logo
One Bad A** American Woman

One Bad A** American Woman

Fox Newsa day ago

Gerri Willis, anchor and personal finance reporter for FOX Business, has dedicated recent years to researching remarkable American women whom her younger colleagues can admire. In her exploration, she discovered Elizabeth Van Lew, a young spymaster for the Union Army during the Civil War.
Gerri and Kennedy discuss her new book, Lincoln's Lady Spymaster, sharing the inspiration behind her decision to share this story and what's next!
Follow Kennedy on Twitter: ⁠⁠@KennedyNation⁠⁠
Kennedy Now Available on YouTube: ⁠ ⁠https://link.chtbl.com/kennedyytp⁠
Follow on TikTok: ⁠https://www.tiktok.com/@kennedy_foxnews⁠
Join Kennedy for Happy Hour on Fridays!
⁠https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLWlNiiSXX4BNUbXM5X8KkYbDepFgUIVZj
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Steve Jobs Archive shares stories, videos, and notes of his famous commencement speech
The Steve Jobs Archive shares stories, videos, and notes of his famous commencement speech

The Verge

time24 minutes ago

  • The Verge

The Steve Jobs Archive shares stories, videos, and notes of his famous commencement speech

Thursday marks the 20th anniversary of Steve Jobs' famous Stanford commencement speech, and the Steve Jobs Archive has marked the occasion by uploading an HD version of the speech, publishing notes Jobs emailed to himself, and sharing details about the leadup to the speech. You can see everything on a page on the Steve Jobs Archive's website and watch the HD video on YouTube. The website's page about the speech is a little saccharine, but there's no denying that the address has been very influential – LeBron James used the speech to help inspire the Cleveland Cavaliers during their championship NBA Finals run in 2016, for example – so I found it pretty cool to read some of the history of it all. I particularly liked reading Jobs' emailed notes with various outlines, themes, and drafts he was trying out. The website also has the interesting detail that Jobs 'read his text verbatim' – given the confidence he had in his many famous presentations for Apple, I figured he might have ad-libbed parts of it. It's all worth checking out, if you have a few minutes.

‘Spaceballs 2' Just Added the Perfect New Actor to the Cast
‘Spaceballs 2' Just Added the Perfect New Actor to the Cast

Gizmodo

time35 minutes ago

  • Gizmodo

‘Spaceballs 2' Just Added the Perfect New Actor to the Cast

Lewis Pullman, son of Bill Pullman, is joining the 'Star Wars' spoof as Lone Starr's son. Plus, we have plot details. Fans have waited almost 40 years for news about Spaceballs 2—and then, in a single day, we got soaked in it like Pizza the Hut. First, news broke that the film was a go with Mel Brooks reprising his role as Yogurt. Then, Rick Moranis and Bill Pullman were announced to reprise their roles from the 1987 original. And now, finally, maybe the best news of all: plot details have been revealed along with a key piece of casting. Lewis Pullman, son of Bill Pullman, will play his father's son in the film. The Hollywood Reporter broke the news of the casting as well as some new plot details. According to the trade, Lewis Pullman is playing Starburst, the son of Lone Starr (Bill Pullman) and Queen Vespa (Daphne Zuniga, who is also now expected to return). Starburst is one of the film's three main characters, along with Destiny, played by Keke Palmer, and a character played by Josh Gad, who has yet to be named. (Is he a Skroob? A Helmet? A Barf? We'll see.) The younger Pullman has had an incredible few years, first really breaking out as the lovable naval aviator Bob in Top Gun: Maverick, followed by playing another Bob, aka Sentry, in this summer's Thunderbolts. He has appeared alongside his father before, in a 2017 film called The Ballad of Lefty Brown, but really, this is the one every fan has hoped for. Plus, he completes a trio that lives up to the film's early tagline: 'The Schwartz Awakens.' A play on the title of the seventh Star Wars film, it suggested the story would follow new, younger characters with the legacy characters (Brooks, Pullman, Moranis, etc.) in smaller roles. Amazon describes the film as 'A Non-Prequel Non-Reboot Sequel Part Two but with Reboot Elements Franchise Expansion Film.' Spaceballs 2 will be coming to theaters in 2027. It's directed by Josh Greenbaum (Barb and Star Go To Vista Del Mar) from a script by Benji Samit, Dan Hernandez, and Josh Gad. It does not yet have an official title but, if the title isn't Spaceballs 2: The Search for More Money, I think everyone will be very, very disappointed.

Fiction: ‘Weepers' by Peter Mendelsund
Fiction: ‘Weepers' by Peter Mendelsund

Wall Street Journal

time43 minutes ago

  • Wall Street Journal

Fiction: ‘Weepers' by Peter Mendelsund

'Call for the wailing women to come; send for the most skillful among them,' enjoined the prophet Jeremiah in his lament for the fallen Israelites. The verse points up the ancient custom of hiring professional mourners to preside at funerals, a practice that has been revived in Peter Mendelsund's fablelike 'Weepers.' Set in a speculative version of the American Southwest, this sweetly wistful novel is narrated by Ed Franklin, 'cowboy poet, powerful sad sack' and a dues-paying member of the Local 302 union of weepers, whose job is to cry on command during eulogies and burials. Business is good for the weepers, an ambiguous blessing. As Ed explains, an emotional numbness has gripped the country and people rely on the weepers' services to activate their own sadness—to 'get things going, meaning set match to tinder'—or simply to handle the sorrowing for them. But if Ed has plenty of work, he is also obliged to stay perpetually in character. All the weepers have guises, and Ed is the sensitive cowpoke who likes his whiskey and writes high-lonesome poems about life on the range (even if, in reality, he often shares a bed with his fetching colleague Chantal, who plays the femme fatale). Into his securely melancholic routine arrives a scruffy, taciturn young man known only as the kid, who begins working with the weepers but in an unusual fashion. The kid himself never cries, but he is preternaturally gifted at awakening the feelings of those around him. Even the merest laying on of his hands can turn a mourner into a sobbing mound of jelly. From the start Ed senses that this mysterious stranger 'was a marker; a sign of some new dispensation,' and the story follows the disturbances he begins to cause within the community. Mr. Mendelsund makes the kid a Christ-like figure, with Ed as his would-be Peter the Apostle, and the text is scattered with sly scriptural Easter eggs for readers who know the Gospels. Some locals are threatened by the kid's ability to call up their most deeply repressed and destabilizing emotions. When the kid is beaten up he refuses to defend himself. Ed tries, mostly in vain, to help him, to bond with him and to read miracles into his every deed. Ed's faith springs from his own psychological alterations, the most volatile being the sensation of hope. For a weeper, even a shred of happiness is a career killer.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store