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2024er Sportbriefmarken unterstützen die Sporthilfe

Verbandsbüro - Ihr Experte für Verbands-und Vereinsmarketing

2024er Sportbriefmarken unterstützen die Sporthilfe

Am heutigen Tag wurde im historischen Ambiente des Berliner Olympiastadions eine außergewöhnliche Briefmarkenserie enthüllt, die nicht nur Philatelisten, sondern auch Sportenthusiasten begeistern wird. Unter dem Motto "Für den Sport - Faszination der Spiele" präsentieren Sporthilfe und Deutsche Post in Kooperation mit dem Bundesministerium der Finanzen eine Sonderedition, die von drei legendären Athletinnen und Athleten aus Deutschland gestaltet wurde: Tennis-Ikone Michael Stich, Fußball-Olympiasiegerin Josephine Henning und die ehemalige Eishockey-Spitzenathletin Maren Valenti. Ihre künstlerischen Interpretationen, die vom olympischen Geist und ihren persönlichen Erlebnissen geprägt sind, bieten einen einzigartigen Perspektivwechsel auf die Faszination der Olympischen und Paralympischen Spiele. Mit dieser Aktion unterstreicht die Sporthilfe einmal mehr ihre bedeutende Rolle bei der Förderung von Nachwuchs- und Spitzensportlern in Deutschland, wobei die Erlöse aus dem Verkauf der Briefmarken direkt in die Unterstützung fließen. Ein inspirierendes Zusammenspiel von Kunst, Sport und sozialem Engagement, das die nationale Bedeutung des Sports auf besondere Weise würdigt.

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Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie to star in new reality show together
Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie used social media to tease audiences with a new reality TV show. The friends originally appeared in five seasons of "The Simple Life".
foxnews.com
The GOP’s Strange Silence on an Indicted Democrat
Earlier this month, federal prosecutors bestowed on Republicans what seemed like an election-year gift: charging a senior House Democrat in a competitive district with accepting $600,000 in bribes and acting as a foreign agent. For a party clinging to a threadbare majority in the House, the indictment offered an obvious opportunity for an America First attack. Representative Henry Cuellar of Texas, who prosecutors say acted on behalf of a Mexican bank and the government of Azerbaijan, is now the second Democrat in recent months—after Senator Bob Menendez of New Jersey—to be accused of doing the bidding of foreign interests.Yet in the past week, the GOP has been strangely quiet about Cuellar. No one in the party leadership has denounced him. Speaker Mike Johnson, fending off an attempt on his job from the far right, certainly could have used the distraction. But he hasn’t mentioned Cuellar once. Donald Trump even praised him, suggesting that President Joe Biden had sent the FBI after “the Respected Democrat Congressman” because Cuellar had criticized the administration’s handling of the U.S.-Mexico border. (Cuellar denies the charges.)[David A. Graham: Bob Menendez never should have been senator this long in the first place]In interviews over the past several days, strategists in both parties posited theories as to why Republicans were passing up an easy attack on Democrats. The most popular comes back to Trump: The GOP is worried that calling out Cuellar will draw more attention to its leader’s legal woes. But that hypothesis goes only so far. Trump’s trials could hardly take up more attention than they already do, and today’s Republicans don’t typically shy away from being called hypocrites. The more troubling explanation might have less to do with the GOP’s self-interest than with the state of political corruption in America—and it suggests that lawmakers might start to abandon even the pretense of policing themselves.The Republican reaction to Cuellar’s charges has fallen well short of the deluge some Democrats expected. The National Republican Congressional Committee has sent out emails pressuring House Democrats to call on their colleague to resign, and multiple party operatives told me that they would use the indictment to try to unseat him this fall. “There’s no doubt this is a gold mine,” Zack Roday, a Republican consultant working on a number of House and Senate races this year, told me. But few Republicans have called for Cuellar to be sanctioned. One of them, ironically, is the GOP’s most infamous exile, former Representative George Santos, the accused fraudster who was expelled from the House in December. He wants his ex-colleagues to mete out the same punishment to Cuellar.Just one current member of Congress has called on Cuellar to resign, and that was a Democrat: the former presidential contender Dean Phillips of Minnesota. Cuellar has voluntarily given up his committee assignments while he fights the charges, but he’s said he won’t resign. Democratic leaders have stood by him as he prepares to run for an 11th term in the House this fall.On some level, the GOP’s restraint is appropriate, Craig Holman, a lobbyist with the good-government group Public Citizen, told me. Like Menendez and any citizen charged with a crime, Cuellar is entitled to a presumption of innocence rather than a partisan rush to judgment. (Santos represented a special case; his expulsion was based less on federal charges than on a damning report by the House Ethics Committee.)Still, few people I interviewed attributed Republicans’ reticence to a sudden outbreak of responsible governance. Indeed, the GOP’s response—or lack thereof—has been disquieting to ethics watchdogs. “The charges are extremely serious,” Noah Bookbinder, the president of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), told me. “It’s certainly easy conduct to condemn when you have an official who is charged with working on behalf of foreign governments, particularly if you’re a party that has a lot of rhetoric about America First.” He noted that the House voted to expel Santos even though his alleged wrongdoing did not implicate national security. “There’s a little bit of whiplash here,” Bookbinder said.Republicans also trod lightly after Menendez was charged last year, but the reasons were more apparent. Democrats abandoned him almost immediately, and Republicans would have gained little from Menendez’s resignation or expulsion, because his replacement would have been appointed by the governor of his state—a Democrat. (Menendez, whose trial begins today, has pleaded not guilty to the charges.)Trump’s influence on the GOP’s reaction to Cuellar’s indictment is unmistakable. “Overall, the Republican Party is on fairly shaky ground on ethical issues given who the de facto leader of their party is,” Aaron Scherb, the senior director for legislative affairs at the good-government group Common Cause, told me. “I’m sure to some extent they’re worried about being called out for hypocrisy.” Historically, members of Congress have been wary of policing corruption in the legislature—even among their opposition—for a similar reason: fear that they’ll subject themselves to greater scrutiny. Yet, as Bookbinder pointed out, the former president and his allies “have rarely been reluctant to accuse others of things that he does himself.”[David A. Graham: Trump flaunts his corruption]Bookbinder told me that in the years since Trump’s election, the GOP’s retreat on ethics has gone beyond rhetoric. Advocates at CREW have found that Republican lawmakers are becoming more reluctant to co-sponsor anti-corruption legislation, even those who had prioritized the issue before Trump became president.Because Trump remains a viable White House contender despite his many indictments and ethical breaches, Republicans may have concluded that voters simply don’t care all that much about corruption. What hasn’t worked on Trump, this thinking goes, won’t work on Cuellar. If that logic prevails, Congress would lose any political incentive to hold itself accountable.Another possible explanation for Republicans’ silence is that Trump’s jeremiads against the “weaponization” of the Justice Department have penetrated not just the GOP electorate but its officials as well. “We actually do believe the Justice Department is corrupt,” one high-ranking Republican campaign strategist told me, speaking on the condition of anonymity to describe the party’s private thinking. The strategist said that even though Cuellar is a Democrat, many Republicans do not want to build on the precedent the House set by expelling Santos before he had been convicted of a crime. “People are nervous,” the strategist said.But Republicans may have other reasons for holding their fire on Cuellar. One of the most conservative Democrats remaining in the House, he frequently partners with Republicans on legislation and occasionally votes with them on abortion and border policy. “We like him!” the strategist told me. “He’s our token Democrat. He’s good on the border.”That might be the most charitable explanation for why top Republicans have given Cuellar a pass. But it is not the one that some ethics advocates are inclined to believe. “It’s a sign of a healthy democracy when corrupt conduct draws consequences, and that starts with condemnation,” Bookbinder said. And when politicians hesitate to call out corruption because their leaders are also potentially corrupt? “That’s a sign of a less healthy democracy.”
theatlantic.com
3 killed, 18 wounded in shooting at May Day party in Alabama
Three people were killed and 18 were wounded over the weekend during a shooting at a party in south Alabama
abcnews.go.com
Donald Trump Jr. visited Peter Navarro in federal prison: Sources
Donald Trump Jr. visited Peter Navarro in Miami federal prison, according to sources familiar with the situation.
abcnews.go.com
Conan O’Brien Keeps It Old-School
It took Conan O’Brien less than 90 seconds to upend Hot Ones. The YouTube interview show’s gimmick is simple: Celebrities eat successively hotter chicken wings while the host, Sean Evans, asks them well-researched questions about their life and career. Most guests are happy to endure painful spice while answering never-before-asked questions. O’Brien, on the other hand, shamelessly infused his own zany sensibility into the show’s design by immediately introducing “Dr. Arroyo,” his personal doctor and a man of dubious skill, credibility, and education. At one point, the character, played by O’Brien’s longtime writer José Arroyo, monitored his health by choking him to locate his pulse.By the episode’s end, O’Brien had broken the mold of the show entirely. Whereas guests typically approach the final stages with caution, O’Brien recklessly poured extra hot sauce onto the already heavily coated wings, before drinking it straight from the bottle. When asked to promote his new show into camera, he resembled a Dionysian jester, his tear- and snot-stained face turned a deeper shade of red as a stream of milk dribbled from his open mouth. “You have to commit to the bit,” Evans told him at one point, impressed by his diligence. “It’s not a bit!” O’Brien exclaimed in response. “This is life!”At the same time, O’Brien gamely answered all of Evans’s questions. He offered casual insights from years of hosting late-night television; he told an amusing, harrowing tale of a water buffalo wreaking havoc during rehearsal after he’d foolishly tried to ride it. He explained his modus operandi while proudly exhibiting it at every turn. This was standard for how O’Brien has carried himself, across his career: He respects rituals and conventions, but finds a way to mold them in his image. The instantly viral Hot Ones appearance, and the new travel show Conan O’Brien Must Go, reveal a somewhat obvious yet still remarkable truth about a man who’s been in the public eye for three decades: O’Brien is one of our last classic entertainers, and he represents a connection to an era of showbiz that has long since evaporated. His unique cross-generational appeal befits his particular arc, largely because his fingerprints have been left on so many touchstones—his omnipresence ensures that groups of 20-somethings have been “discovering” O’Brien since 1993.I say “discovering” because, despite his name recognition, that is still how it feels to tap into O’Brien’s comedic wavelength. Born roughly between the Boomers and Generation X, O’Brien helped bridge the gap between old-school comedy and its speedy postmodern deconstruction. He got his big break writing for a long-running comedy series (Saturday Night Live), helped define the voice of another (The Simpsons), and led a late-night show for 28 years. He lived in the shadow of David Letterman, who defined doing the thing while making fun of it in the late-night space, but the key difference between the two was that Letterman developed his persona in front of the camera, while O’Brien built his among other writers long before he was ever given his own show. Late-night television, as pioneered by hosts such as Johnny Carson and Steve Allen, was designed to comfort, to provide a cozy hearth where guests and viewers alike could feel at ease. Though O’Brien always wanted his guests to feel welcome, his style was possessed with a comedy writer’s exacting, imaginative silliness, which helped enliven the conservative format into something distinct and fresh.Much as he did with his Hot Ones appearance, he’s built a reputation on shaping established institutions in his own worldview, which allows him to move across broadcast and cable television, between various time slots and format changes, and, with his now-popular podcast, into different entertainment mediums. Many hosts feel most comfortable onstage in front of a studio audience, because of the arena’s inherent guardrails and clear power dynamics. But O’Brien frequently comes alive outside the studio, demonstrating a particular skill at worming his way into any environment and mining comedy from within.Conan O’Brien Must Go, his latest travel special, serves as a prime example. The show’s premise is that O’Brien travels to his fans’ home countries and spends time with them on their turf, but it’s really an excuse to film improvised interactions. He records a song with a Norwegian rap duo, visits the Damnoen Saduak Floating Market in Thailand, and takes a tango lesson in Argentina, among other experiential excursions. It’s the best-looking, most expensive series he’s ever made, but O’Brien’s make-them-laugh-at-all-costs approach remains the same.[Read: What Conan O’Brien means to late-night’s future]As with all sketch comedy, the results are hit-or-miss. Sometimes O’Brien finds a groove in a certain setting, such as when he’s asked to appear in an Irish soap opera; other scenes drag because the core joke can’t sustain itself, like when he uses a gigantic pair of fake legs to take on multiple Muay Thai boxers at the same time. Nevertheless, the show’s familiar, flexible structure allows him to showcase his well-crafted on-air persona, and his easy chemistry with everyone, including members of his staff—whom he frequently puts on camera—and complete strangers. And whenever O’Brien engages with someone who implicitly understands how to play off this affable, somewhat arrogant goofball—like a local Norwegian man who calmly insists that O’Brien’s traditional Norwegian outfit looks ridiculous—the show comes alive.In many ways, O’Brien’s true gift lies in his combination of an entertainer’s desperate desire to be liked and an antagonistic streak. Amid the outpouring of praise he receives for being such a nice guy, it’s easy to forget how much O’Brien enjoys acting like a jovial bully. Like a more juvenile, hammier Don Rickles, he can mock people to their face and embrace them at the same time—on the new show, he tells a small Argentinian child that his affect resembles Ted Bundy’s. O’Brien’s ability to make strangers feel comfortable being the butt of the joke comes from his eagerness to mock himself; he immediately conveys to the public that there’s camaraderie in becoming a punch line. “You can’t stop me from being who I am,” O’Brien tells Evans on Hot Ones, after the latter tries to warn him against liberally licking hot sauce off his fingers. This casual declaration might be the real reason for O’Brien’s cockroachlike longevity in an unforgiving, ever-changing industry. Like many others, I remember staying up too late to watch O’Brien’s Late Night show and wondering how he was able to pull off such flights of inspired fancy; it always seemed as though he was getting away with something. More than 30 years into his career, it still feels like he’s pulling off a trick behind somebody else’s back. Maybe that’s because, to paraphrase the man himself, it’s not a bit. It’s just his life.
theatlantic.com
Sen. Bob Menendez’s corruption trial, explained
Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) and his wife Nadine Arslanian arrive for a state dinner in honor of India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi, at the White House in Washington, DC, on June 22, 2023. | Stefani Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images Was the Senate Foreign Relations Committee chair bought by the Egyptian government? Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) is on trial for corruption — again. The trial for Menendez kicked off Monday, as the former Senate Foreign Relations Committee chair faces allegations from federal prosecutors that he and his wife Nadine accepted hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes to benefit three business associates, as well as the governments of Egypt and Qatar. Prosecutors have asserted that Menendez and Nadine accepted “cash, gold, payments toward a home mortgage, compensation for a low-or-no-show job, a luxury vehicle, and other things of value” from the business associates. They’ve said federal agents found almost half a million dollars in cash during a search of the couple’s home (including some inside Menendez’s jackets), as well as more than $100,000 worth of gold bars. In return, prosecutors claim, Menendez did favors for the foreign governments his associates were in business with: Egpyt and Qatar. Prosecutors also allege that Menendez tried to scuttle investigations into two of the associates. Menendez has defiantly denied the charges, but he has stepped down as chair of the Foreign Relations Committee and declined to run for reelection as a Democrat —though he added the caveat that, if acquitted, he might jump back in the race as an “independent Democrat.” Rep. Andy Kim (D-NJ) is the frontrunner to succeed him. Menendez and Nadine were originally set to face trial together, but she requested and received a postponement for health reasons. There is some intrigue around this, as filings from Menendez’s legal team suggest his defense at trial may involve foisting the blame on his wife — an “I had no idea my wife was accepting so many pricey presents” kind of thing. But the evidence against Menendez appears extensive and damning. Prosecutors quote repeatedly from text messages exchanged among the alleged conspirators, and even from internet searches by Menendez (including “how much is one kilo of gold worth”). And they spend a great deal of time pointing out how specific gifts or payments happened immediately before or after Menendez intervened in a way the businessmen wanted. Menendez did end up beating separate corruption charges back in 2015, when the jury at his trial deadlocked — but soon, we will learn whether his luck has run out. Bob Menendez’s rise to power, and his first indictment, explained The son of Cuban immigrants, Menendez rose to power in the Democratic machine of Hudson County, New Jersey, serving as a mayor and then a member of Congress. Corruption rumors have dogged him since he was first appointed to the US Senate in 2006. When he was running for a full term that year, word leaked that federal prosecutors were scrutinizing a nonprofit he had helped get millions in federal grant money — and that had paid him hundreds of thousands of dollars in rent. No charges were brought, and Menendez won a full term. He quickly rose through the Democratic ranks in the Senate and became chair of the influential Senate Foreign Relations Committee in 2013. A standard-issue Democrat on most domestic issues, he was sometimes a thorn in the Obama administration’s side on foreign policy, criticizing deals Obama struck with Iran and Cuba. He also started living large, taking lavish trips and accepting gifts funded by a campaign donor, wealthy Florida eye doctor Salomon Melgen. This again drew federal prosecutors’ scrutiny, and in 2015, Menendez got his first indictment on bribery and corruption charges. But prosecutors’ case ran into a problem. They presented ample evidence that Menendez used the power of his office to help Melgen out — he advocated on Melgen’s behalf in a billing dispute he was having with Medicare, and intervened in various matters pertaining to a cargo screening contract Melgen had with the Dominican Republic. But they needed to prove a quid pro quo — that Menendez was performing “official acts” specifically in return for the gifts and donations. And defense attorneys argued that they were just good friends helping each other out. Their argument prevailed: In 2017, the prosecution ended in a mistrial due to a deadlocked jury. Menendez now seemed vindicated. He soon regained his former post as top Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee (he had stepped back from it while his prosecution unfolded). There was no serious Democratic effort to dislodge him; he only faced an unknown in his 2018 primary, though he got a surprisingly weak 62 percent of the vote against her — and he beat his Republican challenger pretty easily in the general election. Prosecutors’ explosive allegations against Menendez Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) and his wife Nadine Arslanian arrive for a reception honoring the Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis and his wife Mareva Mitsotakis in the East Room of the White House on May 16, 2022, in Washington, DC. Also in 2018, Menendez started dating the woman who would soon become his second wife — and alleged partner in crime — Nadine Arslanian. Before Nadine began dating Menendez, she had “lived a mainly private life” focused on raising two children rather than working, and had struggled financially after a divorce, the New York Times reported. She was unemployed before dating Menendez, and faced foreclosure on her home soon after — so she needed money. Soon, the money — and more — started rolling in. Prosecutors argue that it did so because Menendez and his wife made corrupt deals with three businessmen. 1) Wael Hana, his halal business, and the Egyptian government Wael “Will” Hana was a longtime friend of Nadine’s who had ties to Egyptian government officials. Shortly after Nadine began dating Menendez in 2018, she helped Hana arrange a series of meetings between Egyptian officials, the senator, and Nadine, often discussing arms sales and aid. Per prosecutors, Hana promised Nadine payments in exchange for facilitating these meetings and said he’d give her “a low-or-no-show job” at his company. In spring 2019, Hana scored: The Egyptian government granted his company an exclusive monopoly on certifying that US food exports to Egypt were compliant with halal standards in Islamic law, even though he had no experience in this business area. Prosecutors do not say specifically why they believe Hana obtained this contract, but the implication is that his ties to Menendez were crucial. And Nadine sounded excited — per the indictment, she texted Menendez, “Seems like halal went through. It might be a fantastic 2019 all the way around.” The US Department of Agriculture looked askance at the news, believing it would raise costs for US meat suppliers, so multiple officials contacted the Egyptian government to object. Menendez then called a high-level department official and demanded they back off. And once money was rolling in to Hana’s company, he began paying Nadine — including paying, through his company, $23,000 of her mortgage that was being foreclosed on. Prosecutors claim that, in total, Hana paid hundreds of thousands of dollars in checks, cash, and gold to the Menendezes. In return, they claim, Menendez used his office to help the government of Egypt in various ways, including by providing non-public information about US embassy personnel and planned changes in arms policy. At one point, for instance, senators were holding up military aid to Egypt in protest of their government’s handling of a 2015 incident where April Corley, an American roller skater, was shot and maimed by a (US-provided) Egyptian military helicopter. Per the superseding indictment, after a meeting with Hana and Egyptian officials, Menendez searched Corley’s name. One week later, an Egyptian official texted Hana in Arabic that, if Menendez helped resolve the Corley incident, “he will sit very comfortably.” Hana answered: “Orders, consider it done.” All this, in prosecutors’ telling, amounted to a conspiracy where the Egyptian government effectively bought the Senate Foreign Relations Committee chair — with Hana as the middleman. Hana will face trial alongside Menendez. 2) Jose Uribe’s legal trouble, and a Mercedes-Benz Separately, Hana also connected the Menendezes with Jose Uribe, another businessman working in trucking and insurance (and who had previously been convicted of fraud). Uribe had some associates in legal trouble, with one already being prosecuted by the New Jersey Attorney General’s office and one being investigated by that same office, and he was concerned the cases could implicate him. Hana told the senator and Nadine about all this, and soon afterward, Menendez called the New Jersey attorney’s office, urging them to wrap up the prosecution. Meanwhile, Nadine had gotten into a car accident and needed a new car, and texts suggest that Uribe had promised to pay for it. Eventually, he gave Nadine $15,000 that she used for a down payment on a Mercedez-Benz convertible (after which Nadine texted him, “I will never forget this”) and continued to make monthly payments on the car afterward. Prosecutors argue that this all amounts to Menendez trying “to disrupt New Jersey state criminal matters” in exchange for a car. Uribe was initially indicted alongside Menendez, but he has since pleaded guilty and will likely testify against Menendez at the trial. 3) The prosecution of Fred Daibes, and the Qatari goverment Finally, there’s Fred Daibes, a longtime fundraiser for Menendez, who is also facing trial alongside the senator. Daibes had two things going on. First, Daibes was being prosecuted for bank fraud by the US Attorney’s office for New Jersey, and he wanted that prosecution to go away. With President Biden set to take office in 2021, it was time for a new US Attorney. Traditionally, senators from a state are deeply influential on the US attorney’s choice. Menendez, prosecutors say, badly wanted it to be someone who would go easy on Daibes. He interviewed one candidate, attorney Philip Sellinger, and urged him to do so. When Sellinger said he’d probably have to recuse from the Daibes case, Menendez said he wouldn’t recommend him for the post, per the indictment. Later, a Menendez adviser spoke to Sellinger about the case again, and the adviser reported back to Menendez that he might not have to recuse after all. Menendez eventually did recommend Sellinger for the post, and he was confirmed (and did end up recusing, to the senator’s frustration). The second thing Daibes had going on was that he was seeking a big investment in a real estate project from a Qatari royal family member. Menendez initially connected the two, and while the investment was under consideration, Menendez “made multiple public statements supporting the Government of Qatar” — making sure to send them to Daibes so he could send them to the Qataris. Daibes messaged Menendez pictures of luxury wristwatches, asking Menendez which one he wanted, and also messaged him requesting updates on a Senate resolution supportive of Qatar. At one point, Menendez and Nadine returned from a trip to Qatar and Egypt, and Daibes’s driver gave them a ride back to their house. The next day, prosecutors say Menendez did a web search for “how much is one kilo of gold worth.” In March 2022, Nadine brought two one-kilogram gold bars (then worth $60,000 each) to a jeweler to be sold. The serial numbers on the gold bars, per prosecutors, indicate Daibes had previously possessed them. Agents who later searched Menendez’s home discovered an envelope full of cash with Daibes’s driver’s fingerprints and Daibes’s DNA and return address. What it all means It’s pretty rare these days to get an old-fashioned bribery scandal at this level of national politics. Of course, there’s endless amounts of “legal corruption” going around. Politicians regularly do favors to donors who fund their campaigns, since this is legal as long as there’s no direct quid pro quo. Ex-politicians or officials become lobbyists in industries they’d overseen. Foreign governments pay Donald Trump’s businesses. Hunter Biden rakes in big bucks for questionable work. Justice Clarence Thomas takes luxury trips. But even compared to Menendez’s last indictment — based on his accepting trips and gifts in a Clarence Thomas-like way — this seems to be at a new level. Envelopes of cash and gold bars for a sitting national politician seem like something out of an earlier era. The Democratic Party stuck by Menendez during his first indictment back in 2015 — when, notably, Republican Chris Christie was governor of New Jersey and would have filled Menendez’s seat if he resigned. Some may also have feared crossing the famously vindictive senator. This time around, they bailed, with top leaders calling on Menendez to resign. He refused, but his polling numbers plummeted and he eventually said he wouldn’t run as a Democrat again. Yet he’s left the door open to jump back in the race as an independent if he’s exonerated. Is this the final act of Bob Menendez’s political career or is there another twist coming? Update, May 13, 2024, 11:30 am ET: This article was originally published on September 22, 2023, and has been updated for the beginning of Menendez’s trial.
vox.com
Cowboys' Micah Parsons weighs in on NBA-NFL player debate: 'It ain’t hard to dunk'
Dallas Cowboys pass rusher Micah Parsons pushed back former NBA guard Lou Williams' assertion that the NBA-NFL player debate isn't a "physicality conversation."
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foxnews.com
Big Money Soccer Player Edgar Ié Might Actually Be His Twin Brother
Flaviu Buboi/GettyA former FC Barcelona player is accused of deceiving his new professional team by secretly sending his twin to play in his stead, a bizarre bait-and-switch that’s left the pro soccer world stunned.Edgar Ié signed with the Romanian football club Dinamo București in February, but the team was baffled when he arrived speaking no English. Though Ié has Guinea-Bissau and Portuguese citizenship, he’s spent significant time in Spain, Turkey, France, and the Netherlands—raising doubts about why the player on the pitch could only speak Portuguese.Still, the club let Ié, 30, play as they investigated. Ié took the pitch in five matches before club leaders, suspicious of his identity, asked him for his driver’s license to verify he was, in fact, the player who signed. Ié refused.Read more at The Daily Beast.
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thedailybeast.com
Steve Buscemi spotted with black eye, swollen face after random NYC attack
Actor Steve Buscemi was spotted with a black eye and bruising on his chin in his first appearance since getting slugged in a random attack in Kips Bay last week. The 66-year-old “Boardwalk Empire” actor was sporting a black eye and a swollen chin while shooting a commercial in Soho on Saturday. Buscemi could be...
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nypost.com
Jennifer Lawrence Takes Mike Pence to Task Over Conversion Therapy
Bryan Bedder/Getty Images for GLAADJennifer Lawrence has chilled out a little since the peak of her self-deprecating relatable-girl interview era, but she can still be relied upon to deliver some key zingers when it matters. On Saturday, for example, Lawrence delivered a speech at the GLAAD Awards in New York City in which she made her disdain for former Vice President Mike Pence very obvious. “He’s in New York tonight... receiving a Kid’s Choice Award for weirdest dick,” she told the audience, breaking into laughter. “I didn’t write that one.”“Hi gays,” was how Lawrence, who was attending the GLAAD event to honor queer country star Orville Peck, began her speech. “I love seeing so many humans who can top their field while still being power bottoms.”“I love the gay community. In fact, I was in love with a homosexual. I tried to convert him for years, but now I know conversion therapy doesn’t work,” she said. “Did you hear me, Mike Pence? I said conversion therapy isn’t real, even though I know you think it worked on you.”Read more at The Daily Beast.
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thedailybeast.com
Enjoy 50% off Lovers sex toys for a limited time
Wand-erful times are ahead!
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nypost.com
California mom dies saving drowning daughter just before Mother's Day: sheriff
A California mother died saving her drowning daughter in the San Joaquin River May 9, the Stanislaus County Sheriff's Office said.
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foxnews.com
21 best cocktail dresses for every budget and style for summer 2024 events
It's time to get full glam — for wherever you're headed.
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nypost.com
Jason Kelce at Eagles’ facility ‘almost every day’ after NFL retirement
It seems the Eagles are very much a part of Jason Kelce's post-retirement plans.
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nypost.com
King Charles reveals 1 strange side effect of his cancer treatment
King Charles III announced his cancer diagnosis in February.
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nypost.com
NYC women vote for hottest first responders at wild new dating events
"It’s so difficult to find [a] connection, and dating websites just aren’t cutting it for a lot of singles," relationships expert Alana Carvalho said.
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nypost.com
Kazakhstani ex-government official sentenced for wife's torture and murder in Central Asia
Kazakhstan’s Supreme Court has convicted a former government official of torturing and brutally murdering his wife and sentenced him to prison, officials say.
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foxnews.com
Childish Gambino announces ‘The New World Tour,’ 2 NY shows. Get tickets
The rapper/actor/writer/director/comedian will be at the Barclays Center on Aug. 26-27.
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nypost.com
South Carolina woman Mica Miller's husband says he tried to 'raise her from the dead' during eulogy
South Carolina pastor John-Paul Miller on Saturday gave a eulogy for his late wife, Mica Miller, who died by suicide on April 27, saying he tried to "raise her from the dead."
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foxnews.com
Hundreds of thousands forced to flee again as Israel pushes into Rafah
Israel's battle against Hamas has forced nearly 360,000 people to flee from a city they were told only months ago to seek refuge in.
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cbsnews.com
There’s an Insidious Legal Movement to Make Pregnant Women Second-Class Citizens
And the Supreme Court is poised to add fuel to the fire.
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slate.com
Gisele Bündchen shares rare photo with 5 sisters and late mom on Mother’s Day: ‘She was an incredible role model’
Vânia Nonnenmacher died in January, with the supermodel writing via Instagram that her late parent remains her "guiding light" in parenting.
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nypost.com
Childish Gambino drops 'Atavista,' the 'finished version' of '3.15.20,' and announces tour
Childish Gambino (a.k.a. Donald Glover) released the 'finished' version of his 2020 album '3.15.20' on Sunday as 'Atavista' and will take the music on a world tour.
2 h
latimes.com
Steve Buscemi OK after being punched in face in NYC
"Boardwalk Empire" alum Steve Buscemi is OK after being punched in the face in New York City last week, the actor's rep confirmed.
2 h
abcnews.go.com
New York museum curator detained in Turkey for alleged spider smuggling claims to have government permits
A curator at the American Museum of Natural History was detained at Istanbul Airport while allegedly attempting to smuggle spider and scorpion samples.
2 h
foxnews.com
Harry and Meghan wrap up a very royal looking tour of Nigeria
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex were warmly welcomed in Nigeria, where they wielded celebrity status even as former "working royals."
2 h
cbsnews.com
Trump ahead of Biden in these key swing states: Poll
Former President Trump has the edge in five of the six key battleground states where he was narrowly edged by President Biden four years ago, according to a new poll.
2 h
foxnews.com
UK Foreign Sec. David Cameron rips BBC for not calling Hamas terrorists: ‘What more do they need to do?’
"If you kidnap grandmothers, if you kidnap babies, you rape people, you shoot children in front of their parents, what more do they need to do for the BBC to say, ‘Look, these are terrorists?’" Foreign Secretary David Cameron asked.
2 h
nypost.com
Screaming leads workers to tiger footprints, victim's body
A team was deployed to search for the critically endangered cat after a man was found dead with wounds indicating a tiger attack.
2 h
cbsnews.com
Caitlin Clark opens up on ‘frustrating’ part of Angel Reese rivalry
Caitlin Clark wasn't happy that her and Angel Reese's on-court beef outshined Iowa's NCAA Tournament run this year.
2 h
nypost.com
Jen Psaki forced to edit book after making misleading claim about Biden not checking watch at ceremony
Jen Psaki offered a misleading initial account in her new book of when President Biden was seen looking at his watch during a dignified transfer ceremony.
2 h
foxnews.com
John Krasinski on how fatherhood inspired latest movie,"IF"
Writer, director, and actor John Krasinski declared his latest film, "IF," is his most personal project to date.
2 h
cbsnews.com
Kelly Ripa And Mark Consuelos Recall Their Own “Mortifying” Experiences From The Airport On ‘Live’
The two recalled rushing to make their connecting flight and Consuelos' inability to help a fellow passenger lift their bag.
2 h
nypost.com
Must-know house accessibility tips for older, independent adults
Experts stress the importance of modifying houses for safety to allow adults to stay in their homes for longer as residents get older and mobility becomes restricted.
2 h
foxnews.com
San Francisco under fire for program giving booze to homeless alcoholics: 'Where's the recovery in all this?'
Recovering addict and recovery advocate Tom Wolf said San Francisco's "Managed Alcohol Program" misses the mark when taxpayer funds could go toward other programs to combat addiction.
2 h
foxnews.com
‘Below Deck’ Exclusive Clip: Dylan Piérre De Villiers Plays Truth Or Dare With Bikini-Clad Charter Guests
Dylan Piérre De Villiers might wanna work on those dance moves…
2 h
nypost.com
Filip Chytil skates ahead of Game 5 in positive Rangers sign
The Rangers got some much-needed good news Monday morning.
2 h
nypost.com
Ukraine's Kharkiv residents remain defiant as Russia launches new offensive
Despite intense fighting in the Kharkiv region, residents of Ukraine's second largest city, Kharkiv, have remained defiant. The city experienced a temporary respite on Sunday.
2 h
foxnews.com
The race question follows Caitlin Clark to the WNBA: ‘Boils my blood’
Clark is involuntarily the focus of discussions about race and her transition to professional basketball. Though she hasn’t said anything to fuel the Black-white narrative surrounding her meteoric rise, talks about a double standard are being had.
2 h
nypost.com
Drew Barrymore Admits She Paid In Cash, Not Tickets, For “I Love Pizza” Socks At Dave And Buster’s
"I knew my daughters — I wasn’t gonna ask for their tickets."
2 h
nypost.com
Assistant school principal among 4 arrested in cold case triple murder
All three victims were tortured and killed before their bodies were put into a 2010 Dodge Charger, authorities said.
2 h
cbsnews.com
Dog Joins Owner's Mom in Hilariously 'Shaming' Her for Laundry Mishap
A pet was caught on camera next to the owner's mother in showing disapproval at her housekeeping.
2 h
newsweek.com
RHONJ Recap: Is Jenn Fessler and Teresa Giudice’s friendship a ‘shore’ thing?
Welcome to our new “Virtual Reali-tea” reality recaps! Evan and Danny are recapping “The Real Housewives of New Jersey” season 14, episode 2, from start to finish just for you! They break down the entire episode, plus nominate who they think deserves the MVP award of the night! Check out the full recap now! Subscribe...
2 h
nypost.com
Millennials just ‘can’t do it’: Weird quirk that makes folks over 30 sick to their stomachs
Thirty-somethings just can’t phone it in. 
2 h
nypost.com
Psychic Medium Located Missing Mom's Dead Body, Daughter Says
Theresa Jones, 56, was found in a creek after she disappeared from her home in Bernice, Louisiana.
2 h
newsweek.com
Miranda Cosgrove Details Her Own ‘Baby Reindeer’ Experience With Stalker Who Set Himself On Fire Outside Of The Home She Still Lives In
The traumatic experience took place eight years ago.
2 h
nypost.com
Trump, defenders show up in force ahead of Cohen testimony
Former President Trump was flanked by Republican politicians and his legal team ahead of going into court Monday, when witness Michael Cohen is expected to deliver testimony.
2 h
foxnews.com
2 Americans among 20 arrested at protest over nation of Georgia's future
Thousands of people in Georgia are worried about what they see as their government's effort to let the Caucasus nation "slowly become Russia."
2 h
cbsnews.com