Ken
Coverage of Ken in the Nexus archive.
- A Forecast First Alert is in effect for tonight for possible severe storms
A Forecast First Alert is in effect tonight for possible severe thunderstorms, which are expected to develop in western parts of the state and move toward the metro after 9 PM. Today will be mostly sunny and hot with isolated afternoon thunderstorms, while Friday brings warm, muggy weather and morning showers. The Fourth of July is forecasted to have similar conditions, with thunderstorms possible.
- A Forecast First Alert for possible severe storms later today
A Forecast First Alert is active for possible severe thunderstorms late today and tonight, with additional severe storm risks Thursday night into early Friday. Showers and thunderstorms are expected today, followed by a dry period before renewed storm activity.
- More heat on the way today!
A heat advisory is in effect with temperatures in the lower 90s and heat index values reaching near 100. Afternoon and early evening will be hot and muggy, with showers and thunderstorms expected to cool temperatures on Wednesday before more heat returns on Thursday. The Fourth of July is forecasted to be warm with scattered thunderstorms.
- A Heatwave begins today!
A heatwave begins today with temperatures in the 90s and heat index values reaching 100-110. Excessive heat warnings are in effect until Thursday, accompanied by thunderstorms and isolated severe storms. Miami-like humidity will make conditions feel hotter, particularly this afternoon and evening.
- Bartender who served missing American’s husband in Bahamas says one detail about timeline doesn't add up
A bartender in the Bahamas raised concerns about inconsistencies in the timeline of a missing American woman, Lynette Hooker, who vanished after a boating incident. Ken, the bartender, noted it was unusual for Brian Hooker to take eight hours to travel four miles in 25-mph winds, and Lynette's daughter, Karli Aylesworth, expressed skepticism about her mother's disappearance being an accident.
- Bosses say AI boosts productivity – workers say they’re drowning in ‘workslop’
Bosses claim AI improves productivity, while workers face challenges with 'workslop'—flawed AI-generated content requiring heavy editing. The term 'workslop' highlights issues arising from the AI boom, where superficially polished work proves inaccurate or incomplete.