Archive

2024

Browsing

Rep. Cori Bush, D-Mo., is getting a boost from her allies in the House’s left-wing ‘Squad’ on Monday, as her anti-Israel comments have her fighting for her political life in this week’s primary elections.

‘We have just ONE DAY ahead of us before primary Election Day. Come join Cori & some very special guests on Election Day eve to rally together and get out the vote!’ Bush’s campaign wrote on Instagram announcing the event.

It’s a virtual rally to be held on Zoom at 5 p.m. Eastern Time alongside Reps. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., Jamaal Bowman, D-N.Y., and Summer Lee, D-Pa.

Another notable guest is Hill Harper, an actor who is running in the Michigan Senate Democratic primary against Bush’s more moderate colleague, Rep. Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich.

Bowman’s appearance comes after he lost his own primary re-election bid to a more moderate, pro-Israel Democrat, Westchester County Executive George Latimer.

Bush has been viewed as the second-most embattled Squad member after Bowman, with pro-Israel groups actively campaigning against both progressive leftists. 

The two-term progressive Democrat is one of Congress’ harshest critics of Israel and its operation in Gaza. She has accused Israel’s government of waging a genocide on Palestinians and consistently voted against emergency funding for the Middle Eastern ally.

It has earned her opposition from within her own party, with the group Democratic Majority for Israel backing her opponent, Wesley Bell. He has also got the support of the American Israeli Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), a bipartisan pro-Israel lobbying group.

Tlaib, one of the Bush allies rallying for her Monday night, is Israel’s most outspoken critic in the House, having been censured over her verbal attacks against the Middle Eastern country. She also held up a sign accusing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of being a ‘war criminal’ during his speech to Congress last month.

Bell, Bush’s opponent, is prosecuting attorney for St. Louis County. He’s leaned to the center with his campaign, contrasting with the Democratic incumbent’s progressive policies. 

She and her allies have sought to paint him as a right-wing operator, however, citing his past volunteer work for anti-abortion conservative Mark J. Byrne.

Bush is also going into Tuesday with the backing of House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., and his top two deputies.

Bell was endorsed by the editorial board of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, one of the district’s largest newspapers, late last month.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

A key House committee is widening its probe into the major Democratic fundraising platform ActBlue.

Rep. Bryan Steil, R-Wis., who chairs the Committee on House Administration, is investigating ActBlue over accusations it’s skirting campaign donation laws that allow for rampant fraud on the site.

In a letter sent to top officials on the Federal Election Commission (FEC) on Monday, Steil urged them to ‘immediately initiate an emergency rulemaking to require political campaigns to verify the card verification value (‘CVV’) of donors who contribute online using a credit or debit card, and to prohibit political campaigns from accepting online contributions from a gift card or other prepaid credit cards.’

Republicans on the committee and other GOP officials have for months accused ActBlue of lax donor verification standards.

‘Following widespread allegations of fraudulent donations being reported to the FEC by ActBlue, one of the largest fundraising platforms in the country, this emergency rulemaking is necessary to reassure the American people that ActBlue is taking the necessary steps to protect its donors,’ Steil wrote.

According to his committee, whistleblowers who approached the panel in recent weeks have accused ActBlue of deliberately not using CVV numbers for donations to reduce the bar for verification. 

Whistleblowers have also reported the receipt of a significant number of donations from retirees living on a fixed income, and hundreds of donations of $2.50 from the same individual, according to the committee.

The site has been used to raise millions of dollars for Vice President Kamala Harris as she seeks to take on former President Trump in November.

As of Monday morning, however, a CVV number was required on the page accepting credit card donations for the vice president.

A CVV number was also required for credit card donations to several Democratic House candidates’ ActBlue pages checked by Fox News Digital, though donations were also accepted via Paypal, Venmo and Google Pay, which did not require the user to input such information.

As of spring last year, however, the FEC did not impose specific rules requiring CVV numbers for online political donations.

Steil’s letter also argued that the site’s acceptance of prepaid credit cards and gift cards fueled a ‘very real possibility that straw donors are making campaign donations with funds provided by another person or an unlawful donor including a foreign national. These issues present a serious loophole to the transparency and integrity of the campaign donation process, and an emergency rulemaking is required to rectify these issues.’

The committee said whistleblowers have also claimed prepaid gift cards and credit cards are being used to launder campaign contributions that would otherwise violate campaign finance laws.

It comes after similar investigations were launched by the GOP attorneys general of Virginia, Wyoming and Missouri last week.

ActBlue told Newsweek in response to those probes, ‘This investigation is nothing more than a partisan political attack and scare tactic to undermine the power of Democratic and progressive small-dollar donors. We welcome the opportunity to respond to these frivolous claims.’

The FEC declined to comment when reached by Fox News Digital.

ActBlue and the Harris campaign did not respond to requests for comment.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The U.S. unemployment rate rose to 4.3% in July and hiring slowed, adding to signs of a broader downturn in what has been a solid U.S. economy.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday that the U.S. added 114,000 jobs, down from 206,000 in June and well short of expectations. Economists were expecting the unemployment rate to have been unchanged from June’s 4.1% reading.

The latest report will likely add to worries from some economists that the Federal Reserve has waited too long to cut interest rates in its bid to stamp out inflation. Earlier this week, Fed Chair Jay Powell indicated the first rate cut of the post-pandemic period would come in September, even as many economists flagged signs of a rapidly cooling labor market.

Friday’s report adds further evidence to those concerns.

A worker moves packages at an Amazon same-day delivery fulfillment center in Bronx, N.Y., on July 16, 2024. Stephanie Keith / Bloomberg via Getty Images

‘Oh dear, has the Fed made a policy mistake?’ wrote Seema Shah, chief global strategist at Principal Asset Management based in the UK, in a note to clients following the jobs report’s release. ‘The labour market’s slowdown is now materialising with more clarity.’

She noted job gains have now dropped below the 150,000 threshold ‘that would be considered consistent with a solid economy,’ and that a September rate cut ‘is in the bag.’

‘The Fed will be hoping that they haven’t, once again, been too slow to act,’ Shah said.

Beyond the report’s headline figures were mitigating factors and other signs that the economy remains on relatively firm footing.

Much of the increase in the unemployment measure was driven by temporary layoffs, while the BLS indicated that weather-related factors had temporarily increased the ranks of those who still hold jobs but were technically not at work during the month.  

Meanwhile, wage gains continued to outpace inflation — continuing a trend that has now taken hold for months — and more people rejoined the workforce last month, something reflected in an increased labor force participation rate.

Yet outside of health care, construction and some transportation and warehousing roles, there was little meaningful job growth, with manufacturing adding just 1,000 to its payrolls and professional and business services positions declining by 1,000.

‘Even a few months ago, the labor market seemed fine, the trajectory looked stable,’ said Guy Berger, director of economic research at the Burning Glass Institute, a think tank. ‘Today, things look a bit shakier.’

While Berger doesn’t see an imminent recession, it wouldn’t take much for the gradual downturn to become a more significant one, he said.

The Federal Reserve doesn’t envision that outcome — and in fact is largely in control of it, economists say.

On Wednesday, the Fed announced that it was leaving its key interest rate unchanged at about 5.5% even as Powell said a cut at its next meeting was ‘on the table.’

By cutting interest rates, the central bank would reduce the cost of borrowing for goods and services, which would result in lower monthly payments for consumers and businesses alike who are subject to variable annual percentage rates.

In turn, demand and hiring are likely to increase throughout the economy.

On average, companies are hanging on to their current workers — something reflected in the rate of layoffs’ falling to a record low.

Yet the hiring rate has also fallen to a level not seen since the onset of the pandemic — and before that, 2014.

The upshot: If you have a job, you’re unlikely to lose it these days, barring some exceptions.

But you’re going to struggle if you’re looking for a new one.

The Fed therefore believes it can put a floor underneath the labor market that prevents it from deteriorating further, Berger said.

While there is reason to believe it can accomplish that, there is an alternative view that it is already behind the curve and should have cut interest rates by now.

‘Historically, deteriorating labor markets generate a self-reinforcing feedback loop,’ former New York Federal Reserve President Bill Dudley wrote in a Bloomberg News op-ed last week. ‘When jobs are harder to find, households trim spending, the economy weakens and businesses reduce investment, which leads to layoffs and further spending cuts.’ 

Another worrying sign: The job growth that is occurring has been in an exceptionally narrow range of occupations, like health care and, to a lesser extent, government, particularly at the state and local levels.

From 2015 to 2019, the average monthly pace of payrolls growth outside of those industries was about 137,000, said Julia Pollak, chief economist at ZipRecruiter.

For the past six months, it has averaged 90,000, Pollak said.

And for the past three months, it has averaged just 58,000.

‘What we need to see is strong private-sector labor market growth, and outside of health care, what we’ve seen instead is a very, very rapid deceleration that has shown no signs yet of stabilizing,’ Pollak said.

The result has been an economy of haves and have-nots, she said.

‘The demand for labor has softened substantially; [high] interest rates are having a real effect,’ Pollak said. ‘They are causing businesses to forgo growth opportunities, something that’s causing consumers, especially low-end consumers, to pull back. We’re seeing a bifurcation in consumer behavior.’

Pollak also said leisure and hospitality jobs — a key entry point into the labor market — have actually declined outright in recent months, putting further pressure on workers to secure employment.

Berger said the best outcome is that there won’t be further deterioration. Sluggish growth, he said, is likely to continue for the foreseeable future.

‘I think the Fed is going to keep a lid on how much things heat up — it probably has a soft ceiling on how high it wants to go,’ he said.

‘So we’re going to be stuck in this period for quite a while, where the environment for someone looking for a job is just not great. Things could always get a lot worse, but if you’re hoping for things to turn around, I don’t think the prospect of a big rapid rebound is feasible. It’s going to be gradual and going to take time.’

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

SAINT-DENIS, France — Eight of the fastest men in the world got ready to line up. The time between athlete introductions and when the gun sounded felt equivalent to the length of a Super Bowl halftime show. The pressure of the moment intensified throughout the Stade de France. When the gun went off, Noah Lyles illustrated in 9.79 (.784) seconds that he’s the fastest man in the world — and the most equipped to handle the moment.

“Everybody on the field came out knowing they could win this race. That’s the mindset we have to have,” Lyles said after winning the Olympic 100 final. “Iron sharpens iron. I saw my name and was like, ‘I didn’t do this against a slow crowd, I did this against the best of the best, on the biggest stage, with the biggest pressure.’

‘I wasn’t even in the 100 in 2021. First Olympics in the 100. Having the title, not just at world champs but at the Olympics, of world’s fastest man.’

The painted nails, the pearls around his neck or braided into his hair, the demonstrative introductions and ‘fastest man in the world’ declarations — Lyles is unapologetically himself. He’s the ultimate showman. The best showman in track and field since Usain Bolt.

2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.

He talks the talk and walks the walk.

‘It feels good to back it up. I’ve done a lot of work throughout the last three years since 2021, and even in 2021. I took on a lot of sponsors to get my name out there. I’ve seen tons of scenarios where athletes come in as a favorite and it doesn’t work out for them,” Lyles said. ‘Knowing it can happen continues to fuel me. Constantly going that extra step, knowing that any time, somebody could pop up. People were saying it’s going to be a slow year in the 100. It wasn’t no slow year in the 100.’

Lyles told USA TODAY Sports that the disappointment of only earning a bronze medal in the 200 at the Tokyo Olympics “ignited a fire” within him. He was experiencing depression in the lead-up to the Tokyo Games. He’s since kept multiple therapists and is very forthright about how therapy continues to aid him. He spoke to one of his therapists before the 100.

“My therapist said, ‘You need to let go, be yourself.’ It was the energy that I’m looking for,’ Lyles said.

Lyles understood the direction and went out and executed. He’s done so since being awarded a bronze medal at the Tokyo Olympics, with four world championship golds since. Now he’s an Olympic gold medalist for the first time. The fastest man in the world.

“I Told You America I Got This,” Lyles posted on social media after winning Olympic gold.

Yes, Noah, you told us. And you backed it up. We should all expect the same outcome when you line up for the 200 in Paris, too.  

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

PARIS – Two black vans pull up to the front entrance of the Musée de l’Homme, and the star of the 2024 Paris Olympics gets out of one at almost 11 p.m. on the dot. 

“Snoop!” a well-timed bystander yells. “We love you!” 

Martha Stewart is waiting inside. Snoop greeted his friend and he described to her Noah Lyles’ photo finish, which happened an hour beforehand. Snoop saw it in person. He’s been everywhere and anywhere, with everyone and anyone, during his time at these Games as a correspondent extraordinaire. He hasn’t been sleeping as much as he has been relaxing. 

“This ain’t the town to sleep in. This ain’t the time to sleep,” Snoop said once his work for the day was done. “It’s the time to be on it like you want it.” 

2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.

Bouncing around from different events and being in the thick of the action, watching athletes do their thing, is something Snoop loves, he said.

Snoop and Stewart walked through the space that is usually a five-star restaurant, Cafe de l’homme, which NBC has temporarily turned into a makeshift on-site control room on the first floor of the museum. (Nearly all of the art has been temporarily relocated.)  

They listen to instructions from senior director Mike Sheehan, who also runs Amazon’s “Thursday Night Football” studio shows. Production assistants pour champagne, Veuve Clicquot, for a teaser shot of Stewart and Snoop clinking their glasses. 

“That’s real champagne,” Snoop remarked. 

Snoop and Stewart – Snoop has called her his ‘homegirl’ and the two have been friends for more than 15 years, appearing together on everything from comedy roasts to Skechers commercials – and their entourages traversed the balcony to sit down with NBC Olympics host Mike Tirico on the official prime time set. Tirico was in stitches the entire time thanks to the duo’s antics.

Three years ago, Snoop went viral alongside Kevin Hart for their equestrian dressage commentary. On Sunday, Snoop returned to his “crip walking” bit because he and Stewart attended the dressage competition at Château de Versailles a day earlier.

“This is real and it’s authentic,” Tirico said of the “Snoop experience” in Paris. “It jumps through the screen. He loves the Olympics. He loves America. And he loves these athletes. I think we’re living that every time he goes out and does a piece.” 

Snoop could not sit still. If dancing while sitting was an Olympic sport, he’d have a gold medal. At Versailles, he learned to love the connection between rider and horse. He also claimed to have conquered his previous fear of horses. 

“This is a celebration of the finest athletes in the world, and he has made it so accessible to everybody,” Stewart said. “That’s his talent. Everybody loves him.” 

‘This is what I do every day’

NBCUniversal couldn’t even wait until the Olympic year began to start hyping Snoop, as the corporation announced Snoop’s role on Dec. 31, 2023. 

Snoop has developed into a social-media sensation during the Games. Among the highlights are his badminton analysis, swimming under the watchful eye of Michael Phelps (definitely not edited) and carrying the Olympic torch. 

His bit with Hart is a major reason behind his Parisian presence with NBC. Snoop referred to his Tokyo experience as a “layup drill.” 

“But now this is the game – the real game. And when the lights is on, that’s when I shine the best,” Snoop said. “So this opportunity wasn’t nothing but a chance for me to show the world what it looked like when you put the right person in the right environment. Sports, entertainment, the globe, this is what I do every day. So that’s why it’s not hard for me to do it and it’s not like an act. The bits that we do, they’re comfortable, they’re not stressed or forced. It’s me being me.” 

The former Death Row Records star gave a shoutout to an NBC executive for shooting down his original idea of buttoning up alongside Tirico in a more formal role. 

“When it’s from the heart,” Tirico said. “It’s easy.” 

Snoop is not only talented, Tirico said. He brings the curiosity of a reporter and the ideas of a producer to the table. He rarely shoots down pitches from others and is always trying to improve his segments.

“That license to color outside the lines is what makes greats great, and he knows how to do that and keeps it looking good,” Tirico said.  

That Snoop has become the social-media and cultural sensation of the Paris Olympics hasn’t surprised Tirico because he sees the work behind the scenes.

“He’s added more than I ever imagined he would,” Tricio said. 

‘I’m a family guy’

Snoop has quickly connected with the parents of Team USA athletes in a way most other talent or reporters couldn’t in television feature-type settings. Families being the avenue for his coverage became apparent during the various trials he covered in June, Snoop said. And it was a natural fit for him and maximized his skill set. 

“Because I’m a family guy. This is the Olympics. And this was the Olympics where the family was actually going to be there,” said Snoop, referencing the Tokyo and Beijing Games that prevented families from traveling due to the COVID-19 pandemic. 

Footage of Snoop celebrating alongside Meghan Dressel, the wife of swimmer Caeleb Dressel, while Meghan held their newborn in her arms with giant noise-blockers over the baby’s ears became an early image of the Olympics.  

“When you get somebody who’s a star who’s willing to be part of the team … you fit right in,’ Tirico said. ‘That makes it easier to work with them.”

Snoop comes in, does his highlights and acts like anybody else who comes in to do a segment on the show. He always brings energy. 

“In the past, it was a serious essay about something,’ Tirico said of how guest spots have evolved in Olympic broadcasts. ‘Now it happens to be one very recognizable, popular celebrity connecting with athletes and parents. So maybe a little bit of the methodology has changed, but the essence of it, the core of it, it’s still the same.” 

From the aftermath of the opening ceremony, Tirico said, the conversation surrounding Snoop went from “What are you doing?” to “Why haven’t you done this before?” 

Since May, Tirico was confident Snoop would hold his own on the big stage. 

“This good?” the “Sunday Night Football” play-by-play announcer said, “I wouldn’t have known.” 

‘I do the unthinkable’

Snoop – government name Calvin Broadus Jr. – filmed promotional content with his selected group of “Snoopians,” athletes such as skateboarder Jagger Eaton, beach volleyball tandem Sara Hughes and Kelly Cheng, gymnast Simone Biles and Lyles, the track and field sprinter. Snoop bussed from Paris to Lille, France, with the men’s basketball team. 

Los Angeles, the host of the next Summer Olympics in 2028, last was the epicenter of the Games in 1984. Snoop was 13. He rattled off the American heroes of those Games: Carl Lewis, Edwin Moses and Mary Lou Retton (“Mary Lou, what it do,” he said). 

Snoop said back then he never could have imagined attending an Olympic event. Watching from home was his front row seat. 

“I remember it being exciting because the whole two, three weeks the whole city was in an uproar,” Snoop said. 

Now he has the whole country feeling the same across the Atlantic Ocean. 

“I think it’s just me mastering me,” Snoop said. 

All he’s done is walk the path in front of him. The first stop on that journey was him narrating ‘Planet Earth’ and other National Geographic programs. The first time many people heard him call an athletic endeavor was Jake Paul’s boxing match against former NBA player Nate Robinson. 

“Remember, I’m a rapper. Ain’t no rapper ever did what I’m doing,” said Snoop, who has collaborated with artists ranging from the late Tupac Shakur to Katy Perry. “So there’s limitations to the field that I come from. ‘Rappers aren’t supposed to do this. Rappers aren’t supposed to do this.’ I turn it into, ‘I do the unthinkable.”

Within an hour of his arrival, Snoop’s work – including an 11-minute group interview with reporters from USA TODAY, the Wall Street Journal and the Associated Press – was finished. He climbed into the black van to drive him back to his hotel. More people yelled at him and asked for pictures. 

“This is my everyday life,” he said. 

Snoop has loved Paris for three decades now. All of the attention he’s received here and back home is nice, he said. But he also knows the Olympics is more than an entertainment icon from “LBC.” 

“I just love that the attention is on the positivity, the unity, the sports, the athlete and the way the world is coming together,” Snoop said. “That’s the attention I love.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

No team has been as dominant in the Olympics than the U.S. women’s national basketball team, and they are now three games away from continuing their success with another gold medal.

The American women have been playing like the best team in the world so far in the 2024 Paris Olympics, winning its three group stage games by 19.3 points. Team USA is now in the knockout round, and it will needs to maintain its perfect record if it wants to win a remarkable eighth consecutive Olympic gold medal.

Here’s what to know about the U.S. women’s national basketball squad ahead of its quarterfinal matchup:

USA women’s basketball national team roster

The U.S. women’s 5×5 national team ‘features some of the best basketball talent our country has to offer,’ head coach Cheryl Reeve said. The team not only has talent, but it boasts major international experience. The players that make up the 2024 U.S. women’s Olympic team have a combined 15 Olympic gold medals between them.

2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.

*Each asterisk marks the number of Olympic appearances, including 2024 Paris 

**A’ja Wilson, Las Vegas Aces
*Alyssa Thomas, Connecticut Sun
***Breanna Stewart, New York Liberty
***Brittney Griner, Phoenix Mercury
**Chelsea Gray, Las Vegas Aces
******Diana Taurasi, Phoenix Mercury
**Jackie Young, Las Vegas Aces (Young was on the 2020 USA 3×3 Women’s National Team)
**Jewell Loyd, Seattle Storm
*Kahleah Copper, Phoenix Mercury
**Kelsey Plum, Las Vegas Aces (Plum was on the 2020 USA 3×3 Women’s National Team)
**Napheesa Collier, Minnesota Lynx
*Sabrina Ionescu, New York Liberty

USA women’s basketball schedule for Paris Olympics 

USA women’s basketball went 3-0 in Group C and advanced to the knockout round. Here’s the dates for the U.S. games: 

Monday, July 29: USA 102, Japan 76
Thursday, Aug. 1: USA 87, Belgium 74
Sunday, Aug. 4: USA 87, Germany 68
Wednesday, Aug. 7: USA vs. Nigeria, 3:30 p.m. ET in quarterfinals

The semifinals will be on Friday, Aug. 9 (11:30 a.m. or 3 p.m. ET) and the gold medal game is Sunday, Aug. 11 (9:30 a.m. ET).

Who is head coach of USA women’s basketball?

Cheryl Reeve, head coach of the WNBA’s Minnesota Lynx, is the head coach of the 2024 USA women’s national team. Kara Lawson (Duke), Joni Taylor (Texas A&M) and Mike Thibault (Washington Mystics) are Reeve’s assistant coaches. Reeve and her staff previously led the USA women to a gold medal at the 2022 FIBA Women’s World Cup.

Curt Miller (Los Angeles Sparks) and Tanisha Wright (Atlanta Dream) will assist the team as scouts.

How many gold medals does USA women’s basketball have?

USA women’s basketball has medaled in every Olympics it has participated, winning a total of 11 Olympic medals, including nine gold, one sliver and one bronze. Here’s how the U.S. women have performed since 1976, when women’s basketball debuted at the Montreal Olympics:

2020, Tokyo: Gold (90–75 win over Japan) 
2016, Rio: Gold (101–72 win over Spain) 
2012, London: Gold (86-50 win over France) 
2008, Athens: Gold (92–65 win Australia) 
2004, Athens: Gold (74–63 over Australia)
2000, Sydney: Gold (76–54 over Australia) 
1996, Atlanta: Gold (111–87 win over Brazil)
1992, Barcelona: Bronze (88–74 win over Cuba in bronze medal game)
1988, Seoul: Gold (77–70 win over Yugoslavia)
1984, Los Angeles: Gold (85–55 win over South Korea) 
1980, Moscow: USA boycotted Olympics due to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan
1976, Canada: Silver (83–67 loss to Czechoslovakia)

How many Olympic gold medals does Diana Taurasi have?

Diana Taurasi and Sue Bird (2004, 2008, 2012, 2016, 2020) are the only two American women’s basketball players to win five Olympic gold medals. Taurasi can become the first to earn six gold medals in Paris. 

Here’s the Olympic medal count for every player on the U.S. women’s roster for Paris:

Diana Taurasi: 5 golds (2004, 2008, 2012, 2016, 2020)
Breanna Stewart: 2 golds (2016, 2020)
Brittney Griner: 2 golds (2016, 2020)
A’ja Wilson: 1 gold (2020)
Chelsea Gray: 1 gold (2020)
Jewell Loyd: 1 gold (2020)
Napheesa Collier: 1 gold (2020)
Jackie Young: 1 gold (2020; USA Women’s 3×3)
Kelsey Plum: 1 gold (2020; USA Women’s 3×3)
Alyssa Thomas: 0
Kahleah Copper: 0
Sabrina Ionescu: 0

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Simone Biles returned Monday for back-to-back event finals to finish off the last day of gymnastics at the Paris Olympics.

The American superstar competed Monday morning in the balance beam final but didn’t medal, falling off during her aeriel series and finishing fifth. Biles will compete in the floor final at 8:23 a.m. ET.  

Biles already had the most Olympic medals of any American gymnast ever as she looked to add more to her already record-setting collection. She has already won three medals so far in Paris – gold in the team final, all-around final and vault final.

Biles secured first place in the floor exercise during the qualification round, finishing a comfortable 0.7 points ahead of second-place qualifier and all-around silver medalist Rebeca Andrade. Biles previously won gold in the floor final in Rio, ahead of former teammate Aly Raisman, but withdrew from the event in Tokyo after experiencing a case of the ‘twisties”.

Biles has two Olympic beam medals to her name – bronze in Rio and Tokyo – and will aim for a third consecutive podium finish. 

2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.

American teammate Suni Lee, who won bronze in the Paris all-around final, will join Biles in the beam final. Biles’ Team USA and World Champions Center teammate Jordan Chiles will compete alongside her in the floor final.

The men’s parallel bars and high bar finals will also take place Monday, but no American gymnasts qualified for either event.

Olympic gymnastics schedule Monday, Aug. 5

All events streaming on Peacock and NBCOlympics.com

Men’s parallel bars final (medal event), 5:45 a.m. ET
Women’s balance beam final (medal event), 6:38 a.m. ET
Men’s high bar final (medal event), 7:33 a.m. ET
Women’s floor exercise final (medal event), 8:23 a.m. ET
Primetime in Paris (women’s balance beam and floor exercise finals replay), 8 p.m. on NBC (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)

Simone Biles medals at Paris Olympics

The 2024 Paris Games mark Biles’ third Olympics and her first Olympic appearance since she withdrew from several events at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 due to ‘the twisties.’ Here’s how she’s fared:

Team final: Biles led the U.S. women’s gymnastics team to a gold medal in the team final. It was Biles’ fifth Olympic gold medal and her eighth overall.
Women’s all-around final: Biles edged out Brazil’s Rebeca Andrade for gold in the all-around final to become the oldest all-around Olympic champion since 1952. Biles is also just the third woman to win all-around twice, and the first to do it eight years apart.
Vault final: Biles captured her third gold medal of these Games. Andrade won silver, her third medal of these Games. Biles’ teammate Jade Carey won bronze, her second medal here and third of her career.
Balance beam final: Monday, Aug. 5; 6:38 a.m. ET. An Olympic gold medal on the balance beam has eluded Biles so far. She has two bronze medals on the beam, the first at the 2016 Rio Olympics and second at the 2021 Tokyo Games.
Floor final: Monday, Aug. 5; 8:23 a.m. ET. Biles won gold in the floor exercise at the 2016 Rio Olympics. Soviet Union’s Larisa Latynina (1956, 1960, 1964), Hungary’s Ágnes Keleti (1952, 1956) and Soviet Union’s Nellie Kim (1976, 1980) are the only female gymnasts to win multiple Olympic gold medals in the floor exercise.

Who qualified for the beam finals?

1. Zhou Yaqin, China, 14.866
2. Simone Biles, USA, 14.733
3. Rebeca Andrade, Brazil, 14.500
4. Sunisa Lee, USA, 14.033
5. Sabrina Voinea, Romania, 14.000
6. Manila Esposito, Italy, 13.966
7. Alice D’Amato, Italy, 13.866
8. Julia Soares, Brazil, 13.800

Who qualified for the floor finals?

1. Simone Biles, USA, 14.600
2. Rebeca Andrade, Brazil, 13.900
3. Jordan Chiles, USA, 13.866
4. Sabrina Voinea, Romania, 13.800
5. Alice D’Amato, Italy, 13.700
6. Ou Yushan, China, 13.666
7. Manila Esposito, Italy, 13.633
8. Kishi Rina, Japan, 13.600
Ana Barbosu, Romania, 13.600

Simone Biles’ Olympic medals

2016 Rio de Janeiro ― Gold: Team all-around
2016 Rio de Janeiro ― Gold: All-around
2016 Rio de Janeiro ― Gold: Vault
2016 Rio de Janeiro ― Gold: Floor exercise
2016 Rio de Janeiro ― Bronze: Balance beam
2020 Tokyo ― Silver: Team all-around
2020 Tokyo ― Bronze: Balance beam
2024 Paris — Gold: Team all-around
2024 Paris — Gold: All-around
2024 Paris — Gold: Vault

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian on Friday offered employees two free travel passes to thank staff members who were caught in massive disruptions last month sparked by a botched CrowdStrike software update that stranded thousands of customers and crew.

Delta had more trouble than competitors in recovering from the outages that took thousands of Windows machines offline. The carrier canceled more than 5,000 flights from July 19 through July 24, more than it did in all of 2019, according to FlightAware, in an incident that CEO Bastian said earlier this week cost the company about $500 million, a sum that is equal to about 40% of Delta’s second-quarter profit.

The disruption “has been a humbling moment for our company,” Bastian said in his note on Friday, which was seen by CNBC. “I know it’s been extremely difficult, and I’m deeply sorry for what you have endured. An operational disruption of this length and magnitude is simply unacceptable — you and our customers deserve better.”

The flight cancellations and delays stranded thousands and scarred Delta’s reputation as a standout in reliability. Its executives frequently point out Delta’s work to win over customers willing to pay more to fly the carrier, marketing itself as a premium airline.

Bastian said Delta plans to pursue legal action against CrowdStrike and Microsoft “to recover our losses caused by the outage” and that it has hired law firm Boies Schiller Flexner.

“Your efforts throughout have been nothing short of heroic,” he told staff.

Microsoft and CrowdStrike didn’t immediately comment on Friday.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

PARIS ― The hottest item at the 2024 Paris Olympics is a Snoop Dogg pin.

Not even the man himself owns one. And don’t ask him for the Olympic-themed collectible, as ‘D-O-double-G’ doesn’t know the first place to find his pin.

“I don’t have an answer for that,” Snoop said when asked about the supply. “I’m going to be honest with you, I have zero answer for that.

“I’ll have to get y’all a sidebar on that.”

But he doesn’t have them?

2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.

“Look at me,” the rap said, unzipping the top of his jumpsuit. “I don’t have no pins on.”

The pin shows Snoop exhaling smoke in the form of the Olympic rings logo with the Eiffel Tower in the background. Team USA flagbearer Coco Gauff got her hands on one — and credited Snoop for giving it to her, casting aspersions on Snoop’s claim he’s clueless when it comes to his pins.

Pins are an often-traded collectible at each Olympics in a tradition that dates back to 1896, per NBC. Many Olympic diehards take the bartering seriously.

Snoop’s closest coworkers, such as NBC’s Olympics host Mike Tirico, don’t have the pin.

“I’m kind of disappointed,” said Tirico, who has requested them to no avail.

The pin does not appear to be available for purchase at any Games-sanctioned stores. For the vast majority of the world, the hunt continues.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

NANTERRE, France — The U.S. men were down to their last chance, their final race, to avoid the ignominy of doing something in American swimming that hadn’t been done in 124 years: going oh-for-the-Olympics in men’s individual gold medals.

Then Bobby Finke saved the day. When the reigning Olympic gold medalist in the men’s 1,500 freestyle won it again in a world-record time Sunday evening on the final day of the Olympic swimming competition, the U.S. men saved face — a little.

Instead of zero individual golds, they finished with one. So, instead of having to go back to 1900, we only have to go back 68 years to find this kind of underwhelming individual performance by American male swimmers striving for the top of the medal podium.

The last time the American men won only one individual gold medal at an Olympics was 1956 in Melbourne, when there were only six men’s events in all. The time before that? The 1932 Los Angeles Olympics, when there were only five. Here at the 2024 Paris Olympics, there were 14 individual men’s races. 

After the dominance of Michael Phelps from 2004-2016, and Caeleb Dressel in 2021, this was a shock to the system. No star stepped up. They tried, of course, but it just didn’t happen. Silver replaced gold; bronze replaced silver. Fast times at the U.S. Olympic trials in June could not be matched. Not winning races became the norm.

“We want our athletes to win gold medals but the other teams have great athletes as well,” U.S. men’s coach Anthony Nesty said after the final race Sunday. “Hopefully we go back and all the coaches of the U.S. get back on it in August and hopefully four years from now we have a better result in L.A. (at the 2028 Olympics).” 

But there’s a plot twist in this less-than-inspiring story: the United States actually won the swimming gold medal count at these Olympics, by a sliver over Australia, 8-7. 

Who gets the credit for that? The U.S. women’s swimmers, who admirably won four individual gold medals and one relay gold. The U.S. men did win one relay gold, and that eighth gold came in Saturday night’s mixed medley relay. 

While the men had Finke, the women had Katie Ledecky, who swam into the history books with two more gold medals in her specialties, the 800 and 1,500 freestyle, to go with a relay silver and a bronze in the 400 free. And they had Torri Huske, the American breakout star of the meet, who won the 100 butterfly and anchored two gold-medal-winning, world-record-setting relay teams. She also won a silver in the 100 freestyle and a silver in another relay.

And they had Kate Douglass, who won the 200 breaststroke as well as gold in one relay and silver in the 200 individual medley and another relay. 

There was a depth among the U.S. women that didn’t exist with the men. The United States ran away with the overall swimming medal count, 28 total medals to 18 for Australia, but 18 of those U.S. medals belonged to the women, while only nine were won by the men, with the other coming in the mixed medley relay comprised of two men and two women. 

“Every time we step on deck, I still feel like we have the target on our back that we’re the team to beat and that probably won’t change, ever,” said Dressel, who didn’t win an individual medal here after winning three individual golds in Tokyo three years ago. (He did win two golds and a silver in the relays.)

“The goal when we come to the Olympics and the world championships is to win gold medals. There are other countries that are getting very dominant. … The wealth has just been spread around. I don’t think we’re getting any worse, per se. It’s good for the sport to have the whole world involved in it.”

But there was an unsettled feeling surrounding this U.S. men’s team. 

“Our goal is always to match our times or be better,” Nesty said. “But obviously they could have been better. You have to go back and look at your preparation coming into the meet and be better.”

All was not lost for Nesty. In addition to being the head coach of the U.S. men’s team at these Games, he also coaches someone else who swam here this week: Katie Ledecky. 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY