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California lawmaker's mic cut off while reading bill to end sanctuary state laws, says Dems 'don't care'

A bill that would have ended sanctuary protections for illegal immigrants convicted of sex crimes against minors was voted down in California.
Read full article on: foxnews.com
Singer-songwriter Huey Lewis on seeing his songs come to life on stage
Singer-songwriter Huey Lewis joins "CBS Mornings" to talk about his new Broadway musical, "The Heart of Rock and Roll," and working through hearing loss.
1m
cbsnews.com
‘Terrible’ Zachary Quinto banned from restaurant for allegedly acting like an ‘entitled child,’ making host cry
Zachary Quinto was slammed for his alleged "bad behavior" at a Toronto restaurant during his 47th birthday trip to Canada.
nypost.com
Why D.C.-area schools are grappling with tighter budgets right now
Rising costs, the loss of covid relief funds, education reforms and changing funding formulas are all affecting D.C.-area school budgets next school year.
washingtonpost.com
Mayor Bass has no more excuses for delaying Venice Dell homeless housing
No more excuses for delaying the construction of Venice Dell homeless housing, Mayor Bass
latimes.com
Cricket World Cup taking over NYC area with matches in Nassau County
Of all the high-profile New York City-area venues to be threatened by Islamic extremists this summer, none was more unexpected than the Nassau County International Cricket Stadium (NCICS) on Long Island
nypost.com
‘The Real Housewives Of Dubai’ Star Chanel Ayan Says She Got Bravo Superfan Rihanna’s Seal Of Approval For Ayan Beauty: “I Was Really Excited To Do It”
Ayan also dished on the drama in The Real Housewives of Dubai Season 2.
nypost.com
Just say no to the matching bedroom furniture set
Designers favor mixing an array of furniture finishes and styles. Here’s how to get the look.
washingtonpost.com
Eiza González defends Jennifer Lopez against ‘disturbing’ trolls after tour cancellation: ‘Be kind’
"People are humans, make mistakes and some have personal things happening while also having to be constantly perfect in the public eye," she wrote.
nypost.com
Mexico's first female president; a Georgia cancer patient's Medicaid struggle
Mexico makes history with its first female president. How an extra $30 a month kept a cancer patient from qualifying for Medicaid.
npr.org
Bitcoin billionaire, firm to settle D.C. tax fraud suit for $40 million
Under the agreement, Michael Saylor and MicroStrategy, the business software company he founded, deny they violated D.C. law and admit no wrongdoing.
washingtonpost.com
Dog Experiences Every Emotion While at the Drive-Thru: 'The Drama'
No matter how many times Lola has been to the drive-thru, she can't contain her emotions, her owner told Newsweek.
newsweek.com
‘Entitled’ Zachary Quinto banned from restaurant after allegedly ‘yelling,’ making host cry
The Toronto eatery labeled the actor "an amazing Spock but a terrible customer," requesting Quinto "take [his] bad vibes somewhere else."
nypost.com
Democrats must defend Trump’s guilty verdict against MAGA jury denial
The danger of delegitimizing jury verdicts is real.
washingtonpost.com
Cicadas are back, but climate change is messing with them
Periodical cicadas used to reliably emerge every 13 or 17 years — but spring arriving sooner interferes with the bugs' internal alarm clocks.
cbsnews.com
Who’ll join the Yankees in trying to end New York’s continuing title drought by its headliner teams?
The title drought for the local MLB, NFL, NBA and NHL teams trudges on after the Rangers' quest ended Saturday night.
nypost.com
Kate Middleton ‘considering’ palace balcony appearance at Trooping the Colour ceremony: report
The Princess is understood to be "considering" making an appearance on the Buckingham Palace balcony if she feels well enough on the day.
nypost.com
Shania Twain Onstage Error Takes Internet by Storm
The country music legend handled the onstage mistake like a pro, with fans called Twain "amazing" and a "queen."
newsweek.com
Missing Texas teen found 63 miles away from home after leaving chilling ‘goodbye’ note for family
“Everybody’s read this letter and they’re like, that’s not Geneva. That’s just not her.”
nypost.com
Kellyanne Conway's Daughter Gets Into Spat Over Playboy Gig
Claudia Conway, 19, has hit back at criticism of her decision to share content on Playboy's website.
newsweek.com
The Sports Report: UCLA softball's season comes to an end
After a season defined by miraculous wins, UCLA comes up one comeback short, losing to Stanford in the Women’s College World Series.
latimes.com
U.S. escalation in Ukraine needs a plan
The move won’t end the war. It will only prolong it.
washingtonpost.com
Simone Biles wins 9th US Gymnastics championship
Ahead of the Paris Olympics, gymnastics star Simone Biles won her ninth all-around national championship on Sunday.
abcnews.go.com
Claudia Sheinbaum: New President of Mexico's Election Victory in 3 Charts
Sheinbaum is set to become Mexico's first female president.
newsweek.com
Sister and Family Beg Couple to Move Wedding—Internet Backs Why They Refuse
Wedding expert Zoe Burke told Newsweek: "Moving the date isn't a simple or straightforward thing to do at all."
1 h
newsweek.com
WATCH: Mexico elects Claudia Sheinbaum, 1st woman to be president, election institute says
Claudia Sheinbaum has been elected president of Mexico, marking the first time a woman has been chosen to lead the country, the election institute said.
1 h
abcnews.go.com
Today's Front Pages: Biden's Mass Migrant Amnesty, Musk and Dimon End Feud
Today's front pages feature claims that 350,000 asylum cases have been removed from the legal system and a fresh start for Elon Musk and JP Morgan's chief
1 h
newsweek.com
What Claudia Sheinbaum Has Said About Donald Trump
Sheinbaum, who has been elected Mexico's first woman president, has said she would have a good relationship with Trump if he wins back the White House.
1 h
newsweek.com
Prince William Mentions Princess Kate in Emotional Message
Prince William's reference to Princess Kate came during months out of the spotlight as she is treated for cancer.
1 h
newsweek.com
Heidi Klum shares rare photo with all four kids’ faces while celebrating her 51st birthday
The "America's Got Talent" judge welcomed Henry, Johan and Lou while married to ex-husband Seal, who also adopted her eldest child, Leni.
1 h
nypost.com
Taylor Swift Praised for Pride Month Message During 'Eras Tour'
The singer-songwriter performed in Lyon, France, on June 2 for her first Eras Tour show of the month.
1 h
newsweek.com
South Korea Announces Major Security Response to North's Balloon Stunts
After thousands of balloons filled with trash were floated across the South Korean border, Seoul has promised to suspend the 2018 military pact in its entirety.
1 h
newsweek.com
Map Shows California Cities Will 'Roast' From Heatwave
Much of the state has been slapped with an "excessive heat" warning, with temperatures predicted to soar into triple-digit figures.
1 h
newsweek.com
Russia Lost Nearly 250 Vehicles, 96 Artillery Systems in 48 Hours: Kyiv
Artillery and armored vehicles are vital resources for both sides, deep into the third year of full-scale war in Ukraine.
1 h
newsweek.com
Here’s why you need Lemonade renters insurance for your next move
Hope for the best but prepare for the worst.
1 h
nypost.com
Dodgers are winning again, but who's convinced this team will win in October?
The Dodgers' wins over the Mets and Rockies do not answer some of the longstanding questions that continue to cloud their World Series aspirations.
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latimes.com
Ask a doctor: 'Why are my hands swelling and what should I do about it?'
Some patients wonder why their hands are swelling — and what to do about it. In this installment of "Ask a Doctor," two health experts advise when to seek medical attention for swelling or edema.
1 h
foxnews.com
Election 2024 latest news: Republicans seek revenge for Trump conviction in hush money case
Live updates from the 2024 campaign trail, with the latest news on presidential candidates, polls, primaries and more.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
Harmony sets the tone even off the 'Girls5eva' set for its four stars
The actors reveal what they love about their characters and what they don't love about being women in show business.
1 h
latimes.com
The Death of Western Values—Surveillance, Conformity, and the Post-9/11 State | Opinion
The decline of Western values is not an inevitable consequence, but a result of choices made by those in power.
1 h
newsweek.com
How a woke military has created a recruiting crisis — and put Americans in danger
Fox News host Pete Hegseth tackles the issue in his new book “The War on Warriors: Behind the Betrayal of the Men and Women Who Keep Us Free."
1 h
nypost.com
The Texas Republican Party has gone off the deep end
Even before the release of an outrageous new platform, the party had become an embarrassment to itself.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
These Anti-Wrinkle Serums Soften Fine Lines and Combat Sun Damage
Scouted/The Daily Beast/Retailers.Scouted selects products independently. If you purchase something from our posts, we may earn a small commission.As we navigate the ever-evolving landscape of ‘anti-aging’ skincare products, searching for the right active serum to suit your specific skin goals can be challenging. Whether your aim is to soften fine lines and crow’s feet, remove UV-induced hyperpigmentation, or smooth out texture and the appearance of enlarged pores, there’s a targeted formula for everything nowadays. Of course, not all anti-aging serums are created equal.To help you narrow down the best one for you (and your skin type), we’ve rounded up some of our favorite skin-rejuvenating serums to help correct and prevent multiple signs of aging on the skin. From potent retinoid-forward serums to damage-erasing (and preventing) vitamin C formulas, these serums will help you achieve a radiant, youthful complexion.Read more at The Daily Beast.
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thedailybeast.com
Hunter Biden Is on Trial for Gun Charges. Here’s What to Know
Here’s what to know about the Hunter Biden trial
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time.com
The Stealth Lobbying Cause You’ve Never Heard Of: Wild Horses
An Oscar nominee is among those pushing Congress to end a brutal practice.
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time.com
Nine Books About Aging, Growing, and Changing
Living in a body is an exercise in enduring surprise and accepting change. During our lifetimes, we spring leaks, heal, grow, get sick, and age. We wake up some days and don’t recognize ourselves in the mirror. Some transformations appear on schedule—new rolls of flesh, sudden tufts of hair—and others come upon us suddenly: humbling bruises, unforeseen illnesses. But too frequently, we sanitize the moisture and mess of being alive with bland metaphors.The best writing about our physical selves acknowledges that our exteriors affect how the world receives us; that we’re shaped and changed by family, friends, and lovers; and that as long as we’re alive, our bodies are always in flux. The nine books below are radically truthful: They explore moments of great change—pregnancy, puberty, illness, athletic training, weight fluctuations, aging, transition—and the revelations that accompany them. Reading them inspires both introspection and sympathetic reaction. You’ll wince in shared pain, sigh in relief, and remember that none of us stays the same for long.A Very Easy Death, by Simone de Beauvoir, translated by Patrick O’BrianIn 1964, de Beauvoir published an arresting day-by-day account of her mother, whom she calls Maman, in her final month of life. Set during hospital visits and stolen hours at home, the book lays bare the physicality of approaching death, alongside the strange, stubborn tenderness nestled between a mother and her daughter. “No body existed less for me: none existed more,” de Beauvoir writes of the radical disorientation that her mother’s shrunken, nude form incites. Words become “devoid of meaning,” she observes, while touch, laughter, and facial expressions are a new language. In her last days, Maman finds freedom from the suffocating corset of her class and gender; de Beauvoir writes that she is able to experience “life bristling with proud sensitivities” and “no shame.” But her womanhood remains salient: In the hospital, de Beauvoir records how male doctors demean her mother, while nurses offer more compassionate care for her pain. Watching the woman who birthed her die leads de Beauvoir to fully understand how no body is permanent, and to reflect on how feelings and sensations can be passed down like eye color. Scribner Heavy, by Kiese LaymonLaymon’s memoir marks time through changing measures: weigh-in numbers, fat percentages. The book follows Laymon from childhood into adulthood, an alternately harrowing and healing journey in which the author must learn to listen to his body, even though American society has trained him to distrust, discipline, and punish it. Along the way, Laymon addresses binge eating, anorexia, overexercising, addiction, and sexual abuse. He learns early that as a Black man in a country designed to benefit thin, white, male bodies, American prejudice will bear down on him no matter how much he changes his appearance. Even when Laymon has starved himself down to his lowest weight, his mother reprimands him for considering going for a run at night, telling him, “To white folk and police, you will always be huge no matter how skinny you are.” In another revelatory moment, he writes that the number on the scale has long been “an emotional, psychological, and spiritual destination.” But with every lost pound, the psychological weight of that number grows heavier. When his weight loss spirals into disordered eating, his body knows before his mind does that he is heading somewhere dangerous. In the end, he can only escape that destination by turning toward the women who raised him, and by paying attention to the wisdom of his own form.[Dear Therapist: I’m turning 50 and panicking about my appearance] Catapult The Hearing Test, by Eliza Barry Callahan When a young musician wakes one day with “rolling thunder” thrumming through her head, her life whittles quickly into a case study. Experts are called in; appointments are arranged; doses are prescribed. She learns she’s suffering from encroaching sudden deafness, and she’s told she must enter trials, attempt hypnosis, cut out many of her favorite foods, and avoid too much stimulation, sex included. This engrossing, eccentric novel ties together our ideas about time and sensation, revealing how illness alters both. Then it untangles that knot and weaves a linguistic fabric unlike any you’re likely to have felt before. After losing her hearing, the narrator reaches outward, reflecting on the uncanny coincidences in her life and the lives of those she loves. She writes obsessively about artists who greeted bodily change with grace, and burrows deep into their projects. She finds inspiration in an internet forum for people who have also been abandoned by their senses, where members make earnest attempts to understand their new worlds. The novel finds succor in the shared experiences of shifted perception: Loss of one sensation inspires journeys through others, or leads to the solace of discovering others with similar struggles.King Kong Theory, by Virginie Despentes, translated by Stéphanie BensonThis polemic unfurls in vitriolic vignettes that inspire righteous fury. Despentes, a feminist French filmmaker and writer, takes on beauty ideals, rape, and aging, invoking the figure of King Kong—something “on the link between man and beast, adult and child, good and bad”—to imagine a kind of womanhood that claws back at cruel, unfair patriarchal standards. She begins by defending “the loser in the femininity stakes,” attempting to rescue girls from the wreckage of a society that measures their bodies against impossible ideals. In livid but conversational prose, she unveils the way beauty standards and sexual violence are parallel exercises of power, and argues that patriarchy not only wants women in pain but also demands that they hide that pain––teaching women to feel shame rather than rage when hurt. Despentes details how her own sexual assault was a process of disempowerment; she learned to resist that feeling through speaking about her pain, and through decorating and dressing herself according to her own tastes. And as she ages, she sees how society demands that older women not draw “too much attention”—and gleefully refuses, calling for all women to take pride in their changing forms. In a world that tells women to “conceal your wounds, ladies, lest they upset the torturer,” Despentes wants us to wear our scarred skin with pride, as evidence of our animal persistence.[Read: The unending assaults on girlhood] New York Review Books Lament for Julia, by Susan TaubesA specter stalks a girl—or saves her life—in this ephemeral, mystical novella, first published 54 years after Taubes’s death. The nameless spirit, for reasons unknown, is inextricably linked to its charge, a child who becomes a woman in “a transformation so mysterious and violent,” it must at times avert its eyes. The being and the reader observe Julia’s journey through the great bodily changes of puberty, when she awakes horrified and afraid by the bloodstains in her bed, and pregnancy, when Julia’s entire sensory world is rendered “exquisite and suffused with the odor of souring milk, blood, urine and excrements.” These changes alternately entrance and disgust Julia’s guardian angel, but the ghost is most disconcerted, and eventually outraged, by her gradual adoption of archetypically feminine behaviors. In the process, she’s hiding away her wild interior, which it knows to be her most genuine, embodied self: Was there even “such a thing as woman? I began to doubt it,” it thinks. Lament for Julia turns a strange, searing, and subversive eye toward the universal process of self-construction, and the ways social demands usurp women’s agency as they mature. Penguin Press I Heard Her Call My Name, by Lucy SanteSante’s book opens with a bombshell—and a play on words. The bombshell first appears to be Sante’s announcement of her gender transition to her social circle via email. But it's also, she jokes, herself: a beautiful woman. I Heard Her Call My Name is a coming-of-age tale that, like all stories about puberty, involves hormones and hair along with nerves, terror, and unexpected euphoria. Sante, a prolific writer and artist known for her memoirs and criticism, documents her late-in-life series of bodily changes, connecting that metamorphosis to her adolescent puberty, sexual awakenings, and the experience of aging into her 60s. She begins in youth, finding a “distinct rhyme” between gender transition and her childhood move from Belgium to the United States. But they’re not entirely analogous: Although the facts of her citizenship are initially rigid, the femininity Sante finds via transition is atmospheric; it is a way “of seeing the world, of organizing place and time, of the urge to give, of connectedness to others,” even as it involves injections of hormones, softening skin, new hair, and a novel tenor of voice. The book reminds us to trust our physical impulses, and demonstrates how change can take us to more liberated places than we’ve managed to find before.Read: Young trans children know who they are Avid Reader Press Easy Beauty, by Chloé Cooper JonesThis memoir combines aesthetic theory, philosophy, and personal writing to create a story of self-discovery, predicated on reconceptualizing “beauty.” Cooper Jones was born with a rare disability that renders her physical form surprising to most observers, so she’s locked out of what she calls “easy beauty”: symmetrical, simple, and legible according to entrenched standards. Her condition also means she experiences near-constant pain, which “plays a note I hear in all my waking moments,” she writes. But in her book, Cooper Jones opens up to new sensations and startling epiphanies as she teaches herself to take up space without shame and to stare back at those who dare to judge her. In turn, she finds unexpected possibilities for and sources of beauty—in crowded concerts and people moving through a museum, in watching her son’s skeleton and organs develop during her pregnancy. Seeing him in a sonogram, she writes that she is “pulsing around him, my blood, my skin, wrapped around a void” of pure potential. Through her writing, beauty becomes a moving, muscled, amorphous thing. It's a body that loves and is loved, that builds other bodies and is unafraid to bend into the unknown. Farrar, Straus and Giroux The Undying, by Anne BoyerBoyer’s book on breast cancer is at once a group memoir, a history of a personal tragedy, and a story of violence masquerading as medicine. At age 41, Boyer was diagnosed with one of the deadliest forms of breast cancer, and embarked on an excruciating, financially draining, and devastating treatment journey—but found herself in a sorority of other women who’d been through the same thing. A litany of breast-cancer survival stories miscast healing as an individualistic fable “blood pink with respectability politics,” she explains, but her memoir of diagnosis and treatment resists this framing. Instead, Boyer directs her anger toward the polluting systems that can cause cancer and the medical establishment that treats it expensively and painfully. She argues that people cannot be solo actors in pursuit of health when our world is full of carcinogens, and she rejects medical narratives that inspire shame in the ill while draining their bank accounts. In one rousing moment, she and her patient-peers reject toxic positivity in a chemotherapy room, speaking up about the pain of their treatments rather than enduring it in silence. This is part of her attempt to use her body, and her story, to change our understanding of cancer from an individual struggle to a collective one, and to forge solidarity among those it touches. Grand Central Publishing The Wind at My Back, by Misty Copeland with Susan Fales-HillCopeland’s memoir is a tale of endurance and athleticism, awe-inducing feats of motion and perseverance through mental and emotional pain. The world-famous ballerina, and the first Black principal dancer in American Ballet Theatre history, makes her book a love letter to her mentor Raven Wilkinson, another Black ballerina, who died in 2018. In the 1940s, Wilkinson decided she would be willing to “die to dance,” which she almost did––performing across the country despite violently enforced segregation laws in the South. By the time she and Copeland embarked on a friendship, Wilkinson had retired and fallen into obscurity; Copeland was furious to learn that a fellow Black ballerina had been erased from the discipline’s history. Learning from her “was that missing piece that helped me to connect the power I felt onstage to the power I held off it,” she writes. Copeland wrings meaning from the toll that dance takes, recalling “wrecked” muscles and toes “cemented in my pointe shoes.” Dance influences how she writes about physical transformations, including pregnancy—she calls her son’s kicks “grands battements.” Wilkinson’s wisdom about dance, aging, exhaustion, and exertion puts Copeland’s own struggle against ballet’s racism into historical relief. Ultimately, their pas de deux underscores the power of the art their bodies forge.
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theatlantic.com
Map Shows Countries with Bans on Israeli Passport Holders
The Maldives is the seventeenth country to impose a ban on Israeli passport holders.
1 h
newsweek.com
Man Shocks With 100-Burrito Meal Prep System That 'Changed the Game'
"For this specific video, it was one marathon of a day," Tom Walsh told Newsweek. "I made a little over 100 burritos."
2 h
newsweek.com
Zelenskyy accuses China and Russia of undermining peace summit during visit to Manila
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, during a trip to Asia, accused China of aiding Russia in efforts to undermine a Swiss-organized global peace summit.
2 h
foxnews.com