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Kathy Griffin claims she is banned from The Tonight Show with Fallon


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Kathy Griffin claimed in an Instagram post on Tuesday that she had been banned from “The Tonight Show” with Jimmy Fallon for being inappropriate and controversial.

“I have not done the Jimmy Fallon show since it was on at 12:30 Eastern and Pacific, so I guess I’m banned from the Fallon show, or inappropriate, or too controversial,” Griffin said in the video posted to Instagram. “I don’t even know. When you’re banned from a show — and if you guys know me, I’m banned from most of them. You’re welcome, America and Indonesia — they don’t usually tell you you’re banned. They just can’t seem to find room for you.”

In 2017, Griffin drew bipartisan backlash after posting an image of herself holding a Halloween mask covered in ketchup that appeared to resemble the severed head of President Donald Trump. In addition to facing condemnation, Griffin was investigated by the Secret Service over whether the image constituted a threat against the president.

A source with knowledge on the matter told Fox News Digital that there is no ban on Griffin.

Kathy Griffin and Jimmy Fallon

Comedian Kathy Griffin speaks at El Rey Theatre on November 01, 2022, in Los Angeles, California. Jimmy Fallon during the monologue on Monday, June 8, 2026. (Michael Tullberg/Getty Images;Rosalind O’Connor/NBC via Getty Images)

COMEDIANS DIG AT TRUMP AS BILL MAHER ACCEPTS MARK TWAIN PRIZE AT KENNEDY CENTER

She said she liked Fallon, but then slammed him for having Conor McGregor on in her Instagram tirade.

“I think the Fallon folks made a mistake by having Conor McGregor on,” Griffin said. “I think it sends yet another message to women and marginalized folks everywhere that we’re not equal and you can do anything to us and the perpetrators are still going to be out there being glorified.”

Griffin said it reminded her of when Fallon had Trump on the show and it didn’t sit well with her.

MENTALIST OZ PEARLMAN PULLS OUT OF KIMMEL GUEST APPEARANCE, REPLACED BY LEFT-WING PODCASTER

The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon

Jimmy Fallon doing a monologue on “The Tonight Show.” (NBC)

“I think it’s time we kind of make up our minds about who we’re going to cancel and who we’re not,” she added. “Take it from the most canceled celebrity in history, look it up. As the kids say, do better.”

Griffin recently addressed an old photo she had taken with Trump, who she regularly criticizes now.

She clarified that an old image of her and Trump sitting amicably next to each other at an event was, in fact, “not an AI photo.”

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At the start of a video posted to her YouTube channel in early June, Griffin claimed that several people had been sending her a picture of her with Trump, whom she described as “someone I used to know, but now I don’t care to know any longer.”

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Kathy Griffin on 'The View'

Kathy Griffin on “The View” on Friday, April 24, 2026. (LOU ROCCO/American Broadcasting Companies, Inc. via Getty Images)

Griffin confirmed that the photo was real, adding that she previously had a friendly relationship with Trump.

“I know. Can you f—ing believe it?” Griffin exclaimed. “There was a time I knew Donald as someone who would show up at the opening of an envelope, and I would sit next to him sometimes, and he’d laugh at my jokes. I’m not glorifying him in his last, final days in any way. I want to show you that is not an AI photo, and that’s why I got the dress out, which I still fit into, by the way, because that picture’s got to be 20 years old.”



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Amnesty says RSF committed ethnic cleansing in Sudan’s el-Fasher | Sudan war News

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Rights group accuses the Sudanese paramilitary of ‘crimes against humanity’ for its attacks in and around the capital of North Darfur State.

The Sudanese paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) has committed crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing during their attack on el-Fasher city between 2024 and 2025, rights group Amnesty International alleges.

In a report published on Wednesday, Amnesty said it documented how civilians in and around the capital of North Darfur State in western Sudan were “killed, injured, beaten, tortured and detained between early 2024 and October 2025”.

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“The RSF’s crimes included murder, forcible transfer, imprisonment, torture, rape, sexual slavery, other forms of sexual violence, enslavement, extermination and persecution,” it said in the report.

“Hundreds of thousands of children have been displaced, many of them repeatedly risking death and injury during attacks or while fleeing. Countless have been orphaned. People with disabilities and older people have faced acute risks, including targeted attacks, abandonment, and exclusion from essential assistance,” it added.

The report pointed out that the RSF continually attacked villages and towns around el-Fasher where the Zaghawa ethnic group predominantly lived.

Sudan has been mired since April 2023 in a brutal war between the army and the RSF, which has killed tens of thousands and displaced nearly 14 million others, according to the United Nations.

Both sides have been accused of atrocities, with a UN independent fact-finding mission in February concluding that the 2025 assault on el-Fasher bore the “hallmarks of genocide”.

Amnesty said it interviewed 246 people for its report, which included 208 survivors – 169 adults and 39 children – who had witnessed or had experienced “conflict-related abuses”.

After the RSF waged its final offensive on el-Fasher on October 26, 2025, the rights group found that hundreds of civilians were “executed and many others were tortured or detained”.

One 58-year-old woman survivor said she saw nearly 1,000 dead bodies, including children.

According to Amnesty, the RSF besieged el-Fasher from May 2024 to October 2025, restricting food and humanitarian aid while shelling the city almost daily. The siege contributed to famine, forcing residents to eat ambaz, a peanut oil byproduct normally used as animal feed.

Agnes Callamard, Amnesty International’s secretary-general, said it was a “war on civilians”.

“The world was warned of the horrors that civilians in el-Fasher confronted as the RSF laid siege to the city. It is a stain on the conscience of humanity,” said Callamard.

“A nationwide ceasefire is immediately needed. An independent and adequately resourced international force must be deployed to Sudan to protect civilians against crimes by all parties to the conflict. Without urgent action from the international community, attacks on civilians – and the immense suffering and trauma being inflicted on children – will continue unhindered.”



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Two people scale Empire State Building in New York City



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Two people climbed on top of the Empire State Building Wednesday afternoon holding a banner reading “when the power of love beats the love of power, the world knows peace.”

The New York City Police Department (NYPD) confirmed officers are responding.

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.



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Secretive Gaza meetings in Cyprus as plan to isolate Hamas gathers pace | Israel-Palestine conflict News

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While a Hamas delegation holds talks with mediators in Cairo, discussions over Gaza’s next administrative phase are also taking place in the Cypriot coastal resort city of Ayia Napa.

Representatives of a US-led Board of Peace – headed by prominent international figures including former British Prime Minister Tony Blair and former UN envoy Nickolay Mladenov – are convening to draw up a roadmap for the devastated enclave.

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The primary objective is to isolate Hamas from the Palestinian population and its resources through the implementation of Article 17 of US President Donald Trump’s plan to end Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza, which has now killed more than 73,000 Palestinians. However, the initiative is already buckling under the weight of financial crises, Israeli political gridlock, and legal controversies.

Article 17 and the ‘pincer movement’

Article 17 of the Trump plan paves the way for what officials describe as a “temporary reconstruction” in areas designated as free of Hamas control. Rather than pouring concrete for permanent rebuilding, the plan envisions setting up temporary structures and providing medical services for civilians settling in those areas.

According to reports from the Israeli newspaper Israel Hayom, the Board of Peace – the organisation set up by Trump in the wake of the October Gaza ceasefire – is scheduled to launch a pilot project within weeks in one such “Hamas-free” area, Tal as-Sultan area near Rafah. The plan aims to establish humanitarian shelter compounds for “unarmed” civilians, overseen by a multinational stabilisation force stationed at Camp Amitai on the border. These multinational forces will be equipped only with batons to maintain public order, while the Israeli military fortifies its presence behind the “Yellow Line”, which separates areas of Gaza under Israeli control from those outside it.

The strategy effectively allows for the Israeli military – with the support of the Board of Peace – to only allow for reconstruction to take place in areas under its control. By directing reconstruction, aid distribution, and civilian shelter to areas outside of Hamas’s control, Palestinians in Gaza may increasingly relocate to those areas, ultimately leaving Hamas with “no people, no land, and no resources”.

However, the plan faces fierce resistance from within Israel. The “Israel Envelope Forum”, representing residents of settlements bordering Gaza, has warned that implementing Article 17 constitutes a major strategic gamble.

The forum argues that any “reconstruction” – even temporary structures – before the complete military and political defeat of Hamas is a strategic error that will give the group a golden opportunity to catch its breath, rebuild its tunnel networks, and recruit fighters. It maintains that past attempts at “consciousness engineering” to separate Gaza’s population from Hamas have failed, warning that international civilian administration will only perpetuate the security threat to Israeli border communities.

A ‘colonial occupation’ authority?

The Cypriot Board of Peace meetings have also been overshadowed by a leaked draft resolution published by The Guardian, which revealed that the body is seeking sweeping legal immunity for its members, forces, and contractors, shielding them from potential prosecution in Gaza’s courts. The document also reportedly outlines efforts to seize public facilities and properties inside Gaza without compensation.

While a Board of Peace official quickly dismissed the leak as misleading, the revelations have sparked alarm. Mohanad Mustafa, an expert in Israeli affairs, warned that if the document is authentic, it effectively transforms the Board of Peace into a “colonial occupation authority” rather than an administration meant for rescue and reconstruction.

“This means that any legal violations, criminal acts, or financial corruption committed by Board of Peace members would be completely shielded by legal immunity,” Mustafa told Al Jazeera, adding that seizing public facilities without legal backing violates both local and international law.

Funding collapse and the Israeli veto

Little is known about what is being discussed behind closed doors in Ayia Napa.

Al Jazeera’s correspondent in Cyprus, Mohammed al-Madhoun, reported that the Board of Peace meetings are shrouded in such secrecy that even their exact location remains undisclosed.

And there are few signs of progress for the Board of Peace’s plan in Gaza, with the only visible development being the release of images showing vehicles designated for the International Stabilization Force arriving near the Karem Abu Salem (known as Kerem Shalom in Israel) crossing.

Behind the scenes, the Board of Peace is struggling to resolve two massive hurdles:

Donors have reneged on $17bn in pledges made during a February donor conference, largely due to the economic fallout from the recent regional war with Iran. Without these funds, the Palestinian technocratic committee tasked with day-to-day administration of Gaza cannot function.

The Board of Peace has also adopted the Israeli narrative regarding the plan’s execution. Israel flatly refuses to allow the technocratic committee into Gaza, open border crossings, or begin reconstruction until Hamas is completely disarmed – even down to its military uniforms.

Mustafa, the Israeli affairs expert, notes that Israel is actively obstructing the plan, expanding its occupation to cover more than the 50 percent of Gaza stipulated in the first phase of the ceasefire agreement.

For Hamas, the intentions of the Board of Peace are viewed with deep suspicion. Palestinian political analyst Ahmed al-Tanani explained to Al Jazeera that Hamas recognises Israel’s attempts to exploit the vague texts of the ceasefire agreement and is demanding that mediators provide real guarantees to prevent humanitarian projects from turning into a “cover for genocide”.

Mohammad Mansour has contributed to this report.



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Talarico in trouble as Black voters feel ‘betrayed’ by party, says insider


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Democratic strategists are worried that Senate hopeful James Talarico’s chances of flipping Texas blue are being jeopardized by what they see as a major vulnerability: a lack of enthusiasm on the part of Texas Black voters, who are feeling “betrayed” by the party.

Veteran Democratic strategist Ashley Etienne, a former advisor to President Barack Obama and Vice President Kamala Harris, said that despite Talarico’s history of controversial statements, she believes he is “incredibly well positioned” to become the first Democrat to flip a Texas Senate seat blue in decades. However, she identified one major vulnerability, saying Black voters are “feeling like they were betrayed” by “what happened to Jasmine Crockett.”

Talarico, a Texas state lawmaker and Presbyterian seminarian, defeated Black congresswoman Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, for the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate earlier this year.

Etienne explained that following Crockett’s defeat, “some voters, Black women in particular, are feeling as though the Democratic Party and Democratic candidates want our labor, but not our leadership.” The “two biggest examples,” she said, are “Kamala Harris‘ loss and Jasmine Crockett’s loss.”

CARVILLE ADVISES TALARICO ‘TO DEAL WITH’ PAST CULTURE WAR COMMENTS IF HE WANTS TO WIN TEXAS

james talarico with voters

Democratic Senate candidate James Talarico is facing a problem with Black voter enthusiasm in Texas, according to insiders. (John Moore/Getty Images)

Talarico’s history of hot takes, such as saying he “hates Christianity,” calling God “nonbinary” and asserting that there are six sexes, has caused significant controversy. While Etienne believes that Talarico can swat away these resurfaced comments, she believes the feeling of Black voter “betrayal” could sink his Senate hopes.

A Texas native, Etienne also served as a senior advisor to former President Joe Biden, former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and several members of Congress from Texas. She now runs the communications firm, Etienne & Saint.

She referenced an opinion piece she co-authored in the Houston Chronicle, in which she quoted one Black female voter, who said, “We as Black women give 92 percent of our vote to the Democratic Party, and we get nothing out of the deal.”

“That’s one example of what I think is a larger sentiment across Black women,” she explained.

This, Etienne posited, is an “alarm warning for Talarico.”

JAMES TALARICO ADMITS PAST COMMENTS ‘MISSED THE MARK’ WHEN CONFRONTED ON CLAIMS LIKE GOD IS ‘NON-BINARY’

Rep. Jasmine Crockett

Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, speaks during a hearing with the Subcommittee on Delivering On Government Efficiency in the U.S. Capitol on February 26, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

Why should Talarico be worried about this? According to Etienne, approximately 1.1 million registered Black voters in Texas are not voting. To pull off an upset in the traditionally solid red state, Etienne said Talarico will have to motivate that untapped voter base. The key to doing that, she said, is appealing to Black women.

When it comes to motivating the Democratic base, Etienne posited that “Black women aren’t just another constituency.”

“We are a force multiplier effect when it comes to Black voters,” she said. “We have the ability to bring the entire community to – and we have proven that we do this every cycle after cycle – bring the entire community to the polls.”

In other words, Etienne explained that “if the mood of Black women is low, then you lose an opportunity … to really reach and mobilize and engage and energize the rest of the Black community.”

“That’s the nut he’s going to have to crack,” she said.

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Dallas Jones, a Democratic strategist who served as the Texas political director for the 2020 Biden-Harris campaign, echoed Etienne’s assessment. In an interview with Fox News Digital, Jones criticized Talarico supporters for pressuring Crockett to stump for him. Crockett has endorsed Talarico but has been notably absent from the campaign trail.

“There’s rhetoric that’s being turned up that she has to come and support him, and a lot of that is coming from people that support him,” he noted. “So, what it translates to is people basically telling this accomplished, decorated, Black female member of Congress what she ought to do. And all that does is stoke flames and fires for her supporters, who are saying, ‘She really doesn’t have to do anything. You won, you’re the nominee, you come earn our vote, she doesn’t have to help you do that.’”

DSA’S THIRD MAJOR PRIMARY WIN DEEPENS DEMOCRATS’ FIGHT OVER THE PARTY’S FUTURE

Paxton with fans after winning primary

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton landed President Donald Trump’s endorsement one week ahead of his runoff election against Republican Sen. John Cornyn for the GOP Senate nomination. (Fox News Digital/Amanda Macias)

“There are millions of black Texans out there ready for the taking, ready to support the campaign … [but] every day that goes by there’s an erosion of that support,” Jones continued.

Jones said that he does not think Talarico’s controversial statements will have much of an impact on the Black vote in Texas “considering the alternative” is Republican state Attorney General Ken Paxton.

“There will be a lot of energy and effort to weaponize those types of statements,” he said. “But I truly don’t think that it’s going to have a huge impact.”

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“Black Texans that show up in November are not voting for Ken Paxton,” Jones asserted. “The challenge is creating the enthusiasm to get enough of them to go and vote for him.”

“He himself has admitted that he cannot win the state without Black voters,” he continued, adding, “It’s not a persuasion game, it’s an enthusiasm game.”

Fox News Digital reached out to Talarico’s campaign for comment. Fox News Digital also reached out to Crockett’s office and Paxton’s campaign for comment.



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Critical Cursor Flaws Could Let Prompt Injection Escape Sandbox and Run Commands

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Swati KhandelwalJul 01, 2026AI Coding / Vulnerability

Two flaws in Cursor, an AI code editor, could let a single, ordinary-looking prompt break out of the editor’s safety sandbox and run any command on a developer’s computer. There is no click to fall for and no approval box to ignore.

Cato AI Labs found the pair and named them DuneSlide. They are tracked as CVE-2026-50548 and CVE-2026-50549, both rated 9.8 out of 10 (or 9.3 under the newer CVSS 4.0 scale).

The fix is already out. Both bugs are patched in Cursor 3.0, released April 2, and every version before 3.0 is affected. Cursor’s maker says more than half the Fortune 500 use the tool, so if you run it, update now.

What the sandbox was for, and how it broke

Starting in the 2.x line, Cursor runs the terminal commands its AI agent issues inside a sandbox by default: a locked box that limits what those commands can touch, so a stray instruction cannot wreck the machine.

DuneSlide is about getting out of that box. The way in is prompt injection. The attacker never types into your Cursor. They plant instructions inside something your agent reads on your behalf, such as a connected service through the Model Context Protocol (MCP) or a page returned by a web search.

You ask a normal question, the hidden instructions come along for the ride, and because it needs no click or approval from you, the attack is “zero-click.”

Both flaws use the same trick: get the agent to write one file it should not be allowed to write, then use that write to turn the sandbox off.

  • CVE-2026-50548 abuses a setting. The sandbox permits writes into a command’s working folder, and that folder is an optional parameter, working_directory, on Cursor’s run_terminal_cmd tool. When the agent sets it to a non-default path, Cursor adds that path to the allowed-write list without question. Injected instructions point it at a system file instead of the project. Overwrite the sandbox helper itself (on macOS, /Applications/Cursor.app/Contents/Resources/app/resources/helpers/cursorsandbox), and later commands run with no sandbox at all. Startup files like ~/.zshrc work as targets too.
  • CVE-2026-50549 abuses a safety check. Before writing, Cursor resolves shortcuts (symlinks) to confirm the real destination sits inside your project. The bug is the fallback: when that check fails, because the target does not exist or the attacker removes read access from a folder in the path, Cursor gives up and trusts the shortcut’s in-project path instead. An attacker creates a shortcut that points outside the project, forces the check to fail, and Cursor writes straight through it to the same sandbox helper. Same escape, different door.

Once the sandbox is neutralized, the next command runs as you. That means control of the developer’s machine, plus any cloud or SaaS workspaces the editor is signed into. It all follows from one harmless-looking prompt.

There is no sign this has been used in real attacks. Cato presents it as research, not an active campaign, and the public vulnerability record shows no known exploitation as of publication.

Cato reported both issues on February 19. By Cato’s account, Cursor rejected them four days later, saying its threat model did not cover misuse of MCP servers, even standard ones like the official Linear workspace.

Cato escalated on February 26; Cursor reopened the reports, triaged them, and shipped both fixes in 3.0. The CVE IDs were assigned on June 5.

Cursor published its own advisory for the symlink bug, and its NVD record is live.

Not the first, and probably not the last

DuneSlide is the latest in a run of Cursor bugs that start with a poisoned prompt and end in code execution, each one defeating a different guardrail. The Hacker News covered the earlier rounds:

  • CurXecute (CVE-2025-54135, August 2025) came from the same team, then operating as Aim Security. A planted Slack message rewrote Cursor’s ~/.cursor/mcp.json config and ran commands even after the user rejected the edit. Fixed in 1.3.
  • MCPoison (CVE-2025-54136), from Check Point Research, lets an attacker get an MCP config approved once, then quietly swap in malicious commands with no second prompt.
  • CVE-2026-26268 (February 2026) hid a booby-trapped Git hook in a repository that fired the moment the agent ran a Git command. Patched in 2.5.

The sandbox in the 2.x line was Cursor’s answer to that earlier wave. DuneSlide is about escaping the answer.

Cato says it is disclosing similar flaws in other coding agents and argues the problem is structural rather than a string of one-offs.

That leaves an open question for anyone shipping an agent that reads the open web: whether treating every input as hostile becomes the default, or stays a patch-by-patch scramble.



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What is a heat dome? The US heatwave explained | Weather News

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An intense heatwave is set to blanket much of the central and eastern United States this week as a “heat dome” settles over the region, bringing days of oppressively high temperatures and humidity ahead of the Fourth of July weekend and FIFA World Cup matches in several US cities.

Forecasters say in some places it could feel as hot as 46 degrees Celsius (115 degrees Fahrenheit). Dozens of temperature records could be broken, according to the National Weather Service (NWS), which called the conditions “dangerous”. More than 60 million people are currently under heat alerts.

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At the centre of this week’s forecast is a weather phenomenon known as a heat dome. What is it, and why does it make heatwaves even more intense and unbearable?

What is a heat dome?

A heat dome is a large area of high pressure, formed when warm air flows northward, that acts like a lid over the atmosphere, trapping hot air close to the ground.

As the air sinks, it compresses and warms even more. At the same time, the pressure system helps prevent cooler air and storms from moving in, allowing heat to build at the surface and remain trapped there. With few clouds and little wind, the sun has more direct access to the ground, creating a heat feedback loop.

Heat domes are linked to prolonged heatwaves that can last for days.

How long will it last?

The heat dome is already building and is expected to strengthen over the coming days, spreading from the central US towards the east coast, with dangerous heat lasting several days into early July.

The hottest conditions are expected Thursday and Friday, according to the NWS, and are set to continue through the Fourth of July weekend, which marks the 250th anniversary year of the US, and forecasters say some areas across the Great Plains, the southeast, and the mid-Atlantic are likely to remain unusually hot into next weekend.

What will the highest temperatures be?

Many places are expected to see daytime temperatures in the high 30s Celsius (low 100s Fahrenheit), but humidity will make it feel much hotter. In parts of the central and eastern US, the heat index – a measure of how hot it feels when humidity is factored in – could climb between 40C and 46C (100F and 115F).

“That’s heat that’s impactful to anyone,” said NWS meteorologist Bryan Putnam. “It’s not just older adults or younger children or people who are spending a ton of time outdoors, maybe straining themselves a little more than normal. This is heat that really could impact everyone, especially with people outdoors going into the holiday weekend.”

The nights won’t bring much relief either, with temperatures expected to stay in the 20s Celsius (70s Fahrenheit) overnight, creating potentially miserable sleep conditions for those without air conditioning and making it harder for people to cool down.

“Even after the sun goes down, it’s still going to be very hot,” said AccuWeather senior meteorologist Alan Reppert. “We’re at a pattern that’s really going to be hot during the good portion of the afternoon and even into the evening hours.”

Which parts of the US will be hit the hardest?

The most dangerous conditions are expected in a broad corridor stretching from the Great Lakes to the East Coast, where several cities could experience their hottest day of the year so far. New York City, Philadelphia, Washington, Baltimore, Chicago, Indianapolis, Detroit and St Louis are all expected to be affected, with temperatures also soaring farther south in Dallas, Little Rock and Memphis.

Several of those cities are also hosting FIFA World Cup events. In Philadelphia, organisers have already changed Fan Festival hours to start later in the day.

Cities across the US are rolling out emergency measures as temperatures climb.

Chicago said it would open cooling centres and send city workers to check on vulnerable residents.

In New York City, Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s office announced what it called an “unprecedented” response to the heat, including hydration vans and pop-up cooling stations equipped with misting fans and cooling towels.

Washington, DC, where temperatures are expected to exceed 38C (100F) from Thursday through Saturday, the heat will coincide with Fourth of July celebrations, including what organisers say will be the largest fireworks display ever held on the National Mall.

What are some ways to stay cool?

The NWS says people should stay hydrated, avoid strenuous outdoor activity during the hottest part of the day and seek air conditioning or cooling centres where possible. If you’re spending time outside, wear loose, lightweight clothing and stay near shady areas.

Experts say one of the biggest risks during a prolonged heatwave is that the body doesn’t have time to cool down overnight, which can make the effects of the heat build up from one day to the next. They also recommend drinking water before you feel thirsty and limiting alcohol, which can increase the risk of dehydration.

“If somebody realises that they’re hot, but they’re not sweating, or if they begin to feel a little bit dizzy, those are some signs that they really need to take a break, get inside, find some cooling, and drink plenty of water,”  said Geoff Cornish, assistant chief video meteorologist for the weather forecasting company AccuWeather. “And if they really begin to experience significant symptoms, they need to seek medical attention right away.”



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FSB and Russian military clash over protecting generals, sources say


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For the second time in little more than a year, a blast tore through the Moscow suburb of Balashikha, Russia, and left a Russian military figure dead.

On June 9, explosives planted under a BMW detonated as the driver began leaving a parking lot, according to independent Russian outlet The Insider. The outlet identified the man killed as Lt. Gen. Damir Davydov, a Russian Defense Ministry official responsible for supplying missiles and artillery ammunition to Russian forces fighting in Ukraine.

The location was striking. The explosion occurred roughly 1,150 feet from the site where Lt. Gen. Yaroslav Moskalik, deputy chief of the Main Operations Directorate of Russia’s General Staff, was killed in a car bombing in April 2025, according to the French newspaper Le Monde.

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A screen grab from a video shows the car in which senior Russian military officer Gen. Yaroslav Moskalik was killed in, confirmed by Russia's Investigative Committee, on April 25, 2025, in the Moscow region, Russia. 

A screen grab from a video shows the car in which senior Russian military officer Gen. Yaroslav Moskalik was killed in, confirmed by Russia’s Investigative Committee, on April 25, 2025, in the Moscow region, Russia.  (Russian Investigative Committee / Handout/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Months before Moskalik’s death, another senior Russian officer was assassinated in Moscow. 

Lt. Gen. Igor Kirillov, the head of Russia’s nuclear, biological and chemical protection troops, was killed when a bomb hidden in an electric scooter exploded outside an apartment building. A source in Ukraine’s Security Service, known as the SBU, told Reuters the agency carried out the operation.

Together, the attacks are part of a broader pattern of assassinations and attempted assassinations targeting senior Russian military figures — a campaign that a European intelligence source says is now exposing tensions inside Putin’s own security system.

Since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, senior Russian military figures have been killed in missile strikes, drone attacks, car bombings, crashes and frontline combat — a toll that, according to a European intelligence source, is now fueling internal tensions between Russia’s military and the FSB, Russia’s powerful domestic security service and successor to the Soviet KGB.

“There are internal frictions between Russian security institutions,” a European intelligence source told Fox News Digital. “The Russian military wants the FSB to guarantee physical protection for Russian generals, but the FSB is opposed to taking responsibility for the military.”

The dispute reflects a deeper rivalry inside Russian President Vladimir Putin’s system, where the security services have long held a privileged position over the armed forces, according to multiple sources.

‘PURE HELL’ IN MOSCOW AS UKRAINIAN DRONES STRIKE MAJOR REFINERY SUPPLYING CAPITAL’S FUEL MARKET

“This goes back to Soviet times,” the European intelligence source said. “The security services do not like the military, and the military does not like the security services.”

The central tension, according to the European intelligence source and Russian opposition figure Maxim Katz, is inside Putin’s own system: the war has elevated the importance of the military on the battlefield, while the political structure in Moscow still treats generals as a potential threat.   

The result is a paradox for the Kremlin. Russia needs its military commanders to sustain the war, but the security services that dominate Putin’s system appear reluctant to take responsibility for protecting them. 

 Lieutenant General Fanil Sarvarov, head of the Russian General Staff's army operational training directorate, was killed in a car bomb in Moscow

The damaged Kia Sorento lies at the scene where Lt. Gen. Fanil Sarvarov, head of the Russian General Staff’s army operational training directorate, was killed in a car bomb in Moscow, Dec. 22, 2025.  (Anastasia Barashkova/Reuters)

At least 15 Russian generals have been confirmed killed since the full-scale invasion began, according to independent Russian outlet Mediazona. 

The toll includes five lieutenant generals, seven major generals and three former generals.

Some died far from Moscow, closer to the battlefield

Lt. Gen. Oleg Tsokov, deputy commander of Russia’s Southern Military District, was killed in July 2023 in a Ukrainian Storm Shadow missile strike on the Russian-occupied city of Berdiansk. Maj. Gen. Sergei Goryachev, chief of staff of the 35th Combined Arms Army, was killed in June 2023 during Ukraine’s counteroffensive in the Zaporizhzhia region. Maj. Gen. Vladimir Zavadsky, deputy commander of the 14th Army Corps, was killed near Krynky in southern Ukraine in November 2023.

Others were struck inside Russia or in Russian-controlled territory. 

Lt. Gen. Alexander Otroshchenko, a senior Russian air force commander, died in a military transport plane crash over occupied Crimea in March 2026. Retired Maj. Gen. Kanamat Botashev, flying for the Wagner Group, was killed in May 2022 after his Su-25 was shot down over Ukraine’s Luhansk region.

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Igor Kirillov, head of the Russian Defence Ministry's radiological, biological and chemical protection unit

Igor Kirillov was killed Dec. 17, 2024, when an explosive device hidden in a scooter went off outside a building in Moscow, officials said.   (AFPTV/AFP via Getty Images)

The losses began in the opening weeks of the invasion of Ukraine, when Maj. Gen. Andrei Sukhovetsky, deputy commander of Russia’s 41st Combined Arms Army, and Maj. Gen. Vladimir Frolov, deputy commander of the 8th Army, were killed.

Katz said the military has long occupied a vulnerable position inside the Russian power structure.

“In Russia, the FSB is the biggest and most powerful security organization, and Putin himself comes from that system,” Katz told Fox News Digital. “The army, on the other hand, has always been viewed by these people as a threat.”

Katz said the Kremlin historically has feared popular military figures because the army is one of the few institutions with the capacity to challenge political power.

“You will not find Russian military men in senior government positions,” Katz said. “Since Stalin, they have been afraid of the army. Whenever there is a relatively well-known military figure with a name of his own, they deal with it somehow — legally, or like with Prigozhin, or like with other generals. In Russia, there is no such thing as a popular general.”

Katz argued that even during wartime, when the military might be expected to gain status, Putin’s system keeps the army politically weak.

“The army does not take part in decision-making,” Katz said. “It is funded now, but everything goes to the war. The generals are rich, but not like ministers or FSB people. Among the elites, they are the most deprived.”

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Photograph of Major General Mikhail Gudkov, the deputy head of the Russian Navy

A view shows flowers placed on a table in front of a board with a photograph of Major General Mikhail Gudkov, the deputy head of the Russian Navy who, according to local authorities, was recently killed in the Kursk region amid Russia-Ukraine conflict, at an exhibition of distinguished Russian soldiers’ portraits in the far eastern city of Vladivostok, Russia, July 3, 2025.  (Tatiana Meel/Reuters)

That dynamic, Katz said, helps explain why Russian generals may not want the FSB responsible for their protection.

“For them, the FSB is a much bigger threat than the Ukrainian army,” Katz said. “The Ukrainian army kills a general once in a while. The FSB puts generals in prison much faster.”

The European intelligence source said the killings matter not only because of the operational losses, but because of the psychological effect inside the Russian army.

“Putin understands that losing prominent Russian generals can affect morale within the Russian army, which is already low from the Russian perspective,” the source said.

The apparent compromise, according to the European intelligence source, was to shift responsibility away from the FSB.

“The FSB did not want to deal with military protection, so the security service of the Russian presidential administration would take care of those generals,” the source said.

Katz said the internal pressure on Putin may also collide with Russia’s parliamentary elections in September — a moment he believes Western observers are largely ignoring.

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Russian President Vladimir Putin has been blamed for ordering numerous assassinations of critics and defectors.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has been blamed for ordering numerous assassinations of critics and defectors. ( )

He said the vote will not be free, and the Kremlin is expected to manipulate the results. 

But he argued that if public support for Putin’s United Russia party has fallen sharply, it may become harder for the regime to make the official results appear believable.

“Everyone already knows what results they will announce,” Katz said. “The question is whether anyone will believe those results.”

Katz said Putin’s system has long depended not only on control, but on the perception that the Kremlin still commands broad public support.

“Putin has never ruled in a situation where he does not have a majority,” Katz said. “His legitimacy rests on everyone believing that he has majority support. Once everyone believes he does not have a majority, and that he did not just cheat a little but simply drew the results, that is a different story.”

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Prigozhin ceremony

A portrait of Wagner Group’s chief Yevgeny Prigozhin, who died last week in a plane crash two months after launching his brief rebellion, lies on flowers on the grave at the Porokhovskoye cemetery in St. Petersburg, Russia, on Wednesday, Aug. 30, 2023. (AP Photo/Dmitri Lovetsky)

He compared the potential challenge to authoritarian systems that are forced to move from managed popularity to open coercion.

“Putin cannot lose like Orban,” Katz said. “But if everyone in Russia knows that everyone voted against him and he drew the results in his favor, that would be a new situation. He has never been in that position before.”

Fox News Digital reached out to the Russian and Ukrainian governments for comment but did not receive responses in time for publication.



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England has just had its hottest June on record, Met Office data shows | Extreme heat

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The month of June was the hottest in England on record, driven by a searing heatwave in the final days of the month, which for the first time had red heat alerts for three days, according to Met Office data.

The Met Office said provisional statistics showed Wales and the UK as a whole had recorded their second-warmest June since 1884.

Dr Emily Carlisle, a Met Office scientist, said: “June’s high temperatures are part of a broader pattern of warmth during 2026. So far, five of the first six months of the year have recorded mean temperatures at least 1C above average, with only January seeing below average temperatures.”

The heat in June was preceded by the warmest spring on record for England and Wales, and the third-warmest for the UK.

In May the Met office said one of the most striking values was recorded at Kew Gardens in Greater London, where temperatures reached 35.1C, exceeding its previous station record of 29.3C and the previous UK May record of 32.8C.

Workers taking a break in the heat in London during the red heat alert. Photograph: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images

“This reflects the exceptional nature of the heat, with values more typical of mid-summer being observed in late spring,” the Met office said.

The record-breaking temperatures in the second half of June were notable for exceptionally warm nights, with frequent “tropical nights”, during which the thermometer did not drop below 20C.

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June 2026’s minimum temperature was more than 2C above average across the UK, while England recorded overnight temperatures 2.6C above average.

Prof Stephen Belcher CBE, the Met Office chief scientist, said: “June’s heatwave was a significant weather event, with a red extreme heat warning issued. Human-induced climate change has made events like this more likely and more intense.

“To see temperatures like this in the UK in June is sobering. Events like this bring home the implications of climate change, with very high temperatures and humidity bringing significant health implications from heat stress, as well as impacts to a range of sectors such as transport, energy and water supply.”

Care home staff handing cold drinks to residents during the extreme heat. Photograph: Jordan Pettitt/PA

June was the first time since extreme heat warnings were introduced to the weather warnings system in 2021, that a red warning for extreme heat was issued for three consecutive days in the UK, with the extent and persistence of the heat particularly notable, the scientists said. Records dating back several decades, in some cases over a century, were challenged or exceeded during the three day red extreme heat alert.

The frequency and intensity of heatwaves has increased worldwide. Met Office projections indicate that hot spells will become more frequent in our future climate, particularly over the south-east of the UK. Temperatures are projected to rise in all seasons, but the heat would be most intense in summer.

Analysis out this week by Dr Christopher Callahan, a climate scientist at Indiana University, found that the recent European heatwave had killed more than 20,000 people, according to a rapid modelling study based on peer-reviewed methods.

The analysis found there were likely to have been more than 5,000 excess deaths in France, 4,500 in Germany, 3,000 in Spain, 2,700 in Italy, 1,070 in Poland and 862 in the UK between 22 and 28 June.



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