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Harris campaign team 'exhausted' by being called 'band of idiots,' says former Obama adviser

Obama 2012 campaign manager Jim Messina said on MSNBC Sunday that the Harris campaign team is being forced to make tough decisions ahead of the election.
Read full article on: foxnews.com
A dark-web drug dealer at 20, he bought gold-plated guns. Then a boy died, and he got caught
A Southern California duo face federal sentencing for selling tens of thousands of fentanyl-laced pills and cocaine on the dark web.
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latimes.com
Jenna Fischer swore ‘Office’ co-star Angela Kinsey to secrecy about her breast cancer diagnosis
"She started wearing hats to work so that I wouldn't be the only person in a work meeting wearing a hat," the actress said about her co-star.
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nypost.com
Liam Payne’s sister Nicola says she hoped a news alert about his death was a mistake
Liam Payne's sister Nicola learned of his death through an alert on her phone: 'I went cold.' Meanwhile, toxicology identifies some of the drugs in his system.
latimes.com
Mail-in ballots have made our election tallying a national embarrassment
Elon Musk can land a rocket booster back at the launch tower seven minutes after it takes off, but swing states can’t count votes in a timely manner. 
nypost.com
Yahya Sinwar’s post-death plans show he and Hamas NEVER wanted the war to end
Terrorist killer Yahya Sinwar did not want peace. Not once, not ever. 
nypost.com
South Korea demands withdrawal of North Korean troops allegedly helping Russia fight Ukraine
South Korea issued a demand to Russia to condemn the cooperation between Russia and North Korea, calling for the withdrawal of North Korean troops from Russia's war with Ukraine.
foxnews.com
KJP denies that Kamala Harris has had trouble distinguishing herself from Biden: 'I’ve not seen that'
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre pushed back on the idea that Vice President Kamala Harris has struggled to distinguish herself from President Biden.
foxnews.com
Grit and Controversy Lead to the Liberty’s First Finals Victory
One fishy foul in Game 5 helped end a 28-year wait.
slate.com
Trump sends letter to CBS demanding unedited '60 Minutes' Harris transcript, teases potential lawsuit
In a letter obtained by Fox News Digital, an attorney for former President Trump is demanding CBS News to release the full transcript of its interview of Vice President Kamala Harris.
foxnews.com
Election Disinformation Is Getting More Chaotic
A conversation with Elaine Godfrey about what makes this moment so ripe for conspiracy theories
theatlantic.com
Tragedy of Nova festival survivor Shirel Golan shows the harm of online hate
Shirel Golan, 22, ended her life after surviving the Oct. 7 massacre at the Nova Music Festival, suffering with acute symptoms of PTSD-related stress — and until we address the issue of toxic online rhetoric, survivors will continue to suffer.
nypost.com
Air Force refuses to let fan wear 'Keep Women's Sports Female' shirt at volleyball match vs San Jose State
A fan told OutKick that Air Force Academy security didn't allow him to wear a shirt saying "Keep Women's Sports Female" at a match against the controversial San Jose State squad.
foxnews.com
Migrants no longer guaranteed beds in Chicago as mayor cuts back on shelters
“I don’t want to see anyone lose, right? But the harsh reality is that we can do what we can afford," the mayor said. "We’ve been stretched to the limits."
nypost.com
Billionaire Kamala Harris fundraiser Marc Lasry accuses former hedge fund exec of trying to blackmail him for $50M: lawsuit
Lasry -- the 65-year-old former owner of the Milwaukee Bucks and a major Democratic fund-raiser for Vice President Kamala Harris -- accused Gina Strum of threatening to make it “really, really, ugly” for him and his company, according to the complaint.
nypost.com
Kim Kardashian is ‘pretty much a single mom’ to her 4 kids, Kanye West ‘not around very much’: report
"Although she has help, it's still a lot of work for her to balance and coordinate everything," a source close to the "Kardashians" star said Monday.
nypost.com
‘Halloween comet’ could be visible during daytime this week — here’s the best time to see it
Talk about a Halloween treat.
nypost.com
ESPN analysts question Jets’ identity in fiery take after latest ugly loss
The difference between a "team" and a "roster" was at the center of "Get Up's" discussion Monday when rehashing the Jets' latest loss.
nypost.com
Diddy says 'last words' before he dies will be 'I did it' in resurfaced clip with Martha Stewart, Snoop Dogg
Sean "Diddy" Combs revealed the three words he would say before he dies in a game with Martha Stewart and Snoop Dogg in a video circulating on social media.
foxnews.com
Tesla, Warner Bros. sued for allegedly ripping off images from ‘Blade Runner 2049’ to promote cybercab
Alcon said it had refused a request from Warner Bros. to use images from the firm for Tesla’s Oct. 10 live-streamed cybercab unveiling. Tesla then used images created with AI, the lawsuit said.
nypost.com
Alex Van Halen doesn't 'sugar coat' complex relationship he had with Eddie in new book 'Brothers'
The Van Halen drummer writes an elegy to modern guitar god Eddie about a brotherhood tested by drug abuse, power trips and all the other common traps that befall megastars who once shared the same bedroom.
latimes.com
Wizards and sharpshooter Corey Kispert agree on a contract extension
The 25-year-old has expanded his game through his first three seasons in Washington and could remain with the team for several more.
washingtonpost.com
Will LeBron and Bronny James make history Tuesday? Lakers won't say
Lakers coach JJ Redick says there is no decision yet on whether Bronny James will the court with father LeBron during the season opener against Minnesota.
latimes.com
DOD, FBI investigating suspected major intelligence leak
The Defense Department and the FBI are investigating what could be a significant intelligence breach about Israel's plans to strike Iran.
abcnews.go.com
Mets, Steve Cohen should spend whatever it takes to pry Juan Soto from Yankees
The best way to not be stepbrothers to the Yankees would have been to beat them in the World Series and then take Soto away. Half of that is still possible. And Steve Cohen should try.
nypost.com
Raiders quarterback Aidan O'Connell out for next 4-6 weeks after fracturing thumb: reports
Las Vegas Raiders quarterback Aidan O'Connell fractured his thumb during the Raiders' 20-15 loss to the L.A. Rams on Sunday and will reportedly be out for four to six weeks.
foxnews.com
Cientos rinden homenaje en su pueblo natal a sacerdote y activista asesinado en el sur de México
SAN ANDRÉS LARRÁINZAR, México. — Cientos de personas rindieron homenaje el lunes en su pueblo natal al padre Marcelo Pérez, el sacerdote católico, defensor de los indígenas y campesinos asesinado la víspera al término de una misa en el sureño estado de Chiapas.
latimes.com
Papa Francisco expulsa a otros dos miembros del grupo católico Sodalicio en Perú
El papa Francisco anunció el lunes la expulsión de dos altos miembros del Sodalicio de Vida Cristiana en Perú, elevando a 13 el número total de separados, que incluyen a diez personas el mes pasado y al fundador laico del grupo en agosto.
1 h
latimes.com
Migrants caught at border bused, flown out of San Diego in possible 'cover up' before election: official
A San Diego County official criticized the flying of illegal immigrants out of California to other states so close to the presidential election.
1 h
foxnews.com
Woman served by Trump at McDonald's drive-thru reveals details behind viral exchange with former president
One of Trump's surprised drive-thru customers was a woman originally from Brazil who pleaded with him to fix the United States and not let it become like her native country.
1 h
foxnews.com
Trump urges Bibi to ‘do what he wants to do’ with potential Iran strike
Former President Donald Trump says Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should “do what he wants to do" with regards to a potential retaliatory strike against Iran. 
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nypost.com
Harriet Tubman still isn’t on the $20 bill. She’s got a coin, though.
Nearly 10 years after it was announced. Harriet Tubman is yet to be on the $20 bill. The U.S. Mint - now run by a Black woman - just issued Tubman coins.
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washingtonpost.com
Harris Is Searching for Precious Swing Voters
Also, the first sickle cell gene therapy patient left the hospital. Here’s the latest at the end of Monday.
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nytimes.com
Elon Musk, the world's richest man, is making an all-out push to reelect Trump
Elon Musk has donated more than $70 million to the pro-Trump political action committee he created in order to help reelect Trump in the 2024 presidential election.
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cbsnews.com
New stroke prevention guidelines released by American Stroke Association
Strokes are the fifth-leading cause of death in the United States, and the leading cause of disability. On Monday, the American Stroke Association published its updated guidelines for stroke prevention.
1 h
foxnews.com
Ravens fan John Callis turns himself in to police after pummeling Commanders fans in disturbing video
He is facing charges of first-degree aggravated assault and three counts of second-degree assault after authorities issued a warrant for his arrest last week. 
1 h
nypost.com
Marc Molinaro says opponent Josh Riley is even worse than this ex-pol
Molinaro says his current opponent for congress, Josh Riley, is running an even more dishonest and deceitful campaign than his 2018 matchup against Cuomo.
1 h
nypost.com
WATCH: How to increase your chances of seeing the northern lights
In the continental U.S., some of the best places to see the northern lights are Michigan's Upper Peninsula and North Dakota.
1 h
abcnews.go.com
How to increase your chances of seeing the northern lights
Stargazers should prepare themselves for an uptick in aurora borealis -- or northern lights -- activity as the current solar cycle nears its peak.
1 h
abcnews.go.com
The Slop Candidate
For me, it’s the amber glow of the fry machine gently illuminating the exhausted 45th president of the United States of America. The glare of the potato-warming apparatus casts a shadow on the left side of Donald Trump’s face as he works at a McDonald’s in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. This man, who held the nuclear codes just 1,369 days ago, is now wearing an apron and doling out fast food.The images of Trump’s McDonald’s stunt—in which he jiggled the fryer and handed burgers out of a window yesterday—are uncanny. There’s Trump, face contorted in the appearance of deep concentration, tilting a fry basket to the heavens; Trump hanging two-thirds of the way out a drive-through window, waving like a beleaguered Norman Rockwell character; Trump, mouth agape, appearing to yell into the middle distance of a fast-food parking lot. The shadows of the McDonald’s kitchen, the interplay between the sheen of the stainless steel and the cast of the nugget-warming lights, give the very real photos a distinct Midjourney aesthetic. These pictures immediately reminded me of the viral, glossy AI-generated images of Trump being arrested and thrown in jail that started circulating in the spring of 2023.Perhaps it’s because my feeds have been simultaneously clogged with election-season garbage and AI-generated slop, but the McDonald’s photoshoot struck me as a moment of strange synthesis, where reality and tech-enabled fiction felt somehow mashed together by the internet’s cultural particle accelerator. Trump proffering Dollar Menu items isn’t AI, but it is still slop in all the ways that matter: a hastily staged depiction of a fairly stupid, though entertaining fantasy, meant to delight, troll, and, most important, emphasize a false impression of the candidate.[Read: The most revealing moment of a Trump rally]This is clarifying, insofar that it demonstrates that Trump’s primary output is always a kind of slop. Slop, as it relates to AI, is loosely defined as spammy, cheap blocks of text, video, or images, quickly generated by computer programs for mass distribution. But nonsynthetic slop is everywhere too. What is a Trump rally but a teleprompter reading of stump-speech slop, interspersed with inexplicable lorem ipsum about Hannibal Lecter and wind turbines spun up by the unknowable language model in Trump’s own head? What are Trump’s tweets and Truth Social shitposts if not slop morsels, hurled into the internet’s ether for the rest of us to react to? And what is the Trump campaign producing if not fantastical propaganda intended to conjure a false image of Joe Biden’s America as a dark, dangerous place on the verge of destruction, besieged by immigrants, and savable only by one heroic man? (For instance, earlier today, Trump posted an AI-generated picture of himself as a buff Pittsburgh Steelers lineman.) The McDonald’s photo op was barely real: The restaurant was closed to the public during Trump’s visit. He ignored a question about the minimum wage. Only prescreened customers were allowed in the drive-through, and those customers were not able to place orders—they just took whatever Trump handed to them. Like any good AI slop, the op illustrated a fantasy—in this case, that Trump, a man who has long lived in a gilded penthouse, is a working-class man.In August, I wrote that AI slop is now the aesthetic of the far-right and MAGA coalition, in part because it allows hyper-partisans to illustrate the fictional universe they’ve been peddling and living in for the past decade-plus. But MAGA world has always trafficked in slop. Old memes depicted “God Emperor” Trump. Right-wing artists including Ben Garrison and Jon McNaughton have long illustrated Trump in an absurd light—hulking and hypermasculine or holding a lantern on a boat, like George Washington crossing the Delaware. This was proto-slop, for a simpler, more analog time.Slop isn’t necessarily a commentary on quality so much as on how it is meant to be consumed: fleetingly, and with little or no thought beyond the initial limbic-system response. The main characteristic of slop is that there is an endless supply of it. And so it makes sense that campaigns—not just Trump’s—tend to traffic in it. Campaigns are nothing if not aggressive, often-desperate content farms hoping to get attention. In service of that mission, they meme, pander, email, and text, frequently in cringeworthy fashion. Not unlike the fast food that Trump was hawking, slop is sometimes delicious, but it is never nutrient dense.[Read: The MAGA aesthetic is AI slop]AI slop has clogged the internet with synthetic ephemera, but it has also given a name to the human-made attentional grist that’s all around us—the slop that exists in real life, in meatspace. Trump was really at that Buck’s County McDonald’s, debasing himself for swing-state votes in the same way that candidates have for generations (see: Rick Perry eating a corn dog in 2011). Presidential campaigning has long offered an unreal portrait of American life—it’s just been made more peculiar by the presence of Trump.If AI slop can teach us something about a man like Trump, it seems that the opposite is also true. In the lead-up to the candidate’s fast-food stop, various news outlets, fans, and even T-shirt sellers used generative-AI tools to mock up what the visit might look like. The photos aren’t terribly far off (a few of them accurately placed Trump in an apron), but all of them seem to be trying too hard. In some, Trump’s clothing is too garish; in others, he’s toting a comically large amount of food. None capture the awkward banality of the candidate’s actual campaign stop. In his own way, Trump has shown us all the limits of artificial intelligence. Computers, at least for now, cannot quite capture the crushing surreality and maddening absurdity of modern electoral politics.
1 h
theatlantic.com
Hezbollah is hiding over $500 million in gold, cash below Beirut hospital, IDF says
Israel accused Hezbollah of allegedly hiding more than $500 million in gold and cash in a secret bunker beneath a Beirut hospital -- tipping off Lebanese officials to the stash while saying there were no plans to attack the building.
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nypost.com
A family dog defies debris to survive six days after home explodes
A Prince William County rescue crew removed a family dog from the debris of a house that exploded six days ago.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
'80s pop star Susanna Hoffs of The Bangles faced 'identity crisis' after becoming a mother
The Bangles singer Susanna Hoffs discussed the "identity crisis" she faced after welcoming children with her husband, director Jay Roach.
1 h
foxnews.com
Richmond mayor takes aim at billboard on historic Black cemetery
Mayor Levar Stoney has asked the Richmond City Council to re-designate Shockoe Hill African Burying Ground as a cemetery, making the billboard illegal.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
Fox News Poll: More Harris than Trump supporters think votes will be counted accurately, say they will accept
Majorities of Harris’ supporters think votes will be counted accurately and say they will accept the results whatever the outcome, Trump voters think the opposite.
1 h
foxnews.com
Non-college educated White voters are keeping Kamala Harris 'in the ball game,' CNN data reporter says
CNN's Harry Enten said Monday that non-college educated White voters were shifting away from Donald Trump, suggesting that it was keeping Kamala Harris "in the ball game."
1 h
foxnews.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘It’s Florida, Man’ On HBO, Where Crazy But True Florida Stories Are Reenacted By Well-Known Comedy Stars
The guest cast includes Anna Faris, Randall Park, Jake Johnson, Jon Gries, Sam Richardson, Ego Nwodim, Juliette Lewis and Simon Rex.
1 h
nypost.com
Son accused of brutally killing elderly UWS mom left trail of damning clues: prosecutors
“As alleged, Edward Asencio neglected and isolated his 84-year-old mother before killing her in their shared apartment,’’ Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said in a statement.
1 h
nypost.com
Elon Musk says he’s giving away $1 million a day to voters. Is that legal?
SpaceX and Tesla founder Elon Musk awarded Kristine Fishell with a $1 million check during the town hall at the Roxain Theater on October 20, 2024 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. | Michael Swensen/Getty Images Elon Musk, the billionaire entrepreneur and campaign surrogate for former President Donald Trump, recently announced a plan to give away $1 million each day until November 5 to a randomly chosen person who’s signed a petition from his political action committee. To win the money, the signee must be a registered swing state voter — and that criterion has raised concerns that Musk may be in violation of a federal law that makes it illegal to pay people (or offer them an incentive) to either register to vote or cast a ballot.  “I think there’s a strong argument that there’s potential criminal liability here, so at the very least [the Department of Justice] should be investigating and should be warning people not to be doing this,” Richard Hasen, director of the safeguarding Democracy Project at UCLA Law School, told Vox. The program works like this: Registered voters in Arizona, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, or Wisconsin — all swing states that could go for either Vice President Kamala Harris or Trump come election day — can sign the petition, which claims to be a “Petition in Favor of Free Speech and the Right to Bear Arms” until Monday, October 21, which happens to be the voter registration deadline in Pennsylvania.  The petition is being circulated by Musk’s America PAC, which has taken over much of Trump’s ground operation in key swing states. Musk has made Pennsylvania a particular focus of his personal outreach, hosting events there, including one on Sunday where he handed a woman in a Trump-Vance shirt a giant $1 million check. Though the petition does not require signers to be registered Republicans, the focus on the First and Second Amendments appeals to potential Trump voters who fear Democrats will take away their gun rights and who subscribe to Musk’s idea of “free speech.” The net effect, then, is that Musk is promising $1 million a day to a program aimed at getting pro-Trump voters registered in swing states. Because his contest is only open to registered voters, there may be a case for it to be understood as an illegal financial incentive to get people to register to vote. One issue Musk faces, said David Becker, executive director of the nonpartisan Center for Election Innovation & Research, is that what constitutes payment for voting-related activity has been broadly interpreted in the past.  “This could involve anything of value,” Becker said. The law “has been applied to things like Ben & Jerry’s offering everyone who has an ‘I Voted’ sticker an ice cream cone on Election Day. They received a cease-and-desist letter and changed [the promotion to give] everyone a free ice cream cone on Election Day.” There is some ambiguity in Musk’s promotion, compared to what Ben & Jerry’s offered, however. The uncertainty arises from the fact that Musk’s PAC is asking people to sign a petition for the chance to win $1 million, not explicitly rewarding them for registering to vote. Daniel Weiner, director of the Brennan Center’s Elections & Government Program, told Vox that the issue at hand really comes down to whether entering a specific group of people in a lottery if they sign a petition counts as paying people to register to vote.  “There’s certainly an argument that it is, [but] I think it’s hard to know for sure how to predict how this would play out in court,” Weiner said. Democratic Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro called the contest “concerning,” and said it was “something that law enforcement could take a look at” in an appearance on NBC’s Meet the Press on Sunday. Thus far, the federal government hasn’t announced any investigation into the contest.  If indeed the Justice Department decided to pursue Musk, it would first send a cease-and-desist letter — just like the one Ben & Jerry’s received back in 2008. From there, he would have to decide how to respond; the penalty for breaking the law is $10,000 or a maximum of five years in prison. But even if the DOJ decides to go after Musk for this — and there is no guarantee that it will — the issue likely won’t be resolved before November 5, in part to avoid any perception on the part of the federal government that the DOJ is meddling in the election.  “There are important norms around initiating investigations and legal proceedings in the run-up to an election. Otherwise, they can potentially launch an investigation after the election, and whether they will is something that’s difficult to predict,” Weiner said. “I think that this is something whose legality will not be resolved before the election.”
1 h
vox.com