Here are the headlines you Need2Know for Monday, July 19, 2021:

COVID-19 LATEST

The United States is quickly falling behind in the global vaccination race. After a slow start, Canada has now overtaken the U.S. in terms of its percentage of fully vaccinated adults. The EU is also catching up after lagging far behind until recently. In the developing world, the picture is grim: just 1% of people in low-income countries have been even partially vaccinated. Some hospitals in under-vaccinated parts of the Midwest and South are reactivating their surge plans as the Delta variant drives up hospitalizations, which are back up to about 3,000 a day nationally. Deaths have also ticked up to 238 on the 7-day average. BLOOMBERG

VAX MISINFO

The White House and Facebook are engaged in a war of words over vaccine misinformation after President Biden said social media platforms were “killing people” by allowing falsehoods about the COVID vaccines to spread. Facebook immediately shot back that the president was “finger-pointing.” According to Facebook, 85% of users in the U.S. either want to or have been vaccinated and 2 billion people have “viewed authoritative information” about COVID and vaccines. The surgeon general added that whatever Facebook is doing to curb the spread of misinformation is “not enough.” NBC NEWS

WESTERN WILDFIRES

The Bootleg Fire in Oregon is now the size of Los Angeles, one of about 70 blazes currently burning in the West. A growing wildfire near Lake Tahoe has exploded in size, jumping a highway and leading to evacuations near the California-Nevada state line. Firefighters say the conditions they’re facing across the region are more typical of late summer or fall. GUARDIAN

AMERICA'S PASTIME

A shooting outside Nationals Park in D.C. during the Nats-Padres game on Saturday sent fans and players fleeing for cover in the bottom of the sixth inning. No one was injured inside the venue and police say the stadium was not the target. A night earlier, a 6-year-old girl was killed two miles away while riding her scooter. Those were just two of the dozens of shootings that occurred over the weekend across the country. In Philly, a 1-year-old boy was shot in the leg. In Chicago, 53 people were shot in 41 separate shootings. In Tucson, Ariz. police are investigating a deadly shooting rampage across three separate crime scenes. Several American cities are outpacing their 2020 homicide rates, which were already up 25% from the year before. CNN

OPEC OPENS SPIGOT

The world’s major oil producers have agreed to drastically increase the supply of crude oil over the next two years that would restore all of the cuts they made during the pandemic. The production agreement will add millions of barrels of oil to the market, which should help lower gas prices as well as inflation. WSJ

SMARTPHONE WARS

Apple has fallen from second to third place in global smartphone market share, according to a new research report. Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi is now in second place with 17% of the market, ahead of Apple’s 14% and behind Samsung’s 19%. Xiaomi’s strategy has been to undercut Samsung and Apple with devices that cost about 75% less than an iPhone and 40% less than a Galaxy. THE VERGE

COCO A NO-GO

Coco Gauff will sit out the Olympics after testing positive for COVID, meaning the U.S. tennis team will be without its two top stars after Serena Williams pulled out earlier. With less than a week to go until the Opening Ceremony, at least three people have tested positive while staying in the Olympic Village. Thousands of athletes are flying into Tokyo this week for the Games, raising fears that a virus outbreak will be hard to stop once it starts. Organizers are taking measures to keep that from happening, from the obvious -- testing athletes daily -- to the ridiculous -- making them sleep on cardboard beds that can only support the weight of a single person. Organizers say the beds are environmentally-friendly, but some athletes think the real reason is to keep them from hooking up. YAHOO NEWS

BRITNEY UNCENSORED

Britney Spears lashed out at her family over the weekend, taking to Instagram to blast not just her father but her sister, Jamie Lynn, for performing her music. Spears called out her “so-called support system” for failing her over the course of her 13-year conservatorship and wrote that she will not perform so long as her father continues to control her career. PEOPLE

SPOTTED...

… Adele, making a rare public appearance in the front row at the NBA Finals in Phoenix, where she watched the Bucks pull ahead of the Suns, 3-2: SEE PICS

LEFTOVERS: UNSTOPPABLE

A 14-year-old girl from China is being compared to the basketball great Yao Ming after her hoop skills went viral around the world. Zhang Ziyu is 7 foot 5 inches tall -- and growing -- and has been, unsurprisingly, dominating her under-15 league, where her closest opponent in height is two feet shorter: SEE HER

Listen to the N2K Podcast! Looking for more context and analysis on the big stories of the day? Check out our podcast! Hosts Jill and Carlo break down the headlines, every weekday morning Listen on Apple or Spotify, or watch on YouTube, and send us your feedback!

Share:
More In Culture
Bitcoin Sees Dip After Concerns of New COVID Variant
Bitcoin has officially entered bear market territory. The cryptocurrency is down 20% from an all-time high of nearly $69,000 dollars, which it hit earlier this month. Experts mark the new potentially vaccine-resistant coronavirus variant as the reason for the dip. Patrick McConlogue, CEO of Overlin, joins Cheddar News to discuss.
Stocks Close Lower On Convers Over New COVID-19 Variant
U.S. markets were open for an abbreviated session on the day after Thanksgiving, and the day saw a market meltdown. The Dow dropped more than 900 points for its worst day of the year. Matt Orton, Chief Market Strategist at Carillon Tower Advisers, joined Cheddar News' Closing Bell to discuss.
National Dog Show Crowns Its First Back-to-Back Best in Show Winner
For the first time in the National Dog Show's 20-year-history on NBC, a canine was crowned Best in Show for the second year in a row. Claire, a Scottish deerhound, was the repeat winner, and David Frei, expert analyst and host of the National Dog Show Presented by Purina, joined Cheddar to discuss the historic victory. "It's never happened in the 20 years that we've done this show," he said. "She looks great right now. She's at the top of her game, she's the number three show dog in the country, and has become the top winning Scottish deerhound of all time, breaking her grandmother's record."
Debunking the Demise of Black Friday
Lucien Etori, VP, executive strategy director at R/GA., joined Cheddar News to discuss how retailers are handling supply chain disruptions this shopping season, and how retailers are building better experiences for customers during these ongoing issues.
Food Banks Grapple with Supply Chain Shortages This Thanksgiving
From supply chain shortages to high food costs, food banks are scrambling to serve their communities this Thanksgiving. According to Feeding America, while demand from the beginning of the pandemic has gone down, one in eight people in the U.S. may experience food insecurity this year. Anna McGovern, chief supply chain officer with Food Bank for New York City, joins Cheddar News to discuss the impact of inflation and supply chain issues.
Companies and Consumers Preparing for Black Friday & Cyber Week
The biggest shopping day of the year is approaching - Black Friday - and the following week is known as Cyber Week, the biggest time of the year for online shopping. But for many companies and consumers, the holiday shopping season is already underway. Retailers have been getting creative in their attempts to lure customers amid ongoing supply chain issues, inflation, and the pandemic that could impact sales. Lionesque Group CEO and founder Melissa Gonzalez joins Cheddar News' Closing Bell to discuss.
Jurors Find All Three Defendants Guilty in Ahmaud Arbery Murder
Jurors on Wednesday convicted the three white men charged in the death of Ahmaud Arbery, the Black man who was chased and fatally shot while running through their Georgia neighborhood in an attack that became part of the larger national reckoning on racial injustice during the summer of 2020. Trial attorney and former prosecutor Leslie Ricard Chambers joins Cheddar News' Closing Bell to discuss the verdict, possible sentencing, and more.
Load More