INTERNACIONAL
Trueno, la cara visible del hip hop argentino con conciencia social

Uno de los raperos de habla hispana más importantes del mundo, aquí y ahora, es este joven prolijamente peinado que sonríe y se presta al diálogo con Infobae Cultura sobre la historia de su colaboración artística con Damon Albarn y el proyecto Gorillaz, las raíces nativas de sus rimas y el sentido de convertir -una vez más, ya pasó con el rock hace más de 60 años- una cultura surgida a miles de kilómetros y en otro idioma, en un estilo propio, expresada en el idioma de su tierra. Si hay rock argentino (“nacional”, nunca pareció el término apropiado pero así se constituyó), Trueno es la prueba concreta que hay hip hop argentino.
“Hubo un momento en que tomé impulso y pensé ‘qué bueno que podamos empezar a dar otro mensaje diferente para la próxima generación’”, cuenta el pibe del barrio de la Boca, el xeneize que ahora es una estrella mundial (“en cada show, en cualquier lugar del mundo siempre hay una camiseta de Boca”, cuenta).
“El rumbo que estaba tomando la música urbana, a mí me hacía sentir que se alejaba del núcleo del hip hop. Actualmente, el hip hop carga con un prejuicio a partir de lo que transmiten ciertos cantantes o ciertos mensajes banales, que exaltan el consumismo y lo material; cuando en realidad es un movimiento que nace de la unión, del amor, de la diversión, del respeto, y con el fin de generar unidad”, reflexiona.
—Para entender tu colaboración con Gorillaz hay que remontarse a fines de abril de 2022 cuando subiste al escenario de Tecnópolis con ellos. Fue toda una sorpresa.
—Me llegó la invitación de hacer un freestyle en la canción “Clint Eastwood”. Para mí era una locura… Hacer freestyle fue algo que representó un disfrute super grande para mí. Hacía mucho tiempo que no había freestyleado porque me estaba transportando hacia la música, era una época de transición. Estuvo todo increíble, ¿viste? La banda increíble, Damon una persona supergrosa. El acercamiento fue por su hija, Missy, que sabe hablar en español, y me conocía a mí, conocía el rock argentino.
—En ese momento fue muy impactante lo que dijiste. Entiendo que lo improvisaste porque así son las reglas, pero fue muy simbólico: “Desde Argentina llegamos hasta Inglaterra, por culpa de un micrófono ya no existe más guerra”…
—Exacto, fue como ponerle una curita. Y traté de unir un poco todo, porque también ellos son no solamente, para mí, la banda más emblemática del Reino Unido, sino que son los jefes de una generación, de un estilo de hacer música y ser una banda sin mostrar una cara humana, por así decirlo, de carne y hueso. Eso marcó un montón. Y que estuvieran tocando en Argentina, que me inviten a mí… Siempre trato de no premeditar nada, de no pensarme ni siquiera una sola palabra. Justamente la magia del freestyle es esa, ¿viste? Ver con qué me encuentro, qué cae del cielo. Y creo que recibí tanto aporte de él, de la banda, de los coros, del equipo de trabajo, que me nació darle ese entre, decirles: “Bienvenidos a Argentina, siéntanse en casa, que acá los amamos y está todo bien”.
—Aquella invitación se continuó luego con tu participación en el nuevo disco de Gorillaz.
—Están haciendo un disco increíble, con un concepto increíble. Y justamente en “The Manifesto”, que es esta canción en la que me invitaron, hablan un poco de la trascendencia de la vida y la muerte y de lo positivo que ellos lo ven. Con un mensaje y un concepto tan claro, me fue mucho más fácil interiorizarme, mojarme en el concepto, entender y empezar a explayarme. Fue una sesión larga de estudio, pero de puro disfrute. Nunca estuvimos viendo el reloj ni la hora y ya era de noche: Damon me dejó hacer los versos y los estribillos que yo quería. Me gusta que sea una canción larga, que no sea pensada con una estructura corta para que funcione y que la gente la consuma fácil. Es una canción que tiene un trasfondo, un mensaje, un motivo por el cual escucharla. Siento que une perfecto los dos estilos, el de Damon, de Gorillaz, de su música, sus melodías; y el estilo de rap que llevé para la canción. Quedó increíble.

—El prejuicio con la música urbana, el hip hop (en la que genéricamente se te puede englobar), dice que se trata de una cultura lejana, en inglés y con determinada exaltación de joyas, dinero, armas. En tu música se nota que has tomado otro camino ¿Por qué?
—Yo siento que lo aprendí de mi viejo, que siempre tuvo un mensaje muy social (N. de la R: Pedro Peligro, rapero uruguayo argentino, activista de la escena en los años 90). Lo aprendí de mi abuelo Yamandú Palacios, cantautor uruguayo, e integrante del conjunto de Zitarrosa… Vengo de una familia que vivió el exilio político, por eso tengo conciencia social de lo que representa Latinoamérica y todo lo que nos pasa.
Cuando empecé a hacer música estaba muy en auge todo este mensaje del exceso de las drogas, de las cadenas, de las mujeres, y no hay nada que me haga sentir menos representado que eso. Tomar otro rumbo fue decidir expresar lo que yo siento. Siempre digo que mis canciones son homenajes, dedicatorias y agradecimientos a algo de mi vida.
[Fotos: Camila Medrano]
INTERNACIONAL
Nepal probe exposes $20M fraudulent rescue scheme involving lacing Mt Everest hikers’ food: report

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An investigation has exposed a nearly $20 million insurance scam in Nepal involving guides who allegedly fake or induce mountainside rescues, including by lacing the food of some hikers near Mt. Everest, according to a report by The Kathmandu Post.
Kathmandu is the capital of Nepal, where some adventurous individuals go to climb Mount Everest, the world’s highest peak.
The mountain sits on the border of Nepal and the Tibet Autonomous Region of China.
MIKE TOBIN DOCUMENTS DARING MOUNT EVEREST CLIMB IN NEW FOX NATION SPECIAL
The Kathmandu Post reported that after it highlighted the fraud in 2018, the government established a fact-finding committee, issued a 700-page report and declared reforms.
But last year, the Nepal Police’s Central Investigation Bureau (CIB) reopened the matter and discovered that the fraud was increasing.
This photograph taken May 31, 2021, shows mountaineers lined up as they climb a slope during their ascension to the summit of Mount Everest in Nepal. (Lakpa Sherpa/AFP via Getty Images)
The outlet indicated that the CIB probe points out two main fraudulent scenarios.
One involves guides suggesting to tired adventurers who do not want to walk back that if they feign illness, a chopper will pick them up, according to The Kathmandu Post.
The outlet reported that, in the other scenario, guides and hotel staff, according to the CIB probe, have been coached to scare trekkers at high altitude, where altitude sickness can occur. They allegedly claim that the trekkers are in danger of dying and that only immediate evacuation will spare them.
In some instances, investigators discovered that Diamox (acetazolamide) tablets, utilized to prevent altitude sickness, were given in conjunction with excessive water intake to cause the symptoms that would give grounds for a rescue, the outlet reported.
In at least one instance noted in the investigation, guides allegedly laced food with baking powder to cause people to be unwell, the outlet stated.
AMERICAN JIM MORRISON MAKES HISTORY SKIING DOWN MOUNT EVEREST, DEDICATES RUN TO LATE PARTNER

Tents of mountaineers are pictured at Everest base camp in the Mount Everest region of Solukhumbu district April 18, 2024, on the tenth anniversary of an avalanche that killed 16 Nepali guides. (Purnima Shrestha/AFP via Getty Images)
Police recorded a case in which four individuals were picked up on one chopper flight, but insurance claims were filed as more than one separate rescue, the report noted.
The framework tying the system of mass fraud together was detailed in police interrogations, according to the outlet, which reported that hospitals shell out 20% to 25% of the insurance money to trekking businesses and 20% to 25% to chopper rescue operators in return for patient referrals.
Trekking guides and their businesses get a boost from inflated invoices, the outlet suggested. In some instances, tourists are offered money to join in the scam, The Kathmandu Post added.
In the period between 2022 and 2025, investigators found a whopping 4,782 foreign patients serviced at implicated hospitals, with 171 cases verified as fraudulent rescues, the outlet reported. During that span, Era International Hospital raked in deposits of over $15.87 million for such activities and Shreedhi International Hospital got more than $1.22 million, the outlet reported.
Mountain Rescue Service carried out 171 fake rescues from an overall 1,248 charter flights, scoring around $10.31 million from insurers, the outlet reported, adding that Nepal Charter Service executed 75 fake rescues out of 471 flights, claiming $8.2 million. Everest Experience and Assistance was allegedly tied to 71 suspicious rescues out of 601 flights, with claims of $11.04 million.
HELICOPTER CRASHES INTO OCEAN OFF HAWAII COAST, LEAVING MULTIPLE DEAD AND INJURED

This photograph taken May 12, 2021, shows mountaineers as they climb during their ascent to the summit of Mount Everest in Nepal. (Pemba Dorje Sherpa/AFP via Getty Images)
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CIB charged 32 people last month with offenses against the state and organized crime, the outlet reported, noting that nine individuals were arrested while others were said to be absconding.
Individuals from Mountain Helicopters, Altitude Air and Manang Air, which was rebranded as Basecamp Helicopters, as well as physicians and administrators with Swacon International Hospital, Shreedhi International Hospital and Era International Hospital were among the individuals who have been charged, the outlet indicated.
world, asia world regions, mount everest
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Trump administration accused of violating court order by sharing Medicaid data with ICE

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More than a dozen Democratic-led states are accusing the Trump administration of violating a federal court order by sharing Medicaid data with Immigration and Customs Enforcement, asking a judge to enforce the ruling.
The states’ complaint asks the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California to enforce its existing injunction blocking HHS from sharing Medicaid data with ICE.
«The Trump Administration appears to be defying a direct court order blocking it from sharing the personal, sensitive data of individuals including U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents. It’s invasive — and deeply troubling,» said California Attorney General Bonta, who led the coalition of 22 states. «When Californians signed up for Medi-Cal, they did so with the understanding that their data would not be used for purposes unrelated to administering this program. I urge the court to enforce its earlier order and make clear that these guardrails exist for anyone who is lawfully residing in the United States.»
The complaint stems from a lawsuit spearheaded by California in July 2025 against the Trump administration. The lawsuit accused Health and Human Services of violating federal law through its «mass transfer of sensitive Medicaid data» of both lawful permanent and temporary residents. The lawsuit also argued that the sharing of the personal information will likely create a «chilling effect on individuals’ willingness to enroll in Medicaid programs» for which they are legally eligible.
SECOND FEDERAL JUDGE BLOCKS IRS FROM SHARING ADDRESSES WITH ICE
A split image shows Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents patrolling Terminal C at LaGuardia Airport on March 24, 2026, in New York City (L), and U.S. President Donald Trump arriving at Miami International Airport on March 27, 2026, in Miami, Florida (R). President Trump deployed ICE agents to airports amid TSA staffing shortages, with border czar Tom Homan overseeing the effort. (Michael M. Santiago and Nathan Howard / Getty Images)
A federal judge ruled last December that the Trump administration is not allowed to collect the personal information of lawful permanent residents or citizens, but that it can continue to collect basic information from individuals such as addresses, birthdates and immigration status for residents with temporary status. However, the scope of data that can be collected is limited and cannot include sensitive health information.
The attorneys general accuse Health and Human Services of sharing «a large and complex» set of data on Medicaid recipients with ICE, which is in violation of a federal court ruling allowing the exchange of limited personal information but excluding the information of legal permanent residents. The complaint also accuses the Trump administration of failing to share its criteria for determining if a resident is being «lawfully present.»
CATO Institute Senior Legal Fellow Dan Greenberg told Fox News Digital there is «a strong possibility» that HHS and ICE violated the district court’s order.
LETITIA JAMES SUES HHS OVER TYING FEDERAL FUNDS TO TRANSGENDER POLICY

ICE agents stand at the scene where a woman was shot and killed earlier in the day during an enforcement operation on Jan. 7, 2026, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Christopher Juhn/Anadolu via Getty Images)
«The reason this is a strong possibility is that DHHS communications apparently indicate that it shared a ‘large and complex’ dataset of Medicaid recipients with ICE,» Greenberg said. «That phrase suggests that the dataset that was shared with ICE may have included information that is outside the scope of the court order. That is a question of fact: that is why the states are now asking the court to compel the federal government to explain just what was shared and how it is now being used.»
Greenberg also pointed out that the Transformed Medicaid Statistical Information System database does not «appear to have any simple or direct way to identify/single out immigrants who are undocumented,» making «information-sharing that complies with that court order difficult or impossible.»
«The TMSIS identifies people who are only eligible for emergency Medicaid services, but the problem is that this class of people includes both undocumented and lawfully present immigrants,» Greenberg said. «In short, it is as if the court order said that only some of the information in one particular file should be disclosed, but there is reason to believe that DHHS decided that — because they can’t figure out how to separate out this particular type of information – they may have handed over the whole filing cabinet.»

The US Department of Health and Human Services building is shown in Washington, D.C. (Saul Loeb/AFP)
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In addition to California, attorneys general of Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Massachusetts, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin, and the governor of Kentucky signed on to the complaint.
Fox News Digital reached out to the White House and Health and Human Services for comment.
politics, california, health, immigration, donald trump
INTERNACIONAL
El presidente de Irán sugiere la posibilidad de un acercamiento diplomático en una carta dirigida al público estadounidense

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POLITICA3 días agoQuiénes son las dos acreedoras del préstamo con el que Adorni compró su departamento en Caballito
POLITICA1 día agoEl Gobierno reevalúa la estrategia de comunicación por el caso Adorni y mide el impacto en la imagen de Milei










