'Don't disrespect me': Cardi B hurls pen at prodding man, drawing the line at pregnancy talkNew Foto - 'Don't disrespect me': Cardi B hurls pen at prodding man, drawing the line at pregnancy talk

Cardi B will only address pregnancy rumors on her own time. She made that abundantly clear with a pen and scathing words — both directed to one brash and curious man. The Grammy-winning rapper was seen on camera hurling a pen at the man in the press pool as she left an Alhambra courthouse during the lunch break of her civil assault trial. According to footage shared byABC7andTMZ, the man speaks up from the press pool asking Cardi B about her relationships with ex-husband Offset andboyfriend Stefon Diggs. "Insiders are claiming that Offset is publicly bragging about getting you pregnant for the fourth time," he says. "Do you foresee any paternity issues with Stefon Diggs?" Read more:Cardi B wins civil assault trial brought by security guard, says she'll deny charges 'on my deathbed' As he poses the question, Cardi walks over to another individual holding a pen and waiting for her autograph. She takes the pen from his hand and throws it in the direction of the inquirer. "Stop disrespecting me," she fires back, before her team surrounds her. "Don't disrespect me," she adds. Cardi B shares three young children with Offset. They married in 2017 and went their separate ways in 2024. They were previously headed for divorce in 2020, but seemingly made amends. She wentofficialwith NFL star Diggs earlier this year. It's unclear how exactly the pregnancyrumorsbegan. After the heated exchange on Tuesday, the man tells Cardi B, "I still love you even though you just threw some stuff at me." She did not share the same feelings. Read more:Remember when Cardi B threw a mic at a fan? She's being sued for it "I don't care. You're disrespectful, don't do that. Do you see women asking those types of questions to me?" Cardi B said as she walked to her SUV. "Why do you feel, as a man, you get to ask me those types of questions? Act like you have some manners. And your mama taught you, respect women." She imparted a final message to the press from the vehicle: "You're not going to see me out today, and you can thank him. I'm not playing around. I was very nice. I was very kind." The 32-year-old "Bodak Yellow" and "WAP" hip-hop star prevailed Tuesday in a civil lawsuit brought against her by a Beverly Hills security guard after two days of testimony. Emani Ellis sued Cardi B for $24 million, accusing her of assault, battery and intentional infliction of emotional distress in the aftermath of a confrontation in a hallway outside of an obstetrician's office. Ellis claimed that the rapper scratched her with a long nail extension, leaving a facial scar. Read more:Cardi B denies touching security guard who is suing for assault but says she did curse at her Cardi B was found not liable on all counts by jurors after less than an hour of deliberations. "I swear to God, I will say it on my deathbed, I did not touch that woman," Cardi B said outside the courthouse following the conclusion of the trial. She added that she had missed her kids' first day of school because of the civil trial. "I want to thank my lawyers," she said. "I want to thank the jurors, I want to thank the judge, and I want to thank the respectful press." Times staff writer Richard Winton contributed to this report. Get notified when the biggest stories in Hollywood, culture and entertainment go live. Sign up for L.A. Times entertainment alerts. This story originally appeared inLos Angeles Times.

'Don't disrespect me': Cardi B hurls pen at prodding man, drawing the line at pregnancy talk

'Don't disrespect me': Cardi B hurls pen at prodding man, drawing the line at pregnancy talk Cardi B will only address pregnancy...
King Charles Shares Rare Health Update as He Meets with Cancer Patients amid His Own TreatmentNew Foto - King Charles Shares Rare Health Update as He Meets with Cancer Patients amid His Own Treatment

Chris Jackson/Getty King Charles spoke about his health at his latest royal outing to a hospital, where he met with cancer patients Buckingham Palace announced in February 2024 that the King was diagnosed with cancer The King's visit to Midland Metropolitan University Hospital was postponed from March when he had an adverse reaction to his treatment for cancer King Charlesoffered a rare update about his health at his latest royal engagement as histreatment for cancercontinues. On Sept. 3, the King, 76, spoke about how he was feeling with a cancer patient named Matthew Shinda at Midland Metropolitan University Hospital in Smethwick. The sovereign made the trip to officially open the new medical center and meet clinical staff, patients and volunteers there. According toHello!magazine, the King told Shinda, 73, "I'm not too bad," when asked about his recovery. Richard Pohle - WPA Pool/Getty TheBBCreported that Shinda, who is receiving treatment for prostate cancer, spoke with King Charles about the delays he navigated in receiving the diagnosis. "I'm very sorry about that, it's so frustrating," the King said, according to the outlet. "Half the problem is detecting it, isn't it, in time," King Charles said, according toHello!magazine. Later, he added, "The great thing, I think, is they're getting better and better at dealing with these things. The trouble is there's always hope down the road." The King doesn't often speak about his health, and that comment wasn't the only one he offered about his own well-being at Midland Metropolitan University Hospital on Wednesday. The monarch met Jacqueline Page, 85, in one of the hospital's acute elderly care wards, where she told him that she was "wearing out." Cracking a joke back, King Charles replied, "I know, this is the terrible thing, as I am discovering already. The bits don't work so well when you get past 70." King Charles will turn 77 in November, nearly two years after Buckingham Palace announced that he was diagnosed with cancer and began treatment. Richard Pohle - WPA Pool/Getty In February 2024, the palace shared that the King was diagnosed with cancer and began treatment. He had had a procedure to treat abenign enlarged prostatethat January, but a spokesmanclarifiedhe does not have prostate cancer. The King followed doctors' advice and postponed public-facing work for three months, but continued to undertake state business and paperwork behind the scenes.  He resumed forward work in April 2024 and palace sources said before Christmas that his treatment for cancer would continue into this year. On March 27, the palace announced that the King wasbriefly hospitalized following an adverse reactionto his routine treatment for cancer. His office said that he was admitted toThe London Clinic(where he had had the prostate operation in 2024) after experiencing "temporary side effects that required a short period of observation in hospital." Sources said that such setbacks are not uncommon and a royal source described the scare as "the most minor bump in the road that's very much heading in the right direction." RICHARD POHLE/POOL/AFP via Getty Can't get enough of PEOPLE's Royals coverage?Sign up for our free Royals newsletterto get the latest updates on Kate Middleton, Meghan Markle and more! The King cleared his calendar andreturned to work the following week, and he has kept up with a full schedule since. King Charles' visit to Midland Metropolitan University Hospital was an engagement that had been postponed following his brief hospitalization on March 27, and he offered his apologies during his visit on Wednesday. "I'm sorry I didn't get here a few months ago," the King told staff during his stop, according to the BBC. Read the original article onPeople

King Charles Shares Rare Health Update as He Meets with Cancer Patients amid His Own Treatment

King Charles Shares Rare Health Update as He Meets with Cancer Patients amid His Own Treatment Chris Jackson/Getty King Charles spoke about ...
Federal oversight of Seattle's police department ends after 13 yearsNew Foto - Federal oversight of Seattle's police department ends after 13 years

By Kanishka Singh WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A U.S. court on Wednesday returned control of Seattle's police department to the city, ending 13 years of court-ordered federal oversight of the department, the U.S. Justice Department said in a statement on Wednesday. The Justice Department made the latest recommendation in late July, saying the police department substantially complied with reforms to address civil rights violations and excessive use of force. "Today, the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington recognized the successful completion of the consent decree in 'United States v. City of Seattle', returning complete control of the Seattle Police Department (SPD) to the City," the Justice Department said. The consent decree that established the arrangement began in 2012. That followed a review that found Seattle police regularly violated residents' civil rights and that officers were too quick to use their batons and other weapons. The police department achieved "sustained substantial compliance," according to the Justice Department. The reforms included changes to the police department's practices on use of force, crisis intervention, stops, detentions, supervision, and accountability. The 2011 review found that in encounters that required force, police used excessive force 20% of the time. When officers used their batons, more than half the time it was unnecessary or excessive. Under former President Joe Biden, the Justice Department said in 2023 that the city took steps to address a prior pattern of police misconduct. Among the changes were the creation of a Community Police Commission charged with police oversight. The city also established a team to investigate all incidents involving "serious uses of force," according to the Justice Department. "The Consent Decree created internal systems of 'critical review' for our employees - they know what they are doing and are accountable," Seattle Police Department Chief Operations Officer Brian Maxey said on Wednesday. (Reporting by Kanishka Singh in WashingtonEditing by Rod Nickel)

Federal oversight of Seattle's police department ends after 13 years

Federal oversight of Seattle's police department ends after 13 years By Kanishka Singh WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A U.S. court on Wednesday ...
Pentagon Promises More Cartel Strikes After Deadly Boat RaidNew Foto - Pentagon Promises More Cartel Strikes After Deadly Boat Raid

The USS Sampson, a U.S. Navy missile destroyer, docks at the Amador International Cruise Terminal in Panama City, Panama, on September 02, 2025. Credit - Daniel Gonzalez—Anadolu via Getty Images Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth warned of further U.S. military actionagainst cartelsfollowing a strike that killed 11 people on a boat in the Caribbean that the Pentagon claimed was transporting drugs. "We've got assets in the air, assets in the water, assets on ships, because this is a deadly serious mission for us, and it won't, it won't stop with just this strike," Hegseth said on Fox News on Wednesday. "Anyone else trafficking in those waters who we know is a designated narco-terrorist will face the same fate," Hegseth added. Read more:4,000 Troops and 4,500,000 Militiamen: What to Know About the U.S.-Venezuela Standoff The strike appears to be the first in a long-threatened military campaign by the Trump Administration to stop cartels from trafficking drugs into the United States, despite questions over the legality of such an operation. When President Donald Trump was asked on Wednesday why the vessel was not intercepted and those on board arrested, he said there were "massive amounts of drugs coming into our country to kill a lot of people, and everybody fully understands that." "Obviously, they won't be doing it again. And I think a lot of other people won't be doing it again. When they watch that tape, they're going to say, 'Let's not do this,'" Trump added, referring to a video of the strike released shortly after. Here's what you need to know about the strike and what comes next. Trump first announced the strikeon Truth Socialon Tuesday, claiming without evidence that the 11 people killed were members of Tren de Aragua, a powerful Venezuela-based gang that his administration hasdesignatedas a foreign terrorist organization. He shared a video of what appears to be a speedboat being struck by something and exploding. It is unclear what kind of weapon was used. Trump said that he held Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro responsible for the gang's operations—something Maduro has denied—and has ordered a build-up of U.S. military forces in the waters off Venezuela, ostensibly to target traffickers. "Earlier this morning, on my Orders, U.S. Military Forces conducted a kinetic strike against positively identified Tren de Aragua Narcoterrorists in the SOUTHCOM area of responsibility. TDA is a designated Foreign Terrorist Organization, operating under the control of Nicolas Maduro, responsible for mass murder, drug trafficking, sex trafficking, and acts of violence and terror across the United States and Western Hemisphere," Trumpsaid in a poston Truth Social. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the strike took place in international waters in the "southern Caribbean" against "a drug vessel which had departed from Venezuela." Neither the U.S. military nor the White House provided any evidence to back up their claims that the boat was carrying drugs, or provide legal justification for killing civilian drug traffickers without trial. Ever since Trump raised the possibility of launching military strikes on drug cartels, legal experts have questioned whether there was a basis in law to do so. Brian Finucane, a senior adviser at the International Crisis Group who worked for a decade in the Office of the Legal Adviser at the State Department, said that the Trump Administration's attempt to use drug-related deaths as a justification for using military force against cartels was illegal under international law. "The tragic deaths of Americans from the opioid epidemic do not provide any legal basis for the use of force against Mexico in supposed self-defense," he wrote inJust Securityin February.  "In the absence of such an armed attack, any use of force by the United States on Mexican territory—even if directed at the personnel and facilities of drug trafficking organizations—would violate the UN Charter." Trump pitched the idea of striking cartels in Mexico during his first term to his then-Defense Secretary, Mark Esper, Esper later said, but the Secretary informed the President that it would be illegal. "We would have this private discussion where I'd say, 'Mr. President, you know, I understand the motive.' Because he was very serious about dealing with drugs in America," Espersaid. "I get that, we all understand, but I had to explain to him, 'We can't do that. It would violate international law. It would be terrible for our neighbors to the south. It would, you know, impact us in so many ways.'" Trump campaigned on a promise to use military action against cartels to stop the flow of drugs into the United States, repeating a favored tactic of previous American presidents by declaring war on drugs. During hiscampaign, Trump promised to take down the cartels just as we took down ISIS and the ISIS caliphate," adding: "We will show NO MERCY to the cartels." When he returned to office in January, Trump signed an order directing the State Department to designate drug cartels as foreign terrorist organizations. In February, he designated Venezuela's Tren de Aragua, as well as six groups in Mexico and MS-13 in El Salvador, as foreign terrorist organizations. Earlier this month, the President signed a secret directive to the Pentagon to use military force against these cartels, sources told theNew York Times. Late last month, the Pentagon also ordered three U.S. Navy missile destroyers—the USS Gravely, USS Jason Dunham and USS Sampson—and around 4,000 military personnel to the edge of Venezuela's territorial waters, according toReuters. The Administration confirmed toCNNlast week that it had ordered naval movements as part of an effort to stymie drug trafficking. The Trump Administration is also sending additional military assets to international airspace and waters, including several P-8 spy planes, warships, and an attack submarine, an official told Reuters. Trump views the cartels and drug trafficking as being encouraged and directed byMaduro. Maduro has denied links to Tren de Aragua and points to a record oftackling the group in his own country. Nevertheless, the Trump Administration has piled pressure on Maduro at the same time as it has taken action against the cartels. In addition to a huge build-up of U.S. military forces in the waters off Venezuela, Attorney General Pam Bondi is offering arewardof $50 million for information leading to Maduro's arrest andseizedup to $700 million of assets with alleged links to Maduro on Aug. 13, including luxury goods, bank accounts, and private jets. The Venezuelan government mobilized more than four million militia troops last month in response to U.S. naval movements in the region, and Maduro this week accused the U.S. of seeking regime change in Venezuela. "They are seeking a regime change through military threat," he told reporters on Monday. "In the face of this maximum military pressure, we have declared maximum preparedness for the defense of Venezuela," Maduro said of the deployment, which he characterized as "an extravagant, unjustifiable, immoral and absolutely criminal and bloody threat." Following Tuesday's strike, Hegseth said Maduro was "effectively a kingpin of a drug narco state," adding that he "should be worried." Contact usatletters@time.com.

Pentagon Promises More Cartel Strikes After Deadly Boat Raid

Pentagon Promises More Cartel Strikes After Deadly Boat Raid The USS Sampson, a U.S. Navy missile destroyer, docks at the Amador Internation...
Michelle Williams Shares the 1 Thing She Remembers from "Baywatch" Role at 12 Years Old

Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic In her television debut, Michelle Williams appeared on two episodes of 'Baywatch' in 1993 The five-time Academy Award nominee was 12 years old when she portrayed Bridget Bowers on the shores of Malibu's Will Rogers State Beach Although she made two cameos on 'Baywatch' within months of each other, Williams isn't quite sure if her character was the same for both Baywatchwas a legendary show that featured cameos by many A-list stars, andMichelle Williamsis among that group. While speaking onEntertainment Weekly'sThe Awardist podcast, theDying for Sexactress spoke about appearing on season 4 ofthe bikini-and-beach seriesin 1993 as Bridget Bowers, who had a crush onJeremy Jackson's character, Hobie. "I don't remember much," Williams, 44, said of her time on the show. "I just remember the bikini hanging in my trailer." TheBaywatchepisode titled "Race Against Time, Part I" actually marked Williams's television debut. She then returned a few months later as "Hobie's Groupie." When asked if those two characters were the same person, the five-time Academy Award nominee laughed, "Whoa... I mean… I don't know who is equipped to answer that question. Not me. That might be some stuff for the chat." TheBrokeback Mountainstar was merely 12 years old when she appeared onBaywatch, so she wasn't exactly overanalyzing her role or her time on the set. "I didn't know what thoughts to think," themother of fouradmitted. "It was all kind of experience and very little processing." Others who made cameos onBaywatchover the years includeBryan Cranston,Mila Kunis,David Spade,Sofia VergaraandMariska Hargitay. Williams, meanwhile, earned her two Emmy nominations forDying for Sex, one for Outstanding Limited Series and another for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Limited Series or Movie. Read the original article onPeople

Michelle Williams Shares the 1 Thing She Remembers from “Baywatch” Role at 12 Years Old

Michelle Williams Shares the 1 Thing She Remembers from "Baywatch" Role at 12 Years Old Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic In her tele...

 

ALPHA MAG © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com