- SportsBleacher Report
Aaron Rodgers 'Conflicted' About Packers Future Amid Trade Rumors, John Kuhn Says
While Aaron Rodgers isn't addressing his feud with the Green Bay Packers publicly, one of his former teammates said he recently talked to the star quarterback...
- U.S.Business Insider
Eddie Gallagher says he and other Navy SEALs used a dying enemy fighter for medical practice with no intention of saving him
"We killed that guy. Our intention was to kill him. Everybody was on board," Gallagher said in a recent podcast interview.
- CelebrityYahoo Life
Kristen Bell says she and husband Dax Shepard acknowledge attraction for other people: ‘We’re not dead’
The actress talks about not letting self-esteem get in the way of her relationship.
- CelebrityIn The Know
Man faces vicious backlash for promoting his wife's OnlyFans account: 'Get a divorce'
While working on his taxes, a TikTok user found himself questioning what sort of things were tax-deductible, as many people do.
- U.S.NextShark
Asian American Father Walking With 1-Year-Old Son in Stroller Repeatedly Punched in SF
An Asian American father was waiting to cross the street with his 1-year-old child when a man approached and hit him from behind in San Francisco on Friday. What happened: Bruce, 36, was outside of Gus’s Community Market by the intersection of 4th and Channel streets around 2 p.m. in Mission Bay when he was punched from behind and knocked to the ground. In a surveillance video, the male suspect, identified as Sidney Hammond, can be seen pummeling Bruce more than a dozen times as the stroller carrying his child rolled away.
- CelebrityINSIDER
Divorce is usually caused by one of the '3 i's,' therapists say. Here's what they are, and how they destroy a marriage.
Conflict caused by incompatibility or irreconcilable differences can impact a couple over the course of their marriage, therapist Tess Brigham said.
- WorldThe Telegraph
The Queen comes to Meghan’s assistance in legal battle against Mail on Sunday
The Queen came to the Duchess of Sussex’s aid in her legal battle against the Mail on Sunday on Wednesday by dismissing claims that she owned the copyright to a letter Meghan wrote to her father. Her Majesty’s lawyers intervened in the High Court case as the two sides locked horns over one of the final bones of contention. The Duchess’s former communications secretary, Jason Knauf, also “emphatically” denied having any copyright claim to the letter, landing a final blow to the newspaper’s case. Their interventions on Wednesday paved the way for Lord Justice Warby to award a summary judgment on the outstanding copyright claim and with it, further costs. The Duchess successfully sued Associated for breach of privacy and copyright relating to the publication of five articles featuring extracts of the letter in February 2019. In February, she won a summary judgment, a legal step negating the need for witness evidence, in relation to the privacy claim and the bulk of the copyright claim. One of the final issues on which both sides disagreed was whether the Duchess was the sole owner of the copyright of the letter, having admitted that she sought guidance from others, including Mr Knauf and her husband, Prince Harry. Associated suggested that the Duchess sought professional advice because she knew the letter would be made public and that it was intended for use as part of a media strategy to enhance her image. As a co-author, Mr Knauf’s role at Kensington Palace might have rendered the letter Crown copyright. However, the court heard that Mr Knauf had confirmed in writing, via his solicitors, that despite making a “very minor suggestion” that Meghan include a reference to her father’s ill health, he did not co-write the letter. As such, he said he had no wish to become a party to ongoing legal proceedings.