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For Justice Alito, Presidents Stand Above the Law

He appears willing to allow Trump and future presidents to escape criminal prosecution for their acts.
Read full article on: nytimes.com
Kim Kardashian 'Lesson' She Can Learn From Taylor Swift Feud
Tortured Poets song should draw a line under clashes since 2016, when Kardashian joined in Swift's feud with Kanye West, says comedian.
newsweek.com
Live updates: Witness testimony continues in Trump’s hush money trial
Witness testimony continues Monday in Donald Trump’s trial on allegations of business fraud related to a hush money payment.
washingtonpost.com
Saudi Arabia hosts World Economic Forum Special Meeting
CNN's Eleni Giokos attended a special World Economic Forum meeting held outside the traditional Davos setting to get a closer look at the transformation shaping Middle Eastern economies.
edition.cnn.com
Ukraine Could Soon Get Machine-Gun Mounted Drones
The weaponized drones are "a groundbreaking fusion of aerial superiority and lethal precision," a U.S. drone-making company said.
newsweek.com
‘NYC Prep’ Finally Released From The Bravo Vaults … But Maybe It Should Have Stayed Locked Up?
NYC Prep was billed as the real life Gossip Girl when it debuted on Bravo in 2009.
nypost.com
Key parts of Hope Hicks’s testimony, from the Trump trial transcript
The former top aide and spokeswoman for Donald Trump testified Friday about his messaging strategy and the Stormy Daniels hush money payment.
washingtonpost.com
The Atlantic’s June Cover Story: Anne Applebaum on How “Democracy Is Losing the Propaganda War”
Applebaum reports that autocratic regimes are making common cause with MAGA Republicans to undermine liberalism and freedom around the world.
theatlantic.com
Internet In Stitches As Huskies On Walk Can't Agree On Which Way To Go
One of the dogs wanted to go see her girlfriend, while the other wanted to play with bunnies. One of them finally budged. But who won?
newsweek.com
Putin Orders Tactical Nuclear Weapons Drills in New Meltdown
Alexander Kazakov/Sputnik via ReutersRussian President Vladimir Putin has ordered military drills simulating the use of tactical nuclear weapons, his Defense Ministry announced Monday, in an apparent retaliation to comments made by Western leaders about Moscow’s ongoing war in Ukraine.The Defense Ministry statement announcing the exercises said they came “in response to provocative statements and threats of certain Western officials regarding the Russian Federation.” The announcement follows a furious reaction from the Kremlin last week to recent remarks from British and French politicians.Although Russia’s strategic nuclear forces routinely conduct exercises, Moscow has not previously publicly announced drills for the use of tactical nukes. Tactical nuclear weapons typically feature less powerful warheads than those arming strategic missiles and are designed for battlefield use rather than the destruction of city-sized targets.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Kim Kardashian reacts to Tom Brady’s savage Kanye West diss after getting booed during roast
The seven-time Super Bowl winner poked fun at Kardashian's co-parenting relationship with West, with whom she shares North, Saint, Chicago and Psalm.
nypost.com
Baby is missing after 2 women found dead, girl injured in New Mexico
Police identified the victims as Samantha Cisneros and Taryn Allen and said a 5-year-old girl was injured with a gunshot wound.
cbsnews.com
Over one third of working Americans more uninspired than ever, new study reveals
Four in 10 suburban survey-takers are also experiencing this productivity slump (41%).
nypost.com
Olivia Culpo, Devon Windsor enjoy girls’ night out filled with ‘extra extra’ dirty martinis after F1 Miami Grand Prix
Two other women and the Victoria's Secret model's husband, Johnny Barbara, joined the group for a night of conversation and cocktails at Casadonna.
nypost.com
Caitlin Clark at center of another awkward question before WNBA preseason debut
Indiana Fever star Caitlin Clark was involved in another odd moment with a reporter when she was asked whether "bae" was coming to her game.
foxnews.com
Miami F1: Donald Trump Brands Himself Lando Norris's 'Lucky Charm' After Maiden Win
Lando Norris opened up on his post-race interaction with former U.S President Donald Trump.
newsweek.com
Kim Kardashian looks furious as she’s ruthlessly booed at Tom Brady roast, addresses rumors they dated
Kim Kardashian did not get a positive reaction from the audience at "The Roast of Tom Brady."
nypost.com
Person Falls to Their Death at University Graduation in Ohio
Students are being offered counseling following the fatal fall.
newsweek.com
DASH bus driver was pushed, punched by passenger, video shows
A female Los Angeles city bus driver was attacked by a woman trying to ride DASH on Sunday — just two days after hundreds of Metro bus driver staged a sick-out protesting safety concerns.
latimes.com
L.A. Metro is doomed if it can't keep bus and train riders safe
Violent attacks on the Metro system have scared riders and present an existential threat to public transit in Los Angeles. Leaders have to make major changes to keep the system viable.
latimes.com
Is the Los Angeles City Council serious about ethics reform or wasting an opportunity?
The package of reforms the L.A. City Council is considering has a problem: It doesn't give the City Ethics Commission the independence it needs to do its watchdog job.
latimes.com
How much does a ticket to the Met Gala cost?
Met Gala ticket prices cost far more in 2024 than they did last year. How much is a ticket?
cbsnews.com
For two young journalists, showdown at UCLA camp was baptism by fire
The showdown between law enforcement and protesters on the UCLA campus tested two new journalists, who had no food or helmets but plenty of adrenalin.
latimes.com
‘RHONJ’ Star Rachel Fuda Says Team Melissa Gorga “Absolutely” Met The Night Before The Reunion: “When You Go Into War, You Bring Weapons”
Fuda also opened up about her feud with Giudice, her party-planning passion and her adorable family.
nypost.com
Teens rescued from abandoned Colorado missile silo; 1 injured, another facing charges
Three teenagers were rescued out of an abandoned missile silo near Deer Trail, Colorado on Sunday. At least one faces a trespassing charge.
foxnews.com
Rare May Winter Weather Warning Issued for California
Northern California was hit by steady rain and heavy snow on its mountaintops this weekend.
newsweek.com
Kyle Larson wins at Kansas in closest NASCAR Cup Series finish in history
Kyle Larson edged Chris Buescher at Kansas Speedway on Sunday night in the closest finish in NASCAR Cup Series history. The No. 5 won by a nose.
1 h
foxnews.com
Heartbroken girlfriend of Aussie murdered in Mexico breaks her silence
The devastated girlfriend of one of the Australian surfer brothers killed in a botched robbery in Mexico last month said her heart has "shattered into a million pieces" in her first public comments since authorities identified the bodies.
1 h
nypost.com
Gunman arrested after trying to shoot Pennsylvania pastor during church sermon in wild caught-on-camera moment
A gunman has been arrested after pulling a firearm on a pastor in the middle of a sermon in a terrifying caught-on-camera ordeal.
1 h
nypost.com
Israel blocks Al Jazeera, moves to close down offices in country: 'Hamas' mouthpiece'
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced Sunday that the government has voted to shut down Al Jazeera's operations in Israel despite protest from the company.
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foxnews.com
The Igor Shesterkin revival that’s behind the Rangers’ perfect playoff start
Shesterkin became the first Rangers goaltender to win his first five starts in a postseason since Mike Richter — in 1994, of course.
1 h
nypost.com
Shock As Woman Wades Through Alligator-Infested Waters to Take Out Trash
"I'm not afraid of gators, just mindful," the intrepid poster told Newsweek.
1 h
newsweek.com
D-Day veteran, 99, spreads message of peace ahead of Normandy landings anniversary
D-Day veteran Charles Shay is about to take part next month in the 80th celebrations of the landings in Normandy that led to the liberation of France and Europe.
1 h
foxnews.com
Texas Flood Map Shows Danger Zones, Live Rainfall
A new TexasFlood.org map shows how the Lone Star State has been hit by a wave of flooding since the weekend.
1 h
newsweek.com
China and Iran use 'sophisticated' tactics to target political dissidents on US soil, FBI says
American officials say foreign countries like China and Iran intimidate, harass and sometimes plot attacks against political opponents and activists in the U.S.
1 h
foxnews.com
The Sports Report: Shohei Ohtani is just what the Dodgers ordered
Shohei Ohtani hits two home runs Sunday and appears to be just what the Dodgers have needed to cure their postseason blues.
1 h
latimes.com
Gang-related shooting in Long Beach, California leaves at least 7 wounded, police say
Police in Long Beach, California, are looking for at least two male suspects who authorities believe fired at a group of people, wounding at least seven.
1 h
foxnews.com
Patriots owner Robert Kraft calls out Vladimir Putin at Tom Brady roast: ‘Give me my f---ing ring back’
New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft took the time to call out Russian President Vladimir Putin, who allegedly stole his 2005 Super Bowl ring.
1 h
foxnews.com
Tom Brady dragged at roast over breakup with then-pregnant Bridget Moynahan
"To be fair, he didn’t know. He just thought she was getting fat," comedian Nikki Glaser joked of the 2006 split during Sunday's Netflix special.
1 h
nypost.com
Crimea, Kherson Videos Show Destruction of Russian Landing Boats
Kyiv's forces destroyed a high-speed Russian boat in Crimea using a naval attack drone.
1 h
newsweek.com
Bill Belichick rips Tom Brady, former Patriots players in hilarious appearance at Netflix roast
Former Patriots legendary coach Bill Belichick surprised everyone by showing up to "The Roast of Tom Brady" on Netflix, where he ripped his old quarterback and other players.
1 h
foxnews.com
Mom made son, 3, say ‘goodbye to daddy’ on camera before shooting him dead in murder-suicide a day before custody hearing
Savannah Kriger, 32, and her son Kaiden were found dead with gunshot wounds to their heads at a San Antonio, Texas park back on March 19 -- but authorities have spent weeks piecing together their harrowing final hours as they probed the murder-suicide.
2 h
nypost.com
Donald Trump's Mar-A-Lago Case About to Be 'Hotbed of Activity': Attorney
Former federal prosecutor Joyce Vance discusses importance of May 9 deadline for CIPA court filings in federal case.
2 h
newsweek.com
How the Met Gala became the fashion Oscars
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, will assemble at the steps of New York City’s Metropolitan Museum of Art for the biggest red carpet event of the year. They’ll enter the museum for a high-profile celebration of fashion — sponsored by TikTok this year — that remains entirely out of sight of the public’s gaze, so that all we see will be 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. Wintour notoriously guards the guest list, but Zendaya, Jennifer Lopez, Bad Bunny, and Chris Hemsworth are all celebrity co-chairs of the party. This year, exploding protests over the war in Gaza and a possible strike by Condé Nast workers also threatens 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 hosts, 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, 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. Meanwhile, the Condé Nast union, locked in a bitter contract dispute with company management, is threatening 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 is high. 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.
2 h
vox.com
UN atomic watchdog chief travels to Iran, grapples with Tehran's escalating nuclear program
The head of the United Nations' atomic watchdog recently voiced concerns about Iran's enrichment of uranium and the potential for clandestine activities.
2 h
foxnews.com
UChicago Says Free Speech Is Sacred. Some Students See Hypocrisy.
The president has allowed protest encampments. But they have also disrupted campus life, and he wants the tents down.
2 h
nytimes.com
Election 2024 latest news: After big weekend in Palm Beach, Trump returning to N.Y. courtroom
Live updates from the 2024 campaign trail with the latest news on presidential candidates, polls, primaries and more.
2 h
washingtonpost.com
How teacher autonomy helps students and staff succeed at this top Florida school
Teachers at A.D. Henderson School, a small public school on the campus of Florida Atlantic University, Henderson in Boca Raton, attribute their academic success to their autonomy.
2 h
foxnews.com
The U.S. is updating its Social Security estimates. Here’s what you need to know.
A government report due later on Monday will issue fresh projections on how long the trust funds for Social Security and Medicare will last.
2 h
washingtonpost.com