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Rob Reiner's daughter says she is 'in shock'

admin - Latest News - December 15, 2025
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Rob Reiner’s daughter says she is ‘in shock’



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Dec. 15, 2025, 5:00 AM ESTBy Peter NicholasFEASTERVILLE, Pa. — Fishing through his wallet, David Teeling pulls out a wrinkled newspaper clip showing Donald Trump working the drive-thru of a local McDonald’s — this McDonald’s, the very same one where he and a few friends routinely meet to talk politics and sports.Teeling keeps the picture as verifiable proof for those who don’t believe him when he explains what happened: The once and future president turned up in suburban Philadelphia toward the end of the 2024 campaign and scooped French fries for the customers pulling up to the window.“Some people believe me and some don’t, so I keep that,” says Teeling, 70, over a cup of coffee.A year ago, Trump visited this site to make the point that he was attuned to everyday people who felt overlooked in the Joe Biden-Kamala Harris economy.Trump touts economic policies as recent polls show disapproval05:13These days, it’s Trump who’s in danger of appearing out of touch. Ahead of midterm elections next year, voters are feeling squeezed by high prices and blaming Trump for not doing enough to ease the cost of living, polling shows.A new NBC News Decision Desk survey shows that 53% of adults have changed their grocery-buying habits to stay within budget, while 55% have cut back on entertainment and “extras” so that they can afford life’s necessities.A sampling of grocery prices shows the price of eggs has dropped 29% since Trump was sworn in, though beef prices are up nearly 13%, chicken prices are up 2% and bread is up 4%. Orange juice prices have climbed 28% since the start of Trump’s term, according to Nieslen IQ data in the NBC News grocery price tracker.Overall, an AP-NORC poll found that just 31% of adults approved of Trump’s handling of the economy, the lowest rating he’s notched in either his first or second term.“We can improve those numbers,” John McLaughlin, a Trump pollster, said in an interview. “We did it in 2023 and 2024 and we can do it again. In an election year, Trump will be able to spend more time with voters outside the Beltway.”“The White House doesn’t have a choice but to have President Trump campaign in the midterm elections,” McLaughlin added. “Without Trump on the ballot, it’s hard to get his voters to turn out. If you can’t motivate the Trump voters, we’re not going to win in the midterms.”The White House seems to agree. Susie Wiles, Trump’s chief of staff, said in a podcast interview that the idea is to put Trump “on the ballot” by having him campaign as if it’s 2024 all over again.For Trump, the question is whether he can muster the discipline to consistently deliver a two-part message. He needs to show he grasps that people are struggling while also hammering the point that he’s committed to making their lives better, political strategists say. That’s a tricky balance requiring some humility on Trump’s part, a recognition that “the golden age” he promised at the start of his term is still unrealized.Thus far, Trump blames lingering inflation on Biden, a bogeyman he continues to bash even as the economy bears his imprint with each passing day. He says there is much for voters to cheer, including gas prices, which have fallen from $3.03 a gallon one year ago to $2.92 now; the stock market, where the S&P 500 index is up 16% this year; and new foreign investment in the U.S. totaling trillions of dollars.As for the affordability issue, he calls it a “hoax” perpetrated by Democrats.On his social media site last week, Trump wrote that “affordability, just 13 months ago, was a disaster for the American people, but now, it’s totally different! Prices are coming down fast.”Still, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said last week that Trump’s tariffs are pushing inflation higher than the rate would be otherwise. After falling to a low this year of 2.3% in April, inflation rose to 3% in September for the first time since January. September was the last month data was available.Even members of Trump’s own party have said that prices are too high and Republicans can’t ignore them. “People aren’t dumb. They know when they go to the grocery store what it costs and what it doesn’t,” Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., told NBC News last week.Michael DuHaime, former political director at the Republican National Committee, put it this way: “You can continue to talk about Biden or even Obama or Jimmy Carter if you want. The voters will only tolerate it for so long.”Past presidents faced a similar conundrum, with uneven results. No sitting president wants to concede that their economic policies haven’t delivered. Yet a president risks appearing callous by denying what’s obvious to people who can’t afford to buy ground beef at the supermarket. “One of the mistakes we made as part of the Biden team was not leading with more empathy,” Sam Cornale, former CEO of the Democratic National Committee, said in an interview. “We jumped right into trying to explain away the numbers, but voters weren’t feeling it.”An early look at Trump’s midterm campaign message unfolded last week when he traveled to a casino resort in the Poconos for a rally devoted to the economy. He showed slides and talked up his record, saying his tariffs are sparking a wave of AI, auto and other types of factory construction. But true to form, he also veered off topic, trashing Biden, Powell, Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, late night comedian Jimmy Kimmel, windmills and the African nation of Somalia.“We’re a little behind the 8-ball going into the 2026 election,” said Neil Newhouse, a Republican pollster, in an interview. “The bottom line on the Republican side is we need to focus on what voters are most concerned about: the economy and the cost of living,” he said, adding that people don’t care “what happens in Somalia or the Middle East or other places. For the most part, they’re focused on their pocketbooks. So that’s what we need to be focused on.”Back at McDonald’s, there is no sign that Trump once traded his suit jacket for an apron in one of his most memorable campaign stops. In the wake of Trump’s visit, Yelp disabled its reviews of the restaurant because of caustic write-ups.On occasion, customers will take pictures of the drive-thru window where Trump made his appearance. The staff has turned over since that time; none of the employees at work on a recent weekday were there when Trump showed up. As a company, McDonald’s has faced pressures from what its CEO called a “two-tier economy.” A steep drop in traffic from lower-income customers played a part in the company’s decision to revive its “Extra Value Meal” combos this fall, according to chief executive Chris Kempczinski.Teeling said he’s prepared to be patient while Trump’s economic policies kick in. “It has gone up,” he said of the cost of living. “No question about that. But Trump is a CEO. He can turn these things around. It’s going to take a year, maybe two.”Janice Hall, 72, a retired Philadelphia city employee who was eating a cheeseburger and French fries, agrees.“It’s going to slowly go down,” she said. “We haven’t given it any time yet. It’s not even been a year.”She said she’d vote for Trump again if she could.“I think he’s funny; he’s hysterical. He has a personality,” she said.William Sanginiti, 72, a retired engineer, said over a hamburger and a Coke: “There’s always someone who’s going to complain about something. I’m not. I try to live within my means.”A dissenting note came from one of the regulars. Drinking a coffee, a 76-year-old retired truck driver said he doubts Trump will succeed in reducing prices. He said he’s had to alter his spending habits to make ends meet.“I used to eat a lot of beef; I can’t afford that,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity. “Even when I see reduced prices at different supermarkets, they’re still on the expensive side.”He mentioned the unemployment rate, which stood at 4.4% in September, the highest it has been in the last four years.“A lot of the people who voted for him, they didn’t vote for the layoffs,” he said.Peter NicholasPeter Nicholas is a senior White House reporter for NBC News.Monica Alba, Joe Murphy and Steve Kopack contributed.
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Oct. 21, 2025, 5:29 PM EDT / Updated Oct. 21, 2025, 7:18 PM EDTBy Julie Tsirkin, Monica Alba, Frank Thorp V and Raquel Coronell UribePaul Ingrassia, President Donald Trump’s pick for a top watchdog position, announced Tuesday that he was withdrawing from consideration because he did not have enough Republican support to be confirmed.”I will be withdrawing myself from Thursday’s HSGAC hearing to lead the Office of Special Counsel because unfortunately I do not have enough Republican votes at this time,” he said, referring to the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee, which would review his nomination.Trump nominated Ingrassia to lead the Office of Special Counsel, an independent agency that protects federal employees from prohibited personnel practices, such as retaliation for whistleblowing.Ingrassia had come under scrutiny in recent weeks after Politico reported that he a colleague had accused him of sexual harassment, citing three unnamed administration officials. In a new article Monday, Politico reported on a text chat in which Ingrassia allegedly sent messages saying that he had a “Nazi streak” and that Martin Luther King Jr. Day should be “tossed in the seventh circle of hell.”Ingrassia’s lawyer Monday night pointed to a previous statement denying Ingrassia had “harassed any coworkers — female or otherwise, sexually or otherwise — in connection with any employment.” The lawyer, Edward Paltzik, suggested the text messages reported Monday may not be authentic and added that “even if the texts are authentic, they clearly read as self-deprecating and satirical humor.”Ingrassia had faced growing backlash from Senate Republicans. Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., told reporters Monday that Ingrassia’s nomination was “not going to pass” and that he thought the White House should pull it.Asked by NBC News on Tuesday whether he thought the White House would pull the nomination, Thune said: “I think they’ll have something official to say about that, but you know, you know what we’ve said, and you’ll probably hear from them soon.”Sens. Rick Scott, R-Fla.; James Lankford, R-Okla.; and Ron Johnson, R-Wis., all told reporters they intended to vote against Ingrassia.The possibility of Ingrassia’s withdrawal was also discussed during Trump’s lunch with Republican senators in the Rose Garden on Tuesday, according to two officials familiar with the discussion.Lankford, in telling reporters Tuesday morning that he was a “no” on the nomination, said, “I think it’d be very difficult for a lot of federal employees to be able to say he’s impartial when he says things like ‘Never trust an Indian,’ the comments he’s made about Jews.”“They ought to withdraw him,” Johnson said Tuesday morning.Another Republican senator on the Homeland Security Committee, Joni Ernst of Iowa, declined to say how she would vote but, she said Monday that Ingrassia would have “an uphill battle.”Ingrassia, a former podcaster, had a history of inflammatory comments even before he was nominated. He came under fire for saying Jan. 6, 2021 — when rioters stormed the U.S. Capitol in an effort to overturn the results of the 2020 election — should be declared a national holiday, calling it “a peaceful protest against a great injustice.” He had also called Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel a “psyop.”Julie TsirkinJulie Tsirkin is a correspondent covering Capitol Hill.Monica AlbaMonica Alba is a White House correspondent for NBC News.Frank Thorp VFrank Thorp V is a producer and off-air reporter covering Congress for NBC News, managing coverage of the Senate.Raquel Coronell UribeRaquel Coronell Uribe is a breaking news reporter. 
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Savewith a NBCUniversal ProfileCreate your free profile or log in to save this articleOct. 14, 2025, 7:00 AM EDTBy David IngramInstagram said Tuesday that it would overhaul its approach to teenagers’ accounts and try to crack down on their access to objectionable content after a firestorm of bad publicity over how teens use the social media app.Instagram, which is owned by Meta, announced a series of changes that it said were aimed at making teens’ experience on Instagram similar to viewing PG-13 movies, with equivalent restrictions on sexualized content and other adult material.One new restriction that Instagram said it would adopt is called age-gating: If an Instagram account regularly shares content that is age-inappropriate — for example, content related to alcohol or links to pornographic websites — then, the company said, it will block all teen accounts from being able to see or chat with that account. The age-gating could apply even to celebrities or other widely followed adult accounts, Instagram said. But it did not say precisely where it would draw the line for adult accounts that do not want to be age-gated. A company representative said sharing one piece of age-inappropriate content would not be enough for an adult-run account to lose access to the teen audience.Other apps, such as YouTube, also use age-gating to restrict access to certain types of content.A second new restriction on Instagram will block teens’ search results for a wider range of adult search terms, going beyond its current list of restricted terms, it says.The changes apply only to teen-specific accounts, which are accounts that teens have created using their truthful birth dates or accounts that Instagram has determined through its own investigation are likely to be those of people under 18 years old.It is common for teens to lie about their ages online to avoid certain restrictions. A 2024 survey of U.K. teens by the media regulator Ofcom found that 22% of 17-year-olds said they lied on social media that they were 18 or older.A representative for Instagram said it tries to catch teens who lie about their ages but declined to say how often it finds them doing so.In announcing the latest changes, Instagram said it was borrowing the thinking behind the PG-13 movie rating, which suggests “parental guidance” because of “some material parents might not like for their young children.” The film industry voluntarily released the modern film rating system in the 1960s when it, too, was facing the threat of government regulation.“Just like you might see some suggestive content or hear some strong language in a PG-13 movie, teens may occasionally see something like that on Instagram — but we’re going to keep doing all we can to keep those instances as rare as possible,” Instagram said in a statement.The company said that for teen accounts, it would hide or not recommend posts with strong language, certain risky stunts, sexually suggestive poses or marijuana paraphernalia. It also said artificial intelligence experiences for teens would be “guided by PG-13 ratings by default,” with limits on the types of responses given.It said the same content restrictions would apply until account holders become adults, providing the same experience to 17-year-olds as to 13-year-olds.Some parents have complained for years that Instagram, TikTok and other social media apps do not do enough to protect teens’ well-being. Last year, during a Senate hearing, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg apologized to parents in the gallery who said Instagram contributed to their children’s deaths or exploitation.Instagram does not verify self-reported ages at sign-up in the United States, and Meta is a member of two trade associations, NetChoice and the Computer & Communications Industry Association, that have sued to block state laws that would require age verification. In June, the trade groups won injunctions against state-mandated age checks in Florida and Georgia.Instagram allows kids as young as 13 years old to create accounts. Last year, it introduced teen-specific accounts, saying all minors would be routed into such accounts automatically with limits on messaging and tagging.Instagram says teens have created millions of teen-specific accounts, although it has declined to say how many of those accounts remain active after they are created.Instagram is rolling out the overhaul after a withering year in the public spotlight. In August, Reuters reported that an internal Meta document permitted children to engage in “romantic or sensual” AI chats, including on an Instagram chatbot.In September, two former employees of Meta testified before Congress that the company blocked their research into teen safety in virtual reality and avoided adopting certain safety measures if those measures would mean fewer teens use the company’s apps, including Instagram and Facebook.“Children drive profits,” one of the former employees, Jason Sattizahn, said in an interview last month. “If Meta invests more in safety to get kids off of them, engagement goes down, monetization goes down, ad revenue goes down. They need them.”Meta at the time criticized Sattizahn’s testimony and the testimony of another former employee, Cayce Savage, saying that their claims were “nonsense” and they were “based on selectively leaked internal documents that were picked specifically to craft a false narrative.” It said it had no “blanket prohibition on conducting research with young people.”A report last month from several child safety groups, including Fairplay, criticized Instagram’s teen account features as failing to deliver substantial safety benefits. The report also urged that “recommendations made to a 13-year-old Teen Account should be reasonably PG rated.” Meta said that the report was misleading and that it misrepresented the company’s efforts.David IngramDavid Ingram is a tech reporter for NBC News.
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