Category: Uncategorized

  • Inside the life of the NWSL’s youngest player

    Inside the life of the NWSL’s youngest player


    “I am always thriving to get better, not just physically, but also mentally and emotionally,” she said. “And I would just say it’s a satisfaction of creating a goal and then achieving it. And working really hard and seeing all that hard work really pay off.”

    Mak is the youngest in a growing youth movement within the NWSL, sparked by a then-19-year-old Olivia Moultrie.

    Moultrie, a Portland Thorns midfielder, won an antitrust lawsuit against the NWSL that she filed in 2021 to repeal the league’s age requirement for its players. In 2022, the league unveiled a policy that would allow teams to sign a few under-18 players with restrictions.

    It’s not unheard of for men’s teams to feature teenage talent — Freddy Adu debuted for D.C. United in 2004 at just 14 years old, the youngest person to debut for any professional U.S. sport at the time. And 20 years later, Cavan Sullivan made his own MLS debut for the Philadelphia Union at 14.

    Mak’s father noted that the decision to let their own teen make her professional debut was not one the family members took lightly. She spent months training with multiple NWSL teams ,in addition to her time spent working with Gotham, before signing a deal.

    “She continued to have growth and success within that environment,” Whitham said. “So, Mak wanted it, and we were committed to supporting her dreams.”

    Mckenna Whitham
    Mak Whitham.Elianel Clinton for NBC News

    Gotham’s general manager, Yael Averbuch West, and head coach Juan Carlos Amorós, have partnered with the family to “to ensure she is continuing to grow not only in her game but as a person,” Whitham said.

    “We have a very strong relationship with Gotham and have meetings on a set cadence concerning all areas of her development at Gotham,” he added.

    Some of the league-mandated safeguards for young players include anti-trade protections until they turn 18, a separate changing area from the adults, regular drug testing and requirements that the team helps pay for housing and schooling costs.

    Mak says she’s grateful to have a family that would move across the country to help her achieve her dream. She pointed out that her father’s sports career was similar, as he joined the 1998 Team USA ski team when he was still in high school.

    “He understands the sacrifices and he understands the challenges that come with it,” Mak said. “So I’m really grateful to have him. And I have my mom as well, she helps me with a lot of things, like with schooling … I can go to her and have really good conversations.”



    Source link

  • Tech tycoon Lynch’s doomed Bayesian yacht lifted to surface

    Tech tycoon Lynch’s doomed Bayesian yacht lifted to surface


    Salvage experts lifted Mike Lynch’s sunken superyacht to the surface and began pumping seawater out of it on Saturday, 10 months after it sank off the coast of Sicily, killing the British tech tycoon, his teenage daughter and five others.

    Work resumed at first light, with one of the most powerful maritime cranes in Europe having been used to haul the 184-foot Bayesian from beneath the waves.

    The upper decks appeared badly damaged while the blue hull was encrusted with mud.

    The Bayesian was moored off the small port of Porticello, near Palermo, in August last year when it sank during a sudden storm. The yacht was vulnerable to violent winds and was probably knocked over by gusts of more than 117 km (73 miles) per hour, an interim British report said last month.

    The vessel will be held in an elevated position over the weekend while checks and preparations are made, said TMC Marine, which has been leading the salvage operation, working with Dutch specialists Hebo Maritiemservice to lift the yacht 50 meters from the seabed over the past few days.

    It is then expected to be transported to the nearby port of Termini Imerese on Monday and handed over to the authorities who are investigating the sinking.

    UK's vessel Bayesian
    The Bayesian, left, at anchor off the Sicilian village of Porticello near Palermo, Italy, days before sinking.Fabio La Bianca / Baia Santa Nicolicchia via AP

    The recovery process has been made easier after the vessel’s 72-metre mast was detached using a remote-controlled cutting tool and placed on the seabed on Tuesday.

    In addition to Lynch, founder of the software company Autonomy, his daughter Hannah, lawyer Chris Morvillo and his wife Neda, banker Jonathan Bloomer and his wife Judy, and chef Recaldo Thomas were killed when the yacht sank. Nine other crew members and six guests were rescued.



    Source link

  • What the explosive growth of ‘blowout counties’ means for U.S. politics

    What the explosive growth of ‘blowout counties’ means for U.S. politics



    Look at a few national election results and it’s easy to think of the United States as a 50/50 nation overall, split down the middle between Republican red and Democratic blue. But that’s not the reality in vast and growing swaths of the country, where political competitiveness at the local level is being replaced by landslide loyalty to a single party.

    Across the country, 20-point margins in counties Republicans were winning at the turn of the century have turned into 50-point margins or more in recent years. Meanwhile, the number of counties that flipped from one party to the other in each presidential election has shrunk.

    Data compiled by the NBC News Political Unit has shown the demographic trends that have organized our current political coalitions. But the geographical trends also help show how much of the reorganization has clustered along community lines over the last quarter-century. If some people talk like they’ve never had political conversations with people who disagree with them, it could be because that’s more possible than ever before in today’s politically clustered United States.

    Looking at blowout county wins

    George W. Bush’s Electoral College win in 2000 was famously razor-thin. But his average win across the country’s 3,100-plus counties was about 17 points. Democrats’ advantage in population-dense urban cores bolsters their popular vote count election after election. But Republicans’ advantage in rural counties has been a core part of the Republican playbook, with small-county wins with margins of 50 points or more adding up, bit by bit, to a substantial coalition. These were the counties where each candidate had 50-plus-point-margin wins in the 2000 election:

    Bush captured major wins across the Plains states and up through the Mountain West, while Al Gore racked up margins of 50-plus points in the densely populated New York City boroughs, Philadelphia, Baltimore and some scattered rural areas with large Black populations.

    But more than two decades later, President Donald Trump has dramatically expanded the number of blowout win counties.

    Trump has grown Republican political advantages east of the older GOP bulwarks and has captured Appalachia, which was once a reliably Democratic region, continuing to drive up margins in rural America. The average size of a Trump blowout county was about 10,000 voters last year. On the flip side, Democrats have grown their advantages in population-dense cities and suburbs, with the San Francisco Bay Area; Portland, Oregon; and Seattle emerging on this map as heavily Democratic areas. The average size of a blowout county for Kamala Harris was 210,000 voters.

    Some of the most important political coalitions for Democrats emerge on this map, especially in comparison with 2000. The 2024 map shows the birth of Democratic vote powerhouses in majority-Black DeKalb and Clayton counties in Georgia and in Wisconsin’s Dane County, home of Madison and the University of Wisconsin, with its heavily white and college degree-holding population. Both coalitions are essential to Democratic wins in those states in recent elections.

    Overall, there are four times as many blowout counties today than there were at the turn of the century.

    Counties flipped

    One consequence of the sharp rise in blowout counties: a precipitous decline in swing counties.

    Back in the 2004 election, 227 counties flipped from one party to the other compared with the 2000 election. But last fall, only 89 changed their party preferences from the 2020 election.

    The total number of flipped counties has dropped over the century. The biggest spikes occurred in the 2008 first-term election of Barack Obama and the 2016 first-term election of Trump — moments when the party coalitions changed dramatically.

    Trump’s 89-county flip in this last election was actually an increase over the 80 counties that flipped in Joe Biden’s victory in 2020. The last election was also statistically notable for another reason: Harris became the first candidate this century who didn’t flip a single county compared with the previous election.



    Source link

  • Apple sued by shareholders who allege it overstated AI progress

    Apple sued by shareholders who allege it overstated AI progress



    Apple was sued on Friday by shareholders in a proposed securities fraud class action that accused it of downplaying how long it needed to integrate advanced artificial intelligence into its Siri voice assistant, hurting iPhone sales and its stock price.

    The complaint covers shareholders who suffered potentially hundreds of billions of dollars of losses in the year ending June 9, when Apple introduced several features and aesthetic improvements for its products but kept AI changes modest.

    Apple did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    CEO Tim Cook, Chief Financial Officer Kevan Parekh and former CFO Luca Maestri are also defendants in the lawsuit filed in San Francisco federal court.

    Shareholders led by Eric Tucker said that at its June 2024 Worldwide Developers Conference, Apple led them to believe AI would be a key driver of iPhone 16 devices, when it launched Apple Intelligence to make Siri more powerful and user-friendly. But they said the Cupertino, California-based company lacked a functional prototype of AI-based Siri features and could not reasonably believe the features would ever be ready for iPhone 16s.

    Shareholders said the truth began to emerge on March 7 when Apple delayed some Siri upgrades to 2026 and continued through this year’s Worldwide Developers Conference on June 9 when Apple’s assessment of its AI progress disappointed analysts.

    Apple shares have lost nearly one-fourth of their value since their Dec. 26, 2024 ,record high, wiping out approximately $900 billion of market value.



    Source link

  • Jurors see more texts between Cassie and Diddy as prosecutors prepare to rest case

    Jurors see more texts between Cassie and Diddy as prosecutors prepare to rest case



    Diddy’s trial was abbreviated this week. The proceedings were effectively canceled Wednesday after a juror called in sick, and federal court wasn’t in session Thursday in observance of the Juneteenth holiday. But this morning, all the key players returned to the courtroom to hear testimony from one of the rapper’s former personal assistants.

    Here’s what you need to know about Day 27 of the trial:

    • Brendan Paul testified about the demands of his job as one of Diddy’s former assistants. He told jurors he once went without sleep for three days. He recalled being asked to buy thousands of dollars’ worth of drugs. He said the music mogul didn’t take “no” for an answer and compared his staff assistants to the U.S. military’s SEAL Team 6.
    • Paul, facing cross-examination from defense attorney Brian Steel, agreed that Diddy’s ex-girlfriend “Jane” did not seem hesitant or apprehensive before “freak offs.” Paul said Jane appeared to be a willing participant in the sexual encounters — contradicting her testimony and the government’s narrative.
    • U.S. government prosecutors walked jurors through text messages from Cassie Ventura to Diddy. In one text, Ventura said she didn’t deserve to be beaten by him. “That’s not love, that’s possession,” Ventura wrote, apparently referencing the 2016 hotel assault recorded on video.
    • The defense again attempted to portray “freak offs” as consensual encounters. They entered into evidence a March 2017 text message in which Ventura wrote: “I love our FO’s, when we both want it.”

    🔎 The view from inside

    By Adam Reiss, Chloe Melas, Katherine Koretski and Jing Feng

    Diddy, wearing a white sweater and black pants, appeared engaged in today’s testimony. He seemed to pay close attention to prosecutor Maurene Comey as she questioned U.S. government summary witness Joseph Cerciello, a special agent with the Department of Homeland Security.

    Paul, the ex-assistant, struck an ambiguous note as he concluded testimony for the day. When asked by prosecutor Christy Slavik how he feels about Diddy today, Paul replied with two cryptic words: “It’s complicated.”


    👨‍⚖️ Analysis: In this case, the star witnesses are text messages

    By Danny Cevallos

    Cerciello, the Homeland Security special agent, testified about charts of evidence compiled by prosecutors to confirm they correspond to thousands of pages of records, including text messages.

    Diddy will almost surely not testify. But it doesn’t really matter. That’s because in a modern criminal case — especially a federal criminal case — prosecutors can get witnesses and defendants’ “testimony” in front of the jury without them ever taking the stand. Combing through thousands of pages of text messages is something at which special agents and federal prosecutors excel. It doesn’t matter that a single text message or a short series of messages could be taken out of context. Prosecutors will introduce it and add their own context. After all, if the defendant thinks these statements are misleading, he can take the stand and dispute them, right? Except, most of the time, the defendant does not take the stand.

    In this case so far, the star witnesses have arguably not been the humans. They have been things like text messages, financial records and other documents. For some reason, people have always put things in text messages as though they could never become public. We’re all guilty of that, too. All of us are likely part of a text message “group” with our friends or family where we say things that, if publicly revealed, would cause us a lot of problems. Certainly for Diddy, these texts have caused him a lot of problems — arguably more than the people who testified against him.


    🗓 What’s next

    U.S. government prosecutors are expected to rest their case on Monday. Diddy’s defense team has signaled it will need around two days to present its case. If that rough timeline holds, closing arguments could take place Thursday.

    PSA: Every night during Diddy’s trial, NBC’s “Dateline” will drop special episodes of the “True Crime Weekly” podcast to get you up to speed. “Dateline” correspondent Andrea Canning chats with NBC News’ Chloe Melas and special guests — right in front of the courthouse. Listen here.



    Source link

  • Iran will not resume talks during Israeli strikes

    Iran will not resume talks during Israeli strikes


    IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

    • There’s Good News Tonight: The original summer blockbuster turns 50

      02:06

    • Priced out: More Americans renting rather than buying

      01:34

    • Now Playing

      Iran’s Foreign Minister: Iran will not resume talks during Israeli strikes

      03:12

    • UP NEXT

      Man accused of trying to kidnap Memphis mayor

      01:40

    • Juror from Karen Read’s trial reveals what led to acquittal

      01:42

    • Wisconsin couple charged in plot to poison and kill two women

      01:49

    • 2 killed, 3 injured in terrifying rock slide

      01:45

    • Iranian missile strikes hospital in Israel

      02:07

    • Brad Pitt’s new ‘F1’ movie puts audiences in the driver’s seat at Formula 1 races

      02:18

    • 9-year-old shark attack survivor speaks out

      01:30

    • Pediatric brain surgeon takes on healthcare giant

      03:13

    • Dodgers turn away federal agents from stadium grounds

      01:45

    • Trump to decide on Iran strike within two weeks

      02:11

    • SpaceX Starship explodes during ground test

      01:31

    • Seven men charged in U.S. jewelry heist

      01:20

    • Karen Read found not guilty of murder of in retrial

      04:13

    • New details about celebrity chef Anne Burrell’s death and how she spent her final hours

      01:27

    • Trump on potential Iran strike: ‘I may do it. I may not do it.’

      03:23

    • Destructive tornado outbreak rips across Midwest

      01:16

    • High school student honors classmates with portraits

      01:27

    Nightly News

     In an exclusive interview, Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi called on President Trump to tell Israel to stop its airstrikes on Iran. President Trump responded saying it was ‘hard to make that request’ because Israel is winning. NBC News’ Andrea Mitchell reports. 

    NBC News NOW

    Nightly News Netcast

    NBC News NOW

    Play All



Source link

  • Bassist Carol Kaye says she’s declining Rock Hall of Fame induction — permanently

    Bassist Carol Kaye says she’s declining Rock Hall of Fame induction — permanently



    Carol Kaye, a prolific and revered bassist who played on thousands of songs in the 1960s including hits by the Beach Boys, Simon & Garfunkel and Barbra Streisand, told The Associated Press on Friday that she wants no part of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.

    “I’ve declined the rrhof. Permanently,” the 90-year-old Kaye said in an email to the AP. She said she has sent a letter to the Hall saying the same thing.

    Her remarks come two days after a Facebook post — since deleted — in which she said “NO I won’t be there. I am declining the RRHOF awards show.”

    Kaye was set to be inducted in November in a class that also includes Joe Cocker, Chubby Checker and Cyndi Lauper.

    She said in her deleted post that she was “turning it down because it wasn’t something that reflects the work that Studio Musicians do and did in the golden era of the 1960s Recording Hits.”

    Kaye’s credits include the bass lines on Simon & Garfunkel’s “Homeward Bound,” the Beach Boys’ “Good Vibrations” and the Monkees’ “I’m a Believer.”

    Along with drummer Hal Blaine and guitarist Tommy Tedesco, she was part of a core of heavily used studio musicians that Blaine later dubbed “The Wrecking Crew.”

    Kaye hated the name, and suggested in her Facebook post that her association with it was part of the reason for declining induction.

    “I was never a ‘wrecker’ at all,” she wrote, “that’s a terrible insulting name.”

    Kaye’s inductee page on the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame website makes no mention of the moniker.

    Hall representatives had no immediate comment.

    Many artists have been inducted in their absence or after their death, and in 2006 the Sex Pistols became Hall of Famers despite rejecting their induction.

    In 2022, Dolly Parton initially declined her induction, saying someone more associated with rock ‘n’ roll should get the honor. But she was convinced to change her mind and embrace the honor.



    Source link

  • Voice of America parent terminates more staff in likely death knell

    Voice of America parent terminates more staff in likely death knell



    The parent agency of Voice of America said on Friday it had issued termination notices to over 639 more staff, completing an 85% decrease in personnel since March and effectively spelling the end of a broadcasting network founded to counter Nazi propaganda.

    Kari Lake, senior adviser to the U.S. Agency for Global Media, said the staff reduction meant 1,400 positions had been eliminated as part of U.S. President Donald Trump’s agenda to cut staffing at the agency to a statutory minimum.

    “Reduction in Force Termination Notices were sent to 639 employees at USAGM and Voice of America, part of a long-overdue effort to dismantle a bloated, unaccountable bureaucracy,” Lake said in a statement.

    She said the agency had been “riddled with dysfunction, bias, and waste.”

    Lake said the move meant USAGM now operated near its statutory minimum of 81 employees. She said 250 employees would remain across USAGM, Voice of America, and the Office of Cuba Broadcasting, which transmits news into communist-run Cuba. She said none of OCB’s 33 employees had been terminated.

    The move likely marks an end to VOA, which was founded in 1942 to counter Nazi propaganda, operated in nearly 50 languages and reached 360 million people a week, many living under authoritarian regimes.

    In May, nearly 600 VOA contractors were dismissed.

    Some Republicans have accused VOA and other publicly funded media outlets of being biased against conservatives and called for them to be shuttered as part of wider efforts to shrink the government.

    Another USAGM station, Radio Free Asia, which has already been reduced to skeleton staffing, said in a staff email on Friday that it was implementing additional furloughs in its human resources, ordinance, journalist security, and research, training & evaluation teams.

    Various court cases are pending against the USAGM cuts.



    Source link

  • Wisconsin pair charged in alleged plot to stalk, poison, and kill dating app liaisons

    Wisconsin pair charged in alleged plot to stalk, poison, and kill dating app liaisons



    A Wisconsin boyfriend and girlfriend have been charged with attempted murder for allegedly trying to poison two women the man previously dated after meeting them online, authorities said.

    Paul VanDuyne Jr., 43, and Andrea Whitaker, 41, have each been charged with attempted murder, aggravated battery, recklessly endangering the public and stalking, according to criminal cases filed in the Madison, Wisconsin region.

    On Friday, they each appeared in court separately in Janesville, in Dane County, which also is home to the state capital. Bail was set at $10 million for VanDuyne, who prosecutors said has access to substantial resources, and $4 million for Whitaker.

    Pleas were not entered and each remained in custody, according to jail records. The defendants have separate lawyers, who did not respond immediately to requests for comment.

    One of the two victims — each of whom met VanDuyne on a dating app and saw him only a few times — described an experience discovering a stranger she later realized was Whitaker crouched next to her vehicle in her garage in April.

    The woman is identified in redacted court records as the victim from Dane County; the other woman is identified as the victim from Rock County. The Dane County woman said Friday in court that she met VanDuyne more than a year ago, went on two dates with him, and told him she wasn’t interested in seeing him again.

    “I was never his girlfriend, yet he and Andrea developed the delusion that I was,” she said in court Friday. “This delusion was so strong, they tried to murder me. Their actions and motivations are disconnected from reality. Both have shown their capacity for evil.”

    Appearing at VanDuyne’s hearing, the woman said that after discovering the allegations against the couple, she has people stay with her overnight, installed a security system, and hides her vehicle.

    “I need the court’s protection,” she said. “The community needs the court’s protection.”

    Prosecutors said VanDuyne met Whitaker online roughly during the same time he dated the victims and carried on a relationship virtually as she took courses in the field of pharmacology away from the area.

    Upon her completion of courses, she moved nearby, and the two met in person in spring, according to narratives presented in case documents.

    VanDuyne graduated from Princeton University more than 20 years prior, the institution confirmed. He had a career as a mechanical engineer, his lawyer said in court on Friday. Documents in the Rock County case say he was recently divorced and started dating the victims after meeting them on dating apps or sites that were not named.

    When he connected with Whitaker, the two embarked on a plot against the victims, prosecutors said.

    The victim from Rock County came to the attention of authorities in early May when a doctor from the Wisconsin Poison Center reported that a woman was hospitalized with thallium in her system, the court documents state.

    Thallium was once commonly used to kill rodents. Largely because of accidental poisonings, it has been banned from household use in the U.S. since 1965 and commercially since 1975.

    The doctor, identified only by a last name, is quoted as saying, “The only way a human could have this amount of thallium in her system is if they were intentionally consuming it.”

    Prosecutors said the victim reported no suicidal action and struggled to think of anyone who would try to poison her — the names she came up with were vetted — until VanDuyne came to mind, according to the documents from Rock County.

    She told detectives about texts she had received in early 2025 texts from the man she knew only as Paul when they dated starting nearly two years before, they state.

    She gave investigators his number, and they started looking at VanDuyne earlier this month, according to the court documents.

    She said he had sent her texts in the spring after months of no contact. In them, the Rock County victim said, he called her “evil” and blamed her for causing his girlfriend, Whitaker, to kill herself when she discovered their dating history, the documents state.

    Whitaker did not kill herself.

    In fact, court documents allege, she was integral to the plot to kill the two other women VanDuyne had dated, and they worked together to taint water bottles and vehicles with poisons they procured or, in one case, made from scratch.

    In the May incident that sent the Rock County victim to the hospital, the woman took her middle-school aged sister to the movies but both became ill, according to the documents. The victim took her vehicle to a dealership, where workers reported a noxious smell and tossed out a storage tote they said contained an unknown substance, they said.

    Because the woman and her sister described a smell of rotten eggs, detectives concluded the substance was hydrogen sulfide, a toxic gas.

    Rock County Sheriff Curtis said the Rock County victim was still in a wheelchair as a result of her poisoning. Without the medical care she’s received — including an antidote flown overnight from California — she most likely would have died, he said.

    The alleged plot impacted the other victim, the woman from Dane County, not long afterward, in mid-May, when bystanders reported someone breaking into her vehicle at a Costco parking lot on two separate occasions, according to the documents.

    One witness at the Costco parking lot reported seeing a man get into a Chrysler Pacifica minivan that was traced back to VanDuyne, authorities said in the documents.

    After one of the incidents, the victim reported drinking bottled water she left in her vehicle and noticing in tasted terrible, the court documents state. The water tested positive for cyanide and thallium.

    After realizing the two victims may have the same perpetrators, authorities took a second look at the Rock County victim’s vehicle and concluded it was the subject of a break-ins or attempts with markings similar to those made in the Costco attempts, the documents state.

    Detectives got a judge’s permission to track VanDuyne’s movement and found him traveling to the Rock County victim’s residence, according to the documents. After that trip, authorities allege, they found a trail camera hung on a tree across from the victim’s home.

    In other instances the couple worked together to use cyanide, thallium, and abrin in multiple attempts to poison the victims, once even putting a powdery substance in the ventilation system of a victim’s vehicle, authorities said in the court documents.

    Abrin can be made by grinding the seeds of rosary peas, authorities said in the documents.

    On Thursday, a search of VanDuyne’s minivan turned up a tan bag with multiple vials inside, the court documents say. Authorities found rosary peas in the bag and a seed grinder at his home, the documents state.

    An FBI hazardous materials team was called to help with the search, and members took an active part multiple times, the documents say.

    The defendants were expected to appear in Rock County court next week to face charges of attempted murder and stalking for VanDuyne and attempted murder and aiding a felon for Whitaker.

    VanDuyne is due in Dane County court again Aug. 4. She is scheduled for an appearance there July 2.



    Source link

  • Mahmoud Khalil speaks out after release from detention center

    Mahmoud Khalil speaks out after release from detention center


    IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

    • Now Playing

      ‘Justice will prevail’: Khalil speaks out after release from detention center

      04:04

    • UP NEXT

      Iran foreign minister speaks on U.S., Israel tensions

      08:22

    • Meet the Press NOW — June 20

      49:29

    • Judge says Mahmoud Khalil is not a flight risk or national security threat and should be released

      05:55

    • ‘There is time to negotiate’ before U.S. strikes Iran: Top Senate Armed Services Cmte. Democrat

      09:07

    • Judge orders Trump administration to release Mahmoud Khalil

      01:44

    • Watch: Trump’s frequent use of ‘two weeks’ timeframe

      01:09

    • ‘I still want to serve’: Transgender servicemembers face uncertain future under Trump admin

      05:34

    • Trump Latino voters split over mass deportation agenda but largely back him: Deciders focus group

      10:00

    • Trump says Iran is close to having a nuclear weapon but U.S. intelligence says otherwise

      15:51

    • Tom Homan: Worksite immigration raids will continue but ‘criminals come first’

      00:44

    • White House says Trump to decide on Iran action within two weeks

      01:32

    • NYC mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani responds to accusations of antisemitism

      00:39

    • Trump on Potential US Strike on Iran: ‘I May Do It, I May Not Do It’

      02:50

    • Trump’s circle split over potential Iran strike

      02:21

    • ‘I did not assault anyone’: NYC Comptroller Brad Lander shares details of ICE arrest

      05:57

    • Trump on potential Iran strike: ‘I may do it. I may not do it.’

      03:23

    • Sen. Tammy Duckworth: Trump ‘needs to come to Congress right away’ if he plans to strike Iran

      08:13

    • Israeli ambassador says Trump ‘will support our efforts’ against Iran

      21:40

    • Warren questions Hegseth about sending Marines to cities other than L.A.

      05:23

    NBC News Channel

    Mahmoud Khalil, who was held for several months in a detention center in Louisiana after being detained by ICE, spoke after his release saying justice was “very long overdue.” 

    NBC News NOW

    Nightly News Netcast

    Play All



    Source link