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Housing Market Gets Bad News

Existing-home sales are bound to remain low in the coming months, Moody's expert tells Newsweek.
Read full article on: newsweek.com
Turkey cuts off all trade with Israel in protest against Gaza war: report
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan ended all trade between his country and Israel on Thursday in the latest protest against the war in Gaza.
foxnews.com
Thousands rally in Slovakia to protest a controversial overhaul of public broadcasting
Thousands of people rallied in Slovakia's capital to protest an overhaul of the country's TV services and public radio, which critics say would result in the government controlling the media.
foxnews.com
Iran offers scholarships to students expelled from US, European universities over anti-Israel protests: report
Iran's Shiraz University leader praises anti-Israel agitators at American and European campuses, offers scholarships to expelled students
foxnews.com
Taylor Swift Just Seemingly Confirmed This Fan Theory About 'The Tortured Poets Department'
Taylor Swift has given her stamp of approval to a fan theory on her new album 'The Tortured Poets Department'.
newsweek.com
Sen. Tom Cotton takes aim at student loan forgiveness for anti-Israel agitators
Sen. Tom Cotton, the Republican from Arkansas, on Thursday criticized the possibility of student loan forgiveness that may be extended to anti-Israel agitators at universities nationwide.
foxnews.com
The Airport That Hasn't Lost a Single Bag in 30 Years
Kansai Airport in Osaka, Japan has maintained a flawless record of luggage handling since it opened in 1994.
newsweek.com
Justin Fields could be set to return kickoffs for Steelers
The Pittsburgh Steelers want Justin Fields on the field in any way other than as a starting quarterback.
nypost.com
Former college football star Johnny Manziel predicts NCAA's demise: 'It's only a matter of time'
Former NFL quarterback and Texas A&M star quarterback Johnny Manziel did not mince words when he shared a rather ominous prediction about the future of the NCAA.
foxnews.com
Infamous referee Scott Foster, known as ‘The Extender,’ draws Game 6 in ominous Knicks sign
If you believe in conspiracy theories, the NBA just opened a can of worms before Game 6 of the Knicks-76ers series Thursday night.
nypost.com
California Drought Map Reveals Good News
The map showed which states were expected to remain free from drought, and which states would see new drought develop this month.
newsweek.com
Here’s What ‘Friends’ Got Wrong About New York City
Comedian and lifelong New Yorker Sebastian Conelli gets real about where Friends missed the mark in its depiction of New York City.
nypost.com
See inside a secret NYC garden that only 12 homes can enjoy — 4 of which are for sale
Few know about the lush Jones Wood Garden oasis sandwiched between Lexington and Third avenues, where several homes are looking for new generations.
nypost.com
Mets’ game-ending controversy was decided by new rule change
Carlos Mendoza’s argument that a catcher can’t have his foot on any part of home plate was true until this season, but following a controversial play last year, a change was made.
nypost.com
2024 Showdown: Biden's bump has flatlined in the polls
Any polling bump that President Biden may have enjoyed coming out of his State of the Union address in his 2024 White House race against Republican challenger Donald Trump seems to have disappeared.
foxnews.com
What Is the US Campaign for Palestinian Rights? Group Training Protesters
Organization published report detailing extensive efforts on behalf of Palestinians a few short weeks after Hamas attack on Israel.
newsweek.com
Fired CNN anchor Don Lemon received $1,600 bottle of wine from ex-boss David Zaslav: report
Lemon was gifted a bottle of 2017 Opus One Cabernet blend as he dined with husband Tim Malone at Porter House near Columbus Circle.
nypost.com
College idiots calling for ‘Intifada’ have no idea how many innocents have died from that word
So although youth and ignorance aren’t any real excuse, perhaps I can educate these students about what they are actually calling for.
nypost.com
Elon Musk’s Tesla yanks summer internship offers to students amid massive job cutting
One of the students said Tesla informed her via a phone call that she no longer had a summer internship, a development she linked to cost-reduction efforts Tesla recently started.
nypost.com
JD Vance ‘truly skeptical’ Mike Pence was ‘ever in danger’ during Capitol riot
Sen. JD Vance questioned whether former Vice President Mike Pence's life was ever really in jeopardy during the ransacking of the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
nypost.com
Bucks vs. Pacers Game 6 prediction: NBA playoffs odds, picks, best bets
The Pacers should feel a sense of urgency to get it done on their home court Thursday
nypost.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘The Idea of You’ on Amazon Prime Video, a Pleasingly Horny May/December Rom-Com Led By Anne Hathaway
Hathaway is a normie single mom. Nicholas Galitzine is an uberfamous pop star. And a fantasy love story erupts.
nypost.com
SAG-AFTRA taps Nielsen for streaming data to enforce new contract
Performers union SAG-AFTRA has tapped audience measurement company Nielsen to provide streaming data that will inform how bonuses are distributed.
latimes.com
Best Kentucky Derby Betting Sites | May 2024
The 150th rendition of The Greatest Two Minutes in Sports is set for May 4, 2024.
nypost.com
Employer who fired 78-year-old must now pay her $78,000
A Georgia senior living community fired an elderly worker shortly after honoring her as an employee of the year, regulators allege.
cbsnews.com
RFK Stadium officially set to be demolished
The National Park Service has given the green light for the city to begin deconstructing the vacant stadium.
washingtonpost.com
Elderly Missouri man charged in 1966 stabbing death of Calumet City woman
James Barbier, 79, is charged with first-degree murder in the 1966 stabbing death of 18-year-old Karen Snider at her home in Calumet City.
cbsnews.com
Texas AG files lawsuit against Biden administration for new gun sale requirements: 'Come and take it'
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach announce lawsuits against the ATF to stop enforcement of a new rule requiring background checks for private gun sales.
foxnews.com
Adopted Cat's First Night in New Home Melts Hearts: 'He's So Grateful'
The new owner describes the cat as grateful, capturing the special bond between them.
newsweek.com
Do men or women get better sleep? Docs have an answer
Stealing some shut-eye might be a lot harder if you’re a woman, according to experts.  Women are more likely to report poor sleep quality and insomnia, while men are more likely to report sleep apnea, according to a recent review published in the journal, Sleep Medicine Reviews.  The review, published in April, also reinforced a...
nypost.com
Elon Musk, Argentina's president headline 24th Milken conference
Elon Musk and Javier Milei will headline the 24th annual Milken Global Conference, which has a focus on artificial intelligence, sustainability and other pressing issues.
latimes.com
On Press Freedom Day, little to celebrate for Hong Kong’s journalists
The good news is Hong Kong has scrapped its plan to introduce a “fake news” law. The bad news is with other repressive tools, they no longer need it.
washingtonpost.com
Captain of dive boat Conception faces sentencing for fire that killed 34
Jerry Boylan, was found guilty in 2023 of one count of misconduct or neglect of ship officer, colloquially known as seaman's manslaughter for the deaths of 33 passengers and one crew member on the dive boat Conception.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Whoopi Golberg and Joy Behar rib Sara Haines for daring double-slit leather skirt: ‘Something winked’
Haines wore a black leather skirt with slits up both the left and right side during Thursday's episode of "The View," sparking comments from her co-hosts.
1 h
nypost.com
Biden prays for 'honesty, decency, dignity' in Day of Prayer proclamation amid ongoing campus protests
President Biden announced Wednesday he is praying for "honesty, decency, dignity" this year on the National Day of Prayer, as campus protests continue to grow across the country.
1 h
foxnews.com
Sony and Apollo make formal $26-billion joint bid for Paramount
Adding to the intrigue around Paramount Global, Sony Pictures Entertainment and Apollo Global Management have formally submitted a bid for the storied studio.
1 h
latimes.com
How Photographer Platon Captures the Power of Everyday Heroes
The photographer behind more than 25 TIME covers reflects on what he's learned about leadership from his subjects.
1 h
time.com
3 reasons to pursue debt relief this May
If you're dealing with overwhelming debt, May could be the perfect month to pursue relief. Here's why.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Challengers is the best thing that could happen to polyamory
Tashi Duncan (Zendaya) and her tennis-playing, polyamorous twinks. | Challengers/Amazon MGM Studios The relationship style has been the topic of talky articles and books. Finally, it’s the sexiest element of the year’s sexiest movie. Much has recently been made out of polyamory in the media, to the point where the prospect of dating and ostensibly having sex with multiple people who are also attracted to you seems rather unsexy. Pieces in outlets like the Atlantic, New Yorker, and New York Times (at least twice) have taken stabs at painting portraits of polyams that have resulted in the following takeaways: poly relationships are messy, but they will be the first ones to admit to you that they are messy; poly people believe in a lot of annoying rules, except for annoying rules about monogamy; poly people feel misunderstood but they also have their own acronym-filled language (NRE! Metamour!); polyamory is either popular or not popular at all and said contested popularity, if true, may or may not be the result of a housing crisis. To be clear, I do not come to bury polyamory. I’m merely pointing out that all this seeming like an exhausting hassle is what happens when something humans do in their relationships becomes a media fixation. Secrets are suddenly made un-secret, and so much is lost in translation and public consumption. No one wants to write a news article that comes from a place of horniness, and with that mentality, the subject becomes a punchline. Just when you thought that the entire idea of being communally entangled felt too examined, too picked over to ever be sexy again, Luca Guadagnino’s Challengers comes swooping in. Sun-drenched and sweat-soaked, the film demystifies polyamory into something blazingly simple: being in love — physically and emotionally — with two people and being loved back can make a person as happy as they’ve ever been or ever will be. Challengers/Amazon MGM Studios Imagine if it was you that Josh O’Connor (right) was gesturing this to! In tennis terms, “challengers” are a type of B-list tournament, made for players in ranking purgatory — not good enough to be in the main draws of grand slam tournaments and not bad enough to be out of the game entirely. The title also has a double meaning, referencing the very complicated, emotionally difficult, and extremely randy tennis prodigies-turned-pros Tashi Duncan (Zendaya), Art Donaldson (Mike Faist), and Patrick Zweig (Josh O’Connor). The three are part of an intricate, ball-bashing love triangle, and it’s no accident that every corner is so acutely hot. Zendaya in particular knows how to wear an old money sweater. Faist and O’Connor spend a lot of time arching their backs, whether they’re wearing tiny shorts or not. Perhaps most important, this is a triangle where, as screenwriter Justin Kuritzkes told NBC, “all sides needed to touch” — and they do. That’s crystal clear when they first meet, as teens at the junior US Open. Art and Patrick are attracted to Tashi for completely different, at times murky, reasons. Patrick thinks she’s physically beautiful, the hottest girl on earth. Art admires her commanding style of tennis, which makes her the hottest girl on earth to him. When they watch her rip backhands, something clicks for both of them — so much that when she finishes off the point and screams, Patrick grabs Art’s knee. Through her they see each other’s desires and each other in a new, clear way. The boys invite her to their room, and the great American tennis hope shows up. “I don’t want to be a homewrecker,” Tashi tells them. On the surface, it comes off as a joke. Their closeness and intimacy could be seen as something that’s a little funny for two men who aren’t explicitly gay. But the comment also functions as something truthful. Minutes later, during their three-way kiss, Tashi cocks her head back in a devious, ecstatic grin not because, as one might assume, Art and Patrick are paying her attention — but because Art and Patrick are kissing each other, lost in the moment. Perhaps Tashi Duncan is telling the truth. She wants to be a homemaker, not a homewrecker! What she really wants is to see them up their game. She tells the boys that whoever wins their face-off match the next day can have her number. A year later, when Art and Tashi are at Stanford, Art tries to throw a wrench in Tashi and Patrick’s ongoing relationship. He tells Tashi that the vibe he gets from Patrick is that it isn’t that serious. Art tells Tashi that Patrick doesn’t love her, a bit of information that only bothers her so far as she’d hate for someone to think that’s what she wants. Challengers/Amazon MGM Studios Frown if you’re not into monogamy! When Patrick arrives at Palo Alto, he pulls Art close — so close you can see the sugar glistening off of his churro (not a euphemism) — and warns him that he’s onto Art’s game. He sees the wedge, and Art trying to finagle a way in. Instead of being angry, Patrick is impressed, happy to see Art go for something that he wants — even if it is his girlfriend. Patrick also wants to see Art up his game. Their competition turns Tashi on too, as the two talk about Art while they make out and undress. She tells Patrick that Art can beat him — at tennis. She tells him that she watches and knows what he needs to do better in his matches. She tells him she thinks Art is good enough. At one point Patrick asks Tashi to stop talking about his friend and their shared sport, and it’s as though someone blew out the horniness like a candle. The fight that follows precedes Tashi’s career-ending injury, and in a roundabout way, her eventual marriage to Art, which catapults the pairing to a new level of fame and aspiration. Not unlike the way Tashi was miserable with Patrick when they weren’t talking about Art, Tashi is miserable being married to Art without Patrick. Though Guadagnino and Kuritzkes wrap the couple in plenty of material success — luxury endorsements, high-end clothes, lush hotels, and six grand slam wins — Art and Tashi are not happy as “the Donaldsons.” They have everything they ever wanted, winning tennis’s biggest tournaments and having the money to do anything, but it can’t spark excitement in their lives. You can tell how miserable Art and Tashi are because Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross’s pulsating score takes a breath from its thumping pace whenever we’re near the Donaldsons and their dull monogamy. When Art tells Tashi he wants to retire after the Open, the score shifts into an elegiac, string-forward, pleading love song. It’s so soft that it’s almost a little pathetic, not unlike future tennis hall of famer Art. Yet, when Art and Patrick face off on the court and Tashi watches, Reznor and Ross’s music morphs into something honey-thick, sexier, and more dangerous. The score and their exchanged glances are comically electric; the sexy molly dance music captures the thrill of their three-way relationship. Those beats fill the last moments in the movie, the final points between Art and Patrick. In that closing set, Patrick changes up his service routine and places the ball in the neck of his racket. This is his secret code to Art that he slept with Tashi, a gesture the two created together as teens without Tashi’s knowledge. Art snaps. He goes into a catatonic, post-marriage state. He lets a couple points pass, and by losing them, plunges Patrick and himself into a tiebreak — a race to seven points, like soccer’s penalty shots or basketball’s overtime but more exciting. Valery Hache/AFP via Getty Images The Challengers press tour leaned into the polyam bit of the movie. Because, why not? But who’s winning isn’t Guadagnino’s concern. Nor is he particularly interested in articulating exactly what these men are thinking or feeling. There are no distinct labels or boundaries for how these men feel about each other. There’s no neat way to articulate what it means that the woman they’re both interested in is interested in both of them. There’s no ability to explain how much of their mutual want is fueling this erotic thrill. In this fantasy, there’s no need to talk things out for the sake of respectability or to make an audience feel comfortable or understand. All that exists in this moment is an indescribable frisson and beguiling respect that you may never get with just one person. The point that follows is an exhausting, grunting, sweat-stained rally that ends with both of them at the net, Art going up for a smash and Patrick bracing for impact. We don’t see who wins the point because all the camera’s focus is on Tashi, who growls — a carnal howl — in pleasure. The only other time we’ve seen her this happy was when all three of them were together, with all their desires for each other and with each other out in the open. And they’ve found that again, finally.
1 h
vox.com
Migrant accused of instigating El Paso border riot is still roaming US, despite allegedly assaulting soldier
New details on the case indicate that Border agents failed to review footage of the border riot to identify the migrant's role.
1 h
nypost.com
A Wild Orangutan Used a Medicinal Plant to Treat a Wound, Scientists Say
An orangutan appeared to treat a wound with medicine from a tropical plant— the latest example of how some animals attempt to soothe their own ills with remedies found in the wild.
1 h
time.com
A tale of two downtowns in L.A.: As offices languish, apartments thrive
A new luxury residential tower in downtown L.A. reflects an unusual disconnect: While office rentals continue to struggle, downtown as a residential center is thriving.
1 h
latimes.com
US military acknowledges errant drone strike killed civilian, not al-Qaeda leader
U.S. Central Command acknowledged that one year ago Friday, it mistakenly struck a civilian in a strike in Syria, not the al-Qaeda leader it was looking for.
1 h
abcnews.go.com
Terry Pegula’s daughter Laura takes bigger role in Bills ownership with whispers of internal drama
Bills owner Terry Pegula has gotten his daughter involved in team ownership in the wake of his wife Kim's scary health battle.
1 h
nypost.com
This Inside Joke Between Jason and Kylie Kelce Had Travis Kelce Dying of Laughter
Kylie Kelce's comments about husband Jason Kelce's butt made Travis Kelce throw his head back in laughter.
1 h
newsweek.com
Protesters Are Calling on Universities to Divest from Israel. Here’s What That Means
What do protesters want? What would divestment from Israel mean in practice? How have schools responded?
1 h
time.com
Sanders: Campus protesters are 'out there for the right reasons'
The Vermont Senator says students are right to question U.S. military aid to an Israeli government "in a destructive war against the Palestinian people."
1 h
edition.cnn.com
The Guy Allegedly Behind 2020 “Stolen Election” Theories in Georgia Was Convicted of Videotaping Guests in His Bathroom
What kind of person starts election-fraud conspiracies? This kind, it seems.
1 h
slate.com
At Trump’s Trial, a Decade’s Worth of Celebrity Sleaze Is Exhumed
Donald J. Trump’s lawyers tried to paint Keith Davidson, the man who helped broker a hush-money payment for Stormy Daniels, as a specialist in extracting money from the famous.
1 h
nytimes.com