Tools
Change country:

The pests next door

A woman with short blond hair in a T-shirt holds one pigeon while another perches on her head, in a pastel-decorated room with pink tulips in a glass vase nearby.
Amina Martin rehabilitates pigeons and other birds in a small apartment in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. | Benji Jones/Vox

In NYC, many wildlife rehabbers see pests as part of a thriving urban ecosystem.

BAY RIDGE, New York City — One sunny afternoon in March, Amina Martin answered the phone in her small Brooklyn apartment. On the line was a taxi driver, who told her he had a pigeon in his backseat and was heading her way. The bird needed Martin’s help.

In New York, you never really know who your neighbors are. You might worry they have bedbugs or hoard cats. Maybe they’re celebrities. Or perhaps their apartments are filled with opossums, squirrels, and birds, all rescued from the streets of NYC.

Martin, a Russian immigrant, is that neighbor.

Her studio is full of pigeons, morning doves, and a handful of other stray birds including an African gray parrot named Elmoar. The animals are in cages that line the wall in front of her bed. Some of the birds have broken wings, trouble walking, or are partially blind. Others are abandoned pets with little chance of survival in the wild.

Martin holds a pigeon up to her face in her apartment.
At least twice a week, Martin lets each pigeon out of its cage to fly around her apartment.

It was loud in her apartment when I met her that afternoon — a racket of coos and cheeps and the occasional interjection from Elmoar. “He’s teaching me English,” Martin jokes, adding that he says words like “whatsoever” that she’s had to look up.

Martin let out a couple of pigeons who flew around her apartment, including her favorite bird, named Anfisa. The animal had ombré gray plumage with pops of iridescent purple and green (i.e., she looked like a pigeon). “She’s in love with my husband,” Martin told me. “She lays eggs on his pillow because she thinks he’s her boyfriend.”

Martin is among a small number of people across the New York City boroughs who rehabilitate injured creatures that many other people label as pests. The driver who called Martin had brought birds to her before; an acquaintance of hers finds injured pigeons on the street and calls the same one or two taxi drivers to deliver them. (Sending birds via taxi? “It’s a common thing,” Martin says.)

Over several weeks this spring, I met more than a dozen licensed wildlife rehabilitators (aka, “rehabbers”) in New York. Many of them, like Martin, care for animals at home, turning their living rooms into makeshift wildlife hospitals. I visited a duplex in Staten Island full of squirrels and rats; a room in the Upper West Side with a box of baby opossums; and a small park on Roosevelt Island with injured Canada geese, adult opossums, and house cats, all living together and in some cases sleeping side-by-side. One rehabber in Manhattan told me she converted her balcony into an atrium for injured birds.

A tiny hairless baby opossum is held in two hands, with a syringe on a tray nearby.
A woman with dark hair and a gray T-shirt smiles while holding a rat with two hands in front of her.
A tiny squirrel is fed with a dropper.
A baby opossum with its eyes closed sleeps on a purple furry fabric.

Top left: A four-week-old opossum getting ready to be fed. Top right: Rehabber Amanda Lullo holds a friendly wild rat she’s caring for. Bottom left: A young squirrel sucking down animal infant formula. Bottom right: A baby opossum in a furry sack.

New York’s rehabber community is small; the opossum, pigeon, and squirrel people tend to know each other. Some of them, like Martin, document their work on Instagram, amassing a hefty following. But many of them operate under the radar to avoid unwanted attention from the Department of Health, or their landlords. (A bedroom full of squirrels is typically beyond a building’s pet policy.)

You might be thinking: What are they thinking? People are commonly disgusted by the animals that have adapted to live alongside us — to eat our garbage, to sleep in our streets. We typically want them out of our homes, not in. Wild animals, no matter the species, can also be noisy, dirty, and sometimes diseased. (One of Martin’s pigeons pooped on her bed, and of course, I sat right in it.)

What’s even more puzzling is that most of these rehabbers work for free, often around the clock, to care for these animals until they’ve healed. They often spend what little money they have on feed, specialized equipment including syringes and IV bags, and medicine. One rehabber told me that she can’t afford to buy herself new clothes. “I’m so broke right now,” they said. “All of my money goes to the animals.”

As I spent time with rehabbers, I began to see their perspective. They view these species not as pests but as part of nature — as part of the New York City ecosystem. As part of their home. These animals belong here, rehabbers told me, just as much as we do. And they don’t deserve the harm that humans so often inflict on them, whether deliberately or not.

By showing these animals some respect and helping them survive, rehabbers appear to feel more connected with their environment, with what they see as nature. That enriches their lives and makes them feel less alone.

Maybe they’re onto something.

Black trash bags are piled on a city sidewalk, with traffic a blur of lights passing by.
A common sight in NYC and a food source for many of its critters: A pile of trash on the street, shot in the East Village.

Nearly every inch of New York, the nation’s largest and densest city, has been transformed by humans. Even its parks are largely artificial: The ponds, streams, and waterfalls in Manhattan’s Central Park, for example, are fed by city drinking water.

Yet the city is brimming with non-human life.

On a warm evening in March, I strolled through Central Park and saw a few dozen raccoons, several of which were eating a large pile of spaghetti. I put a motion-sensing camera in Brooklyn’s Green-Wood Cemetery (where conductor and pianist Leonard Bernstein, among other icons, is buried) and it captured videos of groundhogs, skunks, opossums, and stray cats. The city’s ponds are full of turtles. There are even seahorses in the Hudson River, once a dumping ground for chemicals and dead bodies.

“I see nature everywhere in New York City,” says Dustin Partridge, director of conservation and science at NYC Audubon, one of the leading environmental groups in the city.

Two raccoons look at the camera from the dark, their eyes lit up with the lens.
Raccoons, some of the most common wild animals in NYC, prowl Central Park after dark.
A raccoon climbing a tree to get at noodles.
They helped themselves to a large pile of pasta someone had dumped.

Some of the city’s animals are native to the region and have found ways to survive, even as developers chop up and pave over their habitats. Staten Island is still home to a rare amphibian called the Atlantic coast leopard frog, once common in Brooklyn, Queens, and Long Island. Around full and new moons in late spring, horseshoe crabs — ancient creatures that have been on Earth for hundreds of millions of years — still come ashore on NYC beaches to find mates and lay eggs. Islands in the harbor are home to loads of water birds like black-crowned night herons and egrets.

Many other species, meanwhile, are here in New York, in large part, because of us — or because they tolerate us. The wild ancestors of pigeons, which are domestic birds, lived on cliffsides. These days they’re happy to nest on the sides of buildings. Of the several million tons of trash the city produces each year, the occasional overflowing receptacle or torn trash bag provides ample food for rats and raccoons.

A groundhog sits on its back legs in front of a tree while looking into a trail camera.
A nighttime photo of a skunk passing a trail camera.
An opossum is a white blur with bright eyes running past a trail camera.
A dark-furred house cat prowls in the dark past a trail camera toward a tree.

Images captured by a motion-sensing camera installed on a trail in Green-Wood Cemetery, in South Brooklyn.

These furry city slickers don’t fit neatly into any of our categories for animals, says Seth Magle, who runs the Urban Wildlife Institute at the Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago. They exist somewhere between domesticated pets, like cats and dogs, and wildlife, like wolves and bears. “They occupy this invisible space in peoples’ heads,” Magle told me.

And that many of New York’s most common critters are not native to the region further complicates our feelings toward them. The pigeons evolved in Europe and North Africa, and the rats are from Asia. House sparrows and European starlings are native to the eastern hemisphere. Even the squirrels, which technically are native to New York, were artificially introduced to the city in the 1870s, after hunting and deforestation wiped out their resident population.

The plight of these common city animals is that they are so widely unloved. We treat them as if they don’t belong here, in our home. Even if they’re native to New York, we don’t want them in our city. Cities are for humans. Distant forests — environments that we can visit at our leisure, on our own terms — are for them.

A Gothic metal and stone gate with several spiky towers is topped by a large bird’s nest.
In Green-Wood Cemetery, a colony of monk parakeets, birds native to South America, have built a giant nest atop the main gate.

In reality, we’ve already taken most of the planet for ourselves. Only a fraction of those distant forests remain. That’s why an estimated one million plant and animal species are now slipping toward extinction. The animals that are plentiful in cities like New York, these “pests,” are “winners on a planet full of loss,” as environmental author Bethany Brookshire wrote in her 2022 book Pests. Their abundance is, in a way, a success story.

To be clear, building a home for humans in New York has heavily degraded the natural ecosystem; the city has, for example, lost 99 percent of its freshwater wetlands. From another perspective, however, cities like New York have created a new ecosystem — a new web of life.


On any given day in late spring or summer, Arina Hinzen might be wearing a scarf around her neck full of baby opossums. Just as these marsupials cling to their mothers in the wild, the babies — some no larger than a ping-pong ball — cling to the fabric, like an animal print come to life. The animals seem to enjoy riding with Hinzen as she moves about. If they smell something delicious, she told me, the babies poke their snouts out for a whiff.

Hinzen, a licensed rehabber who runs a wildlife welfare group in the city called Urban Wildlife Alliance, is what you might call Manhattan’s premier opossum godmother. In the last decade, the German native has rehabbed roughly 1,500 animals, including hundreds of baby opossums, she said. A single female opossum can give birth to more than a dozen infants, each no larger than a jelly bean. If just one mother gets hit by a car, as is common in NYC, they’ll all be in need of life support. Often, when people find them, Hinzen is who they call.

A woman with short brown hair and a red shirt holds a tiny baby opossum in a soft cloth while hand-feeding it through a tube.
Arina Hinzen, one of NYC’s most trusted opossum rehabbers, feeds a four-week-old baby by inserting a thin tube into its stomach.

Raising baby opossums — which differ from possums, an entirely different marsupial native to Australia — was not always her life. Nor has it been her most unusual vocation. As a young adult in Germany, Hinzen spent more than a decade judging skydiving competitions. Parachuters would hurl themselves from planes, sometimes do tricks in the air, and then try to land on a target. (She, herself, has jumped from a plane close to 500 times.) From there, Hinzen pursued a career in viticulture, got married, and built a wine importing company in NYC with her then-husband.

Years later — now more than a decade ago — Hinzen’s marriage and her company fell apart, she told me, as we shared a bottle of wine on a bench in Central Park. Her world crumbled.

It was around that time, Hinzen says, that she came across an injured pigeon in the Upper West Side. The bird was puffed up on the steps of a church and looked emaciated. Hinzen felt an urge to help. “It seemed like she had already checked out and given up on life,” Hinzen told me. “I think that’s what drew my attention, because I felt almost the same.”

A baby opossum in a furry blanket.
Hinzen prepares a baby opossum for feeding. She uses a specialized animal infant formula.
A baby opossum in a fuzzy blanket receiving food through a thin tube.
At this age, Hinzen feeds the baby opossums five times a day. Each feeding takes about an hour and a half, she told me.

Hinzen brought home the debilitated bird and with help from a local rehab center, nursed it back to health. She released the pigeon — Richard — a few months later. “To see that you can bring something back from the edge of death that has lost all hope ignited my passion,” she told me.

Hinzen, a Buddhist, rescued more pigeons in the months that followed, eventually graduating to infant squirrels and opossums. They have become her specialty. In the spring, Hinzen told me that she might have 40 babies at one time and be tending to them 18 or 19 hours a day. “It has completely taken over my life,” she says.

In these creatures, Hinzen, like other rehabbers, sees something that many of us don’t: something relatable. “I’m absolutely convinced that these animals have an emotional life,” she says. “At the end of the day, all they want is to live, to bring up their families, and to eat. They want the same as we want.”

Feeling a connection with these animals, and compassion for them, has enriched her life in the city, she says. Even just noticing them more — their quirky behaviors, their bizarre features — can inspire awe, she says.

“We are conditioned to see ourselves as different from other living beings,” Hinzen told me. “We have lost a feeling of connection to them. We have forgotten that we are part of nature and part of an ecosystem as much as they are.”

A squirrel looks brightly into the camera, held in two hands in front of an animal cage.
Amanda Lullo, a rehabber in Staten Island, prepares to feed a handful of orphaned baby squirrels.

Amanda Lullo, a squirrel rehabber on Staten Island, echoes some of that thinking. “Everything serves a purpose,” she told me. Rats are “nature’s garbage disposals,” she says, and squirrels are “nature’s gardeners,” since they bury seeds that grow into trees — at least when they don’t retrieve them to eat later. “We need these animals,” she says.

I visited Lullo’s home on two separate occasions this spring. It’s a modest duplex that looks pretty ordinary. Until you walk inside. About two dozen cages, filled with squirrels, rats, and a couple of ferrets, were stacked up against the walls. An IV hung from the ceiling. A handful of pet cats and a rescued pit bull roamed around — and, in one case, slept on top of — the cages, remarkably disinterested in the animals inside.

As we walked around her home, Lullo, who grew up in Brooklyn, introduced me to the animals. There was Pistachio, a.k.a. Fat Boy, a pudgy squirrel who fell from a tree as a baby. The fall broke his arm and cracked his tooth, she said, as the animal (now mostly healed) crawled around Lullo’s body. Lullo also showed me several baby squirrels including a five-week-old; she feeds them a special animal infant formula with a dash of heavy cream using a syringe.

A baby squirrel eats a blueberry.
Lullo feeds a blueberry to one of the young squirrels she’s caring for.
Plastic syringes laid out on a blanket.
An array of clean syringes that Lullo uses to feed the baby squirrels.

I also met a couple of wild rats, most named after fruits, including Strawberry and Blueberry. (Lullo raised them from infancy. Sometimes when people kill rats they find out that they have babies, Lullo said. They feel bad and call a rehabber.)

Though common, these animals are deserving of care, Lullo says. “Humans kill and destroy everything they touch,” she says. The animals of New York City, she explains, are mostly harmless and they just want to live.

Once rehabbers start caring for injured wildlife, they also just find it hard to stop. These people see critters in need everywhere.

A woman in a blue hat and coat throws food over the water of a small pond, where swans, ducks, and geese gather.
Rehabber Mary Beth Artz throws food pellets into a lake in Brooklyn’s Prospect Park to try and attract a domestic duck in need of rescue.

“Once you know, you can’t unknow,” said Mary Beth Artz, a rehabber and stage actor who rescues ducks and other birds from Prospect Park in Brooklyn. (She’s currently rehabbing a jumbo Pekin named Freddie at her home. Last fall, the duck, which may have been purchased as a pet, was abandoned in a Queens parking lot, she said.)

“I say it all the time — ‘I’m not going to do this anymore’ — but then something else happens,” Artz told me one afternoon in Prospect Park, while she was trying to rescue a domestic khaki Campbell duck that was dumped in the lake.

“If we don’t do it, who’s going to do it?”


An uncomfortable answer to that question might be, well, perhaps no one should. Indeed, there are some good reasons to limit the numbers of certain urban critters.

Raccoons and skunks can carry rabies and other diseases. Rodent infestations, meanwhile, are particularly harmful to people experiencing homelessness, Brookshire writes in Pests. Their constant squeaks can make it impossible to sleep. (I couldn’t find anyone, aside from Lullo, who is rehabbing rats in the city. Lullo doesn’t plan to release them. Similarly, rehabbers seldom rescue raccoons, which require a more advanced license.)

“Disease is always a risk with wildlife,” said Myles Davis, a city wildlife expert who manages NYC Audubon’s green infrastructure program. (That said, “You are never at risk of getting rabies from a raccoon,” he added, if you only observe it from afar.)

A hawk perched in a tangle of branches in a tree eats from a dead pigeon held in its talons.
A red-tailed hawk in Green-Wood Cemetery rips apart a pigeon, an abundant food source in NYC.

An overabundance of these animals can also interfere with efforts to protect the city’s rarer species — stoking longstanding tensions between animal welfare and conservation. Pigeons may be an important food source for native raptors, including the once near-extinct peregrine falcon, but raccoons and opossums eat the eggs and chicks of native birds, according to Partridge. This complicates the question of what belongs in an urbanized environment.

I raised these tensions with Catherine Quayle, a spokesperson for the Wild Bird Fund, the city’s most well-known and largest rehab center, mostly focused on birds. “Wildlife rehab is not a practice of conservation,” she told me. “It’s a practice of compassion.” To tell the public that some animals matter and other ones don’t “defeats our mission,” she said, “which is to teach people about wildlife.”

As Quayle sees it, showing compassion for any wild creature, whether it’s a pigeon pecking at a slice of pizza or a songbird flying through during spring migration, can engender more respect for the wild world at large. It can help erode the dividing line between humans and pests, ultimately making us better stewards of our environment.

We really need to be better stewards. Many features of the NYC built environment harm all animals, rare and common alike. Building windows are too reflective, causing birds to crash into them. Rat poison not only makes rodents suffer but harms the rodent-eating raptors. Flaco, a famous owl that escaped last year from the Central Park Zoo (with the help of a miscreant), died recently after colliding with a building. An autopsy revealed that he had four kinds of rat poison in his body (as well as a form of herpes found in pigeons).

This doesn’t mean we should throw up our hands and welcome these animals in with open arms. But maybe — just maybe — NYC could find a way to, you know, not place trash on the street in flimsy plastic bags. (The city says it’s working on it.) You may think urban animals are gross, but we are the ones filling the city with trash.

An overflowing trash can in a city park.
After warm weekend days, trash cans in Prospect Park are overflowing with animal-attracting garbage.
A pigeon and a squirrel sitting on a tree branch with pink tree blossoms in the background.
Two of NYC’s most common (and most reviled) wild creatures.

I still struggle with my own feelings toward these creatures. I happen to live on a rat-ridden street in Brooklyn. On a walk the other night, my dog lunged for a stray cat which then lunged for a large rat (and successfully snatched it). I’ve dealt with mice and bugs in my apartment. Last fall, I had to move because of a roach infestation. If this is the New York City ecosystem, I’m not sure how close to nature I want to be.

What is clear to me is the simple power of connecting with animals as individuals, of pausing even briefly to observe their lives. Watching house sparrows bathe in a grimy fountain or squirrels chase each other around a tree can, I’d argue, inspire awe. And to see them suffering can be incredibly painful.

That much was clear to me back in Bay Ridge, where I was waiting with Martin, the bird rehabber, for the pigeon delivery. A white SUV pulled up, and the driver retrieved a cat carrier from the backseat. Martin took the carrier and set it down on a nearby bench.

The pigeon inside was still and its eyes glossy; I could see its breast faintly rise and fall. It wasn’t doing well, Martin said. The bird was about to die. We sat there in silence, Martin lightly petting the pigeon’s back. And a moment later, the animal was completely still. It had passed away, Martin told me.

“You never get used to it,” she said, quietly.

Frankly, I was devastated. I’ve rarely given pigeons much thought, but at that moment — after witnessing life vanish — I was comforted knowing that these birds, and that so many other unloved creatures across the city, have people looking out for them.


Read full article on: vox.com
Jürgen Klopp and Liverpool, a Love Affair in Street Art and Silverware
A coach’s soccer legacy is often reduced to titles and trophies. In Liverpool, a beloved manager will endure in murals, music and shared memories.
nytimes.com
New York thrilled with first in-person experience hosting Caitlin Clark
It was less than an hour before the first game she would ever play in New York City, this one in Brooklyn at Barclays Center, and young girls squealed for her to sign their No. 22 jerseys, their posters, their magazines, their anything and everything. Caitlin Clark, chewing gum and smiling, made her way down...
nypost.com
Suspected Meteor Turns Sky Over Portugal an Astonishing Neon Blue
via X A suspected meteor lit up the sky over Portugal and Spain late Saturday night, prompting witnesses to flood social media with videos of the spectacular blue fireball.One video, apparently filmed on a driver’s dash-cam, shows a burst of blue light blazing across the sky. Another captures a crowd reacting with awe and dismay as the entire sky turns neon blue while the apparent meteor falls.Authorities in Viseu, Portugal, told Publico they had been alerted to reports of an object falling in the sky but that they had so far not been able to find whatever it was that came crashing down to Earth. The outlet said the Civil Protection agency initially reported a “meteorite fall” but then retracted that statement.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Diddy’s former assistant says she was not surprised by video showing rapper beating ex Cassie Ventura
Suzi Siegel said “there was not one cell in my body that was surprised” by the video.
nypost.com
5/18: CBS Weekend News
Biden travels to Georgia ahead of Morehouse commencement address; Anchovies behind surge of sea lions in San Francisco
cbsnews.com
Are Those Mimes Spying on Us? In Pakistan, It’s Not a Strange Question.
Pakistanis suspect the national intelligence agencies of being behind practically everything — even street performers working for tips in Islamabad.
nytimes.com
Florida fisherman unexpectedly catches 12-foot tiger shark in 25-minute battle: ‘One to remember’
Owen Prior told a local news outlet he's caught hundreds of sharks, including a 14-foot hammerhead.
nypost.com
Carolyn Hax: Friends say to break other plans to avoid offending new man
Friends say it was a “huge mistake” to follow through on a prior commitment when a new love asked for a date.
washingtonpost.com
Ask Amy: Should my husband get a say in what I do with my inheritance?
Her husband doesn’t want her to share her inheritance with her nieces.
washingtonpost.com
Disneyland's character performers vote to unionize
Most of the more than 35,000 workers at Disneyland Resort in Anaheim, home of the company's first theme park, already have unions.
cbsnews.com
Angels' Carson Fulmer gives up winning run in 13th inning by hitting a Rangers batter
The Angels went 0 for 18 with runners in scoring position, struggling through a 3-2, 13-inning road loss to the Texas Rangers Saturday night.
latimes.com
DC Mayor Muriel Bowser jets off for Vegas weekend ‘mission’ after ritzy Masters trip on taxpayers’ dime
Bowser will attend the conference, which is held at Wynn Las Vegas, along with 14 other elected officials and staff members.
nypost.com
Walker Buehler delivers best start since returning from surgery, fueling Dodgers' win
Walker Buehler allowed only three hits over six scoreless innings, struck out seven and walked none during a 4-0 win over the Cincinnati Reds Saturday.
latimes.com
Mavericks rally past Thunder thanks to clutch free throws to reach Western Conference final
DALLAS — P.J. Washington Jr. made two free throws before an intentional miss with 2.5 seconds left, lifting the Dallas Mavericks to a 117-116 victory over the Oklahoma City Thunder on Saturday night and into the Western Conference finals for the second time in three seasons. Washington was fouled by Shai Gilgeous-Alexander on a 3-point...
1 h
nypost.com
School apologizes after seizing Lakota student’s feathered graduation cap
A viral video of staff confiscating a Native American student’s decorated cap sparked an outpouring of anger this week.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
Here’s how everyone can tell you’re American in a foreign country — and why it’s hard to fake being a local
"You hear Americans coming like the thunder."
1 h
nypost.com
Was death of a doctor's wife an accident or staged to look like one?
Susann Sills' body was found at the bottom of the staircase of her family's San Clemente, California home. What led up to her death?
1 h
cbsnews.com
Obi Toppin has chance to help end Knicks’ season in Game 7
It could be Obi’s Revenge. 
2 h
nypost.com
The Iconic Memphis Label Behind Music’s Most Soulful Stars
Howard L. Bingham“We were flying by the seat of our pants,” Stax legend William Bell recently recalled of the early days of the venerable label that tracked the rise of the civil rights movement. “A lot of us came in from the gospel arena, right out of church, just neighborhood kids. We learned how to craft a song as young kids, 14, 15 years old, but really, we just wanted to hear our voices on the radio.”According to legend, Stax Records replaced cotton as the single biggest product coming out of Memphis, Tennessee, during its late-1960s heyday. And if you know the Stax story, it’s not hard to believe.But if you only know the hits, and not the rags-to-riches tale of the label that made stars of Otis Redding, Isaac Hayes, Sam & Dave, the Staple Singers, and so many more, then you couldn’t do better than STAX: Soulsville U.S.A., a four-part documentary that premieres on Max on May 20 and tracks its remarkable, and often heartbreaking, history.Read more at The Daily Beast.
2 h
thedailybeast.com
Olivia Munn documented cancer journey for son to show him 'I tried my best' if she 'didn't make it'
Olivia Munn opened up about why she decided to document her cancer journey. Munn said that she wanted to show her son Malcolm that she "fought to be here" in case she "didn't make it."
2 h
foxnews.com
Kyle Finnegan’s rare hiccup helps Phillies to a 4-3 win in 10 innings
The Nats’ closer has impressed all season, but he was burned for a solo homer with two outs in the ninth before Bryce Harper won it in the 10th with a sac fly.
2 h
washingtonpost.com
Trinity Rodman scores twice as Spirit storms back to top Angel City
Three goals in a seven-minute stretch power Washington to a 4-2 victory at Audi Field.
2 h
washingtonpost.com
Disneyland costumed character employees vote to unionize
The Disneyland Resort employees who play costumed characters in the parks, parades or hotels have voted to unionize, citing issues such as pay and working conditions.
2 h
latimes.com
‘Hacks’ Season 3 Is Its Horniest Yet. Does It Need This Much Sex?
Photo Illustration by Erin O'Flynn/The Daily Beast/MaxHaving a one-night stand seems to have become veteran comic Deborah Vance’s (Jean Smart) go-to method in confronting the two most painful moments from her past: losing a late-night talk show and losing her husband to her younger sister in one fell swoop.In both of the last two seasons of Hacks, Deborah has had fleeting encounters that prove she has the capacity for self-reflection after a night in the sack with a hot guy—which is true even when Deborah breaks her own “no married men” rule.(Warning: Spoilers ahead for the latest episodes of Hacks.)Read more at The Daily Beast.
2 h
thedailybeast.com
This is the new top spot for migrants to slip across US border
”Migration is a dynamic phenomenon, and people are going to adjust and find the circumstances where they have the best chance to reach the United States.”
2 h
nypost.com
The Huge ‘Bridgerton’ Sex Scene Is Scored by…Pitbull?!
Photo Illustration by Luis G. Rendon/The Daily Beast/Netflix/Getty ImagesHave you ever professed feelings to the love of your life while a Pitbull song was playing in the background? Oh, you haven’t? You should give it a try sometime. Clearly, it works wonders—because in Bridgerton, it leads to one of the series’ greatest love stories. Pitbull is a romantic genius.(Warning: Spoilers ahead for Bridgerton Season 3, Part 1.)Let’s set the scene: Penelope Featherington (Nicola Coughlan) is having a tense carriage ride back to her home across from the Bridgerton estate. She’s fed up with Colin Bridgerton (Luke Newton), who has vexed her for years as the charming boy next door. He just ruined her one chance at marriage by intercepting a proposition at a ball. And yet, he still does not seem to love her. Why, then, must he continue to take such a vested interest in her love life?Read more at The Daily Beast.
2 h
thedailybeast.com
Lionel Messi’s Inter Miami denies D.C. United on late strike by Leo Campana
Leo Campana had the winner in the fourth minute of second-half stoppage time as D.C. United fell, 1-0.
2 h
washingtonpost.com
Liberty bury Fever with barrage of 3-pointers in win
When the Liberty’s offense clicked last season, 3-pointers were at the crux of that success.
2 h
nypost.com
Bella Hadid’s Perfume Line Will Awaken Your Inner Romantic
Photo Illustration by Erin O'Flynn/The Daily Beast/Getty ImagesThere is something preternaturally alluring about Bella Hadid. Maybe it’s the supermodel-activist-lemon heiress’ cheekbones, which look like Rodin’s careful hands finished sculpting them just before Pat McGrath’s devoted brushes dotted highlighter powder across their curvature. Or perhaps it’s the Palestinian-American’s fearless dedication to speaking out for what she believes in. Hadid has been strong-willed enough to suffer any detractors, consistently using her platform to speak out about Israel’s virulent military campaign in Gaza, and joining the call to demand a ceasefire.Whatever her draw is, one thing’s for sure: Bella Hadid serves as often as an Applebee’s waiter doing a double shift after a local junior baseball tournament. Watching her walk a runway is like catching a glimpse of Helen of Troy—suddenly, you understand how one face could launch a thousand ships. Hadid has an “it” factor that so many of her contemporaries have failed to procure, an undeniable pull that has made her the muse of designers and photographers around the world at just 27 years old. Who wouldn’t want an aura that makes people fall head over heels with just one look, if only for the big, fat paychecks it may yield?For anyone looking to replicate Hadid’s aura themselves—trust me, I’ve closely studied the texts to try to do this for years—there is Orebella, Hadid’s new line of fragrances, touted as “the first intentional skin parfum.” As a longtime Bella Hadid superstan, whose name was on the Orebella mailing list before the product was even announced, I couldn’t get my hands on Orebella’s first three scents fast enough. I may be a professional critic, sure, but I lay the money down first and form my subjective opinions later. Suze Orman will have my head for that, yet little does she know that all things are possible through Bella Hadid, which I have found out after a week’s worth of testing Orebella. The scents, and their unusual, proprietary formula, are as enchanting as the person who created them, a unique blend of essential oils whose bouquet transforms the longer they’re worn on the skin. While I’m reluctant to gush over every scent in the launch collection, one of them has become my go-to summer staple, a must-have for anyone looking to “reveal their alchemy,” to borrow a phrase from the brand itself.Read more at The Daily Beast.
2 h
thedailybeast.com
NYCFC beat Red Bulls to pull even in Eastern Conference standings
Mounsef Bakrar's helped lift NYCFC to a 2-1 win on Saturday night and pulled them even in the Eastern Conference standings with the Red Bulls.
2 h
nypost.com
Chicago mom left waiting hours for help after 911 call for home invasion: ‘We have no units to send you’
The dispatcher also asked me if I would consider defending myself … if I had a weapon or considered getting one.”
2 h
nypost.com
Florida mom speaks out, asks for prayers after daughter detained in Turks and Caicos for carrying ammo
A Florida mom shared her heartbreak after her daughter was arrested and detained for carrying ammunition at an airport in the Turks and Caicos Islands.
2 h
foxnews.com
Seize the Grey wins the Preakness, ending Mystik Dan's Triple Crown bid
Seize the Grey ended Kentucky Derby winner Mystik Dan's Triple Crown bid by going wire to wire to win the Preakness, giving trainer D. Wayne Lukas his seventh victory in the race.
3 h
npr.org
Trump demands Biden 'drug test,' rips 'radical' RFK Jr. in bid to 'rebellious bunch' at NRA
Former President Trump fired up supporters at the National Rifle Association's Annual Meeting, demanding that President Biden get a drug test before the pair debates.
3 h
foxnews.com
Dive team finds bodies of 2 men dead inside plane found upside down in Alaska lake
Alaska State Troopers say dive teams found the two bodies.
3 h
abcnews.go.com
Man suspected of shooting infant son in hostage standoff apparently killed himself
He was found in the rubble of a Phoenix home that caught fire during a standoff.
3 h
abcnews.go.com
Sarah Hyland’s ex Matt Prokop arrested for allegedly assaulting girlfriend
In September 2014, the "Modern Family" actress filed for a temporary restraining order against Prokop after alleging he choked and threatened her.
3 h
nypost.com
Joe Biden faces potentially nightmarish June swoon with his re-election hopes fading
The month of June is shaping up to be a potential nightmare for President Biden with his re-election, his legacy and Hunter Biden’s freedom all on the line over the course of a month-long gantlet.
3 h
nypost.com
Trump Ends NRA Speech With ‘Horror’ Warning Set to Dramatic QAnon Music
Justin Sullivan/Getty ImagesDonald Trump followed up his endorsement by the National Rifle Association on Saturday with a speech stoking fears of the government under Joe Biden “coming for your guns” and a bizarre monologue set to dramatic music resembling a song favored by QAnon.Addressing thousands of members of the NRA at their annual meeting in Texas, the former president stuck to his usual talking points, hailing the reversal of Roe v. Wade as an “amazing thing,” comparing himself to Al Capone, and insisting “genius” runs in his bloodline.Then, as he wound down, in a disorienting shift, sentimental music began to play and Trump furrowed his brow and shook his head to deliver the grim message that America is “a failing nation.”Read more at The Daily Beast.
3 h
thedailybeast.com
Dali ship will be floated on Monday, officials say
Officials plan to move the ship to a Baltimore terminal at high tide.
3 h
washingtonpost.com
Maryland governor signs Biden-inspired bill establishing 'Center for Firearm Violence Prevention'
Democratic Maryland governor Wes Moore signed a law creating the Center for Firearm Violence Prevention and Intervention, modeled after President Biden's gun violence office.
3 h
foxnews.com
Oleksandr Usyk defeats Tyson Fury by split decision to become undisputed heavyweight champion
Oleksandr Usyk defeated Tyson Fury by split decision on Sunday to become the first undisputed heavyweight boxing champion in 24 years.
3 h
nypost.com
5-year-old boy struck and killed by SUV after playing in Queens playground
A 5-year-old boy was killed after he ran out into a Queens street and was struck by a vehicle, according to police. The child was hit around 6:06 pm in front of 20-19 124th St. in Flushing near a playground, cops said. The boy “ran into the roadway” when a 2008 Honda CRV traveling southbound...
3 h
nypost.com
Anchovies behind surge of sea lions in San Francisco
San Francisco's famed Fisherman's Wharf is seeing an unusually large number sea lions that local officials say is the largest herd of the sea mammals the area has seen in 15 years. The massive herd is snacking on an overabundance of anchovies. Kenny Choi explains.
3 h
cbsnews.com
Rudy Giuliani served indictment in Arizona fake elector case
The former New York mayor was served after his 80th birthday celebration as he was walking to the car, a political adviser said.
3 h
cbsnews.com
Six players within two shots of lead heading into final round of PGA Championship
Sunday’s final round of the PGA Championship will resemble a horse race, with so many big-name contender within two shots of the lead.
3 h
nypost.com
TikTok influencers file lawsuit against U.S. government
Eight TikTok influencers have filed a lawsuit against the U.S. government in an effort to block enactment of a law passed and signed last month that requires TikTok be sold by China-based owner Byte Dance by January, or face a possible nationwide ban. Scott MacFarlane has more.
3 h
cbsnews.com
Auto workers in Alabama vote against joining UAW
Workers at two Mercedes Benz plants in Alabama this week voted against joining the United Auto Workers union. The movement to unionize saw opposition, not just from the company, but also Republican Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey. Michael George has more.
3 h
cbsnews.com