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A federal appeals judge on Friday blocked President Donald Trump’s plan to end birthright citizenship for the children of people in the country illegally or temporarily. 

U.S. District Judge Leo Sorokin ruled that a nationwide injunction on the Trump administration’s effort to end birthright citizenship that he issued earlier this year and that was granted to more than a dozen states can stand. 

Sorokin said the ruling was an exception to a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling that limited lower courts’ ability to issue nationwide injunctions. The issue is expected to return to the Supreme Court.  

Trump and the administration ‘are entitled to pursue their interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment, and no doubt the Supreme Court will ultimately settle the question,’ Sorokin wrote in his ruling. ‘But in the meantime, for purposes of this lawsuit at this juncture, the Executive Order is unconstitutional.’

The Trump administration has argued that children born in the U.S. to parents in the country illegally and temporarily are not ‘subject to the jurisdiction’ of the United States and therefore not entitled to citizenship. 

Trump signed the birthright citizenship executive order, along with a slew of other orders, on his first day in office in January. 

On Wednesday, the San Francisco-based 9th Circuit Court of Appeals also affirmed the lower court’s nationwide injunction, and, earlier this month, a New Hampshire federal judge issued a ruling prohibiting Trump’s executive order from taking effect nationwide in a new class-action lawsuit.

Sorokin disagreed with the Trump administration’s argument that the Supreme Court’s ruling warranted a narrower ruling. 

The plaintiffs in the class-action lawsuit argued that Trump’s executive order is unconstitutional because the 14th Amendment guarantees birthright citizenship, and it also threatens millions of dollars in state funding for ‘essential’ health insurance services contingent on citizenship status. 

Reuters and the Associated Press contributed to this report. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The sequel features many celebrity cameos, including golfers Scottie Scheffler, Will Zalatoris, John Daly, Rory McIlroy, Bryson DeChambeau, and Brooks Koepka, as well as rapper Bad Bunny and athlete Travis Kelce.
Several scenes pay homage to the original movie, including a batting cage sequence and Will Zalatoris playing Happy’s former caddie who now resents him.
Running gags include John Daly squirting alcohol from a hand sanitizer bottle and Scottie Scheffler getting arrested again.

Spoiler alert! We’re discussing important plot points during ‘Happy Gilmore 2’ (streaming now). If you haven’t seen the movie yet and don’t want to know anything about the plot, stop reading now!

The future of ‘regular golf’ is on the line and Happy Gilmore is a down-on-his-luck drunk and father of five who gave up the game years ago after he accidentally killed his wife, Virginia Venit, with a wayward drive off the tee. Shooter McGavin is in an insane asylum and Gilmore is working at a grocery store.

This is the foundation behind the beginning premise of ‘Happy Gilmore 2,’ the highly-anticipated made-for-Netflix sequel of Adam Sandler’s classic 1996 golf film that was released by the streaming service on Friday, July 25. Sandler and much of the original cast returned to reprise their roles for a story set almost 30 years later, with plenty of nostalgic moments, people and scenes that call back to the first movie.

But the plot also plays off modern golf themes with a new renegade league promising more fun threatening the existence of ‘The Tour.’ Gilmore ends up having to save the sport, save himself, find enough money to send his daughter to ballet school in Paris and get grandma’s house back (after he lost it again following Virginia’s death). It’s a fun trip down memory lane fueled by sports, with much of the film taking place on golf courses, golf simulators, driving ranges and batting cages, as a bevy of celebrities and athletes appear on screen in various roles or as themselves.

Here’s a look at some of the best sports moments and cameos from ‘Happy Gilmore 2,’ (and we’ll try not to spoil too much of the movie if you haven’t seen it yet, but beware):

Scottie Scheffler gets arrested … again

There were loads of recognizable golfers from the past and present in the film (although Tiger Woods is notably not one of them, despite being mentioned). But current world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler provided the most timely comic relief as the script called for a couple references to Scheffler’s infamous arrest at the 2024 PGA Championship.

Happy Gilmore shows Scheffler how to win a hockey fight at one point. Scheffler uses the skills late in the film when he punches an opponent when The Tour is in a showdown with evil, ‘Maxi Golf.’ Scheffler is disqualified and put in handcuffs, at which point he says, ‘Oh, no. Not again.’ Scheffler is later shown in prison, including a hidden scene after the credits. He also blows off an interview featuring goofy questions by Gary Potter, played again by actor and comedian Kevin Nealon.

Jack Nicklaus is a close second in the golf humor department when he orders a ‘half-lemonade, half-iced tea, refusing to call it an ‘Arnold Palmer.’

Will Zalatoris is Happy Gilmore’s former caddie

There are several modern-day twists on what happened in the first ‘Happy Gilmore,’ but the best might be the way the script capitalizes on PGA Tour golfer Will Zalatoris and his striking resemblance to the actor who played Gilmore’s caddie in the original film. For ‘Happy Gilmore 2,’ Zalatoris plays himself but he’s also Gilmore’s former caddie and, unbeknownst to Gilmore, he’s now on Tour.

The two end up in the same group at The Tour Championship, with the grudge Zalatoris holds about the way Gilmore used to treat him serving as a catalyst for a fun montage showcasing Gilmore’s return to tournament golf. Gilmore ends up accidentally hitting Zalatoris with a snake, covering him in sand from the bunker and eventually tackles him into a pond just like the old days thinking Zalatoris likes it. Zalatoris, for good measure, is shown choking his own caddie like Gilmore once did to him, with Gilmore offering his approval.

Bad Bunny is Happy Gilmore’s new caddie thanks to evil Travis Kelce

Happy Gilmore’s new caddie winds up being Oscar, a waiter played by Puerto Rican actor and rapper Bad Bunny. Oscar gets unfairly fired by his boss, played by Travis Kelce, during the Tour Champions dinner attended by Gilmore. After Gilmore can’t persuade Kelce’s character he’s being too harsh, Oscar shows up at the first tee as Gilmore’s caddie still dressed in his waiter’s outfit and no clue what to do with Gilmore’s clubs.

Gilmore asks Oscar to go to his ‘happy place’ on the green for him at one point and it leads to a dream sequence in which Bad Bunny’s character lathers honey on Kelce’s character tied to a tree. A bear then approaches to eat Kelce before the camera cuts back to the golf course.

‘Uncle John Daly,’ Happy Gilmore’s drunk neighbor

Happy Gilmore’s daughter Vienna, played by Sunny Sandler, one of Sandler’s real-life children, initially calls John Daly, ‘Uncle John Daly.’ He lives next to Gilmore in the rougher neighborhood he has to move to when he loses all his money. Daly is treated as a quasi-family member in the film. As part of a running gag in the film in which Sandler’s character hides booze in an assortment of props and household items, Daly is frequently seen squirting booze into his mouth from a bottle of hand sanitizer.

But Daly, a recovering alcoholic in real life, also serves as a sounding board and confidant for Gilmore as he contemplates returning to golf, reminding him to, ‘Grip it and rip it.’

Boban goes streaking

Remember Mr. Larson, the large construction foreman who had a nail in his head courtesy of Happy Gilmore, only to become his biggest fan in the gallery? Well, he’s not in the sequel after chasing Shooter McGavin for Gilmore’s gold jacket. But his son, played by 7-foot-4 former NBA center Boban Marjanovic, appears in the film.

Like his father, Drago Larson comes to Gilmore’s aid from the gallery on the golf course when Gilmore falls off the wagon on Mother’s Day. Gilmore avoids arrest because the police have to chase after Boban’s character, who takes off his clothes and goes streaking down the fairway.

Happy Gilmore takes golf’s best to batting cage

The lead up to the film’s final competition (trying not to spoil too much) includes a scene in which Happy Gilmore takes Rory McIlroy, Bryson DeChambeau, Brooks Koepka and Scheffler to the batting cages. This, he tells them, is how he used to get ready for big tournaments and there’s even a flashback to the memorable scene of Gilmore taking baseballs into the chest from the first movie. But DeChambeau proceeds to get hit below the waist and the rest of the world’s best golfers get taken out, too.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Minnesota Vikings find themselves in somewhat of a transition season and it’s already off to rough start.

On Friday, head coach Kevin O’Connell revealed the star receiver Justin Jefferson suffered a mild hamstring strain that is set to keep him out of practice. The team will reevaluate Jefferson next week, but it’s unclear how long he will be sidelined as a result.

Veterans just reported to Vikings training camp on July 22.

Jefferson has been around the NFL block a few times, so his absence isn’t particularly concerning other than the nature of hamstring injuries – which have a tendency to be pesky.

The real concern, however, is for the chemistry that the team is looking to develop on offense.

J.J. McCarthy, the team’s first-round pick in 2024, missed his entire rookie season thanks to a torn meniscus in his right knee. While Sam Darnold filled in admirably for the 14-3 Vikings, Minnesota made the quarterback switch over the offseason to the former Michigan man.

It will be difficult for McCarthy to get on the same page with Jefferson without those valuable practice reps, but the star receiver is seemingly quarterback-proof.

That will be put to the test if Jefferson is sidelined for a significant length of time.

How long is Justin Jefferson out?

Jefferson will be out for at least a week.

The Vikings will reevaluate him after that and determine if he can be cleared for a return to practice at that time. Given the nature of the injury, the receiver will likely be eased back into action once he is ale to return.

Vikings WR depth chart

Here’s a look at the Vikings’ depth chart at receiver without Jefferson:

Jordan Addison
Jalen Nailor
Rondale Moore
Tai Felton
Tim Jones

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Sometimes going to your happy place makes all the difference.

Kelce made an appearance in Adam Sandler-led golf comedy flick ‘Happy Gilmore 2’ as a restaurant manager who is something of a bully to his subordinate Oscar, played by singer and entertainer Bad Bunny.

Kelce is in a pair of scenes in the movie, but the more notable one features Bad Bunny’s character ‘Oscar’ going to his happy place, in which he slathers honey over a half-naked Kelce, who is tied to a post. Kelce is then left to be devoured by a bear in the fantasy sequence.

Earlier, Kelce chest-bumps Xander Schauffele and Collin Morikawa through a restaurant table.

‘I thought he was tremendous, and could totally be a superstar in acting,’ star Sandler said about Kelce in a recent interview.

The movie also features cameos by some of golf’s biggest stars, past and present, including Jack Nicklaus, Nick Faldo, Rory McIlroy, Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele, Bryson DeChambeau, Brooks Koepka, Justin Thomas and Will Zalatoris.

As far as Netflix producing another comedy hit? Well, Happy Gilmore accomplished that feat no more than an hour ago.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

I kept waiting for a besotted, hoodwinked boyfriend to show up at ACC media days.

All I saw was a football coach.

If you’re like me, you followed the breathless offseason coverage of NFL legend turned North Carolina coach Bill Belichick, his relationship with 24-year-old girlfriend Jordon Hudson, and her apparent sway over the veteran coach.

Some even suggested Belichick’s self-described “muse” put him under her spell, like she’s some sort of Svengali who bamboozles her 73-year-old boyfriend.

If you’re like me, you see this situation as a molehill, built into a mountain during the slow news portion of the college football calendar.

When Belichick spoke Thursday at his conference’s media days, he looked and sounded like a college football coach. He spoke to how he spent the offseason “reinforcing the roster.’ North Carolina’s transfer haul that 247Sports ranks as the third-best in the ACC supports this. He explained his excitement for coaching college players, because they’re more receptive to coaching and have formed fewer bad habits than their older NFL counterparts.

Belichick is longer in the tooth than most coaches, but he’s a shade younger than Nick Saban, and, as he spoke to the evolution of the fullback position, he sounded like a man in possession of his wits. Belichick navigated this presser more coherently than a couple of U.S. presidents I’ve observed, anyway.

As for Hudson’s apparent influence over Belichick, I wouldn’t call that a nothing burger. It was strange to see the clout she wielded and roadblocks she erected during that now-infamous interview Belichick gave to CBS, while he attempted to promote his book.

This, though, seems more of a single-patty burger than a gut-busting triple patty, so long as Hudson doesn’t start calling plays or dictating recruiting strategies.

Jordon Hudson influences Bill Belichick’s brand. So what?

Belichick has said Hudson’s place in his life is personal and “doesn’t have anything to do with football.” She’s not employed by the university. She manages activities related to Belichick’s personal brand, and she clearly flexes muscle on his public appearances and messaging.

Belichick is hardly the first coach to acquire an affection for a younger woman, and Hudson, a former cheerleader, is hardly the first WAG to massage her man’s media messaging.

The Athletic obtained and reported on emails Hudson sent to North Carolina’s communications and marketing staff in which she suggested messaging strategies. In those emails, she came off as overbearing, but strategically sound.

I’ve been in plenty of postgame news conferences where a spouse listens intently from the back of the room. I’ve covered a program where the coach’s wife sometimes attended practice.

At North Carolina, wide receiver Jordan Shipp told an ESPN Radio affiliate that Sally Brown, wife of former coach Mack Brown, had an active and visible presence around the program.

Saban occasionally credited his wife, Terry, for her suggestions on his messaging and how he comported himself, and he said she influenced his retirement decision. Terry Saban also helps steer her husband’s kids foundation.

I’m not saying Belichick’s new-to-the-block “muse” will be the next Terry Saban, the ultimate stateswoman of coaches’ spouses.

But, how can we be sure Hudson won’t help Belichick’s public persona?

Mississippi coach Lane Kiffin used to date a 20-something former cheerleader. He still raves about how she positively influenced his worldview.

Belichick, with Hudson’s help, botched the CBS appearance, but it’s not as if the man was loquacious while coaching the New England Patriots. At Thursday’s ACC event, Belichick came off calculated and confident and even mildly humorous.

Belichick survived and thrived operating within the unrelenting spotlight of an east-coast NFL media market. Compared to that, navigating college football media should be a cakewalk. Not a single reporter asked Belichick about Hudson or her involvement with how he operates the Tar Heels during his media days news conference. He fielded nothing but softball questions from the gathered press.

Will Bill Belichick succeed at North Carolina? Talent is the key

Here are the brass tacks. Belichick will succeed at North Carolina if he maintains booster buy-in (meaning NIL dollars) and uses that to assemble and develop a roster capable of contending in the ACC.

I don’t care who you’re dating or how often she interrupts your book-tour interview with CBS, college football is a profession of talent assembly. If Belichick attracts more talent than his peers and develops it well, the Tar Heels should fare OK, as long as he’s checked-in mentally. If he fails to do that, he won’t succeed.

Veteran defensive back Will Hardy described sensing a “new spark” and a “new energy” injected into the program upon Belichick’s hire.

That extends to the fan base. UNC announced that all of its home games are sold out.

Belichick and his staff flipped the roster after inheriting a squad that finished 6-7. UNC’s haul of more than 40 transfers includes capable players from schools like Penn State, Florida, Nebraska and Washington. The Tar Heels also acquired Gio Lopez, a top quarterback from the Group of Five ranks. High school recruiting seems to be going well enough.

Many players transferred out, too. That happens whenever a coaching change occurs.

Those who stayed, and the newcomers who arrived, feel like they have “something to prove,” transfer defensive back Thaddeus Dixon said.

I’d imagine that feeling also applies to a coach who won six Super Bowls guiding the Patriots, before his NFL career fizzled after Tom Brady left his side. He returned to coaching with a muse at his side. So what?

SMU showed it’s possible to quickly climb the ACC’s ladder. The Mustangs made the College Football Playoff in their first season as an ACC member.

With the right coach, UNC could become a playoff contender, too.

Is Belichick the right coach? It’s too soon to wager more than a guess, but I wouldn’t bet against it just because his girlfriend inspires him. I didn’t see a hypnotized codger at media days, only a veteran coach who sounded intent on building a winning program.

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

On what was a momentous day for WWE, it only made sense for arguably its biggest star ever to appear. It was Jan. 6, the Netflix debut of Raw, and inside of the Intuit Dome, “Real American” hit the speakers.

For nearly 40 years, the song and emergence of Hulk Hogan generated one of the biggest pops in wrestling, getting everybody in the crowd on their feet and rocking.

On this day, people were on their feet, but it was far from a warm welcome. It was booing, drowning out everything coming from the WWE Hall of Famer’s mouth. He thanked the fans for supporting him his entire career. It didn’t change the negative reception.

That wound up being Hogan’s final WWE appearance before his death on July 24. Should it have ended like that? No. But can you blame them? No.

There isn’t a way to measure what Hogan meant to wrestling. It might not be a worldwide phenomenon if it wasn’t for him. He was a real-life Captain America, a larger-than-life inspiration and role model for the youth that if they ate their vegetables, took their vitamins and did the right thing, they too could be a superstar like him. He transcended the wrestling ring and paved the way for people like Dwayne Johnson and John Cena to find careers outside of the business.

If there was a Mount Rushmore of wrestlers — just on their contributions to the business — there’s no doubt Hogan would be there.

But that’s the thing; Hogan’s career can’t be viewed as just what he contributed to wrestling. It has to include the things that tainted his legacy, largely because of himself. 

It’s no secret steroid use was rampant in the early days of WWE. But for years, Hogan denied using performance enhancements. How could the perfect role model cheat his way to the top?

The mystique all came crashing down in 1994, when Hogan testified in United States v. McMahon, under immunity, he did take steroids. His admission came as he saved WWE founder Vince McMahon from prosecution.

It should’ve been known it was the start of decades of countless lies and fabrications. For as big as Hogan was, his ego might’ve been larger. He was constantly feeding lies, trying to make himself look like the greatest thing to walk this planet. Whether it was saying Metallica wanted him as a bassist or MLB teams scouted him, Hogan wasn’t afraid to lie.

It even came at the expense of other wrestlers. He claimed The Undertaker hurt him at Survivor Series 1991, and the eventual WWE Hall of Famer wasn’t fired only because video evidence saved him. 

Those lies within wrestling also came with him flexing the power he gained. Do you remember seeing Hogan lose? It was as rare as him telling the truth. He buried so much talent for his own personal gain, whether it was in WWE or WCW. So many stars left in the clutches of a man that couldn’t envision anyone else being bigger than him. 

If it happened, there was a bus for Hogan to throw them under. It was so common, there’s a meme in the wrestling community when a veteran wrestler beats younger talent, their name becomes (first name) Hogan. What a way to stay relevant.

However, there’s no greater negative impact Hogan had on wrestling than stopping the unionization of it. All Jesse Ventura’s vision needed was Hogan’s support. Instead, Hogan told McMahon of the plans, putting an end to wrestler’s rights and leaving McMahon in the control of WWE.   

All that, and we haven’t even touched what’s happened outside of wrestling.

What happened in 2015 ended any chance of Hogan being remembered in a positive light. The extremely racist rant — all done in a sex tape, mind you — showed not just who Terry Bollea was, but who Hogan is. He admitted in the clip he was racist.

A real American, fighting for the rights of every man? Let me tell you something brother, that’s far from the truth — but that’s just on par for Hogan. 

With a legacy so tarnished, it made sense Hogan decided to go full-send on becoming a mascot for President Donald Trump during the 2024 election. And just in case we forgot about his views, he made sure to openly question former Vice President Kamala Harris’ race and joke about wanting to body slam her, making sure we all knew exactly who he was up until the end.

For those that used to be wrestling fans and remember watching Hogan be remarkable, the news of his death was likely a sad one. Spending time watching old clips, overcoming heels, reminiscing on how cool he was to watch and how ingrained he was in their childhood.

But for those still following wrestling know it’s a complex day that can’t just celebrate and honor Hogan. His final WWE appearance is proof he damaged his reputation so much, it was impossible for him to be known as “the immortal” Hulk Hogan again.

While the chorus of boos rained in the arena and Hogan looking at the crowd for what ended up being the last time, commentator Michael Cole said something undoubtedly true.

“If it wasn’t for Hulk Hogan, we would not be here tonight,” he said.

It’s a shame it can’t be his full lasting legacy.

“Hulkamania” indeed ran wild, and that might have just been the problem.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Artist Amy Sherald canceled her upcoming exhibit featuring a portrait of a transgender Statue of Liberty at the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery after Vice President JD Vance raised concerns the show included woke and divisive content, Fox News Digital has learned. 

President Donald Trump signed an executive order in March that placed Vance in charge of overseeing the removal of programs or exhibits at Smithsonian museums that ‘degrade shared American values, divide Americans based on race, or promote programs or ideologies inconsistent with Federal law and policy.’ 

Vance said Sherald’s ‘American Sublime’ exhibit violated Trump’s executive order and was an example of woke and divisive content during a meeting June 9 with the Board of Regents, a source familiar with the meeting told Fox News Digital. 

‘Vice President Vance has been leading the effort to eliminate woke indoctrination from our beloved Smithsonian museums,’ an administration official said in an email to Fox News Digital. ‘On top of shepherding the One Big Beautiful Bill through the Senate and helping President Trump navigate international crises, the vice president has demonstrated his ability to get President Trump’s priorities across the finish line.’

Sherald, best known for painting former first lady Michelle Obama’s official portrait in 2018, announced Thursday she was pulling her show, ‘American Sublime,’ from the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery slated for September, The New York Times first reported. 

Sherald said she was rescinding her work from the exhibition after being told that the National Portrait Gallery had some concerns about featuring the portrait of the transgender Statue of Liberty during the show. The painting, ‘Trans Forming Liberty,’ depicts a trans woman with pink hair wearing a blue gown. 

‘These concerns led to discussions about removing the work from the exhibition,’ Sherald said in a statement, The New York Times first reported Thursday. ‘While no single person is to blame, it’s clear that institutional fear shaped by a broader climate of political hostility toward trans lives played a role. 

‘This painting exists to hold space for someone whose humanity has been politicized and disregarded. I cannot in good conscience comply with a culture of censorship, especially when it targets vulnerable communities.

‘At a time when transgender people are being legislated against, silenced and endangered across our nation, silence is not an option,’ Sherald added. ‘I stand by my work. I stand by my sitters. I stand by the truth that all people deserve to be seen — not only in life, but in art.’

The Smithsonian did not immediately respond to a request for comment regarding Vance’s involvement in the matter. 

The White House said the removal of Sherald’s exhibit is a ‘principled and necessary step’ toward cultivating unity at institutions like the Smithsonian. 

‘The ‘Trans Forming Liberty’ painting, which sought to reinterpret one of our nation’s most sacred symbols through a divisive and ideological lens, fundamentally strayed from the mission and spirit of our national museums,’ Trump special assistant Lindsey Halligan said in a statement to Fox News Digital. 

‘The Statue of Liberty is not an abstract canvas for political expression. It is a revered and solemn symbol of freedom, inspiration and national unity that defines the American spirit.’

Other members of the Smithsonian’s Board of Regents include the Chief Justice of the United States, John Roberts, along with senators John Boozman, R-Ark.; Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nev.; and Gary Peters, D-Mich., along with several other House members. 

Fox News’ Gabriel Hays contributed to this report. 

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Microsoft has laid off over 15,000 people so far in 2025. The stress of the belt-tightening has gotten to CEO Satya Nadella.

“Before anything else, I want to speak to what’s been weighing heavily on me, and what I know many of you are thinking about: the recent job eliminations,” Nadella wrote in a memo to employees Thursday.

After Microsoft’s latest labor reductions, investors pushed the stock’s closing price above $500 for the first time on July 9. The company announced the layoffs of about 9,000 people a week earlier. Microsoft employed 228,000 people as of June 2024. It hasn’t provided a new figure that takes into account its layoffs this year, but Nadella wrote that headcount is basically flat.

“This is the enigma of success in an industry that has no franchise value,” he wrote. “Progress isn’t linear. It’s dynamic, sometimes dissonant, and always demanding. But it’s also a new opportunity for us to shape, lead through, and have greater impact than ever before.”

The cuts at Microsoft are reflective of an overall trend across the tech industry, with over 80,000 positions eliminated to date in 2025, according to one count. Recruit Holdings announced earlier this month that it would lay off 1,300 people from its human resources technology segment that includes the Indeed and Glassdoor websites. The company’s CEO pointed to artificial intelligence in a memo, Bloomberg reported.

On social media in recent months, some Microsoft employees have become disheartened about the company’s cutbacks, given its stature.

“I have loved working for this company, still do, but this has done so much damage to that loyalty because it has shown that Microsoft’s espoused values do not apply to business decisions at the macro level,” a person who lists themselves as a Microsoft directed on LinkedIn posted last week.

Microsoft is the world’s most valuable public company after Nvidia, whose chips have become a critical piece of the AI arms race. Microsoft’s Windows and Office franchises remain dominant, and its Azure cloud services have seen faster growth in recent years as OpenAI and other companies rent out Nvidia graphics cards to run AI models.

In the memo, Nadella touched on Microsoft’s mission for the past 10 years, which has been to empower every person and every organization on the planet to achieve more, and how the rise of AI is changing it.

“We must reimagine our mission for a new era,” he wrote. “What does empowerment look like in the era of AI? It’s not just about building tools for specific roles or tasks. It’s about building tools that empower everyone to create their own tools. That’s the shift we are driving — from a software factory to an intelligence engine empowering every person and organization to build whatever they need to achieve.”

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Trump administration regulators have approved Skydance Media’s $8 billion bid to acquire CBS News parent company Paramount, paving the way for a tectonic shift in ownership of one of America’s three major networks.

The Federal Communications Commission said Thursday that it had approved the acquisition, with FCC Chairman Brendan Carr adding in a news release that the move would bring change to the company’s news coverage. Paramount owns CBS, which includes CBS News.

‘Americans no longer trust the legacy national news media to report fully, accurately, and fairly. It is time for a change,’ Carr said. ‘That is why I welcome Skydance’s commitment to make significant changes at the once storied CBS broadcast network. In particular, Skydance has made written commitments to ensure that the new company’s programming embodies a diversity of viewpoints from across the political and ideological spectrum.’

‘Today’s decision also marks another step forward in the FCC’s efforts to eliminate invidious forms of DEI discrimination,’ Carr added.

David Ellison; Shari Redstone.AP; Getty Images

In recent days, Paramount’s new owner made a number of concessions to the FCC, including agreeing to not implement any diversity, equity or inclusion programs. Skydance also said it would ‘undertake a comprehensive review’ of CBS and ‘will commit, for a period of at least two years, to have in place an ombudsman.’ That role would report to the president of the new company.

A number of companies that have billion-dollar transactions pending before Carr’s FCC have also backed off of DEI programs, including Verizon and T-Mobile.

The concessions also came after Paramount Global settled a lawsuit with President Donald Trump for $16 million. Trump brought that suit, saying the way CBS edited a ’60 Minutes’ interview with former Vice President Kamala Harris was ‘election and voter interference.’

The lone Democrat in FCC leadership, Commissioner Anna Gomez, did not mince words about the push to secure promises from the companies.

“After months of cowardly capitulation to this Administration, Paramount finally got what it wanted,’ she said in an emailed statement.

‘In an unprecedented move, this once-independent FCC used its vast power to pressure Paramount to broker a private legal settlement and further erode press freedom,’ she added. ‘Once again, this agency is undermining legitimate efforts to combat discrimination and expand opportunity by overstepping its authority and intervening in employment matters reserved for other government entities with proper jurisdiction on these issues.’

‘Even more alarming, it is now imposing never-before-seen controls over newsroom decisions and editorial judgment, in direct violation of the First Amendment and the law.’

Skydance is run by David Ellison, son of Oracle founder and Trump ally Larry Ellison. While the younger Ellison made a donation to President Joe Biden’s re-election fund in February 2024 shortly before the former president bowed out of the race, Trump recently signaled his comfort with his takeover of Paramount and its assets, which in addition to CBS News include Nickelodeon, Comedy Central, The CW, MTV, BET and film franchises like “Smurfs” and “Sonic the Hedgehog.”

“Ellison is great. He’ll do a great job with it,” Trump said in June.

There is likely to be a sea change in the editorial direction of CBS News under its new ownership. In a recent filing, Ellison and Skydance said they’d told Carr that they were committed to pursuing a focus on “American storytelling” while touting a new, “unbiased” editorial direction for CBS News. Their meeting came shortly after Paramount agreed to settle Trump’s lawsuit.

It also came just days after CBS announced it was canceling “The Late Show,” currently hosted by Stephen Colbert — an announcement Trump praised on social media. Colbert had recently criticized the parent company’s multimillion-dollar settlement with Trump, while CBS said the cancellation was “purely a financial decision against a challenging backdrop in late night.”

There had been signs of an editorial shift ahead of the merger. Most notably, longtime “60 Minutes” editor Bill Owens announced he was stepping down this spring, citing CBS News’ fading editorial independence. Shortly after, CBS News President and CEO Wendy McMahon was pushed out. Last week, The New York Times reported Skydance was in early talks to acquire the conservative-leaning The Free Press media outlet. Meanwhile, “Daily Show” host Jon Stewart has said he did not know whether his program would survive the merger.

Skydance has spent years pursuing Paramount and eventually realized it could successfully execute the transaction by purchasing Paramount’s parent, National Amusements, the company once helmed by Sumner Redstone, the father of the company’s current chairwoman, president and CEO, Shari Redstone. Yet the proposed deal continued to face hurdles, first under the Biden administration then at the outset of Trump’s term. Its approval came in what was its third deadline extension period.

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Thyman Arensman had a flair for the dramatic during the final mountain stage of the 2025 Tour de France.

The Dutch rider passed Tour de France leaders Tadej Pogačar and Jonas Vingegaard on the final climb up La Plagne in the French Alps to win Stage 19 on Friday, July 25. It was Arensman’s second stage win in less than a week at this year’s Tour de France and occurred on a shorter-than-expected course.

With just two stages left in the 2025 edition of cycling’s biggest event, Pogačar is closing in on his second-straight Tour de France title (and fourth overall) when the riders make their way down the Champs-Élysées in Paris on Sunday for the traditional finale. Here’s a look at the complete stage 19 results and 2025 Tour de France standings after Friday, July 25, as well as what’s coming up this weekend:

Stage 19 results

Here are the final results of the 93.1-kilometer Stage 19 course from Albertville to La Plagne at the 2025 Tour de France on Friday, July 25 (with position, rider, team, time):

Thymen Arensman, Ineos Grenadiers (2 hours, 46 minutes, 6 seconds)
Jonas Vingegaard, Team Visma | Lease a Bike (2:46.08)
Tadej Pogačar, UAE Team Emirates XRG (2:46.08)
Florian Lipowitz, Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe (2:46.12)
Oscar Onley, Team Picnic Postnl (2:46.53)
Felix Gall, Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale Team (2:47.40)
Tobias Johannessen, Uno-X Mobility (2:47.47)
Ben Healy, EF Education-Easypost (2:48.25)
Valentin Paret Peintre, Soudal Quick-Step (2:49.53)
Simon Yates, Team Visma | Lease a Bike (2:50.00)

Tour de France 2025 standings

Tadej Pogačar, Slovenia: 69 hours, 41 minutes, 46 seconds
Jonas Vingegaard, Denmark: 69:46.10 (4 minutes, 24 seconds behind)
Florian Lipowitz, Germany: 69:52.55 (11 minutes, 9 seconds)
Oscar Onley, Great Britain: 69:53.58 (12 minutes, 12 seconds)
Felix Gall, Austria: 69:58.58 (17 minutes, 12 seconds)
Tobias Johannessen, Norway: 70:02.00 (20 minutes, 14 seconds)
Kevin Vauquelin, France: 70:04.21 (22 minutes, 35 seconds)
Primoz Roglic, Slovenia: 70:07.16 (25 minutes, 30 seconds)
Ben Healy, Ireland: 70:09.48 (28 minutes, 2 seconds)
Ben O’Connor, Australia: 70:16.20 (34 minutes, 34 seconds)

2025 Tour de France jersey leaders

Yellow (overall race leader): Tadej Pogačar, Slovenia
Green (points): Jonathan Milan, Italy
Polka dot (mountains): Tadej Pogačar, Slovenia
White (young rider): Florian Lipowitz, Germany

Who’s wearing the rainbow jersey at 2025 Tour de France?

In addition to the four traditional colored jerseys at the Tour de France, the reigning world road race champion wears a rainbow-colored jersey. It’s white with five colored stripes – blue, red, black, yellow and green (same as the colors of the Olympic rings) – and is currently worn by Tadej Pogačar of Slovenia.

2025 Tour de France next stage

Stage 20 of the 2025 Tour de France is a 184.2-kilometer course on hilly terrain from Nantua to Pantarlier on Saturday, July 26. It is the penultimate race of this year’s event.

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