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I asked ChatGPT if an AI bubble’s about to cause a stock market crash and it said…

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Image source: Getty Images

Stock market crashes are notoriously difficult to predict. So I tried asking the latest version of ChatGPT whether I need to worry about a bubble in artificial intelligence (AI) shares.

OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman says that GPT-5 is supposed to be like talking to a PhD-level expert. But the response I got resembled something I might expect from first-year undergraduates.

What ChatGPT said

All that ChatGPT gave me is a list of potential AI risks, including weak earnings and tighter regulation. But in terms of a crash, all it said is that the threat’s “meaningful” – whatever that means.

That wasn’t much help. But it offered to help me assess the probability of different scenarios —  including a mild correction, a moderate decline, and a major crash – which sounded better.

This however, turned out to be some statistics about the past frequency of each of these. And it concluded the likeliest outcome is a 10%-20% drop, because that’s happened most before.

That’s information I can get myself fairly easily. But maybe a PhD isn’t what you need for figuring out when a crash is coming and the best way to prepare.

How I’m preparing

Given this, I’m sticking to my usual approach for being ready for a stock market crash. Part of this involves having an idea of which shares I want to buy if prices go down sharply. 

What I look for is a business that’s going to emerge from a downturn in a stronger position than it was in before. And that means a company with a strong competitive advantage.

When things get tough in an industry, it’s often the case that the weakest firms get hit the hardest. So stronger operators find themselves in an even better position when things recover. That means looking for businesses with big competitive advantages. And there’s one in particular from the UK that’s at the top of my list. 

What to do?

Compass Group (LSE:CPG) is a FTSE 100 contract caterer. It’s not an obvious AI casualty, but if automation drives staff reduction, the firm could face lower demand from workplaces.

The company however, has an incredibly strong competitive position. It’s the biggest operator by far and its scale gives it an advantage when it comes to negotiating prices with suppliers.

What impresses me most is that the firm’s been strengthening its position in an unusual way. It’s been monetising its position by letting competitors use its platform in exchange for a fee.

This generates extra cash while disincentivising rivals from trying to build a competing operation. I think this makes it a brilliant move in terms of securing its long-term position.

Crash opportunities

ChatGPT wasn’t able to tell me much about whether the next stock market crash is imminent. That might be because figuring this out is just too hard even for PhD-level thinking. 

Given this, my plan is to make sure I’m ready with a list of stocks I want to buy whenever the next big drop in share prices comes. And Compass Group’s one of these.

Right now, the stock’s about 10% above my target price. But I expect it to be more resilient than its peers in a big downturn and that makes it an ideal candidate to consider in a crash.



This story originally appeared on Motley Fool

NHS alert as people with Covid issued 10-day warning

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The NHS has urged people to stick to a 10-day rule if they have Covid. Despite a slight decrease in Covid cases in recent weeks, the virus remains prevalent across the UK.

The most recent data from the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), collected during the week of 27 October, indicates a dip in hospital Covid cases.

The weekly average positivity rate for COVID-19 in hospital settings was reported at 5.7 per cent, compared to 7.7 per cent the previous week.

Hospitalisations due to COVID-19 decreased to 2.22 per 100,000 from 2.51 per 100,000 in the preceding week.

The UKHSA noted that those aged 85 and over had the “highest” hospital admission rate, which fell to 22.71 per 100,000 from 28.59 per 100,000 the previous week.

The NHS has a series of recommendations if you test positive. On its website the NHS states that “most” people do not need to take a COVID-19 rapid lateral flow test if they have symptoms.

It is also recommended that you:

  • Try to stay at home and avoid contact with other people for three days after the day the test was taken if you or your child are under 18 years old – children and young people tend to be infectious for less time than adults
  • Try to stay at home and avoid contact with other people for five days after the day you took your test if you are 18 years old or over

Find out about the symptoms you need to watch out for and get health advice with our free health newsletter from the Daily Express

Symptoms

According to the NHS, COVID-19 symptoms can include:

  • A high temperature or shivering (chills) – a high temperature means you feel hot to touch on your chest or back (you do not need to measure your temperature)
  • A new, continuous cough – this means coughing a lot for more than an hour, or three or more coughing episodes in 24 hours
  • A loss or change to your sense of smell or taste
  • Shortness of breath
  • Feeling tired or exhausted
  • An aching body
  • A headache
  • A sore throat
  • A blocked or runny nose
  • Loss of appetite
  • Diarrhoea
  • Feeling sick or being sick

“The symptoms are very similar to symptoms of other illnesses, such as colds and flu,” the NHS says. “Most people feel better within a few weeks, but it can take longer to recover.

“For some people, it can be a more serious illness and their symptoms can last longer.”

To help ease symptoms, the NHS says you should:

  • Get lots of rest
  • Drink plenty of water to avoid dehydration (your pee should be light yellow or clear)
  • Take paracetamol or ibuprofen if you feel uncomfortable
  • Try having a teaspoon of honey if you have a cough – do not give honey to babies under 12 months
  • Try turning the heating down or opening a window to help with breathlessness
  • Breathe slowly in through your nose and out through your mouth, with your lips together like you’re gently blowing out a candle
  • Sit upright in a chair to help with breathlessness
  • Relax your shoulders, so you’re not hunched to help with breathlessness
  • Lean forward slightly – support yourself by putting your hands on your knees or on something stable like a chair to help with breathlessness
  • Not lie on your back if you have a cough – lie on your side or sit upright instead
  • Not use a fan to cool your room as it may spread the virus
  • Try not to panic if you’re feeling breathless – this can make it worse

For more information, visit the NHS website here.



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk

10 Best Kids’ Cartoons Based On Grown-Up Movies

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R-rated movies started in 1968, creating a clear line of demarcation between movies kids could see, and movies they couldn’t. Well, it’s not that kids couldn’t see R-rated movies: They just couldn’t see them without being accompanied by an adult. So it wasn’t an actual attempt to prevent the corruption of impressionable minds. Don’t be silly. It was just the motion picture industry doing their darndest to pass the buck and avoid liability for showing kids things they had absolutely no business watching. 

You can tell Hollywood wasn’t too terribly concerned about kids being around R-rated, grown-up content given that the movie business made a mint selling toys, video games, comic books, and even cartoons about those same movies kids were prohibited from watching. There’s no shortage of kid’s cartoons based on R-rated movies, or at least movies primarily targeting grown-ups. No, some of these aren’t as egregious as, say, “The Exorcist: The Animated Series” (as awesome as that would be), but looking at this list you’ll think it’s pretty crazy they made cartoons given how adult-skewing the movies were. Still, there’s no denying these cartoons are pretty entertaining — almost as much as the movies they’re based on.

RoboCop: The Animated Series

“RoboCop” has been featured in four films; two are R-rated and two are PG-13. (But the PG-13 ones are “RoboCop 3” and the 2014 “RoboCop” remake, so nobody of any age should watch them.) Most casual fans of the franchise believe only the first one is any good (make that really good). “RoboCop” punches far above its weight, promising an action-packed movie about a robot cop (which it delivers), while also providing a thought-provoking satire and inspirational hero’s journey. Oh, it’s also really, really violent. And there’s sexual content. And drugs. Lots of drugs. Pretty much all of the above, usually in the same scene. But hey, if RoboCop is going to clean up the mean streets of 1980s Detroit, you have to showcase just how debaucherous the city had become.

But the core idea of a robot cop fighting crime was too good to pass up, so the adventures of Alex Murphy, Detroit Police Department, inspired not one, but two cartoons. “RoboCop: The Animated Series” released in 1988 from Marvel Productions (the studio behind the groundbreaking “X-Men: The Animated Series”), and pretty much picked up where the 1987 movie left off, just without the sex and drugs (but now with cartoony violence). “RoboCop: The Animated Series” lasted for just a single season with 12 episodes, but was followed by “RoboCop: Alpha Commando” in 1998, which toned the violence way down, as RoboCop was basically Inspector Gadget. Its silly shenanigans lasted for a single season and 40 episodes.

Rambo: The Force of Freedom

Nothing says “family friendly Saturday morning cartoon fun” quite like a special forces super soldier suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder after being taken as a prisoner of war in Vietnam, right? Yeah, okay then. “Rambo: The Force of Freedom” obviously didn’t go as deep into Rambo’s tortured psyche as the inaugural film, “First Blood.” But heck, neither did any of the sequels either. Nope, the cartoon, like the movies, realized the character could easily be placed into any number of dumb, over-the-top action movie scenarios, which is essentially what “Rambo: The Force of Freedom” is about.

In the show, Rambo leads the titular “Force of Freedom” on missions around the world against General Warhawk and his terrorist organization S.A.V.A.G.E. (Specialist-Administrators of Vengeance, Anarchy, and Global Extortion). Is that “G.I. Joe”? Sure sounds like it. Welp, “G.I. Joe” meets “Rambo” sounds awesome, and indeed it was, for one season and 65 episodes in 1986. It’s hard to overstate just how big a deal Rambo was in the mid-’80s, when the character was at the peak of his popularity. “Rambo: First Blood Part II” was the second highest-grossing domestic release of 1985 (behind “Back To The Future”), earning $300 million worldwide, or $900 million in today’s dollars.

Highlander: The Animated Series

The “Highlander” franchise has never been a big hit; each of the five films in the franchise has bombed at the box office. Even the 1986 original only earned $12 million worldwide on a $16 million budget. Yet Hollywood keeps throwing buckets of money at this franchise that has never worked, with a reboot starring Henry Cavill coming soon (since he’s not on “The Witcher” anymore).

All of which is to say, the “Highlander” brand just won’t stay down, as producers continue to try to turn it into a viable brand. Enter “Highlander: The Animated Series,” which successfully danced around the fact that the R-rated franchise was centered around decapitating people. And we gotta admit, it was pretty solid. 

In a loose spin-off and sequel to the 1986 original film, “Highlander: The Animated Series” takes place in a post-apocalyptic future that resembles medieval Europe… but with killer cyborgs. OK, we’re listening. In said future, Connor MacLeod’s descendant Quentin must hone his skills and unite the Immortals to defeat the evil warlord Kortan — a quest he pursued for two seasons and 40 episodes between 1994 and 1996.

Conan The Adventurer

The “Conan the Cimmerian” series was created by Robert E. Howard, and was first introduced in a series of books starting in the early 1950s. Conan spread his wings (well, his biceps) and made his way into comic books in the ’70s, but he didn’t hit the big screen until 1982’s “Conan the Barbarian,” released nearly 30 years after the first book. Imagine a popular franchise taking 30 years to become a movie in this day and age. Unfathomable!

Anyway, the original R-rated “Conan the Barbarian” is best remembered as the movie that launched Arnold Schwarzenegger’s career. Its $79 million worldwide box office ($265 million adjusted for inflation) on a $20 million budget meant a sequel was a no-brainer, though 1984’s inexplicably PG-rated “Conan the Destroyer” showed the barbarian was a one-trick pony, making less than half the first film. Conan was dead as a movie franchise (for now), but was relaunched as the cartoon series “Conan the Adventurer” in 1992. Despite owing more to the PG-rated “Destroyer” that bombed than the R-rated “Barbarian” that thrived, “Conan the Adventurer” was fairly successful, running for two seasons and 65 episodes. Alas, given this was a kids cartoon, “Conan the Adventurer” was more safe than savage, resembling the “He-Man and the Masters of the Universe” series that had dominated the mid-’80s.

Roughnecks: Starship Trooper Chronicles

Dynamic Dutch director Paul Verhoeven developed a reputation for shocking violence, science fiction, and compelling satire in 1987’s “RoboCop” and 1990’s “Total Recall.” After detours into erotic dramas like “Basic Instinct” and “Showgirls,” Verhoeven returned to his cinematic comfort zone with 1997’s “Starship Troopers.” 

Like pretty much all of Verhoeven’s oeuvre, “Starship Troopers” is R-rated. Very, very R-rated. Besides human beings getting mutilated by the evil bug monsters, there’s also profanity and nudity (such as the infamous shower scene with male and female soldiers bathing together). “Starship Troopers” is an awesome watch for those who like Verhoeven’s schtick, but it’s definitely not for kids. But hey, space soldiers killing bugs sounds pretty sweet, right? Kids would love that, yeah?

That’s what the producers of “Roughnecks: Starship Trooper Chronicles” thought. And to be honest, the animated series is pretty solid, even if it obviously lacks the punch of the film (despite being executive-produced by Verhoeven). Using a 3D, computer-generated style, “Roughnecks: Starship Trooper Chronicles” follows the missions of a Mobile Infantry squad as they fight an infestation of evil alien insect invaders. The show bounced around networks throughout its one-season run of 40 episodes from 1999-2000. In the years since, “Roughnecks: Starship Troopers Chronicles” has built a cult following almost as passionate as fans of the film, and is way better than any of the series’ straight-to-video sequels.

Toxic Crusaders

Starting with the 1984 original, the “Toxic Avenger” franchise has always been more of an esoteric series, with a small (make that very small) but devoted fanbase. Still, the existence of that avid audience was enough to get cartoon producers to try their hand at an animated series. It went, well, about as well as the movie series.

Loosely based on the movies, “Toxic Crusaders” follows the same premise of a nerd gaining super powers after getting bathed in toxic waste, and using his newfound abilities to fight evil environmental criminals. He forms a team of mutants, the titular “Toxic Crusaders,” to battle the big bad guy, Dr. Killemoff (did his PhD advisors not think he may be an evil super-villain with that last name?) in the city of Tomaville. So basically, “Captain Planet” meets “Swamp Thing”? Like the films it was based on, “Toxic Crusaders” was not popular, lasting only 13 episodes. But that 13-episode run was still fun, and worth a watch for the few fans of this franchise.

Beetlejuice

Not every legacy sequel succeeds at the box office. For every “Top Gun: Maverick,” there’s a “Terminator: Dark Fate,” “The Matrix Resurrections,” or “Independence Day: Resurgence.” To be honest, it doesn’t matter how much money the original made at the box office, but how much fans fell in love with it in the subsequent years or even decades. Take “Beetlejuice Beetlejuice,” which made more in its opening weekend than the original did in its entire worldwide run. Even adjusting for inflation, the 2024 sequel more than doubled the box office of the 1988 original. So clearly, there was pent-up demand for The Juice. The lion’s share of that demand no doubt came from the love generations of fans have for Tim Burton and Michael Keaton’s classic, quirky, macabre comedy. But we daresay at least some of that comes from millennial kids-turned-adults who became fans from the TV show.

“Beetlejuice” ran for four seasons and 95 episodes on ABC and Fox, more than almost any of the other animated series on this list, and by a pretty impressive margin. This is kind of bizarre when you consider the source material. No, “Beetlejuice” wasn’t rated R, but it was about a dead couple navigating life in the underworld, haunting an eccentric family, and enlisting the aid of a devious demon. Doesn’t exactly scream “kids TV,” does it? Yet “Beetlejuice” was obviously a big hit, and helped create new fans of the franchise out of those tykes who may have been too young for the movie.

Police Academy: The Series

By last count, there are at least 300 “Police Academy” movies. OK, OK, that’s a slight exaggeration. There’s only seven, which may seem minuscule in a moviegoing universe dominated by multiverses, but “Police Academy” was out of control in the ’80s. In fact, the first six “Police Academy” movies were released at a frequency of one movie per year between 1984 and 1989. The franchise took a five-year break, but was back with 1994’s “Police Academy 7: Mission To Moscow,” which earned a meager $126,000 and change. Yikes.

Only the original “Police Academy” was rated R, as producers realized the ridiculous, ribald humor was better suited for PG-13. And, eventually, for a cartoon series. Airing in syndication from 1988 to 1989, “Police Academy: The Animated Series” is unlike many of the other cartoons on this list, as it’s not an adaptation based on the movies. Rather, it takes place chronologically within the series, specifically between “Police Academy 4: Citizens On Patrol” (1987) and “Police Academy 5: Assignment Miami Beach” (1988). 

“Police Academy: The Series” was about a team of academy grads who are led by Carey Mahoney (Steve Guttenberg in the movies) through a series of misadventures. It lasted for two seasons and 65 episodes, proving you couldn’t escape the franchise in the 1980s. While “Police Academy” was never exactly a critical darling, the cartoon does a good job bringing the movies to a new medium, as the franchise was basically a cartoon anyway.

Attack of the Killer Tomatoes

While not specifically R-rated, “Attack of the Killer Tomatoes” and its three sequels were mostly targeted to adults, specifically those old enough to remember the B-movies it was spoofing. Released in 1978, “Attack of the Killer Tomatoes” was a horror-comedy hybrid (a “homedy,” if you will) about the world being attacked by a hungry horde of mutated, murderous tomatoes, and the group of scientists who team up to stop them. So basically, just like a bazillion B-movies from the 1950s, only with giant radioactive animals replaced by vegetables. It was a one-note joke out of which the filmmakers somehow managed to squeeze an hour-and-a-half-long movie, as well as three additional sequels. Clearly, the satirical series had its supporters, which is why it also launched a semi-successful kids cartoon show.

Running for two seasons and 20 episodes starting in 1990, “Attack of the Killer Tomatoes” came from Marvel Productions long before the MCU, and follows the same basic premise as the films. Though to keep the drama going for multiple episodes, the show follows a mad scientist named Dr. Putrid T. Gangreen (voiced by John Astin) who creates the monstrous mutant tomatoes, which also have the power to change into people. Like the film series it is based on, the Fox series certainly has its fans, and has cemented its status as a cult classic 35 years since its initial release. Spend a marathon watching this show, and you’ll never look at your salad the same way again.

The Real Ghostbusters

Movies don’t come much bigger than “Ghostbusters” in 1984, as it earned $295 million worldwide, or just over $900 million in today’s dollars. Yep, an original comedy with sci-fi and horror elements nearly made the equivalent of a billion dollars. Sheesh, how much has the industry changed, right? 

Anyway, the franchise has been riding that high ever since, trying to recapture the box office magic of the original. “Ghostbusters II” temporarily set the opening weekend box office record in 1989 (until Batman himself crushed it a week later). The series then spent decades in development hell, before the failed franchise reboot “Ghostbusters: Answer The Call” flopped in 2016, followed by legacy sequels “Ghostbusters: Afterlife” in 2021 and “Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire” in 2024. While these two films appear to have steadied the sinking ship, the series has topped out at around $200 million (sans inflation).

One bright spot for the franchise was “The Real Ghostbusters.” The storyline is simple enough, as it follows the four heroes from the film as they fight specters and spirits around New York City. The only real difference is Slimer (a villain in the movie) is now the team’s pet. Given some of the ribald humor, “Ghostbusters” was meant as a grown-up movie, but its massive success signaled there was a younger audience. “The Real Ghostbusters” clearly captured this fanbase, becoming the most successful cartoon series on this list by far, lasting seven seasons and 140 episodes from 1986 to 1991.





This story originally appeared on TVLine

Rams lean on four picks to edge Seattle and take first in NFC West

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Midnight Mode, indeed.

On the day the Rams donned black uniforms for the only time this season, the offense largely went dark.

Red-hot quarterback Matthew Stafford cooled. Star receivers Davante Adams and Puka Nacua struggled to consistently make the clutch plays that they often make look routine.

But safety Kamren Kinchens and the Rams’ defense managed to keep the Seattle Seahawks at bay — just barely.

Kinchens intercepted two passes, and cornerbacks Cobie Durant and Darious Williams also picked off passes as the Rams held off the Seahawks for a 21-19 victory on Sunday at SoFi Stadium that was not secured until Seattle’s Jason Myers missed a 61-yard field goal as time expired.

“I’m proud of our football team,” coach Sean McVay said. “We’re not going to apologize for finding different ways to win.”

No apologies necessary. Despite some struggles Sunday, the Rams are living up to expectations as a Super Bowl contender.

Stafford continues to play without major errors, the defensive front continues to pressure quarterbacks into mistakes, and kicking-game issues appear to be solved.

And now the secondary, regarded as a potential liability before the season, is stepping up.

Stafford tossed touchdown passes to Adams and tight end Colby Parkinson, and Kyren Williams rushed for a touchdown as the Rams improved to 8-2, extended their winning streak to five games and assumed sole possession of first place in the NFC West.

Rams coach Sean McVay tries to rev up his players before Sunday’s 21-19 win over the Seahawks at SoFi Stadium.

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

“We found a way to win without playing perfect football against a really good football team,” Stafford said. “So I’ll take it.”

So will Adams, whose lone catch marked the 1,000 of his career and his league-leading 10th touchdown reception this season.

“It wasn’t like it was the worst of all time,” he said of the offense’s performance, “but to our standard it definitely was not there.

“But, I mean, it makes you feel even better knowing you can play like crap … and still come out with a victory against a really good team.”

The Rams can thank Kinchens, a second-year safety who has six career interceptions, including four against the Seahawks. His interceptions set up Williams’ one-yard touchdown in the first quarter and Parkinson’s six-yard score in the fourth.

Rams safety Kamren Kinchens celebrates with teammates after intercepting a pass.

Rams safety Kamren Kinchens celebrates with teammates after intercepting a pass in the second half against Seattle on Sunday at SoFi Stadium.

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

“Man, they want to throw the ball,” a chuckling Kinchens said in explaining his success against the Seahawks. “People that want to kind of put it down the field or give us a shot — big mistake.”

Or, as Durant put it: “Preaching what we do every day, man — take the ball away.”

The Rams went into the game having scored at least 34 points in each of their last three games. But that production was absent against a Seahawks team that fell to 7-3 and had its four-game winning streak end.

Stafford increased his league-leading total of touchdown passes to 27 and did not have a pass intercepted for the seventh consecutive game. But the 17th-year pro was not as sharp as he had been during a stretch that put him in the conversation for NFL most valuable player.

“I’m obviously excited that we got the win,” said Stafford, who completed 15 of 28 passes for 130 yards. “Don’t get it twisted on me here, but at the same time I know I can be better too.”

Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford slings a pass to tight end Colby Parkinson.

Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford slings a pass to tight end Colby Parkinson in the first half Sunday at SoFi Stadium.

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Stafford enjoyed a banner day compared to Seahawks quarterback Sam Darnold.

The Rams’ front did not sack Darnold but it pressured him into poor decisions, and Kinchens, Durant and Williams made him pay. Darnold completed 29 of 44 passes for 279 yards with four interceptions.

Seahawks receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba, who was on pace to set an NFL record for yards receiving in a season, caught nine passes for 105 yards. But he did not score.

Cooper Kupp, the former Rams star making his return to SoFi Stadium, did not have a catch in the first three quarters but had three during a late scoring drive that trimmed the Rams’ lead to two points.

With 1 minute 41 seconds left, Rams punter Ethan Evans kicked the ball 50 yards to the Seahawks’ one-yard line. The Seahawks drove past midfield, but Myers could not match his career-best 61-yard field goal against the Rams in 2020.

This time it went wide right, generating a roar from the crowd, a sigh of relief from the Rams and a joyous locker room celebration.

“It’s a lot of fun in there,” McVay said.

With more, seemingly, to come.

Rams defensive end Braden Fiske (55) and linebacker Byron Young (0) pressure Seattle Seahawks quarterback Sam Darnold.

Rams defensive end Braden Fiske (55) and linebacker Byron Young (0) pressure Seattle Seahawks quarterback Sam Darnold in the fourth quarter.

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)



This story originally appeared on LA Times

Amelia Gray’s Racy Sheer & Lace Minidress Will Make You Look Again

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Amelia Gray has been turning heads with her sheer lace dress at the GQ event. The model attended the GQ Men of the Year 2025 event, which featured high-profile celebrities such as Hailey Bieber and Madison Beer. For the occasion, she showed up in a creative short dress, and the pictures are too hot to handle.

Amelia Gray’s sheer lace dress for GQ event will leave you wanting more

Take a look at the latest photos of Gray looking drop-dead gorgeous in a sheer outfit for the GQ event.

Pictures of the model’s attendance at the event have gone viral on the internet. She chose to wear a black and white see-through patterned sleeveless short dress, giving her the ideal body goals. The 24-year-old paired this outfit with green heels and a pair of black sunglasses. Her straight black shiny hair is kept open with simple makeup, including mascara, eyeliner, and a brown lip gloss.



This story originally appeared on Realitytea

Financial services giant GFI Group doubling space at 55 Water St.

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Financial services giant GFI Group, which has been a tenant at 55 Water St. since 2007, is more than doubling its space there.

The firm is expanding by 64,993 square feet and also renewing 63,756 square feet.

The rent at the 1972-vintage tower was $59 per square foot, reflecting the typical differential over prices in Midtown and at the World Trade Center. 

GFI’s rent at the 1972-vintage tower was $59 per square foot

The additional space represents a consolidation by GFI  from 199 Water St., where it had 70,000 square feet.

GFI’s long-term commitment at 55 Water is the largest direct lease in the district since August 2023, according to Howard Fiddle, leader of a CBRE team representing landlord New Water Street Corporation that included Brad Gerla, Evan Haskell and William Hooks. Newmark’s Jared Horowitz and Hall Stein repped GFI.

The massive, 4 million square-foot tower overlooking the East River saw 200,000 square feet of leasing prior to the GFI deal earlier this year.

55 Water St. has 436,000 square feet available,

CBRE’s Gerla said, “This expansion is a big win for both the building and the submarket.” He noted that Downtown is on pace for its largest leasing total this year since 2019.

The tower has 436,000 square feet available, including a rare block of 330,000 square feet.


Rottenstreich Farley Bronstein Fisher Potter & Hodas converted 18,820 square feet from a sublease to direct space at SL Green’s 500 Park Avenue.

Law firm Rottenstreich Farley Bronstein Fisher Potter & Hodas converted 18,820 square feet from a sublease to direct space at 500 Park Ave. Brian Zak/NY Post

The law firm’s managing partner Dan Rottenstreich said, “With its unique look, history, and location, 500 Park Avenue feels more like a home than a commercial office space — to us and to our clients.”

The building has a total of 201,000 square feet of luxury office and retail space. Office tenants include Vera Wang, Tom Ford Fashion and The Georgetown Company. Offices are 90.1% leased. Asking rents are $120 per square foot.



This story originally appeared on NYPost

Board of Regents mandates ‘climate’ curricula as NY kids still struggle with math and reading

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High schools across New York every year graduate kids who can barely read or do basic math, yet the puffed-up poobahs at the state Board of Regents are adding a new “climate science” requirement.

Starting in 2027, this latest piece of the Regent’s absurdly named “New York Inspires” plan will force schools to teach K-12 students about what causes climate change, how it affects ecosystems and people, and the possible solutions; the powers that be in Empire State education are apparently worried that some teachers might be giving students the wrong messages.

We have our doubts whether obscenely overpaid state Education Commissioner Betty Rosa or the board led by Chancellor Lester Young Jr. have the knowledge base and critical-thinking skills to oversee the setting of a solid climate-science curriculum; this move is simply fresh testimony to their politics-first approach to their duties.

They’ve spent the past few years undermining academic standards, watering down state proficiency exams and easing high-school-graduation requirements — even as independent testing shows New York kids treading water in the middle of the national pack, despite highest-in-the-nation spending in the name of K-12 education.

Rosa & Co. are focused on hiding the failures of New York’s public schools, not fixing them; pretending that they’re taking education into the future with buzzy “climate education” is just another part of the con.

The only thing “New York inspires” under this crew is an accelerating exodus of families who want better lives for their children.



This story originally appeared on NYPost

Bessent says Trump’s $2,000 checks would need congressional vote

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Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said President Donald Trump’s proposal to send $2,000 “dividend” payments from tariffs to US citizens would require congressional approval.  

“We will see,” Bessent said on Fox News’ Sunday Morning Futures. “We need legislation for that.”

Trump, who has touted the billions raised in US tariff revenue this year, has talked about the checks as public frustration mounts over the cost of living. Speaking to reporters on Air Force One on Friday, Trump said the checks would go out sometime next year to “everybody but the rich.”

“It’s a lot of money,” he said. “But we’ve taken in a lot of money from tariffs. The tariffs allow us to give a dividend.” He added that “we’re also going to be reducing debt.” 

Read More: Trump’s $2,000 Tariff ‘Dividend’ Marks Throwback to Covid Checks

The plan could cost the US government double what it’s projected to take in for 2025, according to one estimate. The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a centrist watchdog group, estimated a preliminary $600 billion cost for the proposal, if the dividends were designed along the lines of government stimulus payments during the Covid pandemic. 

Net US tariff revenue for the fiscal year through September totaled $195 billion and many economists have penciled in about $300 billion for calendar-year 2025.

Bessent said Americans should start feeling more economic relief in the beginning of next year, citing the tax cuts in Trump’s signature policy bill passed earlier this year. 

“So I would expect in the first two quarters we are going to see the inflation curve bend down and the real income curve substantially accelerate,” he said.  



This story originally appeared on Fortune

Extensive search off Ireland’s coast for missing Royal Fleet Auxiliary sailor ends | World News

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An extensive multi-agency search off Ireland’s coast for a missing sailor linked to the Royal Navy has ended without success, the Ministry of Defence has said.

The Royal Fleet Auxiliary (RFA) Tidesurge crew member was last seen at about 10.30pm on Friday.

The search has been taking place in the sea off the northwest coast between Tory Island, Co Donegal, and Eagle Island, Co Mayo.

Defence Secretary John Healey said: “After an extensive search, it is with deep sadness that we confirm the missing crew member of RFA Tidesurge has not been found.

“My thoughts are with their family during this tragic time, as well as their fellow crew members.

“I am hugely grateful to the Irish authorities, the RNLI, Royal Air Force and Royal Navy who have responded rapidly to this incident and have worked tirelessly on the search.”

No further details have been released about the crew member and their family has requested privacy.

The Irish Coast Guard said they received a distress call before 9am on Saturday from a UK naval support vessel.

They immediately launched a search and rescue operation after the serviceperson was declared missing.

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Defence Secretary John Healey said he was grateful for those who had worked on the search. Pic: PA

The RFA comprises sailors – officers and ratings – who are employed as civil servants rather than members of the armed forces. Its ships provide vital support to the Royal Navy.

A Ministry of Defence spokesman said: “After an extensive search for a missing crew member of a Royal Fleet Auxiliary (RFA) ship’s company, the individual has not been found, and the search has now ended.

“The individual’s family have been informed, and an investigation is now under way into the incident. No other individuals have been harmed or reported missing.”

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The search, which involved the Irish Coast Guard, Royal Navy, Royal Air Force, RNLI and Irish authorities, was coordinated by the Irish Coast Guard’s maritime rescue sub centre at Malin, a village in County Donegal.

Ireland’s Department of Transport previously said this had involved UK naval support vessels and three RNLI all weather lifeboats based at Ballyglass, Arranmore Island and Lough Swilly.

The Irish Coast Guard also deployed two planes and a helicopter to assist from the air.



This story originally appeared on Skynews

What to know about names such as Operation Charlotte’s Web : NPR

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U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth salutes as he inspect a guard of honor during a welcoming ceremony prior to the 57rd Security Consultative Meeting (SCM) on Nov. 4 in Seoul, South Korea.

Jeon Heon-Kyun/Pool/Getty Images


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Jeon Heon-Kyun/Pool/Getty Images

Recent operations under the Trump administration have raised eyebrows and drawn criticism, not only because of their missions but also because of their names and the intent behind them.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Thursday announced Operation Southern Spear, aimed at what he calls “narco-terrorists” who are allegedly bringing illegal drugs into the country. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) on Saturday also announced it was launching Operation Charlotte’s Web — matching the name of the classic children’s book — in Charlotte, N.C., to target undocumented immigrants.

“There is no parent who has read Charlotte’s Web to a child who cannot be outraged by this,” Dan Shapiro, who served as U.S. Ambassador to Israel from 2011 to 2017, wrote on X.

Asked about the inspiration for the operation name and the message the agency wants to send by using it, DHS responded to NPR with a press release about the operation that included a statement from Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin.

“We are surging DHS law enforcement to Charlotte to ensure Americans are safe and public safety threats are removed,” McLaughlin said in the statement. “There have been too many victims of criminal illegal aliens. President Trump and Secretary Noem will step up to protect Americans when sanctuary politicians won’t.”

NPR also reached out to the Defense Department for comment but has not received a response.

Here is what to know about military operation names.

Naming military operations is not new. Neither is criticism of names

Code names for U.S. military operations date back to the World War II era and began for security reasons, according to Lt. Col. Gregory C. Sieminski in the article “The Art of Naming Operations,” in The US Army War College Quarterly: Parameters. The names were based on colors at first, such as Operation Indigo, but as World War II spread, military officials switched to a name-based system that included projects and locations.

After the Vietnam War, military officials started using a computer system to reconcile nicknames and code words, called the Code Word, Nickname, and Exercise Term System, or NICKA.

Routine military exercises use the NICKA system for naming operations, according to Mark Cancian, a retired Marine colonel and a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. Highly visible operations generally get two-word names chosen outside the system, such as operations Just Cause in Panama, Iraqi Freedom, and Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan, Cancian told NPR.

“The ones that are chosen are chosen for a reason to project a message,” Cancian told NPR. “So, going back to Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom, the message is freedom. With the recent ones, Midnight Hammer and Southern Spear, the message is lethality.”

Although DHS is not considered part of the U.S. military, using the name “Charlotte’s Web” could also have been chosen because “you’ve got the spider’s web that catches people,” but it could also be the administration trying to be “tongue in cheek,” he continued.

And other military operations have received backlash and criticism in the past, including what is now known as Operation Enduring Freedom. It was first called Operation Infinite Justice, but was changed after backlash that it was offensive to Muslims.

“The fact that these names get scrutiny is not unusual,” Cancian said. “Now, I think in this case, given the administration’s aggressive rhetoric, I think that inspires maybe pushback, but it’s not unusual that names get a lot of scrutiny.”



This story originally appeared on NPR