Taylor Swift, Hailey Bieber lead large list of A-listers on celebrity row at Knicks-Spurs Game 4
Madison Square Garden's Celebrity Row was stacked with stars for Game 4 of the 2026 NBA Finals.

Down from seven correspondents to four on “60 Minutes” after CBS News head Bari Weiss took a wrecking ball to the popular Sunday night newsmagazine, there are fears about the coming season’s launch as well as its long-term viability.According to the Washington Post, newly fired correspondent Scott Pelley “ignited a firestorm in a Monday meeting, questioning the credentials of the show’s new boss, Nick Bilton, accusing CBS News head Bari Weiss of 'murdering' the show, and demanding answers about why his colleagues, including fellow correspondents Sharyn Alfonsi and Cecilia Vega, were fired the previous Thursday.”The confrontation prompted media analysts to warn that "60 Minutes" could spiral into a ratings death dive—a stunning reversal for a program that has been a ratings juggernaut for decades.The tensions underlying the purge run deeper than personnel disputes. Alfonsi, Vega, and Pelley have all accused CBS News management of "interfering in its editorial work and inserting bias in an effort to appease the Trump administration"—allegations the network has strenuously denied," the Post is reporting.The report notes the stakes could hardly be higher. "60 Minutes" has been the rare CBS News program to thrive while competitors like "CBS Evening News" have languished behind ABC and NBC. The show averaged more than 9 million viewers per episode last season, a 9 percent increase from the prior year—making its current trajectory all the more catastrophic.Current and former staffers expect conditions to deteriorate further. All attention now focuses on whether the remaining correspondents—Lesley Stahl, Bill Whitaker, L. Jon Wertheim, and contributor Norah O'Donnell—will abandon ship. Stahl, Whitaker, and O'Donnell declined to respond to inquiries Wednesday, while Wertheim refused comment.According to the Post, show production has effectively stalled. People with knowledge of the Wednesday atmosphere described a newsroom where "few people were working and the production had largely ground to a halt.""Nick Bilton has no time to lose," one former CBS News correspondent told the Post. "The next season will be highly scrutinized and even though the show is on so-called hiatus, a lot of work for those September stories is done over the summer. He better have some damn good ideas!"The obstacles appear insurmountable. "I don't see how they put a show on in the fall even if miraculously they cobble together a team," a former "60 Minutes" staffer said bluntly. "Not a single producer thinks they will have a correspondent to work with outside of Norah."Even optimistic assessments are grim. Another former staffer acknowledged that even with new correspondents, "there's a 'sharp learning curve.'" The prediction: "I'd guess they can probably squeeze out a strong season opener and then the wheels will fall off. Week to week, it is a grind."Mark Feldstein, a journalism professor at the University of Maryland and former network television correspondent, characterized the threat as existential. "This is the acid test for David Ellison, but unless he reverses course, I think 60 Minutes will die a slow, embarrassing death as the new management tries and fails to invent a new formula that works better than what's tried and true," Feldstein told the Post's Scott Nover.
Madison Square Garden's Celebrity Row was stacked with stars for Game 4 of the 2026 NBA Finals.
An election expert exposed the "great irony" behind Speaker Mike Johnson's claims that the recent California primary elections were "rigged" in a new podcast interview. Stephen Richer, a fellow at the Cato Institute, told Adam Klasfeld of All Rise News on Wednesday that Johnson's claim that election fraud exists "so far upstream that it's hard to prove" shows how illogical the GOP's argument about election fraud is. Several of the party's top officials, including President Donald Trump himself, have said Republican candidate Spencer Pratt was cheated in the election because Democratic candidate Nithya Raman leapfrogged Spencer late in the race due to mail-in ballots. However, the officials have not provided any evidence of fraud. "While we might dislike the way that California administers its elections, and while we might be impatient for the final results, and while we might wish that the media networks could call the election on election night, none of that is evidence of irregularity," Richer said. Instead, Richer noted that Johnson's claim about election fraud being hard to prove was a veiled suggestion that everyone in California is "completely incompetent." "So, this is very frustrating. This is very illogical, and of course, this is bad actors taking advantage of a California system that I believe should be changed, but again, is not fraudulent," Richer said.
Nithya Raman had 115 days to make her case to Los Angeles voters.
The Trump administration's legal arguments for why federal courts should not interfere in the controversial UFC fight set to take place on the White House lawn were derided as ridiculous by former White House ethics lawyer Norm Eisen on MS NOW's "Deadline: White House" Wednesday.The match, part of Trump's series of events ostensibly celebrating America's 250th anniversary, has come under fire as an event that Trump has a personal financial stake in and stands to profit massively from. Veterans in Washington, D.C. are currently suing to stop it.Anchor Nicolle Wallace cited the key argument from Justice Department lawyers that "final weight cutting is already underway" for 14 fighters, and a delay "could jeopardize the health of the 14 professional athletes involved in the event."Eisen wasn't having it."First of all, the arguments that they're making are so ludicrous," said Eisen, who also worked on Trump impeachment litigation. "Why is the United States Department of Justice making arguments about these fighters? Would they be healthier if, after losing all that weight, they didn't get into that ring?"Ultimately, he said, the arena being erected next to the White House is "a symbol of the way he's defaced Washington, D.C. It's like a graffiti artist run amok in our city," similar to Trump illegally putting his name on the Kennedy Center. "The ring has to come down the same way.""Donald Trump is in a steel cage match with the American people," Eisen added. "He is battering them in the pocketbook because, as you pointed out, this stuff is not free. When he does his $1.8 billion slush fund, it comes out of all of our pockets. It's the same with all of these outrageous projects, and I think the people are sick of it." - YouTube www.youtube.com
More than 2 million barrels of oil are transiting through the Strait of Hormuz every day despite the passageway's closure due to the war in Iran, experts said.
In four minutes on Wednesday morning, Donald Trump promised to bomb Iran and wished for world peace.At 11:50, gathered in the Oval Office for the signing of a $70 billion immigration enforcement bill, President Donald Trump turned to reporters with a warning about Iran. "We hit them hard yesterday, and we're gonna hit them again hard today — in case you miss it, in case you don't turn on your television set," he said.Four minutes later, a reporter asked what Trump wished for himself ahead of his 80th birthday."Peace for the world," he said.The day's strikes follow the downing of a U.S. Army Apache helicopter near the Strait of Hormuz on Monday night. Both crew members were rescued by an unmanned drone boat — the first such operation in U.S. military history.Trump posted on Truth Social Tuesday that the U.S. "must, of necessity, respond to this attack." By 5 p.m., CENTCOM had launched strikes on Iranian air defense and radar sites near the Strait — "a proportional response to unjustified Iranian aggression," it said. Iran hit back within hours, targeting U.S. bases in Kuwait, Bahrain, and Jordan.Trump also declined Wednesday to rule out hitting civilian infrastructure. Asked about power plants and bridges, he replied: "I'm not gonna say that to you, but I could do that."He blamed Tehran for the collapse of peace talks, accusing Iran of running out the clock on a deal he called "fully negotiated.""They keep playing us for suckers," Trump said. "They dealt with some very stupid presidents."The war began February 28 with joint U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iranian military and government sites. It has now surpassed 100 days.
Military expert Col. Peter Mansoor told CNN an Iranian Shahed drone strike on a U.S. Apache helicopter over the Strait of Hormuz changes the entire situation in the ongoing conflict. If Iran intentionally targeted the helicopter, it would represent a new operational capability for Shahed drones, which are designed as air-to-surface cruise missiles, not air-to-air weapons, Mansoor explained. The strike could indicate either an accident or a significant tactical shift. Mansoor noted, Iran never lost its entire drone capability during initial airstrikes and has spent the ceasefire period recovering buried equipment and reconstituting launch platforms. "So there's no doubt that Iran today is more capable than it was when the ceasefire began. But it's going to take years for it to recover the sort of production capability that was lost during the airstrikes," He argued.Watch the video below. Your browser does not support the video tag.
Along with dismantling vital sea monitoring, Trump aims to expand deep sea mining and loosen fishing regulations.