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"Running Out of Time" is a song by the American rock band Paramore (pictured). It was released on May 23, 2023, by Atlantic Records as the fourth single from the band's sixth studio album This Is Why (2023). Hayley Williams, Taylor York, and Zac Farro wrote the song in the early stages of the album's production, and Carlos de la Garza produced it. The band premiered the song at a concert at the Grand Ole Opry on February 7, 2023, and performed it on Jimmy Kimmel Live! on February 14. Described by critics as a pop-rock and dance-rock song, "Running Out of Time" deals with time management and comments on social anxieties over death, aging, and losing friends. Williams said the song was influenced by her personal struggle with punctuality and her friendship with Taylor Swift. Critics positively reviewed the song, praising its lyrics as playful and its composition as well-balanced. The song peaked on several international charts in 2023 and ranked on Billboard's year-end Alternative Airplay chart. (Full article...)
Did you know ...
- ... that 1,500 citizens petitioned Canadian architect John Mackenzie Moore (pictured) to run for election as mayor of London, Ontario, and he ultimately defeated the popular incumbent?
- ... that the Zebulon Devil Dogz, a collegiate baseball team in the United States, is to consist entirely of athletes from Australia?
- ... that The Assembly premiered during Autism Acceptance Week?
- ... that an audit led by Gaynor Legall found that Wales had more than 200 commemorations of people linked to the slave trade?
- ... that the title phrase of the 1952 R&B song "Rock Me All Night Long" is a euphemism for sexual intercourse?
- ... that Henry Morford wrote sequels to works by Charles Dickens and Lord Byron?
- ... that a 1998 documentary covers economic exploitation in post-communist gay pornography from Eastern Europe?
- ... that a museum exhibit later became a Rockefeller family residence?
- ... that, after the US government asked Marvel Comics to make a comic about how drugs are dangerous, the Comics Code Authority refused to approve it because it was about drugs?
In the news
- In golf, Aaron Rai wins the PGA Championship.
- The African Party for the Independence of Cape Verde, led by Francisco Carvalho (pictured), wins the most seats in the parliamentary election.
- Bulgaria, represented by Dara with the song "Bangaranga", wins the Eurovision Song Contest.
- The World Health Organization declares the Ebola epidemic in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda a public health emergency of international concern.
- Protests erupt in Bolivia against the government of Rodrigo Paz, causing clashes between the protesters and the police.
On this day
May 23: Aromanian National Day
- 1706 – War of the Spanish Succession: The Grand Alliance armies routed the Franco-Spanish-Bavarian army in Ramillies, present-day Belgium.
- 1980 – The Shining, the psychological horror film directed by Stanley Kubrick (pictured), was premiered on 10 screens in New York City and Los Angeles.
- 2008 – The International Court of Justice awarded the Middle Rocks to Malaysia and Pedra Branca to Singapore, resolving a 29-year-old territorial dispute in the Singapore Strait.
- 2021 – Ryanair Flight 4978 was forced to land by Belarusian authorities, who detained dissident journalist Roman Protasevich.
- William Bradford (d. 1752)
- Margaret Fuller (b. 1810)
- Basil Salvadore D'Souza and Aileen Hernandez (b. 1926)
- Brennan Johnson (b. 2001)
Today's featured picture
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Albert Marco was an Italian-born bootlegger and pimp active in Los Angeles during the American Prohibition era. Born around 1887, he immigrated into the United States in the early 20th century and became involved in crime in Nevada and Washington before moving to Southern California. Protected by political connections, Marco made large profits from liquor smuggling and prostitution, and was linked to figures including Charles H. Crawford and Max "Boo Hoo" Hoff. In 1928 he was arrested after shooting two men at the Ship Cafe in Venice, Los Angeles. Convicted of assault with a deadly weapon, he was sent to San Quentin State Prison, and was eventually deported to Italy. This photograph, showing Marco at the police station with blood stains, was captured on a glass-plate negative by a Los Angeles Times photographer the morning after a Ship Cafe shooting. Photograph credit: unidentified Los Angeles Times photographer; restored by Adam Cuerden
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