Tools
Change country:

If you want to belong, find a third place

An illustration of a darkened home with a big bright window revealing a woman waving and walking toward several people on a blanket in a park with trees.
Franco Zacha for Vox

Your neighborhood watering hole is more important than you think.

Meng Liu spent years ping-ponging around the world looking for community. It was her dream to live in New York City, but after she found it difficult to make friends, Liu moved to Los Angeles, where she faced similar social roadblocks. Loneliness followed her across the globe to Shanghai, where she again chased a sense of belonging that never came.

Thinking back on a comment a friend had made years ago, Liu had an epiphany. “Belonging isn’t some magical place that you can find in your next destination,” she recalled the friend saying. “It is where you feel most connected with the people around you, and that you have people who love you and that you love.”

So Liu decided to give New York a second chance. She moved back in 2019 and made a commitment to fostering relationships. Inspired by her own difficulty making friends and the country’s epidemic of loneliness, in 2022 she founded a social club, Wowza Hangout, that brings people together around shared interests and activities. Wowza Hangout has hosted gatherings where people ranging in age from early 20s to late 50s play games, watch movies, sing karaoke, and picnic. All events are free, though Wowza Hangout is experimenting with a subscription model ($14.99 a month for unlimited hangouts, as opposed to monthly organized get-togethers). A crucial component of these hangouts are their settings: board game cafés, bars, museums, parks. They’re venues that populate a vibrant city like New York, but where attendees might feel awkward approaching someone they don’t know. Wowza Hangout not only provides the location but gives people permission to transform each of these physical spaces into a hub for connection — in other words, a third place.

First defined by sociologist Ray Oldenburg in his 1989 book The Great Good Place, third places are settings a person frequents beyond their home (the first place) and work (the second place). Third places can include more traditional settings like places of worship, community and recreation centers, parks, and social clubs, but also encompass bars, gyms, malls, makeshift clubhouses in neighborhoods, and even virtual settings like Nextdoor. As Oldenburg described them, third places are great equalizers, spots where regulars of different backgrounds and perspectives can mingle in a location that is comfortable, unpretentious, and low-cost.

Even prior to the pandemic, these institutions were shuttering, according to research. As Americans spend more time alone and practice individualized forms of leisure, like marathoning television series on streaming services and passively scrolling on social platforms, they aren’t gathering communally as often as they were in decades past — a shift the political scientist Robert Putnam observed a quarter century ago in his formative book Bowling Alone.

High rent and disinvestment in low-income neighborhoods could be drivers in the closure of third place businesses, according to Jessica Finlay, an assistant professor in the Institute of Behavioral Science and the department of geography at the University of Colorado Boulder. (Finlay doesn’t yet have data to support this hypothesis, but this summer she hopes to study exactly where third places are closing and how the trends differ by neighborhood.) On a planning level, zoning laws preventing commercial spaces like bars and cafés from building in residential areas further drive the wedge between families and communities.

This isn’t to say Americans don’t value third places. “I think that people both wish they had more of them,” says Katherine Giuffre, a professor emerita of sociology at Colorado College, “and at the same time, overlook them or take them for granted.” With some intentionality, experts believe we can recommit to — and reimagine — third places. They may look exactly as we’ve always experienced them. They may not be physical spaces at all.

The benefits of third places

If one of the many crises that befall our society is loneliness, third places offer a solution. These environments are where the community gathers, where you can be either actively engaged in conversation or passively taking in the bustle around you. At their very best, third places allow people of differing backgrounds to cross paths — to develop what are known as bridging ties. As opposed to our closest connections, bridging social networks encompass people who have varying identities, social and economic resources, and knowledge. “Studies have shown that just having a diversity of folks in your life … more informal and infrequent and unplanned, can be really protective for health and well-being,” Finlay says. “Classically, third places were sites where you could build up these bridging ties.”

As a result, third places are trust and relationship builders: You encounter a person frequently enough that you naturally graduate from a polite smile to small talk to perhaps deeper conversation. “You start to get the feeling that maybe I can trust that person if they say hello to me,” Giuffre says. “It’s not the beginning of some scam.” According to a 2007 study, even employees in these places, like bartenders and hairdressers, can provide emotional support to patrons looking for a sympathetic ear. You don’t need to take on the herculean task of making new friends to be less lonely. You may just need a third place. Simply developing acquaintance-like relationships is enough to foster feelings of belonging, studies show.

Without third places, “Americans may be losing access to key services, goods, and amenities, in addition to community sites that help buffer against loneliness, stress, and alienation,” Finlay wrote in her 2019 paper detailing the loss of third places.

Why we aren’t getting the most out of third places

While teaching a master’s level course about building community at Viterbo University, ethics professor Richard Kyte observed students’ piqued interest when discussing third places. Even if they hadn’t heard the term before, Kyte says, they could easily identify these communal relationship breeding grounds. “It would be the kind of place they used to visit, or a place they remembered from their childhood,” says Kyte, the author of Finding Your Third Place: Building Happier Communities (and Making Great Friends Along the Way). “Or a place that they see other people frequenting, and they wish they had in their lives. But not that many people who say, ‘I have a third place and I go to it on a regular basis.’”

Aside from the obvious — the pandemic — there are a multitude of reasons why third places aren’t being frequented, supported, or funded. In her study of third place closures, Finlay and colleagues found that between 2008 and 2015, stores selling sporting goods, hobby items, musical instruments, and books decreased by 27 percent, while barbershops, beauty salons, and laundromats dropped by nearly 23 percent. Declining church membership suggests organized religion is no longer the community builder it once was. According to a 2023 Pew Research Center survey, over half of Americans say they would rather live in a larger house where schools, stores, and restaurants are miles away. Despite the fact that most of the country lives near a bar, movie theater, restaurant, or park, the Survey Center on American Life found that 56 percent of Americans in 2021 said they had a third place they frequent, down from 67 percent in 2019.

According to Kyte, the separation of residential and commercial real estate means people must rely on cars to access bars and fitness studios. Food- and beverage-focused locations also encourage patrons to purchase their items and leave to make room for the next customer. If you do hope to stay, expect to keep spending. The low-cost luxuriating necessary for healthy third places isn’t considered profitable.

Restaurants aren’t the only environments becoming untenable for lingering. Parks with hostile architecture and a lack of bathrooms and water fountains send the signal that they are spaces just for passing through. “They’re meant to be hostile to people who are without homes,” Giuffre says. “But it ends up being hostile to the whole community.”

And some third places are increasingly difficult to access at all for certain populations. With fewer hangout options for teens (what spots do exist might require them to be chaperoned), they lack time for unstructured socializing. Older and immunocompromised people are vulnerable to illnesses like Covid-19, flu, and RSV circulating in indoor environments that are not well ventilated. Community- and health-focused efforts implemented during the height of the pandemic, like streeteries, expanded patio areas, and pedestrian-only street closures, have been pared back or abandoned, denying many an opportunity to safely engage with their cities and towns. (On the contrary, some cities, like Los Angeles, have made outdoor dining measures permanent.)

When people don’t feel safe in specific contexts, they won’t engage with them. Recently, third places have become a monolith of experience, Finlay says. People are self-segregating based on specific interests, hobbies, or ideologies that tend to skew toward a particular demographic. Interacting with people who look and see the world similarly may deepen our existing connections but don’t facilitate bridging social networks. “We need to facilitate more of these bridging ties and bridging encounters,” Finlay says, “so that we’re not just spending time in an echo chamber, whether it’s online or in person, of people who already think the same way that we do.” However, opting to spend time with people who share similar experiences and backgrounds can be a matter of safety. If you suspect other patrons in a community book club will judge you — or worse, harass you — based on your views or how you present yourself, you’ll avoid those spaces.

In her research looking at young people with histories of housing instability and homelessness, Danielle Littman found that this population doesn’t always feel welcomed in modern third places. People who don’t appear as if they “belong” might face questions like “Why is this person here?” or “Are they supposed to be here right now?” says Littman, an assistant professor in the College of Social Work at the University of Utah. The person might be asked to leave. “Even worse,” she says, is “criminalization of just existing in a space. I see some of those practices and policies as inequitable enforcement of third places.”

By nature, third places should be diverse, Giuffre says. Everyone has a responsibility to act inclusively so the space is safe and welcome to all. “That can be a lot easier said than done,” she says. “Because the teenagers are loud and the old people don’t want to hear them. But we have to open ourselves up to embracing difference.”

How to reimagine third places

Experts agree communities are in a collective state of rethinking third places. But how might those places look? In response to the housing affordability crisis, people are moving into smaller homes they can afford, says Jorge González-Hermoso, a research associate at the Urban Institute. In these smaller homes, people might lack leisure amenities, like a backyard or space for a home gym, pushing them into third spaces to seek those services elsewhere.

In order to signal that these places are lively and in demand, González-Hermoso says, there must be some form of engagement and activation, whether through exercise classes in a park or kids’ skate nights at a roller rink. This public commitment often comes naturally when the community’s needs are taken into consideration.

When the nonprofit Better Block plans public space transformations in cities and towns worldwide, its team first solicits the community’s feedback, says the organization’s executive director, Krista Nightengale. “Valuing the community’s input and not only listening, but watching what they do and how they respond to a space,” she says, “is a huge thing.” In the parking lot outside of Better Block’s offices, for instance, four parking spaces were transformed into a small basketball court where students from a nearby school now organically gather. “Our parking lot has now become a third place for many of those students,” Nightengale says, “where they’ll bring their basketballs, they’ll play after school, or they’ll just simply sit in the patio furniture that we’ve put out there and hang out.”

In her research, Littman says people are looking for third places to meet basic needs — amenities like a safe place to nap or free snacks — especially if they are not getting those needs met at home or work or school.

To make third places as inclusive as possible, Better Block ensures park signs reflect the diverse languages spoken by members in the community or use images like emojis to convey messages, Nightengale says. The organization also aims to make the spaces ADA accessible. Comfortable seating and shade are also integral to making a space comfortable for all. Despite fears that the furniture may be stolen or vandalized, those incidents almost never transpire, Nightengale says. “When you show a space is loved and taken care of, people tend to treat it the same way.”

Perhaps the most accessible third place of all isn’t necessarily a physical one. Online platforms can offer people in rural communities, people with limited mobility, and people with marginalized identities safe and affirming ways to connect. While many potential benefits of online third places haven’t been studied, Finlay has spoken with study participants who say online concerts, for instance, have allowed them to enjoy an event they wouldn’t have experienced otherwise. She has also heard from people who use Nextdoor because, despite it being online, they can still interact with locals. Younger generations may prefer apps like Pokémon Go, she says, another platform that filters reality through the screen — and gets people outside. Chat rooms and social media sites centered around specific interests and hobbies are also popular online third places, Finlay says. However, these online forums come with their own complications, including harassment from other, sometimes anonymous, users and less welcoming attitudes toward people with differing perspectives.

When it comes to established environments that serve the needs of as many people as possible, experts agree that public parks are the closest we have to an ideal third place. Parks are preferably welcoming to all members of the community for a variety of activities; they ideally have bathrooms, water fountains, and cooling tree cover; they’re free and open daily. It might be easier for parents of children playing to chat with one another than for a picnicker to approach a jogger, but events — like concerts, art installations, and farmers markets — can help bring more people together, Giuffre says. But funding and support for parks isn’t always a given. “It’s a policy decision to say we’re going to have money put into these public spaces from our tax dollars so that everyone can participate,” Giuffre says.

How to find your own third place

To get the most out of third places, you’ve got to find one you enjoy frequenting. Mine your interests, Littman says, to discover a location that fulfills your needs. For instance, if you love books but don’t necessarily want to discuss them with others, find a bar or café that offers silent reading nights for people who want to read communally. See what public and commercial spaces are in your community: Do any of them offer classes you’d want to take? Are they spots you’d want to hang out and become a regular? Invite a friend, coworker, or family member to check it out with you.

Immersing yourself in the culture of the space requires intentionality, consciously caring for your, and your community’s, social health. This might require some actionable changes, like dedicating time each week to spend an hour or so in a neighborhood hangout, going into a restaurant or coffee shop instead of picking up, leaving your phone in your pocket while waiting in line, engaging with people in small but meaningful ways. Don’t become discouraged if an interaction isn’t as successful as you hoped, says Liu, the founder of meetup group Wowza Hangout. To be a part of something, you must consistently show up.

Soon enough you’ll naturally braid into the fabric of the third place; you’ll become a familiar face, a driver of conversation, a person to say hello to. In an age of loneliness, that might be one of the most powerful tools of all.


Read full article on: vox.com
Mookie Betts’ foul ball strikes 8-year-old boy in eye at Dodgers home game
An 8-year-old Dodgers fan took a foul ball to the face in a scary moment during Friday’s game against the Reds at Dodger Stadium. The incident occurred in the fourth inning when Mookie Betts sent a screamer into the stands that struck Nathan Sanchez in the right eye, the family told KTLA.  The Sanchez family...
nypost.com
Timberwolves eliminate defending champion Nuggets with stunning rally to win wild Game 7
The Nuggets dreams of a back-to-back NBA title have been shattered.
nypost.com
Biden, Fauci and Butker each deliver starkly different speeches — and the best message gets vilified
The graduating class of 2024 has been treated to three very different commencement speeches in recent days. Only one was not self-serving, dishonest and destructive.
nypost.com
5/19: The Takeout: Reporter Craig Whitlock on his new book about the "Fat Leonard" scandal
For this edition of "The Takeout," Major Garrett sits down with author and Washington Post reporter Craig Whitlock. His new book details the rise and fall of former contractor "Fat Leonard," and his role in one of the most controversial scandals in U.S. military history.
cbsnews.com
Congolese army says it foiled a coup attempt
Congo's army says it has foiled a coup attempt and arrested the perpetrators, including several Americans.
cbsnews.com
Discusión entre dos mujeres desencadena tiroteo que deja 11 heridos en Georgia
Una discusión entre dos mujeres desencadenó un tiroteo que dejó 11 heridos en una concurrida zona turística de Savannah el sábado por la noche, una de cinco balaceras el fin de semana en esta ciudad de Georgia, dos de ellas con víctimas mortales, informaron las autoridades.
latimes.com
Justin Thomas wanted hometown PGA Championship win ‘a little too bad’
Justin Thomas didn’t win the PGA Championship in his hometown this week, but he walked off the 18th green after Sunday’s round at Valhalla feeling like a winner.
nypost.com
Seis muertos y 10 heridos en Idaho al chocar camioneta pickup con furgoneta
Seis personas perdieron la vida en Idaho al chocar una camioneta pickup con una furgoneta de pasajeros, dijeron autoridades.
latimes.com
Opositora Gálvez mide fuerzas ante Sheinbaum con un gran acto en Ciudad de México y el debate final
CIUDAD DE MÉXICO (AP) — Faltan dos semanas para las elecciones presidenciales de México y la opositora Xóchitl Gálvez afrontó un día decisivo el domingo para medir sus fuerzas ante la candidata puntera, la oficialista Claudia Sheinbaum, con un gran acto en la capital y el debate final.
latimes.com
Taiwan Swears In New President, William Lai, Amid Tensions With China
How Lai manages geopolitical relations with China will be closely watched in Beijing and Washington.
time.com
Yankees ‘locker buddies’ Jose Trevino, Jon Berti combine for sneaky defensive gem
Jose Trevino smacked a game-tying, two-run single and was robbed of what would have been his sixth home run of the year. But the Yankees catcher did not need a bat on the most memorable and impressive play of the afternoon.
nypost.com
'People Are Siding with a Country at War': Tyson Fury Suggests Judges Gave Usyk the Victory Due to Ukraine War
British heavyweight Tyson Fury's loss to Ukraine's Oleksandr Usyk on Saturday has now become something of an international controversy. The post ‘People Are Siding with a Country at War’: Tyson Fury Suggests Judges Gave Usyk the Victory Due to Ukraine War appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
Knicks’ OG Anunoby ‘couldn’t move’ in brief Game 7 return
OG Anunoby tested the balky hamstring he injured in Game 2 of this series and was in the starting lineup but he was unable to play for the final three-plus quarters of the Knicks’ 130-109 defeat.
nypost.com
Florida man drunkenly steals school bus, drives 4 hours to Miami: police
Florida man Daniel Saez, 32, is accused of stealing a school bus while high and drunk and driving it around the state. He was charged with grand theft auto.
foxnews.com
RFK Jr.'s fight for presidential debate seat shows the two-party system 'is not working'
RFK Jr. claims that his political opponents don’t want to debate him on stage or “talk about the issues" that are of concern to the American public.
foxnews.com
‘The Sympathizer’ Stages a Second Vietnam War
Photo Illustration by Erin O'Flynn/The Daily Beast/HBOIn the sixth episode of The Sympathizer, the General (Toan Le) is preparing a militia to invade Vietnam and stage a second Vietnam War. Great. Awesome. Definitely what the world needs: More war! But as the Captain (Hoa Xuande) tours the General’s secret military base in the plains of California, he finds out something even worse about this mess—his best friend Bon (Fred Nguyen Khan) has volunteered for this doomed-to-lose army.Captain could’ve just avoided this shitshow entirely if it wasn’t for Bon. Sure, whatever! Send everyone back to Vietnam to lose the war all over again. But now, he has to defend his friend. Ugh. Captain sends a coded message to Man (Duy Nguyễn) that their side will end up killing Bon if the two of them don’t do anything to protect their non-Commie friend. While he waits for a response, Captain does some digging to figure out where the funds for this militia are coming from.They’ve got to be coming from one of the many characters Robert Downey, Jr. is playing, either CIA informant Claude or politician Ned Godwin. It’s the latter, so Captain volunteers for the campaign to get insider information on the donations—proof, essentially, to send back to Man. Captain schmoozes around with Ned’s wife (Veronica Della Vedova) to get access to the senator’s private drawing room, where, later, he takes the donation documents.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Scottie Scheffler finishes strong in final round as chaotic PGA Championship comes to close
Scottie Scheffler's chaotic week in Louisville came to an end on Sunday, but he finished on a high note at Valhalla Golf Club to end tied for eighth at the PGA Championship.
foxnews.com
Report: Dem Senate Candidate 'Not Beholden' to Corporate Interests, Lobbyists, Despite Flood of Money from Lobbyists
A Democrat Senate candidate in Maryland, who has claimed she is "not beholden" to corporate interests or lobbyists, has reportedly received a wave of donations from lobbyists and other corporate officials. The post Report: Dem Senate Candidate ‘Not Beholden’ to Corporate Interests, Lobbyists, Despite Flood of Money from Lobbyists appeared first on Breitbart.
1 h
breitbart.com
Courteney Cox says late ‘Friends’ co-star Matthew Perry still ‘visits’ her after death: He’s ‘around for sure’
Perry was pronounced dead on Oct. 28, 2023, at age 54 after being found unresponsive in a hot tub at his home.
1 h
nypost.com
Maya Brady hits game-winning single that sends UCLA softball to Super Regional
UCLA dominated Grand Canyon from the opening, winning the Bruins' NCAA regional Sunday and advancing to host Georgia in the Super Regional round.
1 h
latimes.com
Mets have serious issues beyond Edwin Diaz’s closer status
Their pen situation is far from a disaster thanks to solid backup plans. But ultimately though, the Mets all know they need Edwin Diaz to be right to have a real chance to reach their goal and make the playoffs.
1 h
nypost.com
Reggie Miller gleefully trolls Knicks after Pacers’ convincing Game 7 win
Pacers great Reggie Miller trolled the Knicks on Instagram following their Game 7 loss to Indiana on Sunday at Madison Square Garden.
1 h
nypost.com
Bruce Nordstrom, Heir Who Led Retail Empire, Dies at 90
As head of Nordstrom Inc. for four decades, Bruce Nordstrom helped transform the family-run company from a regional shoe seller into one of the largest U.S. apparel retailers.
1 h
time.com
New York man with ties to European royalty reported missing in California: police
Authorities in California are searching for a New York man with ties to European royalty who disappeared in Malibu early Saturday morning.
1 h
foxnews.com
Arizona police save 6-month-old shot multiple times, find suspect dead in burning home after hostage standoff
Arizona police rushed into a home to rescue a 6-month-old infant who had been shot multiple times after a suspect took the child and the child’s mother hostage on Friday, authorities said.
1 h
nypost.com
Foster Care Activist Dr. Candice Matthews Says Death Threats Won’t Stop Her
Courtesy of Candice MatthewsA Black civil rights activist in Texas who is notorious for “dropping the hammer for accountability on corruption” and was targeted with a racist hate letter and noose has spoken about how the threat will not stop her mission from protecting foster children of color in the Lone Star State from abuse.In an exclusive interview with The Daily Beast, Dr. Candice Matthews said she was scared “at first,” but that didn’t deter her.“At the end of the day, I’m the voice of the people. I’m the voice for children, the voiceless. My job is to protect the unprotected and that’s what I’m going to,” she said.Read more at The Daily Beast.
2 h
thedailybeast.com
Pacers’ Tyrese Haliburton dons Reggie Miller choke-sign hoodie after tormenting Knicks
A courtside Knicks fan stirred up Tyrese Haliburton, just like Spike Lee had done to Reggie Miller almost 30 years earlier. This one went even worse for the Knicks.
2 h
nypost.com
Schumer says Senate to take up border bill again this week
The Senate will vote this week on a bipartisan border security bill after previous efforts collapsed when Republicans withdrew their support, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said.
2 h
foxnews.com
St. John’s leaves no doubt, repeats as DCSAA softball champions
The Cadets coasted to an 11-1 win over Georgetown Visitation.
2 h
washingtonpost.com
Paul Pierce stomps on Jalen Brunson jersey after Knicks’ loss in bizarre video
Paul Pierce didn't wait long to celebrate the Knicks' demise.
2 h
nypost.com
Pope Francis Calls Out ‘Conservative’ American Bishops on ‘60 Minutes’
60 MinutesPope Francis on Sunday railed against conservative bishops in the United States who oppose his efforts to revitalize the Catholic Church.When quizzed by CBS Evening News anchor Norah O’Donnell over the issue on Sunday’s 60 Minutes, the 87-year-old provided an unexpected response.“You used an adjective, ‘conservative,’” Pope Francis said. “That is, conservative is one who clings to something and does not want to see beyond that. It is a suicidal attitude. Because one thing is to take tradition into account, to consider situations from the past, but quite another is to be closed up inside a dogmatic box.”Read more at The Daily Beast.
2 h
thedailybeast.com
Auburn running back Brian Battie critically injured in Florida shooting that killed brother
Auburn running back Brian Battie is in critical condition after being shot over the weekend and his brother Tommie was killed in the same shooting in Sarasota, Florida over the weekend. 
2 h
nypost.com
Comet Fragment Explodes in Dark Skies Over Spain and Portugal
A brilliant flash of blue, green and white on Saturday night came from a shard of an as yet unidentified comet that was moving around 100,000 miles per hour, experts said.
2 h
nytimes.com
F1 News: Max Verstappen Tops Off His Emilia Romagna GP Victory With 24-Hour Race Win
Max Verstappen's won the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix on the same weekend as a 24-hour sim race.
2 h
newsweek.com
‘MaryLand’ on PBS Ending Explained: Does Mary’s Dying Wish to Stay on the Isle of Man Come True?
Do Becca and Rosaline protect their mother's dream?
2 h
nypost.com
Cassie's lawyer criticizes Diddy's 'disingenuous' apology video as stars react to hotel assault statement
Sean "Diddy" Combs attempted to apologize for past aggressions against Cassie, but 50 Cent and Aubrey O'Day were not impressed.
2 h
foxnews.com
Canadians Humana-Paredes, Wilkerson win Olympic preview at Huntington Beach Open
The loaded women's field included three of the top five teams, all headed to the Olympic Games. Taylor Sander and Taylor Crabb cruised to the men's title.
2 h
latimes.com
Rapper Cardi B won’t endorse Biden in 2024: ‘Layers of disappointment’
The rapper said that while she still believes Trump to be a threat, she's felt "layers of disappointment" under Biden.
2 h
nypost.com
Shani Louk, whose body was paraded through Gaza, laid to rest in Israeli funeral: ‘In your death you became a symbol’
Shani Louk's body was recently recovered from Rafah by the Israeli Defense Forces.
2 h
nypost.com
A three-run comeback lifts Jackson-Reed to DCSAA baseball title
Etan Rosario produced the walk-off single in the seventh as the Tigers earned a 5-4 win against Maret.
2 h
washingtonpost.com
Missouri museum achieves world record for largest gathering of people with underwear on their heads
A museum in Missouri recently broke a Guinness World Record for hosting the world’s largest gathering of people with underwear on their head. 
2 h
nypost.com
A Brief History of Political Podium Scandals
Photo Illustration by Thomas Levinson/The Daily Beast/GettyIt was the wobble felt around the world.Well—at least by a room of Minnesota Republicans who watched Donald Trump’s podium teeter during a speech Friday night. And, of course, the 450,000-some X-users who came upon a clip of Trump swaying on stage courtesy of a Biden-Harris campaign account that’s seeking to cast the former president as over-the-hill.As Trump delivered a speech to the annual Minnesota GOP dinner, a budget-looking podium buckled as he leaned forward to make a point. An exasperated Trump then teed off, bemoaning that the “freaking place is falling down” and chiding that the lectern was tilting further and further left like “too many other things.”Read more at The Daily Beast.
2 h
thedailybeast.com
‘Bachelorette’ star Ryan Sutter says he, Trista Sutter are ‘fine’ after series of confusing posts
"Bachlorette" alum Ryan Sutter tried to clarify a series of cryptic posts on social media that made it seem like he and wife Trista were no longer together.
2 h
foxnews.com
Arizona man sentenced to life in prison for burying wife alive in hand-dug grave
An Arizona man was sentenced to life in prison for burying his wife alive and killing her, as well as an addition 16.5 years for kidnapping, forgery and fraud.
2 h
foxnews.com
NYC-Dublin portal reopens with limited hours, new guardrails to deter shenanigans
“The team will continue making updates as needed to ensure that everyone can continue to enjoy the Portal,” the Flatiron NoMad Partnership and Dublin City Council said in a joint statement on Sunday.
2 h
nypost.com
What could have been hangs over Scottie Scheffler after uneven PGA Championship, arrest whirlwind
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Scottie Scheffler’s stressful and adventurous week was almost over. It was time to go home. Finally. The world’s No. 1-ranked player was standing on the 18th green under the searing Kentucky sun waiting for his playing partner, Mark Hubbard, to putt out so he could make his 271st and final stroke of...
2 h
nypost.com
Colin Jost cracks awkward joke about wife Scarlett Johansson’s body on ‘SNL’
The joke was delivered during a traditional bit that requires Jost and Weekend Update co-host Michael Che to write offensive jokes for each other.
3 h
nypost.com
Ella Steven’s late goal leads Gotham over Red Stars to push unbeaten streak to five
By the time Gotham's 2-1 win against the Chicago Red Stars (5-3-1) ended, it was Ella Stevens that was the center of their celebration against her former team from the past three years.
3 h
nypost.com