Christopher Meloni Lands New Gig Away From 'Law & Order'New Foto - Christopher Meloni Lands New Gig Away From 'Law & Order'

Christopher Meloni Lands New Gig Away From 'Law & Order'originally appeared onParade. Christopher Melonihas been added to theDanFogelman-produced football drama that is coming to Hulu. The veteranLaw & Orderstar was the first person tapped for the still unnamed series about pro football.Varietyreports that Meloni will take on the close-to-home role of head coach, drawing inspiration from his own experience as the quarterback of his high school football team. Fogelman is known for hits likeParadiseandThis Is Us.News of the upcoming football family dramacame out in October 2024, but little is known about the plot as the network has kept many details under wraps. 🎬SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox🎬 Meloni has been a beloved member of theLaw & Orderuniverse for over 25 years, and he won't be turning in his badge just yet. He got his start on the originalThe EqualizerTV series for one episode back in 1988. He is best known for playing Elliott Stabler onLaw & Order: Special Victims Unit.He's made appearances on otherLaw & Ordershows over the years, playing the same character, and most recently stars inLaw & Order: Organized Crime. Related: 'Law & Order' Star Sends Strong Warning to Jenna Bush Hager Meloni's casting news came on the same dayIce-Trevealed thatLaw & Order: SVUSeason 27 has begun filming. He's returning to his role as Sergeant Odafin Tutuola alongsideKelli GiddishandMariska Hargitay. Christopher Meloni Lands New Gig Away From 'Law & Order'first appeared on Parade on Jul 24, 2025 This story was originally reported byParadeon Jul 24, 2025, where it first appeared.

Christopher Meloni Lands New Gig Away From 'Law & Order'

Christopher Meloni Lands New Gig Away From 'Law & Order' Christopher Meloni Lands New Gig Away From 'Law & Order'ori...
Ozzy Osbourne's Final Hours: Paramedics Reveal Heartbreaking DetailsNew Foto - Ozzy Osbourne's Final Hours: Paramedics Reveal Heartbreaking Details

Ozzy Osbourne's Final Hours: Paramedics Reveal Heartbreaking Detailsoriginally appeared onParade. Heavy metal legendOzzy Osbournepassed away on Tuesday, July 22 at 76, and now, details of hisfinal momentsare coming to light. Paramedics reportedly worked for hours to save the rock legend's life after responding to a medical emergency at his home. "We can confirm that our helicopter was dispatched to provide advanced critical care at an incident near Chalfont St Giles yesterday," a spokesperson for Thames Valley Air Ambulance allegedly told theDaily Mail. The emergency response began when a helicopter was reportedly dispatched to a field near theBlack Sabbathfrontman's estate around 10:30 a.m., according to the outlet. In a desperate race against time, medics attempted to save the singer's life for "two hours," but were ultimately unsuccessful in reviving the heavy metal icon. Locals told the outlet they grew concerned when they saw the aircraft overhead, fearing "something serious was happening." One resident shared to the outlet, "We immediately feared it may be for him, as he was known to be in fragile health." Although the official cause of death has not been confirmed, it is believed to be connected to his long-standing battle with Parkinson's disease. The "Prince of Darkness" revealed his stage 2 diagnosis during an interview withGood Morning Americain 2020. "It's been terribly challenging for us all," Ozzy said. "I got a numbness down this arm for the surgery; my legs keep going cold." "I don't know if that's the Parkinson's or what, you know, but that's — see, that's the problem. Because they cut nerves when they did the surgery. I'd never heard of nerve pain, and it's a weird feeling," he detailed. "It is with more sadness than mere words can convey that we have to report that our beloved Ozzy Osbourne has passed away this morning," his wife,Sharon Osbourne, said in a statement, signed by his childrenAimee Osbourne,Kelly Osbourne,Jack OsbourneandLouis Osbourne. "He was with his family and surrounded by love. We ask everyone to respect our family privacy at this time." Ozzy Osbourne's Final Hours: Paramedics Reveal Heartbreaking Detailsfirst appeared on Parade on Jul 24, 2025 This story was originally reported byParadeon Jul 24, 2025, where it first appeared.

Ozzy Osbourne's Final Hours: Paramedics Reveal Heartbreaking Details

Ozzy Osbourne's Final Hours: Paramedics Reveal Heartbreaking Details Ozzy Osbourne's Final Hours: Paramedics Reveal Heartbreaking De...
Sacha Baron Cohen is now shredded. Thank you Marvel!New Foto - Sacha Baron Cohen is now shredded. Thank you Marvel!

Sacha Baron Cohen's got a whole new vibe going on. The comedic actor behind Bruno has joined the Marvel universe through Disney+'sIronheartseries, playing the iconic baddie Mephisto—and he totally transformed himself for the role. The actor dropped his latestMen's Fitness UKcover on Instagram today, showing off his seriously jacked physique. The photoshoot features shirtless shots of Cohen working out, posing with gym equipment, and crushing some pull-ups. "This is not AI, I really am egotistical enough to do this," he joked on his Instagram story. "Some celebs use Ozempic, some use private chefs, others use personal trainers. I did all three." The actor continued the fun in his stories, writing that he's "hard launching my mid-life crisis" and "debuting my new character: middle aged man who replaced beer with protein shakes" alongside the shoot photos. He gave props to his trainerAlfonso Morettifor "doing the unthinkable—putting up with me for 25 mins a day." Moretti shared his own Instagram post, stating, "Sacha trusted my process and followed the plan exactly. Not only did he earn better health and fitness with incredible aesthetics…but also… The COVER of Men's Fitness!!!" "From Borat to Buff full article coming this Friday! For now, enjoy the pictures," Moretti added. "Tell me he doesn't look absolutely incredible!" Cohen appeared as Mephisto inIronheart's season finale on July 1. It marks just his second screen role since 2020'sBoratsequel. Have an opinion on what you just read? Sign up to be a part of the Socialite Life community in order to post a comment, bookmark your favorite articles, topics, and contributors. Sign Up Today Gwyneth Paltrow Told Friends That Brad Pitt "Has Terrible Taste in Women" [Celebitchy] Balenciaga's 2025 F/W Haute Couture Collection Is V. Shoulder-y [Go Fug Yourself] Hunter Biden Goes Off on George Clooney and Barack Obama's People [Pajiba] Laverne Cox Ignorantly Critiques Kamala Harris, Gushes Over Ex-Boyfriend Who Is MAGA [Boy Culutre] Tennis Tuesday: Andrea Vavassori [Kenneth in the 212]

Sacha Baron Cohen is now shredded. Thank you Marvel!

Sacha Baron Cohen is now shredded. Thank you Marvel! Sacha Baron Cohen's got a whole new vibe going on. The comedic actor behind Bruno h...
Rescue under way for three workers trapped by Canada mine collapseNew Foto - Rescue under way for three workers trapped by Canada mine collapse

Rescue officials in Canada are working to free three miners who are trapped underground in northern British Columbia after a mine collapse. The trio were working at the Red Chris mine on Tahltan Nation territory, 260 miles (420km) west of the town of Fort Nelson. "There was an accident," British Columbia Premier David Eby said on Wednesday. "There are three miners that are currently trapped underground. They are, to the best of our knowledge, uninjured and in a refuge area." An area of ground in the mine collapsed the previous day near an area in which the group were working, mine operator Newmont Corp said in a statement. The miners - two of whom are from British Columbia and one from Ontario - were able to move to a sealed area underground, before a second collapse further blocked their movement, Newmont said. The area where they relocated included a refuge station that had adequate food, water and ventilation to "support an extended stay", the operator said. "At the time of the initial incident, three business partner employees were working more than 500 meters beyond the affected zone and were asked to relocate to a designated refuge station before a subsequent fall of ground blocked the access way," Newmont added. Since the second collapse, there has been restricted communication, so a "standdown of operations" at the mine is in place, the company said. The mine in which the three are trapped is an open-pit copper and gold mine, which was constructed in 2014.

Rescue under way for three workers trapped by Canada mine collapse

Rescue under way for three workers trapped by Canada mine collapse Rescue officials in Canada are working to free three miners who are trapp...
For millions in US mobile home parks, clean and safe tap water isn't a givenNew Foto - For millions in US mobile home parks, clean and safe tap water isn't a given

The worst water Colt Smith has seen in 14 years with Utah's Division of Drinking Water was at a mobile home park, where residents had been drinking it for years before state officials discovered the contamination. The well water carried cancer-causing arsenic as much as 10 times the federal limit. Smith had to put the rural park under a do-not-drink order that lasted nearly 10 years. "The Health Department refers it to us like ... 'Why aren't you guys regulating it?' We had no idea it existed," he said. More than 50 years after theSafe Drinking Water Actwas passed to ensure that Americans' water is free from harmful bacteria, lead and other dangerous substances, millions of people living in mobile home parks can't always count on those basic protections. Areview by The Associated Pressfound that nearly 70% of mobile home parks running their own water systems violated safe drinking water rules in the past five years, a higher rate than utilities that supply water for cities and towns, according toEnvironmental Protection Agencydata. And the problems are likely even bigger because the EPA database doesn't catch all parks. Even where parks get water from an outside source — such as a city — the clean water coming in can become contaminated if it passes through problematic infrastructure before reaching residents' taps. Because the EPA doesn't generally require this water to be tested and regulated, the problems may go unseen. Utah is one of the few states to step in with their own rules, according to an AP survey of state policies. "If you look back at the history of the Safe Drinking Water Act, like in the '70s when they were starting, it was, 'Well, as long as the source … is protected, then by the time it gets to the tap, it'll be fine.' And that's just not how it works," Smith said. The challenge of being 'halfway homeowners' In one Colorado mobile home park, raw sewage backed up into a bathtub. In a Michigan park, the taps often ran dry and the water resembled tea; in Iowa, it looked like coffee — scaring residents off drinking it and ruining laundry they could hardly afford to replace. In California, boxes of bottled water crowd a family's kitchen over fears of arsenic. Almost 17 million people in the U.S. live in mobile homes. Some are comfortable Sun Belt retirees. Many others have modest incomes and see mobile homes as a rare opportunity for home ownership. To understand how water in the parks can be so troubled, it's useful to remember that residents often own their homes but rent the land they sit on. Despite the name, it's difficult and expensive to move a mobile home. That means they're "halfway homeowners," said Esther Sullivan, a professor of sociology at the University of Colorado in Denver who lived in several mobile home parks as she researched a book. Residents often put up with "really egregious" property maintenance by landlords because all their money is tied up in their home, she said. Pamela Maxey, 51, of Kalamazoo, Michigan, said she had forgotten what it was like to have reliable, clean water until she traveled to her state Capitol last year to advocate for better mobile home park protections and stayed in a hotel. By then, she had spent eight years in a park where sewage backed up into homes and the flow of tap water was sometimes weak or discolored. "It wasn't until I went into the bathroom to take a shower that I realized, 'I don't have to jump in here and squint my eyes closed the entire time and make sure water doesn't get in my mouth because I don't know what's in it,'" she said. "I went to brush my teeth, and I just turned the faucet on and I brushed my teeth from the water coming from the faucet. I haven't been able to do that for over a year." Victoria Silva, a premed student in Fort Collins, Colorado, estimates the water in Harmony Village Mobile Home Park where Silva lives went out or lost pressure 20 to 30 times over roughly three years there. "People don't realize how much water they need until the water is out for five minutes when they need to flush, when they need to rinse something off their hands, when they need to make some pasta," Silva said. The park's owner says a licensed professional ensures water is maintained and tested, and outages are minimized. Small water companies, serial problems The U.S. has some 50,000 water utilities, most serving small towns and rural areas. Many struggle to find expert staff and funding, and they violate clean water rules more often than the handful of large utilities that serve cities. Buteven among the hard-pressed small utilities, mobile home parks stand out. The AP analysis found that more than half these parks failed to perform a required test for at least one contaminant, or failed to properly report the results, in the past five years. And they are far more likely to be repeat offenders of safe drinking water rules overall. But that's only part of the story. The true rates of mobile home park violations aren't knowable because the EPA doesn't track them well. The agency's tap water violation database depends on information from states that often don't properly categorize mobile home parks. When Smith first searched Utah's database in response to an AP request for data from all 50 states, he found only four small water systems identified as belonging to mobile home parks. With some keyword searches, he identified 33 more. Other parks aren't in the databases at all and may be completely unregulated. One July day in 2021, officials with the EPA were out investigating sky-high arsenic levels in the tap water at Oasis Mobile Home Park in the Southern California desert when they realized the problem went way beyond just one place. "It was literally us driving around and going, 'Wait a minute, there's a bunch of mobile home parks!'" said Amy Miller, who previously served as EPA's head of enforcement for the Pacific Southwest region. The water in these other parks had been off their radar. At some, testing found high levels of cancer-causing arsenic in the water that had been provided to residents for years. It's impossible to know how many unnoticed parks are out there. Most states aren't actively looking for them and say they find very few. In Colorado, after the state passed a new law to require water testing at all mobile home parks, officials uncovered 79 parks with their source of water unknown. That's about a tenth of the total parks in the state. Pipes 'like spaghetti' in the ground Many parks are decades old with aging pipes that can cause chronic water problems, even if the water that supplies the park is clean when it enters the system. Jake Freeman, the engineering director at Central States Water Resources, a Missouri-based private utility company that specializes in taking over small water systems in 11 states, said substandard and poorly installed pipes are more common to see in mobile home parks. "A lot of times, it's hard to find the piping in the mobile home parks because if there's any kind of obstruction, they just go around it," he said. ""It's like spaghetti laying in the ground." After a major winter storm devastated Texas in 2021, Freeman said, the company found pipes at parks it had taken over that "were barely buried. Some of them weren't buried." When pipes break and leak, the pressure drops and contaminants can enter water lines. In addition, parks sometimes have stagnant water — where pipes dead-end or water sits unused — that increases the risk of bacterial growth. Rebecca Sadosky is public water supply chief in North Carolina, where mobile home communities make up close to 40% of all water systems. She said owners don't always realize when they buy a park that they could also be running a mini utility. "I think they don't know that they're getting into the water business," she said. It doesn't have to be like this Utah is a rare state that enforces safe drinking water standards even within mobile home parks that get their water from another provider, according to AP's survey of states. A small number of other states like New Hampshire have taken some steps to address water safety in these parks, but in most states frustrated residents may have no one to turn to for help beyond the park owner. In Colorado, when Silva asked officials who enforces safe drinking water rules, "I just couldn't get clear answers." Steve Via, director of federal regulations at the American Water Works Association utility group, argued against regulating mobile home parks that get their water from a municipality, saying that would further stretch an already taxed oversight system. And if those parks are regulated, what's to stop the rules from extending to the privately owned pipes in big apartment buildings — the line has to be drawn somewhere, he said. Via said residents of parks where an owner refuses to fix water problems have options, including going to their local health departments, suing or complaining publicly. Silva is among the advocates who fought for years to change Colorado's rules before they succeeded in passing a law in 2023 that requires water testing in every mobile home park. It gives health officials the ability to go beyond federal law to address taste, color and smell that can make people afraid to drink their water, even when it's not a health risk. The state is now a leader in protecting mobile home park tap water. Smith, the Utah environmental scientist, said stopping the contaminated water flowing into the mobile home park and connecting it to a safe supply felt like a career highlight. He said Utah's culture of making do with scarce water contributed to a willingness for stronger testing and regulations than the federal government requires. "There's sort of the communal nature of like, everybody should have access to clean water," he said. "It seems to transcend political ideologies; it seems to transcend religious ideologies." ___ The Associated Press receives support from the Walton Family Foundation for coverage of water and environmental policy. The AP is solely responsible for all content. For all of AP's environmental coverage, visithttps://apnews.com/hub/climate-and-environment

For millions in US mobile home parks, clean and safe tap water isn’t a given

For millions in US mobile home parks, clean and safe tap water isn't a given The worst water Colt Smith has seen in 14 years with Utah...

 

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