Venezuela's Maduro says his country is peaceful but will not bow to threatsNew Foto - Venezuela's Maduro says his country is peaceful but will not bow to threats

CARACAS (Reuters) -Venezuela is facing the biggest threat seen in South America in a century but will not bow to it, President Nicolas Maduro said on Monday in a rare press conference. Tensions between the United States and Venezuela have risen in recent weeks amid a large U.S. naval buildup in the Southern Caribbean and nearby waters, which U.S. officials say aims to address threats from Latin American drug cartels. U.S. President Donald Trump has made cracking down on drug cartels a central goal of his administration, part of a wider effort to limit migration and secure the U.S. southern border. But Maduro, Venezuelan Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello and other officials have said the U.S. is threatening their country with the naval deployments and that the buildup is part of an effort to justify an intervention against them. "Venezuela is confronting the biggest threat that has been seen on our continent in the last 100 years," Maduro told journalists, officials and uniformed military brass in Caracas. "A situation like this has never been seen." His country is peaceful, Maduro added, but will not bow to threats. Venezuela's government has scoffed at U.S. assertions that the country and its leadership are key to major international drug trafficking. In early August, the United States doubled its reward for information leading to Maduro's arrest to $50 million over allegations of drug trafficking and links to criminal groups. (Reporting by Reuters)

Venezuela's Maduro says his country is peaceful but will not bow to threats

Venezuela's Maduro says his country is peaceful but will not bow to threats CARACAS (Reuters) -Venezuela is facing the biggest threat se...
As Trump takes aim at the Smithsonian, meet the woman racing to visit every exhibitNew Foto - As Trump takes aim at the Smithsonian, meet the woman racing to visit every exhibit

Pausing next to a hulking steam locomotive at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History on Friday, Kathryn Jones bent down to look at a tiny silk slipper. "I've never seen one in person. It's so small," she said, pointing at the shoe once worn by a Chinese immigrant with bound feet. "That's why I love museums. It takes those facts and solidifies it." The recording of a trail whistle hooted in the background, bringing to life the 1887 Jupiter steam engine that hauled fruit picked by immigrants in Watsonville, California. "The immersion, the sounds, the small little touches that suck you in. I'm a sucker for small objects," she said as she walked through "America on the Move," her 100th Smithsonian exhibit this year. In January, Jones began a quest to visit every exhibit at theSmithsonian Institution museumsin Washington, D.C., and read every plaque. During the past eight months, she has visited 100 exhibits at 13 museums, meticulously logging her time on detailed spreadsheets. According to her records, that's 73 hours inside the museums and almost 51 total hours reading signs. She traverses each exhibit twice, first reading every description and watching every video, then looking at the exhibit again and filming videofor her TikTok account. "My goal for that is almost to kind of provide a marketing sizzle reel for the exhibit," she said. "A priority of mine is getting people in museums, getting people curious, reminding people that learning is fun as well as hopefully right, breaking down the stigma that museums and galleries are stuffy and exclusive and people can't come." Jones paused to take in historic footage of a streetcar passing the White House. "This is what I love to see, D.C. streets which I recognize," she said. "Look how close to the White House they are with a streetcar." She added, "People on roller skates! I did not expect that. A tour! This is so cool." This year, Jones found herself at a professional crossroads after leaving her job as a vice president of marketing. "I called it my grown-up gap year," she said. "There were so many aspects of what I was doing that I loved, but I was just kind of burnt out and felt adrift. So, I took the year off with the intention to figure out what brought me joy in life, what I wanted to do." Making videos about the Smithsonian, she discovered a passion for content creation, which she intends to continue after filming her last Smithsonian exhibition. "I tried, I think, three times and failed before I did my first exhibit. I went to a museum with the intention to read everything, and was either too anxious to do it, embarrassed to be filming in public," she said. "I'm really proud of myself for the strides that I've made in my ability to focus, my confidence in myself." As Jones has built her channel, the Smithsonian has found itself under increased scrutiny. Last month, the Trump administration informed Smithsonian Secretary Lonnie G. Bunch thatit would begin a systematic reviewto "remove divisive or partisan narratives" in advance of the nation's 250th anniversary. A week later, President Donald Trumptook aim at the Smithsonian on Truth Social. "The Smithsonian is OUT OF CONTROL, where everything discussed is how horrible our Country is, how bad Slavery was, and how unaccomplished the downtrodden have been — Nothing about Success, nothing about Brightness, nothing about the Future," he wrote. "We are not going to allow this to happen." The first phase of the review will focus on eight Smithsonian museums, including the National Museum of American History, the National Museum of African American History and Culture and the National Portrait Gallery. In an interview with Fox News, Lindsey Halligan, one of the White House officials who signed the administration's Aug. 12 letter to the Smithsonian, addressed the review. "The fact that … our country was involved in slavery is awful — no one thinks otherwise," she said. "But what I saw when I was going through the museums, personally, was an overemphasis on slavery, and I think there should be more of an overemphasis on how far we've come since slavery." The Smithsonian Institution was in the administration's crosshairs prior to last month's review announcement. In March, Trump signed an executive order titled "Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History," which directed the institution to "prohibit expenditure on exhibits or programs that degrade shared American values, divide Americans based on race, or promote programs or ideologies inconsistent with Federal law and policy." In April, an exhibit by African LGBTQ artists was abruptly postponed by the Smithsonian's National Museum of African Art. The following month, NBC News documented more than 30artifacts that were removedfrom the National Museum of African American History and Culture. And in July,artist Amy Sherald canceled an upcoming showat the National Portrait Gallery after she said curators expressed concerns about a painting of a transgender Statue of Liberty. "It became clear during my exchanges with the gallery how quickly curatorial independence collapses when politics enters the room,"she wrote on MSNBC.com. "Museums are not stages for loyalty. They are civic laboratories. They are places where we wrestle with contradictions, encounter the unfamiliar and widen our circle of empathy. But only if they remain free." This is not the first time that the Smithsonian has found itself in the crossfire of a culture war. In 2010, the institution withdrew part of an exhibition called Hide/Seek featuring works by LGBTQ artists after sustained outcry by then-House Speaker John Boehner and Catholic organizations. The institution was also roiled by a debate over a National Air and Space Museum exhibit of the Enola Gay aircraft, which dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, during World War II. Critics derided plans to include Japanese perspectives and information about the effects of nuclear warfare as an example of "politically correct curating." "The Smithsonian has faced crisis moments in the past … but the crisis moments have never come from a direct political assault, certainly not at the hands of the executive," said Dr. Sam Redman, director of the public history program at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. "I know we use the word unprecedented a lot in this era, but this is truly unprecedented in terms of thinking about the Smithsonian." Some museum scholars dispute the Trump administration's claims that the Smithsonian overemphasizes narratives by Black and LGBTQ artists. "We all know that museums are historically and culturally extremely conservative, and that there's a striking lack of exhibitions devoted to women artists, or women's history or Black artists or LGBTQ," said Lisa Strong, director of the art and museum studies master's program at Georgetown University. "Museums know this and have been working, working to fix this." A2022 reportby journalists Julia Halperin and Charlotte Burns for Artnet found 14.9% of exhibits at 31 major U.S. museums, including the National Portrait Gallery, between 2008 and 2020 were of work by female-identifying artists, and 6.3 % were of work by Black American artists. Trump says the Smithsonian focuses too much on 'how bad slavery was' Queer art facing widespread museum censorship, curators say White House reviewing Smithsonian exhibits to make sure they align with Trump's vision Artist Amy Sherald cancels her Smithsonian show over censorship concerns Jones said her priority on her TikTok channel is encouraging people to visit the Smithsonian museums and local museums that document history. "Hearing those stories of people that have suffered before, problems that we face, that's honestly why I kind of started doing this challenge," she said. "Because when we read these stories and see things, the more we know, the better we can empathize with other people, because we have other experiences to pull from." She sat in the arched alcove of a railroad waiting room to listen to the story of Charlotte Hawkins Brown, who traveled to the Jim Crow South on racially segregated railroad cars during the 1920s. "She talks about how someone said to her, 'This is God's country. You can't sit there,'" Jones said. "Hearing those stories, I do think it's important to confront those things, because that led to where we are now," she said. "People are affected by that. Some people will carry the scars of that."

As Trump takes aim at the Smithsonian, meet the woman racing to visit every exhibit

As Trump takes aim at the Smithsonian, meet the woman racing to visit every exhibit Pausing next to a hulking steam locomotive at the Smiths...
Is summer over? Fall 2025 weather forecast is here.New Foto - Is summer over? Fall 2025 weather forecast is here.

Folks in the eastern half of the United States might be wondering if the current ongoing cool pattern, which even saw temperatures dip into the 20s in portions of West Virginia on Aug. 26, is here to stay. Is summer over? Forecasters say it will definitely stay chilly in the short term: "A fresh area of high pressure will move from Canada into the Northeast over the weekend and remain in place for the Labor Day holiday,"AccuWeather meteorologist Adam Douty said in late August. "Most locations will experience comfortable days with a good deal of sunshine and chilly nights." Indeed, temperatures more common for October will trend as much as 15 degrees below historical averages, with near-record lows at night for many locations. Daytime highs will range from the 60s to 70s, with nighttime lows in the 40s and 50s. Federal forecasters agree with this prediction, noting that "current outlooks for early September favor below-normal temperatures for much of the Midwest and East," Dan Collins, an extended range forecaster withNOAA's Climate Prediction Center, told USA TODAY via e-mail. Sept. 1 is the beginning of meteorological fall in the Northern Hemisphere, while the beginning of astronomical fall is still three weeks away, this year occurring on Sept. 22. Meteorologists use the calendar to determine the change of seasons, while astronomers and the general public usually go with the autumnal equinox, when the sun is directly aligned with the equator, resulting in equal hours of daylight and darkness. Residents of Florida and the western U.S. must wonder what the fuss is about, as summerlike warmth is predicted to continue over these areas for most of September, according to theClimate Prediction Center. In early September, temperatures will be most unusually warm in the Northwest, with upper 90s likely, possibly reaching 100 degrees east of the Cascades,the Weather Prediction Center said in an online forecast. However, according to AccuWeather senior meteorologist Chad Merrill, the warmth will return to the East by mid-month: the current cool temperatures should be replaced by above-average temperatures. Forecasters from the Climate Prediction Center also note that "we are favoring above normal temperatures for much of the lower 48, including the Midwest and East, over the month of September," meteorologist Anthony Artusa told USA TODAY. But AccuWeather's Merrill does not foresee a return to any extreme summertime heat of 95 degrees or above this season. "In the East, those temperatures are finished for the year," he told USA TODAY. What is worrisome in the short-term is the lack of rainfall in the Northeast, which has prompted an expansion of drought in New England, according to the latestU.S. Drought Monitor released Aug. 28. "Drought will worsen in New England before tropical moisture moves in for the second half of the month," Merrill said. AccuWeathermeteorologists anticipate periods of increased tropical activity in the Atlantic Basin during the rest of the hurricane season. After the current storm lull during the end of August and early September due in part to dusty, dry air and cool water in Hurricane Erin's wake, the threat of tropical cyclones is favored to return by the second half of the month and into October and even November, Merrill said. "We are expecting the second half of the hurricane season to be busy," he told USA TODAY. "Chances for the development of La Niña increase as we approach the upcoming winter," Johnna Infanti, a seasonal forecaster with NOAA'sClimate Prediction Centertold USA TODAY in an email. The climate pattern, marked by cooler-than-average sea-surface temperatures in the Pacific Ocean, could also help boost the number of hurricanes that form in the Atlantic by the tail end of the season: "La Niña conditions are associated with more activity (double the amount) in November when compared to ENSO Neutral and especially when compared to Novembers with El Niño conditions," said Matthew Rosencrans, NOAA's lead hurricane seasonal forecaster, in an email to USA TODAY. ENSO-neutral conditions occur when Pacific Ocean seawater is neither unusually warm or unusually cold. According to Infanti, some typical impacts of a La Niña winter can include cooler temperatures over the northern United States, and diminished storm track activity over the southern tier of the U.S. leading to milder-than-normal temperatures and below normal precipitation. In turn, she said the storm track is typically shifted northward, bringing above-normal precipitation to parts of the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes. "However, predictions of this event are still uncertain, and indications point to a short lived, weak event. Weak and short lived events tend to have less reliable impacts than strong, long lived events," Infanti said. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Fall 2025 weather forecast on hurricanes, cool weather and La Niña

Is summer over? Fall 2025 weather forecast is here.

Is summer over? Fall 2025 weather forecast is here. Folks in the eastern half of the United States might be wondering if the current ongoing...
Taylor Swift Puts 'Baby, That's Show Business' 'Showgirl' Vinyl Variants Up for Sale, After Previous Limited Editions Swiftly Sell OutNew Foto - Taylor Swift Puts 'Baby, That's Show Business' 'Showgirl' Vinyl Variants Up for Sale, After Previous Limited Editions Swiftly Sell Out

Anyone who feared they would never get another shot at purchasing vinyl variants of Taylor Swift's "The Life of a Showgirl" can put that dread aside. Although the two limited-edition LP editions that Swift put up for sale last week sold out on her webstore within an hour, she has returned with an on-sale of two different versions of the album with an entirely different third cover, dubbed the "Baby, That's Show Business Edition." The Vegas showgirl motif continues in this newly unveiled cover image, photographed, like all the other artwork, by Mert Alas & Marcus Piggott. This edition is available in two vinyl colors: "lovely bouquet golden vinyl" and "lakeside beach blue sparkle vinyl." More from Variety FTC Files Suit Against Reseller for Price-Gouging Concert Tickets, Including for Taylor Swift's Eras Tour Taylor Swift Puts Vinyl Variants of 'The Life of a Showgirl' Up for Sale, and They Sell Out in Less Than an Hour Taylor Swift's 'New Heights' Podcast Earns 13 Million YouTube Views in 24 Hours as She Unveils 'The Life of a Showgirl' (Update: the blue vinyl variant was marked as sold out about a half-hour after the items went on sale at 3 p.m. ET Thursday, and the golden vinyl sold out just past the one-hour point.) Her webstore shows that this edition will be available for 48 hours or "while supplies last," which, as noted, ended up being less than one hour for the previous release. These versions of the album can be foundhere. The previous variants, which went on sale and almost immediately sold out on Monday, were dubbed"The Shiny Bug Collection."The standard edition, an orange-sparkle disc that has the image of Swift in full costume in a bathtub, is not a limited edition and remains on sale. These alternate vinyl editions follow on the heels of three deluxe CD variants that went on sale last week in Swift's webstore, each of which did last longer than an hour on sale but still sold out well before the announced end time. Anyone who missed out on these LPs or CDs can surely count on more variants coming in the pipeline before the album's Oct. 3 release, and if these have set a pattern, it's to expect a three-hour countdown clock appearing on her webstore before fresh variations go on sale. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Taylor Swift (@taylorswift) All of the covers for the standard and deluxe editions of the album use the showgirl motif and point back toward Swift's stated theme for the album, which is that it reflects her experiences balancing show business and her personal life on the nearly two-year Eras Tour. In the recent past, Swift has augmented her variants with bonus tracks, including a deluxe edition of "The Tortured Poets Department" that was nearly twice as long as the standard edition, but she declared in a podcast appearance with Travis Kelce that she would not be doing that this time around. So fans can count on the differences in editions of "Showgirl" having to do with packaging and not content. "With 'Tortured Poets Department,' I was like here's a data dump of everything I thought, felt, experienced in two or three years. Here's 31 songs. This is 12," she said in the podcast. "There's not a thirteenth, there's not other ones coming. This is the record I've been wanting to make for a very long time. I also wanted it to be every single song is on this album for hundreds of reasons, and you couldn't take one out and it be the same album, you couldn't add one and be… It's just right." She continued, "That focus and that kind of discipline with creating an album and keeping the bar really high is something I've been wanting to do for a very long time," she continued. "I tend to write lots and lots of music, so it's a temptation to release lots of music. But oftentimes, I wanted to do an album that was so focused on quality and on the theme and everything fitting together like a perfect puzzle that these 12 songs for my 12th album, I feel like we achieved that and I'm really happy about that." Best of Variety Oscar Predictions 2026: Venice and Telluride Will Spark the Start of Awards Season New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week 'Harry Potter' TV Show Cast Guide: Who's Who in Hogwarts? Sign up forVariety's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us onFacebook,Twitter, andInstagram.

Taylor Swift Puts ‘Baby, That’s Show Business’ ‘Showgirl’ Vinyl Variants Up for Sale, After Previous Limited Editions Swiftly Sell Out

Taylor Swift Puts 'Baby, That's Show Business' 'Showgirl' Vinyl Variants Up for Sale, After Previous Limited Editions Sw...
Apollonia, Co-Star of 'Purple Rain,' Sues Prince Estate Over Ownership of Stage NameNew Foto - Apollonia, Co-Star of 'Purple Rain,' Sues Prince Estate Over Ownership of Stage Name

Apollonia, best known as a singer-actor-model and Prince protege who co-starred in the1984 film "Purple Rain,"has taken the late singer's estate to court over its attempts to cancel her trademarks and claim ownership over the stage name. Apollonia, whose real name is Patty Kotero, alleged in a suit filed Tuesday and reviewed byVarietythat Paisley Park Enterprises "embarked on an aggressive campaign" to take control of the Apollonia name by appealing to the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board, allegedly claiming Kotero signed over rights to the name as part of her contracts for Purple Rain. More from Variety Prince Documentary Director Speaks Out About Canceled Netflix Project: 'It's a Joke' 'Purple Rain' Returns to Theaters for One-Night Dolby Cinema Presentation Controversial Prince Netflix Documentary Will Not Be Released, Estate Is Free to Create New Project "Now that Prince is deceased, [Paisley Park Enterprises] will not stop in its efforts to acquire all things related to Prince even though it has no legal right to do so," the suit reads. The estate of Prince, who died in April 2016, has been involved in a tangle of lawsuits over ownership of the Purple One's legacy. "The statute of limitations for breach of contract expired long ago," the complaint reads, referencing the Purple Rain contracts assertions, "and neither Prince nor anyone on his behalf ever requested Apollonia cease using her name or demanded she stop using her name on a personal or professional level. Contrary to defendants' claims before the [Trademark Trial and Appeal Board], Prince and Apollonia were friends, and he wanted her to be successful as Apollonia." Paisley Park and Prince "never enforced their alleged rights and the statute of limitations expired long ago," the complaint reasserts. In alengthy response, a rep for Prince's estate called the suit "frivilous" and added in part, "As is our duty, we will continue to protect and preserve Prince's assets and legacy." View this post on Instagram A post shared by Prince (@prince) "All of the goodwill associated with the name and trademark 'Apollonia' for the past four decades is attributable to plaintiff," her lawyer Daniel Cislo argues. "There is only one Apollonia, and Apollonia is the source of the goods and services provided under this name. Therefore, to protect her brand, Ms. Kotero owns several 'Apollonia' trademark applications and registrations." Trademark Trial and Appeal Board documents show that Paisley Park Enterprises filed two cancellation cases against Kotero, one in 2019 and the other in 2021. One has been suspended, the other is awaiting a motion of suspension. "Due to the fact that there are two parallel cancellation proceedings involving the same parties and almost identical marks it is also possible that two different decisions may be issued that cannot be reconciled," Kotero's lawyer wrote in a separate Aug. 19 filing. Best of Variety Oscar Predictions 2026: Venice and Telluride Will Spark the Start of Awards Season New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week 'Harry Potter' TV Show Cast Guide: Who's Who in Hogwarts? Sign up forVariety's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us onFacebook,Twitter, andInstagram.

Apollonia, Co-Star of ‘Purple Rain,’ Sues Prince Estate Over Ownership of Stage Name

Apollonia, Co-Star of 'Purple Rain,' Sues Prince Estate Over Ownership of Stage Name Apollonia, best known as a singer-actor-model a...

 

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