Tools
Change country:

Ivanka Trump’s 5-exercise routine for a toned physique at 42 revealed

Trainer Sandy Brockman also gave insight into Trump's diet, saying the former first daughter focuses on eating lots of protein.
Read full article on: pagesix.com
‘The Dark Knight’ and ‘The Avengers’ forbidden sites among dozens of places NYC festivalgoers can tour for one October weekend
Open House New York Weekend festival returns Oct. 18 to 20, with over 270 locations around New York City for visitors to get behind-the-scenes tours of otherwise hidden spots.
8 m
nypost.com
Hochul pushing staff changes at ‘Titanic’ City Hall as she avoids ousting Adams before Nov. 5 election: sources
Gov. Kathy Hochul is intent on filling top posts in Eric Adams’ administration as City Hall turns into the “Titanic” — but insiders say she’s won’t push out the mayor before the election for fear of backlash. Exercising the governor’s authority to oust the embattled Adams would carry outsize political risks for Hochul, including alienating...
nypost.com
Maniac accused of randomly shoving woman, 82, onto NYC subway tracks is busted, charged with attempted murder: cops
Brandon Harris, 35 – who lives down the block from the Flushing-Main Street No. 7 station where the vicious Wednesday attack occurred – also faces a felony assault rap, authorities said.
nypost.com
The Ohio bakery that’s predicted every presidential election since 1984 correctly
“My bakery’s predicted every presidential election since 1984 — and never been wrong!”
nypost.com
Jets’ lack of a protection plan has the offense stalling out
The Jets are finding it easier to protect Nathaniel Hackett than Aaron Rodgers. 
nypost.com
CNN legal analyst skewers Hillary Clinton's comments on Jack Smith's case against Trump: 'Got her facts wrong'
CNN legal analyst Elie Honig schooled former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, arguing she got the facts wrong about the special counsel's case against Trump.
foxnews.com
Helene conspiracies about lithium, weather control spread online
Claims that politicians manipulated the weather to target Republican areas and that the government is trying to seize land to mine lithium are taking root online.
cbsnews.com
Browns are in 'the worst situation in pro sports,' ex-NFL quarterback says
Former NFL quarterback Dan Orlovsky described the Cleveland Browns as being in "the worst situation in pro sports" on Monday after their latest loss.
foxnews.com
Scuffling Edwin Diaz still the Mets’ best option
It’s probably folly to try to guess correctly who among Carlos Mendoza’s other imperfect options could possibly outpitch Edwin Diaz now.
nypost.com
Trump and Dems pound SALT deduction — but it did no harm to NY taxpayers
The damage supposedly done by the SALT cap has been grossly misrepresented by New York politicians in both parties.
nypost.com
Miami's Hanna Cavinder fires back at troll after Carson Beck NIL dig
Hanna Cavinder on Sunday fired back at a troll who took a shot at her as she was on a private plane to go to Georgia to watch her boyfriend, Carson Beck.
foxnews.com
NY’s fake ‘Equal Rights Amendment’ would LEGALIZE discrimination
The ERA would embed racial retribution in the form of reverse racism, critical race theory and Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion principles into New York's state Constitution.
nypost.com
After a year of war in Gaza, American diplomacy proves futile so far: ANALYSIS
Experts say the failure to resolve the war in Gaza will have lasting effects for the United States.
abcnews.go.com
Reporter's Notebook: Iran’s missiles strike Israel, and a deadly terror attack in Tel Aviv
On the same day Iran attacked Israel with some 181 missiles last week, a terrorist attack saw 7 innocent Israelis murdered in cold blood by two Palestinians in the Tel Aviv area.
foxnews.com
Antisemitism festers in blue states, board of ed in revolt and other commentary
After the Oct. 7 attack on Israel, “it seemed like antisemitism was festering all over the country. But a closer look showed that . . . it was very specifically happening in places primarily run by Democrats,” notes Karol Markowicz at Fox News.
nypost.com
Alabama star pushes Vandy QB's head into ground during upset loss, issues apology
Alabama Crimson Tide star Malachi Moore was seen pushing his opponent's face into the ground on Saturday night. On Monday, he apologized.
foxnews.com
Behind the music: Latino celebrities and presidential politics in the 2024 election
The Harris and Trump campaigns have been trying to connect with prominent Puerto Rican musicians and artists to help court voters who could be decisive in states like Pennsylvania.
cbsnews.com
Rams have hopes Cooper Kupp will return and Matthew Stafford's sore back heals
Rams have been hoping Cooper Kupp could return from injury in Week 7 but can't say for sure as Matthew Stafford rests his sore back during the off week.
latimes.com
'Traitor' Liz Cheney walloped by Wyoming voters for Harris endorsement, break with GOP
An overwhelming amount of Wyoming voters who spoke to Fox News Digital lambasted former Republican Rep. Liz Cheney for endorsing Vice President Harris for the Oval Office.
foxnews.com
Teachers union looks to tip scale for Democrats to take back NY House seat — with the goal of making Hakeem Jeffries speaker
The New York State United Teachers union is going all in on state Sen. John Mannion as the former high school teacher and union activist looks to topple first-term Republican Rep. Brandon Williams in the 22nd House District.
nypost.com
Kamala Harris, Emhoff plant tree for Oct. 7 victims with Mideast on edge — as hecklers chant, beat drums nearby
Israel is believed to be preparing an attack on Iran as retaliation for a largely unsuccessful barrage of rockets last week.
nypost.com
Young tourists love Cali wine country — for everything but the booze
From Santa Barabara, Calif., to Walla Walla, Wash., winemakers are having to cope with an increasingly teetotalling tourism market.
nypost.com
Friends reveal US mom of 2 may have died from ‘medical issue’ before being eaten by shark in Indonesia
"She knew what she was doing," family friend Rick Sass told The Post.
nypost.com
Why a collector bought Bronny James' Summer League debut jersey for $38,400
Bronny James' jersey from his first NBA Summer League game sells for $38,400. It's being added to a private collection that includes artifacts from LeBron James, Kobe Bryant and others.
latimes.com
A European spacecraft launches to perform a crash scene investigation on an asteroid
A NASA spacecraft knocked into an asteroid two years ago to test planetary defense. Now, a new mission will inspect the damage, with the goal of helping future asteroid deflection.
npr.org
GOP New Jersey Senate Hopeful Appears to Almost Pass Out During Debate
YouTubeThings took a wild turn during a U.S. Senate debate in New Jersey on Sunday when the GOP candidate appeared to experience a medical emergency on stage.Curtis Bashaw, the Republican vying for the Senate seat, was debating affordability with his Democratic opponent, Andy Kim, when he appeared to freeze.“We need to make sure that we are dealing with affordability in a sensible way,” Bashaw said before moaning and leaning towards the podium.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Raven-Symoné’s body was edited thinner during body empowerment ‘That’s So Raven’ episode, book claims
Several insiders claimed that producers were going "crazy" over the then-18-year-old's weight and they "handled it" poorly.
nypost.com
Massive ‘Vote for Trump’ sign will be lit up in upstate NY following last-minute court victory
A 100-foot wide "Vote for Trump" sign has sparked controversy in an upstate New York city -- which has sued to block the massive political endorsement.
nypost.com
Underachieving Jets need a Mets-like run to win back their frustrated fans
Can the Jets actually become a team we celebrate, one that we embrace the way we’re embracing the Mets?
nypost.com
American Water, largest water utility in US, dealing with cyberattack
American Water serves 14 million people in 14 states, 18 military installations.
abcnews.go.com
Is ‘Nobody Wants This’ Based on a True Story? Creator Erin Foster Used Her Own Relationship As Inspiration
Netflix's hit rom-com series is based on creator Erin Foster's real-life romance with a Jewish man.
nypost.com
Kamala Harris’ Call Her Daddy Interview Is Already Controversial. Maybe It’s for the Wrong Reason.
In which an American presidential candidate pleads for the support of the “Daddy Gang.”
slate.com
I Had Plans for a Peaceful Retirement. Now My Partner Has Shattered All of It By Coming Clean.
I feel betrayed.
slate.com
Hurricane Helene reveals a rudderless White House — and an inept Harris’ flaws
The failure of the Biden-Harris administration to take charge of urgently needed rescue and recovery efforts after Hurricane Helene underscores a key question: Who is really running this White House?
nypost.com
Venezuela seeks arrest of Juan Guaido, US-based opposition leader
Venezuelan authorities on Thursday issued an arrest warrant for opposition leader and former interim president Juan Guaido, who dismissed the move as politically motivated.
1 h
edition.cnn.com
For hundreds of migrant children living in shelters at the border, this CNN Hero's mobile classrooms offer education and stability
Estefanía Rebellón and her family were forced to flee their home in Colombia when she was 10. Today, she and her Yes We Can World Foundation provide school programs and support to help migrant children continue their learning.
1 h
edition.cnn.com
READ: Trump indictment related to hush money payment
1 h
edition.cnn.com
Trump sounds alarm on illegal immigrant murderers: 'A lot of bad genes in our country'
Former President Trump on Monday said illegal immigrants murderers have "bad genes" as he again criticized the current handling of the border crisis.
1 h
foxnews.com
Harris and Trump marked 1 year since the Oct. 7 attacks with tributes to the victims
Vice President Harris remembered the victims of the attack by planting a memorial tree at her residence at the Naval Observatory in Washington, D.C., while former President Trump visited a sacred site for Hasidic Jews in Queens, N.Y.
1 h
npr.org
Movie armorer on Alec Baldwin's film 'Rust' pleads guilty to gun charge in separate case
She pleaded guilty to carrying a gun into a license liquor establishment.
1 h
abcnews.go.com
Go out on a limb at these new leafy-luxury treehouse resorts
There's fresh growth in the number of stunning treehouse hotels thanks to big brands and hospitality nabobs who hope to make a night in the trees a luxury experience.
1 h
nypost.com
Longtime Adams confidante Winnie Greco resigns and staffer believed to be cooperating with feds is fired as City Hall shakeup continues
Two controversial City Hall staffers — including Winnie Greco, a longtime confidante to Mayor Eric Adams — were pushed out of their jobs Monday, The Post has learned. Greco — who officials believe will potentially be indicted by the feds — resigned, while staffer Rana Abbasova, a key figure in the criminal case against Adams,...
1 h
nypost.com
Travis Kelce’s ex Kayla Nicole calls out NFL star’s ‘slow start’ ahead of Chiefs game
The tight end's former girlfriend referred to him as "the guy" while previewing the Kansas City Chiefs game against the New Orleans Saints.
1 h
nypost.com
Lore Segal, esteemed Austrian American writer who fled the Nazis as a child, dies at 96
She drew upon her experiences for such fiction as “Other People's Houses.”
1 h
abcnews.go.com
Prince George’s considers tying its minimum wage to the cost of living
Prince George’s current minimum wage is $15 per hour — an amount set in 2017 under a 2013 law that implemented incremental increases to what employers must pay.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
The Phony Populism of Trump and Musk
This is an edition of The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here.A Donald Trump rally is always a strange spectacle, and not only because of the candidate’s incoherence and bizarre detours into mental cul-de-sacs. (Journalists have faced some criticism for ignoring or recasting these moments, but The New York Times, for one, has finally said that the candidate’s mental state is a legitimate concern.) Trump’s rally on Saturday in Butler, Pennsylvania, was a hall-of-fame entry in political weirdness: Few survivors of an attempted assassination hold a giant lawn party on the spot where they were wounded and someone in the crowd was killed.The candidate’s tirades are the most obviously bizarre part of his performances, but the nature of the gathering itself is a fascinating paradox. Thousands of people, mostly from the working and middle class, line up to spend time with a very rich man, a lifelong New Yorker who privately detests the heartland Americans in his audience—and applaud as he excoriates the “elites.”This is a political charade: Trump and his running mate, the hillbilly turned multimillionaire J. D. Vance, have little in common with most of the people in the audience, no matter how much they claim to be one of them. The mask slips often: Even as he courts the union vote, Trump revels in saying how much he hated having to pay overtime to his workers. In another telling moment, Trump beamed while talking about how Vance and his wife both have Yale degrees, despite his usual excoriations of top universities. (He always carves out a glittering exception for his own days at the University of Pennsylvania, of course.)Trump then welcomed the world’s richest man, Elon Musk, to the stage. Things got weirder from there, as Musk—who, it should be noted, is 53 years old—jumped around the stage like a concertgoing teenager who got picked out of the audience to meet the band. Musk then proceeded to explain how democracy is in danger—this, from a man who has turned the platform once known as Twitter into an open zone for foreign propaganda and has amplified various hoaxes. Musk has presented himself on his own platform as a champion of the voiceless and the oppressed, but his behavior reveals him as an enemy of speech that isn’t in his own interest.What happened in Butler over the weekend, however, was not some unique American moment. Around the world, fantastically wealthy people are hoodwinking ordinary voters, warning that dark forces—always an indistinct “they” and “them”—are conspiring to take away their rights and turn their nation into an immense ghetto full of undesirables (who are almost always racial minorities or immigrants or, in the ideal narrative, both).The British writer Martin Wolf calls this “pluto-populism,” a brash attempt by people at the top of the financial and social pyramid to stay afloat by capering as ostensibly anti-establishment, pro-worker candidates. In Britain, former Prime Minister Boris Johnson dismissed the whole notion of Brexit behind closed doors, and then supported the movement as his ticket into 10 Downing Street anyway. In Italy, a wealthy entrepreneur helped start the “Five-Star Movement,” recruiting the comedian Beppe Grillo to hold supposedly anti-elitist events such as Fuck-Off Day; they briefly joined a coalition government with a far-right populist party, Lega, some years ago. Similar movements have arisen around the world, in Turkey, Brazil, Hungary, and other nations.These movements are all remarkably alike: They claim to represent the common voter, especially the “forgotten people” and the dispossessed, but in reality, the base voters for these groups are not the poorest or most disadvantaged in their society. Rather, they tend to be relatively affluent. (Think of the January 6 rioters, and how many of them were able to afford flights, hotels, and expensive gear. It’s not cheap to be an insurrectionist.) As Simon Kuper noted in 2020, the “comfortably off populist voter is the main force behind Trump, Brexit and Italy’s Lega,” a fact ignored by opportunistic politicians who instead claim to be acting on behalf of stereotypes of impoverished former factory workers, even if there are few such people left to represent.One of the pioneers of pluto-populism, of course, is the late Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, a rake and a grifter who stayed in office as part of staying out of jail. That strategy should sound familiar to Americans, but even more familiar is the way the Italian scholar Maurizio Viroli, in a book about Italian politics, notes how Berlusconi deformed Italian democracy by seducing its elites into joining the big con against the ordinary voter: Italy, he wrote, is a free country, but Viroli calls such freedom the “liberty of servants,” a sop offered to people who are subjects in a new kind of democracy that is really just the “court at the center of which sits a signore surrounded by a plethora of courtiers, who are in turn admired and envied by a multitude of individuals with servile souls.”The appeals of the pluto-populists work because they target people who care little about policy but a great deal about social revenge. These citizens feel like others whom they dislike are living good lives, which to them seems an injustice. Worse, this itching sense of resentment is the result not of unrequited love but of unrequited hate: Much like the townies who feel looked down upon by the local college kids, or the Red Sox fans who are infuriated that Yankees fans couldn’t care less about their tribal animus, these voters feel ignored and disrespected.Who better to be the agent of their revenge than a crude and boorish magnate who commands attention, angers and frightens the people they hate, and intends to control the political system so that he cannot be touched by it?Musk, for his part, is the perfect addition to this crew. Rich beyond imagination, he still has the wheedling affect of a needy youngster who requires (and demands) attention. Like Trump, he seems unable to believe that although money can buy many things—luxury digs, expensive lawyers, obsequious staff—it cannot buy respect. For people such as Musk and Trump, this popular rejection is baffling and enraging.Trump and those like him thus make a deal with the most resentful citizens in society: Keep us up in the penthouses, and we’ll harass your enemies on your behalf. We’ll punish the people you want punished. In the end, however, the joke is always on the voters: The pluto-populists don’t care about the people cheering them on. Few scores will truly be settled, and life will only become harder for everyone who isn’t wealthy or powerful enough to resist the autocratic policies that such people will impose on everyone, regardless of their previous support.When the dust settles, Trump and Vance will still be rich and powerful (as will Musk, whose fortune and power transcends borders in a way that right-wing populists usually claim to hate). For the many Americans who admire them, little will change; their lives will not improve, just as they did not during Trump’s first term. Millions of us, regardless of whom we voted for, will have to fend off interference in our lives from an authoritarian government—especially if we are, for example, a targeted minority, a woman in need of health care, or a member of a disfavored immigrant community.This is not freedom: As Viroli warned his fellow citizens, “If we are subjected to the arbitrary or enormous power of a man, we may well be free to do more or less what we want, but we are still servants.”Related: Elon Musk bends the knee to Donald Trump. Elon Musk has reached a new low. Here are four new stories from The Atlantic: What going on Call Her Daddy did for Kamala Harris How Jack Smith outsmarted the Supreme Court Third-trimester abortions are rare—but they are happening in America. October 7 created a permission structure for anti-Semitism, Dara Horn argues. Today’s News Hurricane Milton has strengthened into a Category 5 storm. It is expected to make landfall on Wednesday near the Tampa Bay, Florida, region. The Supreme Court allowed a lower court’s decision on Texas’s abortion case to stand; the decision ruled that Texas hospitals do not have to perform emergency abortions if they would violate the state’s law. Philip B. Banks III, the deputy mayor for public safety in New York City and one of Mayor Eric Adams’s top aides, has resigned. His phones were seized by federal investigators last month as part of a probe into bribery and corruption allegations. Dispatches The Books Briefing: In a new short story, Lauren Groff captures the precise moment when a friendship changes forever, Walt Hunter writes. The Wonder Reader: Henry David Thoreau once argued in The Atlantic that autumn doesn’t get enough attention. “This season, I’m wondering whether Thoreau had a point,” Isabel Fattal writes. Explore all of our newsletters here.Evening Read Illustration by Karlotta Freier Couples Therapy, but for SiblingsBy Faith Hill Cam and Dan Beaudoin’s three-decade-old problem began when they were kids. Dan would follow his big brother around. Cam, who’s about three years older, would distance himself. Dan would get mad; Cam would get mad back. Although their mom assured them that they’d be “best friends” some day, nothing much changed—until about three years ago, when a fight got so bad that the brothers stopped talking to each other completely. Dan left all of their shared group chats and unfriended Cam on LinkedIn. But the brothers, who didn’t speak for about a year and a half, started to understand the gravity of this separation. Read the full article.Reflections on October 7Today marks one year since Hamas’s attack on Israel and the start of the subsequent Israel-Hamas war in Gaza. Below, we’ve compiled some of our writers’ recent reporting, analysis, and reflection: The war that would not end: In the year since October 7, the Biden administration has focused on preventing the escalation of a regional war in the Middle East, Franklin Foer reports. But it has failed to secure the release of Israeli hostages or end the fighting in Gaza. Gaza’s suffering is unprecedented: “In my brother’s story, you can get a small glimpse of what the most destructive war in Palestinian history has meant in human terms,” Ahmed Fouad Alkhatib writes. “How my family survived the October 7 massacre”: “We heard shouting in Arabic outside our house—a commander telling one of his men to try to break in. We had woken up to a nightmare: The border had been breached. Hamas was here,” Amir Tibon writes in an article adapted from his new book, The Gates of Gaza. A naked desperation to be seen: In books about the aftermath of October 7, Israelis and Palestinians seek recognition for their humanity, Gal Beckerman writes. The Israeli artist who offends everyone: Long a fearless critic of Israel, Zoya Cherkassky-Nnadi has made wrenching portraits of her nation’s suffering since October 7, Judith Shulevitz writes. Culture Break NBC Watch. The return of Nate Bargatze and his now-classic George Washington sketch points to what really works about Saturday Night Live, Amanda Wicks writes.Grow up. Rather than sneak your greens into a smoothie, it’s time to eat your vegetables like an adult, Yasmin Tayag writes.Play our daily crossword.Stephanie Bai contributed to this newsletter.When you buy a book using a link in this newsletter, we receive a commission. Thank you for supporting The Atlantic.
1 h
theatlantic.com
Elon Musk suggests he’ll be thrown in prison if Harris beats Trump :‘If he loses, I’m f—ed!’
“My view is that if Trump doesn’t win this election it’s the last election we are going to have,” Musk told Tucker Carlson.
1 h
nypost.com
Diddy's celebrity friends are quietly settling with victims ahead of impending lawsuits: lawyer
Celebrities who allegedly covered up or knew about Sean "Diddy" Combs' sexual abuse have been quietly settling with victims, according to attorney Tony Buzbee.
1 h
foxnews.com