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Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni reveals on hot mic she’s quit smoking



The leaders of the world’s richest democracies are talking about how to tackle some of the world’s biggest problems this week, but hot mics at the G7 summit revealed that conversations also covered lighter fare. Sports. Cigarettes. The weather. And something about Greenland?

As world leaders made their way into conference rooms at a lakeside resort, microphones set up for their weighty discussions about war and trade often caught off-the-cuff banter.

‘I’m the boss!’

President Donald Trump listens to European Council President Antonio Costa, left, at a working lunch with leaders of G7 and the Middle East in Evian-les-Bains, France, Tuesday, June 16, 2026. Christian Hartmann/Pool Reuters via AP

Trump strode in late to the final day of talks, and proclaimed “I’m the boss!” to his counterparts sitting around a large oval conference table, waiting to get started on a discussion about concerns that China is flooding export markets with subsidized products. The leaders laughed.

Meloni quit smoking

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’ s smoking habits were the subject of a hot-mic moment on Tuesday. Asked by German Chancellor Friedrich Merz if she had already had a cigarette that morning, Meloni revealed that she hadn’t smoked “since the first of May.”

Her turn against tobacco prompted enthusiastic congratulations from leaders of Canada, the United Kingdom, Japan and the European Union. Meloni raised her hands in celebration. Meanwhile, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney had a question for her.

“Do you have a patch?” Carney asked, grabbing his own arm.

(L-R) European Council President Antonio Costa, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, Italy’s Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen during a working session at the G7 summit in Evian-les-Bains, France, June 16, 2026. THIBAULT CAMUS/POOL/EPA/Shutterstock

Sports talk includes ‘Allez les bleus!’

With the World Cup underway in the United States, Mexico and Canada, soccer naturally became a fallback of discussion.

As leaders gathered for lunch on Tuesday, French President Emmanuel Macron and others weighed in. Someone shouted “Allez les bleus,” the cheer for the French team. Another leader can be heard talking about the recent Champions League victory by Paris-Saint Germain.

US President Donald Trump turned attention to the UFC cage-match event he hosted at the White House on Sunday. Trump, who sat ringside on his 80th birthday, spoke glowingly about Dana White, the CEO of UFC.

At another point on Tuesday, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer effused about Cape Verde’s surprise 0-0 draw against World Cup champion Spain. “Quite remarkable, I have to say,” he said.

French President Emmanuel Macron stands next to President Donald Trump, left, and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, center, at a working lunch with leaders of G7 and the Middle East in Evian-les-Bains, France, Tuesday, June 16, 2026. Christian Hartmann/Pool Reuters via AP

Trump makes a cryptic Greenland reference

In a moment of intrigue, Trump was caught on microphone talking with European Council President António Costa.

“You understand?” Trump said before pausing and looking squarely at Costa. “Greenland.” The start and end of the conversation was unclear.

European politicians have been outraged by Trump’s threats to acquire Greenland, a semiautonomous territory of Denmark.

(From L) Germany’s Chancellor Friedrich Merz, European Council President Antonio Costa, US President Donald Trump, France’s President Emmanuel Macron, Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney, UAE’s President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed al-Nahyan, Italy’s Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani ttend a work lunch as part of the G7 summit, in Evian, eastern France, on June 16, 2026. POOL/AFP via Getty Images

Macron loses track of time — literally

Trump added some levity after Macron appeared to have left his watch behind when he departed the group’s working lunch on Tuesday. Carney drew attention to it, saying, “He’s left his watch here. We’ve got his watch.”

“Give me it if he left, gimme,” Trump chimed in, drawing laughs from the group.

Trump gets a jersey for his birthday, and a bike

There were a few instances of gift-giving diplomacy.

Macron gave all seven of his counterparts personalized bicycles to promote the Cycling World Championships scheduled next year in the French Alps, according to David Lappartient, president of the Union Cycliste Internationale, on social media.

There was no hot mic moment to detect the reaction of Trump, who is not known to bike and has joked about doing minimal exercise beyond regular golf outings.

Merz, who recently sparred with Trump over the war in Iran, presented Trump with a German national team soccer jersey bearing Trump’s name and the number 47. Trump raised it and smiled for a photo before setting it aside.

Merz posted a photo of the exchange on social media and offered a pointed message: “After all, we’re on the same team.”



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‘Widow’s Bay’ Ending Explained: Did Tom Kill Ruth? Who’s Richard Warren’s Last Living Descendant? And What Do The Church Bells Mean?


“We Hope You Enjoyed Your Time!”

That’s the chipper farewell Widow’s Bay Season 1 bid viewers who visited creator Katie Dippold’s cursed island these past eight weeks. We came for a unique horror-comedy, and the Apple TV series delivered hearty laughs and genuine terror in spades. But we stayed for Mayor Tom Loftis (Matthew Rhys), Patricia (Kate O’Flynn), Wyck (Stephen Root), and the rest of the island’s colorful characters, who have a lot of recovering to do after Season 1’s eventful, emotional, downright haunting finale.

Written by Katie Dippold and directed by Hiro Murai, Widow’s Bay Episode 10 picked up right where “Emergency Shelter” left off. After Tom learned that Ruth (K Callan) was the last living descendant of town founder Richard Warren (Hamish Linklater), he considered sacrificing her to save residents, tourists, and his son Evan (Kingston Rumi Southwick) from Widow’s Bay’s wrath.

So did Tom kill Ruth? Is Ruth really Richard Warren’s last living descendant? What do the church bells mean in Widow’s Bay? Do the people of Widow’s Bay weather the storm? And what did Episode 10’s final scene mean?! Decider’s Widow’s Bay ending explained has answers. Just be aware that major Season 1 finale spoilers lie ahead. Don’t say we didn’t Warren you!

Widow’s Bay Ending Explained: Widow’s Bay Episode 10 Recap

When we last saw Tom, he was heading out into the storm to act on the troubling information he received during Rosemary’s (Dale Dickey) iconic genealogy presentation. He makes a pit stop to check Ruth’s medical file in hopes of finding a diagnosis that suggests she doesn’t have much time left. (He even wishes for cancer under his breath! TOM!) Much to his dismay, Ruth’s results are so positive they have a little “wow!” written beside them. He does find a note warning her not to take Oxycodone and Diazepam together, as the two drugs would have a dire interaction. With that nugget of information, he drives to Ruth’s house in a devastated trance.

Patricia radios to remind him, “You don’t have to do this!” despite Wyck’s gunshot to the back of the head stance. But Tom makes his way to Ruth’s door, where a cheery “Welcome to my Home” sign greets him; one of many wholesome personal touches that force him to question his intentions. (Shoutout to production designer Steve Arnold and the props department!) When Ruth fails to answer, he lets himself in and finds her fresh off a two-mile treadmill walk, fit as a fiddle!

Ruth assumes he’s there to escort her to the shelter and is touched. And when Tom suggests they hunker down at her home, she says, “We’ve weathered storms before, haven’t we?” (BRB, sobbing!) As Ruth showers Tom with kindness and he takes in his surroundings, he’s reminded of the full life this woman built. She’s got a photo of Evan on her fridge, for goodness sake! And her jam-packed social calendar includes Story Club and daily visits to help her friend Deirdre up and down her porch. (Again, eyes wet! Help!)

Matthew Rhys on 'Widow's Bay'
Photo: Apple TV

As Tom’s guilt grows, folks grow antsy in the shelter, where Patricia urges Dale to find them a distraction. He stumbles on a room with a projector and numerous film reels, including one labeled “FOR THEM,” which features a man in eerily good spirits speaking to “offerings” about a rigorous peer selection process. “Maybe you’ve committed a crime, or owe a debt to society, or have been found wanting in some way… you’ll never know… Accept your fate and take pride,” the man says. “Your sacrifice will save countless members of our community from needless suffering… Widow’s Bay thanks you!” YIKES.

Elsewhere, Bechir prays his wife’s contractions are a false alarm so she can give birth far away from the curse island, but the doctor reveals “the baby’s coming tonight,” seven weeks early. Bechir slips into full-on panic and searches for Tom, who’s spiraling in Ruth’s bathroom, contemplating whether he should spare her life or swipe the pills he knows she’s not supposed to mix from her medicine cabinet and poison her.

Ruth brews a pot of tea with an outrageously long 27-minute steep time, so she sets a kitchen timer and gives Tom the grand tour. First stop? Evan’s room, lovingly made up with a car poster Ruth bought at a yard sale and an emergency escape ladder he requested in case of fire (plans with friends). Though Evan promised he’d stay put in the shelter, he’s peer pressured to explore the underground tunnels — yes, the ones with the creepy death chair!

Kevin Caroll on 'Widow's Bay'
Photo: Apple TV

To kill time, Ruth flips through and old photo album and recalls her glory days as Miss Widow’s Bay, showing Tom all the people who made a pass at her. She reveals “something” got her father in the lake, noting that Widow’s Bay builds a certain resolve for enduring hardship and horrors. In an effort to quell his guilt and justify murder, Tom presents her with The Trolley Problem.

“Imagine there’s a runaway trolley barreling down the tracks [towards] a big crowd. There’s a lever you can pull that’ll divert it to a different track, where it’ll only hit one person. Would you pull the lever?” he asks. “The runaway trolley is life. The lever is me. You can’t control the bad things that happen in life, Tom. But if you pull that level, that’s a choice. I’m choosing to kill that person, and I could never do that,” she profoundly replies, sharing her favorite Tennessee Williams quote: “The world is violent and mercurial. It will have its way with you… We live in a perpetually burning building, and what we must save from it all the time is love.”

When Tom reminds her Widow’s Bay is “a house of horrors,” Ruth replies, “Life is a house of horrors. You should know that better than anyone, Tom.” She admits she worries about him because he avoids the truth instead of accepting life “in all its ugly, beautiful, terrible glory.” While her words touch Tom, when he spots the brooch that Sarah Westcott Warren gave Richard Warren’s surviving daughter and confirms she’s a descendent, he doubles down. The tea timer blares, he heads to the kitchen, and he adds the crushed up pills to Ruth’s mug.

Bechir learns why Tom is at Ruth’s house. Evan and friends find the island’s torture lair. And everyone freaks when the shelter’s speakers play a chilling message: “It’s time! Listen to your facilitator, move forward, do not beg.” What the heck does that mean? Well, Dale finds a reel labeled “FOR YOU” that breaks it down. “Be strong. Honor the pact. And remember, their sacrifice is our survival,” the man from the first video urges. “The bad times will not end until the covenant is honored, and honored fully. Life for life, the island will make its needs known. One soul for each bell toll. You will be tempted to comfort them. Do not. Their fear is necessary. They say it likes the taste. Now, let’s pray for a long and peaceful slumber.”

Stephen Root and Kate O'Flynn on 'Widow's Bay'
Photo: Apple TV

What the fuck, you might ask? Unfortunately, it’s exactly as it sounds! Each church bell chime represents a human sacrifice demanded by the island — that’s why Pastor Bryce took his own life, to selflessly spare another. If the demands aren’t met, the horrors ramp up. But if lives are given and the pact is honored, residents are spared and the island “slumbers”… until next time! Deeply disturbing footage shows shirtless people with bags over heads and hands tied being marched to their death in the tunnels. A terrified Dale returns to the crowd and screams, “THIS PLACE IS A DEATH TRAP! RUN! RUN FOR YOUR LIVES!”

Meanwhile, an emotional Tom confesses his guilt over Lauren’s death, only to lift his head and see Ruth slumped over on her couch after sipping her tea. “I’m sorry,” he tearfully says. “I had to make it right.” But when Tom walks over to her, she jolts up and resumes telling her story. The island gives him a chance to right his wrong, but after hearing screams over the radio and fearing for Evan’s safety, he grabs a pillow and returns to Ruth. Though it feels like he might try to smother her, he says, “You’re a good person, you don’t deserve this.” To counter his kind words, Ruth reveals she once had an affair with a married man who got her pregnant and everything changes…

“I gave her to him to raise with his wife as their own. I watched my baby girl grow up from afar,” she explains. As Tom’s eyes widen, Ruth confirms a major Widow’s Bay fan theory! Ruth’s daughter was Lauren, Tom’s late wife, which makes his son Evan Richard Warren’s real last living descendant!!!!!

K Callan and Matthew Rhys on 'Widow's Bay'
Photo: Apple TV

“I felt so awful after the ferry. I visited her at the Old Home as often as I could,” Ruth explains. “I told her I was the secret mommy.” (A reference to a formerly incoherent letter Lauren wrote Evan, clearly rooted in truth!) I already went long on Matthew Rhys’ Emmy-worthy Widow’s Bay performance, but my god, his acting this entire finale — as Tom’s at war with himself, trying to hide inner conflict, constantly weighing right and wrong, and processing this heartbreaking reveal — is utterly remarkable. And K Callan SHINES. Her humor! Her heart! Her comedic timing! At 90 years old, she’s still at the top of her on-screen game, and I’m thrilled Widow’s Bay gave her more room to play.

In order to end the curse, Tom realizes son would have to die. When Ruth supportively grabs his hand, he remembers she needs medical attention after sipping the toxic tea. He picks her up and settles into a warm hug, when an unexpected gunshot rings out. Ruth slips from his arms and falls to the floor. And though Wyck is the obvious choice, it’s Bechir who stands before them, gun raised, explaining, “I won’t damn my child. Patricia said you’d be ending it, but I knew you wouldn’t.”

A horrified Tom howls, “She’s not the last descendant!” and instantly regrets the admission. Bechir, a fellow protective father, asks who exactly they need to take out to lift the curse and ensure his child’s safety. But Tom refuses to give up Evan’s name — even when Bechir turns the gun on him. Speaking of Evan, his group find the torture chamber, but a man named Kenny busts them. They obey his request to leave the room, but the island’s evil entity selects Kenny as its sacrifice and locks him in. Evans furiously tries to help, but the door doesn’t unlock until he hears a scream…

A desperate Bechir is about to take action against Tom when the storm suddenly stops. Why? Unbeknownst to them, the island’s appetite is satiated. It isn’t Ruth who dies, it’s Kenny. Evan hesitantly opens the torture chamber door. Kenny’s gone, and the door believed to hold the evil entity is slightly more ajar than before. After realizing Ruth’s head was simply grazed by the bullet, Tom and Bechir race to get her to a doctor. Next time we see Widow’s Bay’s mayor, skies are suspiciously blue.

The town suffered structural damage from the storm, and its people were emotionally tested. But they ultimately survive and return to a place of calm. The final scene sees Tom park his car by the coast, leave Evan inside, and walk to the water to toss Ruth’s Warren brooch away. For a moment, all is well. But as he walks back, the church bell tolls EIGHT times, stopping him in his tracks. When Widow’s Bay returns for Season 2, eight lives will need to be given to honor the deadly pact. How will Tom and friends respond? Will they revert to the island’s sacrificial peer selection system? Will Bechir and his wife escape before she gives birth? Will Ruth survive? And will anyone learn the truth about Evan?!

“There’s loads of cliffhangers left. I feel like Dale is not going to keep that [information learned] to himself. I’d be very surprised. And I want to know what happens to Bechir and his wife,” O’Flynn told Decider when chatting about Episode 4 and Episode 8. “There’s so much in jeopardy there. So I think that there’s a lot of unanswered questions, and yet it’s a very satisfying finale.”

While we did get some crucial answers, there’s a lot we still don’t know. One thing’s for sure: The Trolley Problem isn’t so simple for Tom now that the one person on the tracks is Evan…

Stay tuned for more Widow’s Bay coverage from Decider.





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Warriors best option at No. 11 is Michigan star Yaxel Lendeborg



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 the future direction of the franchise.

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

With the 2026 NBA Draft set for Tuesday, June 23, the Golden State Warriors must target former Michigan big man Yaxel Lendeborg, the oldest player in draft.
NBAE via Getty Images

Starting with Part 1:

Yaxel Lendeborg

Age: 24

Position: Forward

Height/weight: 6-9 / 240

School: Michigan

Yaxel Lendeborg averaged 14.9 points, 7.0 rebounds, 3.3 assists, 1.2 steals, and 1.2 blocks in leading Michigan to the 2026 NCAA championship. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Why he’s a fit

The Warriors are looking for a player who can impact winning from the get-go, and who better than a consensus All-American from the national champs?

Lendeborg is the prototypical Steve Kerr draft prospect: A four-year college player, a hard-nosed defender and an offensive connector.

He averaged 14.9 points, 7.0 rebounds, 3.3 assists, 1.2 steals, and 1.2 blocks after transferring to Michigan, where he became the first Wolverine since Juwan Howard to score 20 points in three straight NCAA tournament games while leading a national title run.

Before arriving at Michigan, Lendeborg was a two-time American Conference defensive player of the year and all-conference honoree at UAB. He tested the draft waters last year but opted for the transfer portal instead, telling the Associated Press that he turned down a $7-9 million offer from Kentucky for a reported $5 million NIL deal at Michigan.

The experience provided Lendeborg more than a big stage and a big payday.

“This year at Michigan was pretty much trial and error with everything I did — press conferences, post games,” he told Mavs.com at the draft combine last month. “I’ve learned what to say, what I can’t say, actions that I can’t do.”

Simply put: Lendeborg is as polished of a final product the Warriors will find at No. 11.

Lendeborg has the largest wingspan-to-height ratio in the draft class — measuring nearly 7-foot-4. USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect

Why he’ll last until No. 11

Lendeborg took a circuitous path to becoming the oldest prospect likely to be taken in the lottery. He didn’t start playing organized basketball until he was 15 years old.

He was cut from his high school team because of poor academics and started his college career at Arizona Western — a JuCo — before beginning his climb up the ranks at UAB.

His age means NBA teams may project a lower ceiling, but Lendeborg could also be seen as a late bloomer whose relative inexperience gives him more room to grow.

NBA comp: OG Anunoby

Lendeborg is slightly undersized for an NBA big man but makes up for it with the largest wingspan-to-height ratio in the draft class — measuring nearly 7-foot-4.



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Cancer doctor says education is key to American dream


Through July 4, The Post, in conjunction with Milken Center for Advancing the American Dream, is featuring US citizens explaining what the American dream means to them in 2026. Among them is John Shen, the Medical Director of Oncology and Tertiary Care for Heritage Provider Network.

My parents immigrated from Shanghai, China. Right when they came here, they had my older sister, and then, actually, two years later I was born … They heard a lot of the stories of how people without necessarily a lot of financial resources were able to come [here], work hard, establish themselves and create opportunities for their children and future generations.

I grew up in Pasadena and went to high school at John Marshall Fundamental. After that I went to college at Stanford University. I studied biological sciences and …  went on to medical school at the University of California, Irvine. After medical school, I went on to my medical residency at Cedar-Sinai Medical Center, and, after that, I went on to my fellowship in hematology oncology and geriatric medicine at UCLA, where I’ve recently joined the faculty there as an attending.


Headshot of John Shen, Medical Director of Oncology and Tertiary Care, Heritage Provider Network.
John Shen is the Medical Director of Oncology and Tertiary Care for Heritage Provider Network. Milken Center

I think access to education is the great equalizer. Education comes in many forms. It’s structured, it’s unstructured. It’s in the classroom, it’s through the world [and] experiences. 

I think having access to education in a formalized setting — but more importantly, also, a less formal setting, social interactions, meeting others, hearing about others’ work, learning about new opportunities, being able to pursue them and contribute to them — is really how I see our youth flourishing and developing their minds, and their futures.

I think America being the hodgepodge that it is, people coming from all walks of life, many different countries, cultures, religions and backgrounds, that collaboration, and being able to, go to a university setting where everyone can interact on an equal playing field and share ideas …  is really what expands ideas and, and makes new ideas pop up.


John Shen, Medical Director of Oncology and Tertiary Care, Heritage Provider Network.
Shen’s parents came to the US from China in search of more opportunities. Milken Center

I’d say philanthropy is really important for the American dream … part of the reason I went into medicine was because … it’s incredibly important to have ongoing access to health[care], no matter what your background or means are. I believe strongly in that.

The American Dream Video Project showcases real stories that illuminate pathways to opportunity. Featured at the Milken Center for Advancing the American Dream (MCAAD), this series is part of the Center’s celebration of America’s 250th anniversary. MCAAD is Washington, DC’s newest cultural institution, offering interactive exhibits and stories about achieving the American Dream. For more information, visit mcaad.org.



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Romeo Beckham fined for using phone behind wheel of Porsche 911



The model, 23, was spotted in Westminster at a red light with a dog loose in the supercar.



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Lionel Messi’s cryptic explanation for tears after first World Cup goal


These tears carried a different meaning.

After Lionel Messi scored the first goal of his historic hat trick Tuesday night in Argentina’s World Cup opener, the soccer legend teared up and held his jersey to his eyes.

While those watching may have assumed the emotion of starting his potential last World Cup in such a manner perhaps overwhelmed the 38-year-old, Messi instead offered a cryptic response.


Soccer player wiping his face with his jersey, showcasing his abdomen and arm tattoos, with blurred spectators in the background.
Lionel Andres Messi (Argentina) scores and celebrates his teams first goal during Group J FIFA World Cup 2026, Argentina and Algeria, Kansas Stadium, Kansas, United States on June 16 2026. NurPhoto via Getty Images

“My tears after the first goal? I’ve had some tough days. It wasn’t related to football. And those feelings were because of that,” Messi said in Spanish after the 3-0 win over Algeria, according to the Associated Press. “I thank my teammates, the coaching staff and the delegation for helping me.”

Messi did not elaborate on the “tough days” he’s experienced leading into his sixth World Cup appearance, and he had his family — wife Antonela Roccuzzo and his three sons, Thiago, Mateo and Ciro — in attendance Tuesday night for his iconic showing.

He dealt with a minor hamstring suffered with Inter Miami before the Cup started, but one would not have known watching him dominate on Tuesday night.

Messi’s three-goal performance now has him tied with Germany’s Miroslav Klose for the most scores in tournament history, and be became the second player to score in five different tournaments, per the AP.

He’s also scored in five straight Cup games.

“It makes me very happy to have lived through everything that came my way. What I’m living though now is the cherry on top,” Messi said, according to the AP.

“I’m very happy an grateful for this wonderful group. I enjoy it so much.”

Messi scored his first goal Tuesday in the 17th minute, added the second in the 60th and registered his first career World Cup hat trick in the 76th minute at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City.


Every match of the FIFA World Cup will air on either FOX or FOX Sports 1. If you don’t have cable, you can take advantage of a DIRECTV free trial to stream it all.

Prefer to check out the action live and in person? Shop World Cup 2026 tickets on SeatGeek and make sure to use promo code NYPOST10 for $10 off purchases over $250 at checkout if you’re a first-time SeatGeek user.


He received a standing ovation after leading, and now has at least two more matches — and likely more — in his quest to score his record-breaking 17th World Cup goal.


Lionel Messi in an Argentina jersey, smiling and pointing to the right.
Argentina’s Lionel Messi celebrates scoring their first goal on June 16, 2026. REUTERS

“This is my sixth World Cup, and I still feel like I’m in good shape,” Messi said, per the AP.

“Fortunately, I’m doing well, and today we managed to win a tough match. It’s important to start the tournament with a victory in the first game, as that’s never easy in a World Cup.”



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Instructor charged in death of bungee jumper Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freitas joked about throwing bodies off bridge: report



One of the bungee jumping instructors charged in the death of a student in Brazil previously joked about throwing bodies off the bridge, filming a sick stunt at the same site where the young woman recently lost her life.

Luis Felipe Feliciano Egoroff, 32, filmed and shared a video on Instagram showing him and other instructors hurling a black bag made to look like a dead body off of Skeleton Bridge, reported Brazilian outlet O Globo.

The video, titled “Hiding the body,” was posted on social media in September 2022, almost four years before the death of 21-year-old Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freitas, who was thrown off the bridge in Limeira, São Paulo state, without a safety rope on Saturday.

The dark video is called “Hiding the body,” and was posted nearly four years before Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freitas’ death. @luisfelipeegoroff/Instagram
Luis Felipe Feliciano Egoroff — one of the three men arrested after the death of Maria Eduarda Rodrigues — was a part of making the video where he joked about death and the risks involved in the jump. EPTV

The twisted clip has resurfaced in the wake of de Freitas’s death, with many social media users slamming it as poor taste and tagging local authorities, including the São Paulo Civil Police and Public Prosecutor’s Office.

“Prophetic, it finally happened. The girl died as rehearsed… There are things that we shouldn’t play with at all,” one user wrote.

It isn’t clear if the other instructors featured in the dark joke video are Egoroff’s fellow suspects, Vitor de Freitas Gonçalves, 27, and Maicon Fernandes Cintra, 42, who have also been charged with de Freitas’s death.

Luis Felipe Feliciano Egoroff, Vitor de Freitas Gonçalves, and Maicon Fernandes Cintra have been charged with the 21-year-old’s death. Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freitas / Instagram

On Tuesday, the trio was transferred from a regional prison to another detention center in São Paulo at the request of their lawyer.

This was done to “preserve the physical integrity of the accused,” their attorney, Rafael Gomes dos Santos, told O Globo.



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Abuse hurled at judge as first group of rioters sentenced for Ely disorder



The deaths of teenagers Kyrees Sullivan and Harvey Evans in 2023 sparked hours of violence and vandalism.



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Oliver Tree’s producer reveals he was meant to be on doomed helicopter flight



Oliver Tree‘s producer Victor WAO revealed he was meant to be on the doomed helicopter flight that killed the musician and five other people.

“I was supposed to be with you guys in that helicopter, and I didn’t go at the last second,” Victor wrote in a translated heartbreaking tribute, referring to his late best friend, music producer Lucas Frota, who also passed away in the crash.

“You told me that since I was scared [of flying], you had managed to get a car to take me to Angra and someone else would go in my place,” he added.

waoofficial/Instagram
Victor WAO / Instagram

“Now I owe you my life, brother. I don’t know what to do at this moment. I love you so much! I will never forget you! Lucas, you were pure light!”

In another post, Victor said he would “never forget” Lucas, whom he called the “most enlightened and wonderful person I have ever known!”

“I am heartbroken, but I am praying for you wherever you are,” he added.

waoofficial/Instagram
AFP via Getty Images

Frota, 24, Tree, 32. Lucas Vignale, 29, Gaspar Prim (also known as Argentinian YouTuber Gaspi), 23, and pilots Alexandre Souza and Charles Marsillac all lost their lives this past Sunday when two helicopters collided mid-air in Rio de Janeiro.

Harrowing video showed that one of the aircrafts plunged directly into the parking lot of a car dealership, setting at least 20 electric vehicles ablaze.

The local Civil Police informed CNN that the case is under investigation and that a forensic examination of the scene has been requested. A police investigator said it’s believed human error may have been to blame.

Tree was in South America as part of his The World’s First World Tour.

@FABIOYUKIOJAPA via REUTERS
MediaPunch / BACKGRID

A day before he passed away, Tree beamed as he documented his fun-filled day in Brazil, which included soccer, riding bikes, haircuts and cooking.

The video was captioned: “Gringo 24 horas no Brasil,” which translates to: “Foreigner 24 hours in Brazil.”

Back in April, Tree eerily joked that his family would not receive any money from his will when he died.

“I don’t believe that any of the wealth, or the things that get made from it, is mine,” the singer said on the April 24 episode of the “Zach Sang Show.”

Instagram/@iae.break
Getty Images for iHeartRadio

“So when I die, my will is set up that when I pass, my family, no one’s going to get a penny,” he added.

Tree, who was single and did not have any children at the time of his passing, said that if he had a wife or kids, they would “not [get] a f–king penny.”

“I’ll get my kids through college. That’s the agreement,” he continued.

“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 declared.



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World Cup 2026: How Luka Modric and Croatia continue to defy the odds


It would, however, take 20 years for Croatia to emerge from the group stage of a World Cup again, bettering the original golden generation by reaching the final in Russia in 2018. But the seeds had long been planted.

Jozak, whose own professional career was cut short by injuries, held a number of coaching roles with Dinamo Zagreb’s youth teams before at various stages becoming the club’s academy director, sports director and most notably technical director of the Croatian Football Federation (CFF).

He was still a young coach leading Dinamo’s second team when Modric joined as a 16-year-old from Zadar, having been overlooked by Hajduk Split.

“He was always a good guy, well-educated, humble,” explains Jozak. “He wasn’t a doubt, because we always saw something in him.

“But you couldn’t say ‘Listen, he’s going to be a superstar’, because he was short and skinny and how are you going to say this guy is going to be dominating the world, right?

“He was always reliable in the way that you can put him on the team, he’s not going to lose the ball where he’s not supposed to lose it. He’s always going to fight, he’s always going to run, he’s going to deliver.

“But he wasn’t even in the top three prospects at that time.”

The young midfielder, obsessed with his hair, was sent on loan to Zrinjski Mostar of the Bosnian Premier League to earn first-team exposure, before spending a season in Croatia with Inter Zapresic.

“Football is very unpredictable, personality-wise,” says Jozak. “His personality drove him. Spending one year in Bosnia made him tougher. He literally survived.

“He was a kid, he was skinny and young, but he had this drive, he had this hunger – like a bull terrier, he wanted to rip off every potential tackle and duel he was confronted with.”



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