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The Knicks weren’t supposed to be facing this kind of Eastern Conference

What is the East going to look like when the dust begins to settle?
Read full article on: nypost.com
What Trump’s presidency could mean for Prince Harry and Meghan Markle
Donald Trump previously threatened to kick Prince Harry out of the US before he beat Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential election.
7 m
nypost.com
Brianna Chickenfry says ex Zach Bryan blocked her on social media
Dave Portnoy and Josh Richards are sticking up for their BFF Brianna Chickenfry following her split from Zach Bryan. After the duo released a diss track aimed at Zach, the Barstool podcaster shared that he has them all blocked on social media. Watch the full video to learn more about the country singer cutting them...
7 m
nypost.com
Five killed when plane slams through airport wall, bursts into flames after takeoff
Federal and local authorities are investigating the cause of the fiery Tuesday afternoon crash at an Arizona airport that killed five people.
8 m
nypost.com
Jeff Bezos offers ‘big congratulations’ to Trump — after blocking Washington Post’s Harris endorsement
Harris supporters responded to Bezos by venting their frustration over his newspaper's abandonment of its decades-long policy of endorsing a presidential candidate.
9 m
nypost.com
This viral travel hack can get coveted you extra legroom — for free
There's a new travel trend soaring high – and it requires even less planning than raw-dogging flights.
nypost.com
Kamala Harris 2024 election loss caused by ‘s–t candidate,’ ‘arrogant’ staff, despondent Dem sources say
The Democratic campaign "tried an Obama play with a non-Obama candidate," one person close to the Harris campaign said.
nypost.com
Heidi Klum defends skin-baring style choices: ‘I’m not shy about my femininity’
"I love dressing up where I have my cleavage showing, wearing miniskirts, high heels, gorgeous stockings — but that doesn’t mean I want to go home with you," the model said in a new interview.
nypost.com
Rory McIlroy just ‘locked’ himself in a studio for 3 weeks to fix swing after major collapses
He hasn’t liked the shape of his swing for a while and wanted a more robust one that could hold up in the most pressure-filled moments following a number of missed chances this season.
nypost.com
Here’s how to tell if your air fryer is spying on you: ‘This is often done’
Frying and spying.
nypost.com
Cops search for missing 5-year-old after mom admits she gave her away during 2022 drug deal
Ashley Rowland was arrested and charged with child abandonment after she allegedly finally came clean about the disappearance of her daughter -- who hasn't been seen since 2022, Oklahoma cops said.
nypost.com
Festive pumpkin-themed decor to warm up your kitchen this fall season
Embrace the autumn spirit with these 10 pumpkin decor pieces that are sure to please.
foxnews.com
Estas políticas migratorias de Trump podrían sacudir la vida de muchas familias
A medida que los votos a favor de Donald Trump mostraron su regreso a la Casa Blanca, su plataforma migratoria de 2024 ha generado conversaciones y preocupaciones entre las comunidades inmigrantes en todo Estados Unidos.
latimes.com
Bob Costas breaks silence on unexpected retirement decision
Costas was criticized for his calls during the 2024 playoffs.
nypost.com
Plane passenger shocked by ludicrous ‘money-making’ baggage fee: ‘I thought she was joking’
Blame the wheel of misfortune.
nypost.com
Harris to address nation following projected loss to Trump in presidential election
CBS News projects that Trump has won a second term in the White House after surpassing the 270 electoral votes needed for victory.
cbsnews.com
Liam Payne’s ‘friend’ and 2 hotel employees are being investigated over his death
Liam Payne’s friend and two hotel employees are being investigated regarding his death. According to TMZ, Argentinian police made some new discoveries after raiding the homes of the hotel workers and the pal of the singer. Watch the full video to learn more about the latest update in Liam’s passing.  Subscribe to our YouTube for...
nypost.com
Supreme Court hears Facebook’s bid to toss shareholder suit over Cambridge Analytica scandal
They shareholders lawsuit claims the company unlawfully withheld information from investors about a 2015 data breach involving British political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica that affected more than 30 million Facebook users.
nypost.com
Hurricane Rafael forecast to strengthen to powerful Category 3 storm before hitting Cuba
Thousands of people in the west of the island were evacuated as a prevention measure before Rafael was expected to slam into Cuba on Wednesday.
latimes.com
MSNBC analyst says Trump 'knows our country better than we do'
MSNBC analyst Claire McCaskill said during "Morning Joe" on Wednesday that they needed to acknowledge that President-elect Trump "knew the country better than we do."
foxnews.com
Christina Milian and Devale Ellis Slay a Sexy “Santa Baby” Lip Sync in Netflix’s ‘Meet Me Next Christmas’
Or should we say... "sleigh?"
nypost.com
JPMorgan Chase CEO Dimon has no plans to join Trump administration
Jamie Dimon will remain at his post at the bank, despite speculation he could be in the running for Treasury secretary.
cbsnews.com
Billionaire Tom Ford buys $104M London mansion in the UK’s priciest home sale this year
Ford's buy comes at a time of a luxury slump in London's property market -- and when Americans are heading across the pond thanks to dollar-driven discounts.
nypost.com
David Axelrod cites ‘racial bias, sexism’ after Kamala Harris loss: ‘Let’s be absolutely blunt’
Axelrod was hesitant to blame Harris' loss entirely on prejudice but said that anyone who doesn’t think "racial bias" or "sexism" impacted the outcome was "wrong."
nypost.com
Doctor who poisoned his mother's partner gets 31 years in prison
Dr. Thomas Kwan who was disgruntled about his inheritance disguised himself as a nurse to inject Patrick O'Hara with a flesh-eating poison.
cbsnews.com
Andy Cohen claps back at troll who called celebrity presidential endorsements of Kamala Harris a ‘flex’
"This is america. if celebs want to express themselves they should be allowed to like everyone else," Cohen hit back at a netizen Wednesday.
nypost.com
The Next Trump Administration’s Crackdown on Abortion Will Be Swift, Brutal, and Nationwide
Voters who thought they could put Trump back in the White House while preserving or expanding reproductive rights are in for a brutal shock.
slate.com
Woman slapped with $270 fine for simple driving mistake
An Aussie woman has taken to social media to vent about a fine she received that she didn’t even know existed.
nypost.com
Pete Alonso next team odds: Mets face challenge from rival to retain star first baseman
There are expected to be many teams looking to bring in the four-team MLB All-Star entering his age-30 season, and there is no clear favorite to be Alonso's next team.
nypost.com
‘The View’s Sunny Hostin Is “Profoundly Disturbed” By Donald Trump’s Victory: “I’m Worried About Mass Deportation And Internment Camps” 
Hostin said Trump's win was "a referendum of cultural resentment in this country."
nypost.com
Melania Trump posts photo of son Barron, 18, voting for the 1st time in election with father at top of ticket
Barron Trump, 18, voted for the first time, and for his father, now President-Elect Trump, according to his mother, Melania Trump, who shared a photo on X.
foxnews.com
The only gift that lets you say “I got you all the languages”
Give a lifetime of language learning with Rosetta Stone’s all-access subscription — the ultimate gift for the curious mind.
nypost.com
Backpack flies into plane propeller – and shreds instantly 
Next time, bring a carryon. Watch the wild moment a checked bag escaped the belly of a twin-engine plane and flew directly into the propeller. The Aerocord flight carrying 18 passengers from Chaitén, Chile, to Puerto Montt was forced to make an emergency landing. In yet another terrifying avian mishap, the airline blamed the broken...
nypost.com
Stocking stuffer for Apple Watch lovers: this band has a built-in charger
And it's under $50
nypost.com
Election results in 7 key swing counties show how Trump swept to victory
These seven key counties have consistently sided with the winning president. Here's how they voted in 2024.
foxnews.com
Donald Trump wins 2024 presidential election: Christina Applegate, Andy Cohen and more celeb reactions to Kamala Harris’ loss
After a tense race Donald Trump won the 2024 presidential election against Kamala Harris. Shortly after the results were released, many celebrities including Cardi B, Andy Cohen and Dave Portnoy took to social media to share their thoughts. Watch the full video to learn more about these celeb reactions.  Subscribe to our YouTube for the...
nypost.com
Lebanon files complaint against Israel at U.N. over deadly pager explosions
Lebanon tells the U.N. that workers were among those killed or injured during the string of attacks attributed to Israel involving exploding pagers.
latimes.com
Moment ‘polling Nostradamus’ who predicted Kamala Harris would win election realizes he was wrong
An American political historian known as the "Nostradamus" of elections was seemingly at a loss for words Wednesday when he realized his prediction — that Kamala Harris would win the presidential election — was wrong.
nypost.com
Kamala Harris snubs supporters at her own election party as they break down in tears over Trump victory
The Democratic nominee hasn't been seen since an appearance at 4 p.m. Tuesday. She won't make a statement on the election until 4 p.m. today — a full 24 hours.
nypost.com
Jan. 6 defendant requests delay in case, citing potential of pardon from Trump
Attorneys for Christopher Carnell, who was found guilty of felony and misdemeanor charges over his participation in the Capitol assault, requested to delay a hearing.
abcnews.go.com
Mom fatally shot in head, dad injured trying to help daughter move out of dumped ex’s home
Ruth Sue Ann Robison, 45, and her spouse Tony Ray Robison, 52, both took bullets to the head when the shooting erupted at the home in Des Moines, Iowa last Friday.
nypost.com
Jamie Dimon to reportedly stay at JPMorgan — and won’t join Trump admin
Dimon said last month that his chances of taking an official post were "almost nil."
1 h
nypost.com
The criminal cases against Donald Trump are now basically dead
President-elect Donald Trump at a campaign rally at Lancaster Airport on November 3, 2024 in Lititz, Pennsylvania. President-elect Donald Trump was indicted four times — including two indictments arising out of his failed attempt to steal the 2020 election. One of these indictments even yielded a conviction, albeit on 34 relatively minor charges of falsifying business records. But the extraordinary protections the American system gives to sitting presidents will ensure that Trump won’t be going to prison. He’s going to the White House instead. The federal charges against Trump are doomed Two of the indictments against Trump are federal, and two were brought by state prosecutors in New York and Georgia. The federal indictments (one about Trump’s role in fomenting the January 6 insurrection, and the other about his handling of classified documents) are the most immediately vulnerable. Once Donald Trump becomes president, he will have full command and control over the US Department of Justice, and can simply order it to drop all the federal charges against him. Once he does, those cases will simply go away.  The White House does have a longstanding norm of non-interference with criminal prosecutions, but this norm is nothing more than that — a voluntary limit that past presidents placed on their own exercise of power in order to prevent politicization of the criminal justice system. As president, Trump is under no constitutional obligation to obey this norm. He nominates the attorney general, and he can fire the head of the Justice Department at any time. Indeed, Trump is reportedly considering Judge Aileen Cannon, a judge who has consistently tried to sabotage one of the Justice Department’s prosecutions of Trump, to be the next US attorney general. Cannon, who oversees Trump’s federal classified documents’ trial, even tried to disrupt the Justice Department’s investigation into Trump before he was indicted. There’s no indication that her apparent loyalty to Trump would diminish if she becomes the nation’s top prosecutor. The fate of the state charges is a little more uncertain, but they are unlikely to amount to anything either The fate of the state charges against Trump is a little more uncertain, in large part because there’s never been a state indictment of a sitting president before, so there are no legal precedents governing what happens if a state attempts such a prosecution (or, in the case of New York, to impose a serious sentence on a president who was already convicted). It is highly unlikely that the state prosecutions can move forward, however, at least until Trump leaves office. On the federal level, the Department of Justice has long maintained that it cannot indict a sitting president for a variety of practical reasons: The burden of defending against criminal charges would diminish the president’s ability to do their job, as would the “public stigma and opprobrium occasioned by the initiation of criminal proceedings.” Additionally, if the president were incarcerated, that would make it “physically impossible for the president to carry out his duties.” There’s little doubt that the current Supreme Court, which recently held that Trump is immune to prosecution for many crimes he committed while in office, would embrace the Justice Department’s reasoning. The Court’s decision in Trump v. United States, the immunity case, rested on the Republican justices’ belief that, if a president could be indicted for official actions taken in office, he “would be chilled from taking the ‘bold and unhesitating action’ required of an independent Executive.”  The kind of justices who favor such “bold and unhesitating action” over ensuring presidential accountability to the law are unlikely to tolerate a prosecution of a sitting president. These same practical considerations would apply with equal force to a state prosecution of a president, and there’s also one other reason why a constitutional limit on state indictments of the president makes sense. Without such a limit, a state led by the president’s political enemies could potentially bring frivolous criminal charges against that president. This argument may not seem particularly compelling when applied to a convicted criminal like Donald Trump. But imagine if, say, Ron DeSantis’s Florida had attempted to indict, try, and imprison President Joe Biden. Or if the state of Mississippi had indicted President Lyndon Johnson to punish him for signing civil rights legislation that ended Jim Crow.  In constitutional law, the same rule that applies to liberal democratic presidents like Biden or Johnson must also apply to an anti-democratic president like Trump. One open question is whether Trump could be incarcerated during the lame-duck period before he is sworn into office. The only state that could conceivably do this is New York, as that is the only place where Trump has been convicted. Trump is currently scheduled for a sentencing hearing on November 26 in that case. The question of whether an already-convicted president-elect can be incarcerated is unique — this situation has thankfully never arisen before in US history, so there’s no definitive law on this subject. But it’s worth noting that neither the New York prosecutors nor the judge overseeing this case have pushed for a quick sentencing process. Judge Juan Merchan chose to delay sentencing until after the election, and the prosecution did not oppose this move. Merchan may decide to delay matters even further now that Trump has won the election. And even if the sentencing does move forward, the charges against Trump in New York are relatively minor, and could only result in him being fined or sentenced to probation. Again, there’s never been a state prosecution of a sitting president before, so there are no precedents to rely on here. It’s possible that, once Trump leaves office, New York or Georgia (the other state with an open case against Trump) may try to resume its long-pending prosecutions against him — although that assumes that the 78-year-old Trump survives his second term in office, and that these states still have the will to prosecute him four years from now. The bottom line is that these prosecutions are likely dead. And they are almost certainly going nowhere for the next four years.
1 h
vox.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Meet Me Next Christmas’ on Netflix Is A Rom-Com About A Woman Obsessed With Meeting Her Soulmate At A Pentatonix Concert
Is it a rom-com? A Pentatonix concert? Who knows!?
1 h
nypost.com
Bill Barr: Prosecutors should 'do the right thing' and dismiss Trump cases: 'Respect the people's decision'
Former Attorney General Bill Barr says state and federal prosecutors should dismiss the cases against President-elect Trump so the country can move on.
1 h
foxnews.com
Polls showed Harris had problems — media and Dems didn’t want to face them
We went through dozens of swing-state polls over the last few months, and there was something for everyone in the stories, as readership metrics and fierce debate around the surveys showed. There were plenty of polls reflecting the mainstream media consensus and bias, suggesting Kamala Harris had the secret sauce and would be powered into...
1 h
nypost.com
Mike Johnson reveals where House stands as GOP fights to keep majority after Trump win
Speaker Mike Johnson is exuding confidence that Republicans will win all the levers of power in Washington, DC the morning after the election.
1 h
foxnews.com
Does Trump's victory clear the way for PGA Tour-PIF merger? Rory McIlroy thinks so
Rory McIlroy, a critic of LIV Golf, says Donald Trump's presidential win could 'clear the way' for a deal between the PGA Tour and the Saudi Public Investment Fund that owns LIV.
1 h
latimes.com
Kathy Hilton gives update on sister Kyle Richards’ dating life after Mauricio Umansky split
News broke in July 2023 that the "Real Housewives of Beverly Hills" star and the real estate agent had called it quits after 27 years married.
1 h
nypost.com