Walt Disney's 2012 Comic-Con Panel
The stars of "Frankenweenie," "Oz, Great and Powerful" and Wreck it Ralph" attend the 2012 Comic-Con event on July 11, 2012 in San Diego, California.
The stars of "Frankenweenie," "Oz, Great and Powerful" and Wreck it Ralph" attend the 2012 Comic-Con event on July 11, 2012 in San Diego, California.
The Pac-12 will splinter apart before fall camp starts, with all but two teams heading to new conferences. One of the highest-rated recruits in program history two years ago, McMillan has lived up to the hype. The 6-foot-5 receiver from Hawaii finished with 90 catches for 1,402 yards and 10 TDs last season.
Authorities revealed Friday the charges filed against an ex-aide of former President Donald Trump and four attorneys in Arizona’s fake elector case, but the names of former Trump chief of staff Mark Meadows and lawyer Rudy Giuliani remained blacked out. The Arizona attorney general's office released a copy of the indictment that revealed conspiracy, fraud and forgery charges had been filed against Mike Roman, who was Trump’s director of Election Day operations, and attorneys John Eastman, Christina Bobb, Boris Epshteyn and Jenna Ellis.
A divided federal appeals court revived a 2021 New York state law intended to provide affordable high-speed internet service to low-income families, setting aside a permanent injunction and handing a defeat to service providers. In a 2-1 decision on Friday, the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan said federal telecommunications law dating to the Great Depression did not pre-empt states from regulating broadband rates. "Congress intended for the states to retain their regulatory authority over many interstate communications services - and to play a role in regulating the rates charged for such services - unless it said otherwise," Circuit Judge Alison Nathan wrote.
The disgraced former NFL star revealed he had been diagnosed with cancer last year
With a slew of tech earnings arriving this week and inflation remaining stubborn, many on Wall Street are focused on the "Magnificent Seven" — Amazon (AMZN), Apple (AAPL), Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL), NVIDIA (NVDA), Meta (META), Microsoft (MSFT), and Tesla (TSLA) — which have driven rallies in the past. The Bahnsen Group CIO David Bahnsen joins Market Domination to give insight into the recent slate of earnings and how the tech sector is evolving beyond previous top names. Bahnsen discusses the problem with investors relying on high valuations as a standard: "High volatility is a byproduct of a high multiple that is totally disconnected from reality. So expensive stocks get more expensive until they don't. But it's impossible to gauge, judge, and certainly time. But you saw already this year earnings season, Facebook just getting ripped apart yesterday and yet Google rallying today. The Mag Seven is over. It doesn't exist as a monolith anymore. " For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Market Domination. This post was written by Nicholas Jacobino
How does an everlasting Lego bouquet for Mom or a laptop marked down by over $1,000 sound?
Alphabet and Microsoft led the U.S. stock market to its first winning week in the last four and its biggest weekly gain since November. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 0.4%, and the Nasdaq composite gained 2%. The Nasdaq composite rose 316.14 points, or 2%, to 15,927.90.
Rhonna Graff said she remembers ‘office chatter’ about the adult film star
Southwest Airlines is studying changes to its quirky boarding and seating policies as it searches for ways to raise more revenue. Airline officials say they are studying possible changes but won't have anything to announce until September. CEO Robert Jordan says he is proud of Southwest's “product,” but it was developed when flights weren't as full as they are today, and customers' preferences change over time, prompting the “deep dive” into “transformational options” in boarding and seating.
Lawyers representing X in Brazil told the Supreme Court on Friday that "operational faults" have allowed users who were ordered blocked to stay active on the social media platform. Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes last week had asked the social media giant to explain why it allegedly did not fully comply with earlier rulings ordering the company, owned by billionaire Elon Musk, to block certain accounts. A report by Brazil's federal police seen by Reuters last week showed accounts on X that top courts had ordered blocked were still active on the platform by early April, being able to gain new followers and to live-stream videos.
Arne Slot’s confirmation as the next Liverpool manager now looks a formality after Feyenoord verbally agreed a compensation package with the Anfield club.
Ty Husted's remains were found by a turkey hunter on private property in northeast Mercer County in Missouri on April 23, according to police
Temporary farmworkers will have more legal protections against employer retaliation, unsafe working conditions, illegal recruitment practices and other abuses under a Labor Department rule announced Friday. The new rule, which takes effect June 28, will target abuses experienced by workers under the H-2A program that undermine fair labor standards for all farmworkers. “H-2A workers too frequently face abusive working conditions that undercut all farmworkers in the U.S.,” said Acting Labor Secretary Julie Su.
Dexcom stock plunged Friday after the company raised its sales outlook for the year, but not enough to satisfy investors.
The first core update of 2024 is now done rolling out - this was a pretty big one but it overlapped with other big changes leading to a 45% reduction in unhelpful content.
Former Oklahoma softball star Jocelyn Alo, the NCAA all-time home runs leader, signed a one-month contract with the Savannah Bananas baseball team.
Gilead stock pared its gains Friday after beating first-quarter sales forecasts on the back of its Covid treatment, Veklury.
The club made their move for the Dutchman to become Jurgen Klopp’s successor earlier this week.
NEW YORK (AP) — JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon says he’s hopeful the Federal Reserve can bring down inflation without causing a recession but wouldn’t rule out more troubling possibilities, such as stagflation. In an interview with The Associated Press at a Chase branch opening in The Bronx, Dimon said he remained “cautious” about the U.S. economy and said inflation may be stickier for longer and that “stagflation is on the list of possible things” that could happen to the U.S. economy. “You sho
Edwards Lifesciences stock underperformed its peers on Friday, sliding on light sales of its transcatheter aortic heart-valve replacements.