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Jake Irvin delivers as Nationals beat Dodgers again to close road trip

Jake Irvin struck out six over six scoreless innings as the Nationals prevailed, 2-0, for a series win at Dodger Stadium.
Read full article on: washingtonpost.com
Anger As Puppies Dumped Outside Shelter By Busy Road At 2:30 a.m.: 'Selfish'
The shelter feared the worst when they discovered that Brynn and Dell had broken out of their crate and were nowhere to be seen.
newsweek.com
US Army Helicopters Keep Crashing: Everything We Know
The US Army is grappling with a spike in helicopter crashes this year, with 12 serious accidents already reported leaving five dead.
newsweek.com
King Charles Latest Cancer Update, Given by Queen
Charles has expressed his frustration about being held back from his usual meetings and greetings with the public.
newsweek.com
Harrison Butker doesn’t only kick footballs
The NFL should have defended the Kansas City kicker’s right to speak his mind.
washingtonpost.com
Ivana Trump Divorce Discussions Add Credibility to Secret Audio Recording: Attorney
Trump can be heard telling his lawyer to fight the release of his divorce papers
newsweek.com
Oregon Serial Killer Fears Sparked by Murders of 5 Women
Jesse Lee Calhoun has been identified as a person of interest in connect with the deaths.
newsweek.com
‘Bridgerton’ Season 3 Star Jessica Madsen Would “Absolutely Love” for Fans to Read Cressida’s Feelings for Eloise as “Queer-Coded”
"I like to think it would make sense because, like, she hasn't bagged a guy. So, like, why not a gal?"
nypost.com
Hunter Biden Mimics Donald Trump Legal Move, Creating TV Debate Clash
The president's son hopes to push back the tax evasion trial to September, just days before the second televised 2024 election debate.
newsweek.com
Matt Gaetz Says Michael Cohen 'Blew Up' Hush Money Trial
Representative Matt Gaetz said Michael Cohen has blown up Donald Trump's Manhattan trial by lying on the stand.
newsweek.com
Great Lakes All Contain 'Hazardous' Forever Chemicals
Although the amounts of PFAS found in each lake were similar, researchers found that they got rid of chemicals at different rates.
newsweek.com
Round 2 of PGA Championship delayed after fatal shuttle bus crash
The second round of the PGA Championship has been delayed after a man was reportedly killed by a shuttle bus outside the historic Valhalla Golf Club in Kentucky.
nypost.com
Did a topless photo lead a California IVF doctor to kill his wife?
Susann Sills had posted a topless photo in a political chatroom that enraged her husband, Dr. Eric Scott Sills, according to prosecutors.
cbsnews.com
How the Yankees are trying to decode what MLB’s new bat speed stats say about their lineup
After MLB dropped a massive amount of data on bat speed there is still some figuring out to be done on what to make of it all.
nypost.com
4 day care workers arrested for lacing children's food with melatonin: Police
A day care owner and three of her employees have been arrested after allegedly sprinkling melatonin on children’s food, police say.
abcnews.go.com
How to Draw Down America's Military Presence in Europe | Opinion
To properly right-size America's presence in Europe, three steps should be undertaken.
newsweek.com
Scottie Scheffler seen in handcuffs in new video of detainment
"Here's the thing, right now he's going to jail and it ain't nothing you can do about it period. There is nothing you can do about it," an officer told the ESPN reporter filming the incident.
nypost.com
Markey targets private equity in health care
The Massachusetts Democrat released draft legislation last month that seeks to infuse more transparency and oversight of private equity firms in the health-care sector.
washingtonpost.com
Population Map Reveals How Every State Changed in a Year
Population numbers in major cities like New York and Philadelphia have dropped.
newsweek.com
Patrick Mahomes supports wife Brittany at Sports Illustrated party after Harrison Butker’s ‘homemaker’ comment
"Harrison Butker is shook," one Instagram user commented on red carpet photos of the couple, with another praising the "supportive husband."
nypost.com
Map Shows Where Nearly 800,000 Without Power After Deadly Texas Storms
Hundreds of thousands of residents were left without power after a severe storm system swept through Texas on Thursday.
newsweek.com
Top-ranked golfer Scottie Scheffler arrested before PGA Championship's 2nd round
The number one golfer in the world, Scottie Scheffler, has been arrested after a misunderstanding with traffic flow following a fatal accident, according to ESPN.
abcnews.go.com
Anya Taylor-Joy dances with Baz Luhrmann, Naomi Campbell steals the show at Cannes party for ‘Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga’
The "Furiosa" star was spotted dancing with the famed "Moulin Rouge" director to the song "Lady Marmalade" at a party on the beach.
nypost.com
At Homeboy, the scoop on Father Greg and his latest honor, from those who know him best
It's about time, former gang members say of Homeboy Industries' Father Greg Boyle being awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
latimes.com
L.A. Affairs: My ex gave me a diamond ring. Was he serious?
My ex-boyfriend and I met up at a party. We chatted and almost kissed in the elevator. That night he surprised me with a diamond ring.
latimes.com
I think I have carpenter ants in my house. What should I do?
These unusually large ants can cause serious structural damage to your home.
washingtonpost.com
At campus protests, ‘DO NOT TALK TO THE MEDIA’!
Student protest organizations have rules against speaking to the media.
washingtonpost.com
F1 News: Emilia Romagna GP Faces Big Threat As Ban Put In Place
The Emilia-Romagna Grand Prix was at risk due to a local train strike, but intervention by Minister Matteo Salvini postponed the strike.
newsweek.com
Why the Parents' Rights Movement (Still) Matters | Opinion
The parents' right rhetoric is powered, in part, by three distinct but inter-related cultural mindsets—implicit ways of understanding and making sense of the world.
newsweek.com
Huntsville Hospital Credits Staff for Success as a Top Maternity Facility
"Although we are very busy, every single patient that comes into our doors has to feel like they're the only patient," the head of labor and delivery said.
newsweek.com
In the galleries: Defining our roots as a pathway to introspection
Artists explore the various meanings of roots as family and identity, several shows explore computer modeling and 3D printing to simulate and contour space.
washingtonpost.com
New Shows & Movies To Watch This Weekend: ‘Bridgerton’ Season 3 on Netflix + More
...plus new seasons of Outer Range on Prime Video, RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars on Paramount+ and more!
nypost.com
When TikTok therapy is more lucrative than seeing clients
Getty Images Why juggle 25 people a week when you can make 30-second videos instead? Dr. Julie Smith is sitting behind a rainbow of five Post-it notes, each meant to represent one of the “Top Five Signs of High-Functioning Depression.” Said signs will be familiar to anyone who has spent time scrolling through the part of social media devoted to improving one’s mental health: “You do everything the world asks of you, so no one would ever know you feel empty inside,” you don’t find pleasure in the same things anymore, social events are tiring. Perhaps you relate to No. 3: “You find yourself scrolling on social, watching hours of TV, and eating junk food to numb those feelings.” The British psychologist and author is an inescapable presence on TherapyTok, where psychologists, psychiatrists, and licensed therapists — along with a swarm of “coaches” with varying levels of credibility — make short, digestible videos educating the public about how to decode their own brains. She’s amassed a following of 4.7 million not just by distilling mental health into 60-second spoken-word listicles but by using intensely colorful gimmicks to draw in viewers who might otherwise think they’re about to watch an object being crushed in a satisfying way. Before explaining “3 Ways Past Trauma Can Show Up in Your Present” or “5 Signs of a Highly Sensitive Person,” Dr. Julie will use a visual hook — she’ll pour out a bucket of candy, flip over a giant hourglass, or pose next to a tantalizingly tall stack of dominos (like any skilled content creator, she knows not to give us the final knockdown until at least halfway through) to keep you watching. Does it matter that “high-functioning depression” and “highly sensitive person” aren’t actual diagnoses? Maybe. Or maybe not. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Dr Julie Smith | Psychologist (@drjulie) That’s because these clips have less in common with actual mental-health treatment than they do with your average “get ready with me” video. At a time when people may be getting fatigued with therapy, it seems like some therapists don’t want to do it anymore, either. Hence the sheer number of them who are spending less time seeing clients and more time producing content in the hopes that millions of people will see it. While most full-time therapists whose rates are set by insurance companies max out at around $100,000 per year, therapists who are full- or part-time content creators can make much, much more. @TherapyJeff, real name Jeff Guenther, an individual and couples therapist in Portland, Oregon, says he can make eight or nine times that amount on social media in the form of brand deals, merch, and direct subscriptions. When I clarify whether he’s making nearly a million dollars, he says, “It’s been an especially good year.” Though he still sees about eight to 10 clients on Mondays and Tuesdays (a full-time therapist would see about 20 to 25 clients a week, he says), Guenther is best known for his straight-talking TikToks about dating and relationships where he’ll refer to his audience as “anxiously attached babes” or “relationship girlies” who are “still in their healing phase but horny AF.” With 2.8 million followers and a dating-advice book coming out this summer, he is perhaps the best example of how to become a therapist influencer by making people feel as though he’s on their side. Therapists have always been influencers, in a way — they may write books, do speaking gigs, or promote products — but in order to get famous on TikTok, they must play by its rules. What works on the app is simple, visually arresting videos that make you feel like they landed in your lap with a kind of cosmic destiny (the comments on these videos often repeat some version of “my For You page really said ‘FOR YOU.’”) Therapists do cute little dances next to cute little graphics about what it’s like to have both ADHD and PMDD; they’ll lip sync to trending songs in videos about how to spot a depressed client who might have made a suicide plan; they’ll hop onto memes as a way to criticize parents who haven’t gone to therapy. The most successful TikTok counselors don’t typically advertise their one-on-one therapy services; instead, they’ll sell products that establish themselves as mental-health experts but have the potential to net influencer-size salaries. Many offer digital courses similar to those of other educational influencers; they’ll promote their books, merchandise, or in the case of Dr. Kojo Sarfo, his comedy tour, where he sometimes asks the audience about their mental health diagnoses. Tracy The Truth Doctor also offers special mental-health coaching to fellow influencers. And then there’s the validating relationship they cultivate with viewers: Guenther has referred to people who call others “too sensitive” as “emotionless turds” and says he wishes he could write “psychologically lethal” texts on behalf of his clients (while acknowledging that this would be considered unprofessional). “I have been accused of being a toxic validator,” he admits. “Like, imagine that your ex-boyfriend is watching my content. Somebody might be coming across, like, a piece of my content that they can use in order to feel better about themselves, even when they should probably actually be doing some work and taking accountability.” But ultimately, who TikTok shows his videos to isn’t in his control. @therapyjeff You’re a relationship girlie but still in your healing phase but horny AF. Listen to my new podcasts: BIG DATING ENERGY & Problem Solved. Pre-order my book today! Join me on the new platform, Passes, for extended commentary on this topic! #therapy #mentalhealth #therapytiktok #datingadvice #relationshiptips #dating ♬ original sound - TherapyJeff Like many therapists on TikTok, Guenther is also extremely forthcoming about his own personal struggles in a way that previous generations of therapists might look down upon. He speaks about going no-contact with his mother, also a therapist, and his experience as the “scapegoat of the family.” (His tips for fellow scapegoats: Wear a T-shirt with the words “Official Family Scapegoat” on it; tell your mother she’s “constantly hijacked by shame” before asking her to pass the potatoes.) Elsewhere, the counselor KC Davis of “Struggle Care” recently confessed to a bout of hyperfixation with romantasy novels so intense it led her to forgo showering and basic care tasks; Therapy Jessa has filmed herself crying, while Courtney Tracy, better known as Courtney the Truth Doctor, makes intimate “get ready with me” videos and speaks about what it’s like to have borderline-personality disorder and autism as a therapist. Despite his gangbusters year as a content creator, Guenther says his career as it stands now isn’t sustainable. Spending so much time on TikTok, he tells me, has affected his own mental health. “It’s exhausting. There’s burnout. It’s a gross place to be,” he says, pointing to the endless demands of the algorithm, hate comments, and the bizarre parasocial relationships that form among audiences who feel that because they watch his content they have direct access to him. “I want to get out of here because Daddy Algorithm is my boss and I get a performance review every single day based on an algorithm that’s mysterious and doesn’t make any sense.” If the content is a little trite, and the therapists don’t enjoy making it, what good is any of it doing? You can make the case that by turning mental health into TikTok engagement bait, influencer-therapists are lowering the stigma of mental illness and encouraging people to seek treatment, or at least to provide a stopgap for those who can’t access direct care. But what it also seems to be is a stopgap for therapists who are burned out by the daily grind of seeing clients one-on-one with little opportunity for career growth, whose salaries are mostly outside their own control. And who can blame them? Even if viewers know watching therapy content isn’t the same thing as actually going to therapy, when a professional therapist comes up on your feed to tell you exactly what you most want to hear at a time when you’re most in need of hearing it — that you are good, that you will be okay, and also here’s a cute little visual hook — you’ll keep watching.
vox.com
Blond Brooks Nader bares all in beaded gown at Sports Illustrated Swimsuit 2024 party amid divorce
The bombshell model sizzled at the Hard Rock Hotel celebrating the famed magazine's annual release.
1 h
nypost.com
An annual rich list says Paul McCartney is Britain's first billionaire musician
Paul McCartney is a billionaire Beatle
1 h
abcnews.go.com
$3B for EPA's lead pipe replacement program sent to states based on unverified data, watchdog says
The EPA inspector general criticized the agency's method of allocating funds for states to replace lead pipes, claiming that inaccurate data was used.
1 h
foxnews.com
Fox News ‘Antisemitism Exposed’ Newsletter: Facebook weighs whether anti-Israel rallying cry is hate speech
Fox News' "Antisemitism Exposed" newsletter brings you stories on the rising anti-Jewish prejudice across the U.S. and the world.
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foxnews.com
Large-scale Ukrainian drone attack on Crimea cuts power, burns refinery
A Ukrainian drone attack struck caused a loss of power in the city of Sevastopol and destroyed a refinery in southern Russia as Russia forces advance in the Kharkiv region.
1 h
foxnews.com
Ukraine's Two Front-Line Boosts Detailed by Zelensky
Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky said his troops have enough artillery shells for the first time in two years of war.
1 h
newsweek.com
‘The Big Bang Theory’ and ‘Young Sheldon’ boss looks ahead to third spinoff, ‘Georgie & Mandy’
"When we brought Mayim [Bialik] and Melissa Rauch on ‘The Big Bang Theory,’ there was no grand plan for them to be cast members. And, this same sort of thing happened with Emily Osment."
1 h
nypost.com
Man Arrested After Faking Death to Avoid Registering as Sex Offender
"Nice try, Benjamin. We found you. You're not dead. We're going to hold you accountable," an Arizona sheriff said after the arrest.
1 h
newsweek.com
A beer flight, chocolate and more: Father's Day gift ideas for the gourmet dad in your family
Father's Day 2024 is approaching and if you have a dad who enjoys gourmet eats, consider these gift ideas – from chocolates to artisanal cheeses, beers and beyond.
1 h
foxnews.com
Police detain Scottie Scheffler at PGA Championship over traffic incident
ESPN had footage of Scheffler handcuffed and walking toward a police car in the morning darkness, with traffic shut down for about a mile in both directions.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Faye Dunaway reveals she was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in Cannes Film Festival documentary
"Thank God there is medication and there are studies and there are doctors who deal with this and I've been able to benefit from that," the star says.
1 h
nypost.com
Scottie Scheffler detained and handcuffed at PGA Championship after incident
Scottie Scheffler was detained and handcuffed at Valhalla Golf Course over a "misunderstanding with traffic flow" before the second round of the PGA Championship.
1 h
foxnews.com
Ten Years Later, Flint Still Doesn't Have Clean Water | Opinion
Access to clean and safe water is a human right.
1 h
newsweek.com
GTA 6 Release Date Sparks Wave Of Disappointment
Fans of the series have reacted with dismay to the news that GTA VI is slated for release in fall 2025.
1 h
newsweek.com
It's official: Tacos and burritos are Mexican-style sandwiches, an Indiana judge rules
An Indiana judge has ruled that tacos and burritos are "Mexican-style sandwiches," allowing a man to proceed with opening his new restaurant without an amendment.
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foxnews.com
Scottie Scheffler, World’s No. 1 Golfer, Detained by Cops Outside PGA Championship
Jon Durr/USA Today Sports via ReutersScottie Scheffler was detained by police early Friday morning before the second round of the PGA Championship. The world No. 1 golfer was put in handcuffs at the entrance to the Valhalla Golf Club in Louisville, Kentucky, according to ESPN. The network reported that Scheffler was attempting to drive past a police officer when he was ordered to stop and get out of the vehicle.ESPN reported that a “misunderstanding with traffic flow” had led to Scheffler’s attempt to drive past the cop. A shuttle bus struck and killed a pedestrian outside the gate of the golf club at around 5 a.m., according to the Louisville Metro Police Department. Multiple officers and first responders remained at the scene at 6:45 a.m.Read more at The Daily Beast.
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thedailybeast.com