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  • A dramatic first look at Martha Stewart, José Andres’ new show ‘Yes, Chef!’

    A dramatic first look at Martha Stewart, José Andres’ new show ‘Yes, Chef!’



    Picture the head chef of a busy restaurant, and you might imagine a hot-headed cook who rules their kitchen with a volatile temper.

    But chefs with a short fuse have no place in the kitchen of Martha Stewart and José Andrés, who are pairing up to host a new cooking competition called “Yes, Chef!” on NBC.

    “For far too long, the pressure of the kitchen has been an excuse for out-of-control behavior,” Stewart, 83, says in an exclusive preview clip from the new series.

    “That kind of behavior doesn’t make a great chef. It holds them back,” agrees Andrés, 55, a Spanish American chef and restaurateur known for his humanitarian work.

    “Yes, Chef!” will put 12 professional chefs to the test, judging not only their cooking skills but their ability to work together and keep their egos in check as they complete high-stakes culinary challenges.

    The chefs have all been nominated by their coworkers, bosses, friends or family.

    “These rising stars all have natural talent, but their egos, intensity, stubbornness or short fuses are holding them back from reaching their full potential,” according to an NBC release about the new series.

    Week after week, contestants must prove they can keep their cool and work together, even as the competition heats up.

    “In our kitchen, it takes a lot more than good food to win,” Stewart says in the preview clip.

    The Emmy-winning lifestyle maven is also shown sharing a vulnerable moment with one of the contestants. 

    “I have been known to be a perfectionist, and that kind of holds you back sometimes,” she admits.

    Each week, Stewart and Andrés will choose a Most Valuable Chef, or MVC, based on the chef’s cooking ability as well as their ability to improve their behavior.

    In the end, one top chef will take home a $250,000 grand prize. 

    Stewart and Andrés have been bonding over great food for a while now. Back in February, she revealed on Instagram that Andrés had treated her to a “magnificent” home-cooked meal with his family in Toronto.

    “Yes, Chef!” premieres Monday, April 28, at 10 p.m. ET on NBC, and will stream the next day on Peacock.





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  • Cooper Flagg declares for NBA Draft

    Cooper Flagg declares for NBA Draft



    Duke Blue Devils forward Cooper Flagg, the long-presumed No. 1 overall pick, announced Monday that he will declare for the NBA Draft.

    Flagg, 18, averaged 19.2 points, 7.5 rebounds and 4.2 assists for the Blue Devils in his freshman season, helping lead the team to a Final Four appearance.

    “It was an incredible year, probably the best year of my life,” Flagg said in a video posted to Instagram. “I have so much gratitude. I feel so blessed for all the opportunities that I was given. Duke has always been a dream for me, but I’m excited to announce that I’ll be entering my name into the 2025 NBA Draft. Today’s just the beginning, but I have the brotherhood with me for life.”

    Flagg was a highly touted prospect before his lone year at Duke, finishing his high school career in 2024 as the consensus top recruit of his class. That summer, Flagg was also invited to be a part of the USA Select Team, practicing against the men’s national basketball team ahead of the Paris Olympics.

    In addition to helping lead the Blue Devils to the Final Four, Flagg won the John R. Wooden Award for college basketball’s most outstanding player, becoming only the fourth freshman to ever do so.

    Flagg previously hinted at a possible return to Duke for another season, telling The Athletic in February, “I want to come back next year. I still feel like a kid. This is the only way I’ve ever known college.”

    Instead, Flagg will head to the NBA.

    The league’s draft is scheduled for June 25, when most expect Flagg to be selected first overall. The three teams with the best odds to win the draft lottery and select Flagg are the Utah Jazz, the Washington Wizards and the Charlotte Hornets, with each having a 14% chance of winning the first pick.






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  • Trump says ‘loser’ Jerome Powell is waiting too long to cut interest rates

    Trump says ‘loser’ Jerome Powell is waiting too long to cut interest rates



    President Donald Trump lobbed a fresh series of insults at Fed Chair Jerome Powell on Monday while reiterated a call for lower interest rates, a move meant to address concerns about a slowing U.S. economy but one that risks reigniting inflation.

    In a post on Truth Social, Trump claimed without evidence that “preemptive cuts” were being called for “by many” now that the economy was facing what he described as “virtually No Inflation.”

    The economy now risks slowing, Trump said, “unless Mr. Too Late, a major loser, lowers interest rates, NOW.”

    “Powell has always been ‘To Late,’ except when it came to the Election period when he lowered in order to help Sleepy Joe Biden, later Kamala, get elected. How did that work out?”

    Though Trump has long criticized Powell, whom he appointed during his first presidential term, the president’s complaints have ramped up in recent days amid a major market reaction to his tariffs shock.

    Economic adviser Kevin Hassett also said last week the administration was “study(ing)” Trump’s options for removing Powell.

    Firing Powell would be an unprecedented move: No president has ever removed a sitting Fed chair. The Fed has historically been a nonpolitical part of the government, and the prospect of Trump taking action has sparked concern that inflation would surge as he forced the central bank to ease up on its role of controlling price growth in favor of economic growth.

    Markets extended their losses after the post, with the S&P 500 falling more than 2% and now down nearly 16% from its February peak, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average declined 750 points, or about 2%. Bond yields moved lower, meaning investors were seeking greater protection in safe-haven assets.

    In referencing the slowing economy, Trump may be becoming more attuned to the negative shock his tariffs strategy is creating to growth.

    A growing chorus of Wall Street firms and analysts increasingly foresee the U.S. economy entering a recession, something real-time measures of gross domestic product (GDP) are also showing

    While it is true that the rate of inflation has slowed from the 9% high it saw at the height of the pandemic, the measure of price growth most closely observed by the Fed remains above its 2% target and actually accelerated in February.

    Not all White House officials appear to be on board with pressuring Powell. Just last week, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told Bloomberg TV that the administration would begin interviewing candidates for Powell’s successor this fall, adding it would give the Trump administration about six months lead time before Powell officially leaves office when his term is up next year. He gave no further details.



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  • New Delhi rolls the red carpet for Vance as Trump’s trade war rattles Asia

    New Delhi rolls the red carpet for Vance as Trump’s trade war rattles Asia


    NEW DELHI — U.S. Vice President JD Vance began a four-day visit to India on Monday and will hold talks with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, as New Delhi rushes to avoid steep U.S. tariffs with an early trade deal and boost ties with the Trump administration.

    Their discussions will cover the first day of Vance’s largely personal visit to the country with his family, which includes visiting the Taj Mahal and attending a wedding in the city of Jaipur, people familiar with the matter said.

    Vance’s wife, Usha, is the daughter of Indian immigrants.

    Vance landed at New Delhi’s Palam airport on Monday following a visit to Rome, where he held a private meeting with Pope Francis on Easter Sunday.

    Modi and Vance are expected to review progress made on the bilateral agenda outlined in February when the Indian leader met President Donald Trump in Washington. It includes “fairness” in their two-way trade and growing their defense partnership.

    The Indian prime minister was one of the first world leaders to meet Trump after he took office, and Reuters has reported that his government is open to cutting tariffs on more than half of its imports from the U.S., which were worth a total $41.8 billion in 2024, as part of a trade deal.

    Vance will hold talks with Prime Minister Narendra Modi as India attempts to boosts ties with the Trump administration and avoid steep U.S. tariffs.
    Vice President J.D. Vance and his wife Usha Vance arrive in New Delhi, India. Keny Holston / Getty Images

    However, the U.S. president has continued to call India a “tariff abuser” and “tariff king.”

    “We are very positive that the visit will give a further boost to our bilateral ties,” Indian foreign ministry spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal told reporters on Thursday, speaking about Vance’s engagements in India.

    The U.S. is India’s largest trading partner and their two-way bilateral trade reached $129 billion in 2024, with a $45.7 billion surplus in favor of India, U.S. government trade data show.

    Officials in New Delhi are expecting to clinch a trade deal with the U.S. within the 90-day pause on tariff hikes announced by Trump on April 9 for major trading partners, including Delhi.

    Vance’s tour in India is also seen as laying the ground for Trump’s visit to the country later in the year for the summit of leaders of the Quad grouping that includes India, Australia, Japan and the U.S.

     Vance begins a four-day visit to India on April 21 as New Delhi looks to seal an early trade deal and stave off punishing US tariffs. His tour includes a meeting with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi.
    Dancers wearing traditional attire stand in front of a poster depicting Vice President J.D. Vance upon his arrival in New Delhi on Monday.Kenny Holston / AFP – Getty Images

    Harsh Pant, foreign policy head at the Observer Research Foundation think tank in Delhi, said the timing of Vance’s visit was critical in the backdrop of trade talks.

    “The fact that the US-China tensions are ramping up, and Vance in particular seems to have taken a very high profile role in American diplomacy, also means that the visit assumes an added layer of significance,” he said.

    Vance is accompanied by U.S. administration officials, but the two sides are unlikely to sign any deals during the visit, people familiar with the matter said.

    India and the U.S. expect to ink a framework for defense partnership this year, while New Delhi also plans to procure and co-produce arms including Javelin anti-tank guided missiles and Stryker infantry combat vehicles, according to a joint statement issued after the February meeting.

    Discussions on such procurements would be taken forward during U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s expected visit to India in the next couple of months, people familiar with the matter said.



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  • Pete Hegseth shared sensitive information in second group chat

    Pete Hegseth shared sensitive information in second group chat


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    Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth is facing growing scrutiny, including calls to resign, for sharing sensitive military information in a second Signal group chat last month, NBC News confirms. The recipients included his wife, as well as his brother and personal lawyer who both hold jobs at the Pentagon. NBC’s Garrett Haake reports for TODAY.



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  • Beijing warns countries against striking a deal with the U.S. at China’s expense

    Beijing warns countries against striking a deal with the U.S. at China’s expense


    BEIJING — China on Monday accused Washington of abusing tariffs and warned countries against striking a broader economic deal with the United States at its expense, ratcheting up its rhetoric in a spiraling trade war between the world’s two biggest economies.

    Beijing will firmly oppose any party striking a deal at China’s expense and “will take countermeasures in a resolute and reciprocal manner,” its Commerce Ministry said.

    The ministry was responding to a Bloomberg report, citing sources familiar with the matter, that the Trump administration is preparing to pressure nations seeking tariff reductions or exemptions from the U.S. to curb trade with China, including imposing monetary sanctions.

    President Donald Trump paused the sweeping tariffs he announced on dozens of countries on April 2 except those on China, singling out the world’s second largest economy for the biggest levies.

    In a series of moves, Washington has raised tariffs on Chinese imports to 145%, prompting Beijing to slap retaliatory duties of 125% on U.S. goods, effectively erecting trade embargoes against each other. Last week, China signaled that its own across-the-board rates would not rise further.

    “The United States has abused tariffs on all trading partners under the banner of so-called ‘equivalence’, while also forcing all parties to start so-called ‘reciprocal tariffs’ negotiations with them,” the ministry spokesperson said.

    China is determined and capable of safeguarding its own rights and interests, and is willing to strengthen solidarity with all parties, the ministry said.

    “The fact is, nobody wants to pick a side,” said Bo Zhengyuan, partner at China-based policy consultancy Plenum.

    China US Trade Tariffs
    An LED lighting manufacturer in southern China’s Guangdong province on April 17.Jade Gao / AFP – Getty Images

    “If countries have high reliance on China in terms of investment, industrial infrastructure, technology know-how and consumption, I don’t think they’ll be buying into U.S. demands. Many Southeast Asian countries belong to this category.”

    Pursuing a hardline stance, Beijing will this week convene an informal United Nations Security Council meeting to accuse Washington of bullying and “casting a shadow over the global efforts for peace and development” by weaponizing tariffs.

    Earlier this month, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said nearly 50 countries have approached him to discuss the steep additional tariffs imposed by Trump.

    Several bilateral talks on tariffs have taken place since, with Japan considering raising soybean and rice imports as part of its talks with the U.S. while Indonesia is planning to increase U.S. food and commodities imports and reduce orders from other nations.

    Caught in Crossfire

    Trump’s tariff policies have rattled financial markets as investors fear a severe disruption in world trade could tip the global economy into recession.

    On Monday, Chinese stocks inched higher, showing little reaction to the commerce ministry comments, though investors have generally remained cautious on Chinese assets due to the rising growth risks.

    The Trump administration also has been trying to curb Beijing’s progress in developing advanced semiconductor chips which it says could be used for military purposes, and last week imposed port fees on China-built vessels to limit China’s dominance in shipbuilding.

    AI chip giant Nvidia said last week it would take $5.5 billion in charges due to the administration’s curbs on AI chip exports.

    China’s President Xi Jinping visited three Southeast Asian countries last week in a move to bolster regional ties, calling on trade partners to oppose unilateral bullying.

    Beijing has said it is “tearing down walls” and expanding its circle of trading partners amid the trade row.

    Xi Jinping in Cambodia
    China’s President Xi Jinping arriving in Phnom Penh, Cambodia on Friday.AFP – Getty Images

    The stakes are high for Southeast Asian nations caught in the crossfire of the Sino-U.S. tariff war, particularly given the regional ASEAN bloc’s huge two-way trade with both China and the United States.

    Economic ministers from Thailand and Indonesia are currently in the United States, with Malaysia set to join later this week, all seeking trade negotiations.

    Six countries in Southeast Asia were hit with tariffs ranging from 32% to 49%, threatening trade-reliant economies that have benefited from investment from levies imposed on Beijing by Trump in his first term.

    ASEAN is China’s largest trading partner, with total trade value reaching $234 billion in the first quarter of 2025, China’s customs agency said last week.

    Trade between ASEAN and the U.S. totalled around $476.8 billion in 2024, according to U.S. figures, making Washington the regional bloc’s fourth-largest trading partner.

    “There are no winners in trade wars and tariff wars,” Xi said in an article published in Vietnamese media, without mentioning the United States.



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  • Parents of toddler who walked Arizona wilderness and was led to safety by rancher’s dog call it a ‘miracle’

    Parents of toddler who walked Arizona wilderness and was led to safety by rancher’s dog call it a ‘miracle’


    The parents of a 2-year-old boy who spent a night alone in the Arizona wilderness and was led to safety by a local rancher’s dog are calling the ordeal “a miracle.”

    Bowden Allen disappeared from his home in Seligman, Arizona, at around 5 p.m. on Monday. The toddler’s father, Cory Allen, was working on the home’s roof, while his mother, Sarah Allen, was caring for their one-year-old, NBC affiliate KPNX-TV reported.

    Sarah said she heard her older child walk out of the home, but when she called for him, he didn’t answer, triggering a panicked search.

    2-year-old Bowden Allen with his parents Cory and Sarah Allen.
    2-year-old Bowden Allen with his parents Cory and Sarah Allen.KPNX

    “It started — getting more intense every minute,” Cory said about the search for his son.

    The couple called in family for help, and eventually contacted the Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office, kicking off a search effort comprising more than 40 rescuers and a Department of Public Safety helicopter that spotted two mountain lions in the area.

    But as the sun set, there was still no sign of Bowden.

    “I didn’t even know how to process,” Sarah said. “I looked at his empty bed in the middle of the night, and I’m like this isn’t real, he’s not — how is he not here? How is he out by himself somewhere in the dark?”

    2-year-old Bowden Allen spent a night alone in the Arizona wilderness.
    2-year-old Bowden Allen spent a night alone in the Arizona wilderness.KPNX

    Around 16 hours later, rancher Scotty Dunton said he found Bowden on his land after his dog, Buford, led him there. Dunton’s property is 7 miles away from the toddler’s home.

    According to Dunton, Buford, an Anatolian Pyrenees, found Bowden sleeping under a tree, KPNX-TV reported. The toddler was found with a few scratches on his arm.

    “I feel like God sent that dog to rescue my son,” Cory told the outlet about Buford.

    Buford, an Anatolian Pyrenees, normally patrols his land and wards off coyotes.
    Buford, an Anatolian Pyrenees, normally patrols his land and wards off coyotes.KPNX

    Sarah called the ordeal “a miracle.”

    “It’s unreal and it’s unbelievable,” she said.



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  • The life of Pope Francis in pictures

    The life of Pope Francis in pictures



    “Here, grief is palpable,” the pope said later at an interfaith service at the nearby Sept. 11 Memorial Museum. “The water we see flowing toward that empty pit reminds us of all those lives which fell prey to those who think that destruction, tearing down, is the only way to settle conflicts.”



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  • 60,000 Americans to lose their rental assistance and risk eviction unless Congress acts

    60,000 Americans to lose their rental assistance and risk eviction unless Congress acts



    Moments after Daniris Espinal walked into her new apartment in Brooklyn, she prayed. In ensuing nights, she would awaken and touch the walls for reassurance — finding in them a relief that turned to tears over her morning coffee.

    Those walls were possible through a federal program that pays rent for some 60,000 families and individuals fleeing homelessness or domestic violence. Espinal was fleeing both.

    But the program, Emergency Housing Vouchers, is running out of money — and quickly.

    Funding is expected to be used up by the end of next year, according to a letter from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and obtained by The Associated Press. That would leave tens of thousands across the country scrambling to pay their rent.

    It would be among the largest one-time losses of rental assistance in the U.S., analysts say, and the ensuing evictions could churn these people — after several years of rebuilding their lives — back onto the street or back into abusive relationships.

    “To have it stop would completely upend all the progress that they’ve made,” said Sonya Acosta, policy analyst at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, which researches housing assistance.

    “And then you multiply that by 59,000 households,” she said.

    The program, launched in 2021 by then-President Joe Biden as part of the pandemic-era American Rescue Plan Act, was allocated $5 billion to help pull people out of homelessness, domestic violence and human trafficking.

    People from San Francisco to Dallas to Tallahassee, Florida, were enrolled — among them children, seniors and veterans — with the expectation that funding would last until the end of the decade.

    But with the ballooning cost of rent, that $5 billion will end far faster.

    Last month, HUD sent letters to groups dispersing the money, advising them to “manage your EHV program with the expectation that no additional funding from HUD will be forthcoming.”

    The program’s future rests with Congress, which could decide to add money as it crafts the federal budget. But it’s a relatively expensive prospect at a time when Republicans, who control Congress, are dead set on cutting federal spending to afford tax cuts.

    Democratic Rep. Maxine Waters, who championed the program four years ago, is pushing for another $8 billion infusion.

    But the organizations lobbying Republican and Democratic lawmakers to reup the funding told the AP they aren’t optimistic. Four GOP lawmakers who oversee the budget negotiations did not respond to AP requests for comment.

    “We’ve been told it’s very much going to be an uphill fight,” said Kim Johnson, the public policy manager at the National Low Income Housing Coalition.

    Espinal and her two daughters, aged 4 and 19, are living on one of those vouchers in a three-bedroom apartment with an over $3,000 monthly rent — an amount extremely difficult to cover without the voucher.

    Four years ago, Espinal fought her way out of a marriage where her husband controlled her decisions, from seeing her family and friends to leaving the apartment to go shopping.

    When she spoke up, her husband said she was wrong, or in the wrong or crazy.

    Isolated and in the haze of postpartum depression, she didn’t know what to believe. “Every day, little by little, I started to feel not like myself,” she said. “It felt like my mind wasn’t mine.”

    When notices arrived in March 2021 seeking about $12,000 in back rent, it was a shock. Espinal had quit her job at her husband’s urging and he had promised to cover family expenses.

    Police reports documenting her husband’s bursts of anger were enough for a judge to give her custody of their daughter in 2022, Espinal said.

    But her future was precarious: She was alone, owed thousands of dollars in back rent and had no income to pay it or support her newborn and teenage daughters.

    Financial aid to prevent evictions during the pandemic kept Espinal afloat, paying her back rent and keeping the family out of shelters. But it had an expiration date.

    Around that time, the Emergency Housing Vouchers program was rolled out, targeting people in Espinal’s situation.

    A “leading cause of family homelessness is domestic violence” in New York City, said Gina Cappuccitti, director of housing access and stability services at New Destiny Housing, a nonprofit that has connected 700 domestic violence survivors to the voucher program.

    Espinal was one of those 700, and moved into her Brooklyn apartment in 2023.

    The relief went beyond finding a secure place to live, she said. “I gained my worth, my sense of peace, and I was able to rebuild my identity.”

    Now, she said, she’s putting aside money in case of the worst. Because, “that’s my fear, losing control of everything that I’ve worked so hard for.”



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  • Service members killed in border crash were California-based U.S. Marines

    Service members killed in border crash were California-based U.S. Marines


    SAN DIEGO — Two service members killed during a border security mission in New Mexico last week were identified as U.S. Marines based at Camp Pendleton in San Diego County.

    The 1st Marine Division identified them as Lance Cpl. Albert A. Aguilera, 22, of Riverside, California, and Lance Cpl. Marcelino M. Gamino, 28, of Fresno, California. 

    They were pronounced dead at University Medical Center of El Paso, Texas, the division said in a statement. A third Marine injured alongside them was in critical condition at the medical center, it said.

    The three were in a vehicle that was a part of a caravan when it crashed Tuesday morning, the division said.

    The crash in an area just north of El Paso was reported shortly before 9 a.m. on New Mexico’s Highway 9 near the Santa Teresa Border Patrol Station in Santa Teresa, NBC affiliate KTSM of El Paso reported.

    The Marines were part of the military’s Joint Task Force Southern Border, which seeks to increase security along the U.S.-Mexico border. This year U.S. forces there came under consolidated military command after President Donald Trump declared an emergency and tapped the defense budget for the effort.

    The 1st Marine Division said in a statement that Aguilera and Gamino were combat engineers with the 1st Combat Engineer Battalion at Camp Pendleton. Gamino was decorated with the National Defense Service Medal and a Sea Service Deployment Ribbon.

    He deployed to Darwin, Australia, as part of a rotational force last year, the division said.

    Last month, nearly 3,000 active-duty troops were deployed to the U.S.-Mexico border as part of Trump’s effort to halt migrant and drug traffic.

    Trump has not commented formally on the Marines’ deaths.

    Rep. Veronica Escobar, D-Texas, who represents El Paso, said in a statement: “I am saddened by the loss of two U.S. service members who were killed in yesterday’s accident in Santa Teresa. I’m praying that the third service member who remains in serious condition recovers, and I’m thinking of the families of all involved.”

    Marine Lt. Col. Tyrone A. Barrion, commander of the 1st Combat Engineer Battalion, said in the 1st Marine Division statement that the loss of the two lance corporals “is deeply felt” in the military branch.

    “I extend my heartfelt condolences and prayers to the families of our fallen brothers,” he said. “Our top priority right now is to ensure that their families, and the Marines affected by their passing, are fully supported during this difficult time.”

    The cause of the crash remained under investigation, the division said.



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