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Scrape Result #9407 — cnn.com

Success · 5 headlines · 2026-06-26T12:02:04Z → 2026-06-26T12:02:35Z

India’s viral youth movement has moved from memes to the streets. Their leader tells CNN why

What started as an online joke has now spilled onto the streets of India’s capital. Since Saturday, Abhijeet Dipke, the founder of the satirical Cockroach Janta Party, has been camped out in the heart of New Delhi, leading a crowd of protesters who are refusing to leave until the country’s education minister resigns over a national exam system mired in scandal. “We are here for the long haul, no matter how many days it takes,” Dipke told CNN from the protest site on this week, as dozens gathered around him in support. “We are going to be here until Dharmendra Pradhan resigns.”

Financial: 1 Sport: 1 War: 1 Sentiment: 6 Humor: 8 Season: 1 Social: 9 Local: 1 Global: 8 Clickbait: 7
The article focuses on a humorous protest movement in India, highlighting social activism and satire, while also having a global significance, but it does not touch on financial, sports, or war topics.

Even Madison Square Garden’s cops can’t believe Taylor Swift wedding rumors

An event permit has been requested. Streets are set to be blocked off. Invitations have even been issued, per one source. But even the legions of staff who work at and around Madison Square Garden — the massive sports arena in the heart of Manhattan where Taylor Swift is rumored to be celebrating her wedding next weekend — aren’t so sure. “She’s a glamorous girl,” said one NYPD officer positioned outside the Garden. “She wouldn’t get married here.” Indeed, the Garden is a far cry from the venues that have seen celebrity nuptials in the past — think Jeff Bezos taking over Venice to wed Lauren Sánchez or even Dua Lipa in Sicily. The arena is a behemoth hunk of metal in the most tourist-packed part of the city, whose floors have absorbed the sweat and tears of hundreds of athletes and music fans.

Financial: 1 Sport: 2 War: 1 Sentiment: 6 Humor: 3 Season: 1 Social: 9 Local: 1 Global: 5 Clickbait: 7
The article focuses on celebrity culture surrounding Taylor Swift's rumored wedding, with a strong emphasis on social aspects and a moderate level of intrigue, making it somewhat clickbait-y.

One week in, what exactly are America and Iran getting from their agreement?

The big news is that the United States and Iran are no longer openly at war. That is, in itself, a win that likely saved lives a week after President Donald Trump signed a memorandum of understanding in France to halt the fighting. That pause was never a given, considering a half-century of hatred between Washington and Tehran and a regional history of eviscerated peace deals. So far, the MOU, a 14-point framework for talks on a permanent peace, has also survived the suspicions of many US lawmakers that it enshrines an American defeat.

Financial: 1 Sport: 1 War: 9 Sentiment: 6 Humor: 1 Season: 1 Social: 2 Local: 1 Global: 10 Clickbait: 3
The article focuses on the geopolitical implications of the agreement between the US and Iran, highlighting the cessation of hostilities, which gives it a high score for war and global significance, while it lacks elements of finance, sport, humor, and local context.

Iran strikes vessel, pausing UN efforts to evacuate ships from Hormuz

Iran struck a vessel in the Strait of Hormuz on Thursday, forcing a pause on evacuations of stranded seafarers and demonstrating its continued ability to restrict the critical waterway, despite the agreement reached last week with the United States. A US official told CNN the vessel was attacked by an Iranian drone, but did not provide further details. While Iran has not claimed responsibility, Thursday’s attack came hours after its powerful revolutionary guards warned that vessels would only be given safe passage via Iranian routes, challenging the Trump administration’s claim that the strait is free and open once more.

Financial: 1 Sport: 1 War: 8 Sentiment: 4 Humor: 1 Season: 1 Social: 2 Local: 1 Global: 9 Clickbait: 6
The article primarily discusses a military conflict involving Iran and its impact on maritime operations, scoring high on war and global significance, while having low scores in financial, sport, humor, and local aspects.

Gangland ‘hit’ shows nowhere is safe in the war over the world’s most lucrative cocaine market

Stepping out of a restaurant onto the bustling streets of Ho Chi Minh City, as diners sit at street tables, the shooter pulls out a gun and fires on his targets from behind. The alleged hit kills a senior member of a feared Australian drug cartel and injures another, yet more carnage in a gang war for control of the world’s most lucrative cocaine market. Video of the shooting in Vietnam shows 24-year-old Lorenzo Lemalu, an operative with the Coconut Cartel, staggering on the footpath before he’s dragged into the restaurant, where attempts are made to save his life. His alleged associate lies seriously injured beside him on the blood-smeared tiles.

Financial: 1 Sport: 1 War: 10 Sentiment: 2 Humor: 1 Season: 1 Social: 5 Local: 1 Global: 9 Clickbait: 7
The article focuses on a violent gangland hit related to the global cocaine market, emphasizing the ongoing war and its implications, which justifies high scores in war and global categories, while sentiment is low due to the tragic nature of the event.