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Club World Cup: How every team can qualify for round of 16

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The group stage at the Club World Cup is well underway, and we’ll soon start to find out our first qualifiers for the round of 16.

Who can qualify on Matchday 2, who has work to do, and what are the results to look out for?

Here’s how it’s all shaping up.


Tiebreakers

1. Group points
2. Head-to-head in the game(s) between the teams in question
3. Goal difference in the game(s) between the teams in question
4. Goals scored in the game(s) between the teams in question
5. Group goal difference
6. Group goals scored
7. Disciplinary points (yellow and red cards)
8. Drawing of lots


GROUP A

Saturday, June 14
Al Ahly 0-0 Inter Miami CF

Sunday, June 15
Palmeiras 0-0 FC Porto

Thursday, June 19
Palmeiras vs. Al Ahly, 12 p.m. ET (East Rutherford, N.J.)
Inter Miami vs. FC Porto, 2 p.m. ET (Atlanta)

Monday, June 23
Inter Miami vs. Palmeiras, 9 p.m. ET (Miami Gardens, Fla.)
FC Porto vs. Al Ahly, 9 p.m. ET (East Rutherford)

With both opening games in Group A finishing goalless, it’s not possible for any team to book their place in the round of 16 on Matchday 2.

What we do know is that five points will be enough to secure qualification, and four points might even do it. So any club who can pick up three points on Thursday will be in a strong position.


GROUP B

Sunday, June 15
Paris Saint-Germain 4-0 Atlético Madrid
Botafogo 2-1 Seattle Sounders FC

Thursday, June 19
Seattle Sounders vs. Atlético Madrid, 6 p.m. ET (Seattle)
Paris Saint-Germain vs. Botafogo, 9 p.m. ET (Pasadena, Calif.)

Monday, June 23
Atlético Madrid vs. Botafogo, 3 p.m. ET (Pasadena)
Seattle Sounders vs. Paris Saint-Germain, 3 p.m. ET (Seattle)

Seattle Sounders and Atlético Madrid face off first Thursday, and the result of this game will determine which one team can qualify on Matchday 2.

If Seattle win or draw, Botafogo can qualify with a victory over PSG.

If Atlético win or draw, PSG can qualify with a victory over Botafogo.

Seattle Sounders will be eliminated if they lose followed by a PSG victory.

Neither PSG nor Botafogo can qualify with a draw.

Second place is sure to go to Matchday 3.


GROUP C

Sunday, June 15
Bayern Munich 10-0 Auckland City

Monday, June 16
Boca Juniors 2-2 Benfica

Friday, June 20
Benfica vs. Auckland City, 12 p.m. ET (Orlando, Fla.)
Bayern Munich vs. Boca Juniors, 9 p.m. ET (Miami)

Tuesday, June 24
Auckland City vs. Boca Juniors, 3 p.m. ET (Nashville, Tenn.)
Benfica vs. Bayern Munich, 3 p.m. ET (Charlotte, N.C.)

Bayern Munich are the only team that can secure their passage to the round of 16 with a game to spare, and it will be confirmed with a victory over Boca Juniors on Friday.

Benfica will be expected to claim three points against amateur side Auckland City, who are out if they lose, and it could yet be that second place vs. Boca Juniors depends on goal difference — effectively who beats the New Zealanders, who lost 10-0 to Bayern, by the biggest scoreline.

Boca Juniors, of course, will have other ideas and will be going for a positive result of their own against Bayern.


GROUP D

Monday, June 16
Chelsea 2-0 LAFC
Flamengo 2-0 Espérance de Tunis

Friday, June 20
Flamengo vs. Chelsea, 2 p.m. ET (Philadelphia)
LAFC vs. Espérance de Tunis, 6 p.m. ET (Nashville)

Tuesday, June 24
Espérance de Tunis vs. Chelsea, 9 p.m. ET (Philadelphia)
LAFC vs. Flamengo, 9 p.m. ET (Orlando)

Flamengo and Chelsea, winners of their opening group games, meet each other in the first fixture Friday. Neither team can qualify with a point.

If Chelsea win, they will be through to the round of 16 through an LAFC victory or draw in the second match.

If Flamengo win, they will be qualified via an Espérance de Tunis victory or draw.

Espérance de Tunis will be eliminated if Chelsea win or draw, and the Tunisian club then lose to LAFC.

Second place will definitely go to Matchday 3.


GROUP E

Tuesday, June 17
River Plate 3-1 Urawa Red Diamonds
Monterrey 1-1 Internazionale

Saturday, June 21
Internazionale vs. Urawa Red Diamonds, 3 p.m. ET (Seattle)
River Plate vs. Monterrey, 9 p.m. ET (Pasadena)

Wednesday, June 25
Internazionale vs. River Plate, 9 p.m. ET (Seattle)
Urawa Red Diamonds vs. Monterrey, 9 p.m. ET (Pasadena)

River Plate sit on top of the group with three points and will guarantee their place in the round of 16 with a victory over Monterrey on Saturday.

No other team can progress, but Urawa Red Diamonds will be eliminated if they lose.


GROUP F

Tuesday, June 17
Fluminense 0-0 Borussia Dortmund
Ulsan Hyundai 0-1 Mamelodi Sundowns

Saturday, June 21
Mamelodi Sundowns vs. Borussia Dortmund, 12 p.m. ET (Cincinnati)
Fluminense vs. Ulsan Hyundai, 6 p.m. ET (East Rutherford)

Wednesday, June 25
Borussia Dortmund vs. Ulsan Hyundai, 3 p.m. ET (Cincinnati)
Mamelodi Sundowns vs. Fluminense, 3 p.m. ET (Miami)

Mamelodi Sundowns are the only team with a win to their name. They will be through to the round of 16 with a victory against Borussia Dortmund on Saturday.

No other team can progress, but Ulsan Hyundai are out if they lose to Fluminense.


GROUP G

Wednesday, June 18
Manchester City 2-0 Wydad AC
Al-Ain 0-5 Juventus

Sunday, June 22
Juventus vs. Wydad AC, 12 p.m. ET (Philadelphia)
Manchester City vs. Al-Ain, 9 p.m. ET (Atlanta)

Thursday, June 26
Juventus vs. Manchester City, 3 p.m. ET (Orlando)
Wydad AC vs. Al-Ain, 3 p.m. ET (Washington)

Juventus and Manchester City are in command after picking up victories on Matchday 1, and this group could be wrapped up on Sunday.

If Juventus beat Wydad AC in the opening game, the Serie A side will qualify if Man City then win or draw vs. Al-Ain.

And if Juve win or draw, that means Man City will qualify with a victory.

If both Juve and Man City win, the top two places will be finalised and the teams will play for top spot on Thursday.

If either Wydad AC or Al-Ain lose, they will be eliminated unless Juventus or Man City are defeated in the opposite fixture.


GROUP H

Wednesday, June 18
Real Madrid 1-1 Al Hilal
Pachuca 1-2 RB Salzburg

Sunday, June 22
Real Madrid vs. Pachuca, 3 p.m. ET (Charlotte)
RB Salzburg vs. Al Hilal, 6 p.m. ET (Washington)

Thursday, June 26
Al Hilal vs. Mexico Pachuca, 9 p.m. ET (Nashville)
RB Salzburg vs. Real Madrid, 9 p.m. ET (Philadelphia)

Only RB Salzburg can secure their place in the round of 16 on Sunday, and it will be confirmed with a victory over Al Hilal.

Pachuca will be eliminated if they lose to Real Madrid.

Arie Luyendyk Jr., Lauren Burnham on Putting Their Kids on Social Media

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Rachael Kirkconnell & Matt James

Status: Split

In the years since Matt and graphic designer Rachael Kirkconnell left his 2021 season together (then briefly split and eventually reunited), they’ve faced many a breakup rumor. 

“I think everybody needs to take a break from social media,” the former Bachelor exclusively told E! News at a July 18 Baskin-Robbins event. “Our lives are lived so much in front of our phones that when anybody steps out of being on their phone 24/7, people think it’s the end of the world.”

In fact, Matt said marriage remains the end-game for the pair.

“I think the good thing about our relationship is we go at our own pace,” the First Impressions: Off Screen Conversations With a Bachelor on Race, Family, and Forgiveness author told E! News in May 2022. “And you’ve seen with other couples—they force the engagement and they’re not together anymore. So, I think what we got is a working recipe and we’re gonna get there.”

But less than three years later, Matt announced he and Rachael split.

“Father God, give Rachael and I strength to mend our broken hearts,” the reality star wrote on Instagram Jan. 16, 2025 alongside a throwback photo of them on The Bachelor. “Give us a peace about this decision to end our relationship that transcends worldly understanding. Shower our friends and family with kindness and love to comfort us. And remind us that our Joy comes from you, Lord.”



Kylian Mbappe: Real Madrid forward in hospital with gastroenteritis

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Real Madrid forward Kylian Mbappe is in hospital with gastroenteritis after missing their Club World Cup opener against Al-Hilal.

Real drew 1-1 with the Saudi side in Philadelphia on Wednesday, with the club saying Mbappe was missing through illness.

But they said on Thursday that he has “acute gastroenteritis” and is in hospital for “various tests and treatment”.

Gastroenteritis is an infection in the gut which causes vomiting or diarrhoea.

Live updates: Israel seeks retribution as Iranian missile hits hospital

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Israeli President Benjamin Netanyahu said Iran would pay for targeting a civilian area of southern Israel on Thursday, with a missile hitting a hospital in Beersheba. No serious injuries were caused by the strike, but there was “extensive” damage.

Israel “will exact the full price from the tyrants in Tehran,” Netanyahu wrote on social platform X. Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei “absolutely should not continue to exist.”

President Trump has met with his top advisers this week as he considers whether to bring the U.S. more fully into the fight.

In the U.S., Thursday is a federal holiday marking Juneteenth. Former President Biden, who designated the day on the federal calendar, is expected to join in the celebrations in Galveston, Texas, later in the day.

The Trump White House, however, is working, with a press briefing scheduled for 1 p.m. EDT.

Worth reading:

Follow along today for updates.

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Summer Game Fest’s best games were small and personal

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Summer Game Fest 2025 was definitely a weird one, but even with everything going on outside, the games on display were still immaculate. My favorites, the ones that I live for, are small, unique, and made for pure love of expression. Being able to see that love so clearly on display, expressed through such painstaking and often thankless work, and also being able to show them to our audience who might not otherwise encounter them, is the defining privilege of my job. That’s what I love about Summer Game Fest, weirdness and all, and hopefully when these games come out, you’ll check ‘em out too.

I loved the first Escape Academy and vibrated through my chair seeing that Coin Crew Games had returned to Summer Game Fest with a bigger, more expansive sequel. Instead of selecting levels, now you can explore an open world, solving puzzles as you discover them in a college campus setup. I love this new direction: the open-world exploration better melds the quirky / cute storytelling of Escape Academy with the actual act of solving puzzles.

In the short demo I was introduced to a cat who lived in my dorm room and wanted a snack. As I explored the campus, I found the cafeteria was closed but the special of the day was fish and milk. I solved the puzzle to open the cafeteria and was rewarded with my feline dorm-mate following me around campus for the rest of the demo and hopefully the full game. There’s no release date yet, but whenever it’s out, I’m enrolling.

Speaking of pet companions, Petal Runner is a somber exploration of the tension between the joy of owning a pet and the inevitable devastation that comes with that, only disguised as a lighthearted pixelated Pokémon-like minigame-a-palooza. You, as a newly minted motorcycle courier, are tasked with helping people with their living Tamagotchis known as HanaPets. Install them, feed them, and bring them items while along the way you explore your relationship with your own first-generation HanaPet, who might not be around for much longer. I did not expect to sit down and play this game, which had all the hallmarks of a quote-unquote “wholesome game,” and be emotionally devastated. It ruined me… 10/10, can’t wait to play.

When I tell you I sat the hell up seeing Relooted’s trailer. Here’s a game, stuffed full of African folks, talking about stealing back their cultural artifacts??? Hell, and I cannot stress this enough, yes. Relooted really captures the feeling of pulling off your own Ocean’s Eleven-style heist. You have a team of experts with their own specialties, and before your heist, you have to position them strategically so that the right person is in the right place to hack locked doors and help you reach unreachable places for a smooth escape.

While some of the Black members of the game’s African developer team couldn’t secure the visas they needed to attend SGF, Ben Myres, the creative director who I was able to speak to, said that each item you’re stealing is a real-life artifact currently being withheld from its country of origin. Each gets its own encyclopedia-like entry giving you its history, where it is now, and where it actually belongs. Nathan Drake, Lara Croft, Indiana Jones are all weaksauce compared to these heroes.

Directive 8020 – October 2nd, 2025

I enjoyed Supermassive Games’ spooky narrative choice adventures in The Quarry and its Dark Pictures Anthology. So I was really glad I had the chance to see what the team is doing next with Directive 8020. This time, instead of haunted schools or cabins in the woods, we’re going to space with Lashana Lynch — a favorite actress of mine for whom I will show up no matter what.

The neat thing about Directive 8020 is its replay system. At critical decision-making moments, you have the option to replay events without having to replay the game. Shoot a guy you shouldn’t have shot? You can immediately go back and see what happens when you don’t. You’ll also have the option to disable that, so the choices you make stick. I had the option to unshoot someone, but I chose to live with my mistake, and all these days later, I still think about that.

Heart Machine, maker of Hyper Light Drifter and its sequel, Hyper Light Breaker, are back with another game guaranteed to mess with your emotions. Possessor(s) is a Metroidvan— excuse me, search action game. I had a spirited and convivial conversation with one of the developers on the merits of using “Metroidvania” versus “search action” as a descriptor and I gotta say, I’ve been convinced. Not enough to remove “Metroidvania” from my vocabulary, but definitely enough to think more about how I use these terms when I write about games.

In Possessor(s) you play as a young woman escaping a city under attack. She is grievously wounded and enters a pact with a demon to heal her wounds and grant her powers so she can escape from the city. Speaking to the developer, he told me the game was about toxic relationships and what they can do to a person. The demon you make your pact with is not nice; he is not the hero. And yet, the developers at Heart Machine decided to make him smokin’ hot, which they know will obscure the very necessary message they’re trying to relay… which, I’m thinking, is probably the point.

Out of Words is my game of the show. Developed by Kong Orange and published by Epic Games, Out of Words is a stop-motion co-op adventure game akin to Split Fiction with a much, much better story. This is the kind of game that reminds me that video games are more than just vehicles for making money or simple entertainment; they are works of art, expressions of a developer’s heart and mind.

It’s about two teenagers who, after a moment of miscommunication, have their mouths removed, forcing them to communicate and navigate a fantastical world without words.

Everything in the game is made by hand and with love so evident it was incredibly moving. When I asked the game’s director, Johan Oettinger, why he and the team spent so much time — he told me they’d been working on this game for a decade — and money to make something that could potentially get drowned out by bigger, flashier releases, he looked me in the face, serious as a cemetery, and said, “Because it has been my dream to make something like this since I was a child.”

As a games journalist I live for the moments when I can see a developer’s fingerprints in a game, their personal quirks and the idiosyncrasies of their lives reflected in their art, and that was all over Out of Words. The developer told me how each blade of grass was made from paper, and how the blue clay they used to make the quirky clay men that populate the world comes from a specific place in Denmark where they harvested it by hand. It was so beautiful I spent most of the 20-minute demo in tears.

A basketball murder, surprise parole, and a whistleblower’s life upended

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Throughout the summer of 2003, America was focused on an evolving true-crime mystery down in Waco, Texas.

“Good Morning America.” CNN. Newspapers. ESPN. The story was everywhere.

All eyes were on what began as the missing person case of Baylor basketball player Patrick Dennehy. It later turned into a murder who-done-it after his body was found with two gunshot wounds to the head while decaying in a gravel pit outside of Waco. His car was found in Virginia Beach, Virginia, with the plates removed.

Soon, teammate Carlton Dotson confessed to the crime. The story became even more disgraceful when secret tapes emerged of Baylor coach Dave Bliss trying to frame Dennehy, the deceased, as a drug dealer amid an NCAA investigation into payments to players.

The scandal has faded so far from public consciousness, though, that few knew and it is believed no media reported that Dotson had been approved for parole on March 25, 2024 — after serving a little more than half of his 35-year sentence.

That continued until a KWTX-TV story in Waco earlier this month detailed that Dotson was out — some 15 months after approval and seven months after Dotson’s completion of a treatment program on Nov. 19 gained him full release.

It was shocking to many of the original participants in the story, including Abar Rouse, the one-time Baylor assistant coach, who recorded Bliss’ comments and, in a sad testament to the warped values of college basketball, lost his coaching career because he did the right thing by speaking out.

“I was stunned to hear about the parole,” Rouse told ESPN this week. “I had no idea.”

In addition to completing the treatment program and general parole requirements, Dotson, now 43, is in what Texas calls its “Super-Intensive Supervision Program,” which seeks to “minimize the threat to the community from dangerous offenders released on parole or mandatory supervision,” a spokesperson for the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles told ESPN.

Back in 2003, about seven weeks after Dennehy went missing, law enforcement arrested and charged Dotson with shooting his friend and teammate. Authorities said Dotson claimed demons were after him because he was “Jesus, the son of God.”

At the time of Dotson’s trial in 2005, when he pleaded guilty, the Dennehy family objected to his 35-year sentence, saying it was too short. They eventually decided to no longer fight Dotson’s possible release, finding admirable grace in the face of decades of loss and mourning.

“Over the years, Patrick’s sister, Wynn, and I have opposed Carlton’s parole,” Dennehy’s stepfather, Brian Brabazon, told ESPN this week. “In 2023, we softened our stance, as we think Patrick may have, and told [the Texas Department of Criminal Justice] we still felt he should do all this time, but we would let the parole board make their own decision.”

Brabazon knew of Dotson’s release because the TDCJ informed the family at the time and updates them whenever Dotson changes his address. Brabazon said Dotson is living in Houston, although he has bounced around Texas, including a stint in Waco, since getting out. Attempts to reach Dotson were unsuccessful.

If possible, Brabazon said, he would like to speak to Dotson, if only for a measure of closure.

“I haven’t reached out to him, but when we were looking for Patrick [in 2003], I spoke to Dotson on the phone and I asked what happened,” Brabazon said. “He told me if we could meet in person, he would tell me. I’m still waiting for his explanation.”

MEANWHILE, THERE IS Rouse, who’s life and career path was abruptly upended by the tragedy. A former Baylor student manager, he spent years climbing the coaching ladder at junior colleges in Iowa and North Carolina before, at age 27, landing what he thought was his big break — a spot on Bliss’ staff at Division I Baylor.

“Every young coach wants to be a head coach, lead their team to a championship and see their kids graduate,” Rouse said. ” I had that same aspiration.”

His first day was June 1. By June 12, Dennehy was missing. As the hunt for Dennehy and eventually his killer overtook everything, Bliss was focused on fending off an NCAA investigation into money being paid to players, including Dotson and Dennehy.

The plan was to tell authorities that Dennehy was a drug dealer and thus flush with cash. Rouse, perhaps alone at Baylor, acted with honor, when he went to a local Wal-Mart, bought a simple tape recorder and “wired myself” for subsequent conversations involving Bliss.

New on the job, he said he had little idea of how the program ran and thought no one would believe his word against a veteran coach if he didn’t have proof.

“We’re talking about perjury, asking people to smear or defame an innocent young man who had been killed,” Rouse said. “You’re breaking laws, you’re altering a murder investigation.”

He eventually turned in the tapes of Bliss discussing the plan and coaching players on what to say to the NCAA. Bliss and Baylor’s athletic director quickly resigned, and Baylor went with a fresh start, hiring Scott Drew and a new staff with no ties to the school. Drew has led the program to prominence, including the 2021 national title.

Rouse said he understood Baylor’s decision but didn’t anticipate being blackballed across the industry as he looked for assistant coaching jobs elsewhere.

To many head coaches, the fact that he recorded his boss mattered more than the potential crimes he was trying to document.

He briefly worked as a grad assistant at Division II Midwestern State under mentor Jeff Ray, but the low-paying job could only last so long. A once-promising young coach found no one else willing to even interview him. He admits to battling anger and sleepless nights.

“My question to those coaches was: What if that was their child?” Rouse said. “Would they still feel like that was OK? … When I walked into a kid’s house and recruited him, one of the things I did to reassure parents was tell them I was going to watch over them like they were my own. Well, some of us mean it and some of us don’t.”

If nothing else, Rouse exposed the complete lack of ethics coaches such as Bliss, now 81, and retired, possessed. Bliss initially apologized but then, in the 2017 Showtime documentary “Disgraced,” repeated many of the same lies about Dennehy.

“The situation with Carlton and Patrick had to come about to see that, for some people, there’s no limit, there’s no red line,” Rouse continued. “There’s nothing that they won’t do in order to secure victories, to get the next recruit.”

He now counts getting away from college basketball as a blessing of sorts because he turned to a career in, of all things, corrections, joining the Federal Bureau of Prisons. Now 49, the married father of four and grandfather of seven lives in Victorville, California, where he works as an assistant warden at one of the three sprawling federal facilities there.

“Sometimes I do wonder: Had I continued in coaching would I truly be happy?” Rouse said. “I’m happy now. I’m happy doing what I do, working with the people that I work with, working with people of integrity, working for an agency of integrity.

“I’m proud of it,” he continued. “I serve with pride. I don’t know if that would necessarily be true if I was in college basketball.”

He’s previously walked prison tiers, run recreational programs and taught inmate classes from Louisiana to Mississippi. At the ADX Supermax in Florence, Colorado — the “Alcatraz of the Rockies” — he supervised educational offerings for the country’s most dangerous offenders.

Every day is a new challenge. There are no roaring March Madness crowds, but there is a far greater purpose than winning games.

“You know, I’m a coach,” Rouse said. “I’ve always been a motivator. I’m going to be the guy out there doing extra and so that you can get other people to do extra. You’re basically coaching a team in this agency. You’re working with your staff; you’re working with the [inmates].”

The integrity that cost him his coaching career is nonnegotiable in his current role. Anything less endangers everyone and everything.

“Not having it can kill people,” Rouse said. “People can die. That’s not just specifically the Bureau of Prisons; that’s any prison. We always tell new troops: We run into danger; we don’t run from it.

“Integrity is one of our core values. That is what drew me into the agency and has sustained me through any tough time that I’ve had. ‘Fair, firm and consistent.’ It just so happens to line up with my background and what I believed as a human being.”

He was home with his wife two weekends ago when he heard of Dotson’s parole. He found himself taken by emotion at all that happened in 2003 and since.

“It just all came back,” Rouse said. “I thought, obviously, of Patrick and Patrick’s family. I thought about Pat’s mom, his sister, his stepdad and how hurt they’re going to be.

“I also believe in rehabilitation though. You can’t work in prison if you don’t believe in rehabilitation. … Is [Dotson] rehabilitated? Is he ready to function? Did he get what he needed inside to be able to function?

“One kid is gone and, and that’s a tragedy. And the kid that did it is now out. And how do you feel about that?”

The answer isn’t simple. Not for Rouse, not for Dennehy’s family, not for anyone.

For most of America, a once all-consuming story has faded from memory. For those in it, however, the impact never ends.

Jurassic Park Secrets Revealed Ahead of Jurassic World: Rebirth

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7. But Goldblum revealed that his character was almost cut from the movie. 

“I’d quickly read the book in preparation and Steven said, ‘Since we scheduled this meeting, there’s an idea afoot to combine the two characters, to absorb your character into the Sam Neill character,'” the actor explained. “I said, ‘Well, geez. I hope you don’t do that.’ I might have even advocated on the spot, and I came back and lo and behold I had a little part in it.”

8. Christina Ricci was in consideration for Lex Murphy, but Ariana Richards won the part for an unusual reason. “I was called into a casting office, and they just wanted me to scream,” Richardson shared. “I heard later on that Steven had watched a few girls on tape that day, and I was the only one who ended up waking his sleeping wife off the couch and she came running through the hallway to see if the kids were all right.”

9. When Joseph Mazzello auditioned for 1991’s Hook, he was told he was too young, but Spielberg vowed to get him in another movie. “Not only a nice promise to get, but to have it be one of the biggest box-office smashes of all time?” Mazzello said of earning the part of Tim. “That’s a pretty good trade.”

Millions on benefits to get £150 off bills

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Double the number of households in Britain will get £150 off their energy bills this winter as the government changes the rules on who qualifies for the Warm Home Discount.

Anyone on means-tested benefits will automatically see the money knocked off their bills no matter what size of property they live in.

However, the cost could be covered by raising fees on all customer bills through the standing charge, unless savings can be found by suppliers.

While debt charities and energy groups have welcomed the move, some say the scheme still leaves out some of those most at risk, including those on non-means tested benefits.

Simon Francis from the End Fuel Poverty Coalition said: “With bills still hundreds of pounds higher than in 2020, millions will continue to face unaffordable energy and cold, damp homes this winter.”

Energy companies pay for and distribute the £150 discount to people’s bills across England, Scotland and Wales, but the government sets the criteria for who should receive it.

Those rules were tightened under the previous administration, limiting the payment to those on the guaranteed element of pension credit, or those on means-tested-benefits living in a home with a high energy score.

Now the qualification about property size, type and home energy score is being scrapped. As a result this winter 2.7 million more homes will get this extra energy bill help, including almost a million households with children.

This extension comes hot-off-the-heels of the government U-turn to reinstate the Winter Fuel Payment to the majority of pensioners.

The bill for expanding the Warm Home Discount will be paid by energy companies and could be passed on through the standing charge, so it is possible all customers will see a slight increase in bills in the autumn to cover this announcement.

However, the government says any rise will be cancelled out by savings made by cutting energy companies’ expenditure and doing more to sort problem debt.

Household bills controlled by the energy price cap have been reduced over the summer months, and standing charges fell in all areas because the rules on what expenditure companies can pass on was restricted.

However, current market expectations are for another rise in gas and electricity bills from the start of October because of higher oil and gas prices.

Representing energy suppliers, Energy UK’s chief executive Dhara Vyas welcomed the announcement and said she hoped to see more help for those most in need “by accelerating progress on a new improved targeted support scheme”.

Earlier this month, Chancellor Rachel Reeves used the Spending Review to confirm £13.2bn will be spent on the government’s Warm Homes Plan, which aims to make homes more energy-efficient and cheaper for people to heat.

Unions are right to stand with immigrants against ICE deportations

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Conservatives and anti-union forces are hammering labor unions for our role in the demonstrations against Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids and Saturday’s “No Kings” rallies. But unions, including controversial Service Employees International Union California president David Huerta, are doing what we should be doing — standing up for our members and for workers as a whole against the enemies of labor. 

Labor’s biggest mistake of the modern era was to allow the destruction of millions of industrial jobs without effective resistance. President Trump spoke the truth about deindustrialization in his 2017 Presidential Inaugural Address when he said, “Rusted out factories [are] scattered like tombstones across the landscape of our nation … One by one, the factories shuttered and left our shores, with not even a thought about the millions and millions of American workers that were left behind.” 

It was Big Labor’s disgraceful acquiescence to this catastrophic assault on American workers’ livelihoods that has allowed Trump to pose as the friend of the American worker. He has successfully channeled workers’ legitimate anger and resentment in the direction of immigrants instead of against the big businesses who destroyed America’s industrial working class. 

While the labor movement in Los Angeles and in California is being criticized for our sympathies for so-called “illegal aliens,” immigrants (legal or not) make up one-third of California’s labor force. Most of California’s “illegals” arrived in the 1980s, 1990s, and early 2000s, many fleeing horrific U.S.-backed Central America dictatorships and the civil wars those regimes created. Most came too late to take advantage of President Ronald Reagan’s 1986 immigration amnesty but are law-abiding and pay taxes in numerous ways and forms. Why would we turn our backs on them?

As a trade unionist, the immigration status of my union brothers and sisters is of no import. The Trump Administration and the big business interests it serves seek to divide working people, but workers as a whole will either move forward together or fall back together. Attacks on one part of the working class cannot, over time, benefit the other parts.

A major line of attack against labor argued by Aaron Withe, CEO of the anti-union Freedom Foundation, conservative investigative reporter Robert Schmid and others is that the average American is being forced to help finance the anti-ICE movement because the SEIU other unions resisting ICE “rely on taxpayer-funded dues.” But this is not taxpayer money. It is workers’ wages, and we have the right to do whatever they want with it, just as if we worked in the private sector.

Moreover, union dues is money well spent. For example, in March, 2023 the SEIU and United Teachers Los Angeles jointly struck the Los Angeles Unified School District. Our picket lines held, SEIU won large pay increases and an extensive expansion of healthcare benefits for part-time employees, and UTLA won a good contract as well.

Conservatives are almost unanimous in their condemnation of Huerta, who spent three nights in detention and is charged with conspiracy to impede an officer — a felony carrying a sentence of up to six years in prison. But Huerta was doing exactly what a good labor leader should be doing — putting himself out front and, if necessary, in harm’s way for the benefit of his members and of workers. The fact that people on both the left and the right were so surprised by Huerta’s incarceration is reflective of modern America’s ignorance about labor history–effective labor leaders have usually had to risk incarceration. 

During the massive strikes that built organized labor in the 1930s, there were many workers and union leaders attacked, jailed, and even killed by police and National Guard. In 1948, John L. Lewis, combative leader of the United Mine Workers, was found guilty of criminal and civil contempt of court for failing to end a coal strike.

In 1964, under then-Teamsters President Jimmy Hoffa, truckers won the first National Master Freight Agreement, a national over-the-road contract said to have brought more workers into the middle class than any other single event in the history of labor organizing. In a long-running, politically-motivated prosecution by Robert F. Kennedy, who called the Teamsters the “enemy within,” and others, Hoffa was convicted of jury tampering, attempted bribery, and fraud and incarcerated from 1967 until 1971. However, in the eyes of authorities, Hoffa’s real crime had been his effectiveness as a labor leader. 

During the 1966 New York City Transit Workers Union strike, union leader Mike Quill led his 36,000 workers in shutting down the world’s largest subway and bus system. Just as Huerta and unions are vilified today, Mayor John Lindsay called the strike “defiance against eight million people” and, as British labor writer Ronan Burtenshaw explains, “the New York Times called for the police and army to run the buses; William F. Buckley Jr wanted the National Guard.” 

A judge issued an injunction to stop the strike, but Quill tore it up in front of the media, saying, “The judge can drop dead in his black robes. We will not call off the strike!” Quill and other leaders were arrested and jailed, but the TWU lines held, and they won the strike.

The Trump Administration’s assault on immigrant workers might be the catalyst for a revitalized labor movement with the kind of power unions like the TWU and the Teamsters once wielded. If so, all workers — immigrant or native born, male or female, white, Black, Latino, or other — will be the winners.

Glenn Sacks teaches Social Studies and represents United Teachers Los Angeles at James Monroe High School in the Los Angeles Unified School District.