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North Carolina gov cross-checks Devils after loss to Hurricanes: 'Too good for such dirty play'

North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper took a swipe at the New Jersey Devils after the Carolina Hurricanes defeated their divisional opponent on Saturday.
Read full article on: foxnews.com
Pearl Harbor Hero, Harry Chandler, Dies Aged 103
Chandler, a Navy medic, is the third Pearl Harbor survivor to die in the past few weeks; only 15 others are still living.
newsweek.com
Who Is Matthew Livelsberger? Tesla Cybertruck Explosion Suspect
Investigators are exploring possible links to the New Orleans attack suspect, Shamsud-Din Jabbar.
newsweek.com
China and Russia Forge Major Tech Collaboration To Challenge US
Under Vladimir Putin's orders, Russia and China will work together on AI development, and this could further power Moscow's war.
newsweek.com
What Matthew Livelsberger's Social Media Reveals About Cybertruck Suspect
Livelsberger, the suspect named in the Las Vegas Trump hotel explosion, was a 37-year-old army veteran from Colorado Springs.
newsweek.com
Shamsud-Din Jabbar's Former Commander Says He Was a 'Great Soldier'
Jabbar, 42, rammed a truck into a crowd in New Orleans' bustling French Quarter early on New Year's Day.
newsweek.com
Kursk Incursion Caused 38,000 Russian Troop Losses, Says Ukraine
Ukraine's Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Syrskyi has given Kyiv's assessment of Russian casualties.
newsweek.com
Suspect Shamsud-Din Jabbar's divorce filings point to financial difficulties
The man suspected in the attack in New Orleans had a checkered marital history punctuated by multiple divorces and financial difficulty, according to court records.
abcnews.go.com
Georgia Polar Vortex Forecast: Deep South Set for Deep Freeze
The polar vortex is expected to bring a "brutally cold stretch" which could prove the coldest January in the U.S. since 2014.
newsweek.com
What Are 'Hazard' Stealth Drones? Ukraine Receives New Equipment From US
The drone system is part of a "major fundraiser" for Ukraine's GUR spy agency, U.S.-based charity, Help Heroes of Ukraine, said in a statement.
newsweek.com
Shamsud-Din Jabbar's Local Mosque Responds to New Orleans Terror Attack
The Masjid Bilal in Houston condemned what it described as "terrible acts" in New Orleans.
newsweek.com
Suicide Squad Kill the Justice League Goes Free for PlayStation Plus Subscribers
PlayStation Plus' monthly games for January 2025 have been revealed and they include Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League.
newsweek.com
Naples, Italy: A Popular Tourist Destination Suffering from Violence and Unemployment
The southern Italian city has become fashionable for tourists, models and actors in a social media age. Yet it remains merciless for many of its youth.
nytimes.com
Who Is Thea Booysen? MrBeast Announces Engagement
The YouTuber shared a photo of his fiancée's gorgeous ring on social media.
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newsweek.com
How Los Angeles ended up with the same nickname as the Confederacy
California may have been a union state, but it has its own north-south rivalry.
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latimes.com
12 beautiful blooms to find in SoCal, one for every month of the year
Here are plants and flowers to enjoy, one for every month of the year, from lilacs, camellias and poinsettias to native buckwheat, wildflowers and toyon.
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latimes.com
Your 2025 joy calendar
We're at the start of a new year. Take time to plan your next adventures using our expert guides that offer opportunities for fun, road trips, self-care and more for every month of 2025.
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latimes.com
College-bound students fear 'outing' undocumented parents on FAFSA financial aid form
Many college-bound students with undocumented immigrant parents are hesitant to submit federal financial aid applications as President-elect Donald Trump vows to deport immigrants who are in the country illegally.
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latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: California's piers are imperiled. Will we take climate change seriously now?
Plenty of people take climate change seriously, but billions of us don't. That doesn't bode well for coastal piers and a lot more.
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latimes.com
A true story of a shipwrecked family with uncanny parallels to the tale of the Swiss Family Robinson
Matthew Pearl's 'Save Our Souls: The True Story of a Castaway Family, Treachery and Murder' is as suspenseful and dire as the Disney movie is idyllic.
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latimes.com
L.A. County's Hall of Administration should stand, Janice Hahn says. And not because of her dad
The Hall of Administration was named after Janice Hahn's father in 1992. She argues it shouldn't be razed, even after the county bought a nearby skyscraper.
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latimes.com
NFL Week 18 picks: AFC North champion will be decided with Saturday doubleheader
The AFC North-leading Ravens (11-5) play host to the Browns, and later the Steelers (10-6), trying to overtake the division lead, play host to the Bengals.
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latimes.com
The IRS faces more cuts under Trump. Here are three ways that could hurt the economy
Donald Trump's election with Republican majorities in Congress likely means less funding for tax enforcement. That will hurt economic productivity and efficiency.
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latimes.com
12 road trips to California's weird and wonderful festivals, one for every month of the year
Honk if you love road trips. Here are a dozen to check out this year, including the Cotati Accordion Festival, the Riverside County Fair and National Date Festival, and the San Diego Food & Wine Festival.
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latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: Are ballots getting tossed because we don't teach cursive anymore?
About 83,000 mail-in ballots were not counted in California because of signature match problems. A reader says that makes the case for cursive instruction.
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latimes.com
How far will Philomena Cunk go to get a laugh? 'If he breaks my nose, it'll heal'
Diane Morgan, the actor who plays know-nothing TV pundit Philomena Cunk, explains how series like 'Cunk on Life,' premiering on Netflix Friday, come together.
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latimes.com
How will 'A Complete Unknown' stack up against Timothée Chalamet's biggest hits?
Timothée Chalamet already has one big box-office hit under his belt for this year — 'Dune: Part Two.' How will 'A Complete Unknown' compare?
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latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: No, the Jan. 6 Capitol rioters weren't just 'trespassers'
A reader takes issue with a letter writer's assertion that the media's coverage of the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection was alarmist.
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latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: The cases for and against high-speed rail in California
A transportation engineer argues the bullet train isn't economically viable. Another reader says finishing the project is a matter of political will.
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latimes.com
New Orleans Attack ‘Inspired by ISIS’, and a Cybertruck Explosion in Las Vegas
Plus, a breathalyzer test for marijuana?
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nytimes.com
How marketing pushed these three indie films into box office hits
Despite major obstacles, some indie films thrived this year. Yes, they were artistically accomplished, but inventive ad campaigns also helped draw in crowds.
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latimes.com
If your phone had feelings would you treat it differently? It could happen sooner than you think
Artificial intelligence could achieve sentience in 10 years. We should prepare for these systems to have their own subjective experiences, including sensing pain caused by humans.
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latimes.com
How 2024 took Nikki Glaser from center stage in stand-up to the center of the Golden Globes
On Jan. 5, Glaser will make history as the first woman to solo-host the Golden Globes, and there is no telling who will be in her comedic crosshairs.
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latimes.com
Women like me struggle to see ourselves as veterans. Why?
Comments like those from Pete Hegseth, Trump's choice for Defense secretary, remind me of my years in the Marines trying to be 'one of the guys.'
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latimes.com
The 16 TV shows we're excited for in 2025
Whether it's returning series like "The White Lotus, "Severance" and "The Last of Us," or new shows like "Watson" and "Long Story Short," there will be plenty of TV to watch in 2025.
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latimes.com
The 119th Congress begins tomorrow. Here's what to know.
The 119th Congress begins Friday with Republicans in full control of the House and Senate for the first time since 2019. Here's what to know.
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cbsnews.com
Kyle Busch Shares Heartfelt Message To Wife As He Reveals How They Spent Their Anniversary
NASCAR driver Kyle Busch celebrated his 14th wedding anniversary with his wife Samantha.
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newsweek.com
The huge stakes in a new Supreme Court case about pornography
Former Attorney General John Ashcroft, whose name is on a seminal First Amendment decision that a far right appeals court decided it could openly defy. | Tim Sloan/AFP via Getty Images If you’ve studied First Amendment law, it’s impossible not to experience déjà vu while reading the briefs in Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton, a Supreme Court case the justices will hear on January 15 about online pornography. That’s because the Texas law at the heart of Free Speech Coalition is in all relevant respects identical to a federal law the Supreme Court blocked in Ashcroft v. ACLU (2004). (That federal law was meant to keep minors from being able to view pornography, and the Texas law attempts to do the same, albeit through a slightly different mechanism.) If the justices take seriously some of the more aggressive arguments Texas makes to defend its law, they could eliminate longstanding free speech protections for sexual content. Even the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, which upheld the Texas law, conceded that the two laws are “very similar” — though the Fifth Circuit did, in an unusual act of defiance by a lower court, conclude that it was not bound by the Supreme Court precedent established in Ashcroft and was free to uphold the Texas law anyway. It’s tempting, in other words, to dismiss Free Speech Coalition as an insignificant case that should end in the justices rebuking their insubordinate colleagues on the Fifth Circuit. That court has a history of handing down poorly reasoned opinions supporting right-wing results. And the Supreme Court, even with its 6-3 Republican supermajority, frequently reverses the Fifth Circuit’s most disruptive decisions. And yet, despite the Fifth Circuit’s weak reasoning and a poorly argued brief by the state of Texas defending its law, the state does make one plausible argument that the Court should tweak First Amendment law to make it less friendly to pornography producers. What is Free Speech Coalition about? Free Speech Coalition involves a 2023 Texas law that requires many — but not all — websites that distribute pornographic content to verify that their users are over the age of 18. The plaintiffs, a trade association for the pornography industry along with various members of that industry, argues that this law forces “adult users to incur severe privacy and security risks.” Many adults, in other words, don’t want to submit a picture of their driver’s license to a porn site which could be hacked or subpoenaed, revealing intimate information about its users’ sexual desires. In Ashcroft, the Supreme Court ruled against a largely identical federal law, which made it a crime for businesses to post material online that is “harmful to minors,” but which also allowed those businesses to escape conviction if they took certain steps to verify the age of their consumers. There are some distinctions between the law at issue in Ashcroft and the Texas law at issue in Free Speech Coalition — most notably, the Texas law only imposes civil, as opposed to criminal, penalties on violators — but even the Fifth Circuit conceded that these distinctions do not change how Free Speech Coalition should be analyzed under the First Amendment. In Ashcroft, a majority of the justices concluded that the government should have used “less restrictive” methods of keeping children away from porn sites, such as promoting “blocking and filtering software” that allows parents and teachers to prevent a particular computer from loading pornographic websites. Ashcroft is one of a line of First Amendment decisions establishing that the government typically may not prevent adults from seeing sexual content, even if the goal is to also prevent children from seeing the same material. Under this line of cases, laws that burden an adult’s access to nearly all sexual material must be “narrowly tailored” to achieve a “compelling” goal, which is why Ashcroft required the government to use the least burdensome method to restrict speech. Laws that burden constitutional rights — such as the right to free speech — are often subject to this narrow tailoring requirement, which is known as “strict scrutiny.” A law can fail strict scrutiny if it sweeps too broadly, imposing severe burdens on a constitutional right in return for relatively small benefits to society. But laws can also fail strict scrutiny if they are underinclusive, on the theory that a law with too many exceptions and loopholes can still limit constitutional rights without actually achieving a goal that could justify such a limitation. Texas’s brief defending its 2023 law suggests that the Ashcroft line of cases should be overruled, and that strict scrutiny should no longer apply to laws that seek to prevent children from seeing pornography, but that also restrict the First Amendment rights of adults. If the justices agree, that would give the government far more power to limit adults’ access to sexual content. A key element of Texas’s argument seems to be that more oversight is necessary given the breadth of pornography available — the state’s brief is full of lurid descriptions of things like bondage and tentacle porn. Texas’s lawyers appear to believe they can coax the justices into supporting their favored result by bombarding them with graphic descriptions of online pornography. That said, Texas does make one good argument for allowing some laws restricting young people from viewing pornography to stand. Ashcroft is a 20-year-old decision, and Texas claims that, in the last two decades, new technologies have emerged that make it possible to verify that an internet user is over 18 without threatening that person’s privacy or revealing any other information about them. If Texas is correct that this technology does exist, and that it can be fairly easily be used, then at least some laws requiring porn sites to bar underage users are constitutional. That’s because the kind of age-gating software that Texas describes in its brief would achieve the government’s goal of preventing children from seeing online porn more effectively than the content-filtering software endorsed by Ashcroft, and it would do so while imposing only a minimal burden on adults who have a right to see pornography. So a law that requires age-gating may survive strict scrutiny today, even if it didn’t in 2004 when technology was less advanced. A decision holding that the law may require pornographers to use this kind of secure, privacy-protecting age-gating software would be consistent with Ashcroft, and wouldn’t require the Supreme Court to toss out its previous decisions establishing that adults may view sexual content — an approach that Texas advocates for in much of its brief. Ashcroft, after all, did not rule that age-gating software is forbidden by the Constitution. It merely looked at the state of technology in 2004 and determined that content filtering was the best available option at that time. What does current law say about free speech and online porn? For much of American history, the courts largely ignored the First Amendment’s language barring laws “abridging the freedom of speech.” The federal Comstock Act, which has never been formally repealed, made it a crime to mail “every obscene, lewd, lascivious, indecent, filthy or vile article, matter, thing, device, or substance,” and many states had similar laws that extended beyond the mail. Artists, art dealers, booksellers, and others were arrested for producing or distributing sexual material that the government — or even just a few particularly zealous government officials — deemed too lascivious. In one 1883 case, an art gallery owner was convicted for selling reproductions of famous nude paintings, including Alexandre Cabanel’s masterpiece “The Birth of Venus.” By the middle of the 20th century, however, the Supreme Court began to take the First Amendment seriously, handing down a series of decisions that gradually shrunk the definition of “obscenity” (a legal term that refers to sexual material that is not protected by the First Amendment) until virtually nothing qualified. Yet, while modern First Amendment law broadly permits artists, authors, and pornographers to provide sexual material of all kinds to adults, it’s also well established that the government may bar young people from accessing some content that adults have a right to see. Both Texas and the Fifth Circuit rely heavily on Ginsberg v. New York, a 1968 case holding that the government may restrict minors’ access to some sexual content. But the facts of this nearly 60-year-old case are very different from those in Free Speech Coalition or Ashcroft. Ginsberg upheld New York’s prosecution of a lunch counter operator who sold two “girlie” magazines to a 16-year-old boy. This case, in other words, did not involve a law that prevented adults from seeing sexual material. Under the New York law at issue in that case, adults who wished to buy similar magazines could simply show their ID to prove they were of sufficient age, and they could do so without much worry that a hacker or government investigator would discover that they bought a magazine full of nude pictures. The Ashcroft line of cases, by contrast, all involve technologies that can widely broadcast sexual material in ways that make it difficult to check whether each consumer of that material is an adult. One 1989 case, for example, struck down a ban on “dial-a-porn” services, where callers could dial a phone number (and pay a fee) to hear a prerecorded, sexually explicit message. These decisions, moreover, established that laws which restrict adults’ access to sexual content generally must survive strict scrutiny, and they did so several years before Ashcroft applied this rule to the internet. In United States v. Playboy Entertainment Group (2000), for example, the Supreme Court struck down a federal law that effectively prohibited cable television stations from broadcasting pornography except between 10 pm and 6 am. Playboy could not possibly be clearer in holding that laws which prevent adults from seeing sexual material that they have a right to see must survive strict scrutiny — even if those laws are intended to shield children from pornography. In the Court’s words, “even where speech is indecent and enters the home, the objective of shielding children does not suffice to support a blanket ban if the protection can be accomplished by a less restrictive alternative.” Ashcroft, in other words, was hardly a groundbreaking decision. It simply took the rule which had already been established in cases like Playboy, and applied it to the new context of online pornography. And yet, despite this long line of cases that all point in exactly one direction, the Fifth Circuit concluded that it could defy all of these cases. It did so largely by implying that the George W. Bush-era Justice Department was staffed by rank incompetents. According to the Fifth Circuit, the Ashcroft opinion “contains startling omissions.” Though the opinion held that the federal law at issue in that case “would fail strict scrutiny,” Ashcroft did not actually explain why strict scrutiny should apply to a law restricting online porn. The Fifth Circuit claimed that “omission” occurred because the Justice Department lawyers who litigated Ashcroft failed to make the argument that strict scrutiny should not apply (instead, they claimed that the law at issue in Ashcroft survived strict scrutiny). According to the Fifth Circuit, because the DOJ never argued against strict scrutiny, Ashcroft never actually established a legal rule requiring courts to apply strict scrutiny in similar cases. It’s hard to know where to even begin with this argument. Lower courts are bound by Supreme Court decisions, even if they disagree with those decisions. Judges cannot refuse to follow Supreme Court cases because they think the lawyers who argued those cases did a bad job. In Ashcroft, moreover, there was a pretty obvious reason why the Justice Department decided not to argue against strict scrutiny. Playboy was decided in 2000, four years before Ashcroft was argued before the justices. So it was already settled law in 2004 that strict scrutiny applies to cases like Ashcroft. And, while the DOJ may have decided not to press the case against strict scrutiny in its Ashcroft briefing and arguments, one of the justices did. Justice Antonin Scalia published a dissenting opinion in Ashcroft which argued that his eight colleagues erred in “subjecting [the federal anti-porn law] to strict scrutiny.” So the justices who decided Ashcroft were hardly unaware of the arguments against strict scrutiny. Eight of them were simply unpersuaded by those arguments. So how should the Supreme Court handle Free Speech Coalition? The First Amendment issues presented by Free Speech Coalition are serious. And the question of whether technology has advanced to the point where it is possible both to shield minors from online pornography and ensure that adults can access any material they have a right to see is a difficult one that deserves a serious look by the federal courts. So it’s a shame that both the Fifth Circuit’s opinion and Texas’s brief are so poorly argued. Proponents of age-gating on porn sites deserve better advocates. They also deserve a more competently drafted law than the one at issue in Free Speech Coalition. The Texas law at issue in Free Speech Coalition appears to have been drafted without any input from a First Amendment lawyer. If Texas is correct that software can verify which consumers of online porn are adults without threatening their privacy, then the Supreme Court should uphold a properly crafted law requiring porn sites to use those services. But it should not uphold this Texas law. That’s because Texas’s law is not structured to survive strict scrutiny. Recall that strict scrutiny requires the courts to strike down laws that aren’t “narrowly tailored” to advance a “compelling interest,” and that this narrow tailoring requirement bars laws that are so underinclusive that they don’t actually do much to advance that interest. Texas’s law mocks this narrow tailoring requirement by applying its restrictions on online pornography to only a small subset of websites where pornography appears. Specifically, the law applies only to a business that “knowingly and intentionally publishes or distributes material on an Internet website … more than one-third of which is sexual material harmful to minors.” For starters, it’s unclear how, exactly, the law measures how much of a website is devoted to “sexual material.” Is this determined by looking at how many bytes of data are devoted to pornography? How many minutes of video? How many inches of screen space? But, even setting this vagueness concern aside, one of the main purposes of strict scrutiny’s narrow tailoring requirement is to block laws that burden constitutional rights without actually doing much to achieve the government’s goals. The Texas law’s one-third requirement means it would not actually block minors’ access to pornography, thus failing to achieve the state’s objective. As the Free Speech Coalition plaintiffs explain in their brief, the trial court which heard this case “found that social media platforms like Instagram and Facebook contain ‘material which is sexually explicit for minors,’ and sites like Reddit ‘maintain entire communities and forums’ devoted ‘to posting online pornography.’” So Texas’s law won’t actually stop anyone from seeing online porn, it will just shift their porn consumption from Pornhub to Reddit. And so, even if age verification apps work as Texas says they do, this particular law still violates the First Amendment and should be struck down for failing to satisfy strict scrutiny. Should the Court decide to follow this path, which is the only path consistent with existing law, it could also make clear that a better-drafted law might survive strict scrutiny — again, assuming that it is actually possible to construct age gates around online pornography without threatening the privacy of adults. In any event, there is no need to overrule decisions like Ashcroft, or to pretend those decisions can be ignored like the Fifth Circuit did, in order to uphold age-restrictive laws.
1 h
vox.com
What’s a ‘flu bomb’? The 7-ingredient recipe fans say ‘eradicates’ illness
Australian alternative health care advocate Barbara O’Neill's recipe has gone viral down under — and beyond.
1 h
nypost.com
Wellness guru explains why stress is good for you — and NYC is the perfect city to embrace it
"New York kind of has its own mind and its own plan for you. And I think that is single handedly the reason why people actually are healthy right here," said Dr. Jonathan Leary.
1 h
nypost.com
Elon Musk Responds to Tesla Cybertruck Explosion: 'Wrong Vehicle'
Musk, who owns Tesla, said the vehicle "actually contained the explosion and directed the blast upwards."
1 h
newsweek.com
From Which Plant Is the Spice Saffron Obtained?
Test your wits on the Slate Quiz for Jan. 2, 2025.
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slate.com
Slate Mini Crossword for Jan. 2, 2025
Take a quick break with our daily 5x5 grid.
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slate.com
China Reacts As WHO Issues Reminder About COVID Responsibility
More than 7 million have died from COVID worldwide in the past five years.
1 h
newsweek.com
Slate Crossword: Place for a Canary … or a UFC Fight (Four Letters)
Ready for some wordplay? Sharpen your skills with Slate’s puzzle for Jan. 2, 2025.
1 h
slate.com
James Middleton details childhood family vacations with sisters Kate and Pippa: ‘Distinct memories’
"Holidays tended to be packing up the car and driving somewhere," the 37-year-old said of the Middleton family's past vacations.
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nypost.com
It’s the Simplest Pasta Dish in the World. But Restaurants Everywhere Are Screwing It Up.
It should be just cheese, pepper, pasta, and oil—but something’s amiss in the sauce.
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slate.com
Oldest Living Olympic Medal Winner Ágnes Keleti Dies Aged 103
Keleti, a Holocaust survivor and the oldest living Olympic medal winner, died Thursday morning in Budapest, the Hungarian state news agency reported.
1 h
time.com
Socialite Jocelyn Wildenstein Known For 'Cat' Plastic Surgery Dies
Wildenstein, known for alleged multiple plastic surgeries, got a $2.5 billion settlement after divorcing in 1999, thought to be the biggest ever at the time.
1 h
newsweek.com