• WWW.TECHSPOT.COM
    Trump's 125% tariffs hit Chinese Amazon sellers hard, forcing them to raise prices or quit the US
    Why it matters: Although President Trump has implemented a 90-day pause on his latest tariffs, China has been hit even harder, with duties on items it exports to the US reaching 125%. This is expected to have a significant impact on Chinese companies that sell products on Amazon, forcing them to either raise their prices for American consumers or exit the market entirely. After Trump raised tariffs on Chinese imports to 125% up from the current 104%, Wang Xin, the head of the Shenzhen Cross-Border E-Commerce Association, which represents more than 3,000 Amazon sellers, told Reuters that the tariffs weren't just a tax issue; they were overwhelming the entire cost structure. She warned that most sellers would find surviving the US market very difficult. The only options were to raise prices in the country or leave to find new markets. Also read: Trump's dream of a US-made iPhone clashes with Apple's manufacturing reality Five Shenzhen-based Amazon sellers who spoke to the publication agreed with Wang's assessment. Three said they would raise prices for their exports to the US, while two said they were planning to leave the market entirely. One seller said he had raised prices in the US by up to 30%. He also plans to let his inventory levels fall and lower spending on Amazon advertising fees, which once took up 40% of his US revenue. // Related Stories "We have to reduce investment, and put more resources into regions like Europe, Canada, Mexico and the rest of the world," he said. Another seller said that maintaining his margins might require prices for higher-cost items to be raised by 50%. Over half of Amazon's sellers are based in China, with more than 100,000 registered in Shenzhen, aka the Silicon Valley of China. They generate annual revenues of $35.3 billion, according to estimates. According to China's State Council, the country's imports and exports involving cross-border e-commerce were worth $358 billion last year. Wang also warned that the tariffs could lead to a rapid increase in China's unemployment rate. It's not just Amazon's Chinese sellers being affect by Trump's actions. Popular platforms Shein and Temu, known for selling virtually everything at low prices, will feel the impact of the de minimis exemption ending at midnight on May 1. The de minimis exemption allows items valued at under $800 to be imported without facing added extra duties. After it ends, these shipments sent through the international postal network will be subject to a duty rate of 90% of their value or $75 (rising to $150 after June 1) per item. Some rival American companies have welcomed the end of de minimis. Forever 21, which is winding down its US operations, attributed its decline to companies leveraging duty-free exemptions on low-cost Chinese imports to gain a pricing advantage.
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  • WWW.DIGITALTRENDS.COM
    Buy Now, Upgrade Later: Slate’s $25K Truck Flips the Script on EVs
    A new electric vehicle startup—quietly backed by Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos—is building something bold in Michigan. Not just a car, but a whole new idea of what an EV company can be. Slate Auto is a stealthy new automaker with one mission: ditch the luxury-first EV playbook and start from the affordable —which most drivers actually seek. The start-up has been operating out of public sight since 2022, until TechCrunch found out about its existence. Of course, creating a little mystery about a potentially game-changing concept is a well-tested marketing approach. Recommended Videos But Slate truly seems to approach EVs in a very different way than most: It isn’t debuting with a six-figure spaceship-on-wheels. Instead, it’s targeting the holy grail of EV dreams: a two-seat electric pickup truck for just $25,000. Yep, twenty-five grand. That’s less than a tricked-out golf cart in some neighborhoods. Slate is flipping the Tesla model on its head. Tesla, but also the likes of Lucid, BMW, and to a certain degree, Rivian, all started with high-end vehicles to build brand and bankroll future affordable car. But Slate wants to start with the people’s pickup—and letting it grow with you. This isn’t just a cheap car. It’s a modular, upgradeable EV that’s meant to be personalized over time. Buy the basic model now, then add performance, tech, or lifestyle upgrades later—kind of like building your own dream ride one paycheck at a time. It’s a DIY car for a generation raised on customization and subscriptions. The company even trademarked the phrase: “We built it. You make it.” Backing up this idea is an equally bold strategy: selling accessories, apparel, and utility add-ons à la Harley-Davidson and Jeep’s MoPar division. You’re not just buying a vehicle; you’re buying into a lifestyle. Think affordable EV meets open-source car culture. Slate’s approach isn’t just novel—it’s almost rebellious. At a time when other startups risk folding under the weight of their own lofty ambitions, Slate is keeping things lean, scalable, and customer focused. The company reportedly plans to source major components like battery packs and motors from outside suppliers, keeping manufacturing costs low while focusing energy on design, experience, and upgrade paths. Sure, it’s all been kept under wraps—until now. With plans to begin production near Indianapolis by next year, the wraps are about to come off this EV underdog. While, at least in spirit, the U.S. market has been dominated by high-end EVs, Slate’s “start small, scale with you” philosophy might be just the jolt the industry needs. Editors’ Recommendations PlugStar’s platform matches your lifestyle with EVs and buying incentives
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  • ARSTECHNICA.COM
    OpenAI helps spammers plaster 80,000 sites with messages that bypassed filters
    DELIVERING SPAM AT SCALE OpenAI helps spammers plaster 80,000 sites with messages that bypassed filters Company didn't notice its chatbot was being abused for (at least) 4 months. Dan Goodin – Apr 9, 2025 3:32 pm | 21 Credit: Getty Images | Iurii Motov Credit: Getty Images | Iurii Motov Story text Size Small Standard Large Width * Standard Wide Links Standard Orange * Subscribers only   Learn more Spammers used OpenAI to generate messages that were unique to each recipient, allowing them to bypass spam-detection filters and blast unwanted messages to more than 80,000 websites in four months, researchers said Wednesday. The finding, documented in a post published by security firm SentinelOne’s SentinelLabs, underscores the double-edged sword wielded by large language models. The same thing that makes them useful for benign tasks—the breadth of data available to them and their ability to use it to generate content at scale—can often be used in malicious activities just as easily. OpenAI revoked the spammers’ account after receiving SentinelLabs’ disclosure, but the four months the activity went unnoticed shows how enforcement is often reactive rather than proactive. “You are a helpful assistant” The spam blast is the work of AkiraBot—a framework that automates the sending of messages in large quantities to promote shady search optimization services to small- and medium-size websites. AkiraBot used python-based scripts to rotate the domain names advertised in the messages. It also used OpenAI’s chat API tied to the model gpt-4o-mini to generate unique messages customized to each site it spammed, a technique that likely helped it bypass filters that look for and block identical content sent to large numbers of sites. The messages are delivered through contact forms and live chat widgets embedded into the targeted websites. “AkiraBot’s use of LLM-generated spam message content demonstrates the emerging challenges that AI poses to defending websites against spam attacks,” SentinelLabs researchers Alex Delamotte and Jim Walter wrote. “The easiest indicators to block are the rotating set of domains used to sell the Akira and ServiceWrap SEO offerings, as there is no longer a consistent approach in the spam message contents as there were with previous campaigns selling the services of these firms.” AkiraBot worked by assigning the following role to OpenAI’s chat API using the model gpt-4o-mini: “You are a helpful assistant that generates marketing messages.” A prompt instructed the LLM to replace the variables with the site name provided at runtime. As a result, the body of each message named the recipient website by name and included a brief description of the service provided by it. An AI Chat prompt used by AkiraBot Credit: SentinelLabs “The resulting message includes a brief description of the targeted website, making the message seem curated,” the researchers wrote. “The benefit of generating each message using an LLM is that the message content is unique and filtering against spam becomes more difficult compared to using a consistent message template which can trivially be filtered.” SentinelLabs obtained log files AkiraBot left on a server to measure success and failure rates. One file showed that unique messages had been successfully delivered to more than 80,000 websites from September 2024 to January of this year. By comparison, messages targeting roughly 11,000 domains failed. OpenAI thanked the researchers and reiterated that such use of its chatbots runs afoul of its terms of service. Story updated to modify headline. Dan Goodin Senior Security Editor Dan Goodin Senior Security Editor Dan Goodin is Senior Security Editor at Ars Technica, where he oversees coverage of malware, computer espionage, botnets, hardware hacking, encryption, and passwords. In his spare time, he enjoys gardening, cooking, and following the independent music scene. Dan is based in San Francisco. Follow him at here on Mastodon and here on Bluesky. Contact him on Signal at DanArs.82. 21 Comments
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  • WWW.NEWSCIENTIST.COM
    Gripping story reveals race to crack world's oldest script, cuneiform
    A close-up shot of the cuneiform script on an ancient column (below)The Trustees of the British Museum The Mesopotamian Riddle Joshua Hammer (Simon & Schuster) What does it take to decipher an extinct writing system? If Joshua Hammer’s new book The Mesopotamian Riddle: An archaeologist, a soldier, a clergyman, and the race to decipher the world’s oldest writing is anything to go by, the main requirements are some ethically dubious archaeological digs and a lot of rampaging testosterone. The book is Hammer’s account of the deciphering of cuneiform, the oldest known writing system. Cuneiform was invented in around 3400 BC in Mesopotamia. It was used for…
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  • WWW.TECHNOLOGYREVIEW.COM
    How AI can help supercharge creativity
    Sometimes Lizzie Wilson shows up to a rave with her AI sidekick.  One weeknight this past February, Wilson plugged her laptop into a projector that threw her screen onto the wall of a low-ceilinged loft space in East London. A small crowd shuffled in the glow of dim pink lights. Wilson sat down and started programming. Techno clicks and whirs thumped from the venue’s speakers. The audience watched, heads nodding, as Wilson tapped out code line by line on the projected screen—tweaking sounds, looping beats, pulling a face when she messed up.   Wilson is a live coder. Instead of using purpose-built software like most electronic music producers, live coders create music by writing the code to generate it on the fly. It’s an improvised performance art known as algorave. “It’s kind of boring when you go to watch a show and someone’s just sitting there on their laptop,” she says. “You can enjoy the music, but there’s a performative aspect that’s missing. With live coding, everyone can see what it is that I’m typing. And when I’ve had my laptop crash, people really like that. They start cheering.” Taking risks is part of the vibe. And so Wilson likes to dial up her performances one more notch by riffing off what she calls a live-coding agent, a generative AI model that comes up with its own beats and loops to add to the mix. Often the model suggests sound combinations that Wilson hadn’t thought of. “You get these elements of surprise,” she says. “You just have to go for it.” ADELA FESTIVAL Wilson, a researcher at the Creative Computing Institute at the University of the Arts London, is just one of many working on what’s known as co-­creativity or more-than-human creativity. The idea is that AI can be used to inspire or critique creative projects, helping people make things that they would not have made by themselves. She and her colleagues built the live-­coding agent to explore how artificial intelligence can be used to support human artistic endeavors—in Wilson’s case, musical improvisation. It’s a vision that goes beyond the promise of existing generative tools put out by companies like OpenAI and Google DeepMind. Those can automate a striking range of creative tasks and offer near-instant gratification—but at what cost? Some artists and researchers fear that such technology could turn us into passive consumers of yet more AI slop. And so they are looking for ways to inject human creativity back into the process. The aim is to develop AI tools that augment our creativity rather than strip it from us—pushing us to be better at composing music, developing games, designing toys, and much more—and lay the groundwork for a future in which humans and machines create things together. Ultimately, generative models could offer artists and designers a whole new medium, pushing them to make things that couldn’t have been made before, and give everyone creative superpowers.  Explosion of creativity There’s no one way to be creative, but we all do it. We make everything from memes to masterpieces, infant doodles to industrial designs. There’s a mistaken belief, typically among adults, that creativity is something you grow out of. But being creative—whether cooking, singing in the shower, or putting together super-weird TikToks—is still something that most of us do just for the fun of it. It doesn’t have to be high art or a world-changing idea (and yet it can be). Creativity is basic human behavior; it should be celebrated and encouraged.  When generative text-to-image models like Midjourney, OpenAI’s DALL-E, and the popular open-source Stable Diffusion arrived, they sparked an explosion of what looked a lot like creativity. Millions of people were now able to create remarkable images of pretty much anything, in any style, with the click of a button. Text-to-video models came next. Now startups like Udio are developing similar tools for music. Never before have the fruits of creation been within reach of so many. But for a number of researchers and artists, the hype around these tools has warped the idea of what creativity really is. “If I ask the AI to create something for me, that’s not me being creative,” says Jeba Rezwana, who works on co-creativity at Towson University in Maryland. “It’s a one-shot interaction: You click on it and it generates something and that’s it. You cannot say ‘I like this part, but maybe change something here.’ You cannot have a back-and-forth dialogue.” Rezwana is referring to the way most generative models are set up. You can give the tools feedback and ask them to have another go. But each new result is generated from scratch, which can make it hard to nail exactly what you want. As the filmmaker Walter Woodman put it last year after his art collective Shy Kids made a short film with OpenAI’s text-to-video model for the first time: “Sora is a slot machine as to what you get back.” What’s more, the latest versions of some of these generative tools do not even use your submitted prompt as is to produce an image or video (at least not on their default settings). Before a prompt is sent to the model, the software edits it—often by adding dozens of hidden words—to make it more likely that the generated image will appear polished. “Extra things get added to juice the output,” says Mike Cook, a computational creativity researcher at King’s College London. “Try asking Midjourney to give you a bad drawing of something—it can’t do it.” These tools do not give you what you want; they give you what their designers think you want. COURTESY OF MIKE COOK All of which is fine if you just need a quick image and don’t care too much about the details, says Nick Bryan-Kinns, also at the Creative Computing Institute: “Maybe you want to make a Christmas card for your family or a flyer for your community cake sale. These tools are great for that.” In short, existing generative models have made it easy to create, but they have not made it easy to be creative. And there’s a big difference between the two. For Cook, relying on such tools could in fact harm people’s creative development in the long run. “Although many of these creative AI systems are promoted as making creativity more accessible,” he wrote in a paper published last year, they might instead have “adverse effects on their users in terms of restricting their ability to innovate, ideate, and create.” Given how much generative models have been championed for putting creative abilities at everyone’s fingertips, the suggestion that they might in fact do the opposite is damning.   In the game Disc Room, players navigate a room of moving buzz saws.DEVOLVER DIGITAL Cook used AI to design a new level for the game. The result was a room where none of the discs actually moved.COURTESY OF MIKE COOK He’s far from the only researcher worrying about the cognitive impact of these technologies. In February a team at Microsoft Research Cambridge published a report concluding that generative AI tools “can inhibit critical engagement with work and can potentially lead to long-term overreliance on the tool and diminished skill for independent problem-solving.” The researchers found that with the use of generative tools, people’s effort “shifts from task execution to task stewardship.” Cook is concerned that generative tools don’t let you fail—a crucial part of learning new skills. We have a habit of saying that artists are gifted, says Cook. But the truth is that artists work at their art, developing skills over months and years. “If you actually talk to artists, they say, ‘Well, I got good by doing it over and over and over,’” he says. “But failure sucks. And we’re always looking at ways to get around that.” Generative models let us skip the frustration of doing a bad job.  “Unfortunately, we’re removing the one thing that you have to do to develop creative skills for yourself, which is fail,” says Cook. “But absolutely nobody wants to hear that.” Surprise me And yet it’s not all bad news. Artists and researchers are buzzing at the ways generative tools could empower creators, pointing them in surprising new directions and steering them away from dead ends. Cook thinks the real promise of AI will be to help us get better at what we want to do rather than doing it for us. For that, he says, we’ll need to create new tools, different from the ones we have now. “Using Midjourney does not do anything for me—it doesn’t change anything about me,” he says. “And I think that’s a wasted opportunity.” Ask a range of researchers studying creativity to name a key part of the creative process and many will say: reflection. It’s hard to define exactly, but reflection is a particular type of focused, deliberate thinking. It’s what happens when a new idea hits you. Or when an assumption you had turns out to be wrong and you need to rethink your approach. It’s the opposite of a one-shot interaction. Looking for ways that AI might support or encourage reflection—asking it to throw new ideas into the mix or challenge ideas you already hold—is a common thread across co-creativity research. If generative tools like DALL-E make creation frictionless, the aim here is to add friction back in. “How can we make art without friction?” asks Elisa Giaccardi, who studies design at the Polytechnic University of Milan in Italy. “How can we engage in a truly creative process without material that pushes back?” Take Wilson’s live-coding agent. She claims that it pushes her musical improvisation in directions she might not have taken by herself. Trained on public code shared by the wider live-coding community, the model suggests snippets of code that are closer to other people’s styles than her own. This makes it more likely to produce something unexpected. “Not because you couldn’t produce it yourself,” she says. “But the way the human brain works, you tend to fall back on repeated ideas.” Last year, Wilson took part in a study run by Bryan-Kinns and his colleagues in which they surveyed six experienced musicians as they used a variety of generative models to help them compose a piece of music. The researchers wanted to get a sense of what kinds of interactions with the technology were useful and which were not. The participants all said they liked it when the models made surprising suggestions, even when those were the result of glitches or mistakes. Sometimes the results were simply better. Sometimes the process felt fresh and exciting. But a few people struggled with giving up control. It was hard to direct the models to produce specific results or to repeat results that the musicians had liked. “In some ways it’s the same as being in a band,” says Bryan-Kinns. “You need to have that sense of risk and a sense of surprise, but you don’t want it totally random.” Alternative designs Cook comes at surprise from a different angle: He coaxes unexpected insights out of AI tools that he has developed to co-create video games. One of his tools, Puck, which was first released in 2022, generates designs for simple shape-matching puzzle games like Candy Crush or Bejeweled. A lot of Puck’s designs are experimental and clunky—don’t expect it to come up with anything you are ever likely to play. But that’s not the point: Cook uses Puck—and a newer tool called Pixie—to explore what kinds of interactions people might want to have with a co-creative tool. Pixie can read computer code for a game and tweak certain lines to come up with alternative designs. Not long ago, Cook was working on a copy of a popular game called Disc Room, in which players have to cross a room full of moving buzz saws. He asked Pixie to help him come up with a design for a level that skilled and unskilled players would find equally hard. Pixie designed a room where none of the discs actually moved. Cook laughs: It’s not what he expected. “It basically turned the room into a minefield,” he says. “But I thought it was really interesting. I hadn’t thought of that before.” COURTESY OF ANNE ARZBERGER COURTESY OF ANNE ARZBERGER Researcher Anne Arzberger developed experimental AI tools to come up with gender-neutral toy designs. Pushing back on assumptions, or being challenged, is part of the creative process, says Anne Arzberger, a researcher at the Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands. “If I think of the people I’ve collaborated with best, they’re not the ones who just said ‘Yes, great’ to every idea I brought forth,” she says. “They were really critical and had opposing ideas.” She wants to build tech that provides a similar sounding board. As part of a project called Creating Monsters, Arzberger developed two experimental AI tools that help designers find hidden biases in their designs. “I was interested in ways in which I could use this technology to access information that would otherwise be difficult to access,” she says. For the project, she and her colleagues looked at the problem of designing toy figures that would be gender neutral. She and her colleagues (including Giaccardi) used Teachable Machine, a web app built by Google researchers in 2017 that makes it easy to train your own machine-learning model to classify different inputs, such as images. They trained this model with a few dozen images that Arzberger had labeled as being masculine, feminine, or gender neutral. Arzberger then asked the model to identify the genders of new candidate toy designs. She found that quite a few designs were judged to be feminine even when she had tried to make them gender neutral. She felt that her views of the world—her own hidden biases—were being exposed. But the tool was often right: It challenged her assumptions and helped the team improve the designs. The same approach could be used to assess all sorts of design characteristics, she says. Arzberger then used a second model, a version of a tool made by the generative image and video startup Runway, to come up with gender-neutral toy designs of its own. First the researchers trained the model to generate and classify designs for male- and female-looking toys. They could then ask the tool to find a design that was exactly midway between the male and female designs it had learned. Generative models can give feedback on designs that human designers might miss by themselves, she says: “We can really learn something.”  Taking control The history of technology is full of breakthroughs that changed the way art gets made, from recipes for vibrant new paint colors to photography to synthesizers. In the 1960s, the Stanford researcher John Chowning spent years working on an esoteric algorithm that could manipulate the frequencies of computer-generated sounds. Stanford licensed the tech to Yamaha, which built it into its synthesizers—including the DX7, the cool new sound behind 1980s hits such as Tina Turner’s “The Best,” A-ha’s “Take On Me,” and Prince’s “When Doves Cry.” Bryan-Kinns is fascinated by how artists and designers find ways to use new technologies. “If you talk to artists, most of them don’t actually talk about these AI generative models as a tool—they talk about them as a material, like an artistic material, like a paint or something,” he says. “It’s a different way of thinking about what the AI is doing.” He highlights the way some people are pushing the technology to do weird things it wasn’t designed to do. Artists often appropriate or misuse these kinds of tools, he says. Bryan-Kinns points to the work of Terence Broad, another colleague of his at the Creative Computing Institute, as a favorite example. Broad employs techniques like network bending, which involves inserting new layers into a neural network to produce glitchy visual effects in generated images, and generating images with a model trained on no data, which produces almost Rothko-like abstract swabs of color. But Broad is an extreme case. Bryan-Kinns sums it up like this: “The problem is that you’ve got this gulf between the very commercial generative tools that produce super-high-quality outputs but you’ve got very little control over what they do—and then you’ve got this other end where you’ve got total control over what they’re doing but the barriers to use are high because you need to be somebody who’s comfortable getting under the hood of your computer.” “That’s a small number of people,” he says. “It’s a very small number of artists.” Arzberger admits that working with her models was not straightforward. Running them took several hours, and she’s not sure the Runway tool she used is even available anymore. Bryan-Kinns, Arzberger, Cook, and others want to take the kinds of creative interactions they are discovering and build them into tools that can be used by people who aren’t hardcore coders.  COURTESY OF TERENCE BROAD COURTESY OF TERENCE BROAD Researcher Terence Broad creates dynamic images using a model trained on no data, which produces almost Rothko-like abstract color fields. Finding the right balance between surprise and control will be hard, though. Midjourney can surprise, but it gives few levers for controlling what it produces beyond your prompt. Some have claimed that writing prompts is itself a creative act. “But no one struggles with a paintbrush the way they struggle with a prompt,” says Cook. Faced with that struggle, Cook sometimes watches his students just go with the first results a generative tool gives them. “I’m really interested in this idea that we are priming ourselves to accept that whatever comes out of a model is what you asked for,” he says. He is designing an experiment that will vary single words and phrases in similar prompts to test how much of a mismatch people see between what they expect and what they get.  But it’s early days yet. In the meantime, companies developing generative models typically emphasize results over process. “There’s this impressive algorithmic progress, but a lot of the time interaction design is overlooked,” says Rezwana.   For Wilson, the crucial choice in any co-creative relationship is what you do with what you’re given. “You’re having this relationship with the computer that you’re trying to mediate,” she says. “Sometimes it goes wrong, and that’s just part of the creative process.”  When AI gives you lemons—make art. “Wouldn’t it be fun to have something that was completely antagonistic in a performance—like, something that is actively going against you—and you kind of have an argument?” she says. “That would be interesting to watch, at least.” 
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  • WWW.BUSINESSINSIDER.COM
    I'm a mom of 4 who relies on Aldi for affordable groceries. I buy these 14 staples every week.
    I'm a busy mom, and I love finding great deals on groceries so I can affordably make healthy meals to fuel my family. One of my favorite ways to do so is by shopping at Aldi, which I've done ever since my first son was born. Now, I buy groceries there for myself, my husband, and our four kids ranging in age from 9 months to 6 years.The budget grocer has some great prices (especially on dairy products), and its small, organized layout allows me to shop efficiently. Here's what I buy my family on weekly Aldi shopping trips. Fremont Fish Market fish sticks are my kids' all-time favorite dinner. We stock up on Fremont Fish Market wild-caught breaded fish sticks every time. Jenna Jonaitis Of all the fish sticks we've tried across many grocery stores, Aldi's Fremont Fish Market wild-caught breaded ones are the winner in our house.They make a tasty, easy dinner for kids, and with 10 grams of protein per serving, we know they're getting a hearty main dish. I plate these with fruit or veggies for a more complete meal. And at just $5.25 for about 41 sticks, we usually keep a few boxes of these in the freezer. I buy at least 12 containers of Friendly Farms Greek yogurt on every trip We love Aldi's Greek yogurt. Jenna Jonaitis The Friendly Farms nonfat plain Greek yogurt is an absolute staple in our home. We usually pay $3.35 per 32-ounce container.Every morning, I have a huge bowl of yogurt topped with granola or fresh berries. I like to mix nonfat and whole-milk plain varieties, and my kids enjoy the vanilla and strawberry flavors. We also add this yogurt to smoothies and homemade popsicles so they have more protein. My oldest has loved Emporium Selection Parmesan cheese since he was 2 years old. Emporium Selection Parmesan is great for pasta. Jenna Jonaitis When my oldest was only a toddler, he became obsessed with the Emporium Selection Parmesan. He'd have 10 slices in one sitting, and he still loves it now. We also grate the cheese over pasta dishes and roasted broccoli, which adds great flavor and a fancy touch.A wedge of this Parmesan usually costs us under $5, which is cheaper than what we've seen at other grocery stores. The kids are obsessed with Friendly Farms Moo Tubes. Moo Tubes make great snacks on the go. Jenna Jonaitis Moo Tubes are squeezable packets of yogurt that are great to take on the road. We love packing these when we head to the beach or go on a neighborhood walk.The cotton-candy flavor is a favorite in our house, but the kids also love blueberry and strawberry. Plus, Moo Tubes are tasty when frozen.A box of eight tubes is usually only $2. We always have Happy Farms string cheese in the fridge. Happy Farms string cheese is an affordable snack for our household. Jenna Jonaitis I keep Friendly Farms string cheese in the bottom drawer of our fridge so even little ones can grab a quick snack.These are great to take on park outings or to add to kids' lunches. We go through at least a pack or two each week. Fortunately, a bag of 12 string cheeses only costs us $3. When we cook this salmon, everyone in the house is happy. My whole family enjoys the salmon from Aldi. Jenna Jonaitis One night each week, we pan-cook Fremont Fish Market wild-caught pink salmon and top it with garlic salt and seasoned pepper. All four of my kids gobble it up, and my husband and I love it, too. It's nice to have one meal that is a surefire hit with everyone — I know we won't need to make separate meals for adults and kids.A 2-pound bag of this salmon only costs $10, making this a literal steal for our family. Southern Grove pistachios make the best appetizer. Pistachios are easy to take on the go. Jenna Jonaitis Pistachios provide protein and healthy fats, and the whole family loves the Southern Grove pistachios roasted with sea salt.I often put these out before dinner as appetizers or use them to fill a charcuterie board when my husband and I host game nights. They're also easy to take on the go.A 16-ounce bag is usually about $6 at Aldi. We use Friendly Farms whole milk for everything. We are usually happy with Aldi's prices for milk. Jenna Jonaitis We get a lot of use out of one gallon of Friendly Farms whole milk. I make hot cocoa with it, add it to my morning coffee, and sometimes just serve up cups of it to my kids before bed.Aldi tends to have the lowest prices for dairy, so we make sure to grab milk here every time. On this trip, a gallon only cost $2.57. Savoritz cheddar turtles are my daughter's favorite snack. Savoritz cheddar turtles are a popular snack in our house. Jenna Jonaitis Our kids like the Savoritz cheddar turtles better than Goldfish and just about any other cheese cracker. At snack time, my daughter always asks for her "turtles." I can't blame her — they're cute and delicious.A huge box of these crackers that's just over a pound usually costs us only $4. This multigrain cereal goes quickly in our house. My kids start some mornings with Millville Balance multigrain cereal. Jenna Jonaitis My kids' favorite cereal is the Millville Balance multigrain cereal in the cinnamon flavor. They eat this alongside a smoothie in the morning or as an afternoon snack. We buy other cereals, but my kids like this variety better than the rest. I usually pop at least four boxes of it into my cart when I shop at Aldi. On my most recent trip, each 13-ounce box was only $2.15. My husband and I love snacking on Southern Grove almonds. Southern Grove almonds come in flavors like honey roasted and wasabi soy. Jenna Jonaitis The kids don't care for almonds much, but my husband and I munch on these while we work. I love the honey ones, and he likes the wasabi-soy flavor. We'll snag a couple of 14-ounce bags (typically under $7 a pop) on each grocery trip to keep the pantry stocked. Sweet potatoes are usually a great deal at Aldi. We bake sweet potatoes once a week or so. Jenna Jonaitis A 3-pound bag of sweet potatoes is usually only $2.59 at Aldi. Since they're so cheap, I grab a bag on every shopping trip.We bake sweet potatoes once a week and serve them with black beans. Sometimes, I slice them up for salads or sweet-potato fries. We add Simply Nature chia seeds and milled flax seeds to homemade granola bars and smoothies. We use chia seeds and flax seeds in our homemade energy balls. Jenna Jonaitis I love to make homemade granola bars to save on grocery costs. Flax and chia seeds are also key ingredients in my favorite energy ball recipe. I make a double batch at least once a week. We also add chia and flax to our smoothies and baked oatmeal. At Aldi, bags of either seed are usually under $5. My 4-year-old usually picks a French baguette as his treat for grocery shopping with me. The bread heats up nicely. Meredith Ochs I usually tell the kids they can pick out one item as a treat when we shop at Aldi. My son always picks the $1.69 Specialty Selected French baguette. I just pop it in the oven for a few minutes and then it's ready for slicing and slathering with butter. It's an easy side for dinners that feels a bit elegant.
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  • WWW.VOX.COM
    Trump’s tariffs are Democrats’ golden opportunity. Are they botching it?
    President Donald Trump has launched a global trade war, raising prices and tanking stocks in the process. His approval rating is in free fall. And yet, somehow, the Democrats are in disarray. Or at least, they are bitterly bickering over what their party’s stance on trade should be.Last week, as “Liberation Day” unraveled global markets, House Democrats defended several aspects of Trump’s trade ideology on social media. In a video posted by the caucus’s X account, Rep. Chris Deluzio of Pennsylvania explained that Washington’s failed “free trade” consensus — the steady lowering of tariff barriers over the past 80 years — had constituted a “race to the bottom” that “hollowed out our industrial power” and “cost us good jobs.” Nevertheless, Deluzio argued that Trump’s “trade strategy has been chaotic” and “inconsistent.” America did need tariffs — but ones that were carefully targeted and paired with pro-union policies and government subsidies. This was not what many liberals wished to hear from the Democratic leadership. In their view, the party’s condemnation of Trump’s tariffs should have been unequivocal: The president had just executed the largest middle-class tax hike in modern memory, pushed up consumer prices, lowered Americans’ retirement savings, and increased the risk of recession. There was no reason to say he had a point about free trade — especially since he didn’t. This story was first featured in The Rebuild.Sign up here for more stories on the lessons liberals should take away from their election defeat — and a closer look at where they should go next. From senior correspondent Eric Levitz. Some progressives, on the other hand, appreciated Deluzio’s nuance. In their account, acknowledging the failings of free trade — and the necessity of supporting domestic manufacturing — was a precondition for persuading working-class voters to trust Democrats on the issue. This debate collapses together two distinct questions: 1) Is Deluzio’s analysis right on the merits?2) Is his message a politically optimal one for Democrats at the national level?I think the answer to both of these is “mostly, no.” Free trade did not hollow out American industryDeluzio’s case for moderate protectionism can be broken down into (at least) three different claims:Free trade agreements hollowed out America’s industrial capacity.Free trade has been bad for American workers.Tariffs are a useful tool for advancing economic justice, since they help prevent a global “race to the bottom,” in which corporations search for the world’s cheapest and most exploitable labor.I think these claims are all largely — though not entirely — wrong. Let’s examine each in turn. It’s not clear precisely what it means for a nation’s “industrial power” to be “hollowed out.” But presumably, Deluzio means that trade has sapped America’s power to produce industrial goods. And it’s certainly true that foreign competition and offshoring have shuttered many US factories, depressed manufacturing employment, and reduced domestic production of some goods. Still, Deluzio’s rhetoric is misleading on two levels. First, trade has not been the primary cause of falling manufacturing employment. Rather, this is mostly attributable to economic development: When countries get richer, consumers spend a smaller share of their incomes on goods, and a higher share on services (people only need so many dishwashers, while their appetite for better health or longer lives is nearly inexhaustible). Which means that, over time, the economy needs fewer people to work in factories, and more to work in hospitals, nursing homes, child care centers, and other service-sector industries. Meanwhile, automation has progressed more rapidly in goods production than in services. Together, these two forces have dramatically reduced manufacturing’s share of employment in all wealthy countries, including those with the most protectionist trade policies.Second, although US manufacturing employment has fallen precipitously, US manufacturing output has not. In fact, such output is much higher today than it was in the 1980s, according to Federal Reserve Economic Data.Courtesy of Federal Reserve Economic ResearchAnd America remains the No. 2 manufacturing power in the world: Despite being home to only 4.2 percent of the global population, the United States is responsible for roughly 16 percent of global manufacturing output.One can quibble with these figures, which conceal major shifts in the types of goods that America produces. But I don’t think most people would look at this data and conclude that America’s industrial power had been “hollowed out.”Free trade has benefited US workers as a wholeDeluzio also implies that free trade has been bad for American workers. And there is little doubt that some US communities have been devastated by trade-induced factory closures. But evidence suggests that globalization has been beneficial for American workers as a whole. Even the famous “China shock” paper — which alerted economists to the concentrated harms of trade liberalization with China — found that most Americans benefited from such liberalization, as access to cheaper goods increased their real wages.In fact, the median US worker’s real personal income — in other words, their annual income adjusted for inflation — was about 18 percent higher in 2023 than it had been when America normalized trade relations with China in 2000, and 38 percent higher than when NAFTA took effect in 1994.This reality cuts against many popular narratives. But it is intuitive. One hundred percent of Americans consume goods, while less than 10 percent produce them. Even in the 1990s, less than 20 percent of Americans worked in manufacturing. Therefore, trade policies that reduced prices of goods were always likely to materially benefit the vast majority of US workers, even if they did take a toll on American manufacturing.Deluzio, like many progressives, suggests that tariffs can advance economic justice. After all, free trade enables corporations to “exploit their workers” abroad, while eliminating good jobs in the United States. Sen. Bernie Sanders recently put the point more explicitly, arguing that America must stop large corporations from moving jobs to “low-wage countries.”There may be some circumstances in which trade restrictions — or at least, the threat of them — can yield progressive outcomes. For example, during Trump’s first term, the US threatened to impose tariffs on Mexico if it did not agree to a new version of NAFTA, which included enhanced labor rights for Mexican workers. Mexico ultimately embraced this new trade agreement, and its workers have seemingly benefited. But as a general rule, putting tariffs on goods from “low-wage countries” does not save poor workers abroad from exploitation so much as it condemns them to more severe poverty. Wages in Vietnam and Bangladesh are extremely low by American standards. Yet they are much higher than they were before those countries became major exporters. In fact, as Vietnam and Bangladesh have become more integrated into the global economy, their poverty rates have fallen dramatically. As the progressive economist Joan Robinson once quipped, “The misery of being exploited by capitalists is nothing compared to the misery of not being exploited at all.”We should aspire to a world with higher baseline labor standards. Workers in poor nations should not have to choose between hyper-exploitation and impoverishment. But slapping high tariffs on goods from low-wage countries will not change the fundamental dynamics of global capitalism. Rather, such a policy would simply increase global poverty, while raising consumer prices in the United States, thereby reducing the real wages of almost all American workers. It is hard to see a progressive case for prioritizing the interests of some small subset of US workers (such as those facing low-wage, foreign competition in manufacturing) over the interests of both the global poor and the American working class, especially since there are other ways of improving blue-collar Americans’ economic fortunes, such as expanding collective bargaining rights and social welfare benefits. There is no reason in principle why working-class Americans can’t earn good salaries in service-sector jobs. As policy analyst Matt Bruenig notes, McDonald’s workers in Denmark earn higher wages than autoworkers in Alabama.Tariffs are increasingly unpopularEven if Deluzio’s argument is substantively misguided, it could still be politically wise. And there is a case for Democrats to signal skepticism of free trade, even as they oppose Trump’s approach to curtailing it. Voters have often expressed sympathy for protecting US industry and skepticism of trade’s benefits. In a 2024 Pew Research survey, 59 percent of Americans said the United States has “lost more than it has gained from increased trade with foreign nations.” And yet, around the same time, a Gallup poll showed 61 percent of American adults saw “foreign trade” as more of “an opportunity for economic growth through increased U.S. exports” than as “a threat to the economy from foreign imports.”The public’s apparently contradictory sentiments about trade had a simple explanation: Most people simply did not have strong opinions about trade policy. In Pew’s polling, trade ranked near the bottom of Americans’ 2024 priorities.But Trump’s tariffs have changed this. In the last few weeks, America’s average tariff rate has jumped from historically low levels to the highest mark since 1909. It would not be remotely surprising if a policy change this gigantic rapidly shifted public opinion on trade. And the available survey data suggests that it has.In Gallup’s current polling, the percentage of Americans who see trade primarily as “an opportunity” has jumped to 81 percent. Meanwhile, a new survey from Navigator Research shows that Americans disapprove of tariffs by a 28-point margin; last August, they had disapproved by only 11 points. And even before Trump’s “Liberation Day” announcements, the Wall Street Journal’s polling showed support for his tariffs falling sharply.If Trump persists with his current policies, America will likely see both a recession and surge of inflation. And this economic pain will be directly attributable to tariffs. In that scenario, we should expect Americans’ weakly held ideological sympathy for protectionism to erode even further.For these reasons, Democrats likely don’t need to caveat their criticisms of Trump’s tariffs, at least at the national level. The party would probably be better off with a more focused message. This doesn’t mean defending the ideological abstraction of “free trade,” but rather, emphasizing that a Republican president has just enacted a historically large middle-class tax hike, which is increasing prices and risking recession.Ultimately though, I’m not sure that Democrats need to sweat the details here. Swing voters tend to be more politically disengaged than partisans, and are not hanging on every word posted from the House Democrats’ X account. For them, rising prices and falling 401(k) values are likely to make the case against Trump’s trade policies more eloquently than any Democrat ever could.Deluzio’s argument might still be the right one for his district. But at the national level, his hyperbolic claims about free trade’s costs do not look politically necessary. And since such hyperbole arguably helped bring about today’s economic woes, Democrats shouldn’t needlessly engage in it. See More:
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  • METRO.CO.UK
    Pokémon cards saved this fan’s life by blocking a gunshot
    That is not their intended use (The Pokémon Company) It turns out Pokémon trading card decks are sturdy enough to block a bullet, as one lucky fan found out to his surprise. There are many reasons to buy Pokémon trading cards, be it the game itself, the pleasure of collecting, or to hoard the rarest ones and sell them for exorbitant prices on eBay. Now, we can add one more reason to the list: because they act as an impromptu bulletproof shield, if someone tries to shoot you. This week, one fan shared a story online about how their own collection of Pokémon cards miraculously blocked a bullet aimed at their chest. The fan, known as LolaInSlacks88 on Reddit, didn’t have the cards in their breast pocket, like you see all the time in movies and TV shows, but nevertheless they did act as a shield to protect him from incoming fire. As they explained on the Pokémon Trading Card Game subreddit, they were asleep at home when they were awoken by loud explosions. Apparently, this was a common enough occurrence for LolaInSlacks88 to assume these were gunshots being fired by their neighbour. They believe the neighbour had accidentally fired their gun towards LolaInSlacks88’s house, as they found a hole in their wall next to a Tupperware bin containing their Pokémon card collection. Upon inspecting the bin, they found the bullet had been stopped by one of their card decks. Perhaps fittingly, it was a deck themed around the pokémon Incineroar, who is famously overpowered in the competitive circuit – at least for the video games. ‘The actual 9mm bullet was still inside the box. If it hadn’t been there, it would have likely struck me while I was asleep as it was level with my bed,’ wrote LolaInSlacks88, following up with an image of a police report (with personal info obviously blacked out) to prove they weren’t fibbing. More Trending ‘I’m okay, but I now count Incineroar as my guardian angel pokémon and have never been happier to have piles of cardboard in my box. You never know–they might stop a bullet!’ It doesn’t sound like their neighbour faced any consequences (the report says the police couldn’t find enough evidence to identify who was responsible), so LolaInSlacks88 can only hope it doesn’t happen again. In a reply to another Redditor, they said, ‘Of course no one admitted to doing it. But they stopped using their property like a shooting range, so hopefully they learned their lesson.’ Incinceroar’s already a fan favourite… or the most hated depending on who you ask (The Pokémon Company) Email gamecentral@metro.co.uk, leave a comment below, follow us on Twitter, and sign-up to our newsletter. To submit Inbox letters and Reader’s Features more easily, without the need to send an email, just use our Submit Stuff page here. For more stories like this, check our Gaming page. GameCentral Sign up for exclusive analysis, latest releases, and bonus community content. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Your information will be used in line with our Privacy Policy
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  • GIZMODO.COM
    Russell T Davies Wants Doctor Who to Keep Swinging for the Fences
    Doctor Who finds itself in a very interesting place ahead of its return this weekend. The revival era of the show just marked its 20th anniversary a few weeks ago, and now, a brand new season is bringing the series a fresh energy via Varada Sethu’s new companion, Belinda. But it also comes after months of anxiety (more so than usual for Doctor Who fans, a fandom that is often paradoxically anxious about change) about the show’s future. After the 2024 season’s ratings came under scrutiny, and rumors of cancellation started swirling, audiences were told now more than ever, this year’s season will help secure whatever comes after. So what does returned showrunner Russell T Davies want audiences to take from the show coming into these new adventures? That whatever happens, Doctor Who isn’t changing its disposition in the face of danger. “I think joy, as ever. Whether it’s scary, or whether it’s set on a far distant planet, or whether it’s set in Miami in 1952. There’s a real joy in Doctor Who,” Davies recently reflected to io9 over Zoom. “It’s a big, broad program. The jokes are big, the scares are big, the monsters are freaky, there’s a real sense of fun to it—and my god, the Earth is in danger every single week! I think it’s a great big swinging for the fences show, and when it swings for the fences, it knocks it out of the park, just to complete the baseball analogy. And I love that.” One of the biggest ways Who is swinging for the fences this season is with its new companion. Andor star Varada Sethu’s Belinda Chandra. A nurse who’s less interested in the razzle-dazzle of the Doctor’s charms and more with getting back to Earth in time for her next shift, she marks a distinct break from the immediate-besties energy of the 15th Doctor and Ruby Sunday last year (although we’ll still get that, with Millie Gibson set to guest across the season). A hesitant friendship is not particularly common for the Doctor or Doctor Who‘s audience in the modern era, but for Davies, it what made Belinda appeal conceptually. “It’s partly spinning the plates and ringing the changes after Ruby, because we’re always very much aware of a new audience coming to watch—and a new audience coming to watch Doctor Who might think every companion is like Ruby Sunday, who’s a perfect companion,” Davies said of the decision to change tacks with Belinda. “Ruby’s young, and overwhelmed, and wide-eyed and joyous and positive, and that’s a glorious companion… but for that for that new audience, and the audience who’s also familiar with the Doctor Who of old, there’s a different way of playing things. That actually, you can open that TARDIS door and you’re in danger of being thrown off a cliff, or having your head sawed off by a robot, or having an electronic vulture put you in its nest for food. You’re very quickly going to say ‘I don’t like this, get me home!’ I come out of [the season] thinking I’d be Belinda. We all want to imagine we’d be Ruby, or Rose Tyler. Belinda is the one saying ‘He’s a madman, get me out of here, take me home.'” © BBC It’s not that Doctor Who will suddenly start presenting its sense of wanderlust in a negative way, but it allows the series to play with its view of itself with someone like Belinda at the Doctor’s side—and gives the Doctor himself a new foil to reflect on. “It just shows the program in a different light,” Davies continued. “It shows the format in a different light, it shows the Doctor in a different light—it gives Ncuti brand new material to play on. I always think the key to long-running programs is always to work hard for your lead, and make sure they get that new material, material that pushes them, tests them, material that makes them think ‘I don’t think I’ve done this before.’ I think that’s a helpful show [for Gatwa] to be in… he’s a limitless actor, who can handle absolutely everything you throw at him, and welcomes all those changes.” Those changes aren’t just taking place in front of the camera this season, but behind the camera too. Davies wrote the bulk of the 2024 season himself, with just two episodes of the eight penned by other writers. This season, half of the season is penned by other writers (Davies co-wrote episode three, “The Well,” with Sharma Angel Walfall). “Every writer brings in a breath of fresh air, a different side of the Doctor, a different slant on the proceedings,” Davies said of the choice to bring in more voices again, having spent much of last year’s season taking the charge on re-setting Doctor Who in the eyes of the BBC and its partner-in-time Disney. “It’s good for me, I meet people—I get to work with people like Inua Ellams, who’s enriched my life. What a scholar, what a radical, what a charming man. Juno Dawson, who I had known for many years, but not well until getting to write on Doctor Who together—but there’s someone who’s always in the New York Times best sellers list! Brand new talent like Sharma Angel Walfall… apparently, I went to give a talk in Manchester when she was about 14 years old, and she was a little student there, but she remembers me from that. I was the Doctor Who man then! And Peter Tighe, he’s a very seasoned Doctor Who writer who knows Who every bit as well as me. He can identify a Drahvin at 50 paces.” “It just keeps the show spinning, keeps it lively. It keeps me lively,” Davies continued. “I mean, I’m a writer and there’s no one I’d rather sit and talk to than writers. Writers don’t often actually get to sit and talk with other writers often enough. We tend to live in our own circles. It’s a very healthy process, and I think it’s paid us a great range of stories.” It’s that desire to keep changing things up that has kept Doctor Who going for 20 years since Davies revitalized the show in 2005 (and that kept it going for decades before in its classic iteration). But it’s something that also reminds Davies of just how long his association with the show has been going—and how many people have been captivated by it. “I literally was just saying, actually, where I live where in Manchester is just off the road from Manchester University, so I walk up and down a street into town that takes me past the biggest student population in Europe. And so many students have watched and loved it as children,” Davies reflected on his legacy as being “the Doctor Who man” not once, but now twice. “I’m a very lucky man, I’m like the Pied Piper. They’ll stop me in the street and say how much they love it.” “I’m the luckiest man in Great Britain, I think, to have people stopping me in the street telling me how much Who meant to them when they were kids. So long may that continue! I always think there’s some brand new eight-year-old watching it for the first time, who will be just as wide-eyed and entranced.” Doctor Who returns to Disney+ worldwide, and BBC One and the BBC iPlayer this Saturday, April 12. Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.
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  • WWW.ARCHDAILY.COM
    Peter Cook Designs Play Pavilion for Serpentine in Collaboration with the LEGO Group
    Peter Cook Designs Play Pavilion for Serpentine in Collaboration with the LEGO GroupSave this picture!Exterior render of the Play Pavilion. Image © Peter Cook (Peter Cook Studio Crablab), Courtesy of SerpentineSerpentine has announced the Play Pavilion, a new structure designed by British architect Peter Cook in collaboration with the LEGO Group. Set to open on June 11 to mark World Play Day, the Pavilion will be located next to Serpentine South in Kensington Gardens, London. Developed with Pablo Wheldon and Cong Ding, the Pavilion is a collaboration between Serpentine, the LEGO Group, The Royal Parks, and CONSUL. The project builds on Serpentine's broader efforts to connect architecture, design, and public engagement through temporary installations in the park.The structure invites visitors of all ages to explore play as a spatial and creative experience. It incorporates LEGO bricks into the design and creates an immersive environment shaped by color, form, and movement. Openings in the walls, some forming slides, tunnels, or stage-like spaces, encourage physical interaction and multiple points of entry. From the outside, perforated and scooped surfaces reveal glimpses of the interior, offering a sense of openness while preserving elements of discovery. Save this picture! Play transcends survival, achievement, and common sense. It encourages, or at least permits us, to explore and idly delight in a territory between the wayward and speculative towards unashamed amusement. - Peter Cook Related Article Serpentine Announces Marina Tabassum as the Designer of the 2025 Pavilion Designed as a place for both informal activity and live programming, the Pavilion will host a series of events throughout the summer. It continues Serpentine's recent focus on engaging younger audiences and creating inclusive spaces. In 2022, the institution partnered with the London Lions Basketball Club, artist Alvaro Barrington, and local organizations to create a public basketball court in Bethnal Green, combining recreation with artistic intervention in a community setting.Save this picture!The Serpentine Gallery is also known for hosting the Serpentine Pavilion, a renowned annual commission that invites a different architect to design a temporary structure each year. Serpentine has announced the selection of Bangladeshi architect and educator Marina Tabassum and her firm, Marina Tabassum Architects, to design the 2025 Pavilion. Titled "A Capsule in Time," the proposal takes inspiration from the ephemeral nature of architecture in the Bengal Delta, incorporating a semi-transparent structure intended to evoke a sense of community and connection. The previous pavilion, "Archipelagic Void," was designed by Minsuk Cho in 2024. Related Article Serpentine Announces Marina Tabassum as the Designer of the 2025 Pavilion Image gallerySee allShow less About this authorReyyan DoganAuthor••• Cite: Reyyan Dogan. "Peter Cook Designs Play Pavilion for Serpentine in Collaboration with the LEGO Group" 10 Apr 2025. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1028969/peter-cook-designs-play-pavilion-for-serpentine-in-collaboration-with-the-lego-group&gt ISSN 0719-8884Save世界上最受欢迎的建筑网站现已推出你的母语版本!想浏览ArchDaily中国吗?是否 You've started following your first account!Did you know?You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.Go to my stream
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