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Drew Barrymore Confesses To Keke Palmer She “Didn’t Know What The Hell Age” She Was As A Child Actor: “I Pay All The Bills”

"I was like, ‘Please don’t treat me like a child. I pay all the bills and I work all day long.’”
Read full article on: decider.com
Princess Diana’s brother Charles Spencer addresses 18-year-age gap with new girlfriend: ‘I wasn’t even thinking romance’
Earl Spencer, 60, insisted that he "wasn't looking" for love when he met Dr. Catrine Jarman, who is 18 years his junior.
7 m
nypost.com
Man Convicted for Gaining 44 Pounds To Dodge Military Duty
The South Korean man was convicted after gaining 44 pounds in order to dodge his nation's compulsory military duty.
newsweek.com
White House Osprey Grounded in NYC After Witness Reports Engine Flames
An Osprey aircraft transporting White House staff was grounded in NYC, with one witness reporting engine flames.
newsweek.com
Animal rescue pilot and dog killed in plane crash; 2 dogs survive
Seuk Kim was flying three dogs from Maryland to Albany, New York, when the plane crashed in the snowy woods of the Catskill Mountains, officials said.
cbsnews.com
World's oldest man dies in England
John Tinniswood, the world's oldest man, has died in northern England. He credited his longevity largely to "pure luck," but did offer advice about over-indulging - in anything.
cbsnews.com
Shelter Dog Saved by Family on Florida Vacation, They Drive Him Home
When a man from Pennsylvania met a shelter dog in Florida, he instantly knew the pup was meant to be family, but picking him up wasn't easy.
newsweek.com
Axios CEO rages against Musk's 'bulls---' claims that X users 'are the media now'
Axios CEO Jim VandeHei blasted billionaire Elon Musk for telling X users after the election that they "are the media now," calling it "bulls---."
foxnews.com
Donald Trump's Mass Deportation Policy Has 'Overwhelmed and Stressed' Students
According to the Higher Ed Immigration Portal, over 400,000 undocumented students are currently enrolled in higher education across the United States.
newsweek.com
NFL power rankings for Week 13: Dolphins, 49ers take drastic turns
Just when it looked like the defending NFC champions were getting their act together after a slow start, there go the 49ers.
nypost.com
The price America paid for its first big immigration crackdown
The Chinese Exclusion Act was the first significant crackdown on immigration in American history. We explore the factors that led to the Act and examine what happened to the economy after it passed.
npr.org
Tribal lands were stolen. What happens when those ancestral territories are returned?
This story is the final feature in a Vox special project, Changing With Our Climate, a limited-run series exploring Indigenous solutions to extreme weather rooted in history — and the future. On a freezing January morning in 1863, American soldiers attacked a Northwestern Shoshone camp along the Bear River in what is now Idaho and slaughtered hundreds of Shoshone people in what is most likely the largest massacre of Native people in the US on a single day. The massacre was horrifically brutal. “[The soldiers] would grab the small children by their braids and crush their heads and bodies into the frozen ground,” Rios Pacheco, a Shoshone tribal elder, said. Pacheco told me that, for generations, Shoshone people passed down stories about some parents being forced to let their babies float down the river that day so that their crying would not alert the soldiers to where a group was hiding along the riverbank.  After losing their territory over the course of decades to Western expansion and violence, the tribe went generations without collectively owned land.  But in 2018, more than 150 years later, the Northwestern Band of the Shoshone Nation bought back over 500 acres of land at the site of the Bear River Massacre.  Since European colonization, Indigenous nations across North America have lost nearly 99 percent of their land. That seizure of Native territory and the development of American industry led to a devastating loss of life, culture, and community. It also set humanity on a course that was harmful to the environment. Western development has led to habitat and biodiversity loss and fueled climate change, spurring more extreme weather, such as drought, wildfire, and floods that have grown worse and more frequent.  The Bear River land purchase was part of a growing movement, generally referred to as Land Back, that’s empowering Native people to address generational trauma and restore landscape health. In recent years, hundreds of thousands of acres of ancestral territories have been returned to tribes. The movement is part of a larger reckoning, too: Last year, the US government concluded its Land Buy-Back Program for Tribal Nations, a decade-long effort to acknowledge historical wrongs and return land to tribal ownership. Over the course of the program, nearly 3 million acres in 15 states were consolidated and restored to tribal trust ownership.  Land Back success stories often come with splashy announcements, but what tribes do afterward isn’t as well-publicized. And it’s in these often overlooked stories that tribes are doing work that doesn’t just help heal the injustice they suffered, but creates meaningful steps to adapt to climate change and build a more resilient environment.   The Northwestern Band of the Shoshone Nation plans to embark on an ambitious restoration project at the massacre site, which they call Wuda Ogwa. The project will help make the area more climate resilient through the planting of native trees and the restoration of a wetland complex, which will add an estimated 10,000 acre-feet of water or more to the Great Salt Lake, which is disappearing because of extreme heat and drought. After the Shoshone were displaced from the land, the massacre site was looted, and in the following years, the site was used by settlers for everything from cattle grazing and farming to a railroad and a failed resort. During the Great Depression, Russian olive trees were planted to help reduce soil erosion, but those trees are now considered an invasive species that sucks up water.  Over the years, this all took its toll on the land. It also reduced one of the key water sources that feeds the Great Salt Lake. Now, drought is making the situation worse.  As they work to overcome years of oppression and violence, the Northwestern Shoshone are also focused on healing the land. “We’re going to start to use that land as a place to regenerate not just the Earth, but also the people,” Pacheco said.    For Indigenous communities, land has never been about simple ownership, but instead is about building a deep, complex relationship with the land. Now, as they begin to reclaim more and more ancestral territory, tribes are demonstrating that Indigenous communities can lead the way on climate adaptation through creative partnerships and ambitious restoration projects.  All of this means that Land Back is not only an important cultural story, it could also prove to be a key part in the fight to build climate resilience.  What is the Land Back movement?  Although Indigenous people have been fighting for and regaining their seized land for hundreds of years, the modern concept of Land Back, sometimes backed by social media campaigns and well-heeled nonprofit groups, has only emerged more recently. The #LandBack hashtag, in particular, has found its own cultural niche thanks to moments like the viral social media posts shared by groups like the NDN Collective or influencers like Blackfoot meme creator Arnell Tailfeathers from Manitoba.   Throughout the 20th century, many tribes steadily built up the funds to buy back their land. In the 21st century alone, dozens of tribes and Indigenous organizations have reclaimed tracts of land that total hundreds of thousands of acres across the country.  Increasingly, tribes are finding new allies in conservation and environmental spaces, who recognize the positive impact that tribal land stewardship can have on the environment.  Land Back can come about in different ways. Sometimes, tribes are able to directly buy back land with their own funds, as the Winnebago Tribe in Nebraska did. A nonprofit group can buy land for a tribe before donating it back to them, as the Trust for Public Land is doing with 30,000 acres it is returning to the Penobscot Nation in Maine. In 2018, an individual gave a couple acres of land back to the Ute Tribe just a few years after buying it.  Then there are more nuanced co-management situations, such as Canyon de Chelly, which is a National Monument under the purview of the federal government, with the Navajo Nation maintaining some land and mineral rights. Most tribes, however, say that full ownership with no strings attached is the best way to uphold tribal sovereignty.  Jan Michael Looking Wolf Reibach is the tribal lands department manager for the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde. “I think the most complete answer for a tribe is when they can recover the lands and have sovereignty over their lands and exercise our sovereignty,” he said. “The strongest and most powerful way for the tribe to restore our connection and bring healing to the land is when it comes back into tribal ownership.” Anne Richardson is the chief of the Rappahannock Indian Tribe, whose ancestral territory is located in what is now Eastern Virginia. Richardson, who can remember her father and grandfather fighting with the state for recognition of their sovereign rights, believes that tribes are proving across the country that everyone else should have been listening to them all along. Traditional knowledge, passed down through generations, was once derided as primitive by Western scientists, but Richardson believes acceptance of that type of knowledge is finally beginning to happen. “Scientists are amazed that we had this knowledge and we never had a degree in science,” she said. “They need that traditional knowledge because our people flourished on these lands for thousands of years.” Land Back projects are a chance for the tribes to build stronger relationships with each other and the land. Along the way, water is getting cleaner and land is becoming more climate resilient, even as the political outlook in the United States looks grim for the climate.  President-elect Donald Trump has promised to withdraw (again) from the Paris climate agreement, among other actions that experts say could prove disastrous for the environment. These include opening public lands for oil drilling and resource extraction, as well as rolling back environmental regulations and undoing climate-friendly federal programs like tax credits for home energy improvements.  Under these circumstances, any climate adaptation projects could prove to be invaluable mitigation against an administration that could add an estimated 4 billion tons of carbon dioxide emissions by 2030.  Jason Brough, a Shoshone PhD student in anthropology and environmental policy at the University of Maine who has helped to map the Wuda Ogwa site, said that tribal Land Back projects could serve as a kind of safety net against potentially harmful federal climate policies. “If Indigenous communities and their partners can have these little niches where animals and plants are safe, that could be really important to get us through these next few years [under Trump]” Brough said.  Of course, tribal sovereignty also means that tribes could decide to use the land they regain for something other than climate projects, per se, including for housing or economic development. But although there are many different Land Back projects with a variety of goals and processes, Reibach says that the ultimate goal is the same: rebuilding a healthy relationship with the land and each other based on reciprocity rather than extraction.  “Regardless of the project or the reason to acquire land back into tribal ownership, the process is very healing for us because it restores our connection to the land,” he said. “We view these lands as being part of us.” Why Land Back can be a climate solution  Across the country, tribal Land Back projects are proving, acre by acre and tree by tree, that their work is benefiting the climate.  In Virginia, the member tribes of the Indigenous Conservation Council for the Chesapeake Bay are engaged in Land Back and restoration projects to help blunt the impact of climate change on the Chesapeake Bay, which could see more than 5 feet of sea level rise in the next century. In 2022, for example, the Rappahannock Tribe reclaimed 465 acres of land on what is called Fones Cliffs in Eastern Virginia. The tribe’s work on the land includes herring restoration, oyster restoration, and native tree planting. Much of the land was previously a large cornfield, and chemicals like phosphorus from fertilizer have degraded the water quality in the river.  Read more from Vox’s Changing With Our Climate series Indigenous communities are leading the way in climate adaptations — from living alongside rapidly melting ice to confronting rising seas and creating community support networks. In a new Vox series, we explore a myriad of solutions. You can read them all here, and we recommend you start with these great stories: This coastal tribe has a radical vision for fighting sea-level rise in the HamptonsNext to some of the priciest real estate in the world, the Shinnecock Nation refuses to merely retreat from its vulnerable shoreline. The tiny potato at the heart of one tribe’s fight against climate changeWetlands absorb carbon from the atmosphere. The Coeur d’Alene’s restoration would do more than just that. Colonial solutions to climate change aren’t workingWhat Indigenous knowledge could mean in the fight to curb global warming. Two hours south, the Nansemond Indian Nation is working to reduce invasive species, protect against erosion, and restore water quality on a piece of land they acquired earlier this year that was once the site of a cement factory. Cameron Bruce, the Environmental Program Coordinator for the Nansemond Indian Nation, says he has noticed more birds and larger herds of deer on the property since the tribe began restoring it.  In Oregon, the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde is working to restore the Willamette Falls area, which was recently the site of a paper mill. Lindsay McClary, restoration ecologist for the tribe, is working with her team to restore stream flow, replace culverts to create fish habitats, remove invasive species, and bring back fire to the landscape. Last year, the tribe conducted a prescribed burn on one piece of land for the first time in 100 years. McClary says that the impact of Indigenous land management is particularly clear in places like the Willamette Falls site, which was previously home to a Blue Heron Paper Company mill. “We’re helping restore some areas that were flooded by someone else’s maybe less than thoughtful decisions,” she said.  “We see time and time again, those places become productive ecologically,” Jason Brough said of Indigenous projects on reclaimed land — meaning those lands “start having benefits for not just our own communities, but for everybody.”  For Brough, Wuda Ogwa carries extra personal significance. One of Brough’s ancestors was shot in the chest at the Bear River Massacre but survived. Rios Pacheco says that only one or two people from most family groups survived, but the fact that those people now have many descendants is a mark of the tribe’s resilience. Despite the pain and trauma that Brough still says exists at the site, he and the tribe are looking toward making it better for the future. Brian Andrew, the project engineer, said their approach to restoration is not simply returning the site to the way it was before the massacre. “We don’t want to put exactly what was there because we want things to flourish and can survive in today’s climate and future climate scenarios,” Andrew said. In some ways, it is remarkable that just a few years after regaining such a culturally significant piece of land, the tribe is already working on a project that could benefit the entire region by adding desperately needed water to the Great Salt Lake. “That’s what’s beautiful about it,” said Maria Moncur, the tribe’s communications and public relations director. “We did it for our people, and it just so happens to help the watershed.” “I know it’s a struggle,” Brough said. “I know we’ve been trying for over 500 years. But we’re at a junction right now where they get to make that choice again … between a path of living with Earth or a path of living against Earth.” In early November, the Northwestern Shoshone organized a community planting event at the Wuda Ogwa site. Over two days, hundreds of both Indigenous and non-Indigenous volunteers came to plant thousands of new trees. Tribal leaders say that this work strengthens the tribal community and the environment, but also works to improve their ties with non-Native neighbors and community members.  “What we’re doing at that massacre site is we’re paying tribute back to those victims,” George Gover, the executive director of the Northwestern Band of the Shoshone Nation, said. “We’re honoring them by putting water and life back into the Great Salt Lake. That’s what this project is all about: life.”
vox.com
What 'Cold Case' Revealed About JonBenét's Mother Patsy Ramsey
The mother of the murdered child pageant star maintained her innocence until the day she died.
newsweek.com
Biden wants drugs like Wegovy, Ozempic covered by Medicare, Medicaid
Millions of Americans would be eligible to have popular weight-loss drugs like Wegovy or Ozempic covered by Medicare and Medicaid under a rule the Biden administration has proposed.
cbsnews.com
MAGA Celebrates Walmart's DEI Move: 'Tide Has Turned'
Walmart has become the largest private company to announce it will be rolling back on promoting diversity initiatives.
newsweek.com
Marjorie Taylor Greene Suggests Biden Admin Trying to Start 'Nuclear War'
Taylor Greene suggested the administration was trying to start a nuclear war, after sharing unconfirmed reports about maybe sending Ukraine nuclear weapons.
newsweek.com
He dazzled the interiors of the first tower on Billionaires’ Row — now, Thomas Juul-Hansen shows off his current work and fave NYC spots
The Danish-born architect landed in New York after getting his master's from Harvard -- and is behind fresh projects like Sutton Tower and 96+ Broadway.
nypost.com
King of Christmas vs. Balsam Hill: Our Christmas Tree Review
It's all merry and bright until you see how much a fake tree costs these days.
nypost.com
North Korea Unveils New Tianma-2 Battle Tank
The new Tianma-2 battle tank resembles some Western models, experts have said.
newsweek.com
If Justin Herbert is incredible, what does that say about the rest of the Chargers?
Justin Herbert continues to show he's one of the NFL's top quarterbacks, but the Chargers' struggles at running back and wide receiver are costing them.
latimes.com
Win one for the Gipper! Ronald Reagan film tops in home sales following Trump victory
Now that's winning one for "The Gipper"-- the late actor and President Ronald Reagan. The film "Reagan" has surged to the top of the home sales charts following President-elect Donald Trump's victory on Nov. 5.
nypost.com
Aging Japan Faces Dating Hurdle As Births and Marriages Plummet
A quarter of Japanese people under 40 who have tied the knot found their spouse through a dating app, a recent survey found.
newsweek.com
Australia Is Moving to Ban Children From Social Media. Will It Work?
The move is politically popular but a vocal assortment of technology and child welfare experts have responded with alarm.
time.com
Internet Obsessed With Woman in 'Toxic Relationship' With Friend's Cat
A generous gesture to look after a friend's cat was met with a less than enthusiastic response from the prickly pet.
newsweek.com
An ancient, Indigenous, legendary bean to give thanks for
What's perfect for a hotter, drier planet this Thanksgiving? A bean you've probably never heard of.
latimes.com
Green Onion Recall Canceled Due to False Positive for Salmonella
A recall of green onions due to possible contamination with salmonella has been canceled because a laboratory error was to blame.
newsweek.com
25 things to do in L.A. to feel like you've walked into a holiday movie
See a puppet show, watch a holiday boat parade and watch tree lightings — these are among many activities that will make you feel like you've been transported into a holiday film.
latimes.com
Is Ambivalence Killing Parenthood?
And can deciding to have kids even be a rational exercise in the first place?
theatlantic.com
A Guide for the Politically Homeless
Those left adrift by Trump’s rise must now engage in a new project.
theatlantic.com
Turkeys got pardoned. Will the Jan. 6 defendants get the same treatment?
Questions swirl about whether President-elect Donald Trump will make good on a promise to pardon rioters who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
latimes.com
Cate Blanchett and Kevin Kline really want viewers to watch 'Disclaimer' a second time
The Oscar-winning actors play arch-nemeses under the watchful eye of director Alfonso Cuarón in Apple TV+'s smoke-and-mirrors mystery thriller.
latimes.com
Americans will throw out 316 million pounds of food on Thanksgiving. Here's how it fuels climate change
The United Nation estimates that up to 10% of all human-produced greenhouse gases are generated by food loss and waste. That’s nearly five times the emissions from the aviation industry.
latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: Readers praise retiring Times columnist David Lauter
David Lauter's columns were 'lucid, informative and good-hearted — stellar as columnist Steve Lopez's work, but different,' says a reader.
latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: Biden shows Trump how a presidential transition is done
Biden can believe everything negative he said about Trump while hosting him at the White House. It's about maintaining the peaceful transfer of power.
latimes.com
Despite warnings from bird flu experts, it's business as usual in California dairy country
New research and discussions with dairy farmers in the Central Valley suggests H5N1 bird flu is more widespread among people than the reported numbers indicate.
latimes.com
Former prisoner Clarence Maclin taps his early artistry for 'Sing Sing'
From a maximum-security prison to a film set, the Rehabilitation Through the Arts program alum hopes to do more films that heal.
latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: Pete Hegseth cannot be trusted with the nation's secrets as defense secretary
Regardless of whether Pete Hegseth's 2017 sexual encounter was consensual or assault, there's enough reckless behavior there to render him unfit for Defense secretary.
latimes.com
A thank you to the undocumented on the eve of Trump's deportation storm
I’ve spent my career trying to sway skeptics that people here illegally are no different from native-born citizens. That nearly all embody the immigrant spirit.
latimes.com
She won a seat in the California Legislature — by campaigning for abortion rights in Nevada
Maggy Krell, a former prosecutor from Sacramento, won a seat in the California Assembly by a landslide while campaigning for abortion rights in Nevada.
latimes.com
Navigating Thanksgiving with heart disease: What to eat and what to avoid
Nearly half of U.S. adults live with cardiovascular disease. Doctors offer tips on what they should and shouldn't put on their plate at Thanksgiving dinner.
foxnews.com
Sean Baker and Mikey Madison push the 'Anora' vibes to the brink
The director and the actor on the humor and pathos and tension and scary moments — sometimes all at once — in their prize-winning film.
latimes.com
‘We’re gonna fight’: Colorado woman says she went ‘to war’ when county tried to claim her private property
TikTok star Taralyn Romero had to fight her local government when it claimed adverse possession to try to seize part of her yard and the creek running through it.
foxnews.com
'I got lonely': Why a 21-year-old theater major built an escape room in his UCLA dorm
"Code Green" is a sci-fi-inspired escape room with a heavy backstory and complex puzzles. It also resides in a dorm room at UCLA.
latimes.com
How L.A. got so many oddly shaped streets — and why it's finally doing something about them
California lawmakers and the City Council are undoing counterproductive policies requiring developers to widen roads in front of their projects.
latimes.com
A radical reshaping of L.A. County's homeless services system is proposed
Two Los Angeles County Supervisors are proposing a radical overhaul of county homeless services by creating a new department that would take back hundreds of millions of dollars from the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority.
latimes.com
What if most Americans aren't bitterly divided?
An 'exhausted majority' is more interested in a competent government, not the red vs. blue battles of elites trying to gain political power.
latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: Nuclear power's promise: Live well now, poison humanity in the future
Nuclear power sounds 'clean' now, but it could poison humanity well into the future. We simply need to reckon with our wastefulness now.
latimes.com
Pumpkin Chapati
If Thanksgiving prep has left you with excess pumpkin puree, try making chapati, a staple flatbread in Kenya that requires only a few ingredients.
latimes.com
Salvation Mountain, one of California's great art oddities, partially collapsed. Devotees vow to save it
A decade after the death of Salvation Mountain creator Leonard Knight, friends gather to pay tribute and plot how to protect the artwork, which sits on public land.
latimes.com