Category: BUSINESS

  • Young Scooter dead on 39th birthday after fleeing police: Reports

    Young Scooter dead on 39th birthday after fleeing police: Reports

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    Atlanta rapper Young Scooter is dead at 39, according to reports.

    The Fulton County Medical Examiner’s Office told Atlanta outlet 11 Alive and entertainment magazine Variety that Kenneth Bailey, 39, died after an incident in Atlanta on Friday night. Bailey, a Future collaborator and Southern rap staple, is better known as Young Scooter.

    In a press conference Friday, Atlanta Police Department homicide commander Lt. Andrew Smith said that officers responded to a dispute with a weapon Friday, which was Young Scooter’s 39th birthday. He said initial reports indicated that shots were fired. 

    USA TODAY has reached out to the Fulton County Medical Examiner’s Office for comment.

    “Once officers arrived they knocked on the door. A male opened the door and immediately shut the door on the officers,” Smith said. Then, APD set up a perimeter at the scene, Smith said.

    “During the process of establishing the perimeter, two males fled out of the rear of the house,” Smith said. “One male returned back into the house. The other male jumped two fences as he was fleeing. When officers located him on the other side of the fence, he appeared to have suffered an injury to his leg.”

    “Officers rendered aid and he was transported to Grady Hospital where he was pronounced deceased,” Smith told reporters, adding that “that male is going to be a 39-year-old male out of Atlanta,” which matches Bailey’s description.

    Atlanta police clarified that the Young Scooter incident was not an officer-involved shooting.

    “Just to be very clear, the injury that was sustained was not via the officers on scene. It was when the male was fleeing,” Smith continued. 

  • Paul Rudd, Jenna Ortega break down ending

    Paul Rudd, Jenna Ortega break down ending

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    Spoiler alert! We’re discussing important plot points and the ending of “Death of a Unicorn” (in theaters now) so beware if you haven’t seen it yet.

    Paul Rudd has played dead onscreen before but never while laying on top of a unicorn puppet.

    In the climax of the comedic horror film “Death of a Unicorn,” Rudd’s character dies and is placed on top of a magical foal’s corpse, and both are then resurrected by the baby unicorn’s horned parents. After having his eyes closed for most of the time while filming the admittedly “cool” scene, Rudd got a kick out of seeing it come together in the final cut.

    “When the unicorn grabs me by the shoulder and drags me over, the thing that I remember thinking is like, ‘Wow, that really looks good,’ because I was on some sort of cardboard thing that they had to pull with ropes,” Rudd says.

    In “Death of a Unicorn,” recently widowed attorney Elliot (Rudd) and his estranged daughter Ridley (Jenna Ortega) take a trip to a nature preserve in the Canadian Rockies, where Elliot hopes to reconnect with his kid and also has a business meeting with a wealthy pharmaceutical clan. On the way, Elliott hits a baby unicorn with his rental SUV, wounding it, and Ridley touches its horn and forms a trippy spiritual connection with the creature.

    They put it in the vehicle to reach the Leopold family’s estate and when it tries to escape, the foal is shot and killed. Elliot and the Leopolds figure out that the unicorn’s blood and shavings from its horn have miraculous medicinal properties, for everything from teen acne to cancer. The Leopolds intend on selling it as a cure-all to the rich and elite but the unicorn parents show up and gruesomely slaughter the Leopolds and their staff one by one.

    Rudd and Ortega break down the movie’s ending and the aftermath for their characters.

    What happens in the ending of ‘Death of a Unicorn’?

    Ridley tries to warn her dad that what’s going on isn’t right, and Elliot finally realizes it late in the game, when the entitled and very bro-y Shepard Leopold (Will Poulter) uses Ridley and the dead foal as bait to capture the other unicorns. After Elliot and Shepard trade stab wounds – Elliot with the baby’s horn, Shepard with a knife – one of the unicorns fatally kicks Shepard in the face and sends him flying, but Elliot succumbs to his injuries. That is, until he’s placed on top of the baby unicorn, the parents lock horns and bring Elliot and the baby back to life, giving Elliot his own magical experience like his daughter’s.

    “I love that the unicorns are a metaphor for our planet and the way that we treat (it) and how disrespectful and ignorant we as a species can be at times,” Ortega says of the film’s ending. “It’s really sweet the way Ridley and Elliot come together at the end and see how much they need each other. And more than anything, I was taken by how impactful the love and vulnerability is and how we all could use a bit more of that.”

    Rudd adds: “They both get to a place that they’ve been desperate to get to and probably wouldn’t have had this insane venture not happened to them.”

    Ortega appreciates how the film tackles the parent-kid dynamic, especially in regard to “a time in a person’s life where they become an adult and the relationship with their parents either gets distant or confused or muddled, and nobody really knows what it means anymore.”

    Does ‘Death of a Unicorn’ have a post-credits scene?

    It doesn’t, but the movie’s final scene is pretty epic: When the cops come and find the gory carnage at the Leopolds’ estate, they stick Elliot and Ridley in the back of a police cruiser after not buying their “unicorns did this” explanation. On the way to the station, Elliot and Ridley see all three unicorns running free right next to them, they get the hint from the creatures that they’re wanting to help, and dad and daughter brace for a collision as the creatures run the vehicle off the road in an apparent rescue attempt.

    While we don’t see what happens next, Ortega imagines that our heroes go on their merry way. “I don’t think they stay close to the unicorns. The unicorns are probably tired of them and want to go back to their cave. And quite frankly, I relate to that,” she says. “I would like to think they did each other solid favors and then kind of just silently agree to never speak or see each other again.”

    The response makes Rudd laugh. “It’s inherent in all of us, isn’t it?” he adds. “From the very get-go of when we first formed as a species, we’re all just really trying to get back to our caves.”

  • 'Death of a Unicorn': Paul Rudd worries about magical beastsMovies

    'Death of a Unicorn': Paul Rudd worries about magical beastsMovies

    ‘Death of a Unicorn’: Paul Rudd worries about magical beastsMovies

  • Full list of episodes, dates, where to watch

    Full list of episodes, dates, where to watch

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    Spoiler alert: This story contains information about the latest episodes of “1923” Season 2.

    Things continue to be bleak for the Dutton family with harsh weather and even harsher adversaries continuing to threaten the Dutton legacy in Season 2 of “Yellowstone” prequel “1923”.

    Spencer Dutton (Brandon Sklenar) is still navigating his way back to Montana and the ranch with Sheriff McDowell (Robert Patrick) warning him not to return. Meanwhile, his pregnant wife Alexandra (Julia Schlaepfer) disembarked in Chicago from a train out of New York, on which she served as a waitress after her belongings and wealth were stolen in a harrowing encounter that knocked her unconscious.

    “1923” is the second “Yellowstone” prequel, following the events of the limited series “1883” (released in 2021) and before the current day “Yellowstone.”

    As the season enters its final 3-episode stretch, there is plenty of time for drama to unfold. Here’s what to know about catching the rest of “1923” Season 2.

    We’ve got room on the couch! Sign up for USA TODAY’s Watch Party newsletter for more recaps of your favorite shows.

    When do new ‘1923’ episodes come out? Episode 6 release date, time

    New episodes of “1923” Season 2 drop every Sunday on Paramount+ at 12 a.m. ET / 9 p.m. PT (previous day).

    Episode 6 of the series titled “The Mountain Teeth of Monster” will release on Sunday, March 30 at 12 a.m. ET / Saturday, March 29 at 9 p.m. PT.

    Episode 1 of Season 2 premiered on Sunday, Feb. 23.

    Watch 1923 Season 2 on Paramount+

    How to watch new episodes of ‘1923’ Season 2

    Season 2 of “1923” became available to stream exclusively on Paramount+ starting Sunday, Feb. 23 with new episodes dropping weekly on Sundays.

    Season 1 of the series is also available on the streaming service. Unlike “Yellowstone,” this series is only available via streaming on Paramount+.

    ‘1923’: Stream on Paramount+

    ‘1923’ episode schedule: How many episodes does Season 2 have?

    While Paramount+ has not released the full episode schedule for Season 2 of “1923,” the season is expected to have eight episodes, according to reports in Collider and Forbes. Here’s what the upcoming schedule looks like:

    • Episode 6 “The Mountain Teeth of Monster”: March 30
    • Episode 7: April 6
    • Episode 8: April 13

    The first five episodes of the season are available to stream on Paramount+.

    Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.

    Who are the Duttons in ‘1923’?

    “1923” follows the Duttons, led by patriarch Jacob and matriarch Cara, played by Harrison Ford and Helen Mirren, respectively.

    Jacob and Cara Dutton are ancestors of the current-day Yellowstone Dutton ranch owner and patriarch John Dutton (Kevin Costner), while Jacob is the brother of James Dutton, the settler played by Tim McGraw in “1883.”

    The series, meanwhile, is set in the early 20th century, “when pandemics, historic drought and the end of Prohibition all plague the mountain west, and the Duttons who call it home,” according to the series synopsis.

    Dutton family tree

    Here’s a look at the Dutton family tree, as reported by Jennifer Borresen for USA TODAY.

    ‘1923’ Season 2 cast

    Cast members for Season 2 of “1923,” per Paramount+, include:

    • Harrison Ford as Jacob Dutton
    • Helen Mirren as Cara Dutton
    • Brandon Sklenar as Spencer Dutton
    • Darren Mann as Jack Dutton
    • Michelle Randolph as Elizabeth Strafford
    • Julia Schlaepfer as Alexandra Dutton
    • Timothy Dalton as Donald Whitfield
    • Jerome Flynn as Banner Creighton
    • Brian Geraghty as Zane
    • Sebastian Roché as Father Renaud
    • Aminah Nieves as Teonna
    • Jennifer Carpenter
    • Robert Patrick as Sheriff McDowell

    Watch the ‘1923’ Season 2 trailer

    Paramount dropped the trailer for Season 2 of “1923” on Jan. 19.

    We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. USA TODAY Network newsrooms operate independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

    Contributing: Jennifer Borresen, Gabe Hauari, Bryan Alexander, USA TODAY

    Saman Shafiq is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at [email protected] and follow her on X and Instagram @saman_shafiq7.

  • ‘Snow White’ is a box office flop. Rachel Zegler isn’t why.

    ‘Snow White’ is a box office flop. Rachel Zegler isn’t why.


    Blaming a young actress for the failure of a massive Disney project is easy. But ‘Snow White’ is failing on its own.

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    The new “Snow White” movie had a lackluster opening weekend last week, but don’t blame lead actress Rachel Zegler for that, even if it seems everybody else will.

    In August, Zegler included a “free Palestine” post on an X thread thanking people for watching the “Snow White” trailer. Everyone promptly lost their minds, with producer Marc Platt even flying to New York to reprimand Zegler for this and a separate comment she made about supporters of Donald Trump.

    In a since-deleted Instagram comment, the producer’s son attributed Zegler’s comment to “immature desires,” saying she “clearly hurt the film’s box office.”

    “My dad, the producer of (an) enormous piece of Disney IP with hundreds of millions of dollars on the line, had to leave his family to fly across the country to reprimand his 20 year old employee for dragging her personal politics into the middle of promoting the movie for which she signed a multi-million dollar contract to get paid and do publicity for,” Jonah Platt wrote.

    Now, other people are trying to blame Zegler for the movie’s underperformance at the box office on opening weekend, despite critics saying she’s one of the only good things about the film.

    Zegler, for her part, has refused to delete the post. Her defiance is brave and important, especially considering the racist harassment she was already facing. In the face of intense backlash, she is standing with the Palestinian people.

    I don’t understand why that’s so controversial.

    Rachel Zegler isn’t alone in expressing her views on Gaza

    Meanwhile, Zegler isn’t the only member of the cast talking about what’s happening in Gaza. Her co-star Gal Gadot has expressed her support for Israel consistently since the Hamas terrorist attacks on Oct. 7, 2023. Gadot, an Israeli who served in the Israel Defense Forces for two years, spoke to Variety about her decision to continue speaking out.

    “On October 7th, when people were abducted from their homes, from their beds, men, women, children, elderly, Holocaust survivors, were going through the horrors of what happened that day, I could not be silent,” Gadot said.

    I’m glad she is voicing her opinion, why is it OK for one actress to speak about her political stances on the “Snow White” press tour but not the other? Zegler made a single post. She isn’t out in the streets protesting in her Snow White costume, nor has she said anything else on the press tour about Israel’s destruction of Gaza. If Gadot is allowed to speak her mind, why can’t Zegler?

    Zegler is just saying what Gen Z firmly believes

    It’s important to remember that Zegler’s sentiments align with what we know about Generation Z’s opinions on the conflict. Polls have consistently shown that millennials and Gen Z are more likely to support the Palestinian people than other generations. Thousands of students across the country have protested the war and the killing of more than 50,000 Palestinians.

    It’s not like Zegler is saying she supports Hamas; she’s just expressing support for the people being killed by the conflict. It’s separation that it seems many have trouble making.

    There are so many voices that have spoken up for Israel over the past year and a half. Both major U.S. political parties support Israel. Zegler, like many of us who support the Palestinian people’s right to exist, has no actual power to change U.S. foreign policy or persuade institutions to divest from Israel. She is a threat to nobody.

    Opinion alerts: Get columns from your favorite columnists + expert analysis on top issues, delivered straight to your device through the USA TODAY app. Don’t have the app? Download it for free from your app store.

    I can’t help but wonder if the backlash would be as intense if Zegler, 23, were not young, Latina or a woman. I can tell you from personal experience that all three things will make you a target if you choose to speak your mind.

    I’m proud of Zegler for standing her ground and not deleting the post. There could be long-term effects on her career; if Disney’s reaction is any indication, there probably will be. But she is doing what she believes is right and speaking up against the slaughter of innocent civilians. She does not deserve the hate she’s receiving.

    
Follow USA TODAY columnist Sara Pequeño on X, formerly Twitter: @sara__pequeno

  • Crossword Blog & Answers for March 29, 2025 by Sally Hoelscher

    Crossword Blog & Answers for March 29, 2025 by Sally Hoelscher

    There are spoilers ahead. You might want to solve today’s puzzle before reading further! A Comedy of Errors

    Constructor: Boaz Moser

    Editor: Jared Goudsmit

    Comments from Today’s Crossword Constructor

    Boaz: I’m thrilled to be making my debut in USA Today with a freestyle puzzle, and I hope you all enjoy! It took me a while to get around to submitting here — I was intimidated by the high standards for cleanliness and sparkliness. But I’m proud of the finished project, and I want to thank Amanda and the team for helping get it to their high standard.

    What I Learned from Today’s Puzzle

    • TESSA (44A: Historical romance novelist Dare) TESSA Dare has written over twenty historical romances set in the Regency Era. I enjoy titles of romance novels, and TESSA Dare’s books are no exception. For example: Say Yes to the Marquess 2015), When a Scot Ties the Knot (2015), and Do You Want to Start a Scandal (2016). TESSA Dare’s website tells me she has “a trio of cosmic kitties.” Well, now I definitely want to check out her books!
    • POWER CREEP (6D: Process by which new content makes older content obsolete, in gaming) POWER CREEP can occur when game expansions are stronger than existing content. This can be an incentive for users to buy the expansions, but can also make older content useless. I was not familiar with this term, but it was fairly inferable once I had some help from crossing answers.
    • BANH MI (10D: Sandwich similar to a khao jee pate) BANH MI is the Vietnamese word for bread. A BANH MI sandwich is served on a baguette, and often contains pork and vegetables, such as cucumber, pickled carrots, and daikon radishes, with chili sauce and mayo. A khao jee pâté, which is similar to a BANH MI, as the clue informs us, is a sandwich in Lao cuisine.

    Random Thoughts & Interesting Things

    • PITA (6A: Souvlaki bread) Souvlaki is a fast food dish in Greek cuisine. It consists of meat (often pork) grilled on a skewer served with or rolled inside a PITA.
    • NEST (19A: Home for a hawk or a hamerkop) Hawks and hamerkops are birds, and make their homes in NESTs. A hawk is a bird of prey that is found on every continent except Antarctica. A hamerkop is a water bird found in mainland Africa, Madagascar, and Arabia. Its closest relatives are the pelican and the shoebill. It’s nice that this clue gives two example, allowing solvers to be successful even if they are only familiar with one of these bird species.
    • JELLO SHOTS (21A: Wobbly alcoholic treats) Well, this answer took me back to my college days, although even then I never actually had JELLO SHOTS, because I don’t like JELLO. I don’t feel like I missed out.
    • RIM (26A: North ___ (place that overlooks the Grand Canyon)) The Grand Canyon is an amazing place. I’ve been there several times now, and each time I am awed by its beauty. Here’s a photo from the South RIM of the Grand Canyon, taken when our family was there in 2022.

    • LIGHT (30A: The “L” of LED) LED stands for “LIGHT-emitting diode.”
    • BLOOPER REEL (34A: Compilation of behind-the-scenes goofs) One can spend a significant time watching BLOOPER REELs. (Speaking hypothetically here, of course…) I especially enjoyed this Sesame Street BLOOPER REEL.
    • VOICE (64A: “Lift Every ___ and Sing”) “Lift Every VOICE and Sing” was written by brothers James Weldon Johnson and J. Rosamond Johnson in 1900 for the 91st anniversary of President Abraham Lincoln’s birthday. The song has been referred to by the NAACP as the Black National Anthem.  “Lift every VOICE and sing, / Till earth and heaven ring, / Ring with the harmonies of Liberty…” 
    • TERRAFORMS (3D: Makes habitable for earthlings) I associate TERRAFORMing with science fiction, and in fact, the term originated in a 1942 science-fiction story by Jack Williamson, “Collision Orbit.” The term has also been used in real-life science, when scientists discuss the TERRAFORMing of planets such as Venus or Mars, debating whether it’s possible to make those planets habitable for humans.
    • OREO (11D: Cookie with Stuf) When talking about the OREO cookie, Stuf is the crème filling. Our crossword friend OREO is making its eighth appearance of 2025 today.
    • HATS (13D: Wear many ___ (take on different roles)) This answer reminds me of an Amy Grant song called “HATS” (1991). “(HATS) / One day I’m a mother / One day I’m a lover / What am I supposed to do / (HATS) / Workin’ for a living’ / All because I’m driven / To be the very best for you / (HATS)…”
    • JOSEPH (21D: Haydn known as “Father of the Symphony”) JOSEPH Haydyn (1732-1809) was an Austrian composer. He is known as the “Father of the Symphony” for his contributions to the development of chamber music.
    • LION (24D: Leo the ___ (MGM mascot)) My cat, Willow, is always happy to see her big cat cousin the LION referenced in the puzzle. This photo was taken after my husband and I returned home from a weekend trip. Apparently, Willow missed me, because she melted onto my lap, trying to get as close to me as possible.

    • ELEVEN (36D: Millie Bobby Brown’s “Stranger Things” role) Stranger Things is a Netflix TV series about a small town dealing with a hostile alternate dimension. Millie Bobby Brown portrays ELEVEN, a young girl with psychokinetic abilities who is known, among other things, for her fondness of Eggo waffles.
    • SAGA (52D: “The Skywalker ___” (tale made up of three “Star Wars” trilogies)) It’s a fun choice to choose a particular SAGA to highlight here instead of clueing the word generically. The Skywalker SAGA includes the nine films (a trilogy of trilogies) originally released between 1977 and 2019.
    • A couple of other clues I especially enjoyed:
      • SECRET PLAN (52A: Strategy for throwing a surprise party, e.g.)
      • OTHER (1D: “My ___ car is a…” (bumper sticker words))

    Crossword Puzzle Theme Synopsis

    A COMEDY OF ERRORS (Freestyle): There’s no theme today since this is a freestyle, or themeless, puzzle. The title is a nod to BLOOPER REEL (34A: Compilation of behind-the-scenes goofs).

    When I solve a themed puzzle, I am on the lookout for the theme. With a themeless puzzle, my solving approach changes and I look for the answer that the title is pointing to. With both types of puzzles, however, I’m always on the lookout for enjoyable fill and fun clues; things that make me smile. This puzzle had plenty of things that made me smile. Congratulations to Boaz Moser on a USA TODAY crossword debut! Thank you, Boaz, for this delightful puzzle.

    For more on USA TODAY’s Crossword Puzzles

  • Sean Kingston, mom Janice Turner found guilty of wire fraud

    Sean Kingston, mom Janice Turner found guilty of wire fraud

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    Sean Kingston and his mother, Janice Turner, have been convicted of federal wire fraud charges.

    On Friday, a jury found the “Beautiful Girls” singer and his mom guilty of all charges against them following a five-day trial, according to court documents reviewed by USA TODAY. They faced one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and four counts of wire fraud.

    Turner was remanded into U.S. Marshals custody, and the judge recommended her incarceration at the Miami Federal Detention Center until her sentencing. Kingston − whose real name is Kisean Paul Anderson − will have his bond terms modified to include home detention with electronic monitoring, with $200,000 cash to be turned over to the U.S. District Court for Southern Florida.

    Kingston, 35, and Turner are scheduled to be sentenced on July 11. Each count has a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.

    In respective statements to USA TODAY on Saturday, lawyers for the mother-son duo responded to their convictions.

    “We do not agree with the verdict. We are thankful that Mr. Kingston was allowed to remain out on bond while awaiting sentencing. We will file an appeal at that time,” a lawyer for Kingston said Saturday.

    “Naturally, we do not agree with the verdict.  We will proceed in the normal course to sentencing in 3 months.  At that time, we will file an appeal,” Turner’s lawyer told USA TODAY on Saturday.

    Sean Kingston used ‘celebrity status’ in fraud, never paid for cars and jewelry: US attorneys

    According to the mother and son’s July indictment, the duo conspired to commit wire fraud between April 2023 and March 2024. In other words, they showed intent to “defraud and to obtain money and property by means of materially false and fraudulent pretenses, representations, and promises.”

    The indictment claimed Kingston and Turner sought to “unjustly enrich themselves by falsely representing that they had executed bank wire or other monetary payment transfers as payment for vehicles, jewelry, and other goods.” They were accused of keeping the items despite never paying for them.

    The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Florida also alleged Kingston leveraged “his celebrity status” and “often persuaded his victim vendors to stray from their regular business practices and convinced them to either supply or deliver their goods and services prior to receipt of full payment.”

    Some of their ill-gotten gains included three watches, which involved fake wire transfers for $285,000 and $480,000; a $160,000 car; and $40,000 worth of audio/video equipment.

    The two still face state-level charges in Florida, and their cases have yet to go to trial. They are accused of carrying out a defrauding scheme, committing grand theft and fraudulently using individuals’ personal information to obtain services.

    From October 2023 through March 2024, the Broward Sheriff’s Office alleges, Kingston and his mother participated in “a systemic, ongoing course of conduct with intent to defraud one or more persons, or with intent to obtain property from one or more persons by false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises or willful representations of a future act.”

    This story has been updated with new information.

  • Katie Thurston reveals breast cancer has spread to her liver

    Katie Thurston reveals breast cancer has spread to her liver

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    Former “Bachelorette” lead Katie Thurston has an unfortunate update on her nascent breast cancer battle.

    In a video she posted Friday on Instagram, the 34-year-old comedian revealed that a recent PET scan detected “spots on my liver that were a little suspicious.” After undergoing another biopsy, it was confirmed Friday that the cancer had spread to her liver.

    “It is fairly small; however, that does put me at stage IV,” she said. “I know stage IV can sound very scary and it can be; however, given that I am triple positive and the spots on my liver are fairly small and detected early, I feel very optimistic on my outcome. I’m very confident in my team at Columbia.”

    Stage IV cancer, also called metastatic cancer, is defined by its spread “to a distant part of the body,” per the National Cancer Institute.

    Thurston, who received a stage III diagnosis last month and recently married comedian Jeff Arcuri, relocated from Los Angeles to New York City and transferred her care to a new medical team. She begins treatment, which includes chemotherapy, next week and also plans to prioritize preserving her fertility, she said.

    In an Instagram Story on Friday, Thurston said she was speaking to CNN about her breast cancer experience and explained why it was important for her to be vocal about the issues she is facing.

    “This needs to be talked about more. Whatever is happening amongst younger women is scary. It’s not normal,” she wrote. “And current medical standards haven’t shifted when it comes to mammogram schedules, leaving women to find out later about their diagnosis. Last summer when I first felt that lump, I would have been more proactive had I known there was a rise in young breast cancer patients happening.”

    After skin cancer, breast cancer is the second most common cancer among women and the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths among American women, according to the National Cancer Institute. Breast cancer rates have risen by 1% each year over the past decade, and women under 50 have seen the biggest increase in occurrences, the American Cancer Society said in a report released last year.

    The report also notes that since 1989, breast cancer mortality rates have dropped by 44%, which equates to around 517,900 lives. The improvement is not across all demographics, however, as rates among American Indian and Alaska Native women “have remained unchanged over the past three decades,” per the ACS.

    What is triple-positive breast cancer?

    Triple-positive breast cancer, the diagnosis Thurston received, is estrogen receptor-positive, progesterone receptor-positive and HER2 (human epithelial growth factor receptor 2)-positive. These hormones fuel cancer growth, and testing for these receptors helps determine treatment options.

    The Affordable Care Act mandates most insurance companies must cover annual screening mammograms for those 40 and older. Last year, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommended mammogram screenings every other year from ages 40 to 74 for those with an average risk for breast cancer.

    The National Cancer Institute makes available a Breast Cancer Risk Assessment Tool, which “allows health professionals to estimate a woman’s risk of developing invasive breast cancer over the next five years and up to age 90 (lifetime risk).”

  • What to read next, from romance to memoir

    What to read next, from romance to memoir

    March was a big month in the publishing world. Between a new “Hunger Games” book, a highly-anticipated nonfiction title from John Green and the third book in Tracy Deonn’s BookTok sensation “Legendborn” series, readers are booked and busy.

    And there are plenty of new celebrity memoirs and biographies to indulge your curiosity, including “Yoko” by David Sheff, Graydon Carter’s memoir and a new “Bangles” deep dive.

    What are you in the mood to read next? We pulled together 15 of our favorites to keep your TBR well-stocked.

    New books: What to read next from March

    From sprawling family dramas and eerie dystopian novels to romance and new literary fiction, there’s something for every reader on this list of March new releases. All of these books are out and available for you to buy at a bookstore near you. 

    For a look at all the 2025 titles we’re excited about, check out USA TODAY’s most anticipated releases list.

    ‘The Dream Hotel’ by Laila Lalami

    This novel is in a dystopian near-future where artificial intelligence has an overreaching hand even in your sleep. Our protagonist, museum archivist Sara Hussein, is stopped by government agents from the Risk Assessment Administration after their algorithm analyzed her dreams and determined she’s at risk of committing a crime in the future. Now, because of this dubious “crime prevention” program, she’s being detained. “The Dream Hotel” is reminiscent of “1984,” a masterful genre-bending commentary on bodily autonomy, government surveillance and the insidious side of technological innovation.

    ‘Broken Country’ by Clare Leslie Hall

    With an opening line of “The farmer is dead. He is dead, and all anyone wants to know is who killed him,” “Broken Country” doesn’t waste any time getting you into this sweeping family drama. The story weaves back and forth in time, examining the consequences of love, pride and obligation. Beth and her husband Frank’s willfully ignorant marital bliss is upended when Beth’s brother-in-law shoots a dog that belongs to Gabriel, Beth’s teenage love. He’s returned to the village with his son, who reminds Beth of her own son who died in a tragic accident. 

    ‘Sunrise on the Reaping’ by Suzanne Collins

    “The Hunger Games” author returns with the series’ fifth installment, a prequel about Haymitch’s win in the 50th Hunger Games. In this “Quarter Quell,” double the amount of tributes are reaped for the Games and Haymitch must leave his home, his beloved girlfriend and his family to fight in the Capitol arena. “Sunrise on the Reaping” is teeming with “Hunger Games” nostalgia, ringing true to the masterpiece of the original trilogy with its themes of propaganda and authority. Fans can expect a few loose-ends tied and the return of many favorite characters. 

    ‘Stop Me If You’ve Heard This One’ by Kristen Arnett

    Big-hearted and knock-your-socks-off funny, “Stop Me If You’ve Heard This One” follows Cherry Hendricks, a professional clown and part time aquarium store employee who is down on her luck. She’s constantly hooking up with the wrong person’s mom, her own is judgmental and Cherry’s grief over her deceased brother is always popping up when she least expects it. And then she meets Margot the Magnificent, a much older lesbian magician whose success and charm manage to pull Cherry in swiftly. 

    ‘Careless People’ by Sarah Wynn-Williams

    “Careless People: A Cautionary Tale of Power, Greed, and Lost Idealism” was kept a secret until less than a week before publication date, and understandably so – Meta quickly filed (and won) an emergency arbitration to stop promotion of the tell-all. In this unflinching memoir, now a bestseller, a former Facebook executive presents shocking allegations against the company’s leadership influence, power and decision-making. 

    ‘Hot Air’ by Marcy Dermansky

    “Hot Air” is a hilariously unhinged romp through messy billionaire shenanigans, disappointing hook ups and wanting what you can’t and shouldn’t have. The story opens on a quickly souring first date (complicated by the fact that their children are on a playdate at the same time) as a hot air balloon, carrying a famous billionaire and his philanthropist wife, crashes into the backyard pool. When one half of the first date and one half of the billionaire couple realize they knew each other in a past life, all four embark on an entangled lost weekend into each other’s lives.

    ‘Story of My Life’ by Lucy Score

    This small-town romance is “Schitt’s Creek” meets “Gilmore Girls.” It follows a once-successful romance novelist whose breakup and writer’s block drives her to impulsively flee to Pennsylvania in search of her next love story. There, she meets the swoony Bishop brothers, including grumpy contractor Campbell, who will renovate her newly purchased house. A fake date for “research purposes” might be just what she needs to get her pen to paper. 

    ‘Stag Dance’ by Torrey Peters

    You never knew you needed a short story collection that includes lonely lumberjacks exploring queerness and gender, but you do. The “Detransition, Baby” author returns with a diverse collection that’s as fun as it is serious. One short story follows a dystopian, plague-ravaged world where humans can no longer create their own hormones. Another follows a sexual awakening between two roommates at a Quaker boarding school. The titular novella follows restless loggers who plan a wintertime dance, on the condition that some of them attend as women.

    ‘Oathbound’ by Tracy Deonn

    The highly-anticipated third book in “The Legendborn Cycle” is finally here. Bree Matthews has isolated herself from her friends, the Legendborn Order and her ancestral connections to keep her community safe, but it comes at a cost. Now, she must make an unbreakable bargain to bind herself to the shapeshifting Shadow King’s as his new protege. But can Bree ever really outrun her past?

    ‘Everything is Tuberculosis’ by John Green

    Green’s second nonfiction book is a well-researched and engaging dive into his obsession with one of the world’s deadliest infection after befriending a young tuberculosis patient in Sierra Leone. Weaving history and solutions, Green explains modern-day tuberculosis as “both a form and expression of injustice,” writing that “there is nothing permanent or inalterable about health inequities.”

    ‘The Unworthy’ by Agustina Bazterrica

    From the author of the horror novel “Tender is the Flesh” comes a similarly eerie tale that fans of “I Who Have Never Known Men” and “The Handmaid’s Tale” will love. In an isolated convent, a woman writes her life story in secret – she’s an “unworthy,” low on the totem pole of the Sacred Sisterhood rankings and dreams of one day ascending to be an “Enlightened.” At less than 200 pages, Bazterrica packs a lot into this story – female rage, abuse, sacrifice, hope and ideological extremism in a world ravaged by climate crises.

    ‘O Sinners!’ by Nicole Cuffy

    Quickly encapsulating, “O Sinners!” follows a grieving Muslim journalist’s deep-dive into a California cult known only as “the nameless.” As Faruq embeds himself into the cult and its enigmatic leader, Odo, he finds himself forced to confront his own past. This literary fiction novel is told in three interwoven timelines – Faruq’s investigation, one that examines Odo’s service in the Vietnam War and another looking back on a clash between “the nameless” and a fundamentalist church. 

    ‘Summer in the City’ by Alex Aster

    Bestselling fantasy author Aster pens a contemporary romance in “Summer in the City.” This lovers-to-enemies-to-lovers story follows a screenwriter returning to New York City after she nabs the gig of a lifetime. She then runs into her now-enemy “Billionaire Bachelor” Parker, who she hooked up with two years ago. But when her hate-fueled writing about him helps her turn a corner with her screenplay and as he’s scouting for a fake red carpet, the pair realize they might need each other more than they expected. 

    ‘The Antidote’ by Karen Russell

    Several Nebraskans collide after a storm ravages their small town in this Dust Bowl epic. As the town of Uz crumbles from the Great Depression and the drought, its residents (including a “Prairie Witch” and a Polish wheat farmer) must grapple with generational forgetting and reckon with a violent past and potential fate. A photographer’s time-traveling camera threatens to reveal both.

    ‘Raising Hare’ by Chloe Dalton

    This moving memoir from a UK political advisor and speechwriter follows her unlikely bond with a newborn hare that she finds in her backyard after it had been chased by a dog. Though she’s advised that the hare will likely die whether kept in captivity or released back out, she raises and bottle-feeds it for over two years. The hare becomes a companion, wandering the fields by day and returning to Dalton’s home by night, imparting valuable lessons about slowing down and the beauty in the unexpected.

    Clare Mulroy is USA TODAY’s Books Reporter, where she covers buzzy releases, chats with authors and dives into the culture of reading. Find her on Instagram, subscribe to our weekly Books newsletter or tell her what you’re reading at [email protected]

  • Nintendo drops 2027 release date

    Nintendo drops 2027 release date

    “The Legend of Zelda” world will soon jump from Nintendo devices to the big screen.

    Nintendo unveiled the release date for the upcoming live-action movie adaptation of its classic video game series on Friday through its new app Nintendo Today.

    The video game giant announced the adventure film back in November 2023 as part of a production partnership with Sony Pictures. The fantasy franchise creator Shigeru Miyamoto previously announced he will serve as a producer alongside Marvel Studios founder Avi Arad.

    The new film comes as the line between video games, film and television continues to blur through new adaptations. The “Zelda” movie follows the massive success of Nintendo’s 2023 blockbuster “The Super Mario Bros. Movie.” The animated film went on to gross over $1.3 billion globally and was nominated for three Golden Globe awards.

    While much about the movie is left unknown, including its cast and story plot, here’s what fans should know as of now.

    When does the live-action ‘Zelda’ movie come out?

    The live-action “The Legend of Zelda” movie is slated to release worldwide on March 26, 2027.

    What is ‘The Legend of Zelda’ about?

    “The Legend of Zelda” video game franchise takes place in the fantasy realm of Hyrule, where three goddesses created a magical object known as the Triforce. Each game follows the young hero Link, who wields a legendary sword as he defeats evil and saves the magical Princess Zelda.

    Who is directing the ‘Zelda’ movie?

    Wes Ball will direct Nintendo and Sony’s live-action “The Legend of Zelda” movie, according to Variety and The Hollywood Reporter.

    Ball, 44, is best known for directing the “Maze Runner” film trilogy and last year’s “Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes.”

    Live-action ‘Legend of Zelda’ cast

    Nintendo and Sony have kept casting details for the live-action “The Legend of Zelda” movie under wraps.

    However, that has not stopped fans from flooding social media with demands for “Euphoria” star Hunter Schafer to be cast as the titular character thanks to her strong physical resemblance.