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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

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Rubio, Hegseth brief congressional leaders as questions mount over next steps in Venezuela

Rubio, Hegseth brief congressional leaders as questions mount over next steps in Venezuela

WASHINGTON – Secretary of State Marco Rubio and other top officials briefed leaders in Congress late Monday on the striking military operation in Venezuela amid mounting concerns that President Donald Trump is embarking on a new era of U.S. expansionism without consultation of lawmakers or a clear vision for running the South American country.

Republican leaders entered the closed-door session at the Capitol largely supportive of Trump’s decision to forcibly remove Venezuela’s president Nicolás Maduro from power, but many Democrats emerged with more questions as Trump maintains a fleet of naval vessels off the Venezuelan coast and urges U.S. companies to reinvest in the country’s underperforming oil industry.

A war powers resolution that would prohibit U.S. military action in Venezuela without approval from Congress is heading for a vote this week in the Senate.

“We don’t expect troops on the ground,” said House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said afterward.

He said Venezuela’s new leadership cannot be allowed to engage in narcoterrorism or the trafficking of drugs into the U.S., which sparked Trump’s initial campaign of deadly boat strikes that have killed more than 115 people.

“This is not a regime change. This is demand for a change in behavior,” Johnson said. “We don’t expect direct involvement in any other way beyond just coercing the new, the interim government, to get that going.”

Johnson added, “We have a way of persuasion — because their oil exports as you know have been seized, and I think that will bring the country to a new governance in very short order,” he said.

But Sen. Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, emerged saying, “There are still many more questions that need to be answered.”

“What is the cost? How much is this going to cost the United States of America?” Rep. Gregory Meeks of New York, the top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said afterward.

Lawmakers were kept in the dark

The briefing, which stretched for two hours, came days after the surprise military action that few, if any, of the congressional leaders, knew about until after it was underway — a remarkable delay in informing Congress, which has ultimate say over matters of war.

Administration officials fielded a range of questions — from further involvement of U.S. troops on the ground to the role of the Venezuelan opposition leadership that appeared to have been sidelined by the Trump administration as the country’s vice president, Maduro ally Delcy Rodriguez, swiftly became the country’s interim president.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman Air Force Gen. Dan Caine and Attorney General Pam Bondi, who brought drug trafficking charges against Maduro, all joined the classified session. It was intended for the so-called “gang of eight” leaders, which includes Intelligence committee leadership as well as the chairmen and ranking lawmakers on the national security committees.

Asked afterward if he had any more clarity about who is actually running Venezuela, Sen. Mark Warner, the top Democrat on the Intelligence Committee, said, “I wish I could tell you yes, but I can’t.”

Leaders of the Senate Judiciary Committee — Republican chairman Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa and ranking Democrat Sen. Richard Durbin of Illinois — said they should have been included in the classified briefing, arguing they have oversight of the Justice Department under Bondi.

Earlier in the day, Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer warned that Trump’s action in Venezuela is only the beginning of a dangerous approach to foreign policy as the president publicly signals his interests in Colombia, Cuba and Greenland.

“The American people did not sign up for another round of endless wars,” Schumer said.

Afterward, Schumer said the briefing, “while extensive and long, posed far more questions than it answered.”

Republicans hold mixed views reflective of the deepening schism within Trump’s “Make America Great Again” movement as the president, who vowed to put America first, ventures toward overseas entanglements many lawmakers in both parties want to avoid — particularly after the long wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

No clarity on what comes next

Next steps in the country, and calls for elections in Venezuela, are uncertain.

The Trump administration had been in talks with Rodríguez, who took the place of her ally Maduro and offered “to collaborate” with the Trump administration. Meanwhile, Trump has been dismissive of Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado, who last month won the Nobel Peace Prize for her struggle to achieve a democratic transition in her nation. Trump has said Machado lacks the “support” or “respect” to run the country.

But Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., a staunch Trump ally, said he plans to speak soon with Machado, and called her “very popular if you look at what happened in the last election.”

“She eventually, I think, will be the president of Venezuela,” Scott said. “You know, this is going to be a process to get to a democracy. It’s not easy. There’s a lot of bad people still there, so it’s going to take time. They are going to have an election and I think she will get elected.”

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., who has been a leading critic of the Trump campaign of boat strikes against suspected drug smugglers, said there are probably a dozen leaders around the world who the U.S. could say are in violation of an international law or human rights law.

“And we have never gone in and plucked them out the country. So it sets a very bad precedent for doing this and it’s unconstitutional,” Paul told reporters. “There’s no way you can say bombing a capital and removing the president of a foreign country is not an initiation of war.”

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Associated Press writer Kevin Freking contributed to this story.

Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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What Are the Pros and Cons of Eating Organic Foods?

What Are the Pros and Cons of Eating Organic Foods?

Organic foods can provide a number of benefits for your health, the well-being of the animals your food is coming from, and the protection of our global environment.

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Narwal adds AI to its vacuum cleaners to monitor pets and find jewelry | TechCrunch

Narwal adds AI to its vacuum cleaners to monitor pets and find jewelry | TechCrunch

Robot vacuum maker Narwal unveiled its new set of smart vacuum cleaners at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) with AI-powered features such as monitoring pets, finding valuable objects, and notifying users about misplaced toys.

The company said that its new flagship Flow 2 robot vacuum has a rounded design and easy-lift tanks for better cleaning. The device uses two 1080p RGB cameras with a 136-degree field of view to map out the area and recognize different kinds of objects using AI models.

Narwal said that through this tech stack, the vacuum cleaner has the ability to identify an unlimited number of objects. The device first tries to identify an object locally, but in case there are no matches, it sends the data to the cloud for further processing.

Image Credits: Narwal

The Flow 2 has three key modes called pet care mode, baby care mode, and AI floor tag mode. With pet care mode, you can define zones where pets usually rest or hang out to clean them. Plus, it can monitor pets and also check in on your pets via two-way audio (there is no guarantee that they would listen to you, though). In the baby care mode, the vacuum switches to quiet mode near the crib and notifies you of misplaced toys. In the AI floor tag mode, the vacuum recognizes valuable items like jewelry, avoids them, and alerts you.

Narwal said that its newest vacuum cleaner has four cleaning modes that can identify different types of dirt. The device can also return to its base to wash the mop and then re-mop a certain area if it is dirty. The company noted that the Flow 2’s design allows for a higher hot water washing temperature for better cleaning.

Narwal adds AI to its vacuum cleaners to monitor pets and find jewelry | TechCrunch
Image Credits: Narwal

Along with the Flow 2, the company also showed off a handheld vacuum called the U50 that weighs 1.41kg (3.1 lbs) and has UV-C sterilization along with heat treatment for allergen removal. The company also demoed an unnamed cordless vacuum with a slim design, 360-degree swivel, and up to 50 minutes of run time. The cordless vacuum also has an auto-empty station that can support up to 60 days of dust disposal.

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Israel Strikes Southern, Eastern Lebanon Targets.

Israel Strikes Southern, Eastern Lebanon Targets.

BEIRUT (AP) — Israel’s air force struck areas in southern and eastern Lebanon on Monday, saying they are home to infrastructure for the militant groups Hezbollah and Hamas.

The strikes came a few days before Lebanon’s army commander is scheduled to brief the government on its mission of disarming Hezbollah in areas along the border with Israel.

The strikes took place nearly two hours after Israel’s military Arabic language spokesman Avichay Adraee posted warnings on X that the military would strike targets for Hezbollah and the Palestinian Hamas groups in two villages in the eastern Bekaa Valley and two others in southern Lebanon.

Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency said a home struck in the village of Manara in the Bekaa Valley belonged to Sharhabil al-Sayed, a Hamas military commander who was killed in an Israeli drone strike in May 2024.

The Lebanese army last year began the disarmament process of Palestinian groups while the government has said that by the end of 2025 all the areas close to the border with Israel — known as the south Litani area — will be clear of Hezbollah’s armed presence.

The Lebanese government is scheduled to discuss Hezbollah’s disarmament during a meeting Thursday that will be attended by army commander Gen. Rudolph Haikal.

Monday’s airstrikes were in villages north of the Litani river and far from the border with Israel.

The disarmament of Hezbollah and other Palestinian groups by the Lebanese government came after a 14-month war between Israel and Hezbollah in which much of the political and military leadership of the Iran-backed group was killed.

The latest Israel-Hezbollah war began Oct. 8, 2023, a day after Hamas attacked southern Israel, when Hezbollah fired rockets into Israel in solidarity with Hamas. Israel launched a widespread bombardment of Lebanon in September 2024 that severely weakened Hezbollah, followed by a ground invasion.

The war ended in November 2024 with a ceasefire brokered by the U.S.

Israel has carried out almost daily airstrikes since then, mainly targeting Hezbollah members but also killing 127 civilians, according to the office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights.

Lebanon’s Health Ministry said a drone strike on a car in the southern village of Braikeh earlier Monday wounded two people. The Israeli military said the strike targeted two Hezbollah members.

(Copyright, All Rights Reserved, WBAP/KLIF 2026)

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‘Hahaha…That Fake Smile’: Melania Loses Control When Trump Opens His Mouth, She Notices the Cameras Too Late, and Fans Can’t Stop Laughing

‘Hahaha…That Fake Smile’: Melania Loses Control When Trump Opens His Mouth, She Notices the Cameras Too Late, and Fans Can’t Stop Laughing

Melania Trump may know her husband better than almost anyone, but Donald Trump still manages to catch her off guard. The first lady couldn’t hide her surprise after he gave an interesting answer to a reporter’s question.

The couple, who will celebrate their 21st wedding anniversary on Jan. 22, were walking into a Mar-a-Lago party when a reporter asked Trump, “Mr. President, do you have a New Year’s resolution?”

‘Hahaha…That Fake Smile’: Melania Loses Control When Trump Opens His Mouth, She Notices the Cameras Too Late, and Fans Can’t Stop Laughing
Trump and Melania. (Photo by Jim WATSON / AFP via Getty Images)

‘Trump Was 35 When Melania Was 10’: Trump Draws Gasps as Critics Examine His Marriage and a Melania Family Detail Stops Them Cold

The suited businessman responded, “l have — peace, peace on earth. Peace on earth.” What exactly “peace on earth” looks like, only Trump knows. Three days later, on Jan. 3, Trump announced the capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, inciting concerns about the next chapter of the U.S. military adventures abroad.  

Melania, dressed in a fitted silver-sequined gown, wore a frozen smile plastered across her face as photographers captured their every move. When Trump uttered his pageant response, she looked at him and grimaced for a split second before resuming her performance as his doting plus-one.  

The public caught the very moment the former model let her mask slip, exposing “the shock on her face.” On Instagram, a user simply laughed, “hahaha.” While another person mentioned that it was “absolutely crazy how fast she put that fake smile back on.” Several onlookers read into the shift in her facial expression, suggesting her true feelings about the president were revealed. 

 A second user commented, “She always looks so pained when she’s next to him.” A third person quipped, “She caught his lie then had to catch her own reaction to that lie.” A fourth noted, “One thing about Melania, is she can’t hide her disgust for him.”

A grim reaction alluded to the senior citizen’s eventual demise being a bright spot in Melania’s life when they wrote, “She’s counting the days. You think Erika Kirk is a happy widow? Just wait.”

Trump and his Cabinet herald themselves as being America’s most transparent administration ever, though critics rightfully doubt that is true.

Regarding matters of the president’s health, he has revealed that he has undergone multiple visits to the doctor and advanced imaging, as well as at least three cognitive tests — all of which he claims he passed with flying colors, since he took office in January 2025.

Yet, hardly anyone has overlooked the chronic bruising of Trump’s hands — which White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt initially claimed was a result of excessive handshaking — his inability to stay awake during meetings, or the cadence of his speech. Even on New Year’s Eve, folks were puzzled by his lack of clear diction. 

A commenter wrote, “His speech is definitely slurred.” Another individual remarked, “Melania heard him slurring his words. She looked concerned for a split second.”

One user proposed, that he was “either drunk or stroking out… you pick!” However, the Republican figure has long boasted that he does not consume alcohol, leaving folks to assume he was “stroking out.”

Trump has denied having suffered a stroke for years. In a new Wall Street Journal interview, he admitted to taking a 325 mg dose of aspirin every day. “They say aspirin is good for thinning out the blood, and I don’t want thick blood pouring through my heart,” he said.

That same article exposed his frat boy diet that consists of McDonald’s Big Macs, Quarter Pounders, Filet-O-Fish sandwiches, fries, and Diet Coke.  

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Trump’s strike on Venezuela gives the U.S. 30% of the world’s oil reserves on paper and a $100 billion rebuilding job in reality | Fortune

Trump’s strike on Venezuela gives the U.S. 30% of the world’s oil reserves on paper and a 0 billion rebuilding job in reality | Fortune

President Donald Trump’s plans to restore Venezuela’s beleaguered oil industry faces a series of challenges that will cost U.S. oil companies many billions of dollars to overcome.

Over the weekend, U.S. forces arrested Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on drug trafficking charges, with Trump claiming the U.S. would “run” the country and take over the country’s nationalized oil reserves.

“American dominance in the western hemisphere will never be questioned again. Won’t happen,” Trump said on Saturday, while explicitly endorsing the “Donroe doctrine,” a social media meme/portmanteau that describes the retro-nostalgic version of imperial authority increasingly on display in his second term. The Monroe Doctrine meets the Donald.

The move follows a series of deadly strikes on Venezuelan boats supposedly carrying drugs, attacks widely considered to be illegal. The United Nations Secretary General António Guterres, the body’s top official, called Trump’s ousting of Maduro a violation of the UN’s charter. 

Home to the world’s largest oil reserves, Venezuela reached its output peak in the 1970s, producing more than 3.5 million barrels of oil daily, though production has significantly tapered off to about 1 million barrels daily. Analysts have high hopes that oil companies entering Venezuela can tap back into the country’s black gold. JPMorgan predicted that with control of Venezuela’s oil, the U.S. could hold 30% of the world’s oil reserves. Other analysts said the country could double or triple its current output, returning it to its highs from 50 years ago, quite quickly.

But experts warn that the path to dominance, at least as far as oil is concerned, will be an uphill battle following decades of mismanagement and sanctions. State-owned oil giant Petróleos de Venezuela S.A. (PDVSA) collapsed in the mid-2010s following the loss of  foreign financial support, as well as skilled workers to maintain pipelines. In 2017, the first Trump administration escalated oil sanctions on Venezuela, restricting the country’s access to U.S. markets.

Small war, big questions

According to Helima Croft, head of global commodity strategy at RBC Capital Markets, oil companies’ efforts to grow production, such as rebuilding infrastructure, would take about a decade. She wrote in a note to investors on Saturday that according to oil executives, these efforts will cost $10 billion annually, bringing total investments over the next 10 years to about $100 billion.

Part of those steep rebuilding costs are also a result of the need to extract and refine heavy crude oil, which makes up about 75% of Venezuela’s reserve, most of which is in the Orinoco Belt. Venezuela’s oil boom of yesteryear was also a result of light crude oil found in the oilfields of western Venezuela, which was easy to access and therefore were depleted quickly. While heavy crude oil is what is predominantly being drilled for today, its viscous consistency and high levels of metals and sulfur mean extracting and refining this product is significantly more costly than its light crude counterpart.

The mass undertaking to restore the Venezuelan oil industry to its peak means oil prices are unlikely to budge anytime soon, said Miguel Tinker Salas, a professor emeritus of history at Paloma College and author of The Enduring Legacy: Oil, Culture, and Society in Venezuela. It’s a hit to Trump’s “drill baby, drill” vision and, according to the historian, the president’s hope of gaining momentum ahead of the midterm elections.

“The notion that Venezuela has the largest reserves of oil in the world—303 billion barrels of oil [in reserve]—may be a stimulant in trying to get the price of oil to drop for potentially his own electoral purposes,” Tinker Salas told Fortune. “Although [Trump] is grossly mistaken if he thinks that Venezuelan oil comes online tomorrow and will affect prices of oil before the election.”

Several other analysts see more than a little bit of midterm maneuvering behind the U.S. strike on Venezuela, given the offyear rout that Republicans suffered in 2025 and Trump’s dismal poll ratings. Macquarie’s global analysts Viktor Shvets and Kyle Liu noted that their 2026 outlook included “start a small war” as one policy the Republicans could pursue to avoid a “meltdown” in the midterms. Maduro’s capture is about oil and the Monroe Doctrine, they added, but it also strengthens the Republican Party’s “tough on crime and drugs” image. 

Elsewhere, UBS chief economist Paul Donovan argued in a Monday podcast that perceptions of “affordability” seem to have shaped U.S. administration policy over the past few weeks. He noted two tariff decisions in particular: a delay on a furniture levy, and a cut on planned fees for tariffs on Italian pasta. 

“The weekend’s action in Venezuela also raises fiscal questions,” he wrote. “It is not clear how, if at all, the US intends to ‘run’ Venezuela but military adventures carry a fiscal cost. Despite the noise of social media warriors, geopolitical considerations are likely to concern investors less.”

Risks of political instability

The factors influencing U.S. oil companies go beyond just the infrastructure challenges plaguing the industry in Venezuela. According to RBC Capital Markets’ Croft, increasing oil production will hinge on companies feeling confident about the safety of setting up shop in Venezuela. That begins with who will be leading the country moving forward.

That individual will likely not be Nobel Peace Prize winner and opposition leader María Corina Machado, whom Trump said lacked support to fill the role; nor will it be Edmundo González, who ran against Maduro in the 2024 election, which was considered to be the fair winner of the election. González is in a self-imposed exile in Spain. Delcy Rodriguez, Maduro’s vice president, was sworn in as Venezuela’s interim president on Monday.

“We don’t really know who’s in charge, who is going to be running Venezuela,” Croft told CNBC on Monday. 

The U.S. will also have to learn from its past efforts to build up authority in the oil-rich countries of Iraq and Libya. Both endeavors included attempts to depose the countries’ respective leaders that led to political collapse and civil unrest.

“We thought Libya was going to be an easy turnaround, post-[former Libyan Prime Minister Muammar] Gaddafi,” Croft said. “So the question is, What’s our template for a rapid recovery of an oil sector that has suffered decades of decline and mismanagement?”

Tinker Salas argued that other factors, including an improvement in technology to extract low crude oil, could expedite production, but until there’s evidence that companies can thrive in Venezuela, there will likely be few efforts to escalate drilling.

“I don’t think any large U.S. major company is going to want to invest without a series of guarantees, because you’re talking about billions of dollars of investment,” Tinker Salas said. “This is an investment for the long term, not for the short term.”

Macquarie’s Shvets and Liu added an ominous warning for the long term of U.S. foreign policy, writing, that this is “another nail in the coffin of [the] global rules-based order,” marginalizing the UN “similar to the League of Nations circa 1930s.” The League of Nations was the forerunner to the UN and is famous among historians for its formation after the wreckage of World War I and its almost immediate failure to prevent the rise of authoritarianism in the 1930s that gave way to World War II.

This could also signal that the Church Committee rules may be “obsolete,” the Macquarie analysts wrote, referring to the regulations in place since 1975 to address abuses intelligence revealed during the Vietnam era. The CIA reportedly played a critical role in ensuring the success of this military action in Venezuela, after all.

A strong Republican midterm showing would reinforce the “unitary system of governance,” on the one hand, but Macquarie argued that it would likely further erode the “few remaining semi-independent agencies (principally the Fed).” Right on cue, a new Federal Reserve chairman is expected to be selected in the coming days.

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Clock and scoreboard malfunction delays Rockets vs. Suns game

Clock and scoreboard malfunction delays Rockets vs. Suns game

Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Play continues with the shot clock not working during the first half of an NBA basketball game between the Phoenix Suns and Houston Rockets Monday, Jan. 5, 2026, in Houston. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

HOUSTON – Monday’s game between the Houston Rockets and Phoenix Suns was briefly delayed because of a malfunction of the clocks and scoreboard before play resumed without either working.

The problems began early in the second quarter when the game clock, shot clock and scoreboard stopped working. The clock and shot clocks went blank and the scoreboard was frozen with the score at the end of the first quarter.

After play resumed, the public address announcer periodically announced the time remaining on the clock, gave the time left on the shot clock early in the count and counted down when the shot clock got under 10. He also announced the score of the game every couple of minutes.

During the delay, some Phoenix players jogged in place or skipped on the court to stay loose. Houston’s Tari Eason took a different path, sitting in an empty courtside seat and chatting with a fan for a bit before returning to the court.

The clock and scoreboard began working with about four minutes left in the first half, and the shot clocks were restored for the start of the third quarter.

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AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/NBA


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After Venezuela, Who’s Next?

After Venezuela, Who’s Next?

Welcome back to World Brief, the first edition of 2026! Today, we’re looking at threats of U.S. intervention around the world, South Korea’s budding friendship with China, and a series of cyberbullying convictions in France.


The Donroe Doctrine

In 2025, U.S. President Donald Trump often touted his “no new wars” mantra as evidence for why he deserved the Nobel Peace Prize. Within days of the start of 2026, though, Trump took a hard right turn: capturing Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, threatening military action against Colombia, warning of the fall of Cuba, suggesting U.S. intervention in Iran, cautioning the administration in Mexico, and vowing to annex Greenland.

Pursuing what has been coined the “Donroe Doctrine,” after the 1823 Monroe Doctrine, Trump kicked off the new year with an eye on U.S. intervention in resource-rich nations—a policy that he has prioritized in his National Security Strategy.

Here’s what you need to know about Trump’s current (and potentially future) targets:

Venezuela

Maduro appeared in a New York court on Monday for the first time since his dramatic seizure by U.S. forces early Saturday morning. He has pleaded not guilty to federal drug-trafficking charges and demanded that he be returned to Caracas, where he maintains that he is the rightful leader. (Independent vote monitors say opposition figure Edmundo González rightfully won Venezuela’s disputed presidential election in 2024.)

Trump has since said that the United States will “run the country,” with some suggesting that either Secretary of State Marco Rubio or presidential advisor Stephen Miller will oversee post-Maduro operations. It is unclear what U.S. involvement will look like, though the White House has said that it aims to take control of Venezuela’s oil reserves.

Experts suggest that the United States’ monthslong pressure campaign against alleged narcoterrorists in Latin America was a thinly veiled smoke screen for its regime-change ambitions. While the White House maintains that its actions against Maduro were legal, United Nations chief António Guterres warned on Saturday that they set a “dangerous precedent,” and several members of the U.N. Security Council argued in an emergency session on Monday that the U.S. operation in Venezuela violated international law.

Colombia

Trump threatened Colombian President Gustavo Petro on Sunday with U.S. military action, saying: “Colombia is very sick too, run by a sick man who likes making cocaine and selling it to the United States. And he’s not going to be doing it very long, let me tell you.” Asked if the United States would launch an operation against Bogotá, Trump replied with, “It sounds good to me.”

The U.S. president has not provided specifics as to what such an operation might look like. But Petro has warned of armed resistance if U.S. forces turn their attention on Colombia. “Do not threaten our sovereignty, because you will awaken the Jaguar,” Petro posted on X last month. “Attacking our sovereignty is declaring war, do not damage two centuries of diplomatic relations.”

Cuba

Following Maduro’s capture, Trump suggested that Cuba’s regime could similarly collapse in the near future. “I think Cuba is going to be something we’ll end up talking about because Cuba is a failing nation right now,” Trump said on Saturday, with Rubio adding, “If I lived in Havana, and I was in the government, I’d be concerned—at least a little bit.”

However, Trump has since walked back some of these comments, telling reporters aboard Air Force One on Sunday that “I think it’s just going to fall. I don’t think we need any action.”

Iran

A day before the U.S. operation in Venezuela, Trump appeared to consider U.S. intervention in Iran in support of anti-regime protesters. “If Iran shots and violently kills peaceful protesters, which is their custom, the United States of America will come to their rescue,” he posted on Truth Social. In response, Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf warned that “all American centers and forces across the entire region will be legitimate targets for us in response to any potential adventurism.”

U.S. forces struck three Iranian nuclear sites in a brazen operation last June during the 12-day Israel-Iran conflict, and Trump has previously threatened Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the Iranian regime under President Masoud Pezeshkian.

Mexico

When it comes to tackling drug cartels, Mexico is one of Trump’s top targets. “Mexico has to get their act together, because they’re [drugs are] pouring through Mexico, and we’re going to have to do something,” Trump said aboard Air Force One on Sunday after sharing a similar sentiment on Fox & Friends.

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum condemned Trump’s most recent threats on Monday. “We categorically reject intervention in the internal affairs of other countries,” she said. “The history of Latin America is clear and compelling: Intervention has never brought democracy, never generated well-being, nor lasting stability.”

Greenland

Throughout 2025, the Trump administration expressed interest in acquiring Greenland, a resource-rich, strategically located territory of Denmark. Despite Copenhagen being a NATO ally, Trump has not ruled out using military force or economic coercion to achieve this goal. “We do need Greenland, absolutely,” Trump told the Atlantic on Sunday. “We need it for defense.”

Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen urged European powers on Monday to take Trump’s threats seriously, adding that “if the United States attacks another NATO country, everything stops.”


Today’s Most Read


The World This Week

Tuesday, Jan. 6: The Organization of American States’ Permanent Council meets to discuss the situation in Venezuela.

Wednesday, Jan. 7: Pope Leo begins an extraordinary two-day consistory of cardinals.

Thursday, Jan. 8: Amman hosts the European Union-Jordan summit.

Sunday, Jan. 11: Benin holds parliamentary elections.

Myanmar holds the second phase of its general election.

Monday, Jan. 12: Hong Kong’s High Court holds a presentencing hearing for pro-democracy activist Jimmy Lai.

The International Court of Justice holds hearings on genocide allegations against Myanmar.

Polish President Karol Nawrocki begins a two-day visit to the United Kingdom.


What We’re Following

A burgeoning friendship. South Korean President Lee Jae-myung signaled a “new phase” in Seoul’s relationship with Beijing on Monday during a four-day state visit to China, adding that 2026 will be the first year of a “full-scale restoration of Korea-China relations.” The summit, during which Lee met with Chinese President Xi Jinping, signals both countries’ efforts to bolster their alliances in the face of regional adversaries.

For Beijing, that opposition comes from Tokyo. Since the inauguration of Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi in October 2025, differences in policy over Taiwan have sparked a major diplomatic blowout between China and Japan as well as threats of military action. Xi has since emphasized China’s shared history with South Korea during World War II, when both countries fought Japan, to curry favor with Seoul.

As for South Korea, one of the summit’s priorities is to counter Pyongyang. Just hours before Lee arrived in China, North Korea launched several ballistic missiles, including what it claimed to be hypersonic missiles, into the sea. This was its first such launch since November. South Korea’s Defense Ministry called the tests a violation of U.N. Security Council resolutions and urged Pyongyang to respond to its push to restart peace talks.

Guilty of cyberbullying. A Paris court convicted 10 people on Monday for cyberbullying French first lady Brigitte Macron. The defendants, eight men and two women whose ages range from 41 to 65, were found guilty of spreading false online claims about Macron’s gender, including that she was transgender, and equating the 24-year age gap between her and her husband, President Emmanuel Macron, to pedophilia.

These comments were “particularly degrading, insulting, and malicious,” the court ruled, pointing to the “cumulative harmful effects” that they had on the first lady. The 10 defendants were sentenced to jointly pay a fine of $11,675 for moral damage and are required to attend cyberbullying awareness training. Other sentences were determined based on the severity of each individual’s online posts, with the harshest receiving a six-month jail term.

Critical infrastructure attacks. Overnight Russian strikes on Ukraine’s Kyiv region early Monday marked what appears to be the war’s first fatalities of 2026. At least two people were killed, and several homes and critical infrastructure were damaged, including a working medical facility in Kyiv’s Obolonskyi district. According to Kyiv Oblast Gov. Mykola Kalashnyk, pockets of the region were left without power.

Over the course of Russia’s nearly four-year war against Ukraine, Moscow has routinely targeted the country’s energy sector in an effort to freeze Ukraine into submission. That includes attacks on its communications grid and oil refineries during the most recent brutal winter. The West has previously responded by imposing sanctions on Russia’s two largest oil companies, Rosneft and Lukoil—to devastating effect. But such pressure has so far failed to force Russian President Vladimir Putin to the negotiating table.

Kyiv’s Western allies will convene in Paris on Tuesday for a session of the “coalition of the willing,” a group of more than 30 nations committed to Ukraine’s defense, during which they plan on discussing postwar security guarantees for Kyiv.


Odds and Ends

Get ready for some expensive sushi. The operator of popular Japanese restaurant chain Sushi Zanmai bid $3.24 million on Monday for a single bluefin tuna. Weighing 535 pounds, the cost of the prized catch was the highest-ever price paid at Tokyo’s Toyosu fish market’s annual start-of-year auction—superseding the previous record of $2.1 million paid in 2019. “I haven’t sampled it yet, but it’s got to be delicious,” the company’s owner, Kiyoshi Kimura, said. “But when I see a good-looking tuna, I cannot resist.”

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Maduro and wife plead not guilty to narco-terrorism charges

Maduro and wife plead not guilty to narco-terrorism charges

Updated January 5, 2026 at 3:00 PM CST

Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro and his wife, politician and attorney Cilia Flores, made their first court appearance at a federal court in New York City Monday afternoon, when they both pleaded not guilty to all charges.

Maduro is facing charges of narco-terrorism conspiracy, cocaine-importation conspiracy and weapons charges. Flores and other senior Venezuelan officials, including Maduro’s son, are also facing charges.

U.S. District Judge Alvin K. Hellerstein is overseeing the proceedings. Monday’s hearing lasted less than an hour, with both Maduro and Flores submitting their pleas.

It’s one of the first times the now-former head of the Venezuelan state has been seen publicly since the U.S. attacked Caracas, captured Maduro and his wife, and brought them to the U.S. over the weekend to face charges.

Maduro greeted people in the courtroom with “Happy New Year” as he entered.

During the proceedings, he introduced himself as the president of Venezuela as well as a prisoner of war. Flores introduced herself as first lady of Venezuela. Her right eye appeared swollen and her forehead was bandaged in what may be injuries sustained during the U.S. military operation.

Alfredo Lasry R / Getty Images

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Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro seen on Aug. 17, 2024, in Caracas, Venezuela. He and his wife pleaded not guilty to the narco-terrorism charges they are facing.

Maduro’s defense requested X-rays and medical attention for what they said may be a broken or bruised rib, which they say was sustained during the military operation.

A heckler stood up in court to say, “You will pay in the name of the Venezuelan people.” Maduro turned to face him and responded, “I am a man of God.” The next court date is March 17.

Outside the courtroom, crowds gathered and emotions were high. Protesters played drums and sang the Venezuelan national anthem. Some who opposed the Trump administration’s actions demanded the U.S. release Maduro. Others decried harsh conditions for Venezuelans under Maduro.

Counterprotesters display signs supporting ousted Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro and fly the Venezuelan flag outside the Daniel Patrick Moynihan United States Courthouse in New York City.

José A. Alvarado Jr. for NPR /

Counterprotesters display signs supporting ousted Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro and fly the Venezuelan flag outside the Daniel Patrick Moynihan United States Courthouse in New York City.

Maduro and Flores were captured in their Caracas compound in a surprise U.S. military operation Saturday.

The same day, the U.S. Justice Department released a 25-page indictment that accuses Maduro and his allies of importing thousands of tons of cocaine into the U.S. with protection from Venezuelan law enforcement. It alleges Maduro provided drug traffickers with diplomatic passports and partnered with drug cartels to send cocaine to the U.S. via points in the Caribbean and Central America. The indictment claims Maduro began drug trafficking into the U.S. as early as 1999.

In a post on X this past weekend, Attorney General Pam Bondi wrote that Maduro and his wife “will soon face the full wrath of American justice on American soil in American courts.”

If convicted, Maduro and his wife could face life in prison.

Maduro is being represented by Barry J. Pollack, a leading trial attorney in the U.S. whose high-profile clients include Julian Assange and Enron executives. Pollack didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Flores is being defended by Mark Donnelly, a Houston-based attorney that specializes in white collar criminal defense.

In a statement sent to NPR Donnelly said, “Our client is in good spirits. We look forward to reviewing and challenging the evidence the government has. While we would love to present our side now, we will wait to do so in court at the appropriate time. The first lady is aware that there is a long road ahead and is prepared.”

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