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“Don’t worry.” Swap these destinations for Mexico for spring break.

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Rising geopolitical tensions are prompting some U.S. travelers to switch their spring break trips abroad to destinations closer to home.

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For some travelers, spring break may look a little different this year.

Recent geopolitical escalations, including the death of Mexican cartel leader El Mencho and the war with Iran, have disrupted travel for many people, leaving some stranded in closed airspace and others seeking refuge in shelters. InsureMyTrip CEO Suzanne Moreau previously told USA TODAY that destinations not necessarily directly affected or located in conflict zones, such as Egypt and Dubai, are also experiencing “ripple effects” of travel disruptions. On February 28, the State Department issued an alert advising “Americans around the world to exercise increased vigilance.”

With spring break just around the corner, some travelers are reconsidering future trips abroad. They worry about their safety and are anxious about crossing the border. So they’re changing their plans to other destinations that seem safer, even annual spring break destinations like Mexico.

“I’m just saying that a lot of people are upset and if I was going to feel safe going somewhere else for spring break, I would choose that,” said Tyler Hosford, security director at global risk mitigation firm International SOS. “It’s more of the idea of ​​relaxing, drinking a margarita, not having to worry about anything, and going. Yes, it’s safe, but can we go somewhere else?”

Let’s go here for spring break this year.

Where is a safe spring break destination for Americans?

Hosford says it varies. He said travel “remains business as usual” for destinations in Europe, East Asia and Australia.

However, travel to parts of Africa and South Asia, such as Sri Lanka and Thailand, has been more affected by the Iran war. “Many travelers from Europe, the United States and Canada will be traveling through these Middle Eastern hubs,” he said, adding that connecting flights would likely need to be changed and travel times would be longer. “People might say, maybe we’ll postpone it.”

Mexico’s recent social unrest has also worried some travelers, with travel insurance platform Squaremas reporting a six-fold jump in customer calls specifically about Mexico.

Hosford said he’s seeing customers change their spring break trips from Mexico to Hawaii, Florida and other Caribbean locations.

Traveling to Mexico is safe in most cases, especially if you stay in a popular resort area. “The areas of Mexico outside of Jalisco where much of the cartel activity was concentrated are actually returning to normalcy,” Hosford said. “Places like Cabo San Lucas, San Jose del Cabo, Cancun, some of them are now safe to go to.”

Popular Spring Break Destinations in 2026

According to Hopper Technology Solutions, the top destinations for spring break in March and April are:

  1. Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
  2. san juan, puerto rico
  3. Fort Myers, Florida
  4. Sarasota, Florida

Spring break flights to the Caribbean

Interest in the Caribbean is surging among American spring breakers. Here are some of Hopper’s most booked destinations in March and April, along with their average round-trip airfares from the United States.

  • San Juan, Puerto Rico – $300
  • Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic – $329
  • Punta Cana, Dominican Republic – $402
  • Montego Bay, Jamaica – $372
  • Kingston, Jamaica – $403

Social Security checks will be mailed on March 11th. See full payment schedule.

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The first round of Social Security payments for March is scheduled to be distributed this week according to the normal schedule.

The March payments come after an alarming report from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). The CBO report suggests that the Social Security Trust Fund (formally known as the Old Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund) will be depleted in fiscal year 2032 (by September 2032).

Back in June 2025, program trustees estimated the fund would be depleted in 2033.

After the trust fund that covers the difference between Social Security benefits and payroll tax revenues is depleted, the program must begin reducing benefit payments.

Here’s what you need to know about this week’s Social Security payments.

Who will receive Social Security payments this week?

Beneficiaries born between the 1st and 10th of their birth month are supposed to receive their monthly Social Security benefits on Wednesday, March 11, according to the SSA payment calendar.

When will my Social Security payments be sent?

Social Security benefits, which are paid primarily to elderly or retired beneficiaries, are typically paid on Wednesdays.

According to the SSA calendar, if the recipient’s birthday is between the 1st and 10th of the month, payments will generally be made on the second Wednesday of the payment month. Those born from the 11th to the 20th will receive the allowance on the 3rd Wednesday, and those born after the 20th will receive it on the 4th Wednesday.

People who received Social Security benefits before May 1997 can receive their payments on the third day of the month, excluding weekends and holidays.

Individuals who receive both Social Security and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) can expect Social Security payments on the 3rd of the month and SSI payments on the 1st of the month.

Complete Social Security Payment Calendar for 2026

SSI payment schedule for the end of 2026

Recipients of Supplemental Securities Income (SSI) checks are typically issued payments on the first business day of the month. Because March 1, 2026 is a Sunday, the March payment will now be made on Friday, February 27, 2026.

Here are the SSI payment dates for 2026 according to the SSA calendar:

  • Wednesday, April 1, 2026 (confirmed in April 2026)
  • Friday, May 1, 2026 (Please check May 2026)
  • Monday, June 1, 2026 (confirmed in June 2026)
  • Wednesday, July 1, 2026 (confirmed in July 2026)
  • Friday, July 31, 2026 (Please check for August 2026)
  • Tuesday, September 1, 2026 (confirmed in September 2026)
  • Thursday, October 1, 2026 (confirmed in October 2026)
  • Friday, October 30, 2026 (Please check for November 2026)
  • Tuesday, December 1, 2026 (confirmed in December 2026)
  • Friday, December 31, 2026 (for January 2027)

Fernando Cervantes Jr. is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Contact us at fernando.cervantes@gannett.com and follow us at X @fern_cerv_.

President Trump’s ‘Freedom 250’ sparks debate over the origins of American Christianity

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Historians say the White House prayer book and 250th anniversary celebrations promote a Christian-centered view of American history.

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The first page of the White House’s new devotional book begins with a myth. It depicts English settlers landing on Cape Henry, near present-day Virginia Beach, hoisting a tall wooden cross and dedicating the land to God in prayer.

The event “reveals the extent to which Christianity, especially Protestantism, has accompanied Britain’s colonial enterprise from its inception,” the booklet says.

However, there is no evidence that the prayers were ever performed, as the document later acknowledged.

Historians and religious experts have warned that the inclusion is a sign of a broader effort by President Donald Trump’s administration to rewrite the country’s origins as explicitly Christian in the year of the nation’s 250th anniversary.

President Trump has announced several faith-focused events that feature almost exclusively Christianity, including his “America Praise” initiative to encourage Americans to join 10 people in prayer each week and a national prayer event in May that will turn the National Mall into a “massive revival.”

The program is sponsored by Freedom 250, a quasi-governmental organization founded by President Trump to realize his vision for the nation’s 250th anniversary. This is separate from America250, a nonpartisan organization created by Congress in 2016 to plan the year’s signature events.

The White House and Freedom 250 say the show is intended to celebrate the protection of religious freedom enshrined in the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Presidents including Ulysses S. Grant, Calvin Coolidge, and Gerald Ford have cited God and religion in speeches marking other milestones.

But some historians argue that Trump’s efforts push the limits of the First Amendment, which prohibits the government from establishing an official state religion.

“We are witnessing this effort to undermine the institutional separation of religion and government,” said Guthrie Graves Fitzsimmons, vice president of programs and strategy at the Interfaith Alliance, a national nonpartisan civil and religious rights organization. “It goes to the core of what it means to be an American: the freedom to worship, the freedom to pray, or the freedom not to pray.”

Freedom 250 Religious Connections

A quarter of the partner organizations listed on the Freedom 250 website are Christian-related, including National Religious Broadcasting Corporation, Angel Studios, the Museum of the Bible, and Pray.com. Another partner is Wall Builders, a nonprofit founded by activist David Barton, who has long advocated that the United States should be run as a Christian nation.

When President Trump launched America Plays in September with a speech at the Museum of the Bible, attended by many of our Christian partners, he also pledged to “defend our nation’s founding Judeo-Christian principles.”

As of March 4, Freedom 250 has no partners representing non-Christian faith groups, according to its website.

Freedom 250 spokeswoman Rachel Reisner told USA TODAY that the partnership mirrors the organization’s offer to work with the 250 President’s Task Force.

“We welcome collaboration with all who share our determination to commemorate our nation’s 250th anniversary in a way that uplifts and unites America,” Reisner said in a statement.

Christine du Mez, an American historian and author of “Jesus and John Wayne,” argued that the lack of equal representation showed that the regime had “no appetite for religious pluralism.” By repeatedly mentioning Christianity, she said, President Trump appears to favor Christianity over other religions in taxpayer-funded programs.

A description of May’s national prayer event on the White House website says it will be streamed to “dioceses” across the country and will include “prominent Christian artists.” Although the document refers generally to “major religious leaders,” it does not specifically mention synagogues, mosques, or other types of worship spaces, nor does it name musicians of other religions.

A White House press secretary told USA TODAY that religions other than Christianity will also participate in the event. Freedom 250 organizers say the organization has not yet decided on the program, but is consulting with religious leaders from a variety of religions, including Christianity, Judaism, Hinduism, Islam and Buddhism.

Other materials produced by the White House and Freedom 250 similarly reference Christianity.

Freedom 250 enlisted PragerU, a conservative media nonprofit, and Hillsdale College, a small Christian school in Michigan, to create exhibits and educational materials for six traveling museums touring the country. Using $10 million in government funding, a mobile museum was built and transported for a year.

“Freedom Trucks” tells the story of the American Revolution and influential American heroes. They also frequently note the role that God played in the founding of the nation. One exhibit on “American Roots” states that “America’s fundamental principles are rooted in Western and Judeo-Christian values.”

Marissa Streit, CEO of PragerU, told USA TODAY that the references to faith in the exhibit are intended to emphasize “the Christian perspective of America’s founding and the love of God and the faith in God that our founders had.”

For example, an exhibit about the Declaration of Independence states that the Founders “believed that God created man for freedom,” and notes that the Continental Congress added references to the “supreme judge of the world” and “divine providence” to the document.

Matthew Spalding, dean of Hillsdale School of Government and advisor to Freedom Tracks, said he felt the depiction of the nation’s founding would be inaccurate without mentioning Christian influences.

He said the reference to Christianity does not imply that people of other faiths do not have religious freedom, but rather focuses on the history of the nation’s founding religion.

“American history has been very much shaped by the Hebrews and Christians who focused on the sense that we have a certain human dignity,” he said. “There’s Christian influence, there’s Jewish influence, there’s also Enlightenment thinker influence, Deist influence. It’s all together.”

Du Mez said the Christian Right has historically overemphasized references to Christianity in the founding of the country.

“For more than half a century, conservative white evangelicals have expressed their own interpretation of America’s past,” Du Mez said. “These alternative histories depict the founding as uniquely Christian.”

Warren Throckmorton, an evangelical Christian and former psychology professor who has spent years studying Christian nationalism, said some of the Christian Right’s historical reinterpretation ultimately found its way into the “Prayers and Proclamations” toolkit released as part of America Prays.

This collection of poems contains 18 references to Christianity, 3 references to Judaism, and no mention of other religions.

A passage in the anthology suggests that prayer helped the Founders overcome their differences at the Constitutional Convention. After the prayer, the collection of poems says, “debate gave way to compromise, which ultimately led to the drafting of the United States Constitution.”

However, a detailed account of the treaty shows that bitter exchanges over slavery, representation, and taxation intensified in the months following the prayer.

Throckmorton said this depiction has been debunked by historians and is “a real problem.”

“The Freedom 250 people would like you to think that prayer saved the country. In reality, it wasn’t. It was more complicated than that,” he said.

Observance of faith at historical junctures

Trump is not the only president to discuss religion during a milestone celebration.

Former President Ulysses S. Grant told Americans that they should “give thanks to Almighty God” for the nation’s blessings on the centennial of 1876. Half a century later, former President Calvin Coolidge implored, “Unless the faith of the American people in these religious beliefs endures, the principles of our Declaration will disappear.”

And on the occasion of the nation’s bicentennial in 1976, former President Gerald Ford asked Americans to reflect on the “deep faith in God that inspired our Founding Fathers.”

But religious historians told USA TODAY that President Trump’s references to religion are different from those of the past.

Throckmorton said presidents typically “talk about God in a very general sense,” so “everyone can find themselves and their religion” in the message. He said the Trump administration has “specifically chosen people to be the faces of Freedom 250…evangelical Christians.”

Recent Republican presidents have sought to appeal to conservative Christians, with President Reagan once telling evangelical leaders, “You can’t support me, but I will support you.” However, there is no record of government-sanctioned and taxpayer-funded events promoting one religion over another.

“The president has the same First Amendment right to freedom of expression as everyone else. He has more influence because of his position,” Throckmorton said. “But none of them are trying to make the Constitution anything other than what it is.”

Graves-Fitzsimmons, who works with the Interfaith Alliance to promote religious freedom, expressed concern that the overt references to Christianity in the 250th document are part of a broader move by the administration to integrate Christianity into the government. In early February, the Interfaith Alliance sued the Trump administration, alleging an illegal lack of religious and ideological diversity in the Justice Department’s Religious Freedom Committee.

The Religious Freedom Commission includes Protestants, Catholics, and Jews, but not Muslims or members of other minority religious groups. The group’s advisory board of lay leaders also includes Muslim representatives. The Interfaith Alliance said the move violates federal law that requires such groups to have “a fair balance in terms of positions represented.”

Andrew Whitehead, executive director of the Association for Religious Data Archives at Indiana University’s Center for the Study of Religion and American Culture, said the debate over religious references in the 250th anniversary of the Confederacy is really about establishing a vision of what America represents.

“Governments are always working on creating national myths,” he says.

“At the end of the day, it comes down to what kind of national myth is upheld today: Does everyone have equal rights under the Constitution, or is this country created by or for white Protestant Christians? Those are contradictory narratives.”

Carissa Wadick covers America’s 250th anniversary on USA TODAY. Contact him at kwaddick@usatoday.com.

Contributor: Breanna Frank, USA TODAY. Liam Adams of The (Nashville) Tennessean

This ridiculously cheap Warren Buffett stock could make you richer

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Could Warren Buffett’s rare loser become a winner in your portfolio?

Berkshire Hathawaywas led by Warren Buffett from 1965 until his retirement at the end of 2025 and has a number of consumer staples stocks in its stock portfolio. But this is one of Berkshire’s worst-performing investments and may offer the biggest opportunity for new investors.

At the end of 2025, Berkshire Hathaway held 27.5% of the stock. Kraft Heinz (NASDAQ:KHC). At current prices, Berkshire’s stock is worth about $7.8 billion, but its investment cost basis was about $9.8 billion.

The position had a carrying value of $12.2 billion before taking a $3.8 billion impairment charge last year.

There was recent talk that Berkshire, led by Buffett’s successor Greg Abel, was selling its stake in Kraft Heinz as the packaged food company considered splitting into two companies. Kraft Heinz has since put those plans on hold, and Berkshire appears content to own Kraft Heinz stock for now. It’s unclear whether Berkshire sees itself in a good place going forward, but a number of things suggest to me that a comeback may be starting.

Why Kraft Heinz had a rare miss at Oracle of Omaha

Mr. Buffett may have won cleverly. S&P500 However, even legendary investors can lose money on their investments. Berkshire’s relationship with Kraft Heinz dates back to 2013.

That’s when the company partnered with private equity firm 3G Capital to take HJ Heinz private. Two years later, Heinz merged with Kraft Foods. Berkshire Hathaway sold 50% of its Heinz stock and consolidated 27.5% of publicly traded Kraft Heinz stock.

The post-merger stock price initially did well. However, within a few years, stock prices began hitting new lows in about 10 years. Initially, stock prices fell due to radical cost-cutting measures that did more harm than good. These job cuts initially increased profitability, but also led to underinvestment in the company’s brands. Additionally, this affected growth and profitability.

To alleviate this problem, Kraft Heinz pivoted, leading to a partial recovery. But within a few years, inflation became the new headwind. In addition to compressing profit margins, high inflation has caused consumers to shun branded products in favor of lower-priced alternatives. As a result, financial performance deteriorated again and stock prices returned to multi-year lows.

Berkshire and Buffett’s losses could be your gains

Under the Kraft Heinz proposed breakup discussed last fall, one entity would take over the company’s fast-growing seasonings and shelf-stable food businesses, while the other entity would take over the staple foods business.

However, management reportedly backed out after pressure from Berkshire. The move removed an important potential catalyst, but reduced the risk that Berkshire would reduce its position and put pressure on the stock. Additionally, other efforts are underway, including the company’s ongoing $600 million rebranding plan, which could also improve results. Kraft Heinz’s forward P/E ratio is about 12 times, which is in line with its competitors. But if earnings recover and sentiment toward food stocks improves, the stock could rise further. Until now, Kraft Heinz’s price-to-earnings ratio (PER) has hovered in the mid-10s.

That’s not all. The stock’s 6.6% forward dividend yield further increases value potential. Kraft Heinz didn’t work out for Berkshire or Buffett, but for those buying today, this stock could be a long-term golden opportunity.

Thomas Neal has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a position in and recommends Berkshire Hathaway. The Motley Fool recommends Kraft Heinz. 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.

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Warner Bros.’ Channing Dungey knows how to create TV magic

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Paramount may have won the battle for her studio, but the head of Warner Bros. Television Group remained focused on what she says is most important: good storytelling.

Channing Dungey is one of USA TODAY’s 2026 Women of the Year, which recognizes women who have made a significant impact in and outside of their communities. Here are this year’s winners.

Channing Dungey loves stories. It started with a book she read when she was two years old and blossomed thanks to Saturday nights spent with her mother.

“I grew up with a mother who loved old movies,” she says. Channing, his mother Judith, and his sister Merrin would gather around the television on weekends. They put M&Ms in a blue bowl and snuggled up to “Roman Holiday” and “Sabrina.” “It was something we did together,” Dungey says.

My family also goes to multiplexes. Sometimes they divide and conquer, as when her mother took Merrin to an animated movie and Channing and his father, Don, went to see their first R-rated movie, Blade Runner. When she was old enough to be on her own, we watched movies like “The Outsider” three times in an afternoon.

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“Keep going”: Channing Dungey’s advice to a new generation in Hollywood

Warner Bros. TV CEO Channing Dungey, known for creating hits from “Bridgerton” to “Abbott Elementary,” is one of USA TODAY’s Women of the Year.

Despite their love of movies, their parents limited the two girls’ television viewing time, so Channing and Merrin used their allotted time wisely. “We got the fall TV guide and went through the shows,” she says. “I’ll make a week’s viewing plan.”

Still, it was entertainment, not a career path. She was a girl from Sacramento, California, and she didn’t know anyone in Hollywood.

But in the back of her mind, in her heart, there was something Dungey knew. It was about how stories make her feel and how stories bring people together.

That instinct would lead her to one of the most influential careers in modern television. Currently, as Chairman and CEO of Warner Bros. Television Group and WBD US Networks, Dungey oversees one of the industry’s most powerful and coveted content engines. And throughout her career, she has reshaped modern television by expanding who tells stories and what stories get told.

believe in the story and the narrator

Before starting, she had to convince her parents of the idea. When she went to the University of California, Los Angeles, the plan was to take a steady path to law school. But after taking a few film and television electives, she realized the problem. She told her mother and father that everyone who applied to law school majored in history or policy. Majoring in film and television will help her stand out and increase her chances of acceptance. She never applied to law school.

Soon, she became a production assistant at Warner Brothers. The soundstage, the energy, the vibrancy of what was being produced, there was no going back. “The first time you drive through the grounds and go under the water tower, everything feels incredibly magical,” said Dungey, 56.

She worked in film development for more than a decade, contributing to films such as “The Bridges of Madison County” and “The Matrix.” In 2004, she jumped into television, which she says was the biggest risk of her career.

The gamble paid off. What is one of your favorite shows? Dungey could help bring the show to the big screen. She championed “How to Get Away with Murder” and “Scandal” during her 15-year tenure at ABC, where she was the first black executive to run a major network. Then, as Netflix’s vice president of original series, she contributed to everything from “Bridgerton” to “The Invention of Anna,” and was instrumental in bringing “Game of Thrones” creators David Benioff and DB Weiss to the streamer.

For the past five years, Dungey has been the first woman and first black executive to lead Warner Bros. Television Group and US Network, greenlighting “Abbott Elementary,” “Ted Lasso” and “The Pit,” while returning to her alma mater. In 2025, Warner Bros. produced more than 80 shows across 20 different platforms and received a record 60 Emmy nominations.

Despite his track record, Dungey candidly says he never knows when he’ll have a hit. “There’s an alchemy to how all these things come together,” she says.

There are people in front of and behind the camera, there is timing, there is marketing, and there is an audience. Some projects are derailed by circumstances beyond anyone’s control, such as the pandemic and two industry strikes, but she was exposed to headwinds that she overcame when she joined WBD. “If it were easy, everyone would be able to pick a hit song.”

But even after 30 years in the business, she still finds projects that make the hairs on the back of her neck stand up. “It always starts with the showrunner and their voice and vision,” she says. “One of the things I say to people who come in is, what is the idea that keeps you up at night, what keeps you up at night? Because then you know you’re working on something great. You can feel it.”

After this winning pitch, Dungey’s work begins in earnest. “I see my job as holding an umbrella over my team so they can stay under the umbrella and focus on their work,” she says. And when necessary, she will fight for projects she believes in.

“It always comes down to my intuition and my strong belief that the story needs to be told,” she says. It happened after the first season of Scandal, and some people turned down the drama starring Kerry Washington. Dungey passionately defended it, and the show became a hit that lasted seven seasons.

The same thing happened again when “Ted Lasso” was shopped around town. And only one buyer said YES: Apple. Dungey believed it anyway.

She continues to hold that umbrella shield throughout the production. “One of the things I tell showrunners is that it’s really important to have your true north,” she says. “People buy in because of your voice and your vision,” she says, and her job is to help them cut through the noise.

that’s show business

There is currently a lot of noise. Netflix was interested in acquiring Warner Bros., but the streamer withdrew on February 26 after Paramount made a hostile bid and ultimately offered the company a much larger all-cash offer. The new deal still needs approval from Warner Bros.’ board of directors and faces regulatory hurdles, but if it goes through, it would be one of the largest entertainment deals in history.

Of course, the outcome could lead to changes for Dungey, perhaps even promoting her to a more senior role within the company. When asked about the outlook, she disagreed professionally. “I feel like this is what I was born to do,” she says of her current job. “I love being in line at the grocery store and hearing the people in front of me talk about the TV characters as if they know them, as if they’re friends. That kind of engagement only happens on TV.”

She understands the conflicts surrounding the company. “One of the reasons people are interested in acquiring Warner Bros. is because of the shows we make, the movies we make, and the intellectual property we have. It all comes from telling the best stories and making this the best creative hub for talent,” she says. “No matter what happens, as long as we continue to tell great stories, we’ll be in a good position. That’s our number one job.”

Building a legacy

One day in February, Dungey walked among the skyscrapers on the Warner Bros. campus into bright sunlight and into the carefully staged waiting room of “The Pit.” Janelle James greets guests on tour trolleys as they gaze at the building where “Friends” was filmed. Dungey feels right at home and is excited to be home. Even though the stakes have grown, the sense of magic hasn’t disappeared.

Early next year, the studio plans to release the long-awaited live-action Harry Potter series. And Dungey is looking forward to Greg Berlanti’s “Stillwater,” which just went on sale to Amazon.

While Hollywood is changing as it prepares for the threat of artificial intelligence and fractured attention spans, Dungey seems calm and balanced. She gets tips and advice from her sister Merrin, but while she always seems happy in front of the camera (her credits include ‘The King of Queens’, ‘Alias’ and ‘Once Upon a Time’), she prefers to stay behind the scenes.

Over the years, Dungey has learned that work-life balance can be elusive. What matters is whether she can be there. Focus on your work when you’re at work, and turn off your phone when you’re at home. “It’s not a perfect science. Sometimes things bleed over,” she says. “You’re just trying to be intentional.”

These days, instead of reading paper scripts, she reads dozens of scripts on her iPad. Her husband, Scott Power, is a voracious TV watcher and they often watch comedy specials together, although he is sometimes several series ahead of her. She admits that her 9-year-old son loves anime and had to learn about it.

Her 13-year-old daughter could follow in her footsteps or become an actress like her aunt. She is already a musical theater enthusiast. Dungey doesn’t make predictions. They take out candy or snacks and watch TV together. They went through all of “Gilmore Girls” twice. I think “Glee” is next.

Once again, a mother and daughter connect through a story unfolding on screen, inviting them to dream.

Wendy Naugle is USA TODAY’s entertainment editor. Follow her on Instagram @wendy_naugle.

Rams sign CB record contract after trade

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Four days after being traded from the Kansas City Chiefs to the Los Angeles Rams, Trent McDuffie is even more certain about his future.

McDuffie and the Rams agreed to a four-year, $124 million contract extension on Sunday, making the cornerback the highest-paid player at the position in league history, according to multiple reports.

His average annual value of $31 million is well above the previous record of $30.1 million set by Sauce Gardner last summer, when the Indianapolis Colts cornerback was still with the New York Jets.

McDuffie’s contract also reportedly includes $100 million guaranteed, more than $10 million more than the next closest player, Derek Stingley Jr. of the Houston Texans ($89 million).

In exchange for McDuffie, the Rams sent four draft picks to the Chiefs, including this year’s 29th overall pick. The exchange won’t become official until the new league year begins Wednesday.

McDuffie, a 2023 All-Pro selection, was widely expected to sign an extension with the Rams after news of the trade broke. The 2022 first-round pick was set to play on his fifth-year option for $13.63 million.

In Los Angeles, McDuffie will be counted on to shore up the most glaring weaknesses on a team where general manager Les Snead looks to make the most of his remaining time with reigning NFL MVP Matthew Stafford. Los Angeles’ pass defense fell apart, finishing the year ranked 22nd in passing yards per game (225.6).

Mojtaba Khamenei has been named supreme leader of Iran. what we know

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Iran’s Council of Experts has selected Mojtaba Khamenei as supreme leader to succeed his late father, who was killed in an airstrike that sparked the US-Israel war against Iran.

Mojtaba Khamenei, a mid-ranking cleric with influence within Iran’s security forces and an extensive business network under his father, was seen as the frontrunner for a vote in the 88-member parliament responsible for choosing a new leader after Ali Khamenei’s death.

“By a decisive vote, the Assembly of Experts has appointed Seyyed Mojtaba Hosseini Khamenei as the third leader of the Holy Regime of the Islamic Republic of Iran,” the parliament said in a statement shortly after midnight Tehran time.

Her appointment is likely to anger President Donald Trump, who said on March 8 that the United States should have a say in the selection. “If we don’t get approval, it’s not going to last very long,” he told ABC News. Ahead of the announcement, Israel threatened to target whoever was chosen.

Here’s what we know about Mojtaba Khamenei.

Iranian clerics and shadow figures

Mojtaba Khamenei was born in 1969 in the Shiite holy city of Mashhad and grew up with his father helping lead the anti-Shah movement. He studied under religious conservatives at the seminary in Qom, Iran’s center of Shiite theological learning, and holds the clerical rank of Khojatul Eslam.

According to Al Jazeera, he served in the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC)’s Habib Battalion during several operations in the Iran-Iraq War in the 1980s.

Although he has never held a formal position in the Islamic Republic’s government, he was widely believed to have been behind the sudden rise of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the hardliner who was elected president in 2005.

According to Al Jazeera, government reformers accused Mojtaba Khamenei of rigging the election and using the Revolutionary Guards’ paramilitary Basij force during the 2009 Green Movement after President Ahmadinejad secured a second term.

According to the Wall Street Journal, public awareness of Mojtaba Khamenei increased during the 2022 women’s rights protests, and she became one of the targets of protesters’ anger. The newspaper reported that a crowd in Tehran at the time was chanting, “Mojtaba, may you die without ever seeing your leader.”

First hereditary succession since the Iranian Revolution

According to the Guardian, Mojtaba Khamenei’s appointment marks the first time since the 1979 Islamic Revolution that the role of supreme leader has passed from father to son. Mojtaba Khamenei has kept a low profile but has maintained control over government power.

The U.S. Treasury Department sanctioned Mojtaba Khamenei in 2019 for representing the supreme leader “in an official capacity, despite the fact that he has never been elected or appointed to any government position” other than his father’s office.

The group’s website said the supreme leader had previously delegated some of his responsibilities to Mojtaba Khamenei, who worked closely with commanders of the Revolutionary Guard’s Quds Force and the Guards’ Basij, a religious paramilitary group, “to advance his father’s regional destabilizing ambitions and repressive domestic goals.”

“He has a strong constituency and support within the Revolutionary Guards, especially among the young radical generation,” Kasra Arabi, head of the Revolutionary Guards’ research for Iran’s Anti-Nuclear Alliance, told Reuters.

Contributed by: Reuters

Study finds the impact of deadly climate change has been underestimated

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Tens of millions more people may be threatened by climate change than previously thought, as previous studies used incorrect information about water levels along the world’s coastlines, a new study says.

The new study, published March 4 in the British peer-reviewed journal Nature, found that more than 90% of existing sea level surveys use a reference sea level that is lower than the actual sea level along the coast. That means already dire predictions about sea level rise may be underestimating the risk.

“Our calculations show that measured coastal sea levels in many places around the world are higher than often assumed in coastal impact studies,” study lead author Catalina Seeger from the University of Padua in Italy said in a statement. “Our findings require that the methodologies underlying all existing coastal hazards research be re-evaluated and, in most cases, updated,” she added.

What is sea level rise?

Sea level rise, one of the clearest signs of human-induced global warming, is caused by the warming and expansion of ocean waters, as well as the melting of mountain glaciers, ice sheets, and the vast ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica.

Sea levels have risen nearly 8 inches around the world since 1880, but unlike water in a bathtub, it doesn’t rise evenly.

For example, over the past 100 years, ocean currents and natural subsidence of the land have caused water levels to rise by about a foot or more in some U.S. cities.

Scientists said global warming will be the main cause of sea level rise. The biggest uncertainty is how quickly West Antarctica’s giant ice sheet will melt.

What causes global warming?

Anthropogenic climate change is caused by the burning of fossil fuels such as gas, coal, and oil, which release greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane into the atmosphere. This extra CO2 increases atmospheric and ocean temperatures to levels that cannot be explained by natural causes.

Why is sea level rise important?

Rising sea levels are increasing the risk of coastal flooding, putting tens of millions of people in the United States and hundreds of millions of people around the world at risk. Approximately 40% of the world’s population lives within 100 km of a coast. As climate change impacts the world, sea level rise is a pressing issue for many coastal communities.

Specifically, in the new study, the authors found that, compared to previous estimates, if sea levels rose by 1 meter, there would be up to a 37% increase in land beneath sea level, potentially impacting between 77 million and 132 million people worldwide.

What does new research show?

Most sea level surveys to date do not reflect reality because they lack direct sea level measurements or incorrectly combine sea level and land elevation data, according to a new study.

“We seem to be dealing with an interdisciplinary blind spot between ocean-level science on the one hand and continent-based coastal hazards influencing science on the other,” said study co-author Philip Minderhoud, a professor of hydrogeology at Wageningen University & Research in the Netherlands.

One easy way to understand this is that many studies assume an ocean surface without waves or currents, but the reality at the water’s edge is an ocean that is constantly being shaken up by wind, tides, ocean currents, temperature changes, El Niño events, and more, Minderhoud and Seeger told The Associated Press.

“We hope this approach will become a new standard for more accurately assessing future coastal impacts,” the authors conclude in their study.

Which regions are most at risk?

This underestimation of sea level rise was particularly notable in the Global South, particularly in Southeast Asia and the Pacific region.

Underestimation was also observed in Latin America, the West Coast of North America, the Caribbean, Africa, the Middle East, and the Indo-Pacific.

What do others think about this study?

“I think the new sea level rise article in Nature is important,” said Michael Mann of the University of Pennsylvania, who was not involved in the study. “The community as a whole appears to be missing the important distinctions they are drawing, which means we may be (significantly) underestimating potential sea level rise in many important regions.

“There’s still quite a bit of uncertainty because of complications with changes in ocean currents and things like that, but this study seems important to me,” Mann told USA TODAY.

Explosives thrown near Zoran Mamdani’s residence: NYPD

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A device thrown outside the official residence of New York City Mayor Zoran Mamdani during dueling protests on Saturday, March 7, was confirmed to be an improvised explosive device, according to preliminary analysis by police.

Two people were taken into custody after New York City police say they tried to ignite a suspicious homemade device during a “Stop Islamic Takeover of New York City” rally led by 30-year-old far-right conservative influencer Jake Lang. Police said the event attracted a large number of counter-protesters, and one demonstrator threw an incendiary device at Lang’s area.

NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch said in a statement on social media that preliminary analysis by the department’s bomb squad determined the device was not a hoax or a smoke grenade, but rather “an improvised explosive device capable of causing serious injury or death.” She added that further tests would be carried out, including on a second device that fell during the crash.

“Sheikh Barat and Ibrahim Qayumi were arrested at the scene yesterday and are being held in connection with this matter,” Tisch said in a statement on Sunday, March 8.

Police said charges against the two counter-protesters are still pending. Tisch said police are working with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York and the Federal Bureau of Investigation on the case.

What happened during the protest outside Gracie’s mansion?

New York City police officers had already arrived at the scene around 11 a.m. local time in preparation for a demonstration planned near Gracie Mansion, the mayor’s official residence. About 20 people gathered in the area for the “Stop Islamic Takeover of New York City” rally, Tisch said.

The incident sparked a massive counter-demonstration dubbed “Get the Nazis Out of New York City,” attended by about 125 people, Tisch said. Police separated the two groups, but tensions began to rise just before noon.

At around 12:15 p.m. local time, police arrested a person in Lang’s area for allegedly using pepper spray against counter-protesters, Tisch said. Police have not publicly identified the person.

Tisch said that around 12:38 p.m., a counter-protester named Barratt, 18, lit an ignition device and threw it toward Lang’s area. The device fell into a crosswalk, hit a fence and was extinguished several feet away from police.

Tisch said Barratt then fled and allegedly recovered a second device from another man who identified himself as Kayumi, 19. Barratt started running with a second device, but dropped it, she added.

The two were taken into custody and the NYPD bomb squad recovered two devices, both of which were slightly smaller than a soccer ball, Tisch said. Police said no injuries or property damage were reported in the incident.

Based on preliminary examinations and X-ray images, the devices appeared to be jars wrapped in black tape and filled with nuts, bolts and screws, Tisch said. The bottle also had a hobby fuse that could be lit.

Report: Federal agents conducting terrorism investigation

Law enforcement officials familiar with the investigation told CBS News that the two people detained, both from Pennsylvania, brought homemade devices to the protests with the intent to cause harm.

The device was made of a sports drink bottle, filled or partially filled with explosives, placed inside a glass bottle and surrounded by nuts and bolts, the news agency reported, citing sources. The fuse was apparently connected to an M80 type firework, according to CBS News.

Search warrants will be executed in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, sources told the news agency. Investigators were also working to determine whether the suspects were inspired by messages from ISIS militants.

The FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force is leading the investigation, the news agency said, adding that terrorism charges are pending in the case.

Mamdani: Protest in front of Gracie House ‘rooted in bigotry and racism’

Following the protests, Tisch said there was no indication the incident was related to the Iran war, but said the investigation was ongoing. The incident occurred during Ramadan, the holiest month in the Islamic calendar.

Mamdani, New York City’s first Muslim mayor, condemned the incident in a statement on March 8, saying city officials were “closely monitoring” the situation. New York City Hall spokesman Joe Calvello earlier confirmed that Mamdani and New York City First Lady Rama Dowaj were safe and called the Lang-led rally “despicable and Islamophobic.”

“Yesterday, white supremacist Jake Lang organized a protest rooted in bigotry and racism outside Gracie Mansion,” Mamdani said in a statement. “That kind of hatred has no place in New York City. It is an affront to our city’s values ​​and the unity that defines who we are.”

“What followed was even more worrying. Violence at protests is never acceptable,” he added. “Attempts to use explosives to harm others are not only crimes, they are reprehensible and go against who we are.”

Lang was pardoned by President Donald Trump after returning to the White House last year, along with about 1,600 other people charged with responsibility for the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot.

Federal prosecutors have accused Lang of assaulting police officers at the Capitol using an aluminum baseball bat and a riot shield. Mr. Lang recently announced that he is running in the Republican primary for Florida’s U.S. Senate seat.

Contributor: Eduardo Cuevas, USA TODAY

Research reveals that one in three Gen Z men believe wives should ‘obey their husbands’

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The study surveyed 23,268 adults from 29 countries, including about 1,000 from the United States.

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Almost a third of Gen Z men in 29 countries believe wives should “always obey their husbands,” a new study conducted in Paris in time for International Women’s Day on March 8th has found.

An International Women’s Day study released by Paris-based multinational market research and consulting firm IPSOS found that of 23,268 adults surveyed, 31% of Gen Z men agreed that wives should always obey their husbands. This number is more than double the 13% response among male baby boomers.

Gen Z male participants consistently expressed more traditional views about gender roles across the board. As outlined in the survey, 57% of Gen Z men agreed that “progressing women’s equality has historically discriminated against men,” and 59% of men agreed that they were expected to “go to great lengths to support equality.” These numbers differed from older participants, with 42% of baby boomer men agreeing that gender equality leads to discrimination against men, and 45% of men agreeing that they are expected to go to excessive lengths to support equality.

The new study comes as the conversation continues to grow, especially in the United States, about young people’s involvement in the manosphere: websites, videos, and forums that promote male supremacy and defend traditional gender roles. Powerful figures in the manosphere, such as self-proclaimed misogynist content creator Andrew Tate, believe that women are to blame for men’s rejection of relationships, low self-esteem, and financial insecurity.

Here we take a closer look at the IPSOS study, including how it was conducted and which countries participated.

Young men express traditional views about their own behavior

In addition to expectations for women, Gen Z men also reported the highest expectations for traditional physical, mental, and emotional expectations for themselves.

According to the IPSOS survey, 43% of Gen Z men think young men should strive to be physically tough, and when it comes to more emotion-centered prompting, 32% of men agreed that they should solve problems on their own before asking for help.

How was the research conducted?

The survey was conducted in 29 countries and distributed on IPSOS’ Global Advisor platform and in India on IPSOS’ IndiaBus platform. The study was conducted between December 24, 2025 and January 9, 2026, according to the study’s technical note summary.

The study asked participants 13 questions about their attitudes toward gender equality. Freedom and the future. and gender roles. Some questions asked participants to rate the extent to which they personally agreed or disagreed with the statements, while others asked participants what others believed. Other questions asked participants to rate whether men or women have more choice in various situations, such as family roles, free time hobbies, and romantic relationships.

IPSOS defines Generation Z as those born between 1996 and 2012, Millennials as those born between 1980 and 1995, Generation X as those born between 1966 and 1979, and Baby Boomers as those born between 1945 and 1965.

Which countries participated in this study?

The study surveyed adults in Thailand, Indonesia, India, Mexico, Chile, Singapore, Malaysia, Colombia, Peru, Argentina, South Africa, South Korea, Brazil, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, Belgium, Australia, Poland, Germany, Turkey, Hungary, Sweden, United Kingdom, Ireland, Canada, United States, France, and Japan.

Japan had the largest sample size, with a total of approximately 2,000 participants. Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, Italy, Mexico, Spain and the United States had the next largest sample sizes, with approximately 1,000 participants from each country, according to the study’s technical notes.

Countries with strict gender roles reflected in the survey

The study organized participants’ responses by gender, generation, and country of origin. Overall, U.S. responses tended to be moderate when it comes to more traditional gender roles and expectations.

Regarding the country with the most responses related to these roles, 80% of male participants in Thailand agreed that gender equality efforts discriminate against men. This compares to 40% of male participants in the United States. Additionally, 70% of male participants in Brazil and India agreed that men are expected to make greater efforts for equality (compared to 44% of men in the United States). These answers reflect the historically strict gender roles that have been enforced in these countries.

Contributor: Rachel Hale, USA TODAY

Greta Cross is USA TODAY’s national trends reporter. Story ideas? Email her at gcross@usatoday.com.

US military death toll rises to 7 in Iran war

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The U.S. military announced on Sunday, March 8, more than a week after the conflict began, that a seventh American service member has been killed in the ongoing war with Iran.

The American soldier died from wounds sustained in Iran’s first counterattack a week ago, U.S. Central Command said. The Pentagon said the individual was “seriously injured” in a March 1 attack on U.S. troops in Saudi Arabia.

The identity of the service member will not be released to the public until 24 hours after his or her family is notified, the Pentagon said.

Six other American service members were killed in an Iranian drone attack in Kuwait. President Donald Trump and several senior administration officials attended a dignified transfer ceremony for six service members on Saturday, March 7, at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware.

The six soldiers are Capt. Cody A. Koch, 35, of Winter Haven, Florida; Sergeant 1st Class Noah L. Tietjens, 42, of Bellevue, Nebraska. Sergeant First Class Nicole M. Amor, 39, of White Bear Lake, Minnesota. Declan J. Cody, 20, of West Des Moines, Iowa, Sgt. The U.S. military said Maj. Jeffrey O’Brien, 45, of Waukee, Iowa, and Warrant Officer Robert Marzan, 3, 54, of Sacramento, California, were also killed in the attack.

In the aftermath of the joint US-Israeli attack on Iran on February 28, Iran responded with its own attacks against both Israel and US allies in the Middle East and Persian Gulf region. Iran’s counterattack also targeted U.S. forces stationed across the Middle East, including Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Jordan, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates.

President Trump has said he expects more American casualties in this endless war, which could last more than four weeks.

Iran’s counterattack left more than a dozen people dead in several Middle Eastern countries, including at least 10 Israeli civilians. According to the Iranian Red Crescent Society, more than 1,300 people have been killed in Iranian attacks by the US and Israel. In Lebanon, on March 8, the Lebanese Minister of Health announced that nearly 400 people had been killed in Israeli airstrikes.

Kathryn Palmer is USA TODAY’s political reporter. She can be reached at the following address: kapalmer@usatoday.com And with X@Kathryn Purml. Sign up for her daily politics newsletter here.

College basketball coaches release updates, complete list of coaching changes

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The 2025-26 men’s basketball regular season ends Sunday and we’ve already seen a number of schools make coaching changes.

Kansas State’s Jerome Tan was one of the first domino players to fall, but his $18.7 million buyout is still under discussion between Tan and the school. Kansas State claims it is obligated to fire Tan for cause, which would invalidate the total amount.

Power conference teams Providence, Boston College and Georgia Tech are also poised to have new coaches next season.

Below is an updated list of head coaching changes during the 2025-26 men’s college basketball season.

College basketball coach fired, not returning: complete list

This story is updated live.

Boston University has fired fifth-year coach Earl Grant, according to reports. Grant has a 72-92 record in five seasons with the Eagles. BC went 4-14 in ACC play, tied for the second-worst record in the conference. The Eagles went 11-20 overall.

According to a report from Field of 68’s Jeff Goodman, Western Michigan has fired head coach Dwayne Stevens. Stevens and the Broncos finished the 2025-26 season with a 10-21 record. Western Michigan went 42-84 in four seasons under Stephens. – Ethan Kasim

Georgia Tech has fired third-year coach Damon Stoudemire, according to multiple reports. The Yellow Jackets ended the 2026 season with a 79-76 loss to Clemson, finishing the season with an 11-20 record, including 12 straight losses. Stoudemire had a 42-55 record with the Yellow Jackets. – Ethan Kasim

Northern Illinois University has fired fifth-year coach Rashon Bano, according to multiple reports. NIU finished the season with a record of 9 wins and 21 losses, but had a losing streak in each of Bano’s other four seasons at the helm. – Austin Cartwright

According to Field of 68’s Jeff Goodman, Ball State has fired coach Michael Lewis.

Lewis went 61-64 in four seasons at the school and 12-19 this season. After going 20-12 in Lewis’ first season in 2022-23, Lewis’ Cardinals teams went just 41-54. – Craig Meyer

This season will be Mark Schmidt’s last at San Bonaventure, but the circumstances of his impending departure are not entirely clear.

Field of 68’s Jeff Goodman initially reported that Schmidt, 63, planned to announce his retirement this weekend, but later edited his post to say Schmidt was “separating” from St. Bonaventure. ESPN’s Pete Thamel also reported that Schmidt is expected to retire. However, the Orient Star reported that Schmidt was informed by general manager Adrian Wojnarowski and athletic director Robert Beretta that he would be relieved of his duties at the end of the season.

Schmidt has been at St. Bonaventure since 2007, compiling a 339-253 record in perhaps the toughest job in the Atlantic 10 Conference. That accomplishment included NCAA Tournament appearances in 2012, 2018 and 2021. Prior to Schmidt’s hiring, the Bonnies had appeared in the NCAA Tournament just once from 1979 to 2007. – Craig Meyer

Kim English has no plans to return to Providence next season, according to multiple reports. Providence is on the verge of missing out on the NCAA Tournament for the third consecutive year under a third-year head coach. English has a record of 42-49 so far at the school.

English played at the University of Missouri from 2008 to 2012 before being selected in the second round of the 2012 NBA Draft. He was the head coach at George Mason from 2021-2023 before leaving for Providence. – Austin Cartwright

Coach Lamar announced on March 3 that Alvin Brooks will not return for the 2026-27 season. He coached the Cardinals for five years and led Lamar to a 12-19 regular season finish in 2025-26.

“I would like to personally thank Coach Brooks and his staff for their hard work and dedication to the men’s basketball program,” Lamar athletic director Jeff O’Malley said in a statement. “Alvin has been inducted into the Cardinal Hall of Fame and we wish him and his family the best of luck in the future.” – Austin Cartwright

Tennessee Tech has fired John Pelphrey on March 3, the school announced. Tennessee Tech is scheduled to move to the Southern Conference next season, and is conducting a nationwide search ahead of the move.

Pelfrey went 79-138 in seven seasons at Tennessee Tech, including 13-18 in 2025-26.

“We would like to thank John for his service and contributions to the men’s basketball program,” Tennessee Tech athletic director Casey Fox said in a statement. “We felt it was the right time to make a leadership change and refocus our men’s basketball program. We wish John and his family the best moving forward.” – Austin Cartwright

Billy Gillispi will not return to Tarleton State next season, according to multiple reports on February 27th. Gillispi has been sidelined since Jan. 15 due to health issues and was placed on administrative leave at the beginning of the season while the school was investigated in October following an anonymous complaint.

Gillispie has dealt with numerous health issues over the years, and resigned from Texas Tech University in 2012 for health reasons. The former Kentucky coach missed most of the 2023-24 season due to blood pressure issues and was diagnosed with kidney failure in 2017. – Austin Cartwright

Oregon State University announced the transfer of Wayne Tinkle. The school made the announcement on February 26th. Tinkle has coached OSU since 2014, leading the Beavers to an Elite Eight appearance in 2021 and another NCAA Tournament appearance in 2015-16.

Oregon State is 16-14 this season as a member of the WCC until the Pac-12 returns as a full conference in 2026-27. It’s unclear whether Tinkle will remain as coach for the remainder of the season. – Austin Cartwright

Scott was suspended indefinitely in January during an investigation into his treatment of Air Force Cadet players. However, on February 20, it was announced that he and the school had agreed to part ways.

“Coach Scott’s passion for the game of basketball has long been evident in his competitive, direct coaching style. It was this coaching style that led Air Force Basketball to some of the program’s most memorable accomplishments during his first tenure at the Air Force Academy,” Air Force Athletic Director Nathan Pine said in the announcement. “Today is a different day, and now is the perfect time for new voices and new approaches to driving the culture and success of our men’s basketball program, consistent with the Air Force Academy’s mission to develop leaders of character cultivated to lead the Air Force and Space Force.

“We would like to thank Coach Scott for his 10 years of service to the Academy and wish him and his family well.”

During Scott’s second head coaching tenure after 2020, Air Force posted a 97-183 record. He also led the program from 2000 to 2004, leading the team to an NCAA Tournament berth in 2004. — Austin Cartwright

Lavin will not return to San Diego for the 2026-27 season, but will remain as head coach for the remainder of the season. The former UCLA and St. John’s coach had a 46-79 record in four seasons in San Diego and is currently 11-17 this season.

“As my tenure as coach at USD begins to end, I would like to pause and express my sincere gratitude to President Jim Harris for giving me this life-changing opportunity in 2022,” Lavin said in the announcement. “Teaching and coaching at the University of San Diego has been an experience of unique pride and joy. Above all, I will carry on the gift of being a part of my players’ journeys and cherish the relationships built along the way.” — Austin Cartwright

Tan led Kansas State to the Elite Eight in his first season in 2022-23, but it was a downward spiral from there. The Wildcats missed the NCAA Tournament for the next two seasons, going 10-15 in conference play and 1-11 in conference play this season before Tann was fired.

“This was a decision made in the best interest of the university and the men’s basketball program,” K-State athletic director Gene Taylor said. “Recent public comments and actions, along with the overall direction of the program, are not consistent with K-State’s standards of supporting student-athletes and representing the university. We wish Coach Tan and his family the best in their future endeavors.”

Kansas State is firing Tan with cause after he criticized the players in a press conference after a blowout loss to Cincinnati. — Austin Cartwright

Kansas City announced in January that Menzies would finish the season with Kansas City but would not return for the 2026-27 season. The Ruths hired former Maryland coach Mark Turgeon soon after. — Austin Cartwright

Country Joe McDonald passes away – Woodstock legend dies at age 84

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Country Joe McDonald, who fronted Country Joe and the Fish and became a Woodstock legend in the 1960s, has died.

“Country Joe” McDonald, a Woodstock Festival legend and frontman for the band Country Joe and the Fish, has died at the age of 84.

According to a statement from the band posted on their official Facebook page, the singer, whose real name was Joseph Allen McDonald, died on Saturday, March 7, in Berkeley, California, due to complications from Parkinson’s disease.

The band said they were “saddened” to hear of MacDonald’s death, adding that MacDonald was “surrounded by his family.”

No further details were disclosed. USA TODAY contacted a McDonald’s representative for more information.

“McDonald was widely known as one of the defining voices of the 1960s counterculture movement. His music blended folk, rock, and political commentary, capturing the spirit of a generation deeply influenced by social upheaval, the civil rights movement, and the Vietnam War,” the official obituary shared by the band reads.

McDonald was the lead singer and co-founder of the 1960s psychedelic folk-rock group Country Joe and the Fish, and wrote some of the group’s most enduring songs, including “I Feel Like I’m Fixin’ to Die Rags,” a protest song against U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War.

“Come on, strong men, come on/Uncle Sam needs your help again/He’s in dire straits/All the way to Vietnam,” he sings in a satirical anti-war anthem. “Put down your book and pick up your gun / We’re going to have a hell of a time.”

The song became a battle cry, immortalized with the infamous f-word cheer during a performance at Woodstock in 1969.

In an interview with Rolling Stone in 2019 to commemorate the 50th anniversary of his career-defining festival performance, McDonald reflected on how the cheers “gave me a lot of trouble.”

“Of course we couldn’t get it on the radio, right? So my most famous song couldn’t be played on the radio. Some people lost their jobs to get it on the radio, but that’s great. It’s a great moment,” he told the outlet. “I was so happy and proud to represent the Vietnam War and Vietnam veterans in that moment. It was so powerful.”

MacDonald told Rolling Stone magazine that he “never thought about the historical significance” of the performance, but now he does. “But I believe that the Woodstock festival, the movie, and the album changed everything about America. And that change is still happening, right? The challenge between the customs and tastes of the World War II generation and the Woodstock generation is still going on. That battle is still going on.”

McDonald was born in Washington, D.C., and raised in El Monte, California. After serving three years in the U.S. Navy as a teenager, he returned to California and immersed himself in the Bay Area’s burgeoning folk and protest music scene.

In the mid-1960s, he co-founded Country Joe and the Fish with guitarist Barry Melton in Berkeley, and the band quickly became one of the best-known bands of San Francisco’s psychedelic rock movement. Their debut album, released in 1967, was genre-defining “electronic music for mind and body.”

MacDonald’s official obituary states: “Throughout his career, MacDonald has used music as a platform for political and social commentary.” “Aside from the Vietnam War, his work has also addressed environmental issues, civil rights, and humanitarian causes. After Country Joe and the Fish disbanded in 1971, he continued to record and perform as a solo artist, producing albums and touring internationally for decades.”

In his last interview with Rolling Stone magazine in 2019, McDonald said the next chapter of his life will be outside the spotlight. “I’m retired now,” he said. “I did a series of performances[recently]and it’s over. It’s over. I’m fully retired.

“I’ve been thinking about retirement for the past few years, but right now I’m just looking at my grandchildren and being home and interacting with my neighbors.”

President Trump moves toward Cuba deal after oil crackdown

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  • The Trump administration is reportedly preparing to announce an economic deal with Cuba.
  • Talks also include deals on ports, energy and tourism, according to people familiar with the administration’s plans.
  • President Trump has publicly stated that Cuba is negotiating with Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

DORAL, Fla. – The Trump administration is preparing an economic deal with Cuba that could be announced soon, two sources familiar with the administration’s plans said.

Details and exact timing of the anticipated transaction are unknown. But the agreement could include relaxations on travel for Americans to Havana. Mr. Trump would not need Congressional approval to ease those restrictions.

The talks include President Miguel Díaz-Canel’s resignation, the Castro family remaining on the island, and agreements on ports, energy and tourism. The US government is considering lifting some sanctions.

After the U.S.’s dramatic detention of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro and the abrupt halt to oil shipments, the island looked set to become the next target for regime change. But instead of overt military action to overthrow the communist government in Havana, the Trump administration is moving to restructure regime change through economic deals that prioritize U.S. interests and avoid full-scale confrontation.

President Barack Obama repealed some rules in the final years of his presidency, but President Trump reinstated some during his first term.

The Trump administration is also pursuing an economic strategy, but those close to the administration say it differs from President Obama’s actions, as the president’s attack on Venezuela and the U.S. seizure of Caracas oil have shown he is serious about restoring U.S. primacy in the Western Hemisphere.

It was not immediately clear what the United States would get in return for the deal, which President Trump teased last week.

President Trump has publicly stated that Secretary of State Marco Rubio has been consulting with the Cuban government and that the Cuban regime wants a deal.

In response to a media request for comment, the White House referred USA TODAY to President Trump’s comments at the Shield of the Americas Summit.

President Trump told Latin American leaders on March 7: “Cuba is at the finish line. They’re right at the finish line. They have no money. They have no oil. They have the wrong philosophy. They have had a bad regime for a long time.”

Trump said at the time that Cuba was negotiating with Rubio, himself and other members of his administration, which he did not name. “I think it would be very easy to reach an agreement with Cuba,” he said.

President Trump added, “If things continue like this, Cuba is in the final moments of its life. It will have a wonderful new life, but if it continues like this, it is in the final moments of its life.”

How is President Trump’s Cuba deal different from President Obama’s?

Former U.S. officials who have worked on Cuba policy privately question how close the administration really is to a deal.

President Trump has been warning of the collapse of the Cuban government ever since it attacked Venezuela and kidnapped President Maduro in a secret raid on his residence. President Trump said in January that there was no need for the United States to take military action in Cuba because Cuba would collapse economically if it could not rely on Venezuela.

Mr. Trump has influence that Mr. Obama does not have, according to people familiar with the ongoing discussions.

The administration has ratcheted up pressure on the Cuban government in recent days, issuing thin threats that it could prosecute Cuban officials.

Rubio and his aides are reported to be holding secret talks with Raul Castro’s grandson, Laurito Castro, who is close to his grandfather. The White House has declined to comment on the report, but senior administration officials have not denied the report.

At a White House event on March 5, President Trump told Inter Miami CF owner Jorge Mas, whose father was born in Cuba, that he would be able to visit the country soon.

“You don’t need my approval. Just come back,” Trump said.

He has expressed a desire to end the bombing campaign with Iran first and said he wants to wait a few weeks, but he doubts they will celebrate together again soon.

Two days later, on March 7, President Trump said, “As we accomplish historic changes in Venezuela, we also look forward to the great changes that will soon come to Cuba.”

President Trump said many of the like-minded leaders he hosted at the Latin American Summit called on Cuba to be considerate.

“In fact, four of them said, ‘Can you please do me a favor? Take care of Cuba. I’ll take care of it, okay?'” Trump told them.

The president’s closest allies have also issued public warnings to Cuba following Maduro’s arrest. Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina said in a Fox News interview last week that Cuba is next on his presidential ticket.

President Trump has indicated repeatedly over the past week that he wants to wait until the war between the United States and Iran is over before relying on Cuba, but the Castro family wields significant power behind the scenes in Cuba, and it is unclear who will succeed Mr. Díaz-Canel, Mr. Raul’s handpicked successor.

“We’re focused on Iran right now, and we’re going to do that. I say, ‘Marco, what would you do if you took a couple days off?'” Trump said in Doral. “Probably about an hour. He’ll take an hour off and then finish the deal with Cuba.”

Francesca Chambers is USA Today’s White House correspondent, covering foreign policy and presidential elections. You can follow her at X @fran_chambers.

Bill Maher talks about message with President Trump after dinner at the White House

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Bill Maher hit back at recent posts about himself about Donald Trump on “Real Time,” explaining his text messages with the president.

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Bill Maher is hitting back as President Donald Trump continues to bash him on social media.

On the March 6 episode of “Real Time,” the comedian addressed the fact that he had been the subject of several truthful social posts of President Trump earlier in the day. Without comment, the president shared multiple news articles featuring his past comments denouncing Maher as a bastard.

“This is getting weird,” Maher said after pointing out that the posts were made during the conflict between the US and Iran, expressing bewilderment.

Trump previously slammed Maher in a Truth Social post in February, saying it would be a “total waste of time” for the two to have dinner together at the White House in 2025. The dinner was set up by mutual friend Kid Rock, and since the two sat down together, Trump has complained that Maher’s HBO show is “very boring” and “anti-Trump.”

In the latest episode, Maher devoted part of his response to Trump’s posts. He claimed that Trump emailed him “right after” the dinner last year, complaining that “I was still part of the crazy left,” and that Trump “should have won the Nobel Prize for ending the war,” to which Marr replied, “Yeah, I should have won 20 Emmys.”

Maher said he and Trump “argued for a while” via text message, and Trump “finally said, ‘Bill, you know what? Don’t change. If you do, I don’t know what to do with you.'” ”

“Okay, that’s a normal human being that I saw the night we broke bread. As long as I think there’s even a spark of potential to bring out more from that guy, I don’t think the dinner is a waste of time, even though I know he’s back to fame now,” Maher said.

Maher disputed some of the claims President Trump made in his Truth Social posts about the dinner, insisting that despite the president’s statements, Trump did not “ask for” the dinner, was not “nervous” or “scared” and did not sit down “on short notice.”

“We had a great time,” Maher said. “So did you, Don, because we were talking like real people instead of the crazy acts we put on in public.”

Maher went on to show a clip in which Trump praises some of the things Trump has done during his presidency to explain that he is not suffering from “Bill Maher Derangement Syndrome” as the president claims. Maher said he defended his decision to have dinner with Trump despite criticism of his actions from some on the left.

Maher told Trump: “Despite all the hate I got from my side, I never threw you under the bus or said, ‘Oh, you’re right, you shouldn’t have had steak with Hitler.’ That’s stupid.”

At the same time, Maher told Trump, “A lot of what you’re doing is different from my idea of ​​success, and I have a right in a democracy to say that.”

Maher previously addressed Trump’s posts about him on the Feb. 20 episode of “Real Time.” The comedian said he “didn’t think” his dinner with Trump was a waste of time, suggesting Trump was upset that Ma would stop criticizing him after the meeting.

“I never said I would do it!” Maher said. “I understand how women feel these days. Men buy you dinner and expect you to serve them afterwards. I’m not that kind of guy.”

President Trump warns of changes coming for Cuba at Shield of the Americas summit

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President Donald Trump also warned of possible action in Cuba on March 7, when he joined Latin American leaders in Florida to launch a new coalition against drug cartels. The latest mention also warned of possibilities in Cuba, among a growing list of comments the president has made about the future of the island nation 90 miles from the United States.

President Trump’s comments, which referred to “big changes” coming to Cuba, came during remarks at the Shield of the Americas Summit on March 7. The daylong event, aimed at discussing strategies to strengthen U.S. leadership and coalitions in the Western Hemisphere, also included the leaders of Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Honduras, Panama, Paraguay, Trinidad and Tobago, and more.

The summit also saw the announcement of the Shield of the Americas, a coalition of like-minded Latin American countries that the Trump administration says was created to combat drug trafficking and solidify U.S. primacy in the Western Hemisphere. President Trump formally inaugurated his coalition government at a day-long, invitation-only summit at Doral Golf Club near Miami.

President Trump linked Cuba to recent U.S. actions in Venezuela following the raid by U.S. special forces that captured the country’s then-leader Nicolás Maduro in January, suggesting that changes could be coming soon on the island. All eyes have been on the island for much of 2026, with President Trump saying in late February that a “friendly takeover of Cuba” was possible as fuel shortages strained dictatorial Havana.

President Trump said on March 7, “As we achieve historic change in Venezuela, we also look forward to the great changes that will soon come to Cuba.” “Cuba is on the front lines and right at the bottom. They have no money. They have no oil. They have bad philosophy and have had bad regimes for a long time.”

The United States has put severe economic pressure on Cuba, which has long relied on oil shipments from longtime ally Venezuela. These shipments were blocked after Maduro’s arrest. However, the Trump administration eased the policy the week of February 23 as the crisis in Cuba worsened and the country suffered power outages.

In the weeks since then, President Trump has called on Cuban leaders to “make a deal,” and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, a Cuban-American, said he was engaging with Havana “at a very high level.” He repeated these talks at the summit, at one point suggesting that Rubio take time off to “work out a deal with Cuba.”

“They want to negotiate, and they’re negotiating with Marco and me and some others. I think it’s easy to get an agreement with Cuba, but I’ve been listening to Cuba for 50 years,” Trump said at the summit. “Cuba is in the last moments of life as it is. A wonderful new life awaits, but as it is, it is in the last moments of life.”

In a moment that drew applause from the crowd, Trump added that he would “take care” of Cuba for the sake of other Latin American countries.

“Many of you here today are saying, ‘We want you to take care of Cuba,’ because you have a problem with Cuba. That’s what you said. I was surprised, but actually, four of you said, ‘Can you please do me a favor? Please take care of Cuba.'” I’ll take charge, okay? ” he said.

Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel reacted by condemning Trump’s comments on social media, writing that the summit and coalition showed Latin American leaders present would condone “the use of deadly military force to resolve domestic issues.”

“This is an attack on the Latin American and Caribbean (Zone of Peace) Declaration, an attack on aspirations for regional integration, and an expression of subordination to the interests of our powerful neighbors to the north, based on the precepts of the Monroe Doctrine,” he wrote.

President Trump has repeatedly linked U.S. actions to one of America’s most important foreign policy challenges of the 19th century, the Monroe Doctrine, which outlined how the U.S. government viewed Latin America as its strategic “backyard,” a region that should be under U.S. influence rather than Europe.

Although previous presidents have distanced themselves from this framework, President Trump has dubbed it the “Donroe Doctrine” and used it to justify operations in Venezuela. He also linked the name to a new leadership coalition, Shield of the Americas, on March 7 and on social media.

“As these situations in Venezuela and Cuba make clear, under our new principles, we will not allow hostile foreign influences to gain a foothold in this hemisphere,” Trump said at the summit. “We will not allow that to happen. Together, we will protect our sovereignty, our security, and our cherished freedoms and independence.”

Contributors: Katherine Palmer, Zach Anderson, Francesca Chambers, Rick Jarvis, Kim Helmgaard, Jamie Fraser, CA Bridges,

Kate Perez covers national trends and breaking news for USA TODAY. You can reach her at kperez@usatodayco.com or X @katecperez_.

Oslo US embassy explosion may have been a deliberate attack

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Norwegian police said a large explosion hit the U.S. embassy in Oslo early Sunday morning in what may have been a deliberate attack related to the Middle East crisis, causing minor damage but no injuries.

“Given the current security situation, it is natural to think that this could be a deliberate attack on the US embassy,” Frode Larsen, head of the Oslo Police Investigation Department, told a news conference.

No suspects have been identified at this time, but police are searching for one or more perpetrators and are working closely with the embassy, ​​Larsen said.

“One of our hypotheses is that this is terrorism, but we are also exploring other options,” Larsen later told public broadcaster NRK.

The explosion at the embassy compound in western Oslo occurred at 1 a.m. local time, witnesses said, and thick smoke filled the streets near the consulate’s entrance.

The Norwegian government has contacted U.S. embassy officials to say this is “unacceptable behavior and we take it very seriously,” Foreign Minister Espen Bart Eide said in a statement.

“The security of diplomatic missions is very important to us,” he said.

Oslo police said the explosion occurred at the entrance to the consulate, and witnesses said the entrance was damaged.

“There was a very thick layer of smoke on the street,” said Sebastian Torstad, an 18-year-old high school student who was driving past the embassy at the time of the explosion.

“There was some damage to the entrance,” Torstad told Reuters.

Police said no further explosives were found in the area.

Summer time arrives as March sunlight explodes

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Daylight Saving Time arrives amidst an interesting and strange phenomenon in the universe. March is different from other months in that the daylight hours increase rapidly.

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You wouldn’t imagine: the sun is moving.

Winter’s long nights and short days are rapidly giving way to daylight hours, part of a fascinating and unbalanced annual cycle.

Although the times of sunrise and sunset are constantly changing, the amount of sunlight increases rapidly in March (and decreases rapidly in September).

During March, some areas of the U.S. will see an increase of more than an hour and a half of daylight by the end of the month. Florida also gets 40 to 50 minutes of sunshine in March. Changes in sunlight are least noticeable around the summer solstice in June and December. At this time of year, sunlight varies by only a few seconds within the month.

The increase in daylight, or the amount of time the sun spends above the horizon, will be most noticeable in the northernmost regions of the United States, said AccuWeather meteorologist Brandon Buckingham. Because the northern hemisphere is tilted at a 23.5-degree angle toward the sun on Earth’s axis, this region will face the sun more directly.

Separately, daylight saving time begins on March 8th. Changing the time will not affect daylight hours, but will change the clock and delay sunset time.

March also marks the arrival of spring, and meteorologists mark the change of seasons on the first day of the month. Most people recognize March 20th as the astronomical first day of spring.

Why is the daylight hours so long in March?

The changes in the amount of sunlight we see throughout the year are determined by the tilt of the Earth’s axis and whether the northern hemisphere faces toward or away from the sun.

The Earth revolves at an angle to the Sun, exactly 23.5 degrees. In the Northern Hemisphere, where the United States is located, the Earth tilts toward the sun in the summer and away from the sun in the winter. In the southern hemisphere, the opposite happens. As the Earth’s axis gradually tilts our hemisphere toward the sun, we experience longer days.

Daylight hours have increased since December 21, 2025, the shortest day of the year in the Northern Hemisphere, and the winter solstice, when the sun is furthest south in the Southern Hemisphere. According to the Old Farmer’s Almanac, the initial increase in daylight hours was only a few seconds per day and was not visible, but the most dramatic increase occurs in March, averaging 3 minutes per day, depending on your exact location.

During the Earth’s rotation around the Sun, the Earth’s axis tilts toward and away from the Sun twice a year. We call this the vernal equinox, when day and night are approximately equal in length.

Starting with the spring equinox on March 20th, daylight will be longer than night every day in the Northern Hemisphere.

It is most noticeable in March, but daylight hours continue to increase until the summer solstice in June. After that, daylight hours decrease again until the winter solstice in December.

This is the number of hours of sunshine we get in March

Mr Buckingham said the amount of sunshine available in March would be different in the north and south.

“Although daily sunshine hours are increasing in every region of the country, the largest increases in daytime sunshine hours are in the northern United States, and the smallest increases are in the southern United States,” he said.

From March 1 to March 31, the southernmost parts of Texas and Florida will get about 40 minutes of sunshine, and northern states like North Dakota, Washington and Idaho will get about 100 minutes of sunshine.

Although there will be some delays in timing, the increase in sunshine hours will also lead to warmer temperatures, Buckingham said.

Here’s how some U.S. cities will see an increase in sunshine hours in March, according to data from the U.S. Naval Observatory’s Office of Astronomical Applications.

  • Charlotte, North Carolina: approximately 1 hour 7 minutes
  • Chicago: Approximately 1 hour 24 minutes
  • New York City: approximately 1 hour 21 minutes
  • Seattle: Approximately 1 hour 43 minutes
  • Duluth, Minnesota: approximately 1 hour 41 minutes
  • Brownsville, Texas: approximately 45 minutes
  • Miami: about 45 minutes

Buckingham said the increase in sunlight will be split almost evenly between morning and evening hours.

Summer time too

Daylight saving time begins at 2 a.m. on March 8th, when our clocks move one hour “forward” and we lose one hour of sleep.

All states except Hawaii and most of Arizona have observed this change, and each year sparks a new debate about whether the practice should be completely abolished.

Don’t miss this Medicare deadline. Otherwise, your insurance premiums may increase.

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Please follow the rules so you don’t have to pay extra.

Enrolling in Medicare is something many older Americans are trying to do as soon as possible. However, there may be reasons to delay enrolling in Medicare. Unfortunately, they may come back to haunt you again.

If you wait too long to sign up for Medicare, you not only risk gaps in your health insurance coverage, but you may also end up paying higher premiums over your lifetime. To avoid falling into that trap, let’s take a look at how Medicare enrollment works.

What is the initial enrollment period for Medicare?

The initial Medicare enrollment period is 7 months. It begins three months before the month you turn 65 and ends three months after the month you turn 65.

During your initial enrollment period, you can sign up for Medicare Part A, which covers inpatient care, and Part B, which covers outpatient care. In addition to Part A and Part B, you can also choose to enroll in a Medicare Advantage plan or a Part D prescription drug plan.

If you received Social Security benefits during your initial Medicare enrollment period, you will be automatically enrolled in Parts A and B. Otherwise, you will have to actively sign up yourself.

Cost of missing deadlines

If you don’t enroll in Medicare during your initial enrollment period, you can enroll at another time in the future. But the problem if you miss your first enrollment period is that you may end up paying additional Medicare premiums for the rest of your life.

For Medicare Part B, if you qualify for coverage but don’t enroll, there’s a 10% surcharge on your premiums every 12 months. For Medicare Part D, you will be charged an additional fee if you go more than 63 days without obtaining creditable drug coverage after your initial enrollment period ends.

Now, you should know that if you are still working and enrolled in a qualified group health plan during your initial Medicare enrollment period, you can usually avoid these penalties by enrolling during the special enrollment period afforded by these circumstances. But if you don’t qualify for a special enrollment period, waiting for Medicare can be a costly mistake.

Know when to register

You may think that delaying enrollment in Medicare is no big deal. Obviously not. Pay attention to when the first registration period takes place to avoid making mistakes you’ll regret.

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.

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This wild 1949 Willys Rat Rod Jeep spouts 4 feet of flame

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Logan Fries’ 1949 Willys probably doesn’t remind you of any Jeep you’ve ever seen.

With olive green paint and American flags hanging from the rear corners, it looks like a machine to be reckoned with. This doesn’t take into account the inoperable .30 caliber gun mounted on the passenger side.

He quickly realized that the gun was a replica that he had begged a kind person in Ohio to sell to him. But live ammunition is “100% ready.”

Fries’ ride was one of many custom vehicles on display on the lower level of Huntington Place for this year’s Detroit Autorama, which concluded March 1. The lower floor was reserved as “Autorama Extreme.”

With a custom chassis, 1984 Ford F-150 drivetrain, and 351 Windsor engine, this Jeep is Fry’s pride and joy. The 24-year-old construction worker from Gibraltar, Michigan, also happily calls himself a rat rod, a category of habits that are far from normal.

“Jeeps were never meant to be on the ground, but now they are. It’s got twin turbos and it’s basically a giant go-kart. It’s just random parts, random makes and models, mixed and matched with different ideas that people have,” Fries said of his vehicle and what makes something a rat rod.

He said it could be a daily driver, but the ride is a bit rough, so it’s more likely to be headed to car shows. That didn’t stop Fries from installing heated seats in this open-to-the-element vehicle. There are other things that might grab your attention.

“It has a rev limiter. You can rev it up, and if you put it in a parking lot…you can just sit in the park and rev it up, and you can get about 4 feet of flame coming out of the exhaust,” he said.

Eric D. Lawrence is senior auto culture reporter for the Detroit Free Press. Send your cool auto tips and suggestions to elawrence@freepress.com. Become a subscriber. Submit a letter to the editor at freep.com/letters.