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From today's featured article
"Feather" is a song by American singer Sabrina Carpenter (pictured) from Emails I Can't Send Fwd:, the 2023 deluxe edition of her fifth studio album. A dance-pop, disco, and disco-pop song, "Feather" is a post-breakup track celebrating the freedom and relief one feels upon ending a relationship. Carpenter co-wrote it with Amy Allen and its producer, John Ryan. Its production was described as light and airy by music critics, who thought the song had impact on Carpenter's success the following year. "Feather" reached number 21 in the US, where it became her first song to reach the top 40, and was also Carpenter's first number 1 on the Pop Airplay chart. The music video, which depicts the deaths of several men who mistreat Carpenter and her dancing at their joint funeral in a church, caused controversy when the Catholic bishop of Brooklyn criticized the church scenes and suspended the priest who allowed them to be filmed. Carpenter performed the song on Saturday Night Live and on her tours. (Full article...)
Did you know ...
- ... that a memorial park was planned in South Korea for composer Zheng Lücheng (pictured), despite controversy over his collaboration with North Korea and China?
- ... that an 829-kilometer-long (515 mi) lightning flash set a record eight years later?
- ... that prison abolition is not embraced by most human rights organizations, despite similar evidence for harm as from recognized forms of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment?
- ... that Philippine senator Bong Go showed his back two times to refute accusations from a YouTube series?
- ... that the Montreal Canadiens hockey team threatened to force a Vermont TV station to stop airing Boston Bruins games?
- ... that in 1808 a wealthy Frenchman bought 2,700 acres (1,100 ha) of land in central New York and built a large estate, but abandoned it and returned to Europe less than a decade later?
- ... that Josiah Mtekateka, the first indigenous Malawian Anglican bishop, began his career as a priest's dog keeper?
- ... that relations were sour from the onset between the Afghan emperor Ahmad Shah Durrani and the Qianlong Emperor of Qing China?
- ... that Mr Flashy's gang used teenagers on electric scooters to deliver crack cocaine?
In the news
- Peter Mutharika (pictured) is elected President of Malawi.
- Typhoon Ragasa leaves at least 28 people dead in Taiwan and the Philippines.
- Saudi Arabia and Pakistan sign an agreement to defend each other against attacks.
- American actor and filmmaker Robert Redford dies at the age of 89.
- In boxing, Terence Crawford defeats Canelo Álvarez, becoming undisputed champion in his third weight class.
On this day
- 235 – Pope Pontian (pictured) resigned after being exiled to Sardinia, becoming the first pope to relinquish the position.
- 1821 – The Declaration of Independence of the Mexican Empire from Spain was drafted in the National Palace in Mexico City.
- 1924 – A team of U.S. Army Air Service aviators landed in Seattle, Washington, to complete the first aerial circumnavigation of the world.
- 1958 – Fernando Rios, a Mexican tour guide in New Orleans, was killed in an instance of gay bashing.
- 2009 – A protest held by 50,000 people in Conakry, Guinea, was forcefully disrupted by the military junta, resulting in at least 157 deaths and over 1,200 injuries.
- Isis Pogson (b. 1852)
- Frank S. Scott (d. 1912)
- Kimiko Date (b. 1970)
- Shimon Peres (d. 2016)
Today's featured picture
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Machu Picchu is a 15th-century Inca citadel located on a mountain ridge in the Eastern Cordillera of southern Peru, about 2,430 metres (7,970 ft) above sea level. Often referred to as the "Lost City of the Incas", it was built around 1450, likely as an estate for the Inca emperor Pachacuti, and was abandoned roughly a century later. Notable structures include the Temple of the Sun, the Temple of the Three Windows, and Intihuatana, a ritual stone. Machu Picchu was designated a historic sanctuary by Peru in 1981, and a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1983. It received more than 1.5 million visitors annually as of 2024, making it Peru's most visited tourist attraction. This photograph of Machu Picchu was taken in 1912 by Hiram Bingham III, the American explorer who rediscovered the citadel, and was published in the April 1913 edition of National Geographic. The image was taken after early clearing work, and shows the agricultural terraces, the central urban complex, and the steep peak of Huayna Picchu rising in the background. Photograph credit: Hiram Bingham III
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