Viggo Mortensen
Viggo Mortensen
Viggo Mortensen
U.S. President Joe Biden's campaign has pulled in more money ahead of November's election than that of his Republican rival Donald Trump, which analysts attribute to Biden's incumbent status and support from Democratic predecessors. That support will be on full display Thursday at a fundraising event for Biden in New York City, where former Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton, both prominent Democrats, will be in attendance. Biden's campaign committee is outraising Trump in both money raised from large contributions and small individual donations under $200, according to OpenSecrets, a research group that tracks money and influence in U.S. politics.
A few years after graduating from college, Sam Bankman-Fried grew worried he was not taking enough risks. So the son of two Stanford Law School professors quit his Wall Street job and in 2017 started a cryptocurrency hedge fund, setting off a sequence of events that will culminate on Thursday with his sentencing over what federal prosecutors have called one of the biggest financial frauds in U.S. history. Prosecutors are seeking 40 to 50 years behind bars for 32-year-old Bankman-Fried, while his defense lawyers have argued he should receive less than 5-1/4 years.
Olympic silver medallist Keely Hodgkinson is thrilled to give athletics fans a sneak peek at how she is aiming to upgrade to gold in Paris as part of two fly-on-the-wall documentaries.
Fellow television personalities are paying tribute to George Gilbey.
“You can afford to live on your own, you're choosing not to."
Cuoco shares 11-month-old Matilda with her partner Tom Pelphrey
The singer lost his sons Arthur and Jethro seven years apart.
Carl Grant, a Vietnam veteran with dementia, wandered out of a hospital room to charge a cellphone he imagined he had. When he wouldn’t sit still, the police officer escorting Grant body-slammed him, ricocheting the patient’s head off the floor. Taylor Ware, a former Marine and aspiring college student, walked the grassy grounds of an interstate rest stop trying to shake the voices in his head.
Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump were the butt of the "Tonight Show" host's gag.
European shares inched higher on Thursday, heading into the long Easter weekend, propped up by gains in JD Sports after reiterating its annual profit forecast, while the benchmark index eyed a second consecutive quarter in the green. The pan-European STOXX 600 edged 0.3% up and eked out a fresh record high, as of 0940 GMT.
The 33-year-old scored the decisive goal as Team GB won gold in Rio.
Energy stocks are the biggest winners this month as oil prices push higher. It's a sign the market rally is broadening beyond just Big Tech.
With flagging iPhone sales, Apple has been pivoting to its burgeoning and successful services business. But that pivot has brought further attention to possible problems with the company's "Walled Garden" ecosystem.
Sharp is a MSc water science, policy & management student at St Antony’s College.
From picking a perfect fragrance to spraying your radiators and getting rid of the worst stinks, here is how to make sure your life always smells sweet
A secret history of machine intelligence, from 14th century horoscopes to 1930s ‘plot genies’ for coming up with storylines
A look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike Dolan With Wall St set for its final trading day of a bumper first quarter, the Federal Reserve seems in "no rush" to lower interest rates just yet - buoying the dollar as other central banks chomp at the bit. Fed Governor Christopher Waller set the tone for the Easter break on Wednesday indicating the central bank was being patient rather than hesitant in lowering borrowing costs this year. Although the comments marginally shaved expectations for a rate cut as soon as June - and nudged two-year Treasury yields back up - it was also clear Waller was merely talking about timing.
General Motors chair and CEO Mary Barra tells Yahoo Finance this is the year of executing on big goals.
It comes after researchers spotted signs of ‘exhaustion’ in the immune cells of women with the BRCA mutation.
The owner, operator and charterer of the container ship that struck Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge on Tuesday are likely to face lawsuits over its collapse and the people killed or injured, but legal experts say U.S. maritime law could limit the companies’ liability. U.S. laws pertaining to open-water navigation and shipping, which are created through court decisions and by acts of Congress, could restrict the kinds of lawsuits filed against the registered owner of the Singapore-flagged ship, Grace Ocean Pte Ltd, its manager Synergy Marine Group and its charterer Maersk , and could limit the damages they would have to pay, three legal experts told Reuters. The economic damages suffered by the city of Baltimore from the closure of the port, the busiest port for car shipments in the U.S., or by businesses that rely on it and the now-collapsed bridge would not be recoverable through lawsuits, said Martin Davies, director of the Maritime Law Center at Tulane University School of Law.