
- CelebrityPeople
Tom Brady Says He Tried to ‘Change the Subject’ When Wife Gisele Bündchen Brought Up His Retirement
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback says his wife brought up the topic immediately after his February Super Bowl win
- CelebrityYahoo Celebrity
Ashley Judd says 'nights are a savage agony' as she recovers from broken leg after Congo rainforest fall
The actress almost lost her leg and suffered nerve damage after tripping over a fallen tree.
- U.S.The Root
A Florida School Decided to Confront Complaints of Racism...Until a Diversity Curriculum Caused 'Angst'
It’s called the “Caucasian Corollary.”
- WorldThe Telegraph
Crowded subways and teeming markets in Brazil as world watches on in horror
Almost one year after Brazil recorded its first Covid-19 death, the country is enduring its deadliest moment of the pandemic to date. But despite the record 1,910 new deaths recorded on Wednesday, life in Brazil's major cities largely continues as normal. On Praça da República square in downtown São Paulo, the scene of commuters coming and going in Brazil's biggest city harks back to pre-pandemic times. The square's roaring street trade remains largely unaffected. The difference being that, alongside sweets and phone cases, most kerbside sellers now offer flimsy facemasks and hand sanitizer. Antônio is one such merchant. When the pandemic struck, he began hawking assorted face coverings alongside his usual selection of beach towels and swimwear at his stall in downtown São Paulo. "There aren't as many people as there were before the pandemic, but I still sell plenty", he explains. "I guess people are still going to the beach." Covid-19 has claimed the lives of over 260,000 Brazilians and the current wave of infections is the worst yet. Average daily deaths in the country have remained above 1,000 for almost six straight weeks.
- PoliticsBusiness Insider
MSNBC host and former Republican congressman Joe Scarborough says there's 'no doubt' that the GOP is 'unsavable'
"You know, my friends and my family members, they all voted for him, and it's been hard for me to process it," Scarborough said of support for Trump.
- HealthYahoo Life
Is this the new normal? Risqué ad slammed for 'woke marketing'
Suitsupply has a history of shocking customers with its revealing commericials.