Category: BUSINESS

  • ‘Handmaid’s Tale’ spotlights song from Taylor Swift’s ‘Reputation (TV)’

    ‘Handmaid’s Tale’ spotlights song from Taylor Swift’s ‘Reputation (TV)’

    I’m sorry the old Taylor can’t come to the phone right now. Why? Oh, cause she’s featuring “Look What You Made Me Do (Taylor’s Version)” on a recent episode of “The Handmaid’s Tale.”

    In the midst of a content drought, Taylor Swift rose up from the dead for “Execution,” Episode 9 of Season 6 of the Hulu series, which aired on May 19.

    During the opening credits, the haunting organ notes for the “Reputation (Taylor’s Version)” track plays for two minutes and 16 seconds. We checked it once, then we checked it twice. The red-robed heroines of Gilead walked in unison down a street after a night of mayhem with sirens blaring in the background. Swift’s anthemic tune played underneath a flurry of gunshots for the first verse, first chorus, second verse and ending “Look What You Made Me Do” repetitions. Mark it in red, underlined.

    Like anything involving Swift’s highly anticipated re-release, the permission to use the song ignited social media fan pages. On Instagram, @thetorturedpoets may have summed it up best by posting the clip with the caption, “SCREAMS GUYS A LOOK WHAT YOU MADE ME DO SNIPPET REP TV IS A THING ITS ALIVE ITS THERE OMG.”

    This isn’t the first time the re-recorded version has been used commercially. In March 2024, Apple TV+ previewed the new version in the docuseries “The Dynasty: New England Patriots.” Former wide receiver Danny Amendola talks about Tom Brady’s comeback after “deflategate” as “Look What You Made Me Do (Taylor’s Version)” plays. The hit track was also spotlighted in the trailer for Amazon Prime’s “Wilderness.”

    “Handmaid’s” lead actress Elisabeth Moss, who plays June Osborne, told Billboard Magazine: “I’ve been wanting to use a Taylor song for many years on the show and we finally found the perfect spot for a track from her, and I’m so glad we waited because there could not be a more perfect song for a more perfect moment.”

    Moss attended the penultimate Eras Tour stop in Toronto with co-star Bradley Whitford, who plays Commander Joseph Lawrence.

    Covering culture’s biggest moments: Sign up for USA TODAY’s Everyone’s Talking newsletter.

    “Taylor has been such an inspiration to me personally,” Moss told Billboard. “As a Swiftie myself, and I think I can speak for (costar) Yvonne (Strahovski) and our entire cast as well, who are all Swifties, it’s such an honor to be able to use her music in the final episodes of our show.”

    When is ‘Reputation (Taylor’s Version)’ coming out?

    So when could “Reputation (Taylor’s Version)” drop? Fans have been mythologizing since Swift’s São Paulo, Brazil, stop in November 2023. But the most recent theory is that she may announce something if she attends the American Music Awards on May 26 in Las Vegas. Her team updated the “Shop” tab of her home page to include: “Apparel, Music, Accessories and Sale” to spell out “AMAS.” And they marked down 12 items to 26%, which fans thinks points to the 26th.

    No official word on if the superstar will appear.

    Don’t miss any Taylor Swift news; sign up for the free, weekly newsletter This Swift Beat.

    Follow Bryan West, the USA TODAY Network’s Taylor Swift reporter, on Instagram, TikTok and X as @BryanWestTV.

  • Cheryl Burke slams comments about appearance, plastic surgery claims

    Cheryl Burke slams comments about appearance, plastic surgery claims

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    Cheryl Burke is shutting down “cruel” speculation about her appearance.

    In a video shared on TikTok and Instagram, the “Dancing with the Stars” alum, 41, spoke out against body-shaming from followers who she said have been commenting that she looks different and speculating as to why.

    “I’m not on Ozempic,” she said. “I’m not sick, I didn’t get a face transplant, and no, I didn’t get a brow lift. The level of projection that is happening and that I’m witnessing is wild.”

    The “Dance Moms” star added that “the accusations are completely cruel” and that it’s “shocking and hurtful” that “so many” of these comments are “actually coming from women.” She also said it’s disappointing to see fans saying that they “miss the old Cheryl,” noting that “my body has changed” in the 20 years she has been in the public eye. “My face has changed because I’ve changed,” she said.

    “The saddest part of all is the way I’m seeing women tear down other women, while pretending it’s from concern,” she continued, concluding, “If you’re here to speculate, compare or demand answers that you’re just not entitled to, you’re not welcome in this space that I have created.”

    Burke posted the clip along with the hashtags “#stopbodyshaming” and “#mentalhealthawareness.” May marks Mental Health Awareness Month.

    The dancer previously opened up about suffering from body dysmorphia during a 2024 appearance on “The Amy and T.J. Podcast.” Burke, who started on “DWTS” when she was 21, recalled dealing with cruel comments about her weight and claims that “she’s too fat for TV.”

    “I am curvy in comparison to a lot of the other professional women so whenever I did gain weight it was a thing,” she said, noting that she felt pressure to lose weight due to this commentary.

    She added on the podcast that she is “still healing” from body dysmorphia but has made an “effort to compliment myself in my gratitude journal – it’s a whole thing, because my brain has been trained to pick out the negatives, in general.”

    Contributing: Naledi Ushe

  • The enduring wisdom of Jesse Jackson’s 1971 visit to Sesame Street

    The enduring wisdom of Jesse Jackson’s 1971 visit to Sesame Street


    When this month, the Trump Administration announced plans to axe the grant that once helped to power “Sesame Street,” a powerful poem came to mind.

    What’s the difference between a child’s brain and a ball of putty? It’s smaller than you might think.  

    Easily molded and warped, the folds not yet folded − metaphorically speaking, of course − how young people take in the world is as much up to the world as it is to them.  

    Perhaps that’s why, in years past, the government has shelled out a few bucks (ahem, $5 million) to help pay the rent of various fuzzy and colorful tenants on “Sesame Street.”  Moved briefly to HBO, the show is now back at PBS − and on Netflix − soon to premiere new episodes across the public airwaves for children from Alaska to Alabama to Altadena to get a little schooling and song for free.

    A live-action, if not sillier version of Jane Jacobs’ sidewalk ballet, the children’s show distills a difficult world into easily understandable lessons: difference is powerful, for example, or it’s good to say you’re sorry.  

    When President Donald Trump’s administration in early May announced plans to axe The Ready To Learn grant, which doles out funds to public television stations, historically for children’s programming like “Sesame Street,” I thought immediately of those lessons lost.

    Some of the edicts may feel milquetoast, classic practices of polite society that we all have to learn. But anyone who sticks around for long enough will notice a more insurgent teaching at play: build your identity, guard it, and do it on purpose.  

    That was at least the central tenet of a chant Reverend Jesse Jackson led in a 1971 appearance on the show, entitled “I am somebody.”

    “I may be poor,” Jackson says, “but I am,” he continues, “somebody,” the real-life children who have seemingly wandered onto “Sesame Street” repeating each phrase after he drops it. The format remains roughly the same throughout, with Jackson offering up various “I may be’s,” and the children echoing defiantly back: “But I am somebody.” It’s a less Black-power oriented version of a poem Jackson first published in 1970.  

    “I am Black, Brown, White, I speak a different language, but I must be respected, protected, never rejected,” he finishes. “I am God’s child. I am somebody.”

    It’s a call and response I got to know well when, starting in the early 1990s, my father and his team-teacher wove it into their high school curriculum. Hip to its enduring wisdom, they felt it was as appropriate for a group of 17- and 18-year-olds as it was for kindergarteners. 

    They would go out into parks on field trips or the quad at the California high school where they taught and chant loudly, early adopters, I guess, of the wellness-y affirmations that would rise to popularity decades later. Saying it aloud, they thought, would help their students believe it. 

    “Sesame Street” may be safe now, subsidized by Netflix’s big bucks, but children’s programming like it is still worth government investment. 

    When the public airwaves grow dry of civic-minded shows, and teaching worthiness to our children becomes an activity safeguarded behind the fences that make good neighbors, our social fabric frays.  

    ‘Somebody’ may seem like something pretty ordinary to be. But as my father and his teaching partner, Jesse Jackson and Big Bird all understood, to believe that everybody is somebody is a radical idea. And one America desperately needs right now.  

    While our children’s brains are still like putty, there couldn’t be a more worthy cause than publicly funded children’s television that teaches the next generation to ask: “Who are the people in my neighborhood?” And whether the answer is a bright blue cookie fiend or a regular day-laborer, lawyer, hairdresser, first-generation, fifth-generation, neo-con, libertarian, democratic socialist or whatever falls in between – to answer with that radical affirmation “they are somebody. And so am I.”

  • Peppa Pig welcomes new baby sister Evie

    Peppa Pig welcomes new baby sister Evie

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    Peppa Pig and her little brother George are officially older siblings of a baby girl, according to an announcement posted to Peppa Pig’s Instagram.

    “Peppa and George have a baby sister!” a towncrier is seen shouting in a video posted to Peppa Pig’s official Instagram.

    Mommy Pig gave birth to another baby girl on Tuesday, May 20, at the Lindo Wing of St. Mary’s Hospital, according to the U.K. talk show Good Morning Britain. The same hospital where Kate Middleton gave birth to all three of her children.

    Daddy Pig sent photos of Mommy Pig, Peppa, George, and the new baby to the show’s correspondent, Richard Arnold.

    In the photo, Mommy Pig is holding the baby while lying in a hospital bed, while Peppa and George stand on the side of the bed, smiling and looking at their new sister.

    The baby girl arrives three months after Mommy Pig announced in February that the family would have a new addition coming soon.

    What is the baby girl’s name?

    Mommy and Daddy Pig’s third baby’s name is Evie, according to People Magazine.

    Mommy Pig’s birth wasn’t easy, but she’s “thrilled Evie is finally here, happy and healthy!” she told People Magazine in an exclusive interview.

    Watch Peppa Pig meet her new baby sister

    Peppa Pig fans will be able to watch her and George meet their new baby sister during a Cinema Event that premieres at theaters on Friday, May 30

    “Peppa Pig Meets the Baby” will feature 10 “oinktastic” new episodes and six new songs fans of the show can sing and dance along to.

    The event will play at theaters from Friday, May 30 to Sunday, June 1 in select cinemas.

    To check if there are showings near you, you can visit the event’s website.

    Julia is a trending reporter for USA TODAY. Connect with her on LinkedIn, XInstagram and TikTok: @juliamariegz, or email her at [email protected]

  • ‘Sesame Street’ finds new streaming home on NetflixEntertainment

    ‘Sesame Street’ finds new streaming home on NetflixEntertainment

  • Impossible’ Tom Cruise meeting unmasked by YouTube star

    Impossible’ Tom Cruise meeting unmasked by YouTube star

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    There is one extreme way to meet Tom Cruise that even the “Mission: Impossible” star had to admire: in disguise at a gala premiere.

    YouTube star Michelle Khare, the risk-taking host of “Challenge Accepted” (5.1 million YouTube subscribers), went old school spy in her quest for a memorable face-to-face meeting with Cruise at the London premiere of “Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning” on May 15.

    Khare, 32, changed into an elaborate old man disguise, complete with a latex mask, in a nearby phone booth before entering the premiere as a guest, as revealed in her TikTok and Instagram videos.

    “Tom Cruise is my idol; he is Hollywood’s last action star,” Khare tells USA TODAY. “I’m known as a YouTube daredevil, so I wanted to make a strong impression and re-create one of Ethan Hunt’s most iconic moments. But it all could have ended up pretty embarrassing.”

    Khare went to the respected Immortal Masks for the impressive mask and worked with a movement coach to mimic the slow walk of a 75-year-old man. The YouTuber alerted “like three people” at Paramount Pictures about the plan. But the security team checking invitations, waiting photographers, and hundreds of fans in attendance were in the dark.

    “Obviously, my nightmare walking up was to have security ask, ‘Can we see your photo ID?’ ” says Khare, who made it past several layers of security. She was surprised to hear fans calling out for the shuffling senior with a cane to come over for selfies. They thought the man could only be Cruise undercover.

    Khare ambled over to a spot in front of photographers and made the big reveal, pulling off the mask as Cruise’s Hunt has done in the “M: I” franchise many times before. The YouTube host had Mission-Impossibled the “Mission: Impossible” premiere.

    The impressed action star, 62, walked over for a one-on-one conversation that lasted an eternity by Cruise standards: eight minutes.

    “Most people might get a photo and move on,” says Khare. “But we really talked. I was very nervous about looking crazy meeting Tom Cruise like this, but it was worth the risk.”

    The meeting ended in classic Cruise fashion.

    “He looked me in the eye, shook my hand, and said, ‘Be competent, not careful,’ ” says Khare. “That’s such a fun way to end your moment with Tom Cruise. We can all learn from that.”

    What is ‘Challenge Accepted’ on YouTube?

    Khare spoke about her Cruise stunt during a Los Angeles For Your Consideration Emmy event on May 18. The YouTube show, which Khare produces, directs and hosts, features the former professional cyclist undergoing grueling training regimens for various professions or impossible tasks – from attending military boot camp to a paramedic academy.

    The “Challenge Accepted: 90 Day Black Belt” episode, which depicts Khare training for a martial arts black belt, is the show’s first Primetime Emmy submission, eligible in the outstanding hosted nonfiction series or special category.

    Khare, who is finishing a full-length “Challenge Accepted” YouTube video of the “Mission: Impossible” stunt, has her sights set for an even bigger homage: The classic plane caper from “Rogue Nation.”

    “I got to tell Tom that I’m planning to re-create his ‘Mission: Impossible 5’ stunt where he’s hanging off the side of a military aircraft as it’s taking off,” says Khare. “Sometimes you just have to go for it.”

  • Premiere date, cast, how to watch

    Premiere date, cast, how to watch

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    Guru Masha Dmitrichenko (Nicole Kidman) is back, and this time she’s taking a group of nine strangers for a “transformational wellness retreat in the Austrian Alps.”

    In Season 2 of “Nine Perfect Strangers,” the secretive healing guru heads to a mysterious Alpine resort with a new batch of wellness-seekers “looking for transformative paths to betterment and happiness.”

    “Over the course of a week, she takes them to the brink,” says Hulu about the new season, forcing them to “connect in ways they could never imagine” at the retreat, while Masha herself “is forced to confront some past demons … threatening to destroy both her own personal wellness and that of her guests.”

    “Will they make it? Will she? Masha is willing to try anything in the interest of healing everyone involved, including herself,” the platform adds.

    The series is based on a novel by Liane Moriarty, who is also the author of “Big Little Lies,” which also featured Kidman. The first season of the series was set in the fictional town of Cabrillo, California.

    Here’s what to know about the second season of “Nine Perfect Strangers” including the release date, cast and trailer.

    Join our Watch Party! Sign up to receive USA TODAY’s movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox

    When does ‘Nine Perfect Strangers’ Season 2 come out?

    Season 2 of “Nine Perfect Strangers” will premiere on Wednesday, May 21 on Hulu with the first two episodes. The streaming platform has not specified what time the episodes will be available.

    ‘Nine Perfect Strangers’: Stream on Hulu | Watch on Sling

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

    How to watch ‘Nine Perfect Strangers’ Season 2

    “Nine Perfect Strangers” Season 2 will be available to stream on Hulu starting Wednesday, May 21. New episodes will drop weekly on Wednesdays.

    Season 1 of “Nine Perfect Strangers” is also available to stream on Hulu.

    Hulu offers membership options ranging from $9.99 a month to $18.99 a month for normal streaming services, and $82.99 a month to $95.99 a month for plans with streaming and live TV. New users can also sign up for a free trial.

    Watch “Nine Perfect Strangers” on Hulu

    ‘Nine Perfect Strangers’ Season 2 episode schedule

    Season 2 of “Nine Perfect Strangers” will have 8 episodes. Here’s what the schedule looks like:

    • Episodes 1-2: May 21
    • Episode 3: May 28
    • Episode 4: June 4
    • Episode 5: June 11
    • Episode 6: June 18
    • Episode 7: June 25
    • Episode 8: July 2

    ‘Nine Perfect Strangers’ Season 2 cast

    While Nicole Kidman returns as the mysterious guru Masha Dmitrichenko, here’s who else is in cast of “Nine Perfect Strangers” Season 2:

    • Henry Golding
    • Lena Olin
    • Annie Murphy
    • Christine Baranski
    • Lucas Englander
    • King Princess
    • Murray Bartlett
    • Molly de Leon
    • Maisie Richardson-Sellers
    • Mark Strong
    • Aras Aydin

    Watch the ‘Nine Perfect Strangers’ Season 2 trailer

    Hulu released the trailer for “Nine Perfect Strangers” Season 2 on April 29.

    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.

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

  • Can you livestream case? Is Cassie speaking?

    Can you livestream case? Is Cassie speaking?

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    This story contains graphic descriptions that some readers may find disturbing.

    Prosecutors in Sean “Diddy” Combs’ federal sex-crimes trial continue to target his alleged cycle of abuse as more witnesses come forward with shocking claims.

    Following bombshell testimony from Danity Kane alum Dawn Richard and Cassie Ventura Fine’s former best friend Kerry Morgan, jurors reconvened in Manhattan court on May 20 to hear more accounts from those in Combs’ orbit.

    Richard, a former member of Combs’ platinum-selling girl group, told the court on May 19 that she saw Combs beat his ex-girlfriend Ventura Fine in 2009 at his Los Angeles home, grabbing her hair and dragging her up a flight of stairs. Meanwhile, Morgan testified that Combs once attacked her in Cassie’s California home, choking Morgan and hitting her in the head with a wooden hanger.

    Combs’ former personal assistant David James also took the stand to reflect on his employment with Combs, including candid conversations with Ventura Fine on her relationship with the Grammy-winning rapper. Ventura Fine’s mother, Regina Ventura, is expected to testify as well.

    Combs, 55, was arrested in September 2024 on charges of sex trafficking, racketeering and transportation to engage in prostitution. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges.

    To close out the May 19 hearing, James began his testimony on the events he witnessed from 2007 to 2009.

    James told the court that one comment stood out in his mind when he thought back on the initial job interview process. A female staff member at the time told him, “This is Mr. Combs’ kingdom. We’re all here to serve it.”

    Morgan testified that her friendship with Ventura Fine ended after Combs assaulted her in April 2018.

    Cassie’s former friend said she was listening to the singer’s music in Ventura Fine’s Hollywood Hills house before Combs came in and allegedly choked Morgan, adding that Combs was yelling and accusing Ventura Fine of cheating on him. She said the rapper “boomeranged” a wooden hanger at her head, which hit her behind the ear.

    When her friend first started seeing the rapper, Morgan said she saw Combs assault Ventura Fine several times, once dragging her by the hair during a trip to Jamaica.

    Morgan was also at Ventura Fine’s apartment the night of the 2016 hotel assault caught on surveillance video and said she returned with a black eye. Thirty minutes later, Combs was pounding on the apartment door with a hammer, Morgan said. “I was terrified,” she told the court, describing Ventura Fine as “numb.”

    “I don’t think she cared if he came in and killed her,” she added.

    Asked why she didn’t call the police after allegedly seeing Combs attack Ventura Fine multiple times, Morgan said her former friend “didn’t want me to.”

    However, the model said she tried to pressure Ventura Fine to leave Combs when the former friends would speak about Diddy and Cassie’s relationship.

    When prosecutors asked how Ventura Fine would respond, Morgan said that she “said she couldn’t.” The reasons she would give were her job, her car and her apartment. Combs controlled everything, Morgan claimed.

    Under cross-examination, Richard told the court about a dinner around 2009 where she allegedly saw Combs punch Cassie. She told the court that music industry heavyweights such as Usher, Jimmy Iovine and Ne-Yo were in attendance.

    Richard said she frequently saw Combs physically abuse Ventura Fine between 2009 and 2011, recalling injuries on her face, arms and knees. She also said she was “shocked” and “scared” after Combs threatened her, warning that “if we said anything, we could go missing” and “we could die.”

    During a pointed cross-examination with Nicole Westmoreland, one of Combs’ lawyers, Richard admitted to giving different versions of events to officials and not mentioning certain details during interviews with prosecutors.

    For example, she said in court that she saw Combs use cocaine and witnessed his alleged drug dealer, identified as “One Stop,” sell drugs, but previously gave different answers to prosecutors.

    Richard agreed there were lapses, but she explained: “I have to go back to memory that I didn’t want to come back to.”

    Combs is facing federal sex-crimes and trafficking charges in a sprawling lawsuit that has eroded his status as a power player and kingmaker in the entertainment industry.

    He was arrested in September 2024 and has been charged with racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution. He has pleaded not guilty to all five counts.

    Racketeering is the participation in an illegal scheme under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Statute, or RICO, as a way for the U.S. government to prosecute organizations that contribute to criminal activity.

    Using RICO law, which is typically aimed at targeting multi-person criminal organizations, prosecutors allege that Combs coerced victims, some of whom they say were sex workers, through intimidation and narcotics to participate in “freak offs” — sometimes dayslong sex performances that federal prosecutors claim they have video of.

    The trial will not be televised, as cameras are typically not allowed in federal criminal trial proceedings.

    USA TODAY will be reporting live from the courtroom.

    Contributing: USA TODAY staff

    If you are a survivor of sexual assault, RAINN offers support through the National Sexual Assault Hotline at 800.656.HOPE (4673) and Hotline.RAINN.org and en Español RAINN.org/es.

    If you or someone you know is a victim of domestic violence, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233 or text “START” to 88788.

  • Crossword Blog & Answers for May 20, 2025 by Sally Hoelscher

    Crossword Blog & Answers for May 20, 2025 by Sally Hoelscher

    There are spoilers ahead. You might want to solve today’s puzzle before reading further! Blanket Term

    Constructors: Tom Pepper & Zhouqin Burnikel

    Editor: Amanda Rafkin

    Random Thoughts & Interesting Things

    • HISS (1A: Sound from an annoyed cat) The only time my cat, Willow, ever lets out a HISS is when she discovers an unwelcome feline visitor in her house. I don’t have any pictures of that, since when that happens I’m usually playing referee between the cats. Instead, here’s a picture of Willow trying to convince me to pet her instead of working. (How could I possibly refuse?)

    • WAS (26A: “It ___ a dark and stormy night”) In the Peanuts comic strip, Snoopy began using a typewriter on top of his doghouse on July 12, 1965 (nearly 60 years ago!). Many of Snoopy’s stories begin, “It WAS a dark and stormy night.”
    • ORCAS (30A: Whales known as “wolves of the sea”) ORCAS and wolves are both apex predators, meaning they have no natural predators. ORCAS earned the nickname “wolves of the sea,” because they hunt in groups, like wolves do.
    • PASTA (33A: Fusilli or gemelli) Fusilli is corkscrew-shaped PASTA. Gemelli is a type of PASTA that appears to be two tubes twisted around each other.
    • AFGHAN HOUND (36A: Silky-haired hunting dog) The AFGHAN HOUND gets its name because the breed originated in the mountain regions of Afghanistan. AFGHAN HOUNDs are characterized by fur that is long, fine, and silky.
    • FORT (42A: Structure that might be made of pillows and blankets) I am a fan of a blanket FORT; it makes such a cozy hideaway. This is a nice theme bonus – whether you call a BLANKET a THROW, an AFGHAN, or a COVER – it can be used to build a FORT.
    • COD (48A: Common fish for lutefisk) Lutefisk is made by drying and salting COD (or whitefish), and then rehydrating it in a lye-solution. The result is gelatinous in texture. Lutefisk originated from Scandinavian countries (Denmark, Sweden, Norway, and Finland). It is popular in some parts of the United States, where it is often associated with Christmas celebrations.
    • ITHACA (2D: Cornell’s city) Cornell University was founded in ITHACA, New York in 1865 by Ezra Cornell and Andrew Dickson White. Cornell is a land grant university (an institution of higher education given federal land by the Morrill Acts of 1862 and 1890).
    • ALF (6D: 1980s sitcom alien from the planet Melmac) ALF is  a TV sitcom that ran for four seasons from 1986 to 1990. The title character was an “alien life form” (aka an extraterrestrial, or ET) from the planet Melmac.
    • OTTAWA (8D: City home to Canada’s Parliament Hill) OTTAWA is the capital of Canada. It is located in the southern part of the province of Ontario, and is Canada’s fourth-largest city (following Toronto, Montreal, and Calgary). Parliament Hill is an area of land in downtown OTTAWA, located along the OTTAWA River. The Parliament of Canada is housed in three buildings located on Parliament Hill.
    • TINA (10D: Bette’s partner on “The L Word”) The L Word was a Showtime TV drama that aired from 2004-2009. One of the show’s main characters is Bette Porter, portrayed by Jennifer Beals, considered by some to be one of the most important LGBTQ TV characters of all time. Another main character is TINA Kennard, portrayed by Laurel Holloman. As the clue mentions, TINA and Bette are partners (though their relationship is on again, off again throughout the series).
    • NAS (22D: Rapper Lil ___ X) Lil NAS X’s song “Old Town Road” (2019) is tied (with “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” by Shaboozey) for the most weeks (19) at the top of Billboard‘s Hot 100 chart.
    • AGE (34D: What Adele’s album titles represent) To date, Adele has recorded four studio albums: 19 (2008), 21 (2011), 25 (2015), and 30 (2021). The numbers reflect Adele’s AGE when she wrote the songs on the album, not necessarily her AGE when the albums were released.
    • KFC (39D: Colonel Sanders’ chain) KFC, formerly known as Kentucky Fried Chicken, was founded in North Corbin, Kentucky in 1930. Founder Harland Sanders (1890-1980) was commissioned as a Kentucky Colonel (an honor bestowed by Kentucky’s governor) in 1935, and became known as Colonel Sanders, the company’s spokesman.
    • REDDIT (47D: Popular discussion website) REDDIT is an online news aggregation and discussion website. One of the features of REDDIT is multiple discussion boards, or subreddits, focusing on a variety of topics. REDDIT users get to upvote and downvote posts, so the most popular posts appear at the top of a feed.

    Crossword Puzzle Theme Synopsis

    • THROW A FIT (17A: React angrily)
    • AFGHAN HOUND (36A: Silky-haired hunting dog)
    • COVER BAND (58A: Tribute group playing familiar songs)

    BLANKET TERM: The first word of each theme answer is a TERM that means BLANKET: THROW, AFGHAN, and COVER.

    A BLANKET TERM is a generic term used to describe a number of items. For example, “color” is a BLANKET TERM, whereas “red,” “yellow,” and “blue” are specific terms. In today’s theme, however, BLANKET TERM refers to a TERM that literally means BLANKET. That’s very fun. Thank you, Tom and Zhouqin, for this enjoyable puzzle.

    For more on USA TODAY’s Crossword Puzzles

  • ‘My 600-Lb. Life’ star Latonya Pottain dies at 40

    ‘My 600-Lb. Life’ star Latonya Pottain dies at 40

    Latonya Pottain, a northern Louisiana woman known for her appearance on “My 600-Lb. Life,” has died at the age of 40, a local coroner confirmed.

    The former reality TV star’s cause of death on May 17 has not been confirmed but a preliminary finding suggests that it was likely due to congestive heart failure, according to the Natchitoches Parish Coroner’s Office.

    The Shreveport woman became well-known during her appearance on Season 11 of the hit TLC show, which showcases the emotional journeys of morbidly obese patients as they lose weight through diet and gastric bypass surgery. 

    Season 11 Episode 2 followed Pottain, the youngest of three siblings who turned to food for emotional comfort following a series of challenging life experiences. When she was 12, her mother died suddenly and her father moved away to be with another woman. She lived with her oldest sister until she turned 15 when her father co-signed a place for her to live on her own.

    Pottain joined the show to get help losing weight so she could walk down the aisle to marry her future husband Daune, according to the Shreveport Times, part of the USA TODAY Network. She said that her brother died shortly before filming began, which impacted her ability to lose weight during the time.

    “I’m back with my trainer, I’m dieting and my weight is going down,” Pottain told the Shreveport Times in 2023. “I’m also moving to be closer to my family so I can get my weight down and get my surgery.”

    Pottain sought financial help for medical treatment this year

    In February, Pottain created a GoFundMe page seeking financial support being bedridden since June 2024 due to severe health issues and nearing her highest weight of 740 pounds.

    “I worked extremely hard to get it down,” Pottain wrote. “My journey with weight struggles has been a long and difficult one. In 2022, I was featured on ‘My 600-lb Life,’ where I started at 531 pounds and worked hard to get down to 505 pounds. However, after the show aired, I experienced overwhelming backlash, which sent me into a deep depression. My mental health suffered, and I became fearful of undergoing weight loss surgery.”

    Pottain revealed that she moved to Houston in 2023 for a “fresh start” but unfortunately found herself in an abusive relationship while coping with her father’s new cancer diagnosis.

    “Unable to take the emotional and physical toll, I returned home to Louisiana. Unfortunately, my health continued to decline, and I developed severe sciatica nerve pain, which caused extreme stomach cramps,” she wrote. “I was prescribed fentanyl, but my body rejected the medication, leading me to begin therapy. Now, I am completely bedridden and unable to get to the hospital because EMTs say transporting me would be a fire hazard due to my weight.”

    Pottain was passionate about foster care

    Lacking a stable environment growing up, Pottain sought to help others in her community as a foster parent.

    “All my life I have taken care of young girls and helped support them, getting them through school, helping them with their kids and just encourage them and be there for them,” Pottain said in 2023. “There’s so many young girls that have lost both of their parents, going through what I went through as a teenager and not having anywhere to go.”

    At the time she said aimed to found a girls group home and have an “awesome wedding.”

    “Life can take a turn and you have to have to be positive and just remind yourself that you are special, you are somebody,” Pottain said.

    Contributing: Meredith G. White, Shreveport Times