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TPR News Now: Tuesday, January 6, 2026

TPR News Now: Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Listen to TPR’s morning newscast for a roundup of the latest headlines and news developments.

This morning’s headlines:

  • Jury selected in trial of former Uvalde school district police officer
  • Mexico condemns US military operation in Venezuela
  • Vaccine scientist talks vaccine scale backs
  • Gov. Abbott wants new anti-fraud measures for child care programs
  • 2025 holiday shopping season got off to a flat start

Today’s weather in San Antonio: Some areas of fog in the morning, otherwise it will clear for a high near 83. Mostly clear tonight with a low around 60.

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Satellites are now tracking big polluters around the world » Yale Climate Connections

Satellites are now tracking big polluters around the world » Yale Climate Connections

Transcript:

Power plants, factories, and other industrial facilities emit climate-warming gases, along with additional pollutants that harm human health.

McCormick: “Over 8 million people a year die from air pollution … and that’s pollutants like SO2, NOx, PM2.5, and those are typically emitted by the same facilities that are emitting a lot of greenhouse gases like CO2 and methane.”

Gavin McCormick is with Climate Trace, an initiative that uses satellite data to track pollution from millions of facilities around the world. It monitors not only climate-warming emissions but other harmful pollutants as well.

And it makes that information public at ClimateTrace.org. Users can zoom in on a map to learn about pollution sources in any community.

And for more than 2,500 urban areas, the tool shows where plumes of pollution travel as they drift through the air.

McCormick: “So you can absolutely see when you look at a city that certain neighborhoods are heavily, heavily experiencing more pollution.”

They’re often areas that have suffered disinvestment for decades.

McCormick: “And so there’s a racial component, there’s an economic component.”

So the data helps identify communities where solutions are needed most.

Reporting credit: Sarah Kennedy / ChavoBart Digital Media

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A growing number of child care providers can’t afford food for themselves

A growing number of child care providers can’t afford food for themselves

Hunger is on the rise for the early care and education workforce, according to recent research from the Stanford Center on Early Childhood, and signs suggest the challenge is unlikely to improve in the short term. 

In June, 58 percent of early care and education providers surveyed by the RAPID Survey Project at Stanford said they were experiencing hunger, which researchers measured using six questions about food insecurity developed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. These providers, who span a variety of roles and settings, are not just dealing with sticker shock at the grocery store; they are skipping meals, eating smaller portions to stretch food supplies further, and going hungry because they’ve run out of money to purchase food.

The RAPID Survey Project measured hunger using six food security criteria developed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture:

  1. The food that we bought just didn’t last, and we didn’t have money to get more.
  2. We couldn’t afford to eat balanced meals.
  3. Did you or other adults in your household ever cut the size of your meal or skip meals because there wasn’t enough money for food?
  4. If yes, how often did this happen?
  5. Did you ever eat less than you felt you should because there wasn’t enough money for food?
  6. Were you ever hungry but didn’t eat because there wasn’t enough money for food?

RAPID has charted provider food insecurity for the past four years. Rates of hunger held steady between 20 percent and 30 percent from summer 2021 until early 2024, then began rising precipitously. 

Phil Fisher, director of the Stanford Center on Early Childhood, said the status quo rates of provider hunger were “unacceptable to begin with,” but that this recent spike is both “alarming” and “concerning.” 

“The early care and education workforce is incredibly vulnerable to economic trends,” Fisher said, explaining the rise. “Part of it is just how close to abject poverty many [educators] are.”

Indeed, early educators earn a median wage of $13.07 per hour, making it one of the lowest-paid professions in the United States. An estimated 43 percent of the workforce relies on public benefits, such as Medicaid and food stamps, to get by. 

So when prices go up, early educators are among the first to feel the effects, and lately, food prices have done nothing but climb. The cost of groceries has increased almost 30 percent since February 2020. 

“Food is very expensive,” said Isabel Blair, a home-based child care provider of almost 20 years who recently decided to close her program in Michigan. “It’s hard for families earning minimum wage to cover their basic needs — housing, child care and food.”

Blair has noticed price inflation among eggs and produce, in particular. Both are staples in an early education program. 

“You go to the grocery store, and the fresh vegetables are very expensive. For a tomato, you pay like three bucks. Or a dozen eggs, you play close to $4 now,” she said. “Feeding the children, you have to provide breakfast, a snack and lunch. Some programs offer dinner. Add those up, and it’s very costly.”

In the RAPID survey, providers shared written responses to open-ended questions, and some highlighted how high grocery prices are affecting their own families. 

“We’re skipping meals so the kids can eat,” a teacher in Colorado said. “Grocery prices are through the roof.” 

“Grocery bills continue to rise and we are having to cut back on what we buy and redo our menu at home to be able to afford the same amount of food we were buying just months ago…” wrote a center director in Washington.

“[My biggest concern right now is that] we don’t go hungry in the street someday,” a teacher at a center-based program in Georgia wrote. 

A center director in Indiana said the “cost of groceries is going up and I can’t afford enough food … to last the entire month. We have to skimp on meals or bring leftovers from work home for the kids to eat.” 

“Keeping food in the house and meeting our nutritional needs as a family [are my biggest concerns],” wrote a home-based provider in Ohio.

Cristi Carman, director of the RAPID Survey Project, said the difficult choices providers must make, between buying more groceries or paying off a bill, is “really, really devastating.” Carman and Fisher separately noted that it becomes harder for caregivers to provide a nurturing, high-quality environment for kids when their stomachs are growling and they’re worried about how to put food on the tables for their own families before their next paycheck hits.

“That’s not humane circumstances for individuals in any role, especially when they’re caring for the youngest children,” Carman said. “They’re not operating under the best set of circumstances. They’re operating at reduced need.”

What’s more, Fisher said, is that early care and education providers often aren’t just buying groceries for themselves, but for the kids in their programs as well. (Rising costs have hit unlicensed family, friend and neighbor providers who care for millions of children from birth to age 5 in the United States especially hard, because while they are technically eligible, many remain excluded from the federal food program for child care providers.) So when providers are going hungry, it usually means the kids they’re serving are affected too. Maybe fresh fruits and vegetables are replaced with canned items, or proteins are replaced with carbs. Corner-cutting becomes unavoidable. 

Despite the severity of food insecurity among providers, grocery prices are not expected to stabilize anytime soon, with the Trump administration’s tariffs forcing up the cost of imported foods. Meanwhile, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, which helps low-income households offset the cost of food, was disrupted during the government shutdown this fall, leaving many recipients without benefits for weeks. RAPID researchers have not yet finished analyzing survey data from that period, but Fisher acknowledged it may only show a worsening situation.

“We’re not expecting these things to get better in the short term,” Fisher said. “If anything it will either reach a ceiling or continue to spiral.”

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Ditch the Phone for These Big-Screen Tablets—for Work and Play

Ditch the Phone for These Big-Screen Tablets—for Work and Play

Other Tablets to Consider

We test tons of tablets every year. Here are a few others we like, just not as much as our picks above.

Apple iPad Pro (M4).

Photograph: Brenda Stolyar

Apple iPad Pro (M4, 2024) for $899: Save yourself some cash and buy the 2024 iPad Pro instead of the latest model. Just make sure you actually buy it at a decent discount. There are two size options—11 or 13 inches—and both are insanely thin and light, enhanced by brilliantly bright OLED displays with 120-Hz refresh rates. They’re the only iPad models with Face ID for authentication, and sport the nano-texture glass add-on to reduce glare—a must-have for anyone frequently using an iPad outside or near a window. They offer MacBook-level performance thanks to the M4 chipset, and you can take advantage of the new multitasking features in iPadOS 26.

Lenovo Idea Tab Pro for $328: I’ve seen discounts on the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro that drop it as low as $280, and I suggest you only snag it if it dips under $300. I used this large tablet on a trip to London for entertainment and to edit my RAW photos from my Nikon via Adobe Lightroom, and it did the job without a hitch. The 3K resolution on the 12.7-inch LCD is sharp, the speakers are rich, and I didn’t notice any problems with performance. It can feel a little unwieldy to hold, but that comes with the territory of a nearly 13-inch tablet. The included stylus helps, especially for smaller touch targets in apps like Lightroom. The only problem? Lackluster software updates. My test unit ran Android 15 at the time, but this tablet supposedly shipped with Android 14 at launch, meaning it will not receive Android version upgrades after Android 16. That’ll make it feel a little out of date soon. At least you’ll get four years of security updates.

Samsung Tab S10 tablets with a white stylus on top of each on a peach pad with wood paneling behind it

Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 series.

Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Series for $900: Samsung’s previous-gen Galaxy Tab S10 series consists of the Tab S10+ and Tab S10 Ultra—but Samsung unveiled the Tab S10 FE and Tab S10 FE+ in 2025, lower-cost versions that start at $500, as well as the Tab S10 Lite ($320). I haven’t tested the cheaper models yet. I did test the Galaxy Tab S10+ and S10 Ultra, and both are on the bigger end of tablet sizes. They’re hard not to like—they perform exceptionally well, have multi-day battery life, promise long software support, and the displays are vibrant, smooth, and sharp. If the Tab S11 series is too pricey, this is an easy way to save and still get a very powerful Android tablet; they’re really not that different from the latest models.

Boost Celero 5G Tab.

Boost Celero 5G Tab.

Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

Boost Celero 5G Tab for $200: I didn’t particularly love using the 10.95-inch Boost Celero 5G Tab—performance can be stuttery, making it a little annoying to operate—but it’s $200 and perfectly fine for entertainment, whether that’s playing some very lightweight games or catching up on Netflix. You can only buy it on Boost, meaning you might be able to get it for even less if you bundle it with your Boost data plan. Since it has 5G, you can add a cellular plan for always-on connectivity. That’s really this tablet’s calling card, because you’ll be hard-pressed to find a cheap tablet with built-in cellular radios. If you don’t want to have to connect to Wi-Fi or tether from your phone, the Celero is a decent option, especially considering the cheapest iPad with cellular will still set you back more than $400.

Front and rear view of the Lenovo Tab Plus a slim tablet with the screen showing app icons and the back propped up by an...

Lenovo Tab Plus.

Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

Lenovo Tab Plus for $240: There are a lot of cheap Android tablets on the internet, and I urge you to be careful with what you buy. If Amazon’s Fire tablets don’t interest you (see below), consider Lenovo’s Tab Plus. I used it for a month for pure entertainment. The 11.5-inch screen is nice and big compared to a phone screen, yet it’s portable enough for travel. The built-in kickstand is excellent and should be standard on all tablets. It’s not the snappiest, but the performance was more than adequate. While the software is largely fine, on rare occasions, a few preinstalled apps caused full-screen ads to pop up on the screen (one was for “virus protection”). It’s crazy that Lenovo would allow that kind of garbage to show up, but the easy fix is to uninstall all the bloatware.

White tablet on light wood shelf with the screen showing the time and a closeup view of bird feathers

Google Pixel Tablet.

Photograph: Nena Farrell

Google Pixel Tablet With Dock for $399: Google’s Pixel Tablet (7/10, WIRED Recommends) is part tablet, part smart display. This 11-inch slate is like a big Pixel phone, with a sharp LCD screen, good speakers, and slick software. It runs pretty well thanks to the Tensor G2 processor inside. However, it comes with a hub, so when you’re done using it as a tablet, you can magnetically dock it to start recharging automatically. This hub doubles as a speaker, and since the Pixel Tablet is the first tablet to support Google’s Cast technology natively, you can cast music or shows to it from your phone or laptop, resulting in better sound quality from the system. When you’re not using it, you can turn the display into a screensaver of the Google Home Hub panel, allowing you to see and control your smart home devices at any moment. It features multi-user support with up to eight profiles, so every family member can switch to a personalized profile, securely locked via fingerprint. I don’t think it’s worth the MSRP anymore, so try to catch it on sale.

Honor MagicPad 2 for £360: This classy tablet is not sold in the US. Quite similar to the OnePlus Pad 2 we recommend above, it boasts a truly gorgeous OLED display with impressive specs (3K resolution, 1,600 nits, 144-Hz refresh rate) that are generally unavailable at this price. Paired with the eight speakers, watching movies and gaming on this tablet is a pleasure. The stylus and keyboard are great (I love the handwriting and formula recognition), but they don’t seem to be available in the UK. I found Honor’s AI features, like Magic Portal, which gets good at predicting what you want to do, very useful, maybe more so on a tablet than a phone. Battery life is good, and charging is speedy (66 watts). The only real weakness here is the limited processing power, which can’t match something like an iPad (though you will pay a lot more for an equivalent Apple device). —Simon Hill

Tablet Accessories

Satechi aluminum iPad stand

Satechi Aluminum Desktop Stand.

Courtesy of Satechi

Tablets often don’t come with kickstands or enough ports, so it’s a good idea to snag a few accessories to enhance your experience. These are some of our favorite tablet accessories, many of which you can also find in our Best iPad Accessories guide.

Satechi Aluminum Desktop Stand for $40: This is my favorite tablet stand, so much so that I’ve taken it with me on trips. It packs down relatively well, and it is very stable—there’s no wobbling around here. You can also adjust the angle quite a bit. It can handle huge sizes too—it worked perfectly with my 12.9-inch iPad Pro.

Twelve South StayGo Mini USBC Hub

StayGo Mini.

Courtesy of Twelve South

Twelve South StayGo Mini USB-C Hub for $60: This works with iPads and other tablets just fine. You can either plug it in and keep it flush with the edge of a slate or use the included cord to keep it extended. You get a USB-C port you can use for pass-through charging, a USB-A, an HDMI, and a headphone jack.

Lamicall Gooseneck Tablet Holder for $21: I’ve used this on my bed frame to hold up various tablets for more than a year. The gooseneck requires a bit of finagling to get to the right position, and if you’re constantly tapping the tablet, it will jiggle around. But it’s a great hands-free way to watch movies. You can affix the clamp to any surface, like a desk or kitchen counter.

Twelve South HoverBar Duo Mount/Stand for $80: You can use this as a stand or as an arm mount, and Twelve South makes it really easy to switch between the two. That means you can easily affix your tablet to your bedside arm mount and then put it on the stand in your home office in the morning. Both are sturdy, and the arm mount is decently adjustable. Best of all, it doesn’t wiggle around as much as the Lamicall above when you tap the screen.

Anker Nano 3 30-Watt Charging Adapter for $17: Most tablets charge at around 18 watts, so this 30-watt charger from Anker is more than capable. The plugs fold up, and it’s pretty compact.

Anker Laptop Power Bank for $120: This flight-approved power bank has a massive 25,000-mAh capacity, which should be enough to recharge most tablets twice, or larger tablets once. It dishes out up to 165 watts, meaning it has plenty of power to recharge even a laptop. You can fast-charge with the USB-C ports and use the USB-A port on another device. There’s a display that shows the battery’s current charge, a built-in retractable USB-C cable, and a second that doubles as a carry loop.


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Issa Birthday Boy! Yaya Mayweather Warms Hearts With Homemade Treat For Her & NBA YoungBoy’s Son KJ

Issa Birthday Boy! Yaya Mayweather Warms Hearts With Homemade Treat For Her & NBA YoungBoy’s Son KJ

Yaya Mayweather took the homemade route to celebrate her son KJ on his fifth birthday. She shared sweet footage of a cake they baked together. The mommy duties moment comes after Yaya seemingly shaded NBA YoungBoy for allegedly being in the same state as Kentrell Jr. and not visiting him. Meanwhile, her mom, Melissa, dropped an adorable social media post celebrating her grandson’s birthday.

RELATED: Aww! Yaya Mayweather Reveals Sweet Christmas Gift NBA YoungBoy Got Their Son (PHOTO)

Yaya Mayweather Shares KJ’s Birthday Cake

Even with a dad worth $300 million, there’s nothing like homemade magic. That’s exactly what Yaya Mayweather created when her son, KJ, requested a homemade cake for his 5th birthday. On her Instagram Stories, she revealed that her mini-me wanted to bake the treat at midnight. And Mama Mayweather made it happen! One video shows her and KJ’s hands cracking an egg into the mix. R. Kelly’s song, ‘It’s Your Birthday’ is playing over the sweet clip. Another video shows KJ smiling at a kitchen island, while loved ones, including Yaya Mayweather, circled around him to sing him ‘Happy Birthday.’ That clip, like the egg-cracking one, has no audio because Yaya added Anita Baker’s song ‘You Bring Me Joy’ to it. It does show KJ blowing out his fifth birthday candle while rocking a Spider-Man t-shirt. The cake he and his mom baked was in a rectangular shape and covered with half white and half light red frosting. Watch the two sweet clips below. 

Mommy Mayweather Puts Daddy YoungBoy On Blast

Yaya Mayweather’s special birthday moment with KJ came after she allegedly popped off on NBA YoungBoy. While she didn’t name-drop her ex, she took to X with several posts about favoritism and her son’s hurt feelings.

In one post, per ItsOnsite!, she wrote, “The favoritism is crazy.” In another she added, “I’ve never heard of someone going to the same state their child lives in and doesn’t see them.” A third post, seemingly in response to another X user, said, “No it hurt my son’s feelings, and it’s up with anyone about my child.” Since tweeting the apparent shade toward NBA YoungBoy, Yaya has seemingly deactivated her X account.

No additional details are available at this time about Yaya and NBA YoungBoy’s co-parenting agreements. Last month, she thanked him on the same platform for surprising Kentrell Jr. with a puppy for Christmas.

Grandma Melissia Shares Birthday Dump For KJ 

While Yaya Mayweather handled birthday cake duties, Grandma Melissia hopped online to shower him with the same loving energy. On Instagram, she penned the cutest caption with three studio photos of Kentrell Jr.

“Happy Happy Birthday to my favorite person in the world. I can’t believe you’re 5 already where has the time gone…? GOD gave him to my daughter at the perfect time. He healed all of us in so many ways & has been the Biggest & Best Blessing to our family. He is the smartest, sweetest, most caring baby. I knew from the 1st time I looked into his eyes right after he was born that he’s going to be a star & somebody very special. The way he calls me MyMy, holds my hand & doesn’t play about me that’s my baby! I love you Bubb Bubbz HBD @kjmeezymayweather”

Grandpa Floyd Mayweather has also entered the chat behind his grand-legacy! The duo have been stealing hearts for the last few years with their boxing workouts and adorable interactions. On his Instagram Story on Monday, Floyd shared three posts celebrating KJ’s birthday: one shot of them in the gym, another of them skating and a third of KJ chilling in his lap. Each post had KJ’s IG account tagged.

RELATED: Yaya Mayweather Comments On Recent Celebrity Proposals While Speaking About Being Single For The Past 5 Years

What Do You Think Roomies?

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President Trump stands ready to send U.S. Big Oil into Venezuela en masse, but the reality is messy and rebuilding a ruined industry takes many years | Fortune

President Trump stands ready to send U.S. Big Oil into Venezuela en masse, but the reality is messy and rebuilding a ruined industry takes many years | Fortune

President Donald Trump says American Big Oil “want to go in so badly” into Venezuela and spend billions of dollars, but the reality is U.S. oil producers are hesitant, and it will take many years and many tens of billions of dollars to rebuild Venezuela’s decimated oil sector after the U.S forcibly removed and arrested leader Nicolás Maduro during a string of attacks on Jan. 3.

More than doubling Venezuela’s current oil production likely would take until 2030 and cost about $110 billion, said research firm Rystad Energy, arguing that bringing Venezuela—home to the world’s largest known oil reserves—back to its previous highs would take even longer. Venezuela’s current oil flows of roughly 900,000 barrels daily are about one-third of its volumes at the turn of the century thanks to mismanagement, labor strikes, sanctions, and financial woes.

“We’re not waving a magic wand here and, all of a sudden, more oil starts flowing out of Venezuela,” said Dan Pickering, founder and chief investment officer for Pickering Energy Partners consulting and research firm. 

“You’re not going to bully Exxon [Mobil] and Chevron into spending a bunch of money in a risky spot,” Pickering said. “Trump says, ‘Drill, baby, drill,” and the industry didn’t listen to it. They’re not going to blindly deploy capital because the U.S. government says they should.”

Oil prices remain low—they ticked up less than 2% on Jan. 5—because the world is awash in oil, making it harder to justify costly and risky new foreign investments. “All of the excitement and hype surrounding Venezuela’s future really deserves a reality check. The hype and reality are very far apart,” said Matt Reed, vice president of the geopolitical and energy consultancy Foreign Reports.

“If you’re talking about building up Venezuela, you’re talking about bringing in [oil] companies that need real certainty. They need the situation to stabilize. They need to be confident it’s going to stay stable if they’re going to assume the risk and invest. At this point, no one is going to rush in,” Reed said.

“Who is going to run Venezuela next year or the year after that?” Reed asked. “The Trump administration says, ‘Well, we’ll deal with that later.’ In the meantime, the oil companies are not going to assume the best-case scenario is going to unfold and commit to anything.”

As the U.S. focused in the fall on bombing boats from Venezuela—killing more than 100 people to date—the Trump administration cited narco-terrorism and stemming immigration problems. When the U.S. began seizing oil tankers in December and launched a pseudo-oil blockade, Trump began talking more and more about oil and the 2007 Venezuelan expropriation of oil assets from U.S. companies as justification for the Jan. 3 attacks and arrests. Every U.S. company except Chevron has left Venezuela. Chevron operates under a special license and produces nearly 20% of Venezuela’s oil.

“The oil companies are going to go in and rebuild their system,” Trump said Jan. 4. “They’re going to spend billions of dollars, and they’re going to take the oil out of the ground, and we’re taking back what they stole. Remember, they stole our property. It was the greatest theft in the history of America.”

Ironically, Trump is essentially using oil to argue that Venezuela is not like the 2003 Iraq invasion under George W. Bush that critics claimed was about oil, Reed said. “When Trump talks about oil, he’s talking about money. He’s making the argument that any reconstruction is going to pay for itself … and the U.S. can avoid the endless, messy, costly regime change wars that have defined the War on Terror.”

“A lot of Americans find it distasteful that the U.S. might be waging wars for oil. That’s not a winning argument for politicians,” Reed added.

What comes next?

Wood Mackenzie and other energy research firms believe—within a year—Venezuela could spike its oil volumes from less than 1 million barrels daily to about 1.2 million barrels with U.S. cooperation, and the state-owned oil company PDVSA and Chevron tackling the so-called low-hanging fruit.

Anything else is a lot more complicated to rebuild much of the production, pipeline, and processing infrastructure to get a lot more oil out of the ground and shipped to countries around the world, primarily China and the U.S.

Still, Chevron’s stock jumped 5% on Jan. 5, while Exxon Mobil and ConocoPhillips ticked up by more than 2%. Two of the biggest oilfield services players best positioned to work in Venezuela again, Halliburton’s stock rose by almost 8%, and SLB by nearly 9%.

The oil companies are reluctant to comment publicly, wanting to avoid upsetting either the Trump administration or the remaining Maduro regime, currently led by Maduro’s vice president, Delcy Rodríguez, who is striking a more conciliatory tone with the U.S. after her initially defiant rhetoric that Maduro was illegally kidnapped and must be released back into power.

Exxon, Halliburton, and SLB declined comment for now. ConocoPhillips said it is monitoring the situation and that it is “premature” to speculate on future investments.

Chevron said it is focused on the safety of its employees in Venezuela and the integrity of its oil assets, declining any commentary on the future.

In a Washington, D.C. conference in November, Chevron Chairman and CEO Mike Wirth said the geopolitical circumstances are difficult, but Venezuela’s potential is worth the effort. “The kinds of swings that you see in places like Venezuela are challenging. But we play a long game. Venezuela is blessed with a lot of geologic resource and bounty. And we are committed to the people of the country and would like to be there as part of rebuilding Venezuela’s economy in time when circumstances change.”

Most oil refineries around the world are not configured to process the extra heavy grades of crude that come from Venezuela, but China has many refineries that can and, thus, receives about 80% of Venezuela’s oil exports. Energy analysts said controlling Venezuelan oil could give the U.S. more negotiating leverage with China on the rare earths processing industry dominated by the country.

Most of the rest of the oil exports head to the U.S. Gulf Coast, where several refineries thirst for more of the heavy volumes and have increasingly needed to rely instead on heavy Canadian oil sands barrels.

And, in the short term, Venezuela’s oil output could drop further before it rebounds or is rebuilt.

“What matters right now for the oil market is the [naval] blockade. And the blockade is going to stay in place for as long as it takes to get results,” Reed said, arguing that the Venezuelan leadership will need to comply with U.S. demands. “That could be months. That’s a lot of oil the Venezuelans will not be able to export until Trump is satisfied.”

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Montana State beats Illinois State 35-34 in OT thriller for 1st national title since 1984

Montana State beats Illinois State 35-34 in OT thriller for 1st national title since 1984

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Montana State finally found a way to answer when it mattered most for the program’s first national championship since 1984.

A year ago, Montana State missed winning its first title in 40 years when a slow start doomed it in a shootout loss to North Dakota State. Two years ago, the Bobcats’ season ended in Bozeman in the quarterfinals on a blocked extra point in overtime against the Bison.

They started this season losing the first two — at Oregon and a double- overtime loss at home to South Dakota State.

So when Myles Sansted’s extra point went through the uprights in overtime for a 35-34 victory over Illinois State on Monday night in the Football Championship Subdivision title game, the Bobcats chucked helmets in the air while sprinting around with a heavy contingent of Montana State fans celebrating with them.

“To be able to clear that hurdle and know that yes this ’25 group accomplished what hadn’t been done in a long time …,” said coach Brent Vigen, who’s already thinking ahead with a young, Montana-laden team featuring only nine seniors. “You know, we’re building for more.”

The Bobcats (14-2) capped a season that featured not one, but two wins over in-state rival Montana over a four-week span. Beating Montana in the semifinals put Montana State back into the title game for the second straight season, third in five years under Vigen and the fourth berth overall.

Montana State topped that accomplishment with its 14th straight win in a thrilling finish in the first overtime in the 48 years of this title game. The Bobcats led 21-7 at halftime and 28-14 in the third. They needed Jhase McMillan’s block of Michael Cosentino’s 38-yard field goal attempt with 57 seconds left in regulation to keep it tied at 28.

In overtime, Justin Lamson tied it with a 14-yard touchdown pass to Taco Dowler on fourth-and-10. Hunter Parsons blocked the extra point attempt after Tommy Rittenhouse threw a 10-yard TD pass to Dylan Lord to give Illinois State its only lead at 34-28 to open overtime.

Stansted’s kick started the celebration of the end of a long title drought. Along with the 1984 I-AA championship, Montana State also won the 1976 NCAA Division II title and 1956 NAIA championship.

“What a hard fought game, and these things aren’t supposed to come easily I guess,” Vigen said.

Lamson, who didn’t join the Bobcats until June, said the OT touchdown was a great play call.

“Taco was wide open,” Lamson said. “I got hit so I was just trying to give him a chance and the rest is history, and Myles did his thing and that was the game.”

Illinois State (12-5) already made history as the first FCS team to win four straight road games to advance through the playoffs to this championship game. That included a win over this postseason’s No. 1 seed and North Dakota State — winners of 10 of the last 14 FCS championships including last year.

This was the Redbirds’ first time in this game since 2014, and they leave empty-handed.

“Just couldn’t find one more play,” Illinois State coach Brock Spack said. “We needed to make one more play to win. When you look at a game that’s a one-point loss like that, there’s probably 10, 15, maybe 20 plays in the game if you make just one of them, you win. Wasn’t able to do that, and we came up short.”

Lamson finished with 280 yards passing and two TDs. He also ran for two more scores. Dowler had eight catches for 111 yards.

Rittenhouse finished with 311 yards passing and four TDs. Victor Dawson ran for 126 yards, and Lord had 13 catches for 161 yards receiving and two TDs.

The takeaway

Illinois State made big defensive plays to give the Redbirds a chance. They forced Montana State three-and-out on consecutive drives in the fourth for a chance at the win and had three sacks.

Montana State won its 14th straight game despite too many self-inflicted mistakes. The Bobcats were flagged 14 times for 93 yards. “We offensively showed flashes, but it was one step forward, maybe sometimes two steps back,” Vigen said.

Blocked kicks

Spack said he thought ball-handling issues might be why both the field goal and extra point attempts were blocked. Cosentino has the ability to get the ball up in the air, which is why Spack decided to go for the lead with the field goal attempt.

“It’s very disappointing,” Spack said.

Up next

Illinois State has to replace Rittenhouse. Leading tackler Tye Niekamp has another season to play for his father Travis, the defensive coordinator and inside linebackers coach.

Montana State should get Lamson back. He joined the Bobcats after stints at Syracuse and Stanford.

___

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Great Job Teresa M. Walker, Associated Press & the Team @ KSAT San Antonio Source link for sharing this story.

Jury selected from hundreds in trial testing accountability after Uvalde shooting

Jury selected from hundreds in trial testing accountability after Uvalde shooting

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A jury has been selected in the trial of a former Uvalde school district police officer charged in connection with the law enforcement response to the 2022 Robb Elementary School shooting.

On Monday, more than 400 potential jurors were questioned about their knowledge of the failed police response to one of the worst school shootings in U.S. history. From that pool, 12 jurors and four alternates were selected for the trial. Opening statements are set for Tuesday morning.

The trial was moved from Uvalde to Nueces County, where it is being held in Corpus Christi, after a judge determined it would be difficult to seat an impartial jury in Uvalde.

During jury selection, presiding Judge Sid Harle acknowledged that, given the case’s national attention, there was likely no one in the pool who had not already heard about the shooting.

Former Uvalde CISD officer Adrian Gonzales faces 29 felony counts of abandoning or endangering a child for his alleged inaction during the response. Prosecutors say Gonzales failed to “engage, distract, or delay the shooter” and did not follow his active-shooter training to confront the gunman. Gonzales has pleaded not guilty to all charges.

Several victims’ family members are expected to attend the trial in Corpus Christi, including Manuel Rizo, the uncle of 9-year-old fourth grader Jackie Cazares, who was killed in the attack.

“We’re going to hope that the prosecution – the district attorney and the people who owe this to their constituents – do their job, and do a damn good job of it,” Rizo told TPR.

Former Uvalde CISD police officer Adrian Gonzales’ trial—connected to the Uvalde Robb Elementary School shooting—is moved to Nueces County and is set to begin on Jan. 5, 2026.

The Cazares family is one of 21 families who sued the City of Uvalde over the shooting, which killed 19 students and two teachers.

Hundreds of law enforcement officers from multiple agencies responded to the scene, but federal and state reviews later described the response as a failure, citing a delay of more than an hour before officers confronted the gunman.

“This police officer, in essence, is being charged with not taking action when prosecutors say he had a duty to act,” said Kirk Burkhalter, a professor of law at New York Law School.

“We’ve seen police officers charged for not doing their duty to the fullest extent. We’ve seen them be charged with standing by while another officer acted,” Burkhalter said. “This is very different. I can’t recall another case where a police officer was charged with simply not doing their job when it comes to a member of the public.”

That context is especially notable following the Parkland school shooting, where a former Broward County sheriff’s deputy was later acquitted of criminal charges tied to his failure to confront the gunman during the 2018 attack at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

Burkhalter added that, in the public’s mind, the case is also about bravery.

“Bravery isn’t the absence of fear,” he said. “It’s being afraid and still taking action.”

Prosecutors have issued 75 subpoenas, underscoring the scope of testimony expected during the trial.

Rizo said he hopes the proceedings will bring accountability and closure.

“We want them to highlight every single opportunity Adrian had to protect the children and teachers – and the survivors,” he said.

Former Uvalde CISD police chief Pete Arredondo is the only other officer to be indicted. He is awaiting a separate trial.

Great Job Jerry Clayton & the Team @ Texas Public Radio for sharing this story.

Her Parenting Time Was Restricted After a Positive Drug Test. By Federal Standards, It Would’ve Been Negative.

Her Parenting Time Was Restricted After a Positive Drug Test. By Federal Standards, It Would’ve Been Negative.

Reporting Highlights

  • No Agreement on Standards: Drug test results are often based on discretionary standards. The level of drugs at which a test is considered positive varies from test to test and lab to lab.
  • Big Disparities: Child welfare systems’ thresholds for positives vary widely. One state’s level is so low, an Air Force pilot can fly with up to 400 times more opiates in their system.
  • Path Forward Is Unclear: There’s no consensus on what should be done. The Trump administration disbanded the expert panel that was in charge of proposing scientifically valid levels.

These highlights were written by the reporters and editors who worked on this story.

Kaitlin spent the first weeks of her newborn son’s life in a panic. The hospital where she gave birth in October 2022 had administered a routine drug test, and a nurse informed her the lab had confirmed the presence of opiates. Child welfare authorities opened an investigation.

Months later, after searching her home and interviewing her older child and ex-husband, the agency dropped its investigation, having found no evidence of abuse or neglect, or of drug use.

The amount of opiates that upended Kaitlin’s life — 18.4 nanograms of codeine per milliliter of urine, according to court documents — was so minuscule that if she were an Air Force pilot, she could have had 200 times more in her system and still have been cleared to fly.

But for Kaitlin, the test triggered an investigation with potentially life-altering consequences. (ProPublica is using Kaitlin’s first name because her full name has been redacted from court documents. She declined to be interviewed for this story.) 

The ordeal “tempered what was otherwise supposed to be a joyous occasion” for the family, according to a lawsuit filed in 2024 by New Jersey’s attorney general against the hospital system, Virtua Health.

The hospital said in a statement that it has “a relentless commitment to evidence-based, equitable care for every family.” In court documents, it denied the lawsuit’s allegation that it discriminated against pregnant patients and noted that Kaitlin consented to the test. It also said that New Jersey law mandates it to submit reports of “substance-affected infants” to the state’s Division of Child Protection and Permanency. The lawsuit is pending and a judge has referred it to mediation.

Drug-testing labs typically report results in black and white: positive or negative. But a little-known fact about the industry is that those results are often based on standards that are wholly discretionary. For example, nearly all states use a threshold of 0.08% blood alcohol content to decide if a motorist is intoxicated. But for other drugs detected in urine, saliva and hair, cutoff levels vary from test to test and lab to lab — including Kaitlin’s test for opiates.

There’s no consensus among labs on what level should confirm the presence of codeine in urine, said Larry Broussard, a toxicologist who wrote an academic journal article on “growing evidence” that poppy seeds in bagels and muffins provoke positive test results. (Kaitlin ate a bagel shortly before taking her drug test, according to court documents.) There’s more consensus for some other drugs, but labs still disagree on appropriate cutoff levels for common drugs such as THC (the compound in marijuana that creates a high) and meth, said Broussard.

A Hospital Said Kaitlin Tested Positive for Codeine, But the Military Would Have Said the Test Was Negative Even at Levels 200 Times as High


Her Parenting Time Was Restricted After a Positive Drug Test. By Federal Standards, It Would’ve Been Negative.

18 ng/ml

Kaitlin’s results

2,000 ng/ml

Federal workers cutoff

4,000 ng/ml

Department of Defense cutoff


4,000 ng/ml

Department of Defense cutoff

2,000 ng/ml

Federal workers cutoff

18 ng/ml

Kaitlin’s results

Note: Ng/ml is nanograms per milliliter. Cutoffs are the level at which each organization considers the presence of codeine in urine to be confirmed by mass spectrometry (gas or liquid chromatography).

In 2022, the same year Kaitlin tested positive for codeine, the Department of Defense noticed a surge in personnel on military bases blaming positive tests on poppy seeds. Scientists at the military’s labs concluded that a change in the manufacturing process of some poppy seeds had led to contamination, causing service members to be falsely accused of abusing drugs.

So far, 62 positive tests for codeine have been “overturned and adjusted in Army records,” an Army spokesperson told ProPublica. In response, the Department of Defense in March 2024 doubled the military’s cutoff level for codeine tests to avoid false positives triggered by poppy seed muffins, bagels and other foods. Service members are now cleared for duty with up to 400 times more codeine in their urine than is used to justify child welfare investigations in some states, ProPublica found.

ProPublica reviewed cutoff levels used to confirm the presence of common drugs, including opiates, meth, THC and cocaine, as cited in court records, labs’ contracts with government agencies and scientific journals, as well as in interviews with toxicologists. We found that the cutoff levels used by the child welfare systems vary widely from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. One large state agency, Michigan’s Department of Health and Human Services, contractually required a lab to use levels that it later acknowledged were “scientifically unsupportable.” 

Ted Simon, an expert toxicology witness and a board member of the nonprofit Center for Truth in Science, which advocates for objectivity in research, said agencies are better off consulting with labs to set cutoff levels. That’s because “some labs do validation testing to ensure the accuracy of their cutoffs based on knowledge of human biology.” But even when labs set levels, they don’t always get them right. Some labs “just use the sensitivity of the chemical analysis to measure vanishingly tiny concentrations with no way to assess the relevance to humans,” Simon said. This can result in situations like Kaitlin’s, where the hospital’s cutoff was near the lower limit of what sophisticated lab instruments can detect, he said after reviewing her case.

Meanwhile, “labs tell their clients what they want to hear and are hesitant to disclose the uncertainty inherent in their methods,” Simon said.

There’s no industry consensus on what, or if anything, should be done about the differing standards. Some experts see a need for uniform levels but acknowledge it would require lengthy vetting before toxicologists and other stakeholders agree on what’s appropriate. Others maintain that as long as labs are transparent and support their decisions with research, they should continue choosing their own levels. “The labs do what works for the instruments that they have,” said Simon.


Child welfare agencies employ a patchwork of drug testing standards, according to contracts and procurement documents.

Some, like Los Angeles County’s Department of Children and Family Services, require labs to use high cutoff levels that protect against false positives. Other agencies’ contracts with their drug testing services do not specify cutoff levels, leaving the decision to the lab.

A few large agencies require labs to use ultra-low levels, which catch more users but come with risks. Incidental exposure to a substance in the environment and over-the-counter medications can trigger positives. “The smaller the concentration that you try to detect, the more likely you are to get false positive results,” said toxicologist Paul Cary, who wrote a guide to testing for drug courts, which aim to address the addictions of people accused of drug-related crimes and avoid incarceration.

Some Child Welfare Agencies’ Thresholds for a Positive Drug Test Are Lower Than the Federal Government’s

The levels at which various agencies consider a drug test positive for meth vary widely. “The smaller the concentration that you try to detect, the more likely you are to get false positive results,” said toxicologist Paul Cary.


250 ng/ml
meth

125 ng/ml

100 ng/ml

0

Federal workers cutoff

Los Angeles County Dept. of Children and Family Services

Orange County, California, Social Services Agency

Utah Division of Child and Family Services

Georgia Division of Family and Children Services

Less meth needed to trigger positive result

Note: Ng/ml is nanograms per milliliter. Squares show the level at which each organization considers the presence of meth in urine to be confirmed by mass spectrometry (liquid or gas chromatography).

The federal government sets standards for drug testing 14 million people. These include public-sector employees as well as workers whose performance affects the safety of others, known as safety-sensitive roles, like airline pilots, truck drivers and those working in nuclear facilities. For decades, the program was known for a rigorous scientific review and inspection process to ensure accuracy. 

In 2025, President Donald Trump’s second administration overhauled the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, the federal agency responsible for the testing standards program, and dismissed half of its staff. It also disbanded the expert panel that proposed scientifically valid cutoff levels, the Drug Testing Advisory Board. “There could be issues for national security or safety sensitive issues that might be impacted given the recent changes,” said Hyden Shen, former regulatory and policy oversight lead at the health agency’s division of workplace programs. In the spring, Shen resigned alongside almost half of his division. He spoke to ProPublica after leaving federal employment.

Private labs have long been free to set their own standards, independent of the federal government’s recommended levels. The CEO of a laboratory company specializing in testing for probation departments, child welfare agencies and courts testified in a lawsuit that in 2018 the lab had lowered cutoff levels for cocaine in hair follicle tests by a factor of five without amending its contract with the state child welfare agency. The company said that the change was to align its levels with scientific updates and that state agencies were made aware of the new cutoffs when it reported test results. The lawsuit was settled with the lab denying wrongdoing.

Federal workers who test positive for drugs can’t be punished until their results are scrutinized by medical review officers, physicians who verify that positive drug test results aren’t being triggered by legitimate medications. (For example, without a special follow-up called an isomer test, over-the-counter Vicks VapoInhaler is indistinguishable from street drugs in multiple types of drug tests.) But medical review of test results is expensive, and few state agencies require it for child welfare cases or for testing people on probation. One lab competing for a contract to test probationers and juveniles in a residential facility in Kansas discouraged the use of medical review officers, saying it would “result in extra expense and extra time for results delivery.” Other state agencies, especially those that oversee parole, probation or prisons, skip confirmation testing entirely and rely instead on cheaper, less accurate immunoassay tests, unless someone contests their result and can afford to pay out of pocket for a follow-up, according to contracts between state courts and labs. 

Agencies “are effectively saying, ‘Most of these people probably did use drugs. And, yeah, OK, there’s a handful that didn’t. But it would bankrupt us to have to confirm all of these,’” said Karen Murtagh, executive director of Prisoners’ Legal Services of New York, which has represented inmates in drug testing cases.


In the spring of 2019, Marie Herrera was working to reunite with her four kids in Michigan’s foster care system. (ProPublica is referring to Herrera by her middle name at her request, to maintain her privacy as she moves forward with her life.) At a hearing on her case, a foster care worker testified that it was going well, according to a filing from her attorney: “Mother had attended all eleven parenting times, had procured employment, was in therapy, lived in three-quarters housing, and tested negative for illegal drugs during the current reporting period.”

Then that July, Herrera’s saliva tested positive for cocaine. Herrera admitted to being in recovery from an addiction but denied using the drug. Over the next eight months, two more of her drug tests were confirmed positive for cocaine by the state’s lab. She sought testing from an outside lab, which didn’t detect illegal drug use.

According to her test results from the state’s lab, which Herrera shared with ProPublica, the levels of cocaine and its metabolite in her system ranged from 1.065 to 1.774 ng/ml, just above the state’s cutoff of 1 ng/ml in saliva. If the positive-test threshold for federal workers had been applied to Herrera’s tests, she could have had more than four times as much of the drug in her saliva and still been cleared to fly a plane.

But Herrera’s positive test from December 2019 caused the judge to take away her unsupervised parenting time, according to court records.

“The positive drug tests turned my world upside down and ruined my life,” said Herrera. What she didn’t know is that behind the scenes, Michigan’s child welfare agency was reviewing — and preparing to raise — its cutoff levels.

Michigan’s levels for cocaine and other drugs in saliva had been set by its drug testing vendor, Forensic Fluids, in 2018, according to public records. (Forensic Fluids did not respond to a request for comment.) Michigan contractually required the same levels when it signed with a new lab, Averhealth, in 2019. 

But the child welfare agency noticed conflicting results between its tests and those ordered by law enforcement agencies, according to public records. Some individuals who tested positive for a drug with one agency tested negative with another.

In November 2020, at the urging of its new lab, the agency raised its levels. Communications between the agency and Averhealth show both were concerned that low cutoffs might not be “forensically defensible” due to “uncertainty around environmental exposure.”

“Current levels … are scientifically unsupportable,” Michigan’s child welfare agency wrote in a memo about the change.

Memo subject: “Drug Screen Cut-Off Levels Change Request.” The memo reads in part: “Although the concerns shared were not specific to testing levels, the correlation between established testing levels and the concerns are clear; current levels result in increased errors, inconsistency and are scientifically unsupportable.”
A 2020 memo from Michigan’s Department of Health and Human Services to its Children’s Services Agency recommends raising agency drug testing levels because current levels are “scientifically unsupportable.” Obtained by ProPublica. Highlight added by ProPublica.

In a statement, Averhealth, the lab that processed Herrera’s tests, said the mismatch in results  that concerned Michigan administrators “in no way calls into question the accuracy or reliability” of its testing. “Inconsistencies occurred when different types of tests were conducted (saliva or hair) or when the individual was tested days later,” the company said, noting that “different types of testing have different limitations.” The company said its test results “simply attest to whether a drug is present in a specimen and, if so, in what quantity. It is left to the courts to decide what, if any consequences, follow.”

In Herrera’s case, the lab said, low-level cocaine positives “likely represent ingestion of cocaine” and that “passive exposure as an explanation is highly doubtful.” The company also pointed out that Herrera had several high-level positive tests for methamphetamine in the fall of 2020, nine months after the court took away her unsupervised parenting time. 

Herrera admits she’s relapsed at times. But she also says that being labeled a cocaine user early on in her case, when she says she wasn’t using, derailed her recovery. Herrera believes it set her up to fail by creating an adversarial relationship with her caseworker and judge. “I wasn’t grateful about what they were doing to me,” she says.

Herrera’s parental rights were terminated in 2021, less than a year after Michigan raised its cutoff levels for cocaine in saliva. In denying Herrera’s appeal, a judge cited her refusal to participate in further drug tests, additional failed tests when she did comply, and her lack of housing and income, among other things.

When Herrera was told she could never again see her kids, she said, she was devastated and relapsed again. “Fuck it, if they say I’m an addict, then I’ll numb the pain.”

“I think about my kids every single day,” she said. “It’s affected me completely.”

Even after raising its cutoffs, Michigan’s levels were still far lower than those used for federal workers. The state declined to comment, but a memo stated that officials considered the federal levels inappropriate because they “do not assess the impacts of how those substances may affect a person’s behavior” or “how that use may impact child safety.”

Drug testing policy experts say it’s not possible for any test, no matter the cutoff level, to reliably predict child safety.

“A drug test doesn’t tell you if a person has a substance use disorder, if they are in recovery, or whether a child is safe,” said Nancy K. Young, executive director of Children and Family Futures, which consults for child welfare agencies, and co-author of a Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration policy paper on drug testing for child welfare agencies. Young said administrators should consider test results as “just one data point” and rely more on “casework and a relationship with the family” to determine whether a child is safe and well.

Great Job Alice Hines & the Team @ ProPublica Source link for sharing this story.

RIP MTV: 25 Iconic Moments We’ll Never Forget

RIP MTV: 25 Iconic Moments We’ll Never Forget

Source: NurPhoto / Getty

MTV launched in 1981 with a simple but revolutionary idea: play music videos around the clock. Its first broadcast, “Video Killed the Radio Star,” felt prophetic, as the network quickly transformed how audiences discovered music and how artists built their images. MTV wasn’t just a channel, it was a cultural engine that blended sound, fashion, and attitude into a new visual language, turning musicians into global stars and making youth culture the center of pop conversation.

For hip hop, MTV’s rise was complicated but ultimately transformative. In its early years, the network was slow to embrace rap, reflecting broader industry resistance to the genre. But once shows like Yo! MTV Raps arrived, hip hop exploded into the mainstream. The platform helped turn regional scenes into national movements, introducing artists, styles, and slang to suburban living rooms around the world. MTV gave hip hop a visual identity, amplifying its storytelling, fashion, and political edge, and helping cement the genre as the dominant cultural force it would become.

What once defined popular culture now reacts to it from the sidelines, overshadowed by YouTube, TikTok, and streaming platforms. MTV’s decline marks the end of a shared musical experience, a time when millions watched the same videos, felt the same moments, and learned the culture together in real time.

Let’s look back at 25 moments, shows and controversies we’ll never forget.

Tupac Addresses Hughes Brothers on Yo MTV Raps 

That Time Ol’ Dirty Bastard Took MTV to Pick Up His Food Stamps

Eminem Trolls Mark Wahlberg

Beyonce Reveals Her 1st Pregnancy at 2011 MTV Video Music Awards

Lil Mama Crashes The Stage

“Come On Be My Baby Tonight” (The Real World New Orleans)

I’mma Let You Finish… Kanye Rushes The Stage

Diana Ross Taps Lil Kim’s Boob

Pedro’s Battle with AIDS (The Real World San Francisco)

Redman Keeps it REAL on MTV Cribs

Pimp My Ride Turning Cars into Mobile Abominations

Tupac Takes on Trump and Greed in America

Snooki’s Bar Brawl (Jersey Shore)

Lauryn Hill’s MTV Unplugged

Jay-Z and Nas Come Together After Their Iconic Beef

The Rise of Beavis and Butt-head

Daria Becomes Pop Culture’s Favorite Animated Introvert

The ORIGINAL Slap Heard Around The World (The Real World Seattle)

“Billie Jean” Becomes The First Video By a Black Artist To Get Mainstream Rotation on MTV

Mic Geronimo Moves in with His Girlfriend on MTV’s Sex in the 90s

News of Tupac’s Passing

TRL Caller Asks Ol’ Dirty Bastard What He’s Done for the Community

Folks Finding Out They’ve Been Catfished by a Lover

Madonna’s Controversial “Like a Virgin” Performance

Great Job J. Bachelor & the Team @ Black America Web Source link for sharing this story.

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