Starbucks bars customers in South Korea from turning their orders into political statementsNew Foto - Starbucks bars customers in South Korea from turning their orders into political statements

SEOUL, South Korea — Ordering coffee inSouth Korea? Not if your name isLee Jae-myung. Starbuckscustomers in the East Asian democracy have been barred from using the names ofSouth Korea's six presidential candidatesin their orders until the election on June 3. A spokesperson for Starbucks Korea told NBC News by phone on Friday that the policy was introduced "in order to prevent inappropriate and abusive use of the names." In recent months South Koreans have increasingly used Starbucks as a political platform — ordering drinks through the app under politicians' names instead of their own, sometimes combined with calls to support or oppose them. Those entreaties are then repeated by baristas when they call out the orders for pickup in stores. Businesses such as Starbucks are anxious to appear neutral given the tense political atmosphere in South Korea, where voters are choosing a successor to former-PresidentYoon Suk Yeolafter he was impeached over his botched martial law declaration late last year. The two main candidates are Lee Jae-myung of the liberal opposition Democratic Party, who narrowly lost to Yoon in South Korea's 2022 presidential election, and Kim Moon-soo from Yoon's conservative People Power Party. The other candidates whose names are not allowed in Starbucks orders are Lee Jun-seok, Kwon Young-kook, Hwang Kyo-ahn and Song Jin-ho. While Lee Jae-myung is leading in polls, Kim is narrowing the gap and could pull even if he persuades Lee Jun-seok of the Reform Party to drop out of the race and throw Kim his support. Customers interviewed by NBC News said they understood why Starbucks would introduce the policy but many described it as an overreaction. "Honestly, setting a nickname like that doesn't seem like an easy or effective way to make a political statement," said Hyunwoo Park, 25. "It's just a nickname — I think people should have the freedom to choose their own," said Young-Eh Choi, 60. "It's my right, so restricting it feels like too much." Yoon's martial law declaration and subsequent impeachment trial have been deeply divisive in South Korea, increasing polarization between liberals who accused Yoon of abusing power and conservatives who embraced his baseless claims of election fraud and adopted slogans andsymbols associated with President Donald Trumpsuch as "Stop the Steal." Yoon supporters stormed a Seoul court in January after a judge extended his detention over the short-lived martial law order. "The country feels very divided by age, gender and political affiliation," Park said. "Personally, I hope we can move past these exhausting conflicts and come together as Koreans." Arim Shin reported from Seoul, Stella Kim reported from Los Angeles and Jennifer Jett reported from Hong Kong.

Starbucks bars customers in South Korea from turning their orders into political statements

Starbucks bars customers in South Korea from turning their orders into political statements SEOUL, South Korea — Ordering coffee inSouth Kor...
Netanyahu Accuses France, U.K., Canada of Emboldening HamasNew Foto - Netanyahu Accuses France, U.K., Canada of Emboldening Hamas

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gives a press conference in Jerusalem on May 21, 2025. Credit - Ronen Zvulun—Getty Images Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has called out the leaders of France, the United Kingdom, and Canadain a video statement, claiming they're "emboldening Hamas to continue fighting forever." Netanyahu was addressingthe fatal shooting of two Israeli embassy staff in Washington, D.C.Yaron Lischinsky, 30, and Sarah Lynn Milgrim, 26, a couple expected to soon be engaged, were killed on Wednesday night as they left an event hosted by the American Jewish Committee at the Capital Jewish Museum. Elias Rodriguez, a 31-year-old man from Chicago, has been charged with first-degree murder and other crimes.A witness at the scene reportedthat Rodriguez said: "I did it for Gaza" and "Free Palestine." In his statement, the Israeli leader said that Hamas "want to destroy the Jewish state" and annihilate the Jewish people," adding that he fails to understand how this "simple truth evades" French President Emmanuel Macron, British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney. "You won't be surprised to learn that Hamas thanked President Macron and Prime Ministers Starmer and Carney for demanding that Israel end its war in Gaza immediately. Hamas was right to thank them. Because by issuing their demand—replete with a threat of sanctions against Israel, against Israel, not Hamas—these three leaders effectively said they want Hamas to remain in power," said Netanyahu. "Now, these leaders may think that they're advancing peace. They're not. They're emboldening Hamas to continue fighting forever." Read More:The Rise of Antisemitism and Political Violence in the U.S. The strong remarks come after Macron, Starmer, and Carney issueda joint statement on Monday, May 19, in which the leaders said they "strongly oppose the expansion of Israel's military operations in Gaza." The joint statement continued: "The level of human suffering in Gaza is intolerable. Yesterday's announcement that Israel will allow a basic quantity of food into Gaza is wholly inadequate. We call on the Israeli Government to stop its military operations in Gaza and immediately allow humanitarian aid to enter Gaza. This must include engaging with the U.N. to ensure a return to delivery of aid in line with humanitarian principles." The trio also called on Hamas to "immediately release the remaining hostages they have so cruelly held" since Oct. 7, 2023. Netanyahu doubled down during his address on Thursday evening, telling Macron, Starmer, and Carney: "When mass murderers, rapists, baby killers, and kidnappers thank you, you're on the wrong side of justice, you're on the wrong side of humanity, and you're on the wrong side of history." Criticism towards Israel and its conduct in the war continues as Gaza faces a worsening humanitarian disaster. On Tuesday, May 20,U.N. humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher warnedthat if Gaza did not receive more aid, an estimated 14,000 babies could die within 48 hours. Amid mounting international pressure and criticism on Israel over its near-total blockade of the Gaza Strip, against a backdrop of increased military operations, some humanitarian aid has been allowed to enter the region. On Friday, May 23,130 trucks carrying supplies reportedly entered Gaza, as well as100 the previous day. The U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in the Occupied Palestinian Territories said on May 22 that supplies allowed into Gaza are "limited in quantity and nowhere near sufficient to meet the scale and scope of Gaza's 2.1 million people." Read More:Former Israeli Prime Minister Says Country's Action in Gaza is 'Close to a War Crime' Netanyahu's criticism of Macron, Starmer, and Carney is similar to that of Israeli Foreign Affairs Minister Gideon Sa'ar, who in response to the D.C. shooting,said on Thursday: "There is a direct line connecting antisemitic and anti-Israeli incitement to this murder. This incitement is also done by leaders and officials of many countries… especially from Europe." Sa'ar continued: "This is what happens when leaders in the world surrender to the Palestinian terrorist propaganda. The statements and attacks blame Israel instead of Hamas… I say to these leaders and officials: 'Stop your incitement against Israel, stop your false accusations.'" French Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Christophe Lemoinesaid in response: "These are completely outrageous and completely unjustified remarks… France has condemned, France condemns, and France will continue to condemn, always and unequivocally, any act of antisemitism." Meanwhile, U.K. Armed Forces Minister Luke Pollard has said Netanyahu is "not correct," in his evaluation of the British position on Hamas and Israel. He told BBC's Radio 4: "We stand in support of Israel's right to self-defence as long as they conduct that within international humanitarian law; a position we've had since those appalling attacks on 7 October. We are also very clear we need to see aid get to the people who are genuinely suffering in Gaza." Contact usatletters@time.com.

Netanyahu Accuses France, U.K., Canada of Emboldening Hamas

Netanyahu Accuses France, U.K., Canada of Emboldening Hamas Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gives a press conference in Jerusalem ...
Ukrainian official says a major prisoner swap with Russia has begunNew Foto - Ukrainian official says a major prisoner swap with Russia has begun

CHERNIHIV REGION, Ukraine (AP) — A major prisoner exchange between Russia and Ukraine began Friday, a senior Ukrainian official said, in one of the few signs of progress from theirdirect talks last weekin Istanbul — part of a U.S.-led effort that so far has failed to produce a ceasefire in the3-year-old war. The swap was taking place at the border with Belarus in northern Ukraine, according to the Ukrainian official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly, Moscow did not immediately confirm the exchange was underway. Ukraine and Russia agreed to the exchange of 1,000 prisoners from each side a week ago in Turkey in their first direct peace talks since the early weeks of Moscow's 2022 invasion of its neighbor. That meeting lasted only two hours and brought no breakthrough in efforts to stop the fighting. Word of the developments emerged when U.S. President Donald Trump said Russia and Ukraine had carried out a large exchange of prisoners. "A major prisoners swap was just completed between Russia and Ukraine," Trump said on the Truth Social platform. He said it would "go into effect shortly," although it was not clear what that meant. "This could lead to something big???" Trump added in his post, apparently referring to international diplomatic efforts to stop the fighting. White House and National Security Council officials did not immediately respond to requests for further details. After the May 16 talks, Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan called the prisoner swap a "confidence-building measure" and said the parties had agreed in principle to meet again. But Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Friday that there has been no agreement yet on the venue for the next round of talks as diplomatic maneuvering continued. European leaders have accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of dragging his feet in peace efforts while he tries to press his larger army's battlefield initiative and capture more Ukrainian land. The Istanbul meeting revealed both sides clearly remained far apart on key conditions for ending the fighting. One such condition for Ukraine, backed by its Western allies, is a temporary ceasefire as a first step toward a peaceful settlement. The Kremlin has pushed back on a temporary halt to hostilities, and Putin has said any such truce must come with a freeze on Western arms supplies to Ukraine and an end to Ukraine's mobilization drive. A senior Ukrainian official said that in Istanbul, Russia had introduced new, "unacceptable demands" to withdraw Ukrainian forces from huge swaths of territory. The official, who was not authorized to make official statements, spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity. The proposal had not been previously discussed, the official said. Putin has long demanded as a key condition for a peace deal that Ukraine withdraw its troops from the four regions that Russia annexed in September 2022 but never fully controlled. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has warned that if Russia continues to reject a ceasefire and make "unrealistic demands," it will signal deliberate efforts to prolong the war — a move that should bring tougher international sanctions. Fighting has continued along the roughly 1,000-kilometer (620-mile) front line, where tens of thousands of soldiers have been killed, and neither country has relented in its deep strikes. Russia's Ministry of Defense said Friday that it had shot down 788 Ukrainian drones away from the battlefield between May 20-23. Ukraine's air force said Russia fired 175 Shahed and decoy drones, as well as a ballistic missile since late Thursday. ___ Arhirova reported from Kyiv, Ukraine. Associated Press writer Aamer Madhani in Washington contributed. ___ Follow AP's coverage of the war in Ukraine athttps://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

Ukrainian official says a major prisoner swap with Russia has begun

Ukrainian official says a major prisoner swap with Russia has begun CHERNIHIV REGION, Ukraine (AP) — A major prisoner exchange between Russi...
'Lilo & Stitch': The biggest changes from Disney's original movieNew Foto - 'Lilo & Stitch': The biggest changes from Disney's original movie

Spoiler alert! We're discussing major plot details from Disney's live-action "Lilo & Stitch." Beware if you haven't seen it yet. On paper, a fragile-voiced mollusk and a calamitous blue alien have very little in common. But the parallels are obvious to director Dean Fleischer Camp, who is following up his 2022 Oscar-nominated "Marcel the Shell With Shoes On" with Disney's live-action remake of "Lilo & Stitch" (in theaters now). "They're both unique protagonists who are looking for their place – and their people – in this world that wasn't really made for them," Camp says. "Even though they're adorable and funny, they have this quiet well of sadness that is very emotional." Join our Watch Party!Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox "Lilo" charts the unlikely bond between a lonely, 6-year-old Hawaiian girl (Maia Kealoha) and her pet extraterrestrial Stitch, whom she adopts from a dog shelter after he crash-lands on Earth. The new movie has allthe Elvis songs and droll one-linersthat you love, but with a bevy of notable changes that die-hard Disney fans will catch as well. Here are some of the major differences in the big-screen update: When we meet the unruly Lilo, she is being raised by her 19-year-old sister, Nani (Sydney Agudong), after their parents died. The new movie fleshes out Nani considerably: Once a star student and athlete, she has now shelved her college dreams of studying marine biology so that she can work and raise Lilo. "In a live-action film, you do have a responsibility to deepen the stakes," Camp says. "I feel a lot of things for Nani. The original doesn't go that deeply into it, but this poor girl was essentially forced to be a teen mom at this time in her life when all of her friends would be graduating high school and dating and thinking about their futures. She had to put all of that on hold, so it felt like a really rich character to invest in." Stitch, otherwise known as Experiment 626, is pursued by fellow aliens Jumba (Zach Galifianakis) and Pleakley (Billy Magnussen), who have been sent to retrieve him after he escapes from another galaxy. In the animated film, Jumba and Pleakley don a variety of disguises – glasses, sunhats, dresses ‒ as they covertly traipse about Hawaii. But in the live-action movie, the characters simply assume human form when they arrive on Earth. As fun as it might be to watch computer-generated aliens in drag, Camp worried that audiences wouldn't buy it. "We wrote these roles for Zach and Billy, and you do want to see them," Camp says. Also, the goal of this adaptation was "to tell a more emotional story of these human sisters, and if we go too clownish with this or that, does it undermine the stakes?" The animated film opens with Lilo delivering a peanut butter sandwich to a fish named Pudge, who lives in the ocean. ("Pudge controls the weather," she explains in an oft-quoted scene.) But as eagle-eyed viewers might notice, the sandwich only has lettuce and tomato in the live-action movie. "Peanut butter didn't read very well underwater," Camp says, laughing. "The process of adapting one of these films thoughtfully is taking every piece that you like from the original and saying, 'Does that work in live action? And if not, what is something that has the same essence?'" Both movies feature intermittent cutaways to an unnamed man who drops his dessert whenever he encounters Lilo and other alien shenanigans. Although that's mint chocolate-chip ice cream in the original "Lilo," the treat has been changed to a multihued Hawaiian shave ice in the 2025 film. "Part of the opportunity of adapting into live action is to make a more authentic depiction of Hawaii," Camp says. "We worked with a lot of consultants. The shave ice was actually the idea of our writer, Chris Bright, who's Hawaiian. He was just like, 'Shave ice? Everywhere on the island. Ice cream? Not so much.'" Bright also pulled from his lived experience growing up in Hawaii for the movie's new characters. The live-action film introduces Tūtū (Amy Hill), Lilo and Nani's elderly neighbor who becomes a surrogate mother of sorts after their parents' deaths. "Chris was just like, 'If this really did happen, where these girls were orphaned, they're in Hawaii. They wouldn't just be abandoned by all their friends and neighbors,'" Camp recalls. "There would be a real effort to try and support them after this tragedy, so it was his idea to introduce that character." In the animated movie, Cobra Bubbles was a former CIA agent-turned-social worker. But here, he's effectively been split up into two distinct characters: a federal agent named Cobra (Courtney B. Vance), and a social worker named Mrs. Kekoa (Tia Carrere), who warns Nani that Lilo will be taken from her if she can't hold down a job. "In order to buy these two girls getting separated in a live-action movie, you couldn't really have the representative of that antagonistic force be a comically huge guy with tattoos on his knuckles, who for some reason is also a social worker," Camp says. Carrere voiced Nani in the animated movie, which gives her scenes with Agudong a "metatextual" layer, Camp adds. "This grown-up Nani, with all her wisdom, is now advising a younger version of herself. It's beautiful." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:'Lilo and Stitch' 2025 movie changes from Disney animated film

'Lilo & Stitch': The biggest changes from Disney's original movie

'Lilo & Stitch': The biggest changes from Disney's original movie Spoiler alert! We're discussing major plot details fro...
"The Devil Wears Prada 2 "Sets (Very Soon!) Release Date, and You'll Need to Get Out Your Florals

Barry Wetcher/20th Century Fox/Kobal/Shutterstock The Devil Wears Prada 2is set for a May 1, 2026 release date So far stars Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway, Emily Blunt and Stanley Tucci have not officially signed on to the project The plot will reportedly follow Streep's Miranda Priestly as she navigates the decline of print journalism The Devil Wears Pradasequel is not moving at a glacial pace, no matter how much it thrills Miranda Priestley. Multiple outletshave confirmed thatThe Devil Wears Prada 2will hit theaters on May 1, 2026. That's less than a year away for a sequel that has yet to officially confirm its cast. The original 2006 film, which was adapted from Lauren Weisberger's book of the same name, starredMeryl Streepas the powerful Miranda Priestley,Anne Hathawayas fashion newbie Andy Sachs,Emily Bluntas vicious assistant Emily andStanley Tuccias Miranda's right hand man Nigel. Rumors of a sequel to the beloved film have long been discussed, but in July 2024,Puck Newsreported that there was officially a sequel to the film in development with writer Aline Brosh McKenna, who adapted Weisberger's novel into the original film's screenplay attached. Producer Wendy Finerman, who worked on the original, as well as director David Frankel, are also both in talks to return, according toDeadline. The PEOPLE Appis now available in the Apple App Store! Download it now for the most binge-worthy celeb content, exclusive video clips, astrology updates and more! Michael Buckner/Variety via Getty And while neither Streep, Hathaway, Blunt or Tucci have officially signed on to the sequel, reports of a potential plot forThe Devil Wears Prada 2imply that Streep and Blunt would be back. According toVariety, the sequel follows Priestly "as she navigates her career amid the decline of traditional magazine publishing and as she faces off against Blunt's character, now a high-powered executive for a luxury group with advertising dollars that Priestly desperately needs." Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. In February 2024, Streep, Blunt and Hathaway excited fans when they reunited to present at the 30th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards. But the cast has had mixed responses when asked about a sequel. In April 2024, Hathaway toldExtrathat she "wouldn't hold out too much hope" for a sequel after tellingE! Newsthat previous month that she didn't "think a continuation of that story is probably ever gonna happen." Barry Wetcher/20th Century Fox/Kobal/Shutterstock However, Tucci seemed up for it while speaking to PEOPLE in October. "If it does happen, I can only say that I'll be happy,"Tucci said at the time. "I don't really know. I haven't [heard] about the plot or anything. I really haven't." The PEOPLE Puzzler crossword is here! How quickly can you solve it? Play now! And Blunt seemingly confirmed the project in December while speaking to the crowd at the Red Sea International Film Festival. "There (are) rumblings," Blunt told the audience, perThe Hollywood Reporter."There is stuff churning around. But I don't know if I can confirm anything. But we would all be delighted." Read the original article onPeople

“The Devil Wears Prada 2 ”Sets (Very Soon!) Release Date, and You'll Need to Get Out Your Florals

"The Devil Wears Prada 2 "Sets (Very Soon!) Release Date, and You'll Need to Get Out Your Florals Barry Wetcher/20th Century F...

 

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