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Yankees vs Red Sox under bet looks strong with Carlos Rodon and Sonny Gray on the mound in series finale

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I finally was able to break free of my losing streak with a win yesterday.

I won’t say it didn’t have its sweaty moments, because the game ended 4-3 in extra innings. However, that still gave us a win on the under. Any time a game goes into extra innings, you have to get a little nervous, especially with the runner on second rule. We dodged a bullet there, and hopefully we can dodge another one here.

Carlos Rodón of the New York Yankees reacting on the field at George M. Steinbrenner Field

Carlos Rodón of the New York Yankees reacts following the sixth inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at George M. Steinbrenner Field in Tampa, Fla., on Aug. 19, 2025. (Julio Aguilar/Getty Images)

The New York Yankees look like they are the best team in the American League, and they don’t even have their best player. The team is getting some surprise contributions from guys like Paul Goldschmidt, who I thought was done with his days of being a contributor.

The team is hitting .241 for the season, and they have one of the better pitching staffs in the game as well. They are a legitimate World Series contender. The question is if the pieces can all fit together for the whole season. We’ve seen multiple teams fall apart after a good half of a year. The Yankees can look at their National League counterpart from last year to know that a good half doesn’t assure you of anything.

Today, they turn to Carlos Rodon, who has been one of the better pitchers in the Yankees’ rotation. For the season, Rodon is 4-2 with a 3.70 ERA and a 1.28 WHIP. None of those numbers are eye-popping, but for a third starter on the team, they are very welcome. He hasn’t been quite as sharp on the road as he has been at home, throwing to a 4.26 road ERA. The good news for the Yankees is that they seem to have found him to be consistent – he will give you five or six innings and three or fewer runs. Boston Red Sox hitters don’t have a great history against him, batting just .227 in 75 at-bats.

Boston Red Sox starting pitcher Sonny Gray throwing a pitch at Progressive Field.

Boston Red Sox starting pitcher Sonny Gray throws a pitch during the fifth inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field in Cleveland, Ohio, on May 30, 2026. (David Dermer/Imagn Images)

If the Red Sox are somehow able to make it into the postseason, this is one of those series they will look at as the launch pad for their success. They have already won the four-game set from the Yankees, and now they are looking to get the sweep. Boston hasn’t been very good this year, and are still 11 games under .500. They only had 12 wins at Fenway coming into this series, so getting three against a good team has to feel like a step in the right direction for them.

Even on the broadcast yesterday, they were talking about trading away guys. There is still no indication of whether they are going to do that or if they will take a different course of action. As of right now, Sonny Gray, today’s starter, has to be fairly high on people’s wish lists if they are going to listen to offers. Gray has been very good this year going 9-1 with a 2.95 ERA and a 1.19 WHIP. His performance at Fenway is a major reason Boston was getting any wins there. He has a 2.61 home ERA and a perfect 4-0 record. We have bet on him multiple times at home this season, and he really hasn’t disappointed.

Willson Contreras looking on after striking out at Target Field

Boston Red Sox first baseman Willson Contreras looks on after striking out against the Minnesota Twins in the first inning at Target Field in Minneapolis, Minn., on April 14, 2026. (Jesse Johnson/Imagn Images)

Gray faced the Yankees at the beginning of the month and went 6.1 innings, allowing three earned runs and two homers. This month has been a bit strange for Gray with homers because he has allowed five homers in four starts. The rest of the year, he has allowed just four homers in 10 starts. I’m not sure what is causing it or if it is just regression to the mean.

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Either way, today is a day to once again back the under. With these two pitchers on the mound, we should see the teams swinging and missing quite a bit. It would be really strange for me to see them getting a bunch of hits strung together. I think we should get a final of something like 3-1 or 4-2. Give me the under for this one.

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For more sports betting information and plays, follow David on X/Twitter: @futureprez2024 



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Sky makes £2bn spending pledge as it prepares takeover of ITV broadcasting arm | Mergers and acquisitions

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Sky has committed to spending £2bn on ITV’s studios business over the next five years as it hammers out a takeover of its broadcasting arm, a move that will safeguard the future of popular programmes such as Coronation Street and Love Island.

Sky, owned by the US telecoms company Comcast, has been in talks for months to buy ITV’s media and entertainment operations, which include its free-to-air TV channels in the UK and the ITVX streaming platform. The £1.6bn takeover deal could be announced in early July, the Sunday Times reported.

The negotiations involve the complex task of separating ITV’s channels and streaming platform ITVX from ITV Studios, which is not part of the acquisition and would remain as a standalone company, listed on the London Stock Exchange.

ITV Studios is one of the world’s biggest production companies, which has made shows including Love Island, I’m a Celebrity … Get Me Out of Here! and the hit drama Mr Bates vs the Post Office, and accounted for more than half of ITV’s £4.1bn annual revenues in 2025.

ITV was created in 1955 to challenge the BBC’s monopoly on UK television, and its studios arm is made up of dozens of individual production companies. It counts rival broadcasters and streaming companies among its customers, including the pay-TV firm Sky.

ITV Studios, one of the world’s biggest production companies, has made shows including Love Island. Photograph: ITV/Shutterstock

Sky, which has a long-term commercial partnership with ITV, already buys shows from ITV Studios and is thought to have agreed to commit £2bn in spending over the next five years after the deal, continuing an existing arrangement. This is not new money, according to a source.

This should help put the business on a solid footing and guarantee the future of a long list of programmes, which include the soap operas Coronation Street and Emmerdale as well as Love Island and I’m a Celebrity.

As part of the deal, ITV Studios is expected to buy Love Productions, which makes The Great British Bake Off, from Sky.

Analysts have predicted that Sky’s proposed takeover of ITV’s broadcast and streaming division would result in heavy job losses at ITV to remove duplication.

Sky’s ambition is to create a streaming champion for the UK by buying ITVX, the country’s biggest free, ad-supported streaming service, competing with the subscription-based services Netflix, Amazon Prime and Disney+. ITVX had 16.5 million monthly active users last year, up from 14.7 million in 2024.

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The takeover deal is expected to attract scrutiny from the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) and the telecoms regulator, Ofcom.

Ofcom is likely to examine concerns about the owner of Sky News taking ITV’s 40% stake in ITN, the production company behind ITV News, Channel 4 News and 5 News.

Any deal combining the TV ad sales operations of ITV and Sky, giving Comcast potential control of more than 70% of the UK market, could prompt an intervention from the CMA.

Industry sources have said Sky may have to look at remedies, including relinquishing its third-party sales deals, which include representing ad sales for Channel 5 and Disney in the UK. This could lead the CMA to reconsider how it measures the ad market to include digital advertising.

Sky and ITV declined to comment.



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Drone captures ongoing rescue efforts after Venezuela earthquakes | Earthquakes

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Drone footage from Catia La Mar in Venezuela’s La Guaira shows widespread destruction after twin 7.2 and 7.5 magnitude earthquakes devastated the region. Authorities say at least 1,430 people have been killed, more than 3,200 injured and over 50,000 remain unaccounted for as rescue teams continue searching collapsed buildings for survivors.



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Fetterman warns of ‘constitutional crisis’ over Mamdani’s Supreme Court defiance

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Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., warned of a “constitutional crisis” Saturday as his fellow party members turned a blind eye to New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s vow to defy a Supreme Court ruling reinforcing President Donald Trump’s power to end Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haitian and Syrian migrants.

Appearing on “Saturday in America,” Fetterman cited prior Democratic warnings of a “constitutional crisis” under Trump, detailing his attempts to assuage fears by pointing out that the Trump administration had yet to defy court rulings.

“I haven’t seen the freak-out now that the mayor of New York is now saying I’m going to defy the Supreme Court ruling,” he told host Kayleigh McEnany.

JOHN FETTERMAN’S FALL FROM HERO TO HERETIC EXPOSES DEMOCRATS’ HARD LEFT TURN

john fetterman zohran mamdani split

Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., speaks to reporters in the Senate subway area in the U.S. Capitol on Tuesday, June 2, 2026; New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani arrives prior speaking about the fiscal year 2027 budget in New York City on May 12, 2026. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images; TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AFP via Getty Images)

“Many of the members in my party are not calling him [Mamdani] out… [or they are] defend[ing] him, or just say[ing] we really actually have to follow the court rulings because… that’s a constitutional crisis, when you have the leader of the country’s largest city [saying] we’re not going to follow or honor what the Supreme Court says.”

Fetterman’s commentary came on the heels of the High Court handing the president two immigration-related legal victories last week. Both were tied to his administration’s efforts to reduce asylum claims.

In the first, Mullin v. Al Otro Lado, the court held that migrants who are turned away at the border before entering the United States are not entitled to apply for asylum.

NY GOVERNOR HOPEFUL VOWS SHOWDOWN WITH MAMDANI OVER SOCIALIST AGENDA: ‘I WILL STOP HIM’

Supreme Court exterior during daytime

The Supreme Court is seen on Capitol Hill in Washington, Dec. 17, 2024. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

In the second, Mullin v. Doe, the court ruled that Haitian and Syrian nationals in the United States with Temporary Protected Status (TPS) could not receive judicial relief postponing the revocation of their status while they challenge the Trump administration’s efforts to revoke it in court.

Combined, the rulings afford the Trump administration a new avenue to limit asylum claims at the border and more leeway to move forward with ending temporary protections for certain migrants already in the country.

Mamdani, in a video statement regarding the latter case, stated the ruling was not something his administration “will ever accept.”

Fetterman has repeatedly warned against far-left politicians like Mamdani who have appeared to gain steam within his party.

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Others, including Maine Senate candidate Graham Planter, Los Angeles mayoral candidate Nithya Raman, Washington, D.C. mayoral candidate Janeese Lewis George and a trio of progressive candidates in New York City have sparked broader conversations about the Democratic Party’s leftward shift.

Fox News’ Robert Schmad contributed to this report.



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Three firefighters killed and two injured while battling Utah-Colorado wildfires | US wildfires

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Three firefighters were killed and two others were hurt while responding to wildfires along the ColoradoUtah border, the US Wildland Fire Service announced on Sunday.

The agency, which was established in January to coordinate wildfire suppression and prevention efforts across public lands, said the firefighters were involved in a joint response to the Knowles and Gore fires on Saturday.

“The US Wildland Fire Service stands united with the USDA Forest Service in grief and in our unwavering support for the loved ones left behind,” it said in a statement on Facebook. “Their bravery, dedication, and sacrifice will never be forgotten.”

Wildfire activity has continued to increase across the western US after several days of hot, dry and windy weather fueled fires in Utah, Arizona and other parts of the region while additional blazes ignited.

In Utah, hundreds of firefighters have been working to contain a wildfire that by Saturday had expanded another more than 20,000 acres (8,000 hectares). State officials said low humidity and strong winds contributed to the rapid growth of the fire.

The Cottonwood fire began on Monday in Fishlake national forest in central Utah. According to the US Forest Service, it grew overnight from about 70,000 acres to more than 92,000 acres by Saturday morning. The National Interagency Fire Center at the time said the fire remained 0% contained and was the largest active wildfire in the US.

The Cottonwood fire near Beaver, Utah, on 27 June. Photograph: Ty ONeil/AP

Officials in Beaver county started working with firefighting teams on Saturday to evaluate the damage, although no estimates were immediately available.

Additional firefighters have been deployed to the dry state to combat both newly ignited fires and existing blazes that have continued to spread because of what forecasters described as critical fire weather – including extremely low humidity, high temperatures and strong winds.

Nearly 3m acres have burned across the country since the beginning of the year, exceeding the 10-year average. Utah has been facing an even greater wildfire threat during the year due to its record-low snowpack and the warmest winter ever recorded.

Earlier in the week, Spencer Cox, the Utah governor, declared a state of emergency because of the severe fire conditions and authorized a statewide fireworks ban ahead of the Fourth of July holiday. The emergency declaration comes as Utah experiences one of its most severe wildfire seasons in recent history, driven by historic drought.

Colorado’s governor, Jared Polis, also declared a state of emergency on Saturday and approved the deployment of the national guard to assist with firefighting efforts.

In recent days, the National Weather Service has issued red flag warnings across a broad section of the west, including California, Arizona and New Mexico.

Power shutoffs have become increasingly common throughout the US west as wildfire danger has grown. Utilities typically use them only as a last resort after evaluating conditions such as sustained winds, wind gusts, available vegetation and terrain.

With extreme wildfire conditions continuing in Utah, Rocky Mountain Power shut off electrical lines serving Beaver county and surrounding areas.

As this summer could become the hottest on record, wildfires continue to pose a growing challenge.

Areas across the American Great Plains that are typically green by mid-spring instead experienced fire rather than rainfall this season, leaving more than 1m acres scorched and barren.

Outbreaks of extreme weather – including conditions that are ripe for wildfires – are symptomatic of the world’s ongoing climate crisis, which is primarily driven by carbon emissions from the burning of fossil fuels.

The Associated Press contributed reporting



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DAVID MARCUS: ‘Permanent’ temporary status is bad for refugees and worse for America

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Democrats across the country are up in arms over the Supreme Court’s decision last week, in Mullin v Doe, which allows the Trump administration to follow through on its plans to send back hundreds of thousands of temporary refugees from Haiti and Syria.

The debate over temporary protected status for refugees hinges on that first first word, “temporary,” and it is reasonable for Americans, who bear the brunt of caring for these refugees, to ask what it actually means.

For his part, New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who appears to be the communist leader of the national Democratic Party these days, had this to say: “The Supreme Court just sparked one of the largest attacks on immigrants in modern American history. In one fell swoop, thousands of Haitians and Syrians now risk losing the right to live and work in the country they call home.”

SUPREME COURT’S LATEST IMMIGRATION RULING WILL CAUSE AMERICANS TO ‘DIE AND SUFFER’ ATTORNEY WARNS

Setting aside the question of whether any of us could just suddenly call Gracie Mansion home and move in with Zo and Rama, what exactly does “home” mean here?

Zohran Mamdani speaking at a podium during a Ramadan Iftar event.

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani speaks at a Ramadan Iftar hosted by his team at the New York Taxi Workers Association, Wednesday, March 18, 2026, in New York. (Angelina Katsanis / AP)

What is vital to understand in thinking about these questions is the core difference between a refugee and an immigrant, and the very different impacts that these two groups have on the native populations they come to live with.

For immigrants, the desire, and even need, to assimilate into American culture is paramount. After all, their children and grandchildren will be living here. But for refugees, there is always the possibility they will return home, hence the word “temporary.”

HOUSE REPUBLICANS DEFY TRUMP TO SHIELD HAITIANS FROM DEPORTATION

The upshot of this temporary status, as I have seen on the ground in Springfield, Ohio, and in Minneapolis, are populations of thousands of Haitians and Somalis, respectively, who are basically given license to live as they did at home, all with taxpayer benefits.

Of course, business owners who employ the Haitians in Springfield, along with the Chamber of Commerce and the libertarian Cato Institute, think this is wonderful. They get a taxpayer-subsidized workforce, which they claim is superior to employing native-born workers.

Haitian migrant families with luggage walking through a Massachusetts T station.

Haitian migrant families head into a T station in Quincy, Massachusetts, on July 26, 2024, as they begin the hour-long journey back to Logan Airport to look for a place to sleep after being dropped off by the Quincy Family Welcome Center. The families, including a group of six who immigrated from Haiti, had spent several hours searching for shelter. (Kayla Bartkowski/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

But according to the people of Springfield I spoke with in 2024, what they actually get is an influx of 20,000 foreigners into their town of 50,000. Native-born students told me the public school became pointless for them, as they tried to accommodate the mostly French-speaking Haitians.

HOUSE REPUBLICANS DEFY TRUMP TO SHIELD HAITIANS FROM DEPORTATION

Meanwhile, the parents of young adults in Springfield decried the lack of housing stock now, as Haitian refugees rent the houses where they would otherwise visit their grandkids.

Rep. Brandon Gill, R-Texas, who has been a champion for these invaded communities, explained on X how the problem is even worse than we thought.

“By the way, many of the Haitians who were given TPS under Joe Biden did not come from Haiti,” Gill wrote. “They were living in nations like Brazil and Chile and came here to take advantage of Biden’s open border. They were sent, not to Martha’s Vineyard or Sherman Oaks, but to blue-collar, midwestern towns like Springfield, Ohio. And the people there were called racist for objecting to the culture of the town they built being fundamentally changed overnight.”

This really is the problem in a nutshell. Temporary status that lasts for years, or even decades, is bad for the refugees, because it discourages assimilation. It doesn’t have to be that way.

Harrisonburg, Virginia, has been an official refugee relocation site for decades and it works because they take in about 200 a year, not tens of thousands. They also offer language and job training. It is a system and it works.

Supreme Court justices

Justices of the US Supreme Court pose for their official photo at the Supreme Court in Washington, DC on October 7, 2022. (OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP via Getty Images)

In Springfield, we see not a system, but a deluge, and not for nothing, the native folks had almost no say over this drastic change to the place they call home.

Sadly, under President Joe Biden and the Democrats, temporary protective status simply became a backdoor for amnesty, but with far more government goodies. These are not, for the most part, people fearing death or punishment in their homeland. They are simply seeking a better life in ours.

It is absolutely regrettable that the Biden administration, allowed over 10 million illegal immigrants and thousands of refugees into the country, because in so doing, it made common-sense immigration reform impossible until that mess is cleaned up.

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The Supreme Court was right to rule that the Trump administration can remove these temporary migrants, and Trump should act forcefully.

In Springfield in 2024, there was great anger from citizens who believe their local politicians and officials sold them out to keep the flow of cheap Haitian labor coming. They knew they had one recourse: voting for Donald Trump, which they and millions of frustrated Americans did. Now, Trump can fulfill his promise to them.

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Burnham may have to boost defence spending to pass ‘Moscow test’, says ex-military chief | Defence policy

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The former head of the armed forces has told Andy Burnham that plans for defence spending must meet a “Moscow test” to keep Russian threats at bay, warning the UK currently “falls short” of that level of commitment.

Adm Sir Tony Radakin, who was the chief of the defence staff until last year, said that if the government’s defence investment plan (Dip), expected to be published this week, was “not enough” then the probable next prime minister would have to find more funding before the general election.

Dan Jarvis, the new defence secretary, is believed to have already secured about £1bn more than his predecessor John Healey after days more of intense haggling between the Ministry of Defence (MoD) and the Treasury.

Healey quit earlier this month after he failed to secure more than £13.5bn to plug an £18bn gap in funding for the plan, which covers the department’s major capital programmes for the next 10 years.

Little is known about Burnham’s thinking on defence, and there have been worries in the MoD that the former mayor of Greater Manchester would reopen any spending deal agreed in Keir Starmer’s final days, despite the prime minister’s attempts to shore up his legacy on the issue.

Allies of Burnham said such concerns were wide of the mark, and they would rather the funding row – which has involved other departments taking a 1% cut to their capital budgets – was resolved and the Dip published now. But they added that he reserved the right to reopen it if needed.

Radakin told the BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg programme that the Dip must match the commitment to spend more on defence because the world was more dangerous, so the UK needed to be “stronger” in the 2030s.

“That’s the big issue, and whether it’s this prime minister or the next prime minister, if we get an announcement of additional money, well, we should always welcome that,” he said.

“But if it’s not enough, then it may be that the new prime minister is going to have to find that money as part of the course of this parliament.”

The former military chief added: “It’s the Moscow test. What do we look like to Moscow? Do we look like a strong member of the Nato alliance? Do we look like a strong nuclear power? Do we look like a strong ally of America? Because those are the elements that keep us safe.

“There’s a risk at the moment that we fall short on those commitments and then that creates a whole load of hurt with our Nato allies, and especially our relationship with America.”

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Starmer, who is meeting the Nato secretary general, Mark Rutte, on Monday, has promised to publish the long-delayed Dip before the Nato summit on 7 July in Turkey, which will be one of his final international engagements. Burnham could take over in No 10 on 17 July if there is no contest.

Jarvis is understood to have already obtained at least £14bn as part of the negotiations, with the Dip expected to be published on Tuesday. But it is not clear that he has obtained any more money for the total defence budget.

Nato has a long-term target for allies to reach 3.5% of GDP by 2035, but there was concern at the MoD that the proposed settlement would leave too great a commitment to be met after the next general election.

Much of the total defence funding goes on the UK’s nuclear deterrent, accounting for 20% in 2025-26, rising to 25% in coming years. Nine nuclear projects cost more than £10bn and the new Dreadnought nuclear submarine is £41bn.

Radakin also said the UK found itself in the “unprecedented” and “unusual” position of being second from the bottom in a Nato league table that ranks member states based on how they are meeting capability requirements.

“That needs to be resolved, we need to play our part, we need to keep the UK safe, we need to keep our alliance partners safe,” he added.



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Three firefighters killed in US wildfires along Colorado–Utah border | Weather News

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The US has seen a harsh wildfire season this year, with prolonged droughts and dry conditions fuelling blazes.

Three firefighters have died while responding to wildfires in the western United States, according to the US Wildland Fire Service.

In a statement on Sunday, the agency said the firefighters had been responding to the Knowles and Gore fires along the Utah-Colorado border.

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The agency, which was created earlier this year to streamline firefighting and fire reduction across public lands, said it stands “in grief and in our unwavering support for the loved ones left behind”.

It said two crew members were also injured while responding to the fires, adding that more details would be released shortly.

The deaths come amid a particularly harsh wildfire season in the US, with consecutive days of hot, dry and windy weather fuelling flames across the western reaches of the country.

Nationwide, nearly three million acres (1.2 million hectares) have burned since the start of the year, surpassing the 10-year average.

At least three dozen wildfires burning in the US as of Sunday were classified as “uncontained”, according to authorities.

Over the last week, the governors of both Utah and Colorado declared state emergencies.

The move allowed Utah’s Governor, Spencer Cox, to ban fireworks ahead of the 4th of July holiday.

“Today, we mourn three heroes who made the ultimate sacrifice protecting lives and communities along the Utah-Colorado border,” Cox said in a post on Sunday.

The state government, meanwhile, warned that persistent drought and dry conditions continued to create “above-normal wildfire potential”.

Colorado Governor, Jared Polis, declared an emergency on Saturday, authorising the use of the National Guard to tackle the fires.

Arizona has also been particularly hard-hit recently, with wildfires burning south of the Grand Canyon and near Kendrick Mountain.

Parts of northern Arizona were without power on Saturday as the utility serving the area initiated a safety shut-off hoping to reduce the risk of wildfires.

The US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has said that climate change has increased the chances of wildfires in recent years, causing high temperatures, extended droughts and dry conditions that fuel fires.

The western blazes come as Europe has contended with a record heatwave, which is expected to hit the eastern US on Wednesday.



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Bring the bear spray to the wedding — you never know when you need to use it on a family member

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If you’re on the fence about whether to bring the bear spray to a wedding or not, you might as well bring it. Even if the location is unlikely to have any bears in the area, you never know when you might need to use it on an out-of-control family member.

I think that’s the lesson to be learned from an incident at a wedding venue last weekend. A Missouri man, according to the Franklin County Sheriff’s Office, was involved in multiple altercations with family members and guests at a “wedding-related event.”

WSAZ 3 reported that deputies were called last Saturday to Sunset Bluffs wedding venue in Washington, Missouri, after witnesses reported that Benjamin J. Reeders, 28, had assaulted several people, including a photographer who suffered minor injuries.

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He also allegedly pushed his mother to the ground and was on the receiving end of a family member’s bear spray prior to deputies arriving on the scene. The use of the bear spray didn’t stop him and, according to police, he was combative and resisted arrest.

HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM TRAVELS 500 MILES ONLY TO GET PEPPER SPRAYED BY POLICE AFTER LOSS

Reeders was arrested and charged with fourth-degree assault, third-degree assault and resisting arrest. His cash bond was set at $20,000.

The wedding venue released a statement about the incident, which they said took place “while a small group of the wedding party was getting ready.”

Hiker holding Sabre Wild bear spray can in forest near Canmore Alberta

A Missouri man had bear spray used on him by a family member prior to a wedding. (Getty)

“An invited guest arrived early in emotional distress and became involved in a physical altercation with his family and a photographer. We are relieved that everyone involved is OK,” Sunset Bluffs said.

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They thanked law enforcement, pointed out that safety for all involved in the wedding is their top priority and were happy to report that the wedding went on as planned.

That warms the heart, doesn’t it? A little family bear spray and the police on the scene are no reason to cancel a wedding.

Bride holding bouquet walking with groom on single track in park

A Missouri man was arrested after an incident prior to a wedding where he was sprayed with bear spray. (Getty)



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