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Protesters call for police reform after Juneau man injured in arrest

By: Greg Knight, News of the North

A peaceful protest was held Saturday outside Juneau Police Department headquarters, following the arrest last week of 49-year-old Chris Williams, Jr.

Williams was medevaced to Anchorage after being taken to the ground by JPD Officer Brandon LeBlanc outside the Douglas Library. Video posted on social media shows LeBlanc taking Williams down during what police say was an arrest after Williams allegedly approached officers aggressively.

Nearly 100 protesters peacefully called for accountability and systemic police reform.

Organizer Jamiann S’eiltin said the incident reflects a broader pattern of violence against Indigenous people.

“This isn’t something new,” S’eiltin said. “This has been going on since almost time immemorial, since the arrival of Western European settlers. So, just want to put that out there that we are brutally attacked 10 times more than the national average, and that’s something to bring forward here today.”

LeBlanc is on administrative leave and an outside agency is conducting an investigation into the incident.

The Central Council of Tlingit and Haida, which confirmed Williams is a tribal citizen, is demanding transparency and a full inquiry.

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Politics

The World Court just ruled countries can be held liable for climate change damage – what does that mean for the US?

Ralph Regenvanu, climate change minister of Vanuatu, speaks outside the International Court of Justice in The Hague on July 23, 2025. John Thys/AFP via Getty Images

The International Court of Justice issued a landmark advisory opinion in July 2025 declaring that all countries have a legal obligation to protect and prevent harm to the climate.

The court, created as part of the United Nations in 1945, affirmed that countries must uphold existing international laws related to climate change and, if they fail to act, could be held responsible for damage to communities and the environment.

The opinion opens a door for future claims by countries seeking reparations for climate-related harm.

But while the ruling is a big global story, its legal effect on the U.S. is less clear. We study climate policies, law and solutions. Here’s what you need to know about the ruling and its implications.

Why island nations called for a formal opinion

The ruling resulted from years of grassroots and youth-led organizing by Pacific Islanders. Supporters have called it “a turning point for frontline communities everywhere.”

Small island states like Vanuatu, Tuvalu, Barbados and others across the Pacific and Caribbean are among the most vulnerable to climate change, yet they have contributed little to global emissions.

Waves spend spray higher than houses and lap at the edges of homes, with palm trees in the background.
Waves hit the shore in Majuro, the capital of the Marshall Islands, during a storm on Nov. 27, 2019. Waves inundated parts of the island, washing rocks and debris into roads.
Hilary Hosia/AFP via Getty Images

For many of them, sea-level rise poses an existential threat. Some Pacific atolls sit just 1 to 2 meters above sea level and are slowly disappearing as waters rise. Saltwater intrusion threatens drinking water supplies and crops.

Their economies depend on tourism, agriculture and fishing, all sectors easily disrupted by climate change. For example, coral reefs are bleaching more often and dying due to ocean warming and acidification, undermining fisheries, marine biodiversity and economic sectors such as tourism.

When disasters hit, the cost of recovery often forces these countries to take on debt. Climate change also undermines their credit ratings and investor confidence, making it harder to get the money to finance adaptive measures.

A satellite image of the Maldives islands.
The Maldives, shown in a satellite image from 2020, has an average elevation of less than 5 feet (1.5 meters) above sea level. With limited land where people can live, the country has tried to build up new areas of its islands for housing.
NASA Earth Observatory

Tuvalu and Kiribati have discussed digital nationhood and leasing land from other countries so their people can relocate while still retaining citizenship. Some projections suggest nations like the Maldives or Marshall Islands could become largely uninhabitable within decades.

For these countries, sea-level rise is taking more than their land – they’re losing their history and identity in the process. The idea of becoming climate refugees and separating people from their homelands can be culturally destructive, emotionally painful and politically fraught as they move to new countries.

More than a nonbinding opinion

The International Court of Justice, commonly referred to as the ICJ or World Court, can help settle disputes between states when requested, or it can issue advisory opinions on legal questions referred to it by authorized U.N. bodies such as the General Assembly or Security Council. The advisory opinion process allows its 15 judges to weigh in on abstract legal issues – such as nuclear weapons or the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories – without a formal dispute between states.

While the court’s advisory opinions are nonbinding, they can still have a powerful impact, both legally and politically.

The rulings are considered authoritative statements regarding questions of international law. They often clarify or otherwise confirm existing legal obligations that are binding.

What the court decided

The ICJ was asked to weigh in on two questions in this case:

  1. “What are the obligations of States under international law to ensure the protection of the climate system … from anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases?”

  2. “What are the legal consequences under these obligations for States where they, by their acts and omissions, have caused significant harm to the climate system?”

In its 140-page opinion, the court cited international treaties and relevant scientific background to affirm that obligations to protect the environment are indeed a matter of international environmental law, international human rights law and general principles of state responsibility.

The decision means that in the authoritative opinion of the international legal community, all countries are under an obligation to contribute to the efforts to reduce global greenhouse emissions.

To the second question, the court found that in the event of a breach of any such obligation, three additional obligations arise:

  1. The country in breach of its obligations must stop its polluting activity, which would mean excess greenhouse gas emissions in this case.

  2. It must ensure that such activities do not occur in the future.

  3. It must make reparations to affected states in terms of cleanup, monetary payment and apologies.

The court affirmed that all countries have a legal duty under customary international law, which refers to universal rules that arise from common practices among states, to prevent harm to the climate. It also clarified that individual countries can be held accountable, even in a crisis caused by many countries and other entities. And it emphasized that countries that have contributed the most to climate change may bear greater responsibility for repairing the damage under an international law doctrine called “common but differentiated responsibility,” which is commonly found in international treaties concerning the environment.

While the ICJ’s opinion doesn’t assign blame to specific countries or trigger direct reparations, it may provide support for future legal action in both international and national courts.

What does the ICJ opinion mean for the US?

In the U.S., this advisory opinion is unlikely to have much legal impact, despite a long-standing constitutional principle that “international law is part of U.S. law.”

U.S. courts rarely treat international law that has not been incorporated into domestic law as binding. And the U.S. has not consented to ICJ jurisdiction in previous climate cases.

Contentious cases before international tribunals can be brought by one country against another, but they require the consent of all the countries involved. So there is little chance that the United States’ responsibility for climate harms will be adjudicated by the World Court anytime soon.

Still, the court’s opinion sends a clear message: All countries are legally obligated to prevent climate harm and cannot escape responsibility simply because they aren’t the only nation to blame.

The unanimous ruling is particularly remarkable given the current hostile political climate in the United States and other industrial nations around climate change and responses to it. It represents a particularly forceful statement by the international community that the responsibility to ensure the health of the global environment is a legal duty held by the entire world.

The takeaway

The ICJ’s advisory opinion marks a turning point in the global effort to hold countries responsible for climate change.

Vulnerable countries now have a more concrete, legally grounded base to claim rights and press for accountability against historical and ongoing climate harm – including financial claims.

How it will be used in the coming years remains unclear, but the opinion gives small island states in particular a powerful narrative and a legal tool set.

The Conversation

Lauren Gifford receives funding from the National Science Foundation and the US Department of Agriculture.

Daimeon Shanks-Dumont does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

​Politics + Society – The Conversation

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Politics

Historian uncovers evidence of second mass grave of Irish immigrant railroaders in Pennsylvania who suffered from cholera, violence and xenophobia

Caskets of Irish railroaders whose remains were excavated from a mass grave outside Philadelphia. AP Photo/Matt Rourke

When commuters on the R5 SEPTA train that connects suburban Chester County to Philadelphia approach Malvern station, they might spot a square stone monument on the right side in a clearing surrounded by a thick stand of forest.

Above it, a sign paid for by the Amtrak electrical workers union and suspended from the trees reads:

BURIAL PLOT OF IRISH RAILROAD WORKERS: At this site, known as Duffy’s Cut, fifty-seven Irish immigrant railroad workers from the counties of Donegal, Tyrone, Derry and Leitrim died of cholera and murder in the summer of 1832.

I’m a historian at Immaculata University, about one mile west of Duffy’s Cut. In 2004, my colleagues and I were the ones to discover the mass grave when we excavated the site with the permission of the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission.

My students, who were about the same age as Duffy’s workers in 1832, provided a great deal of the labor at the excavation.

More recently, in May 2025, we discovered human remains that suggest a second Irish immigrant railroader mass grave 11 miles west of Duffy’s Cut, in Downingtown.

Commuter train passes wooded area with large rocks
A SEPTA commuter train passes Duffy’s Cut in Malvern, Pa.
William E. Watson, CC BY-NC-SA

57 dead railroaders

Duffy’s Cut was named after an Irish Catholic immigrant railroad contractor named Philip Duffy, who lived from 1783-1871 and was probably from County Donegal in northwest Ireland.

I learned about the site and its possible mass grave from Pennsylvania Railroad documents that survived in my family.

A 1909 file, labeled “History of Duffy’s Cut Stone enclosure east of Malvern, Pennsylvania, which marks the burial place of 57 track laborers who were victims of the cholera epidemic of 1832,” was compiled by future Pennsylvania Railroad president Martin W. Clement when he was an assistant supervisor. My grandfather, who was Clement’s executive assistant and later director of personnel, obtained the file before the records were auctioned off in 1972, and my brother showed me the file in 2002.

The Philadelphia & Columbia Railroad, the predecessor of the Pennsylvania Railroad, wanted to shorten the travel time from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh from three to four weeks by Conestoga wagon to three to four days by rail, canal and river.

The file my brother had in his possession stated that the dead railroaders at Duffy’s Cut were young men, recently arrived from Ireland. It also said the cost of mile 59 was vastly more expensive than the typical Philadelphia & Columbia Railroad mile. Laying a typical mile of P&C railroad cost US$5,000 in the 1830s. But at mile 59, gouging the landscape with a “cut” to lay the tracks on level ground and bridging the valley with a fill – an earthen bridge – cost $32,000. Although the work was especially difficult, the common laborers received about 25 cents a day.

Artifact that looks like smooth stick with engraved with the word 'Derry'
Fragment of an Irish-made clay pipe unearthed near the Duffy’s Cut mass grave.
AP Photo/Matt Rourke

Most of the men had sailed from the city of Derry in the north of Ireland to Philadelphia from April to June of 1832 aboard the John Stamp. The ship pulled into the Lazaretto quarantine station on the Delaware River in Essington, Pennsylvania, before sailing on to Philadelphia.

No one on the John Stamp was reported to be ill. This was the height of the 1832 cholera epidemic that ultimately killed at least 10,000 people in the U.S.

Forty-seven laborers from the John Stamp ship joined 10 other Irish immigrant workers who were already living with Duffy in a rental house in Willistown, a mile south of the work site.

Yet almost as soon as they arrived to the work camp at mile 59, so did cholera, which had spread to Philadelphia from New York City.

Cholera in the camps

Americans could read about the spread of cholera across Europe in 1831 in the newspapers, but very little was known about the disease until decades later.

Cholera is a bacterial infection that spreads due to poor sanitary practices in which human feces get into drinking water, via excrement passed into streams or by seepage from outhouses to wells.

But in 1832, people believed cholera was linked to intemperance and vice, which were thought to weaken the body. According to the prevailing miasma theory, it caused outbreaks once airborne. Immigrants and the poor were thought to be especially susceptible to the disease and primary vectors for its spread.

Cholera causes extreme diarrhea and vomiting that lead to rapid electrolyte loss. In 1832 it was fatal in about 50% of cases. In the Delaware Valley, cholera cases mounted from July into August 1832. Philadelphia registered its peak number of cases, 173, on Aug. 6 and peak number of deaths, 76, on Aug. 7. The hardest-hit areas in the region were working-class neighborhoods and canal and railroad work camps.

A typical crew on a P&C mile numbered 100 to 120 men. However, the work by Irish immigrants was segregated along sectarian lines on the railroads in the U.S., as it was in the Belfast dockyards at the same time. The other half of the workers at mile 59, according to Canal Commission reports, were Irish Protestant immigrants who worked for an Irish Protestant contractor and did the less dangerous work of laying tracks. They did not die of cholera.

Four men working in wooded area
The author, second from left, and his team at the dig site at Duffy’s Cut in 2011.
William E. Watson, CC BY-NC-SA

Signs of a massacre

To excavate the site, we partnered with the Chester County Emerald Society, a law enforcement group that cleared our work with the county district attorney, and the coroner, in case we found human remains. The University of Pennsylvania Museum provided ground-penetrating radar, as well as archaeological and anthropological assistance for the dig. Staff trained my students in how to properly excavate and handle artifacts and bones.

Our research team uncovered seven sets of remains between 2009 and 2012 in the remaining eastern portions of the fill. The skeletons had been buried in coffins sealed with an exceptional number of nails, perhaps to contain the cholera.

Analysis at the UPenn Museum showed evidence of violence to each of the skulls – with one skull showing both an ax blow and a bullet encased in the skull. Researchers found no evidence of defensive wounds on any skeleton, suggesting that the men might have been tied up before being killed.

After our team analyzed the remains, we came to the startling conclusion that the men didn’t die from cholera – they were massacred.

I believe that fear of cholera, an epidemic that some clergymen in America and England called “a chastisement for the sins of the people,” and anti-immigrant sentiment fueled violence against them by native-born populations.

After forensic examinations of the remains, five of the skeletons were reburied during a ceremony at West Laurel Hill Cemetery in Bala Cynwyd in 2012. My team determined the identities of two of the deceased – 18-year-old John Ruddy from County Donegal and 29-year-old Catherine Burns, the daughter of one of the workers, from County Tyrone – and their remains were returned to their home counties in Ireland in 2013 and 2015.

Man wearing red, purple and white vestments shown incensing caskets as crowd of people look on
Bishop Michael J. Fitzgerald takes part in a funeral at West Laurel Hill Cemetery in 2012 for the five 19th-century Irish immigrants whose remains were excavated from the Duffy’s Cut site.
AP Photo/Matt Rourke

A second mass grave in Chester County

Historical records led us to what we believe is a second mass grave in Chester County.

An article in the Nov. 7, 1832, issue of the Village Record newspaper in West Chester reported that one man from Duffy’s Cut fled westward down the unfinished track line to another Irish immigrant railroader crew “near the line of East Bradford and East Caln.”

This was P&C mile 48 in Downingtown, Pennsylvania. It was under the direction of Irish immigrant contractor Peter Connor, whose crew of 100 to 120 men was reported to have all died around the same time as Duffy’s crew.

Forty years later, Charles Pennypacker’s 1909 “History of Downingtown” recorded that the dead Irishmen in Downingtown were carted north to a field where they were buried in a mass grave on the property of present-day Northwood Cemetery, “in the eastern part of the cemetery, near the gully.”

Fragments of bones shown in container lined with purple satin
File photo from March 24, 2009, shows bones recovered from the mass grave at Duffy’s Cut.
AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File

On May 15, 2025, the Duffy’s Cut team unearthed the first human remains from the Downingtown crew in the exact place reported by Pennypacker. This work has just started.

Up and down the East Coast, there are numerous mass graves of anonymous workers who died of epidemics and overwork in the 1820s and 1830s. Most of those people will never have their stories told.

At Duffy’s Cut, and now at the Downingtown site, we hope to humanize some of the hardworking immigrants who died building a crucial part of America’s industrial landscape.

Visitors can view artifacts found at Duffy’s Cut at the Duffy’s Cut Museum in the Gabriele Library at Immaculata University in Malvern, Pa.

Read more of our stories about Philadelphia and Pennsylvania.

The Conversation

William E. Watson serves as the unpaid director of the 501 c 3 educational non-profit and in 2016 served as director of an NEH summer teachers’ institute at Immaculata University. .

​Politics + Society – The Conversation

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Entertainment

Julie Chrisley Has Respiratory Problems After Alleged Exposure to Black Mold & …

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Julie Chrisley is having breathing problems.

This spring, the disgraced reality stars got out of prison under deeply controversial circumstances.

Time in prison can haunt you. This is not only psychological or social — but can impact long-term health.

The Chrisleys are describing the lasting impact of alleged exposure to asbestos and black mold behind bars.

Julie Chrisley on her podcast.
On her podcast, Julie Chrisley opened up in July 2025 about respiratory struggles after prison. (Image Credit: YouTube)

During the Wednesday, July 30 episode of Todd and Julie Chrisley’s Chrisley Confessions 2.0 podcast, the criminal couple discussed prison life.

Todd recalled how a fellow inmate at the facility in Pensacola had contracted lung problems.

The cause? Allegedly, prison authorities forced him to clean “black mold” and “asbestos” without proper protective equipment.

“I’m sure because, listen, I have a lung condition from being in prison,” Julie then announced.

She shared that her lung issues were not a result of “doing those things, but because of asbestos.”

Julie told fans:

“You will probably notice me at certain times trying to get a breath.”

Todd Chrisley gestures dramatically on his podcast.
With a dramatic shrug, Todd Chrisley speaks on his podcast in July 2025. (Image Credit: YouTube)

“Because of the black mold that you were around,” Todd then added.

(Did he contradict his wife? It is unclear)

“That’s something that we’re having to address right now,” he continued.

“This week, you have a doctor’s appointment with a pulmonary specialist,” Todd shared, “that’s gonna do some tests on you.”

Julie Chrisley in a grandma's china blouse.
Just a couple of months out of prison, Julie Chrisley discusses her time behind bars. (Image Credit: YouTube)

Perhaps the pulmonary specialist will be able to determine whether asbestos or black mold or a third factor are to blame.

Other likely causes of breathing issues could be wide-ranging, including but not limited to COVID-19.

There are a lot of people acting like both short and long-term symptoms that we all learned by heart in 2020 and 2021 are somehow “mystery” ailments.

Whatever is hampering Julie’s breathing, we hope that there is an easy solution.

Even the worst people in the world deserve to breathe — and Julie isn’t even the worst person in her marriage.

Todd Chrisley shrugs dramatically on his podcast.
Time behind bars did not dissuade Todd Chrisley from talking with his hands. (Image Credit: YouTube)

For their part, the Federal Bureau of Prisons told People that they will “not comment on the conditions of confinement” on current or former inmates.

The statement went on to insist that they prioritize safety, humane treatment, and more. None of which is actually a denial.

Our nation’s prison conditions are abhorrent.

Every cell, every prison block, should be designed as if we know with absolute certainty that an innocent person will live there. (Because we do know that — it is inevitable)

Not every inmate is going to be Julie and Todd Chrisley. And even they deserve better than what they experienced in prison.

Julie Chrisley Has Respiratory Problems After Alleged Exposure to Black Mold & … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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‘And Just Like That …’ Canceled By HBO Max Amid Declining Ratings, …

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It’s the end of the road for Carrie Bradshaw and company.

It was revealed today that the Sex and the City spinoff And Just Like That … will come to an end with its third season.

News that the show’s upcoming two-part finale will be its final episodes comes to us courtesy of showrunner Michael Patrick King.

Nicole Ari Parker, Kristin Davis, Sarah Jessica Parker, Sarita Choudhury and Cynthia Nixon attend Max Original's "And Just Like That" Season 3 Photo Call at Crane Club on May 21, 2025 in New York City.
Nicole Ari Parker, Kristin Davis, Sarah Jessica Parker, Sarita Choudhury and Cynthia Nixon attend Max Original’s “And Just Like That” Season 3 Photo Call at Crane Club on May 21, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images)

King stuns fans with news that ‘SATC’ franchise is coming to an end

“And just like that … the ongoing storytelling of the Sex And The City universe is coming to an end. While I was writing the last episode of And Just Like That season three, it became clear to me that this might be a wonderful place to stop,” read the statement (according to TV Line).

“Along with Sarah Jessica Parker, Casey Bloys and Sarah Aubrey, we decided to end the popular series this year with a two-part finale and extended the original series order from 10 episodes to 12,” King continued.

Now, King is carefully avoiding words like cancelation, but he admits that HBO CEO Casey Bloys and HBO Max HBO Max head of originals Sarah Aubrey were involved in the decision-making process.

Many fans pointed out that if King had planned this as the final season, that information likely would have been included in the show’s promotional materials.

US actress Cynthia Nixon poses for pictures in front of the Eiffel Tower during a photocall for the TV serie "And Just Like That..." on a rooftop at France's Economic, Social and Environmental Council (CESE) in Paris, on May 28, 2025.
US actress Cynthia Nixon poses for pictures in front of the Eiffel Tower during a photocall for the TV serie “And Just Like That…” on a rooftop at France’s Economic, Social and Environmental Council (CESE) in Paris, on May 28, 2025. (Photo by HUGO MATHY/AFP via Getty Images)

“SJP and I held off announcing the news until now because we didn’t want the word ‘final’ to overshadow the fun of watching the season,” he unconvincingly claimed in his statement, concluding:

“It’s with great gratitude we thank all the viewers who have let these characters into their homes and their hearts over these many years.”

Sarah Jessica Parker bids farewell to iconic character

While AJLT never achieved the commercial or critical success of SATC (in fact, very few were surprised by today’s cancelation), many are still sad to be saying goodbye to beloved characters like Carrie Bradshaw.

And of course, no one is more affected by the end of Carrie’s story than the woman who portrayed her on two series and in two feature films.

Sarah Jessica Parker attends Max Original's "And Just Like That" Season 3 Photo Call at Crane Club on May 21, 2025 in New York City.
Sarah Jessica Parker attends Max Original’s “And Just Like That” Season 3 Photo Call at Crane Club on May 21, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images)

“She Broke hearts Heels Habits. She Loved Lost Won Tripped Leaped Fell short and into puddles Aged Got wiser. She has made The hardest Worst and best decisions Traveled near and far For the new The vintage Friends and love,” Sarah Jessica Parker wrote on Instagram today.

“Held onto hands, hopes and the very best of people. Miranda, Samantha and Charlotte, there will never be better friends and what great fortune for Carrie to come to know and love Seema and LTW, most divine new connections,” the actress continued, adding:

“Carrie Bradshaw has dominated my professional heartbeat for 27 years. I think I have loved her most of all. I know others have loved her just as I have. Been frustrated, condemned and rooted for her,” she continued. “The symphony of all those emotions has been the greatest soundtrack and most consequential companion. Therefore the most sentimental and profound gratitude and lifetime of debt. To you all.”

While the Sex and the City sequel series never quite lived up to fans’ expectations, the conclusion of Carrie’s story after 27 years is truly a momentous event.

Here’s hoping And Just Like That … will go out on a high note.

‘And Just Like That …’ Canceled By HBO Max Amid Declining Ratings, … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Entertainment

Kim Zolciak: Okay, Yeah, I Kinda Stole Money from My Daughter!

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Kim Zolciak says she is guilty as charged.

Kinda. Sorta. Allow her to explain, okay?

On the July 31 episode of Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen, the Real Housewives of Atlanta alum was put on the spot in regard to the claim that she and estranged husband Kroy Biermann stole money from daughters Ariana and Brielle.

(Bravo)

“Actually, the rug was pulled out from [under] the Zolciaks, and yeah, I mean, Ariana’s money was spent on bills, to be honest,” Kim told Andy Cohen. “I was left, you know, holding the bag for the family.”

Not a very clear response, huh?

When Cohen asked whether Zolciak had also borrowed money from Brielle, she replied:

“Brielle paid an electric bill here and there. I was left with nothing, so I had to figure it out fast.”

Kim went on to admit that she has to “be so careful” with what she says right now, given that her divorce from Kroy is still ongoing, and that it’s become VERY ugly two years after they filed for the second time.

(Photo Credit: Dave Kotinsky/Getty Images for Empire City Casino at Yonkers Raceway)

Cohen also asked if Kim was planning on paying her daughters back for what she’s borrowed

“Yes,” she answered right away. “The money I borrowed from Ariana, I paid her back. I’m saying for the bills and stuff. And as far as what she’s made and all that stuff, I don’t have the spreadsheets, but she will be.”

During her own Watch What Happens Live interview back in June, Ariana spilled on more details about the financial support she provided her mother and father.

“I would like to very much clarify. Everybody wants this to be just my mother. This was a joint partnership in taking the money,” Ariana said at the time.

To be clear, it’s been no secret for a very long time now that Kim and Kroy made a mess of their finances.

Zach Baus, Brielle Biermann, Kim Zolciak-Biermann and Kroy Biermann attend the grand opening of E3 Chophouse Nashville on November 20, 2019 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Danielle Del Valle/Getty Images for E3 Chophouse Nashville)

Asked whether she “figured out how much money” her parents had taken from her, Ariana said, “No, and I don’t really want to know.”

She added this summer that “the only time my mom asks me for money is if it’s regarding the bills, or it’s something that she needs for the kids.”

At this point, it does sound as if mother and daughter are on solid terms.

“Nobody wants to be put in situations that they are put into. My mom, no matter what, will be my best friend forever,” Ariana said. “Money should never ruin a relationship with your family. You can always make more money, and God blesses us in that way. I have my mom and that’s all that matters.”

Kim Zolciak: Okay, Yeah, I Kinda Stole Money from My Daughter! was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Matty Healy’s Mom Spotted Weeping In Public Following Taylor Swift Diss

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Last week, Matty Healy’s mother, Denise Welch, made some surprising comments about her son’s romantic past.

Specifically, she indicated that she’s glad Matty’s relationship with Taylor Swift didn’t work out.

“Obviously, on pain of death, can I talk about that episode,” Welch quipped when asked about Taylor and Matty’s brief romance during an appearance on Watch What Happens Live.

Denise Welch accepts the award for 'Awesome ally of the year' for her son Musician Matthew Healy at the Diva Awards 2019 at The Waldorf Hilton Hotel on June 07, 2019 in London, England.
Denise Welch accepts the award for ‘Awesome ally of the year’ for her son Musician Matthew Healy at the Diva Awards 2019 at The Waldorf Hilton Hotel on June 07, 2019 in London, England. (Photo by John Phillips/Getty Images)

“But not being her mother-in-law is a role that I am glad that I lost,” she added.

Denise backpedaled a bit by explaining that she has nothing against Taylor as a person:

“Not that I have anything against her at all. It was just — it was tricky,” she clarified.

“She — listen, you’re not allowed to say anything. And then she writes a whole album about it,” Welch added, referring to Swift’s Tortured Poets Department, which referenced her fling with Healy.

By then, of course, the damage had been done, and Denise had incurred the wrath of music’s most passionate fan base.

Taylor Swift fans lash out following Denise Welch’s remarks

Matty Healy of The 1975 performs during the closing day of Lollapalooza Chile 2023 at Parque Cerrillos on March 19, 2023 in Santiago, Chile.
Matty Healy of The 1975 performs during the closing day of Lollapalooza Chile 2023 at Parque Cerrillos on March 19, 2023 in Santiago, Chile. (Photo by Marcelo Hernandez/Getty Images)

As you’re probably aware, Swifties tend to be a bit defensive when it comes to their queen.

So Denise dealt with harsh and swift (no pun intended) criticism from all corners of the internet following her off-hand remark.

And if the latest sighting of Ms. Welch is any indication, then all that backlash might have taken a powerful toll.

Denise breaks down in public: Was Taylor backlash to blame?

According to a new report from TMZ, Matty was spotted consoling Denise after she publicly broke down in tears on Thursday.

Mother and son were spotted conversing on a sidewalk outside of a restaurant in West Hollywood.

Taylor Swift attends the 67th Annual GRAMMY Awards on February 02, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
Taylor Swift attends the 67th Annual GRAMMY Awards on February 02, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for The Recording Academy)

Onlookers said the conversation quickly took a turn for the dramatic, and Matty appeared “animated” as Denise broke down in tears.

Obviously, we don’t know for certain if the conversation had anything to do with Taylor.

Swift has been using her music to throw shade at her exes since the early days of her career, but as TMZ points out, this situation might be unprecedented, as “a parent getting involved is a first.”

These days, Matty is engaged to model Gabbriette Bechtel. And he’s indicated that he has no intention of dissing Taylor in his own music.

Taylor, of course, is in a serious relationship with Travis Kelce, who reported to Kansas City Chiefs training camp (likely for the last time) just last week.

At this point, Matty and Taylor have been broken up much longer than they were together.

But if the events of the past two weeks are any indication, these two may still have some unfinished business between them.

Matty Healy’s Mom Spotted Weeping In Public Following Taylor Swift Diss was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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American Eagle Doubles Down on Controversial Sydney Sweeney Jeans Ad

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American Eagle is not here to apologize.

On August 1, the company issued a statement in response to the hottest story on the Internet:

Sydney Sweeney posing in its jeans and possibly making a reference to a set of Nazi beliefs in the process.

Sydney Sweeney attends the “Echo Valley” European Premiere at the BFI Southbank on June 10, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Andreas Rentz/Getty Images)

On Friday, the brand wrote in a graphic:

Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans is and always was about the jeans. Her jeans. Her story. We’ll continue to celebrate how everyone wears their AE jeans with confidence, their way. Great jeans look good on everyone.

For those very late to this viral party, Sydney Sweeney’s American Eagle campaign originally sparked a social media firestorm days after it launched… due to what some perceived as its not-so-hidden messaging.

(Instagram)

The campaign features the gorgeous actress in fall-centric denim, pulled together by her stylist Molly Dickson.

One look depicts the sultry star in a modern Canadian tuxedo with bold blue jeans and a matching jacket… while another includes super-baggy light-wash jeans with a white tee and then a similar pair but distressed, worn with a white tank.

Sweeney looks undeniable gorgeous.

But it’s not her look in these advertisement that has gotten people buzzing. And criticizing.

Sydney Sweeney attends the 35th annual GLAAD Media Awards at The Beverly Hilton on March 14, 2024 in Beverly Hills, California.
Sydney Sweeney attends the 35th annual GLAAD Media Awards at The Beverly Hilton on March 14, 2024 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images)

In one of the campaign videos, Sweeney is seen zipping up her jeans while lying down.

“Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair color, personality and even eye color,” she says as the camera pans to her face. “My jeans are blue.”

Then, a narrator in voiceover intones: “Sydney Sweeney has great jeans.”

You have to look VERY closely to find it, but a bunch of critics have claimed that using the word “jeans” as a play on “genes” hints at eugenics.

And, according to the National Institute of Health (NIH), eugenics “is broadly defined as the use of selective breeding to improve the human race.”

Eugenics was a racially biased study that was adopted with the Nazi party and is associated with white supremacy.

Sydney Sweeney attends the 2024 People's Choice Awards at Barker Hangar on February 18, 2024 in Santa Monica, California.
Sydney Sweeney attends the 2024 People’s Choice Awards at Barker Hangar on February 18, 2024 in Santa Monica, California. (Photo by Monica Schipper/Getty Images)

In another campaign video, Sweeney recreates Brooke Shields’ controversial 1980s Calvin Klein ad while pulling her pants up her legs.

In the footage, she relayed a message about how “the secret of life lies in the genetic code,” a nod to Shields’ line, “Genes are fundamental in determining the characteristics of an individual and passing on these characteristics to succeeding generations.”

Many social media were unafraid shared their thoughts on the statement, writing for example:

“Sydney Sweeney and American Eagle promoting eugenics and pushing the aryan race Nazi propaganda was not in my 2025 bingo card.”

Another remarked: “American Eagle needs to delete those Sydney Sweeney ads. They are genuinely scary.”

Despite the controversy (or perhaps because of it?), American Eagle’s stock increased 10 percent in just a few days, adding more than $200 million to the group’s value.

Sweeney has not yet commented on the supposed scandal, but previously told People Magazine that American Eagle represents “the comfiest jeans I’ve ever worn.”

American Eagle Doubles Down on Controversial Sydney Sweeney Jeans Ad was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Politics

She wants Zohran’s seat

With help from Amira McKee

Mary Jobaida, who hopes to fill Zohran Mamdani's Assembly seat, canvasses with voters at Queensbridge Houses in Long Island City.

Mary Jobaida is a Bangladeshi-born, Muslim mother of three who wants to be the newest member of the state Legislature.

Democratic mayoral nominee Zohran Mamdani hasn’t been elected mayor yet. But if — or when — he becomes Gracie Mansion’s newest resident, his Assembly seat in the left-leaning “Peoples’ Republic of Astoria” will become vacant — and Jobaida wants to fill it.

Jobaida touts her membership with the Democratic Socialists of America and says she wants to stand up to ICE, make CUNY, SUNY, pre-k and public transportation free, and even decriminalize the theft of food by hungry New Yorkers.

“It’s actually a waste of money, waste of resources and hurtful to people,” she said, noting that “it’s not practical” to arrest someone for stealing nourishment.

Running for the seat, she said, was arranged by God: “I was not going to run against Zohran Mamdani, for sure, because we need progressive elected officials here, but I say it’s like it’s planned by God and accepted by people,” she said, recounting how the district’s lines were redrawn two years ago to include her residence.

The Queens Democratic Party may have other ideas. If Mamdani — who currently leads mayoral polls — is sworn in as mayor on Jan. 1, a special election would have to be called by Gov. Kathy Hochul by Jan. 11 and would likely take place in mid- to late-February.

That would mean the Democratic, Republican and potentially Working Families Party organizations could select their own candidate to run in a special. As City & State reported, the Queens Democrats might jump at the opportunity to replace Mamdani with a more moderate candidate.

Jobaida, who has already started contacting donors, canvassing and gathering volunteers for her bid, is one of the first candidates to emerge amid a wave of leftist energy that’s engulfed the city since Mamdani’s win. She has a website and told Playbook she will officially launch her campaign later this month.

Last month, Assemblymember Jessica González-Rojas announced she would primary state Sen. Jessica Ramos, an Andrew Cuomo foe turned ally. And Mamdani organizer Mahtab Khan registered Monday to run against Queens Assemblymember David Weprin.

One Democratic Party insider told Playbook that discussions around filling Mamdani’s seat aren’t expected to occur in earnest until the SOMOS conference in Puerto Rico — where politicos, lobbyists and policymakers fly to the Caribbean to rub elbows and drink rum in the days immediately after the general election.

The Working Families Party did not respond to repeated requests for comment on whether it would pick a candidate — like Jobaida — to run for the seat on its ballot line. The co-chair of the city’s Democratic Socialists of America chapter told Playbook the party will be hosting “several forums this fall to hear from interested candidates” before its membership votes on whom it wants to endorse.

And Mamdani and Jobaida haven’t spoken yet, though Jobaida plans to speak with him “very soon.”

Jobaida is about 45 years old. She was born in a rural village in Bangladesh that never recorded her birthdate and arrived to this country shortly after 9/11 with a “pretty messed-up education from Bangladesh,” she said.

She attended community college before enrolling in NYU on a scholarship. She got a start in political organizing in 2007 for Barack Obama’s presidential campaign and then worked on Bill Thompson’s mayoral bid. She has taught kindergarten as a teacher in public school classrooms. She also handled constituent services for Jessica Ramos’ office (though she’s not sure if she’ll vote for her former boss yet).

In 2020, Jobaida mounted a primary challenge against longtime incumbent Kathy Nolan in Queens’ 37th Assembly District and lost by just 1,500 votes. After Mamdani’s primary win, Jobaida said she received calls and visits from community leaders, telling her, “You cannot sit quiet; you have to run for this seat.”

“I believe I’m going to win this special election,” Jobaida told Playbook. “If it is special election, it’s sealed. I believe it’s going to be a piece of cake.”

Though she believes the country has deep flaws with its criminal justice system and its treatment of the poor, she has immense gratitude for the nation that welcomed her with open arms.

“We are passing a very difficult moment as a country, as a community,” Jobaida said, referencing the recent shooting of a border patrol officer and border czar Tom Homan’s promise to “flood the zone” with ICE agents in its wake.

“Another way of saying it is like labor pain is harder before the childbirth,” she said. “We are going through some very difficult childbirth, labor pain, now, and I’m hopeful that we’re going to see a beautiful America soon.” — Jason Beeferman

Mayor Eric Adams announced that the city broke multiple records for producing and connecting New Yorkers to affordable homes in Fiscal Year 2025.

BEHIND THE NUMBERS: Adams unveiled a whopping figure at his housing presser in Brooklyn today: 426,800.

That’s the total number of housing units he says his administration has created, preserved or planned over the course of his tenure.

For New Yorkers looking around and wondering why, despite this influx, finding an affordable apartment still feels like competing in the Hunger Games, the operative word is “planned.”

Planned units — which include projections from rezonings, some of which aren’t even yet approved — account for nearly half of the total sum.

Those 197,000 projected homes include the yet-to-be-seen fruits of the mayor’s wide-ranging City of Yes blueprint, neighborhood plans like the yet-to-be-approved rezoning of Long Island City, private rezonings, housing RFPs and other projections.

Many of these initiatives rely on the whims of the private sector, and development decisions that are based on myriad economic factors outside of the city’s control.

“Everything is dependent on the real estate market more generally, everything we do,” Kim Darga, deputy commissioner for development at HPD, said during a briefing on the numbers.

“The mixed-income programs are very dependent also on the greater climate in which we are operating, so what happens with interest rates could drive what happens, what happens with tariffs could impact what happens,” she continued.

Adams nonetheless touted the 426,800-unit figure as far surpassing previous mayors’ housing totals and crowned his administration as “the most pro-housing” in city history. — Janaki Chadha

POT PROBLEMS: Gov. Kathy Hochul said her administration will support cannabis businesses that were incorrectly granted licenses by the state.

“It’s a major screw-up,” the governor told reporters today. “When I found out about it I was angry to say the least.”

Some 150 businesses were found to have been granted licenses for storefronts that are illegally located after regulators mistakenly measured how close they were to schools.

Hochul said she explored an executive order to fix the problem, but instead determined a more durable solution is a change in the law. She blamed the prior leadership at the Office of Cannabis Management for the error.

“I’ll protect these businesses,” she said, while adding that “we need to get the law changed to have a fix.”

State lawmakers, including influential Democrats such as Senate Finance Chair Liz Krueger, have signaled support for changing the law so the retailers can stay put.

In a statement, the Office of Cannabis Management downplayed a report from Spectrum News that found the state knew about the issue for a month before alerting business owners.

“OCM notified impacted applicants and licensees within days of confirming the issue and identifying the scope of redress opportunities,” the office’s spokesperson, Taylor Randi, said in a statement. She added that its acting director, Felicia Reid, began reviewing dispensaries’ compliance “over the past year.”

OCM has also scrambled to dispel reports that dispensaries with locations too close to schools will have to close up shop. Randi said that as long as existing businesses properly file their applications for a renewal, they will be allowed to remain open until legislators come back to Albany to fix the problem. — Nick Reisman and Jason Beeferman

Reps. Dan Goldman and Jerry Nadler visit a federal building in June. He and 11 other House Democrats are suing the Trump administration to access federal immigrant detainment facilities.

ICE’D OUT WITH AN APPOINTMENT: The Trump administration’s response to a lawsuit filed this week by House members barred from inspecting migrant detention facilities has revolved around the Democrats making unannounced visits.

But lawmakers in New York have sought access both announced and unannounced. Rep. Dan Goldman requested an appointment in June and was still denied entry to the 10th floor of 26 Federal Plaza in lower Manhattan. Democratic lawmakers have simultaneously cited their authority to conduct oversight without giving advance notice of “detention facilities holding individuals in federal immigration custody.”

The 67-page lawsuit filed Wednesday in federal court in Washington includes Goldman and Adriano Espaillat as plaintiffs. It references new DHS guidelines that congressional Democrats say infringe on their authority, including the need for seven days’ notice ahead of a visit.

In June, Goldman’s team emailed Immigration and Customs Enforcement staff a request for an appointment nine days before he and Rep. Jerry Nadler came to 26 Federal Plaza amid reports of unsafe conditions. They still were denied access.

The reason, according to DHS? The 10th floor of the building is a processing, not a detention, facility.

“These members of Congress could have just scheduled a tour,” Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said earlier this week in a statement reacting to the legal complaint by 12 members of Congress.

McLaughlin was asked again today on Fox News about the lawsuit and why lawmakers “think that they can just show up announced.”

“Exactly, this is about political theater,” she said in response. “This isn’t oversight.”

Goldman, Espaillat, Nadler and Rep. Nydia Velázquez have said migrants are being held for several days there in unsafe conditions as revealed in videos. And they have said they would use every tool to shine light on the treatment of migrants as President Donald Trump escalates his deportation agenda. — Emily Ngo

Erden Arkan leaves federal court in New York after pleading guilty to a charge alleging that he worked with a Turkish government official to funnel illegal campaign contributions to New York City Mayor Eric Adams.

LET EM OFF EASY: Turkish construction executive Erden Arkan should be sentenced to only one year probation after giving illegal straw donations to Adams’ campaign, his lawyer argued in a memo Friday while denying Arkan had any coordination with the Turkish government.

Arkan, the co-founder of KSK Construction Group, pleaded guilty in January. His lawyer, Jonathan Rosen, said the federal probation office recommended that he receive only a year’s probation and no prison time.

Arkan “did not ‘coordinate’ his decision to use straw donors, the scheme at issue in this case, with the Turkish Consulate or any Turkish official,” despite what prosecutors alleged, Rosen wrote. A Turkish Consulate official invited Arkan to a meeting where he met Adams, but the decision to give illegal straw donations in the names of his employees came only after Arkan tried and failed to solicit donations legally from business contractors, who largely refused to give to Adams.

“Fearing embarrassment from the now impending fundraiser, Erden pivoted to a new strategy,” Rosen explained.

Rosen also argues that federal prosecutors were using Arkan to get to Adams, and he should be let off now that Adams’ case has been dropped. “The government’s characterization of Eric Adams as a ‘tainted prosecution’ … calls into question any bona fide federal interest in Mr. Arkan’s continued prosecution in federal court,” he wrote, quoting former Trump administration Department of Justice official Emil Bove’s letter.

A spokesperson for the Southern District of New York did not immediately respond to a request for comment. — Jeff Coltin

FAKED SIGNATURES: Mayor Eric Adams’ reelection campaign submitted forged petition signatures in an effort to get on the November ballot as an independent candidate. (Gothamist)

TALL ORDER: The Department of Education approved close to $750,000 in catering spending at a single Brooklyn restaurant in the fiscal year 2025. (amNewYork)

HEALTH CUTS: Federal funding cuts to Medicaid could worsen New York’s nursing shortage. (City & State)

Missed this morning’s New York Playbook? We forgive you. Read it here.

​Politics

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Politics

Democratic governors advise strong counteroffensive on redistricting

MADISON, Wisconsin — A group of Democratic governors is urging its colleagues to get tough in countering Republican-backed efforts to gerrymander Texas’ congressional districts.

“It’s incumbent upon Democrat governors, if they have the opportunity, to respond in kind,” outgoing Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly told reporters at a Democratic Governors Association meeting Friday. “I’m not a big believer in unilateral disarmament.”

The advice from Kelly, who chairs the DGA, came two days after Texas Republicans proposed congressional lines that would create five GOP-friendly House districts ahead of next year’s midterms. Democrats need only to net three seats to regain control of the lower chamber.

Kelly didn’t cite California Gov. Gavin Newsom by name, but he is the most high profile, and likeliest, example of a Democrat considering a counteroffensive remapping effort to squeeze more seats from a blue state. On Thursday, Newsom said he’d seek a November special election to have voters approve a new House map that would boost Democrats’ numbers. It’s an expensive and potentially perilous gamble that his Democratic colleagues throughout the country appear to be backing — a notably more aggressive posture for the party.

Various mid-decade redistricting efforts could launch a partisan arms race, as the parties look to redraw competing congressional maps to their own advantages. Democrats face a tougher path, as several blue states are bound by independent redistricting commissions and state constitutions, which would prevent them from quickly remaking maps. By contrast, discussions are already underway in several other Republican-controlled states that could follow Texas’ lead, including Missouri, Indiana and Florida.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz acknowledged there’s “validity” to concerns that Republicans might gain even more seats, should redistricting wars escalate.

But, Walz and Kelly said, “there’s a bigger risk in doing nothing.”

“We can’t just let this happen and act like it’s fine, and hope that the courts fix it,” Kelly said. “We have no idea, quite honestly, at this point, what the courts might do, but by virtue of us responding in kind, we do send a message. We’re not going to take this line down.”

Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers, who campaigned on ending partisan gerrymandering, called Trump’s requests for new maps “so un-American.” He nonetheless echoed Kelly’s call for Democrats to respond, adding when “you’re up against the wall, you have to do whatever you can to stop it.”

Evers recently announced he will not seek another term, rendering the race to replace him a top-tier gubernatorial contest in one of the most politically divided states.

Kelly, Walz, Evers and several other governors, including Andy Beshear of Kentucky and Daniel McKee of Rhode Island, appeared together at the DGA press conference here, where they attacked President Donald Trump’s megabill.

Andrew Howard contributed reporting. 

​Politics