Trump vows to stop ‘transgender lunacy’ and recognize only two genders: ‘Doesn’t sound too complicated, does it?’
Starbucks strike expands to 12 cities
Workers have escalated the strike each day since it began on Friday.
abcnews.go.com
Biden's last-minute emissions goal could be quickly reversed when Trump takes office
President Biden increased the emissions reduction goal for the United States under the Paris climate agreement, which Trump has signaled he intends to withdraw from.
foxnews.com
As Russia threats loom, Finland's people are learning to shoot back
The popularity of weapons training in Finland has soared in recent months, driven by concerns over expansionist neighbor Russia.
latimes.com
Blake Lively's 'Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants' co-stars stand 'in solidarity' with her amid messy lawsuit
Blake Lively is suing Justin Baldoni and others for sexual harassment, negligence, intentional affliction of emotional distress, interference with prospective economic advantage and more
foxnews.com
Amber Heard reacts to Justin Baldoni’s alleged smear campaign against Blake Lively: ‘Horrifying’
Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni's drama has drawn comparisons to Amber Heard and Johnny Depp's defamation trial.
nypost.com
Justin Baldoni’s wedding apology to wife over his ‘insecurities’ and ‘ego’ resurfaces amid Blake Lively’s sexual harassment complaint
Amid Blake Lively’s claim that her “It Ends With Us” co-star Justin Baldoni sexually harassed her and waged a campaign to “destroy” her reputation, a video from Baldoni’s wedding has resurfaced.
nypost.com
Amber Heard reacts to Blake Lively’s claims about Justin Baldoni’s alleged ‘horrifying’ smear campaign
The "It Ends With Us" actor hired the same crisis PR manager that worked with Heard's ex-husband, Johnny Depp, during their defamation trial.
nypost.com
Phillies 'Underrated' Star Predicted To Sign $36 Million Deal With Red Sox
Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Jeff Hoffman could cut ties with the team in favor of a three-year contract with the Boston Red Sox.
newsweek.com
Justin Baldoni’s wedding apology to wife resurfaces after Blake Lively’s sexual harassment complaint
"I want to start off my vows to you with an apology," he told the bride at the altar during their July 2013 nuptials in Corona, Calif., per a clip shared on YouTube.
nypost.com
Cook more at home next year with the help of these 8 kitchen gadgets
Make delicious homemade meals quickly with the help of these eight cooking gadgets.
foxnews.com
Steve Cohen nearing $1 billion in offseason spending with Sean Manaea contract — and Mets aren’t done yet
Steve Cohen is fast approaching a billion-dollar outlay this offseason, and the Mets' work isn't done.
nypost.com
Kourtney Kardashian Shouts Out Sister Khloé Kardashian Over '80s Throwback Video
The reality star shared an adorable throwback video with her sisters.
newsweek.com
Apple poised to break $4T market cap milestone as iPhone sales, AI enhancements thrill investors
Investors are salivating at the prospect of the iPhone maker topping the milestone as the company's stock price has soared by nearly 40% since Jan. 1.
nypost.com
Corbin Burnes $250 Million Sweepstakes Likely Down To Three Teams
As Christmas approaches, the Corbin Burnes sweepstakes has dwindled to three teams: the San Francisco Giants, Toronto Blue Jays, and Boston Red Sox.
newsweek.com
Sebastian Zapeta: What We Know About Suspect in Fatal NYC Subway Fire
A Guatemalan national was arrested in connection with the horrific attack on an F train in Brooklyn on Sunday.
newsweek.com
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ twin daughters celebrate their 18th birthdays as he remains behind bars
The embattled music mogul welcomed Jessie and D'Lila in December 2006 with then-partner Kim Porter, who died in 2018 of pneumonia at age 47.
nypost.com
Mystery NJ drones could be identified faster using new detection tool, but FAA lacks resources
As drone sightings over New Jersey continue to raise questions, a new tool could bring answers about the source of these flying vehicles — if the government could get it off the ground.
nypost.com
Woman Gets Emotional Seeing What Happened to Childhood Home on Street View
A woman was able to step back in time to her childhood using Google Maps, becoming emotional during the experience.
newsweek.com
Man Enjoys Peaceful Kayaking Trip, Then Sees What's Lurking in the Water
A man fishing from a kayak in the Everglades was stunned when he saw bushes ruffle and a creature making its way under his boat.
newsweek.com
2024’s nastiest cruise ships revealed based on viral outbreaks, food safety and hygiene: CDC
The review looks at common spaces such as pools and activity centers, buffet handwashing stations, food storage and cooking equipment.
nypost.com
Woman Thinks She Has a Pimple—Winds Up in Surgery
Stephanie Warkotsch popped what she thought was a hormonal pimple, but it grew back and "got bigger and bigger" across her cheek.
newsweek.com
House report accuses Matt Gaetz of paying women for sex, using illegal drugs, accepting improper gifts
Former Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., allegedly paid multiple women for sex and illicit drugs, according to a House Ethics Committee report.
foxnews.com
Holy ‘ship’! Cargo ship in Turkey tips, sends containers into water
Run for your lives! Surveillance video captured the scary moment the cargo ship ANMAH rolled onto its side at a port in Istanbul, Turkey. Only one injury was reported following the Dec. 23 event that submerged dozens of shipping containers and sent five crew members jumping into the water to save themselves.
nypost.com
Hearts Break for Shelter Dog Who 'Knows He Lost Everything'
Volunteer Helga told Newsweek: "He's going to need someone who loves him for who he is, no matter what the outcome."
newsweek.com
Millennial Mom Shocking Gen Z With Her Tech Skills Delights Internet
The video has sparked a lively discussion among viewers of different ages about where their computer skills are lacking.
newsweek.com
Red Sox Likely To Land $50 Million Star Closer Following Walker Buehler Deal
The Boston Red Sox recently added Walker Buehler to the rotation, likely ending any dreams of signing Corbin Burnes. Is closer Tanner Scott next?
newsweek.com
Injured Yorkshire Terrier Refuses to Stay Home, Owner Gets Creative
"I didn't see him at first. Nobody gets left behind," one user said. Another added: "I am howling! Oh God he looks quite happy!"
newsweek.com
Renowned producer Woody Fraser, creator of 'Good Morning America,' dead at 90
Woody Fraser, the prolific television producer behind shows like "Good Morning America" and "The Dick Cavett Show," passed away at the age of 90 on Saturday.
foxnews.com
Drew Barrymore’s ex-husband Tom Green announces engagement with celebratory selfies
The comedian announced his engagement on social media, calling himself "the luckiest guy in the world."
nypost.com
Luigi Mangione pleads not guilty to murder and weapons charges in UnitedHealthcare CEO's death
Mangione's initial appearance in New York's state trial court was preempted by federal prosecutors bringing their own charges over the shooting.
latimes.com
Ric Flair Calls Out Former ROH Owner After Being Accused of No-Shows
Legendary champion Ric Flair is publicly calling out the former owner of ROH after accusations of no-show appearances.
newsweek.com
Oy to the world! Celebrate Hanukkah at these NYC events and pop-ups
Put on your yarmulke — here comes Hanukkah!
nypost.com
Lo Bosworth’s holiday gift picks include vitamins and olive oil
She's got the lowdown on the best self-care goodies.
nypost.com
Biden admin lifts $10M bounty on the head of leader of Islamist group now in charge in Syria
The Biden administration's $10M bounty on Ahmed al-Sharaa, leader of the group that overthrew Syria's Bashar al-Assad, has now been lifted.
foxnews.com
Luigi Mangione's Lawyer Blasts Eric Adams Over 'Political Fodder'
Attorney Karen Friedman Agnifilo said when her client, Luigi Mangione, is being used for "symbolism" by New York mayor Eric Adams.
newsweek.com
Mourners Gather in Magdeburg Near Scene of Christmas Market Attack
Prosecutors revealed that the number of injured in the Christmas market attack has climbed to as many as 235.
newsweek.com
Josh Allen injury concerns heightened after Bills’ ugly game against Patriots
Josh Allen looked human on Sunday against the Patriots after an injury scare and saw his stranglehold on the MVP award loosen up.
nypost.com
Nordstrom to go private in $6.25 billion deal with Nordstrom family
Century-old department store Nordstrom has agreed to be acquired and taken private by Nordstrom family members and a Mexican retail group in a $6.25 billion deal.
cbsnews.com
Taylor Swift Gifts Fan $4,500 Christmas Present
The 'Fortnight' hitmaker made one little girl's year after visiting her in hospital.
newsweek.com
Six Books to Read by the Fire
When I taught high-school English, I loved planning out the syllabus, book by book. Once chosen, one novel might lead naturally to another; certain titles seemed to go with certain seasons. This second consideration was usually more intuitive than logical, yet it seemed to make a real difference; some books just felt more immersive at particular times of the year. The closing weeks of December, which are both hectic and in some ways ill-defined, have always occupied a unique place in our emotional life—and they seem to call for their own distinctive reading material as well.Picking the right books for the days ahead can be tricky, because the atmosphere that defines the last dregs of the year can be fraught and contradictory. As decorative lights sparkle while the sun retreats, and rough winds hustle us to holiday parties indoors, most of us feel some mix of merriment and bleakness. Something new and uncertain is on the horizon; nostalgia competes with the promise of the new year’s fresh start. Perhaps what makes a book right for this period is that very both-ness: a liminal space between sorrow and joy, end and beginning, dark and light. The six books below capture just that—and each one is perfect to read by the fire while the days grow imperceptibly longer.Flight, by Lynn Steger StrongFamily members are frequently the only people who can really fathom certain formative experiences of yours—what it was like to grow up with your specific mother, what your childhood holiday parties smelled like. In part, that’s what can make being misunderstood or judged by them particularly agonizing. In Strong’s novel, siblings Henry, Kate, and Martin gather for the first Christmas since their mother’s death. Each is grieving her loss, struggling because of their complex, unresolved relationships with her. They’re also fighting over how to handle their inheritance: her Florida home. Disagreement about how to manage its sale or ownership—and whether to see it as a financial lifeline or a memorial to the past—simmers under the surface of every conversation about Christmas traditions or family photographs. Through the alternating perspective of each character, readers come to understand the private sorrows that everyone has brought home with them. But the novel suggests, however subtly, that it’s possible to grow beyond the people we were in our youth—to take flight—while still holding on to the people who knew us back then.[Read: Six books about winter as it once was]Small Things Like These, by Claire KeeganKeegan’s novella follows an Irishman, Bill Furlong, delivering coal throughout a small town during a lean 1980s winter. The story unfolds in the days before Christmas, a time when Bill finds himself particularly moved by the mundane, beautiful things in his life: a neighbor pouring warm milk over her children’s cereal, the modest letters his five daughters send to Santa Claus, the kindness his mother was shown, years earlier, when she became pregnant out of wedlock. While bringing fuel to the local Catholic convent, however, Bill discovers that women and girls are being held there against their will, forced to work in one of the Church’s infamous “Magdalene laundries.” He knows well, in a town defined by the Church, why he might want to stay quiet about the open secret he’s just learned, but it quickly becomes clear that his morals will make him unable to do so. Although the history of Ireland’s treatment of unmarried women and their children is violent and bleak, the novella, like Bill’s life, is characterized by ordinary, small moments of love.Lost & Found, by Kathryn Schulz Written after Schulz’s father’s death, this hybrid memoir is divided into three sections: “Lost,” “Found,” and “And.” Drawing on influences as varied as Elizabeth Bishop’s famous poem “One Art,” the lexicographic history of the ampersand, Plato’s Symposium, and the geology of the Chesapeake Bay impact crater, Lost & Found is—somehow—compulsively readable. The book is both deeply researched and deeply personal; when Schulz contemplates the experience of falling in love after her bereavement, she wonders how this period of great joy can be so entwined with her pain, and attempts to explain how such seeming opposites not only can, but must, coexist. “Our chronic condition involves experiencing many things at once—some of them intrinsically related, some of them compatible, some of them contradictory, and some of them having nothing to do with one another at all,” Schulz observes. By the time she writes that grief has provided her “what life no longer can: an ongoing, emotionally potent connection to the dead,” she’s already conveyed her main point: that losing and finding are impossible to separate fully. The events of her memoir are common, but the context she provides for them makes the book feel at once familiar and utterly novel.[Read: 13 feel-good TV shows to watch this winter]A Child’s Christmas in Wales, by Dylan Thomas“Years and years ago, when I was a boy,” Thomas begins, “there were wolves in Wales.” This wild landscape seems so much of a foregone time that, by contrast, his later life and career in mid-century New York feel almost anachronistic. Thomas’s audio recording of A Child’s Christmas in Wales is perhaps better known than the book version, yet its lines, such as “All the Christmases roll down towards the two-tongued sea,” are just as arresting in print as they are in his Welsh accent. His memories of a hazy, bucolic childhood are made more startling and affecting if you know that his adulthood was marked by addiction and illness. Even for those unfamiliar with his later life, the loss of the mysterious, jubilant country he saw through a child’s eyes feels at once inevitable and painful. Unexpected lines such as “Caves that smelt like Sunday afternoons” and the vague darkness of some of its imagery (at one point, Thomas invokes the “jawbones of deacons”) offset what might otherwise be a mawkish reminiscence of childhood Christmas.North Woods, by Daniel MasonNorth Woods is delightful, strange, and unexpected: It’s the story of a plot of Massachusetts land over the course of nearly 300 years, whose inhabitants include 18th-century colonists and a present-day college student. In these woods, which eventually host a house, then an orchard, then an inn, and then a house again, readers meet people tied to pivotal moments in American history—a slave-catcher and supporters of the Underground Railroad, spiritualists both sincere and opportunistic—as well as those whose private sorrows play out the dramas of their eras, such as a woman who dies in childbirth, a renowned painter hiding his love affair with another man, and a family unmoored by a son’s mental illness. Sometimes Mason’s narration nods to moments from earlier chapters, and sometimes the characters directly—supernaturally—interact across centuries. Over the decades and centuries, the characters whose contemporaries see them as unsound or suspect are, the reader understands, the most in tune with the house’s past. By the end of the novel, Mason has conveyed the paradox of history: Its span is so much longer than any individual human life, yet it is inexorably shaped by the way each one of us spends our days.[Read: The secret to loving winter]Tess of the D’Urbervilles, by Thomas HardyHardy’s bleak, Gothic novel is no cozy Christmas Carol. But its scope and mood are ineffably wintry; it’s the kind of book that demands a crackling hearth to offset the suffering and melodrama. It follows the naive Tess Durbeyfield from her childhood to her death as she suffers a series of heartbreaks and disasters. Set at the end of the 19th century, Tess depicts an England on the verge of a sharp break from its agrarian past, and what its main character endures becomes a metaphor for the much bigger shift Hardy believed he was witnessing: Where her mother’s generation leaned on a “fast-perishing lumber of superstitions, folk-lore, dialect, and orally transmitted ballads,” Tess and her contemporaries have “trained National teachings and Standard knowledge under an infinitely Revised Code,” he writes. “When they were together the Jacobean and the Victorian ages were juxtaposed.” Like much of Hardy’s work, the novel is not subtle in its political arguments, but the writing is at times quite funny too. The book’s long-story-by-the-fire quality, combined with its fairy-tale deployment of castles, unfair punishments, and the thrumming, powerful natural world, evokes the most affecting children’s literature. Those associations, packaged in a gripping novel, make Tess of the D’Urbervilles an apt book for a long, dark night.
theatlantic.com
Meet the man behind Bergdorf Goodman's iconic holiday windows
This year's holiday displays at Bergdorf Goodman honor Fifth Avenue's bicentennial and will be on display through Jan. 6.
cbsnews.com
Honda Stocks Jump Amid Merger Talks With Nissan
Honda and Nissan announced Monday they had signed a memorandum of understanding as merger talks continue.
newsweek.com
Record number of Americans expected to travel this holiday season
More than 119 million Americans will travel for the holiday season, according to AAA. Megan Spurrell, associate director of articles for Condé Nast Traveler, has tips on what to expect.
cbsnews.com
Trump, GOP Are Poised To Shake Up the D.C. Establishment | Opinion
Washington, D.C. is never going to be the same. A new era of governance is dawning, creating exciting new opportunities for Americans from all walks of life.
newsweek.com
Millions in California Warned About Exercising Outdoors
A ban on burning wood in parts of the Golden State has been extended by the National Weather Service due to air quality concerns.
newsweek.com
Atmospheric Rivers Update: 'Storm Train' to Batter US Over Christmas
Severe weather conditions are expected to disrupt holiday travel with heavy rain, snow and flood risks across the West Coast.
newsweek.com