Selena Gomez respectfully clapped back after Eugenio Derbez criticized her Spanish in her latest film, “Emilia Pérez.”
Her reaction came after the “How to...
Porsche has announced that it will have an expanded presence in the DTM in 2025, with Allied Racing joining incumbent Manthey.
The German squad, which...
Four-time Le Mans 24 Hours class winner Gianmaria Bruni is leaving Porsche’s line-up of factory drivers after eight years.
The 43-year-old Italian was absent from...
Carpenter's "A Nonsense Christmas" special premiered Dec. 7 on Netflix.
Sabrina Carpenter in "A Nonsense Christmas with Sabrina Carpenter" at the Sunset Gower...
is a Netflix documentary that explores one of the most notorious cybercrimes of all time. It highlights the audacious exploits by Ilya Lichtenstein and...
The inaugural fundraising campaign of US President-elect Donald Trump has devised a proposal to his elite donors, a dinner with Trump and future First...
A federal appeals court in Washington on Friday upheld a law requiring the wildly popular social media app TikTok to be sold to a non-Chinese owner or face closure in the United States by next month. The court cited "persuasive" and "compelling" arguments presented by the federal government that TikTok poses a risk to national
The U.S. Court of Appeals has rejected TikTok’s court bid to disqualify the U.S. Government’s enforced sell-off bill, which means that TikTok is now closer than ever to being removed from America, which could come as early as January 19th. Though it still has a few avenues to pursue in order to fend off the
Congress has passed a bill that could lead to banning TikTok in the United States. Still, it's not time to say goodbye—at least not yet. Credit: JIM WATSON / AFP via Getty Images Update 12/06/2024: Following ByteDance's lawsuit attempting to stop the so-called "TikTok ban," a panel of judges for the DC Circuit Court of