His Goodbye


April 21, 2025

Daily Edition:

Francis, Gone

Good Monday morning, Core readers!

It feels heavier than usual this morning. I'd almost finished writing a different lead story when the alert came through— and suddenly, everything shifted. Today's newsletters will report that Pope Francis surprised the crowd on Easter Sunday, but I'm here to tell you something else: he's gone. Unexpectedly. Quietly. And sooner than anyone expected.

Today, we look back at a pope who challenged tradition, made allies and enemies, and left the world a little different from the way he found it. As always, you’ll hear it here first — and not just what happened, but why it mattered, and what most others won’t say out loud.

Thanks, as always, for reading. Let’s begin.
Fatih Taskiran


In this issue:

Europe

Pope Francis Has Died


U.S.

SignalGate, Part II


Technology

No sweat!


Lifestyle

The Great Divide

Europe

Final Blessing

video preview

Just a day after delighting crowds from the balcony of St. Peter’s, Pope Francis — the first Latin American pope and one of the most reform-minded leaders in the Church’s history — has died at 88. Many thought he was recovering from illness after his Easter Sunday appearance. So this morning's announcement isn't just somber, but shocking.

Francis reshaped the global Catholic conversation. Migrants, climate justice, and marginalized people were his passions. He welcomed conversations on same-sex blessings, challenged authoritarian leaders, and attempted to pull the Vatican into the 21st century—not without backlash.

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U.S.

SignalGate Returns

It's the sequel no one wanted —and it's messier. Hegseth is now under fire for sharing Yemen strike details in a second Signal chat, which was on his personal phone and filled with… unqualified people: his wife, his brother, and his personal attorney.

Unlike the first leak (which accidentally included a journalist), this one was no accident — and far harder to explain away. It started as a "team huddle" and turned into a full-blown leadership crisis, prompting calls for Hegseth to be removed.

Technology

Marath-ON!

video preview

21 humanoid robots lined up alongside 12,000 human runners in Beijing for the world's first robot vs. human half-marathon. Spoiler: the humans obliterated them — but one robot, Tiangong Ultra, did cross the finish line in 2 hours and 40 minutes, with only a few battery swaps (and one dramatic faceplant).

China’s goal? To lead the global humanoid robot race by 2027. Judging by this “running start,” there’s still a long road ahead — but at least the robots now have sneakers.

It is difficult to say what is impossible, for the dream of yesterday is the hope of today and the reality of tomorrow.
Robert H. Goddard

💬 Beyond the Core

Hop to it!

This huge rabbit, rescued from a kill farm, is now a therapy bunny that drives a mini truck.

Ring-ing

What is the biggest wellness trend of the moment? Spoiler: leaving your marriage.

Big Texter

If you're texting, think twice before using shorthand.

📸 Lens to Life

Photos of robots running alongside flesh-and-blood runners in a Chinese half-marathon.


🗓️ Flashback

1526

Babur defeats Sultan Ibrahim Lodi in the first Battle of Panipat, establishing the Mughal Empire.


1792

Brazilian revolutionary Tiradentes was hanged, drawn, and quartered in Rio de Janeiro.


1863

Bahá'u'lláh, founder of the Bahá'í Faith, enters the Garden of Ridván near Baghdad. He declares himself a Messenger of God during the 12 days he spends there.


1918

Over Vaux-sur-Somme in France, German fighter ace Baron Manfred von Richthofen, aka "The Red Baron", was shot down and killed. The kill is credited to Canadian pilot Arthur Roy Brown.


1956

Elvis Presley's first hit record, "Heartbreak Hotel," becomes #1.


1989

Thousands of Chinese crowd into Beijing's Tiananmen Square, cheering students demanding greater political freedom.


Fatih Taskiran

I'm glad we could get together here. Looking forward to seeing you tomorrow!

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