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The Daily Digest

Sunday, May 31, 2026 · 12 stories

A broad mix: global events, culture, science, health, and entertainment

Stories in this brief

Dang Van Phuoc, AP combat photographer who lost an eye in the Vietnam War, dies at 91

WTOP · May 27

Former AP combat photographer Dang Van Phuoc has died at 91. He was wounded multiple times in the Vietnam War, even losing an eye in a 1969 explosion. Despite his injuries, Phuoc continued to capture intense combat action, earning a reputation for bravery and skill. He later became a portrait photographer and community volunteer in California. WTOP reports on his passing.

China's AI talent war heats up

Semafor · May 26

China is implementing travel restrictions for top AI talent at companies like Alibaba and DeepSeek, aiming to secure its technology amid fierce competition with the US. This move comes as a domestic talent war escalates, with companies like ByteDance offering special stock options and some startups advertising multi-million dollar salaries. Semafor reports this mirrors Silicon Valley’s intense scramble for AI engineers.

Lollapalooza Announces 2026 Aftershows With Zara Larsson, Ethel Cain, Cortis And More

Block Club Chicago · May 26

Lollapalooza has announced its 2026 aftershow lineup, featuring artists like Zara Larsson, Ethel Cain, and Cortis. These late-night performances will take place at over 25 venues across Chicago. Tickets go on sale Friday morning, offering fans a chance to see more acts after the main festival days. This extends the music experience beyond Grant Park.

LA Philharmonic names next music director 

LAist · May 26

The Los Angeles Philharmonic has named Daniel Harding as its next music director. Harding, currently music director of Italy's Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia, will begin his tenure in the 2027-28 season. This appointment follows three years of speculation after Gustavo Dudamel's departure. LA Phil president Kim Noltemy highlighted Harding's musical brilliance and commitment to music education. LAist reports this signals a new artistic direction for the orchestra.

When the grid can’t keep up: how South African laboratories handle power outages

Nature · May 26

South African laboratories are implementing innovative solutions to combat frequent power outages. These "load-shedding" events threaten critical research by disrupting sensitive equipment and preservation methods. To address this, institutions like the National Research Foundation's Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity are investing in solar and battery backup systems. This is part of a broader effort across South Africa to build resilience and ensure scientific continuity despite unreliable power grids, as reported in "Nature."

Why AI can’t be trusted to write scientific reviews

Nature · May 26

Artificial intelligence cannot yet be trusted to write scientific reviews. While AI can help with tasks like screening studies and data extraction, human expertise is still needed to define questions, interpret results, and understand implications. Current AI models can also "hallucinate" or fabricate information, making their outputs unreliable for crucial health and policy decisions. Source: Nature.

Hard-to-detect mutations explain how common autoimmune diseases arise

Nature · May 26

Scientists have identified hard-to-detect somatic mutations in immune cells as a potential cause of autoimmune diseases. A new study in Nature used a high-fidelity DNA sequencing technique to pinpoint these mutations. This research sheds light on how common autoimmune conditions may develop.

Full Transcript

HOST

What happens when a photographer keeps shooting after losing an eye?

JAMES

Dang Van Phuoc lost his right eye to a grenade in 1969 yet kept working patrols for the Associated Press. Horst Faas hired him in 1965; colleagues say he walked point with the infantry and took repeated hits. That record of staying in the field after each wound shaped how later combat photographers judged their own risk. His later portraits in California showed the same focus on civilians that marked his Vietnam work.

HOST

Alibaba's top AI researchers now need approval to leave China.

JAMES

Beijing's new rule hits staff at Alibaba and DeepSeek first. A common assumption was that only state labs faced exit bans, yet private firms now carry the same restrictions. ByteDance is fighting back with large stock grants, and one robotics startup offered an eighteen million dollar package to a chief scientist. The pressure lands on companies that must keep their best engineers inside the country while US firms keep hiring.

HOST

What if the real party starts after the gates close?

MAYA

Over twenty-five venues are already locked in for Lollapalooza's 2026 aftershows. This is the third straight year the festival has pushed the experience into neighborhood clubs instead of keeping everyone in Grant Park. Zara Larsson and Ethel Cain headline the late-night slate while Cortis fills one of the smaller rooms at Metro Chicago. The move spreads ticket revenue across the city and keeps fans spending through the full weekend.

HOST

For anyone tracking orchestras, this hire rewrites the plan.

MAYA

Daniel Harding replaces Gustavo Dudamel at the LA Philharmonic starting in 2027. Kim Noltemy called his education work a deciding factor during the three-year search. The role expands from eight weeks in year one to twelve weeks later. That shift points to a longer commitment than most new directors receive.

HOST

Why stretch the weeks across later seasons?

MAYA

Eight weeks keeps his European posts intact while the orchestra tests the fit. Twelve weeks later locks in deeper programming control and audience reach.

HOST

Power flickers out in a Durban lab mid-experiment.

AISHA

The National Research Foundation's Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity now runs a solar and battery setup after repeated outages. A common read is that standard grid backups suffice; the data shows their new system delivers four hours of full power or seven hours of critical cooling for a million-specimen collection. Until now we could not keep sensitive assays running through multi-hour blackouts without risking sample loss. Labs across the country face the same pressure to protect ongoing work.

HOST

If you write medical reviews, listen up.

AISHA

One in five AI-generated summaries invented a study that never existed. The Nature analysis shows models still cannot define the research question or judge whether a paper actually answers it. Humans remain essential for that framing step. Without it, downstream policy decisions rest on made-up evidence.

HOST

Which hallucination rate did the study track?

AISHA

The 20 percent figure came from health-topic prompts only. It rose when the model had to weigh conflicting trial results rather than list single findings.

HOST

A blood sample sits in a lab, hiding clues doctors have missed for years.

AISHA

One immune-cell mutation hit 0.3 percent frequency in a Nature study. Until now we assumed autoimmune disease came only from inherited genes; the high-fidelity sequencing instead found somatic changes that let T-cells attack self tissue. Think of it like a typo that appears after the book is printed and then spreads through the immune chapter. Patients with lupus or rheumatoid arthritis may carry these acquired errors, which changes how clinicians hunt for root causes.

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