Sunday, November 9, 2025

 
Home Blog Page 5

Trump says boat crews are narco-terrorists. The truth is more nuanced, AP finds : NPR

0


Robert Sánchez dropped out of school as a teenager and like many others in the region became a fisherman like his father, according to friends and relatives.

Peter Hamlin/AP Illustration


hide caption

toggle caption

Peter Hamlin/AP Illustration

GÜIRIA, Venezuela — One was a fisherman struggling to eke out a living on $100 a month. Another was a career criminal. A third was a former military cadet. And a fourth was a down-on-his-luck bus driver.

The men had little in common beyond their Venezuelan seaside hometowns and the fact all four were among the more than 60 people killed since early September when the U.S. military began attacking boats that the Trump administration alleges were smuggling drugs. President Donald Trump and top U.S. officials have alleged the craft were being operated by narco-terrorists and cartel members bound with deadly drugs for American communities.

The Associated Press learned the identities of four of the men — and pieced together details about at least five others — who were slain, providing the first detailed account of those who died in the strikes.

In dozens of interviews in villages on Venezuela’s breathtaking northeastern coast, from which some of the boats departed, residents and relatives said the dead men had indeed been running drugs but were not narco-terrorists or leaders of a cartel or gang.

Most of the nine men were crewing such craft for the first or second time, making at least $500 per trip, residents and relatives said. They were laborers, a fisherman, a motorcycle taxi driver. Two were low-level career criminals. One was a well-known local crime boss who contracted out his smuggling services to traffickers.

The men lived on the Paria Peninsula, in mostly unpainted cinderblock homes that can go weeks without water service and regularly lose power for several hours a day. They awoke to panoramic views of a national park’s tropical forests, the Gulf of Paria’s shallows and the Caribbean’s sparkling sapphire waters. When the time came for their drug runs, they boarded open-hulled fishing skiffs that relied on powerful outboard motors to haul their drugs to nearby Trinidad and other islands.

The residents and relatives interviewed by the AP requested anonymity out of fear of reprisals from drug smugglers, the Venezuelan government or the Trump administration. They said they were incensed that the men were killed without due process. In the past, their boats would have been interdicted by the U.S. authorities and the crewmen charged with federal crimes, affording them a day in court.

The U.S. government “should have stopped them,” a man’s relative said.

It has been difficult for relatives to learn much about their dead loved ones because criminal gangs and the Venezuelan government have long repressed the flow of information in the region.

Venezuelan officials have blasted the U.S. government over the strikes, and the nation’s ambassador to the U.N. called the attacks “extrajudicial executions.” They have also steadfastly denied that drug traffickers operate in the country and have yet to acknowledge that any of its citizens have been killed in boat strikes. Spokespeople for Venezuela’s government did not respond to a request for comment.

The Trump administration has justified the strikes by declaring drug cartels to be “unlawful combatants ” and said the U.S. is now in an “armed conflict” with them. Trump has said each sunken boat has saved 25,000 American lives, presumably from overdoses. The boats, however, appear to have been transporting cocaine, not the far more deadly synthetic opioids that kill tens of thousands of Americans each year.

Sean Parnell, the Pentagon’s chief spokesman, said in a statement to the AP that the Defense Department has “consistently said that our intelligence did indeed confirm that the individuals involved in these drug operations were narco-terrorists, and we stand by that assessment.”

So far, the U.S. military has blown up 17 vessels, killing more than 60 people. Nine of the craft were targeted in the Caribbean, and at least three of those had departed from Venezuela, according to the Trump administration. The military is striking the boats at the same time the administration is applying increasing pressure on Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. The Justice Department doubled a reward for his arrest to $50 million, and the U.S. military has built up an unusually large force in the Caribbean Sea and the waters off Venezuela and has flown pairs of supersonic, heavy bombers along the country’s coast.

Relatives and acquaintances said they have confirmed the deaths through word-of-mouth and inexplicit social media posts that sought to convey information about the dead men without drawing the attention of Venezuelan authorities. They have also made what they described as reasonable deductions: The men have not returned phone calls or texts in weeks, or reached out to say they were OK; Venezuelan authorities, residents said, have also searched some of the homes of the dead men.

“I want an answer, but who can I ask?” said a relative of one of the men. “I can’t say anything.”

The fisherman

A native of Güiria, a village on the southeast side of the peninsula, Robert Sánchez dropped out of school as a teenager and like many others in the region became a fisherman like his father, according to friends and relatives. The 42-year-old was considered among the peninsula’s best pilots, they said, having spent the better part of three decades mastering the area’s currents and winds, so much so he could navigate the waters at night without instruments.

As part of hired crews, the father of four spent his days fishing for snapper, kingfish and dogfish. The fisherman wanted to save enough money to buy a 75-horsepower boat engine so he could operate his own boat and not work for others. It was a dream Sánchez knew he was likely to never realize, relatives said: Most of his income — about $100 a month — went to feed his children.

He was not alone in that situation.

The peninsula is part of Sucre state, one of Venezuela’s poorest. Sucre was once home to several fish processing plants, an auto assembly plant and a large public university, all of which offered well-paying jobs. Most have shuttered. The peninsula is dotted by the unfulfilled promises of 26 years of a self-described socialist government, including an abandoned shipyard and the rusted infrastructure meant for a natural gas complex.

With its proximity to the Caribbean Sea, the area is a popular transit hub for cocaine making its way from Colombia to Trinidad and other Caribbean islands before heading to Europe. Colombian cocaine destined for the U.S. is generally smuggled out of Colombia through the Pacific coast.

The larger economic pressures — and Sánchez’s goal of owning a boat engine — are what pushed the fisherman to accept an offer to help traffickers navigate the tricky waters he knew so well, friends and relatives said.

Sánchez had just finished offloading a day’s catch last month when he told his mother he would be taking a short trip and would see her in a couple of days. They had no idea where he was going.

After seeing clips on social media that mentioned his death, relatives broke the news to his mother, but not until after ensuring she had taken her blood pressure medication. Sánchez’s youngest son, a third grader, could not accept for days that his father was gone. He kept asking adults if his father could have survived the explosion, noting he might still be at sea.

No, the adults told the boy. His father was gone.

One of the first to die

Luis “Che” Martínez was killed in the first strike. A burly 60-year-old, Martínez was a longtime local crime boss, and he made most of his living smuggling drugs and people across borders, according to several people who knew him.

He had been jailed by Venezuelan authorities on human-trafficking charges after a boat he had operated capsized in December 2020, killing about two dozen people, law enforcement officials said at the time. Among those who died in the accident were two of his sons and a granddaughter, relatives told the AP. The AP was not able to determine the disposition of his criminal case, but Martínez was eventually released from custody and returned to smuggling people and drugs, according to acquaintances.

Though they detested what he did for a living — and the control Martínez and similar criminals exerted over their villages — several residents said they appreciated how Martínez contributed annually to the town’s festival of the Virgin of the Valley, the patroness of fishermen, and he spent lavishly in local shops and restaurants. He also bet heavily on cockfights, a popular pastime, a bird breeder said.

Martínez was killed, a relative and several acquaintances said, in the first known U.S. strike, which took place Sept. 2. Trump quickly took to social media to claim the vessel had departed from Venezuela and had been carrying drugs. The 11-man crew, the president said, had been members of the Tren de Aragua gang. He said all of the men were killed and also posted a short video clip of a small vessel appearing to explode in flames.

Martínez’s relatives said they did not believe the underworld figure was a member of that gang.

They said they have been provided no information from the Venezuelan government about his fate. They figured it out when they came across a photo of a body that had washed ashore in Trinidad. The photo had been shared on social media and messaging apps and depicted a badly mutilated body. The people familiar with Martínez said they knew instantly the stout corpse was Martínez because, on his left wrist, was strapped one of his most treasured belongings: an ostentatious watch.

The former cadet and bus driver

Dushak Milovcic, 24, was drawn to crime by the adrenaline rush and money, so much that he dropped out of the country’s National Guard Academy, according to those who knew him. He started as a lookout for smugglers, they said. Though he had no experience at sea, he eventually won a promotion to the more lucrative and coveted jobs on drug-running boats.

It’s not clear how many trips he had undertaken before he was killed last month.

Juan Carlos “El Guaramero” Fuentes had operated a transit bus for several years but was facing dire financial circumstances when it had broken down. The government had been unable — or unwilling — to fix it. That meant he was losing money because bus drivers in Venezuela typically pocket a portion of the fares, making it nearly impossible for him to feed and clothe his family.

Villagers said they were not surprised that Fuentes, who had no nautical experience, turned to smuggling to make ends meet. The higher-level traffickers who typically crewed such boats had been staying ashore to avoid being targeted by U.S. missiles. In their place, villagers said, they had been increasingly hiring novices like Fuentes.

Fuentes told friends he had been nervous about his first smuggling run, knowing it would be filled with risks from weather, rival gangs, even the U.S. military. The September trip had gone surprisingly smoothly, he told friends, and he readily agreed to join another crew. Fuentes was killed in a missile strike last month, friends said, the precise one unknown.



This story originally appeared on NPR

Lloyds continues share buybacks despite a 36% profit plunge. Risk or opportunity?

0


Image source: Getty Images

This week, the Lloyds (LSE: LLOY) share price hit a new all-time high of around 90p. This came despite a 36% profis plunge in its Q3 trading update.

The bank has set aside billions in reserve funds for potential costs related to the ongoing motor finance probe. Even with this hanging over it, the bank has pressed ahead with its share buyback programme, purchasing more than 13m shares this week at around 88p each.

The contrast between falling profits and continued capital returns raises a question — is this a confident long-term move, or a sign of over-optimism?

Good value… or value trap?

Despite having to take on significant costs related to the financing probe, Lloyd’s underlying performance has held up. It’s likely this resilience has helped reassure investors about the core business and that it can effectively manage any fallout from the probe.

However, this does mean the market may be overlooking the risk, which could amplify any negative surprise. The 100p price point is also a notable psychological barrier that could prove increasingly elusive as it closes in.

That said, Lloyds benefits from exceptionally strong sentiment. Plus, it’s popular as both a defensive share and a dividend stock. This lends it a wide and faithful customer base.

What’s more, it’s got the results to back that belief.

Financials

In its latest half-year results, the group reported a profit before tax of approximately £3.5bn, up around 5% from £3.32bn a year earlier.

Meanwhile, underlying net income rose by 6% to about £8.9bn and net interest income grew 5%. A 2% increase in customer deposits added a further £11.2bn to its £493.9bn total.

The board declared an interim ordinary dividend of 1.22p, up 15% year on year. Dividends have been growing at an annual compound growth rate (CAGR) of 8.3% for the past decade.

HSBC, by comparison, has a slightly higher yield but isn’t as well-covered. NatWest, on the other hand, has both a higher yield and better coverage.

However, I’d argue that neither exhibit the same defensive qualities as Lloyds.

So what could happen next?

Given the positive sentiment boosted by ongoing share buybacks, there’s a strong case to argue that the price could keep climbing.

The average 12-month price target from 18 analysts following the stock is 98.16p. Some of the most optimistic among them think it’ll hit 110p.

Still, there are several reasons that it may struggle to break 100p. The motor-finance mis-selling probe is, of course, the big elephant in the room. But the impact of this may already be priced in.

Beyond that, it’s already up almost 63% this year, so further growth could be limited. And despite boasting the second-highest enterprise value (EV), it has the lowest revenue out of all other major UK banks.

The bottom line

While Lloyds’ growth rates look modest, the resilience of the business is impressive given the broader UK banking environment.

Dividends are well-covered and reliable and financials are surprisingly good. So, from an income and defensive point of view, it remains a solid option to consider for a UK portfolio.

However, growth-wise, I expect things will slow down as it edges closer to the 100p level.



This story originally appeared on Motley Fool

Rams vs. San Francisco 49ers: How to watch, start time and prediction

0


p]:text-cms-story-body-color-text clearfix”>

Rams coach Sean McVay and San Francisco 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan know each other — and each other’s schematic and play-calling tendencies — better than perhaps any two coaches in the NFL.

Close games between the teams are a constant.

Since they first squared off in 2017, nearly half of their 18 matchups have been decided by three points or fewer, including the 49ers’ 26-23 overtime victory on Oct. 2 at SoFi Stadium.

  • Share via

Gary Klein breaks down what you need to know for Sunday’s matchup between the Rams and San Francisco 49ers at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara.

So expect another game that could come down to the final possession when the Rams play the 49ers in an NFC West game at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara.

“Two good teams with two good staffs that are familiar with each other,” Rams tight end Tyler Higbee said in explaining the tight nature of the matchup, “and then you throw the rivalry part into it.”

McVay is 7-11 against Shanahan, his former mentor, though the Rams had won three in a row before the Week 5 loss that ended when 49ers star linebacker Fred Warner stopped Kyren Williams on a fourth-and-one play at the 49ers’ 11-yard line.

Rams kicker Joshua Karty missed a 53-yard field goal attempt and had an extra-point attempt blocked in the defeat.

The Rams this week moved to improve their season-long kicking-game issues by signing rookie kicker Harrison Mevis and veteran long snapper Jake McQuaide to the practice squad. Both will be elevated to the roster and play on Sunday.

Mevis, 23, made 89 of 106 field-goal attempts at Missouri, including one from 61 yards. In the United Football League this past season, he made 20 of 21 field-goal attempts.

The 49ers wasted no time addressing their own kicking-game issues.

After a season-opening defeat that included a missed field goal and a blocked kick, they released Jake Moody and signed Eddy Pineiro.

Pineiro has made all 19 of his field-goal attempts and 14 of 15 extra points.



This story originally appeared on LA Times

10 Actors Who Returned To A TV Series After Leaving

0






Unlike movies, the fun thing about television is that TV shows can, hypothetically, go on forever. If a show has a solid-enough engine and showrunners who are committed to the stories they’re telling, TV is made to be endlessly renewable. As fans, we become attached to the people on our favorite long-running shows, finding comfort in the way their weekly installments give our own lives a sort of structure and routine.

Behind the scenes, though, that repeatability can be a curse just as much as it is a blessing. Actors typically sign television contracts for several years at a time; after all, everyone loves job security, and part of the fun of television is getting to explore a character with much greater depth than you would in a film. As those years stretch on, however, artists get restless and want to move on. Sometimes, an actor is forced out for other reasons; sometimes the story demands it, and sometimes the budget is to blame.

In other words, fans love to follow the drama that goes on when the cameras aren’t rolling, and when a major actor leaves a major show, it can become major news. A few years later, though, lots of actors make the time to stop in on their old haunts, reviving their characters for one more go … even though they may have sworn they never would. Read on for the stories of 10 actors who have returned to their shows after leaving.

Isaiah Washington returned to Grey’s Anatomy with Sandra Oh’s help

It can be hard enough to keep a cast engaged when your show stretches past the two-decade mark, but in the early years of “Grey’s Anatomy” — back when it was a flashy new sensation rather than a long-running staple — fans were just as fascinated by stories of the behind-the-scenes chaos on the “Grey’s” set. One of its earliest, biggest scandals occurred in 2007, when Isaiah Washington was fired for using a homophobic slur against fellow castmate T.R. Knight. Creator and showrunner Shonda Rhimes told The Hollywood Reporter that she didn’t expect the show would be able to recover, remembering, “I mean, that was the thing we thought was going to kill the show. And it’s funny, every ‘Grey’s’ actor I talk to who was there during that time is still traumatized by that incident. People still talk about it.”

Though he got the chop in Season 3, Washington nevertheless returned as Dr. Preston Burke in a Season 10 episode meant to help send off Sandra Oh’s character, Dr. Cristina Yang. Burke, we learned, had been running a hospital in Switzerland, and he tried to poach Cristina away from Seattle by offering her a job. Oh, it seems, was instrumental in getting Washington back in Rhimes’ good graces. “She refused to leave the show without my return, and she won that battle,” Washington wrote on X in 2025. “I love me some Sandra Oh!”

Taylor Momsen was put on hiatus, left, and returned to Gossip Girl

Before she was cast as the rebellious teenager Jenny Humphrey on the smash-hit CW series “Gossip Girl,” Taylor Momsen was a child star. She was perhaps best known as Cindy Lou Who in the live-action adaptation of “How the Grinch Stole Christmas,” meaning that by the time her “Gossip Girl” tenure stretched on, Momsen was quite ready to hang up her hat. She’d long since realized that she was more interested in music, anyway, and her band, The Pretty Reckless, was doing pretty well.

“I woke up one morning and went, ‘Wait a second. I don’t have to do this? I don’t have to do this other job? I can just play in my band and tour, and write songs? I can just do that?” Momsen remembered thinking on an episode of co-star Penn Badgley’s Podcrushed podcast. Of course, there was that pesky contract to worry about. “They went, ‘Well, we can’t let you out of your deal, but we can write you out of the show,'” Momsen said. The only caveat was that she wouldn’t be able to act in any other projects. That was fine with her.

Her departure from “Gossip Girl” caused a minor media firestorm, and her co-star Connor Paolo blasted critics of her decision, even hinting at Jenny’s return. Ultimately, though, Momsen wouldn’t reappear on the show until its 2012 series finale, when Jenny showed up at Blair and Chuck’s wedding.

Steve Carell’s contract wasn’t renewed, but he returned for The Office finale

Everything on “The Office” orbited around Steve Carell’s hapless, well-meaning, incompetent paper company boss Michael Scott, but Carell ultimately left the show after Season 7. Though it was initially positioned in the media as simply time for him to step away, production sources later revealed in a book called “The Office: The Untold Story of the Greatest Sitcom of the 2000s” (via IndieWire) that Carell’s exit was the result of contract negotiations that turned sour. Carell had been willing to stay on longer, but NBC simply didn’t bother to renegotiate his contract when it expired. Casting director Allison Jones recalled, “NBC, for whatever reason, wouldn’t make a deal with him. Somebody didn’t pay him enough. It was absolutely asinine. I don’t know what else to say about that. Just asinine.”

Though Carell repeatedly insisted that he wouldn’t return to the show, Michael did indeed attend the wedding of Dwight Schrute (Rainn Wilson) and Angela Martin (Angela Kinsey) that formed the centerpiece of the series finale. “We just thought it would be fun if it were to be a surprise,” Carell told E! News. “We lied a lot.” And while we’re in the business of bringing people back, here are 10 “The Office” characters we’d like to see on Peacock’s spinoff “The Paper.”

Harold Perrineau returned to the island after being fired from Lost

How well do you remember the two-hour premiere of ABC’s “Lost”? If you’ve retained anything from the knockout show’s first season, you probably remember Harold Perrineau’s character Michael and his son Walt (Malcolm David Kelley). These are two characters who became increasingly important as that first season went on. Unfortunately, the show’s slow timeline meant Kelley aged much faster than his character, and Perrineau was ultimately written out, too. “It became pretty clear that I was the Black guy. Daniel [Dae Kim] was the Asian guy. And then you had Jack and Kate and Sawyer,” Perrineau told Maureen Ryan for her book “Burn It Down” (via Vanity Fair).

“I was f***ed up about it. I was like, ‘Oh, I just got fired, I think,'” Perrineau recalled. At the time, he gave an interview about his exit and complained openly about the fact that Michael and Walt didn’t get to close the book on their storyline. “Walt just winds up being another fatherless child,” he said. “It plays into a really big, weird stereotype and, being a Black person myself, that wasn’t so interesting.”

Perrineau did return to the island several times after Season 2, including in the show’s “flash-sideways” final season. “I’m never going to regret advocating for the character and for myself, as an actor,” Perrineau told BuzzFeed. “Let the chips fall where they fall.”

Lauren Cohan left The Walking Dead when they wouldn’t grant pay equity, but she came back

Lauren Cohan played Maggie on “The Walking Dead,” and she was one of the show’s best characters; she’s a headstrong survivor who knows her way around a weapon. She joined in Season 2 and quickly became one of the show’s main characters, thanks in part to her romance with Glenn (Steven Yeun) and her above-average zombie-killing skills. 

After Season 8, news broke that Cohan might not be returning for the show’s ninth season. Sources reported that she was trying to negotiate so that she was paid the same as male co-stars like Andrew Lincoln and Norman Reedus, though Cohan denied those specific rumors. On Andy Cohen’s SiriusXM show “Radio Andy,” she explained, “In a time of parity in the industry and in my show … it wasn’t actually that I was asking for more, it’s that my contract finished. That’s a pretty standard renegotiation.”

The negotiations fell apart, and instead Cohan starred on the ill-fated ABC series “Whiskey Cavalier.” When that show collapsed, she quickly returned to “The Walking Dead.” Speaking with The Hollywood Reporter, Cohan insisted that she’d held on to the character during her absence. “I knew she was going to come back; we just didn’t know exactly when. I mentally always had her in a quadrant of my brain and soul.” The main series has now concluded, but Cohan now leads “The Walking Dead: Dead City,” a spinoff that focuses on Maggie and Jeffrey Dean Morgan’s Negan.

Maggie Roswell continued voicing Maude Flanders after The Simpsons killed her off

In the early days of “The Simpsons,” the titular family was often contrasted with the far more religious one that lived next door. Ned Flanders is one of the best characters on “The Simpsons,” and, along with his wife, Maude (Maggie Roswell), both are pious and particular about raising their children, whereas Homer (Dan Castellaneta) and Marge (Julie Kavner) definitely are not. In the Season 11 episode “Alone Again, Natura-Diddily,” however, Maude was shockingly killed off, and suddenly Roswell was no longer voicing one of the show’s original characters.

The voice actor, it turns out, had moved to Denver, even though “The Simpsons” records its audio in Los Angeles. “I used to fly into L.A. on Thursday and fly back that night, and do that on Monday again,” Roswell told The Denver Post. “It was getting to be too much, too expensive, [and] they wouldn’t give me a raise.” She quit, and they killed Maude.

Thankfully, Roswell and the producers were able to work something out so that she could record from Denver, and Roswell returned to the cast several years later. Though she still occasionally voices Maude Flanders in ghost form, Roswell now primarily stars as Helen Lovejoy. “I do it from home, and I could not be more grateful. We work from March until November, two weeks on, one week off. I get SAG insurance. It’s great,” she told the newspaper. “I am living the life.”

Sarah Silverman was fired after one SNL season, and she hosted two decades later

In its decades on the air, “Saturday Night Live” has served as a proving ground for plenty of comedians, giving megastars like Will Ferrell, Tina Fey, Eddie Murphy, and many more their start. Not everyone breaks out, though, and plenty of cast members don’t last more than a season or two before Lorne Michaels gives them the chop.

In 1993, when she was only 22, Sarah Silverman was cast on the show. She would later find lots of fame on her own, thanks to her well-received sketch show and caustic stand-up comedy, but she was fired after one bad year at “SNL.” Speaking with GQ, Silverman said she mainly served as an audience plant during monologues. “I was not a fully realized person,” she reflected. “I definitely was not ready for it, but it was an amazing experience, and certainly prepared me for the rest. Everything else was pretty easy after that.”

Unlike most people who are fired after only one season on “SNL,” Silverman later returned to Studio 8H as a host. She helmed an episode in 2014, and she told GQ that the show nodded to her history as a monologue ringer. “I took questions from the audience, and all the questions were me from 1994, asking questions,” she said. “It was kind of awesome, because it was like the sweet, little innocent girl asking me questions, and it was me from so long ago.”

The Walking Dead killed off Jon Bernthal twice

“The Walking Dead” was known for its shocking cast exits, as the showrunners had no problem killing off beloved characters with little warning. One such character who got brutally cut was Jon Bernthal’s Shane Walsh. He’s a longtime friend of Rick Grimes (Andrew Lincoln) from before the zombie apocalypse, and the two link back up to discover that Shane has tried to keep Rick’s family safe.

Shane was killed off in the second season, and Bernthal told Conan O’Brien on “Conan O’Brien Needs A Friend” that he took it pretty hard. He sat and watched them film the first episode without him, and it was a difficult experience. “I just palpably understood, you know, I’m not part of that anymore,” he said. “I sat there and I [wept], and I felt sorry for myself, and I knew it was over.”

Bernthal has returned to the show twice, including in the Season 3 episode “Made to Suffer.” Once again, thanks to a hallucination, Shane got killed all over again. Still, Bernthal doesn’t regret anything about his time on the show. He explained to O’Brien, “I think getting killed off was the best thing that ever happened to me in my career, and I’m flabbergasted and grateful for all of it.”

Jeffrey Dean Morgan was killed off of Supernatural, but he returned a decade later

In the first season of “Supernatural,” Jeffrey Dean Morgan played John Winchester. He was the father of Sam (Jared Padalecki) and Dean (Jensen Ackles), two young men who take over the family business; in this case, it just happens to be killing demons. Unfortunately, John died in the Season 2 premiere, sending his sons spinning emotionally as they tried to hold the forces of evil at bay.

In 2019, Morgan returned to “Supernatural” thanks to an episode that involved some run-of-the-mill time travel. Sam and Dean get to visit an alternate reality where their father had survived, and they fill him in on everything they’d been up to in his absence. The episode was the show’s 300th — that’s a lot of time away from that iconic Chevy Impala — but Morgan told Entertainment Weekly he’d remained close with the actors playing his sons. “To step into it again, it’s like wearing an old pair of boots. I’m friends with these guys, so it’s a joy to come in,” he said.

In fact, it was fitting that Morgan played a proud father to the Winchester boys because he himself was proud of his friends’ accomplishments on the show. “It makes me get choked up because they’ve done so well here,” he said. “Episode 300? That’s unheard of.”

Steve Burton was fired from General Hospital over the COVID-19 vaccine, but came back later

Steve Burton has played Jason Morgan on “General Hospital” for a very long time, ever since the character was aged up in 1991. He’s taken a few hiatuses from the soap opera, including for a stint on “The Young and the Restless,” but for the most part, Burton has long been one of the most recognizable actors on one of the only remaining soaps.

In 2021, however, Burton was fired from “General Hospital” for refusing to comply with the set’s COVID-19 vaccine mandates. He announced the decision in an Instagram video, revealing, “I did apply for my medical and religious exemptions and both of those were denied, which hurts. But this is also about personal freedom to me. I don’t think anybody should lose their livelihood over this.” At the time, ABC required that anyone on set who wouldn’t be wearing a mask be vaccinated to protect others from the disease.

By March 2024, however, restrictions had loosened, and “General Hospital” brought Burton back to Port Charles. In a behind-the-scenes video of his first day on set shared by the show on YouTube, he gushed, “It just feels really good to be back on set with my people.”






This story originally appeared on TVLine

10 Actors Who Returned To A TV Series After Leaving

0






Unlike movies, the fun thing about television is that TV shows can, hypothetically, go on forever. If a show has a solid-enough engine and showrunners who are committed to the stories they’re telling, TV is made to be endlessly renewable. As fans, we become attached to the people on our favorite long-running shows, finding comfort in the way their weekly installments give our own lives a sort of structure and routine.

Behind the scenes, though, that repeatability can be a curse just as much as it is a blessing. Actors typically sign television contracts for several years at a time; after all, everyone loves job security, and part of the fun of television is getting to explore a character with much greater depth than you would in a film. As those years stretch on, however, artists get restless and want to move on. Sometimes, an actor is forced out for other reasons; sometimes the story demands it, and sometimes the budget is to blame.

In other words, fans love to follow the drama that goes on when the cameras aren’t rolling, and when a major actor leaves a major show, it can become major news. A few years later, though, lots of actors make the time to stop in on their old haunts, reviving their characters for one more go … even though they may have sworn they never would. Read on for the stories of 10 actors who have returned to their shows after leaving.

Isaiah Washington returned to Grey’s Anatomy with Sandra Oh’s help

It can be hard enough to keep a cast engaged when your show stretches past the two-decade mark, but in the early years of “Grey’s Anatomy” — back when it was a flashy new sensation rather than a long-running staple — fans were just as fascinated by stories of the behind-the-scenes chaos on the “Grey’s” set. One of its earliest, biggest scandals occurred in 2007, when Isaiah Washington was fired for using a homophobic slur against fellow castmate T.R. Knight. Creator and showrunner Shonda Rhimes told The Hollywood Reporter that she didn’t expect the show would be able to recover, remembering, “I mean, that was the thing we thought was going to kill the show. And it’s funny, every ‘Grey’s’ actor I talk to who was there during that time is still traumatized by that incident. People still talk about it.”

Though he got the chop in Season 3, Washington nevertheless returned as Dr. Preston Burke in a Season 10 episode meant to help send off Sandra Oh’s character, Dr. Cristina Yang. Burke, we learned, had been running a hospital in Switzerland, and he tried to poach Cristina away from Seattle by offering her a job. Oh, it seems, was instrumental in getting Washington back in Rhimes’ good graces. “She refused to leave the show without my return, and she won that battle,” Washington wrote on X in 2025. “I love me some Sandra Oh!”

Taylor Momsen was put on hiatus, left, and returned to Gossip Girl

Before she was cast as the rebellious teenager Jenny Humphrey on the smash-hit CW series “Gossip Girl,” Taylor Momsen was a child star. She was perhaps best known as Cindy Lou Who in the live-action adaptation of “How the Grinch Stole Christmas,” meaning that by the time her “Gossip Girl” tenure stretched on, Momsen was quite ready to hang up her hat. She’d long since realized that she was more interested in music, anyway, and her band, The Pretty Reckless, was doing pretty well.

“I woke up one morning and went, ‘Wait a second. I don’t have to do this? I don’t have to do this other job? I can just play in my band and tour, and write songs? I can just do that?” Momsen remembered thinking on an episode of co-star Penn Badgley’s Podcrushed podcast. Of course, there was that pesky contract to worry about. “They went, ‘Well, we can’t let you out of your deal, but we can write you out of the show,'” Momsen said. The only caveat was that she wouldn’t be able to act in any other projects. That was fine with her.

Her departure from “Gossip Girl” caused a minor media firestorm, and her co-star Connor Paolo blasted critics of her decision, even hinting at Jenny’s return. Ultimately, though, Momsen wouldn’t reappear on the show until its 2012 series finale, when Jenny showed up at Blair and Chuck’s wedding.

Steve Carell’s contract wasn’t renewed, but he returned for The Office finale

Everything on “The Office” orbited around Steve Carell’s hapless, well-meaning, incompetent paper company boss Michael Scott, but Carell ultimately left the show after Season 7. Though it was initially positioned in the media as simply time for him to step away, production sources later revealed in a book called “The Office: The Untold Story of the Greatest Sitcom of the 2000s” (via IndieWire) that Carell’s exit was the result of contract negotiations that turned sour. Carell had been willing to stay on longer, but NBC simply didn’t bother to renegotiate his contract when it expired. Casting director Allison Jones recalled, “NBC, for whatever reason, wouldn’t make a deal with him. Somebody didn’t pay him enough. It was absolutely asinine. I don’t know what else to say about that. Just asinine.”

Though Carell repeatedly insisted that he wouldn’t return to the show, Michael did indeed attend the wedding of Dwight Schrute (Rainn Wilson) and Angela Martin (Angela Kinsey) that formed the centerpiece of the series finale. “We just thought it would be fun if it were to be a surprise,” Carell told E! News. “We lied a lot.” And while we’re in the business of bringing people back, here are 10 “The Office” characters we’d like to see on Peacock’s spinoff “The Paper.”

Harold Perrineau returned to the island after being fired from Lost

How well do you remember the two-hour premiere of ABC’s “Lost”? If you’ve retained anything from the knockout show’s first season, you probably remember Harold Perrineau’s character Michael and his son Walt (Malcolm David Kelley). These are two characters who became increasingly important as that first season went on. Unfortunately, the show’s slow timeline meant Kelley aged much faster than his character, and Perrineau was ultimately written out, too. “It became pretty clear that I was the Black guy. Daniel [Dae Kim] was the Asian guy. And then you had Jack and Kate and Sawyer,” Perrineau told Maureen Ryan for her book “Burn It Down” (via Vanity Fair).

“I was f***ed up about it. I was like, ‘Oh, I just got fired, I think,'” Perrineau recalled. At the time, he gave an interview about his exit and complained openly about the fact that Michael and Walt didn’t get to close the book on their storyline. “Walt just winds up being another fatherless child,” he said. “It plays into a really big, weird stereotype and, being a Black person myself, that wasn’t so interesting.”

Perrineau did return to the island several times after Season 2, including in the show’s “flash-sideways” final season. “I’m never going to regret advocating for the character and for myself, as an actor,” Perrineau told BuzzFeed. “Let the chips fall where they fall.”

Lauren Cohan left The Walking Dead when they wouldn’t grant pay equity, but she came back

Lauren Cohan played Maggie on “The Walking Dead,” and she was one of the show’s best characters; she’s a headstrong survivor who knows her way around a weapon. She joined in Season 2 and quickly became one of the show’s main characters, thanks in part to her romance with Glenn (Steven Yeun) and her above-average zombie-killing skills. 

After Season 8, news broke that Cohan might not be returning for the show’s ninth season. Sources reported that she was trying to negotiate so that she was paid the same as male co-stars like Andrew Lincoln and Norman Reedus, though Cohan denied those specific rumors. On Andy Cohen’s SiriusXM show “Radio Andy,” she explained, “In a time of parity in the industry and in my show … it wasn’t actually that I was asking for more, it’s that my contract finished. That’s a pretty standard renegotiation.”

The negotiations fell apart, and instead Cohan starred on the ill-fated ABC series “Whiskey Cavalier.” When that show collapsed, she quickly returned to “The Walking Dead.” Speaking with The Hollywood Reporter, Cohan insisted that she’d held on to the character during her absence. “I knew she was going to come back; we just didn’t know exactly when. I mentally always had her in a quadrant of my brain and soul.” The main series has now concluded, but Cohan now leads “The Walking Dead: Dead City,” a spinoff that focuses on Maggie and Jeffrey Dean Morgan’s Negan.

Maggie Roswell continued voicing Maude Flanders after The Simpsons killed her off

In the early days of “The Simpsons,” the titular family was often contrasted with the far more religious one that lived next door. Ned Flanders is one of the best characters on “The Simpsons,” and, along with his wife, Maude (Maggie Roswell), both are pious and particular about raising their children, whereas Homer (Dan Castellaneta) and Marge (Julie Kavner) definitely are not. In the Season 11 episode “Alone Again, Natura-Diddily,” however, Maude was shockingly killed off, and suddenly Roswell was no longer voicing one of the show’s original characters.

The voice actor, it turns out, had moved to Denver, even though “The Simpsons” records its audio in Los Angeles. “I used to fly into L.A. on Thursday and fly back that night, and do that on Monday again,” Roswell told The Denver Post. “It was getting to be too much, too expensive, [and] they wouldn’t give me a raise.” She quit, and they killed Maude.

Thankfully, Roswell and the producers were able to work something out so that she could record from Denver, and Roswell returned to the cast several years later. Though she still occasionally voices Maude Flanders in ghost form, Roswell now primarily stars as Helen Lovejoy. “I do it from home, and I could not be more grateful. We work from March until November, two weeks on, one week off. I get SAG insurance. It’s great,” she told the newspaper. “I am living the life.”

Sarah Silverman was fired after one SNL season, and she hosted two decades later

In its decades on the air, “Saturday Night Live” has served as a proving ground for plenty of comedians, giving megastars like Will Ferrell, Tina Fey, Eddie Murphy, and many more their start. Not everyone breaks out, though, and plenty of cast members don’t last more than a season or two before Lorne Michaels gives them the chop.

In 1993, when she was only 22, Sarah Silverman was cast on the show. She would later find lots of fame on her own, thanks to her well-received sketch show and caustic stand-up comedy, but she was fired after one bad year at “SNL.” Speaking with GQ, Silverman said she mainly served as an audience plant during monologues. “I was not a fully realized person,” she reflected. “I definitely was not ready for it, but it was an amazing experience, and certainly prepared me for the rest. Everything else was pretty easy after that.”

Unlike most people who are fired after only one season on “SNL,” Silverman later returned to Studio 8H as a host. She helmed an episode in 2014, and she told GQ that the show nodded to her history as a monologue ringer. “I took questions from the audience, and all the questions were me from 1994, asking questions,” she said. “It was kind of awesome, because it was like the sweet, little innocent girl asking me questions, and it was me from so long ago.”

The Walking Dead killed off Jon Bernthal twice

“The Walking Dead” was known for its shocking cast exits, as the showrunners had no problem killing off beloved characters with little warning. One such character who got brutally cut was Jon Bernthal’s Shane Walsh. He’s a longtime friend of Rick Grimes (Andrew Lincoln) from before the zombie apocalypse, and the two link back up to discover that Shane has tried to keep Rick’s family safe.

Shane was killed off in the second season, and Bernthal told Conan O’Brien on “Conan O’Brien Needs A Friend” that he took it pretty hard. He sat and watched them film the first episode without him, and it was a difficult experience. “I just palpably understood, you know, I’m not part of that anymore,” he said. “I sat there and I [wept], and I felt sorry for myself, and I knew it was over.”

Bernthal has returned to the show twice, including in the Season 3 episode “Made to Suffer.” Once again, thanks to a hallucination, Shane got killed all over again. Still, Bernthal doesn’t regret anything about his time on the show. He explained to O’Brien, “I think getting killed off was the best thing that ever happened to me in my career, and I’m flabbergasted and grateful for all of it.”

Jeffrey Dean Morgan was killed off of Supernatural, but he returned a decade later

In the first season of “Supernatural,” Jeffrey Dean Morgan played John Winchester. He was the father of Sam (Jared Padalecki) and Dean (Jensen Ackles), two young men who take over the family business; in this case, it just happens to be killing demons. Unfortunately, John died in the Season 2 premiere, sending his sons spinning emotionally as they tried to hold the forces of evil at bay.

In 2019, Morgan returned to “Supernatural” thanks to an episode that involved some run-of-the-mill time travel. Sam and Dean get to visit an alternate reality where their father had survived, and they fill him in on everything they’d been up to in his absence. The episode was the show’s 300th — that’s a lot of time away from that iconic Chevy Impala — but Morgan told Entertainment Weekly he’d remained close with the actors playing his sons. “To step into it again, it’s like wearing an old pair of boots. I’m friends with these guys, so it’s a joy to come in,” he said.

In fact, it was fitting that Morgan played a proud father to the Winchester boys because he himself was proud of his friends’ accomplishments on the show. “It makes me get choked up because they’ve done so well here,” he said. “Episode 300? That’s unheard of.”

Steve Burton was fired from General Hospital over the COVID-19 vaccine, but came back later

Steve Burton has played Jason Morgan on “General Hospital” for a very long time, ever since the character was aged up in 1991. He’s taken a few hiatuses from the soap opera, including for a stint on “The Young and the Restless,” but for the most part, Burton has long been one of the most recognizable actors on one of the only remaining soaps.

In 2021, however, Burton was fired from “General Hospital” for refusing to comply with the set’s COVID-19 vaccine mandates. He announced the decision in an Instagram video, revealing, “I did apply for my medical and religious exemptions and both of those were denied, which hurts. But this is also about personal freedom to me. I don’t think anybody should lose their livelihood over this.” At the time, ABC required that anyone on set who wouldn’t be wearing a mask be vaccinated to protect others from the disease.

By March 2024, however, restrictions had loosened, and “General Hospital” brought Burton back to Port Charles. In a behind-the-scenes video of his first day on set shared by the show on YouTube, he gushed, “It just feels really good to be back on set with my people.”






This story originally appeared on TVLine

Target mandates smiles and small talk in bid to lift holiday sales

0

Target wants its employees to spread some holiday cheer — whether they like it or not, according to a report.

The Minneapolis-based retailer issued a new directive mandating in-store workers smile and make eye contact and either greet or wave to any shopper that comes within 10 feet, according to Bloomberg News.

If a customer steps within four feet, then the service rep is instructed to ask whether they need help or how their day is going, the new guidance said.

Target wants its employees to spread some holiday cheer to customers in hopes of boosting sales, according to a report. Christopher Sadowski

Major retailers like Walmart and Disney have long used similar customer-greeting rules that require employees to smile, make eye contact and offer assistance when guests come within a set distance.

The initiative, which is known internally as the “10-4 program,” is the latest effort by management to improve customer experience in the nearly 2,000 Target locations nationwide in the run-up to the holiday season.

Michael Fiddelke, the chief operating officer of Target who will take over as the CEO effective Feb. 1, has indicated that his top focus as chief executive will be to provide consistent guest experience — with an emphasis on clean, friendly stores and faster delivery for online shoppers.

Fiddelke told analysts during the company’s second-quarter earnings call in August that Target must “do better” when it comes to delivering a consistently positive shopping experience.

The Minneapolis-based retailer issued a new directive for in-store workers instructing them to smile and make eye contact and either greet or wave to any shopper that comes within 10 feet. Getty Images

The company has been testing new store formats and digital fulfillment models to improve efficiency and reduce out-of-stock issues. In Chicago, certain locations are now handling a greater share of online orders, while others focus entirely on in-store service.

Target’s renewed focus on customer experience follows a period of sluggish sales. The retailer reported that comparable sales fell 1.9% year over year in the second quarter of 2025, including a 3.2% drop in-store. Digital sales, however, rose 4.3%.

Executives have pledged to invest about $4 billion this year in new stores, remodels, technology, and supply chain upgrades to restore what one analyst called “the Target magic” that once drew loyal shoppers.

Target’s Chief Stores Officer Adrienne Costanzo told Bloomberg the company is “making adjustments and implementing new ways to increase connection during the most important time of the year.”

If a customer steps within four feet, then the service rep is instructed to ask whether they need help or how their day is going, the new guidance said. REUTERS

The retailer found that key consumer metrics improved when shoppers were greeted or acknowledged, according to the report.

Target shares are down more than 30% this year, compared with a 14% gain for the S&P 500, as cost-conscious shoppers focus on necessities and rivals like Walmart double down on price cuts and remodeled stores.

The company is expected to report third-quarter earnings later this month. The Post has sought comment from Target.



This story originally appeared on NYPost

Absurd congestion pricing and more: Letters

0

Greedy NY Dems

President Trump is right about congestion pricing (“Trump takes new shot at congest,” Nov. 4).

While he’s at it, he should make an issue of New York’s absurd plan to reduce greenhouse gases by 40% as of 2030, which, if implemented, would dramatically drive up energy prices.

Democrats love to talk about affordability, but no one seems more devoted to taking more and more money out of our pockets through taxes, tolls and utility increases than they do.

It’s not the bodega owners surviving on a small profit margin who are gouging us; it’s Democrat politicians.

Gary Mottola

Brooklyn

Do NOT test nukes

America is just not in any position to resume nuclear testing (“Yes — Test Our Nukes,” Rich Lowry, PostOpinion, Oct. 31).

It will only lead to a costly arms race that we can ill afford. Restarting an arms race at a time when Russia has demonstrated technological superiority in the recent successful testing of its missile systems will be a fool’s errand.

Trump’s dangerous and irrational decision will only exacerbate global instability and has the very real chance of provoking World War III.

I beseech Trump to do what’s right by acknowledging that the Ukraine war is lost and seeking peace with Russia — not a more devastating war. Focus on America’s myriad domestic issues, not warmongering.

No one will win WWIII. All humanity will lose.

Michael Pravica

Henderson, Nev.

A pet ‘trunk show’

Animals are not trinkets or souvenirs, and anyone who sells puppies from the trunk of a car puts profit before the animals’ welfare (“Traffic ‘jam’ by puppy peddler,” Nov. 2) .

Regardless of whether someone is peddling puppies from a Mercedes or churning out litters in a licensed kennel, all breeding results in harm.

New York was right to ban the retail sale of dogs, cats and rabbits in pet stores. However, the only real solution is to end breeding altogether, and always adopt — never shop.

Melissa Rae Sanger

Norfolk, Va.

H’ween Kirk meme

Just when you thought the leftists couldn’t sink anymore into their abyss of hatred, along comes Kyle Kulinski posting an absolutely disgusting meme of Charlie Kirk’s widow (“Ghoul for H’ween,” Nov. 3).

Way to go, Bozo. If the roles were reversed, how would you feel? There’s a special place for you in the world of karma.

Kevin Judge

Naples, Fla.

Fight like Liz Eddy

There is nothing like women getting their panties in a wad over a common-sense suggestion to keep the “W” in the National Women’s Soccer League (“Kicking up a storm,” Kirsten Fleming, Nov. 4).

Women have fought too long and hard for a league of their own to have it taken over by men. Any woman who is against this has obviously lost respect for herself and her gender. More women need to show some courage and stand up and fight for their rights like Elizabeth Eddy.

JoAnn Lee Frank

Clearwater, Fla.

Hero on a train

Reading about this mass stabbing (“UK train slasher,” Nov. 3) reminded me of what a hero Daniel Penny was.

The passengers on the London-bound train were terrified. Imagine if Penny had been there to save them from the rampaging maniac knifer.

Carol Meltzer

Manhattan

Want to weigh in on today’s stories? Send your thoughts (along with your full name and city of residence) to letters@nypost.com. Letters are subject to editing for clarity, length, accuracy, and style.



This story originally appeared on NYPost

Peter Thiel warns if you ‘proletarianize the young people,’ don’t be surprised they end up communist

0

PayPal cofounder and Silicon Valley venture capitalist Peter Thiel doubled down on his worries about generational conflict and the future of capitalism after a similar warning he issued in 2020 proved eerily prescient.

After Tuesday night’s election victory of democratic socialist Zoran Mamdani as New York City’s mayor, an email Thiel sent five years ago went viral.

In the correspondence to Mark Zuckerberg, Marc Andreessen and others, he warned that “When 70% of Millennials say they are pro-socialist, we need to do better than simply dismiss them by saying that they are stupid or entitled or brainwashed; we should try and understand why.”

Thiel expanded on those concerns in an interview with the Free Press that was published on Friday, saying strict zoning laws and construction limits have been good for boomers, who have seen their properties appreciate, but they have been terrible for millennials, who are having an extremely hard time buying homes.

“If you proletarianize the young people, you shouldn’t be surprised if they eventually become communist,” he explained.

While Thiel, who backed Donald Trump’s re-election, disagrees with Mamdani’s answers to New York’s housing affordability problems, he credited the lawmaker for talking about the issue more than establishment figures have been.

He also said he’s not sure if young people are actually more in favor of socialism or if they have become more disillusioned with capitalism.

“So in some relative sense, they’re more socialist, even though I think it’s more just: ‘Capitalism doesn’t work for me. Or, this thing called capitalism is just an excuse for people ripping you off,’” Thiel added.

Affordability politics

While Mamdani’s victory highlighted voters’ shift away from Republicans, moderate Democrats also won with campaigns that focused on the cost of living.

The off-year election results were a “wake-up call” for both parties to tackle the affordability crisis, according to polling expert Frank Luntz, who distinguished it from inflation.

Thiel expressed some sympathy for voters seeking bold ideas to solve daunting problems like student debt and housing costs, which previously have been addressed with “tinkering at the margins.”

Such incremental attempts haven’t worked, spurring voters to warm up to proposals outside the typical political discourse, including “some very left-wing economics, socialist-type stuff,” Thiel said.

As a result, he’s not surprised that voters have gravitated toward Mamdani, even though he doesn’t think his ideas will work either.

“Capitalism is not working for a lot of people in New York City. It’s not working for young people,” Thiel said.

‘Old people’s socialism’

He also observed that the growing popularity of socialism among younger Americans comes amid a “multi-decade political bull market.”

This era of increased political intensity comes as people have started looking more to politics to fix their problems, according to Thiel, who leans more libertarian. 

Part of that is due to a huge mismatch between people’s hopes and reality, with that chasm growing bigger than ever.

“There are some dimensions in which the millennials are better off than the boomers. There’s some ways our society has changed for the better,” Thiel said. “But the gap between the expectations the boomer parents had for their kids and what those kids actually were able to do is just extraordinary. I don’t think there’s ever been a generation where the gap has been as extreme as for the millennials.”

But when asked if a revolution is on the horizon, he said he thinks that’s hard to believe, given that communism and fascism are “youth movements.”

At the same time, America’s aging demographics are marked by fewer young people, who are not having as many children.

“And so, we have more of a gerontocracy. Which means that if the U.S. becomes socialist, it will be more of an old people’s socialism than a young people’s socialism, where it’s more about free healthcare or something like that,” Thiel added. “The word ‘revolution’ sounds pretty high testosterone and violent and youthful. And today, if it’s a revolution, it’s 70-something grandmothers.”



This story originally appeared on Fortune

What Did Jeremy Renner Do? What Filmmaker Yi Zhou Accused Him of – Hollywood Life

0


Image Credit: Getty Images for The Chris Corne

Jeremy Renner made headlines in November 2025 when a filmmaker named Yi Zhou accused the 54-year-old actor of sending her unolicited sexual DMs and threatening to call Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) on her. Renner adamantly denied Zhou’s allegations and fired back with a cease-and-desist letter, accusing the director of sending him multiple explicit messages.

Below, Hollywood Life has compiled the whole story so far between Renner and Zhou.

Who Is Yi Zhou?

Zhou is a 37-year-old Chinese director, writer, producer and model. Known for her documentary Between Stars and Scars: Masters of Cinema, the London School of Economics graduate has been in the film and performing arts industry for nearly 20 years.

As a model, Zhou has appeared in campaigns for Vogue, Uomo Vogue and Elle and was on the cover of Vogue China Beauty among other publications around the world.

Zhou has also dabbled in entrepreneurial ventures, starting her lifestyle and fashion brand, Global Intuition, in 2019. She has also launched entertainment companies, including Into the Sun in the U.S. and in Italy.

What Did Jeremy Renner Allegedly Do?

Zhou accused Renner of sending her sexual DMs and WhatsApp messages over the summer of 2025. According to multiple outlets, Zhou claimed in a series of posts that Renner told her he was “open to a long-term relationship.”

“I believed in him, in the power of love and in the possibility of redemption,” Zhou wrote about Renner. “When I called him out privately about his past misconduct and asked him to behave properly, to respect me as a woman and as a filmmaker, he threatened to call immigration/ICE on me.”

Renner, however, vehemently denied the accusations and sent Zhou a cease-and-desist letter after she went public with her claims in November 2025, according to TMZ. Renner’s attorney, Marty Singer, claimed Zhou came onto Renner and that when she allegedly tried to pull a move on him again in August 2025, he made sure she stayed in the guest room. Renner’s attorney also claimed that Zhou sent the actor explicit, sexual messages. Renner also threatened to take legal action.

Were Jeremy Renner & Yi Zhou in a Relationship?

Renner claimed that he and Zhou had a “brief consensual encounter,” and that he had rejected Zhou’s advances in August 2025, a month after they first met to discuss her documentary Chronicles of Disney.

Who Is Jeremy Renner’s Ex-Wife?

Renner’s ex-wife is Canadian actress Sonni Pacheco. The former spouses share their daughter, Ava, together. Renner and Pacheco were married from 2014 to 2015.

Sunni Pacheco’s Allegations Against Jeremy Renner: What She Accused Him of

After Renner and Pacheco initially agreed on joint custody of their daughter, Ava. However, four years after their divorce, Pacheco filed a request for physical custody of Ava and asked for monitored visitation whenever Renner had their daughter, according to several outlets. Pacheco later accused Renner of several alarming actions, including allegedly threatening to end her life and put a gun in his own mouth before aiming to fire it up toward the ceiling, per TMZ.

Renner denied Pacheco’s claims. A rep for the MCU star told TMZ that the “well-being of his daughter, Ava, has always been and continues to be the primary focus for Jeremy. This is a matter for the court to decide. It’s important to note the dramatizations made in Sonni’s declaration are a one-sided account made with a specific goal in mind.”




This story originally appeared on Hollywoodlife

The sunny European tourist hotspot that’s ‘better than Spain’ with a lower cost of living | Europe | Travel

0


For years, Spain has topped the list of dream destinations for Brits looking to escape the UK. With its warm weather, great food and laid-back lifestyle, it seemed to tick every box.

But while Spain’s expat population has levelled off, its neighbour Portugal is seeing a huge surge in newcomers – and for good reason. Since 2018, the number of expats in Portugal has increased by 150%, despite challenges such as Brexit and the COVID-19 pandemic. There are now nearly 50,000 British residents in Portugal, making them the second-largest foreign community in Portugal, surpassed only by Brazilians. The most popular regions for Britons include the Algarve, Lisbon, Setúbal and Porto. So what’s driving the boom, and why are so many Brits staying for good?

Money talks, and for many expats, Portugal simply makes more financial sense. A recent TikTok video from a woman living in Spain summed up the struggle, saying: “Basically, you’re working to survive.”

The average rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Spain now sits at around €972, but popular expat hotspots can be far higher. Spain is also considering a controversial 100% property tax for non-EU residents, which could double the cost of buying a home before obtaining residency.

Furthermore, inflation has hit Spanish households hard – grocery prices have increased by nearly 40% since 2019, while wages have failed to keep pace.

In contrast, Portugal has earned a reputation as one of Western Europe’s most affordable countries. Housing Anywhere reports that a single person can live comfortably for around €1,285 a month. Numbeo data shows Portugal’s cost of living is nearly 38% lower than the UK, making it especially appealing for retirees on fixed incomes.

Portugal has also made it easier for foreigners to settle in. Its Digital Nomad Visa, launched in 2022, is designed for remote workers earning from abroad. The visa can last for a year or lead to permanent residency, with applicants needing to show an income of €3,480 (£3,060) per month.

For retirees or those living off passive income, the bar is even lower – around €870 (£765) per month, equal to Portugal’s minimum wage.

Spain, meanwhile, offers a non-working visa that requires retirees to prove an annual income of roughly €30,240 (26,600), plus an additional amount for dependents – a significantly higher threshold.

Spain is also suffering from the fallout of the scrapping of its Golden Visa earlier this year. The Portuguese equivalent, however, is proving exceptionally popular, particularly with the British, as it is designed for non-EU citizens. The Portuguese Golden Visa is available to Brits for a €500,000 (£439,200) investment. It grants visa-free travel within the Schengen Area and requires a minimal physical stay in Portugal of seven days in the first year and then 14 days in each subsequent two-year period. After five years of holding the residency, you can then apply for permanent residency or citizenship.

Spain is famous for its sunshine, and while Portugal can’t quite match the Costa del Sol for year-round heat, most of the country enjoys hot summers and mild winters. The north receives more rain, but the climate overall remains a significant draw for those seeking a slower, outdoor lifestyle.

Spain may still hold the classic appeal, but for many Brits, Portugal offers a better balance – a lower cost of living, friendly visa options and plenty of sunshine to go around. For expats watching their budget, it’s not hard to see why Portugal is fast becoming the new Iberian dream.

Over 47,409 British citizens currently reside in Portugal, according to the country’s Agency for Integration, Migration and Asylum (AIMA). This represents a significant increase from the 21,300 British nationals living in the country in 2000, based on data from Portugal’s Observatório da Emigração.



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk