>
Trump: "World's Most Powerful ResetTrump: "World's Most Powerful Reset!"
Israel Continues To Strike Lebanon After Trump Asked Netanyahu To Stop
The Department of Education: Ding Dong the Witch Is Dead?
Video: Semicircular wings give Cyclone VTOL a different kind of lift
'World's First' Humanoid Robot For Real Household Chores Launched With 16-Hour Battery
XAI Training 10 Trillion Parameter Model – Likely Out in Mid 2026
The $7 Powder That Beats Your $5,000 AC Unit!
Private credit is now a $3 trillion asset class and investors are receiving 45 cents on the dollar
Converting Diesel Vehicles to Run on Waste Vegetable Oil, by Polar Bear
Anthropic says its latest AI model is too powerful for public release and that it broke...
The CIA used a futuristic new tool called "Ghost Murmur" to find and rescue...
This Plant Replaces All Fertilizer FOREVER. Why Did the FDA Ban It?
China Introduces Pistol-Like Coil-Gun Based On Electromagnetic-Launch Systems

As many as 1,000 jobs could be cut in the coming weeks, according to The Wall Street Journal.
Disney's marketing department, where various parts of the company have been combined, is expected to feel the brunt of the layoffs, the Journal reported.
Staff of Disney+ and Hulu are also being merged.
Disney is facing a two-pronged threat. The world of streaming services delivers smaller profits than the days of cable or over-the-air television, The Wall Street Journal noted.
Further, tech companies such as Amazon and YouTube are fierce competitors. That means Disney needs to find money to invest in the digital future.
Although the layoffs will be the first under new CEO Josh D'Amaro, they continue a pattern set by former CEO Bob Iger beginning in 2022.
Since then, Disney has cut more than 8,000 jobs, mostly in its entertainment and corporate areas, along with ESPN. Employment has risen at its theme parks and on its cruise ventures.
At the end of its 2025 fiscal year, Disney had 231,000 workers.
Disney joins Sony Pictures, Paramount and Warner Bros. Discovery in making cuts, with more jobs losses likely if Paramount is able to complete a buyout of Warner.
Sony, in fact, announced Tuesday that it would cut hundreds of jobs, according to the Los Angeles Times.
The report noted that Disney is also facing losses from theater revenue, and fears a potential drop in international visitors to its theme parks.
The news comes as Disney toils through years of bad publicity linked to its insistence on inserting leftist, "woke" angles into projects that would have once been geared toward simply entertaining the ticket-buying public.
In addition, as noted by the entertainment-focused website Deadline, layoffs have hit many large media companies.
For example, CBS announced the end of CBS News Radio after 99 years in business.
Epic Games, which produces video games, announced in March it would lay off 1,000 workers. Starz last month laid off 7 percent of its workforce.