• I ordered Chili’s Triple Dipper, which is going viral on TikTok. It was the best $17 I’ve ever spent at a chain restaurant.

    chili's triple dipper appetizer combo platter
    TikTok users have posted about ordering Chili's Triple Dipper appetizer platter as their meal. I thought it was a great value.

    • People ordering Chili's appetizer combo for their main meal are getting millions of views on TikTok.
    • The Triple Dipper comes with a choice of three appetizers and three sauces, usually for under $20.
    • I tried the viral meal and thought it was a lot of food for a relatively low price.

    The Triple Dipper is the latest menu item winning Chili's customers over as chains battle over who offers the best value.

    TikTok videos of people eating and reviewing their Triple Dipper orders have accumulated over 30 million views on the app, and the item has received high praise.

    "If you're going to Chili's and you are not getting the Triple Dipper, especially the mozzarella sticks with the Triple Dipper, you are doing it so wrong," said the creator of one TikTok video that has been viewed over 5 million times.

    However, while the Triple Dipper, which comes with a choice of three appetizers and three sauces, is having a moment, it isn't new — and longtime fans of the appetizer combo are bemoaning how popular it's become because of the online trend.

    "I've been getting them for so long, so I'm kind of mad everyone else is onto it now," a user commented on one TikTok video.

    "The Triple Dipper has always been a fan-favorite, so I love seeing it get a viral moment on TikTok," George Felix, Chili's chief marketing officer, told Business Insider in an email. "Part of our brand purpose is to create a fun atmosphere in our restaurants, and we're now seeing that spill over into social media with our guests showing off all of their epic cheese pulls and heavy-handed ranch dips."

    To see if the viral menu item was truly worth the hype, I ordered it for myself at my local Chili's.

    The Triple Dipper is one of Chili's most famous menu items and has been around for years.
    chilis menu
    A Chili's menu showing the Triple Dipper and burger options.

    The Triple Dipper comes with a choice of three appetizers and three sauces. The price of most Chili's menu items vary by restaurant, but the appetizer combo usually costs under or around $20. The combo cost $17.29, excluding tax and tip, at the Chili's location I visited.

    Customers can choose from a variety of appetizer options to include in the combo, from boneless or bone-in wings to the chain's Southwestern egg rolls, Big Mouth Burger Bites, Chicken Crispers, and fried mozzarella.

    There's no suggestion for how many people the Triple Dipper serves, but as an appetizer, I'd say it's ideal for two people based on the number of each item you get.

    I ordered one of the most popular combinations I saw on TikTok.
    chili's triple dipper appetizer combo platter
    TikTok users have posted about ordering Chili's Triple Dipper appetizer platter as their meal. I thought it was a great value.

    After watching some of the most-viewed Triple Dipper videos on TikTok, I noticed that one of the most popular orders was a combo of the Big Mouth Burger Bites, which are the chain's sliders, fried mozzarella, and the honey-chipotle Chicken Crispers.

    When the large basket of food arrived at the table, my mouth started watering.

    I've ordered the Triple Dipper in the past to share with friends as an appetizer. Often, we had to fight over the last egg roll or cut the sliders in half so we could all get our fill. This time around, I couldn't wait to have the entire thing to myself.

    The first item I tried was the fried mozzarella.
    chilis mozzarella sticks
    Chili's fried mozzarella.

    Rather than a standard mozzarella stick, Chili's fried mozzarella is larger, almost the size of a hash-brown patty. The platter came with two pieces.

    It was warm and fried to a golden crisp, smelled of Italian seasoning, and was served with marinara sauce.

    The fried mozzarella was stuffed with gooey, melted cheese.
    chilis mozzarella sticks
    Chili's fried mozzarella.

    When I bit into the fried mozzarella, the cheese pull was out of this world. The fried mozzarella paired well with the marinara sauce, which had a classic tomato and basil flavor.

    The cheese itself was perfectly melted, but the outside was super crispy. I could immediately see why this menu item is such a fan-favorite.

    The next item in the Triple Dipper was the Big Mouth Burger Bites.
    chilis big mouth bites
    Chili's Big Mouth Burger Bites.

    The Big Mouth Burger Bites are Chili's version of sliders. They can be served as an entrée or as part of the Triple Dipper appetizer combo platter.

    The sliders come with a beef patty, American cheese, bacon bits, and sautéed onions.

    These sliders perfectly filled my burger cravings.
    chilis big mouth bites
    Chili's Big Mouth Burger Bites.

    I thought the two burger bites were a satisfying portion size and very flavorful, especially when dipped in the chain's ranch. The bacon bits were crispy and salty, and the cheese was melted perfectly over the bite-sized burgers.

    The burger patty itself was a little small, but that was to be expected considering they were sliders. They were also a tad overdone for me — I thought they could have been a little more rare, but that's just my preference.

    My favorite of the three appetizers was the honey-chipotle Chicken Crispers.
    chilis honey chipotle chicken crispers
    Chili's honey-chipotle Chicken Crispers.

    The meal came with three honey-chipotle Chicken Crispers, Chili's version of chicken tenders. The tenders were drenched in the spicy-sweet sauce but still exceptionally crispy and crunchy.

    The inside the chicken tender was juicy, and the sauce had a lot of flavor.
    chilis honey chipotle chicken crispers
    Chili's honey-chipotle Chicken Crispers.

    I really enjoyed the kick the sauce had, without being overly spicy. Dipped in the chain's ranch, these chicken tenders really blew me away. They were flavorful and I loved the sticky texture of the sauce, which coated every inch of the tenders.

    I would definitely order the Triple Dipper instead of an entrée the next time I eat at Chili's.
    author outside chilis restaurant
    The author outside Chili's.

    After ordering the Triple Dipper as my meal, I could see why it's gone viral. Not only were all three dishes extremely tasty, but I thought this meal was a great value.

    Given the rising costs of dining out, and even fast food, the Triple Dipper seemed like a great deal at $17.29, especially considering how much food I received. For reference, most Chili's entrées range from $14 to $30 at my local restaurant in Glendale, New York.

    I arrived at Chili's very hungry, but I still couldn't finish the massive appetizer platter. Chili's motto is "If you leave hungry, that's on you" — and the chain's embracing of this trend proves it's committed to that message.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • To get swole, Michael B. Jordan recommends yoga and meditation

    Michael B Jordan
    Michael B Jordan

    • Michael B. Jordan said he's a big fan of yoga, and thinks the idea that it's feminine is outdated.
    • The rate of men taking up yoga and Pilates is growing, data show.
    • Mobility exercises can boost endurance, strength, and longevity. 

    Michael B. Jordan wants to end stereotypes about how men should work out.

    To build up his physique for some of his biggest roles in movies like "Creed" and "Black Panther," Jordan relied heavily on old standbys like weightlifting, boxing, and HIIT.

    But to stay fit, healthy, and maintain his muscle and endurance beyond movies, Jordan has a much broader workout routine.

    Jordan spoke to Business Insider in an interview about his partnership with bottled water brand Propel, an initiative designed to promote community fitness in cities including Newark (Jordan's New Jersey hometown), Atlanta, and Houston.

    Over the years, he's expanded his training from working out on the basketball courts of his youth to taking up everything from cycling to stretching.

    Jordan is also a big fan of yoga and meditation — and he said he's over the cliché that yoga, Pilates, and similar workouts are for women. "Meditation and yoga are extremely important. I think the notion of men can't do yoga and Pilates, or we shouldn't, or whatever that is, I would like to think that we're all past that mindset," he said.

    Jordan, now 37, said doing more mobility exercise and cooling down after workouts over the years has helped him maintain his health and fitness.

    "As I got older, I think you definitely have to train harder, but you have to train smarter as well, and I think that's something I've incorporated into my routine," he said.

    He's not alone.

    More men taking up yoga and Pilates

    As the fitness industry offers more options than ever before, more men are embracing exercise beyond bro staples like the bench press.

    Even elite athletes in notoriously difficult sports like MMA and American football have found yoga to be a worthy challenge.

    UFC star Dustin Poirier previously told BI that he regularly does yoga for core strength and flexibility and finds it to be "really hard."

    Cleveland Browns defensive end Myles Garrett, who at 6-foot-4 and 272 pounds is a force to be reckoned with on the field, has said Pilates and yoga are his go-to strategies for injury prevention.

    Men are sometimes still a minority in some classes. But their numbers are rising, despite research showing a persistent misconception that yoga is somehow more feminine than other forms of exercise.

    A recent CDC survey found that while women are still twice as likely to do yoga as men, men are more likely to practice yoga for pain relief or management.

    That's for good reason. Yoga and other mobility exercises offer a wealth of physical benefits, such as enhancing performance, reducing injury risk, and even boosting longevity, fitness experts have previously told BI. Staying flexible is also known to help offset the health risks of sitting all day.

    Just a little bit of yoga or other gentle exercise is enough to reap the benefits, research suggests.

    To get started, try a doctor-recommended morning routine of deep breathing and energizing movement. Or practice "micro-meditations" to zen out in just minutes a day for better health and longevity.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • After my husband died, I changed my parenting style. I let my kids swear, eat in front of the TV, and sleep in my bed.

    A mom with her two daughters — all wearing white tops and gray sweatpants.
    Holly Matthews with her two daughters.

    • Holly Matthews, 39, became a single mom after losing her husband to cancer in 2017.
    • The couple had always kept things structured regarding bringing up their daughters.
    • Matthews practices a more relaxed style of parenting to help them deal with the death of their dad.

    This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Holly Matthews. It has been edited for length and clarity.

    When my husband Ross was alive, we were a family that observed schedules and had certain rules.

    Our daughters, Brooke, now 13, and Texas, 11, followed routines. Many of them were set by Ross, who was autistic and liked things to be structured and more regimented.

    We sat down every evening for a meal together. The girls had set bedtimes. They didn't come into our bedroom, which we kept as Mom and Dad's space.

    I was comfortable with our style of parenting. It seemed to work well for everyone.

    But, after Ross died of brain cancer in July 2017 at 32, I was forced to rethink it. Practically speaking, it was harder to maintain structure when only one person was enforcing it.

    But it went deeper than that. I quickly realized that rigidity wouldn't give the girls enough time to process their feelings and emotions.

    I'm OK with letting things go and dropping the ball

    I didn't let them run wild or be disrespectful — but things changed. I became a more flexible parent. I've heard it called jellyfish parenting or "going with the flow." The best way to describe it is to be OK with dropping the ball.

    Before Ross died, I always assumed we'd be strict about using devices at the table and going to places like McDonald's for chicken nuggets. I thought my kids would never swear at home.

    But, when you're dealing with heightened emotions caused by grief and loss, you have to pick your battles. If you're exhausted after going toe-to-toe for three hours solid, it's fine to let things go.

    If sleeping in my bed when they've woken up during the night helped reassure them or eating in front of the TV was more relaxing, my girls could do it.

    A family of four on vacation
    Matthews with her late husband, Ross Blair, and their daughters.

    Brooke was particularly anxious after Ross died. She worried about losing me, too. She would make me justify anything I did in case it was too dangerous, whether going somewhere different or driving for a long distance. She'd get up in the night to check on me.

    She was only 6 at the time, and Texas was 4. It was a lot for them to deal with. They're still dealing with it, and I want them to experience as little extra stress in their lives as possible.

    I also let them off-load. One day, Texas came home from school and said she'd needed to tell a teacher that her dad had died. The teacher had said, "Oh, that's not very nice."

    Texas was confused. I told her it's "not very nice" when you drop your ice cream or something like that. "It's fucking shit when your Dad is dead," I said.

    So, I allowed them to swear when they were very young — at least at home. It was a tool because they needed to get their emotions out. At that age, swearing was such a shocking thing to them; it matched how they were feeling internally. It reflected their rage, loss, and sadness.

    We still have boundaries in place

    We'd listen to music when we were driving to school. One of our favorite songs was "Fuck You" by Lily Allen. We'd sing along. It felt liberating to shout the lyrics out loud.

    Meanwhile, we're very direct as a family — we had to be. I've chosen absolute honesty. "There will never be any lies with me," I've told my daughters. "You can ask me any question you want, and I will tell you the truth." I never hide things from them, including my own emotions. I share my philosophy in my work as a self-development coach.

    But it's not to say we don't have boundaries. The girls know there will be consequences if they over-step them. However, I have much more of an understanding of why some behaviors come up. If a child has been through something as traumatic as they have, trying to "teach them a lesson" isn't necessarily going to work.

    I sometimes look back at my attitude to parenting before Ross died. It often came from a space of naive judgment, thinking I had to play by the rules or be considered lacking. But the reality is that you do the best you can.

    Do you have a powerful story about your parenting style that you'd like to share with Business Insider? Please send details to jridley@businessinsider.com.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Olive Garden’s parent company says it’s luring diners in by not raising prices as much as rivals — even if it’s not offering hefty discounts

    A sign hangs on the front of an Olive Garden restaurant on June 22, 2023 in Chicago, Illinois.
    • Olive Garden hasn't been raising prices as much as its rivals — and execs say this is helping it buck industry traffic trends.
    • Its guest counts topped industry benchmarks, even though same-restaurant sales slumped.
    • Darden Restaurants' CEO said that low prices were "more sustainable" than deep discounting.

    Olive Garden's parent company says the Italian chain is bucking industry traffic trends and luring in diners by not raising prices as much as its competitors.

    Olive Garden's same-restaurant guest counts in the fourth quarter were about 0.6% higher than the industry benchmark, Darden Restaurants CFO Raj Vennam told investors at the company's earnings call on Thursday, using Black Box data.

    Despite this, Olive Garden's same-restaurant sales in the quarter fell by 1.5% year-over-year, Vennam said. He attributed the fall to its "decision to minimize pricing."

    Olive Garden's average prices went up by about 1% in the quarter, he said.

    "Maybe that's why we didn't outperform on the sales side, but we did continue to outperform on the traffic side," CEO Rick Cardenas said.

    "If we would have taken the pricing that the industry took in the fourth quarter, Olive Garden would have been positive and would have performed even more," he said.

    In the year to late May, Olive Garden raised prices by about 3.5%, Vennam said — putting it in line with average increases at full-service restaurants across the US. Olive Garden is planning to increase prices by between 2.5% and 3% over the next year, Vennam said.

    Other brands Darden owns include LongHorn Steakhouse, Cheddar's Scratch Kitchen, and Ruth's Chris Steak House.

    Restaurant prices rose rapidly during the pandemic amid increases in both food and labor costs. Grocery prices rose too, but the rate of increase has since stabilized, whereas restaurant inflation is still higher than it was pre-pandemic.

    Diners have noticed this, with many complaining that fast food in particular isn't as good value as it used to be. Some are cooking more at home instead, while others are switching to casual-dining chains like Chili's, Applebee's, and Olive Garden, where they can have a sit-down meal with their family for only a few dollars more each.

    In recent months, some casual-dining chains have focused their marketing on discount combos to lure diners away from fast-food giants. Chili's, for example, has a "3 For Me" deal offering an appetizer, entrée, and drink for $10.99.

    Cardenas said Olive Garden had shunned the deep discounting its rivals were focusing on, which he noted had led to the chain's competitors attracting some customers from fast-food businesses.

    But Olive Garden's approach of focusing on low prices generally rather than offering hefty discounts was more sustainable in the long run, he said.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • China’s ax-wielding clash at sea with the Philippines is a way to ‘exhaust’ it into accepting territory claims, expert says

    A still from bodycam footage released by the Armed Forces of the Philippines, showing the view from a small Filipino boat as Chinese Coast Guard soldiers brandish an ax and what appears to be a knife at other Filipino boats, during a skirmish against a clouded sky, on June 17, 2024.
    A still from bodycam footage from the incident on June 17, 2024, released by the Armed Forces of the Philippines.

    • China's escalations in the South China Sea aim to "exhaust" other countries, an expert told BI.
    • On Monday, Chinese coast guards harassed Filipino boats, part of a string of recent provocations.
    • It's Beijing's way of pushing but coming just "short of actual conflict," Sari Arho Havrén said.

    China's latest maritime provocation — which saw weapons including an ax being wielded at Filipino sailors earlier this week — is part of attempts to "exhaust" neighboring countries into accepting its claims over contested waters, an expert told Business Insider.

    The incident on Monday is the latest "gray-zone" skirmish in the South China Sea, where China has increasingly used nonlethal but highly provocative measures to harass other countries there.

    China has claimed sovereignty over the South China Sea for decades, a claim that was roundly rejected in the Hague in 2016.

    On Saturday, it enacted a law allowing its Coast Guard to seize foreign ships suspected of trespassing, CNN reported.

    "China wants to change the status quo by force — exhaust the countries to give in to their claims," Sari Arho Havrén, an associate fellow specializing in China's foreign relations at the Royal United Services Institute, told BI.

    She said that the latest move by China also fuels the Philippines' fear of provoking a war if it responds.

    https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

    On Wednesday, the Armed Forces of the Philippines released images and video from Monday's alarming maritime clash, in which the China Coast Guard was accused of having "illegally boarded" and "looted" Filipino boats.

    One Chinese coast guard can be seen waving an ax in the footage, while others threatened Filipino sailors with "bladed and pointed weapons" as sirens blared, the AFP claimed.

    Further images show smashed equipment and slashes to the rubber boats.

    Both the Philippines and its allies — including the US — have condemned the incident, which took place in the Ayungin Shoal, a contested atoll in the South China Sea some 120 miles from the Filipino Palawan Island.

    A handout image shared by the Armed Forces of the Philippines shows a hand holding broken equipment, in front of a smashed-up control panel on a Filipino boat, the result of a skirmish by the Chinese Coast Guard on June 17, 2024.
    A handout image shared by the Armed Forces of the Philippines shows a hand holding broken equipment, in front of a smashed-up control panel on a Filipino boat, the result of a skirmish by the Chinese Coast Guard on June 17, 2024.

    China described its actions as "professional, restrained, justified and lawful."

    It comes after several other aggressive acts from Beijing in the South China Sea in recent months, involving lasers, water cannons, maritime militias, and even the alleged poisoning of fishing waters.

    They have provoked international condemnation, but have been considered below the threshold of an act of war.

    A screen grab taken from a video provided by the Philippine Coast Guard showing Chinese Coast Guard ships firing water cannons against Philippines vessels near Scarborough Shoal, South China Sea, on April 30, 2024.
    A screen grab from a video provided by the Philippine Coast Guard showing Chinese vessels shooting water cannons at a ship in the South China Sea, on April 30, 2024.

    Until Monday, China had never forcibly boarded another country's ship, Collin Koh, a research fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore, told CNN.

    The fact it happened this time is significant, he said, because although they were just small rubber boats, they're still part of the Philippines' navy — and therefore seen as sovereign space.

    "That is very dangerous, because, if anything, that could even be construed as an act of war," he said.

    Havrén told BI that it was a very serious escalation, but hesitated to call it an act of war.

    This style of aggression limits the action to just "short of actual conflict," she said — allowing China to probe the limits of provocation without crossing the line.

    She said that China has become "increasingly assertive and confrontational" in the waters around Japan, Taiwan, and the Philippines since Xi Jinping came to power in 2013.

    This is partly prompted by Chinese irritation at increased US involvement in the region, she said.

    Several cooperation agreements have been signed between the Biden administration and the Indo-Pacific, building on other long-standing agreements.

    Xi Jinping and Joe Biden
    Xi Jinping and Joe Biden.

    Beijing is "obsessed by the rivalry with the US," concerned that the White House is bent on limiting China's rise to power, Havrén said.

    "There is a clear appetite for expansion and to push the US away from the region," she said.

    This is a challenge for the US, which is already wrapped up in conflicts in Gaza and Ukraine, and is trying to calm down China's escalations around Taiwan.

    "The more the US focus is stretched, the easier it is for China," Havrén said.

    Xi has accused the US of trying to trick China into invading Taiwan, the Financial Times reported earlier this month.

    Xi's reported comments essentially set the stage for a convenient blame game if a conflict is eventually triggered.

    "I think this kind of applies to the situation with the Philippines as well," Havrén said.

    "China does feel the pressure" from having US-backed hostile nations surrounding it, she said.

    Havrén added that this will only accelerate the division between the US and China — and that countries may have to think about whose side they're on.

    "The countries in the Pacific have been fairly reluctant to take sides," she told BI, "but this kind of aggression from China's side definitely puts more pressure on them to think about how to balance China's behavior."

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Jeff Bezos’ plan for The Washington Post is imploding

    Jeff Bezos distraught on top of Washington Post logo
    • Jeff Bezos is trying to end a financial catastrophe at The Washington Post, employing new leaders.
    • But on Friday a crucial player, Robert Winnett, decided not to join and helm the newsroom after all.
    • It followed a messy exhumation of his UK past, and that of his boss. Now Bezos needs a new plan.

    Jeff Bezos has grand plans to remake The Washington Post. They seem to be blowing up in his face.

    The incoming editor for the newsroom — Robert Winnett, the golden boy of the UK's Daily Telegraph newspaper — pulled out of the job Friday morning.

    He ditched the role after a slew of revelations about his own past as a writer in London and that of Will Lewis, the Washington Post publisher and old friend who tapped him for the top job.

    The news was confirmed by Telegraph editor Chris Evans in a message to staff, seen by Business Insider. It said Winnett would stay there.

    A recent furor over Winnett's hire revealed a profound culture clash between the high morals of the Post and the seemingly less scrupulous British outlets — the Telegraph, London's Sunday Times — where Lewis and Winnett cut their teeth.

    And though Lewis remains in his post, US media elites are openly wondering whether he, too, will go. Even if he doesn't, Winnett's exit has blasted a hole in his plan and his credibility.

    This also leaves Bezos with a problem. He hoped Lewis and Winnett could revamp the newsroom and give The Post new life.

    The outlet, which Bezos bought in 2013, has been hemorrhaging money and readers.

    Lewis recently told Post staff that it had lost half its readers since 2020 and last year lost more than a million dollars a week.

    His promise was to connect with new readers, restructure the newsroom, and bring on Winnett to lead its central news-and-politics operation.

    He touted Winnett as a leading light who could live up to the paper that broke Watergate.

    In Britain, Winnett is indeed broadly admired, primarily for breaking what's widely known as the expenses scandal.

    He revealed the widespread abuse of parliamentary expense accounts, upending the political establishment and forcing many lawmakers to quit.

    That history landed very differently in the US, though — because Winnett paid for the information, brokering a transfer of more than $100,000 to his source.

    What Brits saw as a fair means to an end, many Americans saw as an aberration.

    At the same time, a reexamination of Lewis' past emerged, prompting reports that he may have handled stolen material — albeit within Britain's media laws — and even overseen the destruction of evidence in the phone-hacking scandal that rocked Fleet Street in the early 2010s.

    It's fair to say Lewis lost the newsroom, with the Post union complaining loudly, and (at least) one staffer describing to BI a growing unease at their incoming leadership.

    Bezos threw his weight behind Lewis this week.

    "We do need to change as a business," he wrote in an emphatic email, saying Lewis was still the man to get them there.

    He would do it without diluting the Postt's high standards, Bezos assured the newsroom.

    But without Winnett, on whose shoulders that plan rested, Bezos needs a new solution, and fast.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Christian Siriano says designing for Michelle Obama, Jill Biden, and Kamala Harris is ‘the ultimate compliment’

    Christian Siriano
    Christian Siriano.

    • Fashion designer Christian Siriano dresses some of the biggest names in entertainment and politics.
    • He's designed outfits for Michelle Obama, Jill Biden, and Kamala Harris.
    • Siriano told BI that being chosen to dress powerful women in politics is "the ultimate compliment."

    Fashion designer Christian Siriano has dressed celebrities for red-carpet events including the Oscars, Grammys, and Golden Globes, but his creations have also graced the stages of the Democratic National Convention and the State of the Union.

    While promoting his partnership with Persil laundry detergent, Siriano spoke with Business Insider about designing outfits for first ladies Michelle Obama and Jill Biden as well as Vice President Kamala Harris.

    "When you get to dress those people, it definitely feels really great because the whole world sees them," Siriano told BI.

    In 2016, Obama delivered her famous "When they go low, we go high" speech at the Democratic National Convention wearing a blue Christian Siriano dress with cap sleeves and a flowing skirt.

    "When I dressed Michelle Obama for the DNC and she walked out in that blue dress, it felt really powerful because it felt right for the moment," he said. "It was elegant and sophisticated, but still young and cool."

    Michelle Obama at the 2016 Democratic National Convention
    Michelle Obama at the 2016 Democratic National Convention.

    Siriano also designed another first lady's Democratic National Convention look: a lilac ruched wrap dress for Biden in 2020.

    Jill Biden and Joe Biden at the 2020 DNC.
    Joe Biden and Jill Biden at the 2020 Democratic National Convention.

    "Michelle was more daring, Jill's more, I think, chic and sophisticated and sometimes looks Old Hollywood, and I love that," he said.

    Siriano also crafted a custom maroon suit for Harris to wear at the 2023 State of the Union address.

    Kamala Harris at the 2023 State of the Union
    Kamala Harris arrives for President Joe Biden's State of the Union address in 2023.

    "I got to make a suit for the vice president and it was amazing," he said. "We really tailored it and I felt like she looked really powerful and confident."

    Siriano said that designing for high-profile women in politics has been a career highlight not just because of their visibility, but also because of their stature.

    "You feel so great because a person who everyone's looking up to chose to wear something," he said. "It's kind of like the ultimate compliment."

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Art experts and millionaires head to a Swiss town once a year for its annual Art Basel festival. Here’s what it’s like to visit as a first-timer.

    Art Basel entrance.
    The author walks across Messeplatz, the main square for the Art Basel fair.

    • I traveled to my first Art Basel, an international art fair hosted each summer in Basel, Switzerland.
    • I learned it's a destination where experts and novices can thrive, discover, and learn.
    • This article is part of BI's 2024 Art Basel series, taking you inside the art fair's global scene.

    I spent my first afternoon at Art Basel getting lost.

    I wandered through a maze of 122 gallerists showcasing artwork from around the world. I eyed impressive ceramics created by Paloma Varga Weisz, captivating photos shot by Gordon Parks, and striking paintings by Pat Steir. I turned corners that I thought were familiar and discovered new art instead.

    Above me were another 100-plus galleries presenting works. In the building next door, an exhibit the size of three football fields had enough installations for an entire afternoon of viewing. There were film showings throughout the day, a packed schedule of Q&As, and public artworks scattered across the town of Basel, Switzerland.

    Collectively, this made up Art Basel, the world's premiere art show, where more than 250 gallerists feature 4,000 artists.

    Art Basel.
    A view of Chiharu Shiota's "The Extended Line" featured in Art Basel's Unlimited exhibit.

    Beyond the show's official programming, the Swiss town comes alive each summer for the event. Other art fairs vie for visitors' time. Photo Basel and the Liste Art Fair Basel are hosted on the same weekend. Plus, the town is home to dozens of art museums worth visiting.

    To put it simply, Art Basel is overwhelming.

    It's a hectic week of art, but even as someone outside the art profession, I understood its appeal. Art Basel is my favorite kind of overwhelming — one with endless opportunities to explore.

    Art Basel, Basel.
    Visitors crowd the rooms in the main sector of Art Basel 2024.

    Before arriving in Basel, the art fair felt vaguely familiar

    I can't pinpoint the first time I heard about Art Basel.

    It could've been five years ago when a duct-taped banana was listed for $120,000, or it might have been years earlier. Growing up in Florida, I'm sure I heard murmurs about Art Basel Miami, one of the four locations where Art Basel fairs are held each year.

    For a long time, I didn't think the event was for me. I'm not a museum curator or a gallerist, and I don't have millions to spend on artwork. (Art Basel reported that its largest sale this year was made by the gallery David Zwirner. It sold Joan Mitchell's "Sunflowers" for $20 million.)

    Plus, Art Basel is a place to be seen. Celebrities like Serena Williams have been spotted, visitors spend afternoons crossing paths with millionaires, and influencers have been lured to the fairs in recent years.

    I wasn't sure where or if I fit into that lineup, but I arrived in Basel on June 13 to find out.

    Nine canvases create Janaina Tschäpe's "To cover the earth with a new mist."
    Nine canvases create Janaina Tschäpe's "To cover the earth with a new mist."

    As a first-time visitor, understanding how Art Basel works was confusing. After arriving, getting lost, and navigating a disorganized app, I finally began understanding how the massive event works.

    Art Basel is a show with multiple sectors in multiple locations. Some sectors are self-described, like the film or magazine sector. Then, there's the main sector, which fills two floors of a large hall. Here, 250 galleries from around the world showcase art.

    Next door to the main sector, visitors can explore Unlimited, a hall dedicated to large-scale installations. And then there's the Parcours sector, involving art installations scattered around the town.

    Essentially, art is everywhere. Unless there's someone or something specific you want to see, wandering was the best approach to take it all in.

    You don't have to be an artist or art buyer to enjoy the event

    Art Basel exhibit
    "Zepelín de Acero" by Julio Le Parc and "School of Languages" by Ryan Gander.

    I assumed I wouldn't know a single artist featured, but I was proven wrong after just a few moments in the Unlimited sector.

    At the front of the hall was a 150-foot-long Keith Haring work titled "Untitled (FDR NY) #5-22." I didn't need a plaque to know the artist; Haring's figures are easily recognizable.

    Another recognizable piece sat catty-corner to Haring's project. I knew an organic shape dotted with black spots must have been created by Yayoi Kusama. I explored her exhibit, Kusama, three years ago at the New York Botanical Garden.

    Throughout the week, I spotted more familiar artists and was introduced to many new ones. Francisco Sierra's full-size conceptual aquarium and Alfredo Jaar's powerful neon messages captivated me.

    Plus, it was clear I wasn't the only visitor wandering the fair as a spectator. During the weekend, the Unlimited hall was filled with crowds watching artist performances on water rights by Seba Calfuqueo and peering into the hundreds of mirrors that made up "Zepelín de Acero" by Julio Le Parc.

    Meanwhile, gallerists were eager to dive into the artwork they displayed, and artists proudly described their inspiration for pieces.

    Waterfront walk on Basel.
    The author crosse the Mittlere Brücke over the Rhine River.

    You can't explore Art Basel without exploring the town

    When you travel across the world for an art show, it's hard not to squeeze in some sightseeing.

    So, in the windows when I wasn't viewing art, I was roaming through the Swiss town. The town is located on the banks of the Rhine River, so I spent a lunch break on the river's edge, eyeing the historical buildings lining the waterfront.

    If it had been warmer, you would've seen me floating down the Rhine with a Wickelfisch, a colorful waterproof bag locals tote during the summer months.

    For those itching for even more art, theaters and popular museums like the Museum Tinguely and Fondation Beyeler present even more work.

    Art Basel
    The author walks in Agnes Denes' wheat field, an installation for this year's art show.

    But my favorite way to experience the town was through Art Basel's Parcours exhibit. Across Basel, a hotel, brewery, church, restaurant, and stores exhibited art.

    I stepped inside a partly abandoned shopping center. Between a closed nail salon and textile store, artist Mandy El-Sayegh covered the floors and walls and transformed two empty store spaces to feature her large-scale paintings.

    Nearby, Eric Hattan used materials he scavenged to build towers and structures that were constantly being changed and transformed during the art show.

    Art sculptures scattered over Basel, Switzerland
    Eric Hattan's "Stilles Leben a quiet life," an installation part of Art Basel's Parcours sector.

    The installations prompted me to walk down random Basel streets and stumble upon what the city offers beyond its top tourist attractions.

    By the end of my weekend at Art Basel, I discovered an art fair that — no matter your background — stimulated discussion, encouraged me to reconsider my beliefs, and left me in awe.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Celebrities who died in 2024

    Glynis Johns in a dress
    Glynis Johns was best known for starring in 1964's "Mary Poppins."

    • Here are the famous people who died in 2024.
    • O.J. Simpson, Glynis Johns, Carl Weathers, Chita Rivera, Dabney Coleman, Donald Sutherland, and Louis Gossett Jr. passed away.
    • So did broadcaster Charles Osgood, fashion designer Roberto Cavalli, producer Roger Corman, NBA legend Jerry West, and MLB Hall of Famer Willie Mays.

    Below, we look back at those we lost in 2024.

    Eric Carmen, 74
    Eric Carmen with a cigarette in his mouth
    Eric Carmen.

    Carmen was a rock ballad king whose songs still get constant play to this day.

    "All by Myself" was a hit in the mid-1970s. It became an even bigger hit when Celine Dion did her own rendition in 1996.

    The Grammy-nominated "Almost Paradise" from the soundtrack to the hit 1984 movie "Footloose" became a staple at school dances and weddings.

    Carmen repeated the feat when his song "Hungry Eyes" showed up on the soundtrack for the 1987 classic "Dirty Dancing."

    Carmen's death was announced on his website on March 12, stating he "passed away in his sleep, over the weekend." No cause was given.

    Roberto Cavalli, 83
    Roberto Cavalli sitting down wearing a jacket and scarf
    Roberto Cavalli.

    The Italian fashion designer was known for his flamboyant designs and game-changing innovations.

    Cavalli's use of leopard prints beginning in the 1970s became one of his trademarks. His revolutionary method of printing leather and patchwork denim was beloved by everyone from Madonna to Gwyneth Paltrow.

    Cavalli died on April 12. No cause of death was given.

    Dabney Coleman, 92
    Dabney Coleman with arms crossed
    Dabney Coleman.

    Dabney Coleman became a captivating scene stealer in the 1980s thanks to his gruff demeanor and booming voice. Whether he was playing the mean boss opposite Dolly Parton, Jane Fonda, and Lily Tomlin in 1980's "9 to 5," or the nasty TV producer in "Tootsie," or chasing Matthew Broderick in "WarGames," Coleman had a talent for playing the heel.

    The Emmy winner most recently starred in the HBO hit series Boardwalk Empire from 2011 to 2014 and a 2019 episode of Yellowstone.

    Coleman died on May 16. No cause was given.

    Eleanor Coppola, 87
    Francis Ford Coppola and Eleanor Coppola holding hands on the red carpet
    Francis Ford Coppola and Eleanor Coppola at the 76th Academy Awards in 2004.

    As the wife of Francis Ford Coppola, Eleanor had to navigate the stress and complexities of living with one of the greatest directors of all time.

    She channeled that by filming her husband while he made his landmark 1979 Vietnam movie "Apocalypse Now."

    Her documentary, "Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse," has gone down as one of the most honest accounts of the making of a movie.

    Eleanor died on April 12. No cause of death was given.

    Roger Corman, 98
    Roger Corman leaning on a red chair
    Roger Corman.

    To say Roger Corman was the king of B-movies is too simple of a characterization.

    For decades, Corman made ultra-low-budget genre movies that featured everything from cheesy monsters to crazed bikers. Corman-produced titles almost always made a profit, and many of them became proving grounds for the directors and actors who would go on to change Hollywood.

    After directing the 1967 acid-trip fantasia "The Trip" starring Dennis Hopper and Peter Fonda and written by Jack Nicholson, the trio went on to make "Easy Rider," which would usher in the New Hollywood era of the 1970s.

    Corman also produced titles directed by then-unknowns like Francis Ford Coppola, James Cameron, and Martin Scorsese before they went on to mainstream studio success.

    Corman died on May 9 at his home in Santa Monica, Calif., surrounded by family members.

    Joe Flaherty, 82
    Joe Flaherty leaning on the shoulder of Eugene Levy
    (L-R) Joe Flaherty and Eugene Levy on the set of "SCTV."

    As one of the original cast members of the Canadian sketch comedy show "SCTV" in the late 1970s, Joe Flaherty — alongside the likes of John Candy, Eugene Levy, Catherine O'Hara, Dave Thomas, Andrea Martin, Martin Short, and Rick Moranis — created a brand of comedy that was edgier and more outlandish than their competition "Saturday Night Live."

    In later decades, Flaherty made scene-stealing appearances as the Western Union worker who gives Marty McFly the 70-year-old letter from Doc Brown in "Back to the Future Part II" and the heckler Donald in "Happy Gilmore."

    He was also a regular on TV through the decades, with roles in "Married… with Children," "Freaks and Geeks," and "The King of Queens."

    Flaherty died on April 1 following a brief illness.

    Louis Gossett Jr.
    Louis Gossett Jr. in a tuxedo holding his Oscar over his head
    Louis Gossett Jr. holding his best supporting actor Oscar.

    Born in Brooklyn, New York, Louis Gossett Jr. made his stage debut at 17. After building his craft onstage through the 1960s, Gossett Jr. made the jump to screen and in 1977 was cast in the acclaimed miniseries "Roots" opposite the likes of Ben Vereen, LeVar Burton, and John Amos. He went on to win an Emmy for his performance as Fiddler.

    He was nominated for seven more Emmys after that, most recently in 2020 for playing William Reeves in the HBO limited series "Watchmen."

    He made history in 1983 when he won an Oscar for best supporting actor for his portrayal of the strict drill instructor Emil Foley in "An Officer and a Gentleman." It would mark the first time a Black actor won the prize in that category.

    Gossett Jr. went on to star in hit movies and TV shows like "The Principal," "Toy Soldiers," "Iron Eagle," and "Boardwalk Empire."

    Gossett Jr. died on March 29. No cause was given.

    Norman Jewison, 97
    Norman Jewison in a button-down shirt
    Norman Jewison.

    The legendary director was best known for his eclectic filmography that included the drama "In the Heat of the Night," the musical "Fiddler of the Roof," and the beloved comedy "Moonstruck," all of which garnered him best director nominations at the Oscars.

    The Canadian filmmaker's specialty was getting top-notch performances out of A-list actors like Steve McQueen ("The Thomas Crown Affair") and Denzel Washington ("The Hurricane").

    It often led to Oscar glory for his movies and their stars. Twelve actors received nominations over his 40-year career, with five of his movies earning best picture noms.

    Jewison died on January 20. No cause of death was given.

    Glynis Johns, 100
    Glynis Johns in a black dress with her arms crossed
    Glynis Johns.

    The English actor starred in over 60 films and 30 plays, and is known best for playing Mrs. Banks in the beloved 1964 Disney movie "Mary Poppins."

    Legend has it that Johns originally thought she landed the role of Poppins. To let her down easy, Walt Disney made sure that she got to sing a big musical number in the movie. It led to the famous "Sister Suffragette" sequence.

    In 1973, Johns' breathy voice caught the attention of legendary composer Stephen Sondheim, who cast her in the original Broadway production of "A Little Night Music." Sondheim wrote "Send in the Clowns," the song she performs, with her in mind. Johns would earn a Tony Award for her performance.

    She was also nominated for an Oscar for her work in "The Sundowners" (1960).

    Johns died on January 4. No cause of death was given.

    Toby Keith, 62
    Toby Keith tipping his hat
    Toby Keith.

    Keith became prominent in the 1990s thanks to his hit single "Should've Been a Cowboy."

    It would make him one of the decade's top draws in country music.

    Keith released 19 studio albums, two Christmas albums, and dozens of songs that topped the Billboard Hot Country Songs charts in his career.

    Keith died on February 5 following a bout with stomach cancer.

    Richard Lewis, 76
    Richard Lewis in pajamas in bed holding a book
    Richard Lewis.

    In an era in the 1970s where stand-up comedy could be a path to superstardom, Richard Lewis was one of the biggest acts.

    Often dressed in black and holding his hand up to his temple, his self-deprecating and neurotic style made him a constant visitor to Johnny Carson's "The Tonight Show."

    By the 1980s, he hit it big on TV, starring opposite Jamie Lee Curtis on the series "Anything but Love," which ran for four seasons.

    His movie credits include the Mel Brooks comedy "Robin Hood: Men in Tights," "Leaving Las Vegas," and John Candy's final role before his death, 1994's "Wagons East." Lewis has said Candy's death was one of the things that finally got him sober.

    Lewis introduced himself to a new generation when Larry David's "Curb Your Enthusiasm" premiered on HBO in 2000. For 11 seasons, Lewis played a fictional version of himself as one of David's friends. Though he didn't return as a series regular for the series' final season, season 12, he popped up in a cameo in an episode that aired on February 18.

    Back in April, Lewis revealed via a video on X, formerly known as Twitter, that he was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease and would be retiring from stand-up comedy after undergoing four surgeries.

    Lewis died on February 27 of a heart attack in his Los Angeles home.

    Willie Mays, 93
    Willie Mays in a Giants uniform making a leaping catch
    Willie Mays.

    Regarded as one of the greatest baseball players who ever lived, Willie Mays was astounding to watch.

    He could hit and catch, had speed, and pulled off amazing feats that are still remarkable to this day.

    One of his most memorable plays happened in Game 1 of the 1954 World Series, which is simply known as "The Catch."

    Mays' New York Giants were facing the Cleveland Indians at the Polo Grounds in New York. With the score tied 2-2 in the eighth inning and runners on base, Indians player Vic Wertz hit a towering 420-foot blast to dead center that in today's baseball would be deep in the seats for a homerun. But due to the Polo Grounds' massive outfield, it was in play, and Mays used practically all of it to track down the ball on the run with an incredible over-the-shoulder catch and then threw it into the infield quickly so no runner could score. The Giants went on to win the game in extra innings 5-2, and would go on to win the World Series. Many still regard Mays' catch as one of the greatest moments in baseball history.

    Mays would go on to play 21 seasons with the Giants before being traded to the New York Mets for the 1972-73 season, which would be his last. He finished his career with 3,293 hits and 660 home runs.

    He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1979.

    Mays died on June 18, no cause was given.

    Cindy Morgan, 69
    Cindy Morgan in a dark shirt
    Cindy Morgan.

    A 1980s icon, Morgan found instant stardom in her film debut playing the stunning Lacey opposite Chevy Chase in the classic 1980 comedy "Caddyshack."

    Two years later, she found herself in another iconic work, Disney's "Tron." As Dr. Lora Baines in the real world and Yori, who helps Jeff Bridges after he's sucked into the game world, Morgan once again showed she can shine opposite Hollywood's biggest leading men.

    Though Morgan worked steadily the rest of her career, including a multi-episode run on the soap opera "Falcon Crest," she'll be forever known for her performances in two of the biggest movies of the '80s.

    Morgan's death was first reported on January 6, though she died on December 30, 2023. No cause of death was given.

    Charles Osgood, 91
    Charles Osgood in a bowtie
    Charles Osgood.

    The face of "CBS Sunday Morning" for over two decades, Osgood became a fixture in Americans' homes at the end of every weekend thanks to his wit, calming demeanor, and that bow tie.

    Osgood had been at CBS since the early 1970s, first as a reporter, then the anchor of the "CBS Sunday Night News" from 1981 to 1987. From 1987 to 1992, he was often on "CBS This Morning."

    In 1994, he became the face of "Sunday Morning," replacing Charles Kuralt. He would go on to earn two Daytime Emmys and a Peabody for his work on the show. He ended his run 2016, passing the reins to Jane Pauley.

    Osgood died on January 23 after suffering from dementia.

    Chance Perdomo, 27
    Chance Perdomo in a cream jacket
    Chance Perdomo.

    Perdomo was a rising star in Hollywood, having starred in Netflix's reboot "Chilling Adventures of Sabrina" and "The Boys" spinoff "Gen V."

    The British-American actor died on March 30 as a result of a motorcycle accident, his publicist confirmed.

    Chita Rivera, 91
    Chita Rivera demonstrates her dance routines for a show in New York City
    Chita Rivera.

    Rivera was a Broadway legend who originated some of the stage's most memorable characters, including Anita in "West Side Story," Velma Kelly in "Chicago," and Rose in "Bye Bye Birdie." She would go on to be nominated for 10 Tony Awards and win twice.

    With Broadway credits spanning seven decades, Rivera's singing and dancing shaped generations of performers.

    Rivera died on January 30 following a brief illness.

    Marian Robinson, 86
    Marian Robinson
    Marian Robinson.

    Former First Lady Michelle Obama's mother, Marian Robinson, was often described as the matriarch of the White House during the Obama administration, but the Chicago-born daughter of seven never felt quite at home on Pennsylvania Avenue, according to her family.

    "The trappings and glamour of the White House were never a great fit for Marian Robinson," a statement from former President Barack Obama, Michelle Obama, and other family members said. "'Just show me how to work the washing machine and I'm good,' she'd say."

    Robinson's death was announced on May 31.

    A cause and place of death was not revealed.

    O.J. Simpson, 76
    O.J. Simpson on a movie set
    O.J. Simpson.

    O.J. Simpson had a life of high highs and low lows.

    Finding fame initially on the football field, he became one of the greatest running backs ever to play in the NFL in the 1970s. He had an MVP season in 1973 when he set a single-season rushing record and was inducted into the NFL Hall of Fame in 1985 after his retirement.

    He was set to live out his days as a hero and grow even more famous thanks to endorsements, movie roles, and broadcasting.

    But all of that changed in June of 1994 after his ex-wife Nicole and her friend Ron Goldman were found stabbed to death outside her condo. Days later, Simpson, who was a person of interest in the murders, led Los Angeles police on a slow-speed chase in his Ford Bronco, finally giving up when he got back to his home.

    Simpson's televised trial for the deaths of Nicole and Goldman a year later became one of the biggest spectacles in modern-day American history.

    Simpson was acquitted of the murders, was found guilty in civil court in 1997.

    The story of Simpson's incredible rise and fall still fascinates people to this day. The 2016 ESPN docuseries "O.J.: Made in America" won an Oscar and Emmy, and Ryan Murphy's 2016 scripted series "The People vs. O.J.: American Crime Story" won eight Emmy Awards and two Golden Globes.

    Simpson died on April 10. He had been diagnosed with cancer, his family said.

    David Soul, 80
    David Soul with arm over shoulder
    David Soul.

    Soul found instant fame in the mid-1970s playing Detective Kenneth "Hutch" Hutchinson, one half of the hip crime solvers in "Starsky & Hutch."

    Before hitting it big on the show, Soul was a folk singer through the 1960s, opening for the likes of Frank Zappa and The Byrds. At one time he even sang while his face was covered with a mask, calling himself "The Covered Man."

    After "Starsky & Hutch," Soul went back to music and scored the No. 1 single on the Billboard Hot 100 with "Don't Give Up on Us."

    Soul also made appearances on shows like "Star Trek," "Gunsmoke," the Clint Eastwood movie "Magnum Force," and a miniseries adaptation of the Stephen King novel, "Salem's Lot."

    Soul died on January 4. No cause of death was given.

    Morgan Spurlock, 53
    Morgan Spurlock smiling and holding McDonald's fries and drink
    Morgan Spurlock.

    In 2004, an unknown documentary filmmaker arrived in Park City, Utah, for the Sundance Film Festival. Overnight, his life was changed — because he made a movie about eating McDonald's.

    If there's one thing Morgan Spurlock knew how to do, it was get people's attention. With a big personality and an unusual idea, Spurlock changed the way we look at fast food when he made "Super Size Me," a documentary in which he ate nothing but McDonald's for a full month, to stomach-churning effect.

    The documentary earned an Oscar nomination and became a box-office sensation. Weeks after its release in theaters, McDonald's discontinued its supersize portions.

    Spurlock used that success to become one of the stars in the documentary medium, which was growing in popularity in the early 2000s. He would go on to direct and produce dozens of documentaries for the big screen and TV, focused on everything from Osama bin Laden to One Direction.

    His legacy would be tarnished in late 2017, at the height of the #MeToo movement, when Spurlock confessed to multiple acts of sexual misconduct in his past.

    Spurlock died on May 23 due to complications related to cancer.

    Donald Sutherland, 88
    Donald Sutherland in a leather jacket
    Donald Sutherland.

    Donald Sutherland had the incredible talent to be the life of the party in one performance or a wallflower in the next. Need a dark and disturbing presence for a role? He's your guy. Or he could do a wise-cracking know-it-all character.

    What we're trying to say is whatever the role, Sutherland could pull it off. And he did it so well that he delivered some of the most memorable roles ever put on screen over the last six decades.

    Playing a Nazi-killing grunt in "The Dirty Dozen" (1967), creating one of the greatest screen duos ever opposite Elliott Gould in "M*A*S*H" (1970), acting as a laid-back professor in "Animal House" (1978), delivering one of the best surprise endings ever in a remake of "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" (1978) — he could do it all. He was both the man who knew the truth behind the Kennedy assassination in "JFK" (1991) and the villain in the "Hunger Games" franchise (2013-2015).

    He was a fixture in our lives over generations.

    Sutherland died on June 20 in Miami following a "long illness."

    Johnny Wactor, 37
    Johnny Wactor in a black jacket staring at the camera
    Johnny Wactor.

    Wactor was best known for his role as Brando Corbin on the soap "General Hospital." He appeared in more than 160 episodes during his two seasons on the series before leaving in 2022.

    His résumé included guest roles on "Westworld," "The OA," "Station 19," "Siberia," "Agent X," "Vantastic," "Animal Kingdom," "Hollywood Girl," "Training Day," "Criminal Minds," "Struggling Servers," "Age Appropriate," "NCIS," "The Passenger" and "Barbee Rehab."

    He also starred in the 2016 Mario Van Peebles-directed movie "USS Indianapolis: Men of Courage" alongside Nicolas Cage, Tom Sizemore, and Thomas Jane.

    His family confirmed that Wactor was shot and killed on May 25 in Los Angeles during a robbery.

    M. Emmet Walsh, 88
    M Emmet Walsh in a cowboy hat
    M. Emmet Walsh in "Blood Simple."

    You may not know the name, but you definitely know this face.

    Character actor M. Emmet Walsh showed up in more than 150 movies over his career, many of which have gone on to become classics: "Blade Runner," "Blood Simple," "Slap Shot," "Fletch," "The Jerk," "Back to School," "My Best Friend's Wedding," and "Knives Out."

    He also has appeared in many popular TV shows over the decades, including "Home Improvement," "The X-Files," and "Frasier."

    Walsh died on March 19. No cause was given.

    Carl Weathers, 76
    Carl Weathers throwing a punch
    Carl Weathers.

    Thanks to his bravado and astounding physique, Weathers found fame when he was cast as heavyweight champion Apollo Creed in 1976's "Rocky."

    The following years and decades brought more memorable roles, whether he was sizing up biceps with Arnold Schwarzenegger in 1987's "Predator," or trying to teach Adam Sandler how to play golf in 1996's "Happy Gilmore."

    Most recently, he played Greef Karga in the "Star Wars" series "The Mandalorian." Along with appearing in front of the camera, he also showcased his talents behind it, directing multiple episodes.

    Jerry West, 86
    Jerry West holding a basketball
    Jerry West.

    You can give several examples to show just how great a basketball player Jerry West was. He won an NBA title, an Olympic gold medal, and is the only player on the losing team of an NBA Finals to be named MVP.

    But there's one that overshadows all of these accomplishments: he was the logo.

    That's right. The actual NBA logo is a silhouette of Jerry West dribbling a basketball.

    Known for his tenacious play and ability to score in the clutch, West was one of the stars in the NBA before its enormous popularity in the 1970s, when players like Larry Bird, Magic Johnson, and later, Michael Jordan, became household names.

    After his retirement, West became an executive of the Los Angeles Lakers and was instrumental in the "Showtime" Lakers' championship dynasty through the 1980s. He made the key signings to get Shaquille O'Neal and Kobe Bryant to the Lakers, creating another dynasty in the early 2000s.

    West died on June 12. No cause was given.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • When a single mother was laid off, her emergency fund kept her afloat — and now she has a plan for the future

    The offers and details on this page may have updated or changed since the time of publication. See our article on Business Insider for current information.

    Affiliate links for the products on this page are from partners that compensate us and terms apply to offers listed (see our advertiser disclosure with our list of partners for more details). However, our opinions are our own. See how we rate products and services to help you make smart decisions with your money.

    A side-by-side composite featuring a close-up shot of hand checking money in wallet and headshot of the author, Kit Pulliam
    • Erin Ramos was able to deal with a stressful layoff by using her emergency fund to cover expenses.
    • She made some purchases before losing her job that she would've waited on if she had to do it again.
    • This article is part of "My Financial Life," a series helping people live and spend better.

    Erin Ramos, a single mother, had worked at her company for 15 months when she got a Slack message saying she'd been laid off.

    "I got a message in Slack from my supervisor," Ramos said. "It was basically like, 'Unfortunately, we are going to have to make some cuts, and your position has been impacted. Please acknowledge this Slack message, and then we'll give you a call in a few minutes. I was like, 'Oh, OK.' So that was that."

    Luckily, Ramos was able to start a new job by the end of March, about three months after losing her job. Her emergency fund helped her support herself and her daughter until then. But looking back, she would do a few things differently.

    The layoffs hit at a bad time

    Ramos wasn't totally surprised by the layoffs. Her company had let go a small number of workers twice during her tenure, and she knew that the company was facing some money troubles. But she didn't expect the layoffs to happen during the holidays.

    "They surprised us all on December 14," Ramos said. "I think it was 14 of us in all, just before Christmas." She received a two-week severance package.

    Layoffs are sweeping the US, a worrying trend that has continued from last year. This makes the job market even more difficult for those who are laid off. "I have LinkedIn connections who have been out of work for a year," Ramos said.

    She had an emergency fund of about $3,000, but she was worried about whether it would cover her expenses until she got a new job. "I don't have a year's worth of money saved up," she said.

    Ramos has ovarian cancer, which means she needs to get an expensive immunotherapy infusion every three weeks. As a single mother, she wouldn't have a spouse's healthcare to lean on while she was unemployed, meaning she would have to pay out of pocket for healthcare.

    With the help of an employment lawyer, she was able to get her former workplace to cover three months of COBRA payments. When you lose your job, the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act lets you continue whatever health insurance your former employer provided — but you have to pay the full premium, which is often too expensive when you're no longer employed. This helped ease the strain on her emergency fund, but it gave her a tight deadline to find a job.

    She wishes she had been more cautious leading up to her layoff

    In the end, she was able to make her emergency fund stretch to cover her three-month unemployment period by supplementing it with her unemployment benefits, tax refund, 401(k), and a $500 loan from her parents. While the fund helped her stay afloat, she knew she could've done some things differently leading up to the layoffs that would have left her better prepared.

    The July before she was laid off, she bought a house and made several quality-of-life repairs that took a lot out of her emergency fund.

    "I wish I that I had been a bit more cautious about some of the work that I had done on the house, knowing that layoffs were a possibility," Ramos said. "I chose to build a deck. Did I really need to choose the deck? Probably not. I kind of wish I'd been a little bit more cautious. I think I would've had a bigger savings to fall back on."

    She has a plan to rebuild her emergency fund

    Before the layoff, she kept her savings in an Acorns Invest account. She found its round-up features helpful. It made it easy to save with every purchase, which helped her build up an emergency fund easily, she said.

    It helped that the account was separate from her bank account. "It made it hard for me to dip into," Ramos said. "It wasn't something that I could go into and pull the money from; there was no check card attached to it, and if I wanted to transfer money into my account, it took, I think, three to five days."

    Now she has multiple bank accounts. She still has an Acorns account, but she also has a SoFi Checking and Savings account specifically to for savings. Her SoFi account comes with a Money Vault feature that lets her save money toward specific goals and put it in a slightly harder-to-access area. "It's just this kind of extra layer of steps that's required to access that money," Ramos said. "And it will track the savings for whatever that goal is."

    Her SoFi account has a high interest rate, helping her reliably earn more money on her savings. She's also putting more money away with each paycheck than she was before the layoff.

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    document.documentElement.classList.add(“gi-sponsor-module”);

    if (
    document.querySelector(“.gi-sponsor-module”) &&
    document.querySelector(“article section:first-of-type”) &&
    !document.querySelector(“.full-bleed-hero”) &&
    !document.querySelector(“.enhanced-story-byline”)
    ) {
    document.querySelector(“.summary-list”).insertAdjacentHTML(
    “beforebegin”,
    `

    `
    );
    }
    if (
    document.querySelector(“.gi-sponsor-module”) &&
    document.querySelector(“.full-bleed-hero”) &&
    document.querySelector(“.enhanced-story-byline”)
    ) {
    document.querySelector(“.enhanced-story-byline”).insertAdjacentHTML(
    “beforeend”,
    `

    `
    );
    }
    if (
    document.querySelector(“.gi-sponsor-module”) &&
    document.querySelector(“.post-meta”)
    ) {
    document.querySelector(
    “.post-meta”
    ).innerHTML = `
    ${seriesTitle}
    `;
    }

    Read the original article on Business Insider