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Breaking down Nets’ 2024-25 roster heading into NBA training camp

The Post’s Brian Lewis takes a deep dive into the Nets’ 2024-25 roster before training camp begins.
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Chat with Alexandra Petri and tell her your jokes
Alexandra's live chat with readers starts at 11 a.m. ET on Tuesday. Submit your questions now.
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washingtonpost.com
Brush with fame: The public's one-sided bond with celebrities
Parasocial relationships are those that are one-sided – like the fascination and devotion that fans hold for their favorite celebrities. How do they speak to the human condition?
cbsnews.com
Starstruck: The public's one-sided bond with celebrities
Parasocial relationships are those that are one-sided – like the fascination and devotion that fans hold for their favorite celebrities. Correspondent Susan Spencer talks with journalist Jancee Dunn about her experience interviewing her hero, rock star Stevie Nicks; and with experts about how that intense fan-celebrity relationship speaks to the human condition.
cbsnews.com
Solution to Evan Birnholz’s Sept. 29 crossword, ‘Time Travel’
A challenging meta that may throw you for a time loop.
washingtonpost.com
AI is reshaping drone warfare in Russia and Ukraine
SLOVIANSK, UKRAINE — It looked like an ordinary, modest house on the outskirts of Sloviansk, a small city just behind the front line in eastern Ukraine. But the parlor’s heavy furniture had been replaced by folding tables and six big flat-screen TVs. Five men in fatigues monitored the images flashing across the screens: direct feeds...
nypost.com
Steelers vs. Colts, Commanders vs. Cardinals predictions: NFL Week 4 odds, picks
Post sports gambling editor/producer and digital sports editor Matt Ehalt is in his first season in the Bettor’s Guide.  
nypost.com
How to watch Broncos at Jets for free in Week 4: Start time and streaming
Happy Sunday!
nypost.com
Caesars Sportsbook Promo Code POSTNEWS1000: Access $1,000 in first bet insurance for Vikings- Packers, any Week 4 game on Sunday
Register using the Caesars Sportsbook promo code POSTNEWS1000 to receive coverage on your first bet for any game, with protection up to $1,000.
nypost.com
Is it normal to hate your spouse? Experts reveal how to overcome this and find the love
Relationship experts say it’s normal for couples to experience moments of what feels like genuine hatred. The difference between couples who last and those who don’t can lie in how they handle their emotions in those moments.
nypost.com
Israel says it has killed another high-ranking Hezbollah official
Hezbollah confirmed his death, making him the seventh senior Hezbollah leader slain in Israeli strikes in a little over a week. They include founding members who had evaded death or detention for decades.
cbsnews.com
Iran's Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in hiding with extra security following Hezbollah leader's death: report
Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was placed in a secure location after Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah's killing in Lebanon.
foxnews.com
‘SNL’ Season 50 premiere addresses Hoda Kotb’s ‘Today’ exit — with a Matt Lauer dig
"Saturday Night Live" had plenty of material to report about during its Season 50 premiere — thanks to its own network.
nypost.com
Multiple people dead after plane crash at Wright Brothers National Memorial’s First Flight Airport
The crash occurred at 5 p.m. as, according to eyewitnesses, the airplane was trying to land at the airport, the National Parks Service said.
nypost.com
American Culture Quiz: Test yourself on celebrity birthdays, pumpkin spice and unique cars
The American Culture Quiz is a weekly test of our unique national traits, trends, history and people. This time, test your knowledge of pumpkin spice, sports and more.
foxnews.com
10 fun facts about Mars, also known as the red planet
Mars is a planet with so much more to discover. Research has been done on the planet to test its sustainability for life, and more continues today.
foxnews.com
Netflix Isn’t Chill With Prince Harry Over His Polo Show, Report Claims
Matt Jelonek/Getty Images for SentebaleNacho is the star of Harry’s polo showPrince Harry making a show for Netflix about himself playing polo always seemed a curious idea. Isn’t the long term goal of Harry and wife Meghan Markle to encourage us to identify with them? And wouldn’t a film about playing polo—a famously expensive sport, requiring access to multiple pricey “ponies”—merely confirm suspicions that they live fabulous, millionairey lives while the rest of us struggle to pay vet bills for the dog, let alone maintain a stable of stallions?Well, now it emerges that, according to a report in the Daily Mail, the polo film is not about Harry at all. It’s star is actually his buddy, the handsome Argentinean polo player Nacho Figueras.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Diddy Accuser’s Lawyer Claims ‘High-Profile’ Person Seen in X-Rated Tape at Rapper’s Home
REUTERSAn attorney representing one of Sean “Diddy” Combs's accusers has claimed that someone “more high-profile” than the rapper could be seen with him in a pornographic video filmed at his Atlanta home.Ariel Mitchell-Kidd, a lawyer for a woman who claims she was raped by 54-year-old mogul in 2018, said she was contacted about the “sale of one of the Diddy tapes.”“There already have been tapes leaking around Hollywood being shopped around, but one particular person contacted me to shop a particular video,” Mitchell-Kidd said Friday on NewsNation's “Banfield.” Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
‘Days of Our Lives’ star Drake Hogestyn dead at 70, co-stars Ali Sweeney, Kristian Alfonso react: ‘My heart breaks’
"Days of Our Lives" star Drake Hogestyn, who has played John Black on the soap opera for nearly 40 years, has died.
nypost.com
Lie-flat Seats and Chilled Champagne: Testing Eric Adams’s Upgrade Life
The New York mayor is accused of accepting free luxury travel in exchange for political favors. How large was he living? A writer puts the experience to the test.
nytimes.com
Week 4 NFL player props, picks, odds: Chubba Hubbard, George Pickens, more
After going 2-0 last week and bringing his season record to 6-0, Jacob Wayne is back with three more player props for Sunday's games.
nypost.com
Jets vs. Broncos: Preview, prediction, what to watch for
An inside look at Sunday’s Jets-Broncos NFL Week 4 matchup at MetLife Stadium:
nypost.com
What is Good Cause Eviction? NY lawyer on protection of 'bad tenants', possible squatters
The Good Cause Eviction Law is one that makes it more difficult for landlords to remove tenants. A New York lawyer cautions that the law could cause problems for landlords.
foxnews.com
How Walz Can Win His Debate With Vance
The Republican running mate is a head case. Use that.
theatlantic.com
Six Songs That Sound Like Middle School
Our writers and editors select tracks that bring them right back to those awkward, glorious years.
theatlantic.com
People fill old newspaper boxes with movies, call it ‘Free Blockbuster’
There are hundreds of Blockbuster-themed newspaper boxes across the country filled with old flicks that are free for the taking.
washingtonpost.com
Yes on Measure G for a more functional and representative L.A. County government
Los Angeles County Measure G would make county government more representative by expanding the Board of Supervisors, and more effective by adding checks and balances with an independently elected executive.
latimes.com
The 5 Best New Movies of September 2024
From The Substance to His Three Daughters.
time.com
My Ex Remarried. Now My Kids Love His “New Family” So Much They Don’t Want to Come Home.
It's breaking my heart.
slate.com
America keeps choosing poverty — but it doesn’t have to
Welcome to the first issue of Within Our Means, a biweekly newsletter about ending poverty in America. If you’d like to receive it in your inbox, please sign up here: I’ve always been interested in how race and class shape our society and my work often focuses on topics like criminal justice, housing, and the social safety net. But while I like to point out problems, I also think that’s only half of my job. The other half is to ask, “Now what?” That’s what this newsletter will do. Some issues will dig into the specific ways that poverty punishes people across the country. Others will look at policies that either exacerbate or alleviate poverty. The overarching goal is to find tangible solutions to improve people’s lives. And so if you, like me, think that poverty is a problem that can be eradicated in the United States, then think of this newsletter as a way for us to envision what a realistic path toward that future could look like. Why so many Americans are poor America has gone through many ups and downs since the civil rights era, but one thing has remained remarkably constant: In 1970, 12.6 percent of Americans were considered poor; in 2023, that number was 11.1 percent — or 36.8 million people. “To graph the share of Americans living in poverty over the past half-century amounts to drawing a line that resembles gently rolling hills,” the sociologist Matthew Desmond wrote last year.  It might seem as though the persistence of poverty in the United States says something about how intractable the problem is. This is, after all, the richest country in the world. If America can’t rid itself of poverty, then who can? But it’s not that America can’t do it; it’s that it chooses not to. That said, there isn’t a single answer to why so many Americans continue to be stuck in poverty. It is true, for example, that the American welfare system is broken, consistently undermined, and, in some cases, set up to fail. Studies have shown that programs like work requirements don’t work, and states have been caught hoarding billions of dollars worth of welfare funds instead of distributing them among the people they’re intended for.  But it’s also true that an extraordinary amount of money and effort go into establishing and administering antipoverty programs, and many of them do succeed. Social Security, for example, keeps more than 20 million people above the poverty line.  In recent years, America showed just how much of a choice poverty is: The short-lived pandemic-era child tax credit expansion cut child poverty by more than a third. And the bolstered social safety net from Covid relief bills nearly halved child poverty in a single year — the sharpest drop on record. Once those programs expired, however, the child poverty rate bounced right back. One reason poverty is so stubborn Last year, many homeowners in Lexington, Massachusetts came out to oppose zoning changes that would allow for more housing to be built in the wealthy Boston suburb. The people who needed the new housing were, understandably, not impressed.  “How do you think it makes me feel when some people from a point of great privilege say that they don’t want the type of multifamily housing that I live in because it may look ugly or doesn’t fit the essence of this town?” one young resident, whose family relied on multifamily housing to be able to live in Lexington, told the town legislature. “Are we really setting the bar of entry to be a $1 million dollar house to join our community?” This situation is one answer to the question of what makes the problem of poverty so complicated: competing interests. The reality is that too many people benefit from the existence of poverty. The economy already pits too many groups against each other, leaving many Americans afraid that they have too much to lose should we choose to build a more equitable society.  Homeowners are told that their homes are the key to building wealth, so they reasonably want their property values to keep rising. For renters, on the other hand, any increase in housing costs is a loss. So while renters might want lawmakers to make room for more housing, homeowners often resist any change that could make their home prices stagnate.This is one theme we’ll be exploring in Within Our Means — who stands to benefit and who stands to lose from the policies our lawmakers choose to pursue. We’ll also be looking at questions about fairness, political viability, and why antipoverty programs ought to be viewed as investments rather than handouts. And though we’ll often look at economic arguments, we also won’t shy away from arriving at morally driven conclusions. Sometimes, a program that helps the most vulnerable people is still worth paying for even if it doesn’t necessarily help the economy grow. It doesn’t have to be this way Even when divergent interests exist — like those between renters and homeowners — change is possible: Lexington ended up approving the necessary zoning changes to build more housing, and neighboring towns followed its lead.  This was not, by any means, an inevitable or easy outcome. For many decades, Lexington and its neighbors had been symbols of liberal hypocrisy — the kinds of places where you might see “Black Lives Matter” and “refugees are welcome” signs, but vehement opposition to any new housing project that would help desegregate the region. But one lesson out of Lexington is that sometimes people need a push. It wasn’t just that the town residents had a sudden change of heart — though some residents had clearly been troubled by their own history. The state had enacted a law requiring jurisdictions served by public transit to authorize building more multifamily housing if they wanted to receive certain state funding. Whether the town ends up building the housing units that would make the suburb more affordable depends on whether residents put their money where their mouth is. But at least now, the door has been opened. Some of the changes needed to eradicate poverty are small, unsexy bureaucratic adjustments, like local zoning reforms in Lexington and elsewhere. Others require an ambitious rethinking.  The project of ending poverty will be costly, but it’s long been clear that America can afford it. If more than two-thirds of household wealth is concentrated among the top 10 percent while the bottom half of households own a mere 2.5 percent, then nobody should be living in squalor.  “Now there is nothing new about poverty,” Martin Luther King, Jr. said nearly 60 years ago. “What is new at this point though, is that we now have the resources, we now have the skills, we now have the techniques to get rid of poverty. And the question is whether our nation has the will.” Share your thoughts If you have any ideas, thoughts, or a personal experience with antipoverty programs that you’d like to share, I’d love to hear from you. You can reach me at abdallah.fayyad@vox.com. This story was featured in the Within Our Means newsletter. Sign up here.
vox.com
Dozens of ‘exceptionally well-preserved’ Viking skeletons unearthed in Denmark
"It is truly unusual to find so many well-preserved skeletons at once, like those discovered in Åsum," Museum Odense curator Michael Borre Lundø said in a statement.
nypost.com
Israel claims to have killed Hezbollah official Nabil Kaouk one day after leader’s elimination
The Israeli military said Sunday it killed Nabil Kaouk, another high-ranking Hezbollah official, a day after the Lebanese militant group confirmed the death of multiple commanders, including longtime leader Hassan Nasrallah.
nypost.com
IDF announces death of another senior Hezbollah official following Nasrallah death
The Israeli military says it killed yet another member of Hezbollah's top command on Sunday, after wiping out leadership in a Friday strike.
foxnews.com
Multiple killed after small plane crashes near Wright Brothers National Memorial’s First Flight Airport
The National Park Service confirmed "multiple passenger fatalities" after a small plane crashed at Wright Brothers National Memorial’s First Flight Airport in North Carolina.
foxnews.com
A month of Trinity League football insanity begins
Get ready for five weeks of grueling football when JSerra, Orange Lutheran, Santa Margarita and Servite challenge Mater Dei and St. John Bosco.
latimes.com
Manchester United vs. Tottenham Hotspur prediction: Premier League odds, pick
Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur have put together similar starts to the 2024-25 Premier League season.
nypost.com
U.S. airstrikes on Syria kill 37 militants affiliated with extremist groups
The U.S. military says 37 militants in Syria affiliated with the extremist Islamic State group and an al-Qaeda-linked group were killed in two strikes
abcnews.go.com
Earthquake registering 4.2 magnitude hits California south of San Francisco
An earthquake registering magnitude 4.2 shook part of central California
abcnews.go.com
‘Diff’rent Strokes’ star Todd Bridges reveals last words to mother, ‘Good Times’ actress Betty A Bridges
"Diff'rent Strokes" actor Todd Bridges revealed his last words to his actress mother Betty A Bridges, known for "Good Times," when she died in late August
foxnews.com
Lexi Loya has helped lead St. Joseph High to 13-0 record
The Jesters quarterback has received plenty of guidance from her father Tim, who is also the coach, and brother Logan, a receiver at UCLA.
latimes.com
Vikings vs. Packers, Titans vs. Dolphins predictions: NFL Week 4 odds, picks
Football handicapper Sean Treppedi is in his first season in The Post’s NFL Bettor’s Guide. 
nypost.com
Fanatics Sportsbook Promo: Begin $1,000 bet match offer on Bills-Ravens, all weekend sports
Sign up with the Fanatics Sportsbook promo to bet on the New England Patriots vs. the San Francisco 49ers on Sunday. Register now to claim a $100 bet match for 10 straight days.
nypost.com
Why Are Innocents Still Being Executed?
On Tuesday night, Missouri executed Marcellus Williams, a man who may well have been innocent of the crime he was convicted of. No physical evidence linked Williams to the 1998 murder of Felicia Gayle in her Missouri home, and his trial was marked by a shoddy defense and a jury-selection process that empaneled 11 white jurors and only one Black juror (Gayle was white; Williams was Black). Williams’s execution had been scheduled and halted twice before amid concerns about his guilt; Missouri’s prior governor, Eric Greitens, not only granted Williams a day-of stay but also appointed a committee to investigate his case. The committee was dissolved by the current governor, Mike Parson, in 2023 without ever issuing a report.Earlier this year, Wesley Bell, the current prosecutor of the district where Williams was convicted, filed a 63-page motion in court seeking to set aside Williams’s death sentence on grounds of possible innocence, and later offered Williams a deal that would have commuted his sentence to life without parole. But Missouri’s attorney general rejected the plan, and Williams is now dead. Bell issued a statement after the execution, saying, “If there is even the shadow of a doubt of innocence, the death penalty should never be an option. This outcome did not serve the interests of justice.”Why are innocent people—and those with a good chance of proving their innocence—still being executed? A death sentence does not necessarily reflect guilt, which is why death-row exonerations are not uncommon. By the Equal Justice Initiave’s count, one person is exonerated for every eight people executed. And not everyone who is innocent is exonerated. The Death Penalty Information Center maintains a list of executed people who had “strong evidence of innocence”; it numbers 20 cases, almost all of which are from the past few decades. Other sources offer higher estimates. “At least 30, and likely more, innocent people have been executed in the United States since capital punishment resumed in the 1970s,” Robert Dunham, the director of the Death Penalty Policy Project, told me.The likelihood of executing innocents has moved several state legislatures to end the death penalty within their borders. As the governor of Maryland, Martin O’Malley cited innocence in his 2013 decision to sign a bill abolishing capital punishment. So did then-Governor Pat Quinn in 2011 in Illinois. “Since our experience has shown that there is no way to design a perfect death-penalty system, free from the numerous flaws that can lead to wrongful convictions or discriminatory treatment, I have concluded that the proper course of action is to abolish it,” Quinn said. “With our broken system, we cannot ensure justice is achieved in every case.”[Elizabeth Bruenig: Not that innocent]Surveys suggest that supporters of capital punishment are aware of the possibility of executing innocent people. According to a 2021 study by the Pew Research Center, 78 percent of Americans acknowledge that there is some risk that innocent people will be executed; only 21 percent say that there are adequate safeguards in place to prevent it. Moreover, only 30 percent of death-penalty supporters say that the criminal-justice system successfully prevents the execution of innocents. In a 2009 Gallup poll, 59 percent of respondents said they believed that innocent people had been executed within the previous five years.It’s not possible that current supporters of capital punishment simply don’t realize that the death penalty occasionally results in the execution of innocents. They must know, and they support it anyway. I suspect this is because capital punishment serves a variety of purposes; carrying out justice is merely one. Perhaps death-penalty advocates don’t care about the lives being extinguished, innocent or not—death-row prisoners are disproportionately Black and poor. And perhaps others are loath to admit that the criminal-justice system is prone to error. But for some, the death penalty offers another major benefit: It is an opportunity for the state to exhibit ultimate force, the destruction of a human life. From that perspective, innocence versus guilt only distantly matters. Some people welcome displays of state power—think military parades—because a government capable of destruction is also one strong enough to offer protection. That many small-government conservatives nevertheless wish to see that kind of power in the hands of the state is not just ironic; it is a major obstacle to the abolition of the death penalty.America is currently experiencing an execution spree: One person was executed the week before last, four this past week, and three more are scheduled for October. Maybe all of the people being put to death now are guilty, but there’s more than a sliver of a chance that someone among them is or was innocent—that’s eight executions, after all. For some, that falls between a worthwhile risk and a necessary evil. For others, it’s just murder.
theatlantic.com
Lisa Su on AMD’s Strategy for Growth and the Future of AI
CEO Lisa Su discusses AMD’s strategy, the transformative potential of AI, and how to get more women into leadership positions in tech.
time.com
Inside the Disney Channel’s brutal fame factory and how far Zac Efron, Demi Lovato and Selena Gomez really had to go to win roles: book
Execs at the cable network wanted a leading man with pearlier whites and a more “athletic build" than a 17-year-old Efron possessed.
nypost.com
Jon Gosselin hit weight loss roadblock after shedding 50 pounds
Jon Gosselin dropped more than 50 lbs after starting semaglutide injections, but once he ran out of the weight-loss shots due to a shortage of medication, the pounds almost instantly crept back up.
nypost.com
Brian Burns hasn’t made a major impact yet for Giants
Through four games, Brian Burns is not dominating, and the Giants are not winning.
nypost.com
Suspect arrested after allegedly setting 2 fires, driving into 2 shops and injuring 30 in Germany
A man has been arrested after allegedly setting two fires in the western German city of Essen that left 30 people injured and driving a van into two shops, authorities said Sunday.
nypost.com
Bills, Josh Allen can make another prime-time statement in showdown with Lamar Jackson’s Ravens
This is a game you want every few weeks, because it features two of the three most dynamic quarterbacks in the NFL.
nypost.com