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✈️ The Orlando airport held a food and gift card donation drive for federal workers amid the ongoing government shutdown as those workers who are deemed essential for government operations, including TSA officers, approach their first full pay period without a paycheck.
Sports
Photo: Courtesy of Banana Ball
The Savannah Bananas partnered with the Negro League Museum to bring back the legendary Indianapolis Clowns
The Savannah Bananas’ Banana Ball Championship League features six teams playing 60 games apiece in 2026. One of those teams is the Negro Leagues’ Indianapolis Clowns, “the greatest barnstorming baseball team for over 50 years.”
The Clowns have been called “the Harlem Globetrotters of baseball,” and their approach to playing baseball is what originally inspired Bananas’ founder and owner Jesse Cole.
Cole said partnering “to bring the Clowns to millions of fans all over the country and preserve their legacy is a dream come true,” and Negro Leagues president Bob Kendrick said it was a “tremendous opportunity to not only entertain, but educate fans about the rich history of the Negro Leagues.”
Good history:Before he became Major League Baseball’s home run king, Hank Aaron got his professional start with the Clowns. He only played there for a few months before he was picked up by the then-Milwaukee Braves, but he always credits the Clowns for giving him the platform to showcase his incredible talent.
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Most people around the world are optimistic that life will improve
Despite data showing that most people believe the world is getting worse, most people are much more optimistic that their own lives will improve.
When asked to rate their lives on a scale from 0 (the worst possible) to 10 (the best) as they are now and where they think they’ll be in five years, most people said their life would be better — and that trend held across a wide range of countries.
In general, humans are a lot more hopeful about our own situations improving than we are about the world.