Tools
Change country:

Is Fallout a warning for our future? A global catastrophe risk expert weighs in.

A young woman wearing a backpack stands in the doorway of a derelict room that appears to be abandoned. Wall decorations hang askew and the wall paint is chipped and damaged. The ground is covered in sand.
Ella Purnell as Lucy in Fallout. | JoJo Whilden/Prime Video

What a post-nuclear aftermath could really look like.

Between the crumbling of trust in our institutions and escalating global conflict, dystopia feels deeply familiar in today’s world. Though there are people and organizations who are working to keep the globe and our humanity intact, it’s normal for us to think of the worst-case scenarios.

Fallout, a recently released show on Amazon Prime based on the popular video game franchise, is the latest exploration of one of these scenarios: survival after nuclear war.

Image reads “spoilers below,” with a triangular sign bearing an exclamation point.

Fallout takes place in two different periods in the Los Angeles area: the moments before nuclear bombs are dropped across the US, and 200 years later. Lucy MacLean (Ella Purnell), the show’s protagonist, is a “vault-dweller” — the term for people who live underground in sealed bunkers created by a company called Vault-Tec. Despite their world’s dark past, Lucy and the community of Vault 33 remain optimistic that one day — when the radioactive levels are low enough on the surface — civilization can restart with their help. But when her father, the leader of their vault, gets kidnapped by people from the surface, Lucy leaves her bunker to bring him back.

As she embarks on her quest to find her dad, Lucy finds that the surface is a hostile place. There’s little to no food or clean water, danger exists around every corner in the form of bandits and mutants, and the lone survivors are cynical and distrustful — especially toward Lucy, whose bunkered life seems easy by comparison. As one disgruntled shopkeeper tells Lucy, “The vaults were nothing more than a hole in the ground for rich folks to hide in while the rest of the world burned.”

Indeed, in our real world, there are wealthy people investing in bunkers in case shit hits the fan, including some big names like Mark Zuckerberg. But what about everyone else? That’s a key message in Fallout: Survival isn’t equitable. And while Fallout is a fictional depiction of nuclear war that’s heavy on the sci-fi, nuclear warfare itself is not off the table in reality. There are also plenty of other existential risks that can shape how we live, like future pandemics, a changing climate causing extreme weather and disasters, and harmful artificial intelligence.

What makes nuclear war particularly terrifying is the devastation it can cause in just seconds — the horrifying damage and loss of life from the US atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki nearly 80 years ago underscore why we should prevent this from ever happening again. Yet, nine countries are still armed with nuclear weapons, with the US and Russia possessing thousands of nuclear warheads.

So I reached out to Seth Baum, the executive director of the Global Catastrophic Risk Institute, a think tank that analyzes the greatest threats to civilization and develops strategies to reduce these risks. We talked about what the aftermath of a nuclear war could look like in our real world — and also what we should focus on now to prevent this scenario from happening, as well as how we could prepare for it if it does.

“We do actually need to take this seriously, as dark and unpleasant as it is,” Baum said. “It is a very worthwhile thing to be doing because we could really need it. It could be the difference between life and death for a massive number of people.”

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

After watching Fallout for myself, it feels like an ominous warning. But, of course, it’s also describing an alternate history, and there’s a lot of science fiction in the story. What could an actual post-nuclear world look like for us?

[It] probably would not involve mutants and monsters. Nuclear radiation can cause some mutations, but it probably wouldn’t actually happen like that. But that’s okay, it’s a video game and a TV show, it’s supposed to be entertaining — that’s fine.

The most important thing we can do is to not have a nuclear war in the first place. And that should always be the first option to address the risk of nuclear war. In the event of an actual nuclear war, for people who are in the immediate vicinity of the explosion, there’s not much that can be done. The force of a nuclear explosion is too much. Buildings will be destroyed, people will be killed, that’s just how it’s going to be.

Then for the rest of the world, this is where things get interesting. The plausible nuclear war scenarios would not have nuclear explosions across the whole world. First of all, we just don’t have that many nuclear weapons, which is a good thing. Second of all, much of the world is just not a likely target in any actual nuclear war scenario. You know, I live in New York City, it’s a good chance I would die, right? We are a likely target of nuclear explosions.

But across much of the world, across Latin America, across Africa, large portions of Asia — these are countries that are not involved in any significant disputes with the nuclear-armed countries. There’s only a few nuclear-armed countries, and we tend to have our nuclear weapons pointed at each other and at our close allies, maybe.

So unless you happen to live near [a nuclear missile silo], you’re probably not going to get hit, you’re probably going to survive the immediate attack. Then there are a few things that you’re going to want to look at. The two big global effects are one, nuclear winter, and two, damage to the global economy. If you start removing hubs from the economy, that’s going to have an effect on the rest of the economy. What would that effect be? Well, nobody really knows, we’ve never tried it before. That’s something that every country would have to deal with. At a minimum, there’s going to be some sort of supply chain shocks. Also, nobody’s really studied this in much detail — we could at least try studying it a little bit.

There has been more research on nuclear winter — I’m using the term nuclear winter broadly to refer to all of the global, environmental effects of nuclear war that come from basically the ashes of burning cities and burning other places going up into the stratosphere, which is the second level of the atmosphere, and it stays up there for months, or even years. That can have a variety of effects. One of the biggest being plants don’t grow as much, because it’s colder, it’s darker, there may be less precipitation. So there are some projections and very severe agricultural shortfalls. It could take a lot of effort just to survive, even for countries that had nothing to do with a conflict that caused the war.

How is the US prepared to preserve the lives of its civilians in the event of a nuclear war or other catastrophic events with similar impacts, if at all?

My understanding from this is that we’re just not really prepared to handle this type of situation, that we have some emergency management capabilities, but we push past the reasonable limits of those capabilities pretty quickly in these very extreme scenarios. So would we be able to do some things to help out? Yeah, sure. Would we be able to keep society intact? Maybe, but I wouldn’t count on it. This is really just something that we are not currently set up to do.

Frankly, this would be a good thing to invest more in for the United States government and other governments, to invest more in the capabilities of more successfully surviving these extreme catastrophe scenarios. Nuclear war is one of them, it’s not the only one. This is something that we could and, I think, should do better at.

In the show, a select few of the population get to live safely in bunkers underground — those who have access to power and money, generally. In real life even, there’s a community of wealthy people who have invested in bunkers in case of emergencies. How do we ensure shelter and refuge for as many people as possible in these kinds of situations?

Yes, there are wealthy people who are making these preparations. There are also the survivalists, the preppers, who are doing similar sorts of things, often with a much deeper commitment to actually surviving. Having a bunker in New Zealand doesn’t do you very much good if you’re in the United States during the time of the war.

So for people living out in more strategic locations on a permanent basis, those people may be a lot more likely to survive something like a nuclear war, which targets the big cities in ways that it doesn’t matter how much money you have, you can’t survive the nuclear explosion. It just doesn’t work that way.

What does bring benefits is having the resources in place to deal with the aftermath, which for nuclear war could include a combination of food stockpiles, and preparations to continue making food through any agricultural shortfalls with nuclear winter, could include the public health capabilities to manage the effects. If we see significant supply chain shocks, and just general disruption of how a civilization functions, that can create major public health challenges even away from where the attacks occurred. And also, the social and psychological and institutional preparedness. This is a really big challenge — getting people to wrap their minds around and make actual serious plans with institutional weight behind them, to be prepared to deal with this sort of thing.

It’s not easy. This is not something that we like to think about, like to work on, this is not happy stuff, right? It’s tough because most of the time, you don’t need it. In fact, hopefully you never need it. And yet, if something like this happens, and it could happen, then this could be the difference between life and death for a large number of people.

Why is there this ever-present fascination with stocking up on supplies? Whether it’s bunkers or emergency kits, it feels like people can buy their way to safety — I’m curious what you think is the underlying dynamic here?

Well, first of all, it’s just interesting. I’m fascinated by it, even if I myself am a real failure of a prepper. Despite my line of work, I’m actually not personally very good at this, plus I live in Manhattan — my default expectation is that I would just die. I don’t know my way around this stuff. But some people do, and you know, more credit to them for taking on that sort of responsibility. And a lot of this is things that any of us would be well-served by doing even for a much more basic set of catastrophes.

I remember, a few years ago, I went to a meeting of the New York City preppers group. And I was a little disappointed. I was kind of hoping to meet some really crazy, eccentric people. And it just wasn’t. The group was led by a police officer who was just doing this in his spare time, this little public service, and the people there were normal and they were just trying to learn some basics of what to do. And it turned out some of the basic preparations, it’s a lot of the stuff that FEMA recommends people do for basic disaster preparedness.

Now, is that gonna be enough for a nuclear war? Maybe not. For that, you might need something more serious, and some people are trying to do that sort of serious thing. In the event of a nuclear war, that might be the difference between them surviving and then them not surviving. It’s entirely reasonable that there’s some people out there doing it.

For the rest of us, we should, I think, broadly be supportive of this. I wouldn’t look at those people as eccentric crazies — I would look at them as people who are taking the responsibility of ensuring their own survival and their family’s survival across a wide range of scenarios. That’s commendable, and I wish that there was more of a public or communal attitude toward: Can we help all of us to do more along these lines? Because we could end up really needing it.

While the US hasn’t faced any events as deeply catastrophic for our survival as nuclear warfare would be, are there past crises that we can look to and learn from in an effort to prepare for the worst in the future?

This is a major challenge in the study of global catastrophic risk. We don’t really have a lot of data points. I mean, modern global civilization has never been destroyed before, which is a good thing. That’s, of course, a good thing. But for research purposes, it means a lack of data.

What we have to do is make use of what information we do have. And events like the Covid-19 pandemic are one really important source of information. Another we can try to learn from [is] major catastrophes that have occurred across human history. Then also for the local scale disasters that occur on a relatively frequent basis: natural disasters, violent conflicts, and so on. All of this does provide some insight into how human societies respond to these sorts of situations.

The best we can do is take what we do have experience with, what we do have data on, and extrapolate that as well as we can to these other scenarios that have never happened before, and use that as the basis for using our best judgment about how we can survive and cope with it. And along the way, we can perhaps use that as that much more motivation to prevent these scenarios from happening in the first place, which, again, is always the best option.

Ideally, the world never finds itself in a situation as devastating to human life as global nuclear war would be. How do we reduce that risk as best as possible?

There are a lot of small-picture things that can be done, and then there is that one big-picture thing that, in my opinion, is not getting the attention that it deserves.

The small picture things — and in my experience, this is the primary focus of work on nuclear war risk reduction — are just the day-to-day management of nuclear weapons systems and relations between the countries that have them. This was all especially pronounced recently during the most tense moments of the ongoing conflict in Ukraine, and is probably still a day-to-day concern for the people who manage the nuclear weapons systems in Russia, in the United States, and France and the UK. There’s a lot to be done there to prevent things from escalating, and this is important work.

In my opinion, none of this solves the underlying issue: which is that there are these countries that have nuclear weapons, some of them in rather large numbers. And so those nuclear weapons are pointed at each other and may at some point get used. My view is that the only real solution to this is to improve the relations between these countries, enough that they don’t feel that they need the nuclear weapons anymore. Now, that process can include attention to how terrible the aftermath of nuclear war would be that makes countries that much more eager to get rid of these terrible weapons.

But I have a hard time seeing any significant nuclear disarmament without significant improvements in the relations between the countries that have them, the most important of which is Russia.

This is not a quick-fix solution. This is something that, if it’s going to happen, it would probably happen over the decades.


Read full article on: vox.com
NYPD detectives jump over glass barrier to save distraught woman on ledge of 54-story NYC building, dramatic video shows
The two ESU members hoisted the woman above the glass wall while police waited on the other side to grab onto her, the footage shows.
nypost.com
The dark fashions from Met Gala 2024, ‘The Garden of Time’
The 2024 Met Gala just wrapped and a handful of celebrities interpreted the theme in a particularly dark way, with lots of black and florals. That’s because this year’s dress code was “The Garden of Time,” which is based on a dystopian 1962 short story that uses a garden as a metaphor for cycles of...
nypost.com
Tyla, Zendaya, Mindy Kaling & more stars unexpected styles from the Met Gala 2024
The Met Gala brings out all the biggest stars and this year’s unique theme, “Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion,” had some unexpected styles from A-listers like Zendaya, Tyla, Cardi B, Kim Kardashian, and more. Watch the full video to see how they interpreted the theme. Subscribe to our YouTube for the latest on all your favorite stars.
nypost.com
Brandon Nimmo’s homer lifts Mets over Cardinals to halt three-game skid
Most of Brandon Nimmo’s first month was about as dreary as the New York weather, but May flowers have arrived. 
nypost.com
Aspiring doctor left to die in lake by friends makes remarkable recovery as family plans legal action
Christopher Gilbert, 26, has been taken off life support and is talking and eating with his family again.
nypost.com
Zendaya hailed ‘fashion icon of the year’ after Met Gala outfit change
Take a second look! 
nypost.com
Tyla is covered in real sand — and can barely move — on the 2024 Met Gala red carpet
While the official dress-code for the night was "The Garden of Time," she was instead inspired by "the sands of time" for the distinctive design.
nypost.com
SEAN HANNITY: Biden's team wants you to see as little of him as possible
Fox News host Sean Hannity said Monday that there is only so much President Biden's staffers can do to prevent him from "making a complete fool of himself."
foxnews.com
Met Gala 2024 sees Kim Kardashian, Rita Ora and Emily Ratajkowski brave red carpet in daring sheer dresses
Kim Kardashian revealed her curves in a sparkling dress while Emily Ratajkowski and Rita Ora showed some serious skin at the 2024 Met Gala in New York City.
foxnews.com
Don’t Be Fooled by These AI-Generated Met Gala Looks
As the celebrities arrived to the Met Gala Monday night, so did AI recreations of stars who were not in attendance.
time.com
The Best Accessory Seen on the Met Gala Red Carpet
The best accessory from the 2024 Met Gala red carpet was all that and a bag of chips, courtesy of actor Michael Shannon and Balenciaga.
time.com
Linda Evangelista attends Met Gala for the first time in nearly a decade
The '90s supermodel last attended the star-studded soirée in 2015 —- the same year she started getting sessions of CoolSculpting, which left her "deformed."
nypost.com
Jalen Brunson powers Game 1 win as Knicks rally late to survive Pacers scare
The Cardiac Knicks survived another one. 
nypost.com
LAURA INGRAHAM: Biden is asking people to vote to make themselves and the country poorer and weaker
Fox News host Laura Ingraham unpacks what's at stake in the 2024 presidential election on 'The Ingraham Angle.'
foxnews.com
Dodgers put Joe Kelly on injured list because of shoulder strain
The Dodgers officially activated Walker Buehler on Monday, but they also put reliever Joe Kelly on the injured list because of a right posterior shoulder strain.
latimes.com
Los Celtics y los Cavaliers vuelven a citarse en playoffs desde 2018. Esta vez Boston es el favorito
Una de las cosas que recuerda el alero de los Celtics Jayson Tatum sobre su tiempo en la burbuja de la NBA en Florida en 2020 durante la pandemia fueron sus observaciones fortuitas sobre Donovan Mitchell.
latimes.com
Mica Miller case: Cause of death revealed for South Carolina pastor’s wife
The Robeson County Medical Examiner's office has revealed the cause of death for Mica Miller, the wife of Solid Rock Church pastor, John-Paul Miller after her body was found over the weekend.
foxnews.com
Primer grand slam de Olivares y juego completo de Keller guían triunfo de Piratas ante Angelinos
El venezolano Edward Olivares estremeció el primer grand slam de su carrera y Mitch Keller navegó la ruta completa con sólo cinco imparables permitidos para guiar a los Piratas de Pittsburgh a una victoria de 4-1 sobre los Angelinos de Los Ángeles, el lunes por la noche.
latimes.com
Harper dispara jonrón, Wheeler poncha a 11 y los Filis barren en serie de 4 juegos a Gigantes
Zack Wheeler abanicó a 11 en siete entradas, Bryce Harper disparó cuadrangular de tres carreras y Kyle Schwarber añadió una línea solitaria para ayudar a los Filis de Filadelfia a completar una barrida de cuatro juegos sobre los Gigantes de San Francisco con una victoria por 6-1 el lunes.
1 h
latimes.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘OMG Fashun’ on E!, An Unconventional, Goofy, and Wildly Creative Fashion Competition Hosted By Julia Fox
Project Runway's unconventional materials challenges walked so OMG Fashun could run.
1 h
nypost.com
If Trump were sent to jail...
The hush money case judge warned Donald Trump he could be jailed for gag order violations. Would the Secret Service go with him? Would he be safe?
1 h
edition.cnn.com
Israel’s Rafah operation, explained
Palestinians in eastern Rafah migrate to Khan Yunis after the Israeli army’s announcement on May 6, 2024. | Ashraf Amra/Anadolu via Getty Images The Israel-Hamas war went from a potential short-term ceasefire to strikes on Rafah on Monday. Israel’s long-threatened invasion of Rafah looks like it could be imminent. Israel conducted airstrikes Monday on the southern Palestinian city, currently home to about 1.4 million people who have been displaced throughout Israel’s war on Gaza. It did so one day after ordering at least 100,000 Palestinians to evacuate from the eastern part of the city, prompting scenes of families fleeing north to areas heavily damaged by nearly eight months of fighting. The combination of the two events — plus a vote from Israel’s war Cabinet on Monday to move forward with the operation — indicates a larger operation could be on the way. Israel maintains that four Hamas battalions are operating from the southern city. Rafah is also one of the only places in Gaza that Israeli forces have not destroyed and is the site of two border crossings — critical routes for the humanitarian aid people in Gaza so desperately need. This all came as representatives from Hamas, Israel, Egypt, Qatar, and the US gathered in Cairo to discuss the terms of a potential ceasefire. Hamas reportedly agreed to a proposal by Qatari and Egyptian officials on Monday. Israel has rejected that plan, saying that the agreement is not aligned with the proposal drafted by Israeli and US negotiators. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has repeatedly warned that Israel will attack Rafah, despite US admonitions not to do so without a clear and credible plan for protecting civilians — which State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said the US had not yet seen during a press briefing Monday. Given the destruction of Gaza and the staggering number of deaths — at least 34,500, some 14,000 of whom were children — aid groups and international organizations like the UN are warning that an invasion could be catastrophic due to the immense crowding there and could cut off critical aid routes. However, as of Monday evening, Netanyahu’s government appears committed to its maximalist military objective of destroying Hamas. Israel has consolidated operational control of wide swaths of Gaza, including operations that razed and captured major cities like Khan Younis and Gaza City. In recent months, Rafah has become the focus of the war. Given Israel’s belief that it houses many of Hamas’s remaining fighters, the country’s right wing has been clamoring for an invasion there as the necessary step toward “total victory” and Netanyahu has framed it as an existential battle. But considering Israel’s moves to entrench its control of the north for months or years to come, the possibility of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) seizing Rafah raises dire questions about the future of Gaza after the war. And as the concentration of the vast majority of Gaza’s population is there (and the fact that the city serves as the territory’s main aid hub), in the short term, a full-scale operation spells a humanitarian disaster. What’s happening in Rafah? On Monday, the prime minister’s office posted on X, “The War Cabinet unanimously decided that Israel continues the operation in Rafah to exert military pressure on Hamas in order to promote the release of our hostages and the other goals of the war” while continuing to negotiate a potential ceasefire. That announcement was followed by IDF spokesperson Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari posting on X, “IDF forces are now attacking and operating against the targets of the terrorist organization Hamas in a targeted manner” in eastern Rafah Monday night local time. According to the Jerusalem Post, Hagari said an aerial operation started Monday in preparation for a ground offensive. Israeli forces air-dropped leaflets to people in east Rafah Sunday night warning them to go to a safe zone; however, the operation in east Rafah began just hours later, according to Hagari. The tactics echo ones used in the beginning of the war, when the military urged people to leave northern Gaza, giving them 24 hours to leave the area before a proposed operation (Israel ultimately delayed the strike). As of now, there are few details about what exactly that operation entails — and how many of the 100,000 people urged to evacuate the area made it out to areas near Khan Younis, a city roughly 5 miles north of Rafah, before the operation began. Rafah was supposed to be a safe zone for the roughly 1.7 million people now sheltering there. Israeli operations in northern and central Gaza leveled about 70 percent of the housing in the region, as Abdallah al-Dardari, director of the regional bureau for Arab states at the UN Development Program, said in a press briefing last week. Israel has repeatedly engaged in strikes against Rafah, despite the risk to civilians due to population density, including one on Sunday in retaliation for a Hamas rocket attack on the Kerem Shalom border crossing, which killed four Israeli soldiers and reportedly may have helped accelerate Israel’s timeline for the Rafah operation by stoking fears of Hamas’s capabilities. The Israeli strikes killed at least 19 people, according to Palestinian health officials. The most immediate concern of any operation is humanitarian; military engagement poses a great risk to the people in Rafah, and the UN warned Friday that hundreds of thousands of people would be “at imminent risk of death” should an invasion go forward. Humanitarian supplies including food, fuel, clean water, and medical aid are already in short supply, and some medical aid groups, like MedGlobal, have opted to suspend their operations in light of the operation. “There is nowhere safe to go: for over six months, Israel has routinely killed civilians and aid workers, including in clearly marked ‘safe zones’ and ‘evacuation routes,’” Abby Maxman, the president and CEO of OxFam America, said in a statement Monday. “The notion that the 100,000 civilians being evacuated by Israel will be safe and protected is simply not credible.” It’s also unclear how safe the evacuation zones are. For example, Israel targeted al-Mawasi, a supposed humanitarian zone, in February when an IDF tank fired on a house there, killing the wife and daughter-in-law of a worker with the medical aid group Doctors Without Borders (MSF). “Six other people were injured, five of whom were women or children,” according to a news release from the group. “Bullets were also fired at the clearly marked MSF building, hitting the front gate, the building’s exterior, and the interior of the ground floor.” (The Israeli army told France 24 it had “fired at a building … where terror activity is occurring.”) What are Israel’s goals in Rafah? The ostensible goal of the operation is to go after four Hamas battalions that the government says are based in Rafah. Israel has made various claims about the number of militants the armed forces have killed during the war on Gaza, suggesting numbers as high as 12,000. Hamas does not disclose the number of its fighters killed. Though Israel claims there are six Hamas battalions left — the four in Rafah and two in central Gaza — it’s difficult to assess whether that’s true. “You’ve got the official government line saying that this is the last bastion of Hamas — whatever remains of their battalions,” Tahani Mustafa, senior Palestine analyst at the International Crisis Group, told Vox. “But then you’ve got military leaks that are coming out, with some members of the Israeli military saying, ‘Actually, Israel has been completely unsuccessful in destroying a single battalion,’ and Hamas’s 24, 25 battalions, they assume they are still very much intact.” “There’s a consensus that Hamas still has at least half of its fighters in the field,” Jon Alterman, director of the Middle East program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, told Vox. Israel has said that its goal is the destruction of Hamas, politically and militarily. Because of that, even in the event of a ceasefire and an agreement releasing the hostages Hamas still holds from its October 7 raid, Israel would not have met its goals, perhaps leaving the door open for further actions in Rafah, and Gaza more broadly. Even a more limited incursion into Rafah — if that is even possible — creates some political risks, including the potential for Egypt to reverse a decades-long peace deal with Israel, as it threatened to do in February should Israel invade the city. France has also warned against an invasion; the foreign ministry said that forcibly displacing people from Rafah would constitute a war crime. The US has also warned Israel against launching any invasion without a plan for civilian protection, but there has been no forceful condemnation from the Biden administration, nor any threat to US military aid to Israel so far. What about the ceasefire process? Israel and Hamas have not agreed to a ceasefire since November, when a week-long pause in hostilities saw the return of some 105 hostages and 240 Palestinian prisoners held in Israel. The latest round of peace talks have stalled over the past two months because the bargaining positions are fundamentally at odds. “Unfortunately, we’re in a situation where both sides — their demands are mutually exclusive,” Mustafa said. “You’ve got Hamas that’s insisting on a complete and total cessation of hostilities, a full Israeli withdrawal from the Gaza Strip, that is about one-fifth of its size pre-October 7. It’s demanding the return of people from the south back to the north.” According to Reuters, Hamas negotiators agreed to a three-phase plan consisting of two six-week ceasefire phases during which Hamas would release Israeli hostages in return for a phased military retreat and the release of Palestinian prisoners. The third phase would include implementing a reconstruction plan in Gaza and ending the years-long blockade on the territory. Now, Israeli leadership has said that it is using the Rafah offensive as a pressure tactic — a phased operation to pressure Hamas into accepting its demands for a ceasefire. Each side has blamed the other for the failure to reach an agreement, but fundamentally, as Mustafa said, the positions of the two sides boil down to: stop the war, and continue fighting, which cannot coexist. Netanyahu and the Israeli public see this as a multi-year war, Alterman said. “They don’t want this to end anytime soon, because they want the possibility of October 7 ever happening again to be eliminated,” he said. “Now, whether there’s a military way to get there or not, is a separate question.”
1 h
vox.com
Zendaya changes into second outfit with giant train and flower hat on Met Gala 2024 red carpet
While the star's tennis-filled press tour may be over, it's safe to say she's still serving thanks to a duo of looks at this year's Met Gala.
1 h
nypost.com
Lana Del Rey Buddies Up To Kim Kardashian After Attending Super Bowl With Taylor Swift
The pair were photographed doing an interview together at the Met Gala.
1 h
newsweek.com
Ex-Knick Obi Toppin pulls off electrifying Pacers dunk to stun MSG
Ex-Knicks draft pick Obi Toppin and current Pacer showed off his skills with an unreal dunk at the end of the third quarter of Game 1 on Monday night at Madison Square Garden.
1 h
nypost.com
Tom Brady roaster Nikki Glaser reveals what was off-limits for Netflix special
Tom Brady took the brunt of plenty of jokes about his career and personal life on Sunday during "The Roast of Tom Brady, but there was one topic that one of the roasters said that no one would be joking about.
1 h
nypost.com
Why Rihanna skipped the 2024 Met Gala: report
Although she teased her red carpet look last week, the "Umbrella" singer didn't attend the glitzy fashion event after all.
1 h
nypost.com
Yankees stars, Knicks great come out for Game 1 vs. Pacers at the Garden
Forget the Met Gala -- it's Round 2 at the Garden and the Knicks' biggest fans are showing out.
1 h
nypost.com
Deion Sanders explains why he got involved in social media scrap
Colorado Buffaloes head coach Deion Sanders explained that he was "bored," which is why he got into the mix on social media with others.
1 h
foxnews.com
Super realistic AI photo of Katy Perry at Met Gala 2024 goes viral
The AI-generated snap of the "Roar" songstress showed her posing on the steps of the MET as she donned a beige gown with floral embroidery.
1 h
nypost.com
Swastika arm band at NYC tailor sparks fury — but shop says employee didn’t know what it meant
Ignacio's Tailor shop on East 60th Street issued a groveling apology and a manager said he called the cops, then tossed the hateful garment.
1 h
nypost.com
Angel Reese jets off from Sky training camp to attend 2024 Met Gala on birthday
Angel Reese spent her 22nd birthday glammed up at the Met Gala in Manhattan. 
1 h
nypost.com
Inside the White House Scramble to Broker a Deal in Gaza
The flurry of actions underscores how fluid the situation in the region is as President Biden and his team try to ultimately end the war that has devastated Gaza.
1 h
nytimes.com
Breaking down the latest presidential battleground polls
Key battleground states across the country are essentially even, according to a recent CBS News poll. Executive director of elections and surveys Anthony Salvanto examines the numbers. Then, journalists Jasmine Wright and Daniella Diaz join with analysis.
1 h
cbsnews.com
A judge is forcing Hawaii to give wildfire investigation documents to lawyers handling lawsuits
A judge forced the Hawaii attorney general's office to give to lawyers involved in the lawsuits over the August Maui wildfires all interviews and documents collected by the team hired to investigate.
1 h
foxnews.com
AI tricksters spread fake Rihanna Met Gala red carpet photos after she reportedly skips due to flu
Sorry, they'll be no Rih-awakening tonight.
2 h
nypost.com
Mets’ Brett Baty runs into umpire, goes tumbling down on him in ‘embarrassing’ moment
The Mets third baseman has begun heating up at the plate and has flashed some solid leather of late at the hot corner, but things took a turn early in the team’s game against the Cardinals in St. Louis on Monday night.
2 h
nypost.com
Senators Need to Stop the Anti-Semitism Awareness Act
The panic over pro-Palestinian protesters fuels illiberal legislation.
2 h
nytimes.com
Nicki Minaj blooms in 3D floral minidress and bob hairstyle on the 2024 Met Gala red carpet
Minaj embodied the "garden of time" Met Gala concept as she sported a garden of 3D metal flowers on her yellow minidress.
2 h
nypost.com
Victor Wembanyama wins NBA Rookie of the Year after insane Spurs debut
Wembanyama joined legendary Spurs Tim Duncan and David Robinson as No. 1 overall draft picks by the franchise to have captured the award.
2 h
nypost.com
Lizzo cosplays as a tree on Met Gala 2024 red carpet
The "About Damn Time" singer committed to the "Garden of Time" dress code at the Met Gala on Monday night in New York City.
2 h
nypost.com
Pirates' Paul Skenes still 'scheduled' for minor league start as Olivia Dunne leads hype about call up
Pittsburgh Pirates manager Derek Shelton attempted to downplay rumors that Paul Skenes would be called up to the majors after his start in Triple-A.
2 h
foxnews.com
The Best Memes Reacting To The 2024 Met Gala – And Taylor Swift's Rumored Appearance
The internet is buzzing with memes reacting to the highly anticipated celebrity event.
2 h
newsweek.com
Trolls question Kim Kardashian’s ‘raggedy’ Met Gala sweater cover-up
She waisted no time shining — but what's under that sweater?
2 h
nypost.com
For a Louisiana lawmaker, exempting incest and rape from the state's abortion ban is personal
Louisiana Democratic Rep. Delisha Boyd's battle to exempt pregnancies that are the result of incest and rape from the state's strict abortion ban is personal.
2 h
foxnews.com
The Met Gala theme was both boring and out of touch
The lavish Upper East Side bash was practically "The Hunger Games," but with Kim Kardashian.
2 h
nypost.com
Anti-Israel agitators in NYC shout down man waving Israeli flag: ‘Shame on you!’
A crowd of anti-Israel agitators waving Palestinian flags on the Upper East Side were filmed shouting down a counterprotester waving an Israeli flag.
2 h
foxnews.com
Sydney Sweeney Looks Unrecognizable With New Hair at Met Gala
Sydney Sweeney switched up her hair for the 2024 Meg Gala — looking completely different.
2 h
newsweek.com