Iranian-American actress Sepideh Moafi has earned the first Emmy nomination of her career, securing a place among television's top performers with a nod for For Moafi, the nomination represents far more than a personal milestone. It also marks a significant moment for refugee representation, Iranian-American actors and the broader evolution of diversity in American television. Born in 1985 in a refugee camp in Regensburg, Germany, Moafi is the daughter of Iranian parents who fled the country in the aftermath of the 1979 Islamic Revolution. After spending time seeking asylum in Germany, her family eventually settled in the United States, where she grew up and later trained as both an opera singer and an actress, earning a Master of Fine Arts degree from the University of California, Irvine. Her life story has become an integral part of her public identity, informing both her artistic choices and her humanitarian advocacy. Moafi's Emmy-nominated performance comes in the second ...
For decades, the central question in the US-Iran confrontation was whether Tehran would obtain the ultimate deterrent: a nuclear weapon. But in the latest round of escalation, Iran’s hardline media and conservative political establishment appear to be advancing a different answer. In their reading, Iran may not need an atom bomb to impose strategic costs on Washington and its allies. It already has the Strait of Hormuz. That is the central message running through Iran’s conservative and hardline outlets after the latest exchange of strikes between the United States and Iran. The line is not merely that Iran retaliated. It is that the balance of deterrence has shifted from underground nuclear facilities to a narrow maritime chokepoint through which a major share of the world’s energy trade must pass. The latest escalation followed US strikes on Iranian targets after attacks on commercial vessels near the Strait of Hormuz. AP reported that President Donald Trump said the ceasefire was “o...