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Dad Finds 7-Year-Old's 'To-Do List,' Can't Cope With What She's Written

Chris Palermo doesn't always have time to enjoy the little things, but something about his daughter's list made him stop.
Читать статью полностью на: newsweek.com
Apparent terrorist wounds dozens in Israel truck attack
In the city of Ramat Hasharon, northeast of Tel Aviv, the truck slammed into a bus at a stop as Israelis were returning to work after a weeklong holiday, leaving some people stuck under the vehicles.
nypost.com
The most surprising concern about Aaron Judge’s deflating Yankees slump
During Aaron Judge’s struggles this postseason, in which he has expanded the zone and gotten hurt by low off-speed pitches, one thing has stood out in particular.
nypost.com
Stevie Nicks on speaking out
Stevie Nicks became a superstar as lead singer and songwriter for the '70s band Fleetwood Mac, and a platinum-selling solo artist. She talks with correspondent Tracy Smith about composing her latest song, "The Lighthouse," that was inspired by her own experience with abortion, and a strong desire to "do something" following the Supreme Court decision overturning Roe v. Wade. She also discusses the loss of her bandmate Christine McVie in 2022, and how she continues to pay tribute to her.
cbsnews.com
La Liga to report racist abuse in Real Madrid-Barcelona match to police
The Spanish league condemned the abuse as a “scourge” on the sport and Real Madrid said it was opening an investigation into the events that occurred during Barcelona’s 4-0 win.
washingtonpost.com
Texas A&M's Mike Elko has fiery message after major win: 'It’s not a politician running this program'
Texas A&M Aggies head coach Mike Elko delivered a fiery message at his press conference after the team's 38-23 victory over the LSU Tigers on Saturday night.
foxnews.com
7 favorite recipes for celebrating Day of the Dead
For Día de Muertos, make the sweet bun pan de muerto, tropical mole, bread pudding, flautas and more.
latimes.com
Clemson frat opens its arms to student with special needs
At Clemson University in South Carolina, the ClemsonLIFE program gives students with intellectual disabilities a chance to learn life skills for independent living. One student, Charlie McGee, a young man with Down syndrome, wanted the whole college experience, including joining a fraternity. Correspondent Steve Hartman reports on what McGee, and the members of Phi Kappa Alpha, learned after McGee was welcomed into the brotherhood.
cbsnews.com
Does ‘Yellowstone’ Return Tonight? Here’s When ‘Yellowstone’ Season 5, Part 2 Airs on TV
"This war's just beginning..."
nypost.com
When life doesn’t come with Bluetooth — make it Bluetooth for $30
Last chance to grab this price on the Mymanu Link Bluetooth Transmitter and Receiver.
nypost.com
bet365 Bonus Code POSTNEWS: Score $1K bet insurance or $200 in bonus bets for NFL Week 8, all sports
Get started at bet365 Sportsbook with the bet365 bonus code POSTNEWS to get $200 in bonus bets or a $1,000 First Bet Safety Net.
nypost.com
Eight NFL Betting Promos and Sign-Up Offers: Score big bonus value from top sportsbooks for NFL Week 8
Unlock thousands in bonus bets with the best NFL betting promos for Week 8. Sign up now and get in on the action.
nypost.com
Protesters crash Israeli PM Netanyahu’s speech at event commemorating Oct. 7 victims: ‘Shame on you’
RAMAT HASHARON, Israel — Protesters disrupted a speech by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at a ceremony Sunday remembering the victims of Hamas’ attack on southern Israel last year.
nypost.com
Central Park attempted rapist on the loose: Cops hunt fiend who tackled and assaulted woman
A 38-year-old woman was near 85 East Drive in the northern end of the park around 5:10 a.m. Saturday when she was approached by an unknown attacker, the NYPD said.
nypost.com
Ralph Fiennes on choosing acting roles: "I like characters that have contradictions inside them"
The Oscar-nominated actor starring in two new films – "Conclave" and "The Return" – talks about the draw of playing characters with contradictions, and the thrill of finding a new role.
cbsnews.com
Michelle Obama accuses critics of 'picking apart' Harris' interview answers to distract from Trump's faults
Former first lady Michelle Obama accused Harris critics of homing in on her interview answers in attempt to distract from former President Trump's faults.
foxnews.com
Ralph Fiennes on the provocation of acting
Oscar-nominated actor Ralph Fiennes is returning in two new acclaimed films. In "Conclave," about the intrigue of papal politics, he plays a Vatican insider who oversees a gathering of cardinals who must elect a new pope. In "The Return," Fiennes – reunited with his "English Patient" costar Juliette Binoche – plays Odysseus, who has returned home following the Trojan War. Fiennes talks with correspondent Martha Teichner about the draw of playing characters with contradictions, and the thrill of finding a new role.
cbsnews.com
Shocking viral video shows Kamala Harris supporter screaming in little girl’s face outside Houston rally with Beyoncé
The clip has been viewed tens of millions of times on X, with thousands of people blasting the woman for apparently shouting at a child.
nypost.com
Jason Trennert up for major position in Trump Administration
Jason Trennert isn’t exactly a household name outside the world of finance. But the long-time economic and market forecaster might soon be. Trennert, sources tell The Post, could be up for a major job in a possible Trump administration, possibly as head of the National Economic Council. In that role, Trennert would be the nation’s...
nypost.com
LAX's 'embarrassing misstep' draws closer to being fixed
There isn't a true rail option to LAX. City officials and transit experts have called that "an embarrassing misstep" and look forward to the opening of the new connecting Automated People Mover.
latimes.com
Master of mazes
British designer Adrian Fisher has created hundreds of mazes around the world – works of art that tantalize and confound those who try to navigate through hedgerows, corn stalks, yew trees, or lights. Correspondent Seth Doane gets lost in our fascination with puzzling mazes, and sets out to complete Fisher's monumental maze on the grounds of Leeds Castle in Kent, England, where there is no Google Maps to help you find your way out.
cbsnews.com
Matthew Perry’s Los Angeles mansion where he died sells for $8.5M one year after his death
The "Friends" alum's residence was purchased by movie producer and Arizona-based real estate developer Anita Verma-Lallian for $8.55 million.
nypost.com
Portrait of a genius: Ken Burns on Leonardo da Vinci
The acclaimed filmmaker behind the PBS documentary on the 15th century Italian artist and intellectual calls Leonardo da Vinci "one of the most incredibly interesting human beings who has ever walked the Earth."
cbsnews.com
Ken Burns on the genius of Leonardo da Vinci
Acclaimed filmmaker Ken Burns, renowned for his documentaries on such topics as the Civil War, baseball, jazz and the Statue of Liberty, has now focused on 15th century Italian artist and intellectual Leonardo da Vinci. Correspondent David Pogue talks with Burns and his producing partners, daughter Sarah Burns and son-in-law David McMahon, about their PBS documentary on the man Burns calls "one of the most incredibly interesting human beings who has ever walked the Earth."
cbsnews.com
Trump will champion women’s sports — and end trans athletes’ unfair competition
Donald Trump's unwavering stance on defending the rights of women and young girls in sports has set the standard on the national level, as well as right here in our local communities.
nypost.com
Sports enthusiasts will love this holiday gift guide
From the gym rat to the golfer and the one who spends Sundays rooting for a favorite NFL team, this gift guide includes something for everyone who loves sports.
foxnews.com
Kamala Harris on her first priority as president
"CBS Evening News" anchor and managing editor Norah O'Donnell traveled with Vice President Kamala Harris on the campaign trail over two days, in Texas and Michigan. They talked about what Harris calls her first priority if elected president: signing into law the protections of Roe v. Wade. Harris also discussed what she says are Donald Trump's intentions for Social Security and Medicare, and what the Project 2025 blueprint means should Trump return to the White House.
cbsnews.com
Spurs' Gregg Popovich rails against Trump in lengthy rant: 'Danger follows the delusion'
San Antonio Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich went on a wild anti-Donald Trump rant before the team's game on Saturday night vs. the Houston Rockets.
foxnews.com
Truck slammed into bus stop near Tel Aviv injuring dozens
The circumstances of the crash remain unknown; however, Asi Aharoni, an Israeli police spokesperson, told reporters that authorities are treating it as a terror attack.
cbsnews.com
Is your living room boring? Here are 12 ways to jazz it up.
The right way to use color, pattern, live greenery and more to conquer a “white box” space.
washingtonpost.com
Patrick Mahomes is already ‘No. 2 in the GOAT conversation,’ ex-NFL star says
Patrick Mahomes may only have six full seasons under his belt, but former NFL star Victor Cruz already has the Chiefs quarterback as the second-best ever.
foxnews.com
Transcript: Sen. JD Vance on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan," Oct. 27, 2024
The following is a transcript of an interview with GOP vice-presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance, Republican of Ohio, on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" that aired on Oct. 27, 2024.
cbsnews.com
Solution to Evan Birnholz’s Oct. 27 crossword, ‘Spare Parts’
Don’t lose your head solving this scary metapuzzle.
washingtonpost.com
Giants vs. Steelers, Jets vs. Patriots predictions: NFL Week 8 picks, odds
Post sports gambling editor/producer and digital sports editor Matt Ehalt is in his first season in the NFL Bettor’s Guide. 
nypost.com
There Are So Many Options for To-Go Coffee These Days. But One Kind Is the Best.
Cheap coffee makes me feel like a real New Yorker.
slate.com
A Defense of the Leaf Blower
The trees have a job: to blush their leaves orange or red and then drop them to the lawns and pavements below. If you are one of the many millions of Americans who own their homes, you may soon be faced with the question of what to do with all that foliage. Maybe you will rake your leaves into piles. Maybe you will let them decay into the ground. And maybe—just maybe—you will risk your hard-earned reputation by gusting them away with a leaf blower.For decades now, the dust and din of blowing leaves has infuriated Americans, sometimes to the point of violence. “The gas leaf blower is by all measures, and without dispute, harmful,” a New York Times op-ed announced in 2022, summing up the new consensus. Although the blower’s squall rages and enrages year-round, pushing snow, grass, and dirt alike, autumn gives it special purpose. The very first commercial blower, from the 1970s, was touted on these grounds: “In fall, it rounds up a yardful of leaves in no time.” That makes now a perfect time for me to say what nobody else would dare to: The leaf blower—that is, the machine itself, as it’s used for blowing leaves—is a force for good.But Americans are also right: In many ways, leaf blowers are truly terrible. They are loud, which is irritating to those far away and can damage the hearing of anyone nearby. And they’re inhospitable: Blowers hurtle dirt and debris, along with other particles, through public space; they create a gale unnecessary for sidewalks.This is why America has witnessed a fearsome blower blowback for about as long as we’ve had blowers. In the 1980s, some homeowners’ associations and municipalities started trying to curb the things. Cities moved to ban them entirely. In 1997, Los Angeles passed an ordinance to limit their use within the city. The entire state of California now prohibits the sale of new gas-powered blowers, which is the type that The Atlantic’s James Fallows helped banish from Washington, D.C.The more recent efforts to get rid of blowers have focused on the combustion engines used in many models. These pollute the air as much as an automobile. In recent years, an alternative has emerged in the form of cleaner, electric blowers, with lithium-ion batteries for power, that are strong enough to push a mound of dried-out vegetation to the street. But even if these new devices can solve the blower’s air-pollution problem, they do not address its many other irritations. Battery blowers can be just as loud as those that run on gas, according to Kris Kiser, the president and CEO of the Outdoor Power Equipment Institute. Testing finds that some may hit 90 decibels—that’s louder than city traffic—when they’re producing enough air pressure to, well, blow stuff. And just like the old-fashioned blowers, their blasts end up spreading dirt and dust and leaves well beyond their users’ targets.Yet the blower’s many faults must be weighed against the elemental fact that evicting fallen leaves from your property in late October is a heinous chore, and one that cannot be accomplished easily via mulcher, mower, rake, or bonfire. A leaf blower, though, is as suited to this purpose as a toaster is to browning bread: It is a magnificent, purpose-built device for sending yard detritus from one place to another. I’ll grant that there would be certain benefits, to the Earth and to our own well-being if we could move all of our leaves by hand. The same is true of travel: Walking to another state would do far less damage to the world than flying in an airplane. But the convenience of a blower, like the convenience of jet-propelled flight, is sometimes worth the cost.But leaf blowers, like airplanes, can be grossly overused. The problem that a blower solves so beautifully—the need for clearing leaves—is, or should be, limited in time: Several blowing sessions should suffice, sprinkled in from October to December. I submit that the case against the blower has less to do with leaves than with all the other things that people like to push around with air, at all the other times of year.[Read: Your TV is too good for you]In particular, it has to do with grass. Consider the “mow and blow,” a standard offering for yard work, in which a crew will trim a lawn, then blast it clear of clumps of trimmings with artificial wind. A crew that did a “mow” but not the “blow” would have to spend a lot of time collecting clippings, as well as dust and dirt, in bags and then disposing of them. That’s why gardeners in Los Angeles, who made their living from this work, were among the most vocal opponents of that city’s blower ban during the ’90s. (The city and its landscapers skirmished for years.) Even to this day, the loudest, most annoying blowing comes from this commercial work, Kiser told me. Yard-service companies may end up using four to eight blowers at a time, as early as 5 o’clock in the morning. “That’s where you get in trouble,” he said.Demand for this noisy work is high: Some 40 percent of U.S. households with lawns hired out yard services in 2017. During the pandemic, American homeowners started doing more of their own yard maintenance, Kiser told me, and some bought leaf blowers of their own. That trend may now be over, but blower sales are still increasing worldwide, especially as new battery-equipped models become more powerful. In other words, the blowing bubble may still be growing.[Read: How Starbucks perfected autumn]Excessive use of blowers, not the tools themselves, should be taken as the villain here. The “mow and blow” could be extinguished, or at least scaled back. Homeowners and the people they hire ought to blow much less often, and for shorter durations. They could bag their grass, or cut it frequently enough that the clippings remain modest and would not have to be dispersed by air. This would allow everyone to save their clamor for the autumn, when the blower’s power and fitness for purpose could be fully, gloriously, and temporarily unleashed.Some will ask why this temperance with blowing should be limited. Why not have a full-year ban instead? Why not keep our fallen leaves in place, as a habitat for bees, butterflies, and moths? For that matter, why not abandon our water-hungry yards entirely? These fights seek moral victories. But a practical solution will yield better results, because yards and landscaping are still entrenched in American life. We just need ways to tend to them that are environmentally and socially aware.My premise is simple: Leaf blowers are for blowing leaves, and little else.
theatlantic.com
MomTok Is the Apotheosis of 21st-Century Womanhood
If you’re interested in modern beauty standards, the social value of femininity, and the fetishization of mothers in American culture, Hulu’s recent reality show The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives is a rich, chaotic product. I watched the entire series in a couple of days, gasping and Googling, shriveling inwardly every time I caught a glimpse of my haggard self in the mirror compared with these lustrous, bronzed, cosmetically enhanced women. The stars of the show are young wives and mothers in Utah who have become notable in a corner of the internet called MomTok; their online side hustles include performing 20-second group dances and lip-syncing to clips from old movies, the financial success of which has helped them eclipse their husbands as earners. As an encapsulation of 21st-century womanhood, it’s almost too on the nose: a discordant jumble of feminist ideals, branded domesticity, and lip filler.The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives is a logical end point for lifestyle-focused reality television, which has never quite been able to decide whether women should be gyrating on a pole or devoutly raising a dozen towheaded children. This show bravely asks: Why not both? “We’re all moms; we’re all Mormons. I guess you could say a lot of us in MomTok look similar … We’re just going off based [on] what’s trending,” Mayci (28, two kids) explains in the first episode. The camera cuts to the women filming a video. “Mayci, I need you to twerk your ass off, as hard as you can,” Jen (24, two kids) shrieks. Jessi (31, two kids) comments on the volume of Jen’s cleavage, amplified by her breastfeeding garments. Each woman has waist-length, barrel-curled hair and teeth as white as Mentos; most wear jeans and a tight Lycra top. No children are in sight. What we’re watching isn’t the kind of dreamy domesticity that traditional momfluencers post on Instagram. It’s something more interesting: the conflation of “motherhood” as an identity with desirability, fertility, and sexual power.[Read: The redemption of the bad mother]America loves mothers more than women, an inclination the 2024 election has demonstrated in abundance. Mothers are given license to do things that other women often aren’t, like getting angry or even seeking political power, as long as it’s understood that whatever they’re doing is on someone else’s behalf. In a commencement address to a conservative Catholic college earlier this year, the Kansas City Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker even advised the female graduates in his audience to forgo careers altogether and focus on supporting their husbands as homemakers. The women of MomTok, while pushing back against some of the strictures of the Mormon Church, are living out this advice to a curiously literal degree. They’re financially supporting their husbands as homemakers, thanks to social media. “Who is currently, like, the breadwinner at home?” Demi (30, one child) asks at one point. “I think all of us?” Mayci replies. This looks like progress—women making money, at home, with the flexibility to set their own schedule and pick their own projects. But underlying this portrait is a darker reality: The only women who get to succeed at this kind of “work” are the ones who look the part.The women of MomTok aren’t tradwives, the smock-wearing, Aga stove–warmed, calf-snuggling performance artists who fascinate and perplex us on social media. The Secret Lives mothers flirt and assert their independence and critique the men who try to control them. Some got married as teenagers after unplanned pregnancies; several are divorced. (The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints issued a statement ahead of the show’s release noting that “a number of recent productions depict lifestyles and practices blatantly inconsistent with the teachings of the church,” seemingly in reference to a widely publicized scandal involving one cast member that’s the least interesting part of the series.) Late in the season, Demi plans a girls’ trip to Las Vegas that includes VIP tickets to Chippendales, which prompts an alarming conflict between the more traditional Jen and her husband, Zac, whom she’s supported through college and is about to fund through medical school. Zac, despite having been given $2,500 by his wife to gamble on the trip, is furious that she’d agree—even as a joke—to see a male dance show. He threatens to take their kids and divorce her. “This type of behavior is exactly what MomTok is trying to break in our LDS faith,” Demi tells the camera. “We’re not doing this anymore.”But even as they reject what they see as the suffocating confines of one institution for women, they’re bolstering another. The pursuit of a certain kind of highly maintained beauty for all eight women on the show seems to dominate everything else. In one episode, while getting Botox injections, several of the women gossip, semi-scandalized, about the fact that Jessi drank alcohol from a flask at Zac’s graduation party; the irony that they’re in that moment high on laughing gas administered to ease the pain of the injections seems lost on everyone. In a different episode, Jessi tells her friends that she’s getting a labiaplasty, which she refers to as “a mommy makeover,” because childbirth has changed the shape and appearance of her vulva. Plastic surgery, Mayci explains, is tacitly sanctioned by the LDS Church (though LDS leaders today caution against vanity); Salt Lake City has more plastic surgeons per resident than Los Angeles.“We wanna make sure that we’re taking care of our bodies, and we’re always told that our body is a temple,” Mayci adds during the Botox episode. “It’s actually surprising that [the Church doesn’t] really care about plastic surgery?” The moment underscores the space for interpretive tension within a faith that discourages toxins while prizing beauty in all its forms as a reflection of morality and a source of happiness. And yet it’s hard not to read this show another way: as evidence of a specific online culture that encourages women to bear children while also requiring them to erase the visible evidence of their pregnancies. The physical toll of giving birth is covered up, made as inconspicuous as the children who have left these same marks. That these mothers be beautiful and desirable in this realm is paramount.In one sense, this is what reality television has always wanted from women. Those who can exude sexuality from the safety of the domestic sphere have long been able to build lucrative businesses in the process. In 2022, a writer for Bustle counted 52 separate beauty lines launched by stars of the Real Housewives franchise, who leveraged their fame to sell perfumes, wigs, nail polish, “firming lotion,” and false eyelashes. But the Secret Lives stars are notable for how intricately their brands are enmeshed with fertility—not the mundane reality of day-to-day motherhood but the symbolic power of sexual eligibility and maternal authority. On Secret Lives, Mayci is seen launching Baby Mama, a line of “natal supplements” for women. No one on the show seems to question the primacy of beauty. After filming wrapped, Layla (22, two children) revealed in a podcast interview that she’s had six separate cosmetic procedures over four months. “I had kids young, and I love my babies to death, but they screwed up my body, and I wanted to feel hot again,” she said. Her co-star Demi added, “That’s just the Utah way!”[Read: How did healing ourselves get so exhausting?]Women who don’t accept—or can’t meet—these terms are, tellingly, less visible on the show, and thus less able to leverage their new fame. Mikayla (24, three children), a doe-eyed, strikingly beautiful woman who struggles with a chronic illness that causes skin flare-ups gets sidelined; she has no primary storylines of her own, and much less screen time than the others. This gravitation toward more visibly perfected stars stems perhaps from the aspirational ideal that momfluencers represent, as Sara Petersen writes in her 2023 book, Momfluenced. “As mothers, our everyday lives are full of gritty motherhood rawness, of children refusing to wear snow pants in blizzards, or the strain of holding back tears and curses upon stepping on another fucking Lego.” She adds, “Why would we want to spend our spare time consuming someone else’s rawness when we’re sick and tired of our own?”The women of MomTok are enthralling because they symbolize the possibility of a mother’s desirability and influence—and of a broader sisterhood. They are, with the exception of the one stock villain, Whitney (31, two children), impossibly likable, funny and scrappy and unserious. They constantly invoke their sliver of the internet as a pillar of friendship and prosperity—as in “I really want this MomTok group to survive,” and “We need to get back to what MomTok was before all this happened.” Taylor (30, three children) says that the group built its following in the hope of changing people’s attitudes about Mormon women—and making space for them to be bolder and more outspoken than the norm. But all of the women on the show seem to have wholly absorbed the idea that to be heard as mothers in America, you first have to be seen, in high-definition, expensively augmented perfection.In her 1991 book, The Beauty Myth, Naomi Wolf noted that the proliferation of sexualized images of women in music videos and television and magazines toward the end of the 20th century represented “a collective reactionary hallucination willed into being by both men and women stunned and disoriented by the rapidity with which gender relations have been transformed: a bulwark of reassurance against the flood of change.” The same dynamics have since been amplified a thousandfold on TikTok, where you have precisely one second to hook someone who’s idly scrolling. The politics of visibility are more loaded than ever. Beauty, as Wolf wrote decades ago, has fully taken over “the work of social coercion that myths about motherhood, domesticity, chastity, and passivity, no longer can manage.” The lifelong project of self-maintenance used to be, for women, a distraction from recognizing the things we really need. Now it’s the most valid and laudable form of labor.When you buy a book using a link in this newsletter, we receive a commission. Thank you for supporting The Atlantic.
theatlantic.com
Taylor Sheridan Makes His On-Screen ‘Lioness’ Debut In The Season 2 Premiere
Who better to play the “old soldier” than Taylor Sheridan himself?
nypost.com
Meredith Marks ‘feeling great’ after third breast reduction: ‘I can wear normal clothes!’
The "RHOSLC" star shared with Page Six last month that she was dealing with an unknown medical condition that caused her breast tissue to continuously grow.
nypost.com
Fly more, spend less — Matt’s Flights finds the deals so you don’t have to
Act fast to take advantage of this deal on lifetime access to cheap flights — never overpay for airfare again.
nypost.com
BetMGM Bonus Code NYP250: Score $250 of perks in NJ, PA, MI and WV for Week 8 NFL Sunday, three more offers live elsewhere
Sign up with one of the BetMGM bonus codes to unlock one of the great offers from BetMGM for NFL Sunday.
nypost.com
How to watch Jets vs. Patriots live for free: Start time and streaming
The Jets last win came against the Patriots in Week 3.
nypost.com
‘Take Our Lives Seriously,’ Michelle Obama Pleads as She Rallies For Kamala Harris
Michelle Obama challenged men to support Kamala Harris' bid to be America's first female President.
time.com
American Catholic voters present complex opportunities for Trump, Harris: Academics
The Catholic community has gone through numerous changes throughout the decade and shown major divisions on political issues according to acdemics.
abcnews.go.com
Michigan, Michigan State players brawl after game: 'Lil’ bro stay doing lil’ bro things'
Michigan and Michigan State players got into a skirmish on Saturday night after the Wolverines defeated the Spartans 24-17. Colston Loveland and Anthony Jones were involved.
foxnews.com
American Culture Quiz: Test yourself on hit TV shows, sports stars and Halloween
The American Culture Quiz is a weekly test of our unique national traits, trends, history and people. This time, test your knowledge of popular TV shows, sports stars, Halloween and more.
foxnews.com
Livvy Dunne reflects on watching Simone Biles in person at Olympics, 'heartbreaking' Jordan Chiles controversy
Livvy Dunne had a front row seat to Simone Biles' dominance in Paris, and the emotional roller coaster that was Jordan Chiles' medal controversy.
foxnews.com
Israel Police Say 36 Wounded, Six Seriously, as Truck Rams Bus Stop in Suspected Terror Attack
A truck driver rammed his vehicle into a crowd of people at a bus stop in central Israel early Sunday, wounding at least 36 people - six seriously - before he was “shot and neutralised” by bystanders, police said. The post Israel Police Say 36 Wounded, Six Seriously, as Truck Rams Bus Stop in Suspected Terror Attack appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
Ken Burns on the "incredibly modern" Leonardo da Vinci
In this web extra, filmmaker Ken Burns discusses the subject of his new documentary series for PBS, "Leonardo da Vinci," and how his curiosity and observational genius allowed the 15th century Florentine to create artistic masterpieces that were great works of science, and studies in science that were great works of art.
cbsnews.com