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Brianna Chickenfry vows to ‘never’ date again after Zach Bryan breakup: ‘I’m married to my career’

"Sometimes you get stuck with a bad guy, but that doesn't mean that there aren't good men out there. I've dated really good men," the podcaster told Page Six.
Read full article on: pagesix.com
Soaking rain expected for Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade in NYC — but balloons should fly just fine
A Macy's spokesperson confirmed to The Post that the parade would take place rain or shine.
nypost.com
Hugh Grant doesn’t remember making out with Luann de Lesseps in the Hamptons
"I don't recall shots or kissing but her memory might be better than mine," the "Bridget Jones's Diary" actor wrote on X Monday.
nypost.com
California podría ofrecer rebajas para vehículos eléctricos si Trump elimina el crédito fiscal
California podría ofrecer rebajas fiscales para la compra de vehículos eléctricos si la próxima administración de Donald Trump elimina el crédito fiscal federal para vehículos eléctricos, dijo el lunes el gobernador Gavin Newsom.
latimes.com
How elites got the election wrong — and ignored those predicting Trump’s win
Most Americans view election surveys with both anticipation and skepticism. The sheer number and the potential for defective or biased polling make poll watching a challenging and time-consuming endeavor. If only there were a place we could go and see all the polls and an unbiased average indicating trends. Turns out there is. I visit...
nypost.com
Conservative satire outlet censored by Elon Musk-rival Bluesky: 'Chilling reminder'
"It's ironic that the platform championing tolerance and freedom from Musk's influence is itself so intolerant of differing views," said Babylon Bee creator Kyle Mann.
foxnews.com
Everyone Agrees Americans Aren’t Healthy
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is wrong about a lot of things in public health. Vaccines don’t cause autism. Raw milk is more dangerous than pasteurized milk. And cellphones haven’t been shown to cause brain cancer. But the basic idea behind his effort to “Make America Healthy Again” is correct: America is not healthy, and our current system has not fixed the problem.Joe Biden entered office promising to “beat” the coronavirus pandemic, cure cancer, and get more people health care. Arguably no one on Earth can talk more passionately about funding cancer research than Biden, whose son Beau died of brain cancer in 2015 and who, in 2022, announced an initiative to halve U.S. cancer deaths in the next 25 years. Robert Califf, Biden’s FDA commissioner, has been particularly stalwart in arguing that the agency must play a role in reversing a “catastrophic decline” in Americans’ life expectancy, and has repeatedly warned of “an ever-growing epidemic of diet-related chronic diseases,” such as cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes. A 2019 study found that just 12 percent of Americans are considered metabolically healthy, based on their waist circumference, blood sugar, blood pressure, and cholesterol.Of course Biden’s White House was never going to end cancer or obesity in four years. But many of its policies barely scratched the surface of America’s wide-ranging health problems. Despite Califf’s dramatic language about the country’s diet problems, for example, the FDA’s efforts to improve the situation have mostly revolved around giving Americans more information about healthy foods.The public-health bureaucracy that the Trump administration will inherit is more focused on and skilled at treating America’s health problems than preventing them. That shortcoming—despite the billions of dollars spent every year at these agencies—has damaged the credibility of the public-health establishment enough that Kennedy is now Donald Trump’s nominee for secretary of Health and Human Services. Marty Makary, Trump’s pick to lead the FDA, has similarly risen in prominence by second-guessing "medical dogma" in the U.S. and beyond. And Trump’s pick to lead the CDC, former Representative Dave Weldon, has criticized the agency’s vaccine policies and once attempted to block its vaccine-safety research because of what he claimed were conflicts of interest. A set of men who have made careers of distrusting our existing health-care agencies may soon be empowered to try to blow them up.The Biden administration, to be fair, had less time to deal with America’s deeper health issues, because it was forced to deal with at least a few calamities. Much of Biden’s term was spent navigating the country out of the pandemic. On the whole, his administration achieved most of its COVID goals. The Biden White House provided Americans with free COVID tests and mounted a vaccination campaign that resulted in more than three-quarters of the country getting a shot. Still, the pandemic left the CDC beleaguered by claims that it was simultaneously too slow and too aggressive in its efforts to fight the virus. During Biden’s presidency, the agency promised to “share science and data faster” and “translate science into practical policy,” but it has struggled to respond to the continued spread of bird flu. Public-health experts have slammed the CDC for not sharing enough information about the virus’s spread, including a human case in Missouri earlier this year, and farmers have been reluctant to implement the agency’s recommendations for preventing transmission of the virus from sick cattle to humans.Some of those calamities were self-inflicted. The FDA is entrusted with ensuring that our food and medicines are safe, and it generally does spot issues quickly after they occur. But for months, the FDA failed to act on a whistleblower complaint alerting regulators to deplorable conditions at an infant-formula factory that eventually caused nationwide formula shortages and two infant deaths. The FDA is also supposed to decide what tobacco products can be sold, but it has failed to police the illegal market for vapes and nicotine pouches, such as Zyn. And for all the administration’s talk of being guided by “science and truth,” the White House seemingly bowed to political pressure and abandoned a plan to ban menthol cigarettes at the very end of a long rule-making process. The past four years have revealed that crucial parts of the agency’s remit—most notably its oversight of tobacco and the food system—have been neglected by agency leadership; in 2022, independent reviews of the FDA’s food and tobacco centers found that both lacked clarity on mission and goals.At the same time, the administration has failed to deliver on its loftier ambitions. Biden quietly dropped some of his bolder ideas, such as his campaign promise to create a public-option insurance plan. The Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health, a new government agency that funds high-risk, high-reward research and is essential to Biden’s cancer goals, is in its infancy, and Republicans in Congress are already eager to cut its budget. And some promises, such as Biden’s grand goal to help change America’s diet, have been approached more like trivial pursuits.The administration branded its 2022 hunger and nutrition conference, for instance, as the largest and most important gathering on nutrition policy since the Nixon administration. That 1960s conference led to millions of children gaining access to school lunch and to the creation of the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (or WIC), which provides food to about 6 million Americans each month. The Biden administration’s summit ended with a pledge to end hunger and improve America’s diet by 2030, but the steps taken toward tackling those goals—such as developing a plan to add warning labels to unhealthy foods—have been modest. And all the agency has done so far on that project is conduct research on the labels’ potential design. The FDA has also pledged to lower the sodium in foods, but the targets it’s set for the food industry are entirely voluntary.These efforts are understandably careful and bureaucratic. The agency’s caution over warning-label design comes amid threats from the food industry to sue over any label deemed unjustified. Indeed, in the U.S. legal system, regulators have trouble mandating that companies do much of anything without it being branded as unconstitutional. But the Biden administration’s efforts look comically inadequate given the scope of America’s health problems.RFK Jr. is promising a break from the status quo. This is not to say that he, should he be confirmed as health secretary, has a better plan. Most of his ideas amount to little more than pronouncements that he will take sweeping actions immediately once Trump is sworn in as president. The reality is that many of those efforts would take months, if not years, to implement—and some might not be feasible at all. He has signaled, for example, that he will clear house at the FDA’s food center, despite rules that prevent government bureaucrats from being fired willy-nilly. He also has pledged to ban certain chemicals from food, which he’s argued are contributing to American’s lower life expectancy. But for every chemical the FDA bans, it will have to go through a lengthy regulatory process, which would likely be challenged by food companies in court. Kennedy’s notion of significantly altering the system of fees that drug makers pay the FDA to review their products would likely send the agency into a budgetary crisis.If Kennedy gets confirmed to lead HHS, he will quickly be confronted with the reality that governing is a slow and tedious process that doesn’t take kindly to big, bold ideas, even with an impatient leader like Trump calling the shots. At the outset of his first term, Trump declared war on drug companies, which he claimed were “getting away with murder” due to their high prices. Trump’s then–health secretary, Alex Azar, in turn spent the next four years trying radical fixes that included requiring drug makers to post their prices in TV ads, importing drugs from Canada, tying American drug prices to other countries’, and eliminating the rebates that middlemen negotiate for insurance companies. But each idea got bogged down in bureaucracy and lawsuits. Trump’s early attempts to contain COVID by blocking international air travel similarly did little to keep the virus out of America, despite his claims at the time that the policy “saved us” from widespread outbreaks.Biden benefited from Operation Warp Speed's rapid push to create vaccines, but it was his team of technocrats that finally got them distributed. And they eventually lowered drug prices too, in a much simpler way than Trump was proposing. But technocracy has also failed to address our most pressing—and most visible—health problems. Trump’s picks have little experience navigating the Rube Goldberg puzzle that is American bureaucracy. They certainly aren’t afraid of trying something new, but we’re about to find out how far that will get them.
theatlantic.com
El Malilla, Jay Wheeler y Rels B ponen el ritmo en el segundo día del Flow Fest
El segundo día del Coca-Cola Flow Fest comenzó con intensidad con el reggaetonero mexicano El Malilla, quien con la puesta del sol encendió al público el domingo para que recibiera después a Jay Wheeler, Becky G, Chencho Corleone y Rels B.
latimes.com
White House on potential Israel, Hezbollah cease-fire deal
White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby updated reporters on the potential progress in cease-fire talks for a deal between Israel and Hezbollah. CBS News' Weijia Jiang has the latest.
cbsnews.com
Elton John unsure if he can return to work after ‘severe’ infection caused loss of vision in right eye
Elton John has been partially blind for four months after he suffered an infection in his right eye. The "Tiny Dancer" singer explained his career absence in a new interview.
foxnews.com
Hugh Grant takes issue with Luann de Lesseps’ claim they spent a night ‘making out heavily’
Not quite "Notting Hill" in the Hamptons.
nypost.com
Ohio State basketball star Aaron Bradshaw being investigated for ‘domestic incident’
The Buckeyes provided a cryptic update Friday about the Kentucky transfer's status before the 104-60 win over Campbell.
nypost.com
Paramount+ Black Friday Deal 2024: Save Up to 77% on Two Months of Streaming
The "mountain of entertainment" just got a whole lot cheaper.
nypost.com
Adriana de Moura reveals shock reconciliation with former ‘RHOM’ foes Alexia and Marysol: ‘Miracles do happen!’ 
At the Bravo Fan Fest in Miami, the "Fyah" singer told Page Six's "Virtual Reali-Tea" how she patched things up with her co-stars after years of conflict.
nypost.com
Fiscal pide desestimar casos contra Trump por interferencia electoral y retención de documentos
Fiscales federales solicitaron el lunes desestimar los cargos penales contra el virtual presidente electo Donald Trump en los que se le acusaba de elaborar un plan para revertir los resultados de las elecciones de 2020, y poner fin a la causa en su contra por retención de documentos confidenciales, señalando como motivo una vieja política del Departamento de Justicia que establece que un mandatario en funciones no puede enfrentar procesos penales.
latimes.com
Two toddlers killed in Rialto in crash blamed on suspected drunk driver
Police allege that a drunk driver ran a red light and caused a three-car collision in Rialto, killing two toddlers in one of the vehicles he struck.
latimes.com
How Trump and Hegseth could change the US military and the challenges they might face
Pete Hegseth, Donald Trump's pick to head the Pentagon, wants major changes to the U.S. military. Here's how DOD could be affected.
abcnews.go.com
Pregnant Megan Fox shows off her bump in red-hot leather and mesh
The actress is rewriting the rules of maternity style, stepping out in a sheer dress with coordinating underwear two weeks after announcing her pregnancy.
nypost.com
Hezbollah, Israel exchange strikes, deadly weekend in Lebanon
Israel and the Iran-backed Hezbollah militant group exchanged strikes as more news emerges about a potential cease-fire deal. CBS News' Debora Patta reports on the latest in Beirut as multiple deaths are reported.
cbsnews.com
Bill Murray is going on a short 2025 tour. How much are tickets?
The "Groundhog Day" star has five gigs lined up this year.
nypost.com
Nov 25: CBS News 24/7, 1pm ET
Menendez brothers set to appear in court for the first time in almost 30 years; Special counsel Jack Smith files motion to dismiss 2020 election interference case against President-elect Trump.
cbsnews.com
Elon Musk’s Neuralink to launch new brain-implant trial involving robotic arm
Neuralink has already implanted the device in two patients. It has allowed the first patient to play video games, browse the internet, post on social media and move a cursor on his laptop.
nypost.com
Second most-commonly prescribed drug for older adults is linked to bone loss
The loss of bone mineral density and bone mass is called osteoporosis, a disease that affects an estimated 10 million Americans 50 and older.
nypost.com
Trump transition aide Boris Epshteyn sparking internal strife over appointments
Republicans vying for jobs allege Trump transition aide Boris Epshteyn has been mixing private consulting with his transition role.
cbsnews.com
Menendez brothers resentencing pushed back, judge eyes late January
A California judge has delayed the highly anticipated resentencing hearing for Erik and Joseph "Lyle" Menendez, brothers who killed parents in 1989.
foxnews.com
3 things home equity borrowers should do before 2025
Homeowners considering borrowing from their home equity should consider making these three moves now, before 2025.
cbsnews.com
‘Here’ Comes to Digital, But When Will the Tom Hanks Movie ‘Here’ Be Streaming on Netflix?
This heart-warming movie is coming home for the holidays.
nypost.com
‘Yellowstone’ Kills Off Another Character In Jaw-Dropping Season 5, Episode 11 Twist
Another one bites the dust.
nypost.com
Trump finalizing Cabinet picks ahead of second term
President-elect Donald Trump's picks for his second-term Cabinet are coming together as the Senate confirmation process nears before the inauguration occurs. CBS News' Katrina Kaufman reports.
cbsnews.com
Is AI better at planning and booking a vacation than you are?
Two CBS News correspondents conducted an experiment to see which was better at planning a trip — AI or a person. Here's what they found.
cbsnews.com
Bride balks at letting mom’s boyfriend walk her down the aisle: ‘I should have the final say’
Should he take a hike?
nypost.com
One of Our Best Novelists Made a Detective Show for HBO. It’s Fantastic.
Get Millie Black is a detective show that feels fresh.
slate.com
Animation Guild reaches tentative deal with Hollywood studios
Animators have expressed great concern over the threat of artificial intelligence, which is expected to lead to job losses.
latimes.com
Entire police department resigns leaving South Carolina — leaving community without law enforcement presence
"We're actively working to hire a new police chief and more officers," Mayor Garner said. 
nypost.com
Pete Hegseth demands DA hand over prosecution memo on rape claim — cites tip about more exonerating details
A prosecution memorandum underpinning the decision not to prosecute Hegseth is believed to describe an earlier allegation of sexual misconduct made by the same woman in a different jurisdiction, his attorney Tim Parlatore said.
nypost.com
Sydney Thomas’ TikTok explodes after viral ring girl moment in Jake Paul-Mike Tyson fight
Sydney Thomas, the ring girl who went viral during the Jake Paul-Mike Tyson fight, celebrated reaching one million followers on TikTok.
nypost.com
Democrats no longer 'party of the people' as Trump transforms Republican Party: NY Times analyst
New York Times analyst Nate Cohn said President-elect Donald Trump had effectively destroyed Democratic Party hopes of a permanent, multicultural majority.
foxnews.com
Michael Schumacher Update Offered by Neurosurgeon After Daughter's Wedding
Rumors of Michael Schumacher attending his daughter's wedding were denied.
newsweek.com
CNN weighs expanding primetime anchor Kaitlan Collins’ role to chief White House correspondent: report
CNN top brass is considering naming primetime anchor Kaitlan Collins to the role of chief White House correspondent, as it grapples with how to cover the incoming Trump administration, according to a report. Collins, who hosts “The Source with Kaitlan Collins” weekdays at 9 pm, would relocate with her New York-based show to Washington, D.C.,...
nypost.com
Alec Baldwin believes 'Americans are very uninformed about reality'
Alec Baldwin said he believes Americans are not only "uninformed" about what's going on in their own country, but also about international affairs.
foxnews.com
Kim Kardashian Is Being Roasted Over Viral Post
The reality star caught fire for an ill-advised Instagram Story.
1 h
newsweek.com
Gavin Newsom threatens intervention if Trump kills Biden's $7.5K EV tax credit
Gov. Gavin Newsom revealed that he would offer Californians a $7,500 tax credit for electric vehicles if President-elect Trump gets rid of the rebate.
1 h
foxnews.com
Kaley Cuoco’s ‘8 Simple Rules’ Dad John Ritter Scolded Her For Her Outfit The First Time They Met: “Never Dress Like That Again”
"He's like, 'From here on out, I'm your dad,'" she recalled.
1 h
nypost.com
Bizarre NFL camera rule revealed on crucial Bears-Vikings play
You can always learn something new about the NFL rule book.
1 h
nypost.com
Spire Motorsports Prepares for 2025 With Major Competition Staff Changes
Spire Motorsports announced the hiring of Matt McCall as Director of Vehicle Performance and Dax Gerringer as Technical Director.
1 h
newsweek.com
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ Thanksgiving menu in prison revealed
Since Combs was arrested on charges of sex trafficking, racketeering and prostitution charges, he has been behind bars at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, NY.
1 h
nypost.com
Abandoned North Carolina Mine Poses Possible Threat to Water Supply
Study examines water quality near historic Kings Mountain Mine as North Carolina prepares for lithium mining revival.
1 h
newsweek.com
Gorsuch and Sotomayor Seek Clarity on Critical Issue in Takings Clause Case
Justices Neil Gorsuch and Sonia Sotomayor call for a review of the Takings Clause after the Supreme Court declined a case involving Texas homeowner Vicki Baker.
1 h
newsweek.com
Breaking down the ways the Menendez brothers could walk away from prison
There are three legal paths for the Menendez brothers to potentially leave prison after serving several decades for the 1989 killings of their parents. CBS News legal contributor Jessica Levinson breaks down the latest in their legal battle.
1 h
cbsnews.com