
Newsweek International
April 11, 2025This exciting weekly publication offers a clear combination of news, culture and thought-provoking ideas that challenge the smart and inquisitive. Our promise is to put the reporting back into the news.
The Archives
1972 “With the enormous interest in televised sports such as football and basketball, there has been a corresponding explosion in betting—particularly throughout the middle and upper-middle classes,” Newsweek reported. Today, legal sports betting operations generate billions of dollars in revenue in the United States, according to the American Gaming Association. However, some recent studies have reflected poor financial impacts for consumers because of the growing industry—including smaller household savings, lower consumer credit scores and higher credit card debt. 1966 “For the first time...avoidance of service at a time when U.S. soldiers were at war and casualty lists were mounting had become socially acceptable,” Newsweek wrote amidst the Vietnam War. Now, confidence in the U.S. armed services is at the lowest point in over two decades, according to a 2023 Gallup…
Disaster Response
Rescue workers assess a collapsed 33-story building under construction near the Chatuchak market following a 7.7 magnitude earthquake that struck Myanmar and Thailand on March 28. The quake’s epicenter hit near Mandalay, Myanmar’s second-largest city, and was accompanied by a 6.4 magnitude aftershock. At least 1,700 people were killed and 3,400 injured in Myanmar, with a total of up to 10,000 deaths possible according to U.S. Geological Service predictive modeling. At least 10 people had died as a result of the building collapse in the Thai capital at the time of going to press, and up to 78 more were still missing.…
Flight of Fancy
CONCORDE’S RETIREMENT IN 2003 BROUGHT THE curtain down on an age of supersonic passenger flights. Now, two decades later, Boom Supersonic is trying to revive that era. It’s not just about the speed, the technology or the glamour, says its CEO—something even more important is at stake. “Imagine a future in which our children have friends from other continents that they actually spend time with and what that does for the world,” Blake Scholl told Newsweek. “It’s very hard to go to war with somebody you’ve met.” That prospect is edging closer. Tests have taken place for the Boom Overture, a spiritual successor to Concorde that could fly between London and New York City in just three-and-a-half hours, with plans to revive the Atlantic journey and open other routes across…
A Bruising Diplomatic Ballet
SZUCHA AVENUE, WARSAW, 8 a.m. In front of the entrance to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs building, Radosław Sikorski greets his Ukrainian counterpart Andriy Sybiha, who had been in negotiations with the U.S. in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, a few hours earlier. Sybiha wants to convey the results of these talks to the Polish government. “We keep in constant touch, but there is nothing like a direct conversation,” says Sikorski after the meeting. He adds that Poland is satisfied with the new proposals to resolve the conflict with Russia, which President Vladimir Putin started over three years ago. This is their second conversation in a few dozen hours. Keith Kellogg, Donald Trump’s special envoy for Ukraine, also contacted Sikorski before leaving for Jeddah. “The only thing we are afraid of,” Newsweek…
ALL SYSTEMS GO
THE RESOLUTENESS OF NASA’S AMBITIOUS vision to send astronauts to Mars—a round-trip voyage of more than a billion miles once limited to science fiction—appears stronger than ever, albeit not without significant technological and physiological hurdles. As billionaire Elon Musk continues SpaceX’s relentless commercial efforts, President Donald Trump recently reinvigorated the United States’ race to put boots on the rocky red planet during his joint session to Congress, vowing to lead humanity into space and “plant the American flag on the planet Mars and even far beyond.” Trump previously pledged to send astronauts to Mars during his inaugural address without elaborating on a time frame, but regularly referenced the fourth planet from the sun while campaigning last fall. At a rally in October in Reading, Pennsylvania, Trump promised the United States…
MOST TRUSTWORTHY COMPANIES IN AMERICA 2025
TRUST IS THE FOUNDATION OF ANY STRONG relationship. While it’s one of the most valuable assets a company can have, it’s also one of the hardest to measure. Trust shapes the choices consumers make, the confidence investors place in a business and the loyalty employees feel toward their workplace. Yet, trust is not always as strong as companies assume. A PwC survey found that while 90 percent of executives believed their companies were highly trusted by customers, only 30 percent of consumers felt the same way, highlighting a persistent and widening gap. To help bridge this divide, Newsweek has partnered with market research firm Statista to identify America’s Most Trustworthy Companies 2025. This year’s ranking includes 700 companies in 23 industries ranging from aerospace and health care to retail and…