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Media executives and industry experts close to NBC said the Ronna McDaniel fiasco exposed the chaos in the upper ranks at the Peacock network — with one top honcho telling The Post that “a head needs to roll.”

The hiring and abrupt firing of the former chair of the Republican National Committee under intense pressure from NBC and MSNBC talent, led by Chuck Todd and Rachel Maddow, revealed the power vacuum at the network, multiple sources told The Post on Thursday.

“Someone needs to pay for the clear lack of leadership on this issue,” said one media bigwig, who spoke to The Post on the condition of anonymity. “A head needs to roll.”

“There are some serious conversations happening in Philadelphia,” the source added, referring to the headquarters of NBC-parent Comcast. “If I’m [Comcast president] Mike Cavanagh, I’d be like what the f-k!”

A possible fall guy could be NBC News Group Chairman Cesar Conde, who took “full responsibility” for signing off on the reported two-year, $600,000 deal that landed McDaniel as an on-air contributor at NBC and MSNBC last Friday.

Four days later, his tune changed after Maddow, MSBNC’s most bankable star, called the hire inexplicable, Todd returned to Meet the Press to denounce McDaniels credibility issues and Mika Brzezinski of Morning Joe slammed her as an anti-democracy election denier.

After listening to the legitimate concerns of many of you, I have decided that Ronna McDaniel will not be an NBC News contributor, Conde wrote in a memo Tuesday.

Our initial decision was made because of our deep commitment to presenting our audiences with a widely diverse set of viewpoints and experiences, particularly during these consequential times, he added.

McDaniel is reportedly in talks with high-powered media lawyer Bryan Freedman and is weighing a defamation and harassment lawsuit over the harsh treatment she received from her short-time colleagues.

The black mark that the McDaniel episode has put on Conde’s sterling resume is a “self-inflicted, hemorrhaging wound,” noted a former exec at a rival network.

“For starters, Conde needs to show up in the office to deal with the problem head-on instead of cowering in Brickell Miami,” the source said. “Most of all, he also needs to restore authority and law and order. To that end, someone needs to be accountable. It’s tricky because he wooed Ronna and approved the decision himself. It’s tricky firing anyone for a news felony that he helped commit.”

Another industry expert said the amount of direct reports to Conde and the lack of editorial leadership that oversees NBC News and MSNBC is surprising. Conde is not a news guy, nor does he attest to be, sources told The Post.

Currently, Conde lords over what sources have described as a collection of “fiefdoms.”

Libby Leist oversees “Today;” Janelle Rodriguez is in charge of “NBC Nightly News” and the “NBC News Now” streaming service; Rebecca Blumenstein, who in January 2023 was named president of editorial, oversees bookings for “Meet the Press” and “Dateline;” and Rashida Jones runs MSNBC.

McDaniels hiring was a team effort, with Blumenstein and NBC News senior vice president of politics Carrie Budoff Brown reportedly leading the process, and Jones pushing to get the former RNC chair on MSNBC, which resulted in her getting a more lucrative contributor contract.

However, the immediate backlash inside 30 Rock over for hiring McDaniel’s pushed Jones to do a stunning about-face. Last weekend, she told furious staffers that the unabashed Donald Trump supporter wouldn’t be welcome at the left-leaning network.

After Conde sent out his memo announcing McDaniel’s dismissal, MSNBC primetime hosts Joy Reid, Chris Hayes and Alex Wagner gushed over the ouster.

“That leadership was willing to change on this, I’m grateful to them, Maddow chimed in.

“The inmates are taking over the asylum,” the rival media exec countered. “There’s no clear leader at the network, especially the way Conde set things up.”

Reps for Conde, NBCU, Comcast and NBC News declined to comment.

“Cesar still has full support and confidence of Comcast/ NBCU leadership,” a source close to NBC told The Post.

Sources criticized the fact that the company doesn’t have one leader in charge of all editorial who is responsible, with one media watcher, deadpanning: “sometimes you need one neck to ring.”

“If I were them, I’d clean house,” another source close to NBC said. “The structure that Cesar set up is clearly a failure. I would get rid of all of them and start over. They clearly can’t lead the organization.”

Insiders have pointed to Blumenstein or Brown as potential casualties, while others said there should just be a change in the network’s leadership structure.

Whatever the move, a big change needs to happen in the next 60 days, one source emphasized.

Another source close to the network said the buck should stop with Conde, who has been described as a “well-manicured,” “two-faced,” “teflon”-like exec.

“Cesar will have to take the entire bullet,” another source close to NBC said. “He will need to continue to keep publicly saying he was the one who made the decision and protect Rashida, Rebecca and Carrie. He will need to commit to keeping the news team appraised of upcoming hires — and he will also need to be in New York working with them. This [lack of being present] showed a big gap [in his leadership].”

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Sports

Stars ‘steal one,’ revive series hopes with OT win

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Stars 'steal one,' revive series hopes with OT win

After falling into a 2-0 series hole while losing six straight and nine of their past 11 games to the Vegas Golden Knights, the Dallas Stars had to do something in Game 3.

And they did. The Stars snapped their losing skid to the defending Stanley Cup champions, with 20-year-old forward Wyatt Johnston scoring twice, including the winning goal in their 3-2 overtime win Saturday in the Western Conference quarterfinals at T-Mobile Arena.

“We knew the situation coming into Vegas,” said Stars center Tyler Seguin, who finished with an assist. “We know these guys are the champs from last year, and we know how good they are on home ice. … We knew we had to come in here, we had to steal one no matter. Now, we want to steal two.”

Coming close but not being close enough to win games had been the narrative for the Stars entering Game 3.

They opened Game 1 with a 4-3 loss and were within striking distance in Game 2 before an empty-netter from Jack Eichel late in the third period created extra separation in a 3-1 defeat.

Game 3 saw Dallas find its footing early. Johnston scored the opening goal near the halfway point of the first period before Miro Heiskanen doubled the lead to 2-0 a little more than five minutes into the second period.

Having a two-goal lead, however, was short-lived. The Golden Knights tied the score on a pair of second-period goals from Brayden McNabb and Eichel.

Both teams struggled to come up with the winning goal in the third and in overtime. Stars goaltender Jake Oettinger finished with 32 saves and a .941 save percentage for what was his strongest performance in the postseason.

Oettinger’s counterpart, Logan Thompson, was one of the main reasons why the Golden Knights even reached overtime. Johnston’s first goal along with Heiskanen’s salvo that gave the Stars a 2-0 advantage was the product of an attack that went from struggling to find consistency in the first two games of the series to one that showed why the Stars are among the teams that could potentially dethrone the Golden Knights this postseason.

Through the first two games of this series, Thompson had faced 50 shots. The Stars already had 33 shots by the end of the second period before finishing with 46 shots, with Thompson stopping 43 of them.

Johnston was responsible for a game-high eight shots, with his final being the winner that he snuck beneath the crossbar and over Thompson’s shoulder from a side angle to bring the Stars within a game of tying the series.

“I tried a couple low, and it didn’t work,” said Johnston, who led the Stars with 33 goals in the regular season. “So, I tried to throw one up high and I’m lucky enough it worked.”

Stars coach Peter DeBoer reiterated afterward that his team had to be the more desperate club Saturday night.

DeBoer’s logic was simple. The Golden Knights were still going to have a series lead no matter what happened in Game 3. The Stars, on the other hand, had to find a way to avoid going back to Dallas trailing 3-0.

Getting off to an early start. Finding ways to constantly get shots. Making sure the Golden Knights were the ones who struggled to find cohesion at times. These are the details that allowed the Stars to win Saturday, and they’re also the attributes DeBoer said proves the team has shown gradual improvement since the start of the playoffs.

“What I do like about our game is that our game’s building,” DeBoer said. “Game 2 was better than Game 1. Game 3 was better than Game 2. That’s a great sign for me on our group.”

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World

UK to develop hypersonic missiles to catch up with China and Russia by 2030 – report

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UK to develop hypersonic missiles to catch up with China and Russia by 2030 - report

Britain plans to equip its armed forces with a homegrown hypersonic cruise missile by the end of the decade, according to a report.

Military chiefs are under pressure to catch up with China, Russia and the US by developing a weapon capable of flying at speeds higher than Mach 5 – five times the speed of sound, according to The Sunday Telegraph.

The Ministry of Defence wants the missile to be designed and built in the UK and to enter service by 2030.

Plans are at an early stage, the newspaper reported, although there is no decision on whether the missile will be launched from land, sea or air.

It comes after Prime Minister Rishi Sunak pledged to spend 2.5% of gross domestic product on defence by 2030.

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Ballistic weapons can also reach hypersonic speeds but the difference is in manoeuvrability – ballistic weapons generally have fixed paths but the path of a hypersonic weapon can be changed after launch, making it difficult to destroy.

The US, Russia and China are the main players in the hypersonic weapons race but other countries, such as North Korea, claim to have tested hypersonic weapons.

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US tests hypersonic weapon with speeds ‘five times greater than speed of sound’

The development of hypersonic capabilities is part of Pillar Two of AUKUS – a defence and security pact between the UK, Australia and the US.

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Last month the US tested a hypersonic cruise missile on an atoll in the Marshall Islands in a message to its rival in the Pacific – China. It is the latest in a number of hypersonic weapons tests the country has completed in recent years.

A spokesperson for the MoD would not comment in detail on the development of Britain’s hypersonic missile capability, citing national security, but confirmed “hypersonic technologies to further develop UK sovereign advanced capabilities” were being pursued.

“We continue to invest in our equipment to meet current and future threats,” they added.

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Politics

DOJ challenges motion to dismiss Tornado Cash co-founder’s charges

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DOJ challenges motion to dismiss Tornado Cash co-founder’s charges

According to the filing, the DOJ criticized Tornado Cash’s co-founders for inadequate changes to exclude sanctioned addresses.

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