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  • Israeli-American hostage Edan Alexander to be released Monday, Hamas says

    Israeli-American hostage Edan Alexander to be released Monday, Hamas says


    Hamas said early Monday that it will release Israeli-American hostage Edan Alexander, who is believed to be the last living U.S. citizen held captive in Gaza by the Palestinian militant group, in the coming hours.

    “The Al-Qassam Brigades have decided to release the captive Zionist soldier who holds American citizenship, “Idan Alexander,” today, Monday, May 12, 2025,” a Hamas spokesperson said in a brief statement early Monday.

    Hamas had previously suggested such a release would be a signal of goodwill as part of “the steps being taken to achieve a ceasefire, open the crossings, and allow aid” into the Gaza Strip.

    If successful, the release will come the day before President Donald Trump is set to travel to the Middle East in a trip that is expected to intensify efforts to bring a pause to Israel’s sweeping military offensive in Gaza, from which aid has been cut off for several weeks.

    Trump’s trip is not expected to include a stop in Israel.

    The office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a statement Monday that it was only committing to a safe corridor to allow Alexander’s release, rather than any ceasefire or release of Palestinian prisoners or detainees.

    “We are in critical days, during which Hamas has a proposal before it that would allow for the release of our hostages,” the statement said, adding, “Negotiations will continue under fire and alongside preparations to intensify the fighting.”

    Families Of Israeli Hostages Demonstrate At Gaza Border
    Varda Ben Baruch holds a photo of her grandson Israeli- American hostage Edan Alexander on April 20 in Nir Oz, Israel.Amir Levy / Getty Images

    The Israeli security cabinet last week approved a plan to capture the entire enclave under which more than 2 million Palestinians living in Gaza would be “moved” out of the strip as Israel’s military launched operations to defeat Hamas.

    Alexander, 21, was born and raised in New Jersey and was serving in the Israeli army when he was captured by Hamas during its terrorist attacks on October 7, 2023, along with around 250 others.

    Israeli officials say 1,200 people were killed during the Hamas-led attacks, which marked a major escalation in a decadeslong conflict.

    More than 51,000 people have been killed in the Israeli assault on the Gaza Strip since then, according to health officials in the enclave, which has been run by Hamas since 2007.

    Alexander is one of at least 59 hostages remaining in Gaza, according to Israeli officials, although less than half are believed to be alive. His family confirmed in a statement Sunday that it was expecting his release.



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  • 2 bodies found in New Jersey home that neighbors say exploded

    2 bodies found in New Jersey home that neighbors say exploded



    The bodies of two people were removed from the scattered debris after after neighbors say a New Jersey home exploded early Sunday.

    Two bodies were removed from the scene Sunday morning after fire crews responded to the intersection of Orion Way and Tranquility Court in Washington Township, in Gloucester County, after the blast.

    Officials said the bodies were those of a man and a woman. The pair has not been identified.

    Officials said the incident happened at about 2 a.m. Surveillance footage that shows the home erupting into flames. Officials are investigating the incident as an “intense fire,” not an explosion, police said.

    However, a neighbor said she was sitting in her home, watching a movie with her boyfriend when she heard a blast and saw flames shooting from the other property.

    “I was terrified, absolutely terrified,” Susan Pinto said. “Because, I never heard an explosion like that in my life and it just was, the house was, basically, burning to the ground very, very quickly.”

    Pinto said she called 911 immediately, and firefighters arrived at the scene within minutes.

    Within 10 minutes of the initial explosion, the home was engulfed in flames, neighbors said.

    Two homes nearby were damaged in the incident, officials said.

    Officials have not provided further information on the deceased, but one neighbor said he would see the man who lived in the home when he walked his dog.

    “He was nice. He was a good guy. Always walked his dog and stuff like that. He was a great guy to talk. He’ll say hi, conversations here and there,” the neighbor said.

    An investigation into what may have caused the explosion is ongoing, officials said.



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  • Amber Heard shares she has welcomed twins in surprise Mother’s Day announcement

    Amber Heard shares she has welcomed twins in surprise Mother’s Day announcement



    Amber Heard is a now a mother of three.

    To mark Mother’s Day, the “Aquaman” actor announced Sunday on Instagram that she has welcomed twins, daughter Agnes and son Ocean.

    “This year I am elated beyond words to celebrate the completion of the family I’ve strived to build for years,” Heard captioned the post, in part. “Today I officially share the news that I welcomed twins into the Heard gang. My daughter Agnes and my son Ocean are keeping my hands (and my heart) full.”

    “When I had my first baby girl Oonagh four years ago, my world changed forever,” she continued. “I thought I couldn’t possibly burst with more joy. Well, now I am bursting times three!!!”

    Referencing her own journey to have children, Heard wrote that being a mother “on my own terms despite my own fertility challenges has been the most humbling experience of my life.”

    To conclude her message, Heard celebrated all mothers “wherever you are today and however you got here,” signing the post, “A x.”

    As with daughter Oonagh Paige, 4, Heard has not publicly identified a father of the twins. The actor filed for divorce from Johnny Depp in 2016.

    After Oonagh was born in April 2021, Heard called herself the baby’s “mom and dad” in an Instagram post with her daughter. At the time, Heard emphasized her independent route to motherhood on social media and said she’s creating a family “on my own terms.”

    “I now appreciate how radical it is for us as women to think about one of the most fundamental parts of our destinies in this way. I hope we arrive at a point in which it’s normalized to not want a ring in order to have a crib,” Heard wrote in 2021.

    Heard announced in December 2024 that she would be adding onto her family, though she did not give additional details at the time. 





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  • Trump administration fires top copyright official days after firing Librarian of Congress

    Trump administration fires top copyright official days after firing Librarian of Congress



    WASHINGTON — The Trump administration has fired the nation’s top copyright official, Shira Perlmutter, days after abruptly terminating the head of the Library of Congress, which oversees the U.S. Copyright Office.

    The office said in a statement Sunday that Perlmutter received an email from the White House a day earlier with the notification that “your position as the Register of Copyrights and Director at the U.S. Copyright Office is terminated effective immediately.”

    On Thursday, President Donald Trump fired Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden, the first woman and the first African American to be librarian of Congress, as part of the administration’s ongoing purge of government officials perceived to oppose the president and his agenda.

    Hayden named Perlmutter to lead the Copyright Office in October 2020.

    Perlmutter’s office recently released a report examining whether artificial intelligence companies can use copyrighted materials to “train” their AI systems and then compete in the same market as the human-made works they were trained on.

    The report, the third part of a lengthy AI study, follows a review that Perlmutter began in 2023 with opinions from thousands of people including AI developers, actors and country singers.

    In January, the office clarified its approach as one based on the “centrality of human creativity” in authoring a work that warrants copyright protections. The office receives about half a million copyright applications per year covering millions of creative works.

    “Where that creativity is expressed through the use of AI systems, it continues to enjoy protection,” Perlmutter said in January. “Extending protection to material whose expressive elements are determined by a machine … would undermine rather than further the constitutional goals of copyright.”

    The White House didn’t return a message seeking comment Sunday.

    Democrats were quick to blast Perlmutter’s firing.

    “Donald Trump’s termination of Register of Copyrights, Shira Perlmutter, is a brazen, unprecedented power grab with no legal basis,” said Rep. Joe Morelle of New York, the top Democrat on the House Administration Committee.

    Perlmutter, who holds a law degree, was previously a policy director at the Patent and Trademark Office and worked on copyright and other areas of intellectual property. She also previously worked at the Copyright Office in the late 1990s. She did not return messages left Sunday.



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  • Stocks, dollar up on hope of U.S.-China trade deal despite lack of details

    Stocks, dollar up on hope of U.S.-China trade deal despite lack of details



    SYDNEY, Australia — Wall Street stock futures climbed and the dollar firmed against safe haven peers on Monday as signs of progress in U.S.-China trade talks raised hopes that a global recession might be avoided, though specifics were still sorely lacking.

    Geopolitical tensions also looked to be easing as a fragile ceasefire held between India and Pakistan, while Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said he was ready to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Turkey on Thursday for talks.

    Over in Geneva, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent touted “substantial progress” in trade discussions, while Chinese officials said the two sides had reached “important consensus” and agreed to launch another new economic dialogue forum.

    A joint statement is expected later on Monday, though it was notable that neither side mentioned tariff rates specifically.

    “What we seem to have here, then, is a broad framework under which the two nations can conduct further talks, with the aim of reaching a broader trade agreement,” said Michael Brown, a senior research strategist at Pepperstone.

    “Not the worst-case outcome that was possible from this weekend’s talks, far from it, but not a concrete deal either,” he added. “Does this progress allow for any tariffs to be paused, reduced or rolled back, and if so for how long?”

    Investors are hoping the White House will soon scale back the 145% tariff on Chinese goods, even if only back to the 60% first flagged by President Donald Trump.

    Trump still seems wedded to keeping broad tariffs in place no matter what, which will drag on economic growth and push up prices, but any trade progress could help dodge a sharp downturn.

    Markets reacted by pushing S&P 500 futures up 1.2%, while Nasdaq futures rose 1.4%. EUROSTOXX 50 futures firmed 0.9%, while FTSE futures added 0.4% and DAX futures 0.7%.

    Japan’s Nikkei edged up 0.3%, while South Korea’s Kospi gained 0.4%.

    Chinese blue chips firmed 0.8%, though data over the weekend showed factory-gate prices posted the steepest drop in six months in April while consumer prices fell for a third month.

    The dollar added 0.4% on the safe haven yen to reach 145.90, though it was off an early five-week peak of 146.31. The euro dipped 0.2% to $1.1224 and the dollar index edged up 0.2% to 100.60.

    The dollar also dipped 0.2% on the offshore Chinese yuan to 7.2278, and back toward last week’s low of 7.1846.



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  • Trump admin’s threat to suspend core U.S. legal right sparks outcry, alarm

    Trump admin’s threat to suspend core U.S. legal right sparks outcry, alarm



    Legal experts and Democrats expressed growing alarm over the weekend that Trump administration officials are openly discussing unilaterally suspending habeas corpus — a bedrock American legal right — without the approval of Congress.

    The writ of habeas corpus, which dates back centuries, grants anyone detained in the U.S. the right to see a judge, challenge the government’s evidence against them and present a defense.

    But White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller downplayed its significance on Friday and suggesting that the administration could move to suspend it unilaterally. “That’s an option we’re actively looking at,” Miller told reporters at the White House.

    Steve Vladeck, a constitutional law professor at Georgetown University, described Miller’s statement as “factually and legally nuts” and called it the “most remarkable (and remarkably scary) comments about federal courts that I think we’ve ever heard from a senior White House official.”

    Other legal scholars strongly challenged Miller’s assertion that the president could unilaterally suspend habeas corpus, Latin for “that you have the body.” Vladeck and three other experts said that a legal consensus has existed for decades that only Congress has the authority to do so.

    They noted that Article 1 of the Constitution, which describes Congress’s powers, states, “the Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it.”

    Over the weekend, senior Republicans largely declined to answer questions about Miller’s threat. Democrats argued that the Trump administration is using its immigration crackdown to undermine the power of the judicial branch, bypass traditional legal safeguards and dangerously increase the power of the president.

    “The one power you cannot give the executive is the power to arbitrarily imprison people who oppose the regime,” Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., said at a Democratic rally in Sarasota, Florida. “Today it may be an El Salvadorian immigrant or a foreign student, but tomorrow it is you or me. The slope to despotism can be slippery and quick.”

    Trump reportedly involved in discussions

    President Trump has been personally involved in discussions with the administration about potentially suspending habeas corpus, CNN reported on Saturday. He appeared to allude to the issue in a statement to reporters on April 30. 

    “There are ways to mitigate it and there’s some very strong ways,” Trump said. “There’s one way that’s been used by three very highly respected presidents, but we hope we don’t have to go that route.”

    The White House did not respond to requests for comment from NBC News. 

    Trump was most likely referring to Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson, who suspended habeas corpus during and after the Civil War; Theodore Roosevelt, who suspended it in two provinces in the Philippines during a 1905 rebellion there; and Franklin Delano Roosevelt who suspended it in Hawaii after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

    The Supreme Court and several federal judges have recently ruled that anyone detained in the U.S. — including migrants — has the right to appear before a judge and present their defense. 

    Trump and Miller have assailed those rulings. In his remarks on Friday, Miller referred to the jurists responsible as “a handful of Marxist judges” carrying out “a judicial coup.” He warned that the administration’s decision to suspend habeas corpus unilaterally would depend on whether the courts “do the right thing.”

    Vladeck accused Miller of threatening judges. “It’s not just the mafia-esque threat implicit in this statement,” Vladeck wrote on Substack. “He’s suggesting that the administration would (unlawfully) suspend habeas corpus if (but apparently only if) it disagrees with how courts rule in these cases.”

    Ilya Somin, a law professor at George Mason University, called Miller’s claim that the president has the power to unilaterally suspend habeas corpus false.

    “Habeas corpus can only be suspended in the event of war, invasion, or insurrection. None of that is happening now,” said Somin, a libertarian legal scholar and fellow at the conservative Cato Institute. “And it can only be done by Congress, not the president acting on his own.”

    Somin and Jonathan Adler, a law professor at Case Western Reserve University, cited a 2004 Supreme Court ruling in which conservative Justice Sandra Day O’Connor concluded that only Congress has the authority to suspend habeas corpus. 

    O’Connor also emphasized that habeas corpus has acted as a “critical check” on the executive branch’s power to unlawfully detain individuals in the U.S.

    “Only in the rarest of circumstances has Congress seen fit to suspend the writ,” O’Connor wrote, referring to habeas corpus. “At all other times, it has remained a critical check on the Executive, ensuring that it does not detain individuals except in accordance with law.”

    Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, a conservative icon, agreed in an opinion of his own that the power to suspend habeas corpus rests solely with Congress. He also said that the executive branch cannot unilaterally round up Americans and hold them in “detention without charge,” even in times of rebellion.

    “Where the Government accuses a citizen of waging war against it, our constitutional tradition has been to prosecute him in federal court for treason or some other crime,” Scalia wrote. “The Executive’s assertion of military exigency has not been thought sufficient to permit detention without charge.”

    Prof. Stephen Gillers, an expert on legal ethics at New York University Law School, said that Trump and Miller are trying to discredit judges and maximize the power of the presidency.

    “Denial of habeas corpus jurisdiction for immigrants is an attempt to do an end run around checks and balances,” Gillers said. “It is a way to sideline the courts and retain maximum power in the executive branch.”



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  • Jordon Hudson places second runner-up in Miss Maine USA pageant with Bill Belichick in front row

    Jordon Hudson places second runner-up in Miss Maine USA pageant with Bill Belichick in front row



    Jordon Hudson, girlfriend of former NFL football coach Bill Belichick, placed second runner-up in the Miss Maine USA pageant over the weekend.

    With Belichick, 73, in the front row, Hudson, 24, competed in the two-day pageant — which was held in Portland, Maine, on Saturday and Sunday — for the second year in a row. In 2024, she placed first runner-p.

    Shelby Howell of Bangor won Miss Maine USA 2025.

    Hudson was representing her hometown of Hancock in the state pageant, which features three different areas of competition: interview, swimsuit and evening gown. The winner of Miss Maine USA advances to the Miss USA competition.

    During the contest, Hudson was awarded “Most Stylish” and finished among the top three.

    “I’m feeling an immense amount of pride right,” Hudson said during the question portion of the event. “I’m hoping anyone who’s watching this finds the strength to push through whatever it is they are going through and embodies that hate never wins.”

    Hudson was asked: “If you could relive one moment in your life, what would it be and why?”

    She answered, “I would go back to the days when I was on my family’s fishing boat in Hancock, Maine.”

    “I think about this very often because there’s a mass exodus in the rural areas of Maine, and I don’t want to see more fishermen displaced,” she said. “As your next Miss Maine USA, I would make it a point to go into the communities, to go to the legislator and go to the government to advocate for these people so they don’t to think about these memories as a past moment.”

    Hudson has been in the spotlight due to her public relationship with Belichick, the current head football coach at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. They met in 2021 on a flight, and now, in addition to maintaining a “personal relationship,” she manages Belichick’s “personal brand,” UNC has said.

    Seemingly in that capacity, Hudson recently made headlines for interrupting an interview Belichick sat for with CBS News’ “Sunday Morning,” which aired April 27.

    When asked how he and Hudson met, she was shown on camera interjecting with, “We’re not talking about this.”

    Belichick defended Hudson in a statement: “She was not deflecting any specific question or topic but simply doing her job to ensure the interview stayed on track.”

    Then just days before the start of Miss Maine USA, it was reported that Hudson was banned from UNC’s football facilities, which the university refuted.

    “While Jordon Hudson is not an employee at the University or Carolina Athletics, she is welcome to the Carolina Football facilities,” Carolina Athletics said in a statement. “Jordon will continue to manage all activities related to Coach Belichick’s personal brand outside of his responsibilities for Carolina Football and the University.”



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  • Sabu, legend of pro wrestling’s ‘hardcore’ style, dies at 60

    Sabu, legend of pro wrestling’s ‘hardcore’ style, dies at 60



    Sabu, a “hardcore” professional wresting legend whose real name was Terry Brunk, has died at 60 years old, World Wrestling Entertainment announced Sunday.

    “WWE is saddened to learn that Terry Brunk, known to wrestling fans as Sabu, has passed away,” the company said in a statement.

    All Elite Wrestling also announced the news in a post on social media.

    “From barbed wire battles to unforgettable high-risk moments, Sabu gave everything to professional wrestling,” AEW wrote on X. “Our thoughts are with his family, his friends and his fans.”

    Sabu’s cause of death was not released Sunday, and it was not clear when he died.

    Sabu rose to fame while wrestling for Extreme Championship Wrestling in the 1990s, where he was “a pioneer of hardcore wrestling, leaping from chairs and driving his opponents through tables and even barbed wire,” taking after his uncle, Hall of Famer Ed “The Sheik” Farhat, WWE wrote.

    As a part of ECW, Sabu wrestled contemporaries like Rob Van Dam, Mick Foley and Taz. In a company known for pushing the envelope in terms of the risks wrestlers were willing to take, Sabu still managed to stand out.

    Whether he was leaping off the ring ropes to his opponents on the outside or delivering double leg-drops through tables and ladders, his style of wrestling — not always pretty but certainly impressive and eye-catching — made him a fan favorite.

    He signed with WWE as part of the company’s revival of the ECW brand in 2006. The next year, at WrestleMania 23, he and fellow ECW originals Van Dam, Tommy Dreamer and The Sandman defeated the New Breed in front of 80,000 fans in Detroit. He departed the company that same year.

    Both before and after WWE, Sabu wrestled for top promotions across the globe, including New Japan Pro-Wrestling, AAA and CMLL, as well as dozens of other independent promotions.

    He continued wrestling long after many of his contemporaries had already retired. His final match — and first since 2021, according to Cage Match — was April 18, when he defeated Joey Janela, getting driven through a table and landing on barbed wire in the process.

    Janela called Sabu “my idol, a trailblazer, a gamechanger and an icon,” in a memorial post on X that featured photos and videos of he and Sabu. 

    Wrestling journalist Dave Meltzer called Sabu the “king of the death matches” on Wrestling Observer Radio on Sunday, and credited him with popularizing hardcore wrestling in the U.S.

    “He was the godfather of it in every way,” Meltzer said.

    Big names from across the wrestling world took to social media to remember Sabu as a legend in the field and as a friend.

    In a video posted to X, Taz said Sabu’s death “breaks my heart,” and added that he had watched an old interview of Sabu’s as recently as Saturday night.

    “I would not have had the career that I have had and I’ve been blessed to have if it wasn’t for Sabu,” Taz said, noting the pair debuted against each other for ECW in 1993.

    The X account for docu-series “Dark Side of the Ring” said Sabu’s death “comes as a shock,” as he is featured in the episode airing Tuesday that pays tribute to his uncle.

    “Sabu was a trailblazing groundbreaker who played a major role in the expansion of what a pro wrestling match could be,” wrestler Matt Hardy said on X. “The fact that tables are commonly utilized in pro wrestling is because of Terry Brunk & how he made an inanimate object like a table a must see component in his match.”

    Hardy also called Sabu “heavily influential on today’s current style, even though his contributions are still under appreciated by most.”

    In an X post, AEW wrestler Mark Briscoe said, “Nobody made me want to be a wrestler more than Sabu. R.I.P. to a true hardcore legend.”




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  • Zepbound beats Wegovy for weight loss in first head-to-head trial of blockbuster drugs

    Zepbound beats Wegovy for weight loss in first head-to-head trial of blockbuster drugs



    People taking Eli Lilly’s obesity drug, Zepbound, lost nearly 50% more weight than those using rival Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy in the first head-to-head study of the blockbuster medications.

    Clinical trial participants who took tirzepatide, the drug sold as Zepbound, lost an average of 50 pounds (22.8 kilograms) over 72 weeks, while those who took semaglutide, or Wegovy, lost about 33 pounds (15 kilograms). That’s according to the study funded by Lilly, which was published Sunday in the New England Journal of Medicine.

    Both drugs are part of a new class of medications that work by mimicking hormones in the gut and brain that regulate appetite and feelings of fullness. But tirzepatide targets two such hormones, known as GLP-1 and GIP, while semaglutide targets GLP-1 alone, said Dr. Louis Aronne, director of the Comprehensive Weight Control Center at Weill Cornell Medicine.

    “Two drugs together can produce better weight loss,” said Aronne, who led the study and presented the findings Sunday at the European Congress on Obesity in Spain.

    While tirzepatide won out in what Aronne said many view as “a drag race of efficacy,” both are important tools for treating obesity, which affects about 40% of American adults.

    “The point of these medications is to improve health,” he said. “The majority of people won’t need the most effective medication.”

    The trial included 751 people from across the U.S. who were overweight or had obesity and at least one other weight-related health problem, but not diabetes. Participants received weekly injections of the highest tolerated doses of Zepbound, either 10 milligrams or 15 milligrams, or Wegovy, 1.7 milligrams or 2.4 milligrams.

    By the end of the trial, those who took Zepbound lost about 20% of their body weight on average, compared with a nearly 14% loss for those who took Wegovy. The tirzepatide group trimmed about 7 inches (17.8 centimeters) from their waist circumference, compared to about 5 inches (12.7 centimeters) with semaglutide. In addition, nearly 32% of people taking Zepbound lost at least a quarter of their body weight, compared to about 16% of those taking Wegovy, the study found.

    Weight loss was about 6% lower in men than in women in both groups, the authors noted. As participants in both groups lost more weight, they saw improvements in health markers such as blood pressure, blood fat and blood sugar levels.

    More than three-quarters of patients taking both drugs reported at least one side effect, mostly mild to moderate gastrointestinal issues such as nausea, constipation, diarrhea and vomiting. About 6% of participants taking Zepbound left the trial because of adverse events, compared with 8% of those taking semaglutide.

    The GLP-1 drugs have become increasingly popular, with at least 1 in 8 U.S. adults reporting their use, according to a 2024 survey by KFF, a independent health policy research organization. Zepbound generated $4.9 billion in global sales last year. Wegovy brought in nearly $8.8 billion (58.2 billlion Danish kroner).

    Access and affordability have limited wider use of the drugs. Tirzepatide and semaglutide were removed recently from a list of drug shortages by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Both manufacturers recently released programs that cut costs to about $500 per month or less, depending on the dose.

    Other factors can affect access. This week, CVS Health said Wegovy will become the preferred option on its standard formulary, or list of covered drugs, as of July 1. Zepbound will be excluded.

    It’s important to have a range of drugs to treat a disease as widespread as obesity in the U.S., said Dr. Angela Fitch, chief medical officer of knownwell, an obesity care company. Wegovy has been found to cut the risk of serious heart problems by 20%, she noted. A drug may work well for one patient, but not for others.

    “We’re going to need to use them all just because we have so many patients who need treatment,” she added.



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  • A U.S.-China deal is hinted at and Hamas releases an American hostage: Weekend Rundown

    A U.S.-China deal is hinted at and Hamas releases an American hostage: Weekend Rundown


    The White House on Sunday touted a “China trade deal” — without providing details — after two top U.S. officials alluded to a potential agreement with China following talks between the two countries in Switzerland over the weekend.

    “U.S. Announces China Trade Deal in Geneva,” read the White House’s headline for a transcript of Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer’s remarks to reporters.

    Bessent and Greer had struck an optimistic tone regarding the state of a potential trade agreement with China, noting that the administration would provide additional details on Monday. While Greer referred to an “agreement” and “deal,” neither official provided details. China has not yet publicly weighed in on whether the two countries have struck a deal.

    “I’m happy to report that we made substantial progress between the United States and China in the very important trade talks,” Bessent told reporters, adding that “the talks were productive.”

    Hamas says it will release American hostage

    Relatives and supporters hold placards of Israeli hostages, including Edan Alexander, in Tel Aviv on Dec. 30, 2023.
    Relatives and supporters hold placards of Israeli hostages, including Edan Alexander, in Tel Aviv on Dec. 30, 2023.Ahmad Gharabli / AFP via Getty Images

    Hamas agreed to release Edan Alexander, a dual U.S. and Israeli citizen believed to be the last living U.S. citizen who remains captive in Gaza, weeks after saying it had lost contact with the group holding him hostage.

    His release is part of “the steps being taken to achieve a ceasefire, open the crossings, and allow aid,” Khalil al-Hayya, head of Hamas’ negotiating team, said in a statement. Al-Hayya did not provide information on Alexander’s condition.

    Steve Witkoff, the U.S. special envoy to the Middle East, confirmed the agreement to NBC News and said he is traveling to Israel to secure Alexander’s release.

    The news comes as disagreements on how to approach the situation in Gaza, as well as on Iran, have led to tension between U.S. President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, according to two U.S. officials, two Middle Eastern diplomats and two other people with knowledge.

    While Netanyahu wants to continue a military approach, Trump sees an opportunity to make a deal with a now-weakened Iran, the sources told NBC News.

    ‘Meet the Press’

    Top Trump adviser Stephen Miller on Friday said the administration is “looking at” ways to end due process protections for unauthorized immigrants in the U.S.

    When asked whether he would support suspending habeas corpus for undocumented immigrants, Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., dodged the questions, ultimately telling NBC News’ “Meet the Press” he did not think the issue would come before Congress.

    Meanwhile, Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., spoke about the state of the Democratic Party following the 2024 election.

    Klobuchar reflected on Joe Biden suspending his re-election campaign last year and endorsing Kamala Harris just months before the election.

    “Yes, we would have been served better by a primary. But we are where we are,” Klobuchar said. “I’m not interested in going backwards in time. I’m interested in going forward.”

    Politics in brief

    • Special delivery: The Trump administration is preparing to accept a superluxury Boeing 747-8 jumbo jet from the royal family of Qatar as a gift to be used as the new Air Force One for presidential travel until shortly before Trump leaves office.
    • Musk’s reprieves: Regulatory problems that have dogged tech billionaire Elon Musk and his business empire in recent years have begun to melt away under the Trump administration.
    • ICE trouble: Three House Democrats could face arrest over an incident during an oversight visit to an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention facility in New Jersey, a spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security suggested.
    • Lost in translation: Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff broke with long-standing protocol by relying on Kremlin-provided translators during three high-level meetings with Russia’s Vladimir Putin, officials told NBC News.

    How Leo became the unexpected pope

    Once the Sistine Chapel’s doors are sealed, cardinals attending the conclave swear an oath of “absolute and perpetual secrecy,” as do all Vatican staff assisting them, including cooks, cleaners and drivers.

    But there have since been some clues from insiders as to how a relatively obscure American Augustinian, who was not widely discussed ahead of the event, moved minds and ended up as pope.

    Cardinal Wilton Gregory said that “a lot of dialogue occurred at mealtime, coffee breaks, those moments when you can engage in smaller groups,” hinting that it was in these moments that Cardinal Robert Prevost, soon to become Leo, thrived.

    “It wasn’t that he stood up and made this overwhelmingly convincing speech that just wowed,” said Gregory. “I don’t remember any particular intervention, but I do believe he engaged quite effectively in the smaller group conversations.”

    Notable quote

    This wasn’t our first rodeo. We’ve been through this 268 times.

    Cardinal Timothy Dolan, Archbishop of New York

    The conclave that saw Pope Leo XIV unexpectedly emerge as the new leader of the Catholic Church ended after just 33 hours of deliberation.

    Grocery shoppers brace to pay more for eggs, meat and other staples

    Egg prices are stabilizing after a sharp run-up earlier this year, but grocery shoppers are already getting used to shelling out more for those and other pantry staples.

    After peaking at $6.55 in mid-March, a dozen eggs sold for an average of $5.45 nationwide as of the week ending April 19, according to the latest data available from the market research firm NIQ. The ongoing decline is welcome news for consumers, but it comes amid higher prices for a number of pantry staples even as inflation overall has cooled.

    And it isn’t just eggs: Many shoppers are bracing to pay more for groceries overall as they shift focus toward covering essentials.

    Many are now planning to trim their spending this summer on everything from clothing and furniture to travel, according to a survey the consulting firm KPMG released in late April. Groceries were one of just two categories where shoppers said they expect to spend more.

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