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Kathie Lee Gifford would be ‘in an insane asylum without Jesus’ but ‘can’t stand religion’

The former ‘Today’ host ‘never would have made it’ without her faith.
Read full article on: nypost.com
The Knicks’ Julius Randle era was as turbulent as it was franchise-altering
Very little about Julius Randle's five seasons in New York felt clean. There was always a step back to follow a step forward.
7 m
nypost.com
Bogus Skydiving instructor jailed for lying about being qualified to teach at California center that’s seen 28 deaths
A California skydiving instructor who fraudulently used a colleague's credentials to teach at a facility that has seen 28 deaths related to the dangerous sport was sentenced to two years in prison.
7 m
nypost.com
24 best women’s boots in every style for fall 2024, tested and recommended
These boots are made for walking.
9 m
nypost.com
Who is the Stranger? ‘The Rings of Power’ Season 2 finale has a major reveal: I learned about identity ‘right before filming that scene’
"Literally right before filming that scene was the first time I learned that I was going to utter those words."
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nypost.com
Sarah Paulson Calls Out Heather Gay On ‘WWHL’ For Not Coming Backstage At Her Play: “I Was Disappointed”
Gay was trying to be "demure and mindful."
nypost.com
The Eagles extend Las Vegas Sphere residency. Get tickets today
Don Henley and co. have lined up four February 2025 Sin City shows.
nypost.com
New proposed federal law would bar unions from promoting antisemitism
Legislation proposed in the U.S. Senate would bar unions from using members' due to promote positions deemed as promoting antisemitism and other hateful ideologies without their consent.
nypost.com
Queen Elizabeth’s Last Co-Star Is Back in a New Trailer—as a Baby
StudioCanalQueen Elizabeth II’s final co-star, Paddington Bear, is headed back to movie screens this fall, and a new trailer shows footage of the marmalade-munching bear as a baby bruin. The new film, Paddington in Peru, sees the eponymous bear return to the land of his birth to find his Aunt Lucy. When she herself is found to be missing from her retirement home, Paddington and his London hosts, the Brown family, get sucked into a mission to discover the lost city of El Dorado.In one scene, viewers will get a glimpse of Paddington as a baby as he recalls his upbringing with Aunt Lucy.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
5 key details in special counsel Jack Smith's Trump election case filing
Special counsel Jack Smith argues in a new court filing that former President Donald Trump is not immune from prosecution for his conduct immediately after the 2020 presidential election.
foxnews.com
NYC hotel owners do about-face and support bill that critics call ‘nuclear bomb’ on industry
Some city hotel owners did an about-face to support a City Council plan that critics called a "nuclear bomb" on the lodging industry that would drive up city room rates.
nypost.com
Column: Nobody loves Biden's Western Solar Plan. But it's what we've got
It's time to stop arguing about where to build solar farms on public lands and start doing it. Carefully.
latimes.com
Julian Edelman teases new podcast with Rob Gronkowski
Julian Edelman and Rob Gronkowski are teammates again.
nypost.com
Ask Sahaj: Mother-in-law hides her gay son’s husband from the extended family
What do you say to your mother-in-law who is keeping her gay son’s husband a secret from the extended family?
washingtonpost.com
‘Succubus’ Star Ron Perlman Is Looking For A New Acting Challenge — Sketch Comedy, Anyone?
Sure he's done Hellboy and played The Beast, but why not SNL?
nypost.com
Hurricane Kirk strengthens into a Category 3 storm in the Atlantic
Hurricane Kirk strengthened Wednesday into a Category 3 storm in the Atlantic Ocean and was expected to grow rapidly into a major hurricane, forecasters said.
nypost.com
‘Days of Our Lives’ star Deidre Hall breaks her silence on co-star Drake Hogestyn’s death
"Drake loved what he did and adored and respected everyone with whom he did it," Deidre Hall said in a statement.
nypost.com
Virginia Senate debate: Clinton ex-running mate Kaine, GOP challenger Cao spar on immigration, DEI in military
U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia and Republican challenger Hung Cao clashed on immigration, student loans and mass deportation during their only debate.
foxnews.com
MSNBC host shocked as impeachment witness says Trump regained his support: 'So striking!'
MSNBC host Ari Melber spoke with a star witness against former President Trump in his first impeachment, Ambassador Gordon Sondland, who revealed he was now supporting Trump.
foxnews.com
‘RHONY’ star Erin Lichy reveals her father died: ‘A heartbreak I did not know existed’
The “Real Housewives of New York City” star shared several photos with her dad over the years in a post on Instagram announcing the heartbreaking news.
nypost.com
Children’s Museum of Manhattan transforms abandoned NYC church into ‘magical castle’ with 7 stories of fun for kids — here’s a look inside
It’s something out of a fantasy book – turret and all. The Children’s Museum of Manhattan unveiled a mesmerizing first look at its plans for an 80,000-square-foot abandoned church on Central Park West, which will become a seven-story “magical castle.” The landmarked building at 361 Central Park West – formerly the century-old First Church of...
nypost.com
Tesla issues 5th recall for the new Cybertruck within a year, the latest due to rearview camera
Tesla is recalling more than 27,000 Cybertrucks because the rearview camera image may not activate immediately after shifting into reverse, the fifth recall for the vehicle since it went on sale late last year
abcnews.go.com
How Russia's use of glide bombs is impacting the war in Ukraine
In the war in Ukraine, the use of a weapon known as a glide bomb is helping Russia to make new gains. Officials say one of those bombs is responsible for a recent attack on an apartment building in Kharkiv. Russia is now occupying around 20% of Ukraine.
cbsnews.com
Pierre Engvall is finding out that ice time will be earned, not given, under Patrick Roy
Even if the veteran makes it into the Isles' opening night lineup, a message is being sent clear as day.
nypost.com
Missing Missouri mother's remains found 6 months after mysterious disappearance
Authorities in Missouri have identified the skeletal remains of mother Emily Strite who was found in a remote wooded area six months after she mysteriously disappeared.
foxnews.com
Republican congresswoman's husband stranded in North Carolina as Helene damage brings 'tremendous challenge'
Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., says her husband remains trapped inside their North Carolina home without power following Hurricane Helene on Tuesday.
foxnews.com
London Hands Over Important U.S. Military Base to China Ally
An Indian Ocean island which hosts an important U.S.-UK military base and listening post is going to be given away by the British government. The post London Hands Over Important U.S. Military Base to China Ally appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
Report: Denzel Washington Once Left Diddy Party Enraged, Told Actor Brandon T. Jackson to Leave 'Before the Devil Get There'
Denzel Washington once reportedly stormed out of a party hosted by music mogul Sean "Diddy" Combs and later told comedian Brandon T. Jackson to leave parties early before "the devil get there." The post Report: Denzel Washington Once Left Diddy Party Enraged, Told Actor Brandon T. Jackson to Leave ‘Before the Devil Get There’ appeared first on Breitbart.
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breitbart.com
Facts about ‘Mean Girls,’ the movie, classic flick inspired by nonfiction book
The movie "Mean Girls" came out in 2004 and quickly became a classic. Oct. 3 became associated with the film due to a famous line from the picture.
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foxnews.com
Russia gains ground in Ukraine, adopting new tactics in war's 3rd year
Russia is relying on new tactics to gain ground in Ukraine, with the continuation of U.S. support uncertain as the war grinds on.
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cbsnews.com
Amazon, Target and other retailers are ramping up hiring for the holiday shopping season
Retailers are ramping up hiring for the holiday season
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abcnews.go.com
Ryanair Boeing jet evacuated after flames shoot out of engine before taking off
A Boeing jet with nearly 185 passengers onboard was evacuated in Italy early Thursday after flames were seen shooting from an engine.
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nypost.com
Oasis extends 2025 tour, add second Metlife show. Get tickets today
The Gallagher brothers will be in NJ on Aug. 31 and Sept. 1.
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nypost.com
Ron Hale, ‘General Hospital’ star, dead at 78
Ron Hale was best known for his roles on "General Hospital" and "Ryan's Hope."
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nypost.com
Josh Hader is $95 million Astros disaster in Tigers’ AL Wild Card sweep
The Astros didn't get what they paid for.
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nypost.com
Dakota Fanning reflects on the ‘super-inappropriate’ questions she was asked as a child star
"People couldn’t get away with that kind of thing so much anymore," the 30-year-old said in a new interview.
1 h
nypost.com
Angel Reese loses ‘$100K bet’ to Shaq
Angel Reese apparently owes Shaquille O'Neal after she bet him $100,000 to make a free throw.
1 h
nypost.com
5 Chinese nationals charged with covering up midnight visit to US military site
In summer 2023, the five were confronted after midnight near a lake by a sergeant major with the Utah National Guard. One said, “We are media,” before they collected their belongings and agreed to leave the area, the FBI said.
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nypost.com
Edgar Alejandro wanted to sing música romántica blended with jazz. His professional mariachi parents had notes
Edgar Alejandro knows the challenges of the music industry thanks to his mariachi parents. He's finding his way by blending mariachi, jazz and bossa nova.
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latimes.com
Who is the Stranger? 'The Rings of Power' Season 2 finale has a major reveal
The Season 2 finale of “The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power” has confirmed what many fans suspected all along about the Stranger.
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latimes.com
A divorced couple cohabitated during the pandemic — and fell back in love
The forced proximity of lockdown led to a lot of breakups. But it reminded this duo why they chose each other in the first place.
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washingtonpost.com
Yes on Proposition 32. California’s minimum wage needs a boost
California's workers are struggling. Proposition 32 would give about 2 million of the state’s lowest-paid workers a modest pay raise.
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latimes.com
Lakers newsletter: Max Christie heads list of young Lakers to watch in the preseason
With Lakers training camp underway, there are a few younger players who are going to be worth watching this preseason.
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latimes.com
Becky Hammon likens Liberty to 2014 champion Spurs
Becky Hammon attempted to dissect what went wrong — and has kept going wrong — for her Aces, and that brought her to a Liberty comparison.
1 h
nypost.com
Summer’s over. What was the real meaning of ‘Brat’?
Charli XCX made a pop masterpiece that’s still leaving its mark.
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washingtonpost.com
Sneak peek: The Depraved Heart Murder
ALL NEW: A surgeon is accused of drugging his girlfriend in order to control her. "48 Hours" contributor Nikki Battiste reports Saturday, Oct. 5 at 10/9c on CBS and streaming on Paramount+.
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cbsnews.com
Megalopolis, explained as best we can
Adam Driver and Nathalie Emmanuel in Megalopolis. | Courtesy of Lionsgate One mortgaged winery, $136 million budget, several allegations of non-consensual kissing, and a crossdressing Shia LaBeouf later, Megalopolis is finally here — and it appears to be a “mega-flopolis.”  The film, a perplexing, oversaturated modern riff on the waning days of the Roman Republic — if Rome were New York City by way of Baz Luhrmann and Fellini’s Satyricon — made an astoundingly low $4 million over its opening weekend. Though that might speak primarily to the public appetite for a CGI-laden Shakespearean drama without the benefit of Shakespeare, it’s a number likely assisted by the confusion and division surrounding the film. Even for the notably demanding director Francis Ford Coppola, known for intense sets that lead to masterpieces like The Godfather and Apocalypse Now as well as critically acclaimed flops like The Conversation and his musical One From the Heart, Megalopolis has been accompanied by an unusual degree of chaos and controversy. As Coppola has recounted many times, he’s been trying to make Megalopolis for decades, and ultimately wound up financing it by borrowing against his own fortune — a costly risk that may now never pay off.  Yet after all of that hoopla, even the film’s arrival in theaters may not satisfactorily answer the basic question: What even is Megalopolis, anyway? Here’s an attempt to answer that question — though as with all things related to this film, opinions may vary considerably about Megalopolis, what it’s aiming for, and what, if anything, it achieves. Megalopolis is Ayn Rand’s The Fountainhead with a dash of Inception and a huge helping of theatre camp Megalopolis stars Adam Driver as a futuristic architect named Cesar Catilina. Giancarlo Esposito plays his rival, Cicero, the mayor of New Rome. Cicero’s daughter Julia (Game of Thrones’s Nathalie Emmanuel), who falls for Catilina, waffles between the two (even after Catalina tells the socialite to “go back to the cluuuuub“). She may or may not hold the secret to mastering the “megalon,” a golden glowy element that looks like gold foil but is, we’re told, made of space-time itself. Using megalon, Catilina wants to build a version of New Rome that he dubs an immortal school-city. His vision ultimately turns out to be just a slightly more sci-fi version of the High Line, but it’s apparently enough to usher in the utopia of his dreams. (It also helps that he’s motivated by the memory of his late wife, whose death he may have hastened with his obsessiveness, a la Inception, despite an official ruling of death by suicide.) Also like Christopher Nolan’s Inception, architecture seems to be a metaphor for movie-making — Catilina as a tortured, misunderstood artist who decides to name his son Francis.   Though this basic plot feels swiped from Ayn Rand’s The Fountainhead, in execution the story is full of oddities — Driver can stop time, except when he can’t? — and curiosities; at many showings, a live performer interacts with the screen, lip-syncing along with an off-screen figure. Though the all-star cast is huge, many of the characters seem to have very little to do with the plot. They seem to primarily be window-dressing or an excuse for Coppola to cast many members of his own family, ranging from nephew Jason Schwartzman to several young grandchildren. Like Kevin Costner’s Horizon, another $100 million auteur box office failure, Megalopolis features an odd mix of deliberately elevated language and literary allusions: Driver makes his entrance reciting two-thirds of Hamlet’s soliloquy, apparently purely for drama. Julia and her father battle-slash-communicate using Marcus Aurelius quotes.  The story, such as it is, unfolds against a surprisingly lackluster CGI city whose skylines and blurred edges aren’t quite enough to convey the soaring futuristic vision Coppola clearly had in mind. By contrast, the crowded ensemble scenes and orgiastic, wild, decadent party life of the streets (embodied by a woozy Aubrey Plaza sleeping her way to the top) feel so Felliniesque it’s hard to take it as anything but pastiche. Overall, the concept might have worked much better as an anime — it’s less like a fully coherent narrative and more like a fun project for theater kids and their friends who recently got into computer animation.  The making of Megalopolis was as over-the-top as the film itself 2024 brought an onslaught of weird Megalopolis news in the long build-up to the film itself. First, in May, there was a deep-dive Guardian investigation into the production. Timed to coincide with the film’s debut at Cannes, where it was debuting without a distributor, the piece depicted a troubled set.  Numerous anonymous crew members belittled Coppola’s directorial sensibilities and claimed to be baffled by his inability to work well with CGI; at one point, Coppola reportedly told a crew member, “How can you figure out what Megalopolis looks like when I don’t even know what Megalopolis looks like?” This specific CGI-induced crisis is the kind of thing that many filmmakers angst over (Christopher Nolan again comes to mind), so it isn’t as though the Guardian report alone was enough to cast doubt on the film. However, the report also contained allegations that he behaved inappropriately toward many women on set by making the rounds of the topless women in one elaborate scene and reportedly trying to kiss them. These are allegations Coppola has partially denied, admitting that he kissed the women but denying there was anything untoward — as he was directing, he reportedly announced to the set that “if I come up to you and kiss you, just know it’s solely for my pleasure.” It’s unclear how that statement clarified anything for the actors on set; it doesn’t exactly create the image of a trouble-free production helmed by a focused, clear-sighted director. According to the Guardian, the now-85-year-old auteur would also allegedly smoke weed in his trailer before emerging to announce a brand-new scene to shoot.  Shortly after the Guardian story came the film’s polarized reception at Cannes. Though its director received a wild ovation from an enthusiastic audience made up of many people who were directly involved in the movie (another Horizon parallel), this was countered by critics who called the film, generously, “absolute madness” and “a totally bonkers experiment,” or, less generously, “a head-wrecking abomination” consisting of “138 stultifying minutes of ill-conceived themes, half-finished scenes, nails-along-the-blackboard performances, word-salad dialogue and ugly visuals all seemingly in search of a story that isn’t there.” Yikes. Finally, in July, we got the trailer, which immediately drew criticism for using quotes from critics about Coppola’s previous works, not about Megalopolis. While audiences were still debating whether this was some sort of intentional meta-commentary, the trailer was quickly recalled by Lionsgate, which apologized sincerely to Coppola for what was apparently a genuine mistake.  All of this led up to the resounding question of what sort of a ride we were in for. Even after the film’s release, that’s still not entirely clear — but it’s definitely anything but boring. What does it all mean?! Coppola has claimed that Megalopolis is an exploration of and a warning about an America on the brink of fascism, but the film, despite its clunky Roman metaphors and heavy-handed satire of the modern media, obfuscates that message in plenty of ways. For starters, Coppola seems to think — and Megalopolis repeatedly seems to imply, however inadvertently — that the greatest risk of fascism comes from the politically correct, insurgent left, rather than from oppressive systems. The film instead seems to view a wealthy upper class as a potentially benevolent force, and Coppola has stated that he deliberately cast “canceled” actors (like LaBeouf) in order to avoid the appearance of being “woke.” LaBeouf plays an opportunistic figure who takes up populist causes for his own manipulative ends, all while intermittently wearing a dress and a rat-tail and cozying up to power; it’s all equal parts boorish and incoherent.  Then there’s Cesar Catilina himself, the nephew of a powerful billionaire (Jon Voigt), who despite nominally claiming to work for the people, pursues power and his vision for the masses with pure Randian entitlement. Despite, or more likely because, of his being named Cesar, the film ultimately endorses his righteousness without any self-reflection. The film ends with Catilina winning his battle with the mayor to usher in the city he wants to build — but his former enemy stands by his side, grandfather to his only son, and the family portrait is accompanied by an overtly creepy chant of schoolchildren pledging to build an America dedicated to education and opportunity. Politically, the message is fully muddled. Beyond that flimsy moral, it’s unclear where Megalopolis’s primary claim to genius rests. Lots and lots of movies have been made about a lone hero lost in a dystopian New York. (The Michael Keaton subgenre alone!) The idea that what the city really needs is a new, futuristic architectural vision isn’t new, either;  it’s the central theme of Fritz Lang’s silent masterpiece Metropolis, as well as the film adaptation of The Fountainhead. The 1927 silent classic East Side, West Side finds the main character, just as in Megalopolis, monologuing to his starstruck girlfriend about erecting immortal skyscrapers.  Unlike East Side, West Side, however, Megalopolis wasn’t filmed on location in New York, but rather in Atlanta, where Coppola was apparently so dissatisfied with the accommodations that he bought and renovated an entire motel to house his family during filming. The film’s opening weekend box office might barely cover the cost of that purchase. This contradiction is one of many that makes Megalopolis feel, for all the money and time and clear passion that went into it, like a rough draft of a film that needed several more revisions to find a coherent thesis. Despite a number of head-turning ideas and moments of sheer theatricality, the film gives way more often than not to bloat and incoherence. Is it an interesting sort of incoherence? Well, yes, if you enjoy seeing movies ironically, as many people do.  Still, amid all the scandal and CGI, there’s a real sense of sadness here. This may well be Coppola’s last film, so watching it for the lulz probably isn’t what most movie buffs had on their 2024 agenda. 
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vox.com
Buccaneers vs. Falcons Week 5 predictions: NFL ‘TNF’ picks, odds, best bets
Baker Mayfield and the Buccaneers (3-1) look to extend their lead in the NFC South when they head to Atlanta on Thursday night for a divisional bout with the Falcons (2-2). 
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nypost.com
‘Tell Me Lies’ Cast Reveals One Actor Really Got Slapped During Slap Shots: “He Got His Ass Smacked. It Was So Funny.”
"There was a real slap in there. There was one..."
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nypost.com