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Photographer Ben McDonald accused Taylor Swift's dad of punching him in Sydney, Australia. He said he's never been "punched in the chops, particularly by the talent's dad." AdvertisementA photographer accused Taylor Swift's dad, Scott Swift, of punching him as he tried to take her photo in Australia in the early hours of Tuesday morning. "Police have been told a 71-year-old man allegedly assaulted a 51-year-old man at Neutral Bay Wharf about 2.30am before leaving the location," a New South Wales Police spokesperson told Business Insider. "In 23 years, I haven't been assaulted and punched in the chops, particularly by the talent's dad," McDonald told the Associated Press.
Persons: Ben McDonald, Taylor Swift's, McDonald, he's, , Scott Swift, Taylor, haven't, didn't, Nicole Kidman, Nicole, Ben McDonald's Organizations: Service, Police, New South Wales Police, North Shore Police Area Command, Swift, Daily Mail Australia, Associated Press, Business Locations: Sydney, Australia, New, Australian
NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . Travis Kelce was spotted dancing to Taylor Swift's "Love Story" in Las Vegas on Saturday. AdvertisementIn a clip from the video, Kelce can be heard leading the crowd while chanting, "You've got to fight for your right to party," as Marshmello played a remix of "Fight For Your Right" by the Beastie Boys. In a video uploaded to X, the NFL star was also seen attending Swift's concert at Sydney's Accor Stadium on Friday.
Persons: , Travis Kelce, Taylor, You've, Marshmello, Champagne, Swift, Kelce Organizations: Service, Kansas City Chiefs, Super, XS, Wynn Las Vegas, YouTube, Extra, Beastie, Entertainment, Sydney Zoo, Daily, NFL Locations: Las Vegas, Wynn Las, Vegas, Sydney
A British accountant became a millionaire overnight after he and his wife won around £61 million ($78 million). The press release said that he would work until the end of the UK tax year, on April 5. Debbie Nuttall handed in her notice for her job as a civil engineer after finding out about the win, the press release said. AdvertisementRichard's decision to stay in work to wrap things up is a change when looking at lottery winners of the past. Emily Irwin, a financial advisor to lottery winners, previously told BI that winners have the best chance at protecting their winnings by forming a team of advisors and avoiding overspending.
Persons: , wouldn't, Richard Nuttall, Debbie, Nuttall, Debbie Nuttall, Richard, Ben King, Emily Irwin, Irwin Organizations: Service, National Lottery, Daily Mail, Sky News, BMW Locations: British, Canary, Portugal
Read previewAn easyJet passenger who appeared to be drunk was restrained and later escorted off the plane by police after he became aggressive and attempted to kiss another passenger. It is not known if the passenger was drinking or already intoxicated before he got on the flight. They added that the man became aggressive after he tried to kiss another male passenger who had previously ignored his request for a handshake. Perry Flint, spokesperson for the International Air Transport Association, told BI that it's "clear that post-pandemic behavior is different to that which took place before." Vance Hilderman, an aviation expert and CEO of aviation consulting firm AFuzion, told BI that bad behavior on flights is "unfortunately" the "new normal."
Persons: , Perry Flint, Jeffrey Price, Vance Hilderman, AFuzion Organizations: Service, Daily Mail, Business, Lisbon Police, International Air Transport Association Locations: Glasgow, Scotland, Lisbon
Though Ozzy Osbourne left Black Sabbath in 1979, his wife, Sharon Osbourne, told Billboard any songs the band wrote — Osbourne, Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler, and Bill Ward — require the approval of all four members to license. Regardless of the social media feud, legal experts say if true, the unauthorized use of the samples would be a “clear-cut” case of copyright infringement. He didn't dispute it,” entertainment attorney Donald M. Woodard of Carter and Woodard told Business Insider. AdvertisementOsbourne's recent objection to West's sample would be considered a new copyright claim, as the license for use does not permit West to sample the song in perpetuity. In 2022, Chicago artist Marshall Jefferson accused the rapper of using his song “Move Your Body” in the West song “Flowers” without permission.
Persons: , Ty Dolla, West —, Ye —, Ozzy Osbourne, Donna Summer, West …, Donna Summer's, , Osbourne, West swiped, Ye, Kanye, Hitler West, he'd, Instagram, Alex Jones, Hitler, Sharon Osbourne, — Osbourne, Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler, Bill Ward —, Rolling Stone, FUGA, Tyrone William Griffin Jr, — hasn't, Sharon, Bianca Censori —, Ozzy, who's, I've, Donald M, Woodard of Carter, Woodard, West, ” Woodard, , Robert Freund, Freund, Marshall Jefferson, Griffin Organizations: Service, ign, Business, Billboard, West, iTunes, Apple Music, FUGA, Spotify, Amazon Music, Daily Mail, Kanye Locations: Chicago
Read previewA Delta flight had to turn around after maggots fell from a passenger's suitcase onto another passenger. Philip Schotte, a passenger from the Netherlands who was on the flight, told Fox 2 Detroit that he witnessed the maggots fall on a passenger from a suitcase in the overhead compartment. Flight attendants were then able to locate the source of the maggots: A suitcase that contained a rotten fish inside, according to reports. Travelers who were delayed overnight because of the incident were compensated with hotel accommodation, a $30 meal ticket, and 8,000 air miles, the passenger told the Daily Mail. A Delta flight traveling from Atlanta to Barcelona, Spain, in September had to turn around after a passenger had diarrhea in the aircraft's cabin.
Persons: , Philip Schotte, Schotte, We've Organizations: Service, Daily Mail, Fox, Detroit, Business, Travelers, Delta, United Airlines, New York Times, American Airlines Locations: Amsterdam, Detroit, Netherlands, Atlanta, Barcelona, Spain, San Diego, New Jersey, Miami, Barbados
Read previewSharon Osbourne has expressed regret over taking the buzzy weight-loss drug Ozempic, stating that she now weighs less than 100 pounds and "can't put on weight." In an interview with The Guardian, Osbourne, 71, highlighted the downsides of Ozempic, a diabetes drug that also causes weight loss. She said that after dropping 42 pounds in four months, she's now "through with the weight loss and all that cosmetic stuff." Osbourne has previously talked about her experience taking the weight loss drug. Sharon Osbourne said her husband Ozzy Osbourne claims she looks like Nancy Reagan following her weight loss.
Persons: , Sharon Osbourne, Osbourne, she's, Ozzy Osbourne, Nancy Reagan, Gregg DeGuire, I've, it's, Ozempic, Elon Musk, Charles Barkley, Amy Schumer Organizations: Service, Guardian, Business, Daily Mail, The Recording, Ozempic, FDA, The Times
Many worry that a second term for Trump would be an earthquake, but tremors already abound — and concerns are rising that the U.S. could grow less dependable regardless of who wins. Photos You Should See View All 21 ImagesBiden, in contrast, has made support for Ukraine a key priority and moral imperative. But many of America's European NATO allies are worried that with or without Trump, the U.S. is becoming less reliable. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said he was “currently on the phone a lot with my colleagues and asking them to do more” to support Ukraine. Dalton, a former U.K. ambassador to Iran, said prospects for the Middle East would be “slightly worse” under Trump than Biden.
Persons: Joe Biden, Donald Trump, Emmanuel Macron’s, Trump, Germany’s Angela Merkel, Britain’s Theresa May, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Vladimir Putin, Viktor Orbán “, , Biden, Richard Dalton, Olaf Scholz, , Scholz, Macron, ” Macron, Boris Johnson, ” Johnson, Putin, Johnson, ” Bronwen Maddox, ” Trump, hasn't, , Dalton, implore Biden, Itamar Ben, Israel, Turkey’s Erdogan, Sergey Lavrov, George W, Zhao Minghao, ” “, Jiwon, Kirsten Grieshaber, Dasha, Suzan Fraser, Nomaan Merchant Organizations: U.S, Trump, NATO, Congressional Republicans, Centre, Politics, University College London, Mail, Associated Press, Hamas, White, Russian, CBS, Biden, Fudan University Locations: U.S, gridlock, Congress, Ukraine, Europe, United States, British, German, Germany, ” Russia, China, Iran, North Korea, Russia, Tehran, Dalton, Israel, Gaza, Turkey, Shanghai, Seoul, South Korea, Berlin, Dasha Litvinova, Tallinn, Estonia, Ankara, Washington
Read previewFormer UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson has called out Tucker Carlson after he went to Moscow to interview Russian President Vladimir Putin. “When Tucker Carlson went to the Kremlin, he had a function well known to history. He was to be the stooge of the tyrant, the dictaphone to the dictator and a traitor to journalism,” Johnson wrote in an op-ed for the Daily Mail on Friday. “In his fawning, guffawing, slack-jawed happiness at having a ‘scoop,’ he betrayed his viewers and listeners around the world,” Johnson wrote. Using British slang for buttocks, Johnson called the interview "bum-sucking servility to a tyrant."
Persons: , Boris Johnson, Tucker Carlson, Vladimir Putin, , ” Johnson, Putin, Carlson, Johnson, , Adolf Hitler Organizations: Service, UK, Kremlin, Daily, Business, UN Human Rights, Ukraine, GOP, Fox News Locations: Moscow, Ukraine, Russia, American, France, Western
LONDON (AP) — A British newspaper publisher has agreed to pay Prince Harry a “substantial” sum in costs and damages for invading his privacy with phone hacking and other illegal snooping, Harry’s lawyer said Friday. Judge Timothy Fancourt found that Harry’s phone was hacked “to a modest extent.”The settlement avoids a new trial over 115 more tabloid articles that Harry says were the product of hacking or other intrusions. He recently dropped a libel case against the publisher of the Mail after an unfavorable pretrial ruling. He ordered the publisher to pay “common costs” of a general case seeking to show wrongdoing by the company. Mirror Group Newspapers said it has paid more than 100 million pounds ($128 million) in other phone hacking lawsuits over the years, but denied wrongdoing in Harry’s case.
Persons: , Prince Harry, David Sherborne, Harry, Judge Timothy Fancourt, Princess Diana, Meghan, , ” Harry, Duke of Sussex, King Charles III, Harry’s, Fancourt, , Nikki Sanderson, Fiona Wightman, Paul Whitehouse, Michael Turner, Rupert Murdoch’s, Murdoch Organizations: Newspapers, Mirror Group, Daily, The Sun, Daily Mail, Mail, Group Locations: London, California, United States
Dion's eldest son, René-Charles Angélil, is 23 and attended the 2024 Grammys with her. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. AdvertisementRené-Charles Angélil, 23, is the eldest childCéline Dion, Taylor Swift, and René-Charles Angelil at the 66th Grammy Awards. AdvertisementDion's fraternal twins, Nelson and Eddy, are 13 years oldDion gave birth to Nelson and Eddy via C-section in Florida on October 23, 2010. Dion gave Oprah Winfrey an inside look at her home life with her newborn twins a few months later.
Persons: Céline Dion, René, Dion's, Charles Angélil, Nelson, Eddy, , Dion, René Angélil, Taylor Swift, Charles Angelil, Kevin Mazur, Charles, James Corden's, Instagram, Big Tip, Swift, Nelson Mandela, Eddy Marnay, Oprah Winfrey Organizations: Service, The Recording Academy, Montreal Gazette, South, Daily Mail Locations: Florida, René, French
"The Apprentice" host and entrepreneur Lord Alan Sugar recently blasted remote work in a BBC interview. AdvertisementBritish business mogul and "The Apprentice" host Lord Alan Sugar recently criticized remote working saying it's bad for morale and learning. Lord Sugar, who has been the star of the popular reality competition series "The Apprentice" since 2005, was giving a remote interview with BBC Breakfast after season 18 of the series premiered this month. But the video posted by the BBC on TikTok has been flooded with critical comments from users calling Lord Sugar hypocritical for his views. Lord Sugar recently shared some harsh words about the younger generation during an interview with The Daily Mail , where he criticized their sense of entitlement.
Persons: Lord Alan Sugar, He's, , Alan Sugar, Sugar, Andrew Bloch, Bloch, Sugar's, Lord Sugar, It's, Gen Z, Whoopi Goldberg, John Catsimatidis, John Mackey Organizations: Service, BBC, Daily, Foods Locations: TikTok
Fans think there's a divide in the Cyrus family following Tish and Billy Ray Cyrus' separation. AdvertisementMiley Cyrus didn't thank her dad, Billy Ray, in her acceptance speech at the 2024 Grammys, seemingly fueling rumors that there's a rift in the Cyrus family. Billy Ray Cyrus, Miley Cyrus and Tish Cyrus at the Nickelodeon Annual Kids' Choice Award in 2010. Tish Cyrus, Braison Cyrus, Noah Cyrus, Billy Ray Cyrus, Brandi Cyrus, and Miley Cyrus at the the 2015 MTV Video Music Awards. Representatives for Miley, Tish, Billy Ray, Noah, Braison, Trace, and Brandi Cyrus did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Persons: Cyrus, Billy Ray Cyrus, Noah, Braison Cyrus didn't, Dominic Purcell, Miley, , Miley Cyrus didn't, Billy Ray, Tish, Brandi, Maxx Morando, Braison, Baxter Neal Helson, Christopher Cody, Kristin Luckey, Miley Cyrus, Tish Cyrus, Kevin Mazur, Noah Cyrus, Firerose, Johanna Rosie Hodges, Hannah Montana, superstardom, Braison Cyrus, Brandi Cyrus, John Shearer, It's, Trace Cyrus, Jared, @noahcyrus, Braison —, Billy Ray's, Trace, @tracecyrus, Tish's nuptials, Liam Hemsworth's Organizations: Service, Nickelodeon, Los, The Recording Academy, Disney Channel, Los Angeles Times, Daily Mail Locations: Los Angeles, Cyrus's Franklin , Tennessee, Instagram, Tish, Malibu, Nashville , Tennessee, Walmart, Instagram .
As Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz continues to circulate a drafted resolution saying former President Donald Trump didn't "engage in insurrection or rebellion against the United States, or give aid or comfort to the enemies thereof," retired DC Metropolitan Police Officer Michael Fanone isn't surprised. "It's another example of Matt Gaetz's endless ass-kissing campaign to ingratiate himself with Donald Trump," he told Business Insider Friday morning. In late January, the Daily Mail reported Gaetz's office had begun sending emails of the resolution to members of the House who've endorsed Trump's reelection campaign. Gaetz has yet to file the resolution, but Politico reported that same day it would likely be coming soon. Ultimately, he said, "I feel betrayed" by Trump supporters and legislators he said are operating out of their self-interests.
Persons: Matt Gaetz, Donald Trump, Michael Fanone isn't, Matt Gaetz's, ingratiate, Gaetz's, who've, Trump's, Gaetz, Trump, Fanone Organizations: Republican, DC Metropolitan Police, Daily Mail, New, Capitol, Politico, Trump Locations: United States, New Republic, America
Elon Musk's X is blocking searches for Taylor Swift. Explicit AI-generated pictures of the singer went viral on the platform last week. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementElon Musk 's X is blocking searches for Taylor Swift after explicit AI-generated pictures of the pop superstar went viral last week.
Persons: Elon Musk's, Taylor Swift, Satya Nadella, , Elon Musk, Joe Benarroch, Swift, Karine Jean, Pierre, Jean Organizations: Microsoft, Service, Business, BBC News, Daily Mail, NBC Nightly
Attorney David Sherborne argued that his case was “overwhelmingly successful" and his clients should be reimbursed legal fees because Mirror "advanced a fundamentally dishonest case." Attorney Roger Mallalieu for Mirror Group argued that it should only have to pay legal fees for the portions of the claims it lost. Fancourt found that Mirror used unlawful information gathering in 15 of the 33 newspaper articles about Harry that were examined at trial. Once those claims are resolved, Harry will be able to seek additional lawyers' fees. Mirror Group Newspapers said it has paid more than 100 million pounds ($128 million) in other phone hacking lawsuits over the years, but denied wrongdoing in Harry’s case.
Persons: , Prince Harry, Duke, Sussex, Harry, King Charles III, Britain’s, , Nikki Sanderson, Fiona Wightman, Paul Whitehouse, Michael Turner, David Sherborne, Roger Mallalieu, Sanderson, Wightman, Turner, Timothy Fancourt, Fancourt, Sherborne, Rupert Murdoch’s, Murdoch Organizations: Daily, Group Newspapers, The Sun, Daily Mail, Mail, Mirror Group, Newspapers, Mirror
Sexually explicit AI-created images of Taylor Swift went viral on X this week. Posting on X on Thursday, he wrote: "The spread of AI-generated explicit images of Taylor Swift is appalling — and sadly, it's happening to women everywhere, every day." The spread of AI-generated explicit images of Taylor Swift is appalling—and sadly, it's happening to women everywhere, every day. What’s happened to Taylor Swift is nothing new. (The Daily Mail has reported that her team is considering legal action against the site that created the AI-generated images.)
Persons: Taylor Swift, It's, , Swift, Joe Biden, Joseph Morelle, Morelle, Joe Morelle, Tom Kean Jr, Yvette D, Clarke, — Yvette D Organizations: Service, NFL, NBC News, New Hampshire, Democratic, Committee, Republican, Business, Daily Mail Locations: @RepYvetteClarke
When David Cameron, Britain’s foreign secretary and onetime prime minister, visited Washington last month, he took time out to press the case for backing Ukraine with Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, the far-right Georgia Republican who stridently opposes further American military aid to the country. Last week, Boris Johnson, another former prime minister, argued that the re-election of Donald J. Trump to the White House would not be such a bad thing, so long as Mr. Trump comes around on helping Ukraine. “I simply cannot believe that Trump will ditch the Ukrainians,” Mr. Johnson wrote in a Daily Mail column that read like a personal appeal to the candidate. British diplomats said Mr. Cameron and other senior officials had made it a priority to reach out to Republicans who were hostile to further aid. For reasons of history and geography, Britain recognized that support is not as “instinctive” for Americans as it for the British, according to a senior diplomat, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the diplomatic sensitivity of the matter.
Persons: David Cameron, Marjorie Taylor Greene, stridently, Boris Johnson, Donald J, Trump, , ” Mr, Johnson, Cameron Organizations: Georgia Republican, Mail Locations: Washington, Ukraine, Britain, United States
Lunden and Olivia told me their mission as influencers was to "represent and inspire others to be their authentic self." Advertisement"I did feel represented by them," Asia said, but the tweets "showed me that they are still white women." "We are especially confident in our sexuality and the way that we feel and who we are," Olivia told me. Lunden and Olivia told me they want to advocate for all LGBTQ+ people, including those who don't look like them. It's a chance, the couple told me, to combat the hate and negativity LGBTQ+ parents face.
Persons: Lunden Stallings, Olivia Bennett, Monique Lhuillier, Lunden, Taylor Swift, Stallings, David Yurman, preppy, Olivia, TikTok, Kendrick Brinson, who's, you've, Madison Mathews, sunnies, peck, they'd, Brooklynites, Remington, Zeta Tau, Olivia DMed Lunden —, Justin Bieber, snapbacks, haven't, Lunden's, Ellie Goulding's, Olivia couldn't, Caroline Bayne, Lunden's TikTok, Zara, Mercedes, Sophie, It's, Jackie J, Jackie, There's, Bud Light, Dylan Mulvaney, influencers, They've, KenzKustomz, Krysten Stein, Black influencers, Stein, Hill, millennials Organizations: Naylor, People, Business, Alabama, Chevrolet, New York Post, Daily Mail, Madison, University of Central, Jacksonville State University, Zeta Tau Alpha, University of Alabama's, University, Minnesota, BI, Braves, Rover, Pride, Nielsen, Saks, University of Illinois Locations: Roswell , Georgia, Asia, Olivia, Charleston, LoveShackFancy, Powder Springs , Georgia, Atlanta, Blytheville , Arkansas, University of Central Arkansas, Alabama, Roswell, Austin, RushTok, Alpharetta, Charleston , South Carolina, Southern, Publix, Fayetteville , Arkansas, University of Illinois Chicago
Britain’s media has reacted with fury and bewilderment after a US scientist claimed the perfect cup of tea is made with a pinch of added salt. “I guess we are going to war again?” legal journalist Molly Quell wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter. “We cannot stand idly by as such an outrageous proposal threatens the very foundation of our Special Relationship,” the embassy wrote in a viral X post. Francl also found little sympathy in the British press, which took her suggestion with more than a pinch of salt. In the meantime, the embassy said it “will continue to make tea in the proper way – by microwaving it.”
Persons: Michelle Francl, Molly, , Matt Green, Francl, Organizations: London CNN —, Bryn Mawr College, CNN, ITV News, Embassy, Guardian, Daily Mail Locations: Boston, Britain, United States, British, Pennsylvania
Read previewThe chairman of the Arizona Republican Party resigned on Wednesday, alleging the GOP Senate candidate Kari Lake all but forced him into doing so. Lake, apparently recording the in-person interaction herself, can be heard repeatedly rejecting the entreaties, saying she wouldn't even do it for $1 billion. Lake later told NBC News in Hampshire — where she was attending the election night party for former President Donald Trump — that DeWit should resign. "I received an ultimatum from Lake's team: resign today or face the release of a new, more damaging recording," said DeWit. AdvertisementIn a statement to Business Insider, a spokesman for the Lake campaign denied DeWit's account, saying that "no one from the Kari Lake campaign threatened or blackmailed DeWit."
Persons: , Kari Lake, Jeff DeWit, who's, Soo, DeWit, Sen, Kyrsten, Lake, Donald Trump, He's, 8tF4sodXf3, 4XBSzoVyYL — Vaughn Hillyard, Katie Hobbs —, Ruben Gallego Organizations: Service, Arizona Republican Party, GOP, Business, Daily Mail, Lake, Senate, NBC News, Republican Party, U.S . Senate, Arizona GOP, Democratic Gov, Democratic Locations: East, Hampshire —, Arizona
The chairman of Arizona’s Republican Party resigned abruptly on Wednesday, a day after the publication of a 10-minute recording of a conversation between himself and Kari Lake, a former nominee for governor, in which he appeared to offer a bribe to persuade Ms. Lake to drop her 2024 Senate campaign. In the recording, which was published by The Daily Mail, Jeff DeWit, the chairman, tells Ms. Lake that there are “very powerful people that want to keep you out” of the race, and suggests he is passing on a message from them. He says he had been told to ask her: “Is there any companies out there or something that could just put her on the payroll and give her — to keep her out?”Later in the conversation, which Mr. DeWit repeatedly urges Ms. Lake not to repeat to anyone, he starts to ask, “Is there a number at which — ” before Ms. Lake interrupts, saying “I can be bought?” He replies, “Not be bought,” but instead wait a few years before running. Ms. Lake brushed off the attempts, repeatedly telling Mr. DeWit that she was offended by the approach. “That’s immoral — I couldn’t look at myself in the mirror,” she says, according to the recording.
Persons: Kari Lake, Jeff DeWit, DeWit, , Organizations: Republican Party, The Daily Mail
At Mother Jones, a 48-year-old nonprofit magazine specializing in politics and investigations, the implications were dramatic. "The firehose of Facebook traffic was never going to pay for our journalism, for the majority of our journalism," Bauerlein said. Last decade, many publishers saw their "social traffic decline pretty dramatically," with Facebook deprioritizing text-based articles in favor of video content, Cholke said. "If we all end up finding news in the metaverse, then you'll be finding Mother Jones in the metaverse," she said. What Mother Jones won't do, she said, is "bet everything on one platform, because that never works out."
Persons: Mark Zuckerberg, Sen, John Kennedy, Bill Clark, Reuters Mother Jones, Monika Bauerlein, Mother Jones, Meta, Donald Trump, Bauerlein, Jill Nicholson, Nicholson, Zuckerberg, David Carr, Carr, We've, Meta hasn't, It's, Similarweb, Sam Cholke, John S, Adams, Jonah Peretti, " Peretti, Jessica Probus, BuzzFeed's, BuzzFeed, Probus, Cholke, that's, Chartbeat's Nicholson, Mathew Ingram, Facebook, Ingram, Pew, Elisa Shearer, influencers, Jones Organizations: Facebook, Reuters, Mother, CNBC, Google, Meta, Daily, Comcast, Vice Media, Institute for Nonprofit News, Texas Tribune, Montana Free Press, The Texas Tribune, Institute for Nonprofit, Longtime, Columbia Journalism, Pew Research Center, Pew Locations: Washington, France, Germany, Australia, Helena, American
A woman claimed she was "cursed" after stealing artifacts from Pompeii. She said she was diagnosed with breast cancer within a year of taking pumice stones from the ruins. AdvertisementA woman who said she was diagnosed with breast cancer after stealing artifacts from Pompeii said she hadn't' known about "the curse," referencing a myth that stealing from the site brings bad luck. "I am a young and healthy female, and doctors said it was 'just bad luck.' "Please, take them back, they bring bad luck," she wrote, per The Guardian.
Persons: , Gabriel Zuchtriegel, Zuchtriegel, bocca al lupo, Italy's RaiNews, Atlantide Phototravel, Nicole Organizations: Service, Daily Mail, Guardian, Reuters Locations: Italy, Atlantide, Canadian, Pompeii
Prince Harry dropped his libel lawsuit Friday against the publisher of the Daily Mail tabloid following a ruling in which a judge cast doubt on his case as it was headed to trial. The action will leave him on the hook to pay the publisher's legal fees, which the Daily Mail reported to be 250,000 pounds ($316,000). The publisher argued the article expressed an honest opinion and caused no serious harm to his reputation. In March, Harry sought summary judgment — to win the case without going to trial — and tried to knock out the Mail's defense but a judge didn't buy it. He claims that hostility toward him and his wife on social media and relentless hounding by the news media threaten their safety.
Persons: Britain's Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, Prince Harry, Duke, Sussex, Harry, , Matthew Nicklin, Nicklin, King Charles III, he's, Harry's Organizations: Oxford Children's Hospital, Daily Mail, Court, Associated Newspapers, Newspapers Locations: Oxford, England, London, Britain
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