
Denise Richards' husband Aaron Phypers files for divorce after 6 years together
He cited "irreconcilable differences" as the reason for breaking up their marriage after six years together.
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Denise Richards and Aaron Phypers at Watch What Happens Live! on June 11, 2019
Phypers and Richards separated on July 4, court documents said, according to
Neither Richards nor Phypers has spoken publicly about the split yet.
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The Irish Sun
a day ago
- The Irish Sun
China unveils world's largest $50MILLION inflatable dome over construction site – and its use will surprise you
CHINA has unveiled a massive inflatable dome in the middle of a major city to help shield residents from a construction site. The whopping 50m-high inflatable is reported to be the Advertisement 5 Its design is said to allow for easy inflation and dismantling Credit: Mao Ning Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson/Facebook 5 A viral video shows the incredible moment the inflatable swallows up the building site Credit: Mao Ning Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson/Facebook 5 The whopping 50m-high inflatable is reported to be the largest of its kind in the world Credit: Mao Ning Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson/Facebook Measuring 20,000 square metres, the dome is designed to protect the surrounding neighbourhoods from A viral video shows the incredible moment the inflatable swallows up the building site in the city of Jinan. Viewers can see the dome gradually inflating to its enormous size through a jaw-dropping timelapse. Mao Ning, a spokesperson for China's Foreign Ministry, revealed the giant dome in a Facebook post on July 2. Advertisement read more in world news The balloon uses negative pressure and air filtration systems to stop construction dust affecting nearby areas, according to Times Now News. Its design is said to allow for easy inflation and dismantling so it can be deployed where needed quickly. The dome is made from lightweight PVDF-coated polyester, with four big fans keeping it inflated. Transparent panels let in natural sunlight, allowing the inside to keep well lit during the day without the need for artificial lighting, the Bridge Chronicle has reported. Advertisement Most read in The US Sun Breaking Breaking But the viral clip has also drawn a lot of attention on TikTok, with many users sharing their reactions to the vast inflatable. One user jested: "This is really dangerous because if it gets too big it becomes really soft and a giant might see it and come to take a nap." China's terrifying new giant 'sea monster' war plane pictured for first time - & it's a throwback to Cold War Soviet tech But another said it is "such a clever way to protect both the environment and the people living nearby". "How does one even manufacture a single sheet that large?", asked another. Advertisement It comes as China continues to face issues with many of its major construction projects. A giant skyscraper in the city of Tianjin had stood unfinished for nearly a decade before construction was resumed. 5 It would have been the fifth-tallest building in the world if construction was completed 5 The Goldin Finance 117 in Northern China is twice as high as The Shard in London Advertisement Goldin Finance 117, But work on the £8billion project was halted following the 2015 Chinese stock market crash. Standing at a staggering 1,959 feet, the Walking Stick is nearly twice as tall as The Shard. But Chinese state media has since reported the skyscraper will now resume construction. Advertisement It will no longer get to claim the title as China's tallest building that had been forecast, however. Two taller skyscrapers, the Shanghai Tower and Shenzhen's Ping An Finance Centre, have topped out since then. Why has Trump hit China, Canada, and Mexico with tariffs? DONALD Trump has imposed 10% tariffs on Chinese imports and Beijing has retaliated. Trump also hit Canada and Mexico with 25% tariffs, but walked back many of them on March 6 China : Trump believes China has not done enough to stop the production of chemicals used to make the drug fentanyl. China has slammed Trump for the claim and described fentanyl as America's problem. The country also said the tariffs are a "serious violation" of the World Trade Organization rules. China is filing a lawsuit with the WTO against the US for "wrongful practice." China serves as a major supplier of auto parts to the US. Phones, computers, and other key electronic devices were also in the top imports from China last year, according to Commerce Department data. In 2023, the US imported around $427 billion worth of products from China, according to the US Census Bureau. Data reveals that 78% of all smartphones imported from the US came from China. Trump's tariff threat has sparked fears of price rises for fashion items and toys. Beijing has responded by outlining its own tariffs on American goods, sparking fears of an all-out trade war between the two superpowers. Canada : Trump ignited a trade war with Canada and Mexico during his first days in office as part of a campaign promise to stop the flow of fentanyl and illegal immigrants into the United States. He said both countries had not done enough to halt the drug flow and the mass influx of migrants from reaching US soil. A total of 59 pounds of fentanyl was seized at the northern border by US agents between 2022 and 2024, according to the Canadian government. Meanwhile, almost 62,000 pounds of the drug was seized at the southern border. The 25% tariffs Trump proposed on Canadian goods were destined to come into force on March 4. Canada responded with a 25% tariff on $155 billion of American imports. On March 6, Trump warned the 25% tariff on steel and aluminium would come into force on March 12. Ontario Premier Doug Ford responded with a 25% surcharge on electricity exported to Michigan, Minnesota, and New York. Trump then threatened to The Ontario premier warned that he "will not hesitate to increase" the levies or completely shut off power to the three US northeastern states. Both sides then agreed to talk and toned down their threat. Ford then paused the electricity surcharge. Mexico : Mexico has managed to twice postpone Trump's tariffs on Mexican goods. On February 1, Trump signed an executive order to impose tariffs on imports from Canada, Mexico, and China. But, on February 3, Trump agreed to pause the levies against Canada and Mexico after the countries took steps to appease Trump's concerns on border security and drug trafficking. Trump then threatened that the 25% tariffs would come into force on March 4. Two days later, Trump announced a delay on most goods covered under the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement. Trump credited Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum's progress on border security and drug smuggling as a reason for the pause on the levies. The Mexican Navy has seized thousands of kilograms of drugs from criminal gangs. Sheinbaum promised to deploy 10,000 extra troops to the Mexico-US border. Still, Trump has maintained that on April 2, the US will begin imposing reciprocal tariffs on all its trading partners, including Mexico.


The Irish Sun
a day ago
- The Irish Sun
Trump threatens to take away Rosie O'Donnell's American citizenship branding her ‘threat to humanity' amid ongoing feud
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Irish Examiner
2 days ago
- Irish Examiner
Book review: Distorted view of reality is a common theme
In Marni Appleton's short story Positive Vibes, Lia sees girls sitting at the tables outside the café where she works 'phones in hands, hunched over themselves as though they'd like to fold up flat and slip away entirely'. The scene encapsulates how technology dominates and diminishes the characters throughout Appleton's promising short story collection, I Hope You're Happy. On a school tour, girls ostracise a classmate by cropping her from a group photo so that 'only her arm remained, strung up in thin air like a dead thing'. A woman who becomes obsessed with a work colleague after a sexual encounter checks his Facebook page and Twitter feed every day to forge a sense of closeness with him. In the title story, Chloe intentionally doesn't block her estranged confidant Ana from her social media profiles because Chloe wants her posts to demonstrate that the dissolution of their friendship hasn't dented the vivacity of her life — and knows Ana is addicted to using the apps. The collection's 11 stories are mostly populated by millennials (those born between 1981 and 1996) and Gen Zers (born between 1997 and 2012). All Appleton's protagonists are female. The English author presents us with a glimpse of sexually fluid, uncertain, and hedonistic characters. Some snort cocaine off the back of their iPhones while others engage in threesomes. They're often in precarious employment, overwhelmed ('Doing nothing…no longer seemed an option'), and tentatively trying to negotiate the complications of strained relationships and rapidly-evolving social mores. They believe in manifesting and, perhaps inevitably, one of the book's epigraphs is from Taylor Swift ('Give me back my girlhood, it was mine first'). Appleton's writing has appeared in the Irish literary journal Banshee, among others. Shifting between the first and third person, her stories forensically dissect the subtle power dynamics of relationships and are frequently embossed with striking images. For instance, a teenager waiting outside a station sees her mother's white Toyota Prius among a cluster of black cabs as a 'swan in a huddle of ducklings'. That observation comes from the narrator, Allie, of Road Trip, a story that illuminates an important theme in the collection: Appleton's depiction of outsiders at the centre of her stories. In a frightening chronicle of neglect, Allie's irascible mother punishes Allie by shoving her out of a stationary car onto the side of the road and then drives away. 'No one is expecting me anywhere,' the narrator believes as she walks towards home. 'No one is expecting anything from me.' If the men in this collection are portrayed as, at best, virtue signallers and, at worst, perpetrators of coercive control, some of the female characters are equally adept at sabotaging one of their own. Female friends turn 'inward' to exclude a disloyal classmate for kissing the boyfriend of a group member before they deliver their misogynistic judgement on the betrayal: 'it's so much worse when a girl does it.' Body image is a recurring anxiety in the book and receives its most articulate expression in The Mirror Test. Melissa concedes she is always looking at herself in any available surface — a phone screen, a mirror, a train window — but doesn't recognise the person in the reflection. 'She is cruel and detached … It is true people hate her — that's the price she pays — but their envy, a weight, also lights her up.' The stories anatomise how technology and, particularly, social media distort its characters' view of themselves, but the collection also emphasises their culpability in this degradation. 'I know that anything I've lost,' one character suggests, 'has been given away freely.' Read More Book review: Do not put this book on hold