Family movies at Cinemark are just over $1 this summer. See deal.

Gather the kiddos: It's a discounted movie summer atCinemark.

USA TODAY

The movie theater chain is offering tickets for a low price for a limited time as part of its annual Summer Movie Clubhouse program.

"This program gives families an affordable, easy way to enjoy beloved films together and build the kind of memories that turn today’s young movie fans into lifelong moviegoers," Cinemark Chief Marketing and Content Officer Wanda Gierhart said ina press release.

Here's what we know about the program and how to purchase tickets.

From 'Jack Ryan' to 'Enola Holmes 3':15 movies to stream this summer

What is Cinemark's Summer Movie Clubhouse?

The program offers discounted ticket prices for select family-friendly movies throughout the summer. Tickets cost just under $2 each and movies are shown on Wednesday mornings (some locations offer viewings on different days).

When do tickets go on sale?

Starting on May 13, moviegoers can purchase Summer Movie Clubhouse 2026 tickets atcinemark.com, on the Cinemark app, or at participating box offices.

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Tickets cost $1.75. Taxes and fees may apply.

The Cinemark logo hangs above one of the company's theaters.

Which movies are included in the lineup?

The 10 family-friendly films will play on Wednesday mornings atover 285 Cinemark theatersacross the country from June 1 to Aug. 6.

"Select locations will keep the excitement going with additional screenings on Mondays and Thursdays, giving families even more chances to enjoy these captivating adventures," Cinemark said.

Movies included are:

  •  "Paddington"

  • "Sonic the Hedgehog"

  • "KPop Demon Hunters Sing Along"

  • "Shrek Forever After"

  • "The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants"

  • "A Minecraft Movie"

  • "Dog Man"

  • "How to Train Your Dragon" (live action)

  • "The Bad Guys 2"

  • "Gabby’s Dollhouse: The Movie"

Cinemark is offering food deals, too

Food promotions are also on the table. Cinemark is offering $1 off snack plates and $1 off any size popcorn and drink combos.

Taylor Ardrey is a news reporter for USA TODAY. You can reach her at tardrey@usatodayco.com.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Cinemark offering discount for family-friendly movies. See deal.

Family movies at Cinemark are just over $1 this summer. See deal.

Gather the kiddos: It's a discounted movie summer atCinemark. The movie theater chain is offering tickets for a low price for ...
After bombs, blackouts and bank restrictions, Gaza’s digital workers are still coding

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) — As Israeli drones buzz overhead and ambulance sirens wail in the distance, Tarik Zaeem stays hunched over his laptop, working through lines of code for a Saudi valet parking app, debugging its barcode reader.

Associated Press Palestinian programmer Tarik Zaeem, 44, works on his computer at a coworking space in Gaza City, March 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana) Palestinian digital freelancers work on projects for clients abroad at a coworking space in Gaza City, Tuesday, May 12, 2026. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana) Palestinian graphic designer Reem Alkhateeb, 33, works on her computer next to her son at a coworking space in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, March 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana) Palestinian digital freelancers work on projects for clients abroad at a coworking space in Gaza City, Tuesday, May 12, 2026. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana) Palestinian graphic designer Reem Alkhateeb, 33, and her son Ahmed arrive at a tent that was converted into a coworking space in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, March 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana)

Israel Palestinians Gaza Digital Workers

On weekdays he walks through the bombed-out streets of Gaza City to a coworking space where freelancers charge devices and access stable internet. Remote work providesdesperately needed incomeand a form of escape from the impoverished and largely destroyedGaza Strip.

“When I work, I forget everything and focus on the coding. I stop thinking about my family’s basic needs,” the 44-year-old programmer said of his wife and three children, who fled to Egypt early in the war. “I stop thinking about airstrikes or searching for drinking water. When I’m on my laptop, I shut everything else out.”

Zaeem is part of a community of freelancers coding, designing and programming for clients abroad. Platforms connecting them to clients — including Freelancer.com, Upwork and Mostaql — each have thousands of Palestinians from Gaza registered.

Like others in Gaza, they have at timesstruggled to find food,waterandshelter, lost friends and relatives, andseen their homes and neighborhoods leveledby Israeli airstrikes. Many stopped working, but others kept going, designing logos for pizza parlors in Canada, building booking apps for Palestinian barber shops and creating websites for businesses in Kuwait and Turkey.

After struggling through two years of full-scale war, their work is growing steadier, even as broader recovery and reconstruction efforts remain at a standstill seven months sincea shaky ceasefiretook hold in October.

The digital sector grew up under Israel's blockade

Digital freelancing became popularmore than a decade agoin Gaza. Traditional sectors shrank after Hamas seized control of the strip in 2007, asIsrael’s intensified blockadedevastated agriculture, manufacturing and other industries.

High unemployment and a rise in connectivity — more than nine out of 10 households in Gaza had internet before the war — pushed thousands of digitally skilled college graduates to seek income abroad.

Foreign donors and NGOs took notice, investing in hackathons, incubators and coding academies. The United Nations Development Program said in 2018 that “freelancing and online jobs are considered to be among the best temporary solutions to the unemployment problem.”

Before the war, U.S.-based Mercy Corps’ Gaza Sky Geeks ran bustling coworking spaces with glass walls and a graffiti mural bearing the word “entrepreneur” in Arabic. Rand Safi, its senior program manager, said interest skyrocketed once it became clear that remote workers from Gaza could compete in the global marketplace.

Most of that vanished during the war sparked by Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack, in which Hamas-led militants killed some 1,200 people and abducted 251. Israel’s retaliatory offensive killed over 72,700 people,according to local officials, and displaced most of Gaza’s population of 2 million —often multiple times. Hundreds of thousands sought shelter in squalid tent camps, andelectricity and internet outageswere widespread.

Gaza Sky Geeks said two of its three locations were destroyed in airstrikes. Entrepreneurs, participants and instructors have been killed or lost contact. Today, it is one of the groups working to rekindle the sector, supporting operations at five independent coworking spaces where digital freelancers can return.

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“They want the vibes, and I think they want a piece of their past,” Safi said. “There is a sense among people of not wanting to be dependent on humanitarian aid. They want an income.”

Deadlines hinge on stable power and connectivity

More than 75% of Gaza’s telecommunications infrastructure was damaged during the war, andpower outagesoften made it difficult to fulfill contracts.

“When we first started, the main problem was electricity and internet access. Now that’s less of an issue because workspaces have opened across Gaza,” software engineer Sharif Naim said.

During the war, Naim founded Taqat Gaza, a coworking space powered by solar generators, giving remote workers an opportunity to work in three-hour shifts. Today, it caters to more than 500 freelancers, offering a full day of internet access and networking opportunities that Naim said were seen as equally useful.

“The focus (today) is creating a proper work environment, training and helping freelancers rebuild skills lost during the war so they can compete in the global market again,” he said.

Part of that has been aimed toward women, many of whom became breadwinners or needed to seek additional income amid the war.

Reem Alkhateeb, a mother and graphic designer, said she tries to find time to work online while managing the daily burdens of survival, including waiting in line for food and water. Prices have soared and her husband lost his job, turning her freelancing from supplemental income into the family’s financial lifeline.

“Our dreams are no longer about luxury or big ambitions. We dream about the simplest things that should already be basic human rights: having electricity, having internet access, being able to live and work normally,” she said.

Payment poses challenges

With banks often inaccessible in Gaza and platforms like PayPal unavailable to people with Palestinian addresses, freelancers have had to find alternative ways to get paid. Some route payments through relatives abroad who can receive transfers on their behalf, while others rely oncash brokerswho accept electronic transfers for steep fees.

Some initiatives have stepped in to help freelancers navigate the maze of payment challenges. After her husband and daughter were killed in 2024, Salsabil Bardawi founded “Gaza Talents” as a platform to connect Gaza freelancers to international clients and help them build careers. It has since facilitated more than $600,000 in income for workers, partnering with the Bank of Palestine and the digital wallet “PalPay.”

“A lot of people can work, all they need is a laptop, internet, electricity and clients,” she said.

___ Metz reported from Ramallah, West Bank.

After bombs, blackouts and bank restrictions, Gaza’s digital workers are still coding

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) — As Israeli drones buzz overhead and ambulance sirens wail in the distance, Tarik Zaeem stays hunched over ...
Marks Construction named Small and Emerging Business of the Year

Louisiana Economic Development announced Marks Construction in Donaldsonville was among the five businesses honored at the 2026 Spotlight Louisiana Awards in Baton Rouge.

USA TODAY

Owner Jay Marks and his family were in attendance as his company received the statewide award for Small and Emerging Business of the Year.

"Construction is about more than the things we can see," he saidin a videoshared to LED's YouTube page. "It's about the things we can feel, and about the progress and the memories we make."

Previously a strength and conditioning coach for the Tulane University football team in New Orleans, Marks said in the video he made a leap of faith to start a construction business.

As he recalled, the first years were not easy.

"But I had a praying wife, and I had a state in Louisiana that believed in me," Marks said in the video. "And we have not looked back."

As the business has grown, it has no longer been limited to taking small jobs.

Louisiana Economic Development, partners and small business leaders from across the state gathered for the 2026 Spotlight Louisiana Awards.

"I want to establish something that my own children will be proud to operate one day because family is my why," he said. "This isn't just about projects to me. It's about legacy. And excellence - that's our standard. I always told my players, 'When we focus on the details and the fundamentals, the results will speak for themselves. And now my team approaches every job with strong discipline, clear communication and a championship mindset."

He concluded, "At Marks Construction, we're not just making homes and buildings, we are building community."

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Spotlight Louisiana Awards

The awards ceremony celebrated five companies whose innovation, leadership and investment have created opportunity throughout the state, according to an LED news release.

The Louisiana Growth Network, a division of LED, celebrates the event annually to recognize entrepreneurs and employers leading the state's economic momentum.

"As a former small business owner, I know what it takes to build something from the ground up," Gov. Jeff Landry said in the release. "The companies recognized at Spotlight Louisiana represent the hard work, innovation and determination moving Louisiana forward, and my administration is committed to making sure Louisiana small businesses are connected to the opportunities being created across our state."

Per the release, small businesses employ 54 percent of the state's workforce.

Award winners

The 2026 Spotlight Louisiana award winners were:

  • Small and Emerging Business of the Year, Marks Construction, Donaldsonville

  • Excellence in Entrepreneurial Leadership, Additive Innovators, New Iberia

  • Innovative Company of the Year, OS BENEFiTS, New Orleans

  • Source Louisiana Vendor of the Year, Parish Aggregates, Baton Rouge

  • Spotlight Louisiana Business of the Year, Fire & Safety Specialists, Maurice

Parter awards recognized businesses and small businesses whose work reflected the reach of the state's small business support network, which included:

  • Louisiana APEX Accelerator Government Contractor of the Year, Tunica-Biloxi Services, LLC, Marksville

  • Louisiana Small Business Development Center Excellence in Business Award, Apocalypse Sports, Ponchatoula

  • National Federation of Independent Business Louisiana Small Business Champion, Lott Oil Company, Natchitoches

SBA champions included:

  • Entrepreneurial Success Award, Sweet Kravings Donuts, Gray

  • Family-Owned Small Business of the Year, Washington Building Services, New Orleans

  • Veteran Small Business Champion of the Year, Miles for Smiles LLC, Shreveport

  • Women in Business Champion, Hatten & Hays Mobile Bookstore LLC, Monroe

  • Rural Small Business of the Year, Summit Bike Academy, Ponchatoula

  • Small Business Development Center of Excellence and Innovation Award, LSBDC at Southeastern Louisiana University, Hammond

  • Small Business Person of the Year, Jordanna and Louis Coleman Sr., LC Transport Services LLC, Prairieville

Michael Tortorich is a journalist for the USA Today Network in Louisiana.

Gonzales Weekly Citizen and Donaldsonville Chief, part of the USA Today Network of Louisiana, cover Ascension Parish and the greater Baton Rouge area. Follow atfacebook.com/WeeklyCitizenandfacebook.com/DonaldsonvilleChief.

This article originally appeared on Gonzales Weekly Citizen:Donaldsonville business awarded Small and Emerging Business of Year

Marks Construction named Small and Emerging Business of the Year

Louisiana Economic Development announced Marks Construction in Donaldsonville was among the five businesses honored at the 2026 Spotlig...
NY ranks among best states for working moms, but one major cost stands out

New York is among the best states for working moms, a WalletHub studyrevealed.

USA TODAY

According to WalletHub, women make up around half of the workforce, and in 2025, around 74% of moms with children under 18-years-old were employed. However, the study states that mothers often face many challenges in the workforce.

For example, WalletHub states that women make about 82% of what men make per hour on average, creating a financial disparity that could put an extra strain on working moms. Other issues that can factor into the success and opportunities for working moms could vary from state to state, depending on things like child care access, parental leave policies and good public schools.

"The U.S. still has a lot of work to do when it comes to improving conditions for working moms, given the wage gap and the lack of representation women have in certain leadership positions. However, some states are significantly better than others," WalletHub analyst Chip Lupo said. "The best states for working moms provide equitable pay for women and a strong potential for career advancement, along with robust parental leave policies and high-quality child care, health care, and schools."

WalletHub compared all 50 states and the District of Columbia across 17 metrics to determine which are the best and worst states for working moms.

Here is what to know about New York's ranking.

Why is NY a good state for working moms?

New York was ranked the 9th best state for working moms, according to a WalletHub study.

New York State is among the top 10 best states for working moms, according to WalletHub. The Empire State scored the No. 9 spot, with an overall score of 53.37.

NY scored the No. 12 spot for the child care rank and offers the second-best daycare systems in the country, the study found. That being said, New York was also ranked to have the highest childcare costs in the country compared to the percentage of the median women's income.

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The Empire State ranked No. 12 for work-life balance and No. 33 for the professional opportunities rank.

WalletHub's top 10 best states for working moms

  1. Connecticut

  2. Massachusetts

  3. Rhode Island

  4. New Jersey

  5. Vermont

  6. Maine

  7. Minnesota

  8. District of Columbia

  9. New York

  10. North Dakota

WalletHub's 10 worst states for working moms

  • No. 51: Louisiana

  • No. 50: Alabama

  • No. 49: New Mexico

  • No. 48: Mississippi

  • No. 47: Nevada

  • No. 46: Arizona

  • No. 45: South Carolina

  • No. 44: West Virginia

  • No. 43: Texas

  • No. 42: Idaho

How WalletHub assessed best and worst states for working moms

To determine the best and worst states for working moms, WalletHub compared all 50 states and the District of Columbia across three dimensions: child care, professional opportunities and work-life balance.

Thechild carecategory analyzed these factors:

  • Daycare quality

  • Child care costs

  • Pediatricians per capita

  • School system quality

  • Share of nationally accredited child care centers

  • Number of childcare workers per total number of children

Theprofessional opportunitiesrank analyzed these categories:

  • Gender pay gap

  • Ratio of female executives to male executives

  • Median women's salary

  • Share of working women living with economic security

  • Share of families in poverty

  • Female unemployment rate

  • Gender representation gap in different economic sectors

  • WalletHub's "Best states for working at home" ranking

Thework-life balancecategory analyzed these factors:

  • Parental leave policy score

  • Average length of a woman's work week

  • Women's average commute time.

Data used to create the ranking was collected as of March 30, 2026, and was sourced from multiple entities, including WalletHub research, the U.S. Census Bureau, the Institute for Women's Policy Research, the National Partnership for Women & Families and Child Care Aware of America.

—Madison Scottis a New York Connect reporter, covering entertainment, breaking and consumer news, and trending topics with a focus on stories that matter to readers across New York state. She also has an interest in how the system helps or doesn't helpfamilies with missing loved ones. She can be reached at MDScott@USATodayco.com.

This article originally appeared on Rockland/Westchester Journal News:NY among top states for working moms, WalletHub study finds

NY ranks among best states for working moms, but one major cost stands out

New York is among the best states for working moms, a WalletHub studyrevealed. According to WalletHub, women make up around half o...
Iran vows to fight on as Trump calls latest peace offer

What to know about the Iran war today:The Iranian government insists it demanded only the country's "legitimate rights" and no "concessions" in its response to the latest U.S. peace proposal. PresidentTrump has rejected Iran's reply as "totally unacceptable."  Oil prices surged again Monday after Mr. Trump's dismissal of the Iranian counter-proposal, with international benchmark Brent crude topping $100 a barrel in early trading.Mr. Trump is expected to encourage China to pressure Iran into making a deal to end the costly war during his visit to Beijing later this week, when he will meet with President Xi Jinping. Several tankers, including one Iran says coordinated with its military, seen transiting Strait of Hormuz

CBS News

Several liquid natural gas (LNG) tankers and other vessels have transited the Strait of Hormuz over the weekend, following several days of no visible movements in or out of the strait.

The Qatari-flagged LNG tanker Al Kharaitiyat transited the strategic waterway on Saturday and was headed to Pakistan.

TheReuters news agency saidit was the first Qatari LNG tanker to make the trip since the war began, and that the fuel shipment was authorized by Iran in a bid to boost confidence with both Pakistan, which has acted as a mediator in the war, and Qatar.

The supertanker Agios Fanourios I transited the strait on Sunday, tracking data show, and Iran said it had done so in coordination with its authorities. Another tanker, the Kiara M, linked to Russia's shadow fleet, suddenly re-appeared off the Omani coast on Sunday, east of the strait, after last being seen on May 6 in the northern Persian Gulf.

The British navy's Marine Traffic Operations center previously said no tanker movements had been tracked between May 6 and 8, and that no cargo vessels were known to have transited between May 6 and 9.

Iran demands that all vessels wishing to transit the strait do so in coordination with its military, which is believed to be charging tolls for passage.

Iran "defeated, but that doesn't mean they're done," says Trump

President Trump says Iran's leaders "are defeated, but that doesn't mean they're done,"

In remarks aired Sunday on whether combat operations against Iran had been concluded, Mr. Trump said: "They are defeated, but that doesn't mean they're done."

"We could go in for two more weeks and do every single target," he said. "We have certain targets that we wanted, and we've done probably 70% of them, but we have other targets that we could conceivably hit."

The president dismissed Iran's terms for a potential peace deal as "totally unacceptable" Sunday. Iran said Monday that it asked only for the country's "legitimate rights" and no "concessions" in its response to the latest U.S. peace deal proposal.

Fighting between Israel and Hezbollah continues in Lebanon despite ceasefire

The parallel war between Iranian-backed Hezbollah and the Israeli military continued over the weekend and into Monday, with the Israel Defense Forces warning more civilians to evacuate their villages as the death toll in Lebanon nears 3,000.

The violence has continued despite a ceasefire signed by the Lebanese and Israeli governments a month ago, and the fighting has complicated efforts to broker a wider peace deal between Washington and Tehran.

On Monday, Hezbollah released video purportedly showing strikes on IDF troops in southern Lebanon, with the Iranian proxy group claiming multiple "confirmed hits."

Lebanese women mourn at the side of the bodies of nine people killed the day before in an Israeli airstrike on the southern Lebanese village of Jibshit, during their funeral in the city of Sidon on May 10, 2026. / Credit: Mahmoud ZAYYAT /AFP via Getty Images

IDF spokesperson Avichay Adraee, in hislatest urgent warningto Lebanese civilians via social media, told residents of nine villages in the country's south to evacuate their homes.

An IDF strike on a village where residents received no such warning killed eight members of the same family on Saturday, according to theNew York Times. On Sunday, hundreds of mourners gathered in the coastal town of Sidon for the family's funerals. Among the dead were a couple, three of their children, and a 6-month-old grandchild, according to the Times.

IDF and Hezbollah strikes have intensified in recent days. More than 450 people in Lebanon have been killed since the ceasefire was signed. Israeli officials say 18 military personnel and two civilians have been killed since the fighting with Hezbollah escalated at the beginning of March.

Lebanon's Ministry of Public Healthsaysat least 2,846 people have been killed since March 2, while more than 1 million have been forced to flee their homes.

Netanyahu tells 60 Minutes Iran war "not over," as nuclear material still "has to be taken out"

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says the joint war that his country and the U.S. launched on Feb. 28 has "accomplished a great deal, but it's not over."

Netanyahu told CBS News' Major Garrett for an interview with 60 Minutes that the war cannot be over, "because there's still nuclear material, enriched uranium that has to be taken out of Iran. There is still enrichment sites that have to be dismantled. There are still proxies that Iran supports. There are ballistic missiles that they still want to produce. Now, we've degraded a lot of it. But all that is still there, and there's work to be done."

Read more here.

Iranian president says nation will "never bow down to the enemy"

Iranian ‌President Masoud ⁠Pezeshkian said Sunday that the country would "never bow down to the enemy," vowing that the ruling Islamic Republic regime would "defend national interests with strength."

"If talk of dialogue or negotiation arises, it does not mean surrender or retreat," he said in a message posted onsocial mediabefore President Trump rejected Iran's response to the latest U.S. peace proposal.

"The goal is to uphold the rights of the Iranian nation and to defend national interests with resolute strength," said Pezeshkian.

Iran will "fight whenever it is necessary," vows foreign ministry spokesperson

Iran is prepared to fight "whenever it is necessary," foreign ministry spokesperson Esmail Baqaei said Monday, adding that the regime would also continue using diplomacy, "whenever we deem it appropriate."

Speaking to reporters Monday, Baqaei was asked how Iran would respond if the U.S. were to launch new attacks on the country.

'We fight whenever it is necessary," he said. "Whenever we deem it appropriate, we use diplomacy as a tool to secure the interests of the Iranian nation."

Baqaei said Iran had "shown that it is serious about pursuing its national interests and legitimate rights" through a "diplomatic processes in good faith and in a reasonable manner."

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"The other side must prove itself," he said, referring to the U.S. "It must demonstrate that it is serious in this regard. So far, it has failed."

He earlier said Iran had not demanded any concessions in its response to the latest U.S. peace proposal: "The only thing we demanded was Iran's legitimate rights."

President Trump dismissed Iran's response on Sunday as "totally unacceptable."

Trump expected to discuss Iran with China during summit this week

President Trump is expected to fly to Beijing on Wednesday for a summit with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping, and the Iran war is likely to be on the agenda.

Mr. Trump is under mounting pressure to end the war and calm energy markets that have sent fuel prices spiraling upward for two months. He's expected to try to lean on President Xi to use his influence with Tehran to get them to agree to a deal.

"I would expect the president to apply pressure" over Iran, a senior administration official speaking on condition of anonymity told reporters Sunday, according to the French news agency AFP. The official said Mr. Trump had raised concerns about China continuing to bolster state coffers in Iran and Russia by purchasing oil - despite U.S. sanctions - "multiple times" during phone calls with Xi, as well as China's sales of military-civilian dual-use goods.

"I expect that conversation to continue," the official said.

U.S. sanctions against Chinese entities over the Iran war are also likely to come up, the official told AFP.

Iran's foreign ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei voiced hope on Monday that China would instead use the visit to reinforce Tehran's positions and push back on U.S. demands for a peace agreement.

"Our Chinese friends know very well how to use these opportunities to warn about the consequences of the U.S.' illegal and bullying actions on regional peace and security," he said, "as well as on economic stability and international security."

Iran says it didn't demand concessions in response to U.S. peace proposal

Iran's Foreign Ministry said Monday that it had called for an end to the war across the region and the release of frozen Iranian assets abroad in its response to the latest U.S. peace proposal, which President Trump rejected on Sunday.

"We did not demand any concessions. The only thing we demanded was Iran's legitimate rights," said ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said Monday during a weekly briefing.

He said Tehran's demands included "an end to the war in the region," ending the U.S. naval blockade of Iran's ports and vessels, and the "release of assets belonging to the Iranian people, which have for years been unjustly trapped in foreign banks."

Mr. Trump on Sunday rejected the Iranian response as"totally unacceptable."

"Our focus is on what is urgent," Baqaei said Monday. "What is urgent is ending war in all its forms, including in Lebanon."

Baqaei said Iran was also keen to ensure "safe maritime navigation in the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz" while "stopping illegal actions and acts of maritime interference by the United States against commercial vessels."

Iran's approach is, he said, "very responsible and reasonable … to prioritize immediate issues and focus on resolving them, rather than discussing topics whose history shows they have, on at least two occasions, led to war."

The Trump administration has insisted so far that any peace deal include a commitment by Iran to severely curb, if not completely end its nuclear enrichment program.

Oil prices jump after Trump calls Iran's reaction to U.S. peace proposal "totally unacceptable"

President Trump branding Iran's terms for ending the Middle East war"totally unacceptable"raised the possibility of renewed hostilities and sent oil prices sharply higher in early Asia trade on Monday.

President Trump said on hisTruth Socialplatform that he "just read the response from Iran's so-called 'Representatives.' I don't like it — TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!"

Global energy markets were unnerved with no indication of an imminent agreement to end the war and to reopen the shipping lanes of the Strait of Hormuz. The price of a barrel of international benchmark Brent crude wasback above $100 a barrelearly Monday.

The benchmark U.S. oil contract West Texas Intermediate also surged back toward the $100 a barrel mark ahead of Monday morning trade, as investors braced for further disruptions to supplies through the strait, where Tehran has imposed a near total blockade.

U.S. Gulf allies say Iran launched new drone attacks amid shaky ceasefire

The shaky ceasefire inthe Iran warwas tested again Sunday when a drone caused a small fire on a ship off the coast of Qatar, while the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait reported drones entering their airspaces.

The UAE blamed Iran for the latest attack, the latest threat to a month-old ceasefire, which the Trump administration says is still in effect.

There were no casualties reported, and no one immediately claimed responsibility.

Iran vows to fight on as Trump calls latest peace offer "unacceptable"

What to know about the Iran war today:The Iranian government insists it demanded only the country's "legitimate rights" a...
Inside “The Munsters” Cast's Lives After the Show Ended

The Munsters premiered on CBS in September 1964

People L to R: Pat Priest, Fred Gwynne, Butch Patrick, Al Lewis and Yvonne De Carlo on 'The Munsters,' circa 1964Credit: CBS/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Though the show was beloved, it only lasted for two seasons before being canceled in 1966

  • The sitcom starred Fred Gwynne as Herman Munster and Yvonne De Carlo as Lily Munster

RevisitingThe Munsterselicits anything but the reaction "darn, darn, darn, darn!"

The CBS sitcom lasted only two seasons, but it quickly became a classic. Premiering on Sept. 24, 1964 — less than a week afterThe Addams Familydebuted on ABC —The Munstersfocused on a family of ghouls and their "normie" niece living at 1313 Mockingbird Lane in Mockingbird Heights, a stand-in for a classic American suburb.

Starring Fred Gwynne as Herman Munster andYvonne De Carloas Lily Munster, the show was a campy mashup of classic Universal Pictures monsters and wholesome family-focused sitcoms.

Despite its brief run,The Munstersspawned numerous spinoffs and reboots, including the 1966 filmMunster, Go Home!— which came quickly after the initial series' end — the 1973 animated specialThe Mini-Munsters, the 1981 TV movie revivalThe Munsters' Revenge, the syndicated revival seriesThe Munsters Today, which aired from 1988 to 1991, and the 1995 CBS TV movieHere Come the Munsters.

The pilot for a planned reboot,Mockingbird Lane, aired as a Halloween special on NBC in 2012, and in 2022, directorRob Zombie’sThe Munsterspresented an origin story for the show’s characters.

Sixty years afterThe Munsters' 1966 finale, find out what happened to the beloved sitcom's cast.

Fred Gwynne as Herman Munster

Fred Gwynne as Herman Munster on 'The Munsters' in 1965; Fred Gwynne in New York City in 1984Credit: Silver Screen Collection/Hulton Archive/Getty; Walter McBride/Corbis via Getty

At a towering 6' 5", Gwynne was a perfect fit for Herman Munster, the hulking Frankenstein’s monster-esque patriarch of the Munster clan.

Having already appeared in numerous TV series in the 1950s, Gwynne had his first starring role as Officer Francis Muldoon in NBC’s cop sitcomCar 54, Where Are You?from 1961 to 1963. After starring inThe Munstersfrom 1964 to 1966, he reprised the role of Herman inMunster, Go Home!(1966).

In the decades that followed, Gwynne continued to make numerous appearances in series and TV movies, including 1981’sThe Munsters’ Revenge, while also appearing in films likeFatal Attraction(1987),Pet Sematary(1989) andMy Cousin Vinny(1992). The latter was his final on-screen role.

Gwynne married his first wife, Jean Reynard, in 1952. The couple had five children before divorcing in 1980. He later married Deborah Flater in 1988.

The actor died in 1993 of complications from pancreatic cancer. He was 66.

Yvonne De Carlo as Lily Munster

Yvonne De Carlo as Lily Munster on 'The Munsters,' circa 1965; Yvonne De Carlo at the 2nd annual American Cinema Awards at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif., in 1985Credit: Silver Screen Collection/Getty; Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection via Getty

Prior to taking on the role of vampire bride/homemaker Lily Munster, De Carlo appeared in more than 50 movies in the 1940s and 1950s, including starring oppositeCharlton Hestonas Moses’ wife in Cecil B. DeMille’sThe Ten Commandments(1956).

But, as pop culture historian Geoffrey MarktoldWoman’s Worldin 2024, De Carlo was often “hired to smolder like a prop rather than [portray] a fully-developed character,” and many of her films were “popular in the moment, but nobody remembers them today.”

WithThe Munsters, however, De Carlo reached a new level of campy cultural cache, reprising the role of Lily inMunster, Go Home!andThe Munsters’ Revenge.

Following the show’s cancellation in 1966, she went on to appear in another 27 films, primarily B-movies and horror flicks, playing on herMunstersnotoriety. She also found success on the stage, most notably originating the role of Carlotta Campion in the 1971 Broadway production of Stephen Sondheim’sFollies, and made appearances in shows likeFantasy Island,Murder, She Wrote,Dream OnandTales from the Crypt.

She married stuntman Robert Morgan in 1955. In addition to Morgan’s daughter from a previous marriage, the couple had two sons before divorcing in 1973.

De Carlo died of heart failure in 2007 at age 84.

Al Lewis as Grandpa Munster

Al Lewis as Grandpa Munster on 'The Munsters'; Al Lewis, circa 1995Credit: CBS via Getty; Dana Frank/Getty

Al Lewis’ zany Count Sam Dracula, a.k.a. Grandpa Munster, may have been hundreds of years old, but the actor himself was only 41 when he took on the role — notably, a yearyoungerthan on-screen daughter De Carlo.

Lewis got his start performing in Vaudeville and on Broadway in the 1950s, before moving into television, most notably starring alongside Gwynne inCar 54, Where Are You?before they reunited forThe Munsters.

Along with most of the original cast, Lewis appeared as hisMunsterscharacter inMunster, Go Home!andThe Munsters’ Revenge, and he had a cameo inHere Come the Munsters. He also reprised the role in a 1991 episode of ABC’sHi Honey, I’m Home,and he hosted the TBS TV horror-block Super Scary Saturday as Grandpa Munster from 1987 to 1989.

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Lewis had no qualms getting typecast, saying in a 1997 interview,per NPR, "Why would I mind? It pays my mortgage."

BeyondThe Munsters, Lewis' notable film appearances included Sydney Pollack’sThey Shoot Horses, Don’t They(1969) andMarried to the Mob(1988). He also reprised hisCar 54role in the 1994 film based on the show. On TV, he guest-starred in shows likeLost in Space,Green Acres,Love American StyleandTaxi.

A lifelong left-wing activist, Lewis ran for New York governor as a member of the Green Party in 1998. His bid to be listed on the ballot as “Grandpa Al Lewis” failed, as did his campaign. He did, however, succeed in securing enough votes to place his party on the New York ballot for the next four years. In 2000, he campaigned for the Green Party nomination for one of New York’s two U.S. Senate seats, coming in second.

The actor also ran a restaurant in N.Y.C.'s Greenwich Village called Grandpa's, where he could often be spotted taking photos and signing autographs.

Lewis was married to Marge Domowitz, with whom he shared three sons, from 1956 until 1977. He later married actress Karen Ingenthron-Lewis in 1984, and they remained together until his death in 2006 at age 82. Lewis was also a grandfather of four.

Butch Patrick as Eddie Munster

Butch Patrick as Eddie Munster on 'The Munsters' in 1964; Butch Patrick at the 2019 New Jersey Horror Con and Film Festival at Showboat Atlantic City in Atlantic City, N.J., on March 30, 2019Credit: Silver Screen Collection/Getty; Bobby Bank/Getty

While the role of Eddie Munster was originally played by child actor Happy Derman in the unaired pilot forThe Munsters, then-11-year-old Butch Patrick was ultimately cast as the pint-size werewolf in the series. He remained on the show for both seasons.

Patrick reprised the role of Eddie inMunster, Go Home!, but he did not appear in the 1981 TV movie.

After the series ended, Patrick continued to work in television, with roles on shows likeDaniel Boone,I Dream of JeannieandThe Monkees. In 1971, he starred on the short-lived Saturday morning kids’ showLidsville,fromH.R. Pufnstufcreators Sid and Marty Krofft. He also nabbed the starring role in the 1970 film adaptation ofThe Phantom Tollbooth.

Patrick quit acting in 1975 to work for his father, then returned to the screen with a role in the 1991 horror flickScary Movie. In 1995, he had a cameo in the remakeHere Come the Munstersand appeared in a cameo as himself in 2003’sDickie Roberts: Former Child Star.

He’s taken on a number of small roles in the years since, including voicing the Tin Can Man in Rob Zombie’sThe Munsters.

In September 2016, at age 63, Patricktied the knotwith Leila Murray in Macon, Mo.

Beverley Owen as Marilyn Munster

Beverley Owen as Marilyn Munster on 'The Munsters' in 1964Credit: CBS via Getty

The first of the two original Marilyn Munsters, Beverley Owen came to the series with roles in shows likeAs the World TurnsandWagon Train,as well as the 1964 filmBullets for a Badman, under her belt.

As Marilyn, the daughter of Lily Munster’s sister, she played the only “normal” member of the family — though her spooky relatives considered her odd. After only 13 episodes, Owen leftThe Munstersmidway through its first season.

That same year, she married writer, director and producer Jon Stone, who went on to become an original member of theSesame Streetteam. The couple had two daughters before divorcing in 1974.

Owen briefly returned to the small screen in 1972, playing Dr. Paula McCrea onAnother World. She went on to earn a master’s degree in early American history.

Owendied from ovarian cancerin February 2019. She was 81. Patrick marked her passing in a Facebook post, writing, “Beautiful Beverly Owen has left us. What a sweet soul. I had the biggest crush on her. RIP Bev and thanks for your 13 memorable Marilyn Munster episodes.”

Pat Priest as Marilyn Munster

Pat Priest as Marilyn Munster on 'The Munsters' in 1965; Pat Priest at The Hollywood Show at Westin LAX in Los Angeles on April 28, 2018Credit: CBS via Getty; Priscilla Grant/Everett Collection/Alamy

Hot on the heels of small guest roles in shows likePerry MasonandMy Favorite Martian, Pat Priest was tapped to replace Owen as Marilyn midway throughThe Munsters’ first season. She continued to play the character until the show’s 1966 cancellation.

Post-Munsters, Priest booked guest roles on series likeThe Lucy Show,Mannix,Mission: Impossible,BewitchedandThe Mary Tyler Moore Show. She also starred alongsideElvis Presleyin 1967’sEasy Come, Easy GoandBruce Dernin 1971’sThe Incredible 2-Headed Transplant.

After retiring from acting in the 1980s, Priest started a new career restoring and selling homes, and she also co-ran an antiques business with her sister,perRemind. She did, however, return for a cameo inHere Come the Munstersand provided the voice for an airline announcer in the 2022 filmThe Munsters. She also still occasionally joins Patrick at fan conventions.

Priest was married to Pierce Jensen Jr. from 1955 to 1967. In 1981, she married her second husband, Frederick Hansing. The couple raised their two sons in Idaho. In 2021, she was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and has since been declared in remission.

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But the president sidestepped making a direct prediction and instead made a boast.

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In an interview with “Full Measure” host Sharyl Attkisson, shared online Sunday, the president was asked: “Do you see your son Barron going into politics someday?”

“Well, maybe, he’s certainly a popular guy,” replied Trump.

Then he hyped up other family members, and by extension himself, when he added: “But I have a lot of members of my family that are very popular, you know?”

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The president then concluded: “I have good kids, I have very good kids.”

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Barron Trump turned 20 in March. He is currently studying business at New York University’s Washington, D.C., campus.

He has largely stayed out of the political limelight but has reportedly taken a more prominent behind-the-scenes role in recent years, includingadvising his father on which “macho bro” podcaststo appear on in the run-up to the 2024 election in a bid to boost his popularity with young men.

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Donald Trump Addresses Possibility Of Barron Trump Entering Politics In The Most Trumpian Way

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