Todd Marinovich, former phenom QB-turned-cautionary tale, steps out from under his own myth in new book

<p>-

  • Todd Marinovich, former phenom QB-turned-cautionary tale, steps out from under his own myth in new book</p>

<p>Jay BusbeeAugust 1, 2025 at 2:08 AM</p>

<p>Todd Marinovich, seen in a 2017 photo, tells his side of his infamous football story in his new book, 'Marinovich: Outside the Lines in Football, Art, and Addiction.' (Jeff Gritchen/Digital First Media/Orange County Register via Getty Images) (MediaNews Group/Orange County Register via Getty Images via Getty Images)</p>

<p>The bond between fathers and their athletic-genius children is a complex, fragile and often treacherous one. If the father pushes too hard, the child rebels. If the father doesn't push hard enough, the child might never reach their astronomical potential. And either way, the traditional protective and nurturing role of the father becomes transactional rather than emotional. When fathers take an active interest in their children's athletic development, approval and support are conditional; blasting all those reps and showing up big at game time are what's mandatory. The resulting generational wreckage can last much longer than any career ever could.</p>

<p>Before Tiger Woods and his father Earl, before Venus and Serena Williams and their father Richard, and long before the feel-good tale of Home Run Derby champ Cal Raleigh and his pitching pop, there came Todd Marinovich and his father Marv — the ultimate sports-dad cautionary tale. Nationally famous long before he graduated high school, Todd Marinovich became the grim answer to the question: What if you attempted to genetically engineer an NFL quarterback?</p>

<p>The answer, in Marinovich's case, was chaos, chaos that still echoes today more than three decades later.</p>

<p>Marinovich, a Southern California quarterback who played his college ball at USC and took snaps in the NFL for the Raiders, crashed and burned shortly into his NFL career, a victim of his own bad choices and — most everyone assumed — the immense pressure his father Marv placed on him practically from birth.</p>

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<p>The truth, however, is far more complex and, to Marinovich's mind, far more favorable to Marv, who died in 2020. Marinovich — once dubbed the "Robo QB," or, even less charitably, "Marijuanavich" — has at last put his own story, in his own words, into print. "Marinovich: Outside the Lines in Football, Art, and Addiction" documents, in painful detail, the battles that the onetime quarterback and present-day artist fought throughout his career and continues to fight even now — with addiction, with perception, with himself. It's a harrowing but ultimately impressive and inspiring look at reconciling a public image with personal belief.</p>

<p>"My most fundamental flaw was both a tremendous blessing and a horrible curse, but it was my reality," he writes. "Without the zeal accompanying obsession, who knows if I would've succeeded in football? Someone else could have been the first college sophomore in history to declare for the NFL Draft. Yet, on the flip side, there wouldn't have been a soul-crushing dozen arrests, five incarcerations, and over seven trips to rehab."</p>

<p>There's a reason, then, that he begins the book with this epigram: "This book is an act of self-love after decades of self-defiance." (Disclaimer: Marinovich and this writer share an agent.)</p>

<p>For Marinovich, now 56, training began virtually at birth. His father, a former strength coach with the Raiders, developed a relentless regimen designed to maximize Todd's potential and hone his discipline. But early in his autobiography, Marinovich makes sure to draw a line in the sand:</p>

<p>"No one pushed me into football, least of all my dad, Marv," he writes. "I chose it. Any suggestions to the contrary were lies offered freely by the media to manufacture a Greek tragedy."</p>

<p>And yes, the media dove deep into the Marinovich story, starting long before he suited up for USC. Even as a high schooler, Marinovich was drawing national attention.</p>

<p>"That was a really trippy time for me, because I was so shy going into high school," he told Yahoo Sports recently. "And then articles were talking about my diet, like I was a freak show — 'He's never had a Big Mac!' It just wasn't true. I was healthy, and I ate healthy, but, you know, living in America, you're going to have a Big Mac."</p>

<p>Todd Marinovich (center) signs his Letter of Intent to attend USC with parents Marv (left) and Trudi, on Feb. 10, 1988 in Mission Viejo, California. (Photo by Bob Riha, Jr./Getty Images) (Bob Riha Jr via Getty Images)</p>

<p>During this time, Marinovich honed his ability to remain cool under pressure. An immensely talented basketball player, he played in dozens of hostile gyms, sinking last-second shots to win games in front of rabid crowds. It's the kind of training you can't teach, you just have to experience.</p>

<p>"I felt really comfortable when the time was running out that I want the ball," he recalls. "Not everybody wants the ball when time's running out. And that's OK. Just give it up, just pass it to the guy that does."</p>

<p>As much as he loved basketball, however, Marinovich loved football even more. Speaking today, he notes that there's an almost otherworldly component to the game when it's functioning at its highest.</p>

<p>"It's truly spiritual," he says. "It's 11 of us who are out there at once. It's so special when everyone has just got your back. All you've got to do is handle your guy, don't let the guy down next to you. You're looking at guys in the eye, and they know that you are not going to let them down. You're going, I'm going to die trying not to let you down, bro."</p>

<p>At his finest, Marinovich was something to behold at quarterback. He threw for 9,914 career yards in high school, a mark that was a national record at the time. (It's since been nearly doubled.) Marinovich threw for 2,477 yards his senior year, more than contemporaries John Elway, Jim Kelly or Dan Marino did in theirs. In two years at USC, he crafted some instantly indelible memories — a last-second drive to beat Washington State in 1989, a triumphant 45-42 victory over rival UCLA in 1990.</p>

<p>Those were good days for Marinovich and anyone in the Marinovich business. He was winning nationwide acclaim and shaking off his shyness to become a fixture on the L.A. party scene. He counted Charlie Sheen and Flea among his friends, and he was an unmistakable redheaded presence wherever there was a party to be had.</p>

<p>"There were some really amazing next-level times that I had before it got really bad," he laughs, "and that's just, that's all I'll say."</p>

<p>But the cracks were already starting to show. He engaged in an on-camera shouting match with his head coach in what was then called the John Hancock (now Sun) Bowl on the last day of 1990. A few weeks later, he was busted for cocaine possession, but still got selected in the first round of the 1991 NFL Draft.</p>

<p>He saw little NFL action, playing in just eight regular-season games, with one playoff appearance, over parts of two seasons. He threw for eight touchdowns and nine interceptions, plus a zero-TD, four-INT game against the Chiefs in a 1991 wild-card game. He dodged NFL investigators, often with grimly comical results — he would use teammates' urine to pass drug tests, but got popped when one of his teammates gave him urine while drunk at four times the legal driving limit.</p>

<p>After multiple failed drug tests and failed attempts at rehab, Marinovich was suspended for the 1993 season, and never played in the NFL again. He attempted to catch on with the Canadian Football League, the Arena Football League and other organizations, but nothing stuck. Eulogies for his career pointed the finger at Marv, but Marinovich is adamant that the blame belongs on himself, and only himself.</p>

<p>"Marv was a thorny scapegoat, as he'd delivered the genes and created the environment offering addiction fertile ground," Marinovich writes. "He could be a ruthless tyrant obsessed with perfection, but ultimately, his criticism was child's play. The most damaging voice came from within. At the height of addiction, I needed drugs to silence my mind as much as others require air."</p>

<p>These days, Marinovich lives on the Big Island of Hawaii, hanging out with his dog and creating art. (Check out his work on Instagram.) Creating art isn't a bad life, he admits.</p>

<p>"Art takes me away," he says. "I can escape into a place that … it's hard to describe, but time is non-existent in this place, and there's a flow to it. It's kind of similar to athletics, there's a flow to athletics. But with art, there are no rules, and in football, there are."</p>

<p>Todd Marinovich remains one of football's great what-ifs. But even though his NFL career was a spark at best, he still tries to look back on his days at quarterback with pride.</p>

<p>"For me, it's truly about the experience," he says. "And I had some just beautiful, amazing — all the adjectives — experiences that the game has given me, and I'm grateful for it."</p>

<p>"Marinovich: Outside the Lines in Football, Art, and Addiction," by Todd Marinovich with Lizzy Wright, goes on sale Aug. 5.</p>

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Todd Marinovich, former phenom QB-turned-cautionary tale, steps out from under his own myth in new book

<p>- Todd Marinovich, former phenom QB-turned-cautionary tale, steps out from under his own myth in new book</p> ...

Mikal Bridges agrees to 4-year, $150 million extension with New York Knicks

<p>-

  • Mikal Bridges agrees to 4-year, $150 million extension with New York Knicks</p>

<p>Leocciano CallaoJuly 31, 2025 at 11:51 PM</p>

<p>New York Knicks forward Mikal Bridges has agreed to a four-year, $150 million extension, ESPN's Shams Charania reported Thursday.</p>

<p>SNY initially reported the 28-year-old was eligible for a maximum four-year, $156 million extension. But, per Charania, Bridges took a slight discount to help New York's roster-building efforts.</p>

<p>The Knicks had a window from July 6 to June 30, 2026, before Bridges was set to enter free agency, to secure a new contract with him. The new deal includes a player option for 2029-30 and a trade kicker, according to Charania.</p>

<p>Bridges initially found his way to New York across the East River when he landed in Brooklyn from Phoenix in exchange for Kevin Durant. He spent five seasons with the Suns before getting traded to the borough south of Manhattan.</p>

<p>The former Villanova Wildcat averaged 26.1 points per game in 27 games for the Nets upon his arrival and 19.6 points per game after starting in all 82 games the following season.</p>

<p>Bridges was traded to the Knicks last offseason for Bojan Bogdanović, five first-round draft picks and a second-rounder. The move reunited Bridges with his former college teammates, Josh Hart and Jalen Brunson.</p>

<p>In his first season in blue and orange, Bridges proved to be a dynamic role player for the Knicks, averaging 17.6 points, 3.2 rebounds and 3.7 assists per game. His defense also shined in the Knicks' playoff run before they eventually fell to the Indiana Pacers in the Eastern Conference finals. Bridges averaged 15.6 points, 4.5 boards, 0.9 blocks and 1.7 steals per game in this year's postseason.</p>

<p>Bridges' extension comes after the Knicks hired Mike Brown to replace Tom Thibodeau as their head coach. The team has also added reinforcements in free agency by signing Guerschon Yabusele and Jordan Clarkson.</p>

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Mikal Bridges agrees to 4-year, $150 million extension with New York Knicks

<p>- Mikal Bridges agrees to 4-year, $150 million extension with New York Knicks</p> <p>Leocciano Callao...

Microsoft briefly becomes the second company to hit $4 trillion in market value

<p>-

  • Microsoft briefly becomes the second company to hit $4 trillion in market value</p>

<p>Steve KopackJuly 31, 2025 at 11:02 PM</p>

<p>Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella. (Mark Kauzlarich / Bloomberg via Getty Images file)</p>

<p>Shares of tech giants Meta and Microsoft were soaring Thursday, with the two companies adding a combined $400 billion to their market values.</p>

<p>The two companies together are worth more than JPMorgan Chase, America's largest bank, or Walmart, the country's largest retailer, more than seven times over.</p>

<p>For Microsoft, its value briefly crossed $4 trillion, making it only the second company ever to reach that milestone after Nvidia. The company's market value retreated slightly to $3.97 trillion at the close of trading for the day.</p>

<p>Facebook and Instagram's parent company, Meta, is now on the verge of crossing $2 trillion. Meta shares closed 11.25% higher with Microsoft shares up about 5%.</p>

<p>The soaring stock prices come on the heels of better-than-expected financial results, fueled in part by the artificial intelligence revolution. Meta and Microsoft have each added $200 billion to their market value since Wednesday's close.</p>

<p>Microsoft reported that in the last three months revenue rose 18% to $76 billion, and said it plans to spend more than $30 billion in just the next three months, the majority of which will likely go to the continued expansion of its cloud services to support booming AI usage.</p>

<p>Meta said its revenue surged 22% to almost $50 billion. The number of people who use Meta's services on a daily basis is now almost 3.5 billion, the company said in a statement. Meta said its total expenses for 2025 will be between $114 billion and $118 billion, much of that likely going to investing in AI and its fleet of data centers around the world to power it all.</p>

<p>Investors will be closely watching another major artificial intelligence player on Thursday afternoon, when Amazon reports its earnings. Amazon's value currently sits just below $2.5 trillion and its stock was higher by around 2% on hopes that it too will see blockbuster results.</p>

<p>So far this year, shares of Nvidia have soared 30% and Microsoft's have risen 27%. Meta is also riding the AI wave higher, with its stock seeing a gain of 32% this year.</p>

<p>By contrast, Apple, which was the first company to ever hit $1 trillion, $2 trillion and $3 trillion, has been sinking this year. The iPhone maker's shares are down 18% as investors and analysts worry that its AI ambitions may be falling short of others such as OpenAI and Microsoft, even though the company often takes a wait-and-see approach to new technologies.</p>

<p>Shares of Alphabet, another trillion-dollar tech giant trying to compete in the AI space, are up only 1.5% for the year. The company has the third-largest cloud service, behind Amazon and Microsoft, and has faced concerns that use of its Google search engine could be declining due to the rise of chatbots like ChatGPT.</p>

<p>In May, an Apple executive testifying in Google's antitrust trial said traditional searches in Apple's Safari browser dropped for the first time ever in April. Google said it continues "to see overall query growth in Search."</p>

<p>At the end of 2023, the total market value of all publicly traded companies in the European Union was about $12.5 trillion. Apple, Alphabet, Meta and Microsoft's values are currently just short of that, at $11.4 trillion.</p>

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Microsoft briefly becomes the second company to hit $4 trillion in market value

<p>- Microsoft briefly becomes the second company to hit $4 trillion in market value</p> <p>Steve Kopack...

Amazon reports solid 2Q results and offers better-than-expected sales view despite tariffs

<p>-

  • Amazon reports solid 2Q results and offers better-than-expected sales view despite tariffs</p>

<p>ANNE D'INNOCENZIO July 31, 2025 at 11:34 PM</p>

<p>NEW YORK (AP) — Amazon posted higher fiscal second-quarter profit and sales than the year-ago period, underscoring the online giant's resilience despite tariff uncertainty.</p>

<p>The Seattle-based company also offered on Thursday a sales outlook for the current quarter that beat analysts' projections. Still, its shares fell nearly 7% in after-market trading as the company's estimates for operating income for the current quarter were below analysts' views.</p>

<p>The company reported 17.5% growth for its prominent cloud computing arm Amazon Web Services.</p>

<p>The results come even as uncertainty about President Donald Trump's tariffs have challenged companies and consumers. But Amazon and other large retailers have tried to beat the clock by bringing in foreign goods before Trump's tariffs took effect. Amazon, like many other big retailers, also has the clout to negotiate prices with its suppliers and a broad breadth of items.</p>

<p>Amazon's CEO Andy Jassy told investors that while there's lots of noise about the impact of tariffs on retail prices and consumption, he said "it's impossible to know what will happen." That's because, in part, no one knows where tariffs will finally settle, especially in China, he said.</p>

<p>"If costs end up being higher, we will absorb them, but what we can share is what we've seen thus far, through the first half of the year, we haven't yet seen diminishing demand nor prices meaningfully appreciating," he said.</p>

<p>Jassy also touted the diversity of its more than 2 million sellers in its third-party marketplace, all with different strategies of whether to pass on higher costs to shoppers.</p>

<p>Meanwhile, Amazon is one of the biggest players in the race around generative artificial intelligence.</p>

<p>Like other tech companies, it has increased investments in the technology and is spending billions to expand data centers that power AI and cloud computing. The company is also investing in its own computer chips and those developed by Nvidia. It has also expanded its own AI models and integrated generative AI into other parts of its business.</p>

<p>In March Amazon began testing AI-aided dubbing for select movies and shows offered on its Prime streaming service. A month earlier, the company rolled out a generative-AI infused Alexa.</p>

<p>Jassy anticipates generative AI will also allow Amazon to reduce its corporate workforce in the next few years.</p>

<p>The company is also making big investments in expanding its delivery network to bring faster delivery to customers in less densely populated areas across the U.S. Jassy told investors Thursday that the service is available in 1,000 of the more than 4,000 smaller cities, towns and rural communities targeted by year-end. He noted the early response has been "positive," with customers shopping more frequently and purchasing household essentials.</p>

<p>Amazon earned $18.16 billion, or $1.68 per share, for the quarter ended June 30. That's up from $13.49 billion, or $1.26 per share, in the year-ago period.</p>

<p>Revenue rose to $167.7 billion from $147.9 billion a year ago.</p>

<p>The company's sales figure excluded the impact from Amazon's Prime Day event, which ran from July 8 to July 11. For the first time, Amazon held Prime Day over four days instead of two.</p>

<p>Analysts expected earnings per share of $1.33 on sales of $162.19 billion for the quarter, according to FactSet.</p>

<p>The company said it expects sales for the current quarter of between $174 billion and $179.5 billion. Analysts expected $173.27 billion for the current quarter, according to FactSet.</p>

<p>However, Amazon said that operating income is expected to be between $15.5 billion and $20.5 billion for the third quarter, compared with $17.4 billion in the third quarter of 2024. Analysts expected $19.5 billion for the current quarter, according to FactSet.</p>

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Amazon reports solid 2Q results and offers better-than-expected sales view despite tariffs

<p>- Amazon reports solid 2Q results and offers better-than-expected sales view despite tariffs</p> <p>A...

Paris Jackson and Fiancé Justin Long End Engagement as Star Says She Cried 'Breakup Tears'

<p>-

  • Paris Jackson and Fiancé Justin Long End Engagement as Star Says She Cried 'Breakup Tears'</p>

<p>Rachel DeSantis, Elizabeth LeonardAugust 1, 2025 at 1:15 AM</p>

<p>Rob Kim/Getty</p>

<p>Justin Long and Paris Jackson attend the "One Spoon Of Chocolate" premiere during the 2025 Tribeca Festival at BMCC Theater on June 08, 2025, in New York City.</p>

<p>Paris Jackson and her fiancé Justin Long have ended their engagement</p>

<p>She shared the news in a post shared to X on July 31, writing she'd been crying "breakup tears"</p>

<p>The former couple announced their engagement in December</p>

<p>Paris Jackson and her fiancé Justin Long have called it quits.</p>

<p>The singer-songwriter, 27, and her music producer beau have broken off their engagement, PEOPLE confirms.</p>

<p>Jackson shared the split news in a post shared to X on Thursday, July 31, in which she said that she was crying "breakup tears" in emotional photos published by the Daily Mail earlier this month.</p>

<p>The "Hit Your Knees" singer — who has spent the summer on tour with Incubus — announced her engagement to Long in December, writing in an Instagram post that she "couldn't dream of anyone more perfect" for her.</p>

<p>Aeon/GC Images</p>

<p>Paris Jackson and Justin Long seen on Lower East Side on June 08, 2025 in New York City.</p>

<p>"Doing life with you these last years has been an indescribable whirlwind," she wrote in the post, which has since been deleted. "Thank you for letting me be yours. I love you."</p>

<p>In June, Jackson told Access Hollywood that she was in wedding planning mode.</p>

<p>"The dress is being made, the venue has been picked and the date has been picked by an astrologer, because I'm from L.A.," she said. "I'm all about the crystals and the astrologer, and all that stuff."</p>

<p>That same month, Long joined her on the red carpet for the Tribeca Festival premiere of her film One Spoon of Chocolate.</p>

<p>Jackson, the daughter of Michael Jackson and Debbie Rowe, previously spoke about marriage in a 2021 episode of Red Table Talk.</p>

<p>"I'm not against marriage and if I love someone, sure, but right now my main thing is my spirituality and my music," she told Willow Smith, adding that it's a "maybe" when it comes to having children in the future.</p>

<p>She also revealed on the Unfiltered: Paris Jackson and Gabriel Glenn Facebook Watch series that she's "dated more women than men" in her life.</p>

<p>"I thought I'd end up marrying a chick," she said. "I say I'm gay because I guess I am, but I wouldn't consider myself bisexual because I've dated more than just men and women, I've dated a man that had a vagina… It has nothing to do with what's in your pants, it's literally like, what are you like as a person?"</p>

<p>https://people-app.onelink.me/HNIa/kz7l4cuf</p>

<p>Jackson, who celebrated five years of sobriety from alcohol and heroin addiction in January, released her debut album Wilted in 2020. She's since released a number of EPs and singles.</p>

<p>On July 18, she celebrated her time on the road with Incubus, writing on Instagram, "It's been a hell of a summer so far."</p>

<p>on People</p>

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Paris Jackson and Fiancé Justin Long End Engagement as Star Says She Cried 'Breakup Tears'

<p>- Paris Jackson and Fiancé Justin Long End Engagement as Star Says She Cried 'Breakup Tears'</p> ...

Trump officials headed to Gaza to inspect food distribution centers amid hunger crisis

<p>-

  • Trump officials headed to Gaza to inspect food distribution centers amid hunger crisis</p>

<p>Joey Garrison, USA TODAY August 1, 2025 at 12:24 AM</p>

<p>WASHINGTON ― President Donald Trump is sending two top White House officials to Gaza on Aug. 1 to inspect food distribution centers and meet with Gazans amid intensifying global scrutiny over the hunger crisis in the territory.</p>

<p>Steven Witkoff, Trump's Middle East envoy, and U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee will "secure a plan to deliver more food and meet with local Gazans to hear firsthand about this dire situation" during the rare trip, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters on July 31.</p>

<p>Following their visit, Witkoff and Huckabee are expected to meet with Trump to approve the administration's final plan for food and aid distribution in the region amid Israel's ongoing war with Hamas in Gaza.</p>

<p>More: 'Every ounce of food': Trump presses Israel on starvation in Gaza; 'children look very hungry'</p>

<p>Witkoff and Huckabee spoke to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on the morning of July 31 about delivering food and aid to the area, Leavitt said.</p>

<p>"It's terrible what's occurring there. It's a terrible thing. People are very hungry," Trump told reporters. "You know, the United States gave $60 million for food and it's a shame, because I don't see the results of it. And we gave it to people that in theory are watching over it fairly closely. We wanted Israel to watch over it."</p>

<p>More: One meal a day. $20 for an egg. Choosing which kid gets fed. Starvation stalks Gaza</p>

<p>More: Gaza death toll hits 60,000 as global monitor demands action to avert famine</p>

<p>An alert issued this week by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification raised the prospect of a famine unfolding in Gaza. The United Nations' World Food Programme said a third of Gaza's population does not eat for several days at a time and that one in four Gazans are "enduring famine-like conditions." The Hamas-run health ministry, the chief source of health data in Gaza, said more than 100 people have died from malnutrition in recent days.</p>

<p>Trump broke with Netanyahu earlier this week by saying he disagrees with the Israeli prime minister's claim that no starvation is taking place among the people of Gaza, and he urged Israel to let more food into the enclave.</p>

<p>Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff (L) speaks as US President Donald Trump looks on during a swearing in ceremony for interim US Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on May 28, 2025.</p>

<p>As images of emaciated children in Gaza have alarmed the world, Netanyahu denied Israel is conducting a starvation campaign, calling such accusations a "bold-faced lie" and even rejecting that starvation is occurring.</p>

<p>Trump also said July 31 that Witkoff will later travel to Russia ahead of a new 10-day deadline the president set for the country to agree to a ceasefire with Ukraine or face U.S. tariffs and other penalties. "Going to Israel, and then he's going to Russia, believe it or not," Trump said.</p>

<p>Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison</p>

<p>This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Trump sends Witkoff, Huckabee to Gaza amid hunger crisis</p>

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Trump officials headed to Gaza to inspect food distribution centers amid hunger crisis

<p>- Trump officials headed to Gaza to inspect food distribution centers amid hunger crisis</p> <p>Joey ...

MLB trade deadline: Rangers acquire pitcher Merrill Kelly from Diamondbacks, who continue sell-off

<p>-

  • MLB trade deadline: Rangers acquire pitcher Merrill Kelly from Diamondbacks, who continue sell-off</p>

<p>Ian CasselberryJuly 31, 2025 at 10:38 PM</p>

<p>The Arizona Diamondbacks' sell-off continued Thursday with starting pitcher Merrill Kelly being traded to the Texas Rangers, ESPN's Jeff Passan reported.</p>

<p>Kelly, who turns 37 on Oct. 14, provides another reliable arm for the Rangers' veteran starting rotation, joining Jacob deGrom, Patrick Corbin and Nathan Eovaldi. He has been the D-backs' most consistent starter this season, compiling a 3.22 ERA over 22 starts with 121 strikeouts in 128 2/3 innings.</p>

<p>The Rangers' starting pitchers have the best ERA in MLB at 3.16, led by deGrom (10-3, 2.55 ERA) throwing like the ace who won NL Rookie of the Year and two Cy Young Awards with the New York Mets. Corbin (3.78 ERA) has experienced a career resurgence after struggling the past five seasons with the Washington Nationals. And Eovaldi (9-3, 1.49 ERA) has been one of the best starters in baseball the past six seasons.</p>

<p>Texas (57-52) is a postseason contender, tied with the Seattle Mariners for second in the AL West, five games behind the Houston Astros. The Rangers and Mariners are also tied for the AL's third wild-card playoff berth, 2.5 games ahead of the Cleveland Guardians and three ahead of the Kansas City Royals and Tampa Bay Rays.</p>

<p>In exchange for Kelly, who can be a free agent after the season, the D-backs will receive Triple-A left-hander Kohl Drake, Double-A arm Mitch Bratt and Single-A pitcher David Hagaman. Drake, 25, was ranked as the Rangers' No. 5 prospect by MLB.com, while Bratt, 22, was No. 9 and Hagaman, 22, was No. 13.</p>

<p>Kelly was a late bloomer as an MLB pitcher, an eighth-round pick by the Tampa Bay Rays in 2010 after he was drafted the previous two years by the Baltimore Orioles and Cleveland Guardians but didn't sign. He played nine years in the minors before making his major-league debut with the D-backs in 2019.</p>

<p>In his seven-year MLB career, Kelly has a 3.74 ERA and 62-50 record, averaging 8.2 strikeouts and 2.7 walks per nine innings. He's two seasons removed from his best year in 2023, when he registered a 3.29 ERA and 12-8 record in 30 starts, adding 187 strikeouts in 177 2/3 innings.</p>

<p>Kelly was the fourth regular to be dealt from Arizona leading up to the MLB trade deadline. First baseman Josh Naylor began the D-backs' trade season by going to the Seattle Mariners last week. That was followed by outfielder Randal Grichuk being traded to the Kansas City Royals and third baseman Eugenio Suárez also going to Seattle on Wednesday night.</p>

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MLB trade deadline: Rangers acquire pitcher Merrill Kelly from Diamondbacks, who continue sell-off

<p>- MLB trade deadline: Rangers acquire pitcher Merrill Kelly from Diamondbacks, who continue sell-off</p> ...

Beyoncé's Levi's jeans ad pulled into Sydney Sweeney backlash

<p>-

  • Beyoncé's Levi's jeans ad pulled into Sydney Sweeney backlash</p>

<p>Caché McClay, USA TODAY NETWORK August 1, 2025 at 12:20 AM</p>

<p>A Beyoncé ad for Levi's jeans is being compared to Sydney Sweeney's controversial American Eagle campaign, but other social media users argue the two are far from similar.</p>

<p>"Euphoria" star Sweeney is facing backlash as the face of American Eagle's newest campaign. The denim ad and its tagline "Sydney Sweeney has great jeans" drew sharp criticism online with some users accusing the brand of promoting eugenics.</p>

<p>In a campaign video, Sweeney lies in a full denim ensemble as she leans into wordplay: "Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair color, personality and even eye color. My jeans are blue." The camera then shows Sweeney's blue eyes before a message reads, "Sydney Sweeney has great jeans."</p>

<p>Sydney Sweeney joins forces with American Eagle for its Fall 2025 campaign.</p>

<p>The criticism wasn't about the denim itself, but the language used. Social media users argued the phrase "great genes" paired with a blond-haired, blue-eyed star echoed eugenic ideas — the discredited belief in improving humanity through selective breeding. Some also argued it contributed to the glorification of whiteness.</p>

<p>Sydney Sweeney x American Eagle, oh my god. pic.twitter.com/tDkeGT9R7G</p>

<p>— Sydney Sweeney Daily (@sweeneydailyx) July 24, 2025</p>

<p>Eventually, Beyoncé's recent Levi's campaign, where she poses in a similar position in a denim-on-demin outfit with blond hair, was dragged into the discourse.</p>

<p>So Beyoncé can pose in Levi jeans and it's art…But when a white woman does it, it's a national crisis? pic.twitter.com/aWu3h6nrL8</p>

<p>— Desiree (@DesireeAmerica4) July 29, 2025</p>

<p>One user wrote, "So Beyoncé can pose in Levi jeans and it's art… But when a white woman does it, it's a national crisis?" as she shared a photo of the two ads side-by-side. However, many were quick to point out the differences between the two.</p>

<p>Just going to leave this pic from Beyoncé Levi's campaign right here for those saying Sydney Sweeney with her blond hair/denim/sultry look is racist… pic.twitter.com/ZyeMF6ouCI</p>

<p>— Nicole Saphier, MD (@NBSaphierMD) July 30, 2025</p>

<p>Another said, "Just going to leave this pic form Beyoncé Levi's campaign right here for those saying Sydney Sweeney with her blond hair/denim/sultry look is racist..." A user responded, "No one said that, what was said though was that the ad's inference that blonde hair and blue eyes are superior."</p>

<p>The Grammy-winning singer announced her collaboration with Levi's last fall. She has since released multiple campaigns with the denim powerhouse. But she has never alluded to genes or genetics, focusing solely on the quality and design of the jeans themselves.</p>

<p>One social media user, @dukepege, takes this notion a step deeper: "At what point will it be fully understood that proclaiming or implying 'my genes (jeans) are better' is frightening to any race who's ancestors for long generations have had to suffer at the hands of the very same race of people with the same kind of thinking — that their genes are superior?"</p>

<p>He added, "No, such statements are not benign; they are echoes of a violent and dehumanizing history and the fact that you involve Beyoncé explains very well how you're still unable to comprehend what's being felt."</p>

<p>The conversation comes after Beyoncé was baselessly pulled into another controversy when President Donald Trump accused her of being paid $11 million to endorse Kamala Harris' presidential bid — a payment the the Federal Election Commission has no record of.</p>

<p>The Grammy-winning singer concluded her Cowboy Carter and the Rodeo Chitlin' Circuit Tour in Las Vegas on July 26. The 32-stop stadium tour became the highest grossing country tour, earning over $400 million.</p>

<p>Follow Caché McClay, the USA TODAY Network's Beyoncé Knowles-Carter reporter, on Instagram, TikTok and X as @cachemcclay.</p>

<p>This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: Beyoncé's Levi's jeans ad pulled into Sydney Sweeney backlash</p>

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Beyoncé's Levi's jeans ad pulled into Sydney Sweeney backlash

<p>- Beyoncé's Levi's jeans ad pulled into Sydney Sweeney backlash</p> <p>Caché McClay, USA TODA...

Commentary: Trump isn't 'winning' his trade wars

<p>-

  • Commentary: Trump isn't 'winning' his trade wars</p>

<p>Rick NewmanJuly 31, 2025 at 8:47 PM</p>

<p>President Trump is on a winning streak, if you trust the news. The New York Times declared recently that "Trump is winning his trade wars." The Hill says he's on a "hot streak." The claims "Trump is getting the economy he wants."</p>

<p>All this stems from a flurry of trade deals Trump has negotiated leading up to his self-declared Aug. 1 deadline for trading partners to make deals or face his wrath.</p>

<p>But this isn't winning. Trump is shackling the US economy and threatening his own political future. His tariffs will inevitably weaken the economy and rattle voters who are already losing faith in Trump's ability to safeguard their prosperity.</p>

<p>Trump's supposed "wins" of late include trade deals with South Korea, Japan, Indonesia, and the European Union. Still in the works are deals with Canada, Mexico, and China, the top three US trading partners. Most of the deals announced so far lack specifics and may be more like frameworks for deals that will take months to hammer out.</p>

<p>Wall Street likes them anyway. Under the newly minted deals, imports from those countries will face a tax to enter the United States, typically ranging from 15% to 20%. That's not as bad as the 25% tariff or more that some analysts feared. Trump is also reaching these deals without facing any retaliation, such as tariffs on US exports similar to Trump's tariffs on imports. US stocks have been rising on the news.</p>

<p>Hooray!</p>

<p>The average tax on imports is soaring from about 2.5% before Trump took office to around 18%, according to the Yale Budget Lab. That's certainly an odd win. The tariffs are cutting into profits at Ford (F), General Motors (GM), Procter & Gamble (PG), and many other American companies, including some that say they'll have to pass the higher costs on to consumers through higher prices. Shoppers will face renewed inflationary pressures and a slowdown in hiring likely to come from slower growth.</p>

<p>Winning? President Trump talking tariffs last April. (Reuters/Carlos Barria/File Photo) (REUTERS / Reuters)</p>

<p>Trump tariff defenders argue that economists have been wrong about inflation because it hasn't shown up yet. But that is probably just a matter of timing. Producers and merchants stocked up on imports during the first quarter, knowing the Trump tariffs were coming. They bought a lot less in the second quarter, when many new tariffs were in effect. That is only now beginning to show up in everyday prices. But the early signs show inflation picking up exactly where you'd expect import tariffs to hit.</p>

<p>Inflation data for June showed unusual month-to-month increases in the cost of appliances, toys, clothing, and sporting goods. Imports dominate those product sectors, so if you were looking for tariff-related inflation, that's where you'd find it. "Tariffs [are] beginning to rear their ugly head," Oxford Economics explained in a July 15 analysis. "Tariff impacts on the economy are still in the pipeline."</p>

<p>Drop Rick Newman a note, take his inflation quiz, or sign up for his newsletter.</p>

<p>It's an open question whether Trump's import taxes will raise prices enough to cause consumers serious pain. The Yale Budget Lab expects higher tariffs to cost the typical household about $2,100 per year, once importers, suppliers, and consumers have adjusted to higher prices by shifting their business strategies and buying habits.</p>

<p>If the government forced every family in the US to cough up an extra $2,100 per year, there would be national outrage and maybe revolt. The tariffs won't work like that. Part of the cost to families will be gradually rising prices, some noticeable, others not. Economists generally think the tariffs will push the annual inflation rate from 2.7% now to the high threes or maybe 4%. It's already up from a low of 2.3% in April. But 4% isn't nearly as painful as the 9% inflation from 2022.</p>

<p>Read more: What Trump's tariffs mean for the economy and your wallet</p>

<p>Other parts of the cost to families will come from slower economic growth, which in turn will mean lower pay than some workers would otherwise earn and slightly higher unemployment. Tariffs are inefficient, introducing new costs and barriers to trade. That hurts growth.</p>

<p>Trump may hope the costs of his trade wars are imperceptible to most Americans. But he's hedging. Trump wants Congress to pass legislation to send "tariff rebates" of $600 or more to most taxpayers, drawing the funds from new tariff revenue the Treasury is collecting. Thoughtful voters might ask why Trump is imposing new taxes on one hand, then offering relief from those taxes through a rebate. Wouldn't it be better to do nothing in the first place?</p>

<p>Toying with tariffs: Members of civic groups protest against President Trump's tariffs policy on July 30 in Seoul, South Korea. (Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images) (Chung Sung-Jun via Getty Images)</p>

<p>Given that type of complexity, most Americans will struggle to determine exactly how tariffs are affecting them. But most voters know that Trump is toying with tariffs. They also know Trump signed a big set of tax cuts into law in early July and that Trump is slashing a wide range of government agencies. Trump is forcing a lot of highly visible change on the economy, which means Trump owns the consequences.</p>

<p>Voters may already be blaming him for the problems they see. Trump's approval rating for his handling of the economy dropped from 42% in February to 37% in July, according to Gallup. His overall approval rating dropped from 47% when he took office to 37%.</p>

<p>Winners don't usually lose popularity.</p>

<p>Trump inherited a very prickly electorate when he took office in January. Voters chose Trump in the 2024 presidential race in large part because they wanted him to bring prices down and create more opportunity than they experienced during the Biden years. Trump, so far, is doing the opposite. GDP growth in the first half of 2025 was a weak 1.3%, a percentage point lower than in 2024. Spending is slowing down, and inflation is already higher than economists expected late last year after Trump won the election. Consumer confidence has mostly fallen since Trump took office, with the University of Michigan sentiment index nearly as low as it was at the moment of peak inflation in 2022.</p>

<p>If Trump is winning, then it's ordinary Americans he's winning against.</p>

<p>Rick Newman is a senior columnist for Yahoo Finance. Follow him on Bluesky and X: @rickjnewman.</p>

<p>Click here for political news related to business and money policies that will shape tomorrow's stock prices.</p>

<p>Read the latest financial and business news from Yahoo Finance</p>

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Commentary: Trump isn't 'winning' his trade wars

<p>- Commentary: Trump isn't 'winning' his trade wars</p> <p>Rick NewmanJuly 31, 2025 at 8:4...

July jobs report expected to show hiring slowed while unemployment rate ticked higher

<p>-

  • July jobs report expected to show hiring slowed while unemployment rate ticked higher</p>

<p>Josh SchaferJuly 31, 2025 at 9:51 PM</p>

<p>The July jobs report is expected to show hiring slowed during the month while the unemployment rate moved higher. The data's release will come as investors closely watch for any further signs of slowing in the US labor market amid growing debate over when the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates next.</p>

<p>The Bureau of Labor Statistics data is slated for release at 8:30 a.m. ET on Friday. Economists expect nonfarm payrolls to have risen by 105,000 in July and the unemployment rate to have moved up to 4.2%, according to consensus estimates compiled by Bloomberg.</p>

<p>In June, the US economy added 147,000 jobs. Meanwhile, the unemployment rate fell to 4.1%.</p>

<p>Here are the key numbers Wall Street is expecting Friday, according to data from Bloomberg:</p>

<p>Nonfarm payrolls: +105,000 vs. +147,000 in June</p>

<p>Unemployment rate: 4.2% vs. 4.1%</p>

<p>Average hourly earnings, month over month: +0.3% vs. +0.2%</p>

<p>Average hourly earnings, year over year: +3.8% vs. +3.7%</p>

<p>Average weekly hours worked: 34.2 vs. 34.2</p>

<p>"In our view, the labor market is moderating rather than deteriorating," BofA US economist Shruti Mishra wrote in a note to clients. "Elevated inflation should still keep the Fed on hold."</p>

<p>Friday's labor report comes as investors have been closely watching for any signs of cooling in the labor market that could prompt the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates. (Soeren Stache/picture alliance via Getty Images) (picture alliance via Getty Images)</p>

<p>The latest labor market data will be released just two days after the Federal Reserve opted to hold interest rates steady at its July meeting. Fed Chair Jerome Powell described the labor market as "solid" and pointed to a "historically low" unemployment rate as a key metric to watch when assessing the health of the jobs picture in America.</p>

<p>Powell admitted job creation has shown slowing, but that has come with a decrease in labor supply due to less immigration, therefore keeping the broad labor market picture in balance.</p>

<p>Recent data has reflected signs of this slowing. On Wednesday, data from ADP showed private payrolls grew by 104,000 in July, above the 75,000 expected by economists and a rebound from the 23,000 job losses seen in June. But as the chart below shows, overall hiring momentum has slowed in the private sector in recent months.</p>

<p>"We are in a labor market that has recalibrated to a lower average level," ADP chief economist Nela Richardson told Yahoo Finance on a call with reporters. "The good news here is that that level is still solid enough to support the consumer, and that ultimately will be the tried-and-true test of the health of the labor market. Will consumers keep spending?"</p>

<p>Elsewhere in labor market data, new data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed 7.44 million jobs open at the end of June, a decrease from the 7.71 million seen the month prior. The hiring rate ticked lower to 3.3% from the 3.4% seen the month prior and stood at its lowest level since November 2024.</p>

<p>"The June JOLTS report painted a familiar picture of the labor market: hiring remains quite low, but so do layoffs," Oxford Economics lead US economist Nancy Vanden Houten wrote in a research note following the release. "This will allow the Federal Reserve to keep policy steady as it waits for a clearer picture of how tariffs will impact inflation and growth."</p>

<p>Josh Schafer is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow him on X @_joshschafer.</p>

<p>Click here for the latest economic news and indicators to help inform your investing decisions</p>

<p>Read the latest financial and business news from Yahoo Finance</p>

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July jobs report expected to show hiring slowed while unemployment rate ticked higher

<p>- July jobs report expected to show hiring slowed while unemployment rate ticked higher</p> <p>Josh S...

'Maybe Happy Ending' Star Helen J. Shen Responds to Andrew Barth Feldman Casting Controversy

<p>-

  • 'Maybe Happy Ending' Star Helen J. Shen Responds to Andrew Barth Feldman Casting Controversy</p>

<p>Rebecca RubinJuly 31, 2025 at 11:42 PM</p>

<p>Helen J. Shen, the star of Broadway's "Maybe Happy Ending," is defending the show's recent decision to recast the lead male role with a white actor.</p>

<p>Producers announced last week that Andrew Barth Feldman, a white actor, would replace Darren Criss, who is of Filipino descent, as the helperbot known as Oliver. Critics of the casting choice have argued that Oliver should continue to be portrayed by a member of the Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) community given the musical's Seoul setting.</p>

<p>More from Variety</p>

<p>Tony Awards 2025 Preview: Broadway's Back on Top - and Breaking All the Rules - With 'Oh, Mary!,' 'Maybe Happy Ending' and More</p>

<p>'Maybe Happy Ending' Director Michael Arden on Broadway's Most Unlikely Hit and Adapting 'Lost Boys' Into a 'Sexy' and 'Scary' Musical</p>

<p>Cole Escola and Darren Criss Embrace Chaos and Crying on Broadway</p>

<p>Criss, who originated the role on Broadway and won a Tony for his performance, announced he is leaving the show on Aug. 31. Feldman ("Dear Evan Hansen," "No Hard Feelings") is scheduled to join "Maybe Happy Ending" on Sept. 2 for nine weeks alongside Shen, who originated the role of Claire on Broadway. Feldman and Shen are dating in real life.</p>

<p>"I've been struggling to hold multiple truths within me that seem to contradict. I have and continue to be extremely proud to look the way I do and to co-lead this Broadway show. I know the hurt that people feel because growing up, I would have found a beacon of hope in seeing our show on TV on the Tony Awards. A part of me is mourning that along with the community," Shen said in a statement. "This has been an immensely challenging moment within my home with Andrew, and in this building filled with A/PI folks to say the least. I don't know what's forward, but to have this opportunity to play opposite my favorite actor in the world for 9 weeks, who happens to be PERFECT for the role is a huge moment of joy for me."</p>

<p>"Maybe Happy Ending," a love story about two abandoned robots, opened on Broadway last fall and initially struggled to sell tickets until word-of-mouth and rave reviews changed the show's trajectory. It won six Tony Awards, including the top prize for best musical. Meanwhile Criss cemented history as the first actor or Asian American descent to nab the best lead actor in a musical prize.</p>

<p>"Every perspective on this situation contains truth. I am excited to champion more A/PI works, the way the community has championed 'Maybe Happy Ending,'" Shen's statement continued. "I'm also excited to see work that has a completely different take than 'Maybe Happy Ending,' that can contradict itself, that can be many things, proving that diaspora is a tapestry, and not a monolith."</p>

<p>View this post on Instagram</p>

<p>A post shared by helen j shen |沈雨田 (@helenjshen)</p>

<p>"Maybe Happy Ending" authors Hue Park and Will Aronson responded to the controversy in a separate statement, saying they were "extremely saddened that the show, a decade-long labor of love for us, could ever become a source of confusion, anger or pain."</p>

<p>"We wrote a show about robots so we could engage more intimately with the most basic human questions of love and loss, creating the roles of Oliver and Claire to be avatars of these universal questions," they wrote on Instagram. "They were meant to be products created by a global company, and so never bore Korean names, even in the Korean version of the show. At the same time, we understand that for many in the AAPI community, the makeup of our opening night cast became a meaningful and rare point of visibility. We've heard how strongly people connected to that representation, even if it wasn't our original intent, and how this casting decision has re-opened old wounds."</p>

<p>View this post on Instagram</p>

<p>A post shared by Maybe Happy Ending (@maybehappyending)</p>

<p>They acknowledge that leading roles for Asian performers have "long been painfully scarce" but expressed optimism about recent color-blind casting in "Dear Evan Hansen," "Hadestown," "Oh, Mary!" and "Cabaret."</p>

<p>"Over the last several years, we have been heartened to see Asian performers playing Evan Hansen, Orpheus, Abe Lincoln, Sally Bowles, and others. Leading roles for Asian performers have long been painfully scarce, and these shows excitingly made gestures toward universality with expansive casting, and rightly gave opportunities to actors from identity categories who previously had few options," they continued. "With 'Maybe Happy Ending,' we wanted to write a show in which every role could be played by an Asian performer, but without the intention that the robot roles always would be."</p>

<p>Best of Variety</p>

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<p>What's Coming to Disney+ in August 2025</p>

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‘Maybe Happy Ending’ Star Helen J. Shen Responds to Andrew Barth Feldman Casting Controversy

<p>- 'Maybe Happy Ending' Star Helen J. Shen Responds to Andrew Barth Feldman Casting Controversy</p> ...

Dozens of countries with no deals face higher tariffs as trade deadline nears

<p>-

  • Dozens of countries with no deals face higher tariffs as trade deadline nears</p>

<p>CHRISTOPHER RUGABER July 31, 2025 at 9:17 PM</p>

<p>FILE - A cargo ship heads to Long Beach, Calif., in this June 19, 2025, file photo. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, files)</p>

<p>WASHINGTON (AP) — Numerous countries around the world are facing the prospect of much higher duties on their exports to the United States on Friday, a potential blow to the global economy, because they haven't yet reached a trade deal with the Trump administration.</p>

<p>Some of the United States' biggest trading partners have reached agreements, or at least the outlines of one, including the European Union, the United Kingdom, and Japan. Even so, those countries face much higher tariffs than were in effect before Trump took office. And other large trading partners — most notably China and Mexico — received an extension to keep negotiating and won't be hit with new duties Friday, but they will likely end up paying more.</p>

<p>President Donald Trump intends the duties to bring back manufacturing to the United States, while also forcing other countries to reduce their trade barriers to U.S. exports. Trump argues that foreign exporters will pay the cost of the tariffs, but so far economists have found that most are being paid by U.S. companies. And measures of U.S. inflation have started to tick higher as prices of imported goods, such as furniture, appliances, and toys rise.</p>

<p>For those countries without an agreement, they could face duties of as much as 50%, including on large economies such as Brazil, Canada, Taiwan, and India. Many smaller countries are also on track to pay more, including South Africa, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and even tiny Lesotho.</p>

<p>The duties originated from Trump's April 2 "Liberation Day" announcement that the United States would impose import taxes of up to 50% on nearly 60 countries and economies, including the 27-nation European Union. Those duties, originally scheduled for April 9, were then postponed twice, first to July 9 and then Aug. 1.</p>

<p>Will the deadline hold this time?</p>

<p>As of Thursday afternoon, White House representatives — and Trump himself — insisted that no more delays were possible.</p>

<p>White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Thursday that Trump "at some point this afternoon or later this evening" will sign an order to impose new tariff rates starting midnight on Friday.</p>

<p>Countries that have not received a prior letter on tariffs from Trump or negotiated a trade framework will be notified of their likely tariff rates, Leavitt said, either in the form of a letter or Trump's executive order. At least two dozen countries were sent letters setting out their tariff rates.</p>

<p>On Wednesday, Trump said on his social media platform Truth Social, "THE AUGUST FIRST DEADLINE IS THE AUGUST FIRST DEADLINE — IT STANDS STRONG, AND WILL NOT BE EXTENDED."</p>

<p>Which countries have a trade agreement?</p>

<p>In a flurry of last minute deal-making, the Trump has been announcing agreements as late as Thursday, but they are largely short on details.</p>

<p>On Thursday, the U.S. and Pakistan reached a trade agreement expected to allow Washington to help develop Pakistan's largely untapped oil reserves and lower tariffs for the South Asian country.</p>

<p>And on Wednesday, Trump announced a deal with South Korea that would impose 15% tariffs on goods from that country. That is below the 25% duties that Trump threatened in April.</p>

<p>Agreements have also been reached with the European Union, Pakistan, Indonesia, Vietnam, the Philippines, and the United Kingdom. The agreement with the Philippines barely reduced the tariff it will pay, from 20% to 19%.</p>

<p>And which countries don't?</p>

<p>The exact number of countries facing higher duties isn't clear, but the majority of the 200 have not made deals. Trump has already slapped large duties on Brazil and India even before the deadline was reached.</p>

<p>In the case of Brazil, Trump signed an executive order late Wednesday imposing a 50% duty on imports, though he exempted several large categories, including aircraft, aluminum, and energy products. Trump is angry at Brazil's government because it is prosecuting its former president, Jair Bolsonaro, for attempting to overturn his election loss in 2022. Trump was indicted on a similar charge in 2023.</p>

<p>While Trump has sought to justify the widespread tariffs as an effort to combat the United States' chronic trade deficits, the U.S. actually has a trade surplus with Brazil — meaning it sells more goods and services to Brazil than it buys from that country.</p>

<p>Negotiations between the U.S. and Canada have been complicated by the Canadian government's announcement that it will recognize a Palestinian state in September. Trump said early Thursday that the announcement "will make it very hard" for the U.S. to reach a trade deal with Canada.</p>

<p>Late Wednesday, Trump said that India would pay a 25% duty on all its exports, in part because it has continued to purchase oil from Russia.</p>

<p>On Thursday, the White House said it had extended the deadline to reach a deal with Mexico for another 90 days, citing the complexity of the trade relationship, which is governed by the trade agreement Trump reached when he NAFTA in his first term.</p>

<p>For smaller countries caught in Trump's cross hairs, the Aug. 1 deadline is particularly difficult because the White House has acknowledged they aren't able to negotiate with every country facing tariff threats. Lesotho, for example, a small country in southern Africa, was hit with a 50% duty on April 2, and even though it was postponed, the threat has already devastated its apparel industry, costing thousands of jobs.</p>

<p>"There's 200 countries,'' the president acknowledged earlier this month. "You can't talk to all of them.''</p>

<p>___</p>

<p>AP Writers Josh Boak and Wyatte Grantham-Philipps contributed to this report.</p>

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Dozens of countries with no deals face higher tariffs as trade deadline nears

<p>- Dozens of countries with no deals face higher tariffs as trade deadline nears</p> <p>CHRISTOPHER RU...

Federal court denies Boston bomber's request for new judge to oversee death sentence appeal

<p>-

  • Federal court denies Boston bomber's request for new judge to oversee death sentence appeal</p>

<p>LEAH WILLINGHAM July 31, 2025 at 11:23 PM</p>

<p>1 / 2Boston Bomber AppealFILE - This photo released by the Federal Bureau of Investigation on April 19, 2013, shows Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, the man convicted of carrying out the April 2013 Boston Marathon bombing attack. (FBI via AP, File)</p>

<p>BOSTON (AP) — A federal court on Thursday denied a request by attorneys for Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev to remove the judge overseeing the protracted legal battle over his death sentence.</p>

<p>The U.S. First Circuit Court of Appeals rejected the argument made by Tsarnaev's lawyers that U.S. District Court Judge George O'Toole should be recused from the case because, the lawyers contend, he is not impartial. During an August 2024 hearing, Tsarnaev's attorneys pointed to what they said were comments O'Toole made about the case on podcasts and at public events during the appeals process.</p>

<p>In a two-page judgment released Thursday, appeals court judges ruled that O'Toole should continue to preside over the case, determining that "two panel discussions and a podcast in which Judge O'Toole discussed various aspects of organizing complex jury trials and the problems associated with social media in that context" did not constitute grounds for his removal.</p>

<p>One of O'Toole's attorneys, David E. Patton, didn't immediately respond to a phone message seeking comment.</p>

<p>A federal appeals court in March 2024 ordered O'Toole to investigate claims of juror bias by the defense and to determine whether Tsarnaev's death sentence should stand. He was convicted of helping carry out the 2013 bombing that killed three people and injured hundreds of others near the marathon's finish line.</p>

<p>It's unclear when O'Toole might rule on the juror bias issue. If he finds that jurors should have been disqualified, he should vacate Tsarnaev's sentence and hold a new penalty-phase trial to determine if Tsarnaev should be sentenced to death, the appeals court said.</p>

<p>In 2022, the U.S. Supreme Court reinstated the death sentence given to Tsarnaev after the 1st Circuit threw out the sentence in 2020. The circuit court found then that the trial judge did not sufficiently question jurors about their exposure to the extensive news coverage of the bombing.</p>

<p>The 1st Circuit took another look at the case after Tsarnaev's lawyers urged it to examine issues the Supreme Court didn't consider. Among them was whether the trial judge wrongly forced the trial to be held in Boston and wrongly denied defense challenges to the seating of two jurors who they claim lied during questioning.</p>

<p>Tsarnaev's guilt in the deaths of those killed in the bombing was not at issue in the appeal. His lawyers have argued that Tsarnaev fell under the influence of his older brother, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, who was killed in a gun battle with police days after the bombing.</p>

<p>Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was convicted of all 30 charges against him. Prosecutors portrayed the brothers — ethnic Chechens who moved to the United States from Russia more than a decade ago — as full partners in a brutal and coldblooded plan to punish the U.S. for its wars in Muslim countries.</p>

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Federal court denies Boston bomber's request for new judge to oversee death sentence appeal

<p>- Federal court denies Boston bomber's request for new judge to oversee death sentence appeal</p> <p...

'Make it work mentality' culture at DC airport questioned after fatal crash

<p>-

  • 'Make it work mentality' culture at DC airport questioned after fatal crash</p>

<p>Michelle Del Rey , USA TODAYJuly 31, 2025 at 9:13 PM</p>

<p>Air traffic control employees at Ronald Reagan National Airport (DCA) are often forced to "make it work" with limited resources, Federal Aviation Administration officials said during the second day of the National Transportation Safety Board's hearing into a fatal January crash.</p>

<p>Sixty-seven people died after an Army Black Hawk helicopter collided with an American Airlines regional jet on January 29 over the Potomac River close to Washington. It was the deadliest U.S. aviation accident in decades.</p>

<p>The NTSB launched a probe into the tragedy, which includes a three-day investigative hearing taking place this week. Here are some major takeaways.</p>

<p>Takeaway #1: The FAA allegedly knew of ongoing risks at DCA</p>

<p>Preliminary investigative results released shortly after the accident showed the FAA was aware of ongoing risks at the airport, particularly with military aircraft, but did not take action before the crash, the NTSB alleged.</p>

<p>Other issues with DCA included airspace congestion and a shortage of air traffic controllers.</p>

<p>Following the tragedy, the FAA restricted the use of military helicopters along Route 1, a helicopter route on the Potomac River that passed in front of DCA's runway 33.</p>

<p>Wednesday and Thursday's portions of the hearing partly focused on the roles the Army and FAA played on the night of the crash, with NTSB Chairwoman Jennifer Homendy telling FAA officials the agency did not act on warnings from air traffic control staff who had previously suggested flight path changes to avoid collision threats.</p>

<p>"Every sign was there that there was a safety risk, and the tower was telling you," said the chairwoman.</p>

<p>In a statement posted to X, Senate Commerce Committee Chair Maria Cantwell, D-Washington, who has been a leader in the investigation into the incident, said: "The NTSB hearing revealed the conflicts on the DCA helicopter routes were so clear that an air traffic control working group suggested changing them.</p>

<p>"What caused the FAA's oversight to be so flawed that they couldn't fix this problem before this tragedy occurred?"</p>

<p>Is flying still safe?: Yes. Here's what travelers should know.</p>

<p>Takeaway #2: The 'make it work mentality'</p>

<p>NTSB investigator Brian Soper asked air traffic control officials whether a "make it work mentality has been normalized at DCA airport."</p>

<p>National Airport Operations Manager Clark Allen said he believed it had.</p>

<p>"There's limited real estate for the airport and where to put aircraft, and that can back up very easily," Allen testified. "So, being a high-volume, high-complexity airport, with not a lot of real estate, you have to keep things moving in order to provide a safe and efficient service."</p>

<p>Bryan Lehman, an FAA front-line manager, said his tower is currently dealing with many of the issues DCA has and is performing "non-standard air traffic maneuvers" on a daily basis.</p>

<p>"We take pride in it," said Lehman, adding, "But I will say that at a certain point, it's too much."</p>

<p>Investigators also pressed officials on staffing turnover. Allen said Wednesday that the DCA control tower has had approximately 10 air traffic wardens since early 2013.</p>

<p>"Air traffic managers are responsible for considering any sort of changes to routes, any sort of changes, amendments, evaluation of routes annually," Homendy responded. "You've had 10 air traffic managers in a pretty small amount of time. You've had five in the past five years, three in the past two years. How are they supposed to know to do that if you keep switching air traffic managers?"</p>

<p>The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) seal is seen during the Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport Midair Collision Investigative Hearing on July 30, 2025 in Washington, DC.Victims' families respond</p>

<p>Many of the victims of the plane crash were children and their parents returning from a figure skating competition in Wichita, Kansas.</p>

<p>Speaking to ABC affiliate WJLA, Aisha Duggins, whose sister Kiah Duggins died in the crash, said the hearing "brings me hope that we're having these conversations," even though some of the results of the investigation are "deeply unsurprising."</p>

<p>Contributing: Nathan Diller, USA TODAY</p>

<p>Michelle Del Rey is a trending news reporter at USA TODAY. Contact her at [email protected].</p>

<p>This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: FAA, Army grilled on Potomac plane crash in investigative hearing</p>

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'Make it work mentality' culture at DC airport questioned after fatal crash

<p>- 'Make it work mentality' culture at DC airport questioned after fatal crash</p> <p>Michelle...

Survivor of clergy sex abuse in Peru visits pope's hometown to call for more reforms

<p>-

  • Survivor of clergy sex abuse in Peru visits pope's hometown to call for more reforms</p>

<p>SOPHIA TAREEN July 31, 2025 at 10:55 PM</p>

<p>FILE - A crucifix is silhouetted against a stained glass window inside a Catholic Church in New Orleans, Dec. 1, 2012. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File) ()</p>

<p>CHICAGO (AP) — A Peruvian survivor of clergy sex abuse brought her public campaign for reforms to the American hometown of Pope Leo XIV on Thursday, saying he failed in investigating her case when he was a bishop in her home country and needs to step up now as leader of the world's Catholics.</p>

<p>"I've been quiet since the pope has been elected," Ana María Quispe Díaz said in Spanish at a news conference in downtown Chicago. "But I'm not planning to be quiet forever."</p>

<p>She appeared with members of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. The advocacy group sent a letter to the pope on Thursday renewing demands for more accountability on clergy sex abuse complaints and released documents related to Díaz's case.</p>

<p>The doesn't name people who say they were sexually assaulted unless they consent to being identified or decide to tell their stories publicly, as Díaz has. She began speaking out on social media in 2023, and has faced threats and harassment in Peru because of it, SNAP officials said.</p>

<p>Ahead of Leo's May election, SNAP filed a formal complaint against then-Cardinal Robert Prevost with the Vatican secretary of state, alleging he abused ecclesiastical power in his handling of two cases.</p>

<p>Díaz said she is a victim in one of those cases which overlapped with Prevost's tenure as bishop of Chiclayo, Peru. According to the complaint filed in March by SNAP, Prevost's diocese didn't fully investigate in April 2022 when three women accused priests Eleuterio Vásquez Gonzáles and Ricardo Yesquén of sexually abusing them as minors.</p>

<p>Díaz said Thursday that she had spoken briefly with Prevost on the phone in 2020, telling him how she was abused by Vásquez Gonzáles, but wasn't given assurances that much could be done. All three women spoke with Prevost in person in 2022 about both priests, according to Díaz.</p>

<p>"How much more damage can he do now that he is the pope?" she asked, speaking through a translator.</p>

<p>Following a protocol set by Pope Francis</p>

<p>But Prevost did everything he was supposed to do, according to the Chiclayo diocese and Vatican, including restricting the priest's ministry, sending a preliminary investigation to the Vatican's sex crimes office, offering the victims psychological help and suggesting they go to authorities, who archived the case because it happened too long ago.</p>

<p>Pope Francis had a mixed record on responding to the clergy sexual abuse crisis, bungling a major case in Chile in 2018 before reversing course, ordering an investigation and apologizing to the victims. Ultimately, it became a turning point for how he directed the church to handle cases of priests sexually abusing children for the rest of his papacy.</p>

<p>In these cases, the Vatican investigation found Prevost acted correctly in imposing preliminary restrictions on Vásquez Gonzáles while Peruvian authorities conducted their own civil investigation. The Vatican office archived the case for lack of evidence, then reopened it in 2023 after it gained traction in the media.</p>

<p>Victims' groups are demanding an accounting from Leo. Meanwhile, his supporters say the Chiclayo case is being exploited by his opponents to undermine him after he made enemies by helping shut down Sodalitium Christianae Vitae, a scandal-plagued lay Catholic community in Peru.</p>

<p>No one has accused Leo of abuse himself, nor of knowingly keeping confirmed abusers in public ministry, which has been the biggest issue affecting the Catholic Church recently.</p>

<p>SNAP wants this accused priest removed ASAP</p>

<p>SNAP has asked for accused priests to be removed, which Díaz has sought as well.</p>

<p>The organization provided copies of letters sent in July between Peruvian church officials and Díaz. In them, Peruvian church officials say Vásquez Gonzáles requested earlier this year "to be dispensed from the obligations arising from his ordination as a priest and to leave the clerical state."</p>

<p>The process would take at least six months to complete, according to the letters. Díaz said that's too long.</p>

<p>Fidel Purisaca, director of communications for the Diocese of Chiclayo, neither confirmed nor denied Vásquez Gonzáles' request. "That is a confidential matter between the priest, the bishop, and the Vatican Dicastery," he told The in a WhatsApp message.</p>

<p>The diocese said Yesquén was too sick to continue his ministry, and neither priest has commented publicly on the accusations.</p>

<p>While in Chicago, Díaz did interviews with Spanish language media and for podcasts. She also appeared at SNAP's annual conference in Pennsylvania last week.</p>

<p>Now 29 and a mother of two young children, Díaz said she still isn't always ready to talk about it. But she said something changed when her daughter turned 1.</p>

<p>"Everything came back to me about the abuse," she said, wiping tears at times. "I couldn't leave her alone. Since then it's been a real fight for me to be able to leave them alone."</p>

<p>___</p>

<p>writer Nicole Winfield in Rome and Franklin Briceño in Lima, Peru, contributed to this report.</p>

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Survivor of clergy sex abuse in Peru visits pope's hometown to call for more reforms

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