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How to watch the Minnesota Timberwolves vs. Phoenix Suns NBA Playoffs game tonight: Game 3 livestream options, more

Game 3 of the Timberwolves vs. Suns NBA Playoffs series is tonight. Here's how and when to watch all the action.
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Powerful tornadoes leave behind devastating damage in Oklahoma
A string of tornadoes tore through Oklahoma overnight, devastating multiple communities. It's the second time in just over a month a twister hit the town of Barnsdall, Oklahoma, leveling homes.
cbsnews.com
Shooting at Drake's Mansion: What We Know
A security guard for the rapper was rushed to the hospital with serious injuries, according to reports.
newsweek.com
How Knicks, Pacers may adjust after Game 1 of the Eastern Conference semifinals
Bryan Fonseca reacts to Jalen Brunson’s 43-point effort in the Knicks’ Eastern Conference semifinals Game 1 win over the Pacers, Josh Hart and Donte DiVincenzo’s big contributions and how the Bockers’ bench needs to improve against the up-tempo Pacers after eking out a big series-opening win at Madison Square Garden.
nypost.com
Anti-Israel protesters graffiti monuments, burn American flag
Anti-Israel protesters vandalized a World War I memorial in Central Park on May 6 and burned an American flag after a mob of more than 1,000 marchers was blocked by cops from reaching the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where the star-studded Met Gala was in full swing. Some of the protesters climbed atop the infantrymen...
nypost.com
Ukraine Says It Thwarted Russian Plot to Murder Zelensky as ‘Gift’ for Putin
Thomas Peter/ReutersRussian agents plotted to assassinate Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and top Ukrainian military officials as a “gift” to Vladimir Putin as he’s sworn in for a fifth term—but Ukrainian security officials caught wind of the plan and thwarted the operation.That’s according to the Security Service of Ukraine, which said Tuesday that two colonels in the State Security Administration were detained after it was discovered they’d been taking orders from Moscow. The two colonels, who have not been identified, were “leaking secret information to Moscow” as Russia’s Federal Security Service developed plans to take out Zelensky, the SBU said in a statement.The pair was reportedly part of a network of moles operating in Ukraine that was acting on behalf of the FSB. Among other things, the group was tasked with finding someone in Zelensky’s security detail who could take him hostage and then kill him, according to the SBU.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Why Rangers are home underdogs again — and are a nightmare for DraftKings: ‘Huge hazard’
"I can tell you, easily, that the Rangers are our biggest liability these playoffs."
nypost.com
Trump Has 'Weird Confessional Tell' When Doing Something Wrong: Attorney
Tristan Snell, who worked on the Trump University fraud lawsuit, compares that case to the hush money trial.
newsweek.com
Jon Stewart’s ‘Everybody’s in L.A.’ Guest Spot Could Get John Mulaney ‘Sued‘
Adam Rose/NetflixJohn Mulaney’s free-wheeling, ongoing Netflix special Everybody’s in L.A. might want to start informing their guests that they’re being recorded live. On Monday night, Mulaney’s guest Jon Stewart seemed to forget that little detail before possibly defaming the loud-dressing millionaire and Lakers superfan Jimmy Goldstein on stage. Or was it all a bit?Just like the series premiere on Friday, Monday’s sophomore episode welcomed a beloved comedian to play a notorious Angeleno. First, it was Will Ferrell playing record producer and beret aficionado Lou Adler, and on Monday night, we got Andy Samberg in a long gray wig and a fully bedazzled cowboy get-up that’s a pretty spot-on match for Goldstein’s usual court side attire.“I know I’m unconventionally handsome,” Samberg-as-Goldstein told his hosts. “Some people might even say I look like a lascivious side character in an Oliver Stone film that gets cross-cut with night footage of a snarling wolf. And people can say their jokes about me, but I think it takes great courage to dress this way.”Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Business Insider EIC to Step Down Months After Ackman Fiasco
Noam Galai/Getty for for American Society of Magazine EditorsBusiness Insider’s top editor Nicholas Carlson is stepping down.“Team!” he wrote in an email to staffers, which was obtained by The Daily Beast. “Something I hope you know about me is that I believe life is an adventure. That we only have so many heartbeats and we should use them to live life to the fullest. In that spirit, I’ve decided to make a very big change in my life: Later this summer, I will be stepping down from my position as Global Editor-in-Chief.”The news of his exit was first reported by Semafor.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Stormy Daniels takes the stand in Trump criminal trial
Adult film actress Stormy Daniels took the stand to testify in the unprecedented criminal trial of former President Trump on Tuesday.
foxnews.com
Donald Trump Really Did This to Himself
He probably wouldn’t even be on trial if he hadn’t been such an annoying, frugal boss.
slate.com
Sen. Rubio: TSA Must Stop Enabling Illegal Immigration | Opinion
Since 2022, Joe Biden has released about 7 million more illegal immigrants into the U.S., and we're on track to break further border-crossing records this year.
newsweek.com
Trump privately urged Greene to drop push to oust Speaker Johnson
Former President Donald Trump spoke privately with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene and urged her to drop her push to oust Speaker Mike Johnson, a source told ABC News.
abcnews.go.com
White House official urges US mining projects in nations deemed 'risky' by corporations
A senior White House adviser has voiced the necessity of encouraging mining projects in countries where Western corporations might be hesitant to invest.
foxnews.com
Will There Be A ‘Selling The OC’ Season 3 Reunion On Netflix? Everything We Know
We need to talk about that finale fight.
nypost.com
Ex-Trump special prosecutor Nathan Wade defends conduct, claims he was treated 'unfairly'
Ex-Trump special prosecutor Nathan Wade told ABC News' Linsey Davis he didn't think he did anything wrong after he resigned from the election interference case.
foxnews.com
Jean Smart Tells Drew Barrymore How She Broke A Rib While Filming ‘Mare Of Easttown’: “I Went Over A Railing And Down A Flight Of Stairs”
Smart also suffered a concussion from the accident.
nypost.com
Knicks need more from thin bench unit to get past fast-paced Pacers
New York Post Sports anchor Dexter Henry and SNY’s NBA insider Ian Begley break down the Knicks’ Game 1 win of the Eastern Conference semifinals over Indiana at Madison Square Garden on Tuesday night.
nypost.com
IDF plants Israeli flags, roll over ‘I heart Gaza’ sign with tanks as Rafah ground assault intensifies
An Israel Defense Forces tank crushed a sign that read “I (Heart) Gaza” as the forces seized control of the vital Rafah border crossing Tuesday. The Israeli military moved into the southern Gaza city even as ceasefire negotiations with Hamas were supposedly ongoing, according to reports.
nypost.com
Tom Selleck Says CBS Should “Come To Their Senses” And Renew ‘Blue Bloods’: “The Cast Wants To Come Back”
"We aren’t sliding off a cliff; we’re doing good shows and still holding our place. So I dunno," Selleck said. 
nypost.com
Ukraine Naval Drones Get a Deadly Air-to-Air Missile Upgrade: Reports
Russia released footage of a Ukrainian naval drone that appears to be armed with R-73 air-to-air anti-aircraft missiles.
newsweek.com
Italian Grandma Insists on Sweet Act Whenever Anyone Visits the House
Granddaughter Lara Severino told Newsweek: "The fact that she is 82 and still cooks every meal for herself every day is so incredible to me."
newsweek.com
Chrissy Teigen explains why she skipped 2024 Met Gala after neck brace sparks concern
The "Chrissy's Court" star hasn't attended a Met Gala since walking the 2017 red carpet in a sheer, feathery gown with her husband, John Legend.
nypost.com
College football national championship odds, picks: Target these two long-shot bets
These two teams have long odds that offer value to bettors.
nypost.com
Kendall Jenner looks like an angel in second vintage Givenchy dress at Met Gala 2024 afterparty
The model changed into an ethereal winged minidress after wearing another 1990s Givenchy style on the red carpet.
nypost.com
Ukraine Says it Foiled a Russian Spy Agency Plot to Assassinate President Zelenskyy
Two colonels in the State Guard of Ukraine, which protects top officials, were held on suspicion of enacting the plan.
time.com
Pastor John-Paul Miller casually announced his wife’s death to his congregation
Mica Miller, the wife of a South Carolina pastor she accused of being abusive before she was found dead, died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, according to the local medical examiner. The 30-year-old’s death was ruled a suicide by the Robeson County Medical Examiner, Richard Johnson, ABC 15 reported on May 6.
nypost.com
Drake, Kendrick Lamar receive invite from WWE legend to settle rap beef on show
WWE legend Shawn Michaels offered Drake and Kendrick Lamar to settle their beef at NXT on Monday as the two continued to trade barbs on tracks.
foxnews.com
The best Met Gala 2024 memes: Kim Kardashian’s waist, Dan Levy’s outfit and more
Social media had a field day creating hilarious memes from the 2024 Met Gala.
nypost.com
Preparations Ramp Up for Global Security Force to Quell Haitian Violence
More than half a dozen nations have pledged personnel to a multinational effort to stabilize Haiti, where gangs have taken over much of the capital, setting off a major humanitarian crisis.
nytimes.com
Togo's longtime leader eliminates presidential elections by signing new constitution
Togo's president has enacted a new constitution eliminating presidential elections, prompting concerns that he aims to prolong his family's longstanding rule.
foxnews.com
Trump Plan to Limit Stormy Daniels’ Juicy Details Goes Sour
Lucas Jackson/ReutersA last-ditch effort by Donald Trump to halt jurors from hearing the more salacious details of his sexual affair with porn star Stormy Daniels blew up in his face on Tuesday, as the judge used the former president’s very same reasoning to arrive at the completely opposite conclusion.With Daniels set to testify later Tuesday, Trump had his lawyers start the morning by asking Justice Juan Merchan to block prosecutors from questioning the porn star too closely about their one-night stand on July 13, 2006, during a charity event at the Edgewood Tahoe Golf Course on the Nevada state line with California.Susan Necheles, a Trump defense lawyer, argued that the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office shouldn’t be allowed to ask what exactly happened at the hotel that night.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Woman Spends $12K on Laser Hair Removal, Then Learns Inconvenient Truth
The results from the treatment weren't quite what the woman had envisioned when spending such a high amount.
newsweek.com
I had a wardrobe malfunction at my best friend’s wedding — she said I ruined her big day
A bridesmaid has recounted losing her best friend and feeling humiliated at a wedding, all over a small wardrobe malfunction.
nypost.com
The Danger of Lumping China, Russia, North Korea, and Iran Together | Opinion
There is a growing consensus that China, Russia, North Korea, and Iran are aligning into a modern Tripartite Pact.
newsweek.com
The Met Gala has banned 3 foods from its menu — here’s why Anna Wintour is not ‘fond’ of them
No garlic breath on the red carpet for these A-listers!
nypost.com
Why the Met Gala still matters
Rihanna at the 2015 Met Gala. | J. Countess/FilmMagic Turns out the first Monday in May is the perfect venue for celebrity image-making. On Monday night, some of the biggest celebrities in the country, dressed in their finest and most outrageous couture, assembled at the steps of New York City’s Metropolitan Museum of Art for the biggest red carpet event of the year. They entered the museum for a high-profile celebration of fashion — sponsored by TikTok this year — that remained entirely out of sight of the public’s gaze, so that all we saw was the arrival of the beautiful and wealthy. This is the Met Gala, and for an event that is theoretically just for fashion nerds and doesn’t even get televised inside, it has a remarkable cultural cachet. The Gala, which falls on the first Monday of May, purportedly celebrates the Anna Wintour Costume Center’s keystone exhibit every year. It’s overseen by the Center’s eponymous queen: Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour. This year, the exhibit is called “Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion” and features some of the museum’s oldest and most fragile garments. Guests have accordingly been asked to follow the dress code “Garden of Time,” after a 1962 short story by J.G. Ballard, with moody florals, clock motifs, and even outstanding archival pieces all expected to fit the theme. Stars like Zendaya, Jennifer Lopez, Bad Bunny, Kim Kardashian, and Cardi B were all in attendance — even as exploding protests over the war in Gaza and a just-averted strike by Condé Nast workers threatened to cast a shadow on the rarefied gathering. When the Met Gala was first instituted in 1948, it would not have boasted such an A-list roster of guests, nor such a trendy corporate sponsor (albeit one currently in crisis). The Gala has always been glamorous, but it used to be a local event, primarily a showcase for the society ladies of the Upper East Side. It took decades of careful strategizing and alliance-building with Hollywood to make the Met Gala the pop cultural phenomenon it is today. Now, the Met Gala shines because it is an unparalleled occasion for celebrity image-building. It is a showcase for both the illusion of accessibility and unreachable glamour at the heart of modern celebrity. Here’s how it got there. How the Met Gala went from midnight supper to opium-scented art show to celebrity showcase Sonia Moskowitz/Getty Images Diana Vreeland with Ralph Lauren at the 1984 Met Gala. The Met’s Costume Institute was born out of the Museum of Costume Art, a library devoted to the art of theatrical costumes. In 1946, Lord & Taylor president Dorothy Shaver decided to bring the collection to the Met. Fashion, she felt, needed the cultural power that comes from allying with a major museum. It needed its history preserved and its present recognized to be respected as a major and vital art form. The Met agreed to take the collection — with the caveat that the American fashion industry would be responsible for raising the funds for the Costume Institute’s entire annual operating budget. The Met Gala was conceived out of this grim necessity. At the time, the party was planned by publicist Eleanor Lambert, and it didn’t even take place at the Met. It was a midnight breakfast hosted at Manhattan institutions like the Waldorf Astoria, Central Park, and the Rainbow Room. It was a glamorous affair, but it was for local society and fashion insiders only. In 1974, Diana Vreeland arrived at the Met as special consultant for the Costume Institute from Vogue. There, she had been editor-in-chief and was fired, according to rumor, for refusing to mind her budget. Rumor also had it that New York society royalty Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and Babe Paley campaigned for her to take the new post. Vreeland brought with her a new edge. She introduced the concept of linking the gala to an Institute exhibit via a theme, the first one being “The World of Balenciaga.” Her parties were lavish and romantic. “There was evocative music and sometimes even fragrance was pumped into the air,” so that “regardless of the fashions being presented, it always felt like a delicious opium den,” recalled designer Steven Stolman in Town and Country in 2018. The opium was sometimes close to literal. New York magazine reported in 2005 that Vreeland liked to use a signature perfume in the galleries for each party, and for a 1980 exhibit on China, Vreeland scented the air with the YSL eau de toilette Opium. When guests complained, she explained that the fragrance was needed to create the appropriate air of “languor.” Along with instituting the iconic theme, Vreeland first brought celebrities to the Met Gala. Under her watch, major popular artists including Andy Warhol, Diana Ross, and Cher rubbed shoulders alongside politicians like Henry Kissinger. After Vreeland’s death in 1989, the fate of the Gala was up in the air. Wintour was brought in to host for the first time in 1995, shortly after her arrival as Vogue’s editor-in-chief. The next year, however, the honors went to Wintour’s rival Elizabeth Tilberis, fellow British expat and editor-in-chief of Harper’s Bazaar. It was Tilberis, in many ways, who created the first modern Gala. Tilberis’s Met Gala was sponsored by Dior, which had just named a newly ascendant John Galliano artistic director. Diana, Princess of Wales, attended that year, fresh off her divorce from now-King Charles, appearing in a Galliano-designed blue satin slip gown. The look caused a sensation. Richard Corkery/NY Daily News via Getty Images Princess Diana in her iconic Met Gala look in 1996. The dress, tame by the standards of today, represented Diana freeing herself from the strictures of royal life with a slinky, negligée-inspired look that surely would have been frowned upon by Queen Elizabeth. For Diana, the gown was a piece of image-making that allowed her to make a statement without having to say a word. For Galliano and Dior, it proved their cultural relevancy and their ability to make clothes that spoke for the wearer. For the Met Gala itself, the moment was a breakthrough. It showed how important the Met could be when it came to both fashion and celebrity: a place where two symbiotic institutions could meet and be celebrated in the best possible light. The Met Gala is highly public and highly exclusive. That’s a potent combination. Michael Loccisano/Getty Images Anna Wintour on the Met steps, for the 2023 Met Gala in New York City. After Tilberis died of cancer in 1999, Anna Wintour took over the Met Gala on a permanent basis. And Anna Wintour understands the value of star power. Wintour has always had a canny sense of how closely fashion and celebrity are intertwined, and how much each depends upon the other. Under her reign, the cover stars of Vogue went from models to actresses. The Met Gala has followed suit. It’s become a coveted celebrity ticket — not least because going to the Met Gala and, ideally, serving as a co-host gives you a better shot of landing that Vogue cover. Wintour also makes sure that she and the Gala retain control over just how all those celebrities make their fashion statements. Frequently, she’s the one who matches celebrities with designers. You can track the slow evolution of the Met Gala brand under Wintour’s watch. In 2005, a mere six years into the Wintour era and less than a decade after Diana’s newsmaking moment, New York magazine allowed that Wintour’s camp “like[d] to think of the Costume Institute Ball, held this year on May 2, as a sort of Oscars for the East Coast.” By 2019, 20 years into Wintour’s reign, that nascent ambition was now conventional wisdom. The Sydney Morning Herald declared the Met “the fashion Oscars” without irony. Wintour was helped along in her quest for relevance by the advent of streaming video and social media, both of which helped reinvigorate red carpet coverage. It was common now for pop culture die-hards to follow along on the internet with celebrity arrivals at major award shows and events, and to share their opinions of the fashion on Twitter and Instagram. Celebrities add to the intimacy of the affair by letting viewers into their prep process in streams and Instagram stories. If modern technology is central to the Gala’s relevance, it also provides a venue for Wintour to show off the Gala as a financial powerhouse. Every year the Gala has a new heavyweight corporate sponsor, frequently from the tech sphere. (This year’s is TikTok; in the past they’ve included Instagram, Apple, and Amazon.) It still makes enough money to provide the Costume Center’s entire annual operating budget. Last year, the gala brought in almost $22 million, with tickets selling for $75,000 each and tables for brands to buy starting at $350,000. Karwai Tang/Getty Images Mike Coppola/Getty Images NDZ/Star Max/GC Images Kim Kardashian in Marilyn Monroe’s gown at the 2022 Met Gala. The Met Gala is now the event where celebrities come to reveal a new image or refine an old one, and where the public follows along on the internet with bated breath. Zendaya announced her transition from Disney star to adult actress by acting out a Cinderella transformation on the Met steps in 2019. Rihanna proved she had the fashion cred to read a theme with nuance and the charisma necessary to pull off a dramatic look when she showed up to the 2015 Met Gala, themed to the influence of Chinese fashion on the West, in an enormous imperial yellow fur cape from Chinese couturier Guo Pei. Kim Kardashian built parallels between herself and Marilyn Monroe when she arrived at the 2022 Gala in Marilyn’s iconic “Happy Birthday, Mr. President” dress. The Met Gala continues to fascinate in part because of the alchemy Wintour has created: an assemblage of dozens of celebrities at the height of their fame, taking full advantage of fashion as an art form for image-making. Yet at the same time, the Gala remains a highly alluring mystery. Only Vogue is allowed to take photos inside the party, with the occasional highly curated exception (many attendees have made a tradition of bathroom selfies, where we see a Mad Libs-y melange of A-listers that only add to the party’s mystique). The event itself is not televised. It is not livestreamed. It is not accessible to anyone who is not explicitly invited, which includes most of us. The Gala is thus both highly visible and still a black box — no small feat in an age of overexposure. It allows celebrities to speak to their public without words and then vanish off again into the night, unknowable and unreachable, the way almost nothing else in the social media era does. Sometimes, though, the heady, decadent fantasy of the Met Gala can become a liability. This year, the Condé Nast union, locked in a bitter contract dispute with company management, threatened one of Condé’s most lavish showcases with the possibility of a strike on the day of the Gala. Since Condé Nast includes Vogue, the potential for disarray at the Gala itself was high — high enough that the union explicitly credited their just-announced win to their willingness to do “whatever it takes” on the first Monday in May. Meanwhile, protests over the war in Gaza are raging across the city as the museum prepares for the Gala, with police arresting dozens of student activists on college campuses. It remains to be seen whether the public can remain enamored with celebrity opulence when real-world concerns are just outside, waiting to crash the party. Update, May 7, 10:12 am: This story, originally published on May 6, has been updated multiple times, most recently to include several celebrities who attended the 2024 Met Gala.
vox.com
Golden Retriever's Ritual When Owner's in the Bath Has Internet in Stitches
If Lucy's owner leaves the door unlocked, a four-legged intruder comes into the bathroom with a gift just for her.
newsweek.com
Doja Cat sports another shocking all-tights sheer look at Met Gala 2024 afterparty
The "Paint The Town Red" artist rocked up to Richie Akiva’s Met Gala afterparty at Casa Cipriani wearing a Vetements sheer tights look.
nypost.com
Brittany Howard on why latest album came from a period of intense soul-searching
Five-time Grammy winner Brittany Howard talks about how her latest album was born from a period of intense soul-searching and solitude in Nashville.
cbsnews.com
Former GOP Senate candidate takes on House Republican who voted to impeach Trump
Tiffany Smiley is challenging Rep. Dan Newhouse, one of the last two Republicans in the House who voted to impeach Trump.
cbsnews.com
New Yorkers to Get $1,400 Checks: Here's Who's Eligible
The New York School Tax Relief Program approved the rebates to help homeowners afford their school tax bills, and most will arrive by September.
newsweek.com
Walker Buehler's return featured encouraging signs. Can he can build on those?
Simply returning to the major leagues marked a significant milestone for Walker Buehler. But Buehler and the Dodgers are hopeful he could be more than just another pitcher.
latimes.com
Radio Blackouts As 'Hyperactive' Sun Fires off Fourth X-Flare
Sunspot AR3663 released an X4.5-class solar flare on May 6, after a series of three other X-clas solar flares in the days prior.
newsweek.com
5 smart mortgage moves to make this May
Here's how experts say you can make the most of today's mortgage loan environment.
cbsnews.com
King Says He’s Too Busy With Work to See Harry During London Trip
Gary Miller / Getty ImagesPrince Harry arrived in London Tuesday afternoon and then dramatically announced his father King Charles had said he was not able to meet him during his sojourn in the capital, despite the fact they will be just a few miles apart. Harry arrived in London on Tuesday afternoon for a church service celebrating his Invictus Games project on Wednesday, and shortly thereafter his office made a statement which said Harry would not be meeting the king due to the king’s “full program.”In a statement provided to The Daily Beast, Harry’s spokesperson said: “In response to the many inquiries and continued speculation on whether or not the Duke will meet with his father while in the UK this week, it unfortunately will not be possible due to His Majesty’s full programme.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Ukraine Says It Foiled Russian Plot to Kill Zelensky
The Ukrainian security services arrested two Ukrainian colonels and accused them of spying for Russia. They said the plot also targeted top Ukrainian intelligence officials.
nytimes.com
Ukraine says plot to assassinate President Volodymyr Zelenskyy foiled
2 Ukrainian security officers have been detained and accused of treason over an alleged Russian plot to kill President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
cbsnews.com