Hailey Bieber paired Chanel with Levi’s at Knicks Game 4
The Rhode founder doubled up on denim for the big game.

Swift and pals Este and Alana Haim wore punny T-shirts at the NBA showdown on Wednesday.
The Rhode founder doubled up on denim for the big game.
Knicks lead radio analyst Monica McNutt said she "misspoke" after she questioned Taylor Swift's Knicks loyalty while on the air during Game 4 of the 2026 NBA Finals.
The New York Knicks star helped lead his team to victory in Game 4 of the NBA Finals 2026.
A large etching of what appears to be the numbers “8647” has appeared on the National Mall between the Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial reflecting pool, situated in the area across the street from the White House. The numbers eight, six, and seven are clearly visible in a photo taken by Reuters from the […]
Former Republican Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene slammed President Donald Trump, saying, “He’s the real traitor,” regarding his handling of the Epstein files. “We should consider them traitors,” Greene told CNN’s Kaitlan Collins on The Source with Kaitlan Collins on Wednesday. “They’re traitors, the ones that refuse to release the Epstein files, want to cover […]
Former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) told CNN's Kaitlan Collins that President Donald Trump is a traitor for refusing to release the Epstein files to protect his associates. Greene said Trump called her a traitor for urging transparency, but she countered, arguing those covering up the files — including the President — are the real traitors. "He told me on the phone that his friends would get hurt, and that's why he's against releasing the Epstein files," explained Greene. She criticized Trump for campaigning as a drain the swamp candidate while allegedly working to suppress documents. Greene argued, those refusing to release the files are covering for pedophiles and rapists, making them traitors to the American people.Collins pressed Greene directly, "You think the President is a traitor," to which Greene affirmed her position, highlighting the contradiction between Trump's transparency campaign promises and his actions blocking file release.Watch the video below. Your browser does not support the video tag.
Gas prices could climb even higher in the coming months.Industry officials have already warned the White House that the prices could spike yet again due to rapidly diminishing inventories, reported The Washington Post Thursday.Since the beginning of the Iran war, commercial and government inventories have supplemented gas consumption across the U.S. The reserves have allowed prices to hover around $4.50 per gallon for the last four months—but that could change very quickly, according to oil and gas executives, who are often loath to make such alarming predictions.“We’re sounding the alarm on these inventories going to record lows,” American Petroleum Institute CEO Mike Sommers told Fox Business. “We have to solve this problem in the Strait of Hormuz.”Some inventories could be wiped out in a matter of weeks, according to the Post—just in time for summer holidays.“I have absolutely no doubt the White House—from the president on down—is fully aware of the nearly universal alarm among oil companies and analysts about the direction of travel for oil prices this summer,” Bob McNally, a former Bush administration energy adviser, told the Post.Yet Trump has been remarkably cavalier about the rising costs. With inflation at a three-year high, Trump stunned reporters, lawmakers, and voters alike on Wednesday with just four words: “I love the inflation,” he said.“I love it,” he insisted, pledging that oil prices will drop “like a rock” when the war ends.But the end of the war seems to be nowhere in sight. U.S. forces bombed Iran through two nights this week, part of the White House’s latest strategy to force Tehran to make a deal, despite the obvious risks of escalation.“If we need to negotiate with bombs, we will negotiate with bombs,” Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said Wednesday. “We will strike them hard tonight and hopefully Iran makes a good decision.”Meanwhile, Trump’s allies aren’t so sure that their political movement will weather the brewing economic storm. The far-right populist rode the 2024 campaign on vehement promises of affordability; through his presidency, he swore that Americans would see lower utility bills, cheaper groceries, and more American-based jobs. But that hasn’t been the case.Instead, as millions of Americans struggle with the rising cost of living and companies contend with rattled supply chains, the president’s inner circle fear that it might be too late to fix the problem for Trump’s midterm-dependent acolytes.“Whether it’s peak inflation or not, it doesn’t matter,” one former Trump administration official told Politico. “The die has been cast in terms of how people are looking at the economy.”