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3 big takeaways from Day 8 of Trump's hush money trial

The first week of arguments in Donald Trump's criminal hush money trial concluded Friday with testimony from Trump's longtime assistant and Michael Cohen's former banker.
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Fox News Politics: No calm after the Stormy
The latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more Fox News politics content
foxnews.com
Ricki Lake refused Ozempic for weight loss despite doctor's claims she couldn't lose weight without it
Ricki Lake shared how she lost over 30 pounds without using Ozempic. The "Hairspray" star revealed a doctor told her she couldn't lose the weight without the drug.
foxnews.com
You Just Don’t See the Foam Neck Brace Anymore
It used to be that whenever someone on TV or in a movie fell off the roof or had a skiing mishap or got into any sort of auto accident, the odds were pretty good that they’d end up in a neck brace. You know what I mean: a circlet of beige foam, or else a rigid ring of plastic, spanning from an actor’s chin down to their sternum. Jack Lemmon wore a neck brace for a part. So did Jerry Seinfeld, Julia Roberts, and Bill Murray. For many decades, this was pop culture’s universal symbol for I’ve hurt myself.Now it’s not. People on TV and in the movies no longer seem to suffer like they used to, which is to say they no longer suffer cervically. Plastic braces do still crop up from time to time on-screen, but their use in sight gags is as good as dead. In the meantime, the soft-foam collar—which has always been the brace’s most recognizable form—has been retired. I don’t just mean that it’s been evicted from the props department; the collar has been set aside in clinics too. At some point in the past few decades, a device that once stood in for trauma and recovery was added to a list of bygone treatments, alongside leeches and the iron lung. Simply put, the collar vanished. Where’d it go?The story naturally begins in doctors’ offices, where a new form of injury—“whiplash”—started to emerge amid the growing car culture of the 1940s and the early ’50s. “It is not difficult for anyone who travels on a highway to realize why the ‘painful neck’ is being produced daily in large numbers,” two Pennsylvania doctors wrote in 1955. Following a rear-end collision, a driver’s body will be thrown forward and upward, they explained. The driver’s neck will flex in both directions, “like a car radio aerial.”The damage from this jerking to and fro could not necessarily be seen in any medical scan. It was understood to be more of a sprain than a fracture, causing pain and stiffness in the neck that might spread into the shoulder. Many patients found these problems faded quickly, but for some of them—maybe even half—the discomfort lingered. Whiplash in its graver forms led to dizzy spells, sensory disturbances, and cognitive decline (all of which are also signs of mild traumatic brain injuries). And it could leave its victims in a lasting state of disability—chronic whiplash, doctors called it—characterized by fatigue, memory problems, and headache.[Read: Chronic whiplash is a mystery]From the start, standard whiplash treatment would include the wearing of a soft appliance: a foam collar to support the patient’s head and stifle excess movement. But the underlying problem had a squishiness about it too. If the damage to the neck was invisible to imaging, how was it causing so much misery? Some doctors guessed that the deeper, more persistent wounds of whiplash might be psychic. A paper on the problem published in 1953, in the Journal of the American Medical Association, suggested that the chronic form of whiplash might best be understood as neurosis—a “disturbing emotional reaction” to an accident that produces lasting ailments. These early whiplash doctors didn’t claim that their patients were malingering; rather, they argued that the underlying source of anguish was diverse. It might comprise, in various proportions, damage to the ligaments and muscles, brain concussion, and psychology. Doctors worried that these different etiologies were hard to tease apart, especially in a legal context, when “the complicating factor of monetary compensation,” as one study put it, was in play. (These uncertainties persist, in one form or another, to this day.)A clinical unease colored how the neck brace would be seen and understood by members of the public. For about as long as it was used for treating whiplash, the collar held opposing meanings: Someone had an injury, and also that injury was fake. In The Fortune Cookie, the Billy Wilder comedy from 1966, a cameraman (played by Lemmon) gets knocked over at a football game and then persuaded by his sleazy lawyer—a guy called “Whiplash Willie”—to pretend he’s gravely hurt. They’re planning to defraud the big insurance companies, and Lemmon’s plastic neck brace will be central to the act.Indeed, the stock setting for the collar, soft and hard alike, has always been the courtroom. When Carol Brady finds herself before a judge in an episode of The Brady Bunch from 1972, the “victim” of her fender bender, Mr. Duggan, hobbles into court with an ostentatious you-know-what. “A neck brace—do you believe that?” she asks. Of course you don’t; that’s the point. Mr. Duggan tells the judge that he’s just come from the doctor’s office, and that he has whiplash. (He puts the stress on the word’s second syllable: whipLASH. The condition was still new enough, back then, that its pronunciation hadn’t fully settled.)[Read: No one in movies knows how to swallow a pill]Concerns about unfounded civil suits multiplied in the ’70s and ’80s, thanks in part to what the law professor Marc Galanter would later term the “elite folklore” of seemingly outrageous legal claims, stripped of context and diffused throughout the culture by mass media. There was the woman who said she’d lost her psychic powers after getting a CT scan, the worker at a convenience store who complained that she’d hurt her back while opening a pickle jar, the senior citizen who sued McDonald’s after spilling coffee in her lap. And then of course there was the granddaddy of them all: the whiplash faker in a neck brace—the Mr. Duggan type, familiar from the screen.Car-insurance premiums were going up and companies were pointing to exaggerated whiplash claims from drivers whose “soft injuries” could not be verified objectively. Financial motives did appear to be in play for certain plaintiffs: In Saskatchewan, where a no-fault system of insurance had been introduced and most lawsuits for pain and suffering were eliminated, the number of whiplash-based insurance claims appeared to drop. (Similar correlations have been observed in other countries too.) In the early 1990s, the New Jersey Insurance Department even staged a series of minor accidents involving buses wired up with hidden cameras—they’d be rear-ended by a slowly moving car—to test the prevalence of fraud. The department’s investigators found that Whiplash Willie–style lawyers quickly swooped on passengers to cajole them into making claims of damage to their neck and back.By this time, the neck brace’s mere appearance in a movie or TV show would be enough to generate a laugh. It just seemed so silly and so fake! In the courtroom, insurance companies and other businesses grew less inclined to settle whiplash cases, Valerie Hans, a psychologist and law professor at Cornell, told me. Instead they’d try their luck, and mostly find success, in jury trials. To find out why, Cornell and a colleague did a formal survey of potential jurors’ attitudes about such injuries in 1999, and found that the presence of a neck brace on a plaintiff might only make them more suspicious. Fewer than one-third believed that whiplash injuries were “usually” or “always” legitimate.[Read: Whatever happened to carpal tunnel syndrome?]If the soft neck brace was already well established as a joke on television and a liability in court, the medical establishment soon turned against it too. A series of randomized controlled trials of whiplash treatments, conducted in the 1990s and 2000s, all arrived at the same conclusion: Usage of the soft foam collar was “ineffective at best,” as one evidence review from 2010 described it. At worst, it could be doing harm by preventing patients from engaging in the mobility and exercise programs that seemed more beneficial.A broader shift away from telling patients to keep still, and toward assigning active interventions, was under way in medicine. Bed rest and other forms of immobilization were falling out of favor in the treatment of back injuries, for example. Concussion doctors, too, began to wonder whether the standard guidance for patients to do nothing was really such a good idea. (The evidence suggested otherwise.) And uncertainty was even spreading to the other kinds of cervical orthoses, such as the stiff devices made of foam and plastic called trauma collars, which remain in widespread use by EMTs. These are meant to immobilize a patient’s neck, to help ensure that any damage to their upper spine will not be worsened. But their rationale was being questioned too.In 2014, a team of doctors based in Norway, led by the neurosurgeon Terje Sundstrøm, published a “critical review” of trauma-collar use. “For many years, the cervical collar was the symbol of good health care, or good pre-hospital care,” Sundstrøm told me. “If the patient wasn’t fitted with one, then you didn’t know what you were doing.” But he described the evidence of their benefits as “very poor.” His paper notes that at least 50 patients have their necks immobilized for every one that has a major spinal injury. Trauma collars can interfere with patients’ breathing, according to some research, and their use has been associated with patients’ potential overtreatment. They’re also quite uncomfortable, which may agitate some patients, who could then make just the sorts of movements that the EMTs are, in theory, trying to prevent.In short, despite trauma collars’ near-universal use since the 1960s, no one really knows how much they help, or whether they might even hurt. Sundstrøm said that his own health-care system gave up on using trauma collars a dozen years ago, and has yet to see a single injury as a result. Official guidelines for the emergency use of cervical braces have lately been revisited in a small handful of countries, but Sundstrøm does not expect major changes to take hold. “I don’t think there will ever be really good studies for or against collars like this,” he said, in part because cervical spinal injuries are very, very rare. For the same reason, we may never even know for sure whether collars are appropriate for patients whose cervical fractures have been confirmed in the hospital. “There hasn’t really been any interest in this research topic either,” he told me. Instead, doctors just rely on common sense about which interventions are likely to be helpful.So the use of rigid trauma collars is likely to persist regardless of uncertainty. In health care, that’s more the norm than the exception. Research is difficult, the human body is complex, and tradition rules the day. Lots of standard interventions, maybe even most of them, aren’t fully known to do much good. Viewed against this backdrop, the soft foam collar—rarely useful, always doubted, often mocked—may finally have flipped its meaning. For years it stood for fakery and false impressions and also, ironically, for a lack of proper evidence in medicine—for a failure of support. Now it may signify the opposite. By disappearing from the movies, the courtroom, and the clinic, this form of neck brace has become a rare example of a lesson duly learned. It shows that science can correct itself, every now and then. It shows that progress may be slow, but it is real.
theatlantic.com
Spirit Airlines passengers brawl onboard plane as flight attendant attempts to intervene: 'Throwing it down'
A Massachusetts family said that a brawl on a Spirit Airlines flight broke out "right in front of us" after two passengers began punching one another.
foxnews.com
NBA champion Glen 'Big Baby' Davis sentenced to prison in insurance fraud scheme
Federal investigators said former NBA star Glen Davis and others defrauded an insurance plan for the league's players over a four-year period.
foxnews.com
Former Eagles star says ex-head coach Chip Kelly was 'uncomfortable' around Black players
Chip Kelly lasted just three years with the Philadelphia Eagles, and his former running back LeSean McCoy gave some insight as to why that was the case.
foxnews.com
Eurovision 2024: Here are the songs with the best shot at glory
Another year, another glitter-filled spectacle known as the Eurovision Song Contest. The Grand Final airs Saturday at 3:00 p.m. ET on Peacock in the United States.
npr.org
Miss USA names new 2023 titleholder after former winner resigned title
The Miss USA pageant has named a successor to the Miss USA title after Noelia Voigt resigned on Monday.
abcnews.go.com
49ers Hall of Fame defensive back Jimmy Johnson dies at 86
Hall of Famer Jimmy Johnson, a five-time Pro Bowl defensive back and member of the All-1970s team, died Wednesday night at the age of 86.
foxnews.com
New Jersey legislators advance public records access law overhaul
New Jersey's Senate budget committee on Thursday advanced controversial legislation aimed at overhauling the state's public records access law.
1 h
foxnews.com
Mavericks vs. Thunder Game 2 prediction: NBA playoffs odds, picks, bets for Thursday
Perhaps Dallas is simply allergic to Game 1s and will bounce back, but Luka Doncic’s knee and recent shooting struggles provide concern.
1 h
nypost.com
System of a Down singer Serj Tankian's new book details band's up and downs, and what fuels his activism
Before releasing new memoir "Down With the System" on May 14, Tankian spoke about why he's optimistic about Armenia, and whether we might see another album from System of a Down.
1 h
latimes.com
Cornell University President Martha Pollack steps down after year of turmoil, threats to Jewish students
Cornell University President Martha Pollack is ending her 7-year tenure as the head of the Ivy League school following months of turmoil including demonstrations and threats to Jewish students.
1 h
nypost.com
Where Does Photoshop Go From Here?
Adobe’s app was once synonymous with fake images online. Then came generative AI.
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theatlantic.com
Menendez on testifying at bribery trial: "That's to be determined"
Democratic Senator Bob Menendez, of New Jersey, is set to be tried on bribery, corruption and obstruction charges beginning Monday.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Alex Wennberg changes sticks as he looks to help spark Rangers’ third line
Alex Wennberg was one of three trade-deadline pickups for the Rangers this season, but the Swedish center was immediately the easiest to identify on the ice. 
1 h
nypost.com
Brad Pitt security guard alleges Angelina Jolie told couple’s kids to ‘avoid’ dad during custody visits
The Hollywood exes have been fighting over the vineyard they purchased in 2008 ever since Jolie filed for divorce in 2016.
1 h
nypost.com
Letitia James Sends Warning to 'Dangerous' Man
New York City police are asking for assistance in identifying a man accused of snatching the hijab off a teenage girl's head late last month.
1 h
newsweek.com
Paid sick leave sticks after many pandemic protections vanish
Sixty-one percent of the lowest-paid U.S. workers can't get time off for an illness, according to a recent Economic Policy Institute report on the state of sick leave in the United States.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Chevrolet Malibu drives into sunset as GM makes way for electric cars
At its height, the Chevy Malibu won​ Motor Trend Car of the Year 1997 because of its smooth ride and fuel economy.
1 h
cbsnews.com
NY v. Trump: Judge denies request for gag order modification, mistrial after Stormy Daniels testimony
Judge Juan Merchan on Thursday denied a request for a mistrial and a modification of the gag order by Trump defense attorneys, who argued that the former president should be able to defend himself against Stormy Daniels’ salacious and "prejudicial" testimony.
1 h
foxnews.com
Wall Street rises to pull S&P 500 back nearly to record high
U.S. stocks rose to pull the S&P 500 back within 1% of its record following a rough April
1 h
latimes.com
Royals vs. Angels prediction: Fade this pair of shaky starting pitchers
Run prevention will be tricky between all the mediocre pitchers toeing the rubber
1 h
nypost.com
Jason Kelce bizarrely accuses Secretariat of being ‘juiced to the gills’
Jason Kelce went after the GOAT.
1 h
nypost.com
NFL's Top 10 Wide Receiver Rooms Ahead of 2024 Season: Offseason Trades Bring Major Shakeups
The 10 best wide receiver rooms in the NFL ahead of the 2024 season.
1 h
newsweek.com
Filmmaker Yance Ford presents the police as the 'armies that they have become' in 'Power'
As a follow-up to his Oscar-nominated "Strong Island," the documentarian turns to the history of American policing, why it was established and how it functions.
1 h
latimes.com
Iraq Militias Claim 6 New Attacks on Israel as Gaza War Intensifies
"The Islamic Resistance confirms its continued destruction of enemy strongholds," the Iraqi militia coalition said.
1 h
newsweek.com
Man sentenced to 27 years for stabbing 3 officers in Times Square on New Year's Eve
Trevor Bickford was sentenced to 27 years in federal prison for a "brazen" 2022 New Year's Eve knife attack that seriously injured three NYPD officers, the DOJ said.
1 h
abcnews.go.com
Full List of Trump Family Members Serving as Florida Delegates
Six of Florida's at-large delegates are Trump family members, including Barron, who is stepping onto the political stage
1 h
newsweek.com
LAist staffers offered buyouts ahead of possible layoffs at public radio station
Staffers at LAist have been offered buyouts ahead of a possible round of layoffs. The local public radio station has cited 'a significant budget shortfall.'
1 h
latimes.com
Taylor Swift's New 2024 Eras Tour Setlist Revealed
Taylor Swift kicked off the European leg of the Eras Tour with plenty of changes in the setlist.
1 h
newsweek.com
Abogada de Trump se enfrasca en disputa con Stormy Daniels sobre presunto encuentro sexual de 2006
La abogada defensora de Donald Trump acusó el jueves a Stormy Daniels de alterar lentamente los detalles de un presunto encuentro sexual con Trump en 2006, tratando de persuadir al jurado de que no se le puede creer a una testigo clave en el juicio que se le sigue al expresidente por acusaciones de que pagó para suprimir noticias desfavorables.
1 h
latimes.com
A Simple Fix for the Antisemitism Awareness Act
There is a simple way to fix the Antisemitism Awareness Act.
1 h
nytimes.com
Beach Boys' Brian Wilson placed in conservatorship following dementia diagnosis
Beach Boys founder Brian Wilson on Thursday was approved for a conservatorship after his family petitioned for the court order following the death of his wife.
1 h
foxnews.com
Are cold plunges safe? What you need to know about the health benefits, risks of this celeb-loved trend
"Assuming that everybody responds the same way to cold is extremely dangerous," said François Haman, a health science professor at the University of Ottawa in Canada who has studied cold exposure for two decades.
1 h
nypost.com
Harvey Weinstein no será devuelto a California mientras espera nuevo juicio por violación en NY
Harvey Weinstein permanecerá encarcelado en Nueva York mientras el tribunal delibera si debe permanecer en una cárcel de la ciudad en espera de un nuevo juicio, o si será enviado a California para cumplir su sentencia de prisión por violación en ese estado.
1 h
latimes.com
Southwest passengers baffled after woman climbs into overhead bin for nap
A Southwest Airlines passenger flummoxed fellow flyers after she was filmed napping in the plane’s overhead bin, as seen in a video with 5.1 million views on TikTok. “Southwest is wildin’,” reads the caption to the curious clip, which shows the unnamed person nonchalantly lying lengthwise in the overhead locker as if preparing for cryogenic...
1 h
nypost.com
Homeless Woman Was Living Inside Michigan Store Sign With Computer and Coffee Maker
Contractors curious about an extension cord on the roof of a Michigan grocery store made a startling discovery.
2 h
time.com
Progressive college students despair Trump could win because of protests over Israel: 'Genuinely concerned'
Progressive voters in Michigan fear backlash to Biden's Israel stance could split the Democratic vote and allow Trump to win the November election.
2 h
foxnews.com
Former GOP Rep. Fortenberry charged with lying about illegal campaign contribution
Republican former Nebraska Rep. Jeff Fortenberry has been charged with lying to federal authorities about an illegal, $30,000 campaign contribution by a Nigerian billionaire.
2 h
foxnews.com
Donald Trump is Caught in a New York Courtroom Storm
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slate.com
Protesters demand Armenian prime minister's resignation after border villages ceded to Azerbaijan
Protesters showed up in Yerevan, Armenia, in droves on Thursday to demand Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's resignation after his government moved to cede land to Azerbaijan.
2 h
foxnews.com
Patrick Beverley suspended four games for throwing ball at Pacers fans, exchange with ESPN reporter
This suspension was handed down one day after Indianapolis police said they were investigating an “NBA player and citizen” altercation that happened during that May 2 game without mentioning anyone by name.
2 h
nypost.com
Are smartphones destroying childhood? It’s complicated.
It makes sense that lots of screen time can interfere with kids’ development. But the science is unclear.
2 h
washingtonpost.com
Hailey and Justin Bieber announce pregnancy, show baby bump
This will be the first baby for Hailey and Justin Beiber, who announced their pregnancy after more than five years of marriage.
2 h
cbsnews.com
Masked man chokes, drags person with a belt
Horrifying video shows the moment a masked fiend used a belt to choke a woman unconscious on a Bronx street, before dragging her to the ground and raping her between two cars in a sickening attack last week. The terrifying ordeal unfolded around 3 a.m. May 1 as the perv followed the 45-year-old victim, who...
2 h
nypost.com
PM Update: Some hefty showers this evening and tonight, then cooler Friday
The worst storms stay south but we can still hear some rumbles and see briefly heavy rain. Highs may not be far from 60 to close the work week.
2 h
washingtonpost.com
Hunter Biden hangs with Sean Penn at Malibu’s swanky Soho House amid court setback
Indicted first son Hunter Biden was spotted chatting with Oscar-winning actor Sean Penn outside Malibu's Soho House outpost on Thursday.
2 h
nypost.com