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Frat members at San Diego State University charged after pledge set on fire during party skit

Four members of San Diego State University's Phi Kappa Psi fraternity were charged after a skit at a party last year led to a pledge being set on fire.
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Wegmans Sorbet Recall Over Undeclared Egg Allergen
Eggs are considered one of the nine "major food allergens" by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
newsweek.com
L.A. fire official on new Hollywood Hills blaze
Los Angeles Fire Department spokesperson Margaret Stewart called the fire burning in the Hollywood Hills "very dangerous and explosive." She describes the mandatory evacuation zones and ongoing efforts to fight the fires.
cbsnews.com
Group of Los Angeles firefighters briefly run out of water while putting out flames
A state of emergency was declared in California as multiple wildfires destroyed homes near L.A. and killed at least 5 people. CBS News Los Angeles' Joy Benedict reports that some firefighters ran out of water, but got help from other departments. Rachel Kim interviews a resident looking for "a sign of hope to get over this devastation." Gio Insignares has more on an active fire-fight.
cbsnews.com
Will Rogers' ranch house and motel owned by William Randolph Hearst consumed by Palisades fire
California State Parks Director Armando Quintero acknowledged Wednesday the total loss of Will Rogers’ historic ranch house and the Topanga Ranch Motel built by newspaper baron William Randolph Hearst.
latimes.com
Flames erupt and spread along Southern California beachside homes
Video shows five California beachside homes burning furiously on Wednesday evening amid the Los Angeles wildfires. CBS News Los Angeles' Laurie Perez reports on the line of devastation down the coast.
cbsnews.com
'Explosive' Sunset Fire Prompts Evacuation Order in Hollywood Hills: Map
The Los Angeles Fire Department immediately issued an evacuation order for a densely populated area in the Hollywood Hills.
newsweek.com
SEAN HANNITY: These officials have failed the people of California
Fox News host Sean Hannity says the L.A. Fire Department is understaffed and underfunded as fires destroy the city on "Hannity."
foxnews.com
Otro incendio en Hollywood Hills, cerca de Runyon Canyon, provoca evacuaciones
Los agotados bomberos de Los Ángeles se enfrentan a un nuevo incendio el miércoles por la noche en Hollywood Hills.
latimes.com
Silent on arrival: LA Mayor Karen Bass refuses to answer questions for her absence as wildfires ravage city
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass refused to answer a question after being pressed on her initial absence as wildfires raged across her jurisdiction.
foxnews.com
Heidi Montag reduced to tears after her and Spencer Pratt’s house destroyed in Palisades Fire: ‘I just want to go home’
"I wish I could have gone back and got more."
nypost.com
NFL shares contingency plan for Rams-Vikings playoff game as Palisades fire surges
The NFL is ready to move one of its wild-card round games next week as wildfires continue to rage in Los Angeles County.
nypost.com
Celebrity breakups of 2025: All the couples who split this year
Austin Butler and Kaia Gerber, Naomi Osaka and Cordae and Courtney Ford and Brandon Routh are amongst the couples that led the celebrity 2025 breakups.
nypost.com
Mass. official used taxpayer money meant for seniors on music studio recordings, 153 lbs of bourbon steak tips, framed portrait: feds
About $8,950 went to a music studio to produce recordings of his singing, $2,236 for 153 pounds of bourbon steak tips, $4,800 on a Toyota Prius and $1,658 for a framed, lacquered portrait of Clasby.
nypost.com
Brian Flores’ Dolphins experience turned him into a ‘dictator’: Ryan Fitzpatrick
Ryan Fitzpatrick, speaking this week on the "Fitz & Whit" podcast, said that during year one in Miami, Flores was both "likable" and "relatable" despite a 5-11 season.
nypost.com
Incendios obligan a posponer partido de hockey sobre hielo; NFL y NBA monitorean situación
Debido a los incendios forestales, la NHL pospuso el partido de hockey sobre hielo en que los Kings de Los Ángeles recibirían el miércoles a los Flames de Calgary.
latimes.com
Hurts, quarterback de Eagles, vuelve a entrenar tras sufrir conmoción cerebral
Jalen Hurts regresó con los Eagles de Filadelfia y todo indica que el quarterback estelar se encuentra listo para jugar de inicio este fin de semana en la ronda de comodines de los playoffs de la Conferencia Nacional.
latimes.com
Palisades wildfire: Candace Cameron Bure fears families, small businesses will not recover from devastation
Candace Cameron Bure told Fox News Digital she was "beyond words" to describe how the devastating Palisades fire would hurt the area's residents and businesses.
foxnews.com
They outran the flames in Altadena, wondering how they lived through the fury
Two handymen escaped the Eaton fire while embers hit their faces. The flames 'came down the hill at 80 miles per hour and cut through a Jeep Wagoneer like a blowtorch.'
latimes.com
WATCH: Smoke from wildfire creates eerie haze shrouding Los Angeles skyline
Southern California residents awoke to a hazy sunrise over the Los Angeles skyline choked by smoke from multiple nearby wildfires.
abcnews.go.com
St. John’s defending better than it has in decades big reason for team’s strong start
Though St. John's has struggled from 3-point land, it is off to a strong start because of its stifling defense, The Post's Zach Braziller writes.
nypost.com
Actor James Woods recalls chaotic moments as Palisades fire gained momentum, praises 'good' neighbors for help
Actor James Woods reacts to the apocalyptic Palisades fire in California on 'The Ingraham Angle.'
foxnews.com
Quinn Ewers sidesteps $6 million Texas transfer rumor with cryptic response
Quinn Ewers has a chance to put the rumors of his potential transfer from Texas to rest before the biggest game of the Longhorns’ season. 
nypost.com
Schumer Will Work With Trump to Rename Gulf of Mexico on One Condition
Trump recently proposed the gulf name change, alongside the annexation of Canada, Greenland and the Panama Canal.
newsweek.com
Trump details strategy to get necessary votes with one-bill approach to border, taxes
Republicans are getting to work on one reconciliation bill on both the border and taxes, as Trump wants, after the president pointed to the strategy behind it in a meeting.
foxnews.com
ABC’s ‘narcissistic’ David Muir roasted for sprucing up ‘svelte’ looks while reporting on deadly LA fires
ABC News anchor David Muir is being mocked on social media as “pathetic” and “narcissistic” for using clamps to cinch his flame-retardant jacket while broadcasting from the scene of the deadly Los Angeles wildfires. The eponymous host of World News Tonight with David Muir was surveying the damage in LA for ABC News, doing a...
nypost.com
NY Times column highlights 'deceptions' and 'illusions' of Biden's presidency: 'History won't be so kind'
New York Times columnist Bret Stephens voted for President Biden but called him out for several deceptions and illusions about his tenure in office.
foxnews.com
Shocking before-and-after satellite images show destruction of Malibu and Altadena neighborhoods
Satellite images show neighborhoods in Malibu and Altadena before and after the Palisades and Eaton fires.
latimes.com
Couple who couldn’t afford their own wedding photos finally gets to see them — 56 years later
"She cried a lot. Happy tears," Barry Sharman said of his wife, Margaret. "She was just beside herself with joy."
nypost.com
Sunset fire in Hollywood Hills: Evacuation order is issued
An evacuation zone was established between the 101 Freeway and Laurel Canyon and between Mulholland Drive and Hollywood Boulevard.
latimes.com
How to help victims of Southern California wildfires
Nonprofit groups are working to distribute essential supplies to those impacted.
cbsnews.com
Los Angeles official says wildfires are "nothing like" anything she's seen before
Los Angeles officials briefed reporters about the wildfires scorching the area in Southern California. Los Angeles County is under a state of emergency as the flames are upending the lives of tens of thousands who have been forced to abandon their homes.
cbsnews.com
Shocking before and after pictures show all-out obliteration caused by LA wildfires: images
The LA wildfires across the state of California this week have taken the lives of 5 individuals and thousands displaced from their homes. These before and after pictures show the wildlife's effects across the state.
nypost.com
Space satellites track astonishing expansion of deadly California wildfires
Space satellites tracked the flames and smoke caused by eight California wildfires currently scorching the state.
foxnews.com
Marie Osmond says brother Wayne's death has left a ‘giant hole’ in her heart
Marie Osmond broke her silence on the death of her older brother Wayne Osmond, 73, a week after his death, saying it left a "hole" in her heart.
foxnews.com
The Payoff of TV’s Most Awaited Crossover
On Abbott Elementary, celebrity sightings are as common as a back-to-school flu outbreak or drama with the PTA. The show’s Season 2 premiere kicked off with the spunky second-grade teacher Janine Teagues (played by Quinta Brunson) trying to surprise Abbott students with an appearance from “the only celebrity that matters”: Gritty, the internet-famous mascot for the Philadelphia Flyers. In Season 3, Bradley Cooper joined a class for show-and-tell, the Philadelphia Eagles star Jalen Hurts tried to help a teacher’s boyfriend propose, and Questlove DJed a party in the school gym.As on many a network sitcom, Abbott’s celebrity cameos tend to involve the stars playing themselves, with some embellished biographical details to sweeten their stories. (Questlove, for example, claimed that he and Allen Iverson both credit their illustrious careers to Abbott’s principal, who happens to be one of their closest friends.) Now, midway through its fourth season, Abbott has found a clever way to continue celebrating that hometown pride—and expand the show’s comedic arsenal. The latest episode taps some of Philly’s most well-known fictional personalities, using their outlandish antics to draw out a bit more edge from Abbott’s plucky educators.In tonight’s episode, the main characters of It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia saunter into the public school and invigorate the mockumentary by stirring up chaos. Anyone familiar with the long-running FX sitcom about a group of bartenders knows that the Sunny protagonists don’t belong anywhere near an elementary-school campus. Throughout its 16 seasons, the most of any live-action American comedy series, It’s Always Sunny has been a riotous, foul-mouthed chronicle of escalating misbehavior from a gang of total miscreants. The loosely plotted sitcom has followed the Paddy’s Pub slackers through outrageous, ill-conceived schemes that almost always reveal just how craven they are: They’ve smoked crack in an attempt to exploit the welfare system, siphoned gas to sell door-to-door, and outlined some deeply concerning strategies for picking up women.Suffice it to say, none of them is getting invited to speak at a commencement ceremony or Career Day. By contrast, most of the strangers who’ve popped up at Abbott over the years, whether they’re district bureaucrats or local businesspeople, at least pretend to have altruistic motives. When these visitors cause issues for the school, it’s usually due to incompetence, negligence, or an easily resolved misunderstanding. And of course, there’s generally a moral at the end of the story—the kind of humorous, heartfelt fare that makes Abbott so beloved as family viewing.[Read: Abbott Elementary lets Black kids be kids]But things go awry almost immediately after the Sunny squad shows up in “Volunteers,” the first of two planned crossover episodes. The gang arrives at Abbott under the guise of offering the overworked educators some much needed help from the local school district. Instead, Mac (Rob McElhenney), Charlie (Charlie Day), Dennis (Glenn Howerton), Frank (Danny DeVito), and Deandra (Kaitlin Olson) quickly discover that there are documentary cameras rolling at Abbott, prompting the superlatively toxic Dennis to excuse himself because he knows “quite a bit about filming and consent.” The others stick around, acting slightly more buttoned-up than usual because they know they’re being recorded, but they’re still too abrasive to fit in. They admit that they’re there only to satisfy the community-service requirements of a court order, and in response to one teacher calling them criminals, ask whether it’s really a “crime” to dump 100 gallons of baby oil, 500 Paddy’s Pub T-shirts, and a Cybertruck in the Schuylkill River.These kinds of ludicrous scenarios are par for the course on Sunny, but they strain the boundaries of the malfeasance we usually see from Abbott characters. For the educators, that creates an amusing challenge: The Sunny gang isn’t a pack of wayward teenagers waiting for an understanding mentor to show them the light, and their moral failures can’t be rehabilitated with a pep talk. No earnest, well-articulated argument for the importance of early-childhood education will make characters like these abandon their selfishness, and the unexpected dose of cynicism gives Abbott’s formula an intriguing mid-season shake-up—a nice wrinkle, considering how many network sitcoms begin to feel repetitive the longer they stay on the air.Take the drama caused by Deandra, or “Sweet Dee.” This episode finds the lone woman in the main Sunny crew initially bonding with Janine while volunteering in her classroom: Dee praises Janine in front of the second graders after the two women realize they both attended the University of Pennsylvania. But their camaraderie takes a hit when Dee starts lusting after Gregory (Tyler James Williams), Janine’s fellow teacher—and, after a lengthy will-they-won’t-they storyline, also her boyfriend. When Janine tells Dee that she’s in a relationship with Gregory, the Sunny transplant is undeterred: “You’re good if I take a spin though, yeah?” It’s the first time Janine’s encountered a real romantic foil on the series, and as the conflict plays out, Dee’s brash flirting style forces Janine to acknowledge her fears about the relationship. These scenes offer Janine, easily the most childlike of the teachers, an opportunity to grow by facing the tension head-on—a feat made easier by her having a farcical villain in Dee.Abbott will never be the kind of show where the main cast routinely has to fend off mean-spirited romantic sabotage or keep tabs on a man who gives off serious Andrew Tate vibes. After the volunteers slink back to Paddy’s, the most shiftless person on campus will once again be Principal Coleman (Janelle James), whose ineptitude and vanity don’t prevent her from advocating for the students from time to time. Still, the Sunny crossover episode marks a compelling chapter in Abbott’s evolution. The series has stayed family-friendly thanks to its educational setting, showcasing the comic talents of both its students and teachers. But Abbott is now proving itself adept at something different too: comedy with a real bite, even if it’s not in service of teaching a lesson.
theatlantic.com
JESSE WATTERS: Los Angeles County is 'apocalyptic'
Fox News host Jesse Watters discusses the raging fires that are tearing through areas of Los Angeles County on ‘Jesse Watters Primetime.’
foxnews.com
Capitol Police arrest man attempting to set his car on fire amid Trump DC visit with GOP senators
The U.S. Capitol Police (USCP) said that they arrested a person who attempted to set his car near the Capitol building during President-elect Trump's visit.
foxnews.com
Fire evacuees can find rooms at these L.A. hotels
State law prohibits businesses from boosting prices on hotels by more than 10% for 30 days after a local or state agency has declared an emergency.
latimes.com
Comedian ended her 'Stockholm Syndrome' with the left, says it's become 'party of censorship'
Comedian Whitney Cummings told her podcast listeners this week that the left has become so hypocritical and censorious that she had to start calling it out in public.
foxnews.com
Fire burning in the Hollywood Hills near Runyon Canyon; evacuations ordered
Weary Los Angeles firefighters are dealing with a new fire that broke out Wednesday evening in the Hollywood Hills.
latimes.com
Denise Richards Reveals She Was Sexually Assaulted At 15 In ‘Special Forces’ Season 3 Premiere: “I Couldn’t Even Scream For Help”
It was an emotional episode for the actress.
nypost.com
Sauce Gardner’s OnlyFans tweet lands him, Barstool Sports in defamation lawsuit
A social media post by one Jets player may have been a little too saucy and is now causing legal issues for himself and one well-known sports media company. 
nypost.com
Allison Holker defends herself, addresses Stephen ‘tWitch’ Boss’ family after book backlash: ‘I believe’ he’d want ‘his story told’
The dancer will discuss the alleged hidden secrets of her late husband in her forthcoming memoir, "This Far: My Story of Love, Loss, and Embracing the Light."
nypost.com
NYC is one of the best cities for an active lifestyle — with one of the worst just a few train stops from Midtown
Talk about a tale of two cities.
nypost.com
Yamal y Gavi llevan al Barcelona a final de la Supercopa de España al vencer al Athletic Bilbao
YEDA, Arabia Saudí (AP) — Lamine Yamal y Gavi Páez marcaron los goles con los que el Barcelona doblegó el miércoles 2-1 al Athletic Bilbao para así acceder a la final de la Supercopa de España.
latimes.com
Penn State's James Franklin jabs at Notre Dame ahead of CFP matchup: 'Everybody should be in a conference'
Before taking on Notre Dame, Penn State head coach James Franklin said he disagrees with the team's independent status, suggesting every team should compete in a conference.
foxnews.com
My Childhood Home Is on Fire
We knew to expect winds. When they came on Tuesday morning, sounding like a tsunami crashing over my family’s home in western Malibu, the utility company shut off our power. We knew the chance of fire was high.I had arrived home for the holidays in early December, and had already been greeted by the Franklin Fire, which had burned the hills black. Now, when my dad and I went in search of electricity, a great plume of smoke was rising above those burned hills. It cast out over the Pacific, just as it had during the Woolsey Fire that tore through Malibu in 2018. The way the wind was blowing—rattling our car, scattering palm fronds and tumbleweeds across the road—we knew this new fire would probably hit Topanga Canyon, the mountain community where I grew up. Dad decided we needed to get up there and help our former neighbors. People who have lived in this area for decades, as my family has, can get so used to evacuation warnings that they don’t always follow them.Yesterday, the fires burning around Los Angeles were frightening; overnight they became a terror. A fire this strong, at this time of year, is unusual, an outlier. But it is also familiar, one in a series of fires that, as a seventh-generation Californian, I’ve lived through, or my family has. It has destroyed places that I’ve loved since childhood; it’s not the first fire that’s done so. To some of our friends and neighbors, this fire seemed manageable—until it didn’t. Today, it is, as one friend said, a hell fire.On the way to Topanga Canyon, Dad and I stopped to watch the fire burn. The flames were coming into a neighborhood where two of my childhood friends grew up, just beyond the Pacific Palisades where the blaze started. The way the fire was burning, I couldn’t imagine that the Palisades was still standing. The main road was closed—these winds can dislodge rocks and rain them down on cars—so we took back streets. “You can tell people are emotional from the way they’re driving,” Dad said, after someone whipped around a blind turn. We made it to the house of a friend, another old-timer who, like Dad, lived through the 1993 fire, the one that got so close, it warped the double-pane glass in my childhood home. He told us he’d be fine, based on the way the wind was blowing, and offered to make us a pot of coffee while he still had power—he’d heard they’d be shutting it off in the next hour. Dad said it looked like the flames had reached the mouth of Topanga Canyon, and our friend promised he’d get ready to evacuate. “But nothing will ever be as bad as ’93,” he said.When Dad and I got home, our power was still out. The city had issued evacuation warnings in a nearby neighborhood. Should we get ready? A month before, we’d packed up the family photos and the birth certificates for the Franklin Fire, and our house had been fine. Our Malibu neighbor, who stayed behind during the Woolsey Fire, tends not to worry. But the winds were so strong, she thought this one could be worse than all the others.That night, Dad and I decided to get back in the car, to see how close the fire was. When we managed to open the front door against the wind, we were coated in a fine layer of dust. The houses around us were dark, all their power out. Driving on the highway this time, instead of smoke, we saw flames.The friend we’d visited that afternoon called us. “I’m on the freeway now,” he said. “I got the hell out of there. We’re toast. I’ve never seen anything like this.”From a radio broadcast, cutting in and out, we could hear the gist of the damage so far. “Malibu Feed Bin”—where my family would buy dog food and pet the rabbits—gone. “Topanga Ranch Motel”—the bungalows where I’d wait for the school bus—gone. “Reel Inn”—a seafood restaurant where employees would handwrite ocean puns beneath its neon sign—gone. “Cholada Thai”—a high-school standard where my friends and I still gather—gone. “Wiley’s Bait & Tackle,” a wooden shack opened in 1946, where my brother and I would gross each other out looking at lugworms—gone.My ancestors came to California before it was even a state; we have lived through decades of Santa Ana winds coming in off the desert and shaking our houses so powerfully, we lose sleep. But my brother and I also used to stand outside our childhood home, our backs to the wind, and toss stones into a nearby canyon, laughing as the Santa Anas carried them farther than we could ever throw. The winds are part of life here, and one that I’ve always, probably foolishly, loved.Last night, my parents and I kept our phones on in case any emergency notifications came through. This morning, our power was still out. We have loaded the family photos and the birth certificates in the car and are ready to leave if the evacuation notice comes. Even as the fires are still burning, my parents are already talking about how they will handle this all better “next time.” We will get a larger coffee press so that, next time, we can each have two servings when the power goes out. We will get a camp stove so that, next time, when the gas shuts off, we won’t have to boil water on the barbecue.Mom just told me that her friend sent her some new photographs: My childhood home, which she and my Dad built together in Topanga Canyon, may be gone. For now, the fire is still on the other side of Malibu. The wind is still blowing.
theatlantic.com
Judge agrees to delay George Santos' sentencing in federal fraud case
Calling it a “one-time courtesy,” the judge granted George Santos' request to push his sentencing -- but not by as much as the former New York representative requested.
abcnews.go.com