Why Livvy Dunne gets nervous watching Paul Skenes pitch for Pirates (2024)

Singer-songwriter Huey Lewis on seeing his songs come to life on stage

Singer-songwriter Huey Lewis joins "CBS Mornings" to talk about his new Broadway musical, "The Heart of Rock and Roll," and working through hearing loss.

1m

cbsnews.com

John Sterling’s kids reveal what it’s like to have the legendary Yankees announcer as a dad: ‘Unlike any other human’

John Sterling's loopy home run calls weren't the recently retired Yankee announcer's greatest creations!

22 m

nypost.com

Ex-Met Seth Lugo picks up AL-leading 10th win

The Mets might be wishing now they made Seth Lugo a starter after all. The former Met became the American League’s first 10-game winner in the Royals’ 7-2 win over the Dodgers in Los Angeles on Saturday. Lugo (10-2) allowed two runs and six hits in six innings. Seth Lugo picked up his AL-leading 10th...

25 m

nypost.com

Calmes: The Trump veep guessing game is silly

Everyone's wondering whom Trump will choose as his vice presidential running mate. They should be asking why anyone would want the job.

25 m

latimes.com

‘American Pie’ star Jason Biggs is now ‘class mom’ in one of his kid’s classes

Jason Biggs is putting Manhattan moms -- and his own wife -- to shame with his hands-on parenting.

27 m

nypost.com

MS-13, Russian mobsters use migrants in elaborate injury scam — even getting spinal surgery to pull it off: sources

The crime outfits are swindling millions by staging sham trip-and-fall accidents and bringing immigrants to NYC to pose as victims, according to sources.

35 m

nypost.com

Beaten by cops, this man is skeptical of police reform in Minneapolis

Jaleel Stallings was swept up in the chaos of protests over George Floyd’s murder. The outcome changed his life.

36 m

washingtonpost.com

Money Talk: What to do when your financial advisor isn't doing right by you

In this week's Money Talk, an elderly couple suspects their financial advisor isn't doing right by them, an inherited house goes up for sale, and Social Security rules confound.

36 m

latimes.com

Steve Ballmer: NBA owner in search of a miracle

Steve Ballmer's biggest bet wasn't buying the Clippers or keeping them in L.A., but building the Intuit Dome in the heart of the Lakers' ancestral home.

36 m

latimes.com

Letters to the Editor: Trump's billionaire donors are telling the rest of us to go eat cake

Consequences are for little people. Trump's Silicon Valley donors won't have to live under the policies he wants to implement.

36 m

latimes.com

Editorial: Of course politics influence the justice system. That doesn't mean Trump, Biden verdicts were rigged

The recent convictions of ex-President Trump and current President Biden's son remind us that there always will be interplay between the justice and political systems. That's quite different from basing court decisions on political factors.

36 m

latimes.com

The magic and mania of Lionel Messi

Whenever Lionel Messi takes the field, fans rise, cameras are held at the ready, and anticipation builds as the crowd await a chance to witness greatness.

36 m

washingtonpost.com

D.C.-area forecast: Sunny and warm for Father’s Day with a long stretch of 90s on the way

The worst of the heat and humidity could arrive later this week into next weekend, potentially pushing the heat index near or past 100 to 105.

36 m

washingtonpost.com

Beyoncé and Jay-Z: Malibu renaissance couple

Beyoncé and Jay-Z staged an epic 2023 with a record-setting real estate purchase sandwiched between Bey's history-making Grammy win and her Renaissance tour.

36 m

latimes.com

As California water agency investigates top manager, some worry progress could be stymied

With the top manager of the Metropolitan Water District under investigation, some of his supporters are concerned his sidelining might slow a push for change.

36 m

latimes.com

Letters to the Editor: Did Byron Donalds really 'praise Jim Crow'?

A reader takes issue with a columnist's characterization of Rep. Byron Donalds' comment on Black families during Jim Crow.

36 m

latimes.com

People of color lost a haven in Palm Springs. A new play dramatizes their loss

A play about the burning and bulldozing of homes on Indigenous land in Palm Springs dramatizes the lives of those who found sanctuary there.

36 m

latimes.com

Opinion: Father's Day invites lots of gender stereotypes. But my dad doesn't fit any mold

What his determination to stay in my life has taught me about being a parent.

36 m

latimes.com

Stan Kroenke: Championship owner; Taylor Swift, Beyoncé host

Stan Kroenke had a vision for bringing the NFL back to L.A.; its foundation was SoFi Stadium, which has become a cultural epicenter that extends beyond sports.

36 m

latimes.com

A California crackdown on 'diet weed' could devastate patients who rely on CBD

Legislation aimed at unregulated cannabis products containing delta-8 THC could hurt people who use hemp-derived medicine for serious seizures.

36 m

latimes.com

Magic Johnson: Billionaire point guard of the city

Earvin 'Magic' Johnson's sports empire has grown to include the Dodgers, Sparks, LAFC and Washington Commanders. He also became the fourth billionaire athlete.

36 m

latimes.com

She's 80, washing dishes, and fighting for a better deal for younger workers

Salud Garcia, 80, walks a picket line to fight for higher wages. She won’t benefit much, given her age, but she wants younger employees to be able to 'retire with dignity.'

36 m

latimes.com

Opinion: What binds our union? Tell us what you will be celebrating this Fourth of July

The Fourth of July approaches at a time of deep political division. Tell us: What do you think still binds our union?

36 m

latimes.com

D.C. traffic cameras have led to sharp decline in speeding, data shows

The city has installed 477 traffic cameras. On some roads with the devices, citations fell by more than 95 percent. But traffic fatalities are still rising.

36 m

washingtonpost.com

Credit card delinquencies are rising. Here's what to do if you're at risk

Seriously overdue credit card debt is at the highest level in more than a decade. People 35 and younger are struggling more than other age groups to pay their bills.

36 m

latimes.com

When Are Trump Supporters Complicit?

On the morning of August 8, 2022, 30 FBI agents and two federal prosecutors conducted a court-authorized search of Mar-a-Lago, Donald Trump’s Palm Beach, Florida, estate. The reason for the search, according to a 38-count indictment, was that after leaving office Trump mishandled classified documents, including some involving sensitive nuclear programs, and then obstructed the government’s efforts to reclaim them.On the day before the FBI obtained the search warrant, one of the agents on the case sent an email to his bosses, according to The New York Times. “The F.B.I. intends for the execution of the warrant to be handled in a professional, low key manner,” he wrote, “and to be mindful of the optics of the search.” It was, and they were.Over the course of 10 hours, the Times reported, “there was little drama as [agents] hauled away a trove of boxes containing highly sensitive state secrets in three vans and a rented Ryder box truck.”On the day of the search, Trump was out of the state. The club at Mar-a-Lago was closed. Agents alerted one of Trump’s lawyers in advance of the search. And before the search, the FBI communicated with the Secret Service “to make sure we could get into Mar-a-Lago with no issues,” according to the testimony of former Assistant FBI Director Steven D’Antuono. It wasn’t a “show of force,” he said. “I was adamant about that, and that was something we all agreed on.”The search warrant itself included a standard statement from the Department of Justice’s policy on the use of deadly force. There was nothing exceptional about it. But that didn’t prevent Trump or his supporters from claiming that President Biden and federal law-enforcement agents had been involved in a plot to assassinate the former president.In a fundraising appeal, Trump wrote,BIDEN’S DOJ WAS AUTHORIZED TO SHOOT ME! It’s just been revealed that Biden’s DOJ was authorized to use DEADLY FORCE for their DESPICABLE raid in Mar-a-Lago. You know they’re just itching to do the unthinkable … Joe Biden was locked & loaded ready to take me out & put my family in danger.On May 23, Trump publicly claimed that the Department of Justice “authorized the use of ‘deadly force’ in their Illegal, UnConstitutional, and Un-American RAID of Mar-a-Lago, and that would include against our Great Secret Service, who they thought might be ‘in the line of fire.’”Sarah Longwell: The two-time Trump voters who have had enoughTrump supporters echoed those claims, as he knew they would. Steve Bannon, one of the architects of the MAGA movement, said, “This was an attempted assassination attempt on Donald John Trump or people associated with him. They wanted a gunfight.” Right-wing radio hosts stoked one another’s fury, claiming that there’s nothing Trump critics won’t do to stop him, up to and including attempting to assassinate him and putting the lives of his Secret Service detail in danger.The statement by Trump went beyond inflaming his supporters; it created a mindset that moved them closer to violence, the very same mindset that led thousands of them to attack the Capitol on January 6 and threaten to hang Vice President Mike Pence. Which is why Special Counsel Jack Smith filed a motion asking the judge overseeing Trump’s classified-documents case to block him from making public statements that could put law enforcement in danger. “Those deceptive and inflammatory assertions irresponsibly put a target on the backs of the FBI agents involved in this case, as Trump well knows,” he wrote. Motivated ignorance refers to willfully blinding oneself to facts. It’s choosing not to know. In many cases, for many people, knowing the truth is simply too costly, too psychologically painful, too threatening to their core identity. Nescience is therefore incentivized; people actively decide to remain in a state of ignorance. If they are presented with strong arguments against a position they hold, or compelling evidence that disproves the narrative they embrace, they will reject them. Doing so fends off the psychological distress of the realization that they’ve been lying to themselves and to others. Motivated ignorance is a widespread phenomenon; most people, to one degree or another, employ it. What matters is the degree to which one embraces it, and the consequences of doing so. In the case of MAGA world, the lies that Trump supporters believe, or say they believe, are obviously untrue and obviously destructive. Since 2016 there’s been a ratchet effect, each conspiracy theory getting more preposterous and more malicious. Things that Trump supporters wouldn’t believe or accept in the past have since become loyalty tests. Election denialism is one example. The claim that Trump is the target of “lawfare,” victim to the weaponization of the justice system, is another.I have struggled to understand how to view individuals who have not just voted for Trump but who celebrate him, who don’t merely tolerate him but who constantly defend his lawlessness and undisguised cruelty. How should I think about people who, in other domains of their lives, are admirable human beings and yet provide oxygen to his malicious movement? How complicit are people who live in an epistemic hall of mirrors and have sincerely—or half-sincerely—convinced themselves they are on the side of the angels?Throughout my career I’ve tried to resist the temptation to make unwarranted judgments about the character of people based on their political views. For one thing, it’s quite possible my views on politics are misguided or distorted, so I exercise a degree of humility in assessing the views of others. For another, I know full well that politics forms only a part of our lives, and not the most important part. People can be personally upstanding and still be wrong on politics.But something has changed for me in the Trump era. I struggle more than I once did to wall off a person’s character from their politics when their politics is binding them to an unusually—and I would say undeniably—destructive person. The lies that MAGA world parrots are so manifestly untrue, and the Trump ethic is so manifestly cruel, that they are difficult to set aside.If a person insists, despite the overwhelming evidence, that Trump was the target of an assassination plot hatched by Joe Biden and carried out by the FBI, this is more than an intellectual failure; it is a moral failure, and a serious one at that. It’s only reasonable to conclude that such Trump supporters have not made a good-faith effort to understand what is really and truly happening. They are choosing to live within the lie, to invoke the words of the former Czech dissident and playwright Vaclav Havel.One of the criteria that needs to be taken into account in assessing the moral culpability of people is how absurd the lies are that they are espousing; a second is how intentionally they are avoiding evidence that exposes the lies because they are deeply invested in the lie; and a third is is how consequential the lie is.It’s one thing to embrace a conspiracy theory that is relevant only to you and your tiny corner of the world. It’s an entirely different matter if the falsehood you’re embracing and promoting is venomous, harming others, and eroding cherished principles, promoting violence and subverting American democracy.In his book The Bible Told Them So: How Southern Evangelicals Fought to Preserve White Supremacy, J. Russell Hawkins tells the story of a June 1963 gathering of more than 200 religious leaders in the White House. President John F. Kennedy was trying to rally their support for civil-rights legislation.Among those in attendance was Albert Garner, a Baptist minister from Florida, who told Kennedy that many southern white Christians held “strong moral convictions” on racial integration. It was, according to Garner, “against the will of their Creator.”“Segregation is a principle of the Old Testament,” Garner said, adding, “Prior to this century neither Christianity nor any denomination of it ever accepted the integration philosophy.”Two months later, in Hanahan, South Carolina, members of a Southern Baptist church—they described themselves as “Christ centered” and “Bible believing”—voted to take a firm stand against civil-rights legislation.“The Hanahan Baptists were not alone,” according to Hawkins. “Across the South, white Christians thought the president was flaunting Christian orthodoxy in pursuing his civil rights agenda.” Kennedy “simply could not comprehend the truth Garner was communicating: based on their religious beliefs, southern white Christians thought integration was evil.”A decade earlier, the Reverend Carey Daniel, pastor of First Baptist Church in West Dallas, Texas, had delivered a sermon titled “God the Original Segregationist,” in response to the 1954 Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board of Education. It became influential within pro-segregationist southern states. Daniel later became president of the Central Texas Division of the Citizens Council of America for Segregation, which asked for a boycott of all businesses, lunch counters included, that served Black patrons. In 1960, Daniel attacked those “trying to destroy the white South by breaking the color line, thus giving aid and comfort to our Communist enemies.”Now ask yourself this: Did the fierce advocacy on behalf of segregation, and the dehumanization of Black Americans, reflect in any meaningful way on the character of those who advanced such views, even if, say, they volunteered once a month at a homeless shelter and wrote a popular commentary on the Book of Romans?Readers can decide whether MAGA supporters are better or worse than Albert Garner and Carey Daniel. My point is that all of us believe there’s some place on the continuum in which the political choices we make reflect on our character. Some movements are overt and malignant enough that to willingly be a part of them becomes ethically problematic.[Russell Berman: The voters who don’t really know Trump]This doesn’t mean those in MAGA world can’t be impressive people in other domains of life, just like critics of Trump may act reprehensibly in their personal lives and at their jobs. I’ve never argued, and I wouldn’t argue today, that politics tells us the most important things about a person’s life. Trump supporters and Trump critics alike can brighten the lives of others, encourage those who are suffering, and demonstrate moments of kindness and grandeur.I understand, too, if their moral convictions keep them from voting for Joe Biden.But it would be an affectation for me, at least, to pretend that in this particular circ*mstance otherwise good people, in joining the MAGA movement, in actively advocating on its behalf, and in planning to cast a vote for Trump, haven’t—given all we know—done something grievously wrong.Some of them are cynical and know better; others are blind to the cult-like world to which they belong. Still others have convinced themselves that Trump, while flawed, is the best of bad options. It’s a “binary choice,” they say, and so they have talked themselves into supporting arguably the most comprehensively corrupt man in the history of American politics, certainly in presidential politics.Whichever justification applies, they are giving not just their vote but their allegiance to a man and movement that have done great harm to our country and its ideals, and which seek to inflict even deeper wounds in the years ahead. Many of them are self-proclaimed evangelicals and fundamentalists, and they are also doing inestimable damage to the Christian faith they claim is central to their lives. That collaboration needs to be named. A generation from now, and probably sooner, it will be obvious to everyone that Trump supporters can’t claim they didn’t know.

36 m

theatlantic.com

Night Terrors

Illustrations by Miki LoweMany of us assume, when we’re young, that our parents know what they’re doing. Only when we’re older do we realize that they were making it up as they went; that they were scared; that they were tasked with something—protecting us—that was never fully possible.I imagine the poet Alan Shapiro knows this well. His parents outlived two of their three children, both of whom died of cancer in adulthood: a cruel fate that they could never have prevented. And Shapiro has faced his own limitations in trying to help his son cope with psychiatric illness. In one essay, he described standing outside his son’s bedroom door, day after day, calling his name but not knowing what else to do. “I was anxious about leaving him alone and equally anxious about intruding,” he wrote. And later: “I’d become so disheartened in recent weeks that I took to picturing Nat inside a coffin, as if to ready myself for what I couldn’t keep from happening.”In “Night Terrors,” Shapiro describes that fear of inadequacy. Even as the speaker calms his frightened child in the night, he feels like an imposter—like he was taken over by a spirit that could summon the perfect gentle authority. A parent, Shapiro implies, can still be someone’s fearful kid. But that might be why they respond so viscerally to their child’s vulnerability—why they rush to the bed so quickly, ready to soothe. They remember what it’s like to need a voice in the dark. They never stopped needing it.— Faith HillYou can zoom in on the page here.

36 m

theatlantic.com

The Eerie Silence Over Brexit

Bernie the spectacled bear is one of the star attractions at Chester Zoo in the north of England. He is also one of Brexit’s forgotten losers.Since Britain left the European Union, zoos have struggled to take part in breeding swaps designed to help vulnerable and endangered species, and Bernie has been waiting for two years for the correct paperwork allowing him to move to Germany and romance a female bear. “Prior to Brexit, this would have been in place in 6-8 weeks,” the zoo’s spokesperson told me by email.The plight of hundreds of zoo animals in the country is a reminder of how comprehensively Brexit reshaped the United Kingdom’s relationship with the continent across the Channel. And yet the B-word has barely featured in the campaign to choose the next Westminster government on July 4—not in the debates between party leaders, nor in the policy measures briefed to friendly newspapers, nor in the leaflets sent out by individual candidates. The Conservative Party manifesto is a whopping 80 pages long, but uses the word Brexit only 12 times. The word does not even appear as a stand-alone section of the Labour platform, instead falling under the wider heading of “Britain reconnected.”Champions and opponents of Brexit alike have decided that now isn’t the time to talk about this enormous change to Britain’s place in the world. Nigel Farage, the man who led the populist campaign to leave the European Union, rebranded his UK Independence Party as the Brexit Party for the 2019 election. Now, however, his political vehicle is called simply Reform, and he would rather talk about small boats crossing the Channel or the perils of a cashless society. Even the Liberal Democrats, a pro-European party that campaigned the last time around on a pledge to rejoin the EU (and went from 12 to 11 seats as a result), now claim that this is only a “longer-term objective.”[Matthew Goodwin: Britons’ growing buyer’s remorse for Brexit]As someone who has worked in journalism in Britain for nearly two decades, I can tell you: This is an extraordinary turnaround. During the first half of my career, the campaign to leave the European Union was an obsession of the Conservative right, to the extent that the Tory leader at the time, David Cameron, urged his party to stop “banging on about Europe.” Then came the 2016 referendum, in which Brexit was hailed as a populist triumph against the elite consensus and a foreshadowing of Donald Trump’s election in the U.S. that November. That was followed by three bitter, tedious years of bickering in Parliament over the terms of Britain’s exit, as it became apparent that populist victories are more easily won than put into practice. By December 2019, the process had dragged on for so long that Boris Johnson won an 80-seat majority for the Conservatives by promising simply to “get Brexit done.” And he did: Britain left the European Union—including its single market and customs union—in January 2020.Mission accomplished! Success at last! A promise delivered! And yet four years later, the Tories, now led by Rishi Sunak, are getting exactly zero credit for delivering their signature policy and laying to rest their obsession of the past two decades. The Conservatives are now so far behind in the polls—and so fearful of a wipeout on the scale of that suffered by the mainstream right-wing party in Canada’s 1993 election—that they have switched from trying to win the election to trying to lose less badly. This week, one Tory minister urged voters to back the Conservatives in order to avoid giving Labour a “supermajority,” a term used in reference to the U.S. Congress that doesn’t even mean anything in the British political system. Despite having delivered Brexit exactly as they promised, the Conservatives don’t just fear defeat on July 4. They fear annihilation.What happened? Quite simply, Brexit has been a bust. Conservative ministers like to talk up the trade deals they have signed with non-European countries, but no normal voter cares about pork markets. Anyone who voted for Brexit to reduce immigration will have been severely disappointed: Net migration was 335,000 in 2016, but rose to 685,000 last year, down from a record high of 784,000 in 2022. And although the economic effects of leaving the European single market were blurred by the pandemic and the energy shock that followed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, one can safely say that Britons do not feel richer than they did four years ago.Above all, voters are bored with Brexit. In April 2019, according to the pollster Ipsos, 72 percent of Britons rated Brexit as one of the most important issues facing the country. Today that figure is 3 percent. “The one thing we found in focus groups that unites Leave and Remain voters is that they don’t want to talk about it,” Anand Menon, the director of the independent think tank UK in a Changing Europe, told me. “Brexiters think the Tories have screwed it up. Labour don’t want to mention it because [Keir] Starmer is vulnerable.”That point about Starmer is crucial. Before the 2019 election, he was Labour’s shadow Brexit spokesperson—and showed sympathy to the party’s membership, which leaned heavily toward Remain. But when he became Labour leader the next year—following Johnson’s crushing victory—Starmer accepted that Brexit had to happen, and he ordered his party to vote it through Parliament. In the current election, polls suggest that Labour is winning over many Leave voters who supported the Conservatives in 2019. The last thing those switchers want to hear is backsliding on Europe. And so the Labour manifesto promises to “make Brexit work” with no return to the single market, customs union, or freedom of movement.The B-word has featured more heavily in debates in Scotland, where the majority of voters backed Remain and the governing Scottish National Party is keen to outflank Labour. It is also an election issue in Northern Ireland, where the status of the border with the Republic of Ireland is still fraught. But with both major parties in England extremely reluctant to mention Brexit, the media here have largely followed suit. One of the few exceptions is Boris Johnson, the former prime minister now reborn as a tabloid-newspaper columnist, who accused Starmer of plotting to rejoin the single market. Using a Yiddish word meaning “mooch,” Johnson asserted that “if Schnorrer gets in, he will immediately begin the process of robbing this country of its newfound independence … until this country is effectively locked in the legislative dungeon of Brussels like some orange ball-chewing gimp.” (The infamous hostage scene in Quentin Tarantino’s film Pulp Fiction apparently made a strong impression on Johnson.)[David Frum: ‘We’re all worse off’ ]Johnson might be deploying his usual rhetorical exuberance and cultural insensitivity, but he does have a point. The next government will have many decisions to make about how to manage Britain’s relationship with the EU. The current wall of silence “will all change after the election,” Menon said. “You will get a load more noise about it from Labour members.” Businesses unhappy with post-Brexit import and export regulations “will dare to be more vocal under a Labour government,” he predicted. The trouble is that minor tinkering might help some of the minor problems created by Brexit—Labour has indicated that it will look at the regulations keeping Bernie and other zoo animals from fulfilling their duty to preserve endangered species—but only rejoining the single market would bring dramatic economic benefits. And doing that would involve exactly the trade-off with British sovereignty that Brexiteers campaigned against for so long. Hard conversations can be postponed, but usually not forever. That’s bad news for the 97 percent of Britons who are enjoying the respite from years of arguments over Britain’s relationship with Europe.For now, though, the political consequences of Brexit fatigue are most pronounced on the right. Leaving the EU has created many modest irritations—see Bernie the bear’s love life—without delivering the large rewards that were promised. Here is a lesson for populists everywhere, one that the U.S. anti-abortion lobby has learned since Roe v. Wade was overturned: Don’t be the dog that catches the car.

36 m

theatlantic.com

Letters to the Editor: Will a lifeguard's 'deeply held religious beliefs' prevent him from doing his job?

'Deeply held religious beliefs' have been used to justify all kinds of horrible practices. Now, an anti-LGBTQ+ lifeguard is doing it.

36 m

latimes.com

Donald Trump Responds to Photo of Pope Francis and Joe Biden—'Freaking Out'

Photos showed the president and Francis' foreheads touching during a meeting on the sidelines of the Group of Seven summit.

37 m

newsweek.com

South Dakota bar snack chislic, rooted in pioneer tradition, enjoys modern American makeover

Chislic is a South Dakota bar-food tradition brought by Russian-German immigrants in the 1870s. The local delicacy is generating headlines today with a modern multicultural makeover.

46 m

foxnews.com

Slate Crossword: Novel Set on the Planet Iraq—I Mean, Arrakis (Four Letters)

Ready for some wordplay? Sharpen your skills with Slate’s puzzle for June 16, 2024.

46 m

slate.com

I’m a Dad-to-Be With One Particular “Maternal” Instinct. It’s Actually Quite Normal.

Frantic household activity before birth is a pregnant-person thing, everyone says. I’m not so sure!

51 m

slate.com

My Eternal Quest to Find My Present-Proof Dad a Gift He Won’t Return

My sister started giving him Goo Gone or olives. For some reason, I can’t stop trying.

56 m

slate.com

Bible provides key lessons this Father's Day, says Missouri pastor, a dad of five

Rev. Hans Fiene of Missouri, a dad of five, reflects on Ephesians 3:14-17, sharing the importance of one's earthly father when it comes to fidelity in God the heavenly father.

1 h

foxnews.com

Ukraine's Azov Brigade Sends Direct Message to US After Arms Ban Lifted

"This is a new page in the history of our unit," the brigade had said earlier this week.

1 h

newsweek.com

Russian Prison Guards Taken Hostage As Gunshots Heard: Reports

Detainees, including some linked to ISIS, took two Russian guards hostage and demanded a car.

1 h

newsweek.com

Texas shooting leaves 2 dead, multiple wounded during Juneteenth celebration

Two people were killed and multiple others were wounded Saturday night in a shooting in Round Rock, Texas, during a Juneteenth Celebration, according to police.

1 h

foxnews.com

Yankees’ Juan Soto gives update on how his forearm is feeling

Juan Soto may not be fully out of the woods just yet, but he and his forearm are in a better spot now than a week ago.

1 h

nypost.com

Tony Awards 2024: How to watch, who’s hosting and who could win

Ariana DeBose is back for a third straight year overseeing the Tony Awards, the biggest night on Broadway.

2 h

washingtonpost.com

Drinking Water Bills Could Be Set to Soar

Several regulators told Newsweek that people might have to pay more to fund systems that will clean America's drinking water.

2 h

newsweek.com

Kevin Costner's Colossal 'Horizon' Gamble

The actor and director invested $38 million of his own money into "Horizon: An American Saga".

2 h

newsweek.com

Map Reveals the 10 Best—and Worst—States for Your Skin

Clarins collated government data to determine the best and worst states to live in for your skin health.

2 h

newsweek.com

A school board reinstated Confederate names. It split the community again.

A Shenandoah County School Board decision to resurrect the names of Confederate leaders on schools has inflamed tensions in an area with deep ties to Civil War battles.

2 h

washingtonpost.com

The FBI Made a Phone Network. It Was a Trap.

2 h

slate.com

Cucumber Recall Update As FDA Sets Highest Risk Level

The product was found to contain salmonella and was subsequently recalled by the FDA.

2 h

newsweek.com

103-year-old WWII veteran credits soda and dark chocolate for his longevity as he celebrates birthday

A Pennsylvania World War II veteran celebrated his 103 birthday earlier this month, calling it the greatest day of his life, while he shared the secret of his extraordinary longevity. Frank Pugliano Sr., dressed in his WWII veteran jacket and hat, enjoyed the birthday festivities along with his family and friends at Boyce Park, outside...

2 h

nypost.com

Mets rookie reliever Dedniel Nunez has another strong outing

Mets rookie reliever Dedniel Nunez delivered two shutout innings of work in a 5-1 victory over the Padres at Citi Field.

2 h

nypost.com

Why Livvy Dunne gets nervous watching Paul Skenes pitch for Pirates (2024)

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