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  • The Week Evening Review
    An FBI lawsuit, Trump’s role in the Warner Bros. battle, and the longevity economy

     
    In the Spotlight

    Constitutional rights are at the center of FBI agents’ lawsuit

    The suit filed by 12 fired FBI agents against their former agency for illegal termination is bringing constitutional rights to the fore and could have ramifications across the federal government. It comes as the FBI is already facing accusations of political motivations.

    Challenging the top brass
    In June 2020, the defendants were photographed kneeling during a rally in Washington, D.C., related to then-ongoing George Floyd protests. The agents have said they took a knee “not to reflect a left-wing political point of view but rather to de-escalate a situation that threatened to spin out of control,” said NPR.

    The agents’ dismissals earlier this year “violated their First Amendment rights to free association, including nonassociation, and Fifth Amendment rights to due process; were taken in violation of the separation of powers, without any constitutional authority; and are a legal nullity,” according to the lawsuit. The filing further claims they would “not have been fired had they had the same perceived political affiliations” as the people who participated in the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, said Politico.

    ‘Unusual’ case
    The agents were not from a single unit but spanned several branches of the agency, including “counterterrorism specialists and agents with more than 15 years’ experience in combating criminals,” said CBS News. The lawsuit cites Patel’s 2023 book, “Government Gangsters,” in which he wrote that “some government employees should ‘be removed from their posts and replaced with people who won’t undermine the president’s agenda.’” The civil suit is just one of many that alleges Patel is “engaged in political retribution at America’s top law enforcement agency.” The FBI has not commented on the litigation.

    The government is allowed to “restrict employees’ speech while performing official duties during work hours without violating the First Amendment,” said USA Today. But First Amendment claims aside, the lawsuit “focuses on due process and an alleged failure of the FBI to follow its internal disciplinary rules, which may well determine the outcome,” said Ken Paulson, the director of Middle Tennessee State University’s Free Speech Center, to the outlet. This makes it a particularly “unusual” case.

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    ‘I have been able to see the people I love most, touch them, cry, and pray together.’

    Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado on reuniting with her children in Oslo, Norway, after months in hiding. She made the trip covertly to receive the Nobel Peace Prize, defying a decades-long ban on leaving Venezuela, and has plans to return. “I know the risks I’m taking,” she said.

     
     
    TODAY’S BIG QUESTION

    What role will Trump play in the battle over Warner Bros.?

    The fight over the future of Warner Bros. Discovery is really a battle to decide who will control much of the news and entertainment Americans consume. So perhaps it’s no surprise that President Donald Trump is wading straight into the middle of the fray between Netflix and Paramount Skydance.

    Trump’s assertion this week that he will play a role in deciding the winner of that battle tests the “boundaries of his power,” said The New York Times. Antitrust law does not “specify a personal role for presidents” to influence the merger oversight process “on a whim or for their own benefit.” Trump is thrusting himself into that process, however, forcing executives and shareholders in business sectors far beyond the media industry to “consider the risk” that the president will get involved.

    What did the commentators say?
    Paramount’s hostile bid against Netflix for Warner Bros. “could give Trump even more influence over U.S. media,” said The Conversation. A new conglomerate under the control of Trump ally Larry Ellison and his son, David Ellison, would “control a vast share of U.S. viewership.” Paramount already owns CBS News. Adding Warner-owned CNN to the mix would “concentrate oversight of two of the country’s most prominent newsrooms” under an owner with “strong ties to Trump.”

    It’s “normal” for the federal government to scrutinize and even attempt to block a “mega-merger deal,” said Brian Stelter at CNN. But it’s not normal for a president to “openly opine about it or to say that he will be involved.” Trump’s involvement raises concerns about “favor-trading and corruption” and “could make the most earth-shattering Hollywood merger in years significantly more difficult to move forward.”

    “Let Warner’s shareholders decide,” said The Wall Street Journal editorial board. Each bid should be “analyzed without political interference.” Trump’s involvement is not the “way capitalism is supposed to work,” but now businesses and shareholders are “at the mercy of Trump’s mood.”

    What next?
    The political battlefield over the company’s sale extends beyond the president. Reps. Sam Liccardo (D-Calif.) and Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.) said in a letter that they may “try to block or unravel any acquisition by Paramount,” said Semafor. The company’s offer is backed by sovereign wealth funds from Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Abu Dhabi. And that creates “foreign influence risks,” said the lawmakers.

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    $70 million: The amount a marine robotics company will be paid if it discovers the wreckage of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, which vanished over the Indian Ocean in 2014. Ocean Infinity will scour a 5,800-square-mile area of the seabed in search of the plane.

     
     
    the explainer

    The longevity economy booms as people live longer

    There’s money to be made in the business of extending lifespans, and this so-called longevity economy has become a flourishing part of the financial system. While people have long been looking for ways to live longer, recent health advancements alongside shifting demographics mean people are investing in the longevity economy like never before.

    How much money is in the longevity industry?
    There are trillions of dollars flowing into the longevity economy. It has been growing at a steady rate every year and is expected to have a value of $27 trillion by 2030, and some analyses have the longevity economy possibly reaching this mark by 2026.

    This is due to several factors, most notably a shift “toward health span — the years we spend in peak physical and mental condition,” said Entrepreneur. Customer demand also plays a large role, as by 2034 the U.S. will have “more people over 65 than 18,” and one in six people globally will be over 60 by 2030. 

    What other factors make up this economy?
    There may be more to the longevity economy than many people realize. As elders “live longer and healthier lives and continue to actively participate in the global economy, possibilities open to potentially turn longevity into an asset for society,” said BBC News. 

    Demographics are also playing a large role. For the first time in history, the longevity economy includes “four generations of age 50 and older,” said the Los Angeles Daily News. 

    But even though populations may be “aging in significant numbers, we can’t let the idea of ‘oldness’ and its implications stifle the way we think about economic opportunity,” Dr. Joseph Coughlin, the director of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s AgeLab, said to BBC News. Even though “millennial demands are linked to the rise of the on-demand economy, older adults benefit immensely from its convenience.” This has resulted in a slew of products and services surrounding the longevity economy. Also emerging is the invention of technologies like wearable aging clocks and other devices designed to keep you younger longer.

     
     

    Good day 🩸

    … for HIV/AIDS research. A man is now the seventh person to become HIV-free after getting a stem cell transplant to treat blood cancer. And he’s the second of the seven to receive stem cells that were not resistant to the virus, “strengthening the case that HIV-resistant cells may not be necessary for an HIV cure,” said New Scientist.

     
     

    Bad day 🧑‍🍳

    … for home cooking. Google is increasingly cobbling together multiple recipes that often “get the basics wrong,” said Bloomberg. Food creators are finding that AI-generated “recipe slop” is “distorting nearly every way people find cooking advice online,” damaging their businesses and “causing consumers to waste time and money.”

     
     
    Picture of the day

    ‘The Choir’

    Three lionesses simultaneously roar in a photograph that’s a “highly commended” winner of the Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards. Other contest winners include a young gorilla cavorting through a forest clearing and a squirrel having a bad hair day.
    Meline Ellwanger / Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards 2025

     
     
    Puzzles

    Daily crossword

    Test your general knowledge with The Week's daily crossword, part of our puzzles section, which also includes sudoku and codewords

    Play here

     
     
    The Week recommends

    ‘More Than Cake’ is a baking source like no other

    A cookbook should swell your imagination and expand your kitchen confidence. Natasha Pickowicz’s “More Than Cake: 100 Recipes Built for Pleasure and Community” succeeds on all counts, supplying both inspiration and a grounding sense of the altruistic ways in which baking can bind.

    Baking for good
    Pickowicz is a longtime pastry chef turned writer who for years has harnessed her baking prowess to raise money for charitable organizations through bake sales. Baked goods are “part of my commitment to community building,” she said in the book’s introduction.

    For example, Pickowicz devotes an entire chapter to “modern layer cakes” — shareable creations to encourage communing with either your loved ones or the people in your community. The chapter is formatted as a choose-your-own-adventure. Select a cake base, say, a black sesame chiffon cake, then a soak for that base, like maple and vanilla milk. Fill it with, for example, sweet and spicy hazelnuts and frost it with Italian espresso buttercream. There are 21 of these base items, so the permutations are nearly endless.

    Flavor considered
    The menagerie of layer cake foundations is simply the door leading to a wonderland under the pastry-kitchen stairs. Pickowicz’s carrot cake is striated with coconut flakes; she tops her pine nut sablé cookies with a smear of Taleggio cheese; she transmutes miso soup into a Danish; rose water and mezcal are conjoined in a caramel flan. Whether you are baking a cake for nibbling across a week yourself or blowing it out for a party, this book offers a solution for boundless occasions.

    Read more

     
     

    Poll watch

    U.S. households making under $50,000 annually plan to spend $1,230 on holiday gifts, according to a Gallup survey. This is a drop from the $1,479 they planned to spend in October and an even bigger drop from the $1,578 for the 2024 holidays. 

     
     
    INSTANT OPINION

    Today's best commentary

    ‘The Brits can’t seem to move on from Brexit’
    Iain Macwhirter at The American Conservative
    It will “soon be 10 years since the referendum on British membership” in the European Union, but Brits “just can’t seem to let Brexit go,” says Iain Macwhirter. Why is the British government “apparently seeking to revive the intense culture war that followed the original Brexit vote”? The “division over Europe became part of the wider culture war between the pro-immigration liberal U.K. elites in academia, the media and big corporations, and the so-called left-behinds.”

    ‘Never be honest in Hollywood, even if you are Quentin Tarantino’
    Dave Schilling at The Guardian
    When someone is “brutally forthcoming with their true feelings about something or someone in Hollywood, it’s absolutely jarring,” says Dave Schilling. Quentin Tarantino has been “piercing the veil of Hollywood decorum for decades now, but it seems that he finally picked the wrong target” in Paul Dano. What all of this “makes clear is that no one is successful enough to be honest and that you can be an acclaimed filmmaker and still be completely wrong about art.”

    ‘In Trump’s regime, Catholics are among the most powerful — and deported’
    Gustavo Arellano at the Los Angeles Times
    This year will “go down as one of the best and worst years ever to be a Catholic” in the U.S., says Gustavo Arellano. Catholics are in “positions of power in this country like never before.” But people with a “special devotion to Guadalupe, the overwhelming majority of whom are Latino, can’t even venerate her in peace this year because of Trump.” That’s the “sad irony of seeing Catholicism have such a prominent role in Trump’s second term.”

     
     
    WORD OF THE DAY

    metformin

    A drug typically used to manage Type 2 diabetes. Thanks to its various anti-aging effects, the medication may also give older women a better chance of reaching age 90 compared with another diabetes drug called sulfonylurea, according to a study by scientists in the U.S. and Germany.

     
     

    Evening Review was written and edited by Theara Coleman, Nadia Croes, Scott Hocker, Anya Jaremko-Greenwold, Justin Klawans, Joel Mathis, and Summer Meza, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Illustration by Julia Wytrazek / Getty Images; Aaron Schwartz / CNP / Bloomberg / Getty Images; Michael Nguyen / NurPhoto / Getty Images; Artisan Publishers
     

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