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Today, May 3rd

May 3: The Mind That Made Power Honest, A Mother's Fury Becomes a Movement, The Exxon Executive Who Never Came Home

Some of history's most consequential acts begin with an unflinching look at an uncomfortable truth. May 3 belongs to three figures who took that look and refused to turn away: a Florentine civil servant who wrote down what political power actually does, rather than what it claims to do, and in doing so became one of the most read and most reviled thinkers of the last five centuries; a California mother who stood at the edge of a grief that would have undone most people and transformed it, with extraordinary speed and discipline, into a movement that has saved hundreds of thousands of lives; and a case that forced an entire class of American executives to reckon with the fact that wealth and title offer no immunity from the most elemental forms of danger.

02 May

May 2: Something in the Water, The Man Who Survived the Payola Scandal, Justice at Abbottabad

May 2: Something in the Water, The Man Who Survived the Payola Scandal, Justice at Abbottabad A myth born in a Scottish newspaper, a reputation tested before Congress, and the end of a decade-long manhunt — three stories about what we choose to believe and what we demand to know Some stories are more powerful than the facts that started them. May 2 is populated by three that understand this: a brief newspaper report about a creature in a Scottish loch that has generated nearly a century of tourism, scientific expeditions, and genuine wonder; a congressional hearing that tested the integrity of a television host who had built his career on the premise that the right song, heard at the right moment, changes everything; and a covert operation in a Pakistani city that ended the longest manhunt in American history and forced a world still living in the shadow of September 11 to ask what, exactly, it had been waiting to feel. Myth, scrutiny, and reckoning — and the enduring human question of what we do with the answer once we have it. Nessie On May 2, 1933, the Inverness Courier published a short report by its water bailiff correspondent, Alex Campbell, describing an encounter by John and Aldie Mackay, a local couple who had been driving along the northern shore of Loch Ness when they observed what they described as an enormous creature rolling and plunging in the water. Campbell's account described it as resembling a whale, and the Courier's editor, Evan Barron, made the fateful editorial decision to use the word "monster" in his headline. The story was picked up by the wire services and spread internationally within days. Within months, the London Daily Mail had dispatched a big-game hunter to the Scottish Highlands to track the creature, a former circus manager had published a photograph he claimed was the monster's spoor, and Loch Ness — a twenty-three-mile-long, nearly 800-foot-deep body of fresh water in the Great Glen of Scotland — had been transformed from a scenic regional landmark into the most famous unexplained mystery in the world. What followed across the next ninety years is a story as much about human psychology as natural history. The most famous image of Nessie — the "Surgeon's Photograph" of 1934, purporting to show a long-necked creature rising from the loch's surface — was convincingly debunked in 1994 as a hoax involving a toy submarine fitted with a sculpted head. Sonar surveys conducted in 1967, 1987, and 2003 found no evidence of a large animal in the loch. A 2018 environmental DNA study of the loch's waters found no genetic traces of any large unknown creature, though it did find abundant evidence of eels. The scientific consensus is clear: there is no monster in Loch Ness. And yet the legend persists with a vitality that no debunking has managed to diminish, drawing more than 500,000 visitors to the loch each year — many of them scanning the water with genuine hope. Nessie endures not because the evidence supports her existence but because the human imagination, offered a dark, deep Scottish loch and the possibility of something ancient and inexplicable within it, finds the idea simply too good to relinquish.   Loch Ness on a Highland morning — twenty-three miles of dark water and nearly a century of the most durable mystery in modern folklore. Payola On May 2, 1960, Dick Clark testified before the House Legislative Oversight Subcommittee in Washington, D.C., as part of its investigation into payola — the practice by which record labels and music promoters paid disc jockeys and television hosts to play specific songs, without disclosure to the listening or viewing public. The investigation had already claimed the career of Alan Freed, the disc jockey widely credited with coining the term "rock and roll," who had been fired by his New York radio station and would never recover his professional standing. Clark arrived before the committee having divested himself, at ABC's insistence, of his financial interests in music publishing and record companies — interests that had been extensive and that created obvious conflicts of interest with his role as the nation's most influential tastemaker in popular music. The question before the committee was whether Clark had used his platform on American Bandstand to promote songs in which he had a financial stake. Clark's testimony was careful, thorough, and effective. He acknowledged the financial entanglements, maintained that he had never accepted cash payments for airplay, and presented himself with the boyish sincerity that had made him a television star. Subcommittee chairman Oren Harris famously told him, "You're a fine young man." Clark walked out of the hearing with his reputation not merely intact but, in some respects, enhanced — the survivor of a scandal that had destroyed his chief competitor. The payola hearings were, in retrospect, as much a reaction to the cultural disruption of rock and roll — a music of Black origins that had unsettled the mainstream — as a genuine reform effort, and their legacy is complicated. But they established, in law and in practice, the disclosure requirements that govern the relationship between commercial payments and broadcast airplay to this day. Clark went on to host American Bandstand for another thirty years and to produce Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve for four decades. The hearing on May 2, 1960, was the test he passed that made the rest of the career possible. A television host before Congress in 1960 — the hearing that ended careers across the music industry and left one man standing. ❦ Operation Neptune Spear In the early morning hours of May 2, 2011, local time in Pakistan — late evening of May 1 in Washington — two Black Hawk helicopters carrying twenty-three Navy SEALs from SEAL Team Six crossed the border from Afghanistan into Pakistani airspace and descended on a walled compound in Abbottabad, a mid-sized city in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. The compound had been identified by CIA analysts who had spent months tracking the movements of a courier known to have connections to al-Qaeda's senior leadership. Inside it, on the compound's third floor, was Osama bin Laden — the architect of the September 11, 2001, attacks that had killed 2,977 people, the founder of al-Qaeda, and the most wanted man in the world. The operation lasted approximately forty minutes. Bin Laden was killed by gunfire. His body was flown to the USS Carl Vinson in the North Arabian Sea and buried at sea in accordance with Islamic tradition, to prevent his grave from becoming a shrine. President Barack Obama announced the operation to the nation shortly before midnight on May 1, Washington time, in a brief televised address from the East Room of the White House. The announcement produced scenes of spontaneous public celebration outside the White House and at Ground Zero in New York that were broadcast around the world. The response was understandable — nearly ten years of war, grief, and vigilance had been aimed, in part, at this outcome — but the celebrations also prompted reflection on what bin Laden's death actually resolved. Al-Qaeda had already decentralized significantly; affiliated groups in Yemen, North Africa, and elsewhere continued to operate. The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, begun in the name of the September 11 response, would continue for years. The Abbottabad operation also raised pointed questions about Pakistani sovereignty and the extent to which Pakistani intelligence had been aware of bin Laden's presence in a city that housed a major military academy. May 2, 2011, was not the end of anything that could be cleanly ended. But it was, for the families of 2,977 people, a form of accounting that had taken nearly a decade to arrive.   The White House the night of May 1, 2011 — where a president told the world that a decade-long manhunt had reached its end.

02 May

May 2: The Greatest Two Minutes in Sports

The Greatest Two Minutes in Sports Tonight at Churchill Downs, 20 three-year-old thoroughbreds will run 1¼ miles for a garland of roses, a winner's check of $3.1 million, and a place in 152 years of history. Tonight, May 2, 2026, the gates of Churchill Downs open at 6:57 p.m. ET for the 152nd running of the Kentucky Derby — the oldest continuously contested major sporting event in the United States, and the one that has never, in a century and a half of American history, missed its date with the first Saturday in May. The morning-line favorite, Renegade, draws the No. 1 post — a position that has produced only one winner since 1986. The field includes two Japanese horses, Wonder Dean and Danon Bourbon, chasing a prize that no Japanese runner has ever won. The defending champion's trainer, Bill Mott, is back with Chief Wallabee. Somewhere in the 20-horse field is almost certainly a horse that will be remembered for decades, and almost certainly no one in the crowd of 150,000 knows yet which one it is. That is the promise the Kentucky Derby has kept every year since 1875. It has never broken it. Churchill Downs and the Race That Built a Holiday The Kentucky Derby was the idea of Meriwether Lewis Clark Jr. — grandson of the William Clark of Lewis and Clark — who traveled to England in 1872, attended the Epsom Derby and the French Grand Prix de Paris, and returned home to Louisville convinced that American horse racing needed exactly this kind of grand annual showcase. He organized the Louisville Jockey Club, leased land from his uncles John and Henry Churchill, and built a racetrack. The first Kentucky Derby was run on May 17, 1875, before a crowd of 10,000 people. A three-year-old colt named Aristides — trained by a formerly enslaved man, Ansel Williamson, and ridden by Oliver Lewis, one of 13 Black jockeys in that inaugural field of 15 — won by a length. Of the first 28 Kentucky Derby winners, 15 were ridden by Black jockeys at a time when horse racing was one of the few American sports where Black athletes competed openly as elite professionals. That history has been largely forgotten, and is only recently being recovered. The race became mythological slowly, and then all at once. The garland of red roses — now so synonymous with the Derby that Churchill Downs is called "the home of the Run for the Roses" — was first presented to the 1896 winner and became a formal tradition in 1904. The Mint Julep, the bourbon-and-mint cocktail now inseparable from Derby Day, predates the race itself, its origins traced to Virginia plantation culture of the late 18th century. The Twin Spires that define Churchill Downs's silhouette were added in 1895. The Derby hat tradition — the extraordinary headwear that fills the grandstands each May — grew organically from the Gilded Age fashion culture surrounding the race and is now a phenomenon unto itself. What Meriwether Lewis Clark Jr. built in 1875 as a Louisville civic project became, across 152 runnings, the most storied two minutes in American sports — a race that has produced Secretariat's 1973 record that still stands, Citation's 1948 Triple Crown, and the 80-1 miracle of Rich Strike in 2022, who came off the also-eligible list two days before the race and won anyway.   Churchill Downs in Louisville, Kentucky — home of the Twin Spires and the Kentucky Derby since 1875. Tonight, 150,000 people will watch the 152nd running of the race that has never missed a first Saturday in May. Renegade goes to the gate tonight as the favorite, carrying the weight of a No. 1 post that has won only once in the last 40 years — Ferdinand, 1986. Wonder Dean and Danon Bourbon carry the hopes of Japanese racing and the possibility of a historic first. Somewhere in the field is another Rich Strike, another long-shot who will be impossible to explain afterward and impossible to forget. The Kentucky Derby has survived wars, the Great Depression, a pandemic that ran the 2020 race without spectators for the only time in its history, and 151 previous occasions on which someone was convinced their horse was the one. Every May, the gates open, the field breaks, and the crowd that has waited all year for this moment holds its breath for approximately two minutes. Whoever crosses the wire first will wear roses. The rest is history — and tonight, it gets written again.

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