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Forza Horizon 5 on PS5 Pro delivers the best console experience

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Forza Horizon 5 is a truly superb game. This racer packs an enormous amount of content into stunning open-world environments, spanning regions of Mexico and a Hot Wheels paradise in the sky. It’s a top-notch effort from Playground that’s only been available on Xbox and PC, but porting powerhouse Panic Button has just delivered a version of the game for PS5 and PS5 Pro, even sporting RT boosts for Pro users. Is this the definitive Forza Horizon experience on console?

The broad strokes of Forza Horizon 5’s presentation remain unchanged in the move from Series X to PS5, with a 60fps performance mode and a 30fps quality mode. Flipping back and forth between Series X and PS5, there’s virtually no visual distinction, with identical foliage placement, matching terrain and very similar image quality. I’d really struggle to tell the difference between the two platforms in almost any circumstance. That error-free rendition of Forza Horizon 5 is actually a pretty great accomplishment, given that this engine has never run on PlayStation before.

Pixel counts aren’t especially important here, as both consoles typically reach and hold a full 4K. I did notice more evidence of DRS on PS5 in some shots in performance mode, with one example indicating an 1872p internal resolution on PS5 and the full 2160p on Series X, though I don’t expect this difference would be noticeable in actual gameplay. In quality mode, both consoles are locked to a full 4K throughout.

Forza Horizon 5 rolls onto PS5 and PS5 Pro in style. Here’s the report from Oliver. Watch on YouTube

While there are few changes from Series X to PS5, your choice of mode is fairly impactful with more substantial visual differences between quality and performance than we typically see in current-gen releases. The quality mode packs a greater density of assets, stuffing a lot more foliage into every frame. Textures have more layers, and often have high-quality parallax occlusion maps to add additional detail. Pop-in also tends to be much less of a concern, as high-detail versions of the game’s assets stretch far into the distance. Mexico’s sprawling views look quite a bit better in quality mode, especially in the shrubby desert that typifies much of the game’s landmass.

Most console games rely on resolution changes to optimise their performance and quality modes, but Forza depends on visual settings tweaks instead. Image quality across the modes remains similar, though the tradeoff in environment detail is pretty large. It might have been possible to retain the frame-rate of the performance mode with the extended visual quality of the quality mode by using upsampling like FSR 2 instead of the game’s default 4x MSAA, though there are image quality tradeoffs between temporal techniques and MSAA in this game.

In frame-rate terms, both modes are essentially impeccable, offering a consistent 60fps and 30fps update in typical play. That’s not too surprising, considering how well the game operates on the Xbox platforms, but it’s still an impressive feat for how attractive the game is. Pre-rendered movies continue to run at 30fps in both modes, however.

I did notice two small oddities though. The game’s save size – even for a brand new save – is massive, clocking in at over 2GB. There’s only one save per account so this isn’t that big of a deal, but it’s a lot larger than any other save on my PS5 consoles and much bigger than saves from the Series X version of the game. The game’s car physics also seem to differ slightly depending on the mode. If you let the game run out of a cutscene with zero controller input, the car rolls further in quality mode than it does in performance mode, perhaps due to the differing frame-rates. This also appears to be the case on Xbox consoles, so it’s not a new quirk on PS5 machines.

PS5 Pro actually offers some pretty interesting enhancements over the base console, which are most compelling in the game’s performance mode. There’s a huge difference in the game’s foliage. Note the denser and more vibrant greenery in these shots, with bushes and grasses and ferns that just aren’t present on the base machine. Plus, further into the distance, the foliage that is rendered often shows a higher-detail variant relative to the base console, with less visible pop-in. Of course, when you’re barreling through races at speed the advantage on Pro is less palpable. But the difference in density and pop-in is still obvious and highly appreciated.

The Pro performance mode is essentially a match in foliage rendering for the PS5 quality mode in my comparisons, with an equally lavish depiction of flora detail. That’s a great development, given that was the big advantage the quality mode used to have over the performance mode. It’s not exactly the same – the game’s very cool cone step mapping on building exteriors is a quality mode-only feature, for instance. But in typical play, the two modes look quite similar.

Forza Horizon 5 screenshot - PS5 vs PS5 Pro performance mode, showing foliage
Forza Horizon 5 screenshot - PS5 vs PS5 Pro, showing desert
PS5 Pro offers a noticeable step up in fidelity over PS5 (and therefore Xbox Series X), especially in performance mode. For example, foliage is denser, more vibrant and is shown further into the distance, mirroring the settings seen on PS5’s quality mode at double the frame-rate. | Image credit: Digital Foundry

Beyond that change, the PS5 and Pro in their respective performance modes appear much the same. Resolution is pretty close as well, though Pro has the advantage here – in the shot where the base machine got pulled to 1872p, the Pro managed to hold a native 2160p. It’s not especially apparent in real-world gameplay in either case, but it does show that Sony’s enhanced machine is pulling this off with frame-time to spare.

The quality mode on Pro is bound to be a little more controversial. In most respects, it’s identical to its base PS5 counterpart, with similar-looking tweakables in my comparison shots. But there is one key point of differentiation – ray-traced vehicle self-reflections during gameplay. Essentially, the player vehicle can now feature reflections of itself, which are layered on top of the game’s real-time cubemap reflections. This is most obvious around mirrors and other protrusions, and cars with chrome or other shiny surfaces. Opposing cars don’t seem to get this treatment, only the player vehicle. The garage and Forzavista feature these reflections on PS5, but they aren’t applied during gameplay. If you go looking for the effect, it is noticeable I would say, even if it isn’t especially visually impactful.

Most of the game’s reflections, though, are still based on other techniques. Their deficits aren’t all that noticeable at the typical pace of play in Forza, so it’s not like you’re losing out on too much in the way of fidelity here. Still, I would have loved a more comprehensive solution for RT reflections – perhaps like the one in Forza Motorsport – though that would probably be outside the scope of a port like this.

Outside of that improvement, the two consoles look essentially identical, matching in every significant respect in my testing. That includes resolution, as both machines seem locked to a full 4K pixel count. Frame-rates on both modes are also just as they were on PS5, which is to say that they reach their respective targets without drops. Expect a locked 30fps in quality mode, with the performance mode holding a steady 60.

Forza Horizon 5 screenshot - PS5 vs PS5 Pro, showing self-reflections on PS5 Pro
Forza Horizon 5 screenshot - PS5 vs PS5 Pro, showing self-reflections on PS5 Pro
Here are two examples of the self-reflections possible on PS5 Pro’s quality mode versus the quality mode on the standard PS5. | Image credit: Digital Foundry

There is one curious issue on PS5 Pro though in the current patch. If you turn on the game’s photo mode in quality mode on PS5 Pro during a race event, the game crashes. I was able to replicate this behaviour several times during multiple races, so I suspect this is an issue across the game. The Pro performance mode doesn’t bear this issue, nor does the base machine in either of its modes.

Forza Horizon 5 is an excellent title that is still one of the best-looking racing games ever made. Nothing really comes close to the level of raw environmental fidelity that Forza Horizon 5 so effortlessly accomplishes across its vast open world. Plus, the car models look great, lighting quality is excellent, and performance is typically impeccable across its target platforms. Panic Button’s porting effort certainly does the job too, though the base PS5 essentially comes in exactly as expected. Relative to Series X, it’s a near-perfect match. That’s not a bad thing at all, as the port is consistently high quality and arrives without significant issues.

The Pro is really where the action is at here, specifically in its performance mode. Getting quality mode foliage at performance mode frame-rates is a huge bonus for Pro users, and provides a big visual boost over the base machine. It’s likely the base console could have achieved something similar with a hit to resolution, but this is essentially a compromise-free experience that still typically runs at a full 4K. PS5 Pro’s quality mode is less appealing, just because the added RT makes a minimal difference in most gameplay.

Regardless, Forza Horizon 5 is a great port on Sony’s current-gen consoles. Hopefully we’ll see more from this series soon, but for now this is a great way to enjoy this genre-defining title.





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Simone Biles unsure of competing at 2028 LA Olympics: ‘My body is aging’ | Simone Biles

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Simone Biles says she is unsure whether she will compete at the Los Angeles Olympics in 2028.

The 28-year-old says she has other priorities, and is mindful of the demands her sport puts on her body at an age when most elite gymnasts have long since retired. Biles will be 31 when the LA Olympics start: the oldest all-around female gymnastics champion is Maria Gorokhovskaya, who won gold at the age of 30 at the 1952 Games.

“I’m really trying to enjoy life, to spend time with my husband [NFL player Jonathan Owens)], go support him at his games, live my life as a woman,” she said in an interview with French sports daily L’Equipe published on Tuesday. “I’ve accomplished so much in my sport. For me to come back, it would really have to excite me.”

Biles, the most decorated gymnast of all time, says many fans underestimate the time taken in preparing for the Olympics. “A lot of people think it’s just a one-year commitment but it truly is the four years leading up to the Olympics,” she said. “It’s in LA it’s back in the States, which is so exciting. But if I’m going to compete again, I’m not so sure.”

Biles said she will attend the Games in LA, but is unsure in what capacity. “Whether on the [gymnastics] apparatus or in the stands, I still don’t know that,” she told L’Equipe. “But 2028 seems so far away, and my body is aging. I felt it in Paris.”

Biles won three gold medals and a silver at the Paris Olympics, taking her career tally to seven Olympic golds and 11 medals overall. But she says her body suffered under the strain.

“I went back to the [Olympic] village, I took the elevator and my body literally collapsed. I was sick for 10 days,” she said, before recounting another experience. “The other day, we were sprinting in the garden with friends, I had aches and pains for three days. So, I honestly don’t know. We’ll see.”

She praised her rival, Rebeca Andrade of Brazil, for recovering from injury and for “pushing me beyond my limits,” but also said gymnastics no longer needs both of them.

“It only needs one of us, no? Especially since [Andrade] will not be alone,” Biles said. “A young generation will knock at the door and everything will start again.”

The interview took place before Monday’s Laureus Awards in Madrid, where Biles was named sportswoman of the year. Swedish pole vaulter Armand Duplantis, the double Olympic champion and world record holder, was named sportsman of the year.

Whatever she decides regarding her career, Biles says she will continue to speak about mental health. Biles withdrew from several events at the Tokyo Olympics, partly because she wanted to preserve her mental health.

“I am very proud of the work accomplished to reach this point,” she said, “and I will continue to be the voice of the voiceless.”



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World Book Day 2025: Voracious readers’ top book recos for non-readers to pick up the habit!

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Reading is objectively one of the most gratifying and self-nurturing habits one can take to. After all, what better way than to traverse multiple carefully crafted worlds, that too through your own mind’s eye? That being said, cultivating that kind of creativity, and before that, patience, is tough and waning in a day and age characterised by instant gratification. So from those who have held onto the gift of loving books, through the various phases of their lives, here are some top recommendations from readers the world over, which are sure to draw you in smoothly into the allure of being a reader — maybe in a way that will finally stick this time around!

Book recos for non-readers to kickstart the habit on World Book Day 2025(Photo: Dara Agruss Design)

The Alchemist

Paulo Coelho’s The Alchemist is a short yet impactful novel that’s easy to get into, even for people who aren’t usually drawn to reading. With its straightforward, almost storybook style and emphasis on timeless themes like personal growth and chasing your dreams, it’s an engaging and uplifting read for just about anyone.

Fahrenheit 451

Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451, deals with the themes of censorship, over-conformity, and the true price of independent thinking — the value of which is only understood when it is seriously threatened, or completely taken away. This is actually a great diving point for non-readers as the cult classic is not only relevant in terms of the ever-changing political context, but also carries very simple, straightforward language, making it a super-smooth read.

Holes

Louis Sachar’s Holes may be a young adult novel, but it does a great job of keeping the reader engaged between its many practical and emotionally-charged plot points, in addition to the fact that the larger timeline oscillates between the past and present, compelling one to stay engaged each time they pick it up.

The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy

Douglas Adams’ uber-popular franchise, The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, marries science fiction with comedy, promises you chuckle after chuckle as you ease into the pages, feeling rather comforted. The plot isn’t complicated, and is filled to the brim with imaginative story-telling with exploration and wonder being major themes. A perfect balance then, for new readers on the block.

The Book Thief

Another cult classic on this list, The Book Thief is actually a great starting point for former voracious readers, who lost touch with the habit and are desperately trying to get back into the loop of things. Wrought with emotion and one of the most unanimously agreed upon solid storylines, this Markus Zusak novel is too easy a pick in this regard.

So, this World Book Day, which of these reads will you be immersing yourself in?



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20 years ago, the first videos uploaded to YouTube were short and sweet

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Two decades ago, YouTube wasn’t about the elaborate long-form content pumped out by creators like MrBeast. There wasn’t any fancy lighting, sound effects, or jump cuts.

The platform’s first video, “Me at the Zoo,” was uploaded to YouTube on April 23rd, 2005. It’s a mere 19 seconds long, featuring YouTube co-founder Jawed Karim standing in front of a pair of elephants at the San Diego Zoo.

“Alright, so here we are, in front of the elephants,” Karim says, while glancing back at the elephants. The video offers a brief glimpse of one wrapping hay around its trunk and placing it in its mouth. “The cool thing about these guys is that they have really, really, really long um… trunks, and that’s cool,” Karim says, gesturing. He looks back at the elephants one last time. “And that’s pretty much all there is to say.” (Karim uploaded another video, titled “Rolling down a hill” on April 23rd, but it was deleted.)

The next, “My Snowboarding Skillz,” was uploaded by the user “mw” the very same day. It’s the very first “fail” video uploaded to YouTube, a genre that proliferated on the platform for many years. During the grainy 10-second video clip, you can hear a vague “whooshing” sound get closer as a snowboarder slides up a ramp in a snowy ski area, only to fall just moments later. The snowboarder then picks themself up, and the video cuts off before we can see what happens next.

Just one day later, on April 24th, 2005, a user named “gp” uploaded another video: “tribute.” At just five seconds long, it’s the shortest of the bunch. It shows a person with a brown jacket standing in a nondescript hallway that looks a little like a dormitory. They jump up and balance against the walls before letting out a primal scream. Another person — presumably the one holding the camera — then says, “Very nice” as the person hops down with a thud.

At the time, all three videos were a testament to YouTube’s accessibility: anyone could make a YouTube video by simply capturing a brief moment in time, no matter how mundane it may seem. Though YouTube is now filled to the brim with lengthy tutorials, video deep dives, and vlogs, things have started to come full circle — at least, to some degree.

The supplementary Shorts look like a far cry from what YouTube videos were like 20 years ago. Most of the clips that YouTube’s algorithm serves up weren’t filmed on a whim, featuring thoughtful scripts and deliberate camerawork that the average person might not know how to recreate. But even with more planning involved, many of them have that glimmer of spontaneity and a sense of connection of the first three videos uploaded to the platform. When you only have so much time, you try to cut to the heart of the matter.



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Michigan DT’s NFL draft projections

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play

The 2025 NFL Draft is just one day away from kicking off in Green Bay, and this year’s draft class is once again stacked with defensive tackle talent.

Headlining that position unit is none other than Michigan football defensive tackle Mason Graham. The Wolverines’ 6-foot-4, 296-pound defensive tackle is widely considered to be one of the first handful of defensive players off the board and a near-unanimous pick at No. 5 overall, including USA TODAY’s own mock draft.

He holds a 6.48 prospect grade on NFL.com, which means he will be a “good starter within two years, and is the No. 1 defensive tackle (No. 3 overall prospect) on ESPN’s Mel Kiper Jr.’s big board of prospects in this year’s draft class.

In three seasons at Michigan, Graham quickly became one of the Wolverines’ top defensive players in program history as he earned All-American honors each of the last two seasons and finished with a total of 107 tackles (17 for a loss of 98 yards) and nine sacks for a loss of 65 yards.

The Wolverines’ defensive star is expected to be Michigan’s highest-drafted defensive player since Aidan Hutchinson went No. 2 overall in the 2022 NFL Draft to the Detroit Lions, and the fifth defensive player from Ann Arbor to be taken in the first round since 2021.

Here’s what you need to know about where Graham is projected to go in the 2025 NFL Draft, along with which NFL team he best fits with along with a scouting report:

Where will Michigan’s Mason Graham go in 2025 NFL Draft?

Here’s where NFL draft analysts have Graham going in the first round of the 2025 NFL Draft:

USA TODAY Sports Network Live Mock Draft: Round 1, No. 5 overall to the Jacksonville Jaguars

“The Jaguars are in position to take the best available player here and there can be debate on whether or not that’s Graham or Boise State’s Ashton Jeanty. Still, they go the safer route here, addressing a premium position to solidify a defensive line that’s missing one piece.”

USA TODAY: Round 1, No. 5 overall to the Jacksonville Jaguars

“Amid some volatility in the top five, this pairing is hard to shake. First-year general manager James Gladstone has declared his intent to go young along the line, and Graham’s motor will keep him relevant on plays even when he doesn’t win right away.”

ESPN’s Field Yates: Round 1, No. 5 overall to the Jacksonville Jaguars

“The Jaguars have holes at every level of their defense after allowing 5.9 yards per play last season (31st in the NFL), and Graham is the best available player. He impacts the game in a meaningful way as both a pass rusher and run defender with elite play strength and explosion off the snap.”

ESPN’s Mel Kiper Jr.: Round 1, No. 5 overall to the Jacksonville Jaguars

“I’m out of things to say about Graham to Jacksonville — I’ve projected this match in all four of my mock drafts. New coach Liam Coen might want offensive playmakers for Trevor Lawrence, but the Jaguars have a chance to finally get a pocket-pushing disruptor for the middle of the defensive line.

“With great power and quickness, Graham can get into the backfield to create interior pressure on quarterbacks and drop running backs behind the line of scrimmage. He had 3.5 sacks and 14 run stops last season.”

The Athletic: Round 1, No. 6 overall to the Las Vegas Raiders

“Newly hired general manager John Spytek prioritizes pass rush over everything else on defense. Graham doesn’t have ideal length and isn’t on the same level as a Quinnen Williams-type prospect, but he deconstructs blocks consistently and becomes a problem for offenses. Spytek and his boss, Tom Brady, being Michigan alums doesn’t hurt, either.”

CBS Sports: Round 1, No. 5 overall to the Jacksonville Jaguars

“Graham is such a high-floor prospect at defensive tackle with three-down upside as a disruptor regardless of whether or its a run or pass. Power, pass-rush moves, athletic gifts galore. This is what the Jaguars need on their defensive line.”

Mason Graham scouting report

Here’s a scouting report from USA TODAY’s Panther Wire’s Jared Feinberg:

“Graham is a player whose motor is flaming hot. This has allowed him to make plays in the backfield off pure effort and hustle alone. His explosiveness and initial get-off will put a strain on guards and force them to either overset or lean into their blocks on occasion. Graham takes advantage of this using powerful hands to shock linemen and compromise their anchor.As talented as Graham is, he is still an evolving and developing player. He’ll sometimes play too high with his pads and compromise his ability to anchor and establish a wide, firm base at the point of attack. He also doesn’t have the biggest reach and limited tackle radius, And while that isn’t a significant detriment to his game, it is something to keep an eye on during his professional career.”

Click here to read the full scouting report on the Michigan defensive tackle.

Mason Graham’s best 2025 NFL Draft fit

Here’s what USA TODAY’ Michael Middlehurst-Schwartz believes is the best fit for Graham:

“Amid some volatility in the top five, this pairing is hard to shake. First-year general manager James Gladstone has declared his intent to go young along the line, and Graham’s motor will keep him relevant on plays even when he doesn’t win right away.”

The projection: Jacksonville Jaguars



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Is Georgia Power quietly planning a massive buildout…

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Regulators approved an interim IRP last year that allows Georgia Power to build 1.4 GW of fossil-fueled power plants and 500 MW of batteries, and to contract for nearly 1 GW more from other utilities’ coal- and gas-fired power plants, to relieve some of its nearer-term pressures.

But the all-source RFP launched back in 2022 has remained Georgia Power’s main mechanism to get what it needs by 2031, Whitfield said. That’s despite the fact that it was initially meant to cover just 500 MW, a figure nearly 20 times smaller than the 9.5 GW it is now planning to fill via the all-source RFP process.

This has created something of a regulatory shell game in which Georgia Power can contract for the vast majority of its future energy and capacity needs outside the purview of the standard IRP process, said Simon Mahan, executive director of the Southern Renewable Energy Association trade group.

Many organizations and companies focus exclusively on the IRP, while the ultimate decisions may occur in a totally separate docket, where fewer intervening parties are engaged,” he said.

The battle over Georgia Power’s missing gigawatts comes as the utility has failed to bring as much renewable energy into its resource mix as it previously pledged to.

The utility has about 3 GW of solar, helping to push Georgia into the top 10 states for solar growth. But it’s also been slow to contract with third-party owners of solar and battery projects to meet its power needs. Georgia Power’s 2025 IRP calls for an additional 3.5 GW of renewable energy by the end of 2030, but that plan partially just makes up for the utility’s cancellation of previous clean-power procurements, Mahan noted.

Solar alone can’t meet Georgia Power’s capacity needs, which are driven by demand for electricity for heating in wintertime.

But batteries that can store solar or general grid power could play a more significant role. Regulators approved Georgia Power to add 500 MW of battery storage in last year’s interim IRP, and its 2025 IRP calls for further expanding its energy storage capacity. Mahan noted that much of the solar power being proposed in the state will likely be paired with batteries to enhance its value to Georgia Power’s grid.

Without more information on the contents of the all-source RFP, it’s nearly impossible for environmental groups, consumer advocates, and other stakeholders to know whether Georgia Power is properly weighing renewable alternatives to gas-fired power plants that the utility will build and own itself.

The big picture on carbon and cost

Georgia Power’s commitment to fossil gas and coal — which together made up nearly 60% of its capacity last year — is certainly a problem for the climate. The Sierra Club calculates that the generation mix laid out in Georgia Power’s proposed 2025 IRP would make the utility one of the top greenhouse gas emitters in the U.S.”

It could be a problem for utility customers, too, who have already seen rates rise significantly in recent years due to Georgia Power’s more than $30 billion expansion of its Vogtle nuclear power plant.

Like most regulated utilities, Georgia Power earns a set rate of profit on investments in power plants, power grids, and other capital assets. It’s also required to allow third-party developers to compete with it to build solar and battery projects — a process that can yield lower costs for its customers but also lower rates of return for the utility.

Regulators have a responsibility to closely monitor the utility’s process for choosing which resources end up winning to ensure those decisions aren’t maximizing Georgia Power’s profits at the expense of its customers, said Patty Durand, a consumer advocate and former Public Service Commission candidate. But she fears regulators will fail to challenge Georgia Power’s assertions on which resources will most cost-effectively meet its grid needs.

We need to keep stock of how many gigawatts of fossil fuel Georgia Power is building or keeping on the grid because of data centers,” she said. That is a climate change disaster.”

Durand has also challenged Georgia Power’s load-growth forecasts, noting that the utility has consistently overestimated future electricity demand across the past decade, helping it justify increased spending on profit-earning assets.

Are utility bills a kitchen-table issue? If they are, these guys are in trouble,” she said. Data centers are about to make the bills we pay now into a joke.”

Some of the tech giants playing a role in the data center expansion driving Georgia Power’s demand forecasts have similar concerns. Last year, Microsoft challenged the utility on how it models the value of clean energy resources as well as how it forecasts load growth.

Georgia Power also faced pushback from the Clean Energy Buyers Association (CEBA), which represents companies like Amazon, Google, Meta, and Microsoft that are simultaneously planning major data center expansions and striving to decarbonize their energy supplies. In testimony before the Public Service Commission last year, CEBA warned that some of the new load Georgia Power is forecasting may not materialize if Georgia Power increases the carbon intensity of its resource mix.”

CEBA ended up supporting last year’s interim IRP on the condition that Georgia Power follow through with a promise to offer large industrial and commercial customers new options to bring more carbon-free resources onto the utility’s grid.

Georgia Power’s 2025 IRP lays out a customer-identified resource” proposal to meet its end of the bargain, said Katie Southworth, CEBA’s deputy director of market and policy innovation for the South and Southeast. In simple terms, the utility would allow big customers to work with third-party developers to build solar, batteries, and other carbon-free resources that they could use to power their data centers and other large facilities. That’s a fairly common practice in parts of the country operating under competitive energy markets — but not in Georgia and most of the U.S. Southeast, where utilities remain vertically integrated.

However, the utility’s plan lacks transparency and certainty about how customer-proposed projects will be assessed and approved, and it limits the scale and scope of resources that big customers can bring to the table. Georgia Power also plans to delay implementation of that program, frustrating CEBA members eager to start searching for potential projects.

Hawkins, the Georgia Power spokesperson, told Canary Media that the utility continues to incorporate CEBA’s feedback into our program designs, while still ensuring that all Georgia Power customers are protected. Our proposed IRP portfolio of renewable procurements and programs represents a continuation of our steady and measured renewable growth that delivers benefits to all customers.”

In the meantime, Southworth said, CEBA is encouraging Georgia Power customers looking for cleaner energy options to get involved in the design of the all-source process. That gives us a chance to include other resources that could play a role.”

That may be an option for qualified energy developers active in that competitive procurement. But it remains unclear if or how the Public Service Commission will push Georgia Power to open the hood on that process for consumer advocates and environmental groups that have been denied information thus far.

This is an exceptionally unusual time in the Georgia energy world for a million reasons, of which this is one. I think this is a hugely important issue,” Whitfield said. The investments being planned today are going to transform our energy system,” and Georgia Power is conducting that work without providing critical information about what that new system might look like.”

But time is running short to order more transparency. Georgia Power plans to announce the winning bids for its all-source RFP in July, Whitfield said — the same month that state regulators expect to take their final vote on the IRP



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Heartstopper to end with feature film finale | Movies

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Heartstopper, the much-loved Netflix adaptation of Alice Oseman’s graphic novel series, is to conclude with a feature film directed by Wash Westmoreland, whose previous credits include Still Alice and Colette.

Following three series of the adventures of Nick (Kit Connor) and Charlie (Joe Locke) and their assorted schoolfriends, a film will wrap up their story, based on Oseman’s as-yet-unpublished sixth book.

Connor, who is currently starring on Broadway in Romeo and Juliet, as well as in Alex Garland’s Warfare, will executive produce, as will Locke, most recently seen in Agatha All Along.

Filming will take place this summer; a release date has yet to be confirmed, likewise the involvement of supporting actors such as Olivia Colman, who plays Nick’s mother in the series.

“I am completely overjoyed that we will get to tell the end of the Heartstopper story,” said Oseman in a statement. “I’m so grateful to everyone who has worked hard to make this possible and to the incredible fans of Heartstopper for your patience and passion. I cannot wait to bring this story to a magical conclusion.”

The most recent season broadcast in 2024 and ended with the main characters having sex for the first time. A synopsis for the film suggests that the couple are concerned about whether they can sustain a long-distance relationship once Nick goes to university.

Since its debut three years ago, Heartstopper has won considerable acclaim for its sensitive, light touch and teenage-friendly depiction of LGBTQ relationships. The first season was a runaway hit, appearing in Netflix’s Top 10 chart within two days of launch.

Although unusual, the conclusion of a long-running series as a feature film is not unprecedented. In 2017, Netflix wrapped up the Wachowskis’ sci-fi drama Sense8 with a film, after cancelling the show after its second season cliffhanger, to the annoyance of fans.

Timeless, CSI and Deadwood also finished as films, while Steven Knight’s Peaky Blinders movie is due on Netflix later this year. HBO pioneered the format with two Sex and the City movies purporting to bring the long-running series to an end after six seasons.

But after a hiatus of 11 years, the majority of original characters returned for a spin-off show, And Just Like That.



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American citizen Juan Carlos Lopez-Gomez detained under ICE hold in Florida is released

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CNN
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A US-born man charged this week with being an “unauthorized alien” in Florida has been released after spending the night in jail on a 48-hour hold requested by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement amid the Trump administration’s broad deportation crackdown.

Juan Carlos Lopez-Gomez, 20, was arrested Wednesday by Florida Highway Patrol when the car he was riding in was pulled over for speeding, according to an arrest affidavit and his attorney, Mutaqee Akbar. The American citizen – born in Grady County, Georgia, where he lives in the city of Cairo – was crossing into Florida for his work in construction in Tallahassee, about 45 minutes from home.

Uncertainty stemming from a language barrier or even customs paperwork Lopez-Gomez filled out as a teen may be factors in the Florida detention, his attorney and advocate told CNN as they try to understand what happened.

A senior Department of Homeland Security official told CNN Lopez-Gomez was detained because he said he was in the US illegally, but Lopez-Gomez’s attorney said his client never said that.

“After a stop by a Florida Highway Patrol Trooper, a dual citizen of Mexico and the U.S. was detained after he said that he was in the U.S. ILLEGALLY. Immediately after learning the individual was a United State citizen, he was released,” the official said. “When individuals admit to committing a crime, like entering the country illegally, they will of course be detained while officers investigate.”

Still, the case highlights concerns over racial profiling and immigrants’ rights as the White House aims to vastly slow arrivals at the border and eject undocumented immigrants, from children to suspected criminals, and judges weigh the legality of a mounting number of such cases.

“I think it shows the danger of the rhetoric,” Akbar said of Lopez-Gomez’s case. “We can be hard on immigration and want to protect the borders without profiling people because that is what this is: racial profiling.”

Lopez-Gomez, who speaks an indigenous language and is not fluent in English or Spanish, was arrested with two men under a Florida law that took effect in February and was temporarily blocked April 4 by a federal judge, who barred its enforcement until Friday, court records show. It was not immediately clear why the suspended law was in play.

During a hearing on Friday, the judge extended the restriction until April 29, according to Miriam Haskell, the director of litigation at the Community Justice Project, which represents the plaintiffs who are challenging the law. The judge also ordered another hearing on the matter, Haskell added.

The law touted by Florida’s Republican leaders was designed to discourage undocumented immigrants from entering the state, then blocked after plaintiffs argued it violates a constitutional provision that makes immigration enforcement a federal responsibility.

The state judge in Lopez-Gomez’s case this week verified his US birth certificate and found no probable cause for charging him with crossing into Florida illegally, court records show, but said she didn’t have jurisdiction to release him because of an ICE hold, Akbar said.

It appears the immigration detainer was applied to Lopez-Gomez as part of the traffic stop. “ICE stated they will place a detainer on both subjects,” reads a Leon County arrest affidavit Akbar gave to CNN. ICE uses the provision to ask law enforcement agencies to notify it “before releasing a removable alien” and to “hold the alien for up to 48 hours” to give its umbrella agency, the Homeland Security Department, time to take the migrant into custody.

While “no US citizen is a proper subject of a detainer, … many US citizens have been the mistaken subject of ICE detainers and even prolonged detention and removal, despite their assertion of citizenship,” according to the Immigrant Legal Resource Center, a non-profit working on such issues since 1979.

Lopez-Gomez was released Thursday evening, Florida Immigrant Coalition spokesperson Thomas Kennedy, who was at the Leon County courthouse to assist Lopez-Gomez’s family, told CNN.

“He is free!! Thank you to everyone who shared, call(ed) and did anything to help secure his release,” Kennedy posted on X with a photo of the emotional Georgia man surrounded by supporters.

“The Leon County Sheriff’s Office complies with ICE detainer requests as part of our intake procedures. This practice has been in place for several years and is consistent with standard procedures followed by many detention facilities across the country,” spokesman Javonni Hampton told CNN, noting the agency “does not determine citizenship status or initiate immigration holds.”

ICE and officials in Grady County, Georgia, did not immediately respond to CNN’s requests for comment.

Lopez-Gomez appeared virtually earlier Thursday before Leon County Judge LaShawn Riggans, who was handed a copy of his birth certificate brought by Lopez-Gomez’s mother, Sebastiana Perez.

“In looking at it, and feeling it, and holding it up to the light, the court can clearly see the watermark to show that this is indeed an authentic document,” Riggans said, according to the non-profit news outlet Florida Phoenix, whose reporter was in court for the hearing and first reported the story.

Lopez-Gomez was arrested Wednesday on a charge aligned with the blocked state law and listed in the arrest affidavit as “unauthorized alien enter Florida.”

“I … asked if the driver and passengers if they were here illegally, and they stated yes and had ever been contacted by US Border Patrol or immigration (sic) Customs Enforcement (ICE),” the arresting officer wrote.

One of the men had a Georgia ID, the affidavit states, without saying who.

“Mr. Lopez-Gomez was a passenger in a vehicle pulled over for speeding and made a statement to a Florida State Trooper that he was not legally authorized to be in the United States. There was also a federal detainer issued for him,” the Florida Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, which oversees the highway patrol, told CNN in a statement Friday.

“He was transported to the Leon County Jail. Florida Highway Patrol will continue to work willingly with our federal partners to engage in interior enforcement of immigration law.”

However, Lopez-Gomez never said he was “here illegally,” his lawyer told CNN.

“The trooper talked to the driver, who said he was not here legally and did not have a license. The report claims that both passengers said they were not here legally, but it does not quote Mr. Lopez-Gomez,” Akbar said Friday.

“The detainer sheet … claims that biometrics indicated he was not a citizen, which is also not true,” he said. “Best case scenario, this was a communication breakdown. But that is ‘best case,’ and there is profiling at play here, no doubt.”

Lopez-Gomes might appear in government records as an undocumented person because of paperwork he filled out when he was 16, said Yolanda Alonso, a community activist helping his family. At age 2, he moved to Mexico, then returned at 16, she said.

He didn’t have a passport but was allowed back into the US because he had his Social Security number and a US birth certificate, Alonso said. But he also filed a Form I-94, intended for visitors when they enter and leave the US, she said.

The law in question, Florida’s SB 4-C and 811.102– .103, penalizes illegal immigrants over the age of 18 “who knowingly enter or attempt to enter this state after entering the United States by eluding or avoiding examination or inspection by immigration officers.”

The bill was signed by Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in February and temporarily blocked this month by US Judge Kathleen Williams, the Tallahassee Democrat reported.

“It’s a series of horrors,” said attorney Alana Greer, director and co-founder of the Community Justice Project, which represents the Florida Immigrant Coalition but not Lopez-Gomez. “No one should have been arrested under this law, let alone a US citizen.”

“The judge, the prosecutor, the sheriff and the jail are basically all throwing their hands up and saying, ‘ICE told us to hold him, so we’re going to keep holding him,’ even though no one disagrees with the fact that he’s a citizen,” Greer said.

Lopez-Gomez’s case is “a prime example of why everyone should care, because if it happens to Mr. Lopez-Gomez, a US-born citizen, it can happen to anyone: Haitian Americans, Jamaican Americans, Venezuelan Americans,” Akbar said, “really any American, anyone born in America who has an accent could be at risk.”

This story has been updated with additional information.



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Trump’s ‘America First’ policies bolster China’s interests at the expense of our own

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For tariffs and undermining America’s alliances, Trump and right-wing media’s pitch to their followers is nationalistic. With promises to reverse globalization and restore a mythologized past, they sell a vision of booming domestic manufacturing and repatriated jobs prompting a reflowering of masculinity, calling it “America First.” But that’s just a marketing slogan. The impact of Trump’s hostility to the world isn’t deglobalization; it’s de-Americanization. 

The impact of Trump’s hostility to the world isn’t deglobalization; it’s de-Americanization.

International integration will continue, with or without the U.S. The primary causes of globalization are technological (transportation, information) and geopolitical (the collapse of the Soviet Union, leaving no major power opposed), not “globalist” rather than “nationalist” choices by American presidents. Even if Trump’s protectionist policies lead to more American companies’ building factories in the U.S. — already a big if, as he creates economic uncertainty and cuts them off from foreign customers — it won’t stop other countries from seeking prosperity in free trade and security in alliances. Trump might not believe in mutually beneficial cooperation, but others recognize the advantages. The world will move on without us, spurred by Trump’s hostility to deepen friendly relationships and give others a second look. Indeed, it’s already happening.

An illustrative example is Vietnam, with a developing economy that’s similar in size to Norway and Denmark but growing faster. In the 21st century, Vietnam has been one of the most pro-American countries in the world, in part because of concern about China. Nevertheless, the Trump administration slapped Vietnam with a 46% tariff, falsely calling it “reciprocal.” When Vietnam offered to take its already low tariffs with the U.S. to 0%, White House trade adviser Peter Navarro dismissed it with “that means nothing to us,” accusing Vietnam of “non-tariff cheating.” This week, Vietnam signed cooperation agreements with China, including on production and supply chains.

Trump’s tariffs won’t get Vietnam to trade less. It just won’t trade as much with the U.S. Globalization isn’t stopping — its locus is shifting, and in a way that harms U.S. interests.

The president and his defenders claim that a main goal of the trade war is to help the U.S. outcompete China, but pushing Asia-Pacific countries closer to China is a primary result of his time in office.As one of the first acts of his first term, Trump withdrew the U.S. from the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), a 12-country trade deal that took years to negotiate. It included America, Vietnam, Japan, Australia, Canada, Mexico, Chile and other Pacific Rim countries that together constitute about 40% of the global economy and notably excluded China. TPP not only facilitated trade; it functioned as a China containment strategy, tying Western Pacific countries to the big economies across the ocean, putting them in better position to resist the political demands that’d come with China’s growing economic might. 

Trump called TPP a “horrible deal” in the 2016 campaign and withdrew from it when he took office in 2017, promising better deals with each of the TPP countries via one-on-one negotiations. He got none.

Trump called TPP a “horrible deal” and withdrew from it, promising better deals with each of the TPP countries via one-on-one negotiations. He got none.

A year after the U.S. left, the 11 other countries moved forward with a trade agreement called the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP). It accepts applications, and in 2024 it welcomed its first new member, the U.K. Current applicants include Taiwan, Costa Rica, Ecuador and … China.China will likely meet the CPTPP’s economic standards; the bloc’s decision will mostly rest on politics. It could take years, and the outcome is uncertain. But even if CPTPP rejects China’s application, American trade hostility makes individual members likelier to seek the relative stability offered by China, despite the strings attached. 

Instead of containing China’s rise, Trump cleared its path. The trade war will hurt China’s economy, but as long as it doesn’t collapse, the Chinese government will start making up for the losses by getting trade deals with other countries and the global influence that comes with it. All it has to do is be calm and predictable.

In addition to Vietnam and other Southeast Asian countries, China has been reaching out to Europe. Though they have concerns about closer cooperation with China, European trade officials met with Chinese counterparts this month in response to U.S. tariffs. Touting her economic discussions with India, Indonesia, South Africa and more, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen explained: “The West as we knew it no longer exists. The world has become a globe also geopolitically, and today our networks of friendship span the globe, as you can see in the debate about tariffs.”With the Trump administration denigrating NATO, trying to help Russia in Ukraine and casting doubt on U.S. commitments to allies’ security, European countries have become wary of relying on American defense contractors and are funding their own. They’re drawing closer together, talking more about a joint-EU military force and pursuing relationships abroad. For example, Poland, one of NATO’s largest spenders on defense (as a percentage of gross domestic product), announced nearly $50 billion worth of contracts with the South Korean company Hanwha Aerospace to build missiles and other equipment in Poland, as well as a joint venture to expand business further into Europe.

Trust between countries is valuable. It takes a while to earn and little to destroy, and it is hard to win back.

In addition to Europe, China reached out to Canada, but Prime Minister Mark Carney says China doesn’t share Canada’s values on trade. Nevertheless, America’s neighbor and longtime ally has responded to U.S. tariffs and not-really-joking talk of annexation by seeking to deepen trade and security partnerships with Europe and possibly play an international leadership role. In a remarkable statement, Carney announced that Canada’s old relationship with the U.S., “based on deepening integration of our economies and tight security and military cooperation, is over.” But rather than turn inward, Carney advocated seeking cooperation elsewhere, adding: “If the United States no longer wants to lead, Canada will.” He liked that line enough to make it a campaign ad

Trust between countries is valuable. It takes a while to earn and little to destroy, and it is hard to win back. Trump has undermined trust in the U.S., not only as an ally or trading partner, but also as the world’s premier economic power.

This can be seen in the recent increases in U.S. government borrowing costs, as U.S. Treasury bond yields rose while stock markets declined in response to Trump’s tariffs. Usually, that goes the opposite way, as declining stocks and global economic turmoil prompt a “flight to safety,” with investors flooding into U.S. bonds. But they don’t think American government debt is the safest asset anymore. Based on 10-year bond yields, borrowing is currently cheaper for Canada, Germany, France, Japan, South Korea, China, Italy and Greece.Instead of a rush into dollar-denominated assets, it looks more like capital flight from the U.S.

The American century is over, and the world is heading for a period of uncertainty without a “rules-based order,” more like pre-World War I than post-World War II. But if the eventual result is China’s rising to become the world’s predominant power, historians will note that it didn’t take global leadership, America threw it away.





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Theme, History And Significance Of This Day

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World Book and Copyright Day is celebrated on April 23 every year. This day is observed globally to promote the love for reading and writing. The event transcends borders, promoting the joy of reading, the power of publishing and the importance of protecting intellectual property through copyright laws. On this day, various activities are organised all over the world to promote the passion for books and reading. Moreover, it works towards creating awareness of the importance of education and literacy. World Book and Copyright Day is also known as International Day of the Book or World Book Day.

World Book And Copyright Day 2025 Theme

This year’s theme for World Book and Copyright Day is “The role of literature in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)”, which highlights literature’s pivotal role in driving progress towards the SDGs. It emphasises how literature can inspire action and awareness across key global issues such as poverty, hunger, inequality, and more.

World Book And Copyright Day 2025 History 

World Book and Copyright Day boasts a rich history dating back to 1995. This day, designated by UNESCO (the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation), is a global celebration of literature and its creators.  The symbolic choice of April 23rd coincides with the anniversaries of several literary giants whose works continue to inspire readers and writers across generations.  These include William Shakespeare, Miguel de Cervantes, and Inca Garcilaso de la Vega – names forever etched in the annals of literary history.

World Book Day 2025 Significance 

The core objective of this day is to encourage people, especially children and young adults, to discover the magic of books. By celebrating books and authors, UNESCO underscores the power of literature to promote cultural diversity, multilingualism, and the exchange of ideas.

The Role of Copyright  World Book and Copyright Day also shines a light on copyright protection. Copyright laws are essential for safeguarding the rights of authors, publishers, and all creative minds. They ensure creators receive recognition and fair compensation for their intellectual efforts, fostering a thriving literary and artistic landscape.

World Book Day 2025 Celebration

On this day, a global outpouring of events and activities takes place. Book fairs, author readings, workshops, storytelling sessions, and discussions on copyright issues come alive worldwide. From schools and libraries to bookstores and cultural institutions, diverse entities collaborate to promote literacy and raise awareness about intellectual property rights.
 





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