Shamita Basu
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Podcast Appearances
Meanwhile, the Trump administration, in an escalation of an earlier policy announcement from this week, has paused all immigration applications, including green cards and citizenship processing, for 19 countries that the administration previously restricted travel from.
Those countries include Iran, Haiti, Libya and Somalia, among others.
The administration previously blocked people from those countries from permanently immigrating to the U.S.
or applying for travel or student visas.
Several immigration lawyers told The New York Times their clients on Tuesday had naturalization ceremonies canceled as well as interview appointments with no explanation.
Results are in for Tennessee's special election.
Republican Matt Van Epps won the House seat, defeating Democratic State Representative Afton Bain in a race that was looking tight in its final days and being watched across the country, including from the White House.
President Trump posted his congratulations on social media.
Van Epps received more than $1 million from MAGA Inc., marking the first time the pro-Trump super PAC spent money on a campaign since last year's presidential race.
In the end, Van Epps won with a much smaller margin compared to Trump's 2024 result against Kamala Harris in the same district.
And finally, the beloved show Mad Men, which chronicles life in the 1960s golden age of advertising, made its way to HBO Max this week in 4K for the first time.
But along with crystal clear footage came some mistakes picked up by eagle-eyed audiences.
Those binge-watching found shows out of order, mistitled, and in one, a glaring error somehow made it through.
It's in the episode where Roger Sterling is forced to climb hundreds of stairs to get to a meeting, and he's feeling queasy.
Don't worry, we're going to save you the sound of what comes next.
But in watching this version, you can clearly see a member of the crew manning the fake vomit machine.
The producers had apparently sent the wrong file to HBO.
The publication Ars Technica points out these things can happen with older shows.
Changing aspect ratios reveal crew or equipment.
When Seinfeld first arrived on Netflix, a pothole central to the plot was completely cropped out.