Tuesday, May 5, 2026

London Marathon draws record 1.33 million entries for 2027

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May 5 : A record 1.33 million people have entered the public ballot for the 2027 London Marathon taking place on April 25, surpassing the previous record set in this year’s race, event organisers said on Tuesday.

A total of 1,338,544 people from around the world have applied compared to 1,133,813 last year, an 18 per cent increase.

“This astonishing total of applicants firmly establishes London as the world’s most sought-after marathon,” said Hugh Brasher, chief executive of London Marathon Events, in a statement.

“Nothing else comes close. Our mission is to inspire people of every age and ability to get active, and these extraordinary numbers show the massive draw and power of the London Marathon.”

Ballot results will be announced in July, with places in the race on April 25 decided by a random draw. Organisers are still looking at the possibility of holding the race over two days, Saturday and Sunday.

The 2026 London Marathon broke the record for the largest number of finishers after 59,830 runners crossed the line.

Kenya’s Sabastian Sawe shattered the world record in under two hours and Ethiopia’s Tigst Assefa defended her title by breaking her own women-only world record. 

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2 adults, 2 kids found dead after shooting reported at million dollar home in Texas, police say

HOUSTON — Two adults and two children were found dead inside a Texas home on Monday, police said.

The Houston Police Department said officers responded to a welfare check at around 5:26 p.m. local time in the 2100-block of Kingston Street in the River Oaks area.

Police say that a babysitter alerted officers after having concerns that she hadn’t heard from the family. Upon arrival, HPD said officers first entered the home.

According to HPD, police said that the two adults and the two children are all family members. Detectives believe that the incident is a murder-suicide, HPD said.

At this time, it is unclear what the motive of the shooting.

If you are experiencing suicidal, substance use or other mental health crises please call or text the new three digit code at 988. You will reach a trained crisis counselor for free, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. You can also go to 988lifeline.org or dial the current toll free number 800-273-8255 [TALK].

You can contact the national domestic violence hotline at 1-800-799-SAFE (7233) or click here for more information.

Our sister station, ABC13 Eyewitness News in Houston, is gathering the facts on this breaking news story.

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Meta to expand teen safeguards to 27 EU countries, Facebook safeguards in June

(Fixes typographical error in headline)

By Foo Yun Chee

BRUSSELS, May 5 : Meta Platforms will expand technology safeguards for teen accounts to 27 European Union countries and to Facebook in the United States, the U.S. tech giant said on Tuesday, as it seeks to fend off criticism regarding its efforts protecting teenagers online.

Tech companies are coming under increasing pressure worldwide to come up with age-checking measures over mounting concerns about online abuse, teen mental health and the spread of AI-generated child sexual images.

Meta last year rolled out technology to proactively find accounts they suspect to be teens, even if they list an adult birthday, and place them in Teen Account protections.

“This technology will be expanded to 27 countries in the European Union. Meta is also expanding this technology to Facebook in the United States for the first time, with the UK and EU to follow in June,” the company said in a blogpost.

It also detailed its use of advanced artificial intelligence to detect underage accounts beyond simple admissions of age.

This includes using AI technology to analyze entire profiles for contextual clues to determine if an account likely belongs to someone underage and strengthening circumvention measures to prevent new accounts from users Meta suspects are underage.

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EXCLUSIVE: Sapney V/S Everyone creator Ambrish Varma signs two-film deal with Mahaveer Jain Films

In a major development for new-age storytelling, Mahaveer Jain Films has signed writer-director-actor, Ambrish Verma, for two upcoming feature films.

EXCLUSIVE: Sapney V/S Everyone creator Ambrish Varma signs two-film deal with Mahaveer Jain Films

EXCLUSIVE: Sapney V/S Everyone creator Ambrish Varma signs two-film deal with Mahaveer Jain Films

Ambrish Verma is the creator of the sensational web-series, Sapney V/S Everyone, and its sequel, Sapney V/S Everyone 2. He wrote, directed, and acted in both seasons, which have emerged as breakout hits.

Sapney V/S Everyone S2 recently premiered on Amazon Prime Video and has been receiving an extraordinary response from audiences for its relatable narrative and authentic portrayal of youth aspirations.

Known for backing content-driven cinema, Mahaveer Jain Films has been actively collaborating with exceptional talent. The banner’s upcoming slate includes projects with filmmakers like Sooraj R Barjatya, Imtiaz Ali, Karan Johar, Siddharth Anand, Ram Madhvani, Ssanjay Tripaathy, Montoo Bassi and Mrighdeep Singh Lamba, and actors like Kartik Aaryan, Ayushmann Khurrana, Tiger Shroff and Vikrant Massey.

The details of Ambrish Verma’s two films with Mahaveer Jain Films, including cast and storyline, are currently under wraps. An official announcement is expected soon.

Also Read: Sooraj Barjatya & Mahaveer Jain to unveil title and release date of Ayushmann Khurrana and Sharvari starrer

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Athletic Bilbao appoint former Dortmund manager Terzic as coach

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May 5 : Athletic Bilbao have appointed Edin Terzic as head coach from next season, the LaLiga club said on Tuesday.

The former Borussia Dortmund coach has signed a deal until 2028, replacing Ernesto Valverde with the Bilbao sitting eighth in the Spanish league standings.

Terzic, 43, arrives in the Basque Country with a reputation for leading teams who play high-intensity, attacking football. His tenure at Dortmund was marked by a German Cup title in 2021 and a run to the Champions League final in 2024, which they lost 2-0 to Real Madrid.

The German has been without a job since leaving Dortmund at the end of the 2023-24 season.

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Thailand scraps 25-year-old agreement with Cambodia on joint energy exploration

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BANGKOK: Thailand on Tuesday (May 5) unilaterally terminated a longstanding agreement with Cambodia to work towards joint offshore energy exploration, defying calls from its neighbour to stay the course on the 25-year-old pact.

The Thai cabinet’s cancellation of the agreement, which seeks to develop a framework to jointly explore hydrocarbons in parts of the Gulf of Thailand where the two countries’ claims overlap, had long been expected and follows two rounds of armed conflict between them last year.

The withdrawal was an election campaign pledge of Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul, who earlier this year rode a wave of nationalism stoked by the fierce fighting with Cambodia to become the first Thai premier to be reelected in two decades.

“Cancelling the deal is not related to the border conflict with Cambodia, but part of my policy. It has been 25 years and there has been no progress,” Anutin told reporters, adding that Cambodia would be informed of the decision.

Cambodia’s Foreign Minister Prak Sokhonn expressed regret over the termination and said Phnom Penh “has no option” but to settle the boundary issue under processes outlined in the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, or UNCLOS.

“Cambodia’s decision to pursue compulsory conciliation under UNCLOS reaffirms its commitment to resolving maritime disputes peacefully and in accordance with international law,” he said in a statement.

SCANT PROGRESS

Despite multiple rounds of meetings, the agreement known as “MOU 44” has made little progress since it was signed, with the process derailed by political instability in Thailand, intermittent disputes between the two neighbours and fierce opposition from Thai nationalists.

The two-track agreement had proposed the creation of a framework to allow offshore oil and gas to be jointly explored in overlapping areas while parallel negotiations take place on formal demarcation.

Thai government spokesperson Rachada Dhanadirek said on Tuesday that UNCLOS would be used as a reference to negotiate directly with Cambodia on maritime boundary demarcation. 

Thai Foreign Minister ​Sihasak Phuangketkeow told Reuters that the move was designed to set the stage for renewed talks under a common framework.

“We’re telling our Cambodian colleagues, this is not to abandon negotiation,” he said in an interview on Tuesday. “This is so that our negotiations can go forward … so I hope that they take it, that they see how our intentions are sincere.”

Thailand has historically refused to take part in Cambodian efforts to settle border disputes using international mechanisms, including the International Court of Justice, insisting those be negotiated bilaterally. 

A ceasefire has been in place between Thailand and Cambodia since late December after two eruptions of fighting along large stretches of their 817km border, the first of which ended after intervention by US President Donald Trump.

Each side blames the other for triggering both rounds of clashes, which killed close to 150 people and displaced hundreds of thousands of people.

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Older motorists targeted in new safety push as poor eyesight prompts major driving licence overhaul

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Labour has faced mounting pressure to overhaul driving licence requirements for the over-70s following a string of deadly crashes involving motorists with poor eyesight.

Earlier this year, the Department for Transport launched a public consultation examining whether compulsory eye tests should become part of the licence renewal process for drivers aged 70 and above.


Road safety campaigners and automotive industry figures have called for more urgent action, arguing that the existing framework relies too heavily on individuals honestly reporting their own visual impairments.

The consultation, which closes on May 11, comes after high-profile fatal accident inquiries in Scotland and coroner’s inquests in England raised serious questions about whether current self-declaration rules adequately protect the public from drivers with dangerously poor vision.

Critics have warned that the current system places excessive faith in motorists to acknowledge their own limitations.

Darren Miller from BigWantsYourCar.co.uk said: “This is a system built on trust, but unfortunately, not everyone acts responsibly when it comes to their own limitations.

“When someone is told they’re unfit to drive and chooses to ignore that advice, the risks aren’t just personal. They affect everyone on the road.”

At present, motorists must demonstrate they can read a registration plate from 20 metres, yet no formal vision assessments are mandated after passing the initial driving test.

The Government is currently consulting on tougher driving licence rules for older drivers

| GETTY

Mr Miller added: “Eyesight can decline gradually, and without regular checks, people may not even realise how unsafe they have become behind the wheel.”

The scale of the challenge is substantial, with more than 6.3 million drivers aged 70 and over currently holding full licences in Great Britain, which is projected to approach seven million by 2030.

In 2024, approximately 24 per cent of all car drivers killed on British roads were aged 70 or older, while 1,224 older motorists were killed or seriously injured.

A roadside screening survey conducted by police forces across England and Wales tested 3,010 drivers, finding that 1.7 per cent failed the number plate test outright.

Eyesight test

The consultation will look at pushing older drivers to have mandatory eyesight checks

| GETTY

Shockingly, the failure rate climbed dramatically among the oldest motorists, with 10.2 per cent of those aged 81 to 90 unable to pass the basic vision check.

Several European nations have already implemented compulsory vision assessments as standard practice for older motorists.

Spain requires drivers to undergo medical examinations, including eye tests, every two years once they reach 70, while Italian motorists over that age must obtain a medical certificate with vision testing every three years.

The Department for Transport is weighing multiple approaches, including whether tests should occur every three years in line with existing licence renewals or more frequently as drivers age further.

Police conducting an eyesight test Drivers must be able to read a registration plate from 20 metres away to travel on UK roads | MERSEYSIDE POLICE

Officials are also considering who should administer such assessments, with options ranging from NHS opticians to bespoke testing centres staffed by trained non-clinical personnel.

“Simple measures like routine eye tests tied to licence renewal could save lives,” Mr Miller stated. “It’s not about punishing drivers. It’s about preventing tragedies that should never happen in the first place.”

Minister for Local Transport Lilian Greenwood acknowledged the difficulty of striking an appropriate balance between road safety and personal mobility.

She said: “We need to ensure older drivers can continue to drive safely as long as they are fit and healthy to do so.”

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Here Are the Gifts Our Writers Actually Buy Their Mothers

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Look, I love a Kindle, but if you want to get the best e-reader for your buck, the answer is actually a Kobo. My favorite is the Kobo Libra Colour that’s cheaper than the Kindle Colorsoft and can also double as a digital notebook if you add on the $70 stylus. I also prefer Kobo’s annotating options; you can write right on the pages, instead of in weird pop-up margins and boxes only on Kindle. Kobo also has its own page-turner remote now, which I love to pair with a pillow stand holder so I can lean back and relax without holding up my e-reader at all while I read. I gave a similar pillow stand to my mom, and now I can spot her last reading spot easily because that pillow is resting there.

Clear Listening

Mujjo

Echelon AirPods Pro 2 Case

My husband and I got AirPods around the same time. We were late adopters and longtime fans of our Apple corded headphones. The AirPods 4 aren’t the WIRED team’s favorite for sound, but I’m one of the many people who can’t seem to keep other earbuds in her ears, so Apple’s tip-free design is the best fit for me, though that means you aren’t getting good noise canceling. I got my first set for Christmas from my siblings this year, and originally I stuck some pretty stickers on my case to tell the difference between my case and my husband’s. I’ve since upgraded to this stylish case from Mujjo, which makes it easy to see which case is mine and clip it onto my keys. It’s a nice accessory if your mom already has AirPods but struggles to keep track of them, or is looking for an easier way to differentiate hers from the other members of the house.

Gamer Gear

When the workday comes to an end, you can find me parked on the couch with my Nintendo Switch. I recently upgraded to a Nintendo Switch 2 ($449) so I could finally buy and play Pokopia ($70), since it’s exclusive to the new console, and I’ve already clocked an obscene amount of hours on the game. It’s similar to Animal Crossing, but imagine it’s all Pokémon instead of random animal people. It has a chokehold on me, similar to Animal Crossing: New Horizons did in 2020, and there have been multiple times when I’m still awake playing when my son has a midnight wake-up or an accident. (You could say it’s helping me be ready to parent.) I really like the feel of the new Joy-Cons, too, especially with the included Joy-Con 2 Grip. If you’re not looking to upgrade her console just yet but need a Switch-friendly cozy game for her, Stardew Valley has another big update in the works and only costs $15.

Her Google Calendar IRL

My latest favorite family planning gadget is a digital wall calendar. These handy devices take the Google Calendar I live by (and just about any other digital calendar, too, if your mom isn’t a Google girl) and put it on a physical device I can quickly tap into without needing to grab my phone or bark at Alexa. The Skylight Calendar 2 is my favorite because it not only includes to-do lists, meal planning, and a recipe book but also doubles as a digital photo frame. That means it displays cute photos of my family most of the time, and then, with a simple tap, it opens the calendar or whatever page I was last on to show me what’s on my family’s schedule. It does have a subscription fee, though, to get the digital photo frame feature and a few other options too, like meal planning. But I think it’s well worth it to get so many features in a single device.

Photo Spotlight

Aura

Aspen Digital Photo Frame

As a mom, I take a lot of photos of my family. A lot. And sometimes it feels like all those great photos of my son’s milestones go to my camera roll and photo storage to die. There are two solutions I love for this that are incredibly giftable: a digital photo frame she can instantly upload images to, and a printed photo book where you can take the best of the best and put them at her fingertips. I have and love both for different reasons. I love the digital photo frame to add all the photos from a fun weekend at the San Diego Zoo or Los Angeles Renaissance Pleasure Faire for me to relive again and again, but I also love being able to pull a photo book from the bookshelf and relive a specific moment I know is waiting there for me. Aura makes my favorite digital photo frames (followed by Skylight and the Calendar 2 if you want a multipurpose device, but Aura has no subscription fee if you only want photos), while Mixbook has been a favorite of mine for a while when it comes to printing photos, and has great starting prices for its photo books.

A Bird’s Eye View

Netvue

Birdfy Lite Smart Bird Feeder

If you know a mom who loves to bird-watch (I know one!), you can upgrade her bird feeder to a smart one. Smart bird feeders add a camera into the feeder so she can see a close-up feed of the birds that come to hang out in her yard, and they’re adorable to boot for a little smart curb appeal. WIRED reviewer Kat Merck recommends the original Birdfy Lite as a great gift; it’s her favorite smart bird feeder and comes in adorable colors to brighten your mom’s yard and catch the eye of neighborhood birds. But the one she and I both have our eye on (her for her mother, me for myself) is the Birdfy Nest Duo, which is actually a birdhouse with two cameras so you can see the birds entering the nest outside and raising a family inside.

An Adorable Pan

Photograph: Matthew Korfhage

Field Company

Cast Iron Egg Pan

I didn’t know I needed a tiny cast iron pan until it arrived. Field Co’s hand-finished, preseasoned cast iron pans are already known for being both lightweight and handsome. But with a mere 5-inch cook surface, this one might even cross the line from handsome into “cute.” But that’s what makes it a good gift: Your mother almost certainly does not have a cast-iron pan this small, and yet it also has real utility. At just 2 pounds, this pan is easy to pull out and stash, easy to maneuver or flip a pancake, easy to serve from, and the perfect size to fit the perimeter of a two-egg omelet. In addition to an egg pan, it’s a great, low-effort, single-serving pan in general—whether for grilled cheese, a little bit of bacon or sausage, or a couple chicken thighs. The egg pan can be bought all by itself. But for $60 more, the gift set is nice. It comes with a cleaning kit (with maybe my favorite chain mail scrubber in existence), some seasoning oil, and a leather handle cover in cognac, black, brown, or cherry. —Matthew Korfhage

Compression Care

  • Photograph: Boutayna Chokrane

  • Photograph: Boutayna Chokrane

  • Photograph: Boutayna Chokrane

  • Photograph: Boutayna Chokrane

Therabody

JetBoots Pro Plus

There’s a wellness gadget for everything now. Rings that track your sleep and blood oxygen levels, masks to make you look younger, massagers to relax your muscles, and now there are even boots to improve circulation. WIRED reviewer Boutayna Chokrane says her mom loves these compression boots from Therabody to improve circulation, which is a common problem for many of our aging parents. These boots combine compression, vibration, and LED therapy into a single wearable device that comes with eight preset routines to focus on legs, knees, and joints. It’s a unique option if she wants better recovery for her legs or better circulation for her health.

Better Espresso

  • Photograph: Matthew Korfhage

  • Photograph: Matthew Korfhage

  • Photograph: Matthew Korfhage

The DeLonghi Rivelia is the best and easiest and most user-friendly superautomatic espresso machine I have tested. What’s superautomatic mean? It means you pour whole beans into the hopper, put milk in the milk carafe, and select the drink you want to make on the touch-screen menu. And then you let the machine do most of the rest. The style of espresso made by a superautomatic machine like this Rivelia is generally a bit smoother, and less intense than the sort you get in a cafe. But the process is also less finicky; you won’t be dealing with coffee grounds and portafilters. What’s especially nice with this Rivelia is the ability to make multiple “profiles” for different coffee drinkers in the house, each with their own favorite drinks—and the ability to swap out bean hoppers to make decaf coffee in the afternoon. The Rivelia is also the machine my own mother, a drinker of lattes and dark-roast beans, loves unreservedly. Like others on the WIRED Reviews team, I often ask colleagues and those close to me to test my top-rated machines over long periods to see how they hold up over months or years of regular use. My mother thanks me nearly every month for letting her test the Rivelia. —Matthew Korfhage


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Course correction: Indonesia reshapes ride-hailing sector with state power

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Indonesia is moving to reshape its ride-hailing industry from the inside, with officials saying the state has acquired stakes in app companies as President Prabowo Subianto seeks to raise drivers’ earnings and rein in commission fees.

The move could mark a significant shift in one of Southeast Asia’s biggest on-demand economies, where millions of drivers for platforms such as Gojek and Grab have become a highly visible labour force and, analysts say, a potent political bloc.

Last week, Prabowo announced a presidential decree that would lower the commission fees ride-hailing companies charge drivers for each order, from 20 per cent to 8 per cent.

Drivers would also get universal healthcare and work accident insurance, he said.

“It’s not right that you [drivers] are the ones sweating, but they [the companies] are getting the money. Sorry, if they [the companies] don’t want to comply, don’t bother doing business in Indonesia,” Prabowo said in front of drivers during a May Day rally in Jakarta on Friday.

Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto (centre) delivers a speech in front of thousands of workers during the Labour Day rally celebrations in Jakarta on Friday. Photo: AFP
To ensure that Indonesia’s 7 million ride-hailing drivers get their pay bump, the government, through state wealth fund Danantara, has acquired stakes in several companies, according to Sufmi Dasco Ahmad, deputy speaker of the House of Representatives.

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USPS unveils Route 66 centennial stamps, born from a photographer’s 42 trips

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. — You’re standing in the middle of an empty highway, staring off into the fading, golden light of Arizona’s high desert. The soundtrack playing in your mind? Depeche Mode.

Industrial-leaning synth-pop strains might seem incongruous with such a vista, but it was the alternative rock band’s homage to Route 66 that seduced David J. Schwartz. With camera in hand he has made 42 trips over two decades along the celebrated highway, qualifying himself for the job of creating postage stamps commemorating the Mother Road’s centennial.

The U.S. Postal Service on Tuesday is releasing eight stamps marking significant parts of the road in each of the states it traverses, passing by vintage diners, gas stations and motels — many since preserved or restored — along with breathtaking vistas and wide horizons of the open road.

Route 66 is paved with history, from its early days as an escape from the Dust Bowl and the Great Depression, through serving as a vital supply route during World War II, to its mid-century role as an antidote for wanderlust. A symbol of freedom and mobility, it has evolved into a time capsule of Americana, steeped in nostalgia and neon.

As teenagers in 1988, Schwartz and his best friend had planned a road trip after girlfriends introduced them to Depeche Mode, where they discovered a cover of Bobby Troup’s 1946 pop standard, “(Get Your Kicks on) Route 66.” Schwartz’s mother nixed his participation, delaying his first taste of the open road until 2004.

To Schwartz, the road — stretching 2,448 miles (3,940 kilometers) — represents a significant piece of a newly mobile 20th century America, from its debut in 1926 to its decommissioning in 1985: “Road trips, big cars, neon signs.” Though retired from the federal highway system, vast stretches of the route are still in use and a favorite of road warriors and tourists to this day.

“So much to explore. You start here in Illinois on 66 and you’re cruising through prairie land,” Schwartz said during a recent interview in Springfield. “By the time you get out west, you’re in the desert or you’re in mountains through hairpin turns. It’s just an incredible journey and you just get such a beautiful slice of America going through it.”

Tired of retail management, Schwartz went back to school to study photography and had the idea of Route 66 stamps as early as a decade ago. He was tapped for the project in 2023. He recalls thinking, “Here is my moment to bring Route 66 to the masses.”

Greg Breeding, a USPS art director for stamp design, was working on a graphic showing a map of the road when he discovered Schwartz’s photos. They were beautifully photographed, not commercial and slick.

“They’re as if you were there,” he said, “which makes them especially useful for stamps.”

The USPS plate contains 16 stamps, two of each one representing Route 66 host states. A ninth photo serves as selvage, or the image surrounding the block. It’s the scene of that empty Arizona highway, shot in 2023 near Seligman, Arizona, when Schwartz and his high school friend finally took that trip 35 years in the making.

But a road is a road, isn’t it? Why can’t a traveler get the same view standing on one of the interstate highways that ultimately bypassed Route 66?

“You’d probably get run over,” Schwartz said dryly.

“Interstates are designed to move traffic quickly. They cut through the sides of mountains, they do not follow the contour of the land …,” he added. “On Route 66, you’re actually part of the landscape as you move through it. You feel the land as you’re traveling.”

Breeding and Schwartz steered clear of the fabled highway’s most popular spots, not only because those are tougher to get permission to use, but also because they wanted to give people a “fresh look,” Breeding said. The stamps are devoid of people, he said, in part to create a sense of allure rather tourist trap vibes.

To that end, the blocks capture both the continuing commerce and the roadside relics that hint at their former vibrancy. Take for example the Conoco Tower Station and U-Drop Inn in Shamrock, Texas, a neon-adorned Art Deco beauty whose luminous lights come alive at dusk.

In Yucca, Arizona, Schwartz photographed the dilapidated “Motel” sign in the relentless noonday sun, revealing desert desolation but also “the enduring pulse of the open road.”

Among his favorites is the Illinois entry, a friend’s 1929 Model A Ford rumbling down the only remaining section of Route 66 composed of hand-laid brick in Auburn, just south of Springfield. The goal? Create an image that would make viewers feel as if they were there for the birth of Route 66.

“We wanted to show it to be colorful. We wanted to show the quirkiness. We wanted to show the age,” Breeding said. “It’s like a sort of show, the idea that Route 66 is a living history of the United States, from the past to the present.”

Schwartz said he’s amazed that the stamps boasting his work will “travel all over the United States and end up in people’s mailboxes.”

He added: “I hope they really inspire people to get out there and travel the road and support the Mom and Pop businesses and keep Route 66 alive for another 100 years.”

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