This screengrab taken from a video posted by US Southern Command on December 31, 2025, shows US forces striking a boat. - US Southern Command/X

US military strikes against alleged drug boats have killed at least eight people over the past two days – the latest salvos in the United States' escalating actions against what it says are drug traffickers.

The US military on Tuesday struck what it described as a "convoy" of three boats participating in the trafficking of narcotics, US Southern Command announcedin a post to Xon Wednesday. Three people aboard one boat were killed, while those in the other two abandoned their vessel.

Hours later, the commandposted about a separate strikethat took place New Year's Eve, killing a total of five people aboard two boats.

After the Tuesday strike, SOUTHCOM said it notified the US Coast Guard to activate search and rescue efforts. It's unclear whether any survivors have been recovered.

"The U.S. Coast Guard is coordinating search and rescue operations with vessels in the area," a USCG spokesperson said in a statement, adding that "a Coast Guard C-130 aircraft is en route to provide further search coverage with the ability to drop a survival raft and supplies."

Wednesday's announcements of the latest US strikes offered no details about where they occurred – not even a body of water – as has been the case in the past. The military only said the strikes occurred in "international waters."

US strikes were first concentrated in the Caribbean Sea but the focus was later shifted to the eastern Pacific Ocean because administration officials believed they had stronger evidence linking cocaine transport to the US from those western routes, CNN previously reported.

CNN has reached out to Southern Command regarding the search and rescue mission for any survivors of Tuesday's strikes.

The Pentagon has rarely been proactive in acknowledging the survivors of prior strikes and military officials have come under intense scrutiny for their handling of those cases.

The most controversial was the first known strike against an alleged drug boat on September 2, in which CNN reported that US forces carried out a "follow-on strike" killing two survivors of the initial blast.

That revelation has prompted allegations of a possible war crime with some lawmakers demanding answers from the commander in charge.

In a subsequent strike, survivors were briefly detained aboard a US Navy ship before they were repatriated back to their home countries. In a third strike, the Pentagon contacted Mexican officials and tasked them with leading a search and rescue mission for one survivor who was never located. That individual is now presumed dead.

The new strikes bring the total number of vessels targeted by the US to at least 36 and the number of fatalities to at least 115 since the US began its campaign in September.

The Trump administration has claimed it is carrying out the strikes to stop the flow of drugs into the United States, but administration officials have also suggested they are part of a pressure campaign aimed at ousting Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, from whose country many of the stricken vessels have originated.

White House chief of staff Susie Wiles told Vanity Fair in interviews for a story published earlier this month that Trump wants to keep targeting boats until Maduro "cries uncle."

Last week President Donald Trump said the United States took out a"big facility"as part of a pressure campaign against Venezuela that has included a massive US naval and troop buildup in the Caribbean and a blockade of sanctioned oil tankers, in addition to the strikes.

The CIA carried out a drone strike earlier this month on a port facility on the coast of Venezuela, sources familiar with the mattertold CNN, marking the first known US attack on a target inside that country.

Trump, who has provided few additional details on the "big facility" action, told reporters on Monday that "there was a major explosion in the dock area where they load the boats up with drugs" and that an "implementation area" was "no longer around."

Maduro has repeatedly criticized the US military deployment in the Caribbean and accused the US of waging a campaign of "psychological terrorism" against his country.

In a response to Trump ordering a "complete" blockade of sanctioned oil tankers entering and leaving Venezuela earlier this month, Venezuela's National Assembly approved a law last week that allows for prison terms of up to 20 years for anyone found supporting "piracy" or "blockades."

This headline and story has been updated with Wednesday's strike.

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US military says at least eight killed in new strikes on alleged drug boats, with survivors abandoning ship

US military strikes against alleged drug boats have killed at least eight people over the past two days – the latest salvos in the United S...
Florida woman facing murder charge in death of ailing mother. Was it mercy?

A Florida woman who told investigators she had discussed assisted suicide with her ailing motherhas been arrested on a murder chargein the death of the ailing 97-year-old woman.

Martha Jo Blake, 66, is facing a first-degree murder in the death of Patricia Blake after the Palm Beach County Medical Examiner's Office ruled that the elder Blake's injuries were inconsistent with a natural death.

Autopsy findings indicate the elder Blake, whose body was found on Dec. 26 in the family's Greenacres-area home, was suffocated or strangled, according to her daughter's arrest report. The doctor performing the autopsy found that the 97-year-old had a fresh neck fracture, an internal hemorrhage on both sides of her neck and an indication that something had been placed over her face, the arrest report said.

The elder Blake suffered persistent illnesses, including Parkinson's disease and a thyroid disorder.

Investigators say that the younger Blake told them that her mother wanted to die because of her health issues and that she previously had discussed assisted suicide with her mother's primary care physician in Maine, where the practice is legal.

Blake also told investigators that her mother was deemed ineligible for Maine's assisted-suicide program because she did not have a terminal illness. She indicated she and her mother had discussed the option of suicide by taking pills but determined they did not have any that were lethal enough, authorities said.

An affidavit obtained by USA TODAY does not specify whether Blake denies or admits to wrongdoing but says she told investigators that she last saw her mother alive the night before she was found.

A judge assigned a public defender to represent her. The county Public Defender's Office has a policy of not commenting on active cases.

Where is assisted suicide legal?

Although what happened to Patricia Blake is unclear, the case raises questions over ongoing debate about assisted suicide.

Some states in the U.S. have moved to pass so-called "Death with Dignity" laws that allow for assisted suicide. Such laws are found worldwide but remain controversial.

Assisted suicide is legal in Washington, D.C., and 12 states: California, Colorado, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Vermont and Washington, according to Death with Dignity, a group that supports assisted-suicide laws.

The practice is illegal in Florida.

Several states that have legalized assisted suicide have guardrails in place to ensure the decision meets ethical and legal requirements. Commonly, patients must be at least 18 years old, a resident of the state in which they are seeking care and have a terminal illness with a prognosis of six months or less.

The following states are considering legalizing the practice: Indiana, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New York, North Carolina and Pennsylvania, according to Death with Dignity.

Terminally ill people and affected family members supporting an assisted dying bill going through Parliament in the U.K. stand with posters in London, on Dec. 12, 2025.

More about the history of assisted suicide laws

Oregon was the first state to pass laws supporting assisted suicide. The Oregon Death with Dignity Act went into effect in 1997, according to Death with Dignity.

Illinois andDelawarewere the latest states to legalize assisted suicide in 2025.

The law in Delaware allows terminally ill patients who have six months or less to live to request and receive medication that will "end the individual's life in a humane and dignified manner," according to reporting byThe New Journal, part of the USA TODAY Network.

Around the world the practice is legal in Canada,nineEuropean countries andthreeLatin American countries, according toDignity in Dying, a London-based group that advocates in support of legalizing the practice.

Beatriz Gelos, who suffers from Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), is helped to lift her foot into a wheelchair at the nursing home where she lives, in Montevideo, Uruguay, on Oct. 10, 2025. After two decades living with ALS, Beatriz Gelos was hoping that Uruguay's Senate would pass a euthanasia bill under consideration. The nation passed the law.

Pope Leo XIV weighs in on Illinois legalizing assisted suicide

Pope Leo XIV, a native of Chicago, weighed in on his home state passing the controversial legislation.

Leo told reporters in Italy that he had directly expressed his disapproval of the legislation toGov. JB Pritzker.

"We were very clear about the necessity to respect the sacredness of life, from the very beginning to the very end," Leotold reportersat Castel Gandolfo, near Rome. "Unfortunately … he decided to sign that bill. I'm very disappointed about that. I would invite all people, especially on these Christmas feast days, to reflect upon the nature of human life, the goodness of human life."

Pope Leo XIV looks on after delivering the traditional Christmas Day Urbi et Orbi speech to the city and the world from the main balcony of St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican on Dec. 25, 2025.

Michael Loria is a senior reporter for USA TODAY.Julius Whigham II is a criminal justice and public safety reporter for The Palm Beach Post.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Was it mercy? Daughter faces murder charge in 97-year-old mom's death

Florida woman facing murder charge in death of ailing mother. Was it mercy?

A Florida woman who told investigators she had discussed assisted suicide with her ailing motherhas been arrested on a mu...
Hiker killed in fall on California mountain was 19-year-old 'avid outdoorsman'

(This story was updated to add new information.)

One ofthree hikers found deadafter an unsuccessful rescue attempt on Southern California's Mount Baldy has been identified as a 19-year-old whose family says he was an avid outdoorsman and that they are "destroyed" by his loss.

Marcus Alexander Muench Casanova, a 19-year-old resident of Seal Beach, was identified as one of the three male hikers who died amid windy conditions on the snow-covered mountain earlier this week, the San Bernardino County Coroner said on Wednesday, Dec. 31.

The San Bernardino County Sheriff's Coroner said it's working to identify the other two hikers.

Casanova's body was found Monday, but dangerous winds delayed recovery efforts until Tuesday. Friends say he fell about 500 feet near Devil's Backbone, a trail that lures many hikers and mountaineers to the San Gabriel mountain's highest peak.

The teenager's family issued a statement Wednesday, calling him "an incredibly sweet and empathetic young man."

"We are destroyed by the loss of our beloved Marcus," they wrote. "He was a graduate of Los Alamitos High, a freshman at Santa Clara University's business school, and an avid sailor and outdoorsman ... It is difficult to explain the pain and anguish we are going through and ask for privacy as we try to find our way."

Authorities said they responded to a request at about 11:30 a.m. on Dec. 29 to locate an injured 19-year-old male hiker near the Devil's Backbone trail, who'd reportedly fallen approximately 500 feet. During an aerial search, authorities located the injured hiker and two others. However, due to severe winds, the helicopter was unable to complete the rescue safely, authorities said.

Severe winds continued to hamper another rescue effort later that evening, during which an air medic confirmed all three hikers were dead. The helicopter was unable to complete the recovery efforts, county officials said.

Is Mount Baldy still closed?

The Mount Baldy area of the San Gabriel Mountains istemporarily closeduntil 11:59 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 31, according to the Angeles National Forest.

San Bernardino County Sheriff-Coroner Shannon Dicus said the temporary closure is "necessary to prevent additional emergencies and protect lives."

"The tragic loss of life on Mt. Baldy and repeated rescue responses highlight how dangerous current conditions are, even for experienced hikers," Dicus said. "Weather and terrain conditions remain extremely dangerous and unpredictable, posing a significant risk to both the public and Search and Rescue personnel."

Paris Barraza is a reporter covering Los Angeles and Southern California for the USA TODAY Network. Reach her atpbarraza@usatodayco.com.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Teenage hiker killed in fall on California's Mt. Baldy was 'beloved'

Hiker killed in fall on California mountain was 19-year-old 'avid outdoorsman'

(This story was updated to add new information.) One ofthree hikers found deadafter an unsuccessful rescue attem...
Noam Galai/Getty Andy Cohen and Anderson Cooper in December 2025.

Noam Galai/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen have been friends since the early 2000s

  • They reconnected years after a friend set them up on a blind date, which Cooper called off

  • The CNN reporter and the reality TV host have been hosting CNN's New Year's Eve broadcast together since 2017

Anderson CooperandAndy Cohenhave been friends for over 20 years.

The reality TV host and longtime CNN reporter were originally set up on a blind date by mutual friends in the '90s, but Cooper called it off before they could get together. Luckily, they reconnected years later and have been close friends ever since.

Over the years, Cooper and Cohen have supported each other through major life events, including the death of Cooper's motherGloria Vanderbiltand thebirths of their respective children. The duo also appear together on TV often — Cooper has been a guest onWatch What Happens Live! with Andy Cohenmultiple times, and the pair have been hosting CNN's New Year's Eve broadcast since 2017.

Though the two have been known to poke jokes at each other, Cohen had somesweet words for Coopershortly after he welcomed his first son, Wyatt. During a May 2020 episode of his SiriusXMRadio Andyshow, Cohen admitted that Cooper's baby announcement "had me in a puddle of tears" as "you really have to jump through a lot of hoops to have a baby as a gay man."

"He went through a lot, and I'm just so happy that his son is so beautiful and happy and healthy. I've already seen Anderson light up and open up in new ways," the Bravo star added.

From going on tour together to becoming "playground dads," here's everything to know about Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen's friendship.

1990s: Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen get set up on a blind date by friends

Charles Sykes/Bravo/NBCU Photo Bank Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen

During a December 2017The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, Cooper and Cohen shared that they first met when friends tried to set them up on a blind date. At the time, Cooper was a reporter at ABC and Cohen was working for CBS.

"We had a phone call to set up the date, and I knew within 45 seconds I was never going on a date with Andy Cohen," Cooper shared with hostJimmy Fallon. "He violated my cardinal rule, which is he asked me about my mom [Gloria Vanderbilt] within the first minute of talking to me."

"I wanted to date the Vanderbilt boy! I was excited!" Cohen exclaimed. Cooper ended up canceling the date.

Early 2000s: Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen start vacationing with the same group of friends

Michael Loccisano/Getty Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen in 2017.

The friends shared in a December 2017 interview withThe New York Timesthat they both knew businessmanBarry Dillerand began vacationing with him and his friends. "We wound up in this group that would travel together, [Diller] and his friends," Cohen said.

Some of the friends they traveled with included Diller's wife, fashion designerDiane von Furstenberg, and the late talent managerSandy Gallin.

"I remember going up some waterway in a slow-moving boat, talking to you, sort of entranced. Andy, even before he was on TV, was the life of the party," Cooper added.

"Then we would have dinner occasionally, or be at the same party. We went to Croatia in 2005. I was at Bravo then," Cohen continued.

In an August 2015 interview withEntertainment Weekly, Cohen explained, "Really the way we became friends is he and I have been around the world and back together. We've really been around the world together."

September 12, 2010: Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen sit front row at a DVF show

Astrid Stawiarz/Getty Sarah Jessica Parker, Andy Cohen and Anderson Cooper in 2010.

The duo turned out to support their friend von Furstenberg for her Spring 2011 fashion show during Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week. They were seated next toSarah Jessica Parkerin the front row at the event, which marked one of their first public outings as friends.

December 12, 2010: Anderson Cooper appears onWatch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen

Heidi Gutman/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal Anderson Cooper, Andy Cohen and NeNe Leakes on 'Watch What Happens Live.'

Cooper made his first appearance on Cohen's Bravo show,Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohenin 2010, alongsideNeNe LeakesfromThe Real Housewives of Atlanta.

Cooper and Leakes had previously spoken about how much they liked the other in various media appearances, but theWWHLepisode was the first time they'd met in person.

November 14, 2014: Anderson Cooper interviews Andy Cohen live to promoteThe Andy Cohen Diaries

Andrew Toth/FilmMagic Andy Cohen and Anderson Cooper in 2014.

When Cohen's second book was released, he asked Cooper to do aninterview with him at the 92nd Street Yin New York City.

The two bantered back and forth, with Cooper telling the audience, "It's a little weird because he was trying to make out with me right before we came out here."

"It was a wonderful night. We have really nice chemistry. ... It isn't good enough to date, but we've got great chemistry," Cohen later shared with theAtlanta Jewish Timesin June 2015.

March 21, 2015: Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen's AC2 tour kicks off in Boston

Tim Mosenfelder for AC2/Getty Andy Cohen and Anderson Cooper in 2016.

Not long after their 92nd St Y appearance, Cooper and Cohen were encouraged to do similar shows around the country.

"My agent was in the crowd [at the 92nd St Y interview], and she was like, 'You guys should take this on the road,' " Cooper shared withTheNew York Times.

Cohen added, "We looked at each other, and, immediately, were like, 'Oh, my God, we can travel the country together.' "

They started the AC2 tour in Boston, as they revealed onWWHL, and have since traveled to 50 different cities.

July 5, 2017: Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen vacation in Bora Bora together

Andy Cohen Instagram Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen in Bora Bora.

The duo vacationed together in Bora Bora in 2017. Cohen posted a picture of himself and Cooper with the caption, "Caught a silver fox swimming by a deserted island!"

In it, both wore long-sleeve O'Neill rash guards, and Cohen sported a colorful pair of swim trunks.

December 31, 2017: Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen host CNN's New Year's Eve broadcast together for the first time

Jeremy Freeman/CNN Andy Cohen and Anderson Cooper in 2017.

In October 2017, it was announced that Cohen would be joining Cooper to host CNN's New Year's Eve Live broadcast. The decision was made after CNN elected to cut ties withKathy Griffin.

Ahead of the night, Cooper and Cohen spoke to PEOPLE about what viewers could expect from the broadcast.

"Andy is who is he andhe's kind of the life of the party wherever he goes," Cooper said in December 2017. "And I think it's going to reflect our friendship and the comfort we have with each other and the dynamic of our relationship. We're as curious to see where it goes and what happens! We're both eager and excited about it."

December 28, 2018: Anderson Cooper sends well wishes to dad-to-be Andy Cohen

During a December 2018 episode ofWWHL, Cohen revealed that he wasgoing to be a father, and several of his famous friends sent well wishes to the host, including Cooper.

"I'm so excited for Andy, he is going to be a great dad!" the CNN anchor told PEOPLE in December 2018. "And I'm so glad he finally announced it, so I can pepper him with questions on New Year's Eve!"

February 27, 2019: Anderson Cooper spends time with Andy Cohen's newborn son

Andy Cohen Instagram Anderson Cooper with Andy Cohen's newborn son.

Shortly after thebirth of Cohen's son, Benjamin Allen, the new dad shared a sweet snap onInstagramof his newborn lying in his crib while Cooper looked on. He wrote in the caption, "Uncle Anderson got an exclusive."

June 17, 2019: Andy Cohen pays tribute to Anderson Cooper's mother Gloria Vanderbilt

AfterVanderbilt's death at 95 years oldin June 2017, Cohen posted a thoughtful tribute to her onInstagram.

"Gloria Vanderbilt was an amazing woman who lived a life filled with incredible peaks and impossible obstacles. Through it all she remained eternally optimistic with a wicked sense of humor," he wrote in the caption.

Cohen continued, "In fact, Anderson's iconic and infectious giggle comes from his mom. Sending Anderson all my love, and may she Rest In Peace."

A few days later, heshared a sweet anecdoteabout Cooper and Vanderbilt. "I think how sweet — every time I saw her with Anderson, he always held her hand, which really touched me," he told PEOPLE.

April 30, 2020: Anderson Cooper welcomes a son and Andy Cohen congratulates him

On April 27, 2020, Cooper welcomed his son,Wyatt Cooper. He shared the news on a broadcast ofAnderson Cooper 360°and on Instagram, posting a sweet picture of himself and Wyatt onInstagram.

Shortly after, the Bravo host shared a picture of Cooper and his newborn onInstagram. "'New life, new hope!' Wyatt Cooper, you couldn't have come at a better time! I know a friend who can't wait to meet you!" he captioned it.

June 22, 2020: Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen's sons meet for the first time

Watch What Happens Live Andy Cohen and son Ben (L); Anderson Cooper and son Wyatt

Cooper and Cohen celebrated Father's Day byintroducing their sons to each other oneduring a virtual episode ofWWHL.

"I thought it would be fun if they met right now," Cohen said. "Look, that's gonna be your good buddy Wyatt," the Bravo host told his son Benjamin as he pointed to Wyatt.

"That's gonna be your good buddy and we're gonna travel together. And if you like him half as much as I like his daddy, you're gonna be great friends," he continued.

September 1, 2020: Andy Cohen posts shirtless pictures of Anderson Cooper

Cohen had some fun with Cooper's vacation photos from years past. He posted a few snaps toInstagramwith the caption, "If it were a normal year, I'd be on vacation with my pal...threatening to post shirtless pics of him. Well, it's 2020 and I'm sitting on my deck so I figured I'd just post without asking and piss him off! #SilverFox."

October 9, 2020: Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen take their sons on a playdate

Andy Cohen/Instagram Andy Cohen and Anderson Cooper on a playdate.

Amid the pandemic, Cooper and Cohen ventured out for asocially distanced playdatewith their sons.

"Playground Dads! (Btw my sweater is from @grantedsweatercompany)," Cohen captioned a photo of the pair taken in New York City's Greenwich Village.

December 31, 2020: Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen take shots during New Year's Eve broadcast

CNN Andy Cohen and Anderson Cooper

To celebrate the end of 2020, Cooper and Cohentook a round of shotswhile broadcasting the ball drop on New Year's Eve for CNN. The shots came at Cohen's request and Cooper's dismay, and the CNN anchor's reaction to them got more hilarious with each round.

"I have not had a shot since, I think, the last time we were here," Cooper told Cohen before their first drink.

Cohen responded, "You're getting better at it! I would argue that you're getting better at it."

June 2, 2021: Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen celebrate their birthdays together

Anderson Cooper Instagram Andy Cohen and Anderson Cooper.

Cooper (whose birthday is June 3) and Cohen (whose birthday is June 2)celebrated together at a surprise partywith friends, including Parker and her husband,Matthew Broderick.

They both posted toInstagramfor the occasion, with Cooper writing, "So proud of all you've done, the person you are, and the dad you've become."

December 31, 2021: Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen host New Year's Eve broadcast

Andy Cohen Instagram Andy Cohen and Anderson Cooper.

The duo returned to CNN for New Year's Eve in 2021, where they had shots during the broadcast — including one in honor ofBetty White, whodied that December. As the night went on, Cohen got progressively more intoxicated and made comments about former N.Y.C. mayorBill de BlasioandRyan Seacrest.

"If you look behind me, you'll see Ryan Seacrest's group of losers performing. I'm sorry but if you're watching ABC, you're watching nothing," the Bravo host said at one point.

A few days later, Cohen admitted that he had been "overserved" and addressed his comments, saying, "The only thing that I regret saying, the only thing is that I slammed the ABC broadcast. And I really like Ryan Seacret and he's a great guy and I really regret saying that and I was just stupid and drunk and feeling it."

February 12, 2022: Andy Cohen and his son meet Anderson Cooper's second son Sebastian

Andy Cohen Instagram Andy Cohen with his son and Anderson Cooper's son.

Of course, Cohen was one of the first people to meet Cooper's second son,Sebastian, a few days after he was born.

OnInstagram, he shared a sweet picture of himself cradling Sebastian while his own son, Benjamin, gently touched the baby's head.

In the caption, Cohen wrote, "Today we met our new pal Sebastian Maisani-Cooper! He's a peaceful beauty. Ben calls him "Wheels"! Mazel to Anderson & Benjamin."

May 9, 2022: Anderson Cooper meets Andy Cohen's daughter Lucy

Andy Cohen Instagram Anderson Cooper with Andy Cohen's newborn daughter.

It was a big year for both Cooper and Cohen. Just a few months afterCooper welcomed Sebastian, Cohenwelcomed a second childof his own, a daughter named Lucy. Cohen shared a sweet picture ofCooper meeting Lucy, which he captioned in part, "Uncle Anderson, keeping Lucy honest!"

November 18, 2022: Andy Cohen speaks about the 2022 New Year's Eve broadcast with Anderson Cooper

In spite of rumors that CNN wouldn't be allowing on-air presenters to drink on camera during the 2022 New Year's Eve broadcast, Cohen said viewers can probably expect to see him and Anderson doing shots together per usual.

"I think people enjoy seeing me feed Anderson shots andthat's on the menu," he shared with PEOPLE.

December 15, 2022: Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen discuss dating apps

While promoting their upcoming New Year's Eve special onThe Late Show with Stephen Colbert, Cooper and Cohen discussed their dating lives and revealed whether or not they are on the apps. "I'm back out there, I'm on the apps. I'm on Tinder, I'm on Raya," Cohen said.

When Colbert asked if Anderson was on Raya, Cohen jumped in and said, "No, but I would like him to be and I would like him to be on Tinder."

The pair then pitched each other to potential prospects and shared the best things about each other, as well as the downsides.

December 27, 2022: Andy Cohen says he and Anderson Cooper have bonded over being gay dads

Cohen spoke about howhis friendship with Cooperhas evolved since they became parents in an episode of hisTable for Twopodcast.

"We are these geriatric patients hobbling around chasing our children, but look it's another bonding thing," Cohen said.

He also mentioned that he's glad his and Cooper's kids will be able to grow up together.

"I think what is going to be really interesting to us, as it develops, is being gay dads and as our kids start realizing more and more 'Oh I have gay dads.' I am so glad that Ben [Cohen] will grow up with Wyatt [Cooper] and that Ben with grow up seeing Anderson and Benjamin [Maisani] raising Wyatt and Sebastian."

May 7, 2023: Anderson Cooper interviews Andy Cohen forCBS Sunday Morning

Cohen sat down with Cooper for an interview onCBS Sunday Morningto promote his bookThe Daddy Diaries.

"Well, this is weird. I suddenly feel very vulnerable. You need to do yourBarbara WaltersJedi thing right now and make me feel comfortable," Cohen joked.

The two friends mostly discussed the Bravo host's decision to become a single dad.

"Doing this without a partner, did it give you great pause?" Cooper asked. To which Cohen responded: "I'm happy to say it didn't. I just thought, I want to do this and I'm doing it and I know it's going to be really hard. As a single parent, I just worry about being everything to them. I want to be everything to them, and I know how impossible that is, in a weird way."

December 29, 2024: Andy Cohen reveals the most "annoying" part about working with Anderson Cooper

TheWWHLhost revealed to PEOPLE in December 2024 that the most "annoying" part about working with Cooper is how he's forced to eventually "be the straight guy."

"Literally, he's in a puddle of giggles for the last 90 minutes of the broadcast, and I'm the one that's hitting all the commercial breaks," Cohen joked. "I kind of turn into Mr. CNN for the last 90 minutes, and he turns into Mr. Bravo. It's a very funny role reversal."

December 17, 2025: Anderson Cooper jokes he checks online to see how much Andy Cohen "screwed" them over on NYE

During a December 2025 appearance onThe Late Show with Stephen Colbert, Cooper joked that he looks online during the last half-hour of their annual NYE broadcast to check if Cohen hasgotten them into trouble.

"The problem for me is after New Year's Eve, as soon as we get off, really in the last 30 minutes, I'm just looking at things online to see in what ways has he screwed us over," he said. "[What] did he say I'm gonna have to like, clean up after? Will the headline [of] the Drudge Report inevitably be the next morning, 'This is CNN?,' with a picture of this guy?' "

Read the original article onPeople

Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen's Friendship: Inside the “New Year’s Eve Live” Stars’ Decades-Old Bond

Noam Galai/Getty NEED TO KNOW Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen have been friends since the early 2000s They reconnected years after a frien...
Jamie McCarthy/Getty Bruce Willis and Emma Heming Willis on Jan. 15, 2019

Jamie McCarthy/Getty

Emma Heming Willis marked a very sweet milestone with her husband and father of her children,Bruce Willis.

On Tuesday, the model and actresstook to Instagramto celebrate the anniversary of her and Bruce making it "official." Sharing a candid photo of them from that special time nearly 20 years ago, Emma captioned the post, "18 years ago, he became my boyfriend. With one kiss on the top of my head, time stood still."

She added, "I'm so lucky to know this kind of love."

Emma, 47, and theDie Hardactor, 70, who starred in the filmsRed 2andPerfect Strangertogether, have been married since 2009. The couple shares two children together: Mabel Ray Willis, whom they welcomed in April 2012, and Evelyn Penn Willis, who was born in May 2014.

Emma Heming Willis/Instagram Bruce, Mabel, Evelyn, and Emma Willis

Emma Heming Willis/Instagram

Bruce isalso dad to daughtersTallulah, Scout, and Rumer with ex-wifeDemi Moore, whom he was married to from 1987 to 2000, but remain close.

The actor's family has beentransparent about the highs and lowsof his health since hisaphasia diagnosisin 2022, which progressed to afrontotemporal dementia diagnosisin 2023.

Emma in particular has spread awareness about FTD on social media and in interviews. She published a book in September,The Unexpected Journey: Finding Strength, Hope, and Yourself on the Caregiving Path, intended to serve as a "supportive guide" for caregivers navigating a loved one's dementia diagnosis.

The mother of two has assumed the role of caretaker of her husband alongside a 24-hour health team that aids the ailing actor, resulting in herliving separatelyin a second home with their daughters.

Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with ourEW Dispatch newsletter.

Emma has often taken to social media to share her experiences as Bruce's caregiver, and faced intense scrutiny of her motives while doing so. In September, shedefended herselfin a videoshared to her Instagram, saying, "Everyone will have an opinion, but you have to remind yourself that most don't have the experience to back it up... And if that's the case, they shouldn't offer their two cents about it, and you shouldn't pay them any mind."

During the ABC specialEmma & Bruce Willis: The Unexpected Journey, which aired over the summer, Emmashared that although Bruceis in "really great health overall," his brain "is failing him."

Bruce Glikas/FilmMagic Emma Heming Willis, Rumer Willis, Bruce Willis, Tallulah Belle Willis, Demi Moore, and Scout LaRue Willis

Bruce Glikas/FilmMagic

"The language is going, and, you know, we've learned to adapt," she toldDiane Sawyer. "And we have a way of communicating with him, which is just a... different way."

Emma shared that there are moments when she will see a glimmer of his personality shine through and be instantly taken back to a time before his diagnosis. "Not days, but we get moments," she said. "It's his laugh, right? Like, he has such a hearty laugh. And, you know, sometimes you'll see that twinkle in his eye, or that smirk, and, you know, I just get, like, transported."

She appeared visibly emotional as she continued, "And it's just hard to see, because as quickly as those moments appear, then it goes. It's hard. But I'm grateful. I'm grateful that my husband is still very much here."

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Bruce Willis' wife Emma celebrates couple's anniversary amid actor's dementia battle

Jamie McCarthy/Getty Emma Heming Willis marked a very sweet milestone with her husband and father of her children,Bruce Willis. On Tuesda...
David Beckham/Instagram David Beckham with his son Brooklyn

David Beckham/Instagram

NEED TO KNOW

  • David Beckham posted two photos with his son Brooklyn Peltz Beckham after noticeably leaving him out of a 2025 recap post earlier in the day

  • David wrote, "I love you all so much" and "You are my life" over the Instagram Stories, adding, "On to 2026"

  • The post comes amid the ongoing rift between the Beckhams and just after Cruz Beckham revealed that his brother blocked his family members on Instagram

David Beckhamshared old photos of him with his sonBrooklyn Peltz Beckham, hours after leaving his eldest child out of his 2025 recap post amid arumored family feud.

The retired soccer star, 50, posted the pictures on his Instagram Stories roughly eight hours after sharing a post reflecting on his 2025 thatnoticeably did not include Brooklyn, 26, on Wednesday, Dec. 31.

"I love you all so much," David wrote over a black and white image of himself with a young Brooklyn.

In another Story, he shared a photo of his wifeVictoria Beckham, 51, with Brooklyn and the couple's other three children:Romeo, 23,Cruz, 20, andHarper, 14, soon after their daughter's birth. "You are my Life," David wrote alongside five white heart emojis.

David Beckham/Instagram David Beckham via Instagram Stories on Dec. 31, 2025

David Beckham/Instagram

He added, "I love you all, Love Daddy x. On to 2026," with a champagne glass emoji.

David's Story came just after he told his 88.5 million Instagram followers he feels "very lucky to have had the year I've had in 2025" in his initial post, a 20-slide carousel of various "moments that I will never forget," he wrote.

David referenced his 50th birthday celebrations and being knighted byKing Charlesin November for his "services to sport and charity" in an investiture ceremony at Windsor Castle. "Still pinching myself," he said of the honor in his caption.

"And then finishing with winning the MLS as an owner, I'm so grateful to my incredible wife, my amazing children, my friends and team I work with every single day," David continued. "Nothing would have been possible without you all."

The post comes amid Cruz's claims that Brooklyn blocked his family members on Instagram after fans noticed that Brooklyn wasno longer following his parents, and that they weren't following him back.

Gareth Cattermole/Getty  Victoria and David Beckham with their children on Oct. 3, 2023

Gareth Cattermole/Getty

A spokesperson for Victoria told PEOPLE at the time that Cruz "was responding to stories that [his] parents had unfollowed their son, which isn't true."

The ongoing rift between the Beckhams is rumored to have begun in 2022 when Brooklyn and his wifeNicola Peltz Beckhamwere preparing for their wedding. It was alleged that tension was increasing between Nicola and Victoria after Nicolachose not to wearone of the fashion designer's wedding dress designs for the ceremony, after initially agreeing to do so.

Earlier this year, asource told PEOPLEthat the rift rumors between the pair were true, while a second insider told PEOPLE that the dress situation is "far from the truth."

Read the original article onPeople

David Beckham Adds Photos of Son Brooklyn to His Instagram Stories After Leaving Him Out of 2025 Recap

David Beckham/Instagram NEED TO KNOW David Beckham posted two photos with his son Brooklyn Peltz Beckham after noticeably leaving him out...
A distorted female face; a voter at a voting booth; a mother holds her baby. (NBC News; Getty Images)

As the country prepares to ring in the new year, new state laws will take effect around the country on a host of issues, including the use of artificial intelligence in health care and elections, paid family and medical leave and rising medical insurance costs.

Some states are looking for ways to soften the blow of higher health care premiums as Affordable Care Act tax subsidies expire after Congress failed to extend them. And on the verge of the coming year's midterm elections, a slew of more restrictive voting laws are taking effect.

Here are some of the laws that go live in 2026:

Deepfakes in elections, AI misuse in health care

Thirty-eight states passed legislation this year to deal with the explosive growth of artificial intelligence, including on such topics as preventing the misuse of AI in elections and regulating how the technology disperses medical information, according to theNational Conference of State Legislatures.

AI will continue to be a top issue for states despite President Donald Trump'sexecutive orderin December seeking to limit state regulations on AI, said the group's CEO, Tim Storey.

Trump issued his executive order — which aimed to prevent a piecemeal, state-level approach to AI regulation in favor of "minimally burdensome national policy" for the use of the technology — after Congress was unable to pass legislation over the past year. As a result, it lacks the strength that legislation would provide to rein in state-level actions given that Congress has the exclusive power to pre-empt state laws under the Constitution.

"States have taken the lead, as they have in so many issues," Storey said at a recent news briefing. "AI is the big one."

In the absence of federal legislation, several states have taken action, including on the issues of so-called deepfakes in elections and AI as a medical resource.

Californiapassed legislationbarring AI developers and businesses from giving patients the impression that they are interacting with licensed health care professionals when they are really speaking with chatbots. Oregon enactedsimilar legislationpreventing AI programs from using the title "nurse" when they give medical advice.

Elsewhere,MontanaandSouth Dakotapassed laws this year that now require disclosures about using deepfakes in elections — measures that could come into play during next year's midterms.

Deepfakes, which are images, video or audio that are digitally altered to create false representations of people's statements or actions, have been used to cause confusion in state and national elections. During the 2024 presidential election, for example,NBC News reportedthat a political consultant used AI to create a robocall impersonating President Joe Biden, telling New Hampshire Democrats not to vote in the primary.

Congress has yet to pass legislation to prohibit deepfake content that could mislead voters during elections.

Paid family and medical leave

Maine,DelawareandMinnesotawill have paid family and medical leave policies going intoeffect in 2026, joining several other states that already provide such benefits. Maryland, Vermont and Washington also passed legislation expanding or amending existing paid family leave policies, with the latter state's changes taking effect this coming year. Paid family and medical leave allows employees to receive wages when they take leaves of absence for medical reasons, give birth or take care of family members.

Minnesota state Sen. Alice Mann, a physician who is a member of the state's Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party, sponsored the state's paid leave bill. She said witnessing her patients having to choose between taking care of themselves or loved ones and missing paychecks pushed her to back the legislation.

"I see people every single day who struggle. People are left with the choice of taking care of themselves, their family members, their new baby and not getting a paycheck anymore," Mann said. "And that's not an option that the rest of the world has to face."

Whilefederal lawprovides up to 12 weeks of unpaid job protection for people in need of medical or caretaking leave, the U.S. is the onlydeveloped economywithout paid parental or medical leave. It's also one of the only countries that don't provide paid sick leave at anational level.

Mann said that while Minnesota's legislation was passed in 2023, time was needed before it was implemented for people to actually know that the bill existed and understand how it works. That involved a $5 million public information campaign to educate "employers and community groups on what this policy is, what it does and how you participate," she said.

Delaware's and Maine's policies, which were passed in 2022 and 2023, respectively, also go into effect this coming year.

"It's a very popular policy, again, because we're all human beings, for crying out loud, and if it wasn't popular, we wouldn't be the only country left without it, right?" Mann said. "It is sustainable. It is something that we all use. And so I hope, I expect, that other states will see this, realize this and move to have their own policies in place."

Lapsing Obamacare subsidies

All 50 states will face rising health care costs starting in January after Congress was unable to pass legislation to extend expiring Obamacare premium subsidies before the end of the year.

In an August special session, Colorado became one of the few states toenact legislationaimed at softening the blow of the rising premiums, dedicating $100 million to offset premium hikes in the state's health care exchange.

State Rep. Kyle Brown, a Democrat who sponsored the bill, said the $100 million will serve as "a bridge" for 2026, ensuring that Colorado has funds to sustain some subsidizing of its health care exchange and "cushion the blow" from the lapse in federal subsidies.

"Before we passed the bill, people's premiums on average were expected to go up by 175% in Colorado. We passed the bill, and now they're only going up by 100%," Brown said. "Which is still like 'yeah, instead of tripling, they're doubling.' But it could have been worse."

According to KFF, a health policy research group, Affordable Care Act premium payments are likely to more than double because of the expiring subsidies. In Colorado, premiums for about 225,00 people will increase by anaverage of 101%, according to the state Insurance Division.

Brown said that he had hoped Congress would extend the Obamacare subsidies but that he came to the realization that the funds weren't coming through after having watched the U.S. government shut down for six weeks last fall — the longest federal funding lapse in the country's history — as Democratic and Republican lawmakers deadlocked over the issue. Rising health care prices and the high cost of living overall are expected to be top issues in the 2026 midterms.

"It feels like states are on their own. We don't have a willing partner in the federal government anymore, and so we have to do what we can to take care of our folks and make health care as affordable and accessible as possible," Brown said.

Stricter voting laws

This past year, 20 states passed 37 bills to restrict voting access and elections, according to theVoting Rights Lab, a nonprofit organization that tracks voting- and election-related legislation and aims to expand ballot access. That's the most since 2021, it said.

Meanwhile, 23 states passed 51 bills intended to improve voting and elections, the group found, saying that is the fewest such measures since it started tracking state legislation.

Kansas and North Dakotaeliminated grace periodsfor mail-in ballots postmarked by Election Day but arriving afterward, and eight states passed legislation to restrict or eliminate alternatives to photo ID as proof of voter registration, according to the Voting Rights Lab.

Many of the states that passed such bills might have been influenced byTrump's executive orderin March that pushed for broad changes in how the U.S. conducts its elections, said Chris Vasquez, director of legislative tracking at the Voting Rights Lab.

"I think the main thrust of the story of the year is sort of Trump in March issuing this executive order," Vasquez said.

The order aimed to require that people provide proof of citizenship when they register to vote and required mail-in ballots to be sent in before Election Day. While the proof-of-citizenship requirement wasblocked in U.S. District Court in Washington as an executive branch overreach, certain states have passed legislation mirroring other policies in the executive order.

"We did see 27 states introduce some sort of restrictive proof-of-citizenship legislation this year, which is triple what we saw in the previous legislative session," Vasquez said. "That, for the most part, wasn't successful. But then, where you did see some more activity was on the mail ballot deadline side."

In 2026, he said, Vasquez will be keeping an eye onstate redistrictingand a relatedSupreme Court casethat could limit the scope of the Voting Rights Act as harbingers of what could develop at the state level, including efforts to protect against further voting restrictions.

"I think, especially looking at the Supreme Court potentially really curtailing the ability of plaintiffs to bring Voting Rights Act claims in federal court, these state voting rights acts are essentially something to keep an eye on into potential work against potentially voter suppressive laws," he said.

New laws in 2026 target AI and deepfakes, paid leave and rising Obamacare premiums

As the country prepares to ring in the new year, new state laws will take effect around the country on a host of issues, including the use ...

 

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