for interdiction and seizure, transiting to or from Iranian ports, turn around or prepare to be boarded. If you do not comply with this blockade, we will use force,’” the chairman explained. “And as this message is being transmitted…those ship masters can literally see, sense and feel the pressure around them.”

“It’s a finely tuned machine rehearsed multiple times and executed now 13 times since the blockade has begun,” he posited.

  • Caine on the capabilities of U.S. Navy warships:

“When we talk about an American destroyer, it’s important that you and the American people understand their capabilities. And Arleigh Burke class destroyers are the backbone of the United States Navy surface fleet,” Caine proffered. “Over 500 feet long, they displace 9,000 tons, and it is the sports car of the United States Navy. From the keel to the mast, they stand nearly 10 stories tall, and their four gas turbine engines can drive the ship at 30 plus knots. These ships are armed to the teeth with surface-to-air missiles, land attack cruise missiles, anti ship missiles, anti submarine rockets, torpedoes, five-inch naval guns, multiple electronic warfare systems, embarked helicopters extending the reach and capability of each and every one of these destroyers. But far and away, the most important weapon on board these ships is the American sailor.”

BREAKING: Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Dan Caine outlines the DEADLY capabilities of American warships:

“These ships are armed to the teeth with surface to air missiles, land attack cruise missiles, anti-ship missiles, anti-submarine rockets, torpedoes, five inch naval… pic.twitter.com/gBTcnnMEqF

— Fox News (@FoxNews) April 16, 2026

  • Caine on operating a blockade in highly congested waters:

“On that bridge, our sailors maintain a constant watch, maneuvering the ship tactically and safely through always congested water space, and there is a lot out there,” the general pointed out. “It is like driving a sports car through a supermarket parking lot on a payday weekend with thousands of kids in that parking lot as you attempt to maneuver through there to get to that ship that would attempt to run that blockade.”

NOW: Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Dan Caine reveals what it’s like for American warships enforcing the Middle East naval blockade:

“It is like driving a sports car through a supermarket parking lot on a payday weekend with thousands of kids in that parking lot, as you… pic.twitter.com/Xfh7ngNQBZ

— Fox News (@FoxNews) April 16, 2026

  • Cooper on working with allies during Epic Fury:

“I assess that our military partnerships are stronger than ever as we continue to maintain a very active defense posture across the region during this ceasefire, and that posture stretches across the entire Arabian Peninsula, and it runs from Northern Iraq all the way down into the northern Arabian Gulf,” according to the admiral. “In creating the largest air defense umbrella in the world, across the Middle East, we invited specially trained U.S. military air defenders alongside our partner nation soldiers side by side, literally side by side.”

“And to give you a sense of their contribution and impact,” he highlighted, “the king and crown prince of Bahrain both personally knew our soldiers by name.”

CENTCOM Commander Brad Cooper:

Bahrain, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, and Jordan have been exceptional teammates.

I had a chance to meet with both their senior leadership as well as their troops—both equally inspiring and equally committed to mutual defense.

They defended… pic.twitter.com/rQLhcv2VQx

— Clash Report (@clashreport) April 16, 2026

  • Hegseth on being prepared to resume fighting if needed:

“We can make that transition again very quickly and even more powerfully than ever at the direction of President Trump,” the secretary stated. “The War Department will ensure that Iran never has a nuclear weapon, never. We prefer to do it the nice way, through a deal led by our great Vice President and negotiating team, or we can do it the hard way. We urge this new regime to choose wisely.”

  • Hegseth on Iranian command and control:

“Their command and control capabilities are highly degraded,” Hegseth noted. “So their ability to talk, see and sense is the worst it’s ever been. But their motivation to want to stay in the ceasefire is very high, because they understand that a violation of that ceasefire means a commencement once again, of Admiral Cooper’s forces, which went very poorly for them. “

“As far as the Houthis, thus far, they have stayed out of it, which, of course, we think is a good decision by them,” Hegseth said. “And I think it is a reflection of the fact that over a year ago, in Operation Rough Rider, we had an ongoing and intense campaign that demonstrated American capabilities, which has them hesitating to want to do something on that Strait, which I think would be a poor choice.”

It is worth noting that USNI reported that the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush, which is heading to the Middle East, did not transit the Strait of Gibraltar, but is instead “operating off the coast of Namibia… The path around Africa allows the carrier and its escorts to avoid transiting the Red Sea and the Bab el-Mandeb, which were both hubs of activity for the Houthis in their drone and missile attacks on U.S. and commercial shipping in 2024 and 2025.”

  • Hegseth on claims China is helping to arm Iran:

“President Trump has a very strong and direct relationship with President Xi, and they’ve communicated on that, and China has assured us that that indeed is not going to happen,” Hegseth avowed.

  • Hegseth on the health of Iranian Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei:

He is “believed to be alive, wounded and disfigured,” Hegseth explained. His “status remains the same.”

According to U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, the current assessment on the health of Iranian Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei remains the same, alive, wounded and disfigured. pic.twitter.com/XCuwrz3vZE

— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) April 16, 2026

UPDATES:

Our coverage for the day has concluded.

UPDATE: 6:19 PM EDT –

The ceasefire in Lebanon earned praise from the U.N. Secretary General and Saudi officials.

“I welcome the announcement of a ceasefire between Israel & Lebanon, and commend the role of the U.S. in facilitating it,” Antonio Guterres said on X. “I hope this will pave the way for negotiations towards a long-term solution to the conflict & contribute to ongoing efforts toward a lasting & comprehensive peace in the region. I urge everyone to fully respect the ceasefire and to comply with international law at all times.”

I welcome the announcement of a ceasefire between Israel & Lebanon, and commend the role of the US in facilitating it.

I hope this will pave the way for negotiations towards a long-term solution to the conflict & contribute to ongoing efforts toward a lasting & comprehensive…

— António Guterres (@antonioguterres) April 16, 2026

The Saudi Foreign Ministry “expresses the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s welcome of the announcement by President Donald Trump of the United States of America, regarding the ceasefire in the Republic of Lebanon,” it stated on X. “The Kingdom commends the significant and positive roles played by the President of the Republic of Lebanon General Joseph Aoun, the Lebanese Government, headed by Prime Minister Nawaf Salam, and the Speaker of Parliament, Nabih Berri.”

#Statement | The Foreign Ministry expresses the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s welcome of the announcement by President Donald Trump of the United States of America, regarding the ceasefire in the Republic of Lebanon. The Kingdom commends the significant and positive roles played by… pic.twitter.com/wCxeu5Hi18

— Foreign Ministry 🇸🇦 (@KSAmofaEN) April 16, 2026

UPDATE: 6:09 PM EDT –

Trump took to Truth Social to blast Italy, saying: “Italy wasn’t there for us, we won’t be there for them!”

He included a link to a Guardian story from March about how “Italy has denied the use of an airbase in Sicily to U.S. military planes carrying weapons for the war in Iran after the U.S. did not follow the required authorization procedure.”

UPDATE: 5:59 PM EDT

Pre-war planning meant Iran’s military “was able to mitigate the impact of U.S.-Israeli strikes on its weapons arsenal and leadership,” Bloomberg reported, citing Western military intelligence assessments — which also say the Islamic Republic retains the ability to respond if the ceasefire fails.

Despite the widespread damage and killings of leadership during the hostilities, operational planning undertaken in anticipation of the conflict was effective in preventing the destruction of its missile and drone capabilities as well as maximizing the impact of its military response, people familiar with the assessments told the news outlet.

Exclusive: Iran Has Limited the Impact of US Strikes, Intelligence Says

Pre-war planning meant Iran’s military was able to mitigate the impact of US-Israeli strikes on its weapons arsenal and leadership, according to Western military intelligence assessments — which also say it…

— Alex Wickham (@alexwickham) April 16, 2026

UPDATE: 5:54 PM EDT –

People in the Lebanese capital of Beirut celebrated by firing flares as the 10-day ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah went into effect.

UPDATE: 5:48 PM EDT –

Netanyahu says he rejected Hezbollah’s demands for an Israeli withdrawal from all Lebanese territory, and for a ceasefire in the form of “quiet will beget quiet.”

Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu says he rejected Hezbollah’s demands for an Israeli withdrawal from all Lebanese territory, and for a ceasefire in the form of “quiet will beget quiet.”

In other words, the new ceasefire in Lebanon will be based on the same model as the November… pic.twitter.com/Yn50TCtwSa

— Ariel Oseran أريئل أوسيران (@ariel_oseran) April 16, 2026

UPDATE 5:42 PM EDT –

CENTCOM released a video of a sailor aboard the Arleigh Burke class guided missile destroyer USS Michael Murphy communicating with a merchant vessel during a diversion in the ongoing blockade.

Audio🔊of a Sailor aboard USS Michael Murphy (DDG 112), with video from the guided-missile destroyer’s embarked helicopter flying over the Gulf of Oman, as the U.S. Navy diverts a merchant vessel while enforcing the blockade on ships entering or departing Iranian ports. U.S.… pic.twitter.com/10QxlEoGkk

— U.S. Central Command (@CENTCOM) April 16, 2026

UPDATE 5:20 PM EDT –

Trump on Thursday claimed that Iran has agreed to give up its nuclear ambitions. He made that statement during comments to the press outside the White House on Thursday.

“We had to make sure that Iran never gets a nuclear weapon. They’ve totally agreed to that. They’ve agreed to almost everything,” he claimed, despite no deal being reached during Saturday’s U.S.-Iran talks in Pakistan, The Jerusalem Post noted

In addition, Trump asserted that Iran is willing to do things today “that they weren’t willing to do two months ago,” before the U.S. and Israel launched Operation Epic Fury against Iran.

When asked if it would be acceptable for Iran to agree to a 20-year halt for enriching uranium, Trump said he had received “a very powerful statement” that Iran will not have nuclear weapons for “beyond 20 years.” 

It is unclear how Iran has responded.

.@POTUS on whether a 20-year minimum for Iran to stop enriching uranium is acceptable:

“We have a statement, a very powerful statement, that they will not have — beyond 20 years — that they will NOT have nuclear weapons. There’s no 20-year limit.” pic.twitter.com/saqa3DjfYl

— Rapid Response 47 (@RapidResponse47) April 16, 2026

An image emerged on social media purporting to show what appears to be an anti-drone cage atop a U.S. radar system in Baghdad. Last month, a radar and a Black Hawk helicopter in the Iraqi capital were damaged during a first-person view (FPV) drone attack by an Iranian proxy militia group. As we have been reporting for years, these so-called cope cages emerged in the battlefields of Ukraine and have become ubiquitous in conflicts around the globe.

Reports are emerging of intense and sustained activity by the IRGC to restore access to Iranian underground missile sites. 

“Throughout the early morning (04:15 AM – 06:00 AM local time today), a total of approximately 30 explosions were recorded as crews worked persistently to clear or unseal the blocked tunnel entrances,” according mamlekate, a network of independent journalists covering Iran. 

As we have noted, these sites have been targeted multiple times since February 28, the first day of the war.

Reports from Bushehr, Jam, indicate intense and sustained activity by the IRGC to restore access to the underground missile sites.
Throughout the early morning (04:15 AM – 06:00 AM local time today), a total of approximately 30 explosions were recorded as crews worked… https://t.co/3t3HIbM5as

— مملکته (@mamlekate) April 16, 2026

During his press conference, Hegseth noted that the U.S. is closely monitoring Iranian efforts to dig out these facilities and said they would be unsuccessful.

“While you are digging out, which is exactly what you’re doing, digging out of bombed-out and devastated facilities,” he posited. “We are only getting stronger. You are digging out your remaining launchers and missiles with no ability to replace them.”

🚨SOW Hegseth: “While you are digging out, which is exactly what you’re doing, digging out of bombed-out and devastated facilities. We are only getting stronger. You are digging out your remaining launchers and missiles with no ability to replace them.” pic.twitter.com/Xdkco9qo5F

— Raylan Givens (@JewishWarrior13) April 16, 2026

As we noted yesterday, CNN reported that Iran appears to be using the time to reopen entrances to underground missile cities damaged during the war. The network published footage showing engineering equipment at the Tabriz South missile base and the Khomein missile base. 

The network also noted that, according to U.S. intelligence estimates, about half of the Iranian missile launchers remained intact after a month of fighting, and that many of these launchers could have been buried in underground storage facilities as a result of strikes on the entrances.

CNN published footage showing engineering equipment making use of the ceasefire to reopen the entrances to underground facilities at missile bases that were damaged during the war.

The sites documented include the Tabriz South missile base and the Khomein missile base.

Notably,… pic.twitter.com/B88HISqVYD

— Ben Tzion Macales (@BenTzionMacales) April 15, 2026

U.S. and Iranian negotiators have scaled back ambitions for a comprehensive peace deal and are instead seeking a temporary memorandum to prevent a return ​to conflict, two Iranian sources told Reuters.

“A senior Iranian official said the two sides had started to narrow some gaps, including over how to manage the Strait of Hormuz, a vital route for about 20% of the world’s oil and gas needs that has ​been closed to most ships for weeks,” the news outlet reported.

Iran, which has faced crippling U.S. sanctions for years, “wants a memorandum to include Washington unfreezing some Iranian funds, ​in return for allowing more ships through the strait,” Reuters added.

However, no dates for a return to talks has yet been set.

The commander-in-chief of the Iranian Army boasted about how his country still has a functional Air Force, as demonstrated yesterday during the escort over its airspace by a visiting Pakistani delegation.

“They say the Iranian Air Force is gone. Yesterday we had a guest (Commander of the Pakistan Army),” proclaimed Gen. Amir Hatami. “As soon as he entered our airspace, we announced that your (Pakistan’s) planes weren’t needed. We escorted our guest with twice the number of planes they wanted to bring for escort.”

🇮🇷🇵🇰⚡️– Commander-in-Chief of the Iranian Army:

“They say the Iranian Air Force is gone.

Yesterday we had a guest (Commander of the Pakistan Army). As soon as he entered our airspace, we announced that your (Pakistan’s) planes weren’t needed.

We escorted our guest with twice… pic.twitter.com/fc79L019xG

— MonitorX (@MonitorX99800) April 16, 2026

Hatami’s comments came a day after images emerged on social media purporting to show an IRIAF F-4E and Mig-29A flying over Tehran escorting the Pakistani delegation that arrived today to discuss potential future peace talks.

Despite the ongoing efforts to end the fighting, the U.S. is continuing to flow assets to the region, with transport planes regularly landing in the Middle East from the U.S.

What is a “good faith deal?” U.S. officials say this includes the Iranians understanding they can’t obtain a nuclear weapon, can’t enrich uranium, and must remove already enriched uranium from their country. pic.twitter.com/86XPn0L0cW

— Trey Yingst (@TreyYingst) April 16, 2026

Trump said Israel and Lebanon have agreed to a ceasefire.

“I just had excellent conversations with the Highly Respected President Joseph Aoun, of Lebanon, and Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu, of Israel,” the president stated on his Truth Social site. “These two Leaders have agreed that in order to achieve PEACE between their Countries, they will formally begin a 10 Day CEASEFIRE at 5 P.M. EST.”

However, the statement doesn’t mention Hezbollah, which is fighting Israel, so it is unclear what effect this will have.

Trump added that he is “inviting the Prime Minister of Israel, Bibi Netanyahu, and the President of Lebanon, Joseph Aoun, to the White House for the first meaningful talks between Israel and Lebanon since 1983, a very long time ago.”

Prior to Trump’s social media post, Iran’s parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf told his Lebanese counterpart Nabih Berri that Tehran is pushing for a permanent ceasefire “in all conflict zones” and that a ceasefire in Lebanon is “just as important” as in Iran, according to a statement on Telegram.

BREAKING: Iran’s parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf tells Lebanese counterpart Nabih Berri that Tehran is pushing for a permanent ceasefire “in all conflict zones” and that a ceasefire in Lebanon is “just as important” as in Iran, according to a statement on Telegram. pic.twitter.com/dLis1PD2xE

— Al Jazeera Breaking News (@AJENews) April 16, 2026

Despite Ghalibaf’s comments, Lebanon’s president will not speak to Israel’s prime ​minister in the near future as anticipated, Lebanese officials said on Thursday, according to Reuters. The move dealt a blow to U.S. efforts to expand contacts between the enemy states as Pakistan said peace in Lebanon ‌was vital to ending the Iran war.

The IDF is setting up more outposts in southern Lebanon, Haaretz reported.

Soldiers serving in Lebanon told the newspaper that the army is “operating in Lebanon using methods similar to those used in the Gaza Strip and that these new outposts are likely to become focal points for friction and ongoing fighting against Hezbollah.”

IDF Setting Up More Outposts in Southern Lebanon:
“We’re behaving just like we did in Gaza,” one army source said. “There’s a list of homes to be demolished, and we measure success based on the number of buildings destroyed in a day.”

https://t.co/AVKD6jzmXK

— Mona Fawaz (@mona_fawaz) April 16, 2026

Select Committee on China Chairman John Moolenaar sent a letter to Hegseth concerning the operations of Airbus Space “due to its role in likely providing satellite imagery of U.S. military assets to MizarVision, a Chinese entity, days before the commencement of Operation Epic Fury,” according a committee press release.

“While commercial satellite imagery may serve public interest purposes in some cases, unconstrained imagery provision exposing U.S. forces to heightened risk crosses a dangerous threshold,” Moolenaar wrote. “Near-real-time publication of precise, annotated imagery identifying the exact type, number, and location of specific high-value military assets at an active forward operating base—while those assets are actively engaged in combat operations—is targeting data for enemy forces.”

As we noted yesterday, VANTOR and Planet Labs, two U.S. satellite firms, have already complied with the Pentagon and have curtailed providing imagery over the Middle East.

A Chinese firm, MizarVision, posted detailed satellite imagery of U.S. forces in the Middle East while not disclosing its data sources.@ChinaSelect analysis found @AirbusSpace satellites had multiple daily windows, up to 10 hours, where they could have captured imagery of U.S.… pic.twitter.com/HywjpstNUb

— Select Committee on China (@ChinaSelect) April 16, 2026

China and the U.S. are maintaining communication on U.S. President Donald Trump’s visit to China, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun said on Thursday

Guo’s statement came in response to a question regarding remarks by President Trump in an interview aired Wednesday on Fox News, in which he said factors including Iran would not change the dynamic of his meeting with the Chinese leader.

#Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun said on Thursday that China and the #US are maintaining communication on US President Donald #Trump’s visit to China. Guo’s statement came in response to a question regarding remarks by President Trump in an interview aired… pic.twitter.com/S80Mu6XCEH

— Global Times (@globaltimesnews) April 16, 2026

U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) clarified its efforts to interdict ships providing support to Iran. All Iranian vessels, those with active Office of Foreign Asset Control (OFAC) sanctions, and ships suspected of carrying contraband are subject to boarding and seizure. The contraband items include weapons, ammunition, fissile materials, equipment for nuclear enrichment, metals, oil and lubricants among others.

The ongoing reduction of oil exports from the Middle East as a result of the war is having dire economic impacts around the globe.

On Thursday, International Energy Agency Chief Fatih Birol stated that Europe has “maybe six weeks of jet fuel left,” and warned of possible flight cancellations, according to Sky News

Contact the author: howard@thewarzone.com

Howard is a Senior Staff Writer for The War Zone, and a former Senior Managing Editor for Military Times. Prior to this, he covered military affairs for the Tampa Bay Times as a Senior Writer. Howard’s work has appeared in various publications including Yahoo News, RealClearDefense, and Air Force Times.




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80s movie star, 72, makes rare public appearance for movie comeback

BACK in the 80s and early 90s, this movie star was known for huge blockbuster films, and was one of the biggest names in Hollywood.

Sadly, in 1991, the actor’s beloved wife died and he started to take a step back from the limelight and eventually quit fame – but now the 72-year-old star is making his big comeback.

Hollywood star Rick Moranis is making his return to Hollywood after leaving the spotlight when his wife died Credit: Getty
This actor has made his comeback to the spotlight after three decades Credit: Getty
Rick made a rare appearance at CinemaCon to promote his new movie Spaceballs Credit: Getty
Last year it was revealed how Rick had signed on for the new Spaceballs sequel, reprising his role as Dark Helmet Credit: Alamy

Rick Moranis, famed for 80s films like Ghostbusters, thrilled fans when he made a rare appearance at CinemaCon 2026.

The much-loved actor was spotted at the big event with the cast of the Spaceballs sequel as he prepares for his return to the big screen.

It was announced last year that the Canadian actor would be reprising his role as Dark Helmet.

The original movie, which is a spoof of Star Wars, came out in 1987 and starred many notable names, including Mel Brooks, Daphne Zuniga, Bill Pullman, the late John Candy, and Joan Rivers, among others.

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Many of Rick’s former co-stars have returned for the sequel, such as Mel, Daphne, Bill, and George Wyner.

There are also several new faces among the cast, including Josh Gad and Keke Palmer.

The cast joined Rick at a panel event to promote the movie at CinemaCon.

Despite the star rarely being seen in the last three decades, the actor hasn’t changed much in appearance.

The Flintstones star wore his trademark round-framed glasses, which he was famed for in his iconic movies.

Other than Spaceballs, Rick starred in many successful films in the 1980s and 1990s, including Honey, I Shrunk the Kids and its sequels, and playing Barney in The Flintstones.

Rick thrilled fans when he stepped out on stage at CinemaCon Credit: Getty
Rick starred in a string of successful films in the 1980s and 1990s – seen here in Little Shop of Horrors Credit: Handout
Rick is probably best known for Honey I Shrunk The Kids Credit: Rex
Rick left Hollywood in the 90s to focus on raising his two kids following his wife’ Anne’s death Credit: Alamy

Sadly, Rick started to take a step back from Hollywood when his wife, Anne Belsky, passed away from breast cancer in 1991.

During the 90s, he slowly started to quit fame to focus on parenting his two children.

Although Rick hasn’t been seen on screen, he hasn’t entirely distanced himself from acting.

He lent his voice to several animated projects over the years, including Disney‘s Brother Bear in 2003, and its sequel, Brother Bear 2, in 2006.

Rick’s voice also appeared in a 2018 episode of The Goldbergs and a 2020 episode of the Disney+ docuseries Prop Culture.

However, he hasn’t appeared in a live-action film since Disney’s Honey, I Shrunk Ourselves, which was released directly to video in 1997.

But Rick is now set to be back on the big screen, with production for Spaceballs 2 underway.

The hotly-anticipated sequel is set to hit cinemas in 2027.

Rick also starred in 90s movie, The Flintstones Credit: BBC
The actor was famed for his round glasses back in the 80s and 90s Credit: Getty

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