New Photo - Trump says he'll look into reported second strike on suspected drug boat

Trump says he'll look into reported second strike on suspected drug boat Francesca Chambers, USA TODAY December 1, 2025 at 10:18 PM 0 WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump says he will look into whether the U.S. carried out a second strike against a boat in the Caribbean that the administration says was smuggling drugs, as he defended his Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth from an accusation that he ordered military officials to "kill them all" prior to the lethal strike. A Washington Post report on Nov.

- - Trump says he'll look into reported second strike on suspected drug boat

Francesca Chambers, USA TODAY December 1, 2025 at 10:18 PM

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump says he will look into whether the U.S. carried out a second strike against a boat in the Caribbean that the administration says was smuggling drugs, as he defended his Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth from an accusation that he ordered military officials to "kill them all" prior to the lethal strike.

A Washington Post report on Nov. 28 that cited anonymous sources said that Hegseth gave a directive to leave no survivors, which prompted the U.S. military to conduct follow-on strike that killed two individuals to comply with the order.

Hegseth called the report "fabricated, inflammatory, and derogatory," and Trump allies have responded by questioning the story's accuracy.

"I don't know anything about it," Trump told reporters on Nov. 30. "He said he did not say that, and I believe him, 100 percent," Trump added. "He says he didn't do it."

The Trump administration's lethal strikes on alleged drug boats that the U.S. says were aimed at deterring Venezuelan traffickers was already facing congressional scrutiny, and after the latest reporting, lawmakers on the Armed Services committees in the House and Senate pledged to provide rigorous oversight of the operation.

U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to reporters during travel to Washington, D.C., from Palm Beach International Airport, Florida, U.S., November 30, 2025. REUTERS/Anna Rose Layden

Since September, the administration is known to have carried out strikes on at least 21 boats in international waters that killed 83 people. The reported second strike on the suspected drug boat took place on Sept. 2.

Trump could not say on Nov. 30 if a second strike had taken place, telling reporters riding on Air Force One, "I don't know. I'm going to find out about it. But Pete said he did not order the death of those two men."

"We'll look into it, but no, I wouldn't have wanted that, not a second strike," Trump said.

The legality of the ongoing strikes is in dispute. The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights has said they violate international law, and Democrats in Congress are demanding the Justice Department release a classified Office of Legal Counsel opinion that reportedly says U.S. military personnel involved in the strikes cannot be prosecuted.

Trump has threatened to escalate the attacks to land strikes on Venezuela and said on Nov. 29 that pilots should consider the airspace over the country closed. He told reporters on Nov. 30 that he'd spoke to Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro but did not say what they discussed.

Contributing: Phillip M. Bailey, Zac Anderson

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Trump defends Hegseth after reported second strike on suspected drug boat

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Trump says he'll look into reported second strike on suspected drug boat

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New Photo - Damaged Shenzhou-20 spacecraft to return to Earth uncrewed for inspection

Damaged Shenzhou20 spacecraft to return to Earth uncrewed for inspection By Eduardo BaptistaDecember 1, 2025 at 10:21 PM 0 A giant screen in Beijing shows news footage of rescue workers carrying an astronaut of Shenzhou20 mission outside the return capsule of the Shenzhou21 spacecraft which landed at the Dongfeng landing site in Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, China November 14, 2025.

- - Damaged Shenzhou-20 spacecraft to return to Earth uncrewed for inspection

By Eduardo BaptistaDecember 1, 2025 at 10:21 PM

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A giant screen in Beijing shows news footage of rescue workers carrying an astronaut of Shenzhou-20 mission outside the return capsule of the Shenzhou-21 spacecraft which landed at the Dongfeng landing site in Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, China November 14, 2025. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang

By Eduardo Baptista

BEIJING, Dec 1 (Reuters) - China's first crewed spacecraft to be ruled unfit to fly in mid-mission will be sent ​back to Earth for experts to assess the damage it sustained more closely, ‌state broadcaster CCTV reported on Monday.

On November 5, the Shenzhou-20 spacecraft was meant to bring its crew back to ‌China just after finishing a six-month stay aboard Beijing's permanently inhabited space station Tiangong.

But after the Shenzhou-20 crew discovered a crack in the window of the vessel's return capsule right before takeoff, the return mission was delayed - a first in China's human spaceflight program.⁠

The vessel's crew was forced ‌to return to Earth in a different spaceship nine days later, temporarily leaving Tiangong and its remaining trio of resident astronauts without a flightworthy vessel.

China's ‍space-industrial complex raced to remove that risk by working overtime to execute its first emergency launch mission on November 25, just 20 days after the initial delay was announced.

But the future of the damaged Shenzhou-20 ​vessel, which remains docked at the Chinese space station, was unknown until CCTV's ‌televised report on Monday.

Ji Qiming, a spokesperson for the China Manned Space Agency, told the state broadcaster that Shenzhou-20 would return without crew to Earth, adding that on its way back it would "obtain the most authentic experimental data", without elaborating further.

Jia Shijin, a designer of the Shenzhou spacecraft, revealed to CCTV more details about the tiny crack ⁠that permanently altered China's crewed spaceflight schedule.

"Our preliminary ​judgement is that the piece of space debris was smaller ​than 1 millimetre, but it was travelling incredibly fast. The resulting crack extends over a centimetre," Jia said.

"But we can't directly examine ‍it in orbit, ⁠we will study it closely when Shenzhou-20 returns."

Jia added that the decision to delay the Shenzhou-20 return mission was based on a worst-case scenario where the window ⁠crack might spread, leading to cabin depressurisation and the ingress of high-speed gases.

If this happened, it ‌could then rapidly overwhelm life-support systems and prove fatal to the astronauts.

(‌Reporting by Eduardo Baptista; editinjg by Mark Heinrich)

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Damaged Shenzhou-20 spacecraft to return to Earth uncrewed for inspection

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New Photo - Appeals court upholds ruling that disqualified Alina Habba from serving as N.J.'s top prosecutor

Appeals court upholds ruling that disqualified Alina Habba from serving as N.J.'s top prosecutor Gary Grumbach December 1, 2025 at 10:21 PM 0 An appeals court affirmed a lower court ruling disqualifying Alina Habba from her role as acting U.S. attorney. (Mark Schiefelbein / AP) In a loss for the Trump administration, an appeals court on Monday upheld a lower court ruling disqualifying Alina Habba from her position as acting U.S. attorney for the District of New Jersey. In a 32page ruling, the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals found that Habba's appointment violates the Federal Vacancies Reform Act.

- - Appeals court upholds ruling that disqualified Alina Habba from serving as N.J.'s top prosecutor

Gary Grumbach December 1, 2025 at 10:21 PM

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An appeals court affirmed a lower court ruling disqualifying Alina Habba from her role as acting U.S. attorney. (Mark Schiefelbein / AP)

In a loss for the Trump administration, an appeals court on Monday upheld a lower court ruling disqualifying Alina Habba from her position as acting U.S. attorney for the District of New Jersey.

In a 32-page ruling, the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals found that Habba's appointment violates the Federal Vacancies Reform Act.

"It is apparent that the current administration has been frustrated by some of the legal and political barriers to getting its appointees in place," wrote Judge Michael Fisher.

The decision stems from a motion from Julien Giraud Jr., a New Jersey man who faced drug trafficking and firearm charges that predated Habba's appointment. Giraud moved to dismiss his indictment on July 27, arguing that President Donald Trump's appointment of Habba, who had been overseeing the case, was unlawful.

He pleaded not guilty. The court did not dismiss Giraud's underlying criminal case.

Habba is a former personal lawyer to the president.

A federal judge ruled in August that Habba's appointment was "unlawful," though the judge's order was on hold as the legal proceedings continued in an appeals court.

In the summer ruling, U.S. District Judge Matthew W. Brann took issue with Trump naming Habba as interim U.S. attorney in March, a position that is time-limited to 120 days. He said in his ruling that while Trump nominated her in June to serve as the permanent attorney, the Senate did not take up her nomination.

Weeks after Trump nominated her to the permanent position, judges for the U.S. District Court of New Jersey appointed her deputy to be the new U.S. attorney. In response, Attorney General Pam Bondi fired the deputy, appointed Habba as "Special Attorney to the Attorney General," then appointed her to the deputy position, which allowed her to become the acting U.S. attorney again.

NBC News reached out to Habba's office, the Justice Department and the White House for comment.

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Appeals court upholds ruling that disqualified Alina Habba from serving as N.J.'s top prosecutor

Appeals court upholds ruling that disqualified Alina Habba from serving as N.J.'s top prosecutor Gary Grumbach...
New Photo - Heavy snow and rain to impact post-Thanksgiving travel for Eastern states

Heavy snow and rain to impact postThanksgiving travel for Eastern states Patrick SmithDecember 1, 2025 at 6:42 PM 0 More heavy snow is set to cause problems for postThanksgiving travelers and commuters on the first day of December, with a new winter storm system set to hit the midAtlantic and New England. The National Weather Service said early Monday that many areas could expect a wintry mix, including thunderstorms, through Tuesday.

- - Heavy snow and rain to impact post-Thanksgiving travel for Eastern states

Patrick SmithDecember 1, 2025 at 6:42 PM

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More heavy snow is set to cause problems for post-Thanksgiving travelers and commuters on the first day of December, with a new winter storm system set to hit the mid-Atlantic and New England.

The National Weather Service said early Monday that many areas could expect a wintry mix, including thunderstorms, through Tuesday. More than 6 inches of snow is possible north and west of Interstate 95, and icy conditions are expected across the central and southern Appalachians, leading to treacherous road conditions.

Winter alerts are in place from Pennsylvania to Maine, with up yo 9 inches of snow expected in some areas.

Many motorists and air travelers in the Midwest suffered over the holiday weekend, with large road crashes and hundreds of flights canceled and thousands delayed. That weather system is moving north toward Canada but could still bring snow.

Travelers at Chicago O'Hare Airport following a winter snowstorm Sunday. (Jim Vondruska / Getty Images)

Wintry weather could mean snowplows will be needed as workers and schoolchildren start the week — central parts of the Plains toward the Mississippi Valley could see a few inches, and Omaha and Kansas City could be icy.

Other cities, including Philadelphia and Hartford, Connecticut, could see their first severe snows of the season, and New York City could also be affected, according to AccuWeather's forecast.

Meanwhile, in the Southeast, periods of heavy rain could lead to localized flash flooding Tuesday.

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Heavy snow and rain to impact post-Thanksgiving travel for Eastern states

Heavy snow and rain to impact postThanksgiving travel for Eastern states Patrick SmithDecember 1, 2025 at 6:42 PM 0 Mor...
New Photo - Rihanna Shares Rare Family Moment in Powerful Post

Rihanna Shares Rare Family Moment in Powerful Post Geca FloresDecember 1, 2025 at 2:30 AM 0 Rihanna's Instagram post served not only as a powerful tribute to her homeland but also offered a glimpse into her personal life. In honor of Barbados' Independence Day, the awardwinning singer celebrated the country's 59 years of Sovereignty after gaining independence on Nov. 30, 1966. Moreover, the music icon also acknowledged the country's leaders and paid a special tribute to their second President, Jeffrey Bostic, as he officially assumed office on Independence Day.

- - Rihanna Shares Rare Family Moment in Powerful Post

Geca FloresDecember 1, 2025 at 2:30 AM

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Rihanna's Instagram post served not only as a powerful tribute to her homeland but also offered a glimpse into her personal life.

In honor of Barbados' Independence Day, the award-winning singer celebrated the country's 59 years of Sovereignty after gaining independence on Nov. 30, 1966.

Moreover, the music icon also acknowledged the country's leaders and paid a special tribute to their second President, Jeffrey Bostic, as he officially assumed office on Independence Day.

"Congratulations to Barbados, MY HOME, on our 59th year of Independence and our 4th year as a Republic! Today also marks the installation of our 2nd President, His Excellency Lieutenant Colonel The Most Honorable Jeffrey Bostic, who, alongside our Honorable Prime Minister Mia Mottley, will continue to lead Barbados with excellence!! Barbados, I LOVE YOU!!!! #Bajan2DeBone," she wrote.

Besides her patriotic and powerful message, the "Umbrella" hitmaker shared a look of her country — from its pristine crystal waters, yummy delicacies, stunning beaches and people, including legendary Barbadian cricketer Sir Garfield Sobers.

Sir Garfield Sobers and Rihanna Fenty during the National Honors ceremony and Independence Day Parade at Golden Square Freedom Park in Bridgetown, Barbados, on November 30, 2021.Photo by RANDY BROOKS/AFP via Getty Images

In addition, Riri also treated fans to a personal glimpse of family life at home, sharing sweet moments with A$AP Rocky and their sons RZA Athelston Mayers and Riot Rose Mayers.

She also highlighted her pregnancy journey with their third child, daughter Rocki Irish Mayers, whom the couple welcomed in September.

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Rihanna celebrates the Independence Day of Barbados

This rare update from the "Don't Stop the Music" singer sparked excitement and admiration from fans, especially from her fellow Barbadians, with some even referring to her as their "Caribbean queen."

"Happy Independence to you and the people of Barbados, our national heroine," a follower added.

The same goes for another saying, "Real thugz never forget where they come from baddest queen."

The post also inspired playful fan commentary, with many teasing that her patriotic message made the album unnecessary.

"We don't need that d--n album, Robyn, we're proud that there's no place like home," one wrote.

"That pic of you and your babies is just top tier! Screw the album, we love mommy Riri," an Instagram user said.

A follower poked fun and noted, "I used to want you to release an album, now I don't, in your time comes!"

"Yeah, we don't need an album. Just continue to represent Barbados. Happy Independence, Barbados," a commenter added.

Besides the singer proudly representing her country, the Fenty Beauty owner has made significant contributions to Barbados through her philanthropic efforts.

"There is nothing more important than saving lives and making lives better because the purpose is better than me," the Barbados native said, according to Fox 13.

In addition to being the official Ambassador for tourism, her foundation, Clara Lionel Foundation, launched in 2012 in honor of her grandparents, Clara and Lionel, has donated millions of dollars worth of equipment to hospitals as well as educational resources and essential supplies to schools and shelters.

Related: Fans Were Annoyed for Rihanna's Son During Fashion Show

This story was originally published by Parade on Dec 1, 2025, where it first appeared in the News section. Add Parade as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

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Rihanna Shares Rare Family Moment in Powerful Post

Rihanna Shares Rare Family Moment in Powerful Post Geca FloresDecember 1, 2025 at 2:30 AM 0 Rihanna 's Instagram po...
New Photo - Mamdani-appointed NYC professor who wrote book on ending policing now tasked with shaping community safety

Mamdaniappointed NYC professor who wrote book on ending policing now tasked with shaping community safety Peter D'AbroscaDecember 1, 2025 at 3:00 AM 0 A sociology professor at Brooklyn College appointed to New York Mayorelect Zohran Mamdani's transition team wrote a book about ending policing. "I'm excited to announce that I have been asked to join the Mamdani Transition Team to work on community safety issues. A New Era for NYC," Alex Vitale said on X. Vitale is the author of "The End of Policing," published in 2017.

- - Mamdani-appointed NYC professor who wrote book on ending policing now tasked with shaping community safety

Peter D'AbroscaDecember 1, 2025 at 3:00 AM

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A sociology professor at Brooklyn College appointed to New York Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani's transition team wrote a book about ending policing.

"I'm excited to announce that I have been asked to join the Mamdani Transition Team to work on community safety issues. A New Era for NYC," Alex Vitale said on X.

Vitale is the author of "The End of Policing," published in 2017. The book, which opens by explaining that police don't exist to help citizens, argues for an end to traditional policing for certain criminal activity, including narcotics use, prostitution, patrolling borders and "misbehaving adolescents." The book also argues that police shouldn't combat street gangs.

Alex Vitale, author of "The End of Policing," speaks during a discussion on school policing at the University of Southern Maine on Thursday, March 5, 2020. Other speakers were, left to right, Portland Police Chief Frank Clark, South Portland School Resource Officer Al Giusto, Portland School Board Chair Roberto Rodriguez and Al Cleveland of Maine Youth Justice.

On ending gang units, Vitale argues that they are racist.

Mamdani Keeps Jessica Tisch As Nypd Commissioner

"In most cities, gang units function as a mechanism for racialized social control," the book says in chapter five. "Black and Latino youth are labeled as gang members for hanging out together, while white youth groups are dismissed as harmless."

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Policing borders is also racist, according to the author.

"The expansion of Border Patrol powers has been justified through fear and racism. It legitimizes xenophobic narratives that define immigrants as threats rather than as fellow workers or neighbors," the book says in chapter six.

Mamdani Taps Party Insiders To Steer Transition Despite Vowing To 'Turn The Page' On Old-guard Nyc Dems

Vitale also describes border policing as "inhumane."

Chapter nine of the book argues against training police officers on implicit bias, claiming that police officers' views on race do not matter because the whole system of policing is racist.

"Racism in policing is structural, not simply a product of bad attitudes," the book says. "Training officers to recognize implicit bias without changing what they are tasked with enforcing is like teaching a soldier to be sensitive while sending him to occupy a foreign country."

The professor's faculty profile on Brooklyn College's website says Vitale has spent 30 years writing about policing and that he consults with law enforcement entities and international human rights organizations.

He teaches courses about African Americans in the criminal justice system, according to his university profile.

Vitale has often called to abolish police on his X account, including bicycle police, police helicopters and police in schools. He has also called to abolish joint terrorism task forces, the Drug Enforcement Administration, Border Patrol and even the presidency of the United States.

Mamdani Ripped After 'Word Salad' Response To Question About Key Issue In Nyc: 'No Plan'

NYPD officers respond to a shooting.

He has also called for the NYPD to abolish its gang database.

Neither Vitale nor Brooklyn College returned requests for comment.

Mamdani has hired others who harbor anti-police sentiments.

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Earlier this month, he announced that campaign advisor Elle Bisgaard-Church would join his staff. She has been dubbed the "chief architect" of Mamdani's campaign proposal to have social workers respond to certain non-violent 911 calls and is affiliated with the Democratic Socialists of America.

Mamdani officials did not return a request for comment.

Fox News' Alec Schemmel contributed to this report.

Original article source: Mamdani-appointed NYC professor who wrote book on ending policing now tasked with shaping community safety

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New Photo - DAN GAINOR: November's Nuttiest News: An Elvis judge, COP chaos and more media lunacy

DAN GAINOR: November's Nuttiest News: An Elvis judge, COP chaos and more media lunacy Dan GainorDecember 1, 2025 at 3:00 AM 0 Here's your round up of the seven wildest stories from last month. Let's get started with the blazing insanity of a climate conference in Brazil and then look at six others. It's November, and that usually means the ecoloons come out of the woodwork. For the past several years, November has brought the annual meeting of the Conference of the Parties, or COP.

- - DAN GAINOR: November's Nuttiest News: An Elvis judge, COP chaos and more media lunacy

Dan GainorDecember 1, 2025 at 3:00 AM

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Here's your round up of the seven wildest stories from last month. Let's get started with the blazing insanity of a climate conference in Brazil and then look at six others.

It's November, and that usually means the eco-loons come out of the woodwork. For the past several years, November has brought the annual meeting of the Conference of the Parties, or COP. This year was COP30, held in Brazil and drawing more than 56,000 delegates and business representatives from around the globe. Yep, you made the connection — that's a carbon footprint the size of a small city, flying all around the world to protest … the use of carbon.

It was far worse than that. First, there's the massive highway they built right through the Amazon to get to the conference instead of, you know, doing it online. According to the BBC, that meant eight miles of "a new four-lane highway cutting through tens of thousands of acres of protected Amazon rainforest."

The highway had been proposed back in 2012, "but it had repeatedly been shelved because of environmental concerns."

Newsom Claims Trump Is 'Handing The Future To China' At Brazilian Climate Confab That Wh Skipped

Then rooms at the event were so expensive even some of the delegates balked at the cost. (And most weren't paying for themselves.) So Brazil brought in two large cruise ships to house poorer delegates. One of them advertised that it "offers 11 restaurants, 12 bars, 3 swimming pools, and 8 hot tubs." Life's tough working to save Mother Earth. That's not a climate event — it's a 56,000-person group vacation.

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We're talking Ken Burns, sometime historian and all-around lefty. Burns is in the news for his new documentary series on the Revolutionary War. I'll leave fact-checking that to actual historians. I'm here to mock Burns for his elitist view of rural America. Burns was interviewed on Bulwark's "How to Fix It" podcast, and he decided to shill for his paymasters in formerly public media.

According to Burns, defunding public media will hurt us in non-blue America. "It'll hurt mostly rural communities — maybe that's their intention. There'll be news deserts."

That's right, folks in rural America must not have things like the internet to find news. He sounds like he expects us to be upset because we can't hear NPR while sitting in our outhouse and drinking our moonshine.

Ken Burns speaks onstage during the New York premiere of PBS' "The American Revolution," featuring Ken Burns and Tom Hanks, during the 2025 Atlantic Festival on September 18, 2025, in New York City.

Rural America barely even notices public media. Those outlets are designed for upscale urban audiences who are more than 90% liberal. A country boy can survive … without NPR's ever-left spin on the news.

Things are changing in the opinion section of The Washington Post. In an effort to reach out to other voices, the paper launched a new section called Ripple. Depending on your age, that might mean what happens when you toss a pebble into a pond. Or it could conjure images of the great Redd Foxx playing Fred Sanford in "Sanford and Son." His preferred drink on the show was a fortified wine called Ripple. For oldsters like myself, one wonders if the other names they considered were Mad Dog, Night Train or Thunderbird.

Things are changing in the opinion section of The Washington Post.

Change, as we learned from President Barack Obama, is often not so good. Such is the fate for the Farmers' Almanac. The almanac is, well, buying the farm. No, not that almanac, the other one — or, as The put it, "not to be confused with its older, longtime competitor, The Old Farmer's Almanac in neighboring New Hampshire."

Still, this Maine-based almanac has 208 years under its prodigious belt, and AP says, "it's believed to be the oldest continually published periodical in North America."

The Maine State Capitol in Augusta.

All that is ending in 2026 due to a "chaotic media environment." The staff has nothing to be ashamed of. They outlasted more than half the newspapers I ever worked for. Chaotic, indeed.

And while we are down on the farm, let's talk sheep, followed by goat cuddling. The Washington Post ran a feature on a farmer who rescues gay sheep, under the memorable headline, "I love your sweater. Is it made from gay sheep wool?"

According to the Post, "As many as one in 12 male sheep are non-procreative but show an — ahem — interest in other rams." So the farmer, whose sheep carry names like "Marvin Gay," did "a fashion hookup with Grindr," appropriately the gay hookup site. Together, they launched a fashion show "to promote Rainbow Wool." The title of the show: "I Wool Survive."

Not to be outdone, USA Today marked Thanksgiving by writing about "turkey cuddle therapy." "Cuddling turkeys, in particular," we are told, "can be profound." But don't you dare touch a turkey without its permission. "All interaction between guests and animals happens on the animals' terms − in other words, the turkey needs to choose me," wrote the author.

I will tell you, I cuddled some turkey on Thanksgiving — along with mashed potatoes, stuffing, cranberry sauce and pumpkin pie.

A Thanksgiving dinner featuring cooked turkey and more.

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The media are bombarding us with well-earned complaints about how expensive life is for most Americans and how hard it is to buy a house. Leave it to lefty Vox to zig while the entire world zags. Vox ran a piece in November headlined, "Why owning a house is overrated."

Yeah, building equity and having a place you can fix up and call home — what craziness. What followed was an interview with Jerusalem Demsas, editor-in-chief of The Argument, who argues: "Homeownership is overrated." Now, I agree houses don't always go up in value, but to come out against the American Dream is uniquely liberal.

7. Hunka Hunka Burnin' … Law

Movies that involve quirky judges are more honest than we want to admit. A Missouri judge is losing his job for wearing an Elvis wig and playing "The King" during court cases.

St. Louis Judge Matthew Thornhill "faces a six-month unpaid suspension under the deal he reached with the state," according to AP. After that, he gets 18 more months on the bench before he steps down, possibly to go on tour. (People magazine even had photos of him as Elvis.)

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The Commission on Retirement, Removal and Discipline went after his love for the "King of Rock 'n' Roll," noting how he posed "with staff in a plastic Elvis wig and sunglasses" and sang from the bench.

Split of Judge Thornhill in his robes and wearing an Elvis wig on the bench

The Elvis-is-everywhere schtick allegedly violated rules on "order and decorum," despite 35 letters backing the judge's character. So the judge was judged and found wanting.

On the bright side, he might have the makings of a sequel to "My Cousin Vinny."

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DAN GAINOR: November's Nuttiest News: An Elvis judge, COP chaos and more media lunacy

DAN GAINOR: November's Nuttiest News: An Elvis judge, COP chaos and more media lunacy Dan GainorDecember 1, 2025 at...

 

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