Kanye West, Sean Diddy Combs new song in the cards?
Kanye West and Sean Diddy Combs are fully expected to collaborate on a song.
The rappers, who have been cancelled by Hollywood, would be happy to well align themselves for an album in the future.
A source close to Ye tells Page Six: “Music was a salvation for him, Diddy, like it was for Ye. Diddy’s looking to make amends. I think a song would be the best way to communicate a change,” said one source who regularly works with Kanye.
“Be on the lookout for the song,” the source added
“Ye is brave enough to touch a hot [rod like] Diddy right now. I don’t think any other artists would,” they added.
This comes as Diddy’s ex, Cassie Ventura, accused the rapper of sexually assaulting her.
Ventura admitted in the sex trafficking trial that Diddy once asked her to get into an inflatable pool filled with baby oil.
Ventura revealed that although she did not want to engage in the activity, she was afraid Diddy would not agree if she refused to do so.
“Something that Sean wanted to happen, that’s what was going to happen,” Ventura said on the stand.
Two-time defending champion Jessica Pegula leads an exceptional field for the first WTA 1000 event of the North American hard-court summer, the Omnium Banque Nationale présenté par Rogers in Montreal, Canada.
The Montreal main-draw entry list was revealed this week. All of the world’s Top 68 players in this week’s PIF WTA Rankings are entered in the field, as the event returns to the province of Quebec in its new expanded fashion.
The tournament alternates between Montreal and Toronto on an annual basis. This year in Montreal will be the Omnium Banque Nationale’s debut as a 12-day event with a 96-player main draw, increasing from its previous week-long duration and 56-player draw.
Main-draw play in Montreal will kick off on Sunday, July 27, and the tournament will end with a Thursday night final on August 7. Over 5 million dollars (U.S.) are on the line at the event, with the singles champion pocketing $752,275.
Regardless of location or tournament length, Pegula has been the Queen of Canada over the last two years. The World No. 3 won the title here in Montreal in 2023, then successfully defended her crown last year in Toronto.
She will try for the three-peat against a jam-packed field that includes World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka and this year’s Grand Slam champions, 2025 Australian Open titlist Madison Keys and 2025 Roland Garros winner Coco Gauff.
Of course, the rest of the Top 10 are scheduled to join them: Iga Swiatek, Jasmine Paolini, Zheng Qinwen, Mirra Andreeva, Paula Badosa and Emma Navarro.
Alongside the Top 68 players in this week’s PIF WTA Rankings (dated June 30), the following players have received main-draw entry via protected ranking: Marketa Vondrousova, Sorana Cirstea, Zhu Lin and Anastasija Sevastova.
Grand Slam champions in the main-draw entry list are: Sabalenka, Gauff, Swiatek, Keys, Vondrousova, Elena Rybakina, Barbora Krejcikova, Emma Raducanu, Naomi Osaka, Jelena Ostapenko, and Sofia Kenin.
Another previous Omnium Banque Nationale champion and Grand Slam champion, Bianca Andreescu (2019 Toronto and 2019 US Open), has already received an early main-draw wild card, as has rising Canadian teen Victoria Mboko.
Along with Pegula, the previous Omnium Banque Nationale champions in the entry list include Belinda Bencic (2015 Toronto) and Elina Svitolina (2017 Toronto).
You can find the entire main-draw entry list via the Omnium Banque Nationale website here!
Liam Roberts had only just finished university, but he was already thinking ahead to how to buy a home and fund retirement.
In 2018, he was looking for a way to build up some savings, and so he chose a Lifetime ISA (LISA).
Anyone under 40 can open a LISA to either help save towards retirement or buy a first home. Savers can put in up to £4,000 a year and the government will top it up by 25%.
“It is an excellent product,” says Liam, now aged 28. “The government paid £4,000 towards my first home.”
Liam Roberts
Liam is delighted with his Lifetime ISA
He bought a two-bedroom home in Manchester in 2022, using the cash savings and government bonus to help pay the mortgage deposit.
That LISA was automatically closed, and so, after getting his job as an asset manager, he opened another one.
This time it was a stocks and shares LISA, for even longer-term retirement plans. Again, he puts in the maximum £4,000 a year, and gets the 25% government bonus. He can start making withdrawals, without a penalty, from the age of 60.
“They are designed for long-term planning,” he says.
In a job that involves reading financial products, he knew what he was signing up for, and that it would work well for his circumstances.
Not everyone has the same knowledge, though, or the same opportunity to make the most of the benefits of the LISA. There remains a limited number of providers, with High Street banks and building societies not among them.
The influential Treasury Committee of MPs has said the LISA is ripe for reform, as the commitment of taxpayer funds is involved.
Many of you have got in touch via Your Voice, Your BBC to express your dismay about the product’s pitfalls.
At the heart of these concerns are two issues:
the penalty involved in withdrawing money early, which means people face losing 6.25% of their own savings
the cut-off which means LISA savings can only be used when purchasing a property up to a value of £450,000 – a threshold that has been unchanged since LISAs were launched in 2017, despite rising house prices particularly in south-east England
Those who have been in touch have hit out at the penalty, particularly after being caught out by the £450,000 limit.
‘Upset and annoyed’
One of those was Holly from London. The 28-year-old says she lost around £750 when she bought her home in 2023.
“I was very upset because I’d been using it to save for a house since I was 19 and I did actually use the money to buy my first home as the scheme intended.”
She says at 19 the chances of buying a house over £450,000 felt very remote but then her career was going well and she met her future husband.
“What annoys me is that I bought the home with my now husband and my share is well under £450,000 but of course that wasn’t taken into account,” she says.
Lucy Slavin
Lucy and Daniel Slavin say the rules around LISAs need to change
Daniel Slavin set up a LISA in his 20s. At the time, as a single person, he understood why the thresholds were there and thought it was a good product.
But fast-forward a few years, and now married, when it came to buying a house, he and his wife Lucy fell foul of the £450,000 limit.
While they were still able to buy without needing to use their LISA, Lucy says it put them in a difficult financial position.
“It is incredibly frustrating knowing that if we need to withdraw the money our only option is to lose part of our savings,” says the 32-year-old, who works as a research specialist for a charity.
“I can understand losing the bonus if you withdraw early but the penalties are awful.”
Daniel, 33, who’s a doctor, has since stopped paying into his LISA.
“The current government wants us to buy houses and increase growth and I don’t think they should penalise us for doing the right thing and saving money,” he says.
They need to take inflation into account, he says. “They should change the rules.”
Barrier to new savers
Commentators and campaigners are keen to see changes.
Martin Lewis, founder of MoneySavingExpert, says the £450,000 threshold is “unjust, unfair and the rules need changing”.
“If a LISA is used to buy a property above the threshold, there should be no fine, they should get back at least what they put in,” he said.
“And this flaw doesn’t just hurt those with LISAs. It puts off many young people, especially from lower income backgrounds, who tend to be more risk averse, from opening LISAs in the first place.”
Helen Morrissey, head of retirement analysis at investment platform Hargreaves Lansdown, says that LISAs had proven popular among the self-employed, who can save for retirement despite not having access to a workplace pension.
However, she called for the penalty for early withdrawal to be eased, and the age limit for opening a LISA to be extended.
Savings habit
LISAs were launched under the then-Conservative government in April 2017.
Since then, 6% of eligible adults have opened one, with about 1.3 million accounts still open, according to the most recent figures.
Opinions are clearly divided among those account holders about how well they work.
The government says the LISA is a source of celebration but, in time, it could well address some of their concerns.
“Lifetime ISAs aim to encourage younger people to develop the habit of saving for the longer term, helping them to purchase their first home or build a nest egg for when they are older,” a Treasury spokesperson said.
“We welcome the committee’s report and will now review its findings and respond in due course.”
Additional reporting by Alex Emery, Kris Bramwell and Shanaz Musafer
Guru Dutt invited the audience to confront uncomfortable realities through hauntingly beautiful cinema
Iconic Indian director and actor Guru Dutt was just 39 years old when he died in 1964 but he left behind a cinematic legacy that continues to resonate decades later.
Born on 9 July 1925 in the southern state of Karnataka, next week marks his birth centenary. But the man behind the camera, his emotional turmoil and mental health struggles remain largely unexplored.
Warning: This article contains details some readers may find distressing.
The maker of classic Hindi films such as Pyaasa and Kaagaz Ke Phool – film school staples for their timeless themes – Dutt forged a deeply personal, introspective style of filmmaking that was novel in the post-independence era.
His complex characters often reflected his personal struggles; his plots touched upon universal motifs, inviting the audience to confront uncomfortable realities through hauntingly beautiful cinema.
Dutt’s beginnings were humble and his childhood was marked by financial hardship and a turbulent family life. After his family shifted to Bengal in eastern India for work, a young Dutt became deeply inspired by the region’s culture and it would shape his cinematic vision later in life.
He dropped his surname – Padukone – after entering the Bombay film industry in the 1940s. He made his debut not as a director but as a choreographer, and also worked as a telephone operator to make ends meet. The turbulence and uncertainty of the decade – India’s independence struggle had intensified – impacted the aspiring filmmaker’s prospects.
It was during this phase that he penned Kashmakash, a story rooted in artistic frustration and social disillusionment, ideas that would later shape his cinematic masterpiece Pyaasa.
Simon & Schuster
Pyaasa, a commercial triumph, propelled Guru Dutt to stardom
Dutt’s friendship with fellow struggler Dev Anand – who soon rose to fame as an actor – helped him get the chance to direct his first film in 1951. The noir thriller, Baazi, propelled him into the spotlight.
He soon found love with celebrated singer Geeta Roy, and by many accounts, these early years were his happiest.
After Dutt launched his own film company, he scored back-to-back hits with romantic comedies Aar-Paar and Mr & Mrs 55, both featuring him in lead roles. But yearning for artistic depth, he set out to make what would become his defining film – Pyaasa.
The hard-hitting, haunting film explored an artist’s struggle in a materialistic world and decades later, it would go on to be the only Hindi film in Time magazine’s list of the 20th Century’s 100 greatest movies.
Dutt’s late younger sister, Lalitha Lajmi, who collaborated with me when I wrote his biography, said that Pyaasa was her brother’s “dream project” and that “he wanted it to be perfect”.
As a director, Dutt was fond of ‘creating’ the film as it took shape on the sets, making a lot of changes in the script and dialogues and experimenting with camera techniques. While he was known for scrapping and reshooting scenes, this reached worrying levels during Pyaasa – for instance, he shot 104 takes of the now famous climax sequence.
He would shout and get bad-tempered when things did not go right, Lajmi said.
“Sleep evaded him. The misuse of and dependence on alcohol had begun. At his worst, he started experimenting with sleeping pills, mixing them in his whiskey. Guru Dutt gave his all to make Pyaasa – his sleep, his dreams, and his memories,” she said.
In 1956, as his dream project neared completion, 31-year-old Dutt attempted suicide.
“When the news came, we rushed to Pali Hill [where he lived],” Lajmi said. “I knew he was in turmoil. He often called me, saying we need to talk but wouldn’t say a word when I got there,” she added.
But following his discharge from hospital, no professional support was sought by the family.
Mental health was a “socially stigmatised” topic at the time, and with big money riding on Pyaasa, Lajmi said that the family tried to move on, without fully confronting the reasons behind her brother’s internal struggles.
Released in 1957, Pyaasa was a critical and commercial triumph that catapulted Dutt to stardom. But the filmmaker often expressed a sense of emptiness despite his success.
Pyaasa’s chief cinematographer VK Murthy recalled Dutt saying, “I wanted to be a director, an actor, make good films – I have achieved it all. I have money, I have everything, yet I have nothing.”
There was also a strange paradox between Dutt’s films and his personal life.
His films often portrayed strong, independent women but off screen, as Lajmi recalled, he expected his wife to embrace more traditional roles and wanted her to sing only in films produced by his company.
Simon & Schuster
Guru Dutt and Madhubala in Mr & Mrs 55
To keep his company thriving, Dutt had a simple rule: each artistic gamble should be followed by a bankable commercial film.
But buoyed by the success of Pyaasa, he ignored his own rule and dived straight into making his most personal, expensive and semi-autobiographical film: Kaagaz Ke Phool.
It tells the story of a filmmaker’s unhappy marriage and confused relationship with his muse. It eerily ends with the death of the filmmaker after he fails to come to terms with his acute loneliness and doomed relationships.
Though now hailed as a classic, it was a commercial failure at the time, a blow Dutt reportedly never overcame.
In the Channel 4 documentary In Search of Guru Dutt, his co-star Waheeda Rehman remembered him saying, “Life mein do hi toh cheezen hai – kamyaabi aur failure. (There are only two things in life: success and failure) There is nothing in between.”
After Kagaz Ke Phool, he never directed a film again.
But his company recovered over time, and he made a strong comeback as a producer with Chaudhvin Ka Chand, the most commercially successful film of his career.
He then launched Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam directed by his trusted screenwriter Abrar Alvi. By this time, Lajmi said, his personal life was in severe turmoil, marked by mood swings.
The film delved into the loneliness of a woman trapped in a loveless marriage to a philandering, often tyrannical landlord in an opulent yet feudal world.
Writer Bimal Mitra recalls that Dutt told him about his struggle with sleeplessness and reliance on sleeping pills during this time. By then, his marriage had collapsed and mental health had worsened. Mitra recalled many conversations with Guru Dutt’s constant refrain: “I think I will go crazy.”
One night, Dutt attempted to take his own life again. He was unconscious for three days.
Lajmi says that after this, on the doctor’s advice, his family called a psychiatrist to inquire about treatment for Dutt but they never followed up. “We never called the psychiatrist again,” she added with regret.
Simon & Schuster
A still from Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam, starring Guru Dutt and Meena Kumari
For years, she believed her brother was silently crying for help, perhaps feeling trapped in a dark space where no one could see his pain, so dark that even he could not find a way out of it.
A few days after Dutt was discharged, the shooting for Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam resumed as if nothing had happened.
When Mitra asked him about the incident, Dutt said, “Nowadays, I often wonder what unrest was this, what was the restlessness that I was hell-bent on committing suicide? When I think about this, I get terrorised with fear. But that day, I felt no dilemma in swallowing those sleeping pills.”
The film was a success, became India’s official entry to the 1963 Berlin Film Festival and also won a national award.
But Dutt’s personal struggles continued to mount. He separated from his wife and even though he continued acting in films, he battled profound loneliness, often turning to alcohol and sleeping pills for respite.
On 10 October 1964, Dutt, 39, was found dead in his room.
“I know that he had always wished for it [death], longed for it… and he got it,’ his co-star Waheeda Rehman wrote in the Journal of Film Industry, 1967.
Like the protagonist of Pyaasa, true acclaim came to Dutt only after he was gone.
Cinema enthusiasts often wonder what might have been had he lived longer; perhaps he would have continued to reshape India’s cinematic landscape with his visionary, poetic works.
Yasser Usman is the author of the biography Guru Dutt: An Unfinished Story
In a major crackdown, the Federal Investigation Agency’s (FIA) Anti-Human Smuggling Cell has unearthed a high-profile visa scam involving the fraudulent issuance of Pakistani e-visas to Afghan nationals using fake sponsorships, with alleged complicity of officials from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of Information.
According to the FIA spokesperson, two Afghan nationals were arrested during a targeted raid in Islamabad’s G-8 sector, while a case has been registered against six individuals. Raids are ongoing to apprehend the remaining suspects.
The accused were reportedly operating out of car showrooms in the G-8 area, running a sophisticated racket that circumvented immigration procedures and compromised national security.
The FIA stated that the entire operation facilitated unverified Afghan nationals in obtaining Pakistani e-visas within 24 to 48 hours, using forged sponsorship documents and stolen identification data, all without notifying intelligence agencies.
The FIR, lodged by an FIA officer, claims that the scam was led by Samiullah Afridi, a lower-grade staffer at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in collusion with Malik Muneebur Rehman, a travel agent, Nadir Raheem Abbasi, an employee at the Press Information Department (PID) and several others.
Financial transactions were routed through the bank accounts of Afridi’s cousin, Abdul Aziz Afridi, who owns a car showroom in G-8 and is the brother of a Foreign Office official posted as the deputy head of mission in Kabul.
A private bank account linked to Samiullah Afridi reportedly received nearly Rs40 million in suspicious transactions related to the visa racket.
One of the arrested suspects, Atif Ahmadzai, an Afghan national from Nangarhar province, was found to be running an online travel agency that facilitated e-visa applications using fraudulent means, including forged sponsorships, bypassing formal financial channels and using hawala/hundi methods for fund transfers.
The gang provided urgent tourist visas within 24 to 48 hours for $750 (with 80% allegedly pocketed by Ministry of Information employees).
They also offered other visa categories such as 10-day tourist visas, medical visas, and business visas, each for $350.
The network reportedly met in areas surrounding Islamabad, including G-8, and had set up a streamlined process for Afghan nationals to acquire Pakistani documents without security vetting. Innocent sponsors were unknowingly implicated, while legitimate visa applicants were deprived of their rights.
The scheme, according to the FIA, not only violated immigration protocols but also posed a significant threat to national security by potentially allowing terrorist elements to gain entry into Pakistan unchecked.
Acting on credible intelligence, the FIA raided the showroom and caught Abdul Aziz Afridi and Atif Ahmadzai red-handed.
Ahmadzai was found to be illegally residing in Pakistan and lacked valid travel documentation. Both suspects recorded statements confirming that Samiullah Afridi, Malik Muneebur Rehman, Nadir Raheem Abbasi and another Afghan national named Ahmad Afghani were active members of the ring and had been issuing e-visas illegally in exchange for hefty sums.
The new US political party that Elon Musk has boasted about bankrolling could initially focus on a handful of attainable House and Senate seats while striving to be the decisive vote on major issues amid the thin margins in Congress.
Tesla and SpaceX’s multibillionaire CEO mused about that approach on Friday in a post on X, the social media platform he owns, as he continued feuding with Donald Trump over the spending bill that the president has signed into law. On Saturday, without immediately elaborating, the former Trump adviser announced on X that he had created the so-called America party.
“One way to execute on this would be to laser-focus on just 2 or 3 Senate seats and 8 to 10 House districts,” wrote Musk, who is the world’s richest person and oversaw brutal cuts to the federal government after Trump’s second presidency began in January. “Given the razor-thin legislative margins, that would be enough to serve as the deciding vote on contentious laws, ensuring they serve the true will of the people.”
Musk did not specify any seats he may be eyeing.
In another post on Friday, when the US celebrated the 249th anniversary of its declaration of independence from the UK, Musk published a poll asking his X followers whether he should advance on his previously stated idea of creating the America party to contend against both Republicans and Democrats. More than 65% of about 1.25m responses indicated “yes” as of Saturday morning.
“Independence Day is the perfect time to ask if you want independence from the two-party (some would say uniparty) system!” Musk also wrote in text accompanying the poll, which he promoted several times throughout Friday.
Musk on Saturday then posted on X: “Today, the America party is formed to give you back your freedom.”
He also wrote: “By a factor of 2 to 1, you want a new political party, and you shall have it! When it comes to bankrupting our country with waste & graft, we live in a one-party system, not a democracy.”
One of the replies to Musk’s announcement that he reposted showed a picture of a two-headed snake near the word “uniparty” as well as the logos of the Democratic and Republican parties.
“End the Uniparty,” the reply said. Musk in turn responded to the reply with: “Yes.”
He also suggested the party would run during the 2026 midterms.
New political parties do not have to formally register with the Federal Election Commission “until they raise or spend money over certain thresholds in connection with a federal election”.
Musk’s posts on Friday and Saturday came after he spent $277m of his fortune supporting Trump’s victorious 2024 presidential campaign. The Republican president rewarded Musk by appointing him to lead the unofficial “department of government efficiency”, or Doge, which abruptly and chaotically slashed various government jobs and programs while claiming it saved $190bn.
But Doge’s actions may also have cost taxpayers $135bn, according to an analysis by the Partnership for Public Service, a nonpartisan non-profit dedicated to studying the federal workforce.
Musk left Doge at the end of May and more recently became incensed at Trump’s support for a budget bill that would increase the US debt by $3.3tn. He threatened to financially support primary challenges against every member of Congress who supported Trump’s spending bill – along with promising to “form the America Party” if it passed.
The House voted 218 to 214 in favor of the spending bill, with just two Republicans joining every Democrat in the chamber in unsuccessfully opposing it. In the Senate, JD Vance broke a 50-50 deadlock in favor of the bill, which Trump signed on Friday hours after Musk posted his America party-related poll.
The Trump spending bill’s voting breakdown illustrated how narrowly the winning side in Congress carries some of the most controversial matters.
Trump has warned Musk – a native of South Africa and naturalized US citizen since 2002 – that directly opposing his agenda would be personally costly. The president, who has pursued mass deportations of immigrants recently, publicly discussed deporting Musk from the US as well as cutting government contracts for some of his companies.
“Without subsidies, Elon would probably have to close up shop and head to South Africa,” Trump posted on his own social media platform, Truth Social.
The president also told a group of reporters in Florida: “We might have to put Doge on Elon. Doge is the monster that might have to go back and eat Elon. Wouldn’t that be terrible.”
Ozzy Osbourne’s all-star farewell concert on Saturday, dubbed Back to the Beginning, featured Metallica and Guns N’ Roses, who paid tribute to Osbourne and the original Black Sabbath at what was billed as their final show in Birmingham, England at Villa Park.
Metallica was the penultimate band to perform before the Osbourne/Black Sabbath finale performances. Metallica kicked off their set by covering Black Sabbath’s “Hole in the Sky” from 1975’s Sabotage and they also covered “Johnny Blade” from 1978’s Never Say Die!, as fan footage captured.
Guns N’ Roses performed four Black Sabbath renditions, including opening with Technical Ecstasy’s “It’s Alright” before launching into “Never Say Die.”
For the first time since 1992, @gunsnroses played It’s Alright at Back to the Beginning in ode to Black Sabbath. 🖤
I love Sabbath and the night is about them and Ozzy, but for us GN’R fans specifically, it’s really special to hear this again in 2025. pic.twitter.com/N5A4CFox9W
Guns N’ Roses also performed “Junior’s Eyes” from Never Say Die! along with the title track to 1973’s Sabbath Bloody Sabbath.
The charity gig featuring the four original Black Sabbath members — Osbourne, guitarist Tony Iommi, bassist Geezer Butler, and drummer Bill Ward — also included performances from Slayer, Pantera, Gojira, Alice in Chains, and more, with Tom Morello serving as the musical director. The event featured all-star jams that included Aerosmith’s Steven Tyler, Smashing Pumpkins’ Billy Corgan, Morello, Sammy Hagar, and more, including a team-up for a rendition of Led Zeppelin’s “Whole Lotta Love.”
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Steven Tyler of Aerosmith, Tom Morello & more performing Led Zeppelin’s “Whole Lotta Love” at Back To The Beginning | Black Sabbath’s final show pic.twitter.com/tMK4zBWnPe
“It’s my time to go back to the beginning … time for me to give back to the place where I was born,” Osbourne, who in recent years has been battling Parkinson’s disease and underwent several spinal surgeries, said of his “final” concert in a statement from February. “How blessed am I to do it with the help of people whom I love. Birmingham is the true home of metal. Birmingham for ever.”
Proceeds from Back to the Beginning will benefit Cure Parkinson’s, Birmingham Children’s Hospital, and the Birmingham-based Acorns Children’s Hospice.
As David Corenswet takes over the big red cape for James Gunn‘s Superman, he had some support from previous Men of Steel.
The actor recently shared the “very encouraging” words he received from Man of Steel (2013), Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016) and Justice League (2017) star Henry Cavill, as well as Tyler Hoechlin from The CW‘s Superman & Lois, about taking on the role of DC Comics superhero for the big screen.
“I had the pleasure of exchanging letters with two previous Supermans, Henry Cavill and Tyler Hoechlin. They were very encouraging and we had a lovely exchange and I’m excited to meet them one day. It’ll be great when we can all get in a room together,” he told Heart. “Both of them, interestingly, sort of said in their own words, ‘I’m not gonna try to give you any tips.’ And I think that’s a very Superman thing.”
Corenswet added, “They really just conveyed to me an encouragement and a sense of, you know, have fun with it. Which I think is Superman’s way of doing it too.”
In addition to Corenswet as the Man of Steel, Gunn’s Superman stars Rachel Brosnahan as Lois Lane and Nicholas Hoult as Lex Luthor, among a star-studded cast bringing more DC favorites to life.
David Corenswet as Superman in DC Studios’ and Warner Bros. Pictures’ ‘Superman’
Warner Bros.
Premiering July 11 in theaters, Superman marks the launch of Gunn’s new DCU, after he and Peter Safran took over at DC Studios in 2022.
That December, Cavill confirmed the “sad news” that his Superman would not be returning for Gunn’s DCU. The CW then cancelled Superman & Lois, following a four-season run that began in 2021.
Apple users who are in need of an upgrade to a new set of AirPods wouldn’t need to wait for Prime Day to shop. Right now, the latest AirPods 4 with ANC capabilities are back to $148 from $179, which is their second-best price and a saving of $31 (17%) at Amazon.
This is the second-best price for the standard Apple wireless earbuds, or $10 shy of the record low from last year. However, it’s the lowest for this year, making it considerably an attractive offer.
Why We Like the Apple AirPods 4 with ANC
The AirPods 4 (review) were launched at the end of last year, introducing a new ANC model with an extra $50 price difference compared to the non-ANC version. Regardless, the addition of noise cancellation is a massive upgrade if you desire a quieter listening session, especially since the AirPods feature an open-design, which inherently offers poor passive noise isolation.
Apple’s new generation AirPods are mostly unchanged externally, retaining their familiar “hair dryer” form. However, there are a few subtle tweaks in the positioning of air vents to better relieve pressure, leading to improved sound. The earbuds are lightweight and feel comfortable in the ears even during long listening sessions, all while maintaining a secure fit. You can control them through touch and head orientation, although volume adjustment is only available via the app.
With the right settings, the AirPods 4 provide clear sound and a balanced profile. The bass is somewhat less prominent, but you can boost it with an equalizer tweak to better suit your preferences. We appreciate that the ANC performs well in noise suppression, and it’s even adaptive, similar to the volume control.
The added ANC has minimally impacted the battery life of the AirPods 4. You still get a modest 4 hours of runtime with ANC enabled and 5 hours without the feature. You can extend this up to 30 hours in total with the charging case. Charging is fast, either via USB-C or wirelessly via Qi.
Are you looking to snag the AirPods 4 at this rate? Or are you waiting for the Prime Day sale? Share with us your plans in the comments.