Elle King recounts scary fall that left her with amnesia and a concussion: ‘The baby is totally fine’

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Elle King is on the road to recovery after a nasty fall down her stairs last month.

The “Ex’s & Oh’s” singer recounted the scary accident to “Entertainment Tonight,” sharing “I can laugh now, because I’m doing a lot better, but it was a very intense thing. They said I got amnesia and got post-concussion syndrome.”

King, 33, said she was going downstairs “in the middle of the night, to make a bottle” for her son. King is mother to nearly 18-month-old Lucky Levi, with fiancé Dan Tooker.

“I slipped and knocked myself unconscious,” she explained.

ELLE KING GETS CANDID ON RECONNECTING WITH DAD ROB SCHNEIDER: ‘WE BOTH HAVE GROWN UP A LOT’

At the time, the Grammy-nominated singer’s initial worry was her son – whom she was home alone with at the time.

“The baby is totally fine, and I’m doing a lot better,” she noted. 

“What I love about Nashville is the community that I haven’t really had in any of the last multiple cities that I’ve lived in, even if I’ve had a bunch of friends. There’s something beautiful about this city and my friends and my music family, they all totally gathered around me and were all so supportive and showed up for me and helped me with the baby.”

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For King, recovery requires physical therapy.

“A lot of stretches, and a lot of, like, quiet, downtime which has never been my strong suit,” she said of adjustments she’s made since the fall.

Unfortunately for fans, she also had to cancel shows. At the time of the fall, King emotionally wrote to her Instagram story, “Just wanted to check in with a quick update and apologize to my fans in Tampa, Detroit, and Seattle. I share your disappointment that I had to cancel my radio shows this week. No one ever wants to pull out of shows, especially me. I live for performing.”

“I tried to push through and played 3 shows, but the travel, lights, all of it only exacerbated things,” she added.

King’s first performance of 2023 will be on Jan. 19 in Nashville, Tennessee.

 

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ND Gov. Burgum highlights state energy sector in annual address

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North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum highlighted the successes of the state’s energy sector during his annual State of the State address on Tuesday, while also calling on lawmakers to provide tax relief and address workforce shortages that he says continue to be a top barrier to economic growth.

Burgum delivered his hour-long speech on the first day of the legislative session during a joint session of the House and Senate. In his wide-ranging address, Burgum called for infrastructure investment and stressed the need to provide tax relief to North Dakotans hit by higher costs for food, fuel and other necessities. He also touted the state’s energy sector, and the state’s efforts to capture carbon dioxide for a more sustainable future.

“In today’s global uncertainty, our energy and food security make us the envy of many,” Burgum said. “Today the State of our State is one of strength and infinite opportunity, blessed with our abundant natural resources, inherent freedoms and industrious, caring people.”

DESANTIS CALLS FLORIDA ‘LAND OF SANITY,’ SLAMS BIDEN POLICIES IN HIS INAUGURAL ADDRESS

On Dec. 7, Burgum announced a proposed $18.4 billion budget that increases state spending by more than 3% and includes $3 billion in infrastructure funding. The budget also addresses the worker shortage issue by proposing increases in workforce development funding and public employee salaries.

Citing the costs of inflation and high interest rates, Burgum on Tuesday also urged lawmakers to approve a proposed income tax relief plan that he said would eliminate the state individual income tax for three out of five taxpayers and create the lowest flat-rate individual income tax in the nation.

Burgum also said he supports pending legislation that would exempt active-duty military pay from the state’s individual income tax —saying that some of North Dakota’s own National Guard members have moved to neighboring Minnesota to take advantage of a similar benefit.

Burgum highlighted North Dakota’s production of several crops, but noted that the state has fallen behind when it comes to animal agriculture. The Republican governor called on lawmakers to increase individual farming freedoms that would allow non-relatives to pool resources to start or expand livestock operations.

NEW SENATE, HOUSE LEADERS ELECTED BY GOP MAJORITIES IN NORTH DAKOTA LEGISLATURE

Burgum also said North Dakota’s efforts to store carbon dioxide, known as carbon capture, storage and utilization, is creating a sustainable path forward for the agriculture and energy industries. He said North Dakota is one of only two states with authority to permit Class VI injection wells for carbon dioxide storage and is better positioned than other states to take advantage of the emerging industry.

“Today, we’re on our way toward achieving carbon neutrality as a state by 2030, thanks to our extraordinary capacity to safely store over 252 billion tons of CO2, or 50 years of the nation’s CO2 output,” he said. “And in the process, we can help secure the future of our state’s two largest industries, energy and agriculture.”

 

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NASA planetary science budget remains under stress

WASHINGTON — Despite a small funding increase for 2023, NASA’s planetary science programs still face “significant stress” financially that contributed to the delay of one mission and could push back the start of others.

NASA received $3.2 billion for planetary science in the fiscal year 2023 omnibus spending bill signed into law Dec. 29. That was about $80 million more than what the agency received for planetary science in 2022 and $40 million above its request for 2023.

That increase, though, may do little to address some of the challenges NASA has been facing with current and future missions. Lori Glaze, director of NASA’s planetary science division, outlined those issues in presentations last month to the agency’s Planetary Science Advisory Committee and at a town hall during the Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU).

Among those challenges are ongoing impacts from the pandemic. “There have been some substantial costs in order to accommodate the impacts from COVID,” she said at the AGU meeting. Those costs, she said, had to be absorbed from within the planetary science budget.

There have also been supply chain issues for missions in development, along with inflation and higher labor rates. In addition to higher costs, she said that supply chain issues have required missions to order long-lead items earlier than expected, which requires more money earlier in the project’s development than anticipated.

Glaze said that, as those missions prepare for launch, they have been asking for more money for operations than anticipated. “I don’t think we’re very good at estimating what operational costs will be,” she said at the advisory committee meeting. Operations costs, she noted, are not part of the cost cap for competed planetary science missions, and thus don’t get refined until later in the mission.

“There’s significant stress on the planetary budget,” she said at the AGU town hall. “It’s been a bit brittle and fragile.”

Those issues came to a head in mid-2022 when Psyche, a Discovery-class mission to the asteroid of the same name, suffered delays in testing flight software that caused it to miss its launch window. NASA initiated an independent review that concluded that while Psyche is back on track for a launch now scheduled for October 2023, there were broader institutional issues at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which is developing Psyche, that had to be corrected.

As part of NASA’s response to that review, the agency said Nov. 4 it would delay by at least three years the launch of a Venus orbiter mission called VERITAS that is also part of the Discovery program and under development at JPL. Glaze suggested that the budgetary pressures facing the planetary science program left her with no other options to address the Psyche problems than to delay VERITAS.

“This was not a decision that was easily arrived at,” she said at the AGU town hall. “I do not think this is a good answer. I think it is the least of the bad answers that we could come up with.”

Those budgetary stresses could also affect implementation of the planetary science decadal survey released in April 2022. Glaze reiterated concerns she made in August that funding projections for planetary science fell short of the “level” budget in the decadal, the lower of two budget profiles included in that report. While the level budget projected spending to increase to more than $3.5 billion a year by the middle of the decade, the fiscal year 2023 budget proposal kept spending for planetary science at less than $3.2 billion through 2026, increasing to $3.3 billion in 2027.

“We will continue to try and secure the funding so that we can execute what is in the decadal survey,” she said at the town hall. “The key takeaway from this is that there may be a slight delay in getting some of the activities kicked off.”

As in August, she said those delays would likely affect the top-priority large, or flagship, mission from the decadal, a Uranus orbiter and probe. The science for such a mission is already well-established, she said, so the focus in the near term will be technical studies, including options to launch the mission after 2031, when a Jupiter gravity assist that would shorten the travel time to Uranus is no longer available.

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Busy Philipps shares shocking video footage of her falling down steps: 'How am I not dead?'

Busy Philipps is boldly getting back up after experiencing a traumatic fall.

The “Dawson’s Creek” alum took to Instagram on New Year’s Eve to share a video of her home security footage during the terrifying moment.

In the video, what appears to be a dog ran down the stairs, and Philipps tumbled down immediately after. 

BUSY PHILIPPS REVEALS HER CHILD BIRDIE, 12, IS GAY, PREFERS THEY/THEM PRONOUNS

While the 43-year-old actress stood up after she tripped, objects such as pumpkins are seen rolled into the streets following Philipps’ fall.

Busy Philipps took to Instagram on New Year’s Eve to share a video of her home security footage during the terrifying moment.

Busy Philipps took to Instagram on New Year’s Eve to share a video of her home security footage during the terrifying moment.
(Instagram)

After the “White Chicks” star had a moment to process the fall, she pulled out her phone, petted the dog and walked back up the stairs.

While Busy Phillipps stood up after she tripped down the stairs, objects, such as pumpkins are seen rolled into the streets following her fall.

While Busy Phillipps stood up after she tripped down the stairs, objects, such as pumpkins are seen rolled into the streets following her fall.
(Instagram)

She was seen wearing a sparkly dress with a black jacket over and black boots.

BUSY PHILIPPS SAYS SHE’S STRUGGLING UNDER QUARANTINE WITH HUSBAND MARC SILVERSTEIN

Philipps posted the shocking video with the song “I Know The End” by Phoebe Bridgers.

Her celebrity friends reacted to the Instagram post and made a few encouraging comments.

Netflix’s “Queer Eye” star Jonathan Van Ness said, “But the pop up was so hardcore! Ear rings check / ears attached still, okay going back to watch again.”

“Hamilton” actress Renée Elise Goldsberry responded with a sweet reaction, “You posted it! Brava! How you get back up is what matters! Thx for your shining example!”

BUSY PHILIPPS GOES ON EPIC RANT OVER E! SHOW CANCELLATION, 11-YEAR-OLD DAUGHTER RIPS NETWORK, TOO

The “Busy Philipps is Doing Her Best” podcast host got candid about the fall during an October episode titled “Busy Almost DIED!”

Philipps compared her fall to the meme of a fake Jason Derulo tripping on the Met Gala steps that surfaced on the internet. 

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The "Busy Philipps is Doing Her Best" podcast host got candid about the fall during an October episode titled "Busy Almost DIED!"

The “Busy Philipps is Doing Her Best” podcast host got candid about the fall during an October episode titled “Busy Almost DIED!”
(Getty Images)

“That is literally in my head what was happening. I was flying … when I landed on the sidewalk, I was like looking up at the trees, and I was like, ‘How am I not dead?'” she questioned.

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Although Philipps did not sustain any injuries, she expressed on her podcast that she is happy her life did not end after the fall.

“I’m not gonna f—ing die falling down stairs, I can’t. What a bummer. It’s not for me.”

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‘I’m a Ceramicist, and This Is My Exact Routine for Restoring Moisture in My Dry, Clay-Covered Hands’

Well+Good 

Winter weather does frightful things to skin, often causing it to dry out and become prone to cracking, flaking, itching, and more—but that’s actually not the reason why I have dry hands this season. Sure, dry heat and icy temps contribute to my mitt’s lack of moisture, however, they’re merely a supporting act in the hydration heist that occurs on a daily basis.

As a ceramicist, I spend a lot of my free time sinking my hands into clay, a material that is surprisingly dehydrating. Just like the oil-balancing and acne-clearing mud masks you have sitting on your vanity, pottery does a fantastic job of sucking away grease and moisture—only my already supremely dry skin doesn’t need it. This often results in super-dry, rough, and itchy skin. On the worst days, it can sometimes look like my hands actually have dandruff. Big yikes.

When winter rolls around, it is a full-on fight to keep moisture locked into my thirsty paws. And, sometimes, no matter what I do, it feels like an impossible feat. That is until I decided to pick up one of my all-time favorite skin creams—Weleda’s Skin Food Original Ultra-Rich Cream ($16)—and play around with a daily regimen that would actually revive my sad, raisin-like mitts.

Weleda, Skin Food Original Ultra-Rich Body Cream — $16.00

Key ingredients: Pansy, chamomile, and calendula

The Weleda Skin Food Original Ultra-Rich Cream dates all the way back to 1926 (that’s nearly 100 years of hydration!) and is a staple in many skin-care arsenals, including my own. As a long-time fan of Weleda, I actually can’t remember a time when I didn’t have a tube of this thick, lotion-like skin salve in my medicine cabinet. Formulated with plant-based ingredients, including rosemary, chamomile, and pansy extracts and sunflower and sweet almond oils, it’s a lifesaver for parched paws.

I love it because it has the effects of a buttery salve but glides on and absorbs like lotion, so you don’t have an oil slick sitting on top of your skin (and getting all over everything.) The fast-action formula also works almost instantly to replenish my skin’s moisture barrier and ward off the itchy sensations I experience on my knuckles at their driest.

My dry-hands solution

While I’m a big fan of the Weleda Skin Food Original Ultra-Rich Cream as a solo act, there’s actually a trick to how I apply it to elevate the formula and make it even more effective. Every night before bed, I wash my hands with soap and water and apply either Pacifica’s Lavender Moon Body Scrub ($13) or Hand in Hand Sugar Scrub ($13). (If my hands are in extra dehydration-despair, I reach for Lush Ocean Salt Face and Body Scrub ($21) which works through severe dry skin build-up with ease.) Then, I reach for Skin Food and slather it all over, paying close attention to my knuckles and nail beds since those areas need the most TLC.

As everyday scrubs, Pacifica Lavender Moon Body Scrub and Hand in Hand Sugar Scrub both work wonders. Pacifica’s formula features teeny tiny walnut shell particles that gently and thoroughly slough away dead skin cells to reveal softer and more supple skin underneath. It also contains jojoba seed oil, which provides a base layer of nourishment before the Skin Food gets slathered on.

Pacifica, Lavender Moon Body Scrub — $13.00

Key ingredients: Jojoba, lavender, and vanilla

Hand in Hand is a sustainable scrub I keep in my shower at all times and love it for head-to-toe exfoliation, especially when it comes to my hands. The scrub has a sugar base with deeply nourishing sunflower oil—which has tons of vitamin E—and coconut oils, so it also makes for an excellent primer in addition to getting rid of dead skin build-up.

Hand In Hand, Sugar Scrub — $13.00

Key ingredients: Sugar, coconut oil, and sunflower oil

Available in six different scents.

Since my skin gets so dry, it’s nearly impossible to get cream to penetrate deep enough for lasting hydration on its own. Exfoliating the skin is a necessary step in my dry hands solution, as it removes the layer of dead skin on top and allows for better product absorption and longer-lasting moisture. However, the skin on my hands can also feel super sensitive due to the lack of moisture and consistent irritation. Exfoliating it could technically result in further irritation, only it doesn’t, since the Pacifica and Hand in Hand body scrubs have such nourishing formulas.

Establishing this mini skin-care regimen for my hands has worked true wonders and helps me keep dry skin at bay, no matter how much time I spend getting my hands dirty in clay. By gently removing the barrier of dry skin on my hands’ surface and applying a thick and creamy salve (one people have sworn by for nearly a century, no less), I can create my art without the added discomfort of dehydration.

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Pope Benedict XVI and Pope John Paul II: Catholicism’s dynamic duo

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I’ll never forget standing on the tarmac at Andrew’s Air Force Base in 2008 with a gaggle of journalists waiting for “Shepherd One” to touch down. Like the rest of my colleagues, my feet were killing me, but the excitement was palpable.

The honor guard was in place, Secret Service agents were in place, and dignitaries were queued up. Moments after the Alitalia airliner came to a halt, President George W. Bush and First Lady Laura Bush were first in line to greet the beaming German pontiff.

As he moved from the tarmac into an awaiting limo, he blessed the adoring crowds, including the journalists covering his visit.

America had only hosted two popes — Paul VI in 1965 and John Paul II on seven occasions — but this was the first and only visit of Pope Benedict XVI.

Sounding incredibly like his predecessor, Benedict lauded American values and its responsibility to guard freedom and protect the vulnerable.

“Freedom is not only a gift but also a summons to personal responsibility,” he said in his opening remarks, just before celebrating his 81st birthday at the White House.

“The preservation of freedom calls for the cultivation of virtue, self-discipline, sacrifice for the common good, and a sense of responsibility towards the less fortunate. It also demands the courage to engage in civic life and to bring one’s deepest beliefs and values to reasoned public debate.”

John Paul II had said almost the same thing to Americans on multiple occasions.

REV. ROBERT SIRICO: POPE BENEDICT LEFT US A LOT OF THINKING TO DO

It should come as no surprise that Benedict and John Paul were of one mind on most issues. Both men were formed in the crucible of the Second World War. Both were influential fathers of the Second Vatican Council. Karol Wojtyla — the future John Paul II — was a young bishop from Kraków. Josef Ratzinger — the future Benedict XVI — was an adviser to the archbishop of Cologne, Germany.

For both, the Council was the launchpad for their papacies.

Their contributions to Vatican II are legendary — Ratzinger’s to Dei Verbum, a document about the sources of revelation, and Wojtyla to Gaudium et Spes, about the Church in the modern world

Remarkably, they didn’t meet during the Council. Their paths crossed at the 1978 conclave that elected Italian cardinal Albino Luciani — Pope John Paul I.

Ratzinger later recalled his first impression of the Polish cardinal.

“I was particularly impressed by his human warmth and the deep inner rooting in God which appeared so clearly,” he said of that meeting. “And then, of course, I was also impressed by his philosophical education, his acuteness as a thinker, and his ability to communicate his knowledge.”

Shortly after his election in 1978, John Paul II asked Ratzinger to work with him in Rome. But the newly minted German cardinal declined, having only been archbishop of Munich for little more than 18 months.

The pope renewed his offer in 1981. This time Ratzinger accepted. He took on several roles at the Vatican in early 1982, including Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, a post he held until being elected John Paul’s successor in 2005.

Their 23-year partnership was one of the greatest in modern Church history.

“The collaboration with the Holy Father was always characterized by friendship and affection,” Benedict told an interviewer in 2013. “It developed above all on two planes: the official and the private.”

The two met regularly for lunch on Tuesdays and again on Friday evenings to discuss work. A deep friendship also developed.

“[The idea] that John Paul II was a saint came to me from time to time, in the years of my collaboration with him, ever more clearly,” Benedict said.

They became Catholicism’s dynamic duo. It was almost like Ratzinger was Robin to John Paul’s Batman. But it was deeper than that. Ratzinger’s input gave John Paul’s writings greater depth and clarity. Ratzinger was John Paul’s sounding board for many of his initiatives — from the launching of World Youth Day to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, first published in 1992.

Like John Paul II, Benedict understood his responsibility to faithfully interpret the Second Vatican Council.

In some sense, Benedict’s reign was an eight-year extension of John Paul’s 26-year papacy. Both leaned heavily on Council documents in their encyclicals, speeches, and papal writings. Both men helped cement Church teachings on the priesthood, sexuality, and papal authority.

Benedict went on to break new ground on liturgy and ecumenism. His 2007 motu proprio loosened restrictions on priests’ ability to celebrate the Traditional Latin Mass. Two years later, he created a path for Anglicans to come into full communion with the Catholic Church.

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History may remember Benedict XVI for his abdication in 2013 — the first pope to do so in more than 600 years. But he saw himself as a simple “co-worker in the truth” — the episcopal motto he chose for himself in 1977.

When he’s laid to rest in the crypt under St. Peter’s Basilica on Thursday, Benedict’s remains will fittingly occupy the tomb left vacant when John Paul was moved to the upper basilica in 2011. This will be only the second papal funeral in 44 years — and the first time a sitting pope presides over the funeral of a former pope in centuries.

Pope Francis may well quote Benedict who fittingly described John Paul II’s entrance into heaven while presiding over his funeral in 2005: “We can be sure that our beloved pope is standing today at the window of the Father’s house, that he sees us and blesses us. Yes, bless us, Holy Father.”

That’s a blessing I would readily accept again — this time from heaven.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE BY PATRICK NOVECOSKY

 

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Question about an ‘obvious sign’ someone’s American goes viral: ‘You hear them coming like thunder’

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A Reddit user who challenged followers to share an “obvious sign someone’s American” received entertaining answers that reinforced some stereotypes and provided several, fun travel anecdotes.

“What’s an obvious sign someone’s american?” the user asked over the weekend.

“An Italian told me that Americans walk confidently in the wrong direction,” one person responded.

“British man once told me he knew I was American because I was wearing a baseball cap backwards.” another user said.

“An Italian told me they could tell I was American because I wore my sunglasses on the top of my head when I wasn’t using them,” another user replied. 

REDDIT POSTER SAYS HIS WIFE IS ‘VERY ANGRY’ HE NOW OWNS HIS DAD’S ORPHANED DOG: ‘TOOK THE LIBERTY’

“They want ice in their water,” another person wrote.

The comment sparked a larger conversation, with users chiming in with several anecdotes about trying to order ice in beverages in foreign countries.

“To quote a Latvian woman I met at a hostel: you hear them coming like the thunder,” one user said. “More often than not, if they’re talking and laughing louder than everyone else, they’re American. Edit: I love my American neighbours! Sorry if I sounded rude. Canadians are also pretty loud when we get going.”

POLL: MOST AMERICANS SEE US INFLUENCE AROUND THE GLOBE ON THE DECLINE

“And New Yorkers are a different breed,” another user agreed. “Their regular talking voice absolutely booms over everything else. Makes sense when you have to be heard over the 1,000dB noise pollution.”

“How much personal space they give themselves. Americans like at LEAST an arm length,” user Zonerdrone wrote.

“Americans tend to lean on things when standing still,” another offered.

CHRISTMAS CRISIS: REDDIT POSTER SIDES WITH MOTHER, NOT WIFE, WHETHER TO HANG A STOCKING FOR HIS STEPSON

It’s often said that Americans get a bad wrap in foreign cultures, and those biases routinely show up in film and television. In the first episode of the popular Netflix show “Emily in Paris,” for instance, a French character depicts Americans as obese.

“The people are so fat?” Emily’s boss Monsieur Brossard asks her, after a discussion on Chicago’s famous deep-dish pizza. “Why are they all so fat?”

“Well perhaps from the disgusting food,” her other French boss Sylvie, replies.

Other stereotypes have included that Americans are entitled, arrogant, or obsessed with their jobs.

Some Reddit users, however, had kinder things to say.

“I worked as a cashier in a touristic place in Paris, I always recognised Americans because they were kinda friendly to me and they always left tips,” one user said.

Several others agreed with the sentiment.

 

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Suspected homegrown terrorist Trevor Bickford to appear in court virtually on NYE slashing charges

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Suspected homegrown terrorist Trevor Bickford will appear in court virtually on Wednesday to face charges for allegedly slashing two NYPD officers on New Year’s Eve.

Bickford, a 19-year-old from Maine, is under investigation for alleged ties to Islamic extremism as well, with close family members having reported his behavior to police. Bickford faces two counts of attempted murder of a police officer and two counts of attempted assault.

None of his current charges allege any terroristic motive as of Wednesday, despite the ongoing investigation.

A high-level police source told Fox News Digital that Bickford was being watched by the FBI’s counterterrorism task force in the weeks leading up to Saturday’s attack. The source also said Bickford recently converted to Islam and a tipster claimed he had expressed interest in going to Afghanistan.

MULTIPLE NYPD OFFICERS STABBED WITH MACHETE NEAR TIMES SQUARE

Bickford’s mother also reportedly alerted the FBI to her son’s extremism in the weeks leading up to the attack.

Bickford’s alleged attack took place just outside of Times Square. Police say he first struck a rookie cop identified only as “Paul,” slashing Paul in the head before allegedly causing minor injuries to another officer before being shot in the shoulder.

MULTIPLE NYPD OFFICERS STABBED WITH MACHETE NEAR TIMES SQUARE

NYC Mayor Eric Adams praised the officers’ response in a press conference Sunday morning, saying that the two who were attacked were in stable condition and expected to recover.

“And as we do a preliminary review of the bodycam video, we see how well these officers executed the plan that was put in place by the New York City Police Department in ensuring we protect those who came here to bring in a new year,” he told reporters.

The FBI’s New York field office did not respond to requests for comment regarding the terrorism investigation into Bickford.

 

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Packers' Aaron Rodgers reveals simple key to team's recent success

Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers have gone on a four-game winning streak, putting them within one victory of making the playoffs after a rocky start to the regular season.

The Packers had two wins over some of the top teams in the NFL, including the Miami Dolphins and Minnesota Vikings, and some of the worst teams, Los Angeles Rams and Chicago Bears, during the span.

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Minnesota Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins, #8, walks off the field ahead of Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers, left, after an NFL football game, Sunday, Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay, Wisconsin.

Minnesota Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins, #8, walks off the field ahead of Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers, left, after an NFL football game, Sunday, Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay, Wisconsin.
(AP Photo/Morry Gash)

In those four games, Rodgers has 808 passing yards, four touchdown passes, two interceptions and has been sacked six times. So what has been the key to the Packers’ recent success? Happy thoughts.

“I do believe in the power of manifestation and I do believe in momentum and I believe very strongly in the force of the mind. And when you start to believe something strongly, some miraculous things can happen,” the star quarterback told reporters after the Vikings win, via NFL.com.

JETS’ ROBERT SALEH PREACHES PATIENCE AMID ZACH WILSON UNCERTAINTY AHEAD FINAL REGULAR SEASON GAME

Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers throws a pass during the first half of an NFL football game against the Minnesota Vikings, Sunday, Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay, Wisconsin.

Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers throws a pass during the first half of an NFL football game against the Minnesota Vikings, Sunday, Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay, Wisconsin.
(AP Photo/Mike Roemer)

He also explained where his mind was during the team’s five-game losing streak when things looked bleaker than ever.

“I was resigned to some of those realities being possible. And when I took my mind there, I had a peace about it. I had a peace about all of it. Whatever was supposed to happen, I was surrendered to that reality — with also the resolute mindset that we could still get back in this thing.

“And I think that’s what I’m most proud of, for myself and our team, is that there were a lot of different things that could happen, and we stuck together, and we put ourselves in position to do something special.”

Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers, #12, runs from Minnesota Vikings linebacker Brian Asamoah II, right, during a 2-yard touchdown run in the second half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay, Wisconsin.

Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers, #12, runs from Minnesota Vikings linebacker Brian Asamoah II, right, during a 2-yard touchdown run in the second half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay, Wisconsin.
(AP Photo/Morry Gash)

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The back-to-back MVP now has his team in position to get back to the playoffs after a bad start to the year.

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An account of Benedict's papacy to be sealed in his coffin

VATICAN CITY (AP) — A written account of the history-making papacy of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI will be placed alongside his body in his coffin for burial, the Vatican said Tuesday in revealing plans for the first funeral of a pontiff to resign in six centuries.

Meanwhile, tens of thousands of people filed through St. Peter’s Basilica to view his body as it lay in state for a second day.

When the viewing ends Wednesday evening, a one-page account of Benedict’s nearly eight-year papacy will be put into a metal cylinder and placed inside the coffin, along with other items including Vatican coins minted during his reign, said Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni.

Benedict, 95, died Saturday after 10 years in an extraordinary papal retirement lived out in a monastery in the Vatican Gardens. Pope Francis will celebrate the funeral Mass in St. Peter’s Square on Thursday.

Although the Vatican has stressed that Benedict wanted “simplicity” to characterize his funeral, Bruni said the liturgy will “in great detail be that of pontifical ceremonies … with some original elements.”

After the public viewing concludes at 7 p.m. (1800 GMT) on Wednesday, “the coffin will be closed, with a special rite,″ Bruni said. Benedict’s body will be placed in a coffin hewn from cypress, then put into a zinc coffin that will be sealed in a second wooden casket.

It will be brought out of the basilica and into the square about 40 minutes before Thursday’s funeral, as the crowd gathered for the service recites the rosary for Benedict, who served as pontiff from April 2005 through February 2013.

Vatican security estimated about 65,000 people filed past the bier on Monday and 70,000 had done so on Tuesday. Two influential U.S. churchmen, Cardinals Timothy Dolan of New York and Sean Patrick O’Malley of Boston, attended Mass in the basilica at an altar just behind the central viewing area on the second day.

Among prominent clergymen coming for the funeral will be Hong Kong Cardinal Joseph Zen, his secretary said. Zen, a retired 90-year-old bishop, has been sharply at odds with Francis over the Vatican’s agreement with Chinese authorities on the appointment of bishops. Zen contends the deal betrays pro-Vatican Catholics in China and the clergy who have suffered persecution there.

Elevated to the rank of cardinal by Benedict, Zen had been arrested last year on suspicion of colluding with foreign forces to endanger China’s national security. While not charged with the security-related accusations, he was fined in November after being found guilty of failing to register a now-defunct fund that sought to help people arrested in pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong.

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán was among those at the basilica, whose doors opened before dawn. Like Benedict, Orbán has crusaded for a revival of what European conservatives view as the continent’s Christian roots.

Others paying respects included Miriam Groppelli, an altar server in her parish in Milan, who wasn’t even born when Benedict was pontiff. The 6-year-old had traveled by train with her father, Giuseppe Groppelli, 40, along with her grandparents and older brother and sisters.

“I told her his story, and she was really excited to come to Rome to say goodbye,” the father said. “Benedict has been very important for the Church, his speeches were so clear and beautiful. He leaves a great legacy of knowledge.”

Groppelli offered his take on Benedict’s unusual, nearly-decade-long retirement arrangement that saw him living in the Vatican City monastery where he died. Francis, who was elected in 2013 by fellow cardinals to succeed him, lived nearby.

“I believe there’s no real war or competition within the church and between popes. The church lives and grows every day, also thanks to their words,” he said.

Benedict, the former Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger of Germany, had served for decades at the Vatican as the church’s guardian of doctrinal orthodoxy, was known for his theological knowledge as well as for eloquent speeches.

Since Benedict was no longer head of Vatican City State, in contrast to protocols for funerals of popes who died while still reigning, only two countries — Italy and his native Germany — will send official delegations, according to the Vatican.

Instead, politicians and royalty, especially of predominantly Catholic countries, will attend in a private capacity.

With no need to elect a new pope, cardinals coming from around the world for Benedict’s funeral won’t have to stay in Rome for a conclave to pick the next Church leader. Still, Francis will have ample opportunity to confer with these “princes of the Church,″ who serve as his privileged advisers.

The last decade saw an uneasy equilibrium over the presence in the Vatican of a retired pope and a reigning one.

Now, Francis heads the Church without that presence looming over his papacy.

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Nicole Winfield contributed reporting.

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Follow AP’s coverage of Pope Benedict XVI at https://apnews.com/hub/pope-benedict-xvi

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