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Bianca Censori’s mom responds to claim Kanye West wanted to sleep with her

The rapper's former assistant Lauren Pisciotta made the wild allegations in a bombshell lawsuit filed on Oct. 8.
Read full article on: pagesix.com
Yankees-Guardians ALCS ticket prices are dropping fast
Carlos Rodón is starting game one for the Bronx Bombers.
nypost.com
Mark Taper Forum is back with 'American Idiot': L.A. arts and culture this week
The Mark Taper Forum has officially reopened with Green Day's 'American Idiot' after a yearlong closure that shocked the theater world.
latimes.com
Mark Consuelos Pokes Fun At 18-Year-Olds Who Are “Too Old” For Trick-Or-Treating On ‘Live’: “Don’t You Have A Part-Time Job To Be Late At?”
Ripa teased that trick-or-treaters "come with a list of demands."
nypost.com
Christian Combs spotted partying days after attending his dad Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ court hearing
Christian “King” Combs isn’t letting his dad Sean “Diddy” Combs’ sex trafficking court hearing get in the way of him partying with his girlfriend Raven Tracy. According to an online video, the “Love You Better” rapper was out and about, celebrating with his girlfriend after her speaking engagement at Essence’s “Feed To Funds.” Christian Combs’...
nypost.com
Inside pregnant Madeline Gaudreau’s baby shower following husband Matthew’s tragic death
Madeline shared photos from the sweet celebration, themed “A Little Piece of Heaven,” via her Instagram over the weekend.
nypost.com
Lions troll Cowboys with savage post after Jerry World demolition
You can't get anything past the Lions' social media team.
nypost.com
Cowboys WAGs pampered at lavish pajama party thrown by Dak Prescott’s girlfriend before blowout loss
In footage shared on social media, the significant others of Cowboys players were treated to facials, glam sessions, sweet Halloween treats and more.
nypost.com
Jewish staffers at Condé Nast accuse ex-DEI chief of antisemitism: report
The former DEI chief at Condé Nast reportedly was accused of antisemitism by Jewish employees at the publishing giant — who complained that management was allowing its magazines to take a pro-Palestinian stance and that it failed to crack down on journalists who took part in anti-Israel demonstrations. Yashica Olden, who stepped down as chief...
nypost.com
Gypsy Rose Blanchard has advice for the Menendez brothers if they get released from prison
"It’s very difficult to come out to a world that has changed so much even in the time that I spent," said Gypsy Rose Blanchard.
nypost.com
Jets vs. Bills prediction: ‘Monday Night Football’ odds, pick, best bet
Can the Jets rally behind interim head coach Jeff Ulbrich and string together a crucial win?
nypost.com
In deal to lower huge debt, B. Riley sells its liquidation business
Troubled L.A. financial services firm B. Riley is selling its Great American liquidation and appraisal business for $386 million to lower its debt and recover from a scandal that has spooked investors.
latimes.com
Wanted fugitive caught hiding from cops inside his sofa wearing nothing but his underwear
Police turned up at an address in Potton, Beds, with a warrant to arrest the man and thought there was no one to be found in the property except a friendly dog.
nypost.com
Seven years later, Yankees can use Guardians as steppingstone all over again
Seven years after that hopeful preface, the Yankees can finally write the final chapter they’ve searched so long to write.
nypost.com
Why are Americans obsessed with dating shows
With "Love Is Blind" and other dating shows dominating TV, experts Jared Freid and Serena Kerrigan share why these programs continue to captivate millions of fans.
cbsnews.com
Man, woman found dead in Manassas basement; person of interest detained in N.J.
Police said that the incident was a double homicide and that the “parties involved are known to one another.”
washingtonpost.com
"Mornings Memory:" Behind the scenes of a 1993 zombie film
Mornings Memory spooky edition travels back to 1993, when "The Early Show" gave us a glimpse into the making of a zombie movie on a shoestring budget.
cbsnews.com
FTC cracks down on fake reviews with new rule set to ban phony feedback
With up to 40% of online reviews found to be fake, the Federal Trade Commission is introducing a new rule to ban deceptive feedback. Nick Thompson, CEO of "The Atlantic," explains how it will work.
cbsnews.com
Drew Barrymore Admits To Imagining A “Full-Blown Relationship” With A Celebrity Guest Who Came On ‘The Drew Barrymore Show’
The actress said she "flirts" in the mirror.
nypost.com
Voters with disabilities are feeling ignored by presidential candidates
A new report from Rutgers University estimates that about 40.2 million eligible voters in the quickly approaching U.S. presidential election are disabled
abcnews.go.com
Michigan Democrats pass law to unionize family caregivers in last-ditch power play before election
DETROIT — Michigan Democrats passed a “dues skim” law to unionize caregivers with less than a month to go until Election Day, signaling the party knows its time could be up controlling the Great Lakes State come 2025. The entire Michigan House is up for election Nov. 5, and Republicans need to flip just two...
nypost.com
India’s Ambassador Is Person of Interest in a Canadian Investigation, India Says
The move by the Indian government comes as the two countries have been locked in a dispute following the assassination of a Sikh separatist in Canada last year.
nytimes.com
Jamie Foxx gets emotional sharing pics from first show since health scare: ‘I needed the stage’
“I needed the stage and I needed an audience that was made up of nothing but pure love and that’s what you were,” the actor shared via Instagram.
nypost.com
Four teenage Israeli soldiers killed in Hezbollah drone strike
“We must investigate it, study the details and assimilate the lessons in a quick and professional manner."
nypost.com
At least 4 Israeli soldiers killed, dozens wounded in Hezbollah drone attack
A drone attack by Hezbollah hit the dining hall of an Israeli military base, killing at least four soldiers and wounding dozens others. The base is used to train the Israeli military's recruits. Warning, this story contains graphic images.
cbsnews.com
Man arrested with guns near Trump rally in California
Police say Vem Miller, 49, was arrested over the weekend for having guns near the site of a rally for former President Donald Trump at the famed Coachella venue in California. The U.S. Attorney's Office said in a statement that Trump was not in any danger and a federal official told CBS News there was no indication of an assassination attempt connected to this incident. The suspect was charged with two misdemeanor weapons charges and was released.
cbsnews.com
Eye Opener: Recovery from Hurricane Milton ongoing
Days after Hurricane Milton made landfall on Florida's west coast, people are still picking up the pieces. Meanwhile, a man with guns is arrested near a Trump rally in California. All that and all that matters in today's Eye Opener.
cbsnews.com
Climate expert Porter Fox breaks down the factors behind supercharged storms
Porter Fox, author of "Category Five: Superstorms and the Warming Oceans That Feed Them," joins "CBS Mornings Plus" to explain how warmer water and rising sea levels are fueling more powerful storms and what we can do about it.
cbsnews.com
Trump supports ending double taxation on Americans living abroad: ‘Let’s put America First’
Trump is asking Americans abroad for their vote as he pledges to cut their taxes.
nypost.com
Beef tallow dubbed ‘nature’s Botox’ and used as a retinol swap — dermatologists weigh in
Users praise beef tallow balm for being rich in vitamins and omega fatty acids -- or is it?
1 h
nypost.com
Bath & Body Works stops selling Snowed In candle over negative imagery
Bath & Body Works apologized for its Snowed In candle adorned with a snowflake image that some people compared to KKK hoods.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Disheveled Cardi B promises to ‘never, ever drink again’ after wild 32nd birthday bash
"I will never. Pray for me," the "WAP" rapper said in a video posted on her Instagram Stories.
1 h
nypost.com
Couple blasted for their ‘horrid’ roommate demands in ad: ‘This needs to be made into a horror film’
It’s a live-in nightmare. 
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nypost.com
How Demi Moore is coping amid ex-husband Bruce Willis’ dementia battle: ‘He is stable’
"What I always encourage is to just meet them where they're at,” the actress said.
1 h
nypost.com
Officials probing fiery Tesla crash that killed 4 people in France
Police in western France say they're looking into what caused a Tesla that came off a road to catch on fire in a crash that killed the driver and all 3 passengers.
1 h
cbsnews.com
CDC releases list of 2024’s least sanitary cruise ships: Have you been on one?
The lowest score a ship received was '62' out of '100' per the CDC's Vessel Sanitation Program.
1 h
nypost.com
How Pamela Anderson rediscovered herself in the kitchen
With her debut cookbook, Pamela Anderson pays tribute to the women who opened the world to her through cooking.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
Jets out to turn tumultuous week, changes into new beginning versus Bills on MNF
We’ll get the first glimpse at those changes in prime time against the Bills.
1 h
nypost.com
The Very Hardcore History of the Tamest Drink Imaginable
Does your favorite beverage have a declassified government dossier attached to it? Thought not.
1 h
slate.com
Drake celebrates ‘baby goat’ son Adonis’ 7th birthday with SpongeBob SquarePants party
Social media users helped the rapper ring in his and Sophie Brussaux's child's big day, with one writing, "Started from Bikini Bottom now we're here."
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nypost.com
Mets’ Brandon Nimmo playing through ‘uncomfortable’ injury during playoff run
The Mets outfielder went 0-for-3 in Sunday's dreadful Game 1 loss and was lifted for a pinch-hitter in the ninth inning.
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nypost.com
The Collapse of the Khamenei Doctrine
A year of conflict in the Middle East has destroyed the foreign-policy approach of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. His strategy was always implausible, but its collapse has led Iran to the brink of its first international war since 1988.What I like to call the Khamenei Doctrine—those close to him have variously dubbed it “strategic patience” or, more to the point, “no peace, no war”—rests on a duality that has remained constant through Khamenei’s 35 years in power. Iran refuses any public dealings with Israel, clamoring instead for the Jewish state’s destruction and surrounding it with Arab militias that seek to destroy it. Iranian officials deny the Holocaust and chant “Death to America” at events and ceremonies. And yet, at no point does Khamenei intend to get into a direct conflict with Israel or the United States—because he knows very well that such a confrontation could be fatal for his regime.So what is the point of holding this contradictory posture? Khamenei is a true fanatic. He forged his beliefs as a revolutionary in the 1960s, when he read Sayyid Qutb and Mao Zedong. But he isn’t blind or stupid. Rather, he is patient and pragmatic. He appears to have accepted that his dream of destroying Israel won’t be realized in his lifetime, but he remains ideologically committed to it as a long-term goal for Islamists across generations. He has declared that Israel won’t exist in 2040—a year he will see only if he lives to be more than 100. But he seeks to advance the cause to the extent he can, building the strength of Israel’s enemies, and then handing off the task to his successors.Khamenei knows that his extreme worldview is not popular among most Iranians, or even among much of the country’s ruling elite. And so he adjusts the institutional balance among the Islamic Republic’s various political factions, using the competition among them to gain breathing space when necessary, but never wavering from his objectives.He makes international adjustments with similar strategic caution. He pursued the 2015 nuclear deal with the United States and other world powers to alleviate the diplomatic and economic pressure on Iran. But during the negotiations, Iran made clear that its support for regional militias, and its anti-Israeli and anti-American orientation, was nonnegotiable. Iran would talk only about its nuclear program, despite the concerns that Western negotiators expressed over Iran’s “regional behavior.” Then President Donald Trump tore up the deal in 2018 and brought a policy of maximum pressure to bear on the Islamic Republic. Khamenei delivered his response in a sermon in 2019: “There will be no war, and we won’t negotiate.” He was referring to the United States, but the phrase was an apt summary of his approach to Israel as well.From the point of view of many Iranians, Khamenei’s policies have been disastrous, bringing international isolation, economic ruin, and political repression. But for his own purposes, before October 7, 2023, the leader might have seen his policy as a great success.When Khamenei ascended to power in 1989, most of the region’s Arab states had long since given up the fight against Israel; Khamenei picked up the anti-Zionist mantle and made Iran the sole supplier for anti-Israeli militias across the region. He built a so-called Axis of Resistance, uniting armed groups in Palestine, Lebanon, Yemen, Syria, and Iraq to shoot at Israel, call for its destruction, and occasionally skirmish with U.S. forces in the region. All of this was a win for Islamist internationalism. In the service of that agenda, Khamenei has shown little compunction about sacrificing Iran’s potential as a country for its nearly 90 million inhabitants.But the Khamenei Doctrine was always untenable, and the events of the past year have shown why. The strategy—build up anti-Israeli forces incrementally, without getting into a direct confrontation—required a certain adroitness. At times, Khamenei has had to restrain the Axis forces with calls for prudence. And the Axis is itself a problem—unwieldy, sometimes insubordinate, and unpopular at home and abroad.[Read: Iran’s proxies are out of control]Most of the Axis militias are Shiite (Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad are the exceptions), and some have participated in the region’s sectarian civil wars, which claimed thousands of Sunni Muslim victims—Iraqis, Syrians, and Palestinians. For this reason, not even anti-Israeli populations in the region are unreservedly enthusiastic about the Axis. Within Iran, meanwhile, Khamenei has a hard time selling his animus against Israel to a populace that largely does not share it, and that holds him to account for problems closer to home. When Iranians rise up against their regime—as they did in 2009, 2017, 2019, and 2022—they often use slogans that signal their displeasure with Iran’s support for the Axis. Probably the best-known is “Neither Gaza, nor Lebanon, I give my life to Iran!”The October 7 attack on Israel and the war in Gaza that followed at first looked like a gift to Khamenei. The conflict would foreclose the possibility of a Saudi rapprochement with Israel and disrupt what Israelis had taken to calling their “growing circle of peace” with Arab countries (Khamenei has long sought to prevent such normalization). But a year later, Khamenei’s doctrine has never looked weaker. Iran and its Axis claim to be the defenders of the Palestinian cause—but they have so far avoided directly intervening in a war that they themselves call “genocide.” At the beginning of the conflict, Iranian hard-liners expressed anger that Tehran was not joining the fight. “Children die under rubble while our missiles rot in their silos,” tweeted a well-known anchor on Iranian state television. Hezbollah, some regional analysts grumbled, was being held back by Iranians consumed by their own narrow interests.In April, Israel attacked an Iranian consular building in Damascus, and Iran finally did what it had not done in its entire history: It fired missiles and drones directly at Israel. Far from being deterred, Benjamin Netanyahu’s government has since only upped the pressure on the Islamic Republic, killing Iranian and Axis commanders wherever it can and intensifying the war in Lebanon. It is pummeling Hezbollah with special intensity, killing dozens of its top commanders, including its leader, Hassan Nasrallah, and, most probably, his would-be successor, Hashem Safieddine. After much reticence, Khamenei launched another round of missile attacks on October 1. And Israel has vowed to retaliate.[Read: Iran is not ready for war with Israel]Khamenei has thus brought his country to the brink of a war that he has long sought to simultaneously suggest and avoid. Mostafa Najafi, a Tehran-based security expert who supported the Iranian attacks in April and October, assured me that Iran was prepared for whatever force Israel might bring to bear. The country has readied itself with “all of its defense capabilities” on alert, he said; it has invested in domestic air defenses and acquired Russian-made S300 surface-to-air missile systems. Still, Najafi conceded that Iran’s size will make it difficult to defend. Other experts I spoke with took a bleaker view. “It is not clear how Tehran can climb out of this situation,” Mojtaba Dehghani, an Iranian expert with a close understanding of the regime elites, told me. “They are not ready for this war.”Many in the Iranian opposition argue that Tehran should stop stoking hostilities with Israel and the United States and prioritize economic development instead. The stipulation is found in most opposition political platforms, including those of leftist groups, many of which support a two-state solution for Israel and Palestine. Dehghani agrees with the demand and thinks some in the regime leadership might concur. But he says that such a big “paradigm shift” will be difficult to pull off with Khamenei still in power. The leader is 85, and no one really knows who will succeed him, or whether that succession will bring in new outlooks and commitments; such uncertainty complicates planning for anything beyond the visible horizon.In the meantime, Khamenei holds his nation hostage to a doctrine that courts the conflict it also seeks to avoid. Iran needs to make a historic shift if it is to avert a disastrous war that few Iranians want—and begin building a better future instead.
1 h
theatlantic.com
Demi Moore shares how she’s coping with ‘stable’ ex Bruce Willis’ dementia
"The disease is what the disease is, and I think you have to be in real deep acceptance of what that is," the "Substance" star said.
1 h
nypost.com
Head and hands of Colorado girl last seen in 2005 found in freezer
Authorities are investigating the disappearance of a Colorado teen whose head and hands were found at her family's former home after they sold it.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Online tool helps families calculate the high cost of caregiving
Family caregivers provide billions of dollars of unpaid care for loved ones each year. CBS News consumer correspondent Ash-har Quraishi looks at an exclusive tool that helps calculate the value of the care families provide.
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cbsnews.com
Henry Winkler on winning third Emmy and releasing new children's book, "Detective Duck"
Legendary actor Henry Winkler, fresh off his third Emmy win for "Barry," joins "CBS Mornings" to discuss his latest children's book, "Detective Duck: The Case of the Missing Tadpole."
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cbsnews.com
Chargers' Jim Harbaugh explains heart issue that led to his brief exit from game vs Broncos
Los Angeles Chargers head coach Jim Harbaugh explained what plagued him during Sunday's game against the Denver Broncos and caused him to abruptly leave the game.
1 h
foxnews.com
In Chile a language on the verge of extinction, stirs into life
Ckunsa, an indigenous language in Chile, was declared dead 70 years ago. But groups in northern Chile are successfuly reviving the language and teaching it to a new generation.
2 h
npr.org
Terrifying turbulence on Air Canada flight sends passengers flying, food splattered on ceiling
A routine trip turned into the flight from hell after a severe patch of turbulence caused both passengers and food to go flying. Passenger pics showed food, trays and utensils strewn across the aisle and splotches of sauce and other foodstuffs splattered on the ceiling like a Jackson Pollock painting.
2 h
nypost.com