Shaquille O'Neal Offers Craig Melvin $1 Million Cash to Eat a Giant Bowl of Candy on Live TVNew Foto - Shaquille O'Neal Offers Craig Melvin $1 Million Cash to Eat a Giant Bowl of Candy on Live TV

NBC While appearing onToday, Shaquille O'Neal challenged Craig Melvin to an unexpected bet The retired NBA star told the co-anchor he would give him $1 million cash to eat a giant bowl of candy The retired NBA star also joked about his friendly beef with Melvin Shaquille O'Nealbrought the jokes — and the candy — to theTodayshow! While appearing on the the morning show to talk about his Netflix docuseries,Power Moves, on Friday, May 23, theInside the NBAhost offered co-anchorCraig Melvina sweet sum of money to eat his SHAQ-A-LICIOUS XL Gummies in the latest installment of their ongoing friendly competitions. "If you can eat this in 30 seconds, I'll give you a million dollars cash," O'Neal, 53, told Melvin while gesturing to a large bowl of his not "adult" gummies. NBC 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. Melvin, 46, laughed and declined the invitation, even though the retired NBA star remarked that there was a Bank of America across the street where he could access the funds, should the broadcaster make good on the challenge. "I walk you over there," O'Neal said as Al Roker and Dylan Dreyer laughed in response. During an earlier segment on the show, O'Neal further delved into his imaginary rivalry with Melvin, who introduced the polymath as the "Black Forrest Gump." "Every time we see each other we have a competition and I beat him and he just gets mad," O'Neal joked. "He sends me rude emails, threatening emails. He says he's always gonna beat me up." Elsewhere in the interview, the former athlete talked aboutPower Moves, which documents his behind-the-scenes projects with Reebok. NBC 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! "Are you gonna bring back the Pump?" Melvin asked, referring to '80s-era Reeboks that featured an air pump button on the shoes' tongues. "Yes we are, and you won't get a pair," O'Neal hilariously replied. Co-hostSavannah Guthriethen appropriately summed up the duo's chemistry by saying: "I'm here for this, I'd like a TV show out of this." Read the original article onPeople

Shaquille O'Neal Offers Craig Melvin $1 Million Cash to Eat a Giant Bowl of Candy on Live TV

Shaquille O'Neal Offers Craig Melvin $1 Million Cash to Eat a Giant Bowl of Candy on Live TV NBC While appearing onToday, Shaquille O...
The best Stephen King adaptations, from classics like "The Shining" to recent TV fare

Michael Weinstein/Columbia; Courtesy Everett (2) With the sheer amount ofStephen Kingadaptations released in theaters and on television, there are bound to be some that don't live up to the King of Horror's genius. But there are others that not only match the greatness of the source material but expand upon King's writing with haunting imagery we'll never forget. Obviously, the true classics likeCarrie(1976),The Shining(1980), andMisery(1990) are among the best films of their genre. But we've found that many of the best King-based movies and shows also come from his work outside of horror, with films likeStand by Me(1986) andThe Shawshank Redemption(1994) proving how many of his more straightforward stories are ripe for on-screen interpretation, too. AsThe Shiningturns 45, we list some of our favorite Stephen King movie and TV adaptations that stick in our minds like a good ghost story. DirectorDavid Cronenbergbrings his signature brand of Canadian creepiness to this taut supernatural thriller.Christopher Walkenstars as a school teacher who comes out of a coma with a gift that feels more like a terrifying curse. He has the psychic ability to tell a person's fate by coming into contact with them, leading to him becoming involved in a political conspiracy. It's like aTwilight Zoneepisode spiked with arsenic.—Chris Nashawaty Sure, it may not be as well-known asThe Terminator,Predator, or evenCommando.However, director Paul Michael Glaser's dystopian sci-fi satire is Peak Schwarzenegger. Ahnuld plays a wrongly convicted man who has to fight for his freedom on a death-sport television reality show. To make matters worse, it is hosted by formerFamily Feudkissing bandit Richard Dawson (who, let the record show, is a fantastic movie villain). Timely, prescient, and highly underrated.—C.N. This powerful feminist psychodrama feels like a love letter from King to his single, working-class mother, who he says supported their family alone after his father walked out.Kathy Batesplays Dolores, a hardscrabble Maine housekeeper who hasn't seen her estranged daughter, Selena (Jennifer Jason Leigh), in 15 years. Selena returns after her mother is suspected of a murder that mirrors the events surrounding the death of Selena's abusive father (David Strathairn). Director Taylor Hackford toggles between the past and present in a way that reminds you that sometimes in life, it's hard to tell them apart.—C.N. Mary Lambert's1989 adaptationhas its hardcore fans. But, for my money,Starry EyesdirectorsKevin Kolsch and Dennis Widmyer's remakedigs into something darker and more primal. The Creed family (led by an excellentJason Clarke) moves to Maine; watches their beloved cat, Church, become roadkill; and then brings that pet back to life by burying it in a supernatural cemetery deep in the woods. Like many things that seem too good to be true, there's a catch: Those buried there do not come back the same. There's a lesson here about grief and not messing with the dead (or our cherished memories of them), but you'll be too busy digging your fingernails into your armrest to give it much thought until you're home lying in bed. Oh, and P.S.,good luck trying to fall asleep.—C.N. Frank Darabontis the go-to director when it comes to King adaptations (see also:The Green MileandThe Shawshank Redemption). And he certainly found every ounce of the author's air of locked-room dread in this one. Set almost entirely in a small-town Maine supermarket where the locals are hiding out from...well, what exactly?Thomas Janesteals the show from a great cast of character actors, especially in a final scene that is so raw and bleak and amazing that I may just go watch it again right now.—C.N. Sometimes lost in all of those volumes of white-knuckle horror prose is the fact that King is more than just creeping dread and gotcha scares. He's also a master of nostalgia.Rob Reiner'sStand by Memay be the clearest example of the author's Proustian obsession with the smallest quotidian details of youth — the recollected smells, sights, and sounds of long-ago summer nights that we're only able to share with our oldest (and first) friends. But yes, there's also a dead body. Told in sun-dappled flashback,Stand by Merevolves around four childhood friends (beautifully played byRiver Phoenix,Wil Wheaton,Jerry O'Connell, andCorey Feldman) who, in 1959, set off to find that dead body. But really, it's about male bonding, the first taste of freedom, and how the most insignificant things (a catchy pop song, a campfire story about a pie-eating contest puke-athon) can feel like the only things that matter.—C.N. Everett Stephen King andJohn Carpenter— need we say more? Carpenter, known at that point for such films asHalloween(1978) andThe Fog(1981), proved a strong match for King's pulpy tale of a seemingly sentient Plymouth Fury with a penchant for killing. While King has stated he found the movie adaptation "boring," in some ways we prefer the film's more economical storytelling compared to the book, particularly the choice to cut out the backstory of how the car came to be possessed. Rather than get bogged down in the details of an origin story, Carpenter leaves it semi-ambiguous and allows the audience to just enjoy the ride. —Kevin Jacobsen Miseryis the momentKathy Bates became an icon. Annie Wilkes, the self-proclaimed number-one fan of a jaded bestselling author played byJames Caan, is an unforgettable cocktail of G-rated verbal abuse and hard-R physical violence (the sledgehammer!). "I thought you were good Paul. But you're not good. You're just another lying ol' dirty birdy." King and Bates both make Annie, arguably King's most vivid and dementedly noble character, the perfect villain in their own ways. It should come as no surprise, then, that Bateswon the Academy Award for Best Actressfor the role in 1991.—C.N. Although it was nominated for seven Oscars, including Best Picture,Frank Darabont's adaptation of King's 1982 novellaRita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemptionwas greeted at the box office with relative indifference. Since then, thanks to an infinite loop of cable airings,The Shawshank Redemptionhas snowballed into the ultimate male weepie — a nakedly sentimental drama that guys can choke up watching and not feel guilty about afterward. Tim RobbinsandMorgan Freemanplay Andy and Red — a pair of long-term convicts who gradually become best friends despite Andy's undying dream of freedom and Red's suspicion that after so long behind bars, he might not know how to live on the outside.Shawshankhas its naysayers who dismiss it as melodramatic hooey, but they're wrong.—C.N. Before you say anything, yes, Stephen King is famously not a fan of this version of his 1977 novel. Then again, he may be too close to the story to see what everyone else loves aboutStanley Kubrick'shaunting goose-flesh adaptation. Part supernatural chiller, part psychological thriller (with a dash of sub-zero cabin fever thrown in for atmosphere),The Shiningis the ultimate combination of a typical horror movie and an art film. This dream-logic nightmare begs you to wrestle with it, rearrange it, decode it, and find your own terrifying answers. Like the frenzied conductor of a runaway train,Jack Nicholsonand his devilish smile drive it all.—C.N. A horrific but oddly relatable coming-of-age story,Brian De Palma's masterpiece starsSissy Spacekas small-town outcast Carrie White — a sheltered, picked-on wallflower with a deranged religious zealot mother at home (Piper Laurie) and a telekinetic gift triggered by a rage with which she's just beginning to grapple. De Palma's suspenseful Rube Goldberg–meets–Alfred Hitchcockpig's blood at the prom climax gets all the attention. Still, this sympathetic love letter to teenage misfits everywhere wouldn't work without Spacek's wide-eyed vulnerability and King's deep understanding of the humiliations of adolescence and popularity that every teen knows all too well.—C.N. Kent Smith/AT+T Audience Network If you are looking for an underrated crime series,Mr. Mercedesshould be at the top of your watchlist.Brendan Gleesonis simply terrific as retired detective Bill Hodges, who remains haunted by a terrifying incident in which a man dubbed Mr. Mercedes claimed the lives of 16 people. His independent investigations lead him to a supernatural serial killer (Harry Treadaway), who will seemingly stop at nothing to torment Hodges. Not unlike its 2020 contemporary,The Outsider,Mr. Mercedescombines procedural drama with supernatural scares to create an enjoyable roller coaster ride.—Clark Collis Russ Martin/Hulu Some King novels feel destined for cinematic adaptation — two hours, in and out. Others, like his sci-fi doorstopper11/22/63, are much more suited to television, as proven by this Hulu-produced limited series. Telling the story of an English teacher (James Franco) gifted with the chance to time travel back to 1960 to prevent John F. Kennedy's assassination, the eight-episode thriller is well-paced and well-performed with a strong emotional core that tackles potent themes about love and the consequences of our actions. —K.J. It is easy to poke holes intoCastle Rock's inclusion in this list. After all, it's not technically an adaptation of any particular work. Despite this technicality, this anthology TV show skillfully evokes the milieu of King asa posse of top-notch acting talent(including Sissy Spacek,André Holland, and, in season 2,Lizzy Caplanas a young Annie Wilkes) help extend the Master of the Macabre's universe. Talk about a multiverse of madness!—C.C. Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

The best Stephen King adaptations, from classics like “The Shining” to recent TV fare

The best Stephen King adaptations, from classics like "The Shining" to recent TV fare Michael Weinstein/Columbia; Courtesy Everett...
Angela Bassett Reveals The Political Icons Who Inspired Her Latest Presidential RoleNew Foto - Angela Bassett Reveals The Political Icons Who Inspired Her Latest Presidential Role

Angela Bassett has held many roles, but her latest endeavor takes her to the highest office in the land. And now, she's offering insight at how she prepared for the part. We've seen Bassett get her groove back and waited patiently for her to exhale — now she's portraying the president of the United States in the new film "Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning." Bassettappeared on "The View" Wednesdayto discuss who inspired her take on the role. Co-host Sara Haines asked the Golden Globe winner who did she "draw inspiration from," noting that "we've yet to have a female president." Before answering, Bassett commented, "Perhaps life will imitate art," presumably hinting that the country may be overdue for such a storyline off-screen. "I look towards women of integrity who have served — from Barbara Jordan toShirley Chisholm, Stacey Abrams, Kamala Harris, down and down the line" Bassett said with a sense of reverence. After she wrapped her answer, co-host Joy Behar pointed out that "there are women running countries all over the world." Without missing a second, Bassett replied, "Why are we so behind?" This also isn't her first term as a fictional commander in chief, either. Bassett also plays the president in the Netflix political thriller "Zero Day." And while it may be jarring to see a woman in the White House — given the political climate — Bassett confirmed that filming was wrapped well in advance of the 2024 election cycle. Angela Bassett Shares Why Her 2023 Oscars Loss Still Stings Angela Bassett's Kids Celebrate Their Mom's Overdue Oscar In Sweet Moment Angela Bassett's Face When She Lost The Oscar To Jamie Lee Curtis Is Breaking Hearts

Angela Bassett Reveals The Political Icons Who Inspired Her Latest Presidential Role

Angela Bassett Reveals The Political Icons Who Inspired Her Latest Presidential Role Angela Bassett has held many roles, but her latest ende...
Publix recalls baby food pouches after testing finds elevated levels of leadNew Foto - Publix recalls baby food pouches after testing finds elevated levels of lead

The supermarket chain Publix has recalled fruit and vegetable baby food sold in eight states because product testing found elevated levels of lead, according to federal health officials. Publix recalled 4-ounce Greenwise Pear, Kiwi, Spinach & Pea Baby Food pouches sold at more than 1,400 stores. The pouches were produced by Bowman Andros, a French company with a manufacturing plant in Mount Jackson, Virginia, according to the company's website. Publix issued the voluntary recall on May 9, but it wasn't added to the U.S. Food and Drug Administrationrecall listuntil late Thursday. The potential contamination was flagged by officials in North Carolina, the state that first identifieda 2023 lead poisoning outbreaklinked to tainted applesauce pouches that sickened more than 500 U.S. children. Routine sampling of the baby food pouches found lead levels at 13.4 parts per billion, according to North Carolina agriculture officials. That exceeds the FDA's recommended limit of 10 parts per billion for such products intended for babies and young children. Publix said all the potentially contaminated products have been removed from store shelves. No illnesses have been reported, the company said. Customers can return the pouches to local stores for full refund. This is the second baby food pouch recall because of potential lead contamination in two months. In March,Target recalledmore than 25,000 packages of its store brand Good & Gather Baby Pea, Zucchini, Kale & Thyme Vegetable Puree because of elevated lead levels. North Carolina collaborates with the FDA to conduct routine testing of food products, officials said. In 2023, state health officials investigated reports of lead poisoning in four children who consumed WanaBana apple cinnamon fruit puree. Those findings led to the detection of a nationwide outbreak linked to the pouches, which were widely sold in Dollar Tree and other stores. Tests showed they contained lead at levels2,000 times higherthan the FDA's maximum recommended level, as well as chromium. Federal health officials eventually identified 566 cases of confirmed, probable or suspected cases of lead poisoning tied to the pouches in 44 states. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's childhood lead poisoning program investigated the applesauce outbreak and coordinated state and federal response. However, the program waseliminated in Aprilas part of federal funding cuts under theTrumpadministration. CDC officials didn't say whether or how the agency would respond to a similar outbreak now. A spokesperson said the agency is aware of the Publix baby food recall but hasn't been asked to assist with any investigation. There is no safe level of lead exposure, according to CDC. While the heavy metal is toxic to people of all ages, it can be especially harmful to children, causing damage to the brain and nervous system and slow growth and development. Heavy metals like lead can get into food products from soil, air, water or industrial processes, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics. ___ The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

Publix recalls baby food pouches after testing finds elevated levels of lead

Publix recalls baby food pouches after testing finds elevated levels of lead The supermarket chain Publix has recalled fruit and vegetable b...
Emails shed new light on Trump rally shooter Thomas CrooksNew Foto - Emails shed new light on Trump rally shooter Thomas Crooks

Thomas Matthew Crooks had a lot on his mind in January 2024. The 20-year-old who, six months later, wouldopen fireat President Trump at a Pennsylvania campaign rally —striking his earand killingan audience member— was busy polishing his applications to transfer from community college to a four-year engineering program. Crooks was gathering transcripts and asking friends to review his personal statement. He was also designing a bomb. He ordered more than two gallons of nitromethane from an online speciality fuel retailer using anencryptedemail account, documents obtained by CBS News show. Twelve days later Crooks' purchase hadn't shipped and he wanted to know why. "Hello, my name is Thomas. I placed an order on your website on January 19. I have not received any updates of the order shipping out yet and I was wondering if you still have it and when I can expect it to come," Crooks emailed the retailer, Hyperfuels, at 7:44 a.m. on Jan. 31, 2024. Crooks used his community college email account to inquire about shipping, one of the few operational missteps that has allowed for a rare look into the dark side of this ambitious young student. Two weeks after the nitromethane email, on Feb. 13, 2024, Crooks' focus returned to his academic future, planning a video call he labeled, "Proofread my Pitt personal essay with friends prior to class." A student who went "above and beyond" Very little is known about how or whyThomas Crooksset out to shoot then-presidential candidate Donald Trump. Now, emails, essays and other documents reviewed by CBS News are offering a fresh glimpse into the mind of a young man who was simultaneously planning two irreconcilable futures. In one, Crooks continues his engineering studies, for which he was lauded by professors for his work ethic, progress and class contributions. In the other, he hurtles toward an act that he must have known would end in either prison or — as it did on July 13, 2024 — his death. He was a meticulous and motivated student, attending community college after scoring 1530 on the SATs, records show. He told an adviser he was starting at the school to save money before transferring. In the hundreds of college emails obtained by CBS News, Crooks rarely veers into personal territory, with a few exceptions. When an upcoming assignment required the presence of five adults, he asked the professor if it would be OK if he only brought two or three. Crooks said that other than his sister and parents, he did "not have access to any other adults." Crooks wrote a passage for school on why his favorite season is fall on Jan. 30, the day before he contacted Hyperfuels. The passage, penned in various colors, mused on his love for football and his two favorite holidays, Halloween and Thanksgiving. He waxed poetic about the fall weather and asked, "who doesn't love the changing color of the leaves?" Crooks took his classwork seriously, routinely contacting professors to protest if he wasn't satisfied with his grades. After taking a math exam in which he errantly mislabeled a variable, Crooks asked if he could get the point back. The teacher agreed to give him 75% credit for the question. "Sounds good," Crooks replied. "That should be enough to get me an A." Crooks did A-level work in most of his courses, according to his transcript. Emails show professors were often impressed by his dedication. "Thanks again for your contribution to the class this term — wouldn't've been the same without you!" wrote an English professor in December 2022. One project in particular wowed professors in the engineering department. Crooks, whose mother is visually impaired, designed and 3D-printed a unique chessboard. The prototype included Braille labeling along the rows and columns, and alternating "raised squares with peg-holes to prevent the pieces from being knocked over," as Crooks described it. Former engineering professor Todd Landree recalls the small department's staff marveling at the project. "It was above and beyond what anybody expected," Landree said. Patricia Thompson, who taught the class, said she still thinks about Crooks' project. She also described it as "above and beyond" expectations. "It's sad that he had so much promise and he chose to do this. It's just very difficult to understand where it came from," Thompson said. A skeptic of government's "lofty promises" Crooks was focused on engineering and computing while at the community college, but a handful of written assignments show hints of a deep skepticism of the federal government and corporations. A prompt asking students to consider whether engineers involved in NASA's 1986 Challenger disaster acted ethically yielded a dubious reply. Crooks blamed NASA's administrators, who in pushing for the ill-fated launch "were trying to live up to the lofty promises they made to Congress which they were never going to be able to fulfill," he wrote. For a 2022 English assignment, Crooks wrote about George Orwell's essay, "Shooting an Elephant." Crooks called the essay "a powerful allegory warning against adopting imperialistic policies." "The writing maintains its significance as the themes in it apply to every form of tyrannical government many of which still exist today, and continue to send young men, much like Orwell, to carry out the 'dirty work of Empire,'" Crooks wrote. Crooks wrote about Mr. Trump at least once. The essay was called "Why Nuclear Energy is the Key to a Cleaner Future," and Crooks briefly touched on the proliferation of nuclear weapons, criticizing a decision Mr. Trump made during his first term. "To prevent hostile nations from acquiring nuclear technology, America and its allies can stop sales of the technology to those nations and can enter into mutually beneficial agreements like the Iran deal, which effectively halted that nations (sic) nuclear program until President Trump withdrew from it," Crooks wrote. His writing also, at least once, focused in part on then-President Biden. Crooks reviewed a 2021 opinion column that ran inThe Washington Post, concluding that it persuasively argued against Mr. Biden's support for tuition-free community college. "Liberals also tend to be in favor of free community college and, in fact, free college in general," Crooks wrote. "So it is very interesting to see an author try to convince the other side using their pre-exisiting (sic) political concerns rather than trying to impress their own on to them" While Crooks showed an advanced ability to reason and persuade, he often struggled with spelling and grammar errors. Several essays and work assignments were returned to him asking him to make corrections to his work. A grand jury with a dead suspect The nitromethane purchase invoice lists a separate email account from a Belgium-based service that offers end-to-end encryption. FBI Pittsburgh Special Agent in Charge Kevin Rojek told reporters in August that Crooks had researched "nitromethane, and other materials consistent with the manufacturing of explosive devices." Rojek indicated agents accessed multiple overseas-based encrypted email accounts used by Crooks, who did not use explosives during his attack. A Hyperfuels employee, asked about Crooks' purchase last year, said the company was "aware of the whole situation." The company's president did not respond to phone or text messages. Crooks' transcript and certain other academic records were first made public by America First Legal, a nonprofit founded by Stephen Miller, a longtime aide to Mr. Trump who is now White House deputy chief of staff. Pennsylvania lawyer Wally Zimolong pursued the records on America First Legal's behalf, winning an open records fight that paved the way for their release last year. Among his discoveries was the little-known federal grand jury that subpoenaed the community college and received Crooks' emails and essays. Zimolong provided CBS News with records related to the grand jury's subpoena and Crooks' transcripts. A letter from a Justice Department official to the college on July 24, 2024, confirmed the subpoena related to "an active FBI criminal investigation." Federal grand juries are typically empaneled to determine probable cause to indict a person for a crime, but Crooks — the only known suspect — had been dead for 11 days at that point. "I think it raises a lot of important questions. Were they investigating anyone else? Are they still investigating?" Zimolong asked. He said it adds to the mystery surrounding the young man who seemed determined to continue with college until the day he climbed onto the roof of a building in Butler, Pennsylvania, and began firing. "A year later we still don't know enough," Zimolong said. Here's how much Qatar's plane gifted to Trump administration will cost to retrofit Biggest takeaways from RFK Jr.'s MAHA report Paris court finds 8 guilty in Kim Kardashian jewelry heist case

Emails shed new light on Trump rally shooter Thomas Crooks

Emails shed new light on Trump rally shooter Thomas Crooks Thomas Matthew Crooks had a lot on his mind in January 2024. The 20-year-old who,...

 

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