Welcome, Tom Llamas, to TV's Never-Ending Evening-News BattleNew Foto - Welcome, Tom Llamas, to TV's Never-Ending Evening-News Battle

Tom Llamas has no formal training in juggling, buthis new assignment for NBC Newswill have him working to keep some very big plates spinning in the air. When Llamastakes over the "NBC Nightly News" desk from Lester Holt on Monday night, one of his first jobs will be to ensure that the program's audience barely notices, even if a transition in such a program is one of the more seismic things that happens on TV. He will do it even as he keeps his old job, anchoring "Top Story,"an hour-long streaming program for the broadband outlet NBC News Nowthat starts the minute "Nightly" ends Monday through Friday. More from Variety Lester Holt Ends 10-Year Run as 'NBC Nightly News' Anchor With Hopeful Sign-Off: 'Facts Matter, Words Matter, Journalism Matters and You Matter' Lester Holt Will Exit NBC's 'Nightly,' but Not News: 'I Still Had Gas in the Tank' NBC News Uses Kentucky Derby for New Swing at Sports Coverage "It's funny, but most of the questions I've received"since NBC News announced his new rolehave focused on "'How are you going to do that?"' says Llamas during a recent interview withVariety. "I remind people that 'Today' is four hours straight every single day." The key, says the 45-year-old self-effacing correspondent, is to prove to audiences that he is representing them in a world whereeven the simple act of delivering the news has become increasingly complex. "I want viewers never to forget that we're out there working for them. I truly believe that even though I work for NBC, I work for the viewer," he says. "I really want that to come through, because at the end of the day, viewers have to trust you." Executives at NBC News believe that by naming Llamas the "Nightly" anchor, they are giving viewers something they really want. Here, after all, is someone who,before coming to NBC, was the weekend anchor for ABC News' "World News Tonight," the nation's most-watched evening-news program. Llamas was widely seen as a top candidate to succeed that show's current anchor, David Muir — with one notable caveat. Muir is only 51,and, given his  status in the ratings, seems unlikely to leave the role anytime soon. Now Llamas can anchor the evening news as well, and there is some reason for internal optimism.A recent revamp of "CBS Evening News"that uses two anchors and has shifted focus to enterprise and feature reportinghas not been well-received,with Nielsen showing that both "Nightly" and "World News" have picked up audience share. Executives have also been enthused by a performance by Llamas on March 7, when he filled in for Holt on "Nightly" and won more viewers among people between 25 and 54 — the crowd advertisers desire most in news programs — than Muir did for the evening. Muir has typically trumped Llamas in that audience category by 21% when the two have gone head-to-head, according to Nielsen data. ABC News certainly seems aware of Llamas' new tenure on "Nightly." The Disney-backed news division recentlymade Muir available for a profile in "People"in the days ahead of Llamas' new start. "I have a lot of admiration and respect for David, and I'm looking forward to going up against him every night," says Llamas. "I'm sure he is as well." "Nightly" viewers won't see any overhauls or shakeups to the format they know well, a nod, perhaps, to the challenges CBS News has faced. "We really started this with tremendous respect for our audience. Many of our viewers grew up watching 'Nightly'" with anchors including Tom Brokaw or Brian Williams, says Janelle Rodriguez, executive vice president of programming for NBC News, during an interview. "There is a visceral and emotional connection to the broadcast." Indeed, some new segments ought to appeal to broader audiences. One early effort will have NBC News correspondents probing something every American can relate to, no matter their background. "We are going to take a very sharp and tough look at the insurance industry," Llamas says. "People across this country from all walks of life are having issues" with the effects of being denied coverage. In one coming report, a man with liver cancer who was denied coverage for an experimental treatment was able to get it after NBC News examined the circumstances. "I come from local news," says Llamas. "I don't want to lean back." NBC's "Nightly" will also start to ramp up coverage tied to the nation's 250thbirthday in 2026, with nods to memorable places and people. "Whether you are Republican or you are Democrat or you are independent," says Llamas, the reports will spotlight subject in which viewers should have natural interest. Llamas is only the fourth person to anchor "Nightly" in 40 years and says he has reached out to many of his predecessors for advice and counsel. But it's not the position he expected to have when he was 15 years old and working as an overnight production assistant at WSCV, a Telemundo station in Miami. "Whatever they wanted me to do, I would do," recalls Llamas. "You're getting coffee, answering phones, running the teleprompter, going to our crime scenes, interviewing local officials." He had to enlist his mother for car rides until he got his driver's license. Now he's taking the desk at a fraught time for the TV-news business. The massive audiences that once made a habit of TV news have splintered across dozens of different video sources and the media companies that run the news operations are facing new economic pressures and political scrutiny. Such factors play a big role in the decision to have Llamas continue with his streaming duties. "I think the way you survive is by being everywhere," says Llamas. NBC intends to push "Top Story" viewers to watch "Nightly," and vice-versa, says Rodriguez. "We see this as an opportunity" to bridge any gaps between different generations of viewers, she says, and to "create a lot of cross currents between the two shows." As for politics, Llamas says such stuff is beyond his control. All he can do is get the news out. "You just have to focus on the news and focus on your job, and just remember, it's never about you," he says. "It's not about you." Part of the mission is to keep "Nightly" viable for future generations, particularly as news aficionados get more thrown at them each day via digital and social outlets. "There is just such a flood of info out there and on the one hand yes that' s scattering audiences across multiple platforms, but it is all creating an even bigger need for people to have curated, thought-out contextualized well-produced journalism format that makes the best use their time," says Rodriguez. Such a show "will only become more important as time goes on," she adds. That's a heavy load to carry on the first week of a new job, but Llamas appears ready to get started. "I'm going to have to make sure my energy level is peaking at 6:30. I may have to have a little Cuban coffee at 6:29," he says, "After that, I mean, we're off to the races." Best of Variety What's Coming to Netflix in June 2025 New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week 'Harry Potter' TV Show Cast Guide: Who's Who in Hogwarts? Sign up forVariety's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us onFacebook,Twitter, andInstagram.

Welcome, Tom Llamas, to TV’s Never-Ending Evening-News Battle

Welcome, Tom Llamas, to TV's Never-Ending Evening-News Battle Tom Llamas has no formal training in juggling, buthis new assignment for N...
Taylor Swift and Selena Gomez Celebrate in N.Y.C. 1 Day After Swift Gets Back Her Music Rights (Exclusive Photos)New Foto - Taylor Swift and Selena Gomez Celebrate in N.Y.C. 1 Day After Swift Gets Back Her Music Rights (Exclusive Photos)

Kevin Mazur/Getty; Amy Sussman/Getty Taylor Swift and Selena Gomez reunited for a girls' night out on May 31 The pop stars dined at a restaurant in New York City Swift and Gomez have been friends for years, after they first crossed paths when they were each dating a Jonas brother back in 2008 "Long Live"Taylor SwiftandSelena Gomez'sfriendship! Swift, 35, and Gomez, 32, reunited fora girls' night outin New York City on Saturday, May 31. The pair could be seen engaged in conversation while dining together at The Monkey Bar, according to photos obtained byDeuxmoi. For the evening out, Swift wore a black dress, while Gomez sported an all brown ensemble, including a large coat. Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Christopher Polk/Variety via Getty Swift and Gomez have been good friends for years. They first crossed paths when they were each dating a Jonas brother back in 2008. (Swift was seeing Joe Jonas, whileGomez was linked to Nick Jonas). Over the years, the stars have celebrated each other on various occasions — frommarking their birthdaystopromoting each other's latest music releases— as well ascheering each other onat award shows. The PEOPLE Puzzler crossword is here! How quickly can you solve it? Play now! Swift and Gomez have also been there for each other amid their respective romantic relationships.The Tortured Poets Departmentmusician is currently datingTravis Kelce, while the Rare Beauty founder is engaged toBenny Blanco. While recently appearing onSpotify'sCountdown to, Gomez and Blanco, 37, opened up about how theywent to a party Swift threwafter an awards show, before anyone knew the couple was dating. Raymond Hall/GC Images Swift's Big Apple outing with Gomez came days after the pop star announced that shefinally owns her masters— which allows her to once again be in control of her music catalog after a public ownership feud involving record executiveScooter Braun. "You belong with me. 💚💛💜❤️🩵🖤," Swift cleverly captioned anInstagram carouselat the time, including a nod to her 2008 hit of the same name from her albumFearless. The PEOPLE Appis now available in the Apple App Store! Download it now for the most binge-worthy celeb content, exclusive video clips, astrology updates and more! Swift's post featured three photos of her sitting on the floor of a portrait studio, surrounded by her first six albums. (During the years-long battle for ownership of her music, Swift famously re-recorded those LPs as "Taylor's Version.") Gomezcelebrated her BFFafter she made the news public, writing in an Instagram Stories post, "Yes you did that Tay. So proud!" Read the original article onPeople

Taylor Swift and Selena Gomez Celebrate in N.Y.C. 1 Day After Swift Gets Back Her Music Rights (Exclusive Photos)

Taylor Swift and Selena Gomez Celebrate in N.Y.C. 1 Day After Swift Gets Back Her Music Rights (Exclusive Photos) Kevin Mazur/Getty; Amy Sus...
Veterans fume after VA partially blames them for overpayments it claws backNew Foto - Veterans fume after VA partially blames them for overpayments it claws back

Christopher Praino signed a waiver relinquishing his disability compensation from the Department of Veterans Affairs after he was ordered to active duty in fall 2019. In a letter, the VA confirmed it would terminate his roughly $965 monthly payments because, by law, he could not receive both VA benefits and active-duty pay at the same time. But the agency did not fully halt the payments. Instead, it sent various monthly amounts over the next three years, ranging from $0 to over $2,000, Praino's records show. "The VA never stopped," he said, "after response after response, call after call, walk-in after walk-in." In 2023, despite Praino's repeated efforts to rectify the inconsistent installments that should have ended years ago, the VA informed him in a letter that he owed nearly $68,000. That year, the government began automatically clawing some of the money out of his military paychecks, which he uses to support five children and his wife, leaving him in dire financial straits. "No words can tell you the emotional, mental and physical heartache I have every day dealing with this," he said. "It's eating away at me." In a recent congressional oversight hearing focused onwhy the VA regularly overpays veterans and then asks for the money back, agency officials partially blamed veterans for the exorbitant errors, telling lawmakers that some veterans have been failing to report eligibility changes that would have lowered their monthly disability compensation or pension payments. But Praino and two other veterans told NBC News they did notify the VA in a timely manner. Yet, records show the agency continued overpaying them for months, sometimes years, before asking for the money back. The long-delayed adjustments, which can cause veterans to incur life-changing debts, may indicate another operational shortfall at the VA weeks after officials testified that the agency doles out about $1 billion in overpayments each year due to administrative errors and other factors. The VA overpaid about $5.1 billion in disability compensation and pension payments from fiscal year 2021 to fiscal year 2024, according to Rep. Morgan Luttrell, R-Texas, who chairs the House Subcommittee on Disability Assistance and Memorial Affairs. The issue is recurring and getting worse, Luttrell told NBC News, even as the Trump administration hascut billions of dollars in grantsandslashed thousands of federal jobsin an attempt to trim what it sees as waste and inefficiency in federal spending. "It's not the veterans' fault," Luttrell said. "It's the system that is failing." In a statement, VA press secretary Peter Kasperowicz said the agency, under new leadership, is "working hard to fix longstanding problems, such as billions of dollars per year in overpayments." Luttrell said the overpayment issue is complex, largely stemming from tiers of human error and an outdated computer system that he said does not adequately allow information to be shared between local and national VA offices. "You have to get the software to talk to each other. You have to get the veterans to communicate. You have to get the actors inside the VA to move accordingly, and then you have to make sure the system is lined out as it needs to be," he said. "That is such a complex problem set to solve." In 2015, after his divorce was finalized, veteran Brent Aber said he went to his local VA's office in Akron, Ohio, to remove his ex-wife as a dependent. "I thought, OK, all is done," he said. Aber said it felt like he was officially closing a difficult chapter in his life. But eight years later, another nightmare emerged when the national VA's Debt Management Center sent him a letter, notifying him that he had to pay back more than $17,700. Aber, who served in both the Navy and Army for a dozen years, said he called the VA to find out how he accrued this debt. He said he was told that different VA computer systems do not communicate with one another, meaning the dependent removal may have never been registered nationally, and his monthly payments had not decreased as they should have. Kasperowicz, the VA spokesperson, disputed claims made by Aber and Luttrell about the computer systems, saying the VA has had a centralized claims system since 2013 that "ensures updated information is reflected" for each veteran. Upon follow-up, Luttrell could not be reached for comment on the VA's dispute. Kasperowicz did not offer an explanation as to what happened in Aber's case and said the VA has no record of his dependent change request from 2015. Aber said he spent more than a year fighting the recoupment and claimed financial hardship. But in May, the VA began withholding nearly $500 from his monthly compensation payments until the debt is cleared. To make up for the loss, Aber, who lost both of his legs in a training accident and is now mostly bedridden, said he stopped using a house cleaning service and is mostly eating cheaper, microwavable food. "I provided all the paperwork at the time of the divorce, but that didn't seem to matter," he said. The 50-year-old said the VA's recoupment hurts more as he fights for medical care. He said he has been struggling with severe pain and swelling since he underwent revision surgery on his limbs about two years ago with the hopes of getting fitted again for prosthetics. While Aber said his primary care doctor referred him to an orthopedic surgeon with expertise in double amputations, he said the VA denied the referral. Kasperowicz said the "entirety of the VA Northeast Ohio Healthcare System orthopedic section" and other health care providers have evaluated Aber and "all have agreed that there are no additional surgical options that would provide him pain relief or improved function." "The medical consensus is to continue amputee clinic, physical therapy, pain management and behavioral health treatments to address the complexity of his condition," Kasperowicz said. Aber said the double battle he has been waging against the VA has left him feeling frustrated and betrayed. "I feel like I've been completely done wrong," he said. In Bonaire, Georgia, veteran John Mullens reported a dependent change in February after his 18-year-old son became eligible for a separate VA educational benefit that provides monthly payments to cover the cost of school. By law, veterans cannot receive both benefits at the same time, which Mullens knew from his own research. NBC News reviewed records from his VA portal, showing he filed a request to remove a dependent on Feb. 18. The claim was assigned to a reviewer on Feb. 19, the portal shows. And there were no other updates until May when Mullens received a letter from the VA, alerting him to the duplicate payments, which the VA said resulted in about $340 in overpayments each month. "They did nothing with the information and continued to overpay me," Mullens, 55, said. "The processes are broken." Kasperowicz said it currently takes an average of about 21 days for the VA to remove a dependent and an average of about 91 days to add one. Of the nearly $1.4 billion overpaid in fiscal year 2021, Kasperowicz said about $913 million was related to dependent changes. The VA does not track data showing how many veterans in overpayment cases actually did report changes on time, Kasperowicz said. The overpayments sometimes span many years. In 2023, the VA temporarily suspended the collection of pension debts for thousands of low-income wartime veterans and their survivors after the agency identified an issue with its income verification that led to overpayments between 2011 and 2022. On May 14, Luttrell and other members of the House subcommittee pressed VA officials to explain how the agency planned to fix the problem. Nina Tann, executive director of the VA's compensation service, testified that the agency, which serves about 9.1 million people, has a "heightened risk" of making improper payments due to the large number of beneficiaries and the high-dollar amounts it doles out. Tann said the agency has taken steps to prevent, detect and correct the issue, including being better about notifying veterans that they need to report changes. Tann also said the VA fixed an administrative error in January that had been causing duplicate payments for about 15,000 veterans with dependents in fiscal year 2024. The agency did not force those veterans to repay the money, she said. Kasperowicz said the VA does not seek to recoup overpayments when administrative errors, including issues related to theVA's online filing platform, are to blame. But Praino, who owes almost $68,000 after re-enlisting, said it has been challenging to prove the VA made an administrative error. "They will not admit any mistake," said Praino, 42, an Army sergeant first class, who has been serving in the National Guard full time since 2019. The VA did not immediately comment on Praino's case. The VA transferred Praino's debt to the Treasury Department, which notified Praino in a December 2023 letter that it is required to withhold up to 15% of his federal wages. The Treasury Department began automatically garnishing about $800 from his monthly paychecks in 2023, according to documents provided by Praino. Praino, who is based in Georgia, now takes home about $3,800 a month, which he said barely covers the rent. With car payments, student loans and other expenses and bills, Praino said he has been racking up his credit card with essential purchases like food for his family. Praino said he has post-traumatic stress disorder, depression and traumatic brain injury after first serving in the Navy from 2001 to 2003 and then in the Army. "When you add a financial crisis to the mix, and you're continuing to serve, which is always a high-stress environment 24/7, my emotional state, my mental state, it is a wreck," he said.

Veterans fume after VA partially blames them for overpayments it claws back

Veterans fume after VA partially blames them for overpayments it claws back Christopher Praino signed a waiver relinquishing his disability ...
Hurricane season is here, and the nation's top forecaster has an urgent messageNew Foto - Hurricane season is here, and the nation's top forecaster has an urgent message

No one could have foreseenhow traumatic Hurricane Helene would befor so many people in so many states, but it underscores precisely why National Hurricane Center Director Michael Brennan stresses individual preparation forhurricane season, which begins June 1. The biggest thing people need to know is their own risk – from storm surge, wind, heavy rainfall, flooding, tornadoes and rip currents – regardless of how far they live from where a tropical storm or hurricane makes landfall, Brennan says.Helene and its aftermath,which killed 248 and caused almost $80 billion in damage, clearly demonstrated how destruction can occur miles inland or far from landfall. "Getting ready for hurricane season is all about knowing that risk and starting the hurricane season ready for what that risk might be and how it might present itself to you,"Brennan said in a chatwith USA TODAY about what people need to know and do as the season begins. If he could speak with each one of the more than 200 millionpeople who face hurricane risksin the United States, he would remind them to stay focused on: Your risks,especially for storm surgeand flooding. Early planning and preparation. The hazards of each storm. Conditions immediately after the storm. Here are eight things Brennan wants you to remember: If you live ina storm surge zone, evacuation must be the basis of your hurricane preparedness plan, Brennan said. Consult your local government's website to find out if you live in an evacuation zone. It's important to understand you don't have to drive hundreds of miles to escape the danger of rapidly rising seawater. Most of the time, you can drive only tens of miles to get out of the storm surge evacuation zone, he said. "It makes evacuation a lot more manageable for people if you don't feel like you're going to have to get in the car and drive hours and hours to go someplace you've never been before to be safe." In advance, ask friends and relatives who live nearby but away from the surge threat, if you could stay with them. The other option is to plan to "get to a safe hotel that gets you away from the storm surge threat, where you can ride out the storm and then deal with the aftermath." Start planning nowwhat you would do for your pets, elderly relatives and other folks that might have medical devices, medical conditions or other special needs. Flooding has almost nothing to do with how strong a storm is from a wind perspective, Brennan said. "It doesn't take a major hurricane, or even a hurricane, to cause life-threatening rainfall or flooding where you live. It canflood anywhere it can rain. "It doesn't even have to rain where you are," he said. It can just rain hard somewhere else upstream, and if you're on a waterway, that water could rise and flood you out of your home. "Freshwater flooding from rainfall has killed more people in tropical storms or hurricanes over the last nine or 10 years in the United States than any other hazard," he said. "Helene is an unfortunate example of that." Of 175 people who died as a direct result of Helene's winds and rain, 95 lost their lives because of freshwater flooding, he said. If you live in a flood-prone area, even inland along a creek or a stream, have an evacuation plan for you and your family if you are threatened. Have flood insurance. Remember that homeowners insurance doesn't usually cover flood damage. If you think you've seen the worst where you live from flooding or wind, it is "almost positively not the worst," Brennan said. "It's likely that the events you've seen are only a small piece of what could actually happen. Don't base your response or decision to evacuate based what happened during the last storm. "Take each storm on its own and try not to compare," he said. You could have a very similar storm, on a similar track, but during a different time of year, or different conditions, and it could make a huge difference in what happens where you live. "There were a lot of people that died in Hurricane Katrina along the Mississippi coast because they survived Camille and they thought nothing could ever be worse," but Katrina was worse and people didn't leave, he said. "You don't want to become a victim to a past storm by not preparing and taking action when another storm threatens you." "The most powerful hurricanes that have hit the United States have all formed and made landfall within three or four days," Brennan said. "Even Helene last year went from not even a tropical depression to making landfall within three or four days after it rapidly intensified." Have that plan in place for yourself and your family now, he said. "You could have a storm really develop and threaten you within just a couple of days, and that's not the time to develop your hurricane plan. That's when you want to put (the plan) into practice." How do hurricanes form?An inside look at the birth and power of ferocious storms "If you're in a hurricane-prone area, you have to be ready every year, regardless of whether we're expecting an average season, below average, above average. That risk is there for everyone every year," he said. "We had three hurricane landfalls in Florida last year, five along the Gulf Coast. We've had 25 hurricane landfalls in the United States since 2017." "We have lots of products to tell people what their risk is from wind,storm surge and from heavy rainfall flooding," Brennan said. "The mix of those hazards is going to vary from storm to storm and from location to location within the same storm. You really have to drill down and find that information." A slow-moving tropical storm can cause deadly flooding even without ever becoming a hurricane, and a fast-moving storm like Helene can carry higher winds much farther inland. "A storm making landfall along the Gulf Coast can cause dangerous flooding in the Mid-Atlantic states, like we saw with Ida back in 2021," he said. Ida made landfall in Louisiana, but most of the fatalities were up in New York and New Jersey from freshwater flooding days later and hundreds of miles away from landfall. "Make sure you know where to find authoritative information in terms of evacuations and other safety information," Brennan said. "Make those decisions now, ahead of the storm." Find your trusted media, yourlocal National Weather Service office, your state and local government officials, and follow them on social media. When deciding whether to evacuate, consider what life could be like after the storm. Does anyone in your home rely on electricity for medical devices or to keep medicine refrigerated? Do you have a generator and know how to use it safely? Over the past nine or 10 years, "we've lost almost as many peoplein these indirect deaths that largely occur after a storm as we have to the direct storm itself," he said. Many of those are due to an unsafe environment, including the loss of electricity. Medical devices fail. Heat causes fatalities. First responders often can't reach those having medical emergencies. One of the biggest causes of death after storms are vehicle accidents, he said. "When you've been asked to leave, it's to keep you safe from the storm surge or other effects of the storm. It's also to keep you safe after the storm." Dinah Voyles Pulver, a national correspondent for USA TODAY, writes about hurricanes, violent weather and other environmental issues. Reach her at dpulver@usatoday.com or @dinahvp on Bluesky or X or dinahvp.77 on Signal. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:NHC director has urgent message as hurricane seasons starts

Hurricane season is here, and the nation's top forecaster has an urgent message

Hurricane season is here, and the nation's top forecaster has an urgent message No one could have foreseenhow traumatic Hurricane Helene...
See Where the Cast of "The Karate Kid "Is Now (and Who Reprises Their Role in the Latest Installment)

Alamy Wax on, wax off ... On June 22, 1984, audiences were first introduced to Los Angeles' new kid, Daniel LaRusso (Ralph Macchio), who learned both karate skills and lasting life lessons from the insightful Mr. Miyagi (Noriyuki "Pat" Morita). The film became a smash hit, earning over $100 million worldwide and kicking off a multi-film franchise known as the "Miyagi verse." Whilethe 2010 rebootstarringJackie ChanandJaden Smithoffered a standalone story centered on kung fu,The Karate Kid,Part II(1986),Part III(1989),The Next Karate Kid(1994) and the Netflix seriesCobra Kaiall exist within the same shared universe. Now, both worldsare set to collidewith the newest installment,Karate Kid: Legends, which hits theaters on May 30, 2025. Legendsreunites Macchio's Daniel and Chan's Mr. Han as they train their new prodigy, Li Fong (Ben Wang). "Seeing how important Li Fong is to Mr. Han and Daniel's relationship to Miyagi — there's a parallel there," Macchio said in afirst-look teaser. "And now, combining those worlds in an authentic way, the kung fu and karate, it's something fresh." Ahead of the release ofLegends, here's a look back at where everything started (after all, "balance is key") and see where the original stars are today — and which onesreprised their rolesalong the way. Photo 12/Alamy; Sean Zanni/Getty Macchio was best known for his role as Johnny Cade in 1983'sThe Outsidersbefore playing Daniel LaRusso, the new kid at his L.A. high school. After Daniel is bullied by his classmates, he is encouraged to take karate lessons to defend himself. Apart from scoring another starring role in the 1992 hit comedyMy Cousin Vinny, Macchio has appeared on series and reality TV shows, includingUgly Betty,How I Met Your Mother,The DeuceandDancing with the Stars. Embracing the impact of his workinThe Karate Kid, Macchio went on to reprise the same character inPart II,Part IIIandLegends, as well as onCobra Kaifrom 2018 to 2025. "I knew of the impact ofThe Karate Kidfilm for decades and decades and how it's a piece of pop culture and a piece of your childhood. So I knew it was beloved. I knew the characters were beloved ... It's equal parts nostalgia and, kinda now, contemporary relevance," he said during a 2022appearance onJimmy Kimmel Live!"When I get 8- and 10-year-old kids that are inspired by these characters and the themes of that movie, there's only one thing to do: Embrace it." Off-screen, Macchio has been married to nurse practitionerPhyllis Fierrosince 1987. Together, theyshare two children: sonDaniel(named after hisKarate Kidcharacter) and daughter Julia (who had a role on season 4 ofCobra Kai, playing Daniel LaRusso's cousin). In 2022, Macchio told PEOPLE how proud he was watching Julia on the set ofCobra Kai. "She knocked it out of the park," he said. "I was the proud father on setthat day. As soon as she ran our first take, everybody was like, 'Holy crap, she's got this character.' " Macchio received a star next to the late Morita on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2024. He was joined by family and friends, and formerKarate KidandCobra KaicostarsWilliam ZabkaandTamlyn Tomitaspoke at the celebration. "I've just learned to be so gratefuland appreciative at this age in my life, absorbing and learning and sharing the wisdom that I've gained from others, paying that legacy forward, whether that be with the young cast ofCobra Kaior friends of my kids," Macchio said at the ceremony. United Archives GmbH/Alamy; Rocky Widner/NBAE/Getty Morita played the iconic role of Mr. Miyagi, a maintenance worker in the LaRussos' new apartment building. However, Mr. Miyagi also has a secret: He's a karate expert. BeforeThe Karate Kid, Morita was already recognizable for his portrayal of Matsuo "Arnold" Takahashi onHappy Daysfrom 1975 to 1983. Still,The Karate Kidwas the actor's career-defining role. Morita was nominated for anOscarfor Best Supporting Actor in 1985 for his performance as Miyagi. He reprised his role as Mr. Miyagi in bothKarate Kidsequels, as well as the fourth film,The Next Karate Kid, oppositeHilary Swankin her first major role. After his time in the martial arts franchise, Morita starred on the Nickelodeon seriesThe Mystery Files of Shelby Wooas Mike Woo, Shelby's (Irene Ng) grandfather. The show was groundbreaking for being the network's first show with an Asian lead. Morita was married to actressEvelyn Guerrerofrom 1994 until hedied of kidney failurein 2005 at the age of 73. His impact and memory have lived on, even onCobra Kai. In 2022, Macchio wrote a guest essay for PEOPLE honoring Morita's mark as Mr. Miyagi. "The legacy of your work and contribution to the world inyour portrayal of Mr. Miyagi shines brighter than ever," Macchio wrote to his late costar. "He lives and breathes in a new chapter of theKarate Kiduniverse." Maximum Film/Alamy; Charley Gallay/Getty Zabka played Johnny Lawrence, a bully who beats up Daniel and later becomes his adversary in the All Valley karate tournament. After starring inThe Karate Kid,Zabka landed roles in 1985'sNational Lampoon's European Vacationand 1986'sBack to School. He also returned forTheKarate Kid Part II. Throughout the early 2000s, Zabka became a regular on Syfy (then named the Sci-Fi Channel) and starred in many of their made-for-TV movies, includingPython(2000),Python 2(2002) andAntibody(2002). In 2018, Zabka reprised his role as Johnny onCobra Kai,where his character and Daniel eventually put their rivalry to rest — a development he said he was thankful for. "For years, I had dads dragging their kids over to meet me just to point out the biggest bully on the planet," he told PEOPLE in 2021. "To have people rooting for my character, for me to feel that, is something I've never experienced. It's remarkable." Since 2008, Zabka has been married to his wife, businesswoman Stacie Zabka, with whom he raised three children. Columbia Pictures/Album/Alamy; Manny Carabel/Getty Elisabeth Shueplayed Ali Mills, Daniel's crush and Johnny's ex-girlfriend. A few years afterThe Karate Kid, Shue starred in the 1987 cult hitAdventures in Babysitting, which spawned a Disney Channel remake in 2016. Shue continued to land massive roles, starring inCocktail(1988),Back to the FuturePart II(1989) andPartIII(1990). She earned an Oscar nomination for Best Actress in 1996 for her role inLeaving Las Vegas. Her last major role before taking a break was in 2000'sHollow ManoppositeKevin Bacon. After that film, Shuewent back to Harvardto complete her degree in political science — she had withdrawn in 1989 to focus on acting full-time,per theHarvard Crimson. Shue returned to acting in the 2010s and has had leading roles on several shows — includingSuper Pumped,On the Verge,The BoysandCSI: Crime Scene Investigation— as well as in films such asBattle of the Sexes(2019),Greyhound(2020) andThe Good Half(2023). Shue also reprised her role as Ali Mills on two episodes of season 3 ofCobra Kaiin 2021. "I was a little worried about going on the show at first because I didn't like the way my character had been written out ofKarate Kid2," she said during a 2025 panel discussion at MegaCon Orlando. "It's all about the vindication of Ali. We needed that. Without Ali, there is noKarate Kid. There is no Cobra." In 1994, Shue marriedDavis Guggenheim, a filmmaker known for the 2006 Oscar-winning documentaryAn Inconvenient Truthand the 2023Emmy Award-winningStill: A Michael J. Fox Movie. Together, the couple has three children. AJ Pics/Alamy; Gerardo Mora/Getty Martin Koveplayed John Kreese, Johnny's karate mentor, who encourages his students to play dirty and harass Daniel. Kove reprised his role inPart IIandPart III, and after appearing on the season 1 finale ofCobra Kai, he joined the main cast in the following season. In terms of where Kreese ended up, Kove told PEOPLE in 2025 that he was proud of the character's arc throughout the series. "I've been pushing vulnerability for this characterfor a long time, and sometimes he gets it, sometimes he doesn't," he said. "But the way it ended ... it just was rich. It's what I like to do more than kicking ass and all that." Kove continued, "I like the fact that they took the character all the way from the darkest place inKarate Kid.I signed on to do the deal only if they'd write vulnerable scenes and show how he got to be the way he was, and they did, slowly, in five seasons, exactly what I wanted to do." Outside of theKarate Kidfranchise, Kove had a starring role on the hit seriesCagney & Laceyand appeared inWyatt Earp(1994),Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood(2019) andFight Another Day(2024). In 2021, hecompeted on season 30ofDancing with the Stars; however, hewas eliminated in the first round. According to theTampa Bay Times, Kove has been dating Mary Scavo Squire since 2016. He's also a father to twins Rachael and Jesse — the latter played the bully who torments the younger version of Kreese in flashbacks during seasons 3 and 4 ofCobra Kai. Columbia Pictures; Amanda Edwards/Getty Randee Heller played Lucille LaRusso, Daniel's hardworking single mom who relocates with her son from New Jersey to California. Before joining the cast ofThe Karate Kid, Heller had already made entertainment history when she held a recurring role as Alice onSoap, becoming one of TV's first openly lesbian characters. After skippingThe Karate KidPart II, Heller returned forPart IIIin 1989. Since then, she's had a busy career, with regular appearances on series likeWho's the Boss,Mad Men,WilfredandCobra Kai. Heller's role onMad Menearned her an Emmy nomination for outstanding guest actress in a drama series thanks to her scene-stealing performance as secretary Ida Blankenship. She also starred in the 2024 heist comedyMurder at Hollow CreekwithMickey Rourke,Jason PatricandPenelope Ann Miller. She shares two children with her longtime partner, TV producer Robert Griffard. Columbia Pictures; David Crotty/Getty Chad McQueen played Dutch, an aggressive Cobra Kai student who ran with Johnny's crew. The Karate Kidis Chad's best-known project. Aside from that, he starred in low-budget and straight-to-video films such asDeath Ring(1992),Firepower(1993) andThe Fall(2001), which was his final acting credit. He left entertainment to pursue sports car racing in the 1990s and 2000s. In 2006, he experienced a near-fatal crash while training for the 24 Hours of Daytona endurance race. Chad recovered from his injuries and later founded his own company, McQueen Racing, which builds custom high-performance cars. Chad is the son of racing and acting legendSteve McQueenand actress Neile Adams. From 1987 to 1990, he was married to Stacia Toten. Together, they had one child,Vampire DiariesactorSteven R. McQueen. In 1993, Chad married Jeanie Galbraith, and they had two children, Chase and Madison. On Sept. 11, 2024, the actor and race car driverdied at age 63. His former castmate, Zabka,paid tribute to himtwo days after, writingon Instagram: "Sadly, we lost the legendary Chad McQueen yesterday. I have so many great memories of him when we were filmingTheKarate Kid. He was truly one of [a] kind. He marched to the beat of his own drum and always made me laugh." Tony O'Dell Instagram Tony O'Dell played Jimmy, another Cobra Kai student and a good friend of Johnny. The Karate Kidwas O'Dell's first major role. In 1986, he returned forPart II, and that same year he began starring as Alan Pinkard on the hit seriesHead of the Class. In 2019, he reprised his role as Jimmy onCobra Kai. "I don't think they could've handled [the show] any better," O'Dell said during a 2021 appearance on theCobra Kai Kompanionpodcast. "How the characters have developed and changed, how they are handling the series, the way it looks on camera, the music, just all of it." In addition to acting, O'Dell has had a long career behind the camera working as an acting and dialogue coach onThe George Lopez Show,Girl Meets WorldandNight Court. He also worked withZendayaon her Disney Channel showsShake It UpandK.C. Undercover. Tony O'Dell Instagram; Rob Garrison Twitter Rob Garrison played Tommy, a friend of Johnny and a Cobra Kai student. AfterThe Karate Kid, Garrison starred in the 1986 filmsIron EagleandThe Karate Kid Part II. In the late '80s and early '90s, he continued making appearances on shows likeMacGyverandCoachbefore retiring from acting. Later in his life, Garrison had health issues but was able to guest star on an episode ofCobra Kaiin 2019. Later that year, hedied at age 59from liver and kidney failure. In a statement obtained by PEOPLE, Macchio honored his late costar. "Rob Garrison was a kind gentleman from the first day I met him to the last day we spoke. I am so glad he had the opportunity to show his range and genuine heart with his performance last season onCobra Kai." At the end of season 3's premiere episode in 2021, there was a tribute to Garrison: "Rob Garrison 1960–2019" and "Cobra Kai never dies." Columbia Pictures; Ron Thomas Instagram Ron Thomas played Bobby Brown, a Cobra Kai student who is instructed to injure Daniel with an illegal move that ultimately gets him kicked out of the competition. Thomas returned forThe Karate Kid Part IIand had a minor role in 1987'sThe Big Betbefore retiring from acting. He reprised his role as Bobby Brown on seasons 2, 3 and 5 ofCobra Kai. According to his website, Thomas is a martial artist and offers motivational speeches and online classes about mindfulness as Sensei Ron Thomas. Read the original article onPeople

See Where the Cast of “The Karate Kid ”Is Now (and Who Reprises Their Role in the Latest Installment)

See Where the Cast of "The Karate Kid "Is Now (and Who Reprises Their Role in the Latest Installment) Alamy Wax on, wax off ... On...
'Stranger Things' Season 5: Watch the trailer, find out when final episodes come outNew Foto - 'Stranger Things' Season 5: Watch the trailer, find out when final episodes come out

USA TODAY and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this article. Pricing and availability subject to change. INGLEWOOD, Calif. −"Stranger Things"starsNoah Schnapp,Caleb McLaughlinandFinn Wolfhardtook a trip down memory lane before revealing the date fans have been waiting nearly three years for. Netflix announced at its Tudum 2025 live fan event on May 31 that the show's final season will be released in three parts later this fall. Schnapp, 20, McLaughlin, 23, and Wolfhard, 22, shared their fondest memories from "Stranger Things" from when the show first hit Netflix on July 15, 2016. Their co-stars Gaten Matarazzo, 22, and Millie Bobby Brown, 21, made a sweet appearance via pre-recorded messages. More:Finn Wolfhard talks 'moving on from childhood' with 'Hell of a Summer' The boys then went through the final VHS tape, which included the Season 5 teaser fans have been waiting for. "I think about that night all the time," begins the trailer, which shows Joyce Byers (Wynona Ryder) with her son, Will (Schnapp). "The night it came for you … the night all of this started." The first minute or so of the teaser looks back at the show's major moments − including those famous Christmas lights, the night Eleven (Millie Bobby Brown) was found and the gang's journeys into the Upside Down. In the final minute, we see what Will, his friends and the rest of Hawkins, Indiana, are up against with the big bad Vecna. Netflix Tudum 2025: The Live Eventcelebrated the streamer's biggest shows, including the fans who make all the magic happen. Star-studded casts from "Wednesday," "Happy Gilmore 2," "One Piece," "Outer Banks," "Ginny & Georgia" and other popular shows hit the red carpet and then made their way inside the Kia Forum for an epic lineup of trailer showcases and other major reveals, includingLady Gaga's guest role in "Wednesday." Here's what we know about "Stranger Things 5." The series' eight final episodes, "Stranger Things 5," will stream this fall, surrounding major holidays. Four episodes will premiere as "Volume 1" on November 26, Thanksgiving eve. Three more episodes, "Volume 2," will hit Netflix on Christmas Day. Each volume releases at 8 p.m. ET/5 PT,according to Netflix. Netflix Tudum 2025:Lady Gaga emerges from coffin, reveals guest role in 'Wednesday' Season 2 After Christmas Day, Netflix will give fans a week to recover before dropping the finale. The ending everyone's been waiting for (or dreading) will come on New Year's Eve, Dec. 31, 2025. More:'Stranger Things' prequel 'The First Shadow' is headed to Broadway Season 5 of "Stranger Things" begins with a time jump to the fall of 1987 after Hawkins sees the effects of the opening of the Rifts. Will, Mike, Lucas and the rest of the gang are on a mission to find and kill Vecna, whose whereabouts and plans are unknown. "Complicating their mission, the government has placed the town under military quarantine and intensified its hunt for Eleven, forcing her back into hiding,"reads Netflix's show's synopsis. "As the anniversary of Will's disappearance approaches, so does a heavy, familiar dread." "The final battle is looming — and with it, a darkness more powerful and more deadly than anything they've faced before. To end this nightmare, they'll need everyone — the full party — standing together, one last time." Here's who's coming back to the small screen for Season 5 of "Stranger Things": Winona Ryder (Joyce Byers) David Harbour (Jim Hopper) Millie Bobby Brown (Eleven) Finn Wolfhard (Mike Wheeler) Gaten Matarazzo (Dustin Henderson) Caleb McLaughlin (Lucas Sinclair) Noah Schnapp (Will Byers) Sadie Sink (Max Mayfield) Natalia Dyer (Nancy Wheeler) Charlie Heaton (Jonathan Byers) Joe Keery (Steve Harrington) Maya Hawke (Robin Buckley) Priah Ferguson (Erica Sinclair) Brett Gelman (Murray) Jamie Campbell Bower (Vecna) Cara Buono (Karen Wheeler) Amybeth McNulty (Vickie) who's cutting onions#TUDUMpic.twitter.com/Bq5QdXuX4o — Netflix (@netflix)June 1, 2025 New faces in Netflix's "Stranger Things" Season 5 will include: Nell Fisher (Holly Wheeler) Jake Connelly (Derek Turnbow) Alex Breaux (Lt. Akers) Linda Hamilton (Dr. Kay) This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Netflix Tudum: 'Stranger Things' Season 5 trailer, release date

'Stranger Things' Season 5: Watch the trailer, find out when final episodes come out

'Stranger Things' Season 5: Watch the trailer, find out when final episodes come out USA TODAY and Yahoo may earn commission from li...
What could be next for international students amid Trump's immigration crackdownNew Foto - What could be next for international students amid Trump's immigration crackdown

Lawsuits, next-day countersuits, backtracking and mass confusion. International students find themselves at the center of a dizzying legal landscape as the Trump administration continues to crack down on immigration. Here's what to know as the Trump administration keeps attempting to put up legal barriers to international students' ability to study in the U.S. Just Wednesday, a judge granted Harvard an extension on an injunction that blocked the administration's attempt last week to stop the Ivy League school from enrolling foreign-born students. An estimated 4,700 or more foreign-born students have been impacted since the Trump administration began revoking visas and terminating legal statuses in March. A few have also been detained in high-profile cases. In just the past two weeks, students across the country were granted a nationwide injunction against the administration. Some scholars have been released from Immigration and Customs Enforcement as well. Meanwhile the State Department announced that it is "aggressively" targeting an additional group of Chinese scholars out of national security concerns. But in spite of its legal losses, the federal government has doubled down on its efforts to target international students. On Tuesday, the Trump administration stopped scheduling new student visa interviews for those looking to study in the U.S., according to an internal cable seen by NBC News. Meanwhile, the State Department is preparing to expand its social media screening of applicants, the cable said. The next day, Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced that the government would be looking to revoke the visas of Chinese students "with connections to the Chinese Communist Party or studying in critical fields." It's still unclear what "critical fields" the administration will be looking into and what types of connections to the CCP are under scrutiny. The State Department referred NBC News to comments by spokesperson Tammy Bruce during a news briefing Thursday in which Bruce said the department does not discuss the details of its visa process due to privacy concerns. "We use every tool that we have to vet and to make sure we know who's coming in," Bruce said. "In this particular case, the United States is putting America first by beginning to revoke visas of Chinese students as warranted." For months, there was mass confusion among schools and international students about the criteria the government used to abruptly terminate visas and statuses, with little to no notice to students. But in late April, the Department of Homeland Security revealed at a hearing that it used the National Crime Information Center, an FBI-run computerized index that includes criminal history information. The agency said fewer than two dozen employees ran the names of 1.3 million foreign-born students through the index, populating 6,400 "hits." And from there, many students experienced terminations of their records in the Student and Exchange Visitor Information System (SEVIS), which maintains information about nonimmigrant students and exchange visitors. The method was sharply criticized by legal and policy experts, who pointed out that the database relies on cities, counties, states and other sources to voluntarily report their data. This means that it may not have the final dispositions of cases, potentially leading to errors in identifying students. At another hearing in April,Elizabeth D. Kurlan,an attorney for the Justice Department, said that going forward, Immigration and Customs Enforcement will not be terminating statuses based solely on findings in the crime information center. She also told the court that ICE would be restoring the legal status of international students who had their records terminated until the agency developed a new framework for revocations. Shortly afterward, an internal memo to all Student and Exchange Visitor Program personnel, which is under ICE jurisdiction, showed an expanded list of criteria for the agency to terminate foreign-born students' legal status in the U.S., including a "U.S. Department of State Visa Revocation (Effective Immediately)." Though students would typically have the right to due process and defend themselves before their status is terminated, visa revocation itself is now grounds for the termination of status, according to the memo. The administration has also taken aim at students who have been active in pro-Palestine protests, including Columbia student Mahmoud Khalil and Tufts University student Rümeysa Öztürk, who were both detained in March. Öztürk has since been released from ICE custody. "Every time I find one of these lunatics, I take away their visas,"Rubio said at a news conferencein March. Students across the U.S. from Georgia to South Dakota have been winning their lawsuits against the Trump administration, with judges siding with plaintiffs and allowing them to stay in the U.S. Last week, a judge issued an injunction blocking the Trump administration from terminating the legal statuses of international students at universities across the U.S. It's the first to provide relief to students nationwide. The day after the Trump administrationterminatedHarvard's Student and Exchange Visitor Program certification — a move that would force the university's foreign students, roughly a fourth of its student body, to either transfer or lose their legal status — the Ivy League school sued the administration. And hours later, a judge issued an injunction. In addition to Öztürk, others who were detained are no longer in ICE custody, including Georgetown scholar Badar Khan Suri and Mohsen Mahdawi, a U.S. permanent resident who was born and raised in a refugee camp in the occupied West Bank. The judge in Khan Suri's case ruled that his detention was in violation of the First Amendment, which protects the right to free speech, and the Fifth Amendment, which protects the right to due process. Though the recent nationwide injunction provides some relief, students can still be vulnerable to visa revocation. Legal experts say the temporary restraining order blocks the government from arresting or detaining students, or terminating their legal statuses. But it's possible that visas can still be revoked. And many expect the Trump administration to hit back. "This is a federal district court decision. It is not a final decision, and it seems likely that the executive branch will appeal this decision," Elora Mukherjee, director of the Immigrants' Rights Clinic at Columbia Law School. Mukherjee also added that the Chinese international students referred to in Rubio's new statement are likely not protected by the injunction either. "What they're likely to claim in court in defense of this policy is that the secretary of state and the executive branch deserves deference with regard to quote, unquote, foreign affairs," Mukherjee said. However, with backlash already brewing, Mukherjee said she expects that the policy will be challenged legally, with immigration attorneys and activists arguing that it is unconstitutional. Legal experts said that with many decisions surrounding international students' fate far from decided, foreign-born scholars should first and foremost remain in the country. She also said it's important to seek legal counsel in the event that students are also eligible for other forms of relief, including asylum or otherhumanitarian visas. Razeen Zaman, director of immigrant rights at the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund, said it's particularly important for American citizens to speak out against the immigration policies on behalf of foreign-born students, as many of these students may not be able to push back themselves. "You have to have a certain amount of resources to be able to do that. You have to have a certain amount of connections. There's even some people who are too afraid to seek counsel," Zaman said. "U.S. citizens have the most protections. … And the reality is, even if you're stopped at the border, they do have to still let you in as a U.S. citizen." And given how theSupreme Courton Friday allowed the Trump administration to revoke the temporary legal status of more than 500,000 immigrants from four Latin American countries, Zaman said, it's likely that even more groups will be targeted without fierce advocacy and protest. "This is about the First Amendment today. It's Chinese people, the CCP, whoever they decide is tied to the Chinese government," Zaman said.

What could be next for international students amid Trump's immigration crackdown

What could be next for international students amid Trump's immigration crackdown Lawsuits, next-day countersuits, backtracking and mass ...

 

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