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‘Widow’s Bay’ Season 1 ended with a wild plot twist



Down by the bay…

Warning: Spoilers ahead! Do not proceed unless you’ve watched the “Widows Bay” Season 1 finale, “We Hope You Enjoyed Your Time!” 

In the Season 1 finale of Apple’s buzzy horror/ comedy, “Widow’s Bay,” the frazzled mayor, Tom Loftis (Matthew Rhys) tried to kill Ruth (K Callan) – only to get thrown with a plot twist. She confessed that she was secretly his late wife’s mother, which meant that his son, Evan (Kingston Rumi Southwick) was her grandson. 

This was a big deal because it meant that Evan was the island founder Richard Warren’s (Hamish Linklater) last living descendant.

Hamish Linklater as Richard Warren (pictured in “Widow’s Bay”), the island founder. Robert Clark
Evan (Kingston Rumi Southwick, pictured in “Widow’s Bay”) turned out to be Ruth’s grandson. Robert Clark

As set up in the previous episode, the whole reason why Tom tried to axe Ruth was that killing the last of Richard Warren’s bloodline would break the curse on the island, and save everyone. 

In the Season 1 finale, Tom went to Ruth’s house during a storm and tried to kill her twice – first by crushing pills and putting powder in her tea, then by nearly smothering her with a pillow when he thought she was napping on her couch. 

Tom was conflicted, and kept muttering to Ruth, “you’re a good person, you don’t deserve this.” 

K Callan as Ruth (pictured in “Widow’s Bay”) was happy to give Tom a tour of her home. Robert Clark
Matthew Rhys as Tom and Stephen Root as Wyck (pictured in “Widow’s Bay”) want to break the curse. Apple TV

A friendly Ruth seemed oblivious to his murder attempts. She was having a blast, giving him a tour of her house and yapping about her herb garden. 

She eventually confessed to Tom that she once had an affair with a married man, had a baby, and let the man and his wife raise the child. Her secret kid was Tom’s late wife, she revealed. An astounded Tom confirmed with Ruth that nobody else knew this information. 

Elsewhere in the episode, the town gathered in a shelter as a dangerous storm raged. Patricia (Kate O’Flynn) and Wyck (Stephen Root) were in charge. Things spiraled into chaos when everyone discovered that their stores of food were moldy. The crowd started panicking and fighting. 

Meanwhile, Sheriff Bechir (Kevin Carroll) was appalled to learn that he and his pregnant wife were trapped on the island, because of the storm – and, her due date came early. 

Sheriff Bechir (Kevin Carroll, pictured on “Widow’s Bay”) didn’t want his child born into the curse. Apple TV
Patricia (Kate O’Flynn, pictured in “Widow’s Bay”) was in charge at the shelter, and it didn’t go well. Apple TV

Bechir didn’t want his kid to be born into the curse on the island, so he showed up at Ruth’s house with a gun and shot her. 

“I won’t damn my child. Patricia said you’d be ending it,” he said to Tom, referring to ending the curse by killing Ruth. Bechir added that he came to Ruth’s house because he knew that Tom “wouldn’t” do it. 

Tom told Bechir that Ruth wasn’t the last living descendant, and Bechir held Tom at gunpoint, demanding to know who was. Before Tom could say anything, the storm then cleared up. 

Tom (pictured in “Widow’s Bay”) was frazzled as he contemplated killing Ruth. Robert Clark
Robert Clark

So, seemingly, everything was okay. Ruth was wounded and bleeding, but appeared to be still alive. The episode ended with Tom driving off in his car with Evan. 

But, he noticed the sound of a bell  – signifying that not enough people got fed to the island, and more people will need to be offered as tribute. 

That’s where “Widows Bay” ended, going into Season 2. 

Bechir (pictured in “Widow’s Bay”) shot Ruth in desperation to save his kid, but she appeared to survive. Robert Clark
Tom (pictured in “Widow’s Bay”) ended Season 1 driving off in his car with his son. Apple TV

The Season 1 finale was more serious than the rest of the season, but the shift in tone worked. Tom spent most of the episode agonizing over his choice to try to kill a sweet old lady. 

Rhy’s performance was stellar as always, as Tom unravelled – if he doesn’t get nominated at the Emmys and Golden Globes, it will be a ridiculous snub. 

There were still plenty of laughs, like when Ruth was going through her photo album, and pointing out which men had “made  a pass at her.” She also told Tom that she loved one of her ex boyfriends, until, “He got bit by an animal, and became that animal.”  The show remains delightfully weird.

The horror comedy starring Root and O’Flynn (pictured) has become a word of mouth phenomenon.
Apple reviewed “Widow’s Bay” with O’Flynn (pictured) for a Season 2, but it doesn’t have a premiere date, yet. Apple TV

The Apple horror comedy has been the word-of mouth hit of the summer. 

“It’s become one of those shows everyone’s talking about, and we’re thrilled to see audiences continue to embrace it,” Matt Cherniss, head of programming, Apple TV, said in a statement announcing Season 2. 

Horror king Guillermo del Toro himself also publicly praised the show, posting on X that it, “may very well be the best streaming series in a long time” and called it, “mesmerizing.” 

“Season two is about how everything is great on the island and there’s nothing to worry about,” creator Katie Dippold joked in Apple’s statement announcing the renewal.

Season 2 doesn’t have a premiere date yet.



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You need to think more about your skeleton before it’s too late



Your skin tends to steal the spotlight in the summer — it needs a lot of SPF and TLC to stay healthy.

But don’t forget about your bones! Regardless of the season, bone health is often overlooked until it’s too late.

Building a strong skeleton is important for protecting organs, storing essential minerals and, quite literally, keeping you upright.

As we age, declining hormone levels accelerate bone breakdown, increasing the risk of bone-related conditions such as osteopenia and osteoporosis. Porous and brittle bones can easily lead to fractures, especially among older adults.

“Bone loss is the silent disease,” Dr. Hazim Moustafa, a primary care sports medicine physician at Catholic Health, told The Post. “And we say that because usually there are no obvious, visible signs until it becomes more advanced.”

Moustafa shares who is most at risk for significant bone loss — and how to head it off.

Bone health is often overlooked until it’s too late. Dr. Hazim Moustafa, a primary care sports medicine physician at Catholic Health, breaks down what you should be doing for your skeleton. Donald Pearsall / NY Post Design

Peak bone mass is earlier than you might think

Reaching your greatest bone density — when your skeleton is at its strongest and densest — happens sooner than you might expect.

“Most of our peak bone mass is really occurring in our late teens and early 30s,” Moustafa said. “Once we get into our mid- to late-30s and we progress through life, our bone mass usually starts to drop off.”

Puberty triggers a surge in hormones and growth factors that fuel rapid bone development. As puberty ends, the growth plates at the ends of long bones harden into solid bone and the skeleton stops expanding.

The time when you should start caring about bone loss

“A lot of people think that when they’re entering their 30s … they have a lot of time left. They have their 40s, their 50s to worry about this,” Moustafa said.

Yet the late-20s and early-30s are when people tend to become “more career-oriented or family-oriented. They’re not spending as much time in the gym,” he added. “They’re not spending as much time doing physical activity, and that’s really when this process starts.”

Instead of waiting until middle age, you should focus on incorporating strength training into your routine and eating healthfully in your late-20s and early-30s.

Signs you’re losing bone mass

Bone loss doesn’t often spur early symptoms, but there are some subtle indicators of problems afoot.

Calcium is key to building and maintaining strong bones. Vitamin D, also known as “the sunshine vitamin,” enables your body to properly absorb calcium from food.

Deficiencies in these two nutrients drive bone loss — and they’re easy to detect with blood tests.

Vitamin D, also known as “the sunshine vitamin,” enables your body to properly absorb calcium from food. olezzo – stock.adobe.com

“In our patient population in New York, where a lot of our patients are indoors, there is a little bit of an increased risk of vitamin D deficiency,” Moustafa said.

You may be tempted to undergo a bone density scan — a popular feature at longevity clinics — but health organizations tend to primarily recommend these screenings to postmenopausal women, the group most at risk for rapid bone loss. “If you have high risk, then definitely it’s worth doing,” Moustafa said of the scans.

“But if you’re a relatively [healthy] person, then the information that you’re going to get from that is likely not going to be that beneficial because most of the time [osteoporosis] is a process that takes many, many years.”

Older adults, meanwhile, might experience a loss of height, a rounded, hunched back, a lengthy recovery from injuries and a propensity for fractures, which is an advanced sign of bone disease.

Groups most at risk for significant bone loss

Postmenopausal women are the highest-risk group for osteoporosis because a steep drop in estrogen causes bone resorption to outpace bone formation.

Age-related loss of skeletal muscle mass — a condition known as sarcopenia, which affects both sexes — is also tied to osteoporosis.

“I always say to my patients, if you’re not actively moving and using your muscles, then you’re losing it, especially as you get older,” Moustafa said.

Other at-risk groups:

  • People with low body weight or low body mass index
  • Smokers and heavy alcohol drinkers because these habits hinder calcium absorption
  • Those who don’t exercise
  • People who have long-term corticosteroid use because these medications interfere with the natural bone-building process
  • Patients with rheumatoid arthritis or inflammatory diseases because chronic inflammation expedites bone breakdown
  • Those with a strong family history of osteoporosis
To fight bone loss, Moustafa stresses the importance of eating protein, doing resistance training and weight-bearing exercises, and getting calcium and vitamin D. Flamingo Images – stock.adobe.com

Strategies to stave off bone loss

“Bone loss is not inevitable,” Moustafa assured.

“Bone loss is something that we can easily prevent, and the first way that we can prevent [it is by] living a very healthy lifestyle. That means staying away from things that we know can decrease bone density … like smoking, inactivity or a sedentary lifestyle, poor nutrition.”

Prioritize protein-rich diets because protein provides structural skeletal support.

Next, it’s important to do resistance training and weight-bearing exercises to maintain muscle mass and bone density. Think jumping jacks, squats and deadlifts because stress and tension stimulate bone-building cells.

Moustafa said calcium and vitamin D supplements can help if you’re deficient, but there’s no “magic pill” to prevent or reverse bone loss.

“I wish I could answer that there was some kind of secret sauce or shortcut,” Moustafa said. “Just like with anything in life, the best treatment and the best answer is, really, it takes time.”



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#NannyTok and the perks of nannying to HNW families



They’re caring for the kids — and signing NDAs, carrying Louis Vuitton bags, vacationing to luxe islands like Ibiza and making six figures.

A new reality show, “Million Dollar Nannies,” reveals what it’s really like to be a Mary Poppins to the 1%, from being beholden to strict privacy agreements and undergoing extensive background checks to being on-call all the time and providing near-constant updates to wealthy, neurotic parents.

“So much goes into being a high-profile nanny,” Leah Barrs, 31, who co-stars on the series, told The Post. “I was doing doctors appointments, school events — keeping track of calendars. Not only the parents’ schedules but the kid’s schedules, closet organization. Travel.”  

Leah Barrs, 31, moved to Los Angeles without a plan more than a decade ago. Now, she’s running a highend childcare business for wealthy families. Disney

The show, which premieres today on Hulu and Freeform as an unscripted series, features Barrs and seven other nannies who temporarily move to Ibiza to launch a luxury boutique childcare agency from scratch.

Barrs, a Connecticut native, dropped out of college and moved to Los Angeles in her 20s without a plan. Then, her pastor at The Way LA, an interdenominational Christian church in Los Angeles, connected her with Kourtney Kardashian, who needed a nanny.

“Million Dollar Nannies,” out Wednesday on Hulu, is taking viewers behind the scenes of what it’s really like nannying for the richest families in the world. Disney

“It was fate,” she recalled. “He said, ‘I think you would be perfect for the position. Would you want to work for the Kardashians? I was like, ‘Holy s—t. This is crazy! YES!’” 

Soon, she was caring for Kardashian’s three children whom she shares with Scott Disick — Mason, 15, Penelope, 12, and Reign Disick, 10. The job involved getting them to and from school, prepping snacks — and shielding her charges from the prying eye of paparazzi.

“It was beyond nannying,” she said. “I learned a lot about myself — [Kourtney] really taught me to be a better worker. Networking, being the best version of myself. Representing that family. Everyone always said, ‘You should start your own agency.’” 

Barrs connected with fellow nannies and mannies on #NannyTok. They formed an agency to one-percenters carrying for rich kids on Ibiza. Hulu

Barrs leveraged the #NannyTok network, which has more than 32,000 posts on TikTok, to find other nannies and mannies for her agency.

The cast also includes Jack McCann, 23; Olivia McMahon, 22; Mitchell Bienvenue, 24; Taylor Hayward, 25; Hannah Joy Davis, 26; Tamaya Denae, 23, and Sydney Siegel, 28.

McCann, a New York-city based manny and influencer, had some high-highs and uncomfortable lows.

He got to fly via private jet to Paris so he could babysit while his bosses enjoyed a Valentino fashion show. The next day, he tagged along to the family’s caviar tasting.

“It was their normal,” said McCann, but for him it was  an “out of body experience.”

Olivia “Liv” McMahon, 22, once had to charter a private jet with 24-hours notice, so a family she worked for could jet-set to Mykonos, Greece. The perk? She got to join. Disney

But there were also strange requests. While interviewing to work for another family while on Ibiza, he had to spray-tan a dad, alongside another manny, to get the gig.

“I was being put up against the other manny, to see who was going to be the best fit for their son,” he recalled. “It was definitely out of my comfort zone … I never had to spray tan even my closest girlfriends — it was jarring to do with men in Speedos standing right in front of me.”

Fellow cast member McMahon said her most over-the-top task was having to charter a jet from Miami to Mykonos, Greece — assembling a crew and gas for the plane in just 24-hours, plus figuring out hotels and staffing abroad — so the family she worked for could jet-set at a moment’s notice.

New York City-based manny Jack McCann recalled having to spray tan two dads in Speedos “for work.” Emmy Park for NY Post

“I think I blacked out during the process but at the end of the day it got done,” she told The Post.

Such tasks aren’t uncommon.

“You’re booking travel, you have to do household maintenance, there’s a lot more that goes into it than just caring for children,” McMahon said, adding, “The perk is everything is free —private jet flight, accommodations, my meals.”

Plus, she makes six figures, something she didn’t think was possible after leaving university.

“I dropped out of college and was told I wouldn’t be able to make a lot of money … [I] was instantly greeted with this fear to not make enough money to sustain myself or live the lifestyle I wanted to live,” she said. “Now, I’ve made a nurses salary plus perks.”

She is now based in Los Angeles, working with a family featured on the show and still enjoying the job.

“The perk is everything is free — private jet flight, accommodations, my meals,” McMahon said of the experience working for high-net worth families. Hulu

“My day starts around 2 p.m. when I pick up the kids from school — we get home. I make them a snack. We’ll go in the pool. The kids have playdates or we go to their favorite store in the mall. I do some household chores — folding the kid’s laundry, unloading the dishwasher. I make dinner, get them ready for bed — that’s really the spiel of the day,” said McMahon who dreams of one day being a stay-at-home mom. “I’m literally playing house.”

Another plot twist in nannying for the rich? Caring for niche pets — like a bearded dragon.

Nannying for the rich, Barrs told The Post, can command a six figure salary, plus perks like free trips around the world via private jet. “I’ve always loved the finer things in life,” Barrs said. Hulu
McMahon, who dropped out of nursing school to pursue nannying full-time, told The Post that a generous family she worked for once gifted her a Louis Vuitton bag just because — and a Cartier bracelet for Christmas. @livmcmahonn/Instagram

“I love all animals but I will never go and touch reptiles. My nanny family have a bearded dragon. I had to become pretty well-versed in carrying for this bearded dragon, taking it on walks. I never thought I would have to give a bearded dragon a bath,” McMahon said.

But, she said, it’s worth it.

“For my birthday, they gave me a Louis [Vuitton] bag — the duffle bag with the pink. I saw it when we were in New York shopping. I said ‘Oh my god’ I love that bag. I didn’t think they would get it for me. I was also able to get a Cartier bracelet for Christmas.”

The perks come at a cost though, nannies typically have to be on-call 24/7. Hulu
Off duty, while working on Ibiza, McCann, McMahon and Barrs got to enjoy the fruits of their labors at local beach clubs. jackcmccann/Instagram

Barrs agrees that the once-in-a-lifetime perks outweigh the challenges.

She said, “I’ve always loved the finer things in life.” 



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Valery Kogan wants $45M for his combo NYC penthouse



It’s a “nyet” profit.

Real estate mogul Valery Kogan has listed his Plaza Hotel penthouse for $45 million, The Post has learned — continuing his sale of opulent homes around the world after falling out with Vladimir Putin.

Kogan co-owned one of Russia’s biggest passenger hubs, Moscow’s Domodedovo Airport, but lost his stake three months ago when the state’s highest court dismissed his final appeal to avert the takeover. 

Valery Kogan.
The penthouse spread is grand, similar to Kogan’s other American holdings — but decorated in a different style. Celeste Godoy Photography
The aerie boasts massive exposures that fill the space with light. Celeste Godoy Photography

Putin and Kogan were comrades, but their relationship curdled as the state moved aggressively to seize the airport, which is Russia’s third biggest. It also may not help that Kogan was born in Ukraine.

The airport seizure, which was in the works for some time and sped up last year, coincides with the Kremlin’s ongoing land grabs of privately overseen properties amid the extremely expensive Ukraine War.

The takeover also coincides with Kogan and his wife Olga rapidly trying to rid themselves of hundreds of millions of dollars of properties in their portfolio.

The Plaza penthouse, the couple’s latest listing, sits over two units — Nos. 2003 and 2009 — amid the hotel’s storied green copper turrets, and spans 10,290 square feet in total. The 20th-floor residences are linked to each other by an 80-foot terrace. 

A view of the layout. Both units can be purchased together or separately. Celeste Godoy Photography

The buyer can take the two residences as a single package for $45 million. That all-encompassing arrangement provides an amenity-laden expanse that includes seven bedrooms, eight full bathrooms and two half bathrooms flanked by a Fifth Avenue-facing media room and an office. Carrying costs are close to $40,000 a month for common charges and property taxes.

The property can also be split, with the larger residence at 2009 serving as a triplex spanning 6,316 square feet and listed at $29 million. This unit includes sweeping views of Central Park, 21-foot-tall ceilings, a skylight and a media room overlooking Fifth and Park avenues. 

A grand staircase leads to the apartment’s upper floor, which is entirely devoted to a primary suite with 33 feet of park-facing terrace, a large sitting room, dual marble bathrooms and double dressing rooms.  Three additional bedrooms — each with ensuite baths — occupy a separate floor below.

A peek into the kitchen. Celeste Godoy Photography

Unit 2003, which asks $16 million as an individual property, runs almost 4,000 square feet and features three bedrooms, including a primary suite with a white-marble woodburning fireplace, a large sitting room and a five-fixture marble bath — all overlooking the park. Three bedrooms and three full baths sit upstairs.

Kane Manera and Doug Albert of Corcoran represent the listings. 

The buyer can go all in on the property or choose to live in the larger residence while hosting guests in the other one, the listing notes.

The property’s sale would be Kogan’s second in the building. Last year, two combined apartments, dubbed the mini-Versailles for their over-the-top gilded aesthetic, sold for $21 million, less than half its original $50 million asking price. The 5,302-square-foot residence sits on the 10th floor and combines two units, 1007 and 1009.

The Kogans are linked to both Plaza properties through shell companies, according to filings with New York City Department of Finance.

The living spaces are grand, featuring stone walls. Celeste Godoy Photography
The formal dining room. Celeste Godoy Photography
The penthouses are connected by a terrace. Celeste Godoy Photography

Their desire to offload properties, albeit with steep price cuts, has been very apparent over the last three years. 

The Kogans sold their 40th-floor condo at celeb-favorite 15 Central Park West for $33.89 million, after originally listing it for $65 million.

Their 5,398-square-foot duplex penthouse at 515 Park Ave. went for $14.5 million after being put on the market for $25 million. 

The Kogans also unloaded their Greenwich, Conn., estate for $10.4 million — down from its $14.5 million ask as is, or $24.5 million if renovated.

A handsome stone-clad bathroom. Celeste Godoy Photography
One of the bedrooms on offer. Celeste Godoy Photography
The terrace overlooks Central Park. Celeste Godoy Photography
Central Park is front and center. Celeste Godoy Photography

Overseas, Kogan’s 11,000-square-foot penthouse in Tel Aviv’s Sea One Tower sold for $32 million, or about 120 million shekels, down from $65 million. 

Kogan is still trying to offload his crown jewel, the Bat Sheba’s Palace in Caesarea, Israel, one of the largest and most expensive private residences in the world, at 75,000-square-feet extending over 3 acres. That property has seen its price cut to $210 million, or 770 million shekels, from $260 million.

The turn of events is a massive comedown for Kogan, a one-time bon vivant whose affinity for high living didn’t stop at amassing properties. He also received headlines for over-the-top events, including his granddaughter’s London wedding where Elton John and Mariah Carey came in to perform.

But he and co-partner Dmitry Kamenshchik, after building Domodedovo Airport into a major air hub over the last three decades, are now trying to avoid attention as Putin plows ahead with his big property takeovers.

Since launching its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Russia has seized more than $10.8 billion, or 1 trillion rubles, worth of what the state calls strategic assets. In addition to Domodedovo Airport, the properties include Western companies such as France’s Danone and Germany’s Uniper. 



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Knicks fan braved 12-hour flight delays, psychotic Spurs fans — but it was worth it to see NY win it all



Seeing the New York Knicks become world champions for the first time since 1973 with my own eyes was easily the most chaotic 24 hours of my life — and perhaps the best.

The drama absolutely wasn’t limited to the San Antonio Spurs hardwood as New York’s orange and blue heroes pulled away in the dying seconds to win Game 5, 94-90 in an explosive 16-point comeback.

Diehards who made the last-minute trip to Texas endured travel nightmares — and a share of distasteful fans who didn’t quite extend southern hospitality after the loss.

New Yorkers took over Texas to see the Knicks win the NBA title Saturday. AP Photo/Darren Abate

Bad actors behaved in a deplorable manner, just as pseudo-Knicks fans did terrible things in NYC to Spurs faithful.

I saw a lunatic in a white pickup truck laugh and point a gun at two Knicks fans minding their own business waiting to cross a street — and other New Yorkers told me they got egged like Victor Wembanyama during the finals while in Manhattan, among more stupidity over a damn game. 

Knicks fans celebrated the championship after flying to Texas to see New York win in person. Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

What did the group do? They sprayed a bottle of champagne and smoked cigars on the San Antonio Riverwalk as if nothing had happened. 

The duo briefly held at what the driver thought was a humorous little gunpoint incident shook it off right after too. Some true and good-hearted Spurs fans — like the vast majority Saturday were — even waited with them until their car arrived.

No New Yorker cared about the nonsense, which plenty back in the Big Apple were equally, if not more, guilty of that night.

The Knicks were finally kings of the NBA again.

Post reporter Alex Mitchell celebrates with pal Mike Nicosia after the Knicks won. Alex Mitchell / New York Post

That’s what I’ll remember about my impromptu and haphazardly planned trip, one that cost a pretty penny but was still a discount compared to a good seat at Madison Square Garden.

I don’t care about the 4 a.m. wakeup call and early bird flight to Dallas Saturday, where a good friend of mine drove us the next four hours down I-35 to the greatest live game either of us ever witnessed. 

We stopped at a Buc-ees 146 miles north in Temple and saw several other Knicks fans en route to the Doobie Brothers’ beloved city as part of New York’s takeover. 

Several New Yorkers were seen at a Buc-ees almost 150 miles north of San Antonio, like Post reporter Alex Mitchell.

After road tripping the four hours back to Dallas Sunday morning, it’s an afterthought that my 3:36 p.m. flight home landed almost exactly 12 hours later at around 3:36 a.m. 

We had a series of nightmare delays, starting with air traffic control issues, then weather, and finally hearing our pilot “rejected” the plane we were supposed to take.

But hey, 12 hours is a lot quicker than 53 years.

More than thinking about the aimless time wasted and changing terminals at Dallas-Fort Worth, my mind goes to the tons of Knicks gear I saw throughout the airport of happy fans heading back home — eventually, that was.

Flight-delayed New Yorkers cared more about seeing the win than being stuck in airports. Charles Wenzelberg / NY Post

Everyone you passed had a smile and offered a fist bump — high-spirited TSA officers in Dallas gave me a Knicks cheer and high five as well. Plus, I struck up fantastic conversation with fellow fans waiting for the same flight.

I must have heard “are you going to the parade?” at least a dozen times.

We were all overjoyed, chatting about coach Mike Brown’s fabulous core, including the legend himself, Jalen Brunson, who is expected to return next season when the banner goes up at MSG. 

Nobody was thrilled about being stuck, but if you have to be in an airport for hours, doing it with a unanimously united bunch of New Yorkers is the way to go.

Knicks lovers overran the Alamo Saturday afternoon as you couldn’t turn a corner in San Antonio without seeing team gear at Riverwalk bars, restaurants, hotels, or, truthfully, anywhere.

Many Knicks fans like Post reporter Alex Mitchell posed in front of the Alamo on Saturday. Alex Mitchell / New York Post

It carried over at the Spurs’ home court inside the Frost Bank Center, where New Yorkers owned the noise factor and booed Wemby during warmups to an almost ground-shaking decibel level. 

Just about my entire section in the rafters was filled with journeying Knicks fans, standing with palpable nervous energy almost the whole game, eager to witness long-awaited history.

I’ll never forget the pure elation on the away crowd’s faces when OG Anunoby hit the title-clinching free-throw with 7.7 seconds to go. 

Seeing the Larry O’Brien trophy hoisted at mid-court was a family affair as owner James Dolan got a fever pitch of electric praise from the huge crowd that remained. 

New Yorkers took over the Knicks vs. Spurs game in Texas on Saturday night. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Strangers in the stands cried, hugged, shook hands and offered congratulations to one another as if it were a personal achievement like delivering a healthy baby or getting a major promotion at work.

If you yelled “Go New York Go New York Go!” on your way out of the arena, 50 voices would send it back.

It gave you chills — and a glow that will last much longer than memories of the grueling voyage there and back.. 



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Protesters block copper exports to China from Rio Tinto mine in Mongolia


ULAANBAATAR, Mongolia — Protesters blocked copper exports from a huge Rio Tinto mine in Mongolia on Wednesday, partially cutting off the supply of a mineral vital to China’s renewable energy ambitions.

The protest group, called the Radical Reform Movement, is pushing for a greater share of mining revenue for Mongolians, a long-running demand in a nation where poverty persists despite the exploitation of its mineral riches. Copper is needed for electric vehicles and solar and wind power installations, all industries where China is a world leader.

It wasn’t clear if the protest was a one-day affair aimed at drawing attention to the issue or the start of a prolonged standoff that could have a deeper economic impact in both countries.

Videos posted on Facebook by the Radical Reform Movement showed a small group of protesters milling around a barrier set up on a two-lane road running through a barren landscape on a bright sunny day. A white banner that said “Stop Rio Tinto” in red letters was draped on a large tree branch across the road in front of the tire wall.

The Oyu Tolgoi mine is a massive undertaking to tap a vast reserve of copper deep in the Gobi Desert. About 80 kilometers (50 miles) north of the border with China, it also has large gold deposits and is expected to be the fourth largest copper mine in the world when fully operational, Rio Tinto has said. The British-Australian mining giant owns 66% of the mine, with the Mongolian government holding the other 34%.

The jointly owned mining company said shipments of copper concentrate were halted after the road was blocked on Wednesday morning. It said the Oyu Tolgoi mine contributes about 9% of Mongolia’s tax revenues and warned that a weeklong blockage could cost the government 35 billion Mongolian Tugrik ($13.3 million).

At a Cabinet meeting, Mongolian Prime Minister Uchral Nyam-Osor told the justice and internal affairs minister to enforce the law and hold accountable those who unlawfully obstruct or interfere with business operations being conducted in accordance with the law and regulations, according to the a government Facebook page.

The Radical Reform Movement has called for the expulsion of foreign investors. While others wouldn’t go that far, there are voices in the government calling for the renegotiation of the agreement with Rio Tinto to give the country a larger share of the benefits.



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Kenya accused of deporting Taiwanese conference delegates on China’s behalf


NAIROBI, Kenya — NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Taiwan accused Kenya on Wednesday of human rights abuses against its nationals attending a global oceans conference in Mombasa and blamed China for exerting pressure on the East African country.

Taiwan’s foreign ministry said the scholars’ passports and mobile phones were confiscated and they were detained for more than 20 hours before being deported.

In a statement, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Taipei said it “strongly protests and condemns China’s pressure on the Kenyan government to refuse Taiwanese scholars’ attendance at the international ocean academic exchange conference, as well as the barbaric acts of confiscating passports, mobile phones, and restricting personal and communication freedoms — actions that violate human rights and international norms.”

Kenya defended its decision to deport the Taiwanese nationals. Foreign Ministry Principal Secretary Korir Sing’oei said his country’s foreign policy “recognizes only one China.”

“Any person purporting to hold a Taiwanese passport would ordinarily not be allowed through our borders for lacking proper documentation and would not in any event be part of a formal state meeting convened by Kenya government,” Sing’oei added.

Kenya is hosting the annual oceans conference, which focuses on addressing critical ocean issues, including climate change, biodiversity and pollution.

Hundreds of delegates from Africa, the U.S., the European Union and climate-vulnerable Caribbean and Pacific island nations are taking part in the conference. Organizers have sought to position Africa — which is hosting the event for the first time — as a driving force in global ocean governance.

China and Taiwan split in 1949 as a result of a civil war. For decades, China has seen Taiwan as its own territory and said the island must come under its control, even under the use of force if necessary.



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Philippine Senate president allied with Duterte removed ahead of his daughter’s impeachment trial


MANILA, Philippines — A leadership standoff in the Philippine Senate ended Wednesday with the removal of an ally of former President Rodrigo Duterte as leader of the chamber, which will soon start the impeachment trial of his daughter, incumbent Vice President Sara Duterte.

With 13 of 24 senators backing him, Sherwin Gatchalian, an ally of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., was elected Senate president. His rival, Alan Peter Cayetano, a key supporter of Duterte, conceded defeat.

Both had claimed leadership of the Senate in the last two weeks based on contrasting legal interpretations of the quorum that led to their elections. An allied senator of Cayetano, however, defected Wednesday and gave his rivals’ bloc a clear majority.

“It’s a relief,” Jean Franco, a political professor at the state-run University of the Philippines said, but added that the country’s democracy, “with its weak and fragile institutions,” faces more headwinds.

The Senate infighting has been perceived as being swayed by the long-running political disputes between Marcos and Vice President Duterte. The country’s top two leaders were once allies but had a bitter falling out in a high-profile dispute that reflects the divisions and turbulent politics long plaguing the Asian democracy.

The vice president has blamed Marcos for the arrest of her father, Rodrigo Duterte, and his handover to the International Criminal Court in The Hague last year. The detained former president is scheduled to be tried by the global court starting in November for alleged crimes against humanity.

The charges stem from his brutal anti-drugs crackdowns, which left thousands of mostly poor suspects dead while he was in office. He has denied authorizing extra-judicial killings.

Cayetano captured the Senate presidency on May 11 after his Senate faction attained a slim majority when Sen. Ronald dela Rosa suddenly reappeared to support him after months of hiding.

Dela Rosa once served as Rodrigo Duterte’s national police chief and has been named by the ICC as a co-perpetrator of the former president in the widespread killings of drug suspects. After the ICC unsealed a warrant for dela Rosa’s arrest on May 11, he went back into hiding and remains at large.

Another Cayetano ally, Sen. Jinggoy Estrada, was arrested and jailed on June 1 after being indicted on a plunder charge. He was accused of receiving huge kickbacks from a flood control project, a charge that he denies.

Control over the Senate is crucial. It’s expected to start the trial in July of the vice president, who was impeached by the House of Representatives last month over criminal charges, including unexplained wealth and publicly threatening to have Marcos assassinated.

The House is dominated by Marcos’ allies. The vice president denies the allegations, which her supporters say were fabricated to prevent her from pursuing an announced plan to seek the presidency when Marcos’ six-year term ends in 2028.



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Bernardo Silva joins Real Madrid on free transfer


Midfielder Bernardo Silva has joined Real Madrid on a two-year deal, linking up with manager Jose Mourinho.

Silva, 31, left Manchester City at the end of last season, bringing an end to a trophy-laden nine-year spell.

Silva was heavily linked with a move to Spain, with Barcelona and Atletico Madrid also reportedly chasing his signature.

He becomes Real’s second signing of the summer as a free transfer after defender Marc Cucurella joined from Chelsea in a deal worth £52m.

Real did not win a trophy last season.

They finished eight points behind La Liga champions FC Barcelona and were knocked out in the quarter-finals of the Champions League.

Silva is at the World Cup with Portugal and is expected to play a pivotal role for his country.

Real are understood to be targeting departing Inter Milan defender Denzel Dumfries, while France defender Ibrahima Konate is set to join after leaving Liverpool.

Defender Antonio Rudiger this week signed a contract extension with Real until 2027.



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'We believe our daughter was abused at Muckamore hospital for 17 years – now we want answers'



Laura, 41, was admitted to Muckamore Abbey Hospital when she was 16 and lived there for more than 17 years.



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