Jessica Simpson shares photo after finding her 8th grade cheerleading letterman jacket

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Jessica Simpson has still got spirit. 

The Jessica Simpson Collection mogul shared a throwback with fans earlier this week when she posted a photo of herself with her middle school letterman jacket on. 

“Found my 8th grade head cheerleader letter jacket,” Simpson, 42, wrote on Instagram along with a selfie of her in the green and yellow keepsake. Simpson finished the look with an orange beanie and hoop earrings. 

“Yes! Go Vikings!” her younger sister Ashlee Simpson, 38, commented along with a laughing emoji. 

JESSICA SIMPSON, ALICIA SILVERSTONE LEAD HOLLYWOOD STARS PURSUING FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH VIA NONSURGICAL PROCEDURES 

“U go girl,” Sharon Stone wrote, and Paris Hilton left a heart eyes emoji. 

In recent years, Simpson has been open with her fans about her weight loss journey. The Jessica Simpson Collection mogul said in September after losing the baby weight from her third pregnancy she’s able to fit back into all her old clothes. 

“Oh, gosh, no,” she told Extra at the time when asked if she’s gotten used to the attention on her weight loss. “Would any woman? But Lynda Carter warned me on the set of ‘Dukes of Hazzard.’ She was like, ‘I will always be Wonder Woman and compared to Wonder Woman, and that’s what you’re doing here as Daisy Duke. Just know the words ‘Daisy Duke’ will follow you for the rest of your career.’”

Simpson added, “I’ve been criticized, and it hurts, but I’ve been every weight and I’ve been proud of it. I decided, ‘Okay, everybody is going to talk about my weight all the time, I might as well make money off of it and turn it into a business of selling clothes and acceptance.”

JESSICA SIMPSON HAS SOME FANS CONCERNED OVER RECENT INSTAGRAM VIDEO

The mom of three added that she lost the weight she gained after having her daughter, Birdie, in 2019 with the help of a nutritionist. 

“I went to a nutritionist, and I needed to get my eating habits right,” she said.

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSLETTER

“I absolutely feel healthy,” she told the outlet. “I feel like my old self before I had children and all the hormones going wild. I feel younger, actually. I have a lot more energy and yeah, I get to wear all the clothes that are in storage that I saved for [10-year-old daughter] Maxwell and [3-year-old daughter] Birdie. Maybe Birdie will outgrow them because Maxwell has already outgrown me!”

Simpson and husband Eric Johnson also share 9-year-old son Ace. 

 

Read More 

 

Texas grandfather accused of capital murder in stabbing death of 8-year-old grandson

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

A Texas man is accused of stabbing his grandson to death on New Year’s Day while his grandson was in his custody. 

Richland Hills Police Department responded to a 911 call from someone at a home on Labadie Drive in Richland Hills, Texas around 7:30 a.m. Sunday, Jan. 1. Responding officers found the body of an 8-year-old boy who had been stabbed to death.

A family member identified the boy as Brenym McDonald. 

“Upon arrival, officers made entry to the residence and located what we now know to be a deceased 8-year-old male,” Richland Hills officer Sheena McEachran. “There was a weapon, edged blade weapon involved in this incident and that weapon has been recovered.”

POLICE IN FLORIDA OFFERING $10K REWARD FOR INFO ABOUT ‘HEINOUS’ MURDER OF MARRIED COUPLE

The young boy’s great-grandmother Linda Hubbard said the boy and his parents were living with the boy’s grandfather, 62-year-old Phillip Hughes.

CHICAGO BOY, 9, FATALLY SHOT IN OWN HOME

“They were staying here with the grandfather until they could get him another place to live,” Hubbard said. “They kind of stayed away from him. I can’t say much about that.”

After finding the body, first responders located Hughes, who was walking near the middle school a few blocks away from the home. His arrest was captured on a neighbor’s doorbell camera.

Police are still investigating to determine a motive for the violent stabbing.

“We have lots of questions, just like everyone else has. And throughout the investigation we’ll hopefully be able to answer all the questions and why this tragedy occurred,” said Officer Sheena McEachran with the Richland Hills Police Department. “There’s not a lot of words right now to describe a lot of the feelings involved, but we are doing everything we can to investigate this fully and making sure we bring justice for the family.”

Hughes did have a previous arrest and was convicted for driving while intoxicated.

Hughes is being held at the joint detention center at the North Richland Hills Police Department, where he is being held for capital murder. On Monday, Jan. 2, Hughes appeared in court, where a judge set his bond for $2 million.

 

Read More 

 

At Benedict’s summer home, a town mourns its beloved visitor

Top News: US & International Top News Stories Today | AP News 

FILE – Pope Benedict XVI greets faithful from his summer residence of Castel Gandolfo, the scenic town where he spent his first post-Vatican days and made his last public blessing as pope, Feb. 28, 2013. Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI’s death has hit Castel Gandolfo’s “castellani” particularly hard, since many knew him personally, and in some ways had already bid him an emotional farewell when he uttered his final words as pope from the palace balcony overlooking the town square. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno, File)

CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy (AP) — The shopkeeper named her daughter after him. The parish priest wears his old vestments. The former mayor dedicated a plaque to him on City Hall, and residents up and down this picturesque hilltop town reminisce about hearing him play the piano behind the palace walls on cool summer evenings.

Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI is particularly beloved in Castel Gandolfo, where he joined a centuries-long list of pontiffs who summered at the papal villa overlooking Lake Alban in the hills south of Rome. Benedict’s death has hit its residents hard, since many knew him personally, and had already said their emotional farewells when he uttered his final words as pope from the palace’s balcony overlooking the town square on Feb. 28, 2013.

On that night, thousands had thronged Castel Gandolfo’s main piazza and gave Benedict a thundering round of applause as the palace’s brass-studded doors swung shut at 8 p.m., signaling the official end of his papacy.

Benedict then began the first papal retirement in 600 years in the seclusion of the palace’s grounds, where he waited out the conclave that elected Pope Francis. He returned to the Vatican two months later to live his remaining years in a converted monastery in the Vatican Gardens, where he died Saturday, nearly 10 years after that momentous night in Castel Gandolfo.

Hub peek embed (PopeBenedictXVI) – Compressed layout (automatic embed)

“It was really awful seeing the big door close that night,” said Stefano Carosi, who runs the coffee shop on the main piazza, a stone’s throw from the palace entrance. “It made us realize that this pope wouldn’t be with us anymore … that he had left us.”

It was Pope Urban VIII who had the palace built on the northern end of town in 1624, to give popes an escape from the sweltering Roman summers. It was enlarged over succeeding pontificates to its present size, which is now bigger than Vatican City itself.

Aside from the extensive gardens and a pool that St. John Paul II installed, the palace grounds are home to a working farm that supplies the Vatican with fresh dairy, eggs, honey and produce, as well as an observatory that boasts a world-class meteorite collection.

In the decade since Benedict retired, Castel Gandolfo has had to adapt its livelihood and seasonal rhythms to a new pope who has chosen not to vacation here. Francis has spent every summer of his papacy in Vatican City, depriving Castel Gandolfo’s souvenir shops, restaurants and hotels of the visitors who would pack the town each summer Sunday for noon papal blessings and then stay to enjoy a cool afternoon in the countryside.

Francis has tried to make it up to them, opening the palace and its immaculate gardens to the public in an extension of the Vatican Museums, where visitors can see the papal bedroom, vestments and old uniforms of the papal court.

But even with a year-round tourism opportunity, the absence of a pope still rankles a community that for centuries had a privileged relationship with popes, especially Benedict because of his obvious love for the town and his decision to mark his final moments here as pope.

“When he arrived here (at the beginning of each summer) he looked very tired, but just with the two months he spent in Castel Gandolfo he flourished again,” said Mayor Maurizio Colacchi, whose two terms covered nearly Benedict’s entire eight-year papacy. “It was clear that the air, the atmosphere, the tranquility, the serenity were of great benefit for him.”

Colacchi recalled the visits by heads of state that turned main street into the center of the media universe for a day, as well as Benedict’s lower-profile but more frequent visitor: his late brother, the Rev. Georg Ratzinger, who often spent weeks visiting the pope in summer.

In one of his many papal encounters, Colacchi gave Georg honorary citizenship. In another, Colacchi unveiled a plaque on the façade of City Hall with a quote Benedict once uttered in expressing his love for the town. “Here I have everything: mountains, lake and I can even see the sea, and good people,” the plaque reads.

“We got to know him very well, in the sense that we had the fortune of appreciating him in a more direct way than anyone else, because here everything’s smaller,” said Patriza Gasperini, whose family has run Gasperini Souvenirs, a shop right next to the palace entrance, for three generations.

She remembered how Benedict would greet residents in the main square when he would return from his walks in the gardens, without any bodyguards, or when he’d play his beloved Mozart in the evenings, and passersby could hear it faintly in the main square.

“He was very, very good,” said Gasperini, whose shop still features Benedict-themed religious souvenirs and who named her daughter, Benedetta, when she was born a few months after his 2005 election.

Benedict was remembered with prayer during several moments of the Tuesday morning Mass in the parish church on the main square, where a large photo of him with a black ribbon across the frame was placed next to the altar.

The parish priest, the Rev. Tadeusz Rozmus, donned a white vestment that Benedict had worn during a Mass he celebrated for the Castel Gandolfo faithful in their church and then left behind as a gift.

“The popes who came here didn’t come as guests,” Rozmus said after Mass. “This was their home.”

___

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

 

Read More 

Burger King Adds Hefty ‘Suicide Burger’ to its Menu Nationwide

TheStreet 

While that’s its secret menu name, not its official one, the fast-food giant is adding a burger that makes the Whopper and McDonald’s Big Mac look like a snack.

Fast-food fans want bigger sandwiches. That’s why Wendy’s  (WEN) – Get Free Report lets you add a burger patty to its doubles and why fans regularly order double-patty sandwiches like McDonald’s (MCD) – Get Free Report Big Mac and Burger King’s Whopper.

Those are meaty burgers, but in reality, a single patty at McDonald’s comes in at 1.6 ounces, so a double is 3.2 ounces, which is less than the Quarter Pounder (4 ounces before cooking). And when you go to nicer burger chains like Five Guys and Shake Shack (SHAK) – Get Free Report single burger patties actually get bigger (3 and 4 ounces respectively.

So, even a double-patty sandwich like the Big Mac, the Whopper or a Dave’s Double at Wendy’s is a relatively puny sandwich when it comes to the meat (some of which cooks off anyway). That’s why many fast-food fans have looked for ways to get more meat on their sandwiches.

Wendy’s makes it easy by allowing customers to bring any burger to a triple by adding patties. McDonald’s and Restaurant Brands International’s QSR Burger King generally allow the practice, but neither publicizes it. That has led to the creation of a number of “secret menu” items like ordering a Big Mac made with Quarter Pounder patties (you will pay an upcharge) or building custom monster burgers.

Now, Burger King has decided to lean into the trend and add a true monstrosity to its menus nationwide.

Burger King

Burger King Has Done This in Global Markets

Burger King Japan has a tradition of offering very large takes on the hamburger, but the biggest (for now) is the King Yeti Super One Pound Beef Burger: a four-patty and six-cheese slice sandwich with a similarly high price to match.

“While Japan is known for its high cost of living, the roughly $15 (or 1,750 Yen) that the King Yeti Super One Pound commands is certainly steep for a Burger King menu item: the most expensive sandwich on the U.S. menu, the Texas Double Whopper commands $8.19,” wrote TheStreet’s Veronika Bondarenko in Feb. 2022.

In addition to a potential heart attack, the King Yeti Super One Pound Beef Burger comes with four 100% beef patties, six slices of Gouda cheese, caesar sauce, pickles, onions, and a combination of Parmesan and Camembert cheese on a brioche bun.

Burger King Mades the Quad Stacker ‘Suicide Burger’ Official

While Burger King has never embraced the name, the Quad Stacker has semi-affectionally been known as the “Suicide Burger” by secret menu aficionados. That version of the sandwich is generally ordered with four burger patties, four slices of American cheese, and eight slices of bacon served between two buns with some of Burger King’s secret sauce.

The menu version, which will be rolled out nationwide as part of the new BK Stackers lineup starting Jan. 5, will be a little different Chew Boom reported.

“The Quad BK Stacker features four beef patties, four slices of American cheese, bacon, and Stacker Sauce all sandwiched between a sesame seed bun,” the website shared.

There will also be a Double and a Triple Stacker offered. The only difference is that the Double will have two patties and two slices of cheese, while the Triple will have three of each.

Read More 

Idaho murders: PA police say ‘force was used’ when search warrant was executed at Kohberger home

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Law enforcement officials broke windows and doors when executing an overnight search warrant in the arrest of Idaho quadruple murder suspect Bryan Kohberger, Pennsylva police said Tuesday.

Pennsylvania State Police Major Christopher Paris said during an afternoon press conference that “force was used” to gain access to the Kohbergers’ home during the early morning hours of Dec. 30 in Albrightsville, Pennsylvania.

“There were multiple windows that were broken, I believe, to gain access, as well as multiple doors,” Paris said during the press conference Tuesday afternoon, adding that Bryan Kohberger’s parents were home at the time.

Paris said that preparations for the search warrants execution began on the evening of Dec. 29, and added that around 50 “tactical assets” were on scene.

IDAHO MURDERS: BRYAN KOHBERGER WAIVES EXTRADITION, TO HEAD TO MOSCOW

Mike Mancuso, Monroe County first assistant district attorney, said he believes that Kohberger wants to waive extradition because he wants to see what’s inside the affidavits of probable cause.

“Having read those documents and the sealed affidavits of probable cause, I definitely believe that one of the main reasons the defendant chose to waive extradition and hurry his return back to Idaho was the need to know what was in those documents. So that’s a significant development,” Mancuso said.

Kohberger, 28, signed an extradition document during a court hearing on Tuesday afternoon and waived his right to challenge the arrest on four counts of first-degree murder.

UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO MURDERS TIMELINE: WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT THE SLAUGHTER OF FOUR STUDENTS

“Yes,” Kohberger said when Judge Margherita Worthington asked if he wishes to “waive the rights that I have just explained to you and return to the state of Idaho?”

Kohberger, a teaching assistant and Ph.D. student at Washington State University’s Department of Criminal Justice, was arrested on Dec. 30 by local police and agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation at his parents’ home in Albrightsville.

Paris said that Kohberger was taken into custody “without incident.”

IDAHO MURDERS: BRYAN KOHBERGER SEEN ON BODY CAMERA FOOTAGE DURING TRAFFIC STOP IN INDIANA

He is being charged in connection to the fatal Nov. 13 stabbings of University of Idaho students Kaylee Goncalves, Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle and Madison Mogen, during the early morning hours in Moscow, Idaho.

Kohberger is facing four counts of first-degree murder and one count of felony burglary for “breaking into the home with intent to commit murder,” Latah County Prosecutor Bill Thompson said during a press conference on Friday.

Court documents in Idaho are under seal until Kohberger is brought to Idaho and is served with an arrest warrant, Thompson said.

IDAHO MURDER SUSPECT KOHBERGER’S PENNSYLVANIA CLASSMATES SAY HE WAS ‘BRIGHT,’ AWKWARD, BULLIED IN SCHOOL

The suspect lives in student housing located in Pullman, Washington, around 10 minutes from where the crime happened.

Kohberger’s father met up with his son for a cross-country road trip where they were pulled over in Indiana twice, according to a public defender.

Kohberger’s family said in a statement they will be supporting their son.

“We have fully cooperated with law enforcement agencies in an attempt to seek the truth and promote his presumption of innocence rather than judge unknown facts and make erroneous assumptions,” the statement reads.

Fox News’ Stephanie Pagones and Rebecca Rosenberg contributed to this report.

 

Read More 

 

Only 3 countries have managed to build 5th-generation fighters, but nearly a dozen are already working on 6th-gen jets

Business Insider 

A US Air Force F-22 and an F-35 over Florida in May 2020.

Twenty years after the arrival of the first fifth-generation jet, only a few have entered service.
Fifth-gen jets are still the most advanced, but countries are already working on the next generation.
The scale of those programs shows that countries are betting big on their future sixth-gen aircraft.

Some 20 years after their first appearance in the skies, fifth-generation fighters remain both the most advanced and rarest aircraft in service.

Only four models from three countries — the US’s F-22 and F-35, China’s J-20, and Russia’s Su-57 — have been officially introduced.

But many other countries are determined to have their own next-generation models. At least nine countries are already developing sixth-generation aircraft, either on their own or in cooperation with other countries.

Little is known about these programs, but the scale of the work being done shows that many countries expect sixth-gen jets to be a vital part of their fleets in the decades ahead.

5th and 6th generation

A US Air Force F-16, a fourth-gen jet, over Alaska in July 2019.

Exactly what makes an aircraft “fifth-generation” or “sixth-generation” is subject to debate.

Generally speaking, fifth-generation refers to aircraft that began development in the late 1990s or early 2000s, have a completely new design compared to fourth-gen jets, and emphasize low-observable, or stealth, features.

Sixth-generation characteristics are less defined, as no sixth-gen aircraft exist yet. (The recently unveiled B-21 bomber is billed as the world’s first sixth-gen aircraft, but little is known about its capabilities.)

There is a general consensus that sixth-gen jets will have a number of new or advanced features, including a modular design that allows for seamless upgrades, comprehensive networking capability, the ability to work with drones, and, of course, stealth.

Workers assemble an F-35 at Lockheed Martin’s factory in Fort Worth in October 2011.

Producing aircraft with fifth-gen features requires advanced technological know-how, an advanced industrial base, and, most importantly, massive financial investment. Developing and procuring the F-35, for example, is estimated to have cost as much as $412 billion, which doesn’t include operations and maintenance costs.

Consequently, most countries are sticking with fourth-gen models, buying fifth-gen jets from a country that has already developed them, or, in the case of the F-35, contributing to the program without taking a larger role in development and manufacturing.

As with fifth-gen jets, developing sixth-gen aircraft will require major investment, so many countries have teamed up to share the costs and reduce development time.

NGAD and F/A-XX

An illustration of a potential US military sixth-generation jet.

The US has two sixth-gen projects underway, one for the Air Force and one for the Navy. Both are officially referred to as Next Generation Air Dominance, or NGAD, but the Navy’s aircraft is often called the F/A-XX.

The NGAD projects are top secret and little is known about them — not even which contractor will build them or what they will look like. Lockheed Martin, Northrup Grumman, and Boeing are believed to be competing to build the jets, and all have released illustrations of sixth-gen aircraft.

What is known is that NGAD will be more than a new fighter jet. It will be a family of systems meant to ensure US air dominance. The Air Force has acknowledged developing four technologies for the program, including variable cycle engines, new composite materials, and a new suite of sensors, including advanced radar, infrared sensors, and improved electro-optical cameras.

NGAD also includes unmanned aircraft being designed to complement the sixth-gen fighter. Dubbed Collaborative Combat Aircraft, the drones will be networked to the fighter and can be assigned missions, allowing the jet to deploy them while it engages other targets using new long-range weapons like the AIM-260.

The F/A-XX will have similar features, including the ability to network with unmanned systems, which fits into the Navy’s goal of having 60% of its future carrier air wings be unmanned aircraft.

The Air Force said in 2020 that it had built and flown a full-scale NGAD prototype, though service officials say the program is still in its design phase. The Navy is believed to be in the concept refinement phase for F/A-XX.

The Air Force hopes to have NGAD in service by 2030, while the Navy hopes to have the F/A-XX in service within the same decade.

FCAS/SCAF

A full-scale model of the Future Combat Air System at the Paris Air Show in June 2019.

The Future Combat Air System is a sixth-gen jet project announced by France and Germany in 2017 and joined by Spain in 2019.

FCAS also intends to develop a family of systems for air dominance, with a sixth-generation fighter known as the Next Generation Fighter (NGF) at its center. The NGF will have a new engine, new weapon systems, advanced sensors and stealth technology, and the ability to link with unmanned aircraft and connect to an air-combat cloud network.

The jet is meant to replace France’s Rafales and the Eurofighter Typhoons flown by Germany and Spain. There are also plans for a carrier-based variant for use on France’s future aircraft carrier.

With an estimated cost of about $106 billion, FCAS is one of the largest joint European weapons programs ever.

FCAS is partly meant to give Europeans a European-made option for high-end stealth aircraft, especially in light of the increase in F-35 purchases by European countries. But it faces headwinds.

The first NGF flight was expected in 2027, with manufacturing starting in 2030 and full introduction in 2040. But disputes between the three contractors over workload and prime contractor status kept the project from moving to its next phase for two years.

The four companies appear to have resolved those issues, however. On December 16, they announced the signing of a $3.4 billion contract enabling them to proceed, with plans for initial demonstration flights by 2029.

Tempest and F-X

A model of the Tempest next-generation fighter at the Farnborough Airshow in July 2018.

The NGF isn’t the only European sixth-gen jet in the works. Tempest is an effort by the UK and Italy that began in 2015 and was officially unveiled in 2018.

The jet was to be the main product of a larger British-Italian program also coincidentally called the Future Combat Air System, but the project was renamed the Global Combat Air Program on December 9, when Japan merged its own sixth-gen F-X program with the Tempest.

The British Royal Air Force has said that Tempest will feature a host of advanced capabilities, including a next-generation flight-control system, the ability to operate with unmanned aircraft, advanced sensors and networking capabilities, and even a “wearable cockpit” in which pilots use virtual-reality helmets to operate the aircraft via interactive displays and controls.

Tempest’s designers also want the fighter to be able to carry weapons that have not yet been developed, like hypersonic missiles and directed-energy weapons.

An illustration of Japan’s next-generation fighter aircraft concept.

Japan, which has already bought US-made F-35s, began work on the F-X in order to avoid dependence on a foreign supplier. The jet is the first that Japan has tried to build on its own in 27 years and is meant to replace its aging F-2 fighters, which are set to retire in the 2030s. Tokyo had planned to introduce the F-X into service in 2035.

Plans for the F-X included fiber-optic flight controls, VR-style helmet-mounted displays, and advanced sensors and networking capabilities. Japan is also developing drones, called Combat Support Unmanned Aircraft, to be operated by the F-X pilot either as sensor-laden scouts or as armed combat drones.

Prior to the merger, Tempest appeared on schedule. It is now in the concept and assessment phase, and the full development and manufacturing phase is set to begin in 2025. On July 18, the British Ministry of Defense announced that a flight demonstrator was scheduled to fly in 2027. Official introduction is planned for 2035.

The specifics of the merger of the Tempest and F-X programs and their related projects is not yet clear, but combining the programs could open additional export markets to the final product.

China and Russia

A Chinese J-20 fighter jet.

Unsurprisingly, no sixth-gen fighter programs are as secretive as China’s and Russia’s.

In 2019, Wang Haifeng, chief designer for China’s state-run Chengdu Aircraft Industry Group, said that China had begun research for a next-generation fighter and that it could arrive as soon as 2035.

The future jet could have drone-teaming capability, use artificial intelligence and omnidirectional sensors, and be armed with directed-energy weapons, Wang said, according to media reports.

Gen. Mark Kelly, head of the US Air Force’s Air Combat Command, said in September that China’s sixth-gen aircraft development is “on plan” and that US and Chinese designers have similar views about sixth-gen technology.

Russian Su-57 fighter jets.

“They see it greatly the way we see it, so an exponential reduction in signature, an exponential acceleration in processing power, and the ability to iterate in terms of open-mission systems, to be able to essentially reprogram at the speed of relevance,” Kelly told reporters at the Air & Space Forces Association conference. “The differences, I think, are nuanced. They’re really kind of small.”

Even less is known about Russia’s sixth-gen program. Moscow has announced “next-generation” or “sixth-generation” projects in the past, including an unmanned fighter in 2013. Moscow also announced blueprints for a sixth-generation fighter in 2016.

In January 2021, state-owned military technology conglomerate Rostec announced it was developing a next-generation replacement for the MiG-31, dubbed “PAK DP.” It is often referred to as the MiG-41, but little is known about its capabilities and specifications.

While China is making heavy investment in military aviation, Russia’s ability to develop next-generation jets may be shrinking. Work on Russia’s Su-57 fifth-gen jet was already troubled, and sanctions imposed on Moscow over its attack on Ukraine will likely disrupt its aerospace industry for years to come.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Read More