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GOP senator eyes legislation to defund ‘propagandist’ NPR after suspension of whistleblower

Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., is planning to propose new legislative action that would threaten to cut National Public Radio's (NPR) federal funding if passed.
Read full article on: nypost.com
Stay organized with these no-slip velvet hangers from Amazon
Clean up your life one hanger at a time.
nypost.com
Bill Maher slams Biden’s ‘anachronistic’ speech to black graduates at Morehouse College: ‘We’re not in the past’
"Real Time" host Bill Maher knocked President Biden over the commencement address he gave to Black graduates at Morehouse College, suggesting his comments about racism in America are outdated. 
nypost.com
Go woke, go broke: Boy Scouts’ swerve left is driving families away
The Boy Scouts of America has caved to the wokists — and, surprise surprise, its membership is down the tubes. 
nypost.com
Donald Trump deletes video post on Truth Social referencing ‘unified Reich’
Former President Donald Trump deleted a video that referenced a "unified Reich" from his Truth Social account that sparked outrage on Monday.
nypost.com
Ex-NSC official calls to defund ICC's 'kangaroo court' over Netanyahu arrest bid: 'We're going to be next'
Ex-National Security Council official Richard Goldberg said the International Criminal Court (ICC) should be defunded before it targets the United States.
foxnews.com
Giants rookie Malik Nabers throws shade at team’s new throwback uniforms
The Giants' first-round pick isn't a fan of their new throwback jerseys.
nypost.com
Kevin Costner's ex moves on with family friend, Jessica Biel says she nearly quit Hollywood
The Fox News Entertainment newsletter brings you the latest Hollywood headlines, celebrity interviews and stories from Los Angeles and beyond.
foxnews.com
Many familiar names on roster as U..S. women's soccer team readies for Olympics
Emma Hayes called up her first roster as coach of the U.S. women’s national team and it includes a lot of familiar names.
latimes.com
James Carville tells Biden to stop complaining about coverage of age: The 'issue is suffocating him'
Democratic strategist James Carville said Monday that the age issue was "suffocating" President Biden during an interview with MSNBC's Jen Psaki.
foxnews.com
What Time Is ‘The Good Doctor’ On Tonight? How To Watch ‘The Good Doctor’ Series Finale Live And Online
It's time to say goodbye to Dr. Shaun Murphy.
nypost.com
‘I think she thinks that she’s still good’: Ayo Edebiri reveals how Jennifer Lopez reacted to her ‘scam’ career diss
Ayo Edebiri had to apologize for her insulting comments about Jennifer Lopez when they filmed "SNL" together earlier this year.
nypost.com
Stay cool with the Igloo Polar Hard Cooler this Memorial Day weekend, now 20% off on Amazon
Cool off with Igloo this Memorial Day!
nypost.com
Scientists Are Very Worried About NASA’s Mars Plan
In the Martian lowlands, one rocky crater is dotted with small holes, winding from the floor to the rim like breadcrumbs. Their clean and cylindrical appearance is distinctly unnatural, suggesting the work of aliens—which it is. For three years, a robot from Earth has been collecting samples of rock and soil into six-inch-long tubes, whirring and crackling on the otherwise quiet planet. The robot, a rover named Perseverance, has deposited some of the samples on the Martian surface in sealed tubes. The others, about two dozen so far, remain stored inside the rover's belly.Perseverance will stay on Mars forever, but the majority of its carefully packaged samples are meant to return to Earth. The Mars Sample Return mission, known as MSR for short, is one of the boldest undertakings in NASA history, as consequential as it is complicated. The endeavor, which involves sending an extra spacecraft to the red planet to retrieve the samples, serves as a precursor to getting future astronauts home from Mars. It’s a test of whether the United States can keep up with China’s space program, which is scheduled to return its own Mars samples in the 2030s. It could uncover new information about our planetary neighbor’s history, and reveal a picture of the cosmic wilderness that was the early solar system. Some scientists hope the dusty fragments will contain tiny fossilized microbes that would prove life once existed on Mars. Those tiny life forms will have been dead for who knows how long—but still would be evidence of a second genesis in our own backyard. If, that is, the samples ever make it back to Earth. NASA officials recently announced that the sample-return effort has become too expensive and fallen worryingly behind schedule. The latest estimated cost of as much as $11 billion is nearly double what experts initially predicted, and the way things are going, the samples won't arrive home until 2040, seven years later than expected. At a press conference last month, NASA chief Bill Nelson repeatedly called the state of the Mars Sample Return mission "unacceptable," a striking chastisement of his own agency, considering that MSR is an in-house effort. Officials have put out a call—to NASA’s own ranks and to private space companies—for “quicker and cheaper” plans that don’t require “huge technological leaps” to bring the samples home.[Read: Scientists really, really want a piece of Mars]NASA officials say that they remain committed to the return effort, but researchers—including the agency’s collaborators who work on the project—are concerned. “The path forward is not clear,” Aileen Yingst, a geologist at the Planetary Science Institute who works on the Perseverance mission, told me. Scientists who study Mars are worried that the mission will be downsized. Scientists who don’t study Mars—and a few who do—are frustrated, because MSR consumes so much of NASA’s budget. Scientists can’t imagine NASA giving up on the mission entirely, but the debacle has even prompted some whispered jokes about China coming along and claiming the tubes on the surface before NASA can fly them home. Last year, an independent review ordered by NASA ominously warned that “by abandoning return of Mars samples to other nations, the U.S. abandons the preeminent role that [President John F. Kennedy] ascribed to the scientific exploration of space.”If and when the MSR tubes come home, their contents could dramatically shift our understanding of Mars. The first NASA spacecraft to land on Mars, in 1976, carried instruments designed to examine Martian soil for evidence of tiny, metabolizing life forms but didn’t find anything conclusive. Some bits of Martian rock, ejected by colliding asteroids, have made it to Earth as meteorites. (And scientists have tried to find proof of life in these, too). But such fragments arrive scorched by atmospheric reentry, their composition altered and contaminated from the journey. Pristine samples are far more tantalizing.MSR would deliver Martian dirt straight from an area that scientists believe holds a promising chance at containing signs of life from 3.5 billion years ago. The Perseverance rover is exploring the shores of what scientists believe was once a lake, at a crater called Jezero, where the sedimentary rock may bear signs of a once-habitable world, or preserved life itself. The samples might also offer hints about Earth’s origin story. The rocks that existed here 4 billion years ago, when the solar system was just getting started, have since been crushed, melted, and eroded away. But Mars, a world lacking plate tectonics and serious weather, still bears rocks from the time of its very formation.[Read: The most overhyped planet in the galaxy]The promise of such samples has been a top research priority for planetary scientists for over a decade. The original plan to do so, devised by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), is accordingly ambitious, involving several different spacecraft to retrieve the capsules, launch them into Martian orbit, and fly them back to Earth. No astronauts are involved, but Mars scientists have likened the mission choreography to the Apollo program in terms of complexity.That plan was apparently destined to unravel from the start. NASA’s independent review found that MSR had “unrealistic budget and schedule expectations from the beginning" and was "organized under an unwieldy structure," with "unclear roles, accountability, and authority.” Technically ambitious missions always cost more, and MSR is arguably one of the most complicated that NASA has ever undertaken. But the scientists who help NASA set exploration priorities have no control over the budgets of the resulting programs—Congress does.Last summer, some congressional appropriators briefly threatened the entire MSR effort with cancellation. This February, facing uncertainty over the money that Congress would allocate for MSR in the next fiscal year, the JPL laid off more than 500 employees. (Congress has since allocated a fraction of what NASA spent on the mission last year.) Thanks to budget concerns, NASA has delayed the launch of a telescope that would monitor potentially hazardous asteroids near Earth, and put on hold a proposed mission to study Earth’s atmosphere and magnetic field.Some scientists fear that MSR will draw resources away from other potential projects to search for life in places that they now believe to be far more promising than Mars. The search for alien life in the solar system has long been guided by water, and in the 1990s, when NASA kicked off a golden age of Mars missions, the red planet’s ice regions seemed appealing. But in the years since, other celestial bodies have become more compelling. A moon of Saturn, Titan, is the only body in the solar system besides Earth that has bodies of liquid on its surface, even if that liquid is methane. Two moons of Jupiter, Europa and Enceladus, are likely icy worlds with subsurface oceans; on the latter, cracks in the ice release plumes of salty water, hinting at something like deep-sea hydrothermal activity on Earth. NASA is launching an orbiting mission to Europa later this year, and the latest survey of planetary scientists advised NASA to start working on another to Enceladus. “If I could go anywhere, I would go to Enceladus,” Brook Nunn, an astrobiologist at the University of Washington, told me.[Read: Mars’s soundscape is strangely beautiful]Even some Mars scientists believe that Mars is no longer the top candidate. Darby Dyar, a planetary geologist at Mount Holyoke College, has spent decades studying Mars. “If anybody should be enthusiastic about the returned samples, it’s me, and I am,” she told me. But now she works on a NASA mission to Venus, a planet that might rival Mars as a candidate for extraterrestrial life, and she says she wouldn’t prioritize MSR over her current research.For scientists who support Mars exploration, MSR is a problem, siphoning funds away from other efforts to study it. “There’s so many aspects to studying a planet that do not involve analyzing small amounts of rocks in the lab,” says Catherine Neish, a planetary scientist at Western University, in Canada, who’s working on an international mission to map the ice deposits on Mars’s polar regions. NASA pulled its financial support from that project in 2022, citing MSR’s cost as part of its motivation. Planetary scientists have recommended prioritizing a mission to drill deep into the ice at the Martian poles, far from Perseverance’s domain, where conditions could be just comfortable enough to support small life forms now.NASA is well aware of the all-consuming nature of MSR. As the mission is redrawn, officials have said they are even willing to consider proposals that would bring home just 10 sample tubes, one-third of the amount initially planned. Lindsay Hays, a program scientist at NASA’s planetary-science division, told me that NASA will seek input from the science community about which sample tubes to return. “NASA has a responsibility to use taxpayer funds in the most effective and efficient way possible,” she said. “But it’s also part of our mandate to the nation to do things that have never been done before.”[Read: Too much of a good thing at NASA]Most planetary scientists aren’t happy with a potentially scaled-back approach either. “You’ve decimated the science, because now you’re not going to get the diversity that you could have if we brought back the full suite of samples,” Phil Christensen, a geologist at Arizona State University who co-chaired the community’s latest decadal survey, told me.A badly delayed sample-return mission would fracture NASA’s grand vision for its Martian future. By the 2040s, NASA intends to be focused not on the red planet’s soil, but on sending astronauts there and, crucially, bringing them back. That operation relies on having successfully practiced launching off from Mars, which NASA hasn’t yet managed with MSR. Instead, the agency is back at the drawing board, hoping to find a way out of an $11 billion pit. Officials expect to finish reviewing new proposals and come to a decision on the mission’s future in the fall. Meanwhile, Perseverance chugs along, excavating the mythical oasis of Jezero Crater with each curated tube.
theatlantic.com
This Outdoor Trampoline from SereneLife is at its lowest price ever today on Amazon
Jump around, and save!
nypost.com
Wrongful conviction hearing starts for Missouri man imprisoned 33 years
A wrongful conviction hearing for Christopher Dunn begins in Missouri. Dunn has spent 33 years in prison for a murder he says he didn't commit.
cbsnews.com
Mayor Adams may revoke Diddy’s key to NYC after ‘chilling’ domestic-abuse video
Mayor Eric Adams says his administration is considering taking back Sean "Diddy" Combs' key to the city after horrifying footage surfaced of the rapper brutally assaulting ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura.
nypost.com
West Virginia transgender athlete defeated girls in track events over 700 times, new legal filing says
A new court filing in a lawsuit against the Biden administration said a transgender track-and-field athlete at a West Virginia middle school displaced girls in competition over 700 times.
foxnews.com
Disney’s Pixar cutting nearly 200 jobs, will focus exclusively on feature films, cut streaming series
Disney CEO Bob Iger has scaled back spending on original streaming content to lift Disney+ to profitability.
nypost.com
Bruce Nordstrom, who helped grow family-led department store chain, dies at 90
Bruce Nordstrom, a retail executive who helped expand his family’s Pacific Northwest department store chain into an upscale national brand, died at his home Saturday.
latimes.com
Laughter at Bengal Cat's Hilarious Way of Getting Revenge on Dog
"Thankfully, he has never gone anywhere else inappropriate," Skeeter's owner from Queensland, Australia, told Newsweek.
newsweek.com
Dad won’t see this gift coming: A temperature-controlled Ember Mug
Drink piping hot coffee, sip after sip.
nypost.com
Construction Complete On New High-Speed Rail Tunnel
A 14-mile high-speed rail tunnel has been finished in China after 10 years.
newsweek.com
The Shenandoah County School Board’s Terrible History Lesson
A Virginia school board voted to reinstate confederate names. It’s a disgraceful chapter of our community’s history, write Sarah Kohrs and Neil Thorne.
time.com
The Reich Stuff
At this point, Americans will believe almost any story about Donald Trump. That is both a strength and a weakness for him. On the one hand, it means that nearly nothing he says, including for example that he wants to be a dictator, penetrates too deeply. On the other hand, it means people rarely extend him the benefit of the doubt, even when it’s warranted.That’s what happened yesterday, when Trump’s Truth Social account posted a video featuring fake newspapers with celebratory imagined headlines about Trump (IT’S A LANDSLIDE! TRUMP WINS!!). Below, a sub-headline referred to “the creation of a unified Reich.” Naturally, the combination of Trump and a “unified Reich” was combustible. “This man is a stain, a Nazi, a pure a [sic] simple garbage of a human being,” fulminated Adam Kinzinger, the former Republican congressman. “Flush Trump down the toilet.” The controversy is illuminating about Trump and the presidential campaign, but perhaps not in the ways that it first appeared.Trump’s account has removed the video, and his campaign said it did not create the video but reposted it from another user. It also said the post was done not by Trump but by a staffer who hadn’t noticed the “Reich” reference. Although Trump has a long history of blaming staffers for foolish posts, the excuse here is plausible. The video appears to have been made using a stock video template available online. And the text that appears in the video—about the “unified Reich”—comes, as the Associated Press notes, from a Wikipedia entry about World War I (“German industrial strength and production had significantly increased after 1871, driven by the creation of a unified Reich”) rather than anything about Nazis. It’s a safe bet that the gospel singer Candi Staton wasn’t aiming to boost Hitler when she used the same template for a video of a song about the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing.[David A. Graham: Trump says he’ll be a dictator “on day one”]This election cycle has seen a slew of stories about how the Trump campaign is far more professionally run and regimented than in 2016 and 2020. That appears to be true, but only in a limited sense. Any competent campaign would have vetted such a video before it reposted it in order to avoid just this kind of mess. But Trump and his team can’t or won’t bother to look carefully at what he (or his staff) reposts on social media, and never have. In 2016, he posted an anti-Semitic meme with a Star of David and then tried to convince people it was a “sheriff’s star.” In 2017, he posted a GIF that showed him body-slamming CNN, created by a Reddit user who, whaddya know, also posted lots of anti-Semitic material. Earlier this year, a brief controversy broke out when Trump posted a video of a convoy of trucks decked out in pro-Trump swag, including an image of a bound and tied Joe Biden on one truck’s tailgate.Despite having served as president for four years, and despite being a gifted political messenger, Trump has never grasped—or perhaps never cared—that sloppy words from someone in his position can be hugely consequential, and he resists guardrails that would protect him.[Read: If Trump wins]Trump’s problem here is that even though his excuse makes sense, he is also an authoritarian who has used anti-Semitic language. Believing that he might have posted subtle Nazi messaging doesn’t require much of a leap. Not only did he attempt to steal the last election and promise to be a dictator, but he has also consistently disregarded checks and balances and suggested “termination” of the Constitution. He called neo-Nazi marchers in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017 “very fine people,” hobnobbed with white nationalists, and delivered menacing remarks about American Jews who do not support him—on Rosh Hashanah, no less. His former chief of staff says Trump once told him that “Hitler did some good things.” It’s no coincidence that so many of those past sloppy reposts came from supporters of his who hold hateful views. (It also doesn’t help that a staffer on the campaign of Ron DeSantis, a rival and would-be successor in the GOP presidential primary, was caught surreptitiously inserting Nazi imagery into social-media posts.)The Biden campaign quickly pounced on the situation. “Trump posts a new ad foreshadowing a second Trump term that says he will create a ‘UNIFIED REICH,’ echoing Nazi Germany,” its official account posted on X. The Biden campaign is not stupid, which means both that it should have figured out the real origin of the post (and may well have) and also that it was not going to let an opportunity to savage its opponent pass by.[Yair Rosenberg: Trump’s menacing Rosh Hashana message to American Jews]Biden’s team has been taking a more aggressive approach to Trump as the election nears. After years of elliptically referring to his “predecessor,” the president has begun naming Trump in attacks. The rest of his apparatus is also attacking Trump, trying to remind voters of the reasons they rejected him in 2020. In this case, the Biden campaign seems to have succeeded in manufacturing a controversy. Every major outlet has a headline this morning about the video (a representative example from The Washington Post: “Trump’s Truth Social Account Shares Video Referencing ‘Unified Reich’). These stories are not untruthful—he did share the video—but they are also a little misleading, though perhaps unintentionally so.Whether the backlash to the video helps Biden beat Trump in November is anybody’s guess. Trump’s critics debate whether it is more effective to attack Trump as a threat to democracy, criticize his unpopular policy ideas, paint him as corrupt, or focus on Biden’s positive accomplishments. The incident shows exactly why Trump was so bad at being president. It probably doesn’t tell us anything new about Trump’s feelings regarding Hitler that we didn’t already know. The bizarre thing is that many voters may hear about the controversy and assume that it reveals Trump’s sympathy for the Third Reich, and then vote for him anyway.
theatlantic.com
Anya Taylor-Joy Talks The Use Of AI In ‘Furiosa’ on ‘Live’: “It’s Strange To See Your Eyes And Mouth On Somebody Else’s Face”
""But to be fair, this is what George [Miller] wanted. And it is seamless."
nypost.com
$2,500 Ragdoll Meets Stray Cat for the First Time—Reaction Is Priceless
Purebred ragdolls are not just expensive to buy, they're also expensive to keep, with monthly expenses for the cats ranging from $265 to $750.
newsweek.com
How the Media Is Covering Justice Merchan in Trump’s Criminal Trial
Conservative outlets have criticized Justice Juan M. Merchan as politically motivated, while some liberal media organizations have praised him for muzzling Mr. Trump.
nytimes.com
Which Is Better: Counting Your Steps or Timing Your Workout?
Step count or workout time?
time.com
MAGA Lawyer Gets Dismantled by His Own Damning Trump Emails
Seth Wenig/APDonald Trump made the curious decision to put on a single relevant witness at his New York trial, opting for a MAGA loyalist tangentially involved in the porn star hush money saga—a strategy that failed spectacularly when his testimony only further incriminated the former president.Robert Costello’s role in the Stormy Daniels affair is comedic recursion, a legal version of the Yo Dawg meme. When the feds in 2018 tried to flip then-Trump lawyer Michael Cohen, Costello was the New York lawyer who tried to keep him from cooperating—a cover-up to hide the way Cohen had faked legal invoices, which was itself a cover-up of the hush money payment, which was a cover-up to stop the woman from ruining Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign.For a brief moment in 2018, Costello tried to become Cohen’s lawyer and his “backchannel” to the powerful politician who might corruptly be able to protect him by sidelining the FBI investigation. The idea was to have Cohen represented by Costello, who was close friends with Rudy Giuliani, who was advising the Trump White House—a plan copiously detailed in emails.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Patty Arvielo Is Living Her Family's American Dream as a Top Mortgage CEO
"We are always very future-looking because I need this platform to be sustainable for all my employees and their families," Arvielo told Newsweek.
newsweek.com
Of course Rihanna’s socks cost over $1K
The "Diamonds" singer was spotted outside the Carlyle Hotel in NYC sporting some unusual footwear.
nypost.com
Nikki Glaser reveals the real reason Kim Kardashian was booed at Tom Brady roast
The reality star was in the middle of roasting the NFL legend onstage on May 5 when she had to pause as a roar of boos erupted, which Netflix later edited out.
nypost.com
Forget everything you think you know about what the Trump jury will do
As the former president’s trial wraps up, it’s time to acknowledge that the public experience is vastly different than the jurors’.
washingtonpost.com
Bayley’s push for second WWE Evolution show comes at perfect time despite one potential roadblock
Bayley is right about it being time for a second Evolution show. It's long overdue, but it could initially face a significant hurdle.
nypost.com
‘The Apprentice’ Director Defends Biopic That Shows Donald Trump Assaulting His Ex-Wife, Getting Cosmetic Surgeries: “I Don’t Necessarily Think This Is A Film He Would Dislike”
“Everybody talks about him suing a lot of people — they don’t talk about his success rate though, you know?" director Ali Abbasi said of the Sebastian Stan-led feature.
nypost.com
Defense rests without Trump taking the witness stand in his New York hush money trial
Former President Trump did not stop to speak to reporters as he left the New York courthouse. He is charged with 34 felony counts of falsifying business records.
latimes.com
One of Our Greatest Types of TV Shows Is Now an Endangered Species
TV was once replete with shows that reflected and prescribed what it meant to be a teen. Not anymore.
slate.com
Google, Meta, OpenAI pledge to develop AI safely at global summit
South Korea's presidential office said nations had agreed to prioritize AI safety, innovation and inclusivity.
nypost.com
"Incognito" founder nabbed, allegedly sold $100 million of drugs online
The Justice Department called the site on the dark web "one of the largest illegal narcotics marketplaces on the internet."
cbsnews.com
Woman Questions Sense of Style After Buying 'Ugliest Thing' at Thrift Store
"Thrifted IS a style," commented one user on the TikTok video, which has 2.5 million views.
newsweek.com
Woman Invites Mom To See Sunset, but There Is a Problem: 'Sorry'
Social media users were in stitches over the scene in the viral clip, with one writing "I needed that giggle today."
newsweek.com
Severe Tornado Warnings Across Midwest After Nebraska Pounded With Huge Hail Stones
The National Weather Service said hail stones measuring up to 2 inches fell on the city of Grand Island.
newsweek.com
Pennsylvania inmate on life support granted medical release 49 years after murder conviction
Ezra Bozeman, a 68-year-old prison inmate in Pennsylvania serving a life sentence for a 1975 murder during a robbery, has been granted a medical release order.
foxnews.com
How a Former Red Sox Player Was Busted in Florida Child Sex Sting
Austin Maddox is being held in jail for four charges related to soliciting sexual acts from a minor.
newsweek.com
Princess Charlotte's Full Titles: From Cambridge to Wales
Charlotte's titles changed after the death of Queen Elizabeth II in 2022.
newsweek.com
Jenn Fessler Is the Savior of ‘The Real Housewives of New Jersey’
Rich Polk/Getty ImagesThe Real Housewives of New Jersey is in a most precarious state. We’ve suffered from the same cast for 873 years, and change is strictly forbidden in the bylaws of the Teresa/Melissa hierarchy.But a Trojan Horse has arrived to save the day. A brash queen who’s not threatened by the strictly drawn team lines, with a sense of humor long lost on this humorless show, Jenn Fessler is a breath of fresh air in an otherwise tepid season. And she’s doing all that as a friend-of the Housewives.There may be little praise worth giving the slow-starting Season 14 thus far, as the status quo remains firmly intact, and both sides of the Teresa/Melissa chasm are making solid cases to be booted before Bravo gives the show a fresh set of paint next year. But Jenn has existed on the periphery of this divide since she joined the show last season, managing to avoid the teams mentality that has doomed the franchise.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Texans wideout Tank Dell looks explosive in workout video 3 weeks after suffering gunshot wound
Houston Texans wideout Tank Dell looks to be recovering just fine from a gunshot wound after he was seen running routs in a workout video posted online over the weekend.
foxnews.com
Costs to Arizona taxpayers to reach $314 million in racial profiling verdict against then-sheriff
The taxpayer costs for the racial profiling verdict arising from then-Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s immigration crackdowns are expected to reach $314 million.
latimes.com