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Logan Browning Reveals Why She Didn’t Read Harlan Coben’s ‘I Will Find You’ Before Starring In The Netflix Series: “Maybe Now I’ll Do It”


Logan Browning, of Dear White People and Bratz: The Movie fame, is treading into uncharted territory in Netflix’s new mystery miniseries I Will Find You, taking on her first-ever law enforcement role as FBI agent Sarah Greer.

“This was new for me. This was a new lane,” Browning told DECIDER when she stopped by our studio ahead of the show’s release.

Based on Harlan Coben‘s novel of the same name, I Will Find You follows David Burroughs (Sam Worthington), a man who is serving a life sentence for the murder of his young son. When his ex-sister-in-law Rachel Mills (Britt Lower) provides information proving David’s son might still be alive, he breaks out of prison and they work together to clear his name, all while the FBI is trailing close behind with direct orders to send David, now a fugitive, back to prison.

Browning plays Sarah Greer, a member of the FBI’s Fugitive Task Force who works on a team with her father, Max Williams (played by Chi McBride). While these characters could have been written as one-dimensional agents with a sole purpose to capture and lock up David Burroughs, Sarah and Max are instead written with a layered backstory, much of which revolves around Max’s absence through Sarah’s childhood, deepening her desire to work closely with her dad as an adult.

“It’s the dream, and it means that when I work with directors, I get to have really interesting conversations,” Browning said of her character’s backstory, part of which is what helps Sarah realize that David might be innocent after all. While Sarah might be doing her job when it comes to chasing down a fugitive, Browning knew how important it was to put her character’s desire for truth above all else, especially against the backdrop of America’s flawed prison system.

Logan Browning
Photo: Tamara Beckwith / NYP

“There’s a moment when Sarah and Max are in the car, and she asks him, ‘Have you ever been chasing someone you thought might be innocent?’” Browning recalled. “That’s such a good question for us to be asking, especially when you consider the prison system in America, and how and why and who is incarcerated for what reasons.”

“It’s funny, as Sarah, I believe my job is not just what’s on the page. My job is to find the truth,” she continued. “My job is to be a warrior for justice, and that’s how I feel as Logan, too. The truth is the truth, and I would always go for that.”

Like any dedicated actress, Browning did a lot of research going into this role, and made many calls to her close friend who works as an FBI agent IRL.

“I was asking, ‘What do you think of this?’ She’s like, ‘Okay, now listen, it’s the movies, right? They might not be doing things the way I do it, but this is how I would do it,’” Browning said. “I would ask her, ‘When you’re leaving the house to go to someone’s house, what are you bringing in the car? Do you have snacks? Do you have water? What’s in your trunk? What do you pack? Do you wear sneakers? Do you wear dress shoes?’ I was so curious.”

The one thing Browning didn’t do? Read Coben’s book on which the series is based. But she had a perfectly reasonable explanation as to why.

“I’m going to be honest. I didn’t read the book,” she admitted. “I didn’t read the book, because everyone kept saying that my character was so different from the book. Maybe now I’ll do it. But I really wanted to honor what was on the page in front of me.”

I Will Find You is currently streaming on Netflix.





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Washington’s Hannes Steinbach one of best centers Warriors could take at No. 11


The Warriors possess the No. 11 pick in this month’s NBA draft.

Who they pick with their highest selection since 2021 could hold the cards to not only the final years of Steph Curry’s career but also the future direction of the franchise.

This week, we are profiling five possible prospects GM Mike Dunleavy Jr. could target.

Continuing with Part 3:


Basketball player in a black and purple jersey shooting a free throw.
Former Washington forward / center Hannes Steinbach would help the Warriors improve on the glass. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Hannes Steinbach

Age: 20

Position: Forward / Center

Height/weight: 6-foot-10 / 250 pounds

School: Washington

Why he’s a fit

The Warriors got a taste of what it was like to have a dynamic big man last season. But with Kristaps Porzingis and Al Horford’s futures up in the air, how about developing one of their own?

Steinbach will have been 20 for just over a month when his name is called on draft night, but the German big man already has experience as a professional overseas, as well as on the international stage. His domestic debut produced an eye-popping statistical freshman season.

Following in the footsteps of previous countrymen Detlef Schrempf and Christian Welp, Steinbach starred for the Huskies and lived up to his predecessors.

Steinbach dominated around the rim to the tune of 18.5 points and 11.5 rebounds per game, recording double-doubles in 22 of his 30 games — most in the nation.

His 353 total rebounds also led the country, and he has been described as the best rebounder in the draft class — an area of need for a Warriors team that didn’t have a player average more than six boards per game.


Steve Kerr, head coach of the Golden State Warriors, stands on the sideline during a game.
If Warriors coach Steve Kerr (above) has forward / center Hannes Steinbach on his roster next season, Golden State’s rebounding should improve significantly. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Why he’ll last until No. 11

The last time the Warriors spent a lottery pick on a big man it didn’t go so well.

Steinbach, however, is more Kevon Looney (30th overall, 2015) than James Wiseman (No. 2 overall, 2020). He is not a rim runner or a rim protector and has nothing more than a nascent perimeter shot but comes as a ready-made rebounder with a relentless motor.

The Warriors have struggled to incorporate traditional big men into their offense, but Steinbach’s cutting ability could help him succeed in Steve Kerr’s motion system.

Playing professionally in Germany and competing for his country on the international stage —  leading the Germans to the gold-medal game against Team USA in the FIBA U19 championships — makes Steinbach’s offensive game more mature than other amateur bigs.

However, he faced questions about how his size would hold up against NBA centers.

Steinbach helped assuage those concerns with a strong showing at the NBA combine, measuring in taller than 6-10 with a wingspan that adds another 4 inches. Most notably, he tipped the scales at 248 pounds after entering college at 220.

NBA comp: Domantas Sabonis

With a crafty offensive game, a physical frame and a magnet for rebounds, the NBA’s other successful European big men — Alperen Sengun being another — provide a frame of reference for the type of player Steinbach can become.

ICYMI

Yaxel Lendeborg could be steal of NBA draft

Brayden Burries could be instant playmaker for Warriors



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Dodgers’ part-time playing time dwindles after Tommy Edman returns from injury



Welcome to The California Post’s weekly Dodgers recap, where baseball writers Dylan Hernández and Jack Harris review the week that was, hand out very official awards and take stock of the state of the season.

QUESTION OF THE WEEK

Whose playing time will get cut with Tommy Edman back?

IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

For the last three weeks, opportunities had been plentiful for some previously part-time players in the Dodgers’ lineup.

At second base, Miguel Rojas and Alex Freeland have split at-bats in a platoon. In left field, there’s been a similar tag team of Alex Call and Ryan Ward.

For the most part, the math has been simple. Against left-handed pitchers, the right-handed-hitting Rojas and Call play. Against righties, the left-handed Ward and switch-hitting Freeland get the nod.

The results have been somewhat mixed, from Ward’s impressive .895 OPS to Rojas’ resurgent .280 batting average to Call’s sudden 8-for-38 slump going back to May 28 — the point at which injuries to Kiké Hernández and Teoscar Hernández created the new arrangement.

But without other options, each of their roles were steady.

Now, with Tommy Edman back, playing time will be at a premium again.

While Edman made his long-awaited return from offseason ankle surgery at third base on Wednesday (filling in for Max Muncy on a scheduled day off), most of the switch-hitting utilityman’s starts figure to come at second base or left field.

That means, between Rojas, Freeland, Call and Ward, at-bats will inevitably begin to go down.

How exactly the pie will be split remains to be seen. Manager Dave Roberts noted the team “feels really good” about playing Edman against left-handed pitchers (bad news for Rojas and Call). Then again, his best position is likely at second base (where Freeland, who is hitting .228, has gotten most of the starts this year).

These are good problems for the Dodgers to have, of course, and will only continue as the Hernándezes eventually return to health (Teoscar is scheduled to begin a rehab assignment this week).

But it means someone will wind up getting the short end of the straw. It will be one of the bigger decisions facing Roberts in the coming days and weeks.

PLAYER OF THE WEEK

Max Muncy (4-for-16, 2 home runs, 4 RBIs this week; .265 average, 16 home runs, 28 RBIs, .887 OPS this season)

AP Photo/Matt Marton

Muncy was last an All-Star in 2021. You’d be forgiven for thinking he’d never be one again.

But this week, amid the 35-year-old slugger’s renaissance season, there was Muncy at the top of fan balloting for the Midsummer Classic, deservedly leading all third basemen in the National League in search of his third career All-Star selection.

Muncy’s recent play has epitomized how he got there. This week, he hit two home runs, drew more walks than strikeouts and impressed in particular with a glove that now has him ranked sixth among big-league third basemen in defensive runs saved.

Put it all together and only the Tigers’ Kevin McGonigle has been more valuable at the position than Muncy this year (slightly topping him in Fangraphs WAR 3.1 to 2.8).

An All-Star trip to Philadelphia almost certainly awaits.

PITCHER OF THE WEEK

Yoshinobu Yamamoto (carried perfect game into eighth inning and no-hitter into ninth; 7-4 record, 2.52 ERA this season)

William Liang-Imagn Images

We’d be remiss not to recognize Yamamoto’s latest brush with history here — or to point out, he might be in the Cy Young conversation as well this season.

So far, all of the Cy Young chatter around the Dodgers has focused on Shohei Ohtani. But with the two-way star posting back-to-back bumpy outings that have knocked him out of the majors’ ERA lead (his 1.47 ERA now trails Jacob Misiorowski’s stellar 1.34 mark), Yamamoto is starting to look like an increasingly equal award threat.

Unlike the still-not-qualified Ohtani, Yamamoto does not have workload questions, ranking in the top 10 of the National League in innings pitched. And since a four-start stretch over late April and early May in which he had an ERA above 5.00, the reigning World Series MVP has gotten back in form, allowing just four earned runs in 35 ⅔ innings (a 1.01 ERA) over his last four starts.

Granted, no one is likely catching Misiorowski or Cristopher Sanchez, who has a 1.82 ERA while averaging an NL-best 6.6 innings per start. 

But if someone from the Dodgers can, Ohtani is no longer the only option. Yamamoto is heating up, with no signs of stopping soon.

PROSPECT OF THE WEEK

Cam Leiter (2 starts, 5.2 innings, 14 strikeouts this week; 2.60 ERA this season with Single-A Ontario)

Leiter faced 23 batters over two starts in the last week and struck out 14 of them —flashing the potential that prompted the Dodgers to take him in the second round of last year’s draft out of Florida State.

At the time, Leiter’s selection was seen as somewhat of a risk, after he missed all of 2025 with shoulder surgery.

However, the right-hander has big-league lineage in his family, as the nephew of former big-league pitchers Al and Mark Leiter, and the cousin of current Athletics pitcher Mark Leiter Jr. and Rangers pitcher Jack Leiter.

He had also showcased swing-and-miss in college, when he struck out 56 batters in 35 innings in 2024.

That has translated this season, with Leiter’s rate of 15 strikeouts per nine innings ranking second in the Single-A California League among pitchers with 20 innings.

FUTURE DODGER OF THE WEEK

(Where we identify a potential Dodgers’ future acquisition — sometimes far-fetched, sometimes not)

Kenley Jansen, Tigers (ETA: August)

IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Imagine: The bullpen gates swing open at Uniqlo Field and “California Love” starts playing over the stadium’s sound system.

Why not?

Because the 38-year-old Jansen doesn’t have great numbers this season — he has a 4.50 ERA in 19 games — he could be an inexpensive lottery ticket for the Dodgers, who could use a couple of extra arms in the bullpen. The Tigers would probably be content with just unloading what remains of Jansen’s one-year, $11 million deal.

Jansen’s trademark sinker has averaged 92.5 mph this season, but that’s more or less where it’s been in recent years, including in 2022 when he led the National League in saves with the Braves. Jansen is averaging 11.8 strikeouts per nine innings, his best since that 2022 season.

Jansen is 17 saves short of 500 in his career. The Dodgers wouldn’t be able to help him in that department, as Edwin Diaz should be back by the time they could make a deal for Jansen, but the guess here is that he would exchange that for an opportunity to win a World Series he never won in Los Angeles.



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Twice as many MAGA Republicans favor regime change in Iran than those who want a negotiated settlement: poll



Americans are nearly evenly split between favoring Iranian regime change and a negotiated U.S. settlement with Iran, according to a new survey. 

Some 39% of respondents favor a negotiated settlement where Iran’s current government remains in place, with verifiable limits on its nuclear and missile programs, according to the findings of the Reagan Institute Summer Survey, while 36% favor replacing Iran’s current government with one more favorable to the U.S. 

Another 16% favor a weakened regime where the current government stays in place but is significantly diminished militarily and economically, and 8% responded that they don’t know. 

The findings underscore the political challenge facing President Donald Trump as his administration pursues a newly signed memorandum of understanding with Iran. While the agreement seeks to curb Iran’s nuclear ambitions through negotiations, Americans remain divided over the ultimate objective of U.S. policy toward the Islamic Republic.

Republicans who responded to the survey favored replacing Iran’s government by a 2-to-1 margin over a diplomatic deal. 

Americans are nearly evenly split between favoring Iranian regime change and a negotiated U.S. settlement with Iran, according to a new survey.  Getty Images

Republicans were far more likely than Democrats to favor a more aggressive outcome in Iran. Half of Republican respondents said they would prefer to see Iran’s current government replaced with one more favorable to the United States, compared to 25% who said they would favor a negotiated settlement that leaves the regime in place in exchange for verifiable limits on its nuclear and missile programs.

The findings were nearly identical among self-identified MAGA Republicans, 51% of whom favored regime change while 25% backed a negotiated settlement.

Democrats, meanwhile, largely favored diplomacy. A majority, 52%, said they would prefer a negotiated settlement with Iran’s current government, while 25% favored regime change. Another 14% favored leaving the regime in place but significantly weakened militarily and economically.

Donald Trump signing the Iran Memorandum of Understanding.
Some 39% of respondents favor a negotiated settlement where Iran’s current government remains in place, with verifiable limits on its nuclear and missile programs, according to the findings of the Reagan Institute Summer Survey

The Reagan Institute Summer Survey was conducted May 26 through June 3 among 1,555 respondents nationwide and carries a margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 percentage points. The survey used a mixed-mode methodology that included live telephone interviews, an online panel, and text-to-web responses.

To better reflect the U.S. population, the results were weighted using demographic benchmarks from the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2023 American Community Survey, including age, gender, race, region, and education levels. The poll also included an oversample of 331 MAGA Republicans under age 30, a group with a margin of error of plus or minus 5 percentage points.

The Reagan Institute is a Washington-based policy organization that advocates the Reagan foreign-policy tradition of “peace through strength” and sustained American leadership abroad.

Anadolu via Getty Images
The findings were nearly identical among self-identified MAGA Republicans, 51% of whom favored regime change while 25% backed a negotiated settlement. Fox News

The findings come as Trump has defended a newly signed memorandum of understanding with Iran as a way to reduce tensions and create a pathway toward a broader agreement addressing Tehran’s nuclear program.

The memorandum establishes a 60-day negotiating period during which the United States and Iran will attempt to reach a more comprehensive deal. The agreement also includes provisions aimed at restoring commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz and provides limited sanctions waivers tied to continued negotiations.

Several of the most contentious issues, including the long-term future of Iran’s nuclear program, are expected to be addressed in subsequent talks.

Donald Trump speaks at the G7 summit in Evian-les-Bains. AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda

Trump has described the arrangement as a means of avoiding a wider conflict while pursuing what he called a “great settlement” with Tehran. He has also argued that the agreement could help stabilize energy markets by reopening the Strait of Hormuz, a critical global shipping route, while creating an opportunity to negotiate additional restrictions on Iran’s nuclear activities.

The president added that he agreed to a settlement to avoid “economic catastrophe.” 

“I didn’t want to see economic catastrophe. If you kept this going, that could have happened,” he told reporters at the G7 Summit in France. 



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Sights, sounds and feelings of being at 2026 Knicks parade



To understand the depths of the day, to understand just how much this championship — and the past two months — meant to Knicks fans who’ve waited as many as 53 years for this moment of bliss, perhaps it’s best to start away from the Canyon of Heroes.

Away from the scenes and sounds broadcast on televisions and phones around the country as the franchise’s first-ever ticker-tape parade ended with Mayor Zohran Mamdani distributing keys to the city.

Perhaps it’s best to start at the corner of Park Place and Church Avenue, where Jalen Brunson jersey after Jalen Brunson jersey and orange-and-blue-clad fan after orange-and-blue-clad fan tried to decipher ways to maybe, just maybe, catch a glimpse of the Knicks. Dozens climbed up sanitation trucks, figuring out if those extra feet of height could help catch a recognizable head or two when the floats drove by. Others in the area got a quick New York City geography crash course, figuring out the direction of City Hall and coming to terms that it was either going to be tough — or there was no way at all — to see it.

These were the Knicks fans who still came, who didn’t get a spot by the barricades that some lined up for in the early hours of the morning and still joined in the joyous celebration that echoed throughout the streets of Lower Manhattan.



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Inside Margaret Josephs’ glitzy Pride party: ‘Housewives,’ drag show and more!



Margaret Josephs is putting allyship into action.

“Being an ally is not passive. It is not just saying, ‘I love everyone,’” the former “Real Housewives of New Jersey” star exclusively tells Page Six’s “Virtual Reali-Tea.”

“It is standing next to people when things get hard. It is defending families when they are under attack. It is speaking up when someone tries to make equality negotiable.”

Josephs’ powerful message set the tone for a glamorous Pride Soirée she recently hosted at New Jersey’s Allendale Social to benefit Family Equality, an organization dedicated to supporting and protecting LGBTQIA+ families.

Josephs posed with Jamiee Rizzo, Family Equality CEO Darra Gordon and Soirée co-founder Lexi Barbuto at the festive event.

Snapped Society

Celeb glam experts Rosario Cannata and Jamal Tadros mingled with Josephs and Barbuto at the party. Snapped Society

The reality TV favorite teamed up with Jaimee Rizzo and her wife, Lisa Rizzo, of Taylor Lucyk Group and Soirée, which was co-founded by Lexi Barbuto, to bring together queer friends, allies, families, supporters and celebrity guests for an evening centered on love, visibility and fundraising.

The celebration drew a crowd of familiar faces, including “Real Housewives of Orange County” alum Meghan King, former “RHONJ” personality and podcast host Kim DePaola (better known to fans as Kim D.), Josephs’ husband, Joe Benigno, Simon & Schuster bestselling author and psychic Judith Turner, Jennifer DiLandro of the “Cats & Pudding” podcast, celebrity glam experts Rosario Cannata and Jamal Tadros and “Virtual Reali-Tea’s” own Danny Murphy. 

Guests mingled throughout the evening while learning more about Family Equality’s mission to ensure every person has the freedom to find, form and sustain their family. The nonprofit’s work includes advocacy, education, family-building support and legal protections for LGBTQIA+ parents, children, foster youth and adoptive families, as well as families formed through fertility care, donor conception and surrogacy.

“Virtual Reali-Tea’s” own Danny Murphy attended with beau Kevin O’Hora. Snapped Society
Josephs’ husband, Joe Benigno, Kim De Poala and Jennifer DiLandro were on the scene, too. The trio posed with “RHOC” alum King. Snapped Society

Family Equality CEO Darra Gordon was on hand for the festivities and delivered an emotional speech about the importance of LGBTQIA+ family visibility and representation.

According to attendees, Gordon shared that the New Jersey gathering had become — and would likely remain — one of her favorite Pride events of the year. She reflected on how meaningful it would have been to witness such a celebration of LGBTQIA+ families while growing up in New Jersey herself.

Emily Jones also attended on behalf of Family Equality.

No Pride party would be complete without a little sparkle, and drag performer The Spectra Electra delivered just that. The entertainer wowed guests with a high-energy performance — set to the sounds of pop star Zara Larsson — that added even more glamour, joy and Pride spirit to the celebration.

Guests were treated to a special performance by drag queen Spectra Electra. Snapped Society
Rainbow-themed treats by The Royal Sweet Fairy were available to nibble on. Snapped Society

Meanwhile, attendees indulged in colorful desserts from The Royal Sweet Fairy, whose creations have previously been enjoyed by celebrities including Megan Thee Stallion, the Backstreet Boys and several fan-favorite stars from the “Real Housewives” universe.


For more Page Six reality TV updates …


One particularly touching moment came courtesy of sponsor TruGenetics, which donated a DNA health testing package to Family Equality. The gift will be shared with a family who may benefit from increased access to biological health information — an especially meaningful contribution for families formed through adoption, foster care, donor conception, surrogacy and other paths to parenthood.

Family Equality CEO Darra Gordon was on hand for the festivities and delivered an emotional speech. Snapped Society
Josephs beloved mom, Marge Sr., toasted the night with one of her famous daughter’s Soirée mocktails. Snapped Society

Funds raised during the soirée will directly support Family Equality’s efforts to advocate for LGBTQIA+ families, help parents understand their rights, provide resources for those building families and fight for protections related to adoption, foster care, parentage, schools, reproductive freedom and family recognition.

For Josephs, the event was about more than a fabulous party — it was about showing up for a community she proudly supports.

And judging by the love-filled atmosphere, meaningful fundraising and dazzling entertainment, the evening accomplished exactly that.



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Two chancers bluff their way into weddings to meet women



Owen Wilson and Vince Vaughn star in this classic 2005 comedy



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Oliver Tree’s mom pays tribute with throwback photo showing singer looking wildly different



Oliver Tree’s mom has paid a moving tribute days after her son was killed in a helicopter crash — while sharing a throwback photo of the “Alien Boy” singer looking dramatically different.

“Our dear son Oliver, you made this world a better place,” Christine Begin Nickell wrote on Facebook Thursday, after Tree was killed in a helicopter crash in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

“We are so proud of you. RIP,” she wrote along with three heart emojis, the middle one broken.

Nickell shared a throwback phot of Tree, writing: “Our dear son Oliver, you made this world a better place.” Christine Begin Nickell / Facebook

The proud mom shared the post along with a photo of the singer — best known for his quirky bowl-cut mullet hairstyle — as a fresh-faced youngster with a Justin Bieber-style haircut under a baseball cap, while holding a small dog.

The 32-year-old singer was one of six people killed Sunday when a Bell 206B JetRanger III helicopter collided with another aircraft about 300 feet above the Rio neighborhood of Recreio dos Bandeirantes.

Oliver Tree’s mom Christine Begin Nickell paid tribute to her son after he died in a helicopter crash in Brazil. Christine Begin Nickell / Facebook

Also killed were YouTube star Gaspar “Gaspi” Prim, 23, director and screenwriter Lucas Vignale, 29, music producer Lucas Brito Chaves, 21, and pilots Charles Marsillac and Alexandre Souza.

The crash sparked a fire at an electric vehicle dealership below, setting about 20 cars ablaze.

Tree’s girlfriend, fashion photographer Fiona Chernavskaya, also paid tribute this week while asking fans to stop speculating about their relationship.

“Right now im mourning my partner and best friend, anything else is unimportant. please have some respect,” she wrote on Instagram Wednesday.

“I don’t want to see gossip about other women that Oliver may have been seeing. We were monogamous,” she added.

The singer’s death also renewed attention on a recent interview in which he said he wouldn’t leave his family “a f–king penny” if he died.

“I don’t believe that any of the wealth, or the things that get made from it, is mine. So when I die, my will is set up that when I pass, my family, no one’s going to get a penny,” Tree said on the April 24 episode of “The Zach Sang Show.”

Tree, pictured with his family, was four dates into his global tour before the fatal crash. Christine Begin Nickell / Facebook

“If I have a wife or kids or anything, they’re not getting a f–king penny,” he added.

“I’ll get my kids through college. That’s the agreement. But there’s not going to be a silver spoon.”

“The idea is, when I die, all the money is going to go back to artists.”

Tree, who had more than 11 million monthly Spotify listeners, had completed four dates on his global “World’s First World Tour” before the fatal crash.



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The one growing gap between Dems and Republicans that shouldn’t ever exist — patriotism



Democrats take great offense at being accused of being unpatriotic — but the data doesn’t lie. 

A new NBC News poll captured the partisan gap over pride in America.

Overall, 56% of Americans are extremely or very proud of the country, but only 29% of Democrats, compared to 90% of Republicans. 

That’s a yawning gap, and about a matter that really shouldn’t be controversial.

We aren’t talking about abortion, or Donald Trump’s White House ballroom, but an elemental thing — pride in country — that in most times and places has been taken for granted. 

Once upon a time, that was the case here. The Gallup poll found in January 2001 that nearly 90 percent of Americans were extremely or very proud of the country. 

In 2017, according to Gallup, 75% of the public said that they extremely or very proud of America — a low at the time — and it’s been down since.

The decline has been driven largely by Democrats.

Their disdain for President Trump clearly is responsible for some of the drop, but not all of it.

Democrats were less proud of the country than Republicans even when Barack Obama and Joe Biden were president.  

Obviously, pride in country shouldn’t depend on who the president is; the country is so much more than its politics.

Mark Twain said, aptly, that “the only rational patriotism is loyalty to the nation all the time, loyalty to the government when it deserves it.” 

Even if you have contempt for the party in power, there’s the country’s founding, its constitutional system, its stupendous wealth, its great heroes, its victories in two world wars, its natural beauty and its endlessly interesting, fair-minded and inventive people to feel proud of.

Many Democrats are unmoved by these things, or consider them sources of embarrassment.

The founding? Tainted by racism.

The constitutional system? An antiquated obstacle to progress.

The economy? Rigged by and for billionaires.

Our heroes? Feet of clay or worse. 

A key word here is “systemic,” as in “systemic racism,” which suggests that racism is not a product of historical circumstance, but endemic to the American project itself. 

Why feel pride in a country that is not yet redeemed, indeed may be unredeemable? 

The left — especially in the academy — has long advanced the view that America’s role in the world is predatory and imperialistic.

Over time this radical critique of US foreign policy has gained more traction within the Democratic mainstream. 

Then there’s the attitude toward small-scale expressions of patriotism — American flag imagery, lapel pins, fly-overs, Lee Greenwood songs and the like — that progressives tend to consider crude or jingoistic.

James Talarico, the Democratic US Senate candidate in Texas, once called the American flag “a complicated symbol.”

If the national banner doesn’t elicit an instinctive feeling of devotion, one’s attachment to the country is likely attenuated as well. 

Many progressives would counter that America is a set of ideals, and we should feel fealty to it only to the extent we realize those ideals.

But the country and its people are also a concrete reality, and you either like them or not, feel connected to them or not, and — this is close to the crux of the matter — feel grateful for them or not.

Nearly everyone who isn’t particularly proud of America is still incredibly indebted to it, benefiting from its liberty and prosperity. 

It’s a profound act of ingratitude not to return the debt with a sense of reverence and obligation.

It’s not enough to say, in effect, you’ll feel proud of the country at some future point when it has meet certain social and political benchmarks.

This amounts to a version of St. Augustine’s famous prayer: “Lord, make me patriotic, but not yet.”

In short, patriotism shouldn’t be a partisan issue, rather a foundational commitment of both parties and all factions.

These days, though, we can’t even agree to feel proud of the nation we share — and to which we all owe so much. 

X: @RichLowry



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3-year-old was thrown into crocodile pit by man with learning disability


The suspect accused of hurling a 3-year-old boy into a crocodile pit at a UK zoo was a man with learning disabilities on a day trip with his caretaker — as it emerged the zoo owner’s fearless wife had jumped in to save the child, according to reports.

The 30-year-old man appears to have grabbed the young child — a stranger — while his caretaker took his eye off him Thursday at the popular Johnsons of Old Hurst zoo in Cambridgeshire, England, according to the Sun.

He then hurled the terrified kid over a 4-foot fence into the crocodile enclosure, leaving him in critical but stable condition, the Cambridgeshire Constabulary said Friday.


Visitors on a raised walkway overlooking a crocodile enclosure at Johnson's of Old Hurst.
A 3-year-old boy was thrown into a crocodile enclosure by a 30-year-old man at Johnsons of Old Hurst zoo in Cambridgeshire, England, — leaving him in critical condition. Newsquest / SWNS

The suspect was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder — but released on bail after being “assessed as not being fit for interview,” the police department said.

The update came as it emerged that the zoo owner’s wife, Tracey Johnson, had immediately jumped into the enclosure and rescued the toddler before the crocodiles could get to him.

The 3-year-old was rushed to a hospital with a broken pelvis and arm, according to the outlet. He remains in critical but stable condition, officials said.

Police said that the investigation was “ongoing as we continue to understand the circumstances surrounding this distressing incident.

“Our thoughts remain with the boy, and his family and specialist officers continue to support them through this difficult time.”


Two crocodiles lying on a dirt floor, one with its mouth open, under a heat lamp.
The man was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder. SWNS

The zoo, which opened its reptile section in 2019, offers a “crocodile feeding experience” for roughly $100.

Johnson and her husband, Andy, said in a statement their “thoughts and prayers are with the boy and his family.”

“Out of respect, our tropical house will remain closed until further notice. The rest of the site will remain open,” they said.



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