Tag Archives: hat

‘Okay, it’s done!’ Stranger floors parents, crochets their baby a hat mid-flight. – The Washington Post

  1. ‘Okay, it’s done!’ Stranger floors parents, crochets their baby a hat mid-flight. The Washington Post
  2. VIRAL VIDEO: Villanova woman surprises New Jersey family, crochets hat mid-flight for 5-month-old baby sitting next to her WPVI-TV
  3. Philadelphia woman Meegan Rubin crochets hat mid-flight for 5-month-old NJ baby sitting next to her on child’s 1st flight KABC-TV
  4. Stranger secretly crochets hat for NJ baby on her first flight Eyewitness News ABC7NY
  5. Kind Passenger Secretly Knits Beanie for Baby Sitting Next to Her — and It Was Captured in the Sweetest Video Travel + Leisure

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Khloé Kardashian Posts Adorable New Photo of Son Tatum, 1, in Matching Green Hat and Vest: ‘My Baby’ – Yahoo Entertainment

  1. Khloé Kardashian Posts Adorable New Photo of Son Tatum, 1, in Matching Green Hat and Vest: ‘My Baby’ Yahoo Entertainment
  2. Rob’s Twin! Khloe Kardashian Shares Adorable Photo of Son Tatum HollywoodLife
  3. Khloe Kardashian drops new adorable pic of her baby boy Tatum days after The Kardashians 4 trailer release PINKVILLA
  4. Khloé Kardashian shares adorable photo of son Tatum: ‘My baby Geo News
  5. Khloé Kardashian’s Adorable New Photo of Son Tatum Has Us Wanting to Munch on His Squishy Cheeks Yahoo Life
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Walt Bettinger pulls $500 million rabbit from hat based on projected cuts to Schwab ‘headcount’ and ‘real estate savings’ — assuring analysts it wasn’t previously ‘baked in’ – RIABiz

  1. Walt Bettinger pulls $500 million rabbit from hat based on projected cuts to Schwab ‘headcount’ and ‘real estate savings’ — assuring analysts it wasn’t previously ‘baked in’ RIABiz
  2. Investors bet the worst is over for Charles Schwab Yahoo Finance
  3. Charles Schwab CEO: Our clients are showing some optimism CNBC Television
  4. Biggest stock movers today: Charles Schwab, Transocean, Sunrun, Masimo and more (NYSE:FBK) Seeking Alpha
  5. Morgan Stanley, Charles Schwab, Bank of America, And Other Big Stocks Moving Higher On Tuesday – Amarin C Benzinga
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Harrison Ford says he still has the scars to prove he stapled his ‘Indiana Jones’ hat to his head: ‘You do what you need to do’ – Yahoo Entertainment

  1. Harrison Ford says he still has the scars to prove he stapled his ‘Indiana Jones’ hat to his head: ‘You do what you need to do’ Yahoo Entertainment
  2. Harrison Ford On His Initial Reaction To Indiana Jones’ Costume For ‘Raiders Of The Lost Ark’ Deadline
  3. Harrison Ford First Saw Indiana Jones’ Costume and Was Baffled: ‘What Am I Going to Do With a F—ing Whip? I’m Going to Whip People?’ Yahoo Entertainment
  4. Harrison Ford Details the ‘Indiana Jones’ Franchise in NSFW Perfection Inside the Magic
  5. Harrison Ford Reveals He Initially Had “Many” Questions About His Indiana Jones Costume: “What Am I Going To Do With A F**king Whip?” Decider
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Adam Hadwin gifted safety vest, hard hat for US Open after being tackled at Canadian Open – USA TODAY

  1. Adam Hadwin gifted safety vest, hard hat for US Open after being tackled at Canadian Open USA TODAY
  2. USGA welcomes Adam Hadwin to US Open with hilarious gift after viral security takedown at RBC Canadian Open Fox News
  3. Nick Taylor credits wife’s pep talk for historic Canadian Open win CBC News
  4. Adam Hadwin Sent Protective Gear By U.S. Open After Being Tackled At Canadian Open OutKick
  5. The Canadian Open’s crazy finish, Phil Mickelson’s big land grab, and a seemingly unbreakable Tiger Woods record goes down (sort of) GolfDigest.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Appeals Court Rules Washington MAGA Hat Teacher Protected under First Amendment

Eric Dodge, a science teacher at Wy’east Middle School outside of Portland, Or., won a lawsuit against the Evergreen School District for violating his First Amendment rights after he wore a MAGA hat to a staff training day featuring racial bias training.

In a legal filing published just before New Year’s Eve, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit defended Dodge’s right to wear the hat despite attempts by school administrators to admonish him. According to court documents, a professor leading the cultural sensitivity programming session complained to school principal Caroline Garret that “she felt intimidated and traumatized” at the sight of Dodge’s MAGA hat.

Other teachers also complained with one reportedly crying and another feeling threatened at the sight of the hat. The uproar causes the principal to chide Dodge to use “better judgment” in the future. However, Dodge continued to wear the hat at the following day’s session prompting the principal to call the school’s HR officer, Janae Gomes.

At the end of the staff training day, Dodge approached Garret asking for opportunities to teach classes other than science. Dodge alleges that the principal said “What is the fucking deal with your hat?” adding Dodge was a “homophobe and a racist and a bigot and hateful.” Garret denies the depiction of the conversation.

The experience led Dodge to file a lawsuit against Garret, Gomes, and the Evergreen School District. The Appeals Court only ruled in favor of Dodge’s claim against Principal Gomes.

“That some may not like the political message being conveyed is par for the course and cannot itself be a basis for finding disruption of a kind that outweighs the speaker’s First Amendment rights. Therefore, Principal Garrett’s asserted administrative interest in preventing disruption among staff did not outweigh plaintiff’s right to free speech,” the court ruling notes.

The court documents also quote Wy’east’s principal Caroline Garret, at length, explaining her decision to censor Dodge.

“Mr. Dodge’s decision to wear his MAGA hat on school grounds within weeks of the Trump Administration’s loud and publicized initiative to deport as many immigrants as possible was an affront to Wy’east’s agenda of cultural inclusivity and interest in creating a safe place for ELL students. Ms. Garrett had a reasonable basis, given the anti-immigrant tenor radiating from the administration, to demonstrate inclusivity and tolerance to ELL students and their parents on the school campus,” Garret told the court.

Dodge reportedly resigned from his teaching post in 2020, according to Fox.

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Mbappé hat trick helps him edge out Messi for the Golden Boot

Lionel Messi celebrates Argentina’s title. (Martin Meissner/AP)

The crowd packed into Lusail Stadium was dominated by Argentina fans Sunday, plus plenty of otherwise neutral supporters who threw their weight behind La Albiceleste in hopes of seeing soccer great Lionel Messi finally hoist the World Cup trophy.

They were not disappointed.

Sunday’s match in Qatar ended in glory for Messi, and played out as a fitting culmination of his extraordinary career.

Messi opened the scoring with a first-half penalty kick, making history as the first player to ever score in every stage of the tournament.

He scored again in the second period of extra time, buoying a shocked Argentina side that was still reeling from France’s lightning-fast comeback.

And when all the pressure was on the 35-year-old during a penalty shootout, the exhausted veteran coolly deposited the ball into the back of the net.

Not long after, Argentina’s talisman was celebrating with his teammates, and holding aloft a World Cup trophy that eluded him throughout a storied career.

The sublime finals performance moved Messi into the position of favorite for the Golden Ball award, which is given to the tournament’s best player.

It’s hard to imagine a better way to cap the World Cup career of a man many consider the greatest of all time.

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Elon Musk says Trump should ‘hang up his hat and sail into the sunset,’ too old to run for president again

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Days after former president Donald Trump claimed Elon Musk lied about voting for him, the billionaire Tesla chief executive said Monday that Trump should “hang up his hat and sail into the sunset,” adding that he was too old for another potential run at the presidency in 2024.

Speaking at an Alaska event on Saturday, Trump referred to a tweet in which Musk, who is attempting to terminate his $44 billion deal to buy Twitter, wrote that he had recently voted for a Republican for the first time last month.

“He said the other day, ‘Oh, I’ve never voted for a Republican.’ I said, ‘I didn’t know that,’ ” Trump said at the Anchorage rally for Alaska Republicans Sarah Palin and Gov. Mike Dunleavy. “He told me he voted for me, so he’s another bullshit artist.”

Musk responded to a video of Trump’s remarks in a series of tweets Monday night.

“I don’t hate the man, but it’s time for Trump to hang up his hat and sail into the sunset,” Musk tweeted.

Musk also called on Democrats to “call off the attack” and not focus on whether Trump decides to again run for the White House.

“Don’t make it so that Trump’s only way to survive is to regain the Presidency,” said Musk, who previously noted he is leaning toward supporting Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in 2024 if the Republican were to run for president.

While again offering his support of DeSantis, the billionaire stressed that Trump would be too old to be president.

“Trump would be 82 at end of term, which is too old to be chief executive of anything, let alone the United States of America,” Musk wrote.

A Trump spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment early Tuesday.

Musk’s tweets against Trump come as Twitter is setting the stage for a legal battle with the billionaire to enforce a takeover it wasn’t even sure it wanted. As the company’s stock fell another 11.3 percent after Musk announced Friday he was backing out of the deal to purchase Twitter, the board for the social media giant is expected to file a lawsuit in Delaware Court of Chancery as soon as this week to keep the Tesla chief executive on the hook.

Musk’s lawyers are arguing that he has a right to drop out of the $44 billion agreement because Twitter hasn’t given him enough information about the company’s business.

Twitter shares plunge as it braces for messy legal battle with Elon Musk

The back-and-forth between Musk and Twitter is unfolding as Trump continues to rail against the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection plans. The seventh public hearing on Tuesday is expected to focus on the ways in which Trump and his allies summoned far-right militant groups to Washington as he grew increasingly desperate to hold on to power. The committee is expected to argue that Trump used the date of the congressional counting of the votes, Jan. 6, 2021, to block a peaceful transfer of power.

Jan. 6 hearing expected to focus on link between militants, White House

Shortly after it was announced that Musk was acquiring Twitter, he said in May that he would reverse the company’s ban on Trump. Twitter had banned Trump’s account after the Capitol riot, citing the “risk of further incitement of violence.” Even though Trump has said he would not rejoin Twitter, Musk said the move was “a mistake.”

“I do think it was not correct to ban Donald Trump. I think that was a mistake,” Musk said at a May 10 event hosted by the Financial Times. “It alienated a large part of the country and did not ultimately result in Donald Trump not having a voice.”

On Saturday, Trump, who has continued to make false claims of election fraud, said a top priority for Republicans should be to “stop left-wing censorship and to restore free speech in America.” As he urged supporters to sign up for his social media company, Truth Social — “It’s hot as a pistol” — Trump turned his attention to Musk and Twitter.

“Who the hell knows what’s going to happen?” Trump said. “He’s got a pretty rotten contract. I looked at his contract, not a good contract.”

Trump then lashed out at Musk for allegedly telling the former president he had voted for him. Musk donated to Hillary Clinton’s campaign in 2016, according to Federal Election Commission data, and tweeted in May that he voted for Clinton in 2016 and President Biden in 2020. Musk also wrote that he voted for Republican Mayra Flores, who won a special election last month in South Texas’s heavily Hispanic, blue-leaning 34th Congressional District.

When a conservative media personality challenged Musk’s tweet saying Trump should “hang up his hat and sail into the sunset,” the billionaire said the former president carried with him “too much drama.”

“Do we really want a bull in a china shop situation every single day!?” Musk wrote. “Also, I think the legal maximum age for start of Presidential term should be 69.”

There is no upper age limit for candidates seeking the presidency. If Trump were to run and be the GOP nominee, he would be 78 on Election Day. Biden would be about two weeks shy of his 82nd birthday on Election Day in November 2024.

Musk went on to claim that if DeSantis were to run against Biden, “then DeSantis will easily win — he doesn’t even need to campaign.”

Rachel Lerman, Yiwen Lu, Jacqueline Alemany and Hannah Allam contributed to this report.



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SpaceX pulls off hat trick, launching 3rd rocket in 36 hours

SpaceX just completed a remarkable spaceflight tripleheader.

A two-stage Falcon 9 rocket launched from Florida’s Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on Sunday (June 19) at 12:27 a.m. EDT (0427 GMT), carrying a communications satellite for the Louisiana-based company Globalstar to orbit.

Ten minutes after liftoff, the rocket’s first stage came back to Earth for a vertical landing on the SpaceX droneship Just Read The Instructions, which was stationed in the Atlantic Ocean off the Florida coast. If all goes according to plan, the satellite will be deployed into orbit about 1 hour and 50 minutes after launch.

Related: The 20 most memorable SpaceX missions

The first stage of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket comes down for a landing at sea on June 19, 2022, after launching a communications satellite for the company Globalstar. It was the ninth landing for this booster. (Image credit: SpaceX)

It was the third mission for SpaceX in just over 36 hours. The company launched 53 of its Starlink internet satellites on Friday (June 17) from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida and lofted a radar satellite for the German military from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California on Saturday (June 18).

The Friday mission set a new rocket-reuse record for SpaceX; the Falcon 9 that flew it featured a first stage that already had 12 launches under its belt. (Sunday’s launch was the ninth for this particular Falcon 9 first stage, according to a SpaceX mission description (opens in new tab).)

SpaceX has really ratcheted up its launch pace this year, even before the trifecta. Sunday morning’s liftoff was the the company’s 26th of 2022, and the year isn’t even half over yet. 

Mike Wall is the author of “Out There (opens in new tab)” (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate), a book about the search for alien life. Follow him on Twitter @michaeldwall (opens in new tab). Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom (opens in new tab) or on Facebook (opens in new tab).  



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Avalanche’s Nazem Kadri embraces ‘being the villain’ with Game 4 hat trick

ST. LOUIS — Nazem Kadri stared down middle fingers. He silenced the booing crowd. He celebrated. He shoved.

And, most problematically for his opponents, he scored. Quite a bit.

“I think he liked being the villain tonight,” teammate Erik Johnson said after the Avalanche’s 6-3 Game 4 win against the Blues on Monday. “He certainly stepped up for us.”

Kadri said after the game that the past two days have been upsetting. In Game 3 on Saturday, he and St. Louis defenseman Calle Rosen collided with Blues goalie Jordan Binnington, leaving the St. Louis netminder injured. In the injury’s aftermath, Kadri received threatening and Islamophobic messages, and the Avalanche released a statement Sunday saying they were working with local law enforcement to investigate. TSN’s Darren Dreger reported the police enhanced security procedures at both the team hotel and the arena.

“I know what was said isn’t a reflection on every single fan in St. Louis. I understand that and I want to make that clear,” Kadri said. “But for those that wasted their time sending messages like that, I feel sorry for them.”

He said the situation only gave him fuel. And he had exactly the impact the Blues didn’t want, registering a hat trick and getting under their skin throughout the game.

“I just want to say how proud we are of Naz to go through all that crap the last couple days,” said Johnson, who added a tally of his own Monday. “No person should have to go through that. He sure responded.”

After falling behind 1-0 in the first period of Game 4, Colorado came out with the buzz of a wasp’s nest in the second frame, perhaps with some subliminal help from the Blues organist, who played a rendition of Blink-182’s song “All The Small Things.” At Avalanche games in Denver, the jam serves as a third-period anthem when Colorado is holding on to a lead. And, as if by Pavlovian response, the Avalanche players solved goalie Ville Husso, who had held them scoreless in the first. Johnson scored the equalizer, and it took less than two minutes for the Avalanche to score again, marking the beginning of Kadri’s involvement on the scoresheet.

With 16 minutes left in the frame, Valeri Nichushkin found Kadri with a long pass, setting up a two-on-one rush. Kadri glanced at teammate Mikko Rantanen, who had joined him on the break, but opted to shoot himself, tucking the puck just under Husso’s glove.

The Avalanche center, who has been booed every time he’s touched the puck since Binnington’s injury, held his hand to his ear, and his message was clear: I can’t hear you now.

“I appreciate (the boos),” Kadri said. “I like when fans are engaged in the game and have something to cheer about. If you want to boo, by all means. That doesn’t bother me at all.”

Quite the opposite, it appears. He feeds off it. Devon Toews scored, and with the Avalanche up 3-1, Kadri aggravated Blues forward David Perron, bumping him after a whistle. St. Louis forward Pavel Buchnevich responded by shoving Kadri to the ice, and as Kadri started standing up, Perron threw him back to the ice, then dove on top of him.

The result: Perron and Buchnevich sat in the penalty box, and Colorado got a five-on-three power play.

“That’s just stupid penalties that we cashed in on, and it hurt them,” Kadri said. “If you lose your cool, we’ll make you pay.”

Added Johnson: “We’re just going to stay out of that stuff. We’re going to look the other way. It’s not about ego; it’s about winning.”

Sure enough, Colorado capitalized on the two-man advantage. Though the Avalanche didn’t technically score while Perron and Buchnevich were in the box, they generated a scoring chance right as the power play expired. Rookie Bowen Byram, who took on added responsibility with Samuel Girard hurt, passed to Kadri, and the veteran potted his second of the night. In fewer than five minutes, the explosive Colorado offense had scored four goals.

As Kadri turned to celebrate, Perron tried to elbow him up high, but he avoided the contact then stared right into the faces of two Blues fans flipping him off. He bathed in their jeers.

“I think (the middle fingers) came after the celly,” Kadri said. “But hey, I’ve got to rub it in.”

And he continued to do so with his play. The Blues came back, cutting the Avalanche lead to 4-3 with a pair of power-play goals and setting up higher stakes for Kadri’s third tally of the night.

With 10 minutes left in the game, Nichushkin nudged a puck away from Jordan Kyrou, and it bounced to Kadri, charging into the slot. He snatched the puck from the ice and flung a wrist shot at Husso’s net. The goalie couldn’t manage to stop it with his stick, and Kadri unleashed his third and final post-goal celebration of the night, dropping to a knee and punching the air.

“I wanted to come out tonight and really put a mark on this game, especially after what happened,” he said. “I was able to strike early in the second period and was able to get the mojo going, in terms of individually and as a team. So it felt amazing. Especially to do it on the road. It was pure.”

Kadri has four goals and two assists in the past two games, and all six of his points came after the St. Louis fans started booing every time he touched the puck. He chipped in a final point Monday, assisting Rantanen’s empty-netter to put the score at 6-3.

After the game, Bednar said the team moved past the threats toward Kadri and focused on winning. But the coach acknowledged the center himself might have a tougher time focusing than others, considering the threats and messages were directed at him.

“He proved tonight that he’s able to do that,” Bednar said. “He knows we’re all with him.”

Kadri showing up under bright lights shouldn’t have come as a surprise. He always has to raise the stakes with bets while golfing with friends, childhood buddy Jason McNeill said earlier this season, and his wife, Ashley, has seen how intense he gets playing pickup basketball with his dad and cousins. He even hates to lose in putt-putt, she says.

“Obviously a tremendous game from him,” Bednar said. “I’m really proud of the way he’s handled the last 48 hours, and to be able to come out and perform like that in the pressure situation is amazing.”

Kadri took motivation from more than just the threats and hateful messages. He didn’t like hearing when Craig Berube said, “Look at (Kadri’s) reputation” in response to a question about Kadri’s role in the Binnington collision. The Avalanche center, of course, served an eight-game suspension last postseason for a high hit on Blues defenseman Justin Faulk, and the league suspended him twice in the playoffs while he was with Toronto.

“(Berube) made some comments that I wasn’t a fan of,” said Kadri, who insists he was going for the loose puck in front of Binnington’s crease. “I guess he’s never heard of bulletin-board material.”

He used it to his advantage Monday, and now the Avalanche have a chance to conquer the Blues and their second-round demons when they play Wednesday.

Game 3, with the Binnington collision and go-ahead goal, will likely go down in St. Louis — and perhaps Denver — as the Nazem Kadri Game.

Well, sequels don’t always live up to originals. But in front of a building filled with boos Monday, Kadri made sure that wasn’t the case this time.

(Photo: Dilip Vishwanat / Getty Images)



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