
- PoliticsHuffPost
Seth Meyers Loses It After Joke About Trump Moving Out Gets A Real-World Spin
The "Late Night" host quipped that Trump might steal White House memorabilia on his way out of office. And then...
- PoliticsHuffPost
Ivanka Trump Hit With The Cold, Hard Truth After Hyping Dad’s 'Accomplishments'
Critics reminded Donald Trump's daughter and adviser of his administration's many scandals, failings and controversies.
- EntertainmentIn The Know
After a driver cursed a woman out at a drive-thru, she responded in a 'powerful' way
When a TikToker was allegedly called a derogatory term at a drive-thru, she decided to pay him back in an unexpected manner.
- U.S.The Telegraph
‘I need to protect myself in case there is a civil war’: Why middle-class America is arming up
Brad Vercosa has passed Jimmy’s Sport Shop in Mineola, Long Island countless times, but last Thursday he approached the counter, still in his slippers, to buy his first gun. The construction company owner is one of nearly five million Americans who have purchased their first firearm over the past 12 months, driving what analysts are calling the greatest gun-buying spree in the country’s history. The seeds were sown with the onset of the pandemic last spring, and grew in response to Black Lives Matter demonstrations and pro-Trump rallies over the summer. But for many of Jimmy Gong’s customers in Mineola – a suburban village 20 miles east of the skyscrapers of Manhattan – the storming of the Capitol by pro-Trump demonstrators on January 6 was the inflection point. The following day is one of the busiest Gong, 46, can remember, even accounting for a 150 per cent rise in demand. And he expects business to keep booming. After Donald Trump’s impeachment on Wednesday, the FBI warned of possible armed protests and “domestic terrorism”, amid reports of armed far-Right groups planning to gather at all 50 state capitals and in Washington DC in the run-up to Joe Biden being sworn in as president.
- SportsGolf Channel
Trump logo no longer on bag, Bryson DeChambeau says PGA decision 'is what it is'
Bryson DeChambeau no longer has the Trump logo on his golf bag and he had little to say about the PGA's decision to move its 2022 championship.
- EntertainmentHuffPost
Peter Navarro's White House Departure Is Already A Brutal Meme
This image was practically made to be a meme.