Ecuador's Noboa vows to tackle violence, boost economy and create jobs in second termNew Foto - Ecuador's Noboa vows to tackle violence, boost economy and create jobs in second term

QUITO (AP) — Ecuador's PresidentDaniel Noboawas officially sworn in on Saturday following hisreelectionfor another four-year term early this year. Noboa, 37, who wore a presidential sash over his chest, was sworn in alongside his Vice President María José Pinto and their terms will run until May 2029. The young president, who has become known for his fight against a surge of armed group violence in theSouth American country, pledged in his inauguration speech to continue to tackle corruption, drug trafficking and violent crime. He also swore to implement reforms and said he would lay "a solid foundation for job creation and investment" by working with Ecuador's private sector. "We are at the doorstep of four years of progress," he said. The ceremony in the capital,Quito, was attended by U.S. Health SecretaryRobert Kennedy, Colombia's President Gustavo Petro, Peruvian President Dina Boluarte, and many other international guests and delegates. Noboa was first elected as president in November 2023 aged 35, with little political experience. He unexpectedly entered the race and was elected to complete the term of his predecessor,Guillermo Lasso, who had dissolved the Assembly and stepped down to avoid impeachment. Noboa was re-elected on April 13 in a run-off against left-wing candidateLuisa González, who has made repeated allegations of electoral fraud. Her Citizen Revolution party, lead by former president Rafael Correa, boycotted Saturday's ceremony, even though González claims were rejected by Ecuador's electoral authority and both national and international observers. Violence and high unemployment levels remain the biggest challenges facing the president and his National Democratic Action (ADN) party, which also was able to hold the majority in the country's congress through a number of political alliances. Maintaining that majority will be crucial for Noboa in pushing through his agenda, including a crime-fighting bill marked as "urgent" for its economic implications. The proposal has already drawn criticism from the opposition. Juan Francisco Camino, a professor at the Equinoctial Technological University, said Noboa's tight majority could easily shift the balance. "Just one lost vote from his allies could paralyze his plans," Camino said in an interview. Asked whether Noboa might change his governing approach in this new term, Camino predicted continuity, especially with the government's focus on using state power to fight crime, which he said "sells legitimacy." Ecuador is one of the mostdangerous countriesin the region, with around 8,000 violent deaths by the end of 2024 and crime continuing to rise in 2025. Camino stressed that Noboa must "look beyond security" and focus on rebuilding Ecuador's social fabric, especially in areas like jobs, healthcare, and education. Others said it was important to focus on root causes of violence, like lack of opportunities which often pushes young people to join criminal groups. Only 33% of Ecuadorians had full-time jobs as of late last year, with the rest working in the informal economy.

Ecuador's Noboa vows to tackle violence, boost economy and create jobs in second term

Ecuador's Noboa vows to tackle violence, boost economy and create jobs in second term QUITO (AP) — Ecuador's PresidentDaniel Noboawa...
Storms, rainfall kick off Memorial Day weekend in parts of USNew Foto - Storms, rainfall kick off Memorial Day weekend in parts of US

TheMemorial Day weekend kicked off with a multi-day thunderstormand heavy rainfall system hitting the south-central part of the country, forecasters said. Hundreds of thousands of people were under a severe thunderstorm watch the afternoon of Saturday, May 24, across a large swath of Oklahoma and part of Arkansas. The risk of severe storms stretches from the southern Plains to the Southeast, with isolated severe storms possible in South Florida, theStorm Prediction Centersaid. A risk of showers and thunderstorms also exists in states in the middle and lower Mississippi Valley and Tennessee Valley, according to the National Weather Service. The storms could bring frequent lightning, severe wind gusts, hail and even a few tornadoes. Significant flash flooding is also a risk. A large portion of the center of the country will likely see a wet, rainy holiday weekend, forecasters said. Scattered rain and showers in the Great Lakes region and Northeast are expected over the weekend but ending by Memorial Day, the weather service said. A stationery front from the Southeast into the Northern Plains and central Rocky Mountain region will extend through the holiday, creating showers, thunderstorms and some heavy rain, also putting the area at risk of flash flooding. "The associated heavy rain will create mainly localized areas of flash flooding, with urban areas, roads, small streams, and low-lying areas the most vulnerable," the weather service said. The threat of excessive rainfall increases on May 25 for states in the central and southern Plains, the middle and lower Mississippi Valley and the Tennessee Valley, forecasters said. Flash flooding remains a risk there later in the weekend. Through May 26, the risk for thunderstorms in the region persists, especially for hail greater than 2 inches over parts of the southern High Plains. More than 4 million people were under a flood watch on May 24 that centered around southeastern Kansas, southwestern Missouri and northern Arkansas. According to AccuWeather, multiple rounds of storms could bring more than a month's worth of rain from southeastern Kansas into southern Missouri, northeastern Oklahoma, northern Arkansas and the mid-Mississippi Valley as far east as western Tennessee, through Memorial Day. Rain could fall at rates between 1 and 3 inches per hour, easily flooding low-lying areas or streets and highways, including in areas already soaked in April and earlier in May, AccuWeather said. The runoff could also cause subsequent rises in streams and rivers. "This will create dangerous and potentially life-threatening conditions for those who live near waterways or may be camping or recreating in areas of major flooding," AccuWeather said in an advisory. There have been over 900 preliminary reports of tornadoes in 2025, making this year the busiest for tornadoes since 2011, according toAccuWeather. The 922 reports logged through late May is 281 more than the historical average of 641 for this time of year, the outlet said. The four states with the most tornado reports are Mississippi, Illinois, Missouri and Texas. Each of those states has seen between 87 and 97 tornadoes so far, AccuWeather reported. A mid-May rash of tornadoes that broke out across the central part of the country left a deadly trail in its wake, with over two dozen dead in Kentucky and Missouri. The deaths were concentrated in London, Kentucky, and Laurel County, where at least 17 people were killed on May 16. Five were killed in St. Louis the same day. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Severe weather hits south-central US to start holiday weekend

Storms, rainfall kick off Memorial Day weekend in parts of US

Storms, rainfall kick off Memorial Day weekend in parts of US TheMemorial Day weekend kicked off with a multi-day thunderstormand heavy rain...
9 of a doctor's 10 children are killed in Israel's latest strikes in GazaNew Foto - 9 of a doctor's 10 children are killed in Israel's latest strikes in Gaza

CAIRO (AP) — The bodies of 79 people killed by Israeli strikes have been brought to hospitals in the past 24 hours,Gaza's Health Ministry said Saturday, a toll that doesn't include hospitals in the battered north that it said arenow inaccessible. Nine of a doctor's 10 children were among those killed in Israel's renewed military offensive, colleagues and the Health Ministry said. Alaa Najjar, a pediatrician at Nasser Hospital, was on duty at the time and ran home to find her family's house on fire, Ahmad al-Farra, head of the hospital's pediatric department, told The Associated Press. Najjar's husband was severely wounded and their only surviving child, an 11-year-old son, was in critical condition after Friday's strike in the southern city of Khan Younis, Farra said. The dead children ranged in age from 7 months to 12 years old. Khalil Al-Dokran, a spokesperson for Gaza's Health Ministry, told the AP that two of the children remained under the rubble. Israel's military in a statement said it struck suspects operating from a structure next to its forces, and described the area of Khan Younis as a "dangerous war zone." It said it had evacuated civilians from the area, and "the claim regarding harm to uninvolved civilians is under review." Earlier on Saturday, a statement said Israel's air force struck over 100 targets throughout Gaza over the past day. The Health Ministry said the new deaths brought the war's toll to 53,901 since the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on Israel that sparked the 19 months of fighting. The ministry said 3,747 people have been killed in Gaza since Israel resumed the war on March 18 in an effort to pressure Hamas to accept different ceasefire terms. Its count doesn't differentiate between civilians and combatants. Israel's pressure on Hamas has included a blockade of Gaza and its over 2 million people since early March. This week, thefirst aid trucks enteredthe territory and began reaching Palestinians since the blockade began. COGAT, the Israeli defense body overseeing aid for Gaza, said 388 trucks had entered since Monday. About 600 trucks a day had entered during the ceasefire. Warnings of famine by food security experts, andimages of desperate Palestiniansjostling for bowls of food at the ever-shrinking number of charity kitchens, led Israel's allies to press the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to allow some aid to return. Netanyahu's government has sought a new aid delivery and distribution system by a newly established U.S.-backed group, but theUnited Nations and partnershave rejected it, saying it allows Israel to use food as a weapon and violates humanitarian principles. Israel may now be changing its approach to let aid groups remain in charge of non-food assistance, according to aletter obtained by the AP. Israel accuses Hamas of siphoning off aid but the U.N. and aid groups deny there is significant diversion. Hospitals in Gaza are again reporting attacks and other Israeli pressure. The Health Ministry said 11 security personnel have been trapped at the European Hospital in southern Gaza following heavy gunfire and airstrikes since at least Tuesday. Dr. Saleh Hams, director of the nursing department, said patients were evacuated after an Israeli strike on May 13. Hams said the security staff stayed behind to protect from looting, and that it was the only hospital in Gaza offering neurosurgery, cardiac care and cancer treatment. Israel said it will continue to strike Gaza until Hamas releases all of the 58 remaining Israeli hostages and disarms. Fewer than half of the hostages are believed to be alive since the Oct. 7 attack, in which militants killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducted 251 others. Hamas has said it will only return the remaining hostages in exchange for more Palestinian prisoners, a lasting ceasefire and an Israeli withdrawal from the territory. Netanyahu has rejected those terms and has vowed tomaintain control over Gazaand facilitate what he refers to as the voluntary emigration of much of its Palestinian population. "The Israeli government and its leader have a clear choice: deal or war, saving lives or abandonment," Liran Berman, brother of hostages Gali and Ziv Berman, told a weekly rally in Tel Aviv as families and supporters again demanded an agreement that would bring everyone home. ___ AlJoud reported from Beirut. ___ Follow AP's war coverage athttps://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war

9 of a doctor's 10 children are killed in Israel's latest strikes in Gaza

9 of a doctor's 10 children are killed in Israel's latest strikes in Gaza CAIRO (AP) — The bodies of 79 people killed by Israeli str...
Elton John Dumped His Fiancée Because 'She Didn't Really Like My Music,' Struggled with Extreme Loneliness: 'So Futile'New Foto - Elton John Dumped His Fiancée Because 'She Didn't Really Like My Music,' Struggled with Extreme Loneliness: 'So Futile'

Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Elton John did 10 interviews with esteemed British journalist David Frost over the course of several decades. "David Frost Vs Elton John," airing May 25, is the fifth episode of the six-part MSNBC documentary seriesDavid Frost Vs. During his series of intimate chats with Frost, who died in 2013, John discussed his music, his career and his relationships. "Sad songs say so much,"Elton Johnsang on a 1984 Top 5 single, one of his biggest hits of the '80s. And throughout his nearly six-decade career, sad songs have remained a cornerstone of his repertoire, from "Daniel" to "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me" to "Sorry Seems to Be the Hardest Word" to "Candle in the Wind 1997," a tribute to the lateDiana, Princess of Wales. In "David Frost Vs Elton John," part 5 of MSNBC's sex-episode series David Frost Vs, John expounds on what made one of his saddest songs say as much as it did. The episode covers the 10 interviews John did over the course of decades with the esteemed British journalist he came to consider a good friend. Robin Platzer/Getty Their first interview took place in 1975, and in a vintage clip from it that's shown in the episode, Frost asks John a pointed question about his body of work, which was largely composed by John and his longtime lyricistBernie Taupin. (John, 78, in a current-day interview, says he looked "a bit timid" during his first sit-down with Frost but compliments his own Tommy Nutter suit.) "What's the most emotional song you've ever done — the most meaningful, emotional song?" Frost asks. "There are two very emotional songs," John, who was 27 at the time, replies. "They are also two very autobiographical songs. One's called 'Someone Saved My Life Tonight.' " So how exactly did someone save his life? "Well, I was living with a lady for about six months who didn't really like my music," John says. "I really liked her, but she didn't like my music and kept telling me that I was rubbish and I'd never make it. And she was always saying, 'You'd be better off being a bank manager or something like that.' And I was due to marry her. I got the cake and everything and the flat and the furniture." PA Images via Getty One evening, John met up at a nightclub with the legendary English musician Long John Baldry, with whom he was working at the time and who inadvertently saved his life. He said, 'You're mad to get married, because she doesn't appreciate your music,' " John recalls. "And he knew I was totally wrapped up in music. So I went home and said, 'That's it. It's off.' And that more or less saved my life because if I'd have got married at that particular point in time, I think it would have been goodbye, Elton John." Getty Images/Bob Riha, Jr. Thankfully for all us, John lived to sing more sad songs, but true companionship continued to elude him. In the episode, "To Sir with Love" singer Lulu, a longtime friend of John, comments on the loneliness of being at the top, as John was for most of the '70s. Then in a 1978 interview with Frost, John himself elaborates on his struggles with loneliness. "I've got loads of close friends, fantastic friends," he says in the vintage clip. "And yet, I've got no-one close to me.... There's no-one close to me at all. I think about it sometimes in my 36-room house when I'm sitting there all alone. And it all seems so futile." John, who said he was bisexual in the late '70s, would go on to briefly marry a woman, Renate Blauel, in the '80s, before coming out as gay. In 1993, he embarked on a romantic relationship with Canadian filmmaker David Furnish. The two married in 2104 and share sons Zachary, 14, and Elijah, 12. Stuart C. Wilson/Getty Furnishtold PEOPLE in 2024that he and John "never go to bed on an argument." "We always make sure that before we turn in at night, if there's any kind of hostility in the air or, 'I'm not speaking to you. Really pissed me off,' we don't go to sleep on it," he said. "We don't carry it over the next day." "I just think that's all about respecting the relationship," he added. "David Frost Vs Elton John," from theDavid Frost Vsseries, premieres May 25 on MSNBC. Read the original article onPeople

Elton John Dumped His Fiancée Because 'She Didn’t Really Like My Music,' Struggled with Extreme Loneliness: 'So Futile'

Elton John Dumped His Fiancée Because 'She Didn't Really Like My Music,' Struggled with Extreme Loneliness: 'So Futile' ...
Hayley Atwell Learned to Pickpocket for 'Mission: Impossible' and Robbed Tom Cruise (Exclusive)New Foto - Hayley Atwell Learned to Pickpocket for 'Mission: Impossible' and Robbed Tom Cruise (Exclusive)

In theMission: Impossiblefranchise,Hayley Atwell's Grace is an extremely talented pickpocket, so talented that in the latest installmentThe Final Reckoning, the fate of the entire world relies on her slight-of-hand. What's perhaps surprising, however, is that Atwell herself became a real-life amateur pickpocket in the process. "I did take it quite literally," she tellsParadeexclusively, "I have stolen several things from the set: a salt and pepper shaker, an ashtray, a watch, a necklace, some documents, a fossil, some fake glass." Tom Cruise'sMission: Impossibleco-star didn't stop on set either. "Last night over dinner, I stole Tom's hot sauce that was made especially for him by the restaurant, because the other spices weren't hot enough. They'd made him this special concoction that was in this beautiful glass bottle with a pipette, so at the end of the meal, I went, 'Oh, I will have that.'" The allure was less in Tom Cruise's specially brewed hot sauce ("I tried it on the edge of my tongue," Atwell recalls, "And I was like, 'Okay, that's enough. I'm done.' It was pretty intense.") but more in the thrill of using her newly found skills. "I'm quite, quite nifty at the old hand tricks," she says. 🎬SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox🎬 With theMission: Impossiblefranchise being well-known for its practical effects, Atwell has learned a lot more than just how to nab a glass vial off a dinner table without anyone noticing. "For the first five months, I was working with the stunt team on drifting in a car," she remembers about the beginning of her training forMission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning. "We spent a lot of time on the racetrack, learning how to drift. A lot of running, because I knew I'd be running with Tom and looking at the form of that. A lot of fight sequences, choreography that involved pickpocketing and slight of hand tricks. Working with knives and just creating a sense where my body was physically capable of doing things repetitively without strain, being really mobile." While Atwell starred in multiple Marvel movies and television shows includingAgent Carter, she says that the level of physicality required for theMission: Impossiblefilms is completely different. "This is five years of my life and no CGI," she says. "The main thing was getting myself to a place of physical readiness where I'm mobile, dynamic, resilient and have enough stamina to learn things quickly and to do them repetitively from different angles. A backflip off a bridge in Venice or moving backwards off a moving train inDead Reckoning, working on a dog sled in the Arctic. It's not just a physical stance, but it's the real environments and locations that we found ourselves in, as opposed to being in a studio." WhenMission: Impossibledecided to set a scene in the arctic on a dogsled, the cast and crew headed to the northern recesses of Norway to film with actual dogs, a move many franchises would have certainly opted out of in favor of a studio and CGI. "We were working with dog handlers," Atwell remembers. "It was minus 40 degrees. We were living on an icebreaker ship. We played cards at night. What I loved about [the dogs] is as soon as they knew they were about to take off for a run, they'd get so animated and excited. I loved it. I found it really invigorating. That was a set where you're stopping to let polar bears go by, and you're going to set on a SkiDoo." While polar bears would occasionally wreak havoc on the filming schedule, one also got up close and personal with Atwell and co. at night on their ship. "We went upstairs on the deck, and we saw this polar bear that had stood on its hind legs and put its paws on the side of the ship," she remembers. "We just watched it walk around the side of the ship before it lost interest and eventually walked off knowing it probably couldn't get access to us, thank god." Related:We Ranked All Eight 'Mission: Impossible' Movies, Including 'The Final Reckoning' While Atwell's death-defying stunts are not quite on the same level as Tom Cruise's, she admits she's down for just about everything. When asked if she'd have taken on Cruise's grandFinal Reckoningstunt, hanging off the side of an airplane, she says, "At this point, yeah. I think Tom could have convinced me to do anything. He makes everything seem possible." In addition to one-of-a-kind stunts, theMission: Impossiblefranchise is also unique in its scripting process, with a more build-as-you-go strategy than something that's firmly set in stone. When directorChristopher McQuarrieinitially approached Atwell about joining the team (he'd been impressed by her work on stage years prior), she was brought in for not only a two-hour-long stunt audition, but also a creative jam session of sorts with Cruise. "I came in for a screen test with Tom," she remembers, "And McQ had written eight pages of dialogue for me to have the night before just to learn. I came in and I learned it, but [Tom and I] started working together to try the scene in various ways. We rewrote the scene, and we changed certain lines around. He said, 'Okay, now perform it like you're holding onto a secret. Now perform it like you're totally innocent and you're wide-eyed.' They wanted to see my range, but they also were seeing whether or not I liked the process of changing things up and trying new things, and whether I was willing to adopt that process." Due to the real-time creation, Atwell's Grace doesn't come with a backstory. "It doesn't matter what her past is, so much as whatever we're creating in the present moment can then dictate decisions we want to make about her backstory," Atwell says of the character. More than that, however, Atwell doesn't even know the plot of the movie when she's filming it. She said she didn't learn the full scope ofThe Final Reckoninguntil "I sat down to watch it last week in front of an audience in Japan." Even within her individual scenes, she can't be sure of what's happening. "There is an understanding that because I'm creating in real time with them, there'll be different versions of it," she says. "So I'll play Grace in one way then I might try playing her in a different way. There'll be scenes where she goes off in this direction, and scenes where she does something very different in the story. We're always just looking at how I can expand the range of ideas so that there was a lot for them to play with in the edit when they want to put it all together." Related:Hayley Atwell Says Tom Cruise Inspired Her to Do All Her Own 'Mission: Impossible' Stunts Too WhileMission: Impossible — The Final Reckoningwas originally intended to be the grand finale of the franchise, the film's ending isn't quite as "final" as the title would imply. Atwell says whether or not this is the lastM:Imovie is up to the fans. "I think audiences have to watch it and make their minds up about what they think it is and what they think becomes of everyone," she says. "For me, this is an accumulation of all the movies that have come up to this point, and there was a sense of closure and satisfaction about what things are tied up." When asked what she thought her character Grace would be up to post-Final Reckoning, Atwell responds, "I think she's carrying on, traveling the world, picking people's pockets and getting herself into all sorts of trouble." No doubt somewhere in theMission: Impossibleworld, Grace is also pilfering designer hot sauce on the reg. Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoningis now playing in theaters. Related:He's a Maverick, for Sure! We Ranked the 25 Best Tom Cruise Movies of All Time Hayley Atwell Learned to Pickpocket for 'Mission: Impossible' and Robbed Tom Cruise (Exclusive)first appeared on Parade on May 24, 2025

Hayley Atwell Learned to Pickpocket for 'Mission: Impossible' and Robbed Tom Cruise (Exclusive)

Hayley Atwell Learned to Pickpocket for 'Mission: Impossible' and Robbed Tom Cruise (Exclusive) In theMission: Impossiblefranchise,H...

 

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