Tools
Change country:

Gregg Jarrett: Americans had final say on Jack Smith's 'misbegotten' Trump prosecutions

Fox News legal analyst Gregg Jarrett joined 'Fox & Friends' to discuss charges being dropped against President-elect Trump in federal election interference case.
Read full article on: foxnews.com
Australia Nears Historic Social Media Ban for Under-16s
If the bill becomes law on Thursday, social media platforms would have one year to work out how to implement the age restrictions.
6 m
newsweek.com
Thanksgiving Food Recall List: List of Warnings Issued
People should be aware of certain products they may have in their pantry or refrigerator amid the ongoing recalls.
7 m
newsweek.com
Donald Trump Would Not Go in an Elon Musk Rocket, Granddaughter Says
The president-elect and Kai Trump, 17, attended the sixth Starship test flight this month.
9 m
newsweek.com
Fed’s preferred inflation gauge ticked higher to 2.8% — stoking doubts on December rate cut
The latest inflation data will likely reinforce the central bank's cautious approach when it meets to decide on cutting interest rates next month.
nypost.com
NASA shows off image of U.S. military's abandoned "city under the ice"
Scientists now have a clearer picture of Camp Century, an abandoned U.S. military base long hidden under the ice in Greenland, thanks to a NASA research team's good luck.
cbsnews.com
Ohio Governor Signs Bill to Restrict Bathroom Use for Transgender Students
Mike DeWine signed a bill Wednesday to restrict transgender students from using multiperson bathrooms that match their gender identities.
newsweek.com
NYC Declares War on 'Rat Buffets', Trash to Go in Lidded Bins
New York City's new trash reforms require residential buildings with fewer than 10 units to use lidded bins.
newsweek.com
‘Depressed’ Patrick J. Adams quit ‘Suits’ due to ‘drinking too much’ — reveals his ‘breaking point’
Patrick J. Adams' marriage to Troian Bellisario also played a part in him leaving the show.
nypost.com
The International Criminal Court’s Folly
The high aspirations with which the tribunal was founded should not shield it from the consequences of its decision to pursue other agendas.
theatlantic.com
The International Criminal Court Shows Its Mettle
International law has always been aspirational. The decision on Israel brings it closer.
theatlantic.com
Nov 27: CBS News 24/7, 10am ET
Nearly 80 million people traveling for Thanksgiving; Over 3,000 fake Gibson guitars seized in California.
cbsnews.com
IKEA warns Trump tariffs will make it hard to keep prices low
The US is IKEA's second-biggest market globally, accounting for 13.2% of sales in its 2024 financial year.
nypost.com
NYC’s dazzling holiday window displays from Bergdorf, Macy’s and Bloomingdale’s as Saks pulls back
Manhattan is merry and bright!
nypost.com
Trump picks Jay Bhattacharya, who backed COVID herd immunity, to lead National Institutes of Health
Donald Trump taps health economist Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, critic of COVID lockdowns and vaccine mandates, to the nation's top medical research agency.
latimes.com
ICC Seeks Arrest of Myanmar Military Chief for Rohingya Atrocities
Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing is accused of crimes against humanity for the deportation and persecution of the Rohingya.
newsweek.com
Mom of Three Leaves Newborn to Use Bathroom—Tears at What She Comes Back to
Yenn Stanley asked her 15-year-old to watch his siblings, then "freaked out" over what little Cailey had done.
newsweek.com
Assessing the Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire deal
The ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah has taken effect and appears to be holding as people return to their homes in Lebanon. CBS News national security contributor Samantha Vinograd has a look at the implementation of the agreement.
cbsnews.com
My boss scolded me for my cute out-of-office emails — my personality is being smothered by corporate America
Is she out-of-pocket for these out-of-office emails?
nypost.com
Joe Rogan Gives Scott Storch Health Advice After Producer Reveals Condition
Scott Storch shared on Rogan's podcast that he gets inflammation when he is playing the piano and Rogan issued some advice.
newsweek.com
Thanksgiving Snow Maps Shows How Much Could Hit Each State
Colorado and Utah will see the deepest bouts of fresh snow this Thanksgiving.
newsweek.com
How Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Inspired Two New Christmas Movies
How Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce's romance led to Hallmark and Lifetime's two new Christmas movies
time.com
Is this French bulldog a genius? You do the math
Dog owners in Todmorden, UK, claim their French bulldog can solve complex math problems. Watch as the 3-year-old pooch named Timmy is given a series of mathematics problems, then uses his paw to count out the correct answer. Hannah Shipperbottom called her clever canine “Einstein reincarnated.”
nypost.com
Man Who Wrongly Spent Decades in Jail for Murder Awarded $13 Million
Michael Sullivan was wrongfully imprisoned and awarded $13 million, but state law cut that award down to a maximum of $1 million.
newsweek.com
‘Bob’s Burgers’ Is The Perfect Thanksgiving Show: Here Are the Best ‘Bob’s Burgers’ Thanksgiving Episodes Ranked
"Pass the cranberry sauce, we're having mashed potatoes!"
nypost.com
‘Desperate Housewives’ star Teri Hatcher says dating at 59 is 'just not that fun anymore'
Teri Hatcher, best known for her role in "Desperate Housewives," shared why she prefers being alone but is not closed off to dating.
foxnews.com
U.N. reportedly evacuating some staff from Haiti amid gang violence
There are reports that the United Nations is evacuating a small number of staff in Haiti as gang violence escalates in Port-au-Prince. More than 40,000 people have been displaced from the capital in the last ten days according to U.N. data. Jacqueline Charles, Haiti/Caribbean correspondent for the Miami Herald, joined CBS News to discuss the situation.
cbsnews.com
Kim Kardashian denies Tesla paid her to pose with robot in polarizing photo shoot
The reality star raised eyebrows with a futuristic photoshoot she recently did with the Tesla Optimus Robot.
nypost.com
How much equity can you borrow with a HELOC?
There are limits to the amount of equity you can tap into. Here's how much you can access with a HELOC.
cbsnews.com
Kathy Griffin: Paris Hilton painted her entire house pink for a party — then changed it right back
Hilton has never skimped on expenses when it comes to parties. Earlier this month, she threw a lavish bash for her daughter London's 1st birthday.
nypost.com
Jennifer Garner takes kids Seraphina, 15, and Samuel, 12, to the movies before Thanksgiving
The actress has co-parented her children with ex-husband Ben Affleck, as well as their 18-year-old daughter, Violet, since splitting in 2015.
nypost.com
Aaron Rodgers questions 'journalistic integrity' amid reports he says are 'limited in its truth'
New York Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers indulged in a lengthy conversation about "journalistic integrity," ripping the media for reports he says are majority false.
foxnews.com
NYC found in contempt over ‘grave’ conditions at Rikers Island — with fed takeover increasingly likely
New York City was found in contempt Wednesday over "grave" conditions at Rikers Island -- as a judge said she was "inclined" to order a federal takeover of the troubled jail complex.
nypost.com
Marilyn Manson and Evan Rachel Wood Defamation Suit Has Major Update
Back in 2023, an LA judge threw out key sections of Manson's lawsuit against Wood.
newsweek.com
Gorgeously decorated mansion in a secret celebrity enclave near NYC sells for $26.12M — a local record
The 13-acre estate, known as Niederhurst, sits on a bluff overlooking the Hudson River, known for its dramatic 200-million-year-old basalt cliffs. 
nypost.com
Target Santa 2024: Why the Latest Holiday Shopping Ad Is Going Viral
Target has highlighted a new worker named Kris, who has turned many eyes.
newsweek.com
Sleeping man saved from rolling off bridge by police officer, Good Samaritan in dramatic video
Dramatic new video has been released showing the moment a quick-thinking police officer and a Good Samaritan save a sleeping man from rolling off a bridge in Oklahoma.
foxnews.com
Trump considering retired Gen. Keith Kellogg for Ukraine envoy
WASHINGTON — President-elect Donald Trump is considering naming retired Gen. Keith Kellogg as his Ukraine envoy charged with ending the nearly three-year Russian invasion, The Post has confirmed. Kellogg, 80, was at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago compound in Palm Beach, Fla., on Tuesday and last week as the incoming president picks key administration aides after rapidly fleshing...
nypost.com
Big Tech Losses Pull US Stock Market Down as Inflation Gauge Ticks Higher
Big tech losses pull US stock market down as inflation gauge ticks higher on Wednesday.
newsweek.com
California bombing suspect on FBI most wanted list arrested after 21 years on run
Daniel Andreas San Diego, a suspect in in two 2003 northern California bombings, was arrested in the U.K. this week. San Diego, who had been one of the FBI's most wanted terror suspects, now faces extradition.
cbsnews.com
Trump Cabinet nominees, appointees targeted with ‘violent, unAmerican threats’
Nearly a dozen of President-elect Donald Trump’s Cabinet nominees and other appointees tapped for the incoming administration were targeted Tuesday night with “violent, unAmerican threats to their lives and those who live with them," prompting a “swift" law enforcement response, Fox News Digital has learned.
foxnews.com
Fury as Cheater Demands Ex Pay Her and New Boyfriend's Bills
"When it was clear I was done with her, the entitlement really started to show," a man said in a viral Reddit post.
newsweek.com
Woman Reunites With Dog After a Month and It's Not What She Expected
"Can someone please tell her I'm not speaking to her?" one user said. Another added: "Please move on, I already did."
newsweek.com
Inflation Persists as Core Price Index Rises to 2.8 Percent
The confidence of the Fed that inflation would move back to its two percent target even with lower rates looks misplaced. The post Inflation Persists as Core Price Index Rises to 2.8 Percent appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
Mountain West Conference faces scrutiny as trans player receives honorable mention honors
Social media weighed in Tuesday after the Mountain West Conference named Blaire Fleming to its all-conference honorable mention team ahead of the tournament.
foxnews.com
3 Americans held for years in China have been released, the White House says
The three are Mark Swidan, Kai Li and John Leung, all of whom had been designated by the U.S. government as wrongfully detained.
latimes.com
First Look at Valve's New Steam Controller and VR Hardware Revealed
Leaked photos reveal the first look at Valve's upcoming VR headset and Steam controller.
newsweek.com
Why Wicked’s politics feel so bizarrely timely
Ariana Grande as Glinda in Wicked. | Giles Keyte/Universal Pictures Wicked, the movie musical based on the beloved Broadway show of the same name, is one of the biggest hits of the year, opening at No. 1 in North America over the weekend and already generating some early Oscars buzz. Audiences came in prepared to love Wicked’s famous power ballads and girl power core, but one aspect of the story seems to have caught people by surprise: its somewhat clunky yet remarkably durable political allegory. “I noticed that Elphaba is like Kamala Harris and the Wizard is like Donald Trump,” one fan posted on Reddit. “A charismatic leader who gaslights a community that this woman is wicked just because she’s standing up for a marginalized group of people in the society, how could that be [political]?” director John M. Chu joked. For a silly, spectacular show about friendship and talking animals, Wicked actually does invite political interpretations. Its allegory can both elicit eye rolls and still feel eerily prescient more than 20 years after its stage debut.  Wicked the musical is based on a 1995 novel of the same title by Gregory Maguire, an anti-fascist treatise in which the Wizard becomes a Hitler-like despot. The musical wouldn’t go quite so far when it debuted on Broadway in 2003, but it did get in a number of hits at the George W. Bush administration, which had ordered the invasion of Iraq only months earlier.  In Wicked, the Wizard is revealed to be disenfranchising the talking animals of Oz, on the grounds that to unify the rest of the country, he has to give them a common enemy. Yet the Wizard’s persecution of animals — and, later, of Elphaba — is rooted in a lie, in the same way that Bush falsely claimed that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction before invading.  Some of the references are glaringly obvious: When Dorothy’s house falls on the Wicked Witch of the East, Glinda echoes the Bush administration’s favorite Iraq War euphemism in describing it as a “regime change.” “Is one a crusader or ruthless invader?” sings the Wizard, referencing Bush’s infamous description of the invasion of Iraq as a crusade. “It’s all in which label is able to persist!”  Critics’ responses were mixed. “As a parable of fascism and freedom, Wicked so overplays its hand that it seriously dilutes its power to disturb,” Ben Brantley declared in 2003 at the New York Times, adding that the show “wears its political heart as if it were a slogan button.” Meanwhile, author Daniel Handler, though taken aback by such a dark interpretation of sunny and magical Oz, found himself drawn to the idea. “It is hard not to wonder if the witch, a difficult figure transformed by difficult times, isn’t precisely what our stage needs,” Handler also wrote in the New York Times that same year. “And perhaps, the show suggests, ‘wicked’ is what the W stands for” in George W. Bush.” Singing the same lyrics today, the Wizard suggests not Bush but Trump: a leader consolidating his power by scapegoating marginalized groups and slowly but surely denying them their rights. Meanwhile, the difference in strategy between rabble-rousing progressive Elphaba and conciliatory liberal Glinda might hit home particularly hard for Democrats in the midst of their post-election recrimination.  Both Elphaba and Glinda idolize the Wizard and dream of working at his right hand. When Elphaba learns of the plight of Oz’s animals, she heads straight to the Emerald City to seek his help, certain that if he learns that the animals are being targeted, he’ll rush to their aid. The Wizard suggests he might do so if Elphaba uses her magic as part of his administration, but when she learns that it’s the Wizard behind the attacks, she disowns him, much to the dismay of practical-minded Glinda. Wicked was born to be an allegory of American politics. It can’t quite be anything else. “I hope you’re happy how you’ve hurt your cause forever,” Glinda sings. Elphaba, after all, is alienating a potential powerful ally. “I hope you’re proud, how you would grovel in submission to feed your own ambition,” replies Elphaba, who has decided she will not work with anyone who is using his power to hurt Oz’s talking animal citizens. Could you read this moment as an allegory over how Democrats should handle trans issues going forward? Sure, it sounds like a stretch, but it’s not as far-fetched as you might imagine.  In a way it’s odd to think that Wicked’s political messaging feels so prescient, since most Wicked fans would agree that the political subplot is the weakest part of the musical. Wicked lives and breathes by the fraught friendship between its two leads, not by its duelling visions of activism. Still, in another sense, Wicked was born to be an allegory of American politics. It can’t quite be anything else. That’s what Oz stories are for. Most of the most children’s fantasy classics of the Anglophone world are English: think of Peter Pan, Narnia, The Sword in the Stone, and Harry Potter. They tend to think about what it means to be a good king, about wild magical beasts lurking in the forest, about being an island nation. The Wizard of Oz, though, is an American fantasy. A map of Oz, which is shaped like a rectangle with its long side horizontal, is a simplified map of America, as though drawn by a child: unimaginably vast, spanning the inhabitable entirety of a continent from east to west. (Oz is bordered by poisonous deserts rather than oceans.) It is a country where farmers cultivate fields of corn and wheat and orchards of apples; where industrialists build vast, glittering cities; where the west is full of rough and unsettled land. And it is a country governed by a con man who is lying to the people he rules. When L. Frank Baum wrote The Wonderful Wizard of Oz in 1900, he imagined the Wizard of Oz as someone who was well-meaning if ineffectual and a touch dishonest. “I’m a very good man — just a bad wizard,” the Wizard explains to Dorothy in the 1939 film. Still, the Wizard can work as a remarkably cynical metaphor for all the broken promises of the American dream. The Wizard is a man who will promise you everything but give you nothing, and then he will tell you the answer was inside of yourself all along.  It’s this metaphor that gives The Wiz, the all-Black reimagining of The Wizard of Oz from the 1970s, its surprisingly sharp bite. In The Wiz, Dorothy and her friends are Black people who are promised certain fundamental rights by a government that never plans to pay up. (Wicked gestures at a similar critique by casting the Black actress Cynthia Erivo as the racially othered green-skinned Elphaba.) “Public office is the last refuge of the incompetent,” the Scarecrow scoffs in The Wiz, after learning that the Wizard is a washed-up politician from Atlantic City. “Incompetent!” the Wiz crows. “That’s me!”  Wicked, meanwhile, is not a reimagining of The Wizard of Oz so much as it is a revisionist history. As such, it is fundamentally skeptical of figures in authority — much more so than Baum, who eventually replaced the Wizard with the virtuous and nearly infallible fairy queen Ozma.  The premise of any story that tells you that the villains of your childhood are misunderstood is that the storytellers were lying to you. In Wicked, the Wizard isn’t just a very bad wizard, but a very bad man, too. He lies maliciously and with strategic purpose.  The Wizard can work as a remarkably cynical metaphor for all the broken promises of the American dream. Elphaba and Glinda, here, become just two more dreamers who travel to the Emerald City like Dorothy and her friends, because they want the Wizard to give them their hearts’ desire: protection for the talking animals of Oz as they become steadily more persecuted.  Yet the Wizard they encounter is not only incapable of granting them such a request, but in fact plans to pervert it, using their innocent wishes to enact more violence. He plans to take Elphaba under his wing and have her do magic on his behalf so he can more thoroughly persecute the sentient animals he plans to round up and more efficiently spy on the rest of his citizens.  In the end, the Wizard names Elphaba the Wicked Witch of the West and Glinda the Good Witch of the North because he can trust Glinda to maintain friendly relations with his administration, while Elphaba refuses. He is America governed not by a con man but by a strong man — an authoritarian dictator. This is the kind of metaphor a revisionist history can offer you, and part of why Wicked feels so bizarrely urgent at this moment. In a subversion of a childhood classic, no authority figure can be trusted — which is what makes these stories so attractive when people you don’t trust have found their way into positions of power. 
vox.com
Trump set to take office with razor-thin House GOP majority
Donald Trump is set to take office in January with a razor-thin majority in the House of Representatives that offers Republicans barely any margin of error.
abcnews.go.com