Tools
Change country:

NFL News: Updated AFC Playoff Picture Following Shocking Bengals Win Over Broncos

After the Cincinnati Bengals narrowly beat the Denver Broncos, the AFC playoff picture has gotten a lot more complicated.
Read full article on: newsweek.com
San Diego FC y Club Tijuana anuncian partido amistoso en Snapdragon Stadium
El San Diego FC (SDFC) y Club Tijuana (Xolos) anunciaron este lunes la fecha y horario del partido amistoso del 2025 como parte de la asociación multianual entre ambos Clubes.
latimes.com
Sérgio Conceição es el nuevo entrenador del AC Milan tras el despido de Paulo Fonseca
El AC Milan contrató a Sérgio Conceição como su nuevo entrenador el lunes, horas después de que el club de la Serie A despidiera a su compatriota portugués Paulo Fonseca.
latimes.com
Rep. Victoria Spartz demands 'assurances' Speaker Johnson 'won't sell us out to the swamp'
President-elect Donald Trump endorsed House Speaker Mike Johnson to retain the gavel, but Rep. Victoria Spartz is demanding "assurances" that Johnson "won't sell us out to the swamp."
foxnews.com
Update your winter wardrobe with these 9 cozy styles
Look stylish this winter with these 9 picks to update your wardrobe.
foxnews.com
Árbitros comunicarán decisiones del VAR a aficionados en semifinales de Liga Inglesa
Los árbitros realizarán anuncios en el estadio sobre los resultados de las revisiones de video en las semifinales de la Copa de la Liga Inglesa de esta temporada, informaron los organizadores el lunes.
latimes.com
Barkley busca récord de Dickerson en el último partido de los Eagles
En algún momento de esta semana, el entrenador de los Eagles, Nick Sirianni, decidirá si Saquon Barkley tendrá su oportunidad de romper el récord de temporada de la NFL en yardas por tierra de Eric Dickerson, o el estelar corredor de Filadelfia se sentará en un final de temporada para proteger su salud de cara a los playoffs.
latimes.com
People mistake us for twins or mother and daughter — here’s why that’s rather awkward for us
“We think people are naturally curious as they sense a deep connection between us and want to know the connection."
nypost.com
Teen Arrested After Dad is Fatally Shot During Argument
15-year-old is taken into custody in connection with the killing of his father in Las Vegas on Saturday.
newsweek.com
Gaetz declares ‘resistance is now futile’ after Donald Trump endorses Mike Johnson for speaker — but Massie, others remain unmoved
Former firebrand Rep. Matt Gaetz, who instigated the House GOP toppling of former Speaker Kevin McCarthy last year, declared that resistance to House Speaker Mike Johnson "is now futile" in the wake of President-elect Donald Trump's endorsement.
nypost.com
Hundreds of soldiers freed in the latest prisoner exchange between Russia and Ukraine
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky said 189 Ukrainian prisoners were freed; Russia’s Defense Ministry said 150 Russian soldiers were freed.
latimes.com
Will Ferrell is a total mood as cigarette-smoking Buddy the Elf at NHL game
While attending the hockey game with his family, Ferrell broke character to smoke, drink and look grumpy while dressed as Buddy. 
nypost.com
Six former Florida State players sue hoops coach Leonard Hamilton for $1.5 million in NIL chaos
The lawsuit says they walked out of a practice last season over the missed payments and intended to boycott a Feb. 17 game against Duke.
nypost.com
Plane Crashes: Survivors' Psychological Trauma Explained
Surviving a plane crash can result in symptoms of post-traumatic stress, and everybody experiences these symptoms differently.
newsweek.com
Bruce Willis' Wife Admits She Feels 'Anger and Grief' Amid His Health Struggles
The mom of two recently admitted she feels both 'anger and grief' amid the 'Die Hard' actor's health struggles.
newsweek.com
Gisèle Pelicot's ex-husband won't appeal his 20-year prison sentence for orchestrating mass rapes
A lawyer for the ex-husband of Gisèle Pelicot says he won’t appeal his sentence for drugging and raping her and allowing other men to rape her.
latimes.com
Will Ferrell, a.k.a. Buddy the Elf, had cigarette in mouth, beer in hand at Kings-Flyers game
Buddy the Elf is apparently now a smoking, drinking, scowling hockey fan, as Will Ferrell reprises role from the holiday classic 'Elf' movie at the Kings-Flyers game.
latimes.com
North Koreans Could Be Sent to Labor Camps for Divorcing
A new rule to punish North Korean couples who decide to divorce could see them spend six months working in a labor camp.
newsweek.com
Backpacks filled with cocaine worth over $1M found dumped near Canadian border
The agents found 30 “brick-like” packages weighing a total of 78 pounds containing a “white powdery substance.”
nypost.com
Jimmy Carter's Death: How US Presidents Have Planned Their Own Funerals
President Joe Biden scheduled a state funeral in Washington, D.C., for Carter on January 9.
newsweek.com
Matt Lauer targeted by PETA for alleged ‘abuse,’ beating of animals by sheep farmers at his $9M New Zealand hideaway in bombshell findings
A spokesperson for Lauer said he had "absolutely no knowledge of any alleged problems at his property" until The Post reached out for comment.
nypost.com
Vivek Ramaswamy Is Uninvited From My Sleepover
I could have been a tech entrepreneur, but my parents let me go to sleepovers. I could have been a billionaire, but I used to watch Saturday-morning cartoons. I could have been Vivek Ramaswamy, if not for the ways I’ve been corrupted by the mediocrity of American culture. I’m sad when I contemplate my lazy, pathetic, non-Ramaswamy life.These ruminations were triggered by a statement that Ramaswamy, the noted cultural critic, made on X on Thursday. He was explaining why tech companies prefer to hire foreign-born and first-generation engineers instead of native-born American ones: It has to do with the utter mediocrity of American culture.“A culture that celebrates the prom queen over the math Olympiad champ, or the jock over the Valedictorian, will not produce the best engineers,” he observed. Then he laid out his vision of how America needs to change: “More movies like Whiplash, fewer reruns of ‘Friends.’ More math tutoring, fewer sleepovers. More weekend science competitions, fewer Saturday morning cartoons. More books, less TV. More creating, less ‘chillin.’ More extracurriculars, less ‘hanging out at the mall.’”In other words, Ramaswamy has decided to use the reelection of Donald Trump as an occasion to tiger-mom the hell out of us. No, you may not finish studying before midnight! Put that violin back under your chin this instant! No, a score of 1540 on your SATs is not good enough!That sound you hear is immigrant parents all across America cheering and applauding.Maybe Ramaswamy’s missive hit me so hard because I grew up in that kind of household. My grandfather, who went to the tuition-free City College of New York and made it in America as a lawyer, imbued me with that hustling-immigrant mindset. We may be outsiders, he told me, but we’re going to grind, we’re going to work, we’re going to climb that greasy pole.And yet it never happened for me. I have never written a line of code. Unlike Ramaswamy, I have never founded an unprofitable biotech firm. What can I say? I got sucked into the whole sleepover lifestyle—the pillow fights, the long conversations about guitar solos with my fellow ninth graders. I thought those Saturday-morning Bugs Bunny cartoons were harmless, but soon I was into the hard stuff: Road Runner, Scooby-Doo, and worse, far worse.As the days have gone by, though, I have had some further thoughts about Ramaswamy’s little sermon. It occurred to me that he may not be quite right about everything. For example, he describes a nation awash in lazy mediocrity, yet America has the strongest economy in the world. American workers are among the most productive, and over the past few years American productivity has been surging. In the past decade, American workers have steadily shifted from low-skill to higher-skill jobs. Apparently, our mediocrity shows up everywhere except in the economic data.Then I began to wonder if our culture is really as hostile to nerdy kids as he implies. This is a culture that puts The Big Bang Theory on our TV screens and The Social Network in the movie theaters. Haven’t we spent many years lionizing Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, and Sam Altman? These days, millions of young men orient their lives around the Joe Rogan–Lex Friedman–Andrew Huberman social ideal—bright and curious tech bros who talk a lot about how much protein they ingest and look like they just swallowed a weight machine. When we think about the chief failing of American culture, is it really that we don’t spend enough time valorizing Stanford computer-science majors?Then I had even deeper doubts about Ramaswamy’s argument. First, maybe he doesn’t understand what thinking is. He seems to believe that the only kind of thinking that matters is solving math problem sets. But one of the reasons we evolved these big brains of ours is so we can live in groups and navigate social landscapes. The hardest intellectual challenges usually involve understanding other people. If Ramaswamy wants a young person to do something cognitively demanding, he shouldn’t send her to a math tutor; he should send her to a sleepover with a bunch of other 12-year-old girls. That’s cognitively demanding.Second, it could be that Ramaswamy doesn’t understand what makes America great. We are not going to out-compete China by rote learning and obsessive test taking. We don’t thrive only because of those first-generation strivers who keep their nose to the 70-hour-a-week grindstone and build a life for their family. We also thrive because of all the generations that come after, who live in a culture of pluralism and audacity. America is the place where people from all over the world get jammed together into one fractious mess. America was settled by people willing to take a venture into the unknown, willing to work in spaces where the rules hadn’t been written yet. As COVID revealed yet again, we are not adept at compliance and rule following, but we have a flair for dynamism, creativity, and innovation.Third, I’m not sure Ramaswamy understands what propelled Trump to office. Trump was elected largely by non–college graduates whose highest abilities manifest in largely nonacademic ways—fixing an engine, raising crops, caring for the dying. Maybe Ramaswamy could celebrate the skills of people who didn’t join him at Harvard and Yale instead of dumping on them as a bunch of lard-butts. What part of the word populism does he not understand?Most important, maybe Ramaswamy doesn’t understand how to motivate people. He seems to think you produce ambitious people by acting like a drill sergeant: Be tough. Impose rules. Offer carrots when they achieve and smash them with sticks when they fail.But as Daniel Pink writes in his book Drive, these systems of extrinsic reward are effective motivational techniques only when the tasks in front of people are boring, routine, and technical. When creativity and initiative are required, the best way to motivate people is to help them find the thing they intrinsically love to do and then empower them to do that thing obsessively. Systems of extrinsic rewards don’t tend to arouse intrinsic motivations; they tend to smother them.Don’t grind your kids until they become worker drones; help them become really good at leisure.Today, when we hear the word leisure, we tend to think of relaxation. We live in an atmosphere of what the theologian Josef Pieper called “total work.” We define leisure as time spent not working. It’s the pause in our lives that helps us recharge so we can get back to what really matters—work.But for many centuries, people thought about leisure in a very different way: We spend part of our lives in idleness, they believed, doing nothing. We spend part of our lives on amusements, enjoying small pleasures that divert us. We spend part of our lives on work, doing the unpleasant things we need to do to make a living. But then we spend part of our time on leisure.Leisure, properly conceived, is a state of mind. It’s doing the things we love doing. For you it could be gardening, or writing, or coding, or learning. It’s driven by enthusiasm, wonder, enjoyment, natural interest—all the intrinsic motivators. When we say something is a labor of love, that’s leisure. When we see somebody in a flow state, that’s leisure. The word school comes from schole, which is Greek for “leisure.” School was supposed to be home to leisure, the most intense kind of human activity, the passionate and enjoyable pursuit of understanding.The kind of nose-to-the-grindstone culture Ramaswamy endorses eviscerates leisure. It takes a lot of free time to discover that thing we really love to do. We usually stumble across it when we’re just fooling around, curious, during those moments when nobody is telling us what to do. The tiger-mom mentality sees free time as a waste of time—as “hanging out at the mall.”A life of leisure requires a lot of autonomy. People are most engaged when they are leading their own learning journey. You can’t build a life of leisure when your mental energies are consumed by a thousand assignments and hoops to jump through.A life of leisure also requires mental play. Sure, we use a valuable form of cognition when we’re solving problem sets or filling out HR forms. But many moments of creative breakthrough involve a looser form of cognition—those moments when you’re just following your intuition and making strange associations, when your mind is free enough to see things in new ways. Ninety-nine percent of our thinking is unconscious; leisure is the dance between conscious and unconscious processes.The story Ramaswamy tells is of hungry immigrants and lazy natives. That story resonates. The vitality of America has been fueled by waves of immigration, and there are some signs that America is becoming less mobile, less dynamic. But upon reflection, I think he’s mostly wrong about how to fix American culture. And he’s definitely not getting invited to my next sleepover.
theatlantic.com
List of Airlines Using Boeing 737-800 After South Korean Plane Crash
Nearly 200 airlines use 737-800s.
newsweek.com
Dead humpback whale washes up on Long Island beach: police
A young humpback whale washed up on Long Island on Monday, the latest in a series of troubling similar incidents in recent weeks.
nypost.com
Why Are Flags at Half-Staff Today?
Flags are being flown at half-staff as the nation mourns former President Jimmy Carter who died on Sunday at the age of 100.
newsweek.com
UConn's Jim Mora warns schools to 'think hard before you tamper with our players'
UConn Huskies head coach Jim Mora warned other schools against tampering with his players following the team's Fenway Bowl win over North Carolina.
foxnews.com
College Football Playoff: Oregon vs Ohio State Expert Predictions
Expert Predictions for Oregon and Ohio State in the College Football Playoffs.
newsweek.com
Biden's Defense Department announces new multi-billion-dollar aid packages for Ukraine
The Biden White House announced billions of dollars of additional military assistance to Ukraine in a final push ahead of the impending Trump administration.
foxnews.com
Biden ripped for needling Trump in response to Jimmy Carter’s death: ‘Unmitigated gall’
Biden's political remark did not sit well with conservatives, who slammed him for using the opportunity to attack instead of merely honoring Carter's legacy -- and for having the audacity to speak about "decency."
nypost.com
Internet Can't Cope With What Pet Cam Shows Man Alone With Two Cats Doing
The owner dressed the cats in festive sweaters for the special meal time together.
newsweek.com
Sidney Crosby Passes Mario Lemieux to Become Penguins All-Time Assist Leader
The future Hall of Famer made franchise history on Sunday evening.
newsweek.com
Taylor Swift live updates: Who is Ashley Avignone, the singer’s longtime stylist BFF?
Follow Page Six's live updates for the latest Taylor Swift news, photos, fan theories and more.
nypost.com
Heartbreak for Senior Dog Whose Adopters Canceled Just Before Christmas
"The perfect home for Manny would be one filled with love, patience and warm spots to curl up and feel safe," said the shelter,
newsweek.com
South Korean Authorities Seek Arrest Warrant for Impeached President
Yoon Suk Yeol was impeached over declaring a short-lived martial law.
newsweek.com
NBC omits 'Redskins' from ex-star QB's jersey as Jayden Daniels sets franchise mark, draws fan backlash
NBC omitted the name "Redskins" from a graphic comparing Jayden Daniels and Robert Griffin III on Sunday as the Washington Commanders rookie set a record.
foxnews.com
Boy Discovers 'Unique' Christian Pendant Covered in Gemstones
The meticulously crafted artifact was found in a village that holds religious significance for Christians.
newsweek.com
Gal Gadot had emergency surgery for 'massive blood clot' in her brain during pregnancy
Gal Gadot said she endured weeks of headaches that confined her to bed before learning she had a 'massive' blood clot in her brain. Emergency surgery ensued.
latimes.com
German government seeks to downplay Musk's backing of far-right party ahead of general election
The German government has sought to downplay tech entrepreneur Elon Musk's endorsing of the far-right Alternative for Germany, or AfD, party.
1 h
latimes.com
Will Ferrell’s Buddy the Elf gets grinchy and more star snaps
Will Ferrell channels Buddy the Elf, Jennifer Lopez goes country and more snaps...
1 h
nypost.com
Honey, Browser Extension Promoted by MrBeast, Accused of Ripping Off Users
A popular YouTube creator is accusing PayPal of defrauding influencers and online shoppers though its coupon service Honey.
1 h
newsweek.com
Lessons from the elections held in 70 countries in 2024
From India and the U.S. to Japan, France, Britain and South Africa, voters tired of economic disruption and global instability rejected incumbents.
1 h
latimes.com
The LA home that Matthew Perry purchased in the months before his death has found a new owner
Perry purchased this Hollywood Hills dwelling in the months leading up to his death in late 2023 -- now, it stands to have a new owner.
1 h
nypost.com
Guardian Angels resume New York City patrols after subway burning death: 'Never seen it this bad'
Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa told the New York Post Sunday that members of his group will begin patrolling subways after a rise in violent crime.
1 h
foxnews.com
College Football Playoff: Arizona State vs Texas Expert Predictions
Expert predictions for Arizona State and Texas in the College Football Playoff.
1 h
newsweek.com
Trump team orders ‘all intended nominees’ to stop posting on social media ahead of Senate confirmations
President-elect Donald Trump's chief of staff Susie Wiles sent a message Sunday ordering nominees to refrain from any posting on social media as Senate confirmation hearings are scheduled to start next week.
1 h
nypost.com
Jimmy Carter Understood That No One Ever Wants to Turn Off the Lights
He attempted pragmatism at a time when we could afford it. What now?
1 h
slate.com
Hilary Swank, 50, Shares Rare Photo of One of Her 1-Year-Old Twins
Hilary Swank turned heads on social media with a sweet holiday snap, offering a rare peek at one of her 1-year-old twins.
1 h
newsweek.com
I Just Learned My Absent Dad Has a Deranged Idea of What Grandparenthood Will Be Like
He's clueless.
1 h
slate.com
Get biological men out of women’s prisons — NOW!
Predators like Christopher Scott Williams don't belong in women's prison.
1 h
nypost.com