‘Golden visas’ in demand, helping kids manage anger, giraffes in danger: Catch up on the day’s stories

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👋 Welcome to 5 Things PM! A new study found that parents expressed concern about the example they set for their children, with 70% saying they sometimes model poor anger management themselves. Experts weighed in on strategies to help parents cope.

Here’s what else you might have missed during your busy day:

5 things

A couple pull suitcases along an alley in Lisbon, Portugal. - Armando Franca/AP
A couple pull suitcases along an alley in Lisbon, Portugal. - Armando Franca/AP

1️⃣ ‘Golden visas’: Europe could soon be welcoming a wave of wealthy Americans, as Democratic voters facing another Donald Trump presidency consider moving abroad. Interest in visas that allow people to effectively buy foreign citizenship or residence has skyrocketed among US citizens since the election.

2️⃣ Giraffes in peril: The tallest animal in the world is in trouble because of habitat loss, poaching, urbanization and drought. US wildlife officials are proposing that some species of giraffes be listed as endangered or threatened for the first time.

3️⃣ Sunny delight: New images captured by the Solar Orbiter mission showcase the highest-resolution views of the sun’s visible surface ever seen, revealing dark sunspots and continuously moving charged gas called plasma.

4️⃣ Modern makeover: Several cities around the globe have reinvented themselves, but perhaps none more successfully than Almaty, Kazakhstan. Here’s how a drab Soviet metropolis became Central Asia’s capital of cool.

5️⃣ Knee pain: Aching joints are surprisingly common — about 25% of adults experience knee problems, according to a recent study. These easy exercises can help.

Watch this

🦀 Sea of red: Millions of red crabs travel from the forests of Australia’s Christmas Island National Park to the ocean to mate and spawn every year. The migration usually happens after the first rainfall of the wet season.

Top headlines

• Judge sentences Georgia nursing student Laken Riley’s murderer to life in prison
• Susan Smith, who killed her 2 young children 30 years ago, denied parole
Remote work crackdown: How Trump’s DOGE could push federal workers to quit

320

🕷️ That’s how many tarantulas a man had strapped to his body when he was detained by authorities at an airport in Lima, Peru. They also found centipedes and ants.

Check this out

🪱 Ocean photobomb: Scientists were surprised to find a long-lost species of marine worms living alongside pygmy seahorses in coral colonies from Japan to Australia.

Chloé J.L. Fourreau/Proceedings of the Royal Society B
Chloé J.L. Fourreau/Proceedings of the Royal Society B

Quotable

Troubled childhood: As a young man, Kimes went on a deadly crime spree with his domineering mother. Now he’s speaking out about what his life was like growing up.

Quiz time

Fifth Avenue in New York City. - Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images
Fifth Avenue in New York City. - Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

🛍️ New York’s Fifth Avenue used to be the world’s most expensive shopping street. A street in which European city just took over the top spot in the rankings?
A. Milan
B. Paris
C. Madrid
D. London
⬇️ Scroll down for the answer.

Celebrity corner

Details matter: Irish actor Paul Mescal, star of the “Gladiator II” movie, played a trivia game about his life against a woman who calls herself his “biggest fan” — and lost.

Good vibes

🦬 Team spirit: Colorado Buffaloes head football coach Deion Sanders celebrated superfan Peggy Coppom in a big way on her 100th birthday. Coppom — whose family started going to games in 1940 — was honored with a special apparel line and listened as a sold-out crowd at Folsom Field sang “Happy Birthday” during a win against Utah.

Thanks for reading

👋 We’ll see you tomorrow.
🧠 Quiz answer: A. It’s Milan’s Via Monte Napoleone, marking the first time a European city has topped the rankings.
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5 Things PM is produced by CNN’s Tricia Escobedo, Chris Good, Meghan Pryce and Kimberly Richardson.

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