Cate Blanchett stars in Alfonso Cuarón’s Apple TV+ thriller : NPR

Cate Blanchett stars in Alfonso Cuarón’s Apple TV+ thriller : NPR

Cate Blanchett as Catherine Ravenscroft in the new Apple TV+ series Disclaimer.

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Ever since streaming became a thing, I’ve wondered why more people who make TV don’t take advantage of its freedoms.

Sure, creatives talk often about how they’re making 10-hour movies. But that’s frequently just empty bluster to cover for projects which feel like skeletal ideas stretched over too many hours, or a jumble of plotpoints shoehorned uneasily into episodes aimed mostly at boosting engagement.

And then a project comes along like Apple TV+’s Disclaimer. This seven-episode series uses the breadth and sophistication of streaming to tell a tale which evolves steadily, appearing to be one thing before morphing into something else.

In the process, it subverts expectations to ask pointed questions of both the characters and its audience.

A woman who has it all faces her deepest secret

It all begins with Cate Blanchett’s character Catherine Ravenscroft. She’s a journalist and documentary filmmaker successful enough to earn a high-profile award presented by CNN star Christiane Amanpour one moment, and credibly fool a co-worker into thinking Jodie Foster will star in a movie adaptation the next.

She is the sort of high-achieving, work-focused alpha female that Blanchett plays so magnificently – see 2022’s Oscar-nominated Tar – flanked by a well-meaning but feckless husband and an emotionally floundering son.

Living a glamorously upper middle class life, Catherine is a character easy to envy and suspect – so when a novel shows up in her mail which presents a lightly fictionalized story of her extra-marital encounter with a young man decades ago, it’s tough to find sympathy for a woman who seems to have betrayed everyone in her life.

The book, titled The Perfect Stranger, comes prefaced with an ominous, um, disclaimer: “Any resemblance to persons living or dead is not a coincidence.”

The novel paints a picture of horrific self-absorption Catherine is desperate to keep hidden. It details how a woman had an affair with a young man who later drowned trying to save her son, leading the woman to tell police she didn’t know him to cover up their connection.

A journalist renowned for exposing others’ secrets seems to have a terrible one of her own.

Kodi Smit-McPhee plays Nicholas, Catherine's son, while Sacha Baron Cohen plays her husband, Robert Ravenscroft.

Kodi Smit-McPhee plays Nicholas, Catherine’s son, while Sacha Baron Cohen plays her husband, Robert Ravenscroft.

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Apple TV+

A story that moves carefully

It is difficult to explain the many twists this narrative takes without dropping spoilers that will ruin the experience. And some may feel the plot – crafted with an auteur’s flair by writer/director Alfonso Cuarón, based on a 2015 novel by Renee Knight – is too predictable and outlandish to land with the power he so obviously intends.

But I found myself swept away by Cuarón’s patient, attentive style. (You’ll spend way too much time wondering about the inner life of a cat which constantly pops up in Catherine’s home at the oddest moments, framed artfully by the director’s lens.) This is a story that moves carefully in revealing its secrets, but never completes an episode without delivering forward momentum, leaving you with new clues, bigger questions and a desire to learn more.

Cuarón, a Mexican filmmaker whose name is associated with ambitious movies like Gravity and Roma, assembles an ace cast here. Sacha Baron Cohen is convincingly emasculated as Catherine’s entitled husband Robert and Oscar nominee Kodi Smit-McPhee brings maximum emo energy as their drug-addled son, Nicholas.

But it is Kevin Kline who is the revelation, even though he’s turned in Oscar, Emmy and Tony-winning work for decades. An American often cast as the prototypical yank, here Kline expertly plays a quietly caustic British widower – retired private school teacher Stephen Brigstocke, devastated after the loss of his wife.

Kevin Kline as Stephen Brigstocke.

Kevin Kline as Stephen Brigstocke.

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With an immaculate accent and disheveled style, Kline plays Brigstocke as a man grieving over a family life atomized by loss, stumbling on an ambitious, merciless plan for revenge.

He blames Catherine for the death of his son, which happened after the two met years ago. Brigstocke vows to make her pay, in part, by circulating the book.

Shifting narrators bring different perspectives

Even the narration is complicated here. While Kline’s character often reveals his thoughts by speaking directly to the viewer, Catherine’s ideas are rendered by an omniscient female narrator speaking about her, sometimes sounding like the voice of the book itself. (And yes, it can be confusing, possibly on purpose). There are also flashbacks featuring Kline playing Brigstocke as a younger man and a different actress, Leila George, playing the younger version of Catherine.

It all services a tale exploring the power of storytelling and the danger of assumptions leveraged to make us believe.

Yes, the ending is dramatic while spotlighting those ideas in stark terms – some may even find it overly manipulative and a little too pat.

But I reveled in a well-told tale that truly earned every second of its seven-episode length, allowing a master filmmaker the time, talent and resources to weave a story perfectly suited for the streaming space.

Here’s hoping a few other folks working in this industry are paying close attention.


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The famed Tropicana casino comes down in Las Vegas : NPR

The famed Tropicana casino comes down in Las Vegas : NPR

The Tropicana Las Vegas hotel tower is imploded on Wednesday in Las Vegas.

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David Becker/AP

LAS VEGAS — Sin City blew a kiss goodbye to the Tropicana before first light Wednesday in an elaborate implosion that reduced to rubble the last true mob building on the Las Vegas Strip.

The Tropicana’s hotel towers tumbled in a celebration that included a fireworks display. It was the first implosion in nearly a decade for a city that loves fresh starts and that has made casino implosions as much a part of its identity as gambling itself.

“What Las Vegas has done, in classic Las Vegas style, they’ve turned many of these implosions into spectacles,” said Geoff Schumacher, historian and vice president of exhibits and programs at the Mob Museum.

Former casino mogul Steve Wynn changed the way Las Vegas blows up casinos in 1993 with the implosion of the Dunes to make room for the Bellagio. Wynn thought not only to televise the event but created a fantastical story for the implosion that made it look like pirate ships at his other casino across the street were firing at the Dunes.

From then on, Schumacher said, there was a sense in Las Vegas that destruction at that magnitude was worth witnessing.

The city hasn’t blown up a Strip casino since 2016, when the final tower of the Riviera was leveled for a convention center expansion.

Fireworks are launched before the Tropicana Las Vegas towers are imploded on Wednesday.

Fireworks are launched before the Tropicana Las Vegas towers are imploded on Wednesday.

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David Becker/AP

This time, the implosion cleared land for a $1.5 billion baseball stadium for the relocating Oakland Athletics, part of the city’s latest rebrand into a sports hub.

That will leave only the Flamingo from the city’s mob era on the Strip. But, Schumacher said, the Flamingo’s original structures are long gone. The casino was completely rebuilt in the 1990s.

The Tropicana, the third-oldest casino on the Strip, closed in April after welcoming guests for 67 years.

Once known as the “Tiffany of the Strip” for its opulence, it was a frequent haunt of the legendary Rat Pack, while its past under the mob has long cemented its place in Las Vegas lore.

It opened in 1957 with three stories and 300 hotel rooms split into two wings.

As Las Vegas rapidly evolved in the following decades, including a building boom of Strip megaresorts in the 1990s, the Tropicana also underwent major changes. Two hotel towers were added in later years. In 1979, the casino’s beloved $1 million green-and-amber stained glass ceiling was installed above the casino floor.

The Tropicana’s original low-rise hotel wings survived the many renovations, however, making it the last true mob structure on the Strip.

Behind the scenes of the casino’s grand opening, the Tropicana had ties to organized crime, largely through reputed mobster Frank Costello.

Costello was shot in the head in New York weeks after the Tropicana’s debut. He survived, but the investigation led police to a piece of paper in his coat pocket with the Tropicana’s exact earnings figure, revealing the mob’s stake in the casino.

By the 1970s, federal authorities investigating mobsters in Kansas City charged more than a dozen operatives with conspiring to skim $2 million in gambling revenue from Las Vegas casinos, including the Tropicana. Charges connected to the Tropicana alone resulted in five convictions.

There were no public viewing areas for the event, but fans of the Tropicana did have a chance in April to bid farewell to the vintage Vegas relic.

“Old Vegas, it’s going,” Joe Zappulla, a teary-eyed New Jersey resident, said at the time as he exited the casino, shortly before the locks went on the doors.


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Luis Tiant, former pitcher for Boston and Cleveland, dies at 83 : NPR

Luis Tiant, former pitcher for Boston and Cleveland, dies at 83 : NPR

Former Boston Red Sox great Luis Tiant before Game 5 of the American League Championship Series between the Boston Red Sox and the Houston Astros on Oct. 20, 2021, at Fenway Park in Boston.

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Winslow Townson/AP

BOSTON — Luis Tiant, the charismatic Cuban with a horseshoe mustache and mesmerizing windup who pitched the Red Sox to the brink of a World Series championship and pitched himself to the doorstep of the baseball Hall of Fame, has died. He was 83.

Major League Baseball announced his death in a post on X on Tuesday, and the Red Sox confirmed that he died at his home in Maine.

“Today is a very sad day,” Fred Lynn, a teammate in both Boston and California, posted on X. “A Big game pitcher, a funny genuine guy who loved his family and baseball. I miss him already.”

With a swaggering style and an iconic wiggling windup that froze batters in the box, “El Tiante” was a three-time All-Star and four-time 20-game winner whose greatest individual season came with Cleveland in 1968, when he went 21-9 with 19 complete games and nine shutouts — four of them in a row. His 1.60 ERA was the best in the AL in half a century and he finished fifth in AL Most Valuable Player voting; 31-game winner Denny McLain won it, as well as the league’s Cy Young Award.

Luis Tiant of the Cleveland Indians pitches against the New York Yankees in the fourth inning at Yankee Stadium in 1968.

Luis Tiant of the Cleveland Indians pitches against the New York Yankees in the fourth inning at Yankee Stadium in 1968.

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Marty Lederhandler/AP

Those performances, along with Bob Gibson’s 1.12 ERA in the NL, earned 1968 the nickname “Year of the Pitcher” and helped persuade baseball to lower the pitching mound to give batters more of a chance. No matter, Tiant again won the AL ERA title with a 1.91 mark in 1972, for the Red Sox (and lost the Cy Young to Gaylord Perry’s 1.92 ERA and 24 wins).

“Luis embodied everything we love about this game: resilience, passion, and an undeniable sense of belonging to something greater than himself,” Red Sox Chairman Tom Werner said. “But what made Luis unforgettable was his vibrant personality. He was a gifted storyteller, always sharing tales filled with humor, honesty, and an enduring loyalty to his teammates. All of us are deeply saddened by his passing. We lost one of the great ones today.”

The son of a Negro Leagues star, the younger Tiant was 229-172 in all with a 3.30 ERA and 2,416 strikeouts. He had 187 complete games and 47 shutouts in a 19-year career spent mostly with Cleveland and the Red Sox.

His death comes one week after that of all-time baseball hits leader Pete Rose, whose Cincinnati Reds faced Tiant’s Red Sox in the 1975 World Series — still considered one of the greatest matchups in baseball postseason history.

Tiant shut out the Reds in Game 1, threw 155 pitches in another complete game victory in Game 4 and was back on the mound for eight innings in Game 6, which Boston won on Carlton Fisk’s home run in the bottom of the 12th. The ’75 Series, which Cincinnati won in seven games, is often cited as the greatest of all time.

It was also a national coming-out party for Tiant’s distinctive delivery, in which he would wiggle his hands as he came to the set position, then turn his back to the batter before throwing. The motion would be imitated by generations of children in New England and across the country, but Tiant himself was unmatched.

“Luis had the kind of unforgettable presence that made you feel like you were part of his world,” Red Sox owner John Henry said. “He channeled everything into his love for the game and the people around him. He was magnetic and had a smile that could light up Fenway Park.”

Boston Red Sox pitcher Luis Tiant is pictured in 1974.

Boston Red Sox pitcher Luis Tiant is pictured in 1974.

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Phil Sandlin/AP

After he retired in 1982, Tiant worked as a minor league coach for the Los Angeles Dodgers and Chicago White Sox and was the pitching coach for Nicaragua at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics. He remained active with the Red Sox in spring training and was visible around Fenway Park, often signing autographs before the game at the ballpark’s El Tiante Cuban sandwich stand.

Tiant was inducted into the Boston Red Sox Hall of Fame but never made the national shrine in Cooperstown, New York, receiving a high of 30.9% of the votes in 1988, his first year on the ballot. He was also considered and rejected by veterans committees three times.

“Tough day to hear of Luis Tiant passing away. A former player we loved coming into the clubhouse,” former Red Sox infielder Kevin Youkilis tweeted. “Always joking around with that infectious laugh and saying ‘Man you a sick puppy!’ Forever grateful for the time shared with a legend. May his memory be a blessing!”


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Vice President Harris speaks to media members before departing for New York at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, on Monday. Harris appeared on the CBS news magazine 60 Minutes on Monday, where she answered questions about her economic plans, the war in Ukraine and the U.S.-Mexico border, among other issues.

Harris appears on ’60 Minutes’ and is pressed for specifics about her plans : NPR

Vice President Harris speaks to media members before departing for New York at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland on Monday. Harris appeared on the CBS news magazine 60 Minutes on Monday, where she answered questions about her economic plans, the war in Ukraine and the U.S.-Mexico border.

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Evelyn Hockstein/AFP via Getty Images

Vice President Harris sat for a wide-ranging interview that aired on 60 Minutes on Monday, during which she was pressed for specifics on how she would pay for her economic plans and how she would bring an end to the war in Ukraine.

The interview with correspondent Bill Whitaker followed weeks of criticism from her Republican opponent, former President Donald Trump, that Harris has been unwilling to sit for difficult interviews with the press. Her appearance on 60 Minutes was part of a weeklong media blitz that will see Harris appear on programs that include The View, The Late Show with Stephen Colbert and The Howard Stern Show.

On the economy, Harris was pressed on how she would pay for economic promises like an expanded child tax credit and tax breaks for first-time homebuyers and new businesses. A new report from the nonpartisan nonprofit Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget found that Harris’ estimated proposals would cost the government around $3.5 trillion, but Harris said she would offset that by raising taxes on corporations and the highest-earning Americans.

Her answer led interviewer Whitaker to push back, saying, “We’re dealing with the real world here.” Harris responded by saying she believes leaders in Congress are privately ready to listen to her.

“When you talk quietly with a lot of folks in Congress, they know exactly what I’m talking about,” she said, adding that there are “plenty of leaders in Congress who understand and know that the Trump tax cuts blew up our federal deficit.”

Harris was pressed on her border security stance

On the issue of immigration, Harris was asked why the Biden administration did not move sooner to crack down on illegal immigration — a recurring criticism on the campaign trail from Trump and his running mate, Ohio Sen. JD Vance.

“The policies that we have been proposing are about fixing a problem, not promoting a problem,” Harris said. Illegal border crossings have fallen off by half, she said, “but we need Congress to be able to act to actually fix the problem.”

Harris was also asked about criticism from her Republican opponents that she has morphed from a relatively liberal candidate during her first run for the White House in 2020 to a more centrist candidate today. She responded by saying that her evolution is result of traveling the nation as vice president “and seeking what is possible in terms of common ground.”

“I believe in building consensus,” Harris said. “We are a diverse people, geographically, regionally, in terms of where we are in our backgrounds, and what the American people do want is that we have leaders who can build consensus, where we can figure out compromise and understand it’s not a bad thing, as long as you don’t compromise your values.”

Harris says she wouldn’t meet Putin without Zelenskyy

On foreign policy, Harris said she would not meet unilaterally with President Vladimir Putin of Russia about ending the war in Ukraine, suggesting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy would need to be involved. “Ukraine must have a say in the future of Ukraine,” Harris said.

The vice president also shared new details about a surprising admission she made during her debate with Trump — that she is a gun owner.

She told Oprah Winfrey last month that she had long owned a gun for protection, because of her history in law enforcement. “If somebody breaks in my house, they’re getting shot.” She told Whitaker she owned a Glock and that she’d “had it for quite some time.” Asked if she had ever fired it, she said, “Yes, of course I have, at a shooting range.”

Harris’ appearance was part of a long tradition of presidential candidates sitting for interviews with 60 Minutes going back to 1968. The show said Trump had been scheduled to appear for an interview as well, but that his campaign canceled last week.


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This photo shows shipping containers in various colors stacked in piles at the Port of Baltimore on September 21, 2018.

Port strikes end with deal on wages, averting economic disaster : NPR

Shipping containers sit piled at the Port of Baltimore on Sept. 21, 2018.

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Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

A strike by tens of thousands of dockworkers on the East and Gulf coasts, that could have seriously hurt the U.S. economy had it continued, has been called off.

All workers were called back to work Thursday, after a three-day strike, following a tentative agreement on wages between the International Longshoremen’s Association and the United States Maritime Alliance, representing ocean carriers and port operators.

The two sides have agreed to a 62% wage increase over six years, according to sources who were familiar with the deal but not authorized to speak publicly about it. The union had been seeking a 77% increase over six years. A day before the strike began, the companies had offered nearly 50% in raises.

The parties have also agreed to extend the existing contract until Jan. 15, 2025. They will return to the bargaining table to negotiate all other outstanding issues, including the union’s demand of a ban on all automation at the ports.

The White House worked behind the scenes

The White House had faced mounting pressure from House Republicans and hundreds of industry groups to intervene. They warned of widespread harm to supply chains and the broader economy if the strike was allowed to continue.

But President Biden repeatedly vowed to let the collective bargaining process play out.

“I don’t believe in Taft-Hartley,” Biden told reporters days before the strike, citing the federal law that allows the president to call for an 80-day cooling-off period when the nation’s safety is at risk.

About 12 hours after the strike began on Tuesday, Biden issued a statement urging the U.S. Maritime Alliance to present what he called a fair offer, citing the 800 percent growth in profits some ocean carriers saw in the pandemic.

“It’s only fair that workers, who put themselves at risk during the pandemic to keep ports open, see a meaningful increase in their wages as well,” he wrote.

Biden’s message to the companies also tied in hurricane relief efforts. Noting that dockworkers play an essential role in getting essential supplies to communities affected by Hurricane Helene, he said now is not the time for ocean carriers to refuse to negotiate a fair wage.

Meanwhile, senior leaders in his administration, including National Economic Advisor Lael Brainard, White House Chief of Staff Jeff Zients, and acting Labor Secretary Julie Su, were holding a flurry of calls with the foreign shipping companies and with the union, according to a source familiar with the discussions who was not authorized to speak. After several days of pressure, the companies agreed to put a higher offer on the table, the union accepted that offer and also agreed to extend the contract so negotiations over all other issues could resume.

On Thursday night, after the tentative deal was announced, Biden issued a statement thanking all the parties for acting patriotically to reopen the ports.

“We’ve been working hard on it,” he said. “With the grace of God, it’s gonna hold.”

Economic disaster averted

More than $2 billion worth of goods typically flow through these ports daily, from chemicals and clothing to bourbon and bananas.

The affected ports — from Boston to Houston — normally handle more than half of all cargo containers coming into the U.S., or about a million containers a month, as well as more than 300,000 containers heading out of the country, according to the freight-tracking company Vizion.

Effective immediately, all work will resume, the two sides said in a joint statement. But it could take some days to clear the backlog of ships — scores of them — that were waiting offshore for the strike to end.

In a statement, Jay Timmons, President of the National Association of Manufacturers said manufacturers were encouraged that cooler heads had prevailed.

“It is a victory for all parties involved—preserving jobs, safeguarding supply chains and preventing further economic disruptions,” Timmons wrote.

Ahead of the holiday season, retailers also expressed relief.

“Without the specter of disruption looming, the U.S. economy can continue on its path for growth and retailers can focus on delivering for consumers,” the Retail Industry Leaders Association said in a statement.


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Vice President Harris walks with former Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., at a campaign rally in Ripon, Wis. on Oct. 3.

Kamala Harris campaigned with Liz Cheney in the town that gave birth to the GOP : NPR

Vice President Harris walks with former Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., at a campaign rally in Ripon, Wis. on Oct. 3.

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Charlie Neibergall/AP

The town known as the birthplace of the Republican Party is an unlikely campaign stop for a Democratic presidential candidate.

But on Thursday, Vice President Harris rallied in Ripon, Wis. — home to the Little White Schoolhouse, where an 1854 meeting led to the formation of the Republican Party.

It was the backdrop for a speech from former GOP Rep. Liz Cheney, who endorsed Harris last month. Cheney laid out her own history with the Republican party, from volunteering as a young person to serving in Congress, where she was the No. 3 Republican in the House.

“I have never voted for a Democrat, but this year, I am proudly casting my vote for Vice President Kamala Harris,” Cheney said.

“I know that she loves our country, and I know that she will be a president for all Americans,” Cheney added. “As a conservative, as a patriot, as a mother, as someone who reveres our Constitution, I am honored to join her in this urgent cause.”

Vice President Harris and former Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., during a campaign event in Ripon, Wis., on Oct. 3.

Vice President Harris and former Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., during a campaign event in Ripon, Wis., on Oct. 3.

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Mark Schiefelbein/AP/AP

Cheney said Trump is unfit for office because of Jan. 6

Cheney spoke at length about why she thinks Harris’ opponent, former President Donald Trump, is unfit for the presidency, though she backed him in both 2016 and 2020.

She said he broke his oath of office by attempting to stay in office after losing the election, taking actions that led to the violent riot at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

“What January 6th shows us is that there is not an ounce of compassion in Donald Trump. He is petty, he is vindictive, and he is cruel, and Donald Trump is not fit to lead this good and great nation,” she said.

Cheney herself was a member of the Congressional committee that investigated Trump for his actions on and leading up to January 6 — and she voted to impeach Trump. She later lost her bid for reelection in 2022 to a Trump-backed candidate.

Asked about the Ripon event during an appearance on Fox News, Trump attacked Cheney as a “stupid war hawk” and predicted she would hurt Harris’ campaign.

“I really think it hurts. I think frankly if Kamala, I think they hurt each other. I think they are so bad, both of them,” Trump said.

Liz Cheney (right) presides alongside Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) over a hearing on the January 6th investigation on June 09, 2022 on Capitol Hill. Cheney has said she will vote for Kamala Harris because she believes Donald Trump poses a danger to American democracy.

Liz Cheney (right) presides alongside Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) over a hearing on the January 6th investigation on June 09, 2022 on Capitol Hill. Cheney has said she will vote for Kamala Harris because she believes Donald Trump poses a danger to American democracy.

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Harris praised Cheney for her courage

When Harris took the podium, she thanked Cheney for her courage and said it was a “profound honor” to have her support.

“We may not see eye-to-eye on every issue, and we are going to get back to a healthy two-party system, I am sure of that, where we will have vigorous debates,” Harris said to Cheney.

Harris talked about her commitment to the Constitution and to upholding democracy — an issue that is a deciding factor for a majority of voters this year, polling from NPR News/PBS/Marist shows.

“I believe that anyone who recklessly tramples on our democratic values as Donald Trump has, anyone who is actively and violently obstructed the will of the people and the peaceful transfer of power as Donald Trump has, anyone who has called for, I quote, ‘termination of the Constitution of the United States’ as Donald Trump has, must never again stand behind the seal of the president of the United States,” Harris said.

In recent weeks, Harris’ campaign has worked to highlight support from more than 200 prominent Republicans as she works in swing states like Wisconsin to win over more independents and Republicans disaffected with Trump.

In addition to Cheney, her father, former Vice President Dick Cheney, has also said he will vote for Harris.

Dick Cheney said in a statement last month that Trump “can never be trusted with power again” because he “tried to steal the last election using lies and violence to keep himself in power after the voters had rejected him.”


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Matthew Perry appears at the premiere of Ride in Los Angeles on April 28, 2015.

Doctor charged in Matthew Perry case pleads guilty to drug offense : NPR

Matthew Perry appears at the premiere of Ride in Los Angeles on April 28, 2015.

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Mark Chavez, a doctor accused of giving ketamine to the late Friends star Matthew Perry, has pleaded guilty to one count of conspiring to distribute the drug.

Perry died in October 2023 primarily from the effects of ketamine. His assistant allegedly administered the drug shortly before his death, and he later drowned in the pool of his Los Angeles home. Other factors such as coronary artery disease and the effects of buprenorphine, a medication used to treat opioid use disorder, contributed to his death.

Chavez appeared in federal court in Los Angeles on Wednesday for a change of plea hearing. Chavez said in his plea agreement that he and a second doctor, Salvador Plasencia, began supplying ketamine to Perry beginning around September 2023.

Plasencia, who has also been charged in connection to Perry’s death, allegedly called Chavez to obtain ketamine vials and lozenges for Perry in exchange for money. Chavez admitted to having ketamine on hand after filling a fraudulent prescription for thirty 200-milligram lozenges earlier that year.

Chavez and Plasencia knew each other for at least 20 years, and Chavez knew that Plasencia did not have much experience with using ketamine. Plasencia allegedly said Perry was using the drug to stop smoking, which Chavez knew was not an effective method to curb the habit.

Ketamine is used as an anesthetic and to treat depression. It can cause side effects, such as trouble speaking, headaches, loopiness and spikes in blood pressure.

Chavez said Plasencia, who was allegedly injecting Perry with the drug, questioned him about how to properly diagnose and administer ketamine, and monitor patients using ketamine. Plasencia was also allegedly leaving vials with Perry and his assistant so Perry could administer the drug himself.

In one instance, Plasencia allegedly gave Perry three injections of ketamine worth 260 milligrams, and was planning to give him another 100 milligram dose, all within an hour, which Chavez said he knew was dangerous.

Perry’s assistant allegedly administered ketamine to Perry on the day he died and has also been charged in connection to his death.

“At all relevant times, defendant was fully aware that selling vials of ketamine to a patient for self-administration was illegal, far outside the scope of professional practice, and without a legitimate medical purpose,” the plea deal says.

In several text message exchanges with Plasencia, Chavez said he was “working on getting more” ketamine and “you should sell him the troches,” or lozenges. Plasencia allegedly said in texts that “[If] today goes well we may have repeat business,” and “I think it would be best served not having him look elsewhere and [be] his go to,” according to the plea deal.

In securing ketamine from wholesalers, Chavez admitted to lying on forms about selling the drugs to a third party and falsely listed his place of employment as Dreamscape Ketamine.

Chavez left Dreamscape Ketamine in July 2023 after a dispute with his business partner, and took several prescription drugs with him. He transferred some to a medical facility, but kept others, including vials of ketamine.

In all, Chavez distributed at least twenty-two 100-milligram vials and nine lozenges of ketamine to Plasencia with the intent to sell them to Perry.

On October 12, Perry had an adverse reaction to the ketamine, in which his blood pressure spiked. Around the same time, Chavez learned he was being investigated by the Medical Board of California and ended his business relationship with Plasencia.

Perry died October 28. In a call between Plasencia and Chavez, Plasencia allegedly said he was not worried about being linked to Perry’s death because he had not seen him in weeks.

Chavez is currently out on bond and has waived his right to be indicted by a grand jury. He is facing a maximum of 10 years in prison and will be sentenced in April.


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Ronan Day-Lewis (in white T-shirt) attended a film screening in New York City last year with a group that included his father, Daniel Day-Lewis, and mother, Rebecca Miller, right.

Daniel Day-Lewis ends 7-year retirement to act in his son’s film : NPR

Ronan Day Lewis and his father, Daniel Day-Lewis (left to right in center) are teaming up for a feature film that will bring the decorated actor out of retirement. The pair are seen here as they attended a film screening last year.

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Three-time Oscar-winner Daniel Day-Lewis is set to appear in another feature film, seven years after he abruptly announced the end of his acting career.

The film, Anemone, will be directed by the actor’s son, Ronan Day-Lewis, from a script that the pair co-wrote together. Few details about the movie are available, other than it focusing on intergenerational family bonds, especially the dynamics between fathers, sons and brothers.

Daniel Day-Lewis, 67, will star in the film alongside veteran English actors Sean Bean and Samantha Morton. Over the weekend, Bean and Day-Lewis were spotted riding a motorcycle together on a street in Manchester, England, according to the Manchester Evening News.

In 2017, Day-Lewis was nominated for an Oscar for his portrayal of fashion designer Reynolds Woodcock in his last film, Paul Thomas Anderson’s Phantom Thread. In the same year, Day-Lewis, a celebrity who has long guarded his privacy, said in a brief statement that he would no longer work as an actor.

Ronan Day-Lewis, 26, is a painter and filmmaker. This will be his first feature film, according to a statement from Focus Features, which is making the film with production company Plan B.

Daniel Day-Lewis won his most recent best-actor Oscar for Lincoln, in 2013. His earlier wins were for 1989’s My Left Foot and 2007’s There Will Be Blood.

“We could not be more excited to partner with a brilliant visual artist in Ronan Day-Lewis on his first feature film alongside Daniel Day-Lewis as his creative collaborator,” Focus Features Chairman Peter Kujawski said, adding that the father-son duo “have written a truly exceptional script.”

This isn’t the first time Daniel Day-Lewis has ended a hiatus from film work. He has spoken about having a perennial desire to stop acting — and in the late 1990s, he took a break to become an apprentice to a renowned shoemaker in Italy. In 2017, he issued his retirement notice in hopes of it lasting.

“I didn’t want to get sucked back into another project,” he told W magazine in a rare interview about the decision. “All my life, I’ve mouthed off about how I should stop acting, and I don’t know why it was different this time, but the impulse to quit took root in me, and that became a compulsion. It was something I had to do.”

But just when he thought he was out, he’s being pulled back in.


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In this photo, several Israelis lie face down on the ground beside a highway, taking shelter during a massive missile barrage from Iran on October 1, 2024.

Iran launches major missile attack on Israel : NPR

Israelis shelter on the highway during a massive missile barrage from Iran on Tuesday.

Maya Levin for NPR


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Maya Levin for NPR

Iran unleashed a major airstrike targeting sites across Israel on Tuesday night, while Israel’s air defenses shot down most of the 180 incoming missiles, according to Israeli officials.

The Iranian attack marked the latest escalation in fighting that now stretches into several countries in the region, with warnings that more fighting is likely. Israel found itself fighting on three separate fronts on Tuesday — with Hamas in Gaza to the south, with Hezbollah in Lebanon to the north and with the Iranian missile strike from the east.

Air raid sirens wailed, explosions lit up the nighttime sky and loud booms echoed throughout the country as Israeli defenses fired on the Iranian missiles. Israel’s military spokesman, Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari, said most Iranian missiles were intercepted, though a small number crashed into central and southern Israel.

No Israeli deaths were reported in the airstrike, though the attacks caused some limited damage. Palestinian officials said a Palestinian man was killed by falling debris in the West Bank. Iran fired a large barrage of missiles and drones against Israel back in April. Almost all those weapons were also shot down, and no Israelis were killed in that attack either.

After Tuesday’s strike, Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told his Security Cabinet, “Iran made a big mistake this evening, and it will pay for it.” He went on to add, “Whoever attacks us, we will attack them.”

In Washington, President Biden said, “Based on what we know now, the attack appears to have been defeated and ineffective.” The president added, “Make no mistake. The United States is fully, fully, fully supportive of Israel.”

Pentagon Press Secretary Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder said two U.S. destroyers fired a total of 12 interceptors at Iranian missiles as they headed to Israel. He said the U.S. Defense Department was still assessing whether the interceptors hit their targets.

In a separate development, two gunmen shot dead six people and injured 12 in an attack on a light-rail train in Jaffa, just south of Tel Aviv, according to Israeli authorities. Israeli police said they then shot dead the two gunmen at the scene. Israeli media reports described the gunmen as Palestinians from Hebron in the West Bank.

Escalating regional violence

The Iranian strikes come in the wake of an escalating Israeli operation against the militant group Hezbollah in Lebanon, including a ground campaign launched Monday. Israel is attempting to greatly weaken the group, which has been trained and armed by Iran for four decades.

Iran claimed the missile attack was in response to several recent killings. They include the assassination of Hezbollah’s leader, Hassan Nasrallah, killed last Friday in an airstrike in Beirut; the death of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh, killed in Iran’s capital, Tehran, in July; and the earlier death of an Iranian military commander.

Iran’s mission at the United Nations said in a statement on the social media platform X that Iran carried out a “legal, rational, and legitimate response to the terrorist acts of the Zionist regime.” The statement added that “should the Zionist regime dare to respond or commit further acts of malevolence, a subsequent and crushing response will ensue.”

Israel’s government had warned the public that an attack was coming, and civilians took to bomb shelters nationwide before and during the strike. A short while later, Israelis received another official notice saying they could come out of the shelters. Meanwhile, Jerusalem and Tel Aviv have been put under tight restrictions, including new limits on gatherings in any urban centers.

In this photo, people take cover by standing and sitting in a trench-like ditch on the side of a freeway in Shoresh, between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. One of the freeway's guardrails appears on the left side of the photo.

People take cover on the side of a freeway in Shoresh, between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, on Tuesday as a siren sounds a warning of incoming missiles fired from Iran.

Ohad Zwigenberg/AP


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Ohad Zwigenberg/AP

Iran’s strike linked to wider regional conflict

Hezbollah began firing rockets into northern Israel last Oct. 8 — one day after Hamas launched a major attack into southern Israel. Hezbollah describes its effort as an act of solidarity with the Palestinians.

Over the past year, Israel and Hezbollah have been firing almost every day across the Israel-Lebanon border. But the shooting remained at a relatively low level until Israel unleashed a much larger campaign two weeks ago.

Since then, Israeli airstrikes across Lebanon have killed more than 1,000 people and have forced many Lebanese civilians to flee their homes, according to Lebanon’s Health Ministry. The strikes have targeted Hezbollah and its weapons, killing Nasrallah and several other top officials, as well as many civilians.

Back in April, an Israeli strike killed several leaders of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in Damascus, Syria.

Iran responded by attacking Israel with more than 300 drones and missiles, but nearly all were intercepted by Israel and its allies, including the United States. A few missiles did cause some damage. A 7-year-old girl was severely injured and a military base in southern Israel suffered minor damage, according to Israeli officials.

Hadeel Al-Shalchi reported from Tel Aviv. Greg Myre reported from Washington, D.C.


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Maggie Smith poses for a photo on Wednesday, Dec. 16, 2015 in London. Smith turns 87 on Dec. 28.

Actress Maggie Smith dies at 89 : NPR

Oscar, Emmy, and Tony-winning actor Maggie Smith played everything from wistful ingenues in Shakespeare to Harry Potter’s Prof. McGonagall and the Dowager Countess in Downton Abbey. She died Friday at age 89.

Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP


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Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP

Dame Maggie Smith – whose acting career spanned seven decades and traversed the stage and screen – has died at age 89. She passed away peacefully surrounded by family and friends on Friday morning, her publicist confirmed.

Smith was once so slender and delicate as Desdemona that Laurence Olivier’s Othello could easily smother her with a pillow. By the end of her career, no one would’ve dared try.

Though she was fine-featured and stood barely five-foot-five, casting directors realized early-on that her characters would inevitably appear indomitable, whether she was bristling with epithets in Shaw, casting spells as Harry Potter’s Professor McGonagall, or silencing opposition with sideways glances as Downton Abbey‘s formidable Lady Violet.

Act One: Precise diction in her prime

What Maggie Smith learned about holding audiences rapt, she learned early. She arrived on the professional stage in her teens, and graduated quickly to Britain’s National Theater, the West End and Broadway, where her precise diction proved ideal for delivering the barbs of restoration comedy, and the epigrams of Noel Coward. Let her play the sort of chatterbox that George Bernard Shaw wrote in The Millionairess, and it was sometimes hard for her co-stars to get a word in edgewise.

Almost as nonstop was the title role that won her a Best Actress Oscar in 1970 — her deluded teacher at a Scottish girls’ school in The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie.

“Give me a gherll at an impressionable age,” she purred, “and she is mine for life.”

The character was not, in fact, in her prime, but Smith most definitely was. In the next eight years, she starred in six films, including Travels With My Aunt and Death on the Nile, triumphed on TV in everything from Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice to The Carol Burnett Show, and on stage, held title roles from Hedda Gabler to Peter Pan.

Maggie Smith in February 1969.

Maggie Smith in February 1969.

Roy Jones/Hulton Archive/Getty Images


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Roy Jones/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

All of this before winning another Oscar in Neil Simon’s California Suite, for playing multiple characters including a conniving actress who is herself up for an Oscar, and who practices a delicious, hammily self-deprecating acceptance speech at one point, saying she doesn’t want to “sob all over Burt Reynolds.”

No sobs in Smith’s actual acceptance speech at the Oscars. She thanked her writer, director and co-star.

Act Two: Best exotic roles, some written just for her

All of this was well before a sort of second act in Smith’s career that found her prim and proper as a chaperone in A Room with a View, primly comic as the mother superior in Sister Act with Whoopi Goldberg, cranky in The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel movies, crankier still as the woman who came to stay in Alan Bennett’s driveway in The Lady in the Van, and downright viperish as mother to Ian McKellen’s King in Shakespeare’s Richard III.

Though he’d been slaughtering all comers for most of the movie at that point, there was such venom in her declaration that he was “proud, subtle, sly and bloody,” that McKellen looked shaken. As well he might.

Contemporary playwrights had also taken note. Peter Shaffer, the author of Amadeus and Equus, remembered he was once asked by Smith at a party why he kept writing plays about two men talking. He responded by going home and writing Lettice and Lovage specifically for her, about an extravagantly over-imaginative tour guide “to celebrate her glee and glitter and perfect timing,” he told interviewers. “And above all wit — her presence is witty. ”

Act Three: From Harry Potter to Downton

And then Smith’s career — for which she’d been made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire, and later a Dame and a member of the Order of the Companions of Honor — had a third act. One in which her fame grew out of all proportion to what she’d known before. Children recognized her on the street from the Harry Potter movies (she was in all but one of them).

Maggie Smith as Violet, Dowager Countess of Grantham on Downton Abbey.

Maggie Smith as Violet, Dowager Countess of Grantham on Downton Abbey.

Nick Briggs/PBS


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Nick Briggs/PBS

And while she was casting spells on kids, their parents and grandparents awaited her every utterance on TV’s Downton Abbey, where for six seasons, she brought a capricious sense of humor to the sort of woman she never was in real life — aloof, entitled, un-diplomatic, impatient, argumentative, hidebound, and so thoroughly winning, audiences couldn’t get enough of her.

That, at least, Lady Violet had in common with the woman who played her. Maggie Smith left audiences craving more of her presence for seven decades, though she worked so constantly that the dowager countess’ most famously clueless question — “what is a weekend?” — might almost have been her own.


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