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25 Essential American Films to Watch This Fourth of July

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America has spent 250 years telling itself stories about freedom, reinvention, courage, money, violence, and who gets included in the national picture. These films do not all agree with one another, and that is precisely why they belong together. They show the country at its most hopeful, cruel, inventive, delusional, funny, ambitious, and occasionally impossible to defend.

Because nothing says “understanding America” like sitting in the dark for two hours watching cowboys, capitalists, the underdog, and Cold War freakouts.

This isn’t just a list of essential films made in America. It is a lineup of films actually set in the United States that dig into what it means to live, dream, scheme, survive, fail, reinvent yourself, or simply spiral here.

From manifest destiny and racial reckoning to suburban dread, war, ambition, greed, Hollywood fantasy, and the more questionable corners of capitalism, each film captures a different piece of the American experience—for better, though usually for worse.

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And before anyone starts clutching their vintage film reels about Citizen Kane or The Wizard of Oz not making the cut, they’ve been on every list since the dawn of time. We know. They’re legendary. But honestly? We’re so over it. Back of the bus, Dorothy!

And let’s get this out of the way too: we’re huge fans of the ‘80s. We’ve watched The Breakfast Club and Ferris Bueller’s Day Off about 40 times each. But let’s be real—essential? Nah. We love ‘em, but they’re not making this list.

Honorable mentions? Of course. I’m not a monster, although the medication they put me on might speak otherwise. Mr. Smith Goes to Washington gave us the original idealistic meltdown back when filibusters were dramatic instead of just depressing. Ahem…Senator Booker.  

The Apartment and Some Like It Hot reminded us that Americans used to flirt with wit and cross-dressing before Elon Musk and X ruined nuance. Jaws made everyone afraid of swimming, boating, or doing anything remotely fun near the ocean—and basically invented summer panic.

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Gettysburg is four hours of facial hair and cannonballs for the History channel crowd. 

Rocky? It’s the American Dream in sweatpants. Stallone turned a mumbling meatpacking palooka into a national icon who not only punched out Mr. T, but also singlehandedly ended the Cold War by outlasting a 6’6″ steroid-fueled Soviet science experiment. #Imustbreakyou

Oh, and Bonnie and Clyde: America’s original sexy criminals, armed with great outfits, worse ideas, and enough slow-motion bloodshed to earn permanent residency in cinematic legend.

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Then there’s The Philadelphia Story, where the problems of the American rich are so charmingly presented that you almost forget you’re rooting for people who have never done laundry, faced a utility bill, or checked their narcissism at the front foyer.

25 Essential American Films

These 25 essential American films span silent comedy, noir, Westerns, musicals, war dramas, political satire, horror, and the darker corners of the American dream. Each is set in the United States and offers something to say about the country’s history, ambition, class divides, race, violence, celebrity, capitalism, and enduring talent for turning disaster into spectacle.

They are also films worth owning. A proper 4K UHD or Blu ray release preserves the cinematography, sound, and detail that streaming services too often compress into submission. Our friends at The Criterion Collection would agree with that point rather strongly.

king-kong-1933

King Kong (1933)

Directed by Merian C. Cooper & Ernest B. Schoedsack

Why it’s essential: King Kong is a giant metaphor for exploitation, ambition, spectacle, and New York’s enduring habit of turning everything into a show until it comes crashing down, literally.

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Released during the Great Depression, the film turns Manhattan into both a dream factory and a place of brutal decline, where desperate people chase money, fame, and survival beneath skyscrapers that suddenly feel less permanent than advertised. Kong is exploited, commodified, paraded before a paying audience, and then blamed when the whole arrangement goes predictably sideways. America has repeated that business model with impressive consistency.

It also helped create the modern giant monster movie, proving that visual effects, scale, terror, and genuine pathos could share the same screen. The Empire State Building finale remains one of cinema’s great images, and somehow still feels more honest about New York than half the city’s luxury condo brochures.

Where to buy: $19.99 at Amazon


gone-wind-dvd

Gone With the Wind (1939)

Directed by Victor Fleming

Why it’s essential: Victor Fleming’s Gone With the Wind remains one of Hollywood’s grandest and most technically impressive spectacles, even as it asks the audience to mourn a version of the Old South built on selective memory, wealth, and the erasure of slavery’s brutality.

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That contradiction is precisely why it still matters. The film is beautiful, romantic, deeply problematic, and impossible to separate from America’s long habit of turning history into pageantry when the truth gets uncomfortable.

It also lands differently now, as Atlanta, Nashville, Memphis, Lexington, Raleigh, Richmond, and Charlotte reshape the economic and cultural map of the South. Money, companies, and people are moving into a region that is no longer content to play supporting character to New York, Boston, Los Angeles, or San Francisco. But the new South still carries the old one with it, including the mythology, inequality, ambition, and unresolved history that Gone With the Wind dresses up in curtains and calls tradition.

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Where to buy: $23.74 at Amazon

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stagecoach-blu-ray

Stagecoach (1939)

Directed by John Ford

Why it’s essential: John Ford’s Stagecoach did not invent the Western, but it gave the genre a working engine. Cowboys, redemption, class anxiety, danger, and a bumpy ride through Monument Valley all arrive in one compact, thrilling package. It also made John Wayne a star and showed Hollywood that the frontier could hold an entire country’s worth of arguments.

The film is still great fun, but its larger importance is how much it helped define the American West on screen. The genre may have largely wandered away from movie theaters, but television has kept the frontier myth on life support with Taylor Sheridan’s endless range of ranches, oil fields, lawmen, and wounded men staring at mountains. Yellowstone18831923Lawmen: Bass ReevesThe MadisonMarshals, and Landman all work different corners of the same territory.

Ford’s version is cleaner, faster, and more mythic than most of what followed. But the basic machinery remains the same: land, money, violence, class, family, and people trying to outrun the country they helped build.

Where to buy: $39.99 at Amazon

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The Best Years of Our Lives (1946)

Directed by William Wyler

Why it’s essential: William Wyler’s The Best Years of Our Lives is a quietly devastating film about three World War II veterans trying to return to jobs, marriages, families, and a country eager to celebrate them without fully understanding what they have brought home.

Fredric March and Dana Andrews are extraordinary, but Harold Russell gives the film its most unforgettable performance. A real World War II veteran who lost both hands during the war, Russell plays Homer Parrish with a directness and vulnerability that no amount of studio polish could fake. His performance was so powerful that the Academy gave him both an honorary Oscar for bringing hope and courage to fellow veterans and the competitive Oscar for Best Supporting Actor.

The film is compassionate without becoming sentimental and honest without turning suffering into spectacle. America loves a victory parade. This film asks what happens after the marching band goes home.

Where to buy: $21.99 at Amazon

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The Godfather (1972)

Directed by Francis Ford Coppola

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Why it’s essential: Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather is not merely a gangster film. It is an American family saga about power, immigration, loyalty, capitalism, and the ugly price of treating love as another business arrangement.

Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, James Caan, Robert Duvall, and Diane Keaton give the film its soul, but Gordon Willis gives it its shadows. Every darkened room, amber glow, and half concealed face makes the Corleone world feel both grand and suffocating.

It remains essential because it understands that the American dream can look remarkably noble from across the room, right up until someone closes the door and starts taking meetings. Do not settle for streaming. This one deserves a 4K UHD disc with Dolby Vision and Atmos, preferably watched with the lights down and nobody asking why Michael seems so quiet.

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Where to buy: $25.99 at Amazon


the-general-1926-dvd

The General (1926)

Directed by Buster Keaton & Clyde Bruckman

Why it’s essential: Buster Keaton’s The General is one of the great silent comedies and one of the most astonishing action films ever made. Keaton turns a Civil War train chase into a machine of perfect timing, impossible stunts, collapsing bridges, and physical comedy so precise that most modern blockbuster directors should be required to watch it before being allowed near a green screen.

Its Confederate point of view deserves context, particularly because the film turns a brutal chapter of American history into an adventure built around loyalty, romance, and locomotives. But as filmmaking, it remains extraordinary. Keaton does not need dialogue to sell danger, heartbreak, or a man trying to save his train, his girl, and whatever remains of his dignity.

Find the best restoration you can, preferably with a strong musical score. The film moves like it was made yesterday, which is more than can be said for most action movies with a budget large enough to purchase a small country.

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Where to buy: $16.31 at Amazon


do-right-thing-criterion

Do the Right Thing (1989)

Directed by Spike Lee

Why it’s essential: Spike Lee’s Do the Right Thing is a blistering, funny, frighteningly alive portrait of race, community, policing, pride, and the pressure that builds when nobody feels heard. It does not offer a tidy lesson or a safe villain. It shows a neighborhood under a brutal summer heat, with every insult, misunderstanding, and act of disrespect adding another degree.

Along with films like Juice and Boyz n the Hood, it forced audiences to look at inner city America without the usual suburban filter or a reassuring studio ending. These were stories many people preferred not to acknowledge because they made poverty, anger, police violence, and racial tension impossible to treat as somebody else’s problem.

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A great deal has changed since 1989. Black actors and actresses now lead blockbuster franchises, prestige films, major television series, and command serious power in Hollywood. But progress does not hand anyone a lifetime exemption from prejudice. Some of the people who made careers exposing America’s uglier instincts have later shown blind spots of their own, which should raise an eyebrow or two. Empathy is not supposed to stop at the edge of your own group.

That is part of why Do the Right Thing endures. It is not a sermon. It is a warning about what happens when people stop seeing one another as human beings and start treating every disagreement as a reason to burn the whole block down.

Where to buy: $39.95 at Amazon


psycho-1960-4k

Psycho (1960)

Directed by Alfred Hitchcock

Why it’s essential: Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho did not merely change horror cinema. It taught audiences that the rules could vanish halfway through the film, that a motel shower was no longer a safe place, and that checking into a roadside motel was perhaps not the carefree adventure it once appeared to be.

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Anthony Perkins makes Norman Bates one of cinema’s most unsettling characters because he is so polite, awkward, and quietly broken. Janet Leigh does remarkable work before Hitchcock pulls the rug out from under everyone watching. The film remains a tightly constructed exercise in dread, black humor, repression, and terrible decisions, with its stark black and white photography looking especially vicious in 4K.

Where to buy: $13.99 at Amazon


Sunset Boulevard (1950)

Directed by Billy Wilder

Why it’s essential: Billy Wilder’s Sunset Boulevard is a dark, funny, and deeply unsettling autopsy of old Hollywood, fame, vanity, and what happens when an industry decides you are no longer useful but forgets to tell you.

Gloria Swanson is magnificent as Norma Desmond, a silent era star living inside a mansion sized for an empire and a fantasy sized for an entire studio lot. William Holden is no innocent either, which is part of the fun. The film understands that Hollywood will build you a palace, turn you into a legend, and then leave you there with the lights off.

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It remains one of the great films about celebrity and self invention, with enough shadows, bitterness, and quotable cruelty to make most modern Hollywood satire look like a polite memo from Human Resources.

Where to buy: $15.99 at Amazon

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strangelove-4k

Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964)

Directed by Stanley Kubrick

Why it’s essential: Stanley Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove is a razor sharp Cold War satire about nuclear politics, military incompetence, sexual panic, and the terrifying possibility that the people with the biggest buttons are also the least qualified to touch them.

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Peter Sellers is magnificent in multiple roles, but he is hardly carrying the lunatic asylum alone. George C. Scott turns General Buck Turgidson into a masterpiece of red faced military hysteria, Sterling Hayden makes precious bodily fluids sound like a matter of national survival, and Slim Pickens rides into history with one of the most indelible endings in American cinema.

The film remains funny because Kubrick understood that power often looks ridiculous right before it becomes catastrophic. Sellers is at his absolute best, with The Party running a close second, although that film is considerably less likely to end civilization.

Where to buy: $26.99 at Amazon


cuckoo-nest-blu-ray

One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975)

Directed by Miloš Forman

Why it’s essential: Miloš Forman’s One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest is a furious, funny, and deeply uncomfortable battle between individuality and institutional power. Jack Nicholson’s Randle McMurphy arrives ready to charm, provoke, and generally make everyone’s life more difficult, then discovers that Nurse Ratched and the system behind her have no intention of playing fair.

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The film remains a counterculture landmark because it understands how easily rules, routines, and bureaucracy can become tools for crushing people who do not fit neatly into the approved box. It is America in a padded room, with worse lighting and a much stricter dress code.

Where to buy: $38.63 at Amazon


the-searchers-blu-ray

The Searchers (1956)

Directed by John Ford

Why it’s essential: John Ford’s The Searchers is one of the great American Westerns, but it is far too unsettled and angry to be mistaken for simple frontier nostalgia. John Wayne’s Ethan Edwards moves through Monument Valley like a man possessed, carrying grief, racism, violence, and a very personal version of manifest destiny wherever he goes.

The landscapes are magnificent, the compositions remain staggering, and the film’s influence on generations of directors is impossible to miss. But its real power comes from the way it questions the mythology it helped create. The Searchersunderstands that the American West was built on beauty, brutality, and people who rarely came home unchanged.

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Where to buy: $9.99 at Amazon


rear-window-4k

Rear Window (1954)

Directed by Alfred Hitchcock

Why it’s essential: Alfred Hitchcock turns a single apartment, a courtyard, and one bored man with a broken leg into a masterclass in suspense, voyeurism, loneliness, and the dangerous things that happen when curiosity stops minding its own business.

James Stewart spends the film watching his neighbors as though cable television has not yet been invented, while Grace Kelly arrives looking so impossibly elegant that even murder seems briefly beside the point. Rear Window is tense, witty, and endlessly rewatchable, with Hitchcock using every glance, window frame, and suspicious late night trip across the courtyard to remind us that America has always enjoyed watching other people’s lives a little too much.

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Where to buy: $12.99 at Amazon


singin-rain-4k

Singin’ in the Rain (1952)

Directed by Gene Kelly & Stanley Donen

Why it’s essential: Singin’ in the Rain is Hollywood looking back at its own panic during the shift from silent films to sound and somehow turning professional terror into one of the most joyful musicals ever made.

Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen give the film its impossible energy, but the real trick is how sharp it remains about vanity, image, talent, and an industry terrified that the next technological change might leave half its stars unemployed. It is funny, romantic, technically dazzling, and still one of the best reminders that Hollywood has always been in the business of reinventing itself before the audience notices the scaffolding.

Where to buy: $24.25 at Amazon

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Network (1976)

Directed by Sidney Lumet

Why it’s essential: Sidney Lumet’s Network is a savage, funny, and increasingly uncomfortable portrait of television, corporate power, public outrage, and the moment entertainment decides it no longer needs to pretend it serves the public.

Paddy Chayefsky’s script saw the coming circus with frightening clarity, while Peter Finch turns Howard Beale into more than a man having a breakdown on television. He becomes a product, a ratings weapon, and eventually a warning label nobody bothers to read. The fact that it now feels less like satire and more like a staff meeting is not especially reassuring.

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Where to buy: $49.95 at Amazon

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Double Indemnity (1944)

Directed by Billy Wilder

Why it’s essential: Billy Wilder’s Double Indemnity is the defining film noir, a perfect storm of lust, greed, bad judgment, and people making catastrophic decisions in rooms with very poor lighting.

Barbara Stanwyck is all sharp edges and ankle bracelets as Phyllis Dietrichson, while Fred MacMurray spends the film discovering that murder for profit sounds far more efficient before you actually try it. It is stylish, poisonous, and darkly funny, with every shadow suggesting that someone is about to make things much worse.

Where to buy: $49.95 at Amazon


Version 1.0.0

The Birth of a Nation (1915)

Directed by D.W. Griffith

Why it’s essential: D. W. Griffith’s The Birth of a Nation helped establish the language of feature filmmaking through its scale, editing, camera movement, and narrative ambition. Its influence on Hollywood is undeniable.

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So is its racism. The film glorifies the Ku Klux Klan, distorts Reconstruction, and turns white supremacy into spectacle. It belongs in any serious discussion of American film history, but not as a casual recommendation or a nostalgic monument. Watch it with context, criticism, and a clear understanding of the damage it helped normalize.

Where to buy: $39.48 at Amazon


intolerance-1916

Intolerance (1916)

Directed by D.W. Griffith

Why it’s essential: D. W. Griffith’s Intolerance is a technical and structural landmark, interweaving four stories across different eras to examine persecution, violence, religious extremism, and the human habit of treating cruelty as a civic duty.

Its enormous sets, restless editing, and ambitious crosscutting helped expand what feature filmmaking could attempt in 1916. But it cannot be separated from the racist legacy of The Birth of a Nation, which makes this less a straightforward celebration than a complicated historical artifact. The achievement is real. So is the stain.

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Where to buy: $39.48 at Amazon


all-about-eve-1960

All About Eve (1950)

Directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz

Why it’s essential: Joseph L. Mankiewicz’s All About Eve remains one of the sharpest and funniest dissections of ambition, celebrity, aging, and professional jealousy ever put on film. Bette Davis is magnificent as Margo Channing, a Broadway star watching a younger woman inch closer to her spotlight with a smile sharp enough to draw blood.

The film understands that American success often comes with a waiting room full of people hoping you will lose your grip on it. It is glamorous, vicious, wildly quotable, and still has one of the greatest warnings in movie history: “Fasten your seatbelts. It’s going to be a bumpy night.”

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Where to buy: $39.95 at Amazon


magnificent-amberson

The Magnificent Ambersons (1942)

Directed by Orson Welles

Why it’s essential: Orson Welles’ follow up to Citizen Kane was famously mauled by the studio, with a large portion of his original cut lost to history. And somehow, The Magnificent Ambersons still remains one of the most beautiful and quietly devastating films ever made about old money, family decline, and America’s appetite for progress even when it runs over everyone in its path.

The Ambersons believe their wealth and social standing will protect them forever. Then modern life arrives, the automobiles get louder, and the family discovers that history has no particular interest in preserving anyone’s drawing room. It is a sad, elegant reminder that American dynasties rarely disappear gracefully.

Where to buy: $39.95 at Amazon

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kill-mockingbird-1962

To Kill a Mockingbird (1962)

Directed by Robert Mulligan

Why it’s essential: Robert Mulligan’s adaptation of Harper Lee’s novel remains one of Hollywood’s clearest statements about moral courage, racial injustice, and the obligation to do the right thing when the room would prefer you kept quiet.

Gregory Peck gives Atticus Finch the decency, restraint, and moral authority that made the character an American ideal for generations. The film does not solve the racism at its center, nor should it, but it understands that justice is often less about winning than refusing to look away when everyone else has decided not to see.

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Where to buy: $29.96 at Amazon

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There Will Be Blood (2007) 

Directed by Paul Thomas Anderson

Why it’s essential: Paul Thomas Anderson turns the American dream into an oil soaked fever dream about ambition, faith, greed, and the kind of loneliness that can only be cured by owning everything in sight.

Daniel Day Lewis is magnificent as Daniel Plainview, a man who sees every human relationship as either leverage, competition, or an inconvenience standing between him and another barrel of crude. There Will Be Blood is a modern American epic that understands capitalism as both a religion and a contact sport.

And for all of its brutality, the film does not argue that capitalism is a failed system. It argues that it works remarkably well, right up until the people most gifted at winning it decide everyone else is collateral damage. The Mayor of New York City may have some notes, but the rest of us still need to live in the world as it is.

Where to buy: $9.99 at Amazon

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manchurian-candidate

The Manchurian Candidate (1962)

Directed by John Frankenheimer

Why it’s essential: John Frankenheimer turns Cold War anxiety into a nightmare of political manipulation, conditioned violence, personal trauma, and naked ambition. The Manchurian Candidate is not just a thriller about enemies abroad. It is about what happens when power treats people as tools and patriotism becomes something to exploit.

Its influence on political thrillers is enormous, but its real strength is how controlled and unsettling it remains. Frank Sinatra is excellent, Angela Lansbury is terrifying, and the film understands that the most dangerous people in America are often already in the room.

Where to buy: $59.95 at Amazon


goodfellas-1990

Goodfellas (1990)

Directed by Martin Scorsese

Why it’s essential: Ray Liotta, Robert De Niro, and Joe Pesci deliver the most quotable, cocaine fueled crash course in climbing the capitalist ladder, assuming that ladder is built from stolen goods, threats, and the occasional meat slicer.

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Scorsese does not merely romanticize mob life. He seduces you with the clothes, money, music, and manic velocity of it all, then reminds you that the bill eventually comes due. Usually at 3 a.m. in a parking lot, or just before someone gets fed to the pizza oven.

Where to buy: $15.95 at Amazon


wonderful-life-4k

It’s a Wonderful Life (1946)

Directed by Frank Capra

Why it’s essential:  A heartwarming classic that blends optimism, personal sacrifice, and the power of community in a way that resonates with audiences year after year. It’s a Wonderful Life isn’t just a Christmas movie—it’s a timeless exploration of what truly matters in life. James Stewart’s portrayal of George Bailey, a man questioning his purpose, has become emblematic of the everyman’s struggle. A cinematic triumph that proves sometimes the most wonderful thing you can be is simply human.

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Where to buy: $25.99 at Amazon


Start With One Tonight

Not sure where to begin? Start here.

For the American dream gone rancid: There Will Be Blood
For race, community, and a country at the boiling point: Do the Right Thing
For media, politics, and public insanity: Network
For war and the complicated business of coming home: The Best Years of Our Lives
For the American West and the myths we still cannot quit: The Searchers

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SpaceX is reportedly showing investors a phone prototype, months after Musk said "we are not developing a phone"

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The device is still in the early stages of development. SpaceX has told some investors that the design could change and that it is not yet clear whether the product will ultimately come to market. Representatives for SpaceX and Qualcomm did not respond to requests for comment.
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Alibaba reportedly bans employees from using Claude Code

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China’s Alibaba will ban employees from using Anthropic’s programming tool Claude Code, starting on July 10, according to multiple reports

Anthropic already prohibits Chinese companies, as well as foreign entities owned by those companies, from using its models. The company has reportedly been working to close loopholes that allow Chinese users to access Claude.

According to a recent Reddit post, some of that loophole-closing involved a version of Claude Code that could secretly identify Chinese users. Anthropic’s Thariq Shihipar said in a post on X that this was “an experiment we launched in March that was meant to prevent account abuse from unauthorized resellers and protect against distillation.” (Distillation is a practice where AI models are trained on the outputs of other models.)

“The team has landed stronger mitigations since then and we’ve actually been meaning to take this down for a while,” Shihipar said.

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Nonetheless, Alibaba has reportedly classified Claude Code as high-risk software and is instructing employees to use the company’s own Qoder tool instead.

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D-Link G572 5G router review

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Why you can trust TechRadar


We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you’re buying the best. Find out more about how we test.

D-Link G572: 30-second review

Living in the south of England, you’d expect the internet speeds to be pretty decent, and at one time, not long ago, in the New Forest, they were. But then, as the area started to develop, connection speeds dropped and became increasingly unstable, meaning that if you run a business, fallbacks are needed if you want to keep running.

However, even then, the cellular networks can be hit and miss, aim for the high ground, and ordinarily, you can get a signal, so when my fibre network at home keeled over completely, I reached for my usual choice of mobile network router to get me back online.

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How To Remove Stains From Your Car’s Windshield Or Window Without Scratching The Glass

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Keeping your windshield clean and clear is quite important while driving, so it can be frustrating when there’s a stubborn stain blocking your vision and windshield wipers don’t seem to be enough to wipe it away. However, don’t act too hastily. There are a few things you should keep in mind if you don’t want to scratch your windshield and keep it as clear as can be. 

You’ll first need some essential tools, including microfiber towels, a soft-bristled brush, distilled water, white vinegar, glass cleaner, and rubbing alcohol. Some tougher stains may even call for a clay bar. If you’re cleaning a water stain, start by rinsing the windshield with plain water to remove loose debris that could scratch it. Spray your glass cleaner onto the stained area, then let it sit for a little while. Take out the microfiber towel and gently wipe the area in a circular motion. You may need to use the soft-bristled brush for tougher stains. After, rinse the windshield with the distilled water. If the stain is still there, try white vinegar instead of water and repeat the process.

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Tougher windshield stains and avoiding new ones

While your car is parked outside, a bird may poop on your car, or tree sap can even start dripping onto the windshield. But even driving isn’t safe, since you may end up hitting some bugs that splatter onto the glass. For these kinds of situations, dampen a microfiber towel with rubbing alcohol and let it sit on the stain to soften the debris. Then, using a dedicated clay lubricant or soapy water as a glide, gently rub a clay bar over the area to remove the remaining debris. Even for these tougher stains, don’t use paper towels or sponges — they can leave behind tiny scratches on the glass.

It can be tough to fully avoid these kinds of windshield stains, but there are a few preventative measures you can take. Using a scratch-resistant car cover or windshield cover is always a great option, but even then, you should regularly clean your car to avoid debris turning into stubborn stains. Luckily, there are a lot of household items that are perfect for cleaning your car’s windshield. You may also want to consider a protective coating for your windshield.

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Today’s NYT Strands Hints, Answer and Help for July 5 #854- CNET

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Looking for the most recent Strands answer? Click here for our daily Strands hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Wordle, Connections and Connections: Sports Edition puzzles.


Today’s NYT Strands puzzle is a fun one, and if you’re a fan of a certain domestic animal, you might ace this puzzle. Some of the answers are difficult to unscramble, so if you need hints and answers, read on.

I go into depth about the rules for Strands in this story

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If you’re looking for today’s Wordle, Connections and Mini Crossword answers, you can visit CNET’s NYT puzzle hints page.

Read more: NYT Connections Turns 1: These Are the 5 Toughest Puzzles So Far

Hint for today’s Strands puzzle

Today’s Strands theme is: Barking up the right tree

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If that doesn’t help you, here’s a clue: Doggone it!

Clue words to unlock in-game hints

Your goal is to find hidden words that fit the puzzle’s theme. If you’re stuck, find any words you can. Every time you find three words of four letters or more, Strands will reveal one of the theme words. These are the words I used to get those hints but any words of four or more letters that you find will work:

  • PANS, SNAP, POINT, HEED, HEEDS, SIEVE, HUNT, SPAN, POINTED

Answers for today’s Strands puzzle

These are the answers that tie into the theme. The goal of the puzzle is to find them all, including the spangram, a theme word that reaches from one side of the puzzle to the other. When you have all of them (I originally thought there were always eight but learned that the number can vary), every letter on the board will be used. Here are the nonspangram answers:

  • HOUND, POINTER, TERRIER, SPANIEL, RETRIEVER

Today’s Strands spangram

completed NYT Strands puzzle for July 5, 2026.

The completed NYT Strands puzzle for July 5, 2026.

NYT/Screenshot by CNET

Today’s Strands spangram is HUNTINGBREEDS. To find it, start with the H that is the last letter on the far-left vertical row, and wind over and up.

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Only These iPhone Models Are Getting The New Siri AI This Fall

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Will your phone be getting the upgrade?

Siri has never been the smartest virtual assistant, but what is especially disappointing is how it has refused to evolve despite Apple’s aggressive push for Apple Intelligence. Two major versions of iOS have come and gone without the supercharged Siri that Apple originally promised. Apple finally announced an improved version of Siri in its WWDC 2026 keynote, and it would appear that the virtual assistant is finally living up to the expectations the company set years ago. We went hands-on with Siri AI and found it to be actually useful in answering complex queries and carrying out chained commands.

Only devices compatible with Apple Intelligence will be receiving Siri AI later this year. This includes every iPhone released since the iPhone 15 Pro, alongside iPad and Mac models powered by Apple silicon. The 2024 iPad mini is also supported since it uses the same SoC as the iPhone 15 Pro. Launch the Settings app, scroll down a bit, and if you spot the Apple Intelligence & Siri section, your iPhone is on track to receive the AI-powered Siri upgrade when the stable release of iOS 27 rolls out this fall.

Interestingly enough, Apple says the new assistant will initially be released as a beta. Users will likely need to manually opt in to access Siri AI, much like those testing the iOS 27 developer beta had to hop on a waitlist. Fortunately, compatibility with iOS 27 should not be a cause of concern, given how Apple is extending support all the way back to the iPhone 11.

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Newer iPhones get a more customizable Siri AI

Siri is now better equipped to handle personal requests — it understands context and can reference information from your notes, messages, emails and photos. It is powered by newer Apple Foundation Models that are stored on-device, which should help with both response times and privacy. More complex prompts are offloaded to the bigger models stored on the cloud through Private Cloud Compute, which Apple claims ensures your data is inaccessible to anyone else besides you.

If you own an iPhone 17 Pro, 17 Pro Max or the iPhone Air, Siri AI will be able to take advantage of an even more powerful on-device model. This should improve the overall experience, but more importantly, it enables expressive voices for Siri, improved speech recognition and more accurate dictation. 

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The upcoming iPhone 18 Pro and rumored iPhone Fold will also enjoy powerful on-device AI models, but it’s uncertain if the base model iPhone 18 will too. Analyst Ming-Chi Kuo reported that Apple is looking to bump up the memory in the non-Pro iPhones to 9GB. However, Apple mentions that its most powerful on-device AI models require at least 12GB of RAM.

We must admit, much of the Apple Intelligence suite so far has been sloppy AI features that don’t meaningfully improve the iPhone experience. Siri AI seems to be genuinely useful, though. Even on the beta builds we’ve tried, the virtual assistant has been fast and accurate.

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Steamboats to software: Microsoft’s Brad Smith mines America’s founding for tech insights

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As the country marks its 250th birthday this week, Microsoft is rolling out an unlikely summer project: a six-part series of short videos, hosted by Microsoft President and Vice Chair Brad Smith, that look to American history for lessons relevant to technology and innovation today.

The premise is that every technology debate of the moment — over such issues as patents, privacy, and who gets to shape AI — has a precedent somewhere in the country’s past, and that we’d all benefit from remembering how we got here in the first place.

“We felt that the 250th anniversary of the country deserved some added reflection about the lessons of history, the role of technology, and the questions that we’re facing as a country,” explained Smith, a well-known history buff, in an interview with GeekWire this week.

In the first episode, for example, he stands in Philadelphia’s Independence Square to explain how a steamboat demonstration on the Delaware River in 1787 helped inspire the Constitutional Convention to give Congress the power to grant patents. This was the basis for the intellectual property framework that Smith describes as a bedrock of American innovation.

Savvy viewers may see some irony in a company extolling the virtues of IP protections even as Microsoft and OpenAI defend themselves against a New York Times copyright suit over the material used to train their AI models.

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Asked about that, Smith made it clear he doesn’t see a contradiction.

“Every generation of technology has required a new round of legal thinking, legislation and oftentimes lawsuits, so that courts can sustain the balance that has always been needed between new innovation and the protection of things created already,” he said.

He also noted that Microsoft is often the party going to court to protect customers, pointing as one example to the company’s move this week to intervene before Europe’s top court in defense of the European Union and U.S. data-protection framework.

The six-part series was overseen by Smith’s longtime chief of staff, Carol Ann Browne, a Microsoft vice president; and produced by Kirkland, Wash.-based Trifilm. The episodes, around 3 or 4 minutes each, will roll out in the coming weeks. Smith said they recorded during existing travel plans, working the shoots into stops on trips he was already taking.

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The series travels next to a Boston courtroom for the birth of privacy rights, Henry Ford’s Detroit assembly line for the spread of new technology, Cincinnati for Tocqueville’s take on nonprofits, Great Falls, Md., for George Washington’s early infrastructure ambitions, and the Lewis and Clark expedition in Montana for the value of uniting competing viewpoints.

“The 250th anniversary of the country is quite rightly an occasion to honor the past, celebrate the past,” Smith said, explaining the motivation for the series. “But let’s make sure we get something out of the past that helps us be more successful in the future.”

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Quordle hints and answers for Sunday, July 5 (game #1623)

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Looking for a different day?

A new Quordle puzzle appears at midnight each day for your time zone – which means that some people are always playing ‘today’s game’ while others are playing ‘yesterday’s’. If you’re looking for Saturday’s puzzle instead then click here: Quordle hints and answers for Saturday, July 4 (game #1622).

Quordle was one of the original Wordle alternatives and is still going strong now more than 1,500 games later. It offers a genuine challenge, though, so read on if you need some Quordle hints today — or scroll down further for the answers.

Enjoy playing word games? You can also check out my NYT Connections today and NYT Strands today pages for hints and answers for those puzzles, while Marc’s Wordle today column covers the original viral word game.

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New Google Ad Imagines America’s ‘Declaration of Independence’ Written With AI Help

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An anonymous reader shared this report from TechCrunch:

Two hundred and fifty years after the signing of the Declaration of Independence, a new commercial from Google asks: What if the Founding Fathers had access to Google Workspace?

With the tagline “Group project, but make it 1776,” the ad depicts a largely unseen Thomas Jefferson mid-draft when he gets a nagging text from Ben Franklin, leading to a very Google-centric collaboration process. Edits are suggested in Google Docs, a meeting gets scheduled in Google Calendar and conducted remotely via Google Meet (with every single attendee apparently turning their camera off?), then the whole thing is finalized with e-signatures; cue the fireworks.

Of course, since this is an ad from a tech company in the year 2026, AI has a role to play. The fictionalized founders use Google’s “help me visualize” AI tool to try out different animals on the national seal, Gemini takes notes on the meeting, and the founders also ask the chatbot for advice before declining King George III’s document access request.

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TechCrunch call it “very tongue-in-cheek,” noting that at one point Samuel Adams even asks, “Can we settle this over beers?” And they argue that “the AI evangelism is relatively discreet when compared to many other recent ads.”

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NYT Strands hints and answers for Sunday, July 5 (game #854)

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Looking for a different day?

A new NYT Strands puzzle appears at midnight each day for your time zone – which means that some people are always playing ‘today’s game’ while others are playing ‘yesterday’s’. If you’re looking for Saturday’s puzzle instead then click here: NYT Strands hints and answers for Saturday, July 4 (game #853).

Strands is the NYT’s latest word game after the likes of Wordle, Spelling Bee and Connections – and it’s great fun. It can be difficult, though, so read on for my Strands hints.

Want more word-based fun? Then check out my NYT Connections today and Quordle today pages for hints and answers for those games, and Marc’s Wordle today page for the original viral word game.

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