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New bodycam video of escaped Mississippi monkeys

admin - Latest News - November 6, 2025
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New bodycam video of escaped Mississippi monkeys



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Nov. 5, 2025, 3:48 PM ESTBy Saba HamedyKim Kardashian’s actress era is off to a rough start.Ryan Murphy’s new drama “All’s Fair,” which puts the reality star front and center, is getting blasted by critics, with many specifically calling out Kardashian’s performance as fictional divorce lawyer Allura Grant.The show follows a group of high-powered female attorneys as they help their clients get back at cruel rich men. On Tuesday, the show had a 0% critics score on the movie-focused website Rotten Tomatoes. By Wednesday, that had increased to just 6%. “… Kardashian’s performance, stiff and affectless without a single authentic note, is exactly what the writing, also stiff and affectless without a single authentic note, merits,” The Hollywood Reporter’s TV critic wrote. “Her very presence, which succeeds at generating buzz and not much else, feels fitting for a show that seems to want not to be watched so much as mined for viral bits and pieces.”The legal drama was described as a “crime against television” by The Telegraph’s TV critic. The idea to cast Kardashian came after Disney’s co-chair of entertainment, Dana Walden, set up a dinner with Murphy and Kris Jenner, matriarch of the Kardashian-Jenner family.“I went to Kris’ house and I did something I’ve never done in my career, which was I brought a reality pitch and it wasn’t good,” Murphy said during the show’s lavish Los Angeles premiere at the DGA Theater Complex, according to The Hollywood Reporter. “I started my pitch and I was kind of excited. Anybody in the future who pitches to Kim, you’ve lost Kim when she starts texting on her phone. I finished my pitch and I was sort of nervous and Kris said, ‘That was really good sweetie, but you should write a role for Kim.’”Murphy also praised Kardashian, who is an executive producer on the series alongside Jenner, describing her as “fantastic.” Kardashian has been at the center of the show’s promotional materials and had been prominently featured in trailers for the series ahead of its release. The entrepreneur has said her character was inspired by her own divorce attorney Laura Wasser, who also counts Angelina Jolie, Kevin Costner and Ariana Grande as clients. The role marks the first of several Hollywood projects Kardashian is on deck for. Eva Longoria is set to direct Kardashian in a comedy feature for Netflix titled “The Fifth Wheel,” and Kardashian’s also reportedly being eyed to play the villain in a “Bratz” movie adaptation. She previously had a smaller role in Murphy’s “American Horror Story,” playing a publicist employed by Emma Roberts’ character, and voiced characters in two “PAW Patrol” movies.Like many of Murphy’s other series, “All’s Fair” has an all-star cast made up of Naomi Watts, Niecy Nash-Betts, Sarah Paulson, Teyana Taylor and Glenn Close.But critics said the Hollywood A-listers weren’t enough to bolster the show’s rating. “Not even Glenn Close can save this Ryan Murphy disaster from its dismal plots, clueless characters — and the worst kissing scenes ever filmed,” The Guardian wrote in its 0-star review. The publication’s critic described Kardashian’s performance as “expressionless” and “useless,” but added that “no one seems to know what they’re doing.” Still, some viewers have been enthusiastic about the ensemble and its campiness. The Rotten Tomatoes “Popcornmeter,” which tracks audience reviews, was 62% as of Wednesday. “All’s Fair on Hulu dares to ask the question ‘Does a show need to be good?’ & the answer is no, it doesn’t,” one X user wrote. “We have legendary actresses here giving the worst performances of their careers, it takes a special kind of talent to pull that kind of inability out of them.”Another X user described criticism toward the show as “sexist.”“It’s a show that isn’t afraid to be bad, it reminded me of old ABC dramas,” the user wrote. “It’s a very fun show to watch because it’s over-the-top and bad without apprehension, and that’s fantastic.”Fans of Kardashian also noted that they enjoyed watching her performance, likening the show to an episode of her family’s reality series.Several social media users said the bad reviews are what made them all the more interested. “0% on rotten tomatoes……… oh i need to watch this IMMEDIATELY,” one X user wrote. “IT’S SO BAD GO WATCH IT RIGHT NOW,” wrote another.New episodes of the show drop weekly at midnight ET Tuesdays on Hulu, through Dec. 23. Saba HamedySaba Hamedy is the trends and culture editor for NBC News.
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Nov. 5, 2025, 2:25 PM ESTBy Steve KornackiBetween the two gubernatorial elections on Tuesday, Virginia was supposed to be the lopsided one — and it was, with Democrat Abigail Spanberger crushing Republican Winsome Earle-Sears by 15 points. But New Jersey looked like it was going to be a different story. The polling was competitive, and Republicans had nominated a battle-tested candidate, Jack Ciattarelli, who’d nearly won the governorship four years earlier. Recent momentum was on the GOP’s side, too, with President Donald Trump coming within 6 points of Kamala Harris there last year — a giant improvement from the 16-point Jersey drubbing he’d suffered in 2020. And Democrats were privately sharing alarm that their nominee, Mikie Sherrill, seemed to be wilting under the spotlight. At the very least, this was going to be a close race, one that Republicans would be able to point to as proof that the national political climate wasn’t that bad for them. There was talk of New Jersey shifting away from blue bastion and into swing-state status. An outright Ciattarelli win didn’t feel out of reach.But it was all a mirage. When the polls closed, the rout was on, and Sherrill walked away with a 13-point win, nearly matching Spanberger’s margin in Virginia.It’s a concerning outcome for Republicans, because the two main ingredients in the Sherrill landslide have potential ramifications that extend well beyond the borders of New Jersey.First, there are the well-to-do suburbs and bedroom communities. These are traditionally Republican areas populated with college-educated, white-collar professionals who are deeply uncomfortable with Trump. When he nearly won four years ago, Ciattarelli clawed back many of the suburban voters his party had been shedding in the Trump era. This time around, with Trump back in the White House, they were cross-pressured, but their verdict was decisive: They wanted to vote against the party of Trump.Consider Hunterdon, Morris and Somerset counties, which have the highest median incomes and the highest concentrations of white residents with college degrees in New Jersey. In each one, Ciattarelli’s margin was 12 to 14 points worse than in his 2021 campaign. But his numbers in these counties were in line with Trump’s showing last year:In fact, Ciattarelli fared worse than Trump in Morris, although some of this could be due to it being Sherrill’s home county.But what about Ciattarelli’s home base of Somerset, where he was buried even worse than Trump? It demonstrates the motivation of anti-Trump suburbanites now that he’s back in office, and it suggests that further GOP erosion is possible — in New Jersey and in similar areas around the country.Simply put, there were a lot of suburbanites who were comfortable with Ciattarelli when Trump was an ex-president but who look like they will shun anyone in the GOP column as long as he’s president. The other ingredient in Sherrill’s win involves nonwhite voters. It was with these voters — Hispanic and Asian American voters in particular — that Trump made his biggest gains in 2024. These voters had not backed Republicans in the past, but Trump’s surprising inroads raised hope among Republicans — and trepidation among Democrats — that a broader shift might be underway, not just in New Jersey but nationally.In this way, Ciattarelli was a test case: Could these Trump gains transfer to a non-Trump Republican running without Trump on the ballot?The answer is a resounding no. In New Jersey municipalities that are at least 60% Hispanic (and where results are currently available), all of Trump’s 2024 gains were washed away Tuesday night:Similar results can be seen in heavily Asian American areas in Middlesex County, where Trump also made notable gains last year. Had Ciattarelli combined his suburban performance from 2021 with Trump’s 2024 inroads among nonwhite voters, Ciattarelli would have won. And if he could have retained at least some of both, the race would at least have been tight.That would have given Republicans a nice post-election talking point, obviously, but it also would have been a genuine source of midterm optimism for them. It would have shown that the anti-Trump suburban passions were cooling and that partywide growth with nonwhite voters was continuing apace.But Ciattarelli got neither. And as a result, he got clobbered.Steve KornackiSteve Kornacki is the chief data analyst for NBC News.
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Nov. 21, 2025, 1:44 AM EST / Updated Nov. 21, 2025, 4:54 AM ESTBy Mithil AggarwalShe went from walking out after being publicly chided by the pageant’s co-owner to being crowned its 74th victor.Fátima Bosch Fernández of Mexico was named Miss Universe on Friday, bringing to a close an exceptionally controversial pageant that first made headlines after Thai official Nawat Itsaragrisil berated Bosch, 25, in front of several contestants for not participating in promotional activities. The competition was further plunged into disarray when two of its judges resigned, one of whom accused the organizers of rigging and threatened a lawsuit. Two judges quit Miss Universe, one claiming rigged competition03:24It came as Miss Universe, which makes its revenue from licensing its broadcasting rights to various countries, has faced declining viewership in part from concerns over what some see as its objectification of women and declining relevance.The competition was started in 1952 by a Californian swimwear brand and owned, at least in part, by President Donald Trump from 1996 till 2022.But this year’s pageant became a symbol of a different kind.“It seems to me that it is an example of how women should raise our voices,” Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum, the country’s first female leader, told reporters, referring to Bosch standing up to one of the hosts.“We women look more beautiful when we raise our voice and participate, because that has to do with the recognition of our rights,” she said, adding that she wanted to give “recognition” to Bosch for voicing her disagreement in a “dignified” way.”Miss Thailand Praveener Singh, 29, was crowned the first runner-up, followed by Miss Venezuela Stephany Adriana Abasali Nasser, 25.The pageant is seldom devoid of controversy, with sexual harassment and rigging complaints almost every year. And this year was no exception. Nawat, the Thai national director, hectored Bosch for not following the promotional activities guidelines in a livestreamed sashing ceremony on Nov. 4 and called security when the Mexican delegate stood up for herself.Bosch refused to be silenced and walked out unbowed, joined by others, including last year’s winner, Denmark’s Victoria Kjær Theilvig.“What your director did is not respectful: he called me dumb,” Bosch told Thai reporters then. “If it takes away your dignity, you need to go.”The public embarrassment for the organizers was palpable, prompting Miss Universe’s co-owner, Mexican businessman Raúl Rocha Cantú, to call out Nawat, saying he won’t let contestants be “humiliated.”Nawat later offered a teary apology.“If anyone (was) affected and not comfortable it happened, I am so sorry,” he said with the contestants behind him. He then turned to them and said, “It’s passed. OK? Are you happy?”Then, Omar Harfouch, a Lebanese-French composer, stepped down from the eight-member jury panel, saying Tuesday that there had been a “secret vote” by people not officially part of the jury to preselect the top 130 contestants out of 136.Hours later, another judge, former French soccer star Claude Makélélé, announced he was stepping down, citing “unforeseen personal reasons.” Harfouch on Wednesday said he was considering suing the Miss Universe Organization, which runs the competition, citing emotional trauma and reputational damage.The organization has denied his claims, saying there was no impromptu jury.Meanwhile, Garbielle Henry of Jamaica is recovering at a hospital after she fell offstage on Wednesday during a preliminary round. The Associated Press contributed.
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