NPR News: 07-13-2026 1AM EDT

NPR News: 07-13-2026 1AM EDT

The US hit over 140 targets in Iran overnight while Senator Lindsey Graham died of a torn aorta, US consumer spending surged 6.3% in June, and the EU eyes a social media ban for under-16s — all in five minutes of NPR news.

Jul 13, 2026 5:04 Difficulty: Beginner Played

TL;DR

This NPR News bulletin from July 13, 2026 covers five major stories in five minutes. The US military completed strikes on over 140 targets in Iran, Senator Lindsey Graham died at 71 from a torn aorta caused by cardiovascular disease, US consumer spending surged 6.3% in June driven by the World Cup and Amazon Prime Day, microburst storms with 60–70 mph winds battered Philadelphia, and the EU is weighing a social media ban for children under 16. The single most useful takeaway: consumer spending is rising faster than wages, raising sustainability concerns.

#US-Iran conflict #Strait of Hormuz #Lindsey Graham death #World Cup economic impact #consumer spending trends #Philadelphia weather emergency #Bangkok nightclub fire #EU children's online safety #social media regulation #Disney box office #live-action remakes #wage growth vs spending #Amazon Prime Day #CENTCOM military strikes #Iran strikes #CENTCOM #Lindsey Graham #World Cup #consumer spending #Bank of America #Philadelphia storms #Bangkok fire #EU social media ban #Moana box office #microburst #European Commission #Disney #Senator death

NPR News bulletin for July 13, 2026 covering US military strikes on Iran, the death of Senator Lindsey Graham, US consumer spending data, Philadelphia storm damage, a Bangkok pub fire, EU social media regulation for children, and the weekend box office.

Chapter list
  • Dale Willman opens the bulletin with the night's biggest story: the US military announcing it has finished its latest strikes on Iran, with attacks explicitly aimed at curtailing Iran's ability to threaten commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. NPR's Carrie Khan reports that CENTCOM posted early Monday on X that overnight strikes hit more than 140 targets — drone launch sites, naval capabilities, military infrastructure, and ammunition storage. The strikes are not isolated; they are the latest escalation in a string of attacks that began after an Iranian strike on a commercial vessel in the Straits on Saturday. Iran wasted no time, saying it responded by sending drones and missiles toward Gulf states where US military bases are located, signaling that the exchange of hostilities is far from over.

  • NPR's Eric McDaniel follows up on the death of Senator Lindsey Graham, the Republican from South Carolina who was 71 years old. The Washington DC medical examiner's initial report, shared by Graham's office, attributed his death to a torn aorta — the body's main blood vessel — caused by long-term cardiovascular disease. Emergency services arrived at Graham's home Saturday evening, and dispatch audio reviewed by NPR confirmed they found him in cardiac arrest. His office had initially described his death as a 'brief and sudden illness,' but the medical examiner's report paints a fuller, more clinical picture. Crucially, the final cause of death has not yet been determined, pending additional standard testing including toxicology — meaning the full story is not yet closed.

  • NPR's Steven Masaha reports a striking economic data point: US consumer spending rose 6.3% in June compared to a year earlier, the strongest growth in four years. The headline driver is the World Cup, which sent spending at restaurants and bars soaring, especially in host cities. But a second factor also played a role: Amazon's Prime Day fell a month earlier than last year, pulling online sales into June. Bank of America Institute senior economist David Tinsley describes consumers as 'firing on all cylinders' — a sustained pattern, not just a one-month blip, with solid spending growth since the start of the year. Yet Masaha flags a tension: despite strong wage growth, consumer spending is rising faster than people's earnings, a gap that raises real questions about whether this pace is sustainable once the World Cup buzz fades.

  • Dale Willman turns to a natural disaster story closer to home: a series of microburst storms that struck Philadelphia Saturday afternoon, leaving a trail of destruction that residents are still cleaning up. In West Philadelphia, a building collapsed, sending bricks cascading into the street where they crushed parked cars and blocked trolley tracks. A housing authority building also had part of its roof torn off. The National Weather Service confirmed that some of the microbursts produced winds between 60 and 70 miles per hour across Montgomery and Philadelphia Counties — a powerful event that, while brief, caused significant structural damage to city infrastructure and personal property.

  • Shifting to Southeast Asia, Dale Willman reports on a deadly overnight fire at a pub in Bangkok, Thailand that killed at least 27 people and left dozens more injured. The fire burned through the night, with firefighters unable to bring the blaze under control until the early hours of Monday morning, suggesting a severe and fast-moving incident. Thailand's prime minister has confirmed that the cause of the fire remains under active investigation, leaving unanswered questions about whether it was accidental, linked to the building's construction, or had another source. The death toll makes it one of the deadlier nightlife disasters in the region in recent memory.

  • Terry Schultz reports from Brussels on a major forthcoming policy move: European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, who last year commissioned an expert panel on protecting children from digital harm, is expected to use the panel's findings — due to be presented Monday — to craft her own legislative proposal by September. Von der Leyen has been vocal about her personal concerns, blaming social media's business models for treating children's attention as a commodity and deliberately exploiting addictive design to maximise engagement. She is believed to favour an EU-wide ban on social media access for anyone under 16. The model already faces real-world scrutiny: Australia, the first country to attempt such a ban, has struggled with enforcement. But several EU member states — Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, and Spain — are forging ahead regardless, signalling strong political will even before EU-level legislation arrives.

  • The bulletin's final story turns to Hollywood, where the weekend box office delivered a notable disappointment for Disney. The live-action remake of Moana, which carried a reported production budget of $250 million, failed to land the big opening weekend the studio had anticipated, pulling in $43 million from North American theaters. The gap between budget and opening weekend is stark and will raise questions about the studio's live-action remake strategy. Minions and Monsters — already in its second week — claimed second place with another $20.5 million added to its running total. Toy Story 5 finished third, adding $18.5 million to round out a weekend that belonged firmly to sequels and franchise holdovers rather than new arrivals.

  • The episode closes with a promotional segment for Points North, a podcast from Interlochen Public Radio distributed on the NPR Network. The promo positions the show around immersive storytelling rooted in the natural world of the Great Lakes, using brief audio excerpts that evoke reactions of awe and wonder from listeners. It's a soft, atmospheric close to an otherwise news-heavy bulletin, offering listeners a glimpse of long-form nature storytelling as a counterpoint to the morning's urgent geopolitical and domestic stories.

CENTCOM
US Central Command — the US military's regional command overseeing operations across the Middle East, Central and South Asia.
Strait of Hormuz
A narrow waterway between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman, through which roughly 20% of the world's oil supply passes; a strategic chokepoint often referenced in geopolitical crises.
Aorta
The body's largest artery, carrying oxygenated blood from the heart to the rest of the body; a torn aorta (aortic dissection or rupture) is a life-threatening emergency.
Microburst
A sudden, intense downdraft of air from a thunderstorm that spreads outward upon hitting the ground, producing damaging straight-line winds often exceeding 60 mph over a small area.
European Commission
The executive branch of the European Union, responsible for proposing legislation and enforcing EU treaties; headed by a President, currently Ursula von der Leyen.
Toxicology
Laboratory analysis of bodily fluids or tissues to detect drugs, poisons, or other chemicals; routinely performed as part of a medical examiner's cause-of-death determination.
Addictive design
A product design philosophy, common in social media platforms, that uses psychological triggers (infinite scroll, notifications, likes) to maximize user engagement time.
Prime Day
Amazon's annual sales event offering deep discounts to Prime members; referenced here because its earlier-than-usual timing in 2026 contributed to the June consumer spending spike.
Cardiovascular disease
A class of diseases affecting the heart and blood vessels, including coronary artery disease, hypertension, and atherosclerosis; cited as the long-term underlying cause of Senator Graham's torn aorta.
Commodity
An undifferentiated resource treated as interchangeable and bought/sold purely for its value; used here figuratively to describe how social media platforms monetize children's attention.

Chapter 1 · 00:00

Intro & US Strikes on Iran

Dale Willman opens the bulletin with the night's biggest story: the US military announcing it has finished its latest strikes on Iran, with attacks explicitly aimed at curtailing Iran's ability to threaten commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. NPR's Carrie Khan reports that CENTCOM posted early Monday on X that overnight strikes hit more than 140 targets — drone launch sites, naval capabilities, military infrastructure, and ammunition storage. The strikes are not isolated; they are the latest escalation in a string of attacks that began after an Iranian strike on a commercial vessel in the Straits on Saturday. Iran wasted no time, saying it responded by sending drones and missiles toward Gulf states where US military bases are located, signaling that the exchange of hostilities is far from over.

Claims made here

The US strikes were aimed at reducing Iran's ability to damage shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.

NPR Anchor US military statement

CENTCOM struck more than 140 targets in Iran overnight, including drone launch sites, naval capabilities, and ammunition storage facilities.

Carrie Khan CENTCOM post on X

Senator Lindsey Graham died of a torn aorta caused by long-term cardiovascular disease, according to the Washington DC medical examiner's initial report.

NPR Anchor Washington DC medical examiner initial report

News
US Strikes 140+ Targets in Iran

NPR News: 07-13-2026 1AM EDT · Jul 13, 2026 News

The US military hit more than 140 targets in Iran overnight, striking drone launch sites, naval capabilities, and ammunition storage. Iran responded by launching drones and missiles toward Gulf states hosting American bases.

News
Data point 140+

NPR News: 07-13-2026 1AM EDT · Jul 13, 2026

CENTCOM reported striking more than 140 targets in Iran overnight, including drone launch sites, naval capabilities, and ammunition storage facilities.

Business
Data point 4 years

NPR News: 07-13-2026 1AM EDT · Jul 13, 2026

The World Cup helped drive the strongest consumer spending growth in the US in four years during June 2026.

News
Senator Lindsey Graham Dies at 71

NPR News: 07-13-2026 1AM EDT · Jul 13, 2026 News

Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina died of a torn aorta caused by long-term cardiovascular disease, the Washington DC medical examiner reported. Emergency personnel found him in cardiac arrest at his home Saturday evening; toxicology results are still pending.

News
Data point 71

NPR News: 07-13-2026 1AM EDT · Jul 13, 2026

Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican from South Carolina, died at age 71 from a torn aorta caused by long-term cardiovascular disease.

Business
Data point 6.3%

NPR News: 07-13-2026 1AM EDT · Jul 13, 2026

US consumer spending rose 6.3% in June year-over-year, the strongest growth in four years, driven by the World Cup and early Amazon Prime Day.

Chapter 2 · 00:53

Death of Senator Lindsey Graham

NPR's Eric McDaniel follows up on the death of Senator Lindsey Graham, the Republican from South Carolina who was 71 years old. The Washington DC medical examiner's initial report, shared by Graham's office, attributed his death to a torn aorta — the body's main blood vessel — caused by long-term cardiovascular disease. Emergency services arrived at Graham's home Saturday evening, and dispatch audio reviewed by NPR confirmed they found him in cardiac arrest. His office had initially described his death as a 'brief and sudden illness,' but the medical examiner's report paints a fuller, more clinical picture. Crucially, the final cause of death has not yet been determined, pending additional standard testing including toxicology — meaning the full story is not yet closed.

Claims made here

Emergency services found Senator Graham in cardiac arrest at his home Saturday evening.

Eric McDaniel Dispatch audio reviewed by NPR

Senator Lindsey Graham's cause of death will not be finalized until additional toxicology testing is completed.

Eric McDaniel Medical examiner's statement shared by Graham's office

Chapter 3 · 02:12

World Cup Fuels Strongest US Consumer Spending in Four Years

NPR's Steven Masaha reports a striking economic data point: US consumer spending rose 6.3% in June compared to a year earlier, the strongest growth in four years. The headline driver is the World Cup, which sent spending at restaurants and bars soaring, especially in host cities. But a second factor also played a role: Amazon's Prime Day fell a month earlier than last year, pulling online sales into June. Bank of America Institute senior economist David Tinsley describes consumers as 'firing on all cylinders' — a sustained pattern, not just a one-month blip, with solid spending growth since the start of the year. Yet Masaha flags a tension: despite strong wage growth, consumer spending is rising faster than people's earnings, a gap that raises real questions about whether this pace is sustainable once the World Cup buzz fades.

Claims made here

US consumer spending rose 6.3% in June 2026 compared to a year earlier, the strongest growth in four years.

Steven Masaha Bank of America credit and debit card spending data

Business
Data point 6.3%

NPR News: 07-13-2026 1AM EDT · Jul 13, 2026 Business

US consumer spending jumped 6.3% in June year-over-year, the strongest growth in four years, boosted by the World Cup and an early Amazon Prime Day. But the gains may be fragile: spending is rising faster than wages, raising sustainability questions.

Chapter 4 · 02:48

Microburst Storms Batter Philadelphia

Dale Willman turns to a natural disaster story closer to home: a series of microburst storms that struck Philadelphia Saturday afternoon, leaving a trail of destruction that residents are still cleaning up. In West Philadelphia, a building collapsed, sending bricks cascading into the street where they crushed parked cars and blocked trolley tracks. A housing authority building also had part of its roof torn off. The National Weather Service confirmed that some of the microbursts produced winds between 60 and 70 miles per hour across Montgomery and Philadelphia Counties — a powerful event that, while brief, caused significant structural damage to city infrastructure and personal property.

Claims made here

Microburst storms in Philadelphia produced winds of 60 to 70 miles per hour in Montgomery and Philadelphia Counties.

NPR Anchor National Weather Service

At least 27 people were killed and dozens injured in a fire at a pub in Bangkok, Thailand.

NPR Anchor no source cited

Technology
EU Considers Blocking Under-16s from Social Media

NPR News: 07-13-2026 1AM EDT · Jul 13, 2026 Technology

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen is expected to propose EU-wide legislation banning social media access for children under 16, calling out platforms for treating kids' attention as a commodity. Australia tried a similar ban first, but enforcement has been a challenge.

Chapter 6 · 03:35

EU Eyes Social Media Ban for Under-16s

Terry Schultz reports from Brussels on a major forthcoming policy move: European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, who last year commissioned an expert panel on protecting children from digital harm, is expected to use the panel's findings — due to be presented Monday — to craft her own legislative proposal by September. Von der Leyen has been vocal about her personal concerns, blaming social media's business models for treating children's attention as a commodity and deliberately exploiting addictive design to maximise engagement. She is believed to favour an EU-wide ban on social media access for anyone under 16. The model already faces real-world scrutiny: Australia, the first country to attempt such a ban, has struggled with enforcement. But several EU member states — Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, and Spain — are forging ahead regardless, signalling strong political will even before EU-level legislation arrives.

Claims made here

The European Commission is considering an EU-wide ban on social media access for children under 16, following an expert panel's findings.

Terry Schultz no source cited

Despite strong wage growth, US consumer spending is rising faster than people's earnings.

Steven Masaha no source cited

Australia was the first country to attempt a social media ban for minors, but the model has enforcement problems.

Terry Schultz no source cited

Technology
Data point 16

NPR News: 07-13-2026 1AM EDT · Jul 13, 2026

The European Commission is weighing an EU-wide ban on social media access for children under 16, following a panel report due Monday.

News
Data point 70 mph

NPR News: 07-13-2026 1AM EDT · Jul 13, 2026

Microburst storms in Philadelphia produced winds of 60 to 70 miles per hour in Montgomery and Philadelphia Counties, downing trees and power lines.

Chapter 7 · 04:13

Box Office: Moana Underperforms, Toy Story 5 Holds

The bulletin's final story turns to Hollywood, where the weekend box office delivered a notable disappointment for Disney. The live-action remake of Moana, which carried a reported production budget of $250 million, failed to land the big opening weekend the studio had anticipated, pulling in $43 million from North American theaters. The gap between budget and opening weekend is stark and will raise questions about the studio's live-action remake strategy. Minions and Monsters — already in its second week — claimed second place with another $20.5 million added to its running total. Toy Story 5 finished third, adding $18.5 million to round out a weekend that belonged firmly to sequels and franchise holdovers rather than new arrivals.

Claims made here

Disney's live-action Moana brought in $43 million in North American theaters in its opening weekend.

NPR Anchor no source cited

Disney's live-action Moana reportedly cost $250 million to produce.

NPR Anchor no source cited

Arts
Data point $43M

NPR News: 07-13-2026 1AM EDT · Jul 13, 2026 Arts

Disney's live-action Moana underwhelmed at the box office, bringing in $43 million in North America against a reported $250 million production budget. Minions and Monsters held second place, and Toy Story 5 rounded out the top three.

Arts
Data point $43M

NPR News: 07-13-2026 1AM EDT · Jul 13, 2026

The live-action Moana film earned $43 million in its North American opening weekend, underperforming expectations against a reported $250 million production budget.

Arts
Data point $250M

NPR News: 07-13-2026 1AM EDT · Jul 13, 2026

Disney's live-action Moana reportedly cost $250 million to produce, making its $43 million opening weekend a notable underperformance.

Chapter 8 · 04:40

Points North Podcast Promo

The episode closes with a promotional segment for Points North, a podcast from Interlochen Public Radio distributed on the NPR Network. The promo positions the show around immersive storytelling rooted in the natural world of the Great Lakes, using brief audio excerpts that evoke reactions of awe and wonder from listeners. It's a soft, atmospheric close to an otherwise news-heavy bulletin, offering listeners a glimpse of long-form nature storytelling as a counterpoint to the morning's urgent geopolitical and domestic stories.

News
Data point 27

NPR News: 07-13-2026 1AM EDT · Jul 13, 2026

At least 27 people were killed and dozens injured in a fire at a pub in Bangkok, Thailand, with the cause still under investigation.

No indexed bits in this chapter.

Show stoppers

News
US Strikes 140+ Targets in Iran

NPR News: 07-13-2026 1AM EDT · Jul 13, 2026 News

The US military hit more than 140 targets in Iran overnight, striking drone launch sites, naval capabilities, and ammunition storage. Iran responded by launching drones and missiles toward Gulf states hosting American bases.

Business
Data point 6.3%

NPR News: 07-13-2026 1AM EDT · Jul 13, 2026 Business

US consumer spending jumped 6.3% in June year-over-year, the strongest growth in four years, boosted by the World Cup and an early Amazon Prime Day. But the gains may be fragile: spending is rising faster than wages, raising sustainability questions.

Technology
EU Considers Blocking Under-16s from Social Media

NPR News: 07-13-2026 1AM EDT · Jul 13, 2026 Technology

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen is expected to propose EU-wide legislation banning social media access for children under 16, calling out platforms for treating kids' attention as a commodity. Australia tried a similar ban first, but enforcement has been a challenge.

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7 / 13 cited (54%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

CENTCOM struck more than 140 targets in Iran overnight, including drone launch sites, naval capabilities, and ammunition storage facilities.

Carrie Khan CENTCOM post on X

The US strikes were aimed at reducing Iran's ability to damage shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.

NPR Anchor US military statement

Senator Lindsey Graham died of a torn aorta caused by long-term cardiovascular disease, according to the Washington DC medical examiner's initial report.

NPR Anchor Washington DC medical examiner initial report

Emergency services found Senator Graham in cardiac arrest at his home Saturday evening.

Eric McDaniel Dispatch audio reviewed by NPR

Senator Lindsey Graham's cause of death will not be finalized until additional toxicology testing is completed.

Eric McDaniel Medical examiner's statement shared by Graham's office

US consumer spending rose 6.3% in June 2026 compared to a year earlier, the strongest growth in four years.

Steven Masaha Bank of America credit and debit card spending data

Despite strong wage growth, US consumer spending is rising faster than people's earnings.

Steven Masaha no source cited

Microburst storms in Philadelphia produced winds of 60 to 70 miles per hour in Montgomery and Philadelphia Counties.

NPR Anchor National Weather Service

At least 27 people were killed and dozens injured in a fire at a pub in Bangkok, Thailand.

NPR Anchor no source cited

Disney's live-action Moana brought in $43 million in North American theaters in its opening weekend.

NPR Anchor no source cited

Disney's live-action Moana reportedly cost $250 million to produce.

NPR Anchor no source cited

The European Commission is considering an EU-wide ban on social media access for children under 16, following an expert panel's findings.

Terry Schultz no source cited

Australia was the first country to attempt a social media ban for minors, but the model has enforcement problems.

Terry Schultz no source cited