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More Material 3 Expressive Google apps: Fitbit, Meet, and Chat 

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Material 3 Expressive was officially unveiled last week at The Android Show, with Google releasing guidance at that time. At I/O 2025, we had a “Build next-level UX with Material 3 Expressive” session with another tease at upcoming Google app redesigns, like Fitbit.

For starters, we get another look at Fitbit for Android with Material 3 Expressive. It’s the same Steps stats as before, but with the addition of a FAB (floating action button) for Gemini besides the toolbar for Day, Week, Month, and Year that replaces the top tabs. 

The Gemini FAB presumably will let you launch a chatbot-like experience to ask questions about this metric and trends. That capability was tested in Fitbit Labs earlier this year.

Meanwhile, we also see a video player UI for Fitbit videos that makes use of large buttons that morph when tapped. This is an example of playful and expressive motion. 

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We get a close look at Google Meet for Android. A large pill-shaped button is leveraged to “Join” a call, while you can see the more vibrant use of color. 

Once in a call, Google Meet is making use of the toolbar for controls.

Meanwhile, this session says Google Chat is already using the new floating toolbar. I personally think that component functions like a navigation bar (or bottom bar). 

Earlier in the talk, Google said: “Where app bar supports navigation, toolbar provides critical actions for the current page.” To me Chat’s Home, Direct Messages, Sections, Mentions, and Starred sections — or tabs — are closer to parts of the app that you navigate to than “critical actions.”

Also worth nothing in this video is a concept Material 3 Expressive media player.



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Hinge Health pops 17%, but joins growing ranks of down round IPOs

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Hinge Health, a digital physical therapist company, closed its first day of trading on the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday at $37.56, up about 17% over the $32 IPO price it set the previous day.

That’s a good first-day result. But even with the pop, Hinge’s public valuation is significantly less than its last private market one. The 11-year-old company’s approximate market capitalization, excluding employee options, was about $3 billion, which is less than half of the $6.2 billion Hinge attained in its October 2021 Series E funding round, which was led by Tiger Global Management.

Until recently, companies went to great lengths to avoid down-round IPOs. However, the stigma associated with going public below the last private valuation has lessened significantly if that valuation was during the heady 2020-2021 era.

Companies whose IPOs are priced lower than their last private valuation by VCs include Reddit, which debuted last year at about $5.4 billion, roughly half its $10 billion valuation from 2021.

Another example is ServiceTitan, whose IPO valued it at about $6.3 billion, below the $7.6 billion valuation it secured in a Series H round two years earlier.

Hinge Health’s IPO raised $437 million, with about $237 million in proceeds going directly to the company and the remainder to its existing investors. The company’s largest outside shareholders are Insight Partners, which holds 19% of all stock, and Atomico, which has 15% of all shares. Other venture capital firms that own approximately 8% of Hinge’s shares include 11.2 Capital, Coatue, Tiger Global, and Bessemer Venture Partners, according to the company’s latest S1 filing. Co-founders Daniel Perez and Gabriel Mecklenburg own 18.9% and 8.2%, respectively.

The company aims to reduce musculoskeletal pain with the help of wearable sensors and computer vision technology remotely monitored by a clinical care team of physical therapists, physicians, and board-certified health coaches.

Omada Health, another digital health company, filed to go public earlier this month.  The 13-year-old startup offers virtual care between doctors’ visits for chronic conditions like diabetes and hypertension and competes with Hinge Health in the musculoskeletal pain reduction space. Omada’s biggest shareholders include U.S. Venture Partners and Andreessen Horowitz, which was last valued in 2022 at just above $1 billion.

Hinge Health’s primary competitor is Sword Health, which was valued at $3 billion about a year ago. At that time, Sword Health’s CEO, Virgilio Bento, told TechCrunch that the company might also pursue an IPO in 2025 if it grows as expected and the macroeconomic environment is favorable. 



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Colts owner Jim Irsay dies at 65 : NPR


 Jim Irsay speaks from a podium in 2018.

Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay, pictured in 2018, died “peacefully in his sleep” on Wednesday, according to the team.

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AJ Mast/AP

Jim Irsay — the longtime owner and CEO of the Indianapolis Colts and a prolific rock-and-roll collector — has died at age 65.

He “passed away peacefully in his sleep” on Wednesday afternoon, the Colts said in a statement, extending their sympathies to his three daughters and his entire family.

“Jim’s dedication and passion for the Indianapolis Colts in addition to his generosity, commitment to the community, and most importantly, his love for his family were unsurpassed,” the team wrote.

The team did not specify a cause of death, but Irsay had faced health issues and largely retreated from the public eye in recent years. His last social media post, on Wednesday, wished the Indiana Pacers luck in the NBA Eastern Conference Finals.

Irsay “spent his life and career in the National Football League,” as NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell put it in a tribute.

Irsay started working for the then-Baltimore Colts as a ballboy when he was a teenager after his father, Robert, took over the team in 1972.

“Some of Jim’s fondest memories came from his youth working training camps in Baltimore and growing relationships with players, coaches and staff whom he considered his extended family,” the Colts said. “He worked in every department before he was named the youngest general manager in team history in 1984 when the Colts arrived in Indianapolis.”

An escalating stadium dispute with the city of Baltimore prompted Robert Irsay to take the Colts out of Maryland — in a surprise, overnight move — in March 1984. Shortly after, he made his 24-year-old son the youngest NFL general manager in history.

Jim Irsay took over ownership of the Colts in 1997, after his father’s death and a legal battle with his stepmother. The following year, the team — which had first pick in the draft — selected Peyton Manning, who became a cornerstone of the Colts franchise and is widely considered one of the best quarterbacks in NFL history.

Manning mourned Irsay in an Instagram post, writing that “his love for the Colts and the city of Indy was unmatched.”

“He was an incredibly generous and passionate owner and I will always be indebted to him for giving me my start in the NFL,” wrote Manning, who spent 13 seasons with the Colts. “His impact on the players who played for him will not be forgotten.”

Under Irsay’s nearly three-decade tenure, the Colts won 10 division titles, two AFC championships and — thanks in large part to Manning — the 2007 Super Bowl.

 Irsay hoists the Lombardi Super Bowl trophy in the rain as he celebrates the Colts' 2007 Super Bowl win.

In a now-iconic photo, Jim Irsay hoists the Lombardi Super Bowl trophy in the rain as he celebrates the Colts’ win against the Chicago Bears in Super Bowl XLI in February 2007.

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“Jim’s Colts won the Super Bowl, hosted another and built Lucas Oil Stadium,” Goodell said, referring to the team’s home stadium, which opened in 2008. “He led with integrity, passion and care for the Colts’ players, coaches and staff, and his courageous work in support of mental health will be a lasting legacy.”

Irsay, who served on the NFL’s legislative and finance committees, was also a prolific philanthropist who supported mental health, addiction treatment and community development efforts in Indiana and beyond. His Kicking the Stigma initiative, created in 2020, aims to raise awareness and funding for mental health causes.

Irsay was open about his own struggles with substance abuse and addiction, saying in a November 2023 interview that he had been to rehab “at least 15 times.”

“When I do this work, it’s to try to save and help one person, one at a time — not because of our brand, not because it looks good for the family to have a great charity,” Irsay told the Associated Press in 2022. “It’s the empathy and the tremendous compassion that you develop as a human being because we’re taught from what we go through, we can share our strength, hope and experience to alleviate suffering from others.”

The football community is honoring Irsay on Thursday, with current and former Colts players, as well NFL teams across the country, offering condolences and remembrances. Their tributes paint the picture of a man with many passions and achievements, from football to mental health to music.

“The Irsay family brought football to the state of Indiana and his philanthropic efforts will have a lasting impact for years to come,” Gov. Mike Braun tweeted.

Irsay was an avid collector of music and pop culture artifacts

Irsay doesn’t just leave behind a legacy in the NFL. He also leaves behind what is considered one of the greatest guitar collections in the world.

Irsay was a student of the counterculture with a lifelong passion for rock music, American history and pop culture.

“My influence from people like John Lennon and others growing up, my feeling is that you can be a lot of different things,” he told the New York Times in 2005. “People like John Lennon, Pete Townshend, Bob Dylan had a huge influence — their beliefs, the way Lennon was a guy who took it to far lengths in terms of the peace movement.”

Over the decades, he acquired many historic and culturally significant artifacts, from signed photos and handwritten lyrics to manuscripts and instruments owned and used by music greats including Bob Dylan, The Beatles, Prince, Eric Clapton, Elton John, Jerry Garcia, Jimi Hendrix, Pete Townshend, Jim Morrison and Janis Joplin.

He acquired one of Kurt Cobain’s iconic guitars for a record $4.5 million in 2022, after which the Cobain family donated a portion of the proceeds to Kicking the Stigma.

Irsay owns Jack Kerouac’s scroll of On the Road, as well as first editions of Mark Twain’s Tom Sawyer and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, the boxing shoes Muhammad Ali wore during the Thrilla in Manila, one of Jackie Robinson’s baseball bats and signed letters from Presidents Washington, Jefferson and Lincoln, NPR reported in 2022 — the year Irsay exhibited some of his items to the public at Lucas Oil Stadium.

Items from the “Jim Irsay Collection” have been displayed at museums around the world, from the U.S. Rock & Roll Hall of Fame to the British Library.

Irsay was a musician himself, as the lead vocalist and frontman of the Jim Irsay Band, which performed shows across the country with guest performers including John Mellencamp and Ann Wilson.

Irsay had his struggles

Irsay looks on during a Ring of Honor ceremony during halftime of a game at Indianapolis' Lucas Oil Stadium in October 2024.

Irsay looks on during a Ring of Honor ceremony during halftime of a game at Indianapolis’ Lucas Oil Stadium in October 2024. He had made few public appearances in recent years.

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While Irsay was praised for his steady leadership of the Colts, his personal life was considerably more turbulent.

He was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence in 2014, with police saying he had several bottles of various prescription medications and $29,000 in cash on him at the time and prosecutors alleging he tested positive for multiple opioids.

Irsay eventually pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor count. He was fined $500,000 and suspended by the NFL for six games, and checked into a drug rehab treatment facility. (Addressing the incident nearly a decade later, he said he was “prejudiced against because I’m a rich, white billionaire.”

According to NFL.com, it was later revealed “that a longtime female companion had died of a drug overdose in a home owned by Irsay just days before his arrest.” His wife of over 30 years, Meg Coyle, had divorced him the previous year after a decade-long separation.

In a November 2023 interview with HBO’s Real Sports, Irsay opened up about a past drug overdose that stopped his breathing.

“And they revive me and the doctor goes, ‘Jim, you’re one lucky man because I had virtually signed the death certificate,’ ” he recalled.

The following month, Irsay was found unresponsive at his Carmel home in what the police report called a suspected overdose — which Irsay later denied.

Colts officials said in early January 2024 that he was being treated for a severe respiratory illness. That March, in his first public comments, Irsay said he was “doing great” after undergoing leg surgery to improve his mobility — which he said was his 26th procedure in the last seven years.

Irsay was scarcely seen in public after that point. He sparked concern among fans when he was spotted using a mobility device at the Colts’ last game of the season in January 2025. CBS reports that he had recently been in a wheelchair after two separate surgeries, one stemming from a fall that impacted his nerves and another to fix a serious hematoma.

According to ESPN, Irsay did not attend the NFL’s annual meeting in Florida in March or a league meeting in Minnesota this week and is not believed to have attended last month’s NFL draft.

His succession plan involves his three daughters

Irsay had openly talked about keeping the Colts in the family after his death.

“We’re keeping 100% of the team that I’m passing on to my children,” he said upon inheriting the team himself, according to CBS Sports.

Irsay’s three daughters — Carlie Irsay-Gordon, Casey Foyt and Kalen Jackson — are all involved in the team, and each currently holds the title of vice chair/owner.

Irsay-Gordon, 44, is expected to take over the football side of the franchise, the Indianapolis Star reports. She already has experience doing so, having stepped in for Irsay during his 2014 six-game suspension and his stay in rehab.

Irsay-Gordon, who was named vice president of the Colts in 2008, is “involved in all aspects of the organization, with an emphasis on football operations and the team’s digital, social media, content and production operations,” according to her official biography.

She and her sisters will become the youngest owners in the NFL by more than a decade, according to the Star — following in the footsteps of their dad, who was the youngest owner in the NFL when he took over the Colts at age 37.





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Democrats are still wandering in the wilderness | Andrew D. Hayes

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Views expressed here represent those of the author and not necessarily of MassLive or The Republican. Readers are invited to share their opinions by emailing to letters@repub.com.

Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani welcomes President Trump

Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani welcomes President Donald Trump during an official welcoming ceremony at the Amiri Diwan in Doha, Qatar, Wednesday, May 14, 2025. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)AP

To paraphrase the great American poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning, “How do I love the Democrats embracing poor optics. Let me count the ways.”

Donald Trump riles them up so profoundly they come across as the party of joylessness and misery. Before the 2024 election, their Nazi and Hitler monikers for Trump didn’t really register with independent voters as he won all seven swing states. And the threat to democracy trope, still being exhorted from the halls of Congress and legacy media, smacks of the “Chicken Little syndrome.”

Extreme rhetoric used constantly eventually falls on deaf ears, unless one is predisposed to believe it. More importantly, true evil (Hitler and Nazis) is diminished to a cheap political catchphrase.

So while the Trump administration goes about its agenda, the Democrat clown car continues to roll along.

Remember Sen. Cory Booker, D-New Jersey, aka Senator Spartacus, protesting President Trump’s budget proposals from the Senate floor, calling it a “moral moment” in a “sacred civil space.” He spoke for 25 hours, and nobody remembers anything he said. No memorable phrases or inspiring words, just grandstanding for which he is known.

He got the Spartacus nickname during Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation hearings when he declared he was having a “I am Spartacus” moment by threatening to defy Senate rules and release confidential documents about Kavanaugh. That prompted more than a few head scratches.

And where’s Waldo? I mean Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Maryland. He’s turned into a ghost since his taxpayer-funded trip to El Salvador to check on Kilmar Abrego Garcia with three other Democratic members of Congress lost its fizz with the media. Probably the revelations that Garcia’s wife sought a protective order against him in 2020 took the shine off the “Maryland man” image.

At least Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez of New York drew big crowds for their “Fighting Oligarchy” tour. It didn’t matter that most in attendance probably couldn’t pronounce or define the term and that Sanders and Cortez flew on a $15,000-an-hour private jet (just like oligarchs do) all the while castigating the wealthy in their populist speeches.

And whatever happened to the congresswoman’s Green New Deal ideal of reducing one’s carbon footprint?

However, my favorite is what I like to call the “Storming of the Bastille” (actually an ICE facility in New Jersey) by the mayor of Newark along with three Congress members from the state’s delegation.

They went to Delaney Hall, a 1,000-bed immigration detention facility, to conduct lawful Congressional oversight. Interestingly, they never bothered to do so during the Biden administration, but apparently felt the timing and optics were right with Trump’s aggressive deportation plans for criminal illegal aliens.

And while members of Congress can inspect ICE facilities unannounced, they are still required to show identification and go through security screening before entering, which they did not do.

Instead, they rushed the open gate as a bus carrying detainees was entering and then all hell broke loose. The mayor was arrested for trespassing (since dismissed) and U.S. Rep. La Monica McIver has been charged with assault. The others may possibly have charges brought against them also. But not to worry, AOC and House leader Hakeem Jeffries have warned DHS to “not lay a finger on them.”

Secretary Noem has been put on notice. So, another Democrat spectacle regarding criminal undocumented migrants goes awry.

Meanwhile, President Trump has, as he always does, dominated the news cycle. Trade deals are starting to happen (Great Britain) and trade war fears are lessening (90-day cooling off period with China). All of which has allowed financial markets to bounce back to near all-time highs. So much for the hole in everyone’s 401(k) accounts. Equity markets go up and they go down, just not in a straight line.

And Trump’s recent trip to the Middle East was such a success that even a few Democrats made positive comments. U.S. Rep. Jim Hines of Connecticut praised Trump for doing “pretty darn well” on his trip. And U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticut (no friend to Trump) as well as former Obama CIA director Leon Panetta gave the trip a thumbs-up.

What’s not to like in securing hundreds of billions of dollars in trade deals with countries in that region, lifting sanctions off Syria to give that new government a chance to succeed, seeming to be on a path to a nuclear deal with Iran and directly dealing with Hamas to bring the last American hostage home from captivity alive.

This administration’s new mantra is “peace through commerce.” No more nation building as a foreign policy tool. It worked after World War II with Germany and Japan but has been a 21st century failure in the Middle East.

That Browning poem I mentioned ends with “I shall but love thee better after death.” Not so with the Democratic Party. We need it to recover to maintain a healthy two-party political system.

Yes, Democrats will find their footing, by rallying around messaging that doesn’t solely demonize the opposition but offers a vision a majority of Americans can embrace.

And Democrats should actually take solace in Donald J. Trump’s comeback. Ten years ago, who would have believed the various outcomes of his political odyssey were possible. In politics, anything can happen.

Columnist Andrew D. Hayes of East Longmeadow writes twice a month.



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Gemini will ‘soon’ integrate with apps on Oppo smartphones

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Google is partnering with Oppo to support app integration between Oppo’s apps and Gemini.

Like it has done with Samsung, Google is working with Oppo to integrate Gemini with Oppo’s apps. This includes Oppo’s Notes, Calendar, and Clock apps.

The company explains:

In the upcoming Reno14 Series, coming soon Gemini will connect to OPPO apps and services, including OPPO Notes, Calendar, and Clock, letting you pull information and complete tasks directly in your chat. With a single prompt, users will be able to ask Gemini to work across their apps, simply by pressing and holding the side button to activate Gemini.

Oppo says this will begin on its upcoming Reno 14 series, which was announced earlier this month and is set to be available soon.

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Fujifilm’s X Half is an $850 digital camera with an analog film aesthetic

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Fujifilm has already released one unusual camera this year in the GFX100 RF medium format compact, but it’s latest model may be the most offbeat yet. The $850 X Half is an 18-megapixel digital compact camera, but it uses half of a 1-inch sensor to shoot 3:4 vertical photos. To drive home the retro vibe, it has a rear screen dedicated to displaying the camera’s 13 film simulation modes and can only shoot JPEG and not RAW images.

The name comes from “half-frame” cameras popular in the ’60s, like the famous Olympus Pen F, that use a 35mm film frame sawed in half (18mm x 24mm in size). The backside-illuminated sensor on Fujifilm’s X Half is, well, half that size in both dimensions (8.8mm x 13.3mm) or a quarter the area. It’s also the smallest sensor on any recent Fujifilm digital camera, as the X-series uses the APS-C format and GFX models medium format. In fact, the X Half has the same 3:4 vertical ratio as Fuji’s Instax Mini instant cameras — so you can make prints using an Instax Mini printer via the new dedicated X Half smartphone app.

Fujifilm's X Half camera is a digital camera with an analog film aestheticFujifilm's X Half camera is a digital camera with an analog film aesthetic

Fujifilm

The X Half naturally uses Fujifilm’s film simulation and grain effect modes. Among the new ones are “light leak” for a blown-out quality that happens when film get exposed to light inadvertently, “expired film” and “halation,” an effect caused by light bouncing off film emulsion layers. To really get you into that analog film mood, you can switch to the new Film Camera Mode that limits your view to the optical viewfinder, makes you pull a frame advance lever for each new shot and only lets you see the photos once they’re “developed” through the X Half app. It even produces a “contact sheet” layout for 36, 54 or 72 images.

Another feature is 2-in-1 images that let you combine two still images or movies into one composition in-camera for extra artistic possibilities (using the film advance lever again). That also means the X Half can shoot video as well as photos, with a vertical or square size (up to 2,160 x 2,160) that looks ideal for social media — especially with film simulations applied. Also exuding nostalgic vibes is the “Date Stamp” function that lets you imprint dates in the bottom right of images, just like on old-school Kodak-style film camera.

On top of the main rear 2.40inch LCD 3:4 monitor, the X Half has an optical rather than an electronic viewfinder, adding another analog touch (and the accompanying parallax distortion errors). The camera itself is small enough to slide into a pocket and weighs just 210 grams (7.4 ounces). Other features include a built-in flash, massive 880 frame battery life and SD UHS-I card slot.

The X Half looks like it could be coveted by social media users or anyone looking for a fun party or vacation camera. However, it’s expensive considering that you can just get an Instax (or regular film camera and a lot of film) for a lot less. Fujifilm has definitely captured the photography zeitgeist before with models like the X100 VI, though, so I wouldn’t be surprised if it becomes a hit. The X Half is now on preorder for $850 (in black, charcoal silver and silver) with shipping set to start on June 12.

Image for the mini product module



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Signal’s new Windows update prevents the system from capturing screenshots of chats

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Signal said today that it is updating its Windows app to prevent the system from capturing screenshots, thereby protecting the content that is on display.

The company said that this new “screen security” setting is enabled by default on Windows 11. Signal said that this new feature is designed to protect users’ privacy from Microsoft’s Recall feature, which was announced last year. Recall captures screenshots of the system continuously to remember all of your activities, so you can scroll back in time to remember what you were looking at.

While the company paused the rollout of the feature last year after backlash, Microsoft started testing it again in April through the Windows Preview Channel. Microsoft has made the feature opt-in and has also added a way to pause it anytime. Signal said that despite these changes, the feature still captures content that may be sensitive.

Signal said that when you are trying to take a screenshot with the new screen security setting enabled, you will just get a blank screen.

The company also warned that when the setting is enabled, some functions, such as screen readers, might not work as intended. You can turn off the setting through Signal Settings > Privacy > Screen security.

The app will show you a warning when you are trying to disable this option, and you will have to click on Confirm to complete the action. This is to prevent you from accidentally turning the feature off while trying to adjust other settings.

“We hope that the AI teams building systems like Recall will think through these implications more carefully in the future. Apps like Signal shouldn’t have to implement a “one weird trick” in order to maintain the privacy and integrity of their services without proper developer tools,” Signal said in a blog post.



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Charles Strouse, Broadway composer of ‘Annie’ and ‘Bye Bye Birdie,’ has died at 96 : NPR


Broadway composer Charles Strouse, creator of the hit musicals “Bye Bye Birdie,” “Applause” and “Annie,” died at his home in New York City on Thursday.



AILSA CHANG, HOST:

The composer of musicals “Bye Bye Birdie,” “Applause” and “Annie” has died at 96. Charles Strouse spent his last hours at home in New York. And if you don’t know the name, you may well know the music. Jeff Lunden reports.

JEFF LUNDEN: Charles Strouse was a musical chameleon, says theater historian Laurence Maslon.

LAURENCE MASLON: Strouse was a great craftsperson. He adopted and adapted his vocabulary to whatever the needs of the particular genre were.

LUNDEN: He could write songs in the style of early rock ‘n’ roll…

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, “ONE LAST KISS”)

UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR #1: (As Conrad Birdie, singing) Oh, one last kiss. Oh, give me one last kiss.

LUNDEN: …Or Depression-era New York…

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, “YOU’RE NEVER FULLY DRESSED WITHOUT A SMILE”)

UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR #2: (As Bert Healy, singing) Hey, hobo man. Hey, Dapper Dan. You’ve both got your style, but brother, you’re never fully dressed without a smile.

LUNDEN: …Or ultra-groovy 1970s New York.

(SOUNDBITE OF CHARLES STROUSE SONG, “BUT ALIVE”)

LUNDEN: Strouse was classically trained at the Eastman School of Music and worked with American composer Aaron Copland. He was making a living playing rehearsal piano for Broadway shows when a stage manager, who wanted to be a producer, approached him, he told me in 2008.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

CHARLES STROUSE: He said to me, I hear you write music. And I said, yes, I do. He said, I have an idea for a show about teenagers. Would I be interested? I said, would I?

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, “THE TELEPHONE HOUR”)

UNIDENTIFIED GROUP #1: (As characters, singing) Did they really get pinned? Going steady.

UNIDENTIFIED GROUP #2: (As characters, singing) She saw him.

UNIDENTIFIED GROUP #1: (As characters, singing) I was hoping they would. Going steady.

UNIDENTIFIED GROUP #2: (As characters, singing) She loved him.

UNIDENTIFIED GROUP #1: (As characters, singing) Now they’re living at last. Going steady.

UNIDENTIFIED GROUP #2: (As characters, singing) She never.

UNIDENTIFIED GROUP #1: (As characters, singing) Going steady for good.

UNIDENTIFIED GROUP #2: (As characters, singing) If you got to go, that’s the way to go.

LUNDEN: The show was “Bye Bye Birdie.” It opened in 1960, and even though The New York Times gave it a pan – calling it neither fish nor fowl nor musical comedy – it became an enormous hit, winning the Tony for best musical. And since then, it’s been one of the most performed shows in community theaters and high schools.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

STROUSE: It’s a wonderful feeling. And I am modest, though not humble in any way, but I’m a very lucky man.

LUNDEN: And he became a very rich man. Though he suffered a string of flops afterwards, Strouse had another Tony Award-winning smash with “Applause,” a musical version of “All About Eve” in 1970.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, “APPLAUSE”)

UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR #3: (As Bonnie, singing) ‘Cause you’ve had a taste of the sound that says love – applause, applause, applause.

LUNDEN: Strouse heard even more applause and won a Tony Award for best score with “Annie,” based on the comic strip, “Little Orphan Annie” in 1977. He said the best-known song from that score, “Tomorrow,” was written in rehearsal to cover a set change.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

STROUSE: She found the dog, and she had to, in 12 seconds, let’s say, get back to the orphanage. So we needed a song there.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, “TOMORROW”)

ANDREA MCARDLE: (As Annie, singing) The sun will come out tomorrow. So you got to hang on till tomorrow, come what may. Tomorrow, tomorrow, I love you, tomorrow. You’re always a day away.

LUNDEN: Andrea McArdle was 12 years old when she starred in “Annie.”

MCARDLE: My favorite thing was to listen to him play his songs. Not every composer is as charming as Charles Strouse is when he plays his music.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

STROUSE: (Singing) Gray skies are going to clear up. Put on a happy face.

LUNDEN: The composer kept working into his 80s on new projects at a time when most creators would have been happy resting on their accomplishments.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

STROUSE: I love composing. I love it, you know? And if I’m not composing, if I don’t have a new project or something, I’m rather at a loss of what to do.

LUNDEN: For NPR News, I’m Jeff Lunden in New York.

Copyright © 2025 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

Accuracy and availability of NPR transcripts may vary. Transcript text may be revised to correct errors or match updates to audio. Audio on npr.org may be edited after its original broadcast or publication. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.



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Waltham police release further details on car crash involving department cruiser

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A Waltham police cruiser was struck by another car Wednesday morning when it entered an intersection during a red light with its emergency lights flashing, according to the police department.

The crash happened at the intersection of Totten Pond Road and Wyman Street as the officer driving the cruiser was in the process of responding to an unrelated 911 call, Waltham police said in a press release. Preliminary reports indicate that the cruiser was traveling west on Totten Pond Road and came to a complete stop at a red light prior to entering the intersection with its emergency lights activated.

The other car involved in the crash was traveling south on Wyman Street and had a green light at the time of the crash, police said. The officer reported that he didn’t see the other vehicle until it struck his cruiser.

The driver of the other vehicle told investigators that she was driving 25 mph with no traffic in front of her prior to the crash, police said. She reported not seeing the cruiser until the last moment and attempting to break but ultimately being unable to avoid the collision.

No serious injuries were reported at the time of the crash, but both drivers were taken to a local hospital as a precaution, police said. The cruiser landed on its side following the collision.

The Waltham Police Crash Reconstruction Team is still investigating the crash, police said. It is unclear if any charges will be filed in connection to it or whether the officer involved will face discipline from his department.



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A renewed Pixel Watch 2 is a steal for just $85 on Amazon

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The Pixel Watch 2 is a solid option if you can live with the single-size option, but at under $80, it’s a steal.


Update 05/21: The sub-$80 deal emerges again as the black Pixel Watch 2 has dipped below the $80 barrier – to $75 – again if you want a very cheap and reliable entry into Wear OS 6 later this year. If you want a cheap Android phone companion this might be the best value proposition out there right now.


Update 05/15: While the insanely cheap $75 Pixel Watch 2 stock is slowly dwindling, you can still grab one for a similarly incredible $85. Even that $10 increase is still a steal given that this is a great wearable to pair with your Pixel or any other Android phone, and given the Wear OS 6 update is due to come to this wearable, it’s even more of a steal.


We’ve said it here time and time again that while there are lots of new and upcoming smartwatches vying for your hard-earned money, you can get some serious bang for your buck by buying a slightly older wearable at a substantially discounted price. Considering that, a renewed Pixel Watch 2 is an absolute steal at Amazon – provided you are happy with a smaller wristwatch.

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Although we recommend the 45mm Pixel Watch 3 to most people, the $399 start price is still pretty steep. The 41mm Pixel Watch 3 is, for all intents and purposes, the same wearable as the Pixel Watch 2. It utilizes the same Snapdragon Wear W5 Gen 1 chip, 32GB storage, and 2GB onboard RAM. The 41mm watches even have the same 306mAh battery tucked inside. If you just want a deeply integrated accessory to pair with a Pixel phone or practically any other Android phone, for that matter, the Pixel Watch 2 is still an incredibly solid experience.

pixel watch 2 steal

Amazon currently has the Pixel Watch 2 listed from just $75 right now via the “Amazon Renewed” storefront. That’s a substantial saving even on the discounted $149.99 Pixel Watch 2 on the Google Store. It usually retails for $249.99, while the 41mm Pixel Watch 3 is still $299.99 when on sale. The first-generation Pixel Watch is a tough sell even at $49.99 on Amazon’s refurbished center, but the sequel is a great buy given just how similar it is to the latest model.

For under $80 the Pixel Watch 2 is a steal in our book. Plus Amazon’s return guarantees and the company’s money-back policies are second to none.

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