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We Can Learn a Lot From the Weird Crew That Keeps Showing Up to Trump’s Trial
I sure am seeing a lot of weirdos at Trump’s trial.
5 m
slate.com
Prosecutors seek September retrial for Harvey Weinstein after N.Y. rape conviction was tossed
Wednesday marked the disgraced movie mogul's first appearance in court since his 2020 rape conviction was overturned by an appeals court last week.
9 m
latimes.com
Cher dates younger men because guys her age are cowards — or dead
At 77, Cher has some very simple — and practical — reasons for dating younger men such as her current boyfriend, music producer Alexander “AE” Edwards — who is 39 years her junior. 
nypost.com
I Give Off “Nice Midwestern Girl” Energy. But I Want to Tap Into My… Darker Side.
I want to ramp it up.
slate.com
Little Tokyo named one of America's most endangered places by preservation group
Recent years have seen continued evictions, closures and relocations among businesses that were once staples of the Little Tokyo community.
latimes.com
Air Force preps new military charges against convicted Pentagon leaker Jack Teixeira
Massachusetts Air National Guardsman Jack Teixeira will face military criminal proceedings next month for alleged violations of the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
abcnews.go.com
Mets vs. Cubs prediction: MLB picks, odds, best bets for Wednesday
The Mets will face Shota Imanaga of the Cubs at Citi Field on Wednesday.
nypost.com
Dow surges nearly 500 points after Fed hints next move is rate cut
The Fed concluded its two-day monetary policy meeting by letting the Fed funds target rate stand at 5.25%-5.50%.
nypost.com
UCLA protester says 'Zionist thugs' released rats into anti-Israel encampment
UCLA anti-Israel protester Vincent Doehr told CNN on Wednesday that "Zionist thugs" attacked their encampment and released "rats" into the area.
foxnews.com
Brian Cox slams the Bible as ‘one of the worst books ever’: ‘Stupid’ people believe it
“The Bible is one of the worst books ever, for me, from my point of view," said "Succession" star Brian Cox.
nypost.com
The winner of RuPaul's Drag Race and geopolitics
Taiwan is celebrating the latest winner of RuPaul's Drag Race, Nymphia Wind, after she called the island a country.
latimes.com
7 must-try Brazilian restaurants in Culver City (and beyond)
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latimes.com
House Democrat condemns 'harassment and intimidation' of Jewish students on campuses: 'Not about free speech'
NY Reps. Ritchie Torres and Mike Lawler co-sponsoring legislation to combat escalating antisemitism on U.S. college campuses.
foxnews.com
Emptying my late parents’ home is too hard. Hax readers give advice.
A reader wasn’t prepared for the emotional toll of sifting through their late parents’ possessions.
washingtonpost.com
DraftKings promo code offer: Bet $5, get $200 in bonus bets and SGP for NBA Playoffs
You can sign up with DraftKings and claim a $200 bet and get with daily Same Game Parlay options for all of the NBA Playoffs.
nypost.com
Inside the encampment: MIT student leader reveals goal of protests, calls out 'unacceptable' media coverage
The organizer of an encampment at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology told Fox News Digital they want the school to end research contracts with Israel.
foxnews.com
UFT lawyers blast MTA’s decision with setting June 30 start date for NYC’s controversial $15 congestion toll
The lawyers for the teachers' union lawsuit seeking to block the first-in-the-nation congestion pricing scheme sent a letter to a federal judge flunking the MTA's announcement that the new $15 toll to enter Manhattan south of 60th street will go into effect June 30.
nypost.com
Prince William gives rare Kate Middleton health update as princess battles cancer
Prince William, the Prince of Wales, made a stop at James’ Place Newcastle in England where he was greeted by well-wishers. His wife is taking a break from public duties.
foxnews.com
With ‘Turtles All the Way Down,’ John Green Cinema Returns
Photo Illustration by Luis G. Rendon/The Daily Beast/Getty/MaxYou probably haven’t heard of the most important person who worked on Turtles All the Way Down. The adaptation of John Green’s 2017 novel of the same name, which lands on Max May 2, had one VIP star in a key on-set role: Chief Morale Booster. The lucky person (or rather, being) who landed the part? Bonbon, star Isabela Merced’s tiny pet dog.Bonbon—who is half-chihuahua, half-mini pinscher—is roaming around the HBO offices with Merced while helping to promote Turtles All the Way Down. He’s doing his job as CMB; Merced, Green, and I are all smiles as we kick off our conversation.“I’ll tell you what—Bonbon is about the best dog in the world,” Green says. “I say that as the owner of the best dog in the world, Potato.”Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Dramatic before-and-after photos show Columbia University’s anti-Israel tent city finally gone after NYPD raid
Dramatic before-and-after photos show a massive tent city set up by anti-Israel protesters on Columbia University’s iconic lawn had been completely cleared Wednesday after police stormed the campus and arrested members of a pro-terror mob.
nypost.com
How to watch the Dallas Mavericks vs. LA Clippers NBA Playoffs game tonight: Game 5 streaming options, more
The Dallas Mavericks face the LA Clippers tonight for Game 5 of the teams' NBA Playoffs series. Here's how to watch.
cbsnews.com
Decrepit Harvey Weinstein wheeled into NY court — where prosecutors say they’ll be ready to re-try him for rape before 2025
Harvey Weinstein appeared in a Manhattan courthouse Wednesday for the first time since New York's highest appeals court overturned his sex crimes conviction.
nypost.com
Mayor Bass deletes tweet after Lakers' season ends: 'At least we won the in season tournament!'
An X post from the verified account of L.A. Mayor Karen Bass touted the Lakers' in-season tournament win following the team's playoff series loss to the Nuggets.
latimes.com
How much does long-term care insurance cost for a 65 year-old?
Are you thinking about purchasing long-term care insurance at 65? Here's how much your coverage could cost.
cbsnews.com
Weinstein Wheeled Into Court as Prosecutors Vow to Retry Him
PoolIn early 2020, the most coveted seat in downtown New York was a spot in Harvey Weinstein’s sex crimes trial.For four weeks, about 70 reporters and 30 public citizens endured frigid temperatures to secure a seat inside the 15th floor courtroom where Weinstein dodged questions from camera crews and ate fistfuls of candy as witnesses testified about how he lured them in with promises of career opportunities before sexually assaulting them.On Wednesday, Weinstein was wheeled into Manhattan criminal court for the first time since his rape conviction was overturned in a shock decision. Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Ex-76ers owner Michael Rubin trolls Knicks fan over Fanatics sports betting losses in deleted tweet
Ex-76ers owner and Fanatics CEO Michael Rubin had some fun at the Knicks' and bettors' expense.
nypost.com
How Gwen Stefani Just Subtly Paid Tribute to Blake Shelton As They Cozied Up on the Red Carpet
Gwen Stefani and Blake Shelton showed off their individual senses of style on the red carpet on a night out in L.A.
newsweek.com
Invasion Worries in Eastern Europe
European countries that border Russia are concerned that they'll be invaded next if an emboldened Russia is successful in Ukraine, even though they're members of the NATO alliance. We go to the Baltic nation of Estonia and hear from people who are making preparations in case of invasion.
npr.org
UnitedHealth CEO defends insurer after major hack, reveals amount of ransom paid as senators question firm’s size
"Your company let the country down," Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden told Witty.
nypost.com
DEA Cedes Ground in the Losing War on Weed. It's Not Enough | Opinion
America ceded ground this week in its longest and dumbest war: the War on Drugs.
newsweek.com
Rechazo a políticas de ajuste y bajos salarios dominan marchas Día del Trabajador en Latinoamérica
En la capital argentina, largas columnas identificadas con banderas de distintos gremios confluyeron hacia el centenario Monumento al Trabajo bajo la consigna “La patria no se vende”.
latimes.com
Biden’s Electoral College Challenge
President Joe Biden won a decisive Electoral College victory in 2020 by restoring old Democratic advantages in the Rust Belt while establishing new beachheads in the Sun Belt.But this year, his position in polls has weakened on both fronts. The result is that, even this far from Election Day, signs are developing that Biden could face a last-mile problem in the Electoral College.Even a modest recovery in Biden’s current support could put him in position to win states worth 255 Electoral College votes, strategists in both parties agree. His problem is that every option for capturing the final 15 Electoral College votes he would need to reach a winning majority of 270 looks significantly more difficult.At this point, former President Donald Trump’s gains have provided him with more plausible alternatives to cross the last mile to 270. Trump’s personal vulnerabilities, Biden’s edge in building a campaign organization, and abortion rights’ prominence in several key swing states could erase that advantage. But for now, Biden looks to have less margin for error than the former president.[Read: Will Biden have a Gaza problem in November’s poll?]Biden’s odds may particularly diminish if he cannot hold all three of the former “blue wall” states across the Rust Belt that he recaptured in 2020 after Trump had taken them four years earlier: Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. Biden is running more competitively in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin than in any other swing states. But in Michigan, Biden has struggled in most polls, whipsawed by defections among multiple groups Democrats rely on, including Arab Americans, auto workers, young people, and Black Americans.As James Carville, the veteran Democratic strategist told me, if Biden can recover to win Michigan along with Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, “you are not going to lose.” But, Carville added, if Biden can’t hold all three, “you are going to have to catch an inside straight to win.”For both campaigns, the math of the next Electoral College map starts with the results from the last campaign. In 2020, Biden won 25 states, the District of Columbia and a congressional district centered on Omaha, in Nebraska—one of the two states that awards some of its Electoral College votes by district. Last time, Trump won 25 states and a rural congressional district in Maine, the other state that awards some of its electors by district.The places Biden won are worth 303 Electoral College votes in 2024; Trump’s places are worth 235. Biden’s advantage disappears, though, when looking at the states that appear to be securely in each side’s grip.Of the 25 states Trump won, North Carolina was the only one he carried by less than three percentage points; Florida was the only other state Trump won by less than four points.It’s not clear that Biden can truly threaten Trump in either state. Biden’s campaign, stressing criticism of Florida’s six-week abortion ban that went into effect today, has signaled some interest in contesting the state. But amid all the signs of Florida’s rightward drift in recent years, few operatives in either party believe the Biden campaign will undertake the enormous investment required to fully compete there.Biden’s team has committed to a serious push in North Carolina. There, he could be helped by a gubernatorial race that pits Democratic Attorney General Josh Stein against Republican Lieutenant Governor Mark Robinson, a social conservative who has described LGBTQ people as “filth” and spoken favorably about the era when women could not vote. Democrats also believe that Biden can harvest discontent over the 12-week abortion ban that the GOP-controlled state legislature passed last yearBut Democrats have not won a presidential or U.S. Senate race in North Carolina since 2008. Despite Democratic gains in white-collar suburbs around Charlotte and Raleigh, Trump’s campaign believes that a steady flow of conservative-leaning white retirees from elsewhere is tilting the state to the right; polls to this point consistently show Trump leading, often by comfortable margins.Biden has a much greater area of vulnerable terrain to defend. In 2020, he carried three of his 25 states by less than a single percentage point—Georgia, Arizona, and Wisconsin—and won Pennsylvania by a little more than one point. He also won Michigan and Nevada by about 2.5 percentage points each; in all, Biden carried six states by less than three points, compared with just one for Trump. Even Minnesota and New Hampshire, both of which Biden won by about seven points, don’t look entirely safe for him in 2024, though he remains favored in each.Many operatives in both parties separate the six states Biden carried most narrowly into three distinct tiers. Biden has looked best in Wisconsin and Pennsylvania. Biden’s position has been weakest in Arizona, Nevada, and Georgia. Michigan falls into its own tier in between.This ranking and Trump’s consistent lead in North Carolina reflect the upside-down racial dynamics of the 2024 race to this point. As Democrats always do, Biden still runs better among voters of color than among white voters. But the trend in support since 2020 has defied the usual pattern. Both state and national polls, as I’ve written, regularly show Biden closely matching the share of the vote he won in 2020 among white voters. But these same polls routinely show Trump significantly improving on his 2020 performance among Black and Latino voters, especially men. Biden is also holding much more of his 2020 support among seniors than he is among young people.These demographic patterns are shaping the geography of the 2024 race. They explain why Biden has lost more ground since 2020 in the racially diverse and generally younger Sun Belt states than he has in the older and more preponderantly white Rust Belt states. Slipping support among voters of color (primarily Black voters) threatens Biden in Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin too, but the danger for him isn’t as great as in the Sun Belt states, where minorities are a much larger share of the total electorate. Biden running better in the swing states that are less, rather than more, diverse “is an irony that we’re not used to,” says Bradley Beychok, a co-founder of the liberal advocacy group American Bridge 21st Century, which is running a massive campaign to reach mostly white swing voters in the Rust Belt battlegrounds.Given these unexpected patterns, Democratic strategists I’ve spoken with this year almost uniformly agree with Carville that the most promising route for Biden to reach 270 Electoral College votes goes through the traditional industrial battlegrounds of Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. “If you look at all the battleground-state polling, and don’t get too fixated on this poll or that, the polling consistently shows you that Biden runs better in the three industrial Midwest states than he does in the four swing Sun Belt states,” Doug Sosnik, who served as the chief White House political strategist for Bill Clinton, told me.Democratic hopes for a Biden reelection almost all start with him holding Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, where polls now generally show a dead heat. If Biden wins both and holds all the states that he won in 2020 by at least three points—as well as Washington, D.C., and the Omaha congressional district—that would bring the president to 255 Electoral College votes. At that point, even if Biden loses all of the Sun Belt battlegrounds, he could reach the 270-vote threshold just by taking Michigan, with its 15 votes, as well.But Michigan has been a persistent weak spot for Biden. Although a CBS News/YouGov poll released Sunday showed Biden narrowly leading Trump in Michigan, most polls for months have shown the former president, who campaigned there today, reliably ahead. “In all the internal polling I’m seeing and doing in Michigan, I’ve never had Joe Biden leading Donald Trump,” Richard Czuba, an independent Michigan pollster who conducts surveys for business and civic groups, told me.[Read: How Trump is dividing minority voters]Czuba doesn’t consider Michigan out of reach for Biden. He believes that Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has qualified for the ballot, will ultimately draw more votes from Trump. Democrats have also rebuilt a formidable political organization, he noted, while the state Republican Party is in disarray, which will help Biden in a close race. And defending abortion rights remains a powerful advantage for Democrats, Czuba said, with Governor Gretchen Whitmer an effective and popular messenger for that cause.But Czuba said Biden is facing obstacles in Michigan that extend beyond his often-discussed problems with Arab American voters over the war in Gaza, discontent on college campuses around the same issue, and Trump’s claim that the transition to electric vehicles will produce a “bloodbath” for the auto industry. Biden is also deeply unpopular among independents in the state, Czuba said concerns about his age are a principal concern. “That’s the overriding issue we’re hearing,” he told me. “I don’t think any of those independents voted for Joe Biden thinking he was going to run for reelection.” On top of all that, Sunday’s CBS News/YouGov poll showed Trump winning about one in six Black voters in Michigan, roughly double his share in 2020.If Biden can’t win Michigan, his remaining options for reaching 270 Electoral College votes are all difficult at best. Many Democrats believe that if Biden loses Michigan, the most plausible alternative for him is to win both Arizona and Nevada, which have a combined 17 votes. Georgia or North Carolina, each with 16 votes, could also substitute for Michigan, but both now lean solidly toward Trump. After Michigan, or the combination of Arizona and Nevada, “there’s a fault line where the math works but the probabilities are pretty significantly lower,” Sosnik said.Public polls this spring aren’t much better for Biden in Arizona and Nevada than in Georgia and North Carolina. And just as Biden faces erosion with Black voters in the Southeast, he’s underperforming among Latinos in the Southwest. Yet most Democrats are more optimistic about their chances in the Southwest than the Southeast.In Nevada, that’s partly because the Democrats’ turnout machinery, which includes the powerful Culinary Union Local 226, has established a formidable record of winning close races. Both states have also been big winners in the private-investment boom flowing from the three big bills Biden passed in his first two years in office: Nevada received $9 billion in clean-energy investments, and Arizona got a whopping $64 billion from semiconductor manufacturers. The sweep of Trump’s plans for the mass deportation of undocumented immigrants could undo some of his gains with Latinos.But mostly, Democratic hopes in both states center on abortion. Ballot initiatives inscribing abortion rights into the state constitution seem on track to qualify for the ballot in both, and polls show most voters in each state believe abortion should remain legal in all or most cases. In Arizona, the issue has been inflamed by the recent decision from the Republican-controlled state supreme court to reinstate a near-total ban on abortion dating back to 1864.Beychok says a message of defending democracy and personal freedoms, including access to abortion and other reproductive care, remains Biden’s best asset across the Sun Belt and Rust Belt swing states. “Abortion, democracy, and freedom have been greater than whatever Republicans have decided to throw against the wall,” he told me. “They can go and scream about Biden’s age, or ‘the squad,’ or inflation and the cost of things. The problem is they have been singing that song for years and they have continued to lose elections.”If Biden has a path to a second term, those issues will likely need to clear the way again—in the Rust Belt and Sun Belt alike.
theatlantic.com
MLB prop bets: Picks for Corbin Burnes, CJ Abrams, Jose Altuve
Target these three bets for Wednesday's MLB action.
nypost.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Acapulco’ Season 3 On Apple TV+, Where Young Max Becomes A Manager At Los Calinas, While Older Max Gets To Know His Daughter
Season 3 picks up exactly where Season 2 left of, with the surprise appearance of Max's adult daughter.
nypost.com
Raquel Leviss claims she’s ‘just getting to know’ rumored new boyfriend Matthew Dunn
The Dunn Investment Group CEO is the first man to whom the "Vanderpump Rules" alum has been romantically linked since her affair with Tom Sandoval.
1 h
nypost.com
Harvey Weinstein appears at NY court in wheelchair after rape conviction overturned
Harvey Weinstein made an appearance at his first court hearing following his rape conviction being overturned. The NY appeals court made the stunning reversal April 25.
1 h
foxnews.com
Cher turned down dating Elvis Presley because she was 'nervous of his reputation'
Cher reflected on why she turned down the chance to date Elvis Presley in a new interview on the "Jennifer Hudson Show."
1 h
foxnews.com
Indonesia's Dramatic Volcano Eruption Caught on Video
Some 12,000 locals have been evacuated due to concerns over ash, pyroclastic flows and a tsunami risk.
1 h
newsweek.com
BlackRock looks to make monthly paychecks part of 401(k) employee retirement plans
BlackRock is reportedly looking to shakeup employers' default retirement strategies by turning a portion of retirement savings into fixed lifetime payments through target-date funds embedded with annuities. 
1 h
nypost.com
Anne Hathaway’s ‘Tonight Show’ Interview Hits An Awkward Snag After The Audience Reacts In Silence To Her Question
Hathaway was stunned nobody in the audience had read the book that inspired her new film, The Idea of You. 
1 h
nypost.com
Best luxury gifts for kids: 25 ideas to spoil your little one
Spoil your little one with these big-budget must-haves. 
1 h
nypost.com
Americans increasingly worried about economy as election looms: poll
Immigration once again was the top issue of concern for Americans in April, but new polling shows worries about the economy are a strong second.
1 h
foxnews.com
These are the perfect dream homes for every type of American, according to AI
A new study from Lombardo Homes shows exactly what Americans look for in terms of home appearance and layout -- and how it all differs generationally.
1 h
nypost.com
New Blow to Biden on Immigration
Americans have ranked immigration as the top issue faced by the country for the third consecutive month.
1 h
newsweek.com
Don’t go ballistic — study reveals how anger can increase heart attack, stroke risk
For the sake of your blood vessels, don't B negative.
1 h
nypost.com
Husband of F1 Heiress Delivers Whiny Tirade Against Tipping
Greg Doherty/Getty Images for Maddox GalleryThe husband of a Formula One heiress has a secret pet peeve: tipping low wage workers.Luxury real estate agent Sam Palmer is married to Petra Ecclestone, who is set to inherit the billions amassed by her father, Bernie Ecclestone, the former chief executive of the F1 group who has an estimated net worth of $2.4 billion, according to Forbes. Palmer took to Instagram on Tuesday, from the couch of his $30.5 million Los Angeles mansion to speak his insanely out-of-touch truth.Read more at The Daily Beast.
1 h
thedailybeast.com
Republican Rep. Elise Stefanik again demands perjury probe of Trump ‘fixer’ Michael Cohen
House Republican Conference Chair Elise Stefanik and Intelligence Committee Chair Michael Turner are re-upping their demand for the Justice Department to probe Michael Cohen's alleged perjury to Congress.
1 h
nypost.com
Florida's 6-week abortion ban takes effect as doctors worry women will lose access to healthcare
The ban has gone into effect, with doctors concerned women in the state will no longer have access to needed healthcare.
1 h
latimes.com