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CBS shaking up NFL pregame show still won’t make it worth your time

Not to be cruel or cold, but what difference does it make? 
Read full article on: nypost.com
The week in whoppers: The BBC goes to bat for Raisi, Mayorkas pushes border BS and more
Why is the BBC running interference for a brutal Islamist dictator?
nypost.com
Supreme Court's Contradicting Its Own Rulings, Justices Say
The Supreme Court ruled on Thursday to uphold lower-court decisions on sentencing requirements for firearm convictions.
newsweek.com
Political consultant allegedly behind fake Biden robocall indicted
New Hampshire's attorney general announced Thursday that Steve Kramer was indicted on 26 charges in the state and the FCC said he had been fined $6 million.
cbsnews.com
Trump and GOP repeatedly echo Nazi and far-right ideology as they aim to retake White House
A video on former President Trump's Truth Social mentioned a 'unified Reich' under a second Trump term. Critics were quick to pounce.
latimes.com
Help! I Just Wanted to Help a Friend With His Wedding. Now His Bride Is Threatening to Sue.
Is this what thanks looks like?
slate.com
Serial Killer Robert Pickton Clings to Life After 'Major Attack' in Prison
A notorious serial killer clings to life after he was brutally attacked inside a Canadian federal prison by other inmates earlier this week.
newsweek.com
Dissenting Justice Kagan Appears to Shade Alito for Flying Upside-Down Flag
Jacquelyn Martin/Getty ImagesJustice Elena Kagan seemed to take a subtle swing at her conservative Supreme Court counterpart Samuel Alito in her dissent to a ruling issued Thursday morning.The case, which was split 6-3 in its decision, was over a gerrymandered election map in South Carolina that a lower court had ruled as discriminatory towards Black voters. The Supreme Court’s decision Thursday reversed that ruling, finding no bias toward Black voters in MAGA Rep. Nancy Mace’s (R-SC) district.Alito, writing for the conservative majority, said the plaintiff NAACP brought no significant evidence of racial bias in the map’s redistricting. He claimed they “did not offer a single alternative map” that would’ve redistricted the zone according to politics without also depressing Black voting power.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Construction Wraps Up on the World's Most Expensive Arena
The Intuit Dome in Los Angeles is packed with technology that its developers hope will redefine the fan experience. Here's a look inside.
newsweek.com
Off-duty LAPD officer charged with assault with a deadly weapon
Six-year L.A. police veteran Richard Podkowski, 28, was arrested Tuesday and charged with assault with a deadly weapon near LAX.
latimes.com
‘Man in finance?’ Stylists say it’s time to elevate your ‘bro style’
It's about to be 'finance bro' summer. But, are the 'bros' dressed for the occasion?
nypost.com
Kate Middleton Artist Reveals the Truth Behind That Portrait
Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast/Reuters/TatlerThe artist whose portrait of Kate Middleton has been roundly derided as amateurish and lacking any resemblance to Kate herself has said her intention was to capture the Princess of Wales’ “soul.”Hannah Uzor told Tatler magazine, who commissioned the portrait for its July cover: “It’s really important to capture the soul of the person, so I spent a lot of time looking [at Kate], looking at her pictures, watching videos of her, seeing her with her family, seeing her in diplomatic visits, seeing her when she’s rowing or visiting children in a hospice. It’s been really interesting for me to get a sense of who she is.”Readers responding to her explanatory video continued to rubbish the picture—in which “Kate” is seen in a white floor-length Jenny Packham evening dress she wore in 2022—saying it bore no likeness to its subject. Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Dow plunges over 600 points as Wall Street worries rates will stay high
The weakness was widespread and overshadowed another blowout profit report from market heavyweight Nvidia.
nypost.com
Demi Moore Is Back With One of the Best—and Wildest—Movies of Her Career
At a nutty Cannes, the nuttiest movie earned the longest ovation.
slate.com
House lawmakers flunk ‘so-called’ university presidents over spike in campus antisemitism
A House education panel gave “so-called” university presidents failing grades on Thursday for allowing antisemitic encampments to spread on their campuses this spring — part of demonstrations which in some cases blocked Jewish students from entering school buildings and disrupted final exams. Northwestern University President Michael Schill, Rutgers University President Jonathan Holloway and UCLA Chancellor...
nypost.com
‘Heat Dome’ Leads to Sweltering Temperatures in Mexico, Central America and U.S.
Extreme heat has left millions in sweltering temperatures, strained energy grids and resulted in Howler monkeys dropping dead in Mexico.
time.com
The Question the World Needs to Ask About the Middle East Right Now
If the Middle East is a puzzle, it’s one that grew even harder to imagine ever clicking together as the evening of May 19 gave way to May 20. In the space of 24 hours, the President of Iran was killed, and the Prime Minister of Israel learned that a warrant for his arrest for…
time.com
Say their names: With Biden mum on Hamas’ US hostages, Trump can champion their cause
Hersh. Keith. Sagui. Edan. Omer. Theirs should be household names across the United States. But they’re not, and the fault lies with President Biden.
nypost.com
Why King Charles and Prince William suddenly canceled their upcoming royal engagements
Recent developments in UK politics forced King Charles and Prince William to make some last-minute changes to their royal schedules.
nypost.com
More than 1,800 congressmen once enslaved Black people. This is who they were, and how they shaped the nation.
The Washington Post has compiled the first database of slaveholding members of Congress by examining thousands of pages of census records and historical documents.
washingtonpost.com
At least 10 hospitalized when 11-year-old NYC student unleashes pepper spray in school cafeteria
The unidentified minor sprayed the noxious gas inside PS 219 in Queens on Thursday morning, sources the The Post.
nypost.com
TikTok has turned into GoFundMe for the cash-strapped: ‘Instead of money, the currency is attention’
"In order for TikTok to pay off my student loans in one fell swoop, I would need 247 million people to watch this video for five seconds."
nypost.com
Burglars beware: Police are using 'bait houses' in this wealthy California town
Faced with an uptick in home burglaries, police in Atherton decided to plant traps to snare burglars.
latimes.com
Schumer-backed border bill fails a second time with even less Dem support
Senators rejected a border bill backed by Schumer and some Democrats that Republicans claimed would be "worse than doing nothing."
foxnews.com
Biden moves to designate Kenya as a major non-NATO ally
President Biden on Thursday announced his intent to designate Kenya as a major non-NATO U.S. ally, the first such designation for a sub-Saharan African country.
cbsnews.com
Bella Hadid makes a statement in keffiyeh dress at Cannes: ‘Free Palestine forever’
The supermodel headed out for ice cream on Thursday while wearing a vintage outfit fashioned from an Arab garment known as a keffiyeh.
nypost.com
Trump’s Bronx rally live updates: Ex-prez expected to speak on NY’s economy, migrant crisis
Donald Trump is holding an NYC campaign rally on Thursday at Crotona Park in the Bronx, one of the most Democratic counties in the US. Follow the Post’s live updates for the latest news on Trump’s speech and scheduled protests.
nypost.com
Beyoncé’s Latest Lawsuit Claims She Stole Lyrics for ‘Break My Soul’
Michael Buckner/Getty ImagesBeyoncé is still riding high off the release of her country-inspired album Cowboy Carter, but this week, she was hit with a copyright infringement lawsuit that may put a damper on her summer.The superstar has been accused of using a sample in “Break My Soul”—the lead single off 2022’s Renaissance—that allegedly infringes upon the copyright of a 2002 track by Da Showstoppaz called “Release a Wiggle.”“Break My Soul” interpolates the song “Explode” by New Orleans artist Big Freedia, who is also named in the lawsuit. The suit was filed by the original members of Da Showstoppaz, who say that Big Freedia’s song, which was then interpolated into Beyoncé’s song, used their “unique and distinctive lyrics and musical composition” without permission. Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Florida football player Michai Boireau arrested after 150-mph police chase
The defensive lineman "drove recklessly, radically changing lanes and driving through traffic at speeds of more than 100 mph, passing vehicles on the shoulder," according to a report.
nypost.com
Nikki Haley supports Trump in 2024 with her eyes on 2028
Now the thing to watch is where her supporters go.
washingtonpost.com
Sen. Graham sounds alarm on terror threat after Marine base incident: 'Wake-up call'
Republican South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham sounds off on the threat an open border poses to another terrorist attack inside the United States on "Hannity."
foxnews.com
Toronto awarded the first international WNBA team as league expands
Toronto's WNBA expansion team is expected to play its first game in 2026. A team name has not yet been announced.
cbsnews.com
Can I call out my niece for homophobic posts? Give advice to this Hax question.
Every week, we ask readers to think like an advice columnist and submit their advice to a question Carolyn Hax hasn’t answered.
washingtonpost.com
Hacks shows cancel culture is a joke
Jean Smart as Deborah Vance in Season 3 of Hacks The worst thing to happen to very good television shows is when they run out of things to say. Telling a good story and what fans and network executives want (more show) are forces often at odds with one another, and I’ve watched more than a few of my favorite shows crumble under the pressure to give it one more go.   That’s why I was a little worried about Hacks, which stuck its landing in season two. The second season finale had Deborah Vance (Jean Smart) firing Ava Daniels (Hannah Einbinder), telling Ava that it was time for her to succeed on her own. The move came from love, and perhaps from Deborah, a little bit selfishly, wanting to enjoy her success alone.  As a conclusion for these characters, it was well played and well earned — good for fans, extremely tricky for the writing team. The show relies on the friction created by the strange, begrudging love these two have for one another. Without the turbulence, there is no show here, and at the same time, more of the same rocky road antics between the two could feel repetitive.       But it turns out, I had nothing to worry about. Hacks still has plenty to say.   The show continues to be a consistent delight. This third chapter focuses on Deborah’s ambitions of becoming a late-night network TV talk show host. Through her journey, the show asks questions — both cynical and earnest — about what the future of commercial comedy looks like and which comedians actually get to take risks. The answer to the latter is usually the very rich and very famous.  These themes collide in “Yes, And,” the eighth and penultimate episode of the season, in which Hacks’s antihero finally gets “canceled.”   This was inevitable — cancellation is one of the most omnipresent conversations in modern comedy. There are few things less enjoyable than an allegedly funny boomer unable to see how unfunny they’ve become. And as the show establishes, Deborah Vance has always been a boomer (derogatory).  But as the show makes clear, she’s not quite the worst boomer. Hacks is deeply self-aware, with its sharpness balancing its optimistic sitcom underpinnings. We’ve followed along as Deborah has learned how to navigate the modern world with a terminally millennial woman as her guide, and both of the main characters’ fumbles are framed more as miscommunications than personal failings. Still, below the slapstick of a “woke mob” coming for Deborah Vance, Hacks has canny observations about who gets canceled, who holds power, and what actually means anything in an industry that revolves around the rich and powerful. “Yes, And” opens with a seemingly innocuous mistake: Deborah Vance has been double-booked at both a UC Berkeley ceremony where she’ll be awarded with an honorary degree and an appearance at Palm Springs Pride. It’s a tough call, but Deborah has to go to Berkeley because she’s trying to build some momentum and buzz for the late-night hosting gig. A fancy event at a prestigious college will do that, and it turns out that a vaunted New Yorker writer profiling Deborah will also be there to finish up the article. Knock this out of the park and that late-night show is hers. But unfortunately for Team Deborah Vance, that plan quickly goes south — enough to make double-booking the least of their concerns. While at Berkeley, a supercut of Deborah telling racist and ableist “jokes” emerges and goes viral. Calling them jokes is generous because they’re just blobs of bigotry without anything resembling a punchline (e.g., cars shouldn’t be made by Asian people because Asian people aren’t good drivers). As Deborah tells Ava, the clips are stitched from material she did decades ago and she obviously doesn’t feel that way today. More importantly, though, Deborah needs the New Yorker and network executives to know she’s not problematic because she really wants this job. As the clip circulates, Deborah and Ava have to figure out what to do. Ignore it and hope it goes away? Admit she said those things, but don’t apologize? Acknowledge the clip and apologize?  Deborah complains about being picked on, and that it isn’t fair that she’s being targeted. Ava thinks Deborah’s completely lost the plot. “You get to be rich and famous for making jokes,” Ava replies, urging Deborah to just say sorry. “People are allowed to have their reactions to them.” As Ava delivers this very astute observation Deborah (at a frat party no less), it’s not difficult to connect her point to the contemporary discourse surrounding real–life comedians getting critiqued for their jokes or behavior and then calling themselves victims of cancel culture. Whether it’s Dave Chappelle trying to defend his anti-trans humor, Amy Schumer talking about Middle East politics, Jerry Seinfeld talking about the state of modern-day comedy, or Ellen DeGeneres talking about getting “kicked out” of the business — it all revolves around not being able to handle critique.  As Ava points out, there are no victims of cancel culture. No one is ever canceled. No one’s success is ever taken away. No one’s actually being censored. It’s simply a personal misreading of the power dynamic. All of the comics I listed above continue to have some combination of robust deals with streaming services, accolades for speaking out, and huge stadium shows.  Fame inverts the comedy landscape. Famous comedians will always have more power than a non-famous person they’re targeting, which means they can’t help but punch down, a comedy no-no. Now that social media platforms and the internet have democratized fame and visibility, said famous comedians are being held accountable. Accountability can feel a lot like some kind of injustice to very famous, rich people. But at the end of the day they’re still very rich and famous. “No one’s actually canceled,” Ava says.  The show putting these words in Ava’s mouth is important because she also lost a job over a joke. In the first season, Ava fires off a tweet about an anti-gay senator that gets her fired and kicks off the events of the show. Unlike famous comedians, she had to suffer consequences for what she did (i.e., moving to Las Vegas and working for Deborah Vance). She has firsthand experience about what being professionally “canceled” is actually like. At the same time, her trials and tribulations — becoming a landlord and not having much of a social life — were extremely privileged problems to have.   Ava keeps reminding Deborah that she could end the kerfuffle by apologizing. Deborah, so stubborn, would rather go through the fresh hell of college improv and bribing frat brothers with wine than say sorry. She insists comedians don’t apologize for their comedy. It isn’t until a dean pulls the plug on her ceremony, and ostensibly damages the New Yorker profile, that Deborah finally agrees to attend an on-campus town hall and listen to the students offended by her old material. The ending of the episode is indistinguishable from a fairy tale. After Deborah’s apology, her New Yorker profile is glowing. It’s all about her humanity and how she’s a difficult, but daring comedian for wanting to learn and grow. With this newly demonstrated ability to listen, the writer surmises that Deborah would be the perfect late-night host. Right after Ava reads her the article, Deborah gets word that she clinched the gig and snagged her dream job.  But while Deborah Vance got her happy ending, there’s a sly wryness to it that comes back to the show’s bigger point about famous people complaining about cancel culture: It’s all a joke.  Of course, we’re happy when Deborah’s past doesn’t derail her future because she’s the show’s protagonist, and we know her story and who she is. (It doesn’t hurt that her transgressions are much less severe than real-life parallels.) She also apologizes because she seems to have some semblance of regret and wants to be better. And because she listens to the students tell her how wrong she was and shows remorse, she gets a glowing profile in a fancy magazine.  The barest minimum gets a handsome reward because the bar is on the floor.   While that’s a satisfying story for our fictional hero, it’s a little less enjoyable to think about how the episode underlines that Deborah’s job was never really in question. The viral clip and online rage were never going to ruin her chances. The network would likely always have given her the hosting gig. Between the second and third seasons of Hacks, Deborah has reached that tier of Seinfeld and DeGeneres, the level of prestige where any consequence can be met with complaint, and that’s just as good as an apology. It ultimately doesn’t matter whether Deborah was actually sorry about the offensive stuff she said or if she just wanted to appear sorry because her dream gig was being threatened.  “Yes, And” gets at the idea that we all want to believe that people, especially famous rich ones, can be held accountable. We want our personal judgments to have some kind of bearing on an industry run by rich and powerful people. But that’s all a setup, something we fall for because it feels a little better than being the punchline.
vox.com
‘The Blue Angels’ Ending Explained: Where are Amanda Lee and the Other Pilots Now?
The end of The Blue Angels may be only the beginning.
nypost.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Tires’ On Netflix, Where Shane Gillis Stars In A Comedy About A Failing Auto Repair Shop
Gillis created the series with Steve Gerben, who stars as Will, and frequent collaborator John McKeever.
nypost.com
2 climbers die on Mount Everest, 3 still missing
The climb by Joshua Cheruiyot Kirui, a 40-year-old banker at Kenya Commercial Bank, had been closely followed in Kenya.
cbsnews.com
Good Riddance to The Good Doctor
The popular series was more of an amalgamation of non-autistic people’s misconceptions about autism than a nuanced exploration of what it’s like to be someone with autism.
time.com
How the rise of audiobooks has revolutionized reading
Audiobooks allow readers to listen to a book rather than reading. This allows books to be read while doing other tasks, like driving or exercising.
foxnews.com
22 Very Best Memorial Day TV Sales of 2024: Shop Best Buy, Samsung, More
Springtime savings are in order.
nypost.com
Jeremy Renner Shares Major Health Update Over a Year After Snowplow Accident
Jeremy Renner gave a major update regarding his health.
newsweek.com
Lenny Kravitz on whether he's looking for love
Grammy-winning artist Lenny Kravitz gets personal with "CBS Mornings" co-anchor Gayle King, sharing his perspective on finding love and whether he's open to it right now.
cbsnews.com
New Mexico man charged with trying to burn down a San Bernardino County preschool, strip mall
The suspect is on probation for setting a church on fire in New Mexico in 2022.
latimes.com
Endangered Whale Found Dead in 'Gruesome' Discovery
In 2023, there were only 356 of the North Atlantic right whale remaining in the world, with humans being the main reason for their decline.
newsweek.com
Jews, like all other Americans, have the right to lobby politicians
Readers respond to a Post article on Jewish business leaders lobbying in the aftermath of Oct. 7.
washingtonpost.com
Best Amazon Memorial Day Sales 2024: 50% Off Tech, TVs, Headphones, More
Upgrade your tech for less.
nypost.com
Hershey’s is being sued over ‘deceptive’ Reese’s packaging
Some choco-holics are taking Hershey's to court.
nypost.com
Should I Worry About Catching the Bird Flu?
Here's what to know.
time.com
Lenny Kravitz says he's at a place in his life where he's open for love
Grammy-winning artist Lenny Kravitz tells "CBS Mornings" co-anchor Gayle King about his thoughts on finding love and says he's "just open" right now.
cbsnews.com