Photos capture Chicagoans' protest against ICE and Trump's intervention plansNew Foto - Photos capture Chicagoans' protest against ICE and Trump's intervention plans

CHICAGO (AP) — Thousands of protesters marched in Chicago on Saturday against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement andPresident Donald Trump's plan to send National Guardtroops and immigration agentsto the city. ___ This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.

Photos capture Chicagoans’ protest against ICE and Trump’s intervention plans

Photos capture Chicagoans' protest against ICE and Trump's intervention plans CHICAGO (AP) — Thousands of protesters marched in Chic...
Utah violinist released from ICE detention on bondNew Foto - Utah violinist released from ICE detention on bond

A Utah violinist who has played with high-profile orchestras has been released on bond after being detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement last month. Donggin Shin, 37, wasapprehended by immigration authoritiesin a hotel parking lot while he was on a work trip in Colorado and placed in ICE detention on Aug. 18. His father brought him to the U.S. from South Korea when he was a child and he lives in Salt Lake City, according to his attorney, Adam Crayk. Shin, who goes by the name John, was held at the Denver Contract Detention Facility in Aurora, Colorado — more than 500 miles away from his home — according to an ICE database. He was released on $25,000 bond on Tuesday. "I never thought I would have to feel what it's like to be shackled on my ankles and my wrist, feeling like some kind of a serious criminal, as if I have murdered someone," Shin said at a press conference Friday, according toKSL-TV, an NBC affiliate based in Salt Lake City. "I was absolutely terrified. Obviously, I cried all day," he added. Shin was held for a total of 17 days and is now wearing an ankle monitor, according to Crayk. Shin was identified by ICE's Fugitive Operations Team, which is generally focused on apprehending immigrants who have committed serious crimes and are considered national security threats, according to charging documents. A spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In response to previous questions about Shin, a seniorDepartment of Homeland Securityofficial told NBC News: "Our message is clear: criminal illegal aliens are not welcome in the United States." The official added that Shin had a DUI conviction. Records show the matter was resolved after Shin pleaded guilty to the misdemeanor offense in 2020 and served his probation. Crayk, Shin's attorney, told NBC New in a previous interview that his client's father was battling brain cancer at the time of his prior arrest. "My father was losing a battle to a Level 4 glioblastoma brain tumor. He had limited time to live," Shin said, according toKSL-TV. "I fell into a depression during that time and the impaired driving followed." Shin entered the U.S. on a tourist visa on Sept. 3, 1998, which "required him to depart the U.S. by March 3, 1999," according to DHS. But Crayk previously told NBC News that this timeline is incomplete, as Shin's father switched to a student visa, which conferred status onto Shin at the time. Crayk said Shin became a DACA recipient years later, but lost his DACA protections due to his 2020 conviction. He has remained without lawful status for the last four and a half years. Shin works in telecommunications but has played with the prestigious Utah Symphony and Ballet West in recent years. Musicians have been playing at the state Capitol each day, determined to raise awareness until Shin returns home. Shin's wife, DeNae Shin, thanked the Salt Lake City community for its support over the last few weeks. "During those really dark times where I was feeling such despair, it was really those letters that kept me going," she said.

Utah violinist released from ICE detention on bond

Utah violinist released from ICE detention on bond A Utah violinist who has played with high-profile orchestras has been released on bond af...
Steve Buscemi shares the surprising way he landed "Reservoir Dogs": 'It wasn't really based on your audition'

Miramax/Courtesy Everett Steve Buscemilanded Mr. Pink inReservoir DogsafterQuentin Tarantinosaw his audition. The legendgoesthat Tarantino wanted to play Mr. Pink himself, but was willing to give it up if he saw a killer performance from someone else. However, it wasn't Buscemi's audition forReservoir Dogsthat caught the director's eye. Instead, it was the actor's tryout for a different film that convinced him. Buscemi appeared on arecent episodeof theSmartLesspodcast and discussed how he got his breakout role. TheWednesdayactor had auditioned forReservoir Dogstwice. ThePulp Fictiondirector informed him that he was cast as Mr. Pink while the two were using the restroom together. This casual announcement was in "typical Quentin fashion," Buscemi joked. "He says, 'Yeah and it wasn't really based on your audition, you know,'" theFargostar continued. "He said, 'But [casting director] Ronnie Yeskel showed me a tape of when you auditioned for that Neil Simon movie.'" Buscemi was surprised because that film, which he did not end up getting, was a comedy. He asked Tarantino what he saw in that performance that made him see Buscemi as Mr. Pink. Sign up forEntertainment Weekly's free daily newsletterto get breaking TV news, exclusive first looks, recaps, reviews, interviews with your favorite stars, and more. Miramax/Courtesy Everett TheKill Billdirector said that the vintage shirt and slicked back hair that Buscemi wore made him look like a criminal. "That was just how I dressed," Buscemi said. "That was just me. And so, thank God I went on that audition." Reservoir Dogswas not the only time the two worked together. Buscemi went on to have a small role inPulp Fiction. Listen to the fullSmartLesspodcast below. Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Steve Buscemi shares the surprising way he landed “Reservoir Dogs”: 'It wasn't really based on your audition'

Steve Buscemi shares the surprising way he landed "Reservoir Dogs": 'It wasn't really based on your audition' Miramax/...
Actor and "Last Comic Standing" winner Jon Reep arrested and charged with sexual exploitation of a minor

Michael Schwartz/WireImage Comedian Jon Reep was arrested on 10 charges of sexual exploitation of a minor on Friday. The Hickory Police Department in North Carolina opened an investigation into Reep in April. After reviewing the HPD's case, a grand jury indicted Reep on Tuesday. Comedian Jon Reep has been arrested on 10 charges of sexual exploitation of a minor. Reep was charged with one count of second degree sexual exploitation of a minor and nine counts of third degree sexual exploitation of a minor. The Hickory Police Department in North Carolina announced the comedian's arrest in astatementon Facebook on Friday. Representatives for Reep did not immediately respond toEntertainment Weekly's request for comment. Reep was scheduled to perform a stand-up show in Goldsboro, N.C., on Friday night, according to hissocial media. Rick Diamond/Getty The HPD revealed that in April the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children submitted an Internet Crimes Against Children cyber tip that reported "child sex abuse material." The police department alleged that its initial investigation found that Reep held the account in question. That initial investigation led the HPD to obtain a search warrant to seize electronic devices from the property associated with the IP address of the cyber tip, and the department investigated online communications. The Grand Jury of Catawba County reviewed the case on Tuesday and issued a true bill indictment that charged Reep with the aforementioned 10 counts. The HPD arrested Reep on Friday and he was transported to the Catawba County Detention Facility. Reep then posted a $260,000 bond and has been released, a representative for the Catawba County Sheriff's Office confirmed to EW on Saturday. Chris Haston/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Reep is best known for saying "That thing got a Hemi?" in a series of Dodge commercials from the mid-2000s. In 2007, he won season 5 of NBC's stand-up competition seriesLast Comic Standing, beating out the likes ofAmy Schumer, Doug Benson, and Lavell Crawford. That same year, he appeared on an episode ofMADtv. Sign up forEntertainment Weekly'sfree daily newsletterto get breaking TV news, exclusive first looks, recaps, reviews, interviews with your favorite stars, and more. The comedian also played Gerald Bob, a police officer, on the sitcomRodney. He made his film debut as Raymus in 2008'sHarold and Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay. Reep later appeared in episodes ofGood Luck Charlie,Eastbound & Down,Black-ish, andJane the Virgin. His most recent TV appearance was in a 2024 episode ofCurb Your Enthusiasm. Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Actor and “Last Comic Standing” winner Jon Reep arrested and charged with sexual exploitation of a minor

Actor and "Last Comic Standing" winner Jon Reep arrested and charged with sexual exploitation of a minor Michael Schwartz/WireImag...
Poland buries wartime remains in western Ukraine as part of reconciliationNew Foto - Poland buries wartime remains in western Ukraine as part of reconciliation

PUZHNYKY, Ukraine (Reuters) -Remains of Poles killed by Ukrainian nationalist insurgents during World War Two were buried in western Ukraine on Saturday as officials from both countries looked on, a move to ease a rare strain in relations between the two close allies. Poland was allowed to exhume the remains in the former Polish village of Puzniki, in present-day Ukraine, earlier this year after longstanding demands from Warsaw over the issue, which has caused friction between the neighbouring countries. With Polish Catholic priests officiating, the simple wooden coffins of 42 Poles, each marked with a cross and flanked by wooden cross, were placed in a long, narrow grave in a wooded, abandoned cemetery. Lanterns and wreaths draped in Polish red and white and Ukrainian yellow and blue colours were laid alongside. "The victims of the Puzniki massacre rested in an unmarked grave for decades, but their memory endures for their loved ones and those who fought for this remembrance, truth, and act of elementary justice," Polish Culture Minister Marta Cienkowska was quoted as saying by state news agency PAP. "Today's burial is a restoration of dignity to those who had it stripped from them in the most inhumane way." Cienkowska expressed confidence that it would be possible to locate and identify remaining victims, according to PAP. Survivor Maria Jarzycka-Wroblewska, 90, said groups of men had assured residents they would be safe and then the killings occurred overnight. "No one in my immediate family was murdered here, but neighbours, friends and even a distant cousin were," she said. "Thank God that the Ukrainian authorities and the Poles came to an agreement and this is finally done...You cannot put all Ukrainians in the same basket." The abandoned village is among sites where Polish officials say more than 100,000 people were killed by insurgents between 1943 and 1945. Large swathes of modern-day western Ukraine were under Polish control at the time. The Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), which fought against both Nazi German forces and the Soviet Red Army, is widely held responsible for the killings as part of efforts to limit Polish influence over the area. The so-called Volhynia massacres have complicated relations even as Poland has backed Ukraine against Russia's 2022 invasion by supplying weapons and taking in almost a million refugees. Ukraine has rejected Poland's description of the killings as "genocide", saying thousands of Ukrainians were also killed in events that were part of a wider conflict between the neighbours. The exhumations involving around 20 specialists had been aimed at identifying victims and burying them. Polish officials have called on Ukraine to allow more operations to take place. (Additional reporting by Alan Charlish in Warsaw; Writing by Dan Peleschuk and Ron Popeski, Editing by Franklin Paul)

Poland buries wartime remains in western Ukraine as part of reconciliation

Poland buries wartime remains in western Ukraine as part of reconciliation PUZHNYKY, Ukraine (Reuters) -Remains of Poles killed by Ukrainian...
Pilot and influencer Ethan Guo released from Antarctic air base after two monthsNew Foto - Pilot and influencer Ethan Guo released from Antarctic air base after two months

PUNTA ARENAS, Chile (AP) — An American social media influencer who has been stuck in a Chilean airbase in Antarctica for two months after landing a plane there without permission was released on Saturday back to the mainland, where he was to pay $30,000 in penalties. Ethan Guo, who was 19 when he began hisfundraising mission for cancer research, was attempting to become the youngest person to fly solo to all seven continents. But he was detained after Chilean authorities said he lied to officials by providing authorities with "false flight plan data." Prosecutors said he had been authorized to only fly over Punta Arenas in southern Chile, but that he kept going south, heading for Antarctica in his Cessna 182Q — a single-engine light aircraft known for its versatility. After he landed in Chile's Antarctic territory on June 28, he wasdetained in a military baseamid legal negotiations between his lawyers and the government. Guo, who is originally from Tennessee and turned 20 in July, spent two months living in the base with limited communications and freezing Antarctic winter temperatures plunging below zero. He was released by a Chilean judge on the condition that he donate the tens of thousands of dollars raised to a childhood cancer foundation within 30 days and leave the country as soon as possible. He is also banned from entering Chilean territory for three years. The influencer's lawyer Jaime Barrientos told The Associated Press that Guo landed because he had to divert his aircraft due to poor weather conditions, and that he did receive authorization from Chilean authorities. "To his surprise, when he was about to take off back to Punta Arenas he was arrested, in a process that from my perspective was a total exaggeration," Barrientos said. Barrientos said he was happy with the agreement struck with authorities. Guo landed Saturday at Punta Arenas aboard a navy ship wearing a Chilean national soccer team jersey and appeared friendly with the press after disembarking, describing his detention as "mundane" experience with "limited freedoms". "The Chilean people have been incredibly hospitable, they've been fantastic people. They've taken care of me. They've taught me Spanish, and they've treated me like family," he said.

Pilot and influencer Ethan Guo released from Antarctic air base after two months

Pilot and influencer Ethan Guo released from Antarctic air base after two months PUNTA ARENAS, Chile (AP) — An American social media influen...
US independent director Jim Jarmusch proves surprise Venice winnerNew Foto - US independent director Jim Jarmusch proves surprise Venice winner

By Crispian Balmer VENICE (Reuters) -U.S. indie director Jim Jarmusch unexpectedly won the coveted Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival on Saturday with "Father Mother Sister Brother", a three-part meditation on the uneasy ties between parents and their adult children. Although his gentle comedy received largely positive reviews, it had not been a favourite for the top prize, with many critics instead tipping "The Voice of Hind Rajab", a harrowing true-life account of the killing of a five-year-old Palestinian girl during the Gaza war. In the end, the film directed by Tunisia's Kaouther Ben Hania took the runner-up Silver Lion. Divided into chapters set in New Jersey, Dublin and Paris, "Father Mother Sister Brother" features an ensemble cast including Tom Waits, Adam Driver, Mayim Bialik, Charlotte Rampling, Cate Blanchett, Vicky Krieps, Indya Moore and Luka Sabbat. Each instalment drifts gently through domestic encounters where nothing much happens, but small gestures and silences sketch out the generational awkwardness that can beset families. "All of us here who make films, we're not motivated by competition. But this is something I truly appreciate, this unexpected honour," said Jarmusch, who made his name in the 1980s with offbeat, low-budget works such as "Down by Law". In other categories, Italy's Toni Servillo was named best actor for his wry portrayal of a weary president nearing the end of his mandate in "La Grazia", directed by his long-time collaborator Paolo Sorrentino. China's Xin Zhilei won best actress for her role in "The Sun Rises On Us All", a drama directed by Cai Shangjun that delves into questions of sacrifice, guilt and unresolved feelings between estranged lovers who share a dark secret. The Venice festival marks the start of the awards season and regularly throws up big favourites for the Oscars, with films premiering here over the past four years collecting more than 90 Oscar nominations and winning almost 20. GAZA TO THE FORE Venice has often been seen as the most glamorous and least political of the major film festivals, but in 2025 the movies that made the strongest impact focused on current events, with the ongoing Israeli invasion of Gaza casting a long shadow. As he unveiled his own picture last weekend, Jarmusch acknowledged that he was concerned that one of his main distributors had taken money from a company with ties to the Israeli military. "The Voice of Hind Rajab", which uses the real audio of a young girl's desperate pleas for help as her car comes under Israeli gunfire, was the fan favourite, winning a record 24-minute standing ovation at its premiere. "Cinema cannot bring Hind back, nor can it erase the atrocity committed against her. Nothing can ever restore what was taken, but cinema can preserve her voice, make it resonate across borders," Ben Hania said on Saturday night. "Her voice will continue to echo until accountability is real, until justice is served." The best director nod went to Benny Safdie for "The Smashing Machine", which starred Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson in the role of the real-life mixed martial arts pioneer Mark Kerr. "To be here amongst the giants of the past and the giants here this year, it just blows my mind," said Safdie, who has previously co-directed films with his brother Josh. The special jury award went to Italy's Gianfranco Rosi for his black-and-white documentary "Below the Clouds", about life in the chaotic southern city of Naples, marked by repeated earthquakes and the threat of volcanic eruptions. Among the movies that left Venice empty-handed were a trio of Netflix pictures, Kathryn Bigelow's nuclear thriller "A House of Dynamite", Guillermo del Toro's re-telling of "Frankenstein" and Noah Baumbach's comedy-drama "Jay Kelly". "No Other Choice" by South Korea's Park Chan-wook also failed to secure an award, despite strong reviews, likewise "Bugonia" by Yorgos Lanthimos, which starred Emma Stone. The main jury was chaired by U.S. director Alexander Payne, joined by fellow filmmakers Stéphane Brizé, Maura Delpero, Cristian Mungiu and Mohammad Rasoulof, alongside actresses Fernanda Torres and Zhao Tao. (Reporting by Crispian Balmer and Roberto Mignucci; Editing by Alexandra Hudson)

US independent director Jim Jarmusch proves surprise Venice winner

US independent director Jim Jarmusch proves surprise Venice winner By Crispian Balmer VENICE (Reuters) -U.S. indie director Jim Jarmusch une...

 

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