• Armie Hammer is unrecognizable with new mohawk and mustache

    Armie Hammer is unrecognizable with new mohawk and mustache

    Armie Hammer is the latest celebrity to take style cues from Joe Exotic. The “Call Me By Your Name” actor, 33, must be going stir crazy while stuck at home during the coronavirus pandemic, because he made a dramatic change to his hair on Wednesday. “Killing the game,” Hammer captioned his new ‘do on Instagram, …
  • ‘RHONJ’ star Dolores Catania helps organize supply donation for NJ hospital

    ‘RHONJ’ star Dolores Catania helps organize supply donation for NJ hospital

    “Real Housewives of New Jersey” star Dolores Catania has stepped up to help her home state, which has become one of hotspots of the coronavirus crisis in the US. She has partnered with fellow entrepreneurs and friends to donate food, shoes and medical supplies to the healthcare workers on the frontlines at St. Joseph’s University …
  • Mike Trout’s big worry over MLB’s ‘pretty crazy’ Arizona plan

    Mike Trout’s big worry over MLB’s ‘pretty crazy’ Arizona plan

    The plan to start the Major League Baseball season after the coronavirus shutdown is lifted seems a little fishy to the sport’s biggest star. Los Angeles Angels outfielder and reigning AL MVP Mike Trout sounds skeptical about the proposal being discussed to play games in Arizona without fans while sequestering players and staff in nearby …
  • ‘Costliest Government Coverup of All Time’: Growing Confidence among U.S. Officials That Coronavirus Emerged from Lab

    ‘Costliest Government Coverup of All Time’: Growing Confidence among U.S. Officials That Coronavirus Emerged from Lab

    People cross a street during evening rush hour in Beijing’s Central Business District as the spread of coronavirus continues in China, April 15, 2020. U.S. intelligence has “increasing confidence” that the novel Wuhan coronavirus outbreak began in a lab that was researching bat-coronaviruses, contrary to China’s claim that the pandemic emerged from a Wuhan wet …
  • Another 5.2 million Americans file for unemployment as crisis puts 22 million out of work

    Another 5.2 million Americans file for unemployment as crisis puts 22 million out of work

    More than 5.2 million Americans filed for unemployment benefits last week as the number of people put out of work by the coronavirus crisis climbed above 22 million, new federal data show. The staggering numbers from the US Department of Labor indicate 13 percent of the American workforce was sidelined in just a month as …
  • Some coronavirus stimulus checks were deposited into wrong bank accounts

    Some coronavirus stimulus checks were deposited into wrong bank accounts

    Some Americans say they haven’t gotten their coronavirus stimulus checks because the feds sent the money to the wrong bank accounts. Several taxpayers tried to check the status of their payments on the Internal Revenue Service’s website only to discover the agency put the money in accounts they didn’t recognize or no longer use. “My …
  • Some banks are taking coronavirus stimulus checks for overdrawn accounts

    Some banks are taking coronavirus stimulus checks for overdrawn accounts

    Some Americans’ coronavirus stimulus checks are reportedly disappearing because their banks are pocketing the money. Some banks are putting customers’ deposits from the federal government toward negative balances in their accounts — leaving those unfortunate taxpayers with nothing, The New York Times reported Thursday. USAA — a financial-services company that serves people in the military …
  • Why coronavirus won’t wreck Joe Judge’s Giants

    Why coronavirus won’t wreck Joe Judge’s Giants

    You better know what to do when circumstances change, when you are confronted with crisis. Coaching the New York Football Giants —whether you are champions such as Bill Parcells and Tom Coughlin or a rookie such as Joe Judge — in the midst of a pandemic is not exactly miraculously landing a plane in the …
  • Federal Small-Business Loans Set to Run Out as Congressional Negotiations Continue

    Federal Small-Business Loans Set to Run Out as Congressional Negotiations Continue

    U.S. Small Business Administration loans may dry up by the end of Wednesday even as businesses seek relief from closures brought on by the coronavirus pandemic, Bloomberg has reported. The SBA’s emergency Paycheck Protection Program was established by Congress as part of its $2.2 trillion coronavirus-relief package. The PPP allocated $349 billion for loans to …
  • Sen. Chris Murphy: ‘The Reason We Are in This Crisis Today Is Not Because of Anything China Did’

    Sen. Chris Murphy: ‘The Reason We Are in This Crisis Today Is Not Because of Anything China Did’

    Senator Chris Murphy speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., December 13, 2018. Senator Chris Murphy (D., Conn.) said Tuesday that the blame for coronavirus “is not because of anything that China did” and instead rests squarely with President Trump. Speaking to CNN’s Anderson Cooper, Murphy laid out the case that Trump “didn’t take this …