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Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Jazz expected to waive Lonzo Ball after acquiring former Cavs guard; send Jock Landale to Hawks

February 04, 2026
Jazz expected to waive Lonzo Ball after acquiring former Cavs guard; send Jock Landale to Hawks

The Utah Jazz are expected to waive Lonzo Ball after acquiring the guard in a three-team trade with the Cleveland Cavaliers, meaning Ball is poised to become a free agent,ESPN's Shams Charania reported Wednesday.

In addition to the 28-year-old Ball, the Cavaliers are also sending their 2028 and 2032 second-round picks to the Jazz,according to NBA insider Jake Fischer.

As part of the trade, the Jazz are shipping center Jock Landale off to the Atlanta Hawks for cash considerations, permultiplereports.

The Jazz collect a pair of second-round picks, the Hawks acquire Landale — who had been averaging a career-high 11.3 points and 6.5 rebounds per game for the Memphis Grizzliesbefore the 30-year-old big man was first dealt to Utah in the Jaren Jackson Jr. trade— and the Cavaliers dump salary amid deadline chaos that's already brought themJames Harden,Keon Ellis and Dennis Schröder.

Trading Ball frees Cleveland of his $10 million salary,according to The Athletic.

This past summer,Ball landed with the Cavs, then his fourth team since going No. 2 overall out of UCLA in the 2017 NBA Draft. He had previously played for the Los Angeles Lakers, New Orleans Pelicans and Chicago Bulls, the last of whom traded him to Cleveland for wing Isaac Okoro.

[Get more Cavs news: Cleveland team feed]

At the time, Cleveland was looking to reinforce its backcourt followingthe free-agency departure of Ty Jerome. However, Ball hasn't made the impact the Cavaliers imagined.

He's shooting a meager 30.1% from the field this season, including a ghastly 27.2% from deep. His 4.6 points per game are, by far, a career low.

Plus, Ball is averaging just 3.9 assists per game, his second fewest since reaching the league. He played 20.8 minutes per contest in his 35 outings with the Cavs.

In October 2024, Ball returned to the court for his first game in more than 1,000 daysafter missing 2 1/2 seasons because of an array of knee injuries.

Since then, he's yet to score more than 18 points in a game.

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Shai Gilgeous-Alexander out through All-Star break with ab injury

February 04, 2026
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander out through All-Star break with ab injury

The NBA trade deadlineis drawing nearer and more teams are making game-changing moves to alter the NBA landscape heading into the playoffs. However, through all the hullabaloo, the most impactful event might have happened last night.

USA TODAY Sports

NBA insider Michael Scottoreportsthat reigning MVPShai Gilgeous-Alexanderof theOklahoma City Thundersuffered an abdominal strain duringlast night's gameagainst theOrlando Magic. He is expected to be out through at least the All-Star break.

SGA had been selected as an All-Star Game starter. 2026 would have marked his fourth consecutive All-Star Game appearance.

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The NBA has announced its starters for the 2026 All-Star Game. Starters were selected through a fan vote (50% weight), and a survey of NBA players (25%) and a media panel (25%). Players were selected without regard for position. See the five starters from each conference. <p style=Eastern Conference Cade Cunningham, Detroit Pistons (second All-Star selection)

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Jalen Brunson, New York Knicks (third) Tyrese Maxey, Philadelphia 76ers (second) Jaylen Brown, Boston Celtics (fifth) Giannis Antetokounmpo, Milwaukee Bucks (10th) <p style=Western Conference Stephen Curry, Golden State Warriors (12th All-Star selection)

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Oklahoma City Thunder (fourth) Luka Dončić, Los Angeles Lakers (sixth) Victor Wembanyama, San Antonio Spurs (second) Nikola Jokić, Denver Nuggets (eighth)

Giannis, Curry, Doncic highlight 2026 NBA All-Star Game starters

When did SGA suffer his injury?

Gilgeous-Alexander suffered his abdominal injury during Oklahoma City's128-92win against the Magic on Feb. 3.

Despite the injury, SGA still managed 20 points and nine assists, extending his streak of consecutive 20-point games to 121 games. He played 28 minutes in the contest, scoring his final point with just over two minutes remaining in the game.

When will SGA return?

SGA will miss at least five games, and will be re-evaluated following the All-Star break. Oklahoma City's first game after the break will be on Feb. 20 at home against theBrooklyn Nets.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Shai Gilgeous-Alexanders injury update: Ab strain for Thunder star

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Hornets-Bulls trade grades: Who won the Coby White deal?

February 04, 2026
Hornets-Bulls trade grades: Who won the Coby White deal?

The Chicago Bulls keep making moves, this time dealing a player they should have traded well over a year ago in order to actually get something of value.

Yahoo Sports

That player is Coby White, whose contract status has beenthoroughly coveredon this site. The TL;DR version is this: The Bulls just traded him to the Charlotte Hornets at his lowest possible value, which has been a theme of theirs when dealing away players.

[Subscribe to Yahoo Sports NBA on YouTube]

The trade itself is slightly complicated.

On Wednesday, the Oklahoma City Thunder shipped out Ousmane Dieng to the Hornets for Mason Plumlee. Dieng was then re-routed to Chicago, leading to this total trade:

Coby White and Mike Conley Jr. went to Charlotte for Collin Sexton, Dieng, and three second-round selections.

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Let's get into the trade-grade game.

Charlotte Hornets: B+

This up-and-coming team just got a heavy upgrade in White, who is especially solid moving off the ball, and it did so without relinquishing much.

The acquisition of White is Charlotte's pre-agency play, as it can now enter the summer with the hope of re-signing the high-scoring guard, who now returns to his home state.

White can start or come off the bench, providing the team with scoring, some playmaking and improved defense. He's essentially a better version of Sexton, which has to be considered a win.

Chicago Bulls: C

Look, we can talk about how the Bulls at least got something out of this deal, and that's all fine and well. But when you consider White had enormous value a year ago and the Bulls failed to pull the trigger, this is what happens.

The Bulls simply waited too long, again, which is underlined thoroughly by this post from Stephen Noh:

(Bluesky screenshot)

We shouldn't celebrate that the Bulls finally got off their butts to act on the Coby White situation, when they should have done it so long ago.

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Fan of 'The Pitt' Season 2? Here's how to watch the new episode.

February 04, 2026
Fan of 'The Pitt' Season 2? Here's how to watch the new episode.

This article contains spoilers for "The Pitt" Season 2.

USA TODAY

If ever there was a lull in the typical chaos of an emergency room that could qualify as the calm before the storm, it would be the 10 o'clock hour atPittsburgh Trauma Medical Centeron July 4.

On"The Pitt"Season 2,Episode 4, the doctors and nurses are still unwavering in their care — detecting a heart attack, treating diabetes complications and stopping arterial bleeding. But they have enough of a handle on the typical madness to shift their focus elsewhere: flirting, charting and placing bets.

It's all happening as the staff is anticipating a rush of patients from a nearby hospital forced to close down. Whether that seemingly imminent storm is about to hit, viewers will have to tune intothis week's episodeto find out.

Here's what to know about"The Pitt"Season 2, Episode 5.

<p style=Sepideh Moafi steps into "The Pitt" Season 2 as the new attending physician, Dr. Baran Al-Hashimi. Who else is new for Season 2 of HBO Max's Emmy-winning drama? And why are they at the Pittsburgh ER? Find out on January 8.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> After the Labor Day ER drama of Season 1, Dr. Michael Dr. Robby (Wyle) with Joy (Irene Choi), a third-year medical student who joins (L) Laëtitia Hollard joins Dr. Frank Langdon (Patrick Ball) is back to

Who's new on 'The Pitt' Season 2? Meet Dr. Baran Al-Hashimi and more

Sepideh Moafi steps into "The Pitt" Season 2 as the new attending physician, Dr. Baran Al-Hashimi. Who else is new for Season 2 of HBO Max's Emmy-winning drama? And why are they at the Pittsburgh ER? Find out on January 8.

Review:'The Pitt' is still the absolute best show on television

'The Pitt' Season 2, Episode 4 recap

Robby and team assess parkour fail Vince and evict TikTok Tanya on "The Pitt" Season 2, Episode 4.

Potentially thegoriest moment of "The Pitt" Season 2, Episode 4comes when the cocky fourth-year medical student James Ogilvie (Lucas Iverson) gets a humbling lesson about handling foreign objects stuck in the body.

When an unconscious parkour influencer arrives in the ER after falling through a skylight, he appears mostly stable, with no broken bones. But when he begins bleeding from the back, the doctors notice a laceration caused by a piece of glass deep in his skin.

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Ogilvie naively attempts to pull it out, causing the artery it was pressuring to gush. His veteran colleagues, including Dr. Michael "Robby" Robinavitch (Noah Wyle) and Dr. Cassie McKay (Fiona Dourif), step in to save the day and contain the bleeding.

Elsewhere in the ER:

  • Robby's soon-to-be replacement Dr. Baran Al-Hashimi (Sepideh Moafi) lectures Dr. Trinity Santos (Isa Briones) about her backlog of charts.

  • A patient starstruck by the medical influencer "Dr. J," better known as medical student Victoria Javadi (Shabana Azeez), gets relief for her glued-shut eye, losing her eyelashes in the process.

  • And Dr. Samira Mohan (Supriya Ganesh) tries to figure out a solution for a middle-aged patient with diabetes complications and no insurance to pay for his visit.

When does new the episode of 'The Pitt' come out?

The new episode of "The Pitt" will air on Thursday, Feb. 5 at 9 p.m. ET.

New episodes are released on Thursdays at 9 p.m. ET on HBO Max.

How to watch 'The Pitt'

"The Pitt" is available to watch on HBO Max, which offers severalsubscription plans, including basic with ads for $10.99/month or $109.99/year.

'The Pitt' episode release schedule

New episodes of "The Pitt" will drop weekly leading up to the season finale on Thursday, April 16. Here's the remaining release schedule for "The Pitt" Season 2:

  • Feb. 5: Episode 5

  • Feb. 12: Episode 6

  • Feb. 19: Episode 7

  • Feb. 26: Episode 8

  • March 5: Episode 9

  • March 12: Episode 10

  • March 19: Episode 11

  • March 26: Episode 12

  • April 2: Episode 13

  • April 9: Episode 14

  • April 16: Episode 15 (finale)

Melina Khan is a national trending reporter for USA TODAY. She can be reached atmelina.khan@usatoday.com.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:When does 'The Pitt' come out? How to watch Season 2 new episode

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A pop star keeps accidentally going viral with decade-old songs. It has saved her career.

February 04, 2026
A pop star keeps accidentally going viral with decade-old songs. It has saved her career.

Despite the irrevocable dreariness of winter, a song that sounds like pure summer is ascending the charts, approaching 2 billion streams on Spotify. With its bouncy, island-pop beat, "Lush Life" is as high-energy and buoyant as its singer, Zara Larsson, who dresses like aLisa Frank-inspiredMalibu Barbie.

What's even weirder is the fact that "Lush Life" was first a hit in 2016, and it's not the first of Larsson's decade-old songs to make a comeback. What's going on here?

The pop singer's career renaissance, which now includes a Grammy nod and amuch-lauded performanceat the ceremony's pre-show, is largely thanks to TikTok. The app's ability to turn a song into a smash hit iswell-documented, but the pop stars randomly selected by the algorithm to have this kind of resurgence are rarely able to capitalize on their 15 minutes of fame. Larson, however, is determined to turn her viral luck into something more enduring.

Who is this person and why are her older songs trending?

Larsson belongs to the class of mid-tier pop star whose songs you definitely recognize, although her face and name may escape you — she's more than a one-hit wonder, but far from a household name. Her big break came in 2008, when, at 10 years old, shewon Sweden's version ofGot Talent.She immediately got a record deal, and as she entered her teenage years, put out a number of hits, including "Ruin My Life" and "Never Forget You."

Zara Larsson in a low-cut, see-through beaded top with straps.

"I had amazing people who were helping me and have always listened to me, but being 14 in a room full of 40-year-olds, it's kind of impossible to experiment and find out who you are,"she told i-D in 2026.Unsure of what she really wanted her identity and career to look like, Larsson fizzled out, until — completely randomly — a TikTok meme made her relevant again.

In August 2024, a TikToker posted a video of several Lisa Frank-style dolphin images set to Larsson's song with Clean Bandit, "Symphony," with the caption "I'm depressed." The irony of the upbeat visuals and song and the downbeat messagingbecame a meme, and other users began sharing similar posts set to "Symphony" with captions like "I have social anxiety" and "I want to give up with my whole life."

Instead of ignoring the trend's absurdity, Larsson embraced it byposting her own versionwith the caption "What the f*** is happening." Her video's popularity transcended that of the original, and she beganusing dolphin imagery at her concertsand embracing a more beachy style, to better match the meme. She released a new song with this aesthetic, "Midnight Sun," in June 2025, which earned her enough buzz to open for Tate McRae on her Miss Possessive tour, sparking a full resurgence in the U.S. Larsson then embarked on her own tour for her newMidnight Sunalbum. The single earned her adedicated cult following of superfansand is nowat its highest position ever on the Billboard Hot 100.

Larsson's song "Lush Life," similarly, first came out in 2015, and spent weeks slowly rising to its peak at No. 75 on the charts in August 2016. Nearly a decade later, in November 2025, avideo of a teenage fan enthusiastically performingthe song's choreography on stage with Larsson went viral, launching it back into the zeitgeist, where it has once again begun to climb the charts. The dance is now a TikTok trend, and it's at No. 40 on the Hot 100,a new peak position. According to data that TikTok shared with Yahoo, posts using "Lush Life" have exceeded 14.5 billion total views. Following in the path of other pop stars like Sabrina Carpenter and Role Model,who have honed the art of the viral concert stunt, Larsson too brings a fan on stage with her at every show, driving tons of views and chatter on social media.

Larsson is now working on a deluxe edition of her albumMidnight Sunthat's due out in March, and in October, released her biggest hit yet — a collaboration with the internet darling PinkPanthress called "Stateside."In the music video,Larsson acknowledges the popularity of her colorful Y2K aesthetic by swapping it with PinkPanthress' plaid-infused, British one. Her initial nostalgia-driven resurgence might have been a fluke, but her comeback is real.

What does this mean for pop music?

Larsson has recovered from herflop era, a term used to describe the dreaded experience of trying but failing to reclaim your glory days. Dozens of other once-famous pop stars could only dream of the kind of renaissance Larsson has mounted. Working so hard to break out can be seen as cringe, but since Larsson's entire resurgence was absurd, audiences don't see her as a try-hard.

"I've already had success and then my 'flop era.' And then it's like, 'ok, I flopped.' So, it doesn't scare me anymore," Larssontold ABC Newsin December.

Chimene Mantori, the founder of amusic influencer talent agency, tells Yahoo that Larsson didn't exactly fail — she plateaued. But the way the singer handled it could be a blueprint for other artists hoping to finally break out.

"I think audiences are quick to label quiet periods in artists' careers as 'flops,' but music careers aren't linear — they're cyclical, especially in the modern day, where a TikTok trend can suddenly revive a dormant song," Mantori explains. "She's let the audience dictate her direction rather than self-rebranding. She didn't overexplain, she didn't distance herself from memes — she took the moment and ran with it."

Zara Larsson, blond hair flying, sings her heart out onstage in a small, heavily sequined swimsuit.

A number of singers have broken out of the so-called "Khia Asylum" — that's internet parlance for a lower tier of pop stardom where celebrities are seen as desperately striving for cultural relevance. They toil away putting out music and performing until they find the right combination of good music, iconic style and algorithmic luck to catapult them to stardom. Sabrina Carpenter did it with her bombshell rebrand onShort n' Sweet, Chappell Roan managed it with her embrace of drag aesthetics and undeniable musical prowess with "Good Luck Babe," and Charli xcx had a monumental career breakthrough with her balance of hard-partying and vulnerability onBrat.

They can now welcome Larsson into their ranks. She's now surpassed 50 million monthly Spotify listeners, and she's not losing momentum. Imagine what she could do when her music and aesthetics actually match the weather outside.

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'TODAY' co-hosts honor Savannah Guthrie’s faith amid the search for her missing mom

February 04, 2026
'TODAY' co-hosts honor Savannah Guthrie's faith amid the search for her missing mom

AfterSavannah Guthrie asked for prayers amid the ongoing search for her mother, her fellow "TODAY" co-anchors on Wednesday honored their colleague's faith.

"All of her friends are rallying, and know that the way that we can help her is to pray," Jenna Bush Hager said after a segment about the Guthrie family's faith. "Her faith leads us, and Nancy leads us as well."

On Monday night, less than 48 hours after authorities believeNancy Guthrie was abducted from her Arizona home, Savannah Guthrie shared a message on Instagram asking to "please pray."

Her comments have resonated nationwide as local and federal authorities continue to search for her 84-year-old mother, who was reported missing Sunday afternoon from her home outside of Tucson after she did not show up at church.

"We believe in prayer. We believe in voices raised in unison, in love, in hope. We believe in goodness. We believe in humanity. Above all, we believe in Him," Savannah Guthrie wrote in a caption.

On Wednesday, several "TODAY" co-hosts reflected on her message of prayer, including Bush Hager, who revealed that she used to attend church with Savannah Guthrie. Craig Melvin noted that over the last few days, people have "come out of the woodwork" to share they are praying for the Guthrie family — something he said "Savannah and the family needs to hear."

"My pastor used to have this saying years ago," he added. "He's like, it's easy to be faithful when things are going well in your life. It's easy to be faithful when you're at the mountain, top of the mountain, but the God of the mountain is the God of the valley."

Co-host Carson Daly added, "It's easy to be pessimistic and negative at a time like this, but I feel like you have the same option to still think about a positive outcome. I know these hours and days goes by, that feels harder, but we still have that ability. You know, through our faith, think let's get Nancy home."

No suspects have been identified in the investigation that now involves the FBI. The Pima County Sheriff's Department believes Guthrie — who has limited mobility and has no cognitive issues — was taken "possibly in the middle of the night, and that includes possible kidnapping or abduction."

"Thank you for lifting your prayers with ours for our beloved mom, our dearest Nancy, a woman of deep conviction, a good and faithful servant. Raise your prayers with us and believe with us that she will be lifted by them in this very moment," Savannah Guthrie added in her Instagram post Monday. "We need you."

In early 2024, Savannah Guthrie published a memoir, "Mostly What God Does: Reflections on Seeking and Finding His Love Everywhere."

Loyal viewers of the "TODAY" show have previously heard Savannah Guthrie speak about her mother and their shared faith, saying in 2023 that "the greatest gift my mother gave me was faith and belief in God. It changed my whole life."

The family, in which Savannah Guthrie is one of three children, was raised to have deep convictions and faith. That belief proved crucial after Savannah Guthrie's father, Charles Guthrie, died when she was 16.

"I remember being asked by friends, "How can you still believe?" And I remember saying, "Oh, no. This is when I need him the most. I can't lose my dad and lose God at the same time," Savannah Guthrie said on air in 2024.

During a tribute to her mother on her 80th birthday, Savannah Guthrie called her a "woman of great faith" and described her as an inspiration. The inspiration continued to Savannah Guthrie's own children, as she previously said on air that she believes it is her "job to tell my kids about the God that I know, but then God has to do the rest when they grow up, it's theirs to choose."

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Epstein files rife with uncensored nudes and victims' names, despite redaction efforts

February 04, 2026
Epstein files rife with uncensored nudes and victims' names, despite redaction efforts

NEW YORK (AP) — Nude photos. The names and faces of sexual abuse victims. Bank account and Social Security numbers in full view.

All of these things appeared in the mountain of documents released publicly by the U.S. Justice Department as part of its effort to comply with a law requiring it to open its investigative files onJeffrey Epstein.

That law was intended to preserve important privacy protections for Epstein's victims. Their names were supposed to have been blacked out in documents. Their faces and bodies were supposed to be obscured in photos.

Mistakes, though, have been rampant. A review by The Associated Press and other news organizations has found countless examples of sloppy, inconsistent or nonexistent redactions that have revealed sensitive private information.

A photo of one girl who was underage when she was hired to give sexualized massages to Epstein in Florida appeared in a chart of his alleged victims. Police reports with the names of several of his victims, including some who have never stepped forward to identify themselves publicly, were released with no redactions at all.

Despite the Justice Department's efforts to fix the oversights, a photo of one topless woman remained on the site, with her face in full view, Wednesday evening.

Some accusers and their lawyers called this week for the Justice Department totake down the siteand appoint an independent monitor to prevent further errors.

A judge scheduled a hearing for Wednesday in New York on the matter, thencancelled itafter one of the lawyers for victims cited progress in resolving the issues. But that lawyer, Brittany Henderson, said they were still weighing "all potential avenues of recourse" to address the "permanent and irreparable" harm caused to some women.

"The failure here is not merely technical," she said in a statement Wednesday. "It is a failure to safeguard human beings who were promised protection by our government. Until every document is properly redacted, that failure is ongoing."

Annie Farmer, who said she was 16 when she was sexually assaulted by Epstein and his confidante, Ghislaine Maxwell, said that while her name has previously been public, other details she'd rather be kept private, including her date of birth and phone number, were wrongly revealed in the documents.

"At this point, I'm feeling really most of all angry about the way that this unfolded," shetold NBC News. "The fact that it's been done in such a beyond careless way, where people have been endangered because of it, is really horrifying."

Trump administration defends its Epstein files redaction efforts

The Justice Department has blamed technical or human errors on the problems and said it has taken down many of the problematic materials and is working to republish properly redacted versions.

The task of reviewing and blacking out millions of pages of records took place in a compressed time frame. President Donald Trump signed the law requiring the disclosure of the documents on Nov. 19. That law gave the Justice Department just 30 days to release the files. It missed that deadline, in part because it said it needed more time to comply with privacy protections.

Hundreds of lawyers were pulled from their regular duties, including overseeing criminal cases, to try and complete the document review — to the point where at least one judge in New York complained that it was holding up other matters.

The database, which isposted on the Justice Department website, represents the largest release of files to date in the yearslong investigations into Epstein, whokilled himself in a New York jail cellin 2019 while awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking charges.

Epstein files rife with missed or incomplete redactions

Associated Press reporters analyzing the documents have so far found multiple examples of names and other personal information of potential victims revealed.

They have also found many cases of overzealous redactions.

In one news clipping included in the file, the Justice Department apparently blacked out the name "Joseph" from a photo caption describing a nativity scene at a California church. "A nativity scene depicting Jesus, Mary and (REDACTED)," it said.

In an email released in the files,a dog's nameappeared to have been redacted: "I spent an hour walking (REDACTED) and then another hour bathing her blow drying her and brushing her. I hope she smells better!!" the email said.

The Justice Department has said staff tasked with preparing the files for release were instructed to limit redactions only to information related to victims and their families, though in many documents the names of many other people were blacked out, including lawyers and public figures.

Images remain uncensored

The Justice Department has said it intended to black out any portion of a photo showing nudity, and any photos of women that could potentially show a victim.

In some photos reviewed by The AP, those redactions did obscure women's faces, but left plenty of their bare skin exposed in a way that would likely embarrass the women anyway. Photos showed identifiable women trying on outfits in clothing store dressing rooms or lounging in bathing suits.

One set of more than 100 images of a young woman were nearly all blacked out, save for the very last image, which revealed her entire face.

Associated Press reporters from around the world contributed to this report.

The AP is reviewing the documents released by the Justice Department in collaboration with journalists from CBS, NBC, MS NOW and CNBC. Journalists from each newsroom are working together to examine the files and share information about what is in them. Each outlet is responsible for its own independent news coverage of the documents.

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