Blood-curdling screams and a 'crazed' look: Witnesses describe Michigan Walmart stabbingNew Foto - Blood-curdling screams and a 'crazed' look: Witnesses describe Michigan Walmart stabbing

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. — It was a seemingly normal Saturday for Julia Martell, who was browsing the aisles of her local Walmart with a friend when she heard people screaming. Still, she didn't think much of the disturbance, making the assumption that there was a fight a few aisles over. As she turned the corner, she saw a man running down another aisle, and then she saw his knife. Eleven people ranging in age from 29 to 84 wereinjured in a stabbing attackat the Traverse City store Saturday, and a suspect was apprehended. Bradford James Gille, 42, was quickly subdued by other shoppers and taken into custody when a deputy arrived, the Grand Traverse County Sheriff said. The man barreled past someone else nearby and "angled toward me," Martell, 32, told NBC News. "And that's when I booked it down the aisle." She said the man looked "crazed" and laser-focused on getting to the store's exit. She said she doesn't think she was an intended target, or that she even particularly caught the man's attention, but that she was uninjured because she got out of the way in time. Authorities have said Gille acted alone and that the attack appeared to be random without predetermined victims. Martell stopped running when she found a group of others, which is when she said the fear set in "because I had no idea where the person was." "All I know is I saw a knife, and I ran away from the knife, and now I have no idea where the knife is," Martell said. "I'm still sitting and grappling with the weight of realizing that it was kind of a life or death moment," Martell said. She said it's "surreal" that she was there when it happened, especially in retrospect after seeing all of the news coverage. "I could have easily been next," she said. On her way out of the store, she passed at least two men who had stab wounds. One, she said, was elderly and was complaining about his heart. The other made a joke about needing a Band-Aid. Officials have said that Good Samaritans in the store subdued the attacker before officers arrived and could arrest him. Martell said that was happening on the other side of the store from where she ended up. Michael Miller, 34, said he was one of those people. He, along with his fiancée, Julia Ling, 27, and four of their kids, heard what they described as blood-curdling screams when they walked into the Walmart. Ling grabbed the young girls and pulled them behind a bread rack. "Anything to block him from them," she said. But Miller ran toward the action to help, she said. Ling said she saw the man stab one victim in the produce section, then another by the self checkout, before he ran toward her and her kids. "He lunged at us," she told NBC News. Then, she said, he lunged at Miller, and the group trying to stop the attacker pushed him out the door. The group outside got the suspect to the ground and Miller called 911, he said. Officers arrived within minutes, Miller said. Once on scene, he helped the first responders locate all of the injured victims, he said. Miller said he and some other men around him "reacted at the same time and reacted in the same way," to the attacker, allowing them to work together to subdue the suspect. "I think we all saw each other. We all noticed each other and saw what was going on," Miller said. "I mean, definitely something that I think everybody was kind of in on together." Both Miller and Ling called the day's events a "wake up call" and expressed concern over bringing their kids on errands with them, especially when the other is busy and one of them has to go alone. Ling said she's already started thinking about making plans to go when Miller is home from work. But both of them have a little faith in their community after so many bystanders worked together to stop the violence. Miller "kept saying to me after the fact was, 'I only did what anybody should have done,'" Ling said. "It should be that way," Miller added. Michigan prosecutors are seeking a terrorism charge against Gille, the suspect, in addition to 11 counts of assault with intent to murder, one for each stabbing victim. All of the victims received care at Munson Medical Center, where all but one remain hospitalized. Munson Healthcare spokesperson Catherine Dewey said eight of the victims are in fair condition and two are in serious condition. All are expected to survive.

Blood-curdling screams and a 'crazed' look: Witnesses describe Michigan Walmart stabbing

Blood-curdling screams and a 'crazed' look: Witnesses describe Michigan Walmart stabbing TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. — It was a seemingly n...
At least 3 killed and others injured in train derailment in southern GermanyNew Foto - At least 3 killed and others injured in train derailment in southern Germany

BERLIN (AP) — A regional passenger train derailed in southernGermanyon Sunday, killing at least three people and seriously injuring others, authorities said. Federal and local police said the cause of the crash near Riedlingen, roughly 158 kilometers (98 miles) west of Munich, remains under investigation. Photos from the scene showed parts of the train on its side as rescuers climbed atop the carriages. It was not immediately clear how many people were injured. Roughly 100 people were onboard the train when at least two carriages derailed in a forested area around 6:10 p.m. (1610 GMT). Storms passed through the area before the crash and investigators were seeking to determine if the rain was a factor. "There have been heavy rains here, so it cannot be ruled out that the heavy rain and a related landslide accident may have been the cause. However, this is currently the subject of ongoing investigations," said Thomas Strobl, interior minister of the state of Baden Württenberg. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, in a post on social platform X, said he mourned the victims and gave his condolences to their families. Deutsche Bahn, Germany's main national railway operator, said in a statement that it was cooperating with investigators. The company also offered its condolences.

At least 3 killed and others injured in train derailment in southern Germany

At least 3 killed and others injured in train derailment in southern Germany BERLIN (AP) — A regional passenger train derailed in southernGe...
Trump reaches agreement with E.U. to impose 15% tariff, with exceptions for key industriesNew Foto - Trump reaches agreement with E.U. to impose 15% tariff, with exceptions for key industries

President Donald Trump on Sunday announced a trade agreement with the European Union that would set tariffs at 15%, ending what had been months of uncertainty surrounding trade with the United States' largest trade partner. The tariff rate is a reduction from the 30% that Trump threatened onJuly 12and the 20% he said he would imposeon April 2. Announcing the agreement, Trump said the E.U. will not impose a tariff on U.S. imports. He added this agreement was "satisfactory to both sides." European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said Sunday alongside Trump that the pact "will bring stability. It will bring predictability. That's very important for our businesses on both sides of the Atlantic." However, Trump said 50% tariffs on steel would remain unchanged and more tariffs could still be on the way for pharmaceutical products, which Ireland is one of the top sources of. Trump recently threatened 200% tariffs on pharma goods. In the meeting with von der Leyen, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said semiconductor tariffs could also be announced in the coming weeks. Outlining parts of the agreement, Trump said "the European Union is going to agree to purchase from the United States $750 billion worth of energy." He said the E.U. would also invest $600 billion into the United States. It was not immediately clear what form that investment would take or over what time period it would be deployed. Trump added that E.U. nations will also be purchasing "a vast amount of military equipment," though a definitive purchase amount was not yet set. The European Commission has been bulking up its military supplies but has been focused on buying primarily from European companies so far. Trump said this arrangement would lead to the "opening up of all of the European countries, which I think I could say were essentially closed." However, the E.U. buys hundreds of billions of dollars in U.S. goods each year. In 2024, that value was nearly $400 billion. The agreement appears to closely mirror thetrade agreement announced with Japan on Tuesday, under which Japanese imports will face a 15% import duty, which was also lower than Trump earlier threatened. In a press briefing after the meeting with Trump, von der Leyen said that the 15% tariff would not stack on top of any other tariffs already in place. She said the U.S. and E.U. have both agreed to apply zero tariffs to a number of categories of imports: all aircraft and component parts, certain chemicals, generic pharmaceuticals, semiconductor equipment and some agricultural products. "We will replace Russian gas and oil by significant purchases of U.S. [liquified natural gas], oil, and nuclear fuels," she said. Von der Leyen said she estimates the union will buy $250 billion worth of the energy products per year over the course of a three-year period. "Fifteen percent is not to be underestimated but it is the best we could get," she added of the still high rate of duties that exports from the 27 European countries will face. "Fifteen percent is certainly a challenge for some, but we should not forget it keeps access to the American market." She described the meeting with Trump as "very difficult because we started far apart from each other." In the end, she said it was "good and satisfactory." But last year, the average U.S. tariff on imports from the European Union was just 1.2%, according to Capital Economics' chief Europe economist. Ireland's prime ministersaid in a post on Xthat he welcomed the deal but "it does mean that there will now be higher tariffs than there have been and this will have an impact on trade between the EU and US, making it more expensive and more challenging." Germany's prime minister responded by saying, "A trade conflict has been averted that would have hit the export-oriented German economy hard. This is especially true for the automotive industry, where the current tariffs will be almost halved from 27.5% to 15%. This is precisely where the rapid reduction of tariffs is of utmost importance." The European Union has been in active negotiations with Lutnick and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer for weeks and had believed it was extremely close to a deal before Trump suddenly fired off a letter on Truth Social saying he would hike tariffs to 30%. The E.U.'s top trade negotiator made multiple trips across the Atlantic to meet with his U.S. counterparts and was set to speak by phone with Lutnick again Wednesday, according to a spokesperson for the E.U. "Imposing 30% tariffs on E.U. exports would disrupt essential transatlantic supply chains, to the detriment of businesses, consumers and patients on both sides of the Atlantic," von der Leyen said after Trump's July letter. Immediately after the letter, the E.U. said it would continue working toward an agreement of some type by the new deadline of Aug. 1. But the bloc continued to simultaneously prepare an extensive list of U.S. products against which it could apply retaliatory tariffs if an agreement weren't reached amid fears that Trump could end talks. Some of those products included Boeing aircraft, U.S. vehicles and imports from politically sensitive states such as bourbon from Kentucky and soybeans from Louisiana. At the time of the announcement, the E.U. had about $100 billion worth of retaliatory tariffs ready to deploy. Agricultural and business groups hadwarnedthat 30% tariffs on the European Union could dramatically impact the price and availability of wines, cheeses and pasta, and called the proposed levy "incomprehensible." Cars and other vehicles produced in the E.U. could still face increased prices. "The costs for our companies have already reached the billions — and with each passing day, the total continues to grow," the German auto trade group VDA told NBC News in a statement on July 14. The 27 countries of the European Union are the United States' largest trading partner — its $605 billion worth of imports into the U.S. surpass Mexico, Canada and even China. The most valuable category of imports in 2024 was drugs and pharmaceuticals primarily from Ireland, followed by autos, aircraft and other heavy machinery from nations such as France and Germany. Trump has separately threatened to impose a 200% tariff on any drugs imported into the U.S., though it would not be applied for at least 18 months. It was unclear if the deal with the E.U. would prevent that.

Trump reaches agreement with E.U. to impose 15% tariff, with exceptions for key industries

Trump reaches agreement with E.U. to impose 15% tariff, with exceptions for key industries President Donald Trump on Sunday announced a trad...
Jay Leno Says Today's Late-Night Hosts 'Alienate' Half the Audience With Political Jokes 'Cozying Up to One Side': 'I Don't Think Anybody Wants to Hear a Lecture'New Foto - Jay Leno Says Today's Late-Night Hosts 'Alienate' Half the Audience With Political Jokes 'Cozying Up to One Side': 'I Don't Think Anybody Wants to Hear a Lecture'

Jay Leno believes late-night TV comedians have become too politicized — and that they risk losing half the viewing audience by "cozying up to one side or the other." "To me, I like to think that people come to a comedy show to kind of get away from things, you know, the pressures of life, whatever it might be," Leno said in a recent interview with David Trulio, president and CEO of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation and Institute. "Now you have to be content with half the audience because you have to give your opinion." More from Variety Jay Leno Says Jimmy Kimmel 'Humiliated Me' During 2010 'Tonight Show' Interview and 'I Let It Happen. I Didn't Edit It. It Was My Mistake.' Jay Leno Says Election Day Was 'Fair' and 'It Was Honest' After Trump Win: 'It Was a Great Day For Democracy' Jay Leno Recovering From Motorcycle Accident, Two Months After Suffering Serious Burns: Report Leno didn't name names. But the current roster of late-night hosts — Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Kimmel, Jon Stewart, John Oliver, Seth Meyers and more — has routinely mocked President Trump and the MAGA movement. To be fair, they have also opportunistically lampooned Democrats. Leno's impression is that late-night TV these days skews toward specific political viewpoints. "I love political humor, don't get me wrong," the late-night veteran told Trulio. "But it's just what happens when people wind up cozying too much to one side or the other." Leno asked rhetorically, "Why shoot for just half an audience all the time? You know, why not try to get the whole. I mean, I like to bring people into the big picture." Leno's interview with Trulio, formerly Fox News Digital's managing editor and head of strategy and editorial operations, was conducted beforeCBS announced on July 17 that it was canceling "The Late Show With Stephen Colbert."CBS claimed it was "purely a financial decision." The axing of Colbert's show appeared to many critics to be another concession to Trump, coming after CBS parent company Paramount Global agreed to pay the president $16 million to settle what legal experts said was a meritless lawsuit going after "60 Minutes." After Trump said"I absolutely love that Colbert got fired,"Colbert told Trump to "Go fuck yourself." On Friday, David Letterman, former "Late Show" host, slammed the cancellation of Colbert's show as an act of"pure cowardice"and suggested that Skydance Media (whosetakeover of Paramount is set to close next monthafter the FCC approved the deal) wanted Colbert ousted to avoid problems with the Trump administration. The caption on the Reagan Foundation'sYouTube interview clip with Leno, which was posted July 22, says, "Late-night TV used to be about laughs — not lectures. ‪@jayleno‬ tells us why he never shared his political opinions on The Tonight Show, and why he thinks today's hosts are losing half of America by doing so." Thefirst partof Trulio's interview with Leno was posted July 9 on YouTube.Part 2, in which Leno "shares his thoughts on Reagan's comedic brilliance," was uploaded July 15. Leno hosted "The Tonight Show" on NBC from 1992 to 2009; Conan O'Brien briefly took the reins of the show before NBC brought Leno back from 2010-14. Leno was the first late-night talk show host to conduct an interview with a sitting president, with President Barack Obama appearing on the show in March 2009. After Trump's victory in the 2024 presidential election,Leno said in an appearance on "The View"that he was "not a fan" of Trump but that, "The nice thing about this election is, it was fair, it was honest…. there was no cheating. Everybody says it was honest. I mean, it's a great day for democracy," Leno added. In the interview with Leno, Trulio alluded to a study of the comedian's "Tonight Show" jokes, which Trulio said had found were "roughly equally balanced between going after Republicans and taking aim at Democrats." According to a George Mason Universityanalysisreleased in 2009, on "The Tonight Show" from 1992-2008, Leno told 4,468 jokes about Bill Clinton, nearly 50% more than George W. Bush (2,999 jokes). Following them in the Top 10 most frequent targets of Leno's jokes were Al Gore, Hillary Clinton, O.J. Simpson, Dick Cheney, Michael Jackson, Monica Lewinsky, Bob Dole and John McCain. Asked by Trulio what his strategy was vis-a-vis political humor, Leno replied, "It was funny to me when I got hate letters [that said], 'You and your Republican friends' and 'Well, Mr. Leno, I hope you and your Democratic buddies are happy' — over the same joke. And I go, 'Well, that's good. That's how you get a whole audience.'" Leno has previously shared his belief that late-night hosts who have come after him are too one-sided. In 2019, he said on "The View" that he"always liked to humiliate and degrade both sides equally." SEE ALSO:Jay Leno Says Jimmy Kimmel 'Humiliated Me' During 2010 'Tonight Show' Interview and 'I Let It Happen. I Didn't Edit It. It Was My Mistake.' Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week 'Harry Potter' TV Show Cast Guide: Who's Who in Hogwarts? Final Emmy Predictions: Talk Series and Scripted Variety - New Blood Looks to Tackle Late Night Staples Sign up forVariety's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us onFacebook,Twitter, andInstagram.

Jay Leno Says Today’s Late-Night Hosts ‘Alienate’ Half the Audience With Political Jokes ‘Cozying Up to One Side’: ‘I Don’t Think Anybody Wants to Hear a Lecture’

Jay Leno Says Today's Late-Night Hosts 'Alienate' Half the Audience With Political Jokes 'Cozying Up to One Side': '...
Jennifer Lopez Suffers Mid-Performance Wardrobe Malfunction During Her Concert: 'I'm Glad I Had Underwear on, I Don't Usually'New Foto - Jennifer Lopez Suffers Mid-Performance Wardrobe Malfunction During Her Concert: 'I'm Glad I Had Underwear on, I Don't Usually'

Jennifer Lopez/Youtube (2) Jennifer Lopez's skirt ended up "On the Floor" during her latest concert, but she didn't let it detract from the show! The musician, who recentlycelebrated her 56th birthday, handled a mid-performance wardrobe malfunction like a pro while she was in Warsaw, Poland, on July 25. During her gig at the PGE Narodowy stadium — as part of herUp All Night: Live in 2025 tour— Lopez thanked fans for coming out to the show, when a glittery skirt she was wearing randomly snapped off her body and fell to the stage floor. Though Lopez was unsuccessful in trying to stop the skirt from hitting the ground, she didn't let the mishap take away from the moment, which was shared on her officialYouTubechannel, as well as by fans onInstagram. The hitmaker played the incident off by smiling big and strutting around the stage with her arms in the air, even pulling off a little spin. https://people-app.onelink.me/HNIa/kz7l4cuf "I'm out here in my underwear," Lopez joked, as a dancer approached her with the skirt and attempted to put it back on. "That's gonna be everywhere." "I'm glad that they reinforced that costume," she later said. "And I'm glad I had underwear on. I don't usually wear underwear." Lopez later tossed the skirt to fans in the crowd and told them to "keep it," joking that she didn't "want it back." Jennifer Lopez/Youtube Lopez was praised by fans for how she laughed off the onstage wardrobe malfunction. "She's adorable & handled it like a pro that she is 🙌🏻," one supporter captioned footage of the moment shared on Instagram. "👏👏🙌🔥😍😂life is too short," another fan wrote in the comments section of a post. The "Ain't Your Mama" singer's latest tour stop came after she celebrated her birthday on July 24. Lopez marked the occasion by dropping a new song titled "Birthday," and she was presented witha huge three-tiered cakeas she celebrated with dancers and musicians on the road with her. Lopezkicked off the tour, her first in six years, with a performance in Galicia, Spain, on July 8. It took place over a year after shecanceled herThis Is Me... Livetourin May 2024. In celebration of her birthday in Antalya, Turkey, Lopez shared abare-faced photo of herself— as well as some celebratory clips — with a caption dedicated to her fans. "What a gift you all are," the mother of two wrote. "Thank you so much for all your beautiful birthday wishes." Lopez is next set to perform in Bucharest, Romania, on Sunday, July 27. She will then make her way to Istanbul and beyond in the weeks to follow, before herinternational runwraps on Aug. 12 in Sardinia. Read the original article onPeople

Jennifer Lopez Suffers Mid-Performance Wardrobe Malfunction During Her Concert: 'I'm Glad I Had Underwear on, I Don't Usually'

Jennifer Lopez Suffers Mid-Performance Wardrobe Malfunction During Her Concert: 'I'm Glad I Had Underwear on, I Don't Usually...

 

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