When researchers inside Instagram began studying young users’ experiences on the photo-sharing app, they found that nearly a third of teenage girls said the platform made negative feelings they had about their bodies worse, internal documents show on.wsj.com/3Cb9QFU
“Teens blame Instagram for increases in the rate of anxiety and depression,” a slide from an internal Facebook presentation said. Among teens who reported suicidal thoughts, 13% of U.K. users and 6% of U.S. users traced those feelings to Instagram. on.wsj.com/3lr3o6D
The research offers the deepest look yet at what Facebook, which owns Instagram, knows about the app’s impact on teens and their mental health. Researchers concluded that some of the problems were specific to Instagram, and not social media more broadly. on.wsj.com/3hvQ5RA
In public, Facebook has consistently played down Instagram’s negative effects on teens, and hasn’t made its research public or available to academics or lawmakers who have asked for it on.wsj.com/2VGzS4d
Anastasia Vlasova joined Instagram at 13 and became entranced by the lives and bodies of fitness influencers. About a year ago, she started seeing a therapist after developing an eating disorder—something she attributes to her time on the app. on.wsj.com/3AcSXKn
Eva Behrens, a 17-year-old high-school student in Marin County, Calif., said she estimates half the girls in her grade struggle with body-image concerns tied to Instagram on.wsj.com/395NbOz
Facebook’s researchers said that Instagram should reduce exposure to celebrity content about fashion, beauty and relationships. A former executive recently questioned the idea of overhauling the app to avoid social comparison. on.wsj.com/3CegDOP
Teen boys aren’t immune. In a deep dive Facebook’s researchers conducted into mental health in 2019, they found that 14% of boys in the U.S. said Instagram made them feel worse about themselves. on.wsj.com/3hwIima
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Pittsburgh is at the center of a class inversion between the Republican and Democratic parties that is redefining American politics and eroding President Biden’s re-election chances on.wsj.com/4aM1dTr on.wsj.com/4aM1dTr
In Pennsylvania, the largest 2024 battleground state, Biden’s gains have been overtaken by opposition from voters who work in the natural-gas industry, a sector that has given a boost to blue-collar workers in rural counties on.wsj.com/4avxf6n
These voters see Biden as hostile to fracking, which taps natural gas trapped in sedimentary rock deep underground.
The sector has drawn billions of dollars in new investment in Pennsylvania, much of it in the state’s southwest corner. on.wsj.com/4avxf6n
🧵One year ago today, Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich was detained in Russia for doing his job.
He remains in a Moscow prison.
We’re offering resources for those who want to show their support for him. #IStandWithEvan wsj.com/Evan
A year of missed weddings, reporting trips and travels with friends: For 12 months, Evan Gershkovich has been deprived of a normal existence on.wsj.com/3TBJGGz on.wsj.com/3TBJGGz
“We know that he is innocent of what he’s being accused of. He’s a journalist.”
Evan Gershkovich’s parents discuss the toll their son’s imprisonment has taken on him. on.wsj.com/3TTy0QK
A desperate Russian soldier under bombardment in the trenches hatched an idea to try to save his life: surrender to a Ukrainian drone on.wsj.com/42GHD6v
Russian draftee Ruslan Anitin was being hunted by drones dropping small bombs, according to drone footage reviewed by WSJ on.wsj.com/4417J5u
Using hand signals, Anitin proposes a messaging system to the drone pilots. He asks them to spare his life. on.wsj.com/3Cu1LOF
On June 13, the U.S. House of Representatives voted 422-0 to approve a bipartisan resolution calling on Russia to immediately free Evan Gershkovich on.wsj.com/42G8orT
Evan Gershkovich has written exclusive accounts about the Kremlin’s war efforts, profiled Russian dissidents and reported from Russian border towns on the toll of the Ukraine war. Read a selection of his work here. on.wsj.com/4611sZg
Breaking: Elon Musk has completed his takeover of Twitter and fired the company’s CEO and CFO, people familiar with the matter say on.wsj.com/3WmrQbl
Elon Musk fired Twitter Chief Executive Parag Agrawal and Chief Financial Officer Ned Segal after the $44 billion deal closed Thursday, according to people familiar with the matter. It wasn’t immediately clear who would step into those top positions. on.wsj.com/3DjvCtj
Elon Musk also fired Vijaya Gadde, Twitter’s top legal and policy executive, and general counsel Sean Edgett in his takeover of the company, people familiar said on.wsj.com/3sDK6iu
“Welcome to hell”: How everyday Ukrainians found the will and means to beat the Russians in Kyiv and change the course of the war on.wsj.com/3LChG1h
During the first month of the war, Ukrainians formed armed groups with whatever weapons they could find. They climbed trees in search of cell phone reception to report on enemy movements. The result was a domestic insurgency fused onto a traditional army. on.wsj.com/3Stv1LA
After Russia invaded, a Ukrainian city council member led preparations for a fighting stand on the western edge of Kyiv. Around half of the citizen soldiers, which included a firefighter and bus driver, had never fought before. on.wsj.com/3S4Ky4s