
Brad Pitt's home burglarized
Brad Pitt's home burglarized
The Los Angeles Police Department said a break-in occurred at a house in the Los Feliz neighborhood. A law enforcement source familiar with the investigation confirmed to CNN that it belongs to actor Brad Pitt.
00:32 - Source: CNN
Twin waterspouts spotted in Florida
Twin waterspouts were seen from Bradenton, Florida, just south of Tampa Bay, on June 22.
00:30 - Source: CNN
NBA Draft 2025: Here's what you need to know
From Cooper Flagg's No. 1 selection and China's rising star Yang Hansen — here's what you need to know about the 2025 NBA Draft.
00:52 - Source: CNN
Astronauts launch to space station after delay
Axiom Space Mission 4 launched four astronauts from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The flight comes after an extended delay triggered by tests related to leaks plaguing the International Space Station. The group is expected to be in space for two weeks to help carry out about 60 experiments before returning home.
00:32 - Source: CNN
New Yorkers, visitors cope with heat wave
New York City nearly hit 100 degrees for the first time in over a decade on Tuesday. The city's last triple-digit temperature happened on July 18, 2012, but it hasn't been 100 degrees in June since 1966 – nearly 60 years ago.
00:47 - Source: CNN
Why Japan has a rice crisis
Rice prices in Japan have nearly doubled in the past year, exacerbating the country's cost of living crisis. CNN's Hanako Montgomery explains how this rice crisis emerged.
01:17 - Source: CNN
Brad Pitt gets candid about recovery
Brad Pitt opened up about his recovery experience in an interview on 'Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard.' The actor talked about getting to know Shepard, who is also in recovery, through an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting they both attended.
00:48 - Source: CNN
Helicopter fails landing attempt near waterfront restaurant
A helicopter crash-landed near a waterfront restaurant in Clay Township, Michigan. Clay Township police said minor injuries were reported. The FAA is investigating the cause of the crash.
00:31 - Source: CNN
Alligator found in basement after fire
Milwaukee firefighters rescued an alligator in the basement while responding to a house fire. No one was inside and no firefighters were hurt, according to the Milwaukee Fire Department.
00:16 - Source: CNN
Truck hangs off bridge in China
Social media footage captured a truck hanging off a bridge in Guizhou Province in southwest China as heavy rains caused landslides at the start of monsoon season.
00:41 - Source: CNN
Rubin Observatory reveals breathtaking views of space
The Vera C. Rubin Observatory released its first images, showcasing millions of galaxies. The images are also expected to reveal thousands of previously unknown space objects.
01:07 - Source: CNN
Iconic taxi may vanish forever
Hong Kong's government announced the shift away from the city's iconic red taxis toward multicolored electric and hybrid vehicles. Toronto native Alan Wu has refurbished one to keep the nostalgia alive for himself and others among the city's diaspora.
01:58 - Source: CNN
Caves near China's 'Avatar Mountains' found packed with decade-old trash
A hidden environmental crisis is unfolding in ancient caves near China's Zhangjiajie Forest Park, famed for its massive quartz-sandstone pillar formations, which are said to have inspired the floating scenery that appears in the 2009 Hollywood blockbuster 'Avatar.' Viral social media videos showing piles of trash in the area, some reportedly dumped over a decade ago, are prompting a mass cleanup of the karst caves.
00:59 - Source: CNN
50 years of 'Jaws' and shark attacks
As Steven Spielberg's summer blockbuster 'Jaws' turns 50, CNN's Harry Enten figures out how likely it is to be attacked by a shark and whether we should fear the waters.
01:57 - Source: CNN
The NHL Stanley Cup's perfect imperfections
The Stanley Cup is one of the most iconic trophies in all of sports, but one of the reasons the NHL's championship trophy is so lionized is its perfect imperfections. CNN's Coy Wire spoke to The Keeper of the Cup Howie Borrow for a tour of some of the trophy's character-building bloopers.
01:02 - Source: CNN
Storm chaser captures 'unprecedented' view of monster hailstones falling from sky
Storm chaser and research scientist Sean Waugh has documented softball sized (or greater) hailstones in freefall with an ultra-high-tech camera mounted on a retrofitted research vehicle. The goal – to study and better understand what makes gigantic hail form, and how to better detect it and ultimately improve severe weather warnings. Sean speaks with CNN Meteorologist Derek Van Dam while on the road, capturing imagery of this very impactful and expensive natural phenomenon. (edited)
01:47 - Source: CNN
Flash flood destroys apartment building
An apartment building in West Virginia partially collapsed as flash floods hit the area. The governor's office said at least five people are dead and four people remain missing following the floods.
00:31 - Source: CNN
After talking to hundreds of dads, this podcaster shares his two biggest lessons
Dr. John Delony speaks to millions of listeners on his popular podcast about mental health, family and relationships. As a therapist, he's used to offering advice to struggling fathers, but we asked him about the biggest lessons he's learned as a dad.
01:32 - Source: CNN

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
14 minutes ago
- Yahoo
AWGE Spring 2026: Clothes Maketh What You Make Of Them
Within the fashion realm, the black vans circling around the church where A$AP Rocky's spring AWGE show was held spelled the arrival of A-lister guests. But in the broader global landscape, one couldn't help think of ICE raids and protests, an impression the masked protesters and armed forces in flak vests facing off outside the venue did nothing to dispel. More from WWD A$AP Rocky Debuted New Puma Sneaker Collaborations in Paris With Support From Rihanna The Originals: Yohji Yamamoto Takashi Murakami and Readymade's Yuta Hosokawa Team on Capsule Collection The stage seemed set for a riot, and they got one – Riot Mayers in the arms of mom Rihanna. In their wake, the crowd moved inside with all the resigned weariness of travelers passing between the hands of the TSA and through security gates. Eventually, Rocky had guests – who included fellow musicians A$AP Nast, Miguel – nodding in their seats to the sound of a new track rumored to be from his hotly anticipated 'Don't Be Dumb' album. For AWGE's sophomore coed collection, titled 'Obligatory Clothing,' the rapper-turned-designer zeroed in on archetypes that went from suit-wearing lawyers and paramedics to youths in hair curlers and XXL streetwear, a glamourpuss wearing a trench over a micro-miniskirt and louche types in satin playing card prints – what you think they do for a living is on you. 'For me, this whole 'Obligatory Fashion' statement was just [about] how you take the simple uniform or the purpose of a uniform, and how people correlate that to profession, lifestyle and everything,' Rocky said after the show. By the time the hammer fell in the 'City Court of AWGE,' as one print indicated, the verdict was: if sharp tailoring is a crime, the brand is guilty as charged. Here, he continued to refine the ideas introduced in his first effort, and served his purpose of skewing perception. Suit jackets looked classic from the front and were backless; tailored trousers were split into a skirt; shirts turned into crisp halter tops; sagging trousers had six waistbands – half boxer shorts, half denim ones. Elsewhere, his eye for tweaking proportions just so came through strongly, as evidenced by a workwear suit cut oversized which felt dressed up under the combined influence of cropped trousers and red-soled patent Mary-Janes. It was the kind of detail that made his designs stand up to sartorial scrutiny. There were plenty of accessories to further mix things up, like paper bags with a flower peeking from the glass bottle inside, which brought Banksy's famous Flower Thrower mural to mind. The musical artist's collaborations were also represented. Eyewear and clutches shaped like XXL cases nodded to his role as creative director of Ray-Ban. Feet were clad in the upcoming Puma Mostro Gabbia and a distressed iteration on the Speedcat model. Those Mary-Janes and stilettos were from Christian Louboutin and came with bedazzled charms made by jewelry label Pavē Niteō, which is under the A$AP Rocky Ventures, Inc. umbrella. Pointed commentary on recent and current events as well as his own experiences was palpable but delivered with a light touch. 'I'm gonna put all of these things into my fashion to tell my story without having it to be so like 'look, I'm controversial and political,'' he said. 'I'm just showing you the way I see it in little nifty ways.' Just as pointed is his retail strategy. After available exclusively on the brand's website for its debut, the brand will now be opening to wholesale accounts. But don't expect to see AWGE on every major retail floor. 'I want to start off very niche…small, limited and exclusive,' Rocky said. 'There's no way to do that in an environment that's oversaturated with new brands, old brands.' Plus, 'there's just a lot going on in the global economy – it's f–ed, pardon my French, for lack of better words,' he continued. 'And I think I have a particular customer, and I want to target that customer [who] loves, grieves and agrees with everything that I like, my taste, my values, my lifestyle, my past, my conflictions and my story.' And that customer may get their hands on the goods sooner than they think: the brand announced it was holding a sample sale in Paris on Sunday and Monday. Launch Gallery: AWGE A$AP Rocky Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear Collection Best of WWD Windowsen RTW Spring 2022 Louis Shengtao Chen RTW Spring 2022 Vegan Fashion Week Returns to L.A. With Nous Etudions, Vegan Tiger on the Runway
Yahoo
25 minutes ago
- Yahoo
45 Photos Of Random '90s Things That Millennials Will Instantly Recognize At First Glance
oh-so-groovy '90s-meets-psychedelic graphic design on Fruitopia vending machines: nose full of slimy boogers on Double Dare that low-key grossed you out: Trace & Color coloring books that somehow made anything you traced look sloppy and like you did it with your foot: Slates, which your parents would usually get you for long car trips: the Forrest Gump: The Soundtrack, which your parents would play over and over in the car on those long car trips: the "Snapple Lady," who appeared in all of the company's commercials: parents having stacks of processing envelopes full of photos they got developed and never put in photo albums: having a kids' photo album that you filled with your favorite photos (aka whatever pics your parents gave you, usually if they had doubles): a ton of blank VHS tapes with covers that looked like this: all the extra labels that came with blank VHS tapes that no one would ever use: 11.E!'s Talk Soup hosted by John Henson, which was the old-school way to watch viral videos: school square pizza, which you always looked forward to having on Fridays, along with a chocolate milk: coarse sugar-coated orange candies (that you ONLY ever saw and ate at your grandma's): Jerry Springer Too Hot for TV! VHS tape that they would show commercials for late at night, and made you wonder what exactly was on it: Wendy's commercials that featured its founder, Dave Thomas: Lay's Wow chips that were made with Olestra and gave people diarrhea: Clearing House magazine stamps that came in the mail, and you would use to order magazines that you then would never pay for: instant coupon machines you would play with at the supermarket: Disney bubble bath bottles that doubled as toys: 2000 soap, which every mom loved to buy in bulk: and how your breath wasn't minty fresh until it felt like you had burned a hole in your mouth with it: giant 3D cutout displays stores would have just to announce the release of an upcoming album or movie: McDonald's cooler they would have at school functions filled with orange drink: the McDonald's drive-thru menus that were brown and beige and had crappy speaker systems: big Nature Sounds music displays inside Targets: gumball machines that Blockbuster Video would have near the exit of the store: the Blockbuster Video-branded popcorn that was next to the candy at the checkout counter: tickets you need to get from the video game section at Toys "R" Us and take to the cashier in order to buy the game: Toys "R" Us Geoffrey Bucks that you would get for your birthday or holidays, and made you feel "rich": touchscreen monitors inside of the Warner Bros. Studio Store that allowed you to paint Looney Tunes characters: and Ebert reviewing movies and either giving them a thumbs up or thumbs down. Then studios promoting their films with "Siskel and Ebert give it two thumbs up!": crossover episodes that made no sense but went hard: paper ghosts you'd make at school with Tootsie Pops, pipe cleaners, Sharpies, and the super rough tissues that the school provided year-round: metal jungle gyms that got super hot in the summer: Disney Store plastic shopping bags that looked like this and that you refused to throw away because they were so magical looking: Disney/ BeyondLeftovers / Via sandykat15 / Via the Mickey Mouse gift boxes the Disney Store used to have: jimsgems2012 / Via VinterestTreasures / Via rulers that didn't really make great stencils: to the Wonder Hostess Bakery Outlet to get Twinkies, Ding Dongs, and other pastries, all while taking in the oh-so-good baked goods scents: Jerry Cleveland / Denver Post via Getty Images, Bloomberg / Bloomberg via Getty Images Good Seasons dressing bottle that every family seemed to own. And which made you feel like a gourmet chef if your parents asked you to make the dressing — even if it was just pouring the seasoning packet in with oil and vinegar: this exact wooden salad bowl (with matching salad tongs) that your family would use to serve the salad in for dinner: torchiere floor lamps that got so hot that you knew better than to even get close to touching. Or looking directly at the lightbulb while it was turned on because it had the brightness of 10 suns: PlugIns when they used gel packets that would get all gooey and covered in dust: E. Cheese's colorful ball pits that always smelled like feet and were probably way more gross than you even realize: glow-in-the-dark stars you would put on the ceiling of your bedroom and would give you a mini-heart attack when they would fall on top of you in your sleep: lastly, always sitting very close to the TV because most TVs were relatively small with bad resolution:
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
James Gunn Says The Movie Industry Is 'Dying' Due to Unfinished Screenplays
James Gunn, director for the highly anticipated forthcoming reboot of Superman, has been in the news quite a bit recently, and in rather blunt fashion. The 58-year-old filmmaker has made headlines for casually and confidently responding to fans "trying to restore the SnyderVerse"—in reference to Man of Steel director Zach Snyder—who have laid out a pretty ridiculous set of plans with ways to essentially "bomb reviews" of Superman, along with other ways to keep moviegoers away. Gunn offered up a funny, albeit condescending reply on X of, "Lol I think we will survive. I'm not sure the eight people that listen to that guy (I'm going to go out on a limb and guess it's a guy) are going to impact the course of events." While he's also taken to putting fans in their place who have been incorrectly spreading rumors that Batman II is canceled, Gunn also dropped another blunt take on the movie industry as a whole, explaining what he believes is the true reason the movie industry is "dying." "I do believe that the reason why the movie industry is dying is not because of people not wanting to see movies," Gunn said in a profile from Rolling Stone. "It's not because of home screens getting so good. The number-one reason is because people are making movies without a finished screenplay." "I know some people that were my former workers at Marvel — people who made some of the worst movies," Gunn explained. "There were people that were lazy and didn't put their time in. And then there were other directors that worked really hard and maybe didn't have the best movie come out, but they did everything they could." Gunn's overall point comes across as pretty fair and logical, and was in response to a reference about Eddie Murphy once stating that every bad movie happens because of Hollywood's apparent habit of setting a production date before they have a finished screenplay. One has to believe this problematic habit of Hollywood rushing films to production without a finished product, which has to induce somewhat of an extra massive strain on all the major players involved in any given film, has probably only gotten worse over the last decade with the strong, competing presence of continuously growing streaming platforms. Gunn appears to be adamantly backing up his take with DC Studios' polar opposite approach to Batman II's incessantly-discussed production status. "We don't have a script [for Batman II]. Matt's [director Matt Reeves] slow. Let him take his time. Let him do what he's doing. God, people are mean. Let him do his thing, man." Gunn's Superman reboot starring David Corenswet is right around the corner, slated to hit theaters on July Gunn Says The Movie Industry Is 'Dying' Due to Unfinished Screenplays first appeared on Men's Journal on Jun 18, 2025