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Alaska fisheries in 2025: turmoil, economic and environmental challenges and some bright spots

Commercial fishing and recreational vessels are docked in the Homer harbor on Oct. 23, 2025. The commercial fishing industry endured a series of challenges over the year, some of them imposed by the new Trump administration. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

For Alaska’s fishing industry and fishing-dependent communities, 2025 was a year of turmoil and uncertainty, much of it imposed by ideological pursuits from the new Trump administration.

The short-lived agency called the Department of Government Efficiency hacked away at federal funding for science across the board. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in particular was in its crosshairs; the Heritage Institute’s Project 2025 blueprint for the second Trump administration heaped scorn on NOAA, saying its National Weather Service, National Marine Fisheries Service and other agencies “form a colossal operation that has become one of the main drivers of the climate change alarm industry and, as such, is harmful to future U.S. prosperity.” The NMFS’ Alaska Fisheries Science Center, which does the bulk of the research on which fishery managers depend, was among the agencies that suffered deep budget and staffing cuts

The prospect of more cuts is unsettling, some officials said. “I guess now we’re getting to a point that I’m getting really concerned and almost freaked out about how much data that we’re potentially losing that we’re used to having,” Anne Vanderhoeven, a member of the North Pacific Fishery Management Council, said on Dec. 4 during that body’s December meeting.

Even as the Trump administration cuts the support fishery management, it is demanding that the industry harvest more fish, in line with an administrative order issued by the president on April 17.

The federal government shutdown created more problems for fisheries managers, but the North Pacific Fishery Management Council used data from last year to set next year’s harvest limits for Alaska pollock — the nation’s top-volume commercial seafood — and other groundfish in the Bering Sea and Gulf of Alaska.

Hannah Scholosstein, international marketing and grants manager for the Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute, works in her office in Juneau on May 22, 2025, amid promotional materials. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Hannah Scholosstein, international marketing and grants manager for the Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute, works in her office in Juneau on May 22, 2025, amid promotional materials. A legislative task force has recommended boosted funding and support for ASMI, among other actions. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)

Alaska’s seafood industry continues to endure a variety of economic challenges — competition in markets that are glutted, rising costs, declines of some important fish stock and labor shortages, among them. There are fewer people harvesting seafood commercially in Alaska than at any time on record.

Alaska legislators have tried to address some of those woes. A legislative task force made numerous recommendations about financial systems, marketing, industry diversification, workforce development and other subjects. Those recommendations produced a series of bills. Two of them passed during the 2025 session, gaining unanimous support, but Gov. Mike Dunleavy vetoed one of them, which would have shored up the Alaska Commercial Fishing and Agriculture Bank. The Legislature has the opportunity to address the subject again in the coming session.

The Dunleavy administration ran into trouble with two of its other fishery-related efforts. The governor introduced a bill that would legalize salmon farming, which is widely disdained in the state. The bill went nowhere. The administration is also continuing to try to overturn federal subsistence management on federal sections of the Kuskokwim River, but it has lost in court so far.

There were some notable improvements in 2025.

Bering Sea snow crab stocks are starting to rebound after a massive crash that closed harvests for two years, the first. However, there has been a puzzling boom in the number of snow-tanner crab hybrids. The Alaska Department of Fish and Game is treating the hybrids as snow crabs for harvest-management purposes.

The overall salmon harvest was much bigger and more lucrative than last year’s dismal totals. Bristol Bay reds were not as small as last year’s record tiny fish, and the region also had a bigger run than predicted. However, salmon runs in the Yukon River continue to be poor.

But trouble is brewing in the marine and freshwater environments that support fish.

In areas of thawing permafrost, particularly Northwestern Alaska, a phenomenon called “rusting rivers,” has released such high levels of metals that conditions at times are toxic for fish. The thaw creates acid rock drainage, similar to the type of pollution that can come from hardrock mining. Iron and other metals that are freed through the process turn clear waters orange or red. The problem is serious enough to have merited a chapter in this year’s Arctic Report Card, issued on Dec. 16 by NOAA.

A member of a multi-organization team combatting the spread of invasive European green crabs holds one of the crabs trapped in Southeast Alaska in the summer of 2023. (Photo by Ginny Eckert/Alaska Sea Grant)
A member of a multi-organization team combatting the spread of invasive European green crabs holds one of the crabs trapped in Southeast Alaska in the summer of 2023. The invasive crabs were first discovered in Alaska in 2022. The Metlakatla Indian Community is leading the effort to combat their spread, and this year workers in the program trapped more than 40,000 of the crabs. (Photo by Ginny Eckert/Alaska Sea Grant)

Alaska scientists have also confirmed that invasive northern pike, a bane to native salmon runs in Southcentral Alaska, can swim across Cook Inlet to colonize new territory. The freshwater pike, which gobble up salmon fry and other fish, are too entrenched in the Matanuska-Susitna Borough to be eradicated from waterways there. Biologists have been working to keep Kenai Peninsula pike-free and believed they were successful in 2018, until scientists discovered that pike are able to survive the relatively short swim through the inlet’s saltwater into new freshwater sites. The eradication work has continued, and state biologists believe the peninsula is again pike-free.

Another looming threat comes from the south. Resource managers with the Metlakatla Indian Community, the tribal government in Alaska’s most southeastern spot, have been battling what its officials term an “explosion” of invasive European green crabs. The first Alaska discovery of the invasive crabs, which can devastate native fish stocks, was in 2022 in the Metlakatla area. At first, there were only a few shells. But this year, workers in the tribal program trapped more than 40,000 of the crabs, which have been steadily expanding north.

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A year before Alaska’s U.S. House election, two candidates are emerging as frontrunners

By: James Brooks

“I voted” stickers are seen on display at a polling station in Juneau’s Mendenhall Valley on Tuesday, Aug. 16, 2022. (Photo by James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)

One of Rep. Nick Begich III’s uncles is endorsing his main Democratic opponent, Matt Schultz, in next year’s election. Tom Begich’s name was atop a list released to the Alaska Beacon by Schultz’s campaign this month.

Begich’s endorsement of his nephew’s opponent won’t surprise people familiar with Alaska politics — he’s a longtime figure in the state’s Democratic scene, has been publicly critical of his nephew’s actions and is running as a Democrat in the governor’s election — but Schultz’s list and a similar list of endorsements by Republicans for Begich III shows how the state’s political establishment is settling on a two-person race for U.S. House, unlike the crowded contest for governor.

“It will be awkward. It’s always awkward,” Tom Begich said of the endorsement, “ but my mom taught us to learn to live with disagreement, to move beyond it. It doesn’t change the fact that I love my nephew. Just, I’m not supporting him in this election.”

Tom Begich is among 14 people — 12 Republicans and two Democrats — who have registered to run for governor in next year’s election.

Incumbent Gov. Mike Dunleavy is term-limited and unable to run. 

While there are plenty of candidates for the governor’s seat, the number of people running for federal office is tiny. Incumbent U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan, a Republican, doesn’t have a well-known challenger yet. Former U.S. Rep. Mary Peltola, a Democrat, has been rumored as a possible opponent but has yet to file. 

In the U.S. House race, as Begich III seeks re-election, he has the endorsement of President Donald Trump and a wide range of state and national Republicans, including those running for governor on different tickets.

The same is true on the Democratic side, where support for Schultz appears almost entirely united.

“I’m very pleased to support him and glad he’s running,” said state Sen. Matt Claman, D-Anchorage and the other Democratic candidate in the governor’s race.

“I think he’s more connected with the general, broad spectrum of values in Alaska, more connected with some of the challenges we’re facing. He’s really looking carefully at how we’re dealing with homelessness, and I think he’s concerned about some of the affordability issues that are particularly a challenge in rural Alaska,” Claman said of Schultz.

Among the other people endorsing Schultz are independent state Rep. Alyse Galvin, who ran unsuccessfully for U.S. House in 2020 and 2018, and Forrest Dunbar, a Democratic state senator who ran unsuccessfully for House in 2014. 

One notable absence is Peltola, who held Alaska’s U.S. House seat for one term before Begich III defeated her in the 2024 election.

Also missing is longtime Democrat Mark Begich, the incumbent Republican’s other uncle and Alaska’s U.S. senator from 2009 to 2015.

“There’s definitely been a lot of support from Democrats all around the state, and I’m very grateful for that. It seems to be a lot of coalescing support,” Schultz said by phone.

A pastor in Anchorage, Schultz spoke on the day that the U.S. House announced that it would not vote to renew subsidies for health insurance policies purchased on the federal marketplace.

Without those subsidies, the prices of many policies will spike with the start of the year.

“That’s really, really sad and disturbing,” Schultz said. “It seems like it should be a no-brainer that you start out by making sure that people can afford their lifesaving medicine.”

Schultz said that as he’s gone around seeking early support for his campaign, he’s found joy and excitement among people who want to find a common good.

“It really is this wonderful excitement to say — just like we pulled together as a nation to go to the moon, we can pull together as a state to provide food and health care to people. It’s a goal that matters so much and is so basically good at its heart that people can’t wait to start working for it,” he said. “I think there’s a hope out there that has felt absent in the last decade or so.”

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Politics

How the ‘slayer rule’ might play a role in determining who will inherit wealth from Rob Reiner and his wife

Michele Singer Reiner and Rob Reiner pose with their children, Jake, Romy and Nick, far right, at a 2014 gala. Michael Loccisano/Getty Images

The fatal stabbings of filmmaker and actor Rob Reiner and his wife, the photographer and producer Michele Singer Reiner, have sparked widespread grieving. This tragedy, discovered on Dec. 14, 2025, is also increasing the public’s interest in what happens when killers could inherit wealth from their victims. That’s because Nick Reiner, their son, was charged with two counts of first-degree murder four days after the couple’s deaths at their Los Angeles home.

What’s the ‘slayer rule’?

All states have some form of a slayer rule that prevents killers from inheriting from their victims. While the rules differ slightly from state to state, they always bar murderers from profiting from their own crimes.

Simply put, if you’re found guilty of killing someone or plead guilty to their murder, you can’t inherit anything from your victim’s estate.

In some states, this might go beyond inheritance and apply to jointly held property, insurance policies and other kinds of accounts.

Most of these slayer rules, including California’s, apply only to “felonious and intentional” killings, meaning that they don’t apply if you accidentally kill someone. Although there doesn’t have to be a guilty verdict by a judge or a jury, or a guilty plea from the accused, there must be some finding by a criminal or civil court of an intentional and felonious killing.

These rules, known as slayer rules, have a long history in the United States. They became more prominent following an 1889 murder case in New York state, in which a 16-year-old boy poisoned his grandfather to get an inheritance that was written into his grandfather’s will.

How often are slayer rules invoked?

It’s hard to say for sure. As far as we know, nobody’s tried to keep track.

Slayer rules come into play whenever someone who would otherwise inherit assets from an estate is convicted of or found liable for murder, and the slayer is entitled to inherit from the victim.

These tragic cases almost always involve murders committed by relatives. Many of the high-profile ones have been tied to murders that occurred in California.

Famous disinherited murderers include Lyle and Erik Menendez, the Californians known as the Menendez brothers. In 1996, a jury found them guilty of the first-degree murder of their parents, José and Mary Louise “Kitty” Menendez. The Menendez brothers’ parents, who were killed in 1989, had a fortune that today would be worth more than $35 million.

The brothers, who became eligible for parole but were denied it in 2025, have been in prison ever since.

Once there has been a finding of an intentional and felonious killing, even if the slayer is later released on parole – or even if they serve no prison time at all – they would still not inherit anything.

In practical terms, that means if one or both of the Menendez brothers were to win parole in the future, they would still be ineligible to inherit any of their parents’ wealth upon their release from prison.

California’s slayer rule also meant that salesman Scott Peterson, who was convicted of killing his pregnant wife, Laci Peterson, in 2002, couldn’t collect the money he would otherwise have been due from her life insurance policy.

Peterson has been in prison since 2005.

Two young men, wearing prison garb, sit in a courtroom.
Erik Menendez, left, and Lyle Menendez, seen standing trial for their parents’ murders, in 1994. They were convicted in 1996.
Ted Soqui/Sygma via Getty Images

What can block its application?

In the absence of a murder conviction, the slayer rule may not apply. For example, a conviction for a lesser criminal offense, such as manslaughter, might allow the accused – or their lawyers – to argue that the killing was unintentional.

This exception could be relevant to the prosecution of the Reiners’ murders if it were to turn out that Nick Reiner’s defense can show that substance abuse or schizophrenia rendered him insane when he allegedly killed his parents at their Los Angeles home.

On the other hand, under California law, even if there is no conviction the probate court administering the murder victim’s estate could still separately find that the killing was intentional and felonious. That civil finding would bar the slayer from inheriting without a criminal conviction.

Rob Reiner holds a microphone next to a young man with a banner for the movie 'Being Charlie' visible in the background.
Rob Reiner and his son Nick, seen in 2016 speaking about ‘Being Charlie,’ the movie about a young man’s struggle with substance use that they made together.
Laura Cavanaugh/FilmMagic via Getty Images

Does this only apply to families with big fortunes?

Slayer rules apply to anyone who kills one or more of their relatives, whether their victims were rich, poor or in between.

When large amounts of money are at stake, cases tend to garner more attention due to media coverage during the criminal trial and subsequent inheritance litigation.

Who will inherit Rob Reiner’s and Michele Singer Reiner’s wealth?

It’s too soon for both the public and the family to know who will inherit ultimately from the Reiners.

Wills are typically public documents, although the Reiners may have also engaged in other types of estate planning, such as trusts, that do not typically become public records. And celebrities with valuable intellectual property rights, such as copyrights from the Reiners’ many film and television properties, tend to establish trusts.

Assuming that, like many parents, the Reiners left most of their fortune – which reportedly was worth some US$200 million – to their children, including Nick, then California’s slayer statute may come into play. The couple had two other children together, Romy and Jake.

Rob Reiner also had another daughter, Tracy Reiner, whom he adopted after his marriage to his first wife, the actor and filmmaker Penny Marshall.

It’s also likely that the Reiners included charitable bequests in their estate plans. They were strong supporters of many causes, including early childhood development.

Might the slayer rule apply to Nick Reiner?

It’s much too soon to know.

It is important to emphasize that the wills and other estate planning documents of Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner have not yet been made public. That means what Nick Reiner might stand to inherit, if the slayer rule were to prove irrelevant in this case, is unknown.

Nor, with the investigation of the couple’s deaths still underway, can anyone make any assumptions about Nick’s innocence or guilt.

And, as of mid-December 2025, an unnamed source was telling entertainment reporters that Nick Reiner’s legal bills were being paid for by the Reiner family.

The Conversation

The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

​Politics + Society – The Conversation

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Entertainment

Chris Rea Cause of Death: ‘Driving Home For Christmas’ Singer Was 74

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We have sad news to report from the world of music today.

Chris Rea — the rock singer best known for his 1986 his “Driving Home For Christmas” — has passed away.

He was 74 years old.

British singer Chris Rea peforms during a concert in theater Carre on November 24, 2014 in Amsterdam.
British singer Chris Rea peforms during a concert in theater Carre on November 24, 2014 in Amsterdam. (PAUL BERGEN/AFP via Getty Images)

News of Rea’s passing comes courtesy of a statement from his wife and two children.

“It is with immense sadness that we announce the death of beloved Chris,” the family wrote, according to ABC News.

“He passed away peacefully in hospital earlier today following a short illness, surrounded by his family.”

No official cause of death has been revealed, but Rea dealt with numerous health issues in recent years

He had suffered from health problems, including pancreatic cancer, and he suffered a stroke in 2016.

Music legend passes at poignant time of year

Musician Chris Rea attends the  Music Industry Trust Awards 2005 on November 7, 2005 in London, England. Michael Parkinson is the 2005 recipient of the Music Industry Trust Dinner Award, and is honoured at this evening's gala dinner.
Musician Chris Rea attends the Music Industry Trust Awards 2005 on November 7, 2005 in London, England. Michael Parkinson is the 2005 recipient of the Music Industry Trust Dinner Award, and is honoured at this evening’s gala dinner. (Photo by Jo Hale/Getty Images)

Though he scored numerous hits over the course of his lengthy career, Rea remains best remembered for “Driving Home For Christmas,” a festive favorite in his native UK for nearly 40 years.

Though not an immediate hit, song eventually became a holiday mainstay on British radio.

“Driving Home For Christmas” has been featured on numerous film and television soundtracks, and it’s currently featured on a TV ad for the UK retailer Marks and Spencer.

Rea also hit the British charts with several other singles, including “Fool (If You Think It’s Over)” and “Let’s Dance.”

In 2012, it ranked as the twelfth most popular Christmas song in a nationwide poll.

UK singer Chris Rea performs at the National Stadium February 17, 2003 in Dublin, Ireland.
UK singer Chris Rea performs at the National Stadium February 17, 2003 in Dublin, Ireland. (Photo by Getty Images)

Born in 1951 in Middlesbrough, in northeast England, to an Italian father and Irish mother, Rea didn’t begin playing guitar until he was in his twenties, but he took to it instantly.

He played in several locally popular bands before striking out and finding success as a solo singer-songwriter.

In recent years, he shifted away from pop and rock into a more bluesy sound, and his latter albums received some of the best reviews of his career.

Our thoughts go out to Chris Rea’s loved ones during this incredibly difficult time.

Chris Rea Cause of Death: ‘Driving Home For Christmas’ Singer Was 74 was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Entertainment

Kody Brown: Blame My Kids! It’s Their Fault We Don’t Talk!

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Welp. That was awkward.

On the latest episode of Sister Wives, Kody Brown somehow thought it was a good idea to revisit the past and apologize to ex-spouse Christine… while sitting with both her and her husband, David Woolley.

At one point, Kody told the couple that he’s sorry he ever acted like a victim and sorry he ever claimed he didn’t love her.

Again, Woolley were there at the time. It was very strange.

(TLC)

Amid the awkward conversation, David asked at one point if he could perhaps offer the father of 18 some words of wisdom.

“Can I give you a little bit of advice? Just a little bit? Start with your kids,” Woolley, who has eight children of his own, suggested. “Show that part. Because the women have moved on.”

David went on to tells Kody “your kids still need to heal and that’s the part that you need [to work on],” adding that despite “butting heads” with his own sons and daughters as part of his own healing journey with them, they came through it stronger on the other side.

Just a few weeks ago, Kody admitted he’s been an absentee father.

The guy barely has any relationship with his adult kids… but he took extreme exception Sunday night to Woolley bringing them up in the context of his mea culpa.

Kody Brown appears to be pondering life in this photo. (TLC)

“I’ve set a boundary with my kids and I’m setting that boundary with David and Christine,” he vented via confessional. “My whole purpose here is to apologize to Christine. Not to David. Not to anybody else.”

The reality star continued as follows:

“I don’t care what you think. I’m here to apologize and I don’t even want to be reminded of that because it will bring me back to an angry place.”

During the actual back-and-forth, Kody handled things in a far more gentle fashion.

When it comes to repairing things with his children, the polarizing former polygamist told Woolley: “There’s an effort I’m already making and reaching out.”

Kody Brown makes another absurd facial expression.
Making a normal facial expression, Kody Brown reminds ‘Sister Wives’ viewers that his apparent lack of impulse control can be entertaining and unnerving at the same time. (Image Credit: TLC)

Kody also made a point to defend himself and blame his kids for their estrangement from him, as he has in the past.

“Those deteriorations happened as a party, not as an individual,” Kody told David. “My bad experience with my children and their pain comes from an experience that we were in together, not that they or I did something wrong and offensive.”

The narcissist emphasized that he remains open to reconciliation — or at least communication of some kind.

“I’m willing to have the conversation. I’m willing to hold space. ‘Dad, you did this, you did this, you did this.’ I’m willing to hold that space,” he said.

For her part, Christine very much wants the six children she and Kody share to know they can rely on both their parents.

“They need to know that it’s completely fine to hang out with him,” Christine explained the camera, hoping to encourage their children to work toward genuine reconciliation and growth in their relationships with their father.

“They need to go have fun with their dad and not just sit and have a meal and have a conversation.”

Kody Brown: Blame My Kids! It’s Their Fault We Don’t Talk! was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Entertainment

Barry Manilow Reveals Diagnosis, Reschedules Upcoming Shows

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Barry Manilow is opening up about his diagnosis.

After a recent bout of illness, the music legend underwent further testing.

Doctors discovered that he has cancer.

There is both good news and bad news, Manilow told his fans and followers.

Barry Manilow in September 2023.
Barry Manilow performs during the first of his three “Record-Breaking Charity Weekend Celebration” shows on September 21, 2023. (Photo Credit: Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

Music legend Barry Manilow is sharing his cancer diagnosis

On Monday, December 22, legendary musician Barry Manilow marked the second day of winter by sharing some rough news on Instagram.

“We just finished five great Christmas concerts at the McCallum Theatre in Palm Desert,” he began.

The 82-year-old acknowledged: “This marks the seventh time we have done these charity concerts and raised millions for nonprofit organizations throughout the Coachella Valley.”

Manilow then wrote: “As many of you know I recently went through six weeks of bronchitis followed by a relapse of another five weeks.”

He continued: “Even though I was over the bronchitis and back on stage at the Westgate Las Vegas, my wonderful doctor ordered an MRI to make sure that everything was OK.”

Part 1 of 2 of Barry Manilow's text post to Instagram.
On Instagram, Barry Manilow revealed his cancer diagnosis on December 22, 2025. (Image Credit: Instagram)

“The MRI discovered a cancerous spot on my left lung that needs to be removed,” Manilow revealed.

“It’s pure luck (and a great doctor) that it was found so early,” he acknowledged.

Manilow then affirmed: “That’s the good news.” Unfortunately, that is not the end of it.

“The bad news is that now that the Christmas A Gift Of Love concerts are over,” he continued, “I’m going into surgery to have the spot removed.”

Manilow shared further good news: “The doctors do not believe it was spread and I’m taking tests to confirm their diagnosis.”

He is hoping for an easy recovery

“So, that’s it,” Barry Manilow announced. “No chemo. No radiation. Just chicken soup and I Love Lucy reruns.”

He was a kid when I Love Lucy first premiered. Many people find that their “comfort shows” stem from childhood.

“The only follow-up is a month to recover,” Manilow revealed.

“And,” he explained, “that means we have to reschedule the January arena concerts.”

His post includes a lot of information on the rescheduling.

Part 2 of 2 of Barry Manilow's text post to Instagram.
Revealing the bad news, Barry Manilow struck an apologetic tone with followers. (Image Credit: Instagram)

“I’m very sorry that you have to change your plans,” Manilow expressed.

“Just like you,” he assured, “we were all looking forward to the January shows.”

Manilow continued: “And hate having to move everything around.”

These rescheduled dates include stops in places like Orlando, Tampa, and even Columbus.

Those who are already ticket-holders will be able to repurpose those January tickets for the new dates.

Barry Manilow in April 2022.
Barry Manilow attends the Clive Davis Gallery Ribbon Cutting at New York University on April 05, 2022. (Photo Credit: Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images)

Catching cancer in stage 1 is a best-case scenario

Cancer is never good news.

But catching cancer in stage one and having the financial means to undergo life-saving surgery before it spreads or causes any detectable pain or symptoms?

That is about as good as cancer news can get.

Barrow Manilow is a living treasure and a cultural icon.

We wish him an uneventful surgery and an easy recovery.

Barry Manilow Reveals Diagnosis, Reschedules Upcoming Shows was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Entertainment

Helen Siff Cause of Death: ‘Modern Family,’ ‘Will & Grace’ …

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We have tragic news to report from the world of television today.

Helen Siff — the character actress best known for her work on beloved sitcoms like Modern Family and Will & Grace — has passed away.

She was 88 years old.

Actress Helen Siff has died at the age of 88.
Actress Helen Siff has died at the age of 88. (YouTube)

News of Siff’s death comes courtesy of a statement from her family, who confirmed that she passed away on Thursday after a “long, painful illness.”

“Those who worked with Helen knew her not just as a talented performer, but as someone who brought professionalism, dedication and genuine kindness to every set,” the family said in their statement (per People).

“She understood that every role, no matter how large or small, was an opportunity to contribute something meaningful to the story being told.”

Born in Woodmere, NY in 1937, Siff accumulated more than 70 roles across TV and film during her decades-long career.

Her first jobs included appearing as a waitress in Lou Grant in 1981 and as a cashier in 1984’s The Karate Kid.

She also appeared in multiple episodes of Married… with Children, as well as single episodes of Will & Grace, Ellen, Scrubs, Modern Family, Curb Your Enthusiasm, and Spin City.

A character actress beloved by casting directors for her professionalism and comic timing, Helen also appeared in a wide array of films, including Don’t Mess With the Zohan, with Adam Sandler, and Hail, Caesar!, where she appeared alongside George Clooney.

Though she may not have been a household name, Siff was known to film and television fans all over the world.

As her family noted in their statement, she possessed “the rare gift of making even the smallest part memorable.”

Our thoughts go out to Helen Siff’s loved ones as they mourn this one-of-a-kind talent.

Helen Siff Cause of Death: ‘Modern Family,’ ‘Will & Grace’ … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Entertainment

Vince Zampella Cause of Death: ‘Call of Duty’ Creator Was 55

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We have tragic news to report from the world of gaming today.

Vincent Zampella — the tech executive who was best known as one of the architects behind the Call of Duty franchise — has passed away.

He was just 55 years old.

Vince Zampella, CEO of Respawn Entertainment, introduces the video game "Titanfall 2" during Electronics Arts news conference on June 12, 2016 in Los Angeles, California.
Vince Zampella, CEO of Respawn Entertainment, introduces the video game “Titanfall 2” during Electronics Arts news conference on June 12, 2016 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images)

News of Zampella’s death comes courtesy of Los Angeles NBC affiliate NBC4.

According to early reports, Zampella was killed in a single-car accident on Southern California’s Angeles Crest Highway.

The head of Respawn Entertainment and the former CEO of Infinity Ward was driving his Ferrari when he suddenly lost control and struck a concrete barrier.

According to the California Highway Patrol, one passenger was ejected and later died at an area hospital.

CEO, Respawn Entertainment Vince Zampella speaks at the 7th Annual Produced By Conference at Paramount Studios on May 31, 2015 in Hollywood, California.
CEO, Respawn Entertainment Vince Zampella speaks at the 7th Annual Produced By Conference at Paramount Studios on May 31, 2015 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images)

The driver died at the scene after being trapped inside the vehicle, which was engulfed in flames.

“For unknown reasons, the vehicle veered off the roadway, struck a concrete barrier, and became fully engulfed,” said the California Highway Patrol in a statement issued Monday (via Deadline).

“The passenger was ejected from the vehicle and the driver remained trapped. Both parties succumbed to their injuries. It is currently unknown whether alcohol and/or drugs were a factor in this crash.”

Zampella co-founded Respawn Entertainment in 2010. The studio was acquired by EA in 2017.

Respawn is best known for the video games Titanfall, Titanfall 2, Apex Legends, and STAR WARS Jedi: Fallen Order.

Vince Zampella and Brie Larson attend the BATTLEFIELD 6 reveal celebration hosted by Electronic Arts and Battlefield Studios at Sunset Room Hollywood on July 31, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
Vince Zampella and Brie Larson attend the BATTLEFIELD 6 reveal celebration hosted by Electronic Arts and Battlefield Studios at Sunset Room Hollywood on July 31, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for EA Entertainment)

Zampella was widely regarded as one of the gaming industry’s greatest success stories.

Across social media today, fans from around the globe are paying tribute to his beloved body of work.

“Vince Zampella had one of the most legendary runs in video games. Anything he touched turned into gold. His loss will be felt deeply in this industry,” wrote one X user on Monday.

“Nah, man. Not Vince Zampella. We lost a fucking LEGEND. Shocked ain’t even the word,” another added.

“In absolute shock right now. Rest in peace to an absolute legend and giant of our industry,” a third stated.

Zampella is survived by three children. Our thoughts go out to his loved ones as they attempt to process this devastating loss.

Vince Zampella Cause of Death: ‘Call of Duty’ Creator Was 55 was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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CBS pulls ‘60 Minutes’ segment on notorious El Salvador prison

CBS News abruptly pulled a “60 Minutes” investigation featuring Venezuelan men deported to El Salvador’s CECOT prison on Sunday, sparking swift backlash within the newsroom, including from the story’s veteran correspondent.

The canceled segment, yanked at the behest of newly appointed editor in chief Bari Weiss, focused on the notorious El Salvador prison that President Donald Trump has deported immigrants to despite reports of human rights violations within the prison. Several men now released from the prison were featured in the segment describing the conditions they endured within CECOT.

But Weiss nixed the segment just hours before it was set to air after calling for multiple additions, according to The New York Times, including an interview with top Trump adviser Stephen Miller or another top official in the Trump administration.

CBS said in a statement that the segment will air at a later date, and Weiss defended the decision to hold the segment in a statement to POLITICO.

“My job is to make sure that all stories we publish are the best they can be,” Weiss said. “Holding stories that aren’t ready for whatever reason — that they lack sufficient context, say, or that they are missing critical voices — happens every day in every newsroom. I look forward to airing this important piece when it’s ready.”

But Sharyn Alfonsi, the veteran correspondent on the story, condemned Weiss’ decision.

In an email obtained by The New York Times and later shared on social media by Times reporter Michael M. Grynbaum, Alfonsi told her CBS colleagues that reporters on the segment had requested comment from the White House, the Department of Homeland Security and the State Department. She added that the segment had also already undergone a rigorous review and fact-checking process.

To pull the story so close to airtime, Alfonsi said, is “not an editorial decision, it is a political one.”

“Government silence is a statement, not a VETO,” Alfonsi wrote. “Their refusal to be interviewed is a tactical maneuver designed to kill the story.”

She continued, “If the administration’s refusal to participate becomes a valid reason to spike a story, we have effectively handed them a ‘kill switch’ for any reporting they find convenient.”

Alfonsi added that if CBS’ new standard for airing a segment requires government interviews, then the government “effectively gains control over the ’60 Minutes’ broadcast.”

“We have been promoting this story on social media for days. Our viewers are expecting it,” Alfonsi wrote. “When it airs without a credible explanation, the public will correctly identify this as corporate censorship. We are trading 50 years of ‘Gold Standard’ reputation for a single week of political quiet.”

During an editorial call on Monday, Weiss spoke of “trust” between members of the newsroom and the public.

“The only newsroom I’m interested in running is one in which we are able to have contentious disagreements about the thorniest editorial matters with respect, and, crucially, where we assume the best intent of our colleagues. Anything else is absolutely unacceptable,” Weiss said on the call. Multiple news outlets reported on the call and CBS confirmed Weiss’ comments to staff to POLITICO.

She also reiterated that she held “Inside CECOT” because “it was not ready.”

“While the story presented powerful testimony of torture at CECOT, it did not advance the ball — the Times and other outlets have previously done similar work,” said Weiss. “The public knows that Venezuelans have been subjected to horrific treatment at this prison. To run a story on this subject two months later, we need to do more. And this is ’60 Minutes.’ We need to be able to get the principals on the record and on camera.”

The viewers, Weiss added “come first.”

“That’s my north star and I hope it’s yours, too,” she said.

The cancellation of “Inside CECOT” is the latest in a string of controversial moves made by the media giant this year.

In July, CBS announced a $16 million settlement with Trump, who sued the company as a private citizen following his own appearance on “60 Minutes.” It was after that settlement that the Trump administration approved Paramount Skydance’s acquisition of CBS.

Weiss, founder of The Free Press, was appointed as editor in chief by Paramount owner David Ellison in October to overhaul the newsroom.

Trump has continued to express his displeasure with CBS, but that hasn’t stopped Ellison from courting the administration’s favor as he seeks to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery.

​Politics

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Politics

Trump critic George Conway files to run for NY House seat

George Conway, a conservative lawyer and vocal critic of President Donald Trump, filed paperwork on Monday to run as a Democrat for the seat Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-N.Y.) is vacating.

News of Conway entering the race began surfacing last month, especially after Conway confirmed he had hired a Democratic pollster to weigh his chances.

Conway was previously married to Kellyanne Conway, who helped manage Trump’s 2016 presidential bid and then served in the White House during Trump’s first term.

Though George Conway was also offered a position with the administration during Trump’s first term, he declined. The relationship between the president and Conway turned contentious, with Conway often criticizing Trump and the president in turn commenting on the Conways’ marriage.

The feud ultimately culminated in Trump calling Conway a “stone cold LOSER & husband from hell” and Conway calling Trump a “fascist.” Conway went on to pen an essay that called Trump “unfit for office.”

The lawyer eventually co-founded The Lincoln Project, a PAC of former Republicans with a self-described purpose of defeating Trump, and has continued to criticize the president.

Shortly after Conway filed to run, Councilmember Erik Bottcher announced he is ending his campaign for House of Representatives, choosing instead to run for New York State Senate.

But Conway will still join an increasingly crowded primary race for Nadler’s seat. At least nine hopefuls — including Jack Schlossberg, the only grandson of John F. Kennedy — have filed to run for the position since Nadler announced in September he would not seek reelection.

March for Our Lives organizer Cameron Kasky, Assemblymen Alex Bores and Micah Lasher have also filed to run for the Manhattan-based seat.

​Politics