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Trump supports Cuomo in NYC mayoral race against Mamdani

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US Republican president slams Zohran Mamdani as a ‘communist’, says Andrew Cuomo has a ‘good shot of winning’.

Washington, DC – United States President Donald Trump has backed former Governor Andrew Cuomo’s decision to run as an independent in the New York City mayoral race, renewing his attack against Democratic nominee Zohran Mamdani.

Asked about Cuomo’s decision to stay in the contest after losing the Democratic primary to Mamdani, Trump said on Tuesday that the former governor can still win in the general election in November.

“I think he should stay. I think he has a shot,” Trump told reporters.

The former governor, 67, announced on Monday his intention to run as an independent after handily losing the Democratic contest to Mamdani last month.

But Cuomo has a mountain to climb in the overwhelmingly Democratic city, especially given that he will be competing for the anti-Mamdani vote with incumbent Mayor Eric Adams, who is also running as an independent, and Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa.

In an early sign of the challenges he is facing, Cuomo’s announcement on X received a flood of negative responses, with many citing his sexual harassment scandals.

Cuomo resigned as New York governor in 2021 after facing mounting sexual harassment allegations, which he has denied.

On Tuesday, Trump, a native New Yorker who moved to Florida after his first term as president in 2021, stopped short of fully endorsing Cuomo.

Asked whether he prefers Cuomo to win, Trump said: “I don’t want to say. I’m a Republican; he’s a democrat or an independent.”

“I think Andrew would have a good shot of winning. He’s got to run a tough campaign. You know, he’s running against a communist,” he added, referring to Mamdani.

The US president has been increasingly critical of Mamdani, 33, a left-wing state legislator who has made affordability the key component of his campaign.

Accusing Democrats of being communists or communist sympathisers is a frequent, misleading attack line by some Republicans. Analysts have told Al Jazeera that Mamdani’s platform does not contain the key tenets of communism, such as government takeover of industry and private property.

Last week, Trump suggested that he could use the “tremendous power” of the White House to take over New York City if Mamdani wins.

“As President of the United States, I’m not going to let this Communist Lunatic destroy New York,” Trump wrote in a social media post earlier this month.

“Rest assured, I hold all the levers, and have all the cards. I’ll save New York City, and make it ‘Hot’ and ‘Great’ again, just like I did with the Good Ol’ USA!”

Many of the president’s close allies, including several members of Congress, have deployed overtly Islamophobic language to attack Mamadani, who is of South Asian descent.

Last month, the White House said that baseless allegations that Mamdani has supported “terrorism” in the past “should be investigated”, with the intent of revoking his US citizenship.

Some close Trump allies, including billionaire Bill Ackman, backed Cuomo during the primaries.

The race to lead the largest US city has been capturing national and international headlines, in part due to the attacks on Mamdani over his support for Palestinian rights.

On Tuesday, Mamdani’s campaign sarcastically congratulated Cuomo on winning Trump’s backing.

“Obviously, this triumph speaks for itself. The question now is whether Cuomo will embrace Trump’s support publicly or continue to just accept it in private,” the campaign said in a statement.

CEO of Guidewire Software, Rosenbaum, Sells Over $300,000 Worth of Shares

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Guidewire software CEO Rosenbaum sells $308,910 in shares

Mike Waltz faces questioning about Signal leak during UN ambassador hearing

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UN ambassador nominee Mike Waltz asked about Signal chat leak

Donald Trump’s former national security adviser Mike Waltz has faced scrutiny from US senators over his role in a sensitive Signal group chat in which officials discussed sensitive war plans.

Waltz appeared before a hearing on Tuesday seeking Senate confirmation as Trump’s nominee for ambassador to the United Nations, following his removal from his former post in May.

Under questioning from Democrats, Waltz maintained he did not share classified information in the chat, which accidentally included a journalist.

The March incident, which became known as “Signalgate”, threw the White House into turmoil and sparked a debate about the administration’s cybersecurity.

Waltz convened the group chat on Signal that also included Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth, Vice President JD Vance, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, as well as several other top administration officials to discuss an imminent strike on the Houthi rebel group in Yemen.

The editor-in-chief of the Atlantic magazine, Jeffery Goldberg, was also added to the highly sensitive chat and ultimately reported on his participation, and the chat’s contents.

Amid the fallout, Waltz appeared on Fox News to take “full responsibility” for building the group chat, adding that it was “embarrassing”. Waltz and the White House have maintained no classified information was shared in the chat.

Waltz was removed from his post in May by Trump who nominated him for US ambassador to the UN.

Despite opposition from some Democrats, he will likely be confirmed since Republicans hold a majority in the US Senate.

At the hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Senator Chris Coons, a Democrat from Delaware, said he hoped to hear Waltz express “regret over sharing what was very sensitive, timely information about a military strike on a commercially available app.”

Signal was not “an appropriate, secure means of communicating highly sensitive information,” Senator Coons said.

“That engagement was driven by and recommended by the Cyber Security Infrastructure Security Agency, by the Biden administration,” Waltz responded. He argued that the use of Signal was “not only authorised” but “highly recommended.”

“This was demonstrably sensitive information,” Senator Coons said, and asked Waltz if he was investigated for the expansion of the Signal group to include a journalist.

“The White House conducted an investigation and my understanding is the Department of Defence is still conducting an investigation,” Waltz responded.

Senator Tim Kaine, a Democrat from Virginia, also asked Waltz whether the Pentagon investigations into Secretary Hegseth were ongoing.

Waltz responded that he should not, and could not, comment on an ongoing investigation but maintained no classified information was shared.

Murmurs, a Trump post and a surprise – How Waltz’s removal unfolded

In contrast, Waltz’s fellow Republicans on the committee largely avoided the Signal matter, instead focusing on US funding to the United Nations and asking how he would engage with China’s rising influence.

Senator Rick Scott, a Florida Republican who once served alongside Waltz in the US House of Representatives, called him a “man of integrity, grit, and principle.”

Waltz’s nomination to be the US’s lead envoy at the UN comes amid international uncertainty about America’s role on the world stage and the strength of its commitments to foreign allies.

The position would play a key role in representing US interests abroad at a time when the Trump administration has slashed billions in foreign aid and fired thousands of staffers at the State Department and US Agency for International Development (USAID).

Senator Mike Barrasso, a Wyoming Republican, asked Waltz about his “commitment to reviewing every dollar going to the UN to ensure our taxpayer dollars are being used wisely.”

In response, Waltz listed a series of international organisations and projects that he said the US helped fund that he believed deserved review, including several climate-focused entities like the UN Environment Programme, the International Union for Conservation of Nature, the Commission for Environmental Cooperation, and more.

“I think it is incumbent on this administration to say, what’s it doing, is it making us safer, stronger, and more prosperous, and are we getting enough bang for our buck,” Waltz said.

MIT’s Bionic Knee Provides Amputees with Natural Movement

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Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have developed a method to restore astoundingly natural movement in people who have had leg amputations above the knee. Rather than fit an artificial limb into a socket, the team has created a bionic knee that can be integrated with a patient’s muscle and bone – enabling them to move much more easily than with previous prostheses.

The new bone-integrated system, dubbed e-OPRA (enhanced Osseointegrated Prostheses for the Rehabilitation of Amputees), is said to not only help patients walk faster, climb stairs, and avoid obstacles with ease, but also provide greater stability and control over movements.

In the video below, you can see a patient – with just a few inches of upper thigh and femur connected to the new prosthetic limb – demonstrating motion that’s surprisingly fluid as they walk and kick a ball.

Introducing: The Osseointegrated Mechanoneural Prosthesis

The tech comes from a team including Media Arts & Sciences professor Hugh Herr, who’s been running a biomechatronics lab at MIT for years. Herr developed a deep passion for mountain climbing in his early teens, lost the lower halves of both legs to frostbite after being caught in a blizzard, resumed climbing, and subsequently led pioneering research in prosthetics. A brief profile of Herr is provided in the clip below.

Superhuman Body – Dr. Hugh Herr, Innovator of Bionic Limbs

This breakthrough follows work presented by Herr and his team from last year, where they showed how nervous-system-driven prostheses for below-the-knee amputees gave them greater control over their movements. Indeed, both projects follow a surgical technique that Herr’s lab has been exploring for years called agonist-antagonist myoneuronal interface (AMI), which involves reconnecting muscle pairs so they can communicate their position and the speed of their contraction with each other within the residual limb.

That sensory feedback helps the patient decide how to move their prosthetic limb, and accurately control it. The above-the-knee system features a titanium rod implanted into the residual femur bone, along with wires that gather information from electrodes located on the AMI muscles within the body. The idea behind this approach is to provide better load-bearing and mechanical control of the prosthesis than a socket-based option, while avoiding the possibility of skin infections.

The new bionic knee is directly integrated with the user’s muscle and bone tissue (bottom row right), allowing for faster and more fluid motion than with a traditional prosthesis

Image courtesy of the researchers

Signals from the AMI muscles are transmitted to a custom-built robotic controller, which calculates the torque necessary to move the bionic knee just the way the user intends.

Two study participants who had received the combined AMI and e-OPRA system performed better at numerous physical tasks involving the prosthetics than others who had the AMI surgery but not the e-OPRA implant, and a third group who had neither AMI nor e-OPRA.

Additionally, the researchers found that the two participants who received the combined bionic knee system showed significantly greater feelings of agency and ownership of the prosthesis as part of their body. The study’s findings were published in the journal Science last week.

“No matter how sophisticated you make the AI systems of a robotic prosthesis, it’s still going to feel like a tool to the user, like an external device,” says Herr. “But with this tissue-integrated approach, when you ask the human user what is their body, the more it’s integrated, the more they’re going to say the prosthesis is actually part of self.”

Hopefully, this work will make advanced prosthetics for above-the-knee amputees more easily accessible in the near future. Herr expects that could take about five years, during which time the combined AMI and e-OPRA systems will go through larger clinical trials for Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval in the US.

The team’s work follows some fascinating recent innovations in more natural artificial limbs. Last year, researchers in Italy created an intricate unpowered prosthetic foot with a structure designed to closely replicate the bones in a real foot. And earlier this year, biomedical engineers at Johns Hopkins University presented a prosthetic hand that can grip a range of objects with just the right amount of pressure needed to hold them securely without damaging them.

Source: MIT News

Market dip triggered by inflation concerns following release of data showing impact of Trump tariffs in June

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  • Stocks dipped on Tuesday as new consumer price index data showed rising inflation and the Aug. 1 deadline for Trump’s tariff campaign loomed.

President Donald Trump’s tariff campaign is coming for your price tags. On Tuesday, the Labor Department released new data on its Consumer Price Index, showing that consumer prices rose 2.7% in June from a year earlier, and faster than May’s increase of 2.4%. Though that increase was in line with economists’ expectations, the stock market still reacted negatively to the news, with the S&P 500 dropping 0.4% and the Dow losing nearly 1%.

Markets have been on a rollercoaster since Trump unveiled his aggressive plans at April’s Liberation Day announcement, though stocks have mostly recovered since a calamitous collapse in the spring. But with Trump once again threatening an aggressive hike on trading partners’ levies on Aug. 1, and the existing tariffs already impacting consumer goods, volatility is likely still on the horizon for investors.

Ignore ‘Sell America’

The Consumer Price Index, which tracks goods and services costs, is a reliable tracker for measuring inflation, with investors often turning to updated data to predict potential macroeconomic changes, such as Federal Reserve rate cuts. Though CPI has been trending downward since a peak in 2022, a reversal could prolong cuts, especially with Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell warning that Trump’s tariffs are likely to negatively impact inflation, much to Trump’s chagrin.

The new data on Tuesday triggered mixed results for stocks, with banks like Wells Fargo and JPMorgan dropping despite better-than-expected earnings results. Nvidia, the first $4 trillion company, rose on Tuesday after announcing it hoped to resume sales of certain general processing units to China, which had been previously restricted due to export controls.

Tuesday’s dip in the S&P 500 demonstrated that investors are still waiting ahead of Trump’s new tariff deadline of Aug. 1, which would impose steep import costs on dozens of U.S. trading partners. Still, JP Morgan’s U.S. head of investment strategy, Jacon Manoukian, told Fortune that he remains confident in the U.S. economy’s long-term dominance, describing the so-called “Sell America” trade as short-sighted. “We completely disagree with the idea that the U.S. is somehow losing its position as the center of the financial universe,” he said.

Other assets also fell on Tuesday, with Bitcoin’s hot streak cooling down as the top cryptocurrency fell around 2.9% at the time of publication. It dropped below its new benchmark of $120,000, though it still remained above $115,000. But that could change as the House of Representatives continues with its self-announced “Crypto Week,” as lawmakers consider different bills that would establish regulatory frameworks for stablecoins and other cryptocurrencies. Circle, the stablecoin company that went public in June, fell about 4.6% on Tuesday.

Introducing the 2025 Fortune 500, the definitive ranking of the biggest companies in America. Explore this year’s list.

Court rules against Trump’s travel ban, says refugees cannot be barred from entering US

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The Trump administration has faced a raft of legal challenges as it seeks to radically restrict immigration to the US.

A United States federal judge has ruled that the administration of President Donald Trump cannot block approved refugees from entering the country under the guise of a wider travel ban.

US District Judge Jamal Whitehead ruled late on Monday that Trump’s June order barring people from 12 countries from entering the US expressly states that it will not stop people from seeking refugee status.

“In other words, by its plain terms, the Proclamation excludes refugees from its scope,” Whitehead wrote.

The ruling is the latest development in a dizzying number of court cases challenging the Trump administration’s efforts to radically restrict immigration through a raft of policies that have stretched the limits of executive power.

The judge ordered the administration to continue processing a group of 80 refugees who had already been through vetting and were “presumptively protected refugees” who were nonetheless turned back due to the travel ban.

That ban applies to 12 countries and expands on a similar effort pursued by Trump during his first term in office, when his so-called “Muslim ban” prompted widespread anger and faced legal challenges before being ultimately upheld by the conservative-majority Supreme Court.

The June order applies to countries such as Afghanistan, Yemen, Iran, and Sudan, as well as Haiti and Myanmar, among others.

The administration has also revoked existing legal status for scores of people from countries like Afghanistan and Haiti, throwing their future in the country into doubt and opening them up to the possibility of deportations to countries that experts say remain mired in conflict and unsafe conditions.

A US court temporarily paused an order by the Trump administration ending Temporary Protective Status (TPS) for Afghans living in the US on Monday, several hours before it was set to expire, extending that status by one week as the court deliberates on the issue further.

Trump suspended the US refugee admissions programme upon entering office at the beginning of his second term in January, leaving thousands of people who had already been cleared for admission, sometimes after years of an arduous bureaucratic and vetting process, in a state of limbo.

A handful of refugees and advocacy groups sued, and Whitehead ruled in February that the administration could not suspend a programme created and funded by Congress. A US Circuit court put that decision on hold in March, however, ruling that the president has wide latitude over the question of who may enter the country.

Chartmetric’s latest report, “Make Music Equal,” monitors gender representation among 1 million artists.

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MBW’s Stat Of The Week is a series in which we highlight a data point that deserves the attention of the global music industry. This week’s Stat Of the Week comes from the series’ long-time supporter, music data analytics firm Chartmetric.


Music analytics company Chartmetric has published its 2025 Make Music Equal Report, which presents the company’s analysis of pronoun data from a database of over one million artists across 230 countries and territories.

First released in 2018, Chartmetric says that its Make Music Equal initiative began as a “data-driven approach for measuring and improving the structural inequities of today’s music industry”.

Today, according to Chartmetric, the initiative exists as three parts, including a free and fully accessible database of over 1 million artist pronouns across the world; a live and regularly updated dashboard that offers a snapshot into the current state of diversity in the music industry; and an artist Identification Tool that lets users check and verify an artist’s pronoun data.

Chartmetric added in its report that “rather than assigning gender to artists,” which it says is “a problematic method regardless of accuracy,” the company has “relied on the pronouns that artists and their teams include in their bios on digital streaming platforms”.

The company explained further: “This has grown into a database of over 1 million pronouns. We use this data to analyze pronoun distribution across genres, playlists, and charts, aiming to highlight the industry’s gender disparities and identify where improvements are most needed.”

For the most recent report, which you can read in full here, Chartmetric has divided its research into 10 key segments. Below are a few key findings that stood out

Chartmetric has pronoun data on more than 1 million artists from 230 countries and territories. Of this 1 million, over 728,000 are solo acts. Today, according to Chartmetric’s research, 79% of these solo acts use he/him pronouns, while 18% use she/her pronouns and 3% use they/them and other pronouns.



Meanwhile, among the top 100 artists by ‘peak Chartmetric score’, women now make up 33% of this elite tier, representing a significant increase from just 26% in 2020 (see chart below).

While men still dominate with 56% of the top spots, the seven percentage point gain suggests female artists are increasingly breaking through into the industry’s most visible ranks.



The report highlights disparities in the sync licensing world, with video games showing the greatest gender imbalance.

While TV syncs demonstrate relatively balanced representation with 29% male artists and 26% female artists, video games feature 49% male solo artists compared to just 6% female artists in their soundtracks.

Festival and concert data reveals an interesting trend linked to rising touring costs. Between 2019 and 2024, the percentage of she/her artists performing at festivals rose by 3% while he/him acts saw a modest 2% increase.

This growth appears to be driven by a notable decline in bands on festival lineups – from 47% to 41% for concerts and 50% to 40% for festivals (see below) – as the “rising global cost of touring” makes individual artists more economically viable for promoters.



The report identified significant regional variations in gender representation.

Taiwan emerged as the country with the smallest gender gap among solo artists, with male artists representing 63% compared to 34% female artists – a 29 percentage point difference.

At the opposite extreme, Bangladesh showed the largest disparity with 92% male artists and just 6% female artists.



One of the most significant data points revealed within Chartmetric’s report is the power of female audiences in driving artist success.

Among the Top 10 male artists by Chartmetric score, female followers outnumbered male followers for all except three artists – Drake, Eminem, and Kendrick Lamar. Meanwhile, female artists saw female fans dominate “across the board.”




The report concludes that this pattern “highlights the strength and consistency of female fandom culture, particularly their roles in driving artist engagement on social platforms.”Music Business Worldwide

Severance dominates nominations, with The Penguin and The White Lotus close behind

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Getty Images Woman in white and black ensambleGetty Images

Quinta Brunson plays Philadelphia teacher Janine Teagues in the show Abbott Elementary

Severance, The Penguin, and The White Lotus lead the nominations for this year’s Emmy TV awards.

Britt Lower, Quinta Brunson, Harrison Ford and Jeremy Allen White are among the stars competing for the top prizes for acting.

The Studio, The Bear, Abbott Elementary and Shrinking are among the contenders in the comedy categories.

RuPaul became the most nominated reality host in Emmys history for his show RuPaul’s Drag Race, and Harrison Ford earned his first career Emmy nomination at age 83 for his role in the show Shrinking.

The best TV shows and actors of the past year will be honoured at the awards ceremony in Los Angeles on 14 September.

Here is the full list of nominees announced on Tuesday.

The most nominated shows

The most nominated shows

27 – Severance

24 – The Penguin

23 – The White Lotus

23 – The Studio

16 – The Last of Us

14 – Andor

14 – Hacks

Getty Images Stephen Graham and Owen Cooper attend Netflix's "Adolescence" ATAS Event at Television Academy's Wolf Theatre at the Saban Media Center on 27 May, 2025 in North Hollywood, California.Getty Images

British drama Adolescence stars Stephen Graham (left) and Owen Cooper

Major categories

Outstanding drama series

  • Andor (Disney+)
  • The Diplomat (Netflix)
  • The Last of Us (HBO Max)
  • Paradise (Hulu)
  • The Pitt (HBO Max)
  • Severance (Apple TV+)
  • Slow Horses (Apple TV+)
  • The White Lotus (HBO Max)

Outstanding comedy series

  • Abbott Elementary (ABC)
  • The Bear (Hulu)
  • Hacks (HBO Max)
  • Nobody Wants This (Netflix)
  • Only Murders in the Building (Hulu)
  • Shrinking (Apple TV+)
  • The Studio (Apple TV+)
  • What We Do in the Shadows (Hulu)

Outstanding limited or anthology series

  • Adolescence (Netflix)
  • Black Mirror (Netflix)
  • Dying for Sex (Hulu)
  • Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story (Netflix)
  • The Penguin (HBO Max)

Outstanding lead actor in a drama series

  • Sterling K Brown – Paradise (Hulu)
  • Gary Oldman – Slow Horses (Apple TV+)
  • Pedro Pascal – The Last of Us (HBO Max)
  • Adam Scott – Severance (Apple TV+)
  • Noah Wyle – The Pitt (HBO Max)

Outstanding lead actress in a drama series

  • Kathy Bates – Matlock (CBS)
  • Sharon Horgan – Bad Sisters (Apple TV+)
  • Britt Lower – Severance (Apple TV+)
  • Bella Ramsey – The Last of Us (HBO Max)
  • Keri Russell – The Diplomat (Netflix)

Outstanding lead actor in a comedy series

  • Adam Brody – Nobody Wants This (Netflix)
  • Seth Rogen – The Studio (Apple TV+)
  • Jason Segel – Shrinking (Apple TV+)
  • Martin Short – Only Murders in the Building (Hulu)
  • Jeremy Allen White – The Bear (Hulu)

Outstanding lead actress in a comedy series

  • Uzo Aduba – The Residence (Netflix)
  • Kristen Bell – Nobody Wants This (Netflix)
  • Quinta Brunson – Abbott Elementary (ABC)
  • Ayo Edebiri – The Bear (Hulu)
  • Jean Smart – Hacks (HBO Max)

Outstanding lead actor in a limited or anthology series or movie

  • Colin Farrell – The Penguin (HBO Max)
  • Stephen Graham – Adolescence (Netflix)
  • Jake Gyllenhaal – Presumed Innocent (Apple TV+)
  • Bryan Tyree Henry – Dope Thief (Apple TV+)
  • Cooper Koch – Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story (Netflix)

Outstanding lead actress in a limited or anthology series or movie

  • Cate Blanchett – Disclaimer (Apple TV+)
  • Meghan Fehy – Sirens (Netflix)
  • Rashidah Jones – Black Mirror (Netflix)
  • Cristin Milioti – The Penguin (HBO Max)
  • Michelle Williams – Dying for Sex (Hulu)
Getty Images Hannah Einbinder at the 2025 PaleyFest LA "Hacks" Screening held at Dolby Theatre on 28 March, 2025 in Hollywood, CaliforniaGetty Images

Hannah Einbinder portrays Ava Daniels, a down-on-her-luck comedy writer, in Hacks

Outstanding supporting actor in a drama series

  • Zach Cherry – Severance (Apple TV+)
  • Walton Goggins – The White Lotus (HBO Max)
  • Jason Isaacs – The White Lotus (HBO Max)
  • James Marsden – Paradise (Hulu)
  • Sam Rockwell -The White Lotus (HBO Max)
  • Tramell Tillman – Severance (Apple TV+)
  • John Turturro – Severance (Apple TV+)

Outstanding supporting actress in a drama series

  • Patricia Arquette – Severance (Apple TV+)
  • Carrie Coon – The White Lotus (HBO Max)
  • Katherine LaNasa – The Pitt (HBO Max)
  • Julianne Nicholson – Paradise (Hulu)
  • Parker Posey – The White Lotus (HBO Max)
  • Natasha Rothwell – The White Lotus (HBO Max)
  • Aimee Lou Wood – The White Lotus (HBO Max)

Outstanding supporting actor in a comedy series

  • Ike Barinholtz – The Studio (Apple TV+)
  • Colman Domingo – The Four Seasons (Netflix)
  • Harrison Ford – Shrinking (Apple TV+)
  • Jeff Hiller – Somebody Somewhere (HBO Max)
  • Ebon Moss-Bachrach – The Bear (Hulu)
  • Michael Urie – Shrinking (Apple TV+)
  • Bowen Yang – Saturday Night Live (NBC)

Outstanding supporting actress in a comedy series

  • Liza Colón-Zayas – The Bear (Hulu)
  • Hannah Einbinder – Hacks (HBO Max)
  • Kathryn Hahn – The Studio (Apple TV+)
  • Janelle James – Abbott Elementary (ABC)
  • Catherine O’Hara – The Studio (Apple TV+)
  • Sheryl Lee Ralph – Abbott Elementary (ABC)
  • Jessica Williams – Shrinking (Apple TV+)
Getty Images Jeremy Allen White attends a dinner for the cast and producers of "The Bear" at Musso & Frank Grill on June 9, 2025, in Hollywood, California.Getty Images

Jeremy Allen White recently reprised his role as chef Carmen “Carmy” Berzatto in series four of The Bear

Outstanding supporting actor in a limited or anthology series or movie

  • Javier Bardem – Monsters: The Lyle And Erik Menendez Story (Netflix)
  • Bill Camp – Presumed Innocent (Apple TV+)
  • Owen Cooper – Adolescence (Netflix)
  • Rob Delaney – Dying For Sex (Hulu)
  • Peter Sarsgaard – Presumed Innocent (Apple TV+)
  • Ashley Walters – Adolescence (Netflix)

Outstanding supporting actress in a limited or anthology series or movie

  • Erin Doherty – Adolescence (Netflix)
  • Ruth Negga – Presumed Innocent (Apple TV+)
  • Deirdre O’Connell – The Penguin (HBO Max)
  • Chloë Sevigny – Monsters: The Lyle And Erik Menendez Story (Netflix)
  • Jenny Slate – Dying For Sex (Hulu)
  • Christine Tremarco – Adolescence (Netflix)

Outstanding reality competition programme

  • The Amazing Race (CBS)
  • RuPaul’s Drag Race (MTV)
  • Survivor (CBS)
  • Top Chef (Bravo)
  • The Traitors (NBC)

Outstanding scripted variety series

  • Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO Max)
  • Saturday Night Live (NBC)

Outstanding talk series

  • The Daily Show (Comedy Central)
  • Jimmy Kimmel Live! (ABC)
  • The Late Show with Stephen Colbert (CBS)
Getty Images Seth RogenGetty Images

Hollywood satire The Studio is Seth Rogen’s latest venture

Challenging Client

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Client Challenge



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