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US flight cancellations accelerate as airlines comply with government shutdown order

FILE – Alaska Airlines planes are shown parked at gates with Mount Rainier in the background on March 1, 2021, at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport in Seattle. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File)

AP- U.S. airlines began canceling hundreds of flights Thursday due to the Federal Aviation Administration’s order to reduce traffic at the country’s busiest airports starting Friday because of the government shutdown.

Airports that will see cuts include Anchorage International and Seattle Tacoma, both directly affecting Alaskan travelers.

More than 500 flights scheduled for Friday were already cut nationwide, and the number of cancellations climbed steadily throughout Thursday, according to FlightAware, a website that tracks flight disruptions.

The FAA order to cut flights at 40 of the busiest airports across the U.S. includes New York, Los Angeles and Chicago, according to a list distributed to the airlines and obtained by The Associated Press. But the impact will disrupt travel at many smaller airports too.

The FAA seeks to reduce service by 10% across “high-volume” markets to maintain travel safety as air traffic controllers exhibit signs of strain during the shutdown. The move also comes as the Trump administration is ramping up pressure on Democrats in Congress to end the shutdown.

Airlines will phase in the 10% reduction in their flight schedules at the airports across more than two dozen states. Just hours before the reductions went into place, airlines were scrambling to figure out where to cut and some travelers began changing or canceling itineraries preemptively.

Travelers with plans for the weekend and beyond waited nervously to see if their flights would take off as scheduled.

The affected airports included busy connecting hubs and those in popular tourist destinations, such as Atlanta, Denver, Orlando, Miami and San Francisco. In some of the biggest cities — such as Dallas, Houston and Chicago — multiple airports will be affected.

Flight cuts will begin gradually

Airlines will phase in the cuts at the direction of the FAA, eliminating 4% of flights at the 40 airports on Friday and working up to 10%, according to three people familiar with the plans who were not authorized to discuss them publicly.

Delta Air Lines said it planned to cancel roughly 170 flights Friday. By late Thursday afternoon, United Airlines had called off 145 flights and American Airlines had canceled 32 for Friday, according to aviation analytics firm Cirium.

The FAA had not yet published an official order as of the afternoon.

Some airlines planned to focus on slashing routes to and from small and medium-size cities.

“This is going to have a noticeable impact across the U.S. air transportation system,” industry analyst Henry Harteveldt said.

The flight reductions just weeks before the busy holiday season prompted some travelers to change their plans or looking at other options.

Fallon Carter canceled her Friday flight from New York to Tampa, Florida, where she planned to spend the weekend at the beach. She was worried about making it back to Long Island to be a bridesmaid at her best friend’s wedding.

“I don’t know if I get there, will I get home?” Carter said.

The FAA is imposing the reductions to relieve pressure on air traffic controllers who are working without pay during the shutdown, which began Oct. 1, and have been increasingly taking sick days. Most controllers work mandatory overtime six days a week, leaving little time for side jobs to help cover bills unless they call out.

In recent weeks the FAA has delayed flights when airports or its other facilities are short on controllers.

Shuffling schedules

Airlines said they would try to minimize impact on customers, some of whom will see weekend travel plans disrupted with little notice.

United, Delta and American were among carriers that said they would offer refunds to passengers who opt not to fly, even if they purchased nonrefundable tickets.

The head of Frontier Airlines recommended that travelers buy backup tickets with another airline to avoid being stranded.

The cuts also could disrupt package deliveries because two airports with major distribution centers are on the list — FedEx operates at the airport in Memphis, Tennessee, and UPS in Louisville, Kentucky, the site of this week’s deadly cargo plane crash.

The cuts could affect as many as 1,800 flights, or upward of 268,000 passengers, per day, according to an estimate from Cirium.

Airlines are used to dealing with canceling thousands of flights on short notice during severe weather, but the difference now is that these cuts during the shutdown will last indefinitely until safety data improves.

Shutdown already straining travel

The shutdown is putting unnecessary strain on the system and damaging confidence in the U.S. air travel experience, said U.S. Travel Association President and CEO Geoff Freeman.

Kelly Matthews, who lives in Flat Rock, Michigan, and frequently flies for work, said she has canceled most of her upcoming trips and understands why federal airport employees have stopped showing up.

“You can’t expect people to go in to work when they’re not getting a paycheck for the continuation of over a month now,” she said. “I mean it’s not a matter of them not wanting to do the job — but you can’t afford to pay for gas, your day care and everything else.”

Controller staffing worsening

The past weekend brought some of the worst staffing issues since the start of the shutdown.

From Friday to Sunday evening, at least 39 air traffic control facilities reported potential staffing limits, according to an AP analysis of operations plans shared through the Air Traffic Control System Command Center system. The figure, which is likely an undercount, was well above the average for weekends before the shutdown.

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Juneau Assembly confronts budget shortfall after tax exemptions pass

NOTN- The City and Borough of Juneau’s Assembly began early budget discussions on Wednesday, bracing for a projected $6 million loss following the passage of two ballot measures exempting food and utilities from local sales tax.

Finance Committee Chair Christine Woll said the Assembly convened sooner than usual, typically, the city begins its budget process in December to address the significant fiscal impact of the new exemptions, which take effect next month.

“When food and utilities become tax exempt for residents here next month that will, impact the amount of money the city is taking in.” Woll said, “And essentially the high-level message coming out of that meeting was the assembly wants to use those extra savings we ended up with at the end of last year to take our time, to really look at our whole city budget with the public and talk about what priorities we have before making any large cuts.”

Still, Woll said city departments have been directed to “tighten spending” and pause new projects until the Assembly determines long-term strategies to balance the budget.

“You won’t be seeing the pool hours changing, or any of our facilities being shut down immediately.” Said Woll, “As we think towards next year, we will see significant service reductions, and we don’t want to make those decisions too early before getting a lot of input from our community. But you know, in anticipation of some big cuts, we asked our city manager to be pretty conservative.”

Woll added that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers fully fund Phase Two of the HESCO barrier flood protection project helped to relieve financial pressure, but doesn’t have any impact on the city’s budget.

“We really didn’t have funding in place for it, and so it was going to be very complicated, especially with the ballot initiative passing, that had really tied our hands.” she said, “Unfortunately, because it wasn’t in our budget, it doesn’t replace any funding. It doesn’t give us more funding, but it does mean that we can move forward with a project that otherwise I’m not sure we were going to be able to do.”

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USDA revises SNAP benefit amounts during shutdown after admitting miscalculation

By: Jacob Fischler, States Newsroom

A sign in a convenience store along Barlowe Road in Hyattsville, Maryland, on Oct. 28, 2025, advertises that it accepts SNAP benefits. (Photo by Ashley Murray/States Newsroom)

The U.S. Department of Agriculture will reduce the largest monthly food assistance payments by about 35% in November, a smaller decrease than the department initially estimated, according to a court filing late Wednesday.

That means the maximum monthly benefit likely would be roughly two-thirds of the usual benefit flowing to recipients, rather than the half initially projected.

USDA miscalculated how to adjust benefit payments for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, to account for a lack of full funding during the government shutdown, a department official said in a filing to the U.S. District Court for Rhode Island. 

The formula the government initially used and sent to states Tuesday would have resulted in about a 50% cut to the maximum monthly benefits, and left some households without benefits. 

SNAP pays benefits on a sliding scale depending on the size of a household, the household’s income and other expenses such as housing. By cutting the maximum benefit by one-half, the department would have spent about $3 billion from a SNAP contingency fund instead of the full $4.65 billion in the fund, which is what the court ordered it to spend.

The error was first reported to U.S. District Chief Judge John J. McConnell Jr. by the coalition of cities and nonprofit organizations that sued to force the government to pay SNAP benefits this month. 

An analysis submitted by Sharon Parrott, a former White House budget officer who now leads the left-leaning think tank Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, showed that the table the department submitted to the court and sent to states on Tuesday would fall short of the court’s order to spend the entire contingency fund.

The groups said the department’s error was another reason the court should compel the government to transfer funds to pay out full benefits for November.

“Defendants’ approach means that only around $3 billion—out of the $4.65 billion Defendants have said is available—will be spent on SNAP benefits in November, leaving more than $1.5 billion in contingency funds unspent,” they wrote in a Wednesday brief. “Defendants opted for partial (and delayed) SNAP payments, but even then, did not manage to do that correctly.”

The department said in its filing later Wednesday that it independently discovered its miscalculation and worked to fix it before Parrott’s declaration hit the court docket.

“Defendants realized this error and worked to issue new guidance and tables as soon as it was discovered, not in response to Plaintiffs’ notice filed earlier this evening,” USDA’s brief said.

The parties are scheduled to argue before McConnell again Thursday afternoon.

This report will be updated.

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Number of Alaska fishers and seafood workers hits record low, state report finds

By: James Brooks, Alaska Beacon

 Commercial fishing boats are lined up at the dock at Seward’s harbor on June 22, 2024. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

The number of people working in Alaska’s famed seafood industry has set a new record low, surpassing last year’s record low, according to figures published this month by the Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development in its magazine, Alaska Economic Trends.

In 2024, an average of 5,393 people were employed as fishers, processors or other seafood workers each month in Alaska, wrote analyst Joshua Warren. That’s down by 443 jobs from the same figure in 2023.

Alaska remains the No. 1 seafood producer among U.S. states, according to federal statistics, and produces more seafood than every other state combined.

The state department of labor has kept a monthly tally of seafood jobs in the state since 2001, and industry employment has been in a steady decline since 2019 due to a variety of factors, including a lack of available fish, competition from cheaper international sources, and high operating costs that can make fishing uneconomic. 

Since the start of 2001, the high point of fishing employment was in 2015, when an average of 8,501 people were employed in the seafood industry each month.

Historically, seafood employment was significantly higher due to reduced rates of automation and the fact that Alaska seafood tended to be processed and packaged locally. 

The modern trend has been toward direct export and processing internationally, where wages are lower.

Seafood employment in Alaska is extremely seasonal, with a peak in June and July during the salmon season and a low ebb in December, before a new season of fishing in federal waters offshore.

In July 2024, only 17,361 people worked in the Alaska seafood industry, the lowest annual peak on record since January 2021. In July 2013, the highest peak, more than 25,000 people were employed in the state’s seafood industry.

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Juneau Assembly reviews Goldbelt’s West Douglas cruise port plan

Rendering of proposed Welcome Center provided by Golbelt.

NOTN- The Juneau Assembly held a Committee of the Whole meeting Monday night and among a number of meaty topics, reviewed Goldbelt Inc.’s proposal to develop a large-scale cruise ship facility and supporting infrastructure on West Douglas.

“we’re still just getting in more information on the project.” Said Deputy Mayor Greg Smith, “We want to hear more about master planning back there, because it’s potentially significant development, there’s hundreds of acres of what we believe to be much better developable land for housing.”

Mayor Beth Weldon said the proposed project, still in its early stages, would include extending North Douglas Road, building an onshore terminal and parking area, wastewater treatment facilities, a small boat harbor, and two cruise ship berths.

The project, nicknamed “Goldbelt Aaní” has no officially announced opening date.

According to Goldbelt, Goldbelt Aaní, will highlight Lingít culture and boost the city’s economy.

The Assembly also discussed updating the West Douglas master plan, which will help guide long-term development on the island.

“We’d like authorization to start doing some master planning.” said Smith, “The assembly said, Yes, bring in some more information about what Master Planning might look like, how much it might cost, try to work in collaboration with Goldbelt, should they want to.”

The Master plan along with Goldbelt’s proposed cruise port, involves potentially developing hundreds of acres of land, with a critical focus from the city on establishing a second crossing to enable future development.

“We felt that there should be master planning in relation to their project. Goldbelt doesn’t feel like there should be.” said Smith, “We have to figure things out, you know, if they want to use utilities out there, or emergency services and other city services like that.”

According to the city, public outreach and public comment will be a big part of the master plan process, which will proceed as Goldbelt prepares to submit a conditional use permit.

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Juneau’s Thanksgiving Basket program may be more important than ever as federal funding runs dry

By: Grace Dumas, News of the North

Maureen Hall and Jennifer Skinner of St. Vincent de Paul

With Thanksgiving fast approaching, St. Vincent de Paul is gearing up for an anticipated community tradition, the annual Thanksgiving Basket Program, which provides full holiday meals to hundreds of local families in need.

Jennifer Skinner and Maureen Hall of St. Vincent de Paul spoke about the effort Monday noting that the organization expects higher demand this year due to recent cuts and delays in federal food assistance programs.

“We’ve been providing meals at Thanksgiving time for families in Juneau for a few decades now,” Skinner said. “We definitely see the need and meet the need for our neighbors here in Juneau. We anticipate, about 400 Thanksgiving baskets a year, but this year, given the current climate in our area, we are certain we’re going to see higher numbers than that.”

Families can register to receive baskets by visiting svdpjuneau.org and clicking on the events page, by calling 907-789-5535, or by scanning QR codes posted around town.

The baskets include all the fixings for a traditional Thanksgiving meal turkey, stuffing, canned yams, cranberry sauce, gravy, and more.

“So the items we’re looking for donation as well are, you know, the stuffing mix, canned yams, instant mashed potatoes, cranberry sauce, gravy mix, pies, butter, turkeys, and anything that goes into your own personal Thanksgiving meal prep is stuff we try to provide for our families.” said Skinner.

Volunteers play a crucial role in the program. Skinner said many Juneau residents make the annual basket delivery a personal tradition.

“We have a couple of folks that return every year as a day date to go and deliver Thanksgiving baskets. And they just really get a kick out of spending that time together and helping neighbors in need.”

Deliveries will take place on November 22, a pre-covid addition to the Holiday tradition that Hall said was inspired by a local man in town.

“I remember one year seeing an elderly gentleman come all the way from Douglas on the city bus, having to walk the extra couple blocks to where we were handing them out, he had a roller suitcase with him, and I thought, My gosh, we need to expand how we do the deliveries.” Hall said, “Instead of having people, often with disabilities or lack of transportation come to us, we continue to go to people’s homes and do all the deliveries that way.”

Skinner said local businesses and organizations are also encouraged to contribute food or monetary donations. “There’s always a way to give,” she said.

Nearly 2,000 Juneau families rely on SNAP, she said, and with the federal government shutdown surpassing records and funding running dry, those numbers could make this year’s Thanksgiving distribution one of the most critical yet.

United Way of Southeast Alaska has published an updated list of local food resources, including food pantries, meal programs, and emergency support services, to help residents access food assistance.

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Politics

Zohran Mamdani’s transformative child care plan builds on a history of NYC social innovations

Assembly member Zohran Mamdani attends a news conference on universal child care at Columbus Park Playground on Nov. 19, 2024, in New York City. Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

Zohran Mamdani, the 34-year-old New York State Assembly member and democratic socialist, was elected New York City’s mayor on Nov. 4, 2025, after pledging to make the city more affordable through policies that include freezing rents, providing free public buses and a network of city-owned grocery stores.

During his campaign, Mamdani’s promises clearly resonated with New Yorkers struggling with the high cost of living.

Of all of Mamdani’s campaign commitments, free high-quality child care for every New Yorker from 6 weeks to 5 years old – while boosting child care workers’ wages to match that of the city’s public school teachers – could be the most transformative.

The cost of child care in New York City is expensive. More than 80% of families with young children cannot afford the average annual cost of US$26,000 for center-based care. A recent study found that families with young children are twice as likely to leave the city as those without children. The study identified housing and child care costs as key drivers of migration out of the city.

New York’s child care problem mirrors a nationwide system that is seen by many experts as broken. U.S. families spend between 8.9% and 16% of their median income on full-day care for one child. And prices have been rising: Between 1990 and 2024, the cost of day care and preschool rose 263%, much faster than overall inflation.

Despite high prices, child care workers are poorly paid: In 2024, the median pay for child care workers, who are mostly women and often women of color, was $15.41 an hour, or $32,050 a year. That’s nearly at the bottom of all occupations when ranked by annual pay. Additionally, child care programs face high turnover, and it’s difficult for them to recruit and retain qualified staff. Program quality suffers as a result.

As a feminist scholar who has written extensively about child care, I believe Mamdani’s promise of free universal child care, with decent pay for child care staff, could transform the politics and the reality of child care in New York and beyond.

An example to the nation

During the Great Depression, the Works Projects Administration, a New Deal agency created to combat unemployment, established 14 emergency nursery schools in New York. Opened between 1933 and 1934, these schools were primarily intended to offer employment opportunities to unemployed teachers, but they also became a form of de facto child care for parents employed on various work-relief projects.

With the onset of World War II, rising numbers of women took up jobs in the city’s war industries.

In 1941, the lack of adequate child care prompted the administration of Mayor Fiorello La Guardia to fund a handful of already existing nursery schools, including the New Deal nurseries whose federal funding had dried up. New York became the only U.S. city to provide publicly subsidized child care services.

New York provided an example to the nation, and between 1943 and 1945, wartime child care centers were established in hundreds of cities under the federal government’s Lanham Act of 1941. It’s the closest the U.S. has come to establishing a universal child care system.

While most wartime child care centers were shuttered at war’s end, in New York a citywide grassroots mobilization of parents forced the city to keep its centers operating. It marked the first peacetime allocation of municipal tax dollars for child care programs.

People hold signs at a news conference.
People hold signs as they attend a news conference at Columbus Park Playground, Nov. 19, 2024, in New York City.
Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

Building blocks

In the 1960s, under the liberal administration of Mayor John Lindsay, public child care in New York City was expanded, and in 1967 child care workers organized a union, AFSCME Local 205 Day Care Employees.

After a bitter three-week strike in 1969 to protest low wages and poor working conditions, child care workers won a contract that included a wage scale comparable to that of elementary school teachers in the city’s public school system. The contract also included a training program that allowed them to upgrade their skills and get credit for it.

When President Richard Nixon vetoed federal child care legislation in 1971 that would have provided federal funding for child care programs across the nation, New York’s child care movement took to the streets to demand universal child care, even if the federal government refused to fund it. Groups like the Day Care Forum and the Committee for Community Controlled Child Care staged demonstrations on the city’s Triborough Bridge – since renamed the Robert F. Kennedy Bridge – and set up a one-day “model day care center” on the lawn of City Hall.

Public child care services survived the city’s fiscal crisis of 1975, largely due to the activism of working-class communities who fought against day care closures.

Though far from universal, the child care system in New York today boasts the largest publicly supported system in the country, and can serve as the building blocks for Mamdani’s plan.

Transformative beyond New York

Mamdani’s campaign estimated that his universal child care plan would cost $6 billion annually. To fund his policies, Mamdani has proposed an increase of the state’s corporate tax rate and raising the city’s income tax by 2 percentage points on New Yorkers earning more than $1 million a year. While Mamdani will need the assistance of Gov. Kathy Hochul to raise taxes, Hochul supports universal child care, even if she disagrees on how to pay for it.

Universal child care has positive economic impacts, including more women in the workforce and more money in the pockets of parents to spend in the economy. Research from the liberal Center for American Progress concluded that the availability of affordable high-quality child care would lead 51% of stay-at-home parents to find work, and about a third of employed parents to work more hours.

In New York, the disposable income of families could increase by up to $1.9 billion due to the avoidance of child care costs.

One year from the U.S. midterms, Americans remain worried about the cost of basic needs. And majorities of both Democrat and Republican voters say the cost of child care is a major problem, and they want government to prioritize helping families pay for it.

If he can find the money to pay for it, with universal child care, Mamdani could blaze a trail that other policymakers follow.

The Conversation

Simon Black 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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Entertainment

Haley Kalil Says Matt Kalil’s Giant Penis Was Reason For Divorce

Reading Time: 4 minutes

What caused model and influencer Haley Kalil to split with football player Matt Kalil?

It wasn’t fighting. As it turns out, they basically never had any conflict like that.

When you divorce over just one issue, it had better be a big one.

In their case, it sounds like they had one enormous problem that Haley just couldn’t handle. Yes, it’s what you think.

Haley Kalil smiles while holding up her phone.
There are smiles of delight and there are anxious smiles. Haley Khalil is displaying both in this moment. (Image Credit: YouTube)

Why did Haley Kalil and Matt Kalil divorce?

Though most know her by her username, haleyybaylee, Haley Kalil is a Sports Illustrated model and an influencer who boats over 10 million Instagram followers.

Matt Kalil is well known in the sports world for being part of the NFL. And he’s now gained a sizable boost to his reputation for an off-the-field reason.

Haley and Matt married in 2015. Their marriage lasted for 7 years.

In 2022, Haley Kalil and Matt Kalil divorced. And she’s now explaining why.

During a lengthy (six hour!) YouTube livestream with Swedish streamer and certified hottie Marlon Garcia, she explained why she filed for divorce.

Haley Kalil types on her phone while seated across from Marlon Garcia.
Typing furiously, a laughing Haley Kalil writes why her marriage didn’t work out while Marlon Garcia waits to read her explanation. (Image Credit: YouTube)

After eating some very delicious-looking food, and towards the end of the livestream, Haley explained that she and Matt never fought.

She also emphasized that he remains “her boy” to this day — but that they ended up being incompatible as sexual partners.

The reason was, she strongly implied, that his penis was simply too gargantuan. It sounds like it was primarily an issue of girth (as, let us be honest, many people may have length issues with a partner).

To be clear, Haley did not simply come right out and say the details. She conveyed most of what she had to say by typing it into her phone for Marlon to read.

Haley predicted that his facial expression would be priceless when he read it. And it was.

Haley Kalil holds her phone for Marlon Garcia to read.
His face a mask of disbelief, Marlon Garcia reads Haley Kalil’s explanation. (Image Credit: YouTube)

‘0.01% of the population’

Repeatedly, Marlon Garcia asked Haley Kalil if she was being serious about what she wrote about Matt Kalil.

“Deadass, for our whole marriage, deadass!” she replied.

(If you are not versed in 21st Century vernacular, she is explaining that what she wrote is true)

Haley went on to explain that she had looked into therapeutic and medical solutions in her attempt to accommodate her ex-husband’s magnum dong.

In addition to referring to him being in the “0.01 percent of the population,” she mimed how something large — like a human limb, an elephant’s trunk, or an improbably colossal penis, might thud heavily against a table.

Haley Kalil lets her arm drop to astonish Marlon Garcia.
Despite writing out a description, Haley Kalil also mimed to fully illustrate her ex’s hidden asset. (Image Credit: YouTube)

Haley took the imagery beyond miming, by the way.

She said that intercourse (without using that word) might be possible, but only with pain to the point of tears.

Haley also likened the situation to two (or possibly three) 12-ounce soda cans stacked upon each other.

As anyone on the internet likely knows, there are certainly people (often professionals) who could at least partially accommodate that.

But not everyone’s genitals are compatible. And, despite a clear fondness for each other and years of trying to make it work, Haley found that this was the primary reason for their divorce.

It sounds like congratulations are in order

As you might imagine, when Haley Kalil filed to divorce Matt Kalil a few years ago, she did not cite “irreconcilable dong.”

So this is news to the world.

Presumably, it is not news to Keilani Asmus, who married Matt just last year. Perhaps their interlocking parts are a little more compatible.

Haley didn’t share this in an effort to embarrass Matt. She heaped praise upon him, citing what a good guy he is and how much she cares for him.

Many people share intimate details about partners, particularly exes. However, we wouldn’t generally recommend doing so on a livestream — not even buried six hours into a video — unless you’re prepared for potential fallout.

Congratulations to Matt Kalil, by the way.

Haley Kalil Says Matt Kalil’s Giant Penis Was Reason For Divorce was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Entertainment

Barbara Jankavski ‘s Horrifying Cause of Death Revealed: ‘Human Barbie’ …

Reading Time: 2 minutes

We have tragic news to report from the world of social media today:

Influencer Barbara Jankavski has passed away at the age of 31.

Jankavski — who documented her many plastic surgeries and beauty routines — had more than 400,000 followers across multiple platforms.

Influencer Barbara Jankavski has died at the age of 31.
Influencer Barbara Jankavski has died at the age of 31. (YouTube)

Jankavski was nicknamed “Boneca Desumana,” which roughly translates to “inhuman doll,” due to her many plastic surgeries.

She is believed to have gone under the knife nearly 30 times for cosmetic procedures.

News of her passing comes courtesy of CNN Brazil.

Jankavski passed after consuming unknown substance with public defender

No official cause of death has been given, but the circumstances of Jankavski’s passing paint a grim picture of her final hours.

According to TMZ and other outlets, Jankavski died in the presence of a public defender who confirmed to police that he had paid her for “sexual services.”

He also revealed that they had both used illicit substances, but the exact nature of those substances remains unclear.

The lawyer says he realized after she had fallen asleep that Barbara was no longer moving. He promptly called emergency services, but sadly, Barbara was pronounced dead on the scene.

Police report that there was bruising on her face and body, but a friend reportedly confirmed that the injuries were the result of a fall that Barbara suffered several days prior to her death.

Though an investigation is ongoing, it appears that Jankavski’s death is not being treated as suspicious at this time.

On social media, fans and friends of Barbara’s have been mourning her untimely passing.

“Rest in peace diva, you lived a bit of the life that I always wanted, that comforts us a bit,” one commenter wrote on her most recent Instagram post.

“Wow, when I saw it was her I couldn’t believe it rest in peace my love,” another added.

“Omg so sad, I really liked her content. May you rest in peace,” a third chimed in.

Our thoughts go out to Barbara Jankavski’s loved ones during this enormously difficult time.

Barbara Jankavski ‘s Horrifying Cause of Death Revealed: ‘Human Barbie’ … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Entertainment

Collin Gosselin Pens Beautiful Tribute to REAL Loving Mom, Colleen Conrad: ‘I …

Reading Time: 4 minutes

Collin Gosselin is bringing tears to our eyes. And we’re not alone.

Robbed of his childhood and then publicly smeared by his notorious mother, his life has been an uphill battle.

But people have come into his life who have uplifted him and supported him along the way.

In a powerful tribute, Collin is thanking his dad’s ex-girlfriend for being a real mother to him, and making him part of her family.

A YouTube screenshot from Collin Gosselin's 2024 interview with Entertainment Tonight.
During his interview with Entertainment Tonight, Collin Gosselin spoke frankly about the horrors of his childhood. (Image Credit: YouTube/Entertainment Tonight)

Collin Gosselin is grateful to have one mother figure who really loves him

In a recent TikTok update, Collin Gosselin is thanking the actual loving mother figure in his life.

Obviously, the young adult is not referring to the notorious Kate Gosselin.

She forfeited any claim to being a loving mother to Collin long before she institutionalized him as a tween.

Rather, he was discussing Colleen Conrad.

Though Colleen is Jon’s ex-girlfriend, she was there for Collin for years of his adolescence. Even after she and Jon split, she has shown up for Collin and spoken up for him.

Now-exes Jon Gosselin and Colleen Conrad in December 2018.
Now-exes Jon Gosselin and Colleen Conrad in December 2018. They broke up in 2021. (Photo Credit: Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images for WE tv)

In his TikTok tribute, Collin penned in the caption that he has “the greatest people” in his life. They have helped him through “so much” in his young life.

“I always say that every man needs a mother, and I am so thankful I had mine,” Collin expressed. “Thank you Colleen.”

He added: “And thank you to everyone who has come into my life and been there for me.” 

Within the post itself, Collin affirmed that he “always believed that family didn’t have to be blood.”

Colleen, he noted, was always there for him. Kate, he acknowledged, cannot honestly say the same.

@collingosselin

I always knew when the day came that I spoke up, some would hate and try to tear me down. That’s ok, nothing this world can hand me will be worse than what I endured in my early stages of life. I will always think of my younger self and advocate for that kid, and all the kids like him, and all the adults who still remember that trauma. Speak up. No matter how much resistance you face, never falter… When the haters hate, silence your phone, crank up the music, and tear up that Mustang.

♬ original sound – Collin Gosselin

Colleen ‘introduced me to your family, and they are now my family’

“You cheered for me the loudest when I graduated,” Collin Gosselin wrote in his Colleen tribute, “while my mother didn’t.”

He gushed: “You introduced me to your family, and they are now my family.”

Sure enough, Colleen and blood relatives of hers commented under the post to show their support to Collin.

“You never gave up on me, no matter how much I gave up on myself,” Collin praised.

He concluded: “Always my cheerleader. I love you Colleen.”

A dark mode Instagram screenshot of Collen Conrad's Instagram caption on August 4, 2023.
In August 2023, Colleen Conrad went to bat for Collin Gosselin, advocating for the sextuplet after his infamous biological mother hurled insults and portrayed him as “dangerous” to an audience of millions. (Image Credit: Instagram)

When Collin wrote of Colleen standing up for him, he wasn’t kidding.

She and Jon were together for seven years. It must have been complex for everyone when Jon was finally able to free Collin from the institution where Kate had locked him away and brought him to a home that he’d never known.

In 2023, Kate publicly lashed out at Collin. She tried to paint a picture of him as some sort of unstable nightmare who deserved the abuse of which he has accused her.

Colleen spoke up for Collin in a heartfelt Instagram post.

She doesn’t have Kate’s platform or infamy. But, unlike Kate, she appears to have the capacity for basic human decency — as well as a healthy relationship with Collin.

Colleen feels the same way

Even four years after Jon moved on, Colleen Conrad keeps up with Collin Gosselin and his social media. She saw the tribute and publicly responded.

She commented that she is “so blessed” that he came into her life. “I will always consider you my son,” Colleen wrote.

“I wish everybody knew what an amazing person you are,” she gushed. “I get angry and it hurts me so much to see people write negative comments when they don’t know you and what you’ve been through.”

Colleen affirmed: “I’m glad you’re finally writing your story.”

Her daughter, Jordan Conrad, also wrote that Collin’s tribute made her “tear up.” She expressed her love for him and shared her mother’s sentiment that his presence in their lives is “a blessing.”

That’s beautiful. And Jordan was not the only one who teared up at all of this.

Collin Gosselin Pens Beautiful Tribute to REAL Loving Mom, Colleen Conrad: ‘I … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip