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Timothée Chalamet new deal shatters his ‘Indie hero’ image

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Timothée Chalamet new del shatters his ‘Indie hero’ image
Timothée Chalamet new del shatters his ‘Indie hero’ image

Timothée Chalamet’s latest business move is making almost as many headlines as his movies.

The Oscar-nominated actor has found himself at the center of online debate after reportedly landing a $1 million deal with prediction-market platform Kalshi.

While some longtime fans questioned whether the partnership fits the thoughtful, indie-star image they admired, insiders insist nothing about Chalamet has actually changed.

“Timothée didn’t change,” a source told Rob Shutter. “People are finally seeing who he’s always been.”

According to those close to the actor, fans built an idealized version of Chalamet that never reflected reality.

“Fans wanted him to be a tortured artist who didn’t care about fame, money, or celebrity,” an insider said. “That was never Timothée.”

Instead, sources describe him as someone who has always embraced both the craft of acting and the rewards that come with Hollywood success.

“He loves acting, but he also loves attention, big paychecks, courtside seats, and beautiful women,” said a source. “He’s always wanted to be a movie star, not a monk.”

His high-profile relationship with Kylie Jenner, brand partnerships and increasingly public lifestyle have only amplified that perception shift.

“People convinced themselves he was above fame,” another insider said. “He never claimed that. He wanted success from day one.”

Whether fans see the Kalshi partnership as surprising or simply overdue, insiders believe it marks a change in perception¬–not personality.

“The audience is finally catching up,” said a source. “He’s exactly who he’s always been.”

Swedish minister brought her 3-month-old baby to EU meeting; viral video highlights the country’s generous parental leave system

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Swedish minister brought her 3-month-old baby to EU meeting; viral video highlights the country's generous parental leave system

The clips have gone viral on social media.

When ministers from across Europe gathered in Luxembourg on Thursday to discuss climate policies, one moment quickly stole the spotlight. Swedish climate minister Romina Pourmokhtari brought her 3-year-old son, Adam, to the EU council meeting to highlight the benefits of parental leave policies that don’t force women to choose between work and family responsibilities. And that Sweden’s parental leave system makes that possible.“I wanted to showcase being an example of not having to make that choice, which, of course, also requires having a partner that’s not a dinosaur—someone who’s quite modern and up for it to tag along,” she told Reuters.

15 Jun 2026 | 12:57

Is spending lakhs on a child’s birthday party reasonable or insane?

The EU Council confirmed it was the first time a baby had attended a meeting of EU ministers. Photographs of the 30-year-old minister sitting at the negotiating table with her baby quickly went viral across social media and sparked a conversation that goes far beyond one mother and her infant.

A baby at the negotiation table

Pourmokhtari, 30, was the youngest government minister in Sweden’s history when she took office in 2022. She has just returned from parental leave, while her husband is on leave until Sweden’s election in September and travelled with her to Luxembourg to care for Adam. The message was not simply about bringing a child to work. It was about showing what becomes possible when parenting responsibilities are shared.In many countries, including India, the conversation around working mothers often focuses entirely on women: How will she manage? Who will take care of the baby? Should she return to work? Rarely does society ask the same questions of fathers.

How Sweden’s parental leave system works?

Sweden has one of the most generous parental leave systems in the world. Parents receive around 16 months of paid leave in total. Of this, 90 days are reserved exclusively for each parent and cannot be transferred to the other. If either parent, most often the father, doesn’t use their allotted share, those days are forfeited entirely. These non-transferable days, popularly called “daddy months,” were introduced specifically to encourage fathers to spend more time with their newborns and to shift the cultural expectation that childcare falls primarily on mothers.The policy has worked. Swedish fathers routinely take months off, and active fatherhood in the early years has become the norm rather than the exception. Pourmokhtari credits this structure, combined with support from her team, with making it “much less controversial” for her husband to step back from work while she returned to hers.

Why this matters beyond Sweden?

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For most parents around the world, particularly mothers, Pourmokhtari’s act in Luxembourg will sound something not normal. The pressure that working parents, and especially working mothers, face is rarely about ambition or ability. It’s about structure. In the absence of adequate parental leave, flexible policies, and affordable childcare, families are left to manage an impossible equation on their own. Someone has to give, and in most countries, that someone is almost always the mother.What Sweden has done differently is remove the forced choice at a policy level. The “daddy months” are a smart choice. The downstream effects of this are significant. Children benefit from bonding with both parents early. Mothers are not automatically derailed from their careers at the moment they give birth. And fathers, having spent real time as the primary caregiver, tend to remain more involved as children grow older.Pourmokhtari herself was careful to point out that longer leave periods alone are not enough. She urged governments to also look at flexible rules around how parents share leave, and at making childcare genuinely affordable.The image of a baby at an EU negotiating table is easy to smile at. But what it quietly asks of every government watching is a harder question: what would it take for parents in your country to not have to choose?

World Cup ticket scams target desperate fans

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World Cup ticket scams target desperate fans

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You finally find World Cup seats that fit your budget. The site looks polished. The ticket has a QR code. The seller says someone else wants them, so you need to move fast. That is exactly the moment scammers are counting on.

The 2026 FIFA World Cup runs through July 19, 2026, across the United States, Canada and Mexico. With the tournament underway, fans are still hunting for last-minute seats. Meanwhile, fraudsters are using fake ticket listings, spoofed FIFA websites, social media posts and artificial intelligence-made scams to steal money and personal information.

This scam hits differently because the purchase feels emotional. Maybe you are planning a once-in-a-lifetime trip. Perhaps the tickets are a surprise for your child or grandchild. Or maybe you are trying to turn a match into a memory your family talks about for years. That is why knowing where these scams show up, and how they pressure fans, can save you from a painful and expensive mistake.

HOW 1 MAN GOT SCAMMED IN SECONDS USING GOOGLE

A Cape Verde fan attends the 2026 FIFA World Cup Group H match between Uruguay and Cape Verde at Miami Stadium in Miami on June 21, 2026. (Craig Williamson/SNS Group)

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World Cup ticket scams are surging during the tournament

The tournament’s timing, ticket demand and last-minute pressure are giving scammers exactly what they need. World Cup tickets are expensive. Demand is intense. Many fans waited until the tournament started to look for seats. That creates the perfect opening for criminals.

Scammers love urgency. A sold-out match makes people panic. A lower price can feel like luck. A countdown timer can make you ignore the little things that feel off.

MICROSOFT TYPOSQUATTING SCAM SWAPS LETTERS TO STEAL LOGINS

The FBI has already warned that cybercriminals are creating fake FIFA websites. These sites copy FIFA branding, official-looking pages and ticket language. Some fake domains look close enough to fool a fan checking from a phone.

The FBI also said scammers may use these fake sites to collect names, home addresses, phone numbers, email addresses and banking information. That is important because this scam can go beyond one bad ticket purchase. Once criminals have that personal information, they can try to open accounts in your name. They can also target you with more believable scams later.

Woman typing on her smartphone

The real FIFA ticketing page is the safest place to start, since scammers are creating spoofed sites that look official. (Elisa Schu/Picture Alliance via Getty Images)

Fake FIFA websites can steal more than ticket money

A fake ticket site can look official while quietly collecting your payment details and personal information. The safest move is also the easiest one to overlook. Type FIFA.com directly into your browser. Then go to the official ticketing page from there.

SPOT FAKE ONLINE STORES, AVOID FACEBOOK SUBSCRIPTION SCAMS

Do not rely on a search ad. Do not trust a link in a text. Be careful with links in Facebook groups, WhatsApp chats or emails that claim to offer verified seats. Scammers can buy ads. They can clone logos. They can copy the feel of an official checkout page. A fake page may even have clean writing and a professional design.

That means the old scam clues may not show up. You may not see misspelled words or strange graphics. The fake page may look good enough to pass a quick glance. Before you enter payment details, slow down and look at the address bar. The official FIFA site should use FIFA.com. If the domain includes extra words, odd spellings or a different ending, back out.

FBI lists fake FIFA domains to watch for

The FBI named examples of spoofed FIFA domains so fans can see how small changes can make a fake page look official.

GOOGLE SEARCH LED TO A COSTLY SCAM CALL

The FBI says more fake websites may appear leading up to and throughout the 2026 World Cup. These examples have already been identified: 

  • www.fifa[.]cab
  • www.fifa[.]pink
  • www.fifa[.]blue
  • www.fifa[.]pub
  • FIFA[.]city
  • Fifa[.]bio
  • fifa[.]beer
  • fifa[.]click
  • fifa[.]cam
  • fifa[.]ceo
  • fifa[.]help
  • filfa[.]org
  • fifa-online[.]com
  • https://fifa-2026[.]xyz
  • jobs-fifa[.]com
  • fifa-hr[.]com
  • fifa-careerhub[.]com
  • fifaworldcup-careers[.]com
  • fifa-hiring[.]com
  • fifahiring[.]com
  • fifa-ticket[.]live
  • fifastore.us[.]com
  • fifaworldcup26[.]sale
  • fifaworldcup26.xcover-staging[.]com
  • worldcup2026-tickets.com[.]mx
  • worldcup26ticket[.]com
  • 2026fifaworldcuptickets[.]online
  • fwc2026[.]net
  • fwc2026.web[.]app
  • www.fifa2026p[.]com
  • fifa2026fworldcup[.]com
  • wvvw-fifa[.]com
  • ww-fifa[.]com
  • fifa-com[.]com
  • www.fifa-com[.]services
  • quiniela-fifa-2026.pages[.]dev

Notice the patterns. Some domains use strange endings. Others add words like “ticket,” “career,” “hiring” or “World Cup.” A few rely on tiny spelling tricks, such as changing “www” to “wvvw.” The FBI calls this typo squatting. That means scammers count on people making small typing mistakes or clicking links too quickly.

AI ticket scams make fake listings look legitimate

Artificial intelligence is helping scammers make fake ticket pages, emails and seller messages feel more believable. Fake pages can now have polished copy, realistic customer service language and smooth checkout prompts.

Scammers can also create fake confirmation emails that look like they came from a real ticketing company. They can generate ticket screenshots, QR codes and fake order pages in minutes. That means a nice-looking QR code proves very little. So does a screenshot of a ticket.

A scammer can copy a real-looking image, edit it and send it to several buyers. By the time fans find out, the seller may be gone. The real test is whether the ticket transfers through the official channel. For World Cup tickets, that means using FIFA’s official ticketing system or official resale marketplace.

QR CODE EMAIL SCAM TARGETS EMPLOYEE REVIEWS

If a seller refuses to transfer the ticket through the proper platform, walk away. A screenshot should make you more suspicious, not more comfortable.

World Cup resale problems are already hitting fans

Even fans who use known resale platforms can end up with refunds instead of seats. Bina Ramroop reportedly bought World Cup tickets through StubHub for her grandson’s 13th birthday. She paid $485 per ticket for Spain versus Cape Verde in Atlanta. When she arrived, the tickets would not transfer into the FIFA ticketing app. StubHub offered a refund. However, she wanted the experience, not the money back.

Another fan, Pape Ndaw, reportedly bought tickets in December for about $550 each. Two days before a June 14 match near Dallas, he received a message saying the seller could not deliver. He later found last-minute seats going for more than $1,500 each.

BOOKING.COM DATA BREACH EXPOSES TRAVELER DATA TO SCAMS

Then there was Patrick O’Neil’s family. They traveled to Atlanta after buying five tickets through StubHub. Two tickets transferred. Three never arrived. Some family members went in, while the others watched nearby.

These examples show the ugly part of the resale market. Even a known platform may leave you with a refund instead of a seat. That may not help after you have paid for flights, hotels and time off.

Social media World Cup ticket deals carry big risks

Ticket offers on Facebook Marketplace, X, Reddit, Telegram and WhatsApp can look more trustworthy than they really are. A scammer may use a real-looking profile photo, a friendly message and a believable excuse.

They might say a family member got sick. They could claim their group has extra seats. Or they may tell you they “just want a real fan to go.” That story could be true. However, it could also be bait.

The biggest warning sign is when the seller pushes you away from a protected checkout system. If they ask for Zelle, Venmo, Cash App, wire transfer, gift cards or crypto, your risk jumps fast. Those payments can be hard to reverse. In some cases, you may have no easy way to get your money back.

Also, watch for pressure. A legitimate seller may want to move quickly, but a scammer wants you to stop thinking, so you send money before checking the ticket, the transfer method or the website.

IDENTITY THEFT RARELY ANNOUNCES ITSELF: 6 SIGNS YOU MISSED

How to spot a World Cup ticket scam

These warning signs can help you pause before a fake seller turns your excitement into a costly mistake.

1) Check the website address before you click

Look closely at the domain. The FBI says scammers use typo squatting, which means they rely on small spelling changes or fake web endings to trick people. For example, a fake site may use an extra letter, a strange ending or words like “ticket,” “career,” or “World Cup” to look official. The real FIFA website should be entered directly as www.fifa.com. If the link looks different, back out before entering your name, payment details or login information.

2) Watch the ticket transfer method

A real ticket should transfer through the official ticketing system. A screenshot, PDF or QR code image should not be enough. If the seller refuses to use the official transfer process, end the conversation.

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3) Avoid risky payment requests

Be careful if a seller asks for peer-to-peer payment apps, crypto, gift cards or a wire transfer. A credit card often gives you stronger fraud protections. Also, keep the transaction inside a trusted platform whenever possible.

4) Question the bargain price

A seat far below the going rate may be bait. Scammers know fans are searching for one lucky break. Compare the price with official listings and trusted resale options. If the gap feels huge, treat it as a warning sign. 

5) Slow down when the seller adds pressure

Scammers love phrases like “last chance,” “someone else wants them” or “pay now.” Take a breath before you pay. A few extra minutes can save your money, your trip and your personal information.

Tartan Army

Scottish fans took over Ocean Avenue in Miami’s South Beach. (Photo by Ryan McDougall/PA Images via Getty Images)

What to do before buying World Cup tickets

A few checks before checkout can help you avoid fake tickets, bad transfers and stolen account details.

1) Start with FIFA’s official ticketing page

Go directly to FIFA’s official site and navigate from there. Avoid sponsored search results for tickets. The FBI has warned that paid imitators can try to pull fans away from the legitimate site.

2) Bookmark the real FIFA site

After you reach the real FIFA website, save it as a bookmark or favorite. That gives you a safer way back later. Also, be careful with FIFA subdomains. The FBI says fans should navigate to subdomains, such as plus.fifa.com, directly from the official FIFA homepage instead of typing them from memory.

3) Be careful with ads

Exercise caution when clicking ads for tickets, hospitality, merchandise or jobs. Before you click an ad, check the URL. Some malicious ads may display one website but send you somewhere else.

4) Use safer payment options

Use a credit card when possible. It may give you more options if something goes wrong. Do not send money to a stranger through Zelle, Venmo, Cash App, wire transfer, gift cards or crypto.

5) Protect your accounts before checkout

Use a password manager so fake sites do not trick you into reusing passwords. Turn on two-factor authentication (2FA) for your email, FIFA account and payment accounts. That adds another layer if scammers get your password.

6) Keep proof before you travel

Save emails, receipts, transfer confirmations and seller messages. Before you leave for the stadium, confirm that the ticket appears in the official ticketing app or platform. Do not wait until you are standing at the gate.

What to do if a World Cup ticket scam hits you

Fast action can limit the financial damage and reduce the risk of identity theft.

1) Contact your bank or credit card company

Explain what happened and ask what options you have to dispute the charge or block further payments.

5 MYTHS ABOUT IDENTITY THEFT THAT PUT YOUR DATA AT RISK

2) Change your passwords

Change the password for any account tied to the transaction. Start with your email because scammers often use it to reset other logins. Use a password manager to create strong, unique passwords for your FIFA account, email, banking apps and any account where you reused the same password.

3) Turn on two-factor authentication

Turn on two-factor authentication (2FA) if you have not already. Start with your email, banking apps and any account tied to the fake ticket purchase.

4) Save the evidence

Keep screenshots, emails, seller profiles, payment receipts and website addresses.

5) Check your device

Run strong antivirus software if you clicked a suspicious link or downloaded anything from a fake ticket site. A scam page may try to steal more than payment details. Get my picks for the best 2026 antivirus protection winners for your Windows, Mac, Android and iOS devices at CyberGuy.com.

6) Reduce your personal information online

A data removal service can help reduce how much personal information scammers can find about you online. That can make future impersonation attempts harder. Check out my top picks for data removal services and get a free scan to find out if your personal information is already out on the web by visiting CyberGuy.com.

7) Report the scam to the FBI

Report the fake site or seller to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center at IC3.gov. Include the fake domain, a description of what happened, what information you entered and any payment details. If money changed hands, include the payment date, amount, payment type, account numbers involved and any receiving bank or crypto wallet details you have.

8) Freeze your credit if sensitive information was exposed

If you entered sensitive personal details, freeze your credit. Then watch for new accounts or hard inquiries you do not recognize.

Kurt’s key takeaways

World Cup ticket scams are getting harder to spot because fake sites now look clean, polished and believable. AI makes that problem worse. The safest route is still FIFA’s official ticketing system. If you buy anywhere else, understand the risk before you pay. A screenshot or QR code does not prove that a ticket will get you into the stadium. The transfer needs to happen through the official platform. Do not let urgency make the decision for you. Scammers want you to be rushed and emotional. If a deal feels too easy, take a breath and check the source. The few minutes you spend verifying the ticket could save your money, your trip and your personal information.

Would you risk buying a last-minute World Cup ticket from a stranger online if the deal looked almost too good to pass up? Let us know by writing to us at CyberGuy.com.

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Hugh Jackman feels frozen out by Hollywood friends after Deborra-Lee Furness split

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Hugh Jackman feels frozen out by Hollywood friends after Deborra-Lee Furness split

After his split from Deborra-Lee Furness, Hugh Jackman is said to be facing a cold shoulder from his longtime Hollywood pals.

Insiders have revealed that the Wolverine star believes his ex-wife has turned his friends against him.

“Hugh’s increasingly angry over the feeling that more and more people in Hollywood are quietly turning against him,” a source told Radar Online.

They went on to add, “He blames Deb for it 100 percent and says there’s been a steady drip of poison behind the scenes from her and her camp.”

This comes as Jackman felt ignored by his longtime friend Nicole Kidman at the Met Gala recently. Furthermore, he is also said to be upset by Naomi Watts and Russell Crowe for giving him the cold shoulder.

“What’s more, it’s not just Nicole who seems to be taking sides. Hugh is now convinced Naomi Watts and even Russell Crowe are ditching him for Deb,” an insider claimed.

As per the sources, Kidman is “firmly Team Deb.” The Babygirl actress reportedly believes that Furness was “deeply hurt” by Jackman’s actions. “Nicole isn’t interested in pretending otherwise just because Hugh showed up with a new woman on his arm,” the source said.

Adding, “A lot of people close to Deb feel Hugh did her wrong, and Nicole is one friend who has stayed incredibly protective.”

For those unaware, Hugh Jackman and Deborra-Lee Furness announced separation in 2023 and got divorced in June 2025. Their split was tied with Jackman’s relationship with Sutton Foster as sources claimed that the duo grew romantically closer while starring in The Music Man in 2022. Moreover, Furness also revealed that the breakdown of their 27-year marriage was a “traumatic journey of betrayal.”

Now, the actor claims that it is “incredibly unfair” that even his new-girlfriend Foster is being “frozen out and judged” by people who used to socialize with her.

“Hugh is demanding Deb stop stirring the pot. He says things have spiraled way beyond a normal breakup and turned into a coordinated effort to isolate them socially,” the source revealed, noting that he is “no longer prepared to just sit back and take it.”

5 easy steps to grow fresh leafy coriander from discarded roots: Simple guide for beginners

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5 easy steps to grow fresh leafy coriander from discarded roots: Simple guide for beginners

Transform your kitchen scraps into fresh coriander with simple home gardening tips. Discover how to easily grow this essential herb from discarded roots or seeds in small pots. Learn about optimal soil, sunlight, and watering techniques to ensure a continuous supply of fragrant leaves, making your daily cooking a breeze and saving frequent market trips.

Fresh coriander has a special place in Indian kitchens. It adds bright green colour, aroma, and a final touch that makes simple food feel complete. Many of us buy it every week without thinking much about the cost or how quickly it finishes.But the good news is that it can also be grown easily at home to save repeated trips to the market, providing us with fresher leaves and making daily cooking a little easier.While we look forward to planting seeds in small pots, surprisingly, these herbs can be grown from their roots as well, which we often tend to throw away as garbage.For Mona, who has spent years growing vegetables and herbs at home, coriander is one of the easiest and most rewarding plants for beginners, and she revealed some easy tips to keep the coriander coming back to the kitchen to The Better India.Here are some easy tips to grow coriander leaves from discarded roots:

5 easy steps to grow fresh leafy coriander from discarded roots Simple guide for beginners

Representative Image

Choose between seeds and fresh roots

Coriander can be grown in two simple ways: from seeds or from the roots of a fresh market bunch. Seeds are the more traditional choice and usually give healthy growth over time. Mona says that root propagation is faster and works well when the roots are still fresh and intact.Usually, people grow it from seeds. Mona carefully chooses coriander roots that are fresh when she gets a new bunch from the market.With this method, since roots are already developed, they start producing new shoots quite early, within a few days.

Use a small pot with rich soil

Coriander does not need a large container, so it can easily grow on balconies and in small homes. A pot or grow bag with good drainage is usually a good choice. The soil should be loose, well-draining, and mixed with compost or vermicompost. Healthy soil helps the plant grow fuller, greener leaves. Drainage holes are important because coriander does not grow well in excess water for long periods.

Sow seeds or roots correctly

Coriander seeds can be lightly crushed before sowing, because each seed capsule contains two seeds. Scatter them evenly and cover them with a thin layer of soil or compost. Keep the soil moist, and seedlings usually appear within seven to 14 days.If using roots, choose a bunch with healthy and fresh roots. After using the leaves, leave about 3- 5 cms of coriander stem and plant them with the stems slightly above the soil line. Fresh roots can begin sending out new shoots within a few days when kept in a bright spot.

Give it sunlight and steady water

Coriander grows best in four to six hours of sunlight a day. Morning sun is gentler in hot weather, so that is often the better choice. Water regularly, but do not let the soil become soggy. The top layer should feel slightly dry before watering again. In warmer months, the plant may need water more often, especially in containers that dry out quickly.

Harvest often and feed lightly

Once the plant has enough leaves, start snipping the outer ones for cooking. Regular harvesting helps in fresh growth, and the plant keeps producing for a longer time.One important tip is to remember to avoid pulling out the whole plant unless it is finished. Adding a little compost every few weeks can also support healthy growth.

Death toll from Venezuela earthquakes rises to at least 235, with thousands reported missing

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Death toll from Venezuela earthquakes rises to at least 235, with thousands reported missing

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The death toll from the catastrophic series of earthquakes that rocked Venezuela this week has risen to at least 235, with at least 4,300 injured and thousands more missing as U.S. military leadership has arrived in Caracas to help coordinate relief efforts. 

The number of dead is expected to climb Friday following back-to-back magnitude 7.2 and 7.5 earthquakes that hit northern Venezuela on Wednesday night, roughly 120 miles west of Caracas. 

Venezuelan state TV has broadcast dramatic images of rescues, including a woman who was trapped under a cement slab, only a bare foot poking out before crews managed to get her out alive, The Associated Press reported. The injured were seen being pulled out of the rubble covered in dust and blood, among them children and animals. 

U.S. Southern Command said overnight that U.S. Marine Corps Maj. Gen. Kevin J. Jarrard arrived in Caracas on Thursday “to oversee Department of War support to Venezuela earthquake relief efforts.”

TRUMP ADMINISTRATION PLEDGES $150M IN AID, DEPLOYS NAVY WARSHIPS AFTER DEADLY VENEZUELA EARTHQUAKES

Neighbors carry a man rescued from the rubble of a collapsed building in La Guaira, Venezuela, on Thursday, June 25, 2026, the day after earthquakes struck the area. (Pedro Mattey/AP Photo)

SOUTHCOM’s announcement comes as the Trump administration has activated a government-wide humanitarian response, pledging $150 million in aid and deploying U.S. Navy warships to assist in life-saving rescue operations.  

“Maj. Gen. Jarrard is serving as the senior U.S. Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) official on the ground and is working closely with partners to plan, coordinate, and direct the U.S. military’s unparalleled logistical and operational capabilities to support the rapid, life-saving movement of response personnel, equipment, and humanitarian assistance into affected areas,” SOUTHCOM said in a statement, noting that Venezuela’s interim government — led by acting President Delcy Rodríguez — formally requested American assistance. 

“Assigned U.S. military forces will utilize fixed and rotor wing aircraft to provide specialized mobility services and assist U.S. Government personnel, search and rescue teams, and partners assessing damage and delivering critical life-saving assistance,” SOUTHCOM added.

PLAYERS, FANS FLEE STADIUM AS POWERFUL EARTHQUAKES STRIKE DURING VENEZUELA BASEBALL GAME

Responders searching for victims in a demolished building in Caracas, Venezuela

Responders search for victims in a demolished building in Caracas, Venezuela, after a magnitude 7.2 earthquake and a 7.5 aftershock struck the region on June 24, 2026. (Jesus Vargas/Getty Images)

The coastal region of La Guaira, which is located north of Caracas, suffered some of the heaviest damage and casualties. The country’s main airport is there and was closed due to damage, complicating aid efforts. 

Retired schoolteacher Juan Alberto Mendaño climbed through wreckage in La Guaira and past a body when he spotted a woman who was trapped and signaling with her hand for help, according to the AP. 

“May God rescue her as quickly as possible,” Mendaño reportedly said. “When we heard the scream, there was nothing we could do.” 

Venezuelan authorities said they were diverting rescue teams from other parts of the country to La Guaira. 

Rodríguez also appealed to businesses Thursday to make heavy construction equipment available for rescue operations.

Patients lying on stretchers outside a hospital damaged by an earthquake in Catia La Mar, Venezuela

Patients lie outside a hospital evacuated after it was damaged in an earthquake in Catia La Mar, Venezuela, on June 25, 2026. (Pedro Mattey/AP)

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“We hope to rescue as many living people as possible,” Rodríguez added, referring to La Guaira as a “disaster zone.” 

Fox News Digital’s Alexandra Koch and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

Behind the scenes of the Giannis trade: the restless final hours

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Behind the scenes of the Giannis trade: the restless final hours

A NOTE USUALLY goes out around 6 p.m. in the Milwaukee Bucks‘ facility. There are no strings attached to it. It’s simply an offer from general manager Jon Horst to take a break from a long day of work and hoop for an hour or two downstairs on the team’s practice court.

Whatever business you’re working on — be it a report on a draft prospect, player development update or trading the best player in franchise history — will be there for you when the game is over. So will dinner.

The idea is to reconnect with the game they all love.

Once upon a time, Horst was a guard on the Rochester College basketball team that won two USCAA national championships. Over the past 10 days, before Horst and the Bucks finally traded Giannis Antetokounmpo to the Miami Heat after a year of torturous debate, Horst and his staff got in two or three pickup games.

Sunday night was different. That was the night the two finalists for Antetokounmpo — the Heat and Boston Celtics — had submitted their final offers for the two-time MVP and been told to wait for an answer.

It was also Father’s Day.

Horst had a choice: keep everyone at the facility to debate the merits of both offers until consensus was reached or call it a night and make it home in time to see his two kids before bed.

For a year, the Bucks had debated whether it was finally time to trade Antetokounmpo and, if so, what it would take for them to do so.

Antetokounmpo had communicated to them on numerous occasions that he felt the time had come.

But it wasn’t until this season ended with such a resounding whimper — with Milwaukee winning just 32 games, the league launching an investigation into the team based on Antetokounmpo’s accusations that the club wouldn’t let him play, and missing the play-in tournament — that the Bucks had finally accepted their fate and focused on the return they could get for him, rather than mortgaging the last of their future to convince him to return.

Sunday night was the moment of truth.

Boston’s offer would return a star in Jaylen Brown, a former Finals MVP, around whom the Bucks could start rebuilding.

Miami’s proposal included an All-Star, Milwaukee native Tyler Herro, a strong collection of young players and draft capital that would allow the Bucks more optionality to build their next team.

One offer would lend itself to immediate competitiveness, but essentially restart the cycle they’d just exhausted with Antetokounmpo without replenishing the resources needed to build around Brown. The other was a full reset, with building materials.

Horst had canvassed the league for months, fielding offers and presenting them to his front office and ownership group, then getting feedback from Antetokounmpo’s camp as to whether he’d be willing to extend his contract with those teams.

At least four strong bids had died on the vine after Antetokounmpo rejected them, multiple sources with knowledge of them say.

It was the last night of an exhausting, weekslong negotiation period to finalize the end of a protracted, awkward yearlong saga — one that had consumed three teams, while the rest of the league waited for a resolution. Either way, the ripple effects would be enormous.

This final debate was too complicated to solve overnight, and so Horst didn’t offer a staff pickup basketball break before a long night of work.

He sent everyone home early and made it back to his own kids by 10 p.m.

The Father’s Day celebration was muted: some cake, a card and a bottle of cologne.


THE BUCKS WERE pressing up against the deadline co-owner Jimmy Haslam had set a month earlier.

During a news conference to introduce new coach Taylor Jenkins and sitting alongside Horst, Haslam had made a declaration: The Bucks would have Antetokounmpo’s future settled by draft night. Either he would agree to sign an extension to remain with Milwaukee — or he’d be traded.

But by then, the Bucks had their answer, multiple sources with knowledge of the situation say. Antetokounmpo was not going to sign another extension in Milwaukee.

Antetokounmpo signed contract extensions in 2020 and 2023 to stay in Milwaukee, with one team source joking that those brief periods were the only times the Bucks truly got a reprieve from teamwide and leaguewide speculation about his future with the organization.

For half a decade, the Bucks were one of the most successful franchises in the league, leading the NBA in winning percentage (.686) across the regular season and playoffs from 2018 to 2023.

Several team sources voiced to ESPN a guiding ethos of the organization through the years: Teams don’t willingly trade superstars, especially in a small market such as Milwaukee.

It’s why the Bucks had made every attempt, through multiple roster iterations, to build championship-level teams with Antetokounmpo, gutting their future more and more each time to do it.

After losing in the first round of the 2025 playoffs, the third consecutive season in which they were bounced in the opening round, Milwaukee made its final Hail Mary, stretching the contract of Damian Lillard, who had torn his left Achilles during the postseason and missed the 2025-2026 season, and using that money to sign center Myles Turner.

Later that summer, Antetokounmpo and his reps expressed to Bucks management their concerns over the roster, and asked the team to explore a trade to the New York Knicks.

Talks stalled.

Antetokounmpo began the season with the Bucks, but missed 14 of the team’s first 31 games, and the Bucks were under .500 by December.

It was then that Antetokounmpo and his agent privately reiterated to Horst again that the team was not good enough, and it was time for both sides to move on.

But the Bucks believed they could turn around the season when their star got healthy.

But he never did, and the losses continued to pile up ahead of the trade deadline in February, forcing the Bucks to engage in trade discussions for the first time.

During those negotiations, Bucks team sources insist they were upfront with teams that they were unlikely to deal their franchise star unless they were blown away by an offer.

Ultimately, they weren’t, and chose to wait until the offseason, betting that more teams would join the bidding, and offers would strengthen.

After the deadline passed, and despite wanting to be traded, Antetokounmpo then riled the Bucks fan base by posting a clip from “The Wolf of Wall Street” in which Leonardo DiCaprio’s character says that, despite public pressure, he wouldn’t be leaving.

Any idea of salvaging the relationship deteriorated shortly thereafter. Antetokounmpo played his final game with the franchise March 15, and the two sides engaged in a public dispute over whether Antetokounmpo was healthy enough to play.

Throughout, but especially during the second half of the season, Antetokounmpo often lamented the erosion of the team’s culture and discipline.

After the season, Turner went public with the team’s habits and its lack of accountability — and noted how Antetokounmpo took advantage.

“Guys were late all the time,” Turner told New York Liberty forward Breanna Stewart on their “Game Recognize Game” podcast. “Guys were showing up to film whenever they wanted to show up. Guys were missing meetings. It was one of the craziest things I personally ever experienced.

“Giannis is going to show up whenever he wants, really. I think that this kind of just came with the territory that — and once I saw what was going down, I was like, ‘Hey man, more power to you. They ain’t going to fine you. S—, do what you do.'”

After the Bucks’ season-ending loss to the Philadelphia 76ers in April, by which point they had long been eliminated from the postseason, Antetokounmpo was asked if he had played his last game in a Bucks uniform.

“That’s a very good question,” Antetokounmpo said at the time. “I don’t know. It’s not up to me.”

By then, both sides knew the answer.

The only unresolved question was which uniform he’d play in next.

play

1:32

Why Richard Jefferson likes the Bucks’ haul in the Giannis trade


HORST SLEPT WELL Sunday night and longer than he usually does, relieved to be on the other side of the most consequential decision of his professional life.

In Miami and Boston, however, sleep was hard to come by. Both franchises believed they had a great chance of landing Antetokounmpo, according to team sources, but they were paralyzed until a final decision had been made.

Either way, the tasks would be daunting. Getting him was the goal, but then they’d have to build the rest of the roster after giving up a ton to acquire him.

But not getting Antetokounmpo was infinitely worse. That would mean repairing relationships with players who had spent the past few weeks — or in Miami’s case, months — hearing their name in trade discussions.

And, of course, still having to grapple with the reason both franchises had pursued Antetokounmpo so doggedly in the first place: They simply weren’t championship contenders, or even close.

Both team presidents had said as much after their seasons ended in disappointment.

“I am not going to tank. We are not going to lose. We are not going into the lottery and do that insanity because I will quit — if I ever get ordered to go down that road. I am always thinking of ways to win,” Heat president Pat Riley said after his team lost in the play-in tournament. “Now, all I can give you is a bunch of excuses. And I don’t want to do that. We are just not good enough. We are not happy with it. This is the first time in those three years that we have an opportunity to do something with our roster, with our flexibility, with our players.”

The Celtics had lost in the first round to the Philadelphia 76ers, sparking a series of organizational discussions that led to the conclusion that the current roster simply “wasn’t good enough,” as one Celtics source put it.

“If you would have told me last summer that we would have won 56 games in the regular season, that the young guys would all become contributors, that people would have great impact all up and down our roster, that we would get [Jayson] Tatum back for 20 games or whatever it was, I would have been thrilled with those results,” Celtics president Brad Stevens said.

“But the reality is, we came up short. And so now, the job is to do an honest assessment.”


THROUGHOUT THE DAY on Monday, the Bucks had gone back and forth over the two offers.

There were “spirited debates” and differences of opinion, as one Bucks source put it.

But in the end, they preferred the optionality that Miami’s package gave them in building something new.

Horst had always liked the concept of the Heat’s deal.

It was one of two offers he brought to Bucks co-owners Wes Edens and Jimmy Haslam at the trade deadline in February. But back then, Milwaukee was still torn on whether it had exhausted all options to win with Antetokounmpo. If there was a chance, even a remote one, of competing for a title and convincing him to stay, the Bucks had to play it all the way out. It was a gamble.

So, instead of trading Antetokounmpo, they signed Cam Thomas and traded for Ousmane Dieng, hoping they’d help get them into the play-in tournament.

They didn’t.

“I think they just had to know they’d tried everything,” another source close to the process said. “Then, things got really yucky at the end.”

That Bucks gamble had paid off. The Heat’s offer improved in the offseason, multiple sources with knowledge of it say, with this year’s first-round pick, now known to be No. 13, included in the deal.

Ultimately, though the Celtics were willing to part with Brown, they weren’t willing to also include young prospects Hugo Gonzalez and Baylor Scheierman to land Antetokounmpo, a decision that has put them in an awkward situation with Brown.

Multiple sources say the team is still engaging in trade discussions for the five-time All-Star.

Says one league source: “It’d be insane for Boston to bring him back after dangling him so publicly. “

Says another: “I wouldn’t do a damn thing. Those two guys are so good, you can’t just trade Jaylen because it’s awkward. Make everyone come back and figure it out.”

Heat general manager Andy Elisburg had been down this road before, trying to “land the plane” as Riley often said, many times over the years — and missed. With Lillard, Kevin Durant, and, at the past trade deadline, Antetokounmpo. Elisburg’s job, this time, was to do whatever was necessary to complete the deal.

As he waited, all Elisburg could do while he waited was work through every aspect of the deal on his iPad for the thousandth time and start to consider how the Heat would build a team around him if they ended up with the winning package.

Elisburg had been calling Horst about Antetokounmpo for years, registering the Heat’s interest if Milwaukee ever got to a place where it would consider trading him.

It was a long play, to be sure. But on the wall of Elisburg’s apartment in downtown Miami is an example of Elisburg’s patience — and aggression.

It’s an original 1978 movie poster of “National Lampoon’s Animal House,” signed by John Belushi and director John Landis. Elisburg loves movies. He likes to tell friends that all of life’s answers are in movies, and every answer is in one of the Godfather movies.

He once stood for hours outside a cigar shop in Birmingham, Michigan, after he spotted a poster with the infamous line from “Godfather 2,” “This is the life we have chosen.”

It wasn’t for sale, but he had to have it. So, he made the manager of the cigar shop an offer he couldn’t refuse, and the poster now hangs in his office inside the Heat headquarters, along with the Sicilian translation of the line.

The “Animal House” poster had been something he had coveted for years. When it finally came on the market this spring, he interrupted a lunch to bid on it.

The bidding took about 30 minutes. His phone chirped every time another bidder topped him.

But Elisburg was determined. He would not be outbid, just like during the Antetokounmpo trade discussions.

play

2:20

Shams breaks down the Giannis trade to the Heat


SOME 24 HOURS after he had made the biggest move in franchise history, Horst was in no mood to discuss it.

Mostly because he couldn’t — league rules prevent any comment on transactions until they’re approved. But also because his team had just drafted a future — one that, for the first time in more than a decade, would not include Antetkounmpo.

It was 11 p.m. Tuesday. Every TV camera within a three-state radius with an interest in the NBA was in attendance. Wearing a black suit, Horst delivered a statement.

“Before I start, just to be clear, until trades are approved by the league, we’re not allowed to comment on anything, so there won’t be any conversations about that. We are excited about the draft.”

He had just drafted his first two lottery picks since taking over as GM in 2017, and the highest Bucks draft picks since 2016, when the team had selected Thon Maker at No. 10.

“We’re building,” Horst said.

“These guys are important to it,” he said of Arizona’s Brayden Burries, drafted No. 10 and Tennessee’s Nate Ament, selected No. 13.

“We’re just really excited to continue to build and add on piece and piece and create an identity, a style of play, a roster full of character and versatility and size. Got a lot of work ahead of us, but it’s a good start.”

He seemed excited, refreshed. To build anew again, to emerge from the pressure of trying to appease Antetokounmpo and ignore the coy, passive-aggression that had come to define the last year of their relationship.

Last fall, when Antetokounmpo moved his family from Milwaukee back to his native Greece, it seemed to be a signal that the emotional chord between the city and the man who had become a star in it had been severed.

Antetokounmpo could never bring himself to publicly ask for a trade, but moving his family to Greece and enrolling his children in Greek schools seemed to be his way of doing so.

The move didn’t last long, though. Antetokounmpo’s family was back in Milwaukee within a few months, multiple sources say. Even during the most uncomfortable periods this past spring, he brought his family to Bucks games and played with his children on the court.

Antetokounmpo was genuinely torn, multiple sources close to him say. Between loyalty and love of a city that had embraced him as a skinny kid from Greece 13 years ago, and his desire to compete for more championships with a franchise that had exhausted all its resources to try to do that for him.

Those contradictory forces had swirled for years.

“Winning a championship comes first,” Antetokounmpo told The New York Times in 2023, after the No. 1-seeded Bucks had lost in the first round to the No. 8-seeded Miami Heat. “I don’t want to be 20 years on the same team and not win another championship.”

Antetokounmpo had wanted to guard Heat swingman Jimmy Butler in that series, despite a back injury he suffered in Game 1.

Point guard Jrue Holiday, instead, had drawn that assignment and faltered. Holiday had struggled in back-to-back playoff series, shooting a combined 37% in Milwaukee’s last 12 playoff games.

That frustration led to two fateful decisions that serve as the line of demarcation for the beginning of the end of Antetokounmpo’s time with the Bucks.

The first was the firing of coach Mike Budenholzer, launching a coaching carousel in Milwaukee that led to the hires of first-time coach Adrian Griffin and veteran coach Doc Rivers.

Neither coach clicked with the locker room. Griffin was fired after 43 games and a 30-13 record (.698 winning percentage). Rivers lasted 200 games, and the team went 97-103 (.485).

The second was the inclusion of Holiday in the trade that brought superstar Lillard from Portland.

“Looking back on it, the one thing we did that changed everything was put Jrue in that trade,” a Bucks source said. “Jrue was such a leader on and off the floor. He would do things like if Giannis was holding the ball too much, Jrue would just bring it up and play with everybody else without making it a thing. He was a pro at it.

“But Jrue was in the deal [for Lillard] because we thought we needed offense over defense. But once he was gone, we lost our whole defensive identity. It’s not so much that getting Dame was a mistake. He would’ve been perfect if we still had Jrue.”

That was in 2023, though. Everyone moved on. Lillard is back in Portland. Butler is in Golden State. Holiday won a title in Boston and somehow ended up back in Portland.

The Bucks’ front office played a pickup basketball game late Wednesday night after the draft was over. Horst went home early for the first time in months with his kids.

Antetokounmpo will soon be introduced as a member of the Miami Heat.

Outside the Fiserv Forum, however, a reminder of the golden era of Bucks basketball remains in limbo.

In the summer of 2023, Antetokounmpo and his brothers opened a branch of their retail chain, Antetokounbros. It was one of the signature investments he made in Milwaukee to show his commitment and connection to the city.

The two other branches of the store are located in Athens.

But now, there’s a sign in the window of the Milwaukee store.

We are refreshing our space and preparing for new inventory. We look forward to welcoming you back soon.

Regular hours will resume June 30.

Thank you for your understanding.

The brands winning with World Cup advertising may not be the sponsors

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The brands winning with World Cup advertising may not be the sponsors

General view of the exterior of San Francisco Bay Area Stadium ahead of the FIFA World Cup 2026 Group B match between Qatar and Switzerland on June 13, 2026 in Santa Clara, California.

Fran Santiago | Getty Images

As people around the world tune into this summer’s World Cup, some of the brands generating the most buzz aren’t even official sponsors of the tournament.

The list of official sponsors for this year’s World Cup, hosted in cities across the U.S., Canada and Mexico, include global household names like Adidas, Coca-Cola and Qatar Airways.

But even before the tournament began, the spotlight fell on companies like Levi Strauss & Co., Taco Bell and Texas-based convenience store chain Buc-ee’s. Some have garnered traction on social media for their creative marketing strategies, while others have benefited from organic customer response with the influx of international players and fans.

McDonald’s celebrated the tournament with limited-time menu items and cups. Taco Bell leaned into a new campaign to support fans in celebration or support depending on the outcome of a match.

According to marketing research firm WARC Media, advertising spending on this year’s World Cup tournament is expected to reach $10.5 billion. That’s just below spending for the 2018 World Cup, hosted by Russia, which totaled roughly $12.6 billion.

Market intelligence firm Sensor Tower told CNBC that World Cup advertising spend increased 42% week over week in the days leading up to the first game. The firm tracked that Taco Bell and Duracell have both increased their advertising spend in the past few weeks, though the top 10 World Cup advertisers by spend over the past three months have been sponsors or broadcast partners of the event.

According to market research firm Meltwater, in the ramp-up to the World Cup, non-sponsor brand collaborations generated nearly double the engagement of official sponsors, reaching roughly 61 million engagements versus just 33 million.

The firm told CNBC that while sponsored advertisements led in volume, distribution and creative quality helped propel non-sponsors to higher engagement, with the most social media engagement coming from TikTok.

Since the tournament began, non-sponsor brands have surpassed 57,000 mentions on social media versus just over 43,000 for official sponsors, the company said.

“A big takeaway from this World Cup is that you don’t need an official sponsorship to own the cultural moment anymore,” Meltwater CEO John Box told CNBC. “The brands that will win the next tournament aren’t necessarily the ones with the biggest budgets, but instead the ones who are set up to see what’s trending in real time, the creativity to connect it back to your brand, and the speed to act before the moment passes.”

World Cup results

Kylian Mbappé’s Nike soccer cleats during a French national team training session at Bentley University in Boston, Massachusetts, on June 20, 2026. The number 58 on the cleats represent the goals scored by Mbappé for the national team.

Johnny Fidelin | Icon Sport | Getty Images

According to Meltwater, Coca-Cola and Adidas accounted for half of all sponsor mentions in the buildup to the tournament. But in the final 11 days before the first match on June 11, McDonald’s became the clear winner, with engagement share rising from 2.6% to 23%.

Of the non-sponsors, Lego accounted for 82% of the top 50 most engaging non-sponsor posts across social media platforms, Meltwater said. The construction toy company’s World Cup campaign delivered 12 times the sponsor average in the days leading up to the tournament.

Nike, who is not an official tournament sponsor, saw its World Cup advertisement — featuring celebrities like Kim Kardashian, Travis Scott and Lebron James as well as scores of World Cup stars like Norway breakout Erling Haaland and Portugal captain Cristiano Ronaldo — rake in more than 70 million views on YouTube.

Sneaker rival Adidas counts roughly 7 million views for its advertisement featuring actor Timothée Chalamet, Argentina captain Lionel Messi and more.

That gap is indicative of the winners and losers of the off-pitch advertising battle during the tournament, according to Andrew Rohm, a professor of marketing at Loyola Marymount University.

“It was just interesting how those two brands took totally different approaches to their four- to five-minute pieces of content, and I loved the Nike approach because it was totally on-brand, irreverent, unexpected, in your face,” Rohm told CNBC. “You don’t have to be an official sponsor to tie back into the cultural social importance of a worldwide global event like the World Cup, especially if you have assets like Nike has that you can deploy towards that.”

When it comes to the advertising winners of this year’s World Cup, Rohm said it’s a battle between “the expected and the unexpected.” The companies that aren’t official sponsors and are therefore not restricted by FIFA are able to have the most fun with their marketing, he said.

One brand making the most of its non-sponsor status is denim brand Levi’s.

Because the company isn’t an official backer of the tournament, its branding on the host stadium in Santa Clara, California, had to be removed before matches.

The Levi’s logo, loosely shaped like a jeans pant pocket, was shrouded in a white covering — but the move counterintuitively generated buzz for the company on social media from amused fans. In a similar move, razor brand Gillette’s cover for its logo on the stadium in Massachusetts mimicked shaving cream foam to make light of the situation.

“What started as a naming rights sponsorship restriction at the Levi’s Stadium became the most commented and shared post in Levi’s history,” Kenneth Mitchell, Levi’s chief marketing officer, wrote last week. “Leaning fully into it with a profile change on our social channels sealed the deal.”

Mitchell added that “strong brand iconography” worked on the company’s side, as its distinctive logo remained recognizable even under the covering.

According to Meltwater, Levi’s led the strongest example of non-sponsor visibility through its marketing, with its mentions increasing by 44% since the start of the World Cup. Engagement with the company increased nearly four times after it leaned into the stadium covering marketing, the research firm found.

A shifting ad strategy

Jared Watson, an assistant professor of marketing at New York University’s Stern School of Business, said he’s seen brands having more fun in their marketing during this year’s tournament.

“I think what you’re seeing play out, especially this year, is these brands that are taking sort of a rebellious or a cheeky approach to where they’re not officially being aligned with FIFA, and so a lot of consumers are in support of these marketing initiatives, in part because it feels somewhat adversarial to what’s happening,” Watson told CNBC. “It’s kind of stripping away that capitalistic intention from FIFA.”

Watson said brand success has not come from the marketing alone, but also that some companies are picking up on the frustration consumers feel with the commercialization of global soccer.

FIFA introduced mandatory hydration breaks during matches, for example, baking in more time for ads without breaking up the game. The breaks have drawn criticism from fans who say they’re unnecessary and a money grab.

“There’s a little bit of a stick-it-to-the-man mentality of we like to see these brands that are rebelling and pushing back because it’s kind of in the spirit of what the World Cup is, which is unity and meritocracy,” Watson said.

FIFA said in December the three-minute breaks were intended to prioritize “player welfare” and “part of a focused attempt to ensure the best possible conditions for players.”

Some brands have also found more organic success as fans around the world experience the culture of the World Cup host cities, posting about their newfound affinity for American general store chain Buc-ee’s and salad dressing company Hidden Valley Ranch.

“One of the things that we’ve seen, which I think has helped a lot of brands that maybe hadn’t proactively decided to jump into the advertising fray, is we’ve seen the delight with sort of basic American things,” Watson said. “That has allowed a lot of these brands to kind of slipstream or somewhat reactively jump on these trends and gain some earned media.”

And in an age of artificial intelligence, marketing that creates an emotional connection and has a human appeal stands out, according to Kelly Cutler, an associate professor of marketing at Northwestern University.

“I think it’s particularly timely, because I think people feel a little bit sensitive right now with all of the media around AI and all the discussions around AI,” Cutler said. “So that understanding at that human level of how important it is when your team wins or loses is so basic and fundamental and creates such a connection.”

Cutler also said the marketing cuts through generations — younger consumers are more aware of when they’re being sold to and are more often resistant. Companies that can develop a deeper bond with Generation Z will find the “golden goose of marketing,” she said.

For sponsor companies constrained by FIFA regulations, she added, the World Cup may have broader implications for future brand partnerships.

“The organizations, obviously they want those sponsorship dollars, and they don’t want to experience this type of situation where the brands that are paying nothing are getting a lot of traction and hitting all the headlines and having these really interesting outcomes,” Cutler said. “So I do think that it’s going to be interesting to watch how this impacts future sponsorship programming.”

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Golden eagle shot 17 times after it was released in Borders conservation project

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An X-Ray of a golden eagle with little white spots where shotgun pellets have lodged

The project to boost golden eagle numbers across southern Scotland is led by the charity Restoring Upland Nature (RUN) and has seen the birds flourish.

However, there have been a number of setbacks with shootings and disappearances.

Dumfriesshire farmer Michael Clarke, who chairs the group, said: “While we are relieved that Squeagle has survived, and is soaring high in southern skies thanks to the efforts of the rescuing gamekeepers, the Scottish SPCA and our eagle officer, John, we utterly condemn this act of persecution.

“This abhorrent wildlife crime was clearly committed by an individual or individuals who consider themselves above the law.

“Whoever is responsible for this, and anyone who seeks to excuse or conceal it, should reflect on the immense damage their actions cause to wildlife, the efforts of land managers, farmers, conservationists and local communities, and the future of golden eagles in the UK.”

Tom Holland ditches wedding ring for ‘Spider-Man’ press tour with Zendaya

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Holland, 30, shares more photos with Zendaya, 29, after officially hard-launching their relationship

Tom Holland delighted fans earlier this month by confirming that he and his longtime partner Zendaya secretly got married.

As the press tour for their upcoming movie, Spider-Man: Brand New Day, kicked off, the Euphoria actress finally gave fans a good and proud look at her wedding band nestled under her 5-carat diamond engagement ring.

Holland, however, has yet to be seen wearing his wedding ring.

In the latest photos shared by the Marvel star on Friday, June 26, the couple looked radiant at the Spider-Man: Brand New Day fan event in Paris a day prior.

The pictures of the pair walking down the theatre’s stairs were highly evocative of them walking down the aisle during their secret nuptials. But while Zendaya’s ring finger was decorated with two rings, Holland’s hands remained bare throughout the week.

The couple recently officially hard-launched their relationship on Instagram by sharing photos from an earlier event in Rome.

The newlyweds have been touring the globe as Spider-Man: Brand New Day nears its July 31st world premiere. So far, they have made stops in the capital cities of Spain, Germany, Rome, France, and, most recently, England.

Despite no sign of a wedding ring on Holland’s hand, the actor recently appeared to confirm to Esquire that he and Zendaya already got married after their engagement in late 2025.

The pair first met in 2016 on the set of Spider-Man: Homecoming and confirmed their relationship in 2021.