Home Blog Page 101

President Trump’s war rezoning, Democrats likely to intensify polarization

0

play

The redistricting war is heating up.

What happens next?

History provides little guidance. Because there has never before been a cross-border campaign to redraw congressional districts in the middle of the decade and on the fly. But the effects are immediate and far-reaching, likely boosting the Republican Party’s prospects in the midterm elections, weakening political centrists, reducing minority representation in Congress, and intensifying the country’s polarization.

The Texas Republican Party launched a redistricting bid last August at the request of President Donald Trump. California Democrats had a similar reaction. And the U.S. Supreme Court’s April 29 decision opened the floodgates even as the November election looms.

President Trump boasted to reporters at the White House in July that “Texas will be the largest state,” and his prediction came true. “That makes it 5 (seats).”

A total of eight states have redrawn their congressional districts in the past year for political advantage, but some of the new maps are still being challenged in court.

The new lines in six states are aimed at endangering incumbent House Democrats in Texas as well as Florida, Missouri, North Carolina, Ohio and Tennessee.

California’s new map aims to help defeat up to five Republican senators. But an effort to redraw Virginia’s congressional map to flip up to four Republican-held seats was rejected on procedural grounds by the state Supreme Court on May 8, a major setback for Democrats.

In Utah, a judge ordered the Republican-led state legislature to abide by an anti-gerrymandering measure passed by voters in 2018. This created a Democratic-friendly congressional district centered on Salt Lake County.

Bottom line: Republican candidates currently face more favorable terrain in 14 House districts, compared to Democratic candidates in six.

In a political world where Republicans have a mere five-seat majority in the House, these incremental gains could soften the party’s defeat in the midterm elections, despite the headwinds of an unpopular war and rising gas prices.

And a ceasefire has not yet been reached.

Redistricting is not finished this year.

Tennessee wasn’t late.

A week after the Supreme Court’s decision weakening the Voting Rights Act, the Volunteer state Legislature approved and Republican Gov. Bill Lee signed a redistricting plan aimed at taking control of Tennessee’s only Democratic-leaning congressional district.

The district, centered around Memphis, was divided into three Republican-dominated districts. The new line will run down the middle of Beale Street and extend hundreds of miles to the outskirts of Nashville.

Three other southern states are also eager to redraw their legislatures.

In Alabama and South Carolina, Republicans want to flip Democratic-held congressional districts in those states toward Republicans. In Louisiana, Republican Gov. Jeff Landry delayed the primary to give him time to redraw districts with the goal of flipping one or two Democratic seats.

Shrinking the political middle class

The number of competitive parliamentary seats is already declining, both as a result of and a contributing factor to the country’s sharp political divisions.

The nonpartisan Cook Political Report and Amy Walter estimate that only 18 of the 435 U.S. House districts are currently in dispute. This is the lowest number since independent analyst Charlie Cook began publishing his ratings more than 40 years ago.

“Leaders of both parties may think it’s good for their political fortunes,” said Dan Webb, a former U.S. attorney and director of the nonpartisan group No Labels. “But it’s scary for America and the vast political center.”

Politicians in safe Republican or safe Democratic districts have little electoral incentive to reach out across party lines while campaigning or in office. Winning the party’s nomination would almost guarantee victory in the general election, but the biggest risk to another term is that he will not be able to satisfy the most partisan voices.

Minority representation is likely to decline

The Louisiana v. Calais decision on the Voting Rights Act will almost certainly reduce the number of districts with a majority of minority voters, which will likely also reduce the number of racially diverse legislators.

Majority-minority districts are likely to be redrawn in Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Tennessee and Texas by November. In South Carolina, Republicans want to target the district of former House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn, the only African American in the state’s congressional delegation.

The impact is expected to accelerate after the 2030 Census prompts redistricting in nearly every state. Nearly 70 congressional districts covered by the Voting Rights Act’s protections could be changed.

This will likely result in the sharpest decline in the number of black legislators since 1877, during the post-Civil War Reconstruction period. And the new Congress has four fewer black members than the previous Congress.

According to the Pew Research Center, 133 members of the current House of Representatives in the 119th Congress are Black, Hispanic, Asian American, or multiracial. Although this is a record, Congress remains less racially and ethnically diverse than the United States as a whole.

Almost three-quarters of these member states have a geographical base in majority-minority areas that can no longer be expected to be protected.

Read more: Modern art depicting the district

Most of the new maps look more like abstract art of red and blue tendrils than sensible grids, and that’s true of some of the majority-minority districts that are being erased.

In Texas, for example, new legislative lines zigzag through major cities like Austin, Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston and San Antonio, dividing Democratic-heavy districts into vast Republican-controlled areas.

(Of course, this is nothing new; the word “gerrymander” was coined in 1812 to describe districts that were redrawn with a little imagination by then-Massachusetts Governor Elbridge Gerry.)

Now, some states that didn’t have the time or political momentum to redraw their districts in 2026 are considering the possibility of redrawing them next year. If Republicans are able to cushion their expected losses in this year’s redistricting process, such efforts could well be spurred.

In Mississippi, the state legislature has already scheduled a special session in late May to review the state’s Supreme Court districts. In Georgia, Republican Gov. Brian Kemp said the state will likely draw new congressional maps before the 2028 election.

Some Republican officials are discussing redistricting in other red states, including Arizona, Kansas, Nebraska and New Hampshire.

So do some Democratic leaders in blue-leaning states such as Colorado, Illinois, Maryland, New York, New Jersey and Washington.

“It’s time to fight fire with fire,” Democratic New York Gov. Kathy Hochul vows. “All is fair in love and war.”

And this is war.

I never thought United’s Glasgow flight would change the way I travel

0


A growing group of travelers say that launching flights is one of the most exciting ways to discover new destinations.

play

  • United Airlines has renewed its daily service from Newark to Glasgow, Scotland.
  • Inaugural flights often include celebrations, special meals, and souvenirs for passengers.
  • The company’s return to Glasgow was prompted by a recovery in market demand for travel to Scotland.

Cruising Altitude is a weekly column about air travel. Have a suggestion for a future topic? Fill out the form or email us at the address at the bottom of this page.

Glasgow, Scotland – There’s always a new place to explore. Just ask Amanda van Dijk, whom I met on a United Airlines flight from Newark Liberty International Airport to Glasgow on May 8th.

This is Amanda’s eighth flight in the past two years, and while waiting to board a United Airlines flight to Glasgow for the first time since 2019, she told me that she’s officially hooked on following the airline to new places.

“It opens your eyes to places you never thought you would go,” she said as bagpipes blared in the background. (Yes, United had a bagpipe player at the Newark gate to see us off.)

Van Dijk, a project manager from Houston, stood with a group of United Airlines inauguration enthusiasts. They often run into each other while exploring new destinations on the airline, and all agreed it was a great way to decide on a destination and a fun way to collect souvenirs.

United had previously operated flights from Newark to Glasgow, but treated the return to service as an entirely new route, holding speeches and a celebration before the first flight departed.

We explain why travelers should consider following an airline to new places every chance they get, and how United Airlines decided it was time to fly to Glasgow again.

What are the characteristics of the first flight?

As an avgeek (aviation geek), an inauguration flight always feels a little special because of its uniqueness and just being able to say we did it.

It’s not a problem for airlines to usually lift suspensions to pick up passengers.

There will always be a gate celebration, additional food, memorabilia, and speeches to set the mood. Before United’s flight to Glasgow departed, there was a bagpipe performance, a ribbon cutting and speeches from executives and tourism officials. Airline representatives were also handing out keychains and pins.

Frankly, I’m sure other travelers in Terminal C weren’t as excited about the live bagpipe music, but it didn’t dampen the atmosphere at the gate.

At a time when air travel can often feel mundane, if not outright frustrating, inauguration flights can remind us of a time when every trip was a special event.

Van Dijk and his fellow travelers brought their own memorabilia to hand out, and said the inauguration felt like a bonding experience for everyone on the flight.

What was it like onboard United Airlines’ Glasgow inauguration ceremony?

United Airlines flies daily from Newark to Glasgow on its Boeing 737 Max, so in some ways it felt like intercontinental travel within the United States, timing aside.

There were no lie-flat seats for premium passengers, and the economy cabin had a standard narrow-body configuration with six seats across.

But the atmosphere on board was festive, with passengers talking to each other about the thrill of taking part in the new route. The flight attendants were also particularly friendly and a pleasure to board. So did the captain, who decided to give his wife a special welcome during the announcement.

Every seat in economy had a welcome message. In the premium cabin, each passenger was given an additional souvenir. Prizes included pajamas, a teddy bear wearing a Glasgow Airport shirt, a key chain, an aircraft trading card and several other welcome documents.

The menu is also Scottish-inspired, with regionally themed dishes such as smoked Scottish salmon appetizers and single malt Scotch reduction braised short ribs.

As a traveler, I always find overnight flights from the East Coast to Europe to be a little tough on my body clock, but this festival was worth it even with the sleep deprivation.

When we landed in Glasgow, we were greeted by a water cannon salute. As we approached the gate, two fire trucks sprayed the plane as a sign of welcome.

How United decided to offer their services to Glasgow again

Matt Stevens, United’s vice president of international network, told me that the airline’s return to Glasgow felt in some ways inevitable, even after the airline pulled its flights from the city in 2019.

“We have been serving Glasgow since before the pandemic and have been closely watching the market as demand recovers. Bringing Glasgow back into our network felt like a natural step to give our customers more choice and ways to experience Scotland,” Stephens said in an email. “We already offer more flights from the US to Scotland than any other US airline with flights to Edinburgh from our three hubs.”

Once United Airlines executives determined there was enough demand to restart the route, they needed to work with U.S. and British government representatives, tourism boards and airport operators to ensure the route’s success and attract passengers.

Stevens said United has been encouraged by booking trends since announcing the resumption of flights to Glasgow.

“Bookings for Glasgow are stable and in line with our expectations for the first season of service,” he said. “Many travelers are already taking open-jaw itineraries to and from Glasgow, then using the Edinburgh service at the end of their trip (or vice versa), as they are only an hour’s drive away, which allows United customers to see more of the country.”

In fact, demand is so strong that United has already expanded its slots on this route. Originally planned to be a daily seasonal service until September, the service will now operate daily until late October.

Mr Stevens said Glasgow was worth checking out, even if you missed the inaugural edition.

If Scotland isn’t your destination, take a look at other inaugurations that may inspire your own travels in the future. We don’t know where the airline’s updated route map will take us.

The reporter for this article received access from United Airlines. USA TODAY maintains editorial control of content.

Zach Wichter is a travel reporter and writes the Cruising Altitude column for USA TODAY. He is based in New York and can be reached at zwichter@usatoday.com.

Savannah Guthrie’s Mother’s Day post honors missing mother Nancy

0


Savannah Guthrie said she will “never stop searching” for her missing mother, Nancy Guthrie, in a touching Mother’s Day tribute.

play

  • Savannah Guthrie’s 84-year-old mother, Nancy Guthrie, has been missing since February 1st.
  • FBI footage showed an armed person tampering with her front door camera before she disappeared.
  • In a Mother’s Day message, Savannah Guthrie said she “needs help” to bring her home.

Savannah Guthrie will “never stop looking” for her mother, Nancy Guthrie.

The Today anchor (54) took to Instagram on Mother’s Day to express his heartfelt condolences for his 84-year-old mother, who has been missing for more than three months. Authorities believe Nancy Guthrie was taken from her Arizona home against her will.

“Mom, daughter, sister, Nonnie, I miss you with every breath,” Guthrie wrote. “We will never stop searching for you. We will never be at peace until we find you.”

Guthrie shared his message alongside a touching video compilation showing various family photos and clips of Nancy Guthrie, including one in which the Today anchor and her mother posed together.

In her caption, Guthrie once again urged anyone who knows anything about her mother’s disappearance to call 1-800-CALL-FBI.

“We need help and we know someone can make a difference,” she said, adding, “You can remain anonymous and rewards are still available.”

Guthrie’s post ended with, “Keep praying. Let’s bring her home.”

Nancy Guthrie was reported missing from her home in Arizona on February 1st and had been missing since the evening before. In February, the FBI released an image showing an armed man fiddling with a camera at Nancy Guthrie’s front door before her disappearance, but the suspect in the image has not been identified.

The Pima County Sheriff’s Office continues to investigate the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie. Guthrie’s family has announced a reward of up to $1 million for information leading to her recovery.

Savannah Guthrie left the Today show in February after her mother went missing, but she returned to work on April 6 and has been on the air ever since. Before her first day back on Today, she gave an interview with Hoda Kotb and explained her decision to return.

“It’s hard to imagine doing that, because this is a place of so much joy and brightness,” she said. “I can’t come back and try to be something I’m not. But I can’t not go back, because that’s my family. I think that’s part of my purpose now. I want to smile, so it’s real. My joy becomes my protest. My joy becomes my answer. And it’s fun to be there.”

There have been no significant developments or developments in the Guthrie investigation in recent weeks. Tucson police recently confirmed that human bones were found 11 miles from Nancy Guthrie’s home on May 7, but the bones were “prehistoric” in nature and unrelated to the case.

Contributor: KiMi Robinson, USA TODAY, and Sarah Lapidus, The Arizona Republic

Impulse buying is on the rise. Here’s how to stop it

0

play

A new study finds that even though American consumers are feeling their wallets tighten, many are still making impulse purchases.

53% of consumers surveyed by PartnerCentric said their overall budget is tighter in 2026 than in 2025. However, 81% of consumers said they had made an impulse purchase so far in 2026. The average number of impulse purchases was 7, and the median spend per purchase was $50. The average amount spent on one single biggest impulse purchase was $355.

“The consumer economy is in a strange place right now. Even though the majority of consumers say they’re on a tight budget this year, they’re still shopping beyond the essentials,” Stephanie Harris, founder and CEO of PartnerCentric, told USA TODAY.

“In fact, Gen Z and Millennials are the most likely to report making an impulse purchase in 2026, at 86% and 85%,” she says. It’s an emotion, a desire for small rewards when life is expensive and you feel a lot of pressure. ”

What did people buy on impulse?

The top categories for impulse purchases were food or beverages at 54%, followed by clothing at No. 2 (53%), electronics at 35%, and shoes or accessories at 26%.

The number one reason for impulse purchases was price, with 65% citing price, and 64% saying it was because of a treat or reward. 41% of respondents said it made them feel good in the moment, and 28% said they didn’t know they wanted it until they saw it.

But there were also generational differences.

Gen Z shoppers were the most likely (74%) to say they needed a little treat or treat, compared to 59% of Millennials, 62% of Gen Xers, and 50% of Baby Boomers. Baby boomers were the most likely to make impulse purchases based on price or bargains, with 71% jumping on bargains, compared to 67% of millennials, 65% of Gen Xers, and 63% of Gen Zers.

Women were more likely to buy clothing, food, and beauty products on impulse, while men were more likely to buy electronics, food, and clothing.

Additionally, online or major e-commerce sites are the most popular place for impulse purchases at 64%, compared to 36% in person at a big box store, 34% at a grocery store, and 22% during the holidays.

Why do people make impulse purchases?

Impulse buying is often driven by an interaction between emotion, environment, and immediate gratification, said Sining Wang, an assistant professor of economics at Case Western Reserve University’s Weatherhead School of Business. Mr. Wang teaches courses in economic behavior and psychology, among others.

The modern retail environment, especially online platforms, is designed to reduce friction and encourage faster decision-making through personalized recommendations, limited-time offers, one-click purchases, and continuous exposure to products, Wang told USA TODAY.

Shoppers don’t always make completely rational or long-term optimization decisions, Wang said.

“Emotional states can temporarily shift our attention from future outcomes to immediate rewards,” he says.

Buying something can create short-term pleasure, control, and even a sense of accomplishment, he said.

“This is especially true when the individual purchases are relatively small, even though they may accumulate over time,” Wang said.

Stress can increase impulse buying

Stress also plays a big role in impulse buying, Wang said. Under stress, people often experience a decrease in self-control and an increased desire for immediate comfort and reward.

“Shopping can temporarily relieve anxiety or create a sense of control during times of uncertainty, which is one reason why impulse buying may increase during times of economic uncertainty, work schedule demands, or broader social stress,” Wang said.

There is also evidence that mental fatigue affects the quality of decision-making. When individuals are cognitively exhausted, they are less likely to evaluate purchases carefully and more likely to rely on emotional or habitual decision-making, Wang said.

Tips to avoid impulse purchases

According to Wang, here are ways you can avoid or curb impulse purchases.

  • Implement a “cooling-off” period before making non-essential purchases, especially online. Waiting 24 hours greatly reduces emotional decision-making.
  • Avoid shopping when you are stressed, mentally upset, or overly tired.
  • Create structure before entering the store or website with a shopping list and predefined budget.
  • Remove stored credit card information from online retailers to make the purchasing process more hassle-free.
  • Track small discretionary purchases over time. Consumers often underestimate how quickly small impulse purchases can add up.
  • Be wary of marketing tactics designed to create a sense of urgency, such as countdown timers or “while stocks last” messages.

“While impulse purchases themselves are not necessarily harmful, problems tend to arise when repeated emotional spending is disconnected from long-term financial goals,” Wang says.

Betty Lin-Fisher is a consumer reporter for USA TODAY. Contact her at blinfisher@USATODAY.com or follow her at @blinfisher on X, Facebook and Instagram and @blinfisher.bsky.social on Bluesky.. Sign up for our free The Daily Money newsletter, breaking down complex consumer and financial news. Subscribe here.

President Trump says Energy Secretary is ‘positive’ about suspending gas tax in response to price hikes

0


Americans pay about 18 cents per gallon in taxes on gasoline and 24 cents per gallon on diesel fuel.

play

Energy Secretary Chris Wright said the Trump administration is prepared to suspend the federal gasoline tax to reduce costs for U.S. consumers amid the Iran war.

Wright appeared on NBC’s “Meet the Press” on May 10, and after being asked about suspending the gas tax, he said, “I support any steps that are taken to lower gas prices and lower prices for Americans.”

The national average gasoline price rose to $4.55 per gallon last week, according to AAA. Gasoline prices haven’t increased this much since 2022, when the national average reached $5.01.

The federal gasoline tax is about 18 cents per gallon, and 24 cents per gallon for diesel fuel.

Wright declined to predict whether gas prices will rise above $5 a gallon this year.

“I don’t know what the future holds for gas prices,” he told host Kristen Welker when asked if gas prices could rise further in the coming weeks.

During an appearance on “Meet the Press” in March, Wright told Welker there was “a good chance” consumers would see $3 gas by the summer. In an appearance on May 10, he sidestepped these claims and said, “I can’t make predictions.”

“If we can move freely across the Strait of Hormuz, energy prices will come down,” he said.

Millie Bobby Brown honors adoptive mother in first Mother’s Day post

0


Millie Bobby Brown gave a shoutout to her adoptive mothers on her first Mother’s Day. Check out her and other stars’ posts, from Reese Witherspoon to Kim Kardashian.

play

First-time mom Millie Bobby Brown celebrated Mother’s Day on May 10th by subtly celebrating motherhood in all its forms.

The Stranger Things star shared stories on Instagram that recognize “hopeful mothers-to-be,” “exhausted mothers,” “new mothers,” “grieving mothers,” “stepping up mother figures,” “mothers of prodigal children,” “single mothers,” and “foster or adoptive mothers.”

Brown, 22, and her husband, rock star Jon Bon Jovi’s son Jake Bon Jovi, 24, adopted a baby girl in August last year.

On her birthday, February 19, Brown posted a photo of herself and her young daughter on the beach, saying, “I’m grateful for my husband and daughter.” “I’m very blessed.”

The pair announced the birth of their child this summer in a joint Instagram post, writing, “We are so excited to embark on this next chapter of beautiful parenting in both peace and privacy.” And now there are three.

Here’s how other celebs are spending Mother’s Day.

Kris Jenner shares classic Kardashian family photo

Mom Kris Jenner posted a merry-go-round of family photos to celebrate her large family of six adult children and 13 grandchildren.

“Being a mother and grandmother has been the most rewarding and meaningful role in my life. It has brought me more joy, love, and purpose than I ever could have imagined,” Jenner, 70, wrote alongside photos, some dating back to her older children’s own childhoods.

“I am so grateful to my beautiful mother for teaching me everything about unconditional love, strength, and always going out of my way for my family. And I am infinitely proud of the women and mothers my daughters have become. Watching them love and nurture their babies is one of the greatest gifts.”

Kim Kardashian brings conversation back to baby video of her four children with Ye

Daughter Kim Kardashian also shared a clip reel of baby and toddler footage of her four children with ex-husband Yeh, ex-Kanye West: North, Saint, Chicago and Psalm.

“My baby!!! Thank you for choosing me to be your mother,” the 45-year-old reality star and businesswoman wrote.

Her sister Kylie Jenner, 28, posted a photo of her daughter Stormi and son Ire Webster, as well as a video showing a banner reading “Best Mom Ever” and a stack of “I love you” balloons with floral Mylar balloons. “My kids are so cute,” she captioned her Instagram Story.

Nicole Kidman shares sentimental photo with daughters Sunday and Faith

Nicole Kidman has shared an old image, which appears to be from a desert vacation, with her daughters Sunday and Faith (whose father is Keith Urban).

“To my beautiful daughters, being a mother is the greatest joy,” she wrote. “Happy Mother’s Day to all the mothers around the world.”

Kidman, 58, is also the mother of two adult children, Bella and Connor, whom she adopted with ex-husband Tom Cruise. Her post didn’t mention them.

Demi Moore talks passionately about three “pretty girls”: Rumer, Scout and Talulah Willis

Demi Moore reminisced about their childhoods with a black-and-white childhood portrait of her daughters Rumer Willis, Scout Willis, and Talulah Willis, as well as a video clip of the ladies dancing at the 2025 Vanity Fair Oscar Party.

“I still remember the first time you fell into my arms. Come on, look,” Moore, 63, wrote of her children with Bruce Willis. “My sweet girls, you have grown so much that I have taken my breath away. And somehow, every year, I love you more and more.”

Justin Timberlake pays tribute to ‘the greatest women I know’

The Grammy-winning singer and songwriter shared a rare glimpse into her family life with several family photos documenting the day.

In one photo, Timberlake, 45, casually dressed in a hoodie and ball cap, and his wife Jessica Biel, 44, cradle their two children, Silas and Phineas. He also shared a selfie of the couple hugging and a throwback shot with his mother, Lynne Bomer Harless.

“The greatest women I know,” he simply captioned the post. “Happy Mother’s Day.”

The 32-year-old pop star posted a video of her mother Joan Grande on her Instagram Stories, showing her smiling as she walks into the room and picks up a cup of tea.

“Beautiful inside and out!” Ariana Grande captioned the video. “You are the smartest, funniest, most generous, hardest working, and kindest. I love you so much.”

Reese Witherspoon shares vintage photo with grandmother Dorothea

Reese Witherspoon shared her gratitude for four generations, including a vintage photo of little Reese and her grandmother.

“Thank you to the women who shaped me. My amazing mother Betty and grandmother Dorothea who made my childhood so magical,” she wrote, along with heart and tulip emojis. “And to these three beautiful people who made me a mother. Happy Mother’s Day.”

She ended the merry-go-round with a photo of her three children, Ava, Deacon and Tennessee, holding up pink mylar balloons that read “MOM.”

“Slide 2!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!” friend Kerry Washington commented with heart eyes while praising Reese’s childhood photo.

Spring & Mulberry chocolate bar recall expands due to salmonella concerns

0

play

There has been an expanded recall of chocolate containing dates due to concerns about salmonella contamination.

On May 8, Spring & Mulberry expanded its chocolate bar recall to all finished products manufactured using batches of date ingredients, following what the company called a “comprehensive root cause investigation.”

“An investigation determined that a single lot of date ingredients used in the manufacture of the company’s chocolate was the most likely source of contamination,” the company said in a news release.

The news release said all products included in the expanded recall have tested negative for Salmonella and there have been no confirmed reports of illness. These bars will be available for sale online and in stores from August 2025.

The company originally announced a voluntary recall of mint leaf date chocolate bars in January after routine third-party testing confirmed possible salmonella contamination.

If you have an affected bar, please do not consume it. Refunds can be obtained by contacting Spring & Mulberry with a photo of the product packaging showing the batch code.

Influenced Spring and Mulberry Chocolate Bar Lot

The following flavors with lot codes were announced to be part of an extended recall.

  • blood orange: 025217, 025289, 025325
  • coffee: 025226, 025274, 025344
  • Earl Gray: 025346
  • Lavender rose: 025204, 025205, 025212, 025216, 026037, 026040
  • Mango chili: 025245, 025322, 025328
  • Mint leaves: 025225, 025272, 025342, 025364
  • Mixed berries: 025220, 025223, 025247, 025248, 025251, 025253, 025288, 025296, 025335, 026008
  • Mulberry fennel: 025230, 025287
  • Pecan dates: 025233, 025237, 025238, 025239, 025240, 025241, 025290, 025294, 025329, 025330
  • Pure dark: 025217, 025218, 025219, 025254, 025266, 025269, 025324, 025338, 025350
  • Pure Dark Mini: 025302, 025303, 026009
  • Sea salt: 026013, 026014

Symptoms and treatment of salmonella poisoning

According to the Food and Drug Administration, salmonella is a bacterium that can cause serious and sometimes fatal infections in young children, frail and elderly people, and people with weakened immune systems. Signs of salmonella poisoning include:

  • Diarrhea that is bloody or that persists for more than 3 days without improvement
  • Diarrhea and fever of 102 degrees or higher
  • Excessive vomiting, especially if you can’t keep fluids down
  • Signs of dehydration include a dry mouth and throat, less frequent urination, and feeling dizzy when you stand up.
  • stomach cramps

Symptoms most commonly occur 6 hours to 6 days after exposure. Most people recover in four to seven days, but people with weakened immune systems, such as children under 5 and adults over 65, can experience more severe symptoms that require treatment and hospitalization.

Martin Short opens up about his daughter’s death in new interview

0

play

Less than three months after losing his eldest daughter, Martin Short has opened up about his grief in a new interview.

The 76-year-old “Murder in the Bills” star reflected on the death of his daughter, Katherine Hartley Short, in a conversation with “CBS Sunday Morning” that aired May 10. The Los Angeles County Coroner’s Office previously confirmed that Short’s 42-year-old daughter died by suicide.

“It’s been a nightmare for my family,” Short told CBS. “But, like my wife, there was an understanding that mental health and cancer are both illnesses and, in some cases, terminal conditions. And my daughter struggled for a long time with extreme mental health, including borderline personality disorder, and did her best until she couldn’t anymore.”

He added that he wants to help bring “mental health” out of the shadows so people are “not ashamed” to talk about it. “Instead of hiding behind the word suicide, accept that this may be the final stage of the disease,” he says.

Short also talked about losing many people in his life over the past year, including his sister-in-law, daughter, and friends Diane Keaton, Rob and Michelle Reiner, and Catherine O’Hara. “It’s amazing,” he said, adding that he “can’t” wrap his head around all the losses. “You just have to breathe in and breathe out.”

Short’s representative confirmed Katherine Hartley Short’s death in February, saying in a statement shared with USA TODAY: “The Short family is devastated by this loss and asks for privacy at this time. Katherine was loved by all and will be remembered for the light and joy she brought to the world.” The “Three Amigos” actor shared Katherine with wife Nancy Dolman Short, who died of ovarian cancer in 2010. They also had two sons.

Short has faced many losses in his life since childhood. When he was 12 years old, his older brother died in a car accident, and within a few years, his parents also died.

“I was preceded in death by my brother David. He was the star of the family,” Short said at an event during the Netflix Is a Joke festival in Los Angeles on May 7, according to People. “Then my mother was diagnosed with cancer at her funeral and passed away three years later. My father passed away the following year.”

Short told “CBS Sunday Morning” that losing her brother, mother and father by the age of 20 gave her “perspective” on grief.

“Ever since I was a child, I understood that the end of life comes to us all, and for some it comes too soon,” he said. “We have to celebrate what we’ve been through with them and we’re so fortunate. … When I think about them, they just went next door for a while.”

A new Netflix documentary about the comedian, “Marty, Life Is Short,” will be released on May 12th.

If you or someone you know is in crisis, contact the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline by calling or texting 988 or visiting 988lifeline.org.. The Crisis Text Line also provides free 24/7 confidential support via text message when people in crisis dial 741741.

Contributor: KiMi Robinson, USA TODAY

Prime Minister Netanyahu says Iran responds to US proposal, saying “the war is not over”

0

play

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in an interview on CBS’ 60 Minutes scheduled to air on May 10 that the war between the United States and Israel against Iran is “not over.”

In excerpts of the interview published before the show aired, the prime minister claimed that nuclear material still exists in Iran and could be removed “if we just go in and take it out.”

Prime Minister Netanyahu said President Donald Trump told him he wanted to “go in there” and refused to rule out the use of U.S. troops to recover nuclear material.

“I’m not going to talk about military means,” Netanyahu said. “I think it’s physically possible.”

Prime Minister Netanyahu further stated that military objectives have not been fully achieved.

“There are still enrichment facilities that have to be dismantled. There are still Iranian-backed proxy facilities. There are also ballistic missiles that Iran still wants to produce,” Netanyahu said. “Now we have degraded much of it, but everything is still there and there is work left to do.”

USA TODAY has reached out to the White House for comment on the interview.

According to Iranian state media, the interview took place on the same day that Iran accepted a U.S. proposal to end the war. Details of the response have not been disclosed.

“We will never bow before our enemies. Even if there is talk of dialogue or negotiations, it does not mean surrender or withdrawal,” Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said in a post on X on May 10. “Rather, the goal is to protect the rights of the Iranian state and defend its interests with decisive force.”

U.S. Energy Secretary Christopher Wright appeared on NBC’s “Meet the Press” on May 10 and said the Trump administration had not yet heard “a clear solution” from Iran.

The interview took place as support for Israel in the United States is at historic lows.

According to a survey released on April 7 by the Pew Research Center, 60% of all American adults have a favorable opinion of Israel, compared to 53% a year ago, a 20-point change from 2022 onwards. Only 37% of respondents had a favorable opinion of Israel.

The war has fueled Americans’ suspicions that Israel, and Netanyahu in particular, has dragged the United States into a long-term conflict in the Middle East. Notably, Trump’s former ally and conservative commentator Tucker Carlson repeatedly called Trump a “slave” of Israel and Netanyahu in an interview.

Contributors: Katherine Palmer, Carissa Wadick, Eduardo Cuevas – USA TODAY

Tatum O’Neal’s son Kevin McEnroe writes emotional essay about drug use

0


Tatum O’Neal’s son Kevin McEnroe opens up about the actress’ struggle with addiction in an emotional and relatable Mother’s Day essay.

play

Tatum O’Neal’s son opens up about the Oscar-winning actress’ struggle with addiction in an emotional and empathetic essay for Mother’s Day.

Kevin McEnroe, whose parents include O’Neal and tennis player John McEnroe, published a vulnerable essay written in the form of a letter to his mother in Small Bow magazine on May 7th. In it, he said the Paper Moon star, 62, had not been “always a mother” to him and talked about how difficult it was to watch her struggle with drug addiction. But he ended by offering love and forgiveness.

Ms. McEnroe wrote to Ms. O’Neal that when she was a child, “you were my mother until my boyfriend gave me heroin,” adding, “Sometimes you would leave the house in the middle of the night and not come back until the morning.”

“I don’t care that one of my earliest memories is of you sending me to buy cigarettes or me throwing away your drugs,” he wrote. “I don’t care that once I found a mirror on your bathroom counter, your answer was, you can say the line if you want. … I don’t care that you overdosed again and had a stroke and brain damage, and then you tried to escape from a memory care facility, and then you drank. In a weird way, I’m proud of that. That’s when I knew you were still alive.”

“It’s hard sometimes, but I love you,” McEnroe told his mother, adding that about a year and a half ago, his mother drank and told her she wanted to commit suicide. At first, she berated him, but said, “Then you called me and I helped you.” “You haven’t had a drink or a drug since then, and I’m proud of you for that. I’ve never seen you put so much effort into anything, but today you do.”

McEnroe also reflected on his substance abuse problems in the article, noting that he previously abused alcohol, cocaine, and painkillers. “I drank myself to death and you were about to attend my funeral,” he wrote. “I’m so lucky to be like you, because now I understand. I can forgive because I empathize.”

Later in the essay, he added: “I forgive you, and you forgive me, and we forgive others, because we have to. Otherwise we would both be dead.” In closing, he wished Ms. O’Neal a happy Mother’s Day and said he was “proud” to be her son.

O’Neal, who became the youngest Oscar winner at age 10 for her supporting role in Paper Moon, starring her father Ryan O’Neal, has opened up about her past drug abuse problems. She was arrested in New York in 2008 for purchasing cocaine and pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct.

In 2020, O’Neal suffered a near-fatal stroke from an overdose of morphine, opiates and painkillers. She was in a coma for six weeks. In a 2023 interview with People magazine, she said that when she came out of the coma, she was unable to speak because she “almost died.” The Bad News Bears star said at the time that he was in recovery and had spent two years trying to regain his memory.

“I’ve been trying to stay sober my whole life,” O’Neal told People magazine, adding that she had been an addict “on and off for the last 30 to 40 years.” McEnroe also told People that her mother has “embraced this attempt at recovery,” adding, “In the world of recovery, there can be moments where you feel like, ‘I can’t live like this.'” And I think that’s what ultimately happened. I see great hope now. ”

In a new essay, McEnroe told his mother that the stroke was “the best thing that ever happened to you and to us,” because “even though you’re alive today, you definitely wouldn’t be alive and there’s hope that tomorrow you might be alive.”

If you or someone you know is suffering from a mental and/or substance use disorder, you can call the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s free and confidential Treatment Referral and Information Service at 1-800-662-HELP (4357). Available 24/7 in English and Spanish (TTY: 1-800-487-4889).

According to Iranian media, Iran has accepted the US peace proposal. What you need to know

0


The Trump administration’s framework proposes a pause in fighting until authorities develop a permanent peace plan.

play

WASHINGTON – Iran has accepted President Donald Trump’s offer to end wartime hostilities and start peace talks on a range of contentious issues, Iran’s IRNA news agency reports.

Details about Iran’s response were not immediately available, and the White House did not respond to a request for comment. U.S. Energy Secretary Christopher Wright appeared on “Meet the Press” on May 10 and said the Trump administration had not yet heard “a clear solution” from Iran.

IRNA reported that Iran has sent a response to President Trump’s proposal to intermediary Pakistan.

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian appeared to mention the latest proposal in a May 10 post to X.

“We will never bow before our enemies. Even if talk of dialogue and negotiations comes up, it does not mean surrender or withdrawal,” he said in the post, translated from the original Persian. “Rather, the goal is to protect the rights of the Iranian state and defend its national interests with decisive force.”

The ongoing negotiations come as a month-long ceasefire between the two countries appears to be holding shaky despite naval gunfire near the Strait of Hormuz in recent days.

Gasoline prices appear to be stabilizing on the back of hopes for a peace framework with Iran. Wright on May 10 did not rule out the possibility of eliminating the gas tax to reduce costs for U.S. consumers, but declined to predict whether prices could rise above $5 a gallon or below $3 a gallon by the end of the year.

Here’s what we know so far about the war.

A short-term proposal to suspend hostilities and resume negotiations

The U.S. plan proposes a pause in fighting to hammer out a permanent peace plan, but has so far failed to gain support among Iranian negotiators. The proposal also calls for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz for a month, perhaps one of Iran’s most powerful levers of leverage against the United States in the ongoing war.

According to multiple media reports, the plan was presented by the Trump administration as a moratorium on fighting in order to restart peace talks. Following peace talks in Islamabad, Pakistan, on April 12, the United States and Iran failed to reach an agreement. Efforts to return to the negotiating table have since stalled, but President Trump has repeatedly extended the self-imposed ceasefire deadline.

The latest round of talks comes after a week of sporadic clashes amid a month-long ceasefire in the Persian Gulf.

What does this proposal mean for gas prices?

The national average price of gasoline rose to $4.55 a gallon last week, the highest price since $5.01 in 2022, according to AAA. Oil prices have fallen slightly amid conflicting negotiations between Iran and the Trump administration.

Asked on “Meet the Press” if gas prices could reach $5 a gallon again or fall below $3 this year, Wright declined to make a prediction.

“If we can move freely across the Strait of Hormuz, energy prices will come down,” he said.

The Energy Secretary has indicated that officials are open to suspending the federal gasoline tax to lower prices for consumers.

“This administration supports any steps that are taken to lower prices at the pump and lower prices for Americans,” he said.

Democrats harshly criticize Trump over war as polls slump

Meanwhile, Democrats continue to criticize President Trump and his administration over the war. Public opinion polls since the war began have consistently shown that the conflict is largely unpopular with the American public, with rising gasoline prices being the top concern.

Democratic Sen. Cory Booker said in an interview with “Meet the Press” on May 10 that the president has “no way out” of the war, condemning the conflict because of its impact on American deaths, costs and energy prices.

“This will continue for months, and those who promised to lower prices and avoid foreign ties will continue to feel the pain,” Booker said.

A Marist poll released on May 6 found that 6 in 10 Americans (60%) disapproved of President Trump’s handling of the war against Iran, saying it had “done more harm than good.”

The poll, conducted in collaboration with NPR and PBS News, found that 33% approved and 7% were unsure, up 6 points from 54% in March.

Ship off the coast of Qatar hit by drone

On the morning of May 10th, a cargo ship was attacked by a drone off the coast of Qatar, causing a small fire on board. The British military said no injuries were reported and authorities were investigating the source of the projectile.

The attack is the latest to threaten the fragile ceasefire between the United States and Iran as peace negotiations continue.

The navy has been firing artillery near the Strait of Hormuz since fighting ceased more than a month ago. On May 7, the U.S. Navy reported that it had disabled two Iranian tankers that were attempting to enter a port in the Islamic Republic.

Iran continues to restrict traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, and the United States has blocked the country’s ports.

A viral GoFundMe helped this mother overcome homelessness.

0

play

A year ago, Jonica Jamison said, “I didn’t even feel like a mother.”

She has three daughters, and her youngest was 7 months old on Mother’s Day last year. But at the time, Jamison’s family of five had been homeless for several months, and there was little hope that things would change.

They lived apart for weeks at a time, moving from hotel to hotel, and she and her husband sometimes spent the night in the car with their baby.

Jamison, 39, who earned a master’s degree and worked as a school counselor for 10 years before medical issues in her family led to unemployment and homelessness, said she was shocked to see her family’s life fall apart so quickly.

“I felt like a failure to my kids,” she told USA TODAY. “It was very difficult to find a way out of things. Things were very much on top of each other for me. It was really difficult to stay positive.”

USA TODAY spent time with Jamison and his family in Charlotte, North Carolina, last year and shared their story in December. The response to this article was overwhelming, with dozens of readers asking for help.

Jamison eventually started a GoFundMe — something she said she had never thought about before — and over Christmas and the weeks that followed, hundreds of donors raised more than $65,000 for her and her family.

“It’s not at all difficult to hope,” Jamison said.

With this funding, Jamison was able to secure housing for his family in Charlotte. She paid a 15-month lease up front to ensure her children had a place to call home next year. They moved into their home in January.

“I didn’t expect that to happen,” she said, adding that she keeps all the messages of encouragement people send her in a folder. “(It) really resonated with me.”

There are no easy solutions to overcoming homelessness

Jamison hopes to return to work in counseling and now has a passion for helping other families deal with homelessness. She has had several job interviews, but struggles to hold a position without childcare.

She remains the primary caregiver for her husband, who has multiple sclerosis, and her daughters, who have various medical needs.

“Not just because I need the money, but because I don’t want to be a stay-at-home mom. I don’t want to be just a caregiver,” Jamison said. “I love my family and I’m dedicated to seeing them all in a better place than they are now. But that’s not the only thing I want to do.”

Families at risk of homelessness need the right resources and support systems to achieve stability, said Pair Moraras, a senior research fellow in the Urban Institute’s Division of Housing and Communities.

“A lot of families are really falling between the cracks,” Moraras said, noting that some assistance programs have requirements that may prevent families from getting the help they need.

Jamison consistently reaches out to housing assistance and social services programs, but her family is often told they don’t qualify or don’t hear back at all. One of the only organizations she says has been helpful is the Queen City Pregnancy Resource Center, where she receives free diapers, gas cards, parenting classes and other support. But even with GoFundMe, Jamison said the family isn’t out of the woods yet.

“And it’s not because I’m not trying, it’s because I am trying,” she said. “It will cost a lot of money to recover.”

This Mother’s Day, Jamison is grateful for the simple joys of motherhood

More than the money, the response to her story in December gave Jamison hope.

Jamison previously said he was just trying to survive. “Right now I’m fighting to grow,” she added.

On the Tuesday before Mother’s Day, Jamison texted USA TODAY about the simple joys of motherhood that she felt grateful for that morning.

“I’m listening to my daughters get ready for school and having space to move around comfortably without being cramped in the same room with my baby sister and parents,” she wrote. “I feel so peaceful listening to the sound of the local train and not having to rush to think about paying for the next day’s hotel room. I enjoy some quiet time with my baby girl while feeding her breakfast.”

Madeline Mitchell’s role covering women and the care economy for USA TODAY is supported by a partnership with Pivotal and Journalism Funding Partners. Funders do not provide editorial input.

Contact Madeline at: memitchell@usatoday.com and @maddiemitch_ With X.

Steelers reportedly won’t meet with Aaron Rodgers as planned

0

It seems like every time the Pittsburgh Steelers take a step forward toward signing Aaron Rodgers, the team takes two steps back.

Despite multiple reports that the Steelers are scheduled to meet with Rodgers this weekend, Insider’s Mark Kaboly provided an alarming update on the situation.

“As far as I can gather, there are no talks scheduled or expected between Aaron Rodgers and the Steelers,” Kaboly wrote, via X. “We contacted the couple in the building, but no one has seen him yet.”

Well, easy to come, easy to go.

The NFL world was abuzz with reports that Rodgers was scheduled to visit the Steelers and that a deal is expected to be made sooner or later, but it looks like fans will have to wait a little longer after the Cavory news.

For the latest Steelers news, including offseason moves, follow X @TheSteelersWire and like our Facebook page.

‘SNL’ cold open brings back Matt Damon’s Brett Kavanaugh impression

0


Matt Damon revived his Brett Kavanaugh impression in this week’s “Saturday Night Live” cold open. The Supreme Court justices hit bars with Pete Hegseth, played by Colin Jost, and Kash Patel, played by Aziz Ansari.

play

Brett Kavanaugh, played by Matt Damon, is back in court.

“Saturday Night Live” opened with a surprise on the May 9th episode. That night’s host, Damon, reprized his role as a Supreme Court Justice outside in the cold.

This sketch was done at a bar in Washington DC. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth (played by Colin Jost) enters a store to get a drink to avoid his work colleagues. “Because no one in President Trump’s people likes to drink as much as I do.”

“Wrong!” Kavanaugh, played by Damon, tells Hegseth that “I thought I would find you here” because he “saw all the women covering their drinks” when he entered wearing a robe.

Kavanaugh and Hegseth were depicted in sketches as two party-loving peas in a pod. Yost’s Hegseth boasts that he “started a war,” while Damon’s Kavanaugh boasts that he “ended abortion,” adding, “Your body, my choice!”

Damon famously impersonated Kavanaugh on “SNL” in 2018 when he parodied the Senate Judiciary Committee hearings on Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court nomination.

Eventually, a third drinking buddy, Aziz Ansari’s FBI Director Kash Patel, walks into the bar. The “Parks and Recreation” actor made his impersonation debut in the May 2 cold open.

“Seriously, we’re all living the American dream,” Ansari’s Patel said. “I was the first in my family to go to a college party, years after I graduated.”

Kavanaugh, played by Damon, then revealed the secret to others. “We’re going to give Trump a third term,” he said, explaining that even though this is unconstitutional, President Donald Trump “discovered the original Constitution and wrote ‘Psycho!’ at the end.” ”

Recent episodes of SNL usually begin with James Austin Johnson playing the president, but this was the second consecutive cold open in which he didn’t appear. Last week’s SNL episode similarly focused on Hegseth’s Jost and Patel’s Ansari, but Johnson’s Trump was absent.

Damon will host the May 9 episode of “SNL,” marking his third time hosting “SNL” since 2018. Musical guest included Noah Kahan.

Episodes of “SNL” that aired over Mother’s Day weekend often recognized the holiday by having cast members’ mothers participate in the opening. However, in his monologue, Damon explained why the show skipped it this time.

“Typically, ‘SNL’ brings all of the cast’s mothers to the show first class, and no expense is spared,” he said. “Apparently, the same thing was going to happen this year, but then Spirit Airlines shut down. So to all of you waiting to meet the cast’s moms, I’m sorry, but it’s not going to happen tonight.”

However, there were exceptions. Marcello Hernandez’s mother made a cameo appearance in the audience with the comedian as part of an episode where the audience was oddly interested in seeing her.

During his monologue, Damon also joked about the fact that he was prepping for his new movie, The Odyssey, so early to appear on SNL, since the show will go on hiatus after its July 17 release date.

“A new movie is coming out,” he said. “It’s called ‘The Odyssey,’ but it’s not going to be released this weekend or next weekend, it’s going to be released in theaters nine weeks from now.”

Who will host next week’s “SNL”?

Damon’s “SNL” was the penultimate episode of “SNL” Season 51. The show’s season finale is scheduled for next Saturday, May 16th. Former cast member Will Ferrell returns to host the show for a sixth time, along with musical guest Paul McCartney.

“SNL” will then go on a summer hiatus, resuming with new episodes in the fall.

Exclusive excerpt from “Communion” – JD Vance recalls falling in love with Usha.

0

play

Vice President J.D. Vance is gearing up for the publication of a new memoir, this time about rediscovering religion.

Communion: Finding My Way Back to Faith (released June 16 by Harper) is Vance’s second book. His bestselling 2016 memoir, Hillbilly Elegy, chronicles his childhood, which was marked by abuse, alcoholism, and poverty. This became the basis for the 2020 Ron Howard-directed film starring Amy Adams and Glenn Close.

In “Communion,” Vance reflects on his Protestant upbringing and conversion to Catholicism after spending time as an atheist.

“An important part of that journey was falling in love with a girl who would eventually become a mother four times,” Vance told USA TODAY in a statement.

“Every mother, every family has their own story, with its ups and downs. To every mother reading this, I hope your story includes more good days than bad. And I hope you’re having a wonderful Mother’s Day.”

Read an excerpt from ‘Communion’ JD Vance: Vice President on how he met his wife Usha

Shortly before I started law school, one of my best friends, Mike, went through a particularly tough breakup with a girl. I did my best to calm my friend down with a combination of pleasant conversation and plenty of natural light, but all the standard clichés still applied. During their relationship, he admitted that he and his girlfriend were not particularly compatible. He complained that she was jealous. She demanded too much of his time. Her parents were interfering. But all of that disappeared into a fog of emotional pain. Now she was perfect and beautiful and the love of his life. She dumped him, and as I’ve found many times with friends, the only thing worse than heartache is heartache with a bruised ego.

Mike and I were home in Middletown over Christmas, so I took him to our favorite watering hole, Carol’s Speakeasy, to play darts, tell stories, and drink away our troubles.

It’s new, but he’s in a pretty good place, That’s what I thought when I left the bar.

But as I drove him home, a sense of loss – well lubricated by alcohol – flooded through him.

There he was in my old Honda Civic (I was sober and he wasn’t) yelling about this girl. I hugged him and listened to him in the driveway for about an hour, telling him to keep putting one foot in front of the other. I reminded him that he wasn’t that into her until she dumped him and that he was a handsome guy with lots of options.

“Besides,” I told him. “I’m single. When I get back to Columbus, I can be your wingman. There’s plenty of fish in the sea.”

“Yes,” he answered half-heartedly. Columbus was not a goal-rich environment for single couples.

In my own dating life, I had never felt the same kind of heartache. While I was in college and for a few years after graduation, I dated a girl named Mary. She was kind and wanted the same things in life as I did. That’s a nice house, a decent job, and a few kids. My family got along well with her. No relationship is perfect, but nothing seemed to be a deal breaker. Still, even though I love her, I couldn’t escape the feeling that if she dumped me the next day, I’d get over it right away. I would never react the way Mike reacted to his breakup with Jessica.

“Hey, I don’t think I have that gene or anything,” I said to Mike.

“What do you mean?” he asked.

“I’ve never fallen head over heels for a girl. Some are good, some are bad. I can rate Mary by all these objective criteria, and she’s mostly great. But if she broke up with me, would I sob? That’s not possible. Doesn’t that matter?”

“Maybe she’s not the right woman,” he suggested.

“Maybe,” I said. “But maybe I’m not that emotional.”

A few months after that conversation, I was still dating Mary. Now long distance, far from New Haven, CT, I was a few months into law school. I was walking late into the night on an unusually cold and rainy autumn day. New Haven was foggy and eerie, and the rain had left the streets deserted. And all the while, I was thinking about another student, Usha Bala Chirkuri.

I called my friend Mike and asked him about law school, his classmates, the atmosphere, and the girls.

“Dude, I seem to be obsessed with this chick in my little group. It’s unhealthy.”

I explained that this small group was a group of 16 students who shared all of their first grade classes.

I told him all about her. I mean, she was smarter than anyone else. Maybe her smile could brighten up a room. That she had the most amazing attitude.

“She can’t even walk like a normal person. Normal girls look kind of unstable in high heels,” I told him. “She’s different. She glides across the room no matter what shoes she wears. And her laugh, sheesh. Whenever she laughs, it’s the most amazing thing. She’s very modest, but her squeal is the best sound I’ve ever heard.”

“JD?” Mike interrupted. “Remember when you told me I didn’t have the gene to fall in love with a girl at first sight? I always thought that was BS. Now I know it is.”

Of course he was right. There is no need to elaborate on the main points. As a result of my current work, my relationship with the Second Lady has been written about, analyzed, researched, and dissected more than I ever thought possible. It’s strange to read something you know is a lie about the person you love the most. For example, a former classmate (and former acquaintance) told a leading newspaper that I was first attracted to Usha because of her “ambition.”

Usha and I found this humorous. I never confessed this to my classmate, but I was more attracted to Usha’s ambition. There were many things that I thought were unusual about Usha when I first met her. One is that she was fiercely competitive, which I found more odd than charming. She was incapable of jealousy, and I thought it came from supreme inner self-confidence. But when I asked her – she was as talented as anyone I’ve ever met – what she wanted to do, I was struck by how indifferent she was to traditional metrics of success.

“I just want to do interesting work,” she told me.

Her dream job was to run Sesame Workshop. Because she loved children and the idea of ​​creating educational programs that would interest them. At Yale Law School, we believe that everyone ultimately runs the world. You can’t throw a rock without hitting someone who thinks they’ll end up on the Supreme Court or in the U.S. Senate. But Usha was more capable than any of them, so that shouldn’t have bothered her at all. “There’s something a little off about all of this,” I said to Mike. “The least impressive people in this school are the most ambitious. But the most impressive people just want to have a family and a decent job.”

I said something similar to Usha: “You have the greatest mismatch between ambition and ability of anyone I’ve ever met. You could be Chief Justice, but you’re not interested in it.”

That complete indifference to what others want her to do or have her do to him is just one in a long list of attractive personality traits.

I once described Usha as a combination of beauty, intelligence, height, and every other genetic talent a human being could wish to possess. But there was something more. She was intense. I was attracted to her, unlike I had never been attracted to anyone before.

The reason I broke up with Mary was partly because of the distance, but mostly because I couldn’t imagine settling down with someone else.

“I’m going to marry this girl,” I said to my friend. “Otherwise, I’ll be a bachelor for the rest of my life.”

Everyone else was like a dim light bulb illuminating Usha’s glow. My feelings for her overrode every instinct and everything I thought I knew about women. “Let’s play things that aren’t available” was a phrase that young people used to talk about in order to attract the opposite sex. But instead, I told Usha that I loved her before we started dating. “Don’t be too strong” was another dating adage I learned from the world, but we had only been dating for a few weeks when I told her I wanted to get married and I was going to do whatever it took to get there.

I always wanted to go back to my hometown in Ohio, but she fell in love with New York. So I told her I was going to move with her to New York or California or Colorado. I didn’t care as long as she was there. I told her everything and asked her about everything. Her life was the most interesting in the world. Politics, technology, business – these were professional interests and things I wanted to read and work on. But Usha was the only one I felt real passion for.

Surprisingly, it worked. Usha and I started dating in law school, but our first summer together we were romantically and physically separated. I was first in Washington, D.C., and then in New Haven doing research for a professor, and she was working at a law firm in New York. We had only been dating for a few months, but I felt so strongly about her that she occupied my thoughts almost every waking moment. Of course, this was normal. Two young lovers find themselves in the early stages of a romance where everything is new, exciting, and profound. But I remember thinking that no man in the history of the world had ever felt so strongly towards a woman that he had to hide at least some of his feelings so as not to become too strong. The fact that we spent most of that summer in separate cities – the absence – made everything even worse.

Now that I think about it, it’s a wonder they didn’t break it. I didn’t just get too strong. I was the worst boyfriend in many ways. My traumatic childhood left me with a lot of resentment and terrible conflict management skills. I would overreact, retreat, fight or flight. – For minor violations. Even if Usha was my soulmate at Yale, I don’t deserve her. But still she stuck there.

Contributor: Mary Walrath-Holdridge

This monitoring of retirement accounts can cause confusion for your heirs

0


It may seem like an afterthought, but naming beneficiaries for your retirement accounts is extremely important. Here’s why:

play

Designating a beneficiary (or co-beneficiary) for a retirement account can feel like a simple administrative task, like small potatoes. However, not ensuring that your beneficiaries are named can cause serious problems for your loved ones after your death. Here’s a breakdown of what happens if the beneficiary is not current:

Account type matters

401(k) and other employer-sponsored plans

Let’s say you’re self-employed and have a Solo 401(k) or work for a company that offers a retirement plan, such as a traditional 401(k) or 403(b) plan. What happens to your retirement account when you die depends largely on whether you named a beneficiary. In that case, the plan will be transferred to the designated individuals without going through probate.

Probate is the legal process for settling the estate of a deceased person. This process verifies the will, pays any outstanding debts, and transfers any remaining assets to your heirs. For a simple probate, the entire process takes 3 to 6 months. However, it may take longer than that, and if the beneficiary is counting on it, it could put them in a financial bind.

Additionally, probate can be expensive, with filing fees, attorney fees, and other costs totaling 3% to 7% of the total estate.

Traditional IRA and Roth IRA

If you die without a designated beneficiary, the administrator of your traditional or Roth IRA will review your account agreement. If no living recipients are registered, the default recipient hierarchy is started. The general default order is that the surviving spouse is named first. If you don’t have a spouse, some guardians include children or other relatives in the beneficiary chain, but many do not and the IRA goes directly to your estate.

Once incorporated into an estate, the IRA triggers a five-year payment period instead of the 10-year rule available to the designated beneficiary. In other words, the IRA must be fully liquidated within five years.

As part of your estate, the IRA is also subject to potential creditor claims, and because it has a five-year payment period, it has a higher tax burden than if it had a ten-year payment period. The federal estate tax exemption for 2026 is $15 million, so most households won’t have to pay estate taxes, but the five-year forced liquidation could still result in a higher-than-expected tax bill.

How to check the latest information on your beneficiaries

It doesn’t hurt to set aside one day each year to check on your beneficiaries and see if they’re up to date. For example, if you were recently divorced, you may want to remove your ex-spouse as a beneficiary and replace him with someone else. The verification and update process includes only two steps:

  1. Gather all your retirement accounts.
  2. If you have not designated a beneficiary or would like to change the beneficiary on your account, please contact your plan administrator or custodian to request a beneficiary designation form.

And don’t forget, you can do it your own way. For example, you can specify both a primary beneficiary and a contingent beneficiary who will inherit the account if the primary beneficiary is unable to receive the assets. You can also designate multiple beneficiaries for a single retirement account if you wish.

Naming a beneficiary is the easiest way to ensure your loved one receives their retirement account with as little hassle as possible.

The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

The Motley Fool is a USA TODAY content partner providing financial news, analysis and commentary designed to help people take control of their financial lives. Its content is produced independently of USA TODAY.

The $23,760 Social Security bonus that most retirees completely overlook

Offers from the Motley Fool: If you’re like most Americans, you’re several years (or more) behind on your retirement savings. But there are some lesser known ones “Secrets of Social Security” It may help ensure that you increase your retirement income.

One Easy Trick Could Pay You Up to $23,760…Every year! By learning how to make the most of your Social Security benefits, we think you can retire confidently with the peace of mind we all desire. participate stock advisor To learn more about these strategies,

View “Social Security Secrets” »

The op-ed proposes automating Trump’s account and giving every baby $1,000.

0

play

Two academic researchers want the Trump administration to automate the “Trump Account” so that every baby born between 2025 and 2028 automatically receives $1,000 in retirement savings.

About 6.6 million American children are enrolled in a new federal retirement savings program, and 1.4 million newborns will receive a $1,000 contribution from the government, the Treasury Department reported May 8.

These families joined the program ahead of its July 4 launch by filing the new IRS Form 4547 on the website trumpaccounts.gov or with their 2025 tax return.

But if enrollment were automatic, the Trump Account program could reach 73 million American children, researchers say.

“I think it’s a missed opportunity,” said Stephen Rohr, an assistant professor at the Brown School at Washington University in St. Louis. “These accounts have the potential to be transformative in how we help people in this country build wealth.”

In a May 4 op-ed in the Washington Post, co-authored with fellow WashU scholar Jin Huang, Rohr argues for automation of the Trump account.

The researchers said the Treasury Department is aware of their proposal.

“The U.S. Department of the Treasury is committed to maximizing the impact of Trump Accounts, facilitating the enrollment of all eligible children, and achieving the goal of ensuring every American child has a Trump Account,” the Treasury Department said in a statement.

What is a “Trump Account”?

The program promises to put $1,000 into a retirement savings account for every child born during the four years of Donald Trump’s second presidential term, essentially an IRA for children.

American children under the age of 18 born before 2025 are also eligible for Trump accounts, but without the seed money from the federal government.

The program is tailored to teach children about saving and investing and encourage them and their families to build assets for adulthood and retirement.

Critics have warned that the Trump account could become an expensive gift to the wealthy, employed by already well-invested parents as a way to pad their portfolios.

Past research has shown that low-income Americans are less likely to participate in retirement savings. For example, only about half of workers making between $15,000 and $30,000 a year participate in the Vanguard 401(k) program, compared to 95% of workers making more than $15,000 a year.

“Without automatic enrollment, without the ability to ensure low-income households open accounts and receive the $1,000, there is a risk that this program becomes another tax subsidy that primarily benefits wealthy households,” said Madeline Brown, senior policy associate at the Nonpartisan Urban Institute.

Why is automatic registration important?

Auto-enrollment is widely considered the ideal model for retirement savings programs. This is because potential savers are more likely to participate if they are required to make an effort to opt out.

According to AARP, 20 states have introduced automatic IRA programs as a safety net for employees who don’t have access to retirement savings. The state program provides retirement savings to these workers through automatic enrollment.

Under federal law, most new 401(k) plans starting in 2025 were required to automatically enroll employees, rather than leaving the decision up to employees.

In an editorial, WashU researchers cite Maine’s Alfond Grant program, which provides parents with a $500 grant for newborn babies. When the program switched from voluntary to automatic enrollment, participation rates increased from 40% to 100%.

“I think that’s the important message: We know how to do this,” said Huang, a social policy professor at the Brown School.

Based on CDC data, approximately 3.6 million Americans will be born in 2025. Of this group, 1.4 million people are currently registered with Trump accounts.

“So we need to understand who are the two-thirds of kids who didn’t claim $1,000,” said Brown of the Urban Institute.

Why aren’t more people claiming Trump’s account?

The Trump Account website touts the registration process as relatively easy. Submit Form 4547, a one-page document that asks for your date of birth, social security number, and other basic information. After following the instructions on the site and submitting the form, you will be contacted with instructions on how to complete your account setup.

But tax returns are rarely easy, and this one is new.

“This is new and unfamiliar, and people may just not have the knowledge to tackle it,” Rohr said. “The more paperwork you put on people, the more people you’re likely to lose in the process.”

Some new parents may not even know the Trump account exists. Anyone filing a 2025 tax return had the opportunity to file Form 4547, but millions of low-income Americans have not filed a tax return.

“The decision to tie enrollment in this program primarily to tax filings leaves behind the children who need it most,” Brown said.

Newborns aren’t the only ones who could miss out on free retirement savings.

In addition to the $1,000 federal contribution, philanthropists Michael and Susan Dell have pledged to donate $250 each to the first 25 million Trump Account applicants who are under the age of 10, born before 2025, live in a ZIP code, and have a median income of less than $150,000.

Numerous other pledges have been received from philanthropists and American businesses, potentially expanding the scope of the program.

It may sound unbelievable that anyone would give up free retirement savings. But small retirement accounts routinely slip through the cracks, getting lost or forgotten by people who change jobs.

“Our experience in the private sector with very small accounts is that a significant percentage of the population has never connected their accounts,” said J. Spencer Williams, founder and CEO of financial technology company Retirement Clearinghouse. “You end up with orphaned, orphaned accounts.”

Trump’s account won’t necessarily remain small. The program’s website estimates that even without additional donations, a $1,000 donation will grow to $6,000 by the time the newborn turns 18. By age 55, it will reach $243,000.

“We all pay for these accounts with our taxes,” said Monique Morrissey, senior economist at the Progressive Economic Policy Institute. “So even if you don’t like the idea of ​​a Trump account, you should use it.”

Coach staying in the Bay Area

0

play

The Golden State Warriors appear ready to fight back — at least one key piece of the puzzle is reportedly locked in place.

Steve Kerr has agreed to return as the team’s head coach after both sides agreed to a two-year contract extension, his agent told ESPN. According to a report by ESPN, Kerr will remain the highest-paid coach in the NBA on an annual basis.

This came after weeks of speculation that Mr Kerr was considering resigning. Kerr’s contract was about to expire and he was in talks with the Warriors about his future with the team.

“I still love coaching, but I understand that,” Kerr told reporters after the Warriors lost in the play-in tournament. “All of these jobs have an expiration date. There’s always a run, and when the run ends, you might need new blood, new ideas, etc.”

In fact, in the final minutes of the Warriors’ season-ending game against the Phoenix Suns on April 18, Kerr hugged Stephen Curry and Draymond Green on the sideline.

“I don’t know what’s going to happen next,” Kerr was heard telling the star players over an Amazon Prime Video microphone. “But I love you guys. Thank you.”

This is a clear indication that the Warriors are looking to make another comeback with Stephen Curry (age 38), Jimmy Butler (age 36), and Draymond Green (age 36), all of whose contracts expire in 2026-2027, assuming Green exercises his player option.

Green could decline his option and seek a multi-year deal, but the Warriors will need to carefully consider his future after the next two seasons.

It also shows that Kerr and the Warriors feel they can win. Kerr probably doesn’t want to be part of the rebuild. And in a similar vein, if the Warriors are looking to build for the future, they probably want to bring in a coach earlier in his career than the 60-year-old Kerr.

Either way, the Warriors will need to add some pieces to remain competitive in the Western Conference.

Butler suffered a torn ACL in January and his status for the start of the 2026-27 season may be in doubt. Either way, Golden State general manager Mike Dunleavy Jr. could use this closing period to compete to acquire a star, as it has become clear that this Warriors roster is lacking.

The Warriors were rumored to be signing Bucks star Giannis Antetokounmpo before February’s trade deadline, and Golden State could be involved again in the acquisition as Antetokounmpo’s future in Milwaukee will be evaluated this offseason.

Either way, one thing that could be beneficial for the Warriors is if Kerr can develop and advance young players.

Since taking over in 2014, Kerr’s record with Golden State is 604-353 (.631). He is the second-longest tenured active head coach in the NBA, behind Erik Spoelstra, who has been the head coach of the Miami Heat since 2008.

The 2025-26 season marked the first time in Kerr’s 12 years that the Warriors lost an 82-game season (37-45). Golden State went 15-50 in 2019-20, but played only 65 games due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Aside from winning five rings as a player with the Chicago Bulls and San Antonio Spurs, Kerr won four NBA championships as head coach of the Warriors.

Kerr took over from former head coach Mark Jackson in 2014-15 and led Golden State to the Finals in his first year. In the end, the Warriors defeated the Cleveland Cavaliers, ending a 40-year title drought. The following year, the team won a regular-season record 73 games, but ultimately lost the Finals rematch to the Cavs in seven games after Golden State blew a 3-1 lead.

That offseason, the Warriors signed Kevin Durant to change the balance of power in the NBA, winning back-to-back championships in 2017 and 2018, but losing their three-peat to the Toronto Raptors in 2019.

The Warriors won their most recent championship in 2022.

WHO details plans to repatriate cruise ships during hantavirus outbreak

0

play

Passengers from the hantavirus-infected expedition ship MV Hondius are expected to begin disembarking in carefully controlled groups in Tenerife early on Sunday, May 10, as the World Health Organization coordinates a massive international repatriation operation following multiple deaths from an outbreak on board.

According to an update from Oceanwide Expeditions on May 9, the ship is scheduled to arrive at Granadilla, the industrial port of Tenerife, the largest of the Canary Islands, at 5:30 a.m. local time on May 10. Passengers and a limited number of crew members will begin disembarking around 8 a.m. local time and be transferred directly to waiting aircraft.

The company said passengers will disembark under strict health protocols by either Zodiac ships carrying up to five people or boats carrying up to 10 people. The timing of each group’s disembarkation will be coordinated with repatriation flights organized by governments and international organizations.

Oceanwide Expeditions said it was not involved in the testing or repatriation process led by the WHO and national authorities.

WHO says Tenerife residents will not encounter passengers

In an open letter addressed directly to Tenerife residents on May 9, WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus sought to reassure local residents worried about the ship’s arrival because of memories of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Let me hear this clearly: This is not another coronavirus,” Ghebreyesus wrote. “The current public health risk from hantavirus remains low.”

Ghebreyesus said there are currently no symptomatic passengers on board and that WHO experts have confirmed that they remain on board. He also detailed the extensive precautionary measures planned for the evacuation operation.

“Passengers will be transported ashore by ferry through a completely cordoned corridor in sealed and guarded vehicles to the industrial port of Granadilla, far from residential areas, and will be repatriated directly to their home countries,” he wrote. “You’ll never run into them.”

Americans headed to the Nebraska quarantine

WHO and governments spent several days coordinating flights for passengers from more than 20 countries.

At a WHO briefing on May 9, Dr. Maria van Kerkhove, the agency’s acting director-general for epidemics and pandemic management, said passengers who developed symptoms during the evacuation would be immediately transferred to a medical evacuation plane and flown to the Netherlands for treatment.

Healthy passengers will board country-specific repatriation flights in Tenerife.

The US State Department confirmed that repatriation flights were being arranged for the Americans aboard the ship. After returning to the United States, the passengers will be taken to the National Quarantine Center at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.

CDC officials said epidemiologists and medical teams will conduct an exposure assessment of the American passengers and monitor them during the recommended 42-day observation period.

Outbreak linked to at least three deaths

The WHO announced that eight people have fallen ill in connection with the outbreak, three of whom have died (a Dutch couple and a German national). Six people have been confirmed to have Andean hantavirus infection, and two are still suspected of being infected.

Spanish health authorities announced on May 8 that a woman tested negative after traveling with a passenger who later died of hantavirus, but that additional preventive testing was planned.

After passengers disembark, the Hondius will pick up supplies before heading to Rotterdam in the Netherlands, where it will pick up the remaining crew of around 30 people. Oceanwide Expeditions said passengers’ baggage will be left on board and returned separately.

USA TODAY reporter Sara Moniuszko contributed to this report.

Reporter Anthony Thompson can be reached at ajthompson@usatodayco.com or on Twitter @athompsonUSAT.

Holly Madison talks about ‘strange sight’ at Hugh Hefner’s Playboy Mansion

0


The comments came after A&E’s 2022 documentary series, Playboy Secrets, in which she described some of her experiences at the mansion as traumatic and cult-like.

‘Girls Next Door’ alumna Holly Madison is reminiscing about what life was like at the Playboy Mansion before and after filming for the reality show began.

Hugh Hefner’s ex-girlfriend and former E! star. The reality series spoke about life in the Hefner mansion on the May 5 episode of their podcast “Let’s Be Honest.” She said filming “Girls Next Door” changed her “weird scenes,” such as group sex and a night out at a strip club.

“It was a really weird scene. Nobody liked it, and everybody just wanted to get it over with as quickly as possible,” she told podcast host Kristin Cavallari. In A&E in 2022 In the documentary series “Playboy Secrets” Madison described some of his experiences at the mansion as traumatic and cult-like.

The pattern changed once filming for “The Girls Next Door” began, Madison said. The reality series, which aired for six seasons from 2005 to 2010, followed the lives of Madison and playmates Kendra Wilkinson and Bridget Marquardt inside the Playboy Mansion.

“It’s not like I don’t go out at all if it’s something like a special occasion, but I’ve been so busy with shows that I’ve stopped doing the regular club nights that I used to go out to every Wednesday and Friday,” she said.

Madison said on the podcast that the show has given Hefner more empathy and self-esteem, and that she doesn’t feel the need to go on “a night of compulsive sex.”

USA TODAY has reached out to Playboy Enterprises for comment.

Holly Madison previously described living in the mansion as a ‘cult’

Madison left the mansion and her relationship with Hefner in 2008 after seven years together. The Playboy magazine founder died of cardiac arrest in 2017 at the age of 91.

In A&E in 2022 In the documentary series “Playboy Secrets,” Madison describes life at the mansion as a cult and says her first sex with Hefner was traumatic. At the time, she thought she was in love with him, but looking back, she said, “It was just Stockholm syndrome.”

Shortly after the documentary was released, Mr. Cooper, 34, Mr. Hefner’s son and founder of Hefner Capital, defended his father to X, writing, “While some may not approve of the life my father chose, my father was not a liar.”

“No matter how unconventional he was, he lived with integrity and honesty. He had a generous personality and cared deeply for others. These sordid stories are instances where regret becomes revenge,” he wrote.

That same month, the magazine published a statement saying, “Today’s Playboy is not Hugh Hefner’s Playboy.”

“We believe in and validate these women and their stories, and strongly support those who come forward to share their experiences,” the statement said. “We also recognize that these allegations often go unheard and that sexual violence affects victims everywhere.”

Contributed by: USA TODAY