‘Roseanne' Alum John Goodman Sheds 200 Pounds Without Surgery or Diet Drugs — Find Out How
The 73-year-old — once 400 pounds — attributes his weight loss to ditching booze, exercising (10,000 to 12,000 steps a day!), and adopting a Mediterranean-style eating plan focused on vegetables, fruits, fish, nuts and olive oil.
'He's likely added years to his life,' says Dr. Stuart Fischer, author of The Park Avenue Diet. 'It's courageous and should be inspiring to his fans, especially those who are struggling with their weight.'
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Forbes
13 minutes ago
- Forbes
NYT 'Connections' Hints Today: Answers and Clues for August 2
Looking for Friday's NYT Connections hints, clues and answers instead? You can find them here: Are you ready for the hardest purple group category you've ever seen? When you don't even know the word that's the group name itself, you're bound to be in for trouble. How to Play Connections Connections is the second-most popular NYT Games puzzle game outside of the main crossword itself, and an extremely fun, free offering that will get your brain moving every day. Play it right here. The goal is to take a group of 16 words and find links between four pairs of four of them. They could be specific categories of terms, or they could be little world puzzles where words may come before or after them you need to figure out. And they get more complicated from there. There is only one set of right answers for this, and you only get a certain number of tries so you can't just spam around until you find something. There are difficulty tiers coded by color, which will usually go from yellow, blue/green to purple as difficulty increases, so know that going in and when you start linking them together. You pick the four words you think are linked and either you will get a solve and a lit up row that shows you how you were connected. If you're close, it will tell you that you're one away. Again, four mistakes you lose, but if you want to know the answers without failing, either come here, or delete your web cookies and try again. If you want to play more puzzles, you can get an NYT Games subscription to access the full archives of all past puzzles. So, onto the hints and answers: FEATURED | Frase ByForbes™ Unscramble The Anagram To Reveal The Phrase Pinpoint By Linkedin Guess The Category Queens By Linkedin Crown Each Region Crossclimb By Linkedin Unlock A Trivia Ladder What Are Today's Connections Hints? These are the hints that are laid out on the puzzle board itself, but after that, we will get into spoiler territory with some hints and eventually the answers. The hints for the Connections groups today are: What Are Today's Connections Groups? Alright, the full spoilers follow here as we get into what the groups are today: What Are Today's Connections Answers? The full-on answers are below for each group, finally inserting the four words in each category. Spoilers follow if you do not want to get this far. The Connections answers are: We will start off easy here. The sticky Yellow group was not too hard to follow, given that none of these are especially tricky. Cleave, however, could be similar to Adhere, I suppose. Green Group? Kind of difficult. I think you could connect (no pun intended) Intimacy and Relations together for this category pretty quickly to get a sense of what they were going for. Congress is a stretch but…Commerce? Sexual commerce? Is that like prostitution? I have genuinely never heard of sex referred to in that way. I'm going ot start calling it that. Blue Group - Not bad. I mean, Spare, Split, Strike, you'll get those right away. Then just search for the fourth, Foul, and this was an easy set of pins to knock down. Alright now this Purple Group was insane. I didn't even know the word 'contronyms' existed, much less would I have caught that these words mean their opposite. Cleave to separate or to adhere to makes sense. Garnish you can add to a meal, or you can take away from wages. Oversight is something you miss, or having additional oversight is so you don't miss something. Sanction? I don't get it. Did you seriously get this category on your own? Follow me on Twitter, YouTube, Bluesky and Instagram. Pick up my sci-fi novels the Herokiller series and The Earthborn Trilogy.


New York Post
42 minutes ago
- New York Post
Bob Dylan's former NYC townhouse asks $3M — with design by a famed Gilded Age architect
Find 'Shelter From the Storm' in this historic townhouse that just listed for sale. A handsome Upper Manhattan property that Bob Dylan once called home has listed for $3 million, the Wall Street Journal reported. The megastar musician lived in the five-story residence, designed by an iconic Gilded Age architect, for 14 years until 2000. 12 The five-story townhouse along Harlem's Strivers' Row. Allyson Lubow for Sotheby's International Realty 12 Bob Dylan, pictured in 2015. WireImage 12 A spacious living room in the well-preserved townhouse. Allyson Lubow for Sotheby's International Realty The 'Like a Rolling Stone' singer arrived in New York City from Minnesota in the 1960s. Dylan initially lived in a third-floor Greenwich Village walkup. That apartment, and its entire building, also listed for sale in July for $8.25 million. Less than three decades after arriving in the Big Apple and becoming a household name, Dylan bought himself a home in Harlem. The neighborhood's famed jazz and blues traditions inspired Dylan throughout his career. The Nobel Prize-winning songwriter spent years at the 4,500-square-foot property, but there's little to show for it beyond a deed. The intensely private singer lived a quiet life in the townhome-lined community, a historic district called Strivers' Row. 12 Strivers' Row is located on both sides of West 138th and West 139th streets in Harlem. Chestnut Productions/Yuri Semenyuk for Sotheby's International Realty 12 Original features of the home include woodburning fireplaces and crown molding. Allyson Lubow for Sotheby's International Realty 12 A sitting area on an upper floor. Allyson Lubow for Sotheby's International Realty 12 The large eat-in kitchen blends old-world details with modern amenities. Allyson Lubow for Sotheby's International Realty 12 The home's original range stove. Allyson Lubow for Sotheby's International Realty 12 A formal dining room on the parlor floor. Allyson Lubow for Sotheby's International Realty 12 The private carport. Allyson Lubow for Sotheby's International Realty The two-block tract is lined with historic townhouses, but Dylan's former home comes with a special degree of architectural cachet. It was designed by the prolific Gilded Age architect Stanford White, whose Renaissance Revival-style defined the luxury buildings of his era. The spacious property includes a 19-foot salon, a large eat-in kitchen and a massive parlor floor. The well-preserved five-bedroom's classical details, like period moldings, hardwood floors, pocket doors and soaring ceilings, are balanced out by the modern luxuries of Gaggenau appliances and heated floors. Colin Montgomery and Stan Ponte of Sotheby's International Realty hold the listing. The current owners of the townhome, Isam Salah and Elaina Richardson, purchased it for $3.17 million in 2018, according to city records. Salah, a retired attorney, and Richardson, the former editor in chief of Elle magazine, are selling to focus on their lives upstate, the Journal reported. Richardson runs a nonprofit artists' retreat in Saratoga Springs. 12 Detailed millwork on the stairs. Allyson Lubow for Sotheby's International Realty 12 A large bedroom. Allyson Lubow for Sotheby's International Realty Their home's discounted sale price, the pair told the Journal, meets the market where it's at. Interest in high-end Harlem townhomes, either as family homes or portfolio investments, has lagged since the pandemic. But the married couple told the Journal that the memories created in their townhome make up for the loss. They purchased the home in part because they admired its well-preserved details, including an original range stove and a 4-foot-tall safe, which they use as a bar. The connection to Dylan is not lost on the couple, however. Richardson told the Journal that small tour groups occasionally stop outside the home, but said that the dedicated fans are pretty sedate.


Vogue
an hour ago
- Vogue
Rihanna Knows There's No Such Thing as Too Many Accessories
We've all heard the quote long attributed to Coco Chanel: 'Before you leave the house, look in the mirror and take one thing off.' Well, Rihanna is having none of that. Yesterday, Rih was spotted in Beverly Hills wearing a classic white button-up and single-cuffed blue jeans. But the singer, mogul, and Smurfette reminded us that accessories can elevate an outfit from simple to sensational. BACKGRID USA Rihanna embraced the trendy in her third-trimester style in a pair of snakeskin printed kitten heel flip-flops from Amina Muaddi. She opted to mix prints, covering her hair in a silk Valentino V-print scarf. (She also added a pair of oversized sunglasses from the Italian label.) Rih didn't stop there, though. She went all in on the jewelry, stacking heaps of bracelets, a large signet ring, and strings of peals around her neck. Between the headscarf, oversized sunnies, and pearls, she more than embraced Old Hollywood glamour, bringing it into 2025 with her modern denim and footwear choices. Rihanna has always embraced over-the-top dressing, from the Saint Laurent maxi dress and Schiaparelli bag she wore for a Fatburger run in Los Angeles, to the outré Alaïa two-piece she donned for a dinner at Giorgio Baldi. But sometimes, there's nothing better than a classic white button-up and jeans.