The Morning: Pain at the pump
Plus, peace talks, changes at Apple and chatbots in prison.
The Morning
April 21, 2026

Good morning. Officials said Vice President JD Vance would lead an American delegation back to Pakistan today for peace talks with Iran. But it’s not clear if the Iranians will show up.

There’s more on the war, the administration and other big stories below. (Plus, it’s Iggy Pop’s birthday.) But let’s start with the price of gas.

A gas pump.
In Massachusetts. Simon Simard for The New York Times

Pain at the pump

A lot of you are feeling this war at the gas pump. I sure am. It now costs me $106 to fill my full-size pickup truck at the neighborhood station. I know the owner a little, and I raised my eyebrows at him when I was done. He shrugged. It was clear drivers had been grinding him about it all day.

You read abstractions about the war in Iran, the Strait of Hormuz, the unstable oil market. Then you go pump 10 gallons into your minivan and experience what that means at home. Ouch.

But don’t take it out on the station owner, Lydia DePillis told me. Lydia, who covers the American economy, reported on why price hikes at the filling station take so long to go away. When oil prices spike, profit margins shrink for businesses down the supply chain, she said. To recoup, they keep prices a little higher even as their costs shrink.

For her story, Lydia went deep on the math those gas station owners have to do as prices spike. She introduced readers to a Massachusetts gas station owner named Alex Weatherall:

He refills his tanks about every four days, and the “rack price” that his wholesale gasoline provider charges jumped to $3.347 per gallon last week from $2.398 on Feb. 25 — an increase of 39.6 percent. His last truckload cost $39,488.

Weatherall raised his price by only 33.8 percent: “He would charge more, but he feared losing business if his competitors did not follow,” Lydia wrote. “Fewer visits also mean lower sales at his convenience store and restaurant.”

Gas stations — and especially independently run ones like Weatherall’s — rely for much of their income on the snacks and sodas and cigarettes and beer they sell inside. “If I had to solely rely on fuel as my only source of profit, I wouldn’t stay in business,” another owner told Lydia. “I want the consumer to come in the store, and we do everything we can to entice them to come in.”

Chart showing how gasoline’s retail price follow its wholesale price.
Sources: AAA (national average); U.S. Energy Information Administration (wholesale prices). Lydia DePillis/The New York Times

Feeling squeezed

Because those people who come into the store? They’re often regulars. They have relationships with the staff. They experience the gas station as a community hub. That can add to the pressure when it comes to setting prices — wherever you live. (Look at this map showing how much people pay in each state.)

My colleague Michael Barbaro, a host of “The Daily,” went to suburban Jacksonville, Fla., to hear about that pressure. He and his team spent time with a gas station manager named Cameron Joudi, who has had to ratchet up the price of his gas again and again. “He wasn’t repeatedly raising gas prices on strangers,” Michael said. “He was raising prices on people he really cares about. People who he knows are already stretched very thin.”

It’s hard, Joudi told Michael: “I hope they understand that I’m not pricing my gas to make a quick buck,” he said. “I’m pricing my gas how I need to price it in order to stay afloat.” Joudi said he makes around 10 cents to 15 cents per gallon he sells. His tank, Michael reported, holds around 8,000 gallons, which lasts a couple of weeks. That means a profit of between $800 and $1,200 — not a fortune.

But a rise can still hurt Joudi’s customers. “The Daily” spoke to one of them, a veteran who served in Afghanistan. Where did he get the money to cover the higher cost of his gas? From the grocery budget, he said:

We’ve been going to those food banks every now and then, which help out. I like those. A lot of local churches do help out, so that’s pretty nice. I have three kids. So I make sure that they eat first. So usually we’ll get all their food first.

Usually. Sometimes he and his wife don’t eat. Which is a good reminder: Pain at the pump is relative.

Related: Environmental groups are suing the Trump administration to stop BP from starting a new $5 billion drilling project in the Gulf of Mexico.

THE LATEST NEWS

War in the Middle East

A soldier in olive green military uniform and helmet sledge hammers the head of a Jesus statue.
The image is undated but began spreading on social media Sunday. It came from Debl, a village a few miles north of the Israeli border. via Reuters

Politics

  • Kash Patel, the F.B.I. director, is suing The Atlantic over an article that claimed his job was in jeopardy because of excessive drinking and impulsiveness.
  • Trump’s labor secretary, Lori Chavez-DeRemer, is stepping down. She had been facing an internal inquiry into charges of misconduct.

Around the World

Two soldiers in camouflage maneuver a wheeled gun onto a truck on a snowy ground, while a third looks on. A clear blue sky is overhead.
In Ukraine in February. Tyler Hicks/The New York Times

Business

Chart showing Apple’s market valuation since 2000.
Source: FactSet. The New York Times

Other Big Stories

  • The satirical newspaper The Onion announced a new plan to take over the operation of Infowars, the conspiracy-peddling website formerly owned by Alex Jones. A judge must approve the deal.
  • The singer known as D4vd was charged with the murder of a teenage girl whose decomposed body was found in the trunk of his car.
  • Health influencers, many of them aligned with the MAHA movement, are promoting nicotine as a health hack. In the video below, Dani Blum explains what’s going on. Click to play.
A short video showing Dani Blum, a reporter, and social media images.
The New York Times

THE MORNING QUIZ

This question comes from a recent edition of the newsletter. Click an answer to see if you’re right. (The link will be free.)

A California man was charged with grand theft in a $34,000 scheme in which the police said he …

OPINIONS

Rebecca Archer’s daughter Renae was too young to get the measles vaccine before an outbreak in her town. She caught the disease — and died from its complications a decade later.

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MORNING READS

A man wearing a purple t-shirt sits in front of a typewriter.
Nick Browning with the typewriter inmates use in the Jessup Correctional Institution’s library. Alex Kent for The New York Times

Jailbroken: Prisons ban A.I. chatbots. But inmates are finding ways to use them anyway.

Blow fish: Swedish researchers gave salmon cocaine.

Your pick: The most clicked link in The Morning yesterday was this year’s poetry challenge.

TODAY’S NUMBER

225

— That is the number of electrical substations that power trains in the New York City subway. Dozens are nearing 100 years old and need renovation or replacement. See what they look like and learn what they do.

SPORTS

Boston Marathon: Both of last year’s champions defended their titles. John Korir was nearly three minutes faster than his 2025 win, setting a course record of 2:01:52. Sharon Lokedi won the women’s race in 2:18:51.

N.B.A.: What makes an N.B.A. champion? Here’s what seven metrics have told us over 20 years.

College sports: A Cal State Northridge volleyball player, Jordan Lucas, has gone viral for his eccentric celebrations. He’s