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CNN host calls Biden foreign policy 'a mess,' suggests Israel killing Hamas leader could help Harris

CNN's Dana Bash said the Biden administration's foreign policy has been a "mess," and suggested Israel's killing of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar could help the Harris campaign.
Read full article on: foxnews.com
AOC faces censure from Democratic Socialists for recognizing Israel’s right to exist — despite pol’s criticisms of Hamas war
The New York chapter of thee Democratic Socialists of America is presenting a resolution to "censure" Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for ailing to sufficiently support "Palestinian Liberation."
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nypost.com
The chaos, conspiracy theories, and controversy surrounding Liam Payne’s death
Singer Liam Payne at the “All of Those Voices” premiere on March 16, 2023, in London, England. Liam Payne died Wednesday in Buenos Aires, leaving fans around the globe mourning the former One Direction singer — and grappling with chaos, conspiracy theories, and controversy in the wake of the 31-year-old’s death. Argentine police confirmed that Payne, who came to Buenos Aires two weeks ago to attend a concert by his former bandmate Niall Horan, had died after falling from the third story of his hotel. The BBC obtained the transcript of two 911 calls that were made from the hotel with concerns for Payne’s safety shortly before his death. Authorities later clarified that Payne died as a result of injuries from the fall.  In a joint statement posted to Instagram, the former members of One Direction — Niall Horan, Harry Styles, Louis Tomlinson, and Zayn Malik — said that they were “completely devastated” by “the loss of our brother, who we loved dearly. The memories we shared with him will be treasured forever.” As a member of the massively popular UK boy band, Payne achieved a very rare level of global fame, but faced addiction struggles that he spoke about publicly following the band’s breakup. His last single, “Teardrops,” released in March, left fans speculating about his mental health. Just days before his death, Payne had received a cease-and-desist order from his ex-fianceé Maya Henry. The premature death of any public figure is a collectively mourned tragedy, but when a large and devoted fandom faces this kind of loss, the ripple effects can be intense. Often, fans in this situation are met with what psychologists term disenfranchised loss — when there’s a lack of community support system for this grief because the “loss” of a celebrity or an intense parasocial relationship isn’t one that society tends to recognize as real or legitimate.  In such a context, fans look online for other fans to share their experience with, which can lead to plenty of confusion and chaos. The circumstances of Payne’s death contributed to the spread of misinformation about what happened, as did coverage by tabloid media.  Who is Liam Payne, and how did he become famous?  Payne initially auditioned for the fifth season of The X Factor in 2008 with a rendition of Frank Sinatra’s “Fly Me to the Moon.” He was just 14. (Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole, with whom he would go on to share a child, served as one of the judges at the time.) Payne was dismissed and brought back to the show twice before being cut by executive producer and judge Simon Cowell. However, Cowell encouraged him to come back in a couple of years.  At 16, Payne tried out again for the competition’s seventh season in 2010 where his Michael Bublé-inspired cover of “Cry Me a River” earned him a standing ovation from Cowell. He failed to advance as a solo act but received a fateful second chance when guest judge Nicole Scherzinger suggested that he and his future bandmates — Styles, Horan, Malik, and Tomlinson — compete as a boy band under Cowell’s mentorship. One Direction made it all the way to the finals before coming in third.  Throughout their time on the show, the group accumulated a fervent international following on social media, especially Tumblr. Soon after the competition, they signed with Cowell’s Syco Entertainment and released their single “What Makes You Beautiful” from the album Up All Night in 2011. The album was notably successful in the United States, debuting at No. 1 on the Billboard 200. They became the first UK group to top the US charts with a debut album, marking a new British invasion. Throughout their time as a band, One Direction released five albums — their final record excluding Malik, who exited the group in 2015 — and two concert films, One Direction: This Is Us and One Direction: Where We Are. In 2015, they released their final album, Made In The A.M., before each remaining member embarked on a solo career.  What’s been happening since 1D’s split?  A year after One Direction’s final album, Payne released his solo single, “Strip That Down” featuring Quavo, from his first and only album LP1. The R&B-tinged track was fairly successful, peaking at No. 10 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 3 on the UK Singles charts. However, LP1 received largely negative reviews.  Payne’s solo career and celebrity were met with less buzz than his bandmates, notably Styles. He largely garnered headlines for his relationships and personal life. In 2016, he started dating Cheryl Cole and had a son, Bear, with the singer in 2017 before they split a year later. In 2021, he opened up about the “severe” addiction issues he dealt with during his boyband days on The Diary of a CEO podcast. The singer revealed that he took a lot of “pills and booze” and experienced suicidal ideation. “The day the band ended, I was like, ‘Thank the Lord,’” he said on the podcast. “I know a lot of people are going to be mad at me for saying that, but I needed to stop, or it would kill me.” The following year, he sat down for an interview with YouTuber Logan Paul on his podcast Impaulsive which prompted his less-than-favorable reputation among One Direction fans in his final years. On the podcast, Payne made some questionable claims about his role in the band, stating that the idea for One Direction started with him and that his first solo single “outsold” the rest of the group’s debuts. He also discussed negative interactions with his ex-bandmates and discord within the group. What happened on the day of Liam Payne’s death? On October 16, Payne had been in Argentina for two weeks, in part to attend a Niall Horan concert. Roughly an hour after posting photos and videos with his girlfriend, influencer Katie Cassidy, on his Snapchat, posts claiming that Payne had fallen from his hotel balcony began to circulate on X. TMZ confirmed his death with partially cropped photos of Payne’s dead body, which they later removed.  In a statement to the Associated Press, Buenos Aires police said that Payne fell from the third floor of the Casa Sur Hotel in the Palermo neighborhood of Argentina’s capital at 5:07 pm local time, resulting in extremely serious injuries. Police also found medication in his room.  The next day, Buenos Aires police shared a preliminary autopsy that pointed out “craniocerebral injuries were sufficient to cause death” as well as “internal and external hemorrhages in the skull, thorax, abdomen and limbs.” How did the media respond?  When the news first broke, many on social media refused to believe it, in part because Payne had continued to update his accounts throughout the day until shortly before his death. That changed abruptly when TMZ published a photograph of Payne, ostensibly under the guise of identifying him and “confirm[ing] early reports from witnesses.” The outlet quickly unpublished the photo due to public backlash, but retained a description of Payne’s body at the scene.   The treatment of the situation by TMZ was the beginning of a flood of sensationalized reporting surrounding Payne’s death. Readers of outlets ranging from tabloids to CNN quickly learned about the damage done to Payne’s hotel room, the 911 caller who reported that Payne was allegedly “trashing the room” and had taken “too many drugs and alcohol,” and the legal battles with ex-fiancée Maya Henry that reportedly “overwhelmed” Payne prior to his death. The tabloids also fed speculation about Payne’s mental health, referencing his past mention of suicidal thoughts and circulating reports of his “erratic” behavior in the lead-up to the incident.  Platforms like X were rife with misinformation, most notably unsourced videos and photos falsely purporting to be of Payne either falling or having fallen to his death, all of which were subsequently debunked.  What was the controversy with his ex-fiancée? Weeks before his death, Payne received criticism from One Direction fans online for displaying so-called attention-seeking behavior at Horan’s Bueno Aires show on October 2. On Snapchat, he said he announced that he was attending the show and had some things to “square up” with Horan. In videos, Payne can be seen eagerly engaging and taking photos with fans seated outside of his suite. After the show, Payne was spotted posing for more fans outside. After the concert, Payne posted a photo of himself and Horan, stating that he was “so proud” of his former bandmate.     Amid that discussion, clips of Payne’s comments from his interview with Paul began to recirculate on TikTok and X, as well as other ridiculed interactions he had on social media. He was also still dealing with criticism from fans that he was a controlling partner after a TikTok his current girlfriend Cassidy posted in August where Payne quips that she looks “nice and covered up for once.”  On October 14, his ex-fiancée Maya Henry — to whom he was engaged from 2020 to 2022 — made some troubling allegations on The Internet Is Dead podcast about her relationship with Payne, which she called “toxic.” In the most chilling moments of the interview, she accused him of “play[ing] with death” and threatening suicide as a “manipulation tactic.” She said she and her family offered to get him help in a rehab facility, which he ignored. She also stated that she sent him a cease-and-desist letter after he allegedly wouldn’t stop contacting her through her iCloud accounts.  She also claimed that Payne’s family had warned her against releasing her first novel, Looking Forward, this past May, which she says was “inspired by true events.” Given the book’s subject matter — a woman’s traumatizing experience with a famous man — fans speculated that it was based on her relationship with Payne. In the book, the main protagonist Mallory is coerced by her partner into receiving a painful at-home abortion. Mallory is then discouraged by her partner’s team from seeking medical treatment for hemorrhaging for fear of being spotted in public.  How has the industry reacted? In the wake of Payne’s death, social media was flooded with entertainment industry tributes from Payne’s colleagues and friends, everyone from the Backstreet Boys to Paris Hilton. Dermot O’Leary, the host of X Factor, the British reality competition show where One Direction was famously created in 2010, posted to Instagram that Payne’s death was “the worst news.” “I remember him as a 14 year old turning up to audition on The X Factor, and blowing us away singing Sinatra. He just loved to sing.” Payne’s neighbors and close friends recounted moments of kindness and compassion, including the time he reportedly saved the life of a friend in a fire. “I’m devastated,” Rita Ora, who previously collaborated with Payne on the Fifty Shades Freed soundtrack, wrote on Instagram. “He had the kindest soul, I will never forget. I loved working with him so much — he was just such a joy to be around on and off stage.” Several relatives of Payne’s former bandmates reacted publicly, including Harry Styles’ mother, who shared a broken heart emoji on Instagram. The band itself issued a joint statement via Instagram. Additionally, former band member Louis Tomlinson updated Instagram with a lengthy tribute to Payne, saying he was “devastated to be writing this but yesterday I lost a brother.” In a statement, Payne’s family described themselves as “heartbroken” by the loss. “Liam will forever live in our hearts and we’ll remember him for his kind, funny and brave soul,” the family stated. “We are supporting each other the best we can as a family and ask for privacy and space at this awful time.” How have fans reacted?  Because the early reports of an out-of-control man endangering himself were so out of sync with the upbeat, calm social media videos uploaded to his feed from earlier in the day, many fans initially refused to believe he’d died. People magazine reported that the videos shared on Payne’s feed the day of his death had actually been created four days earlier. Still, it was enough to jump-start a wave of wild speculation, including the false conspiracy theory that his death was somehow connected to the ongoing criminal case against Sean “Diddy” Combs. Internet trolls also flooded the hotel where he died with ironic and mocking reviews, while others reportedly turned to harassing Henry, flooding her Instagram comments following his death. Many of Payne’s fans, however, were left simply reeling from the shock. Local fans turned the location of Payne’s hotel into an impromptu memorial site after his death, leaving candles, flowers, and other tributes in his memory and singing his songs.  “I’ve always loved One Direction since I was little,” one of the fans gathered there told the Associated Press. “To see that he died and that there will never be another reunion of the boys is unbelievable.” Another fan told CNN that she’d been unable to see the group on their Argentine tour stop. Her visit to Payne’s memorial site, she noted, was “the only time I was able to clap for him.”
6 m
vox.com
Woman slashed with razor, Amazon jacket-wearing menace knifes man in the eye in NYC subway chaos: cops
The victim, whose age is unclear, was riding a northbound No. 2 train when Maritza Abreu, 49, suddenly picked the blade up off the floor and slashed her in the face at the 110th Street-Central Park North station, leaving a deep gash, authorities said. 
9 m
nypost.com
Mom shamed over ‘entitled’ shopping trick she uses with her kids
A mom has been dragged online after sharing her 'parenting hack', where she lets her daughter pick out whatever she wants when they go shopping.
nypost.com
Brian Cashman turned the tables on his Yankees doubters
Funny, we aren’t hearing now from all those many Yankees fans who suggest GM Brian Cashman is a fool, a dope or an idiot. Or about how they generally want him out. 
nypost.com
Steve Sarkisian won’t touch Quinn Ewers vs. Arch Manning question
Steve Sarkisian does not want to go there.
nypost.com
Bodycam footage shows suspect try to light bomb as he’s chased by police on Washington highway
A Washington state man strung out on fentanyl tried to detonate a homemade bomb as he was surrounded by police following a highway pursuit, shocking bodycam footage shows. The Bellevue Police Department and Washington State troopers say they were chasing a stolen black Mercedes sedan on Interstate 90 when the driver, identified as 42-year-old Sokphana...
nypost.com
Golf pro Kelley Brooke accuses partner at Bethpage golf course of stealing $300K — and trying to to frame others, including autistic teen
Kelley Brooke, a well-known female golf pro who was named 2018's LPGA Professional of the Year, claimed in the lawsuit that the firm's former vice president, Paul O'Donoghue, pocketed loads of cash during his six years running the course's pro shop.
nypost.com
Prada and Axiom Space reveal modernized NASA spacesuits for the 2026 moon landing
The suits are to be used for NASA’s Artemis III mission, which will mark humankind’s first return to the moon since 1972. It will see the first woman and the first woman of color walk on the moon.
npr.org
Early-balloting skeptic Kari Lake explains the turnaround that led to her Early Voting Bus Tour
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Arizona’s Republican Senate nominee, Kari Lake, voted early this election — after repeatedly denouncing the option just a couple years ago. “We just can’t wait until the end, and we have to bank the vote,” the former TV-news anchor explained, talking to The Post on her campaign bus. Her early vote last week...
nypost.com
Martha Stewart got too drunk on gin in college and hasn’t tried it since, but says she’ll sample Snoop Dogg’s new booze
"We are real friends," the rapper told the crowd. "This is not TV, this is not made up. We really care about each other. Martha, I love you."
nypost.com
Kawhi Leonard out ‘indefinitely’ in latest Clippers injury crisis
Kawhi Leonard is going to be out for a while. 
nypost.com
Oklahoma parents and teachers sue to stop top education official's classroom Bible mandate
The suit alleges that the mandate violates the Oklahoma Constitution because it involves spending public money to support religion.
latimes.com
Aldi offers Thanksgiving meal for 10 people for less than $50
Aldi touts lowest-priced Thanksgiving meal in five years, besting a similar offer from rival Walmart by about $2.
cbsnews.com
This NYC heiress’ Cold War retreat in Connecticut that she expanded — but never lived in — has listed for $25.5M
In 1951, the eccentric heiress purchased a lavish property in New Canaan for the event of a Soviet attack -- only to expand it and never live inside.
nypost.com
Kamala Harris’ Fox News interview: Letters to the Editor — Oct. 18, 2024
NY Post readers discuss Vice President Kamala Harris’ interview with Fox News host Bret Baier.
nypost.com
Fox News interview with Kamala Harris draws 7.1 million viewers, more than quadruple channel’s average audience
The viewership for Wednesday's showdown far outstripped Fox News Channel's daytime audience of 1,571,000 for the third quarter of this year.
nypost.com
Virginia’s Tony Bennett suddenly retires right before season in college basketball stunner
Bennett will hold a press conference on Friday at 11 a.m. to discuss his decision. 
nypost.com
Simon Cowell postpones auditions for ‘Britain’s Got Talent’ in the wake of Liam Payne’s death
Simon Cowell postponed “Britain’s Got Talent” auditions following Liam Payne’s sudden death. The former “X Factor” judge reportedly called off the tryouts last minute after hearing the tragic news. Watch the full video to learn more about Simon taking a step back from his work due to his protégé’s passing. 
nypost.com
Israel killed Hamas’s leader. What happens next?
Yahya Sinwar during a celebration of International Quds Day in Gaza City on April 14, 2023. | Yousef Masoud/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images The killing of Yahya Sinwar, the leader of Hamas and architect of the October 7 attacks, could be a pivotal moment in the war in Gaza and the wider conflict in the Middle East. It might even be an opportunity to end the fighting — but only if both sides of the war treat it that way.  According to preliminary Israeli media reports, Sinwar, along with two other Hamas fighters, was killed on Wednesday in the southern Gaza city of Rafah when Israel Defense Forces (IDF) opened fire on a building where the three were holed up. The troops then ordered an airstrike against the building, collapsing it. When IDF troops entered what was left of the building on Thursday, they noticed that one of the killed Hamas members looked like Sinwar. The body’s identity was confirmed by DNA testing on Thursday.  While Sinwar has been described as a “dead man walking” by Israeli officials for months, he was reportedly not the target of the IDF operation and it’s very surprising that he was apparently above ground and accompanied by only a few fellow fighters. For months, US and Israeli officials have said Sinwar was likely deep underground in Hamas’s tunnel network, surrounded by hostages effectively acting as human shields. Israeli authorities say they believe Sinwar had been in a tunnel with six hostages who were executed by their captors in late August, though it’s not clear when exactly Sinwar left.  What will his death mean for Hamas? Jonathan Lord, director of the Middle East Security Program at the Center for a New American Security, said that with Hamas already severely degraded after a year of Israeli assaults, Sinwar’s death, alone, would likely result in “no change to Hamas’s military capabilities.” But, he added, “politically, Sinwar’s death leaves a gaping hole in the movement, at least in the near term.” Sinwar, explained Born in the Gaza city of Khan Younis in 1962, Sinwar had been a member of Hamas since its origination in 1987, and founded its internal security service, known as the Majd. He acquired a reputation for brutally enforcing loyalty to the movement by murdering and torturing suspected traitors and collaborators.  Sinwar was arrested for murder and kidnapping in 1988 and sentenced to four life terms in Israel. During his time in prison, he reportedly learned Hebrew and consumed Israeli media and books to learn more about his adversary. Sinwar was able to put those lessons to use after he became one of more than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners released in 2011 in exchange for the captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit.  Six years after his release, he became Hamas’s leader in Gaza. Within the Hamas leadership, he was considered among the least willing to make political compromises with Israel and the closest to Iran. Sinwar was reportedly the main architect of the October 7 attacks and was the one who picked its official name, Operation al-Aqsa Flood. After Hamas’s global political leader Ismail Haniyeh, was killed in an Israeli bombing in Tehran in July, Sinwar took over that role as well. Over the past year, Israeli and American authorities have often described Sinwar as the main obstacle to a ceasefire.  Sinwar was committed to full Israeli military withdrawal from Gaza, and less willing to compromise than Hamas leaders based outside of Palestine. In early October, the New York Times reported that American intelligence assessed that Sinwar did not believe he would survive the conflict, wanted to see Israel embroiled in a larger war in the Middle East, and was not interested in reaching a compromise. All of which, it seems, has been proved correct. What’s next for Hamas — and the war in Gaza It’s not immediately clear who will take Sinwar’s place. Many of Hamas’s senior leaders and Sinwar’s top lieutenants have also been killed over the past years. In terms of global leaders, the most obvious candidate, if only because he’s the most prominent Hamas figure still alive, is Khaled Meshaal, a founding member of the group who was chair of Hamas’s political bureau from 1996 until 2017, when he was replaced by Haniyeh. Meshaal is currently based in Qatar. It’s also possible Hamas might choose a younger face from within its politburo — the main decision-making body.  For Israel, Sinwar’s death is a major political and strategic victory. “This is our bin Laden moment,” Nimrod Novik, former senior adviser to the late Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres, told Vox. Novik described the killing as a tremendous opportunity for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “to declare victory” and push for a ceasefire deal and hostage release deal along the lines of the one Israel offered in late May, and which Hamas accepted — albeit with some key alterations — in early July. Talks over that deal eventually collapsed when Netanyahu added additional conditions.   “The guy that you, Bibi, kept saying is blocking the deal is gone,” said Novik, a fellow at the Israel Policy Forum. “Can you do something creative?” The message from Washington was similar. “This moment gives us an opportunity to finally end the war in Gaza,” ⁦Vice President and Democratic Presidential nominee Kamala Harris said in a brief statement.  For the moment, however, that doesn’t seem to be how Netanyahu sees it. “Today, evil took a heavy blow — the mission ahead of us is still unfinished,” the prime minister said on Thursday.  For now, attention turns to the remaining hostages held in Gaza, with many families fearful that more may be killed in retaliation for Sinwar’s death. Officially, Hamas is believed to be holding 101 of the 254 hostages abducted on October 7, though Israeli authorities believe as many as half of those may be dead.  Sinwar’s death comes at a time when Israel has increasingly been shifting its political attention and military resources toward its war with Hezbollah in Lebanon and Syria as well as its escalating direct conflict with Iran, though strikes in Gaza — including a deadly one earlier this week on a hospital where displaced people were sheltering — have continued.   Netanyahu has also reportedly been considering a plan proposed by several former generals to turn northern Gaza into a closed military zone, evacuating its entire civilian population and starving out any who remain. Defense Minister Yoav Gallant has denied that Israel is moving forward with this so-called starvation plan, which is opposed by the US.  On Monday, the US issued a statement telling Israel to improve humanitarian conditions in Gaza — particularly by allowing in more aid shipments, which have reportedly slowed to a trickle, or risk the supply of US weapons. On the other hand, the statement came on the same day Israel received a new top-of-the-line missile defense system.  This wouldn’t be the first time the White House — and Netanyahu’s Israeli critics — have hoped the prime minister would “take the win” in Gaza. In a White House statement back in May, Biden assured Israelis that “Hamas no longer is capable of carrying out another October 7” and that the pursuit of “total victory” would not bring the hostages home or “bring Israel lasting security.” Perhaps Sinwar’s killing will change the calculus of the Israeli government. But it’s also possible that Netanyahu and his senior officials might see this as vindication — if they’d heeded Biden’s caution back in May, Sinwar would presumably still be alive. And of course, hopes of a ceasefire will dim further if hostages are killed by Hamas in retaliation.  One thing is for sure, the war in Gaza, which has killed more than 40,000 people, is back at the center of attention. The question is whether that means it will finally be brought to an end — or at least a pause — or if a more-or-less permanent reoccupation of the territory is in store. 
vox.com
‘The Lincoln Lawyer’ Season 3 Episode 2 Recap: Where French Dips Lead
“If the cartel wanted me dead, I’d be dead. We’d all be dead.”
nypost.com
Liam Payne's One Direction bandmates 'devastated' by his death: 'There will be more to say'
One Direction's surviving members Louis Tomlinson, Zayn Malik, Niall Horan and Harry Styles reacted Thursday in a joint statement to Liam Payne's death.
latimes.com
Could We Finally Be Getting A ‘Twitches 3’? Tamera Mowry-Housley Confirms There’s “Interest”
Tamera already has a couple of ideas for what a new installment could look like.
nypost.com
FBI arrests Alabama man in hack of SEC’s X account that caused bitcoin price spike
FBI arrests Alabama man for SEC hack on X that caused bitcoin price spike.
washingtonpost.com
Zayn Malik speaks out after Liam Payne’s death: ‘I loved and respected you dearly’
“I think he is just kind of happy,” the singer speculated about his former band member. “He likes going to the studio, making the songs, he just doesn’t want to do anything that happens after that."
nypost.com
These are the sectors with the most job postings on Indeed
Certain types of workers find themselves particularly in demand amid robust hiring across the U.S., new analysis finds.
cbsnews.com
Possible bear attack was actually vicious murder, investigators say
Investigators are asking for help solving a "vicious" murder in a remote camping in Montana that was so brutal a 911 caller had reported it as a possible bear attack.
abcnews.go.com
Travis Kelce jokes he ‘didn’t do nothing’ during bye week — despite PDA-filled NYC getaway with Taylor Swift
When asked by a Chiefs' TikTok social media employee what he did during the team's off week, the tight end replied, “I didn’t do nothing. I ain’t did nothing.”
nypost.com
The week in whoppers: Brian Stelter bizarrely spins Harris’ Fox interview, Kamala denies Blinken’s threats to Israel are . . . threats and more
CNN analyst Brian Stelter claimed that Vice President Kamala Harris' interview on Fox News was actually a "sign of toughness."
nypost.com
Zayn Malik posts emotional tribute to former One Direction bandmate Liam Payne after his untimely death
"I never got to thank you for supporting me through some of the most difficult times in my life," he wrote, in part.
nypost.com
Shop Birkenstock for your entire Christmas gifting list this year
And just like that, she entered the room — in Birks.
nypost.com
One Direction pays tribute to Liam Payne: 'We will miss him terribly'
Former One Direction star Liam Payne died Oct. 16 at age 31.
abcnews.go.com
Netflix shares soar after it reveals how many new subscribers signed up
Netflix is working to increase revenue from its new ad-supported plans but has said it does not expect advertising to become a primary growth driver until 2026.
nypost.com
Migrant who ganged up on NYPD cops in Times Square nabbed by ICE after slap-on-the wrist jail sentence 
One of the migrants caught on video ganging up on New York's Finest in Times Square is on his way to getting deported -- thanks to federal immigration agents who kept tabs.
nypost.com
Father and Son Indicted on Murder Charges for Georgia School Shooting
A grand jury handed up charges against Colt Gray, 14, who is accused of killing four people at his high school. His father, Colin Gray, is accused of giving him access to the murder weapon.
nytimes.com
Fox News Politics: Who was Yahya Sinwar?
Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more Fox News politics content.
foxnews.com
Shop the best fall shoes from Zappos for men and women that’ll turn heads
These new kicks are worth kicking into your shopping cart.
nypost.com
New York Liberty will get ticker-tape parade if they win WNBA finals, mayor says
Give us Liberty! And ticker tape. The New York Liberty will become the first New York City women’s sports team to parade through the Canyon of Heroes if they win the WNBA finals, said Mayor Adams. Adams made the promise of a ticker-tape for the Brooklyn women’s basketball stars to The Post during this week’s...
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nypost.com
Liam Payne investigators question 2 women who were in singer’s hotel room hours before his death
The prosecutor's office said the two women "had been with the musician in his room" at CasaSur Palermo Hotel in the "hours prior" to his death.
1 h
nypost.com
CBS News Trump-Harris poll finds Trump with slight edge in Arizona
In the race for the U.S. Senate seat in Arizona, Democrat Ruben Gallego leads Republican Kari Lake by 9 points.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Who has the hottest seats in the NFL?
Here is the Sports+ hot-seat meter (1 is the coolest, 10 is the hottest) for head coaches, general managers and quarterbacks.
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nypost.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage’ On CBS, A ‘Young Sheldon’ Spin-Off About Georgie And Mandy Raising Their Daughter In Mid-’90s Texas
Who knew The Big Bang Theory was going to become a cinematic universe?
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nypost.com
Key Pennsylvania region sees ‘waitlist’ for Trump signs; lawmaker says voters ready to reverse Dem policies
Lehigh County Republican State Sen. Jarrett Coleman and Northampton County GOP leaders Andrew Azan III and Tom Carroll spoke to Fox News Digital about their collective ground game.
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foxnews.com
Hamas chief Yahya Sinwar’s death could lead to retaliation against hostages: experts
The death of Hamas chief Yahya Sinwar could either clear a path for cease-fire negotiations to restart and free the hostages in Gaza, or force the terror group to retaliate and kill some of the captives, experts say.
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nypost.com
Katie Holmes and look-alike daughter Suri Cruise bundle up for fall stroll in NYC
The Carnegie Mellon freshman returned to New York City over the weekend to support her famous mother's Broadway debut in "Our Town."
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nypost.com
Secret Service chief warns of Trump shooting report's "impact on agency morale"
The independent review panel found the Secret Service suffers from "deep flaws" and called for it to undergo "fundamental reform" to carry out its mission of protecting top government officials around the world.
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cbsnews.com
Union drive at Wells Fargo heats up as employees allege intimidation tactics
Wells Fargo employees seeking to unionize say the bank fired members of their proposed bargaining unit ahead of a scheduled vote.
1 h
latimes.com
‘Utah curls’ trend makes $1.5K extensions look low-effort: ‘Like having Rapunzel hair’
Their expertly balayaged and blown-out manes became known as "Utah curls," named for the origin of the #MomTok troupe.
1 h
nypost.com