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NFL coach Jim Harbaugh goes viral in bizarre clip of him peeking through a curtain to watch his team practice

NFL coach Jim Harbaugh goes viral in bizarre clip of him peeking through a curtain to watch his team practice

Daily Mail​6 days ago
The Los Angeles Chargers were back in practice on Monday and nobody seemed to be happier about it than their eccentric head coach, Jim Harbaugh.
As preparations for the 2025 campaign stepped up and the players got back out onto the practice field, a Chargers admin caught Harbaugh bizarrely staring through a curtain at his players.
To make things seem even more suspicious, Harbaugh was wearing a cap and sunglasses, almost as if he was trying to disguise his appearance.
The team itself clearly saw the funny side given they posted it out onto social media, simply writing as the caption: 'Wait for it'.
Fans immediately leapt onto the image of Harbaugh, with some comparing it to Jack Nicholson 's 'Here's Johnny' scene from the 1980 horror film The Shining.
Another fan described Harbaugh as 'a national treasure' while a different Chargers supporter replied saying: 'I love it - definitely my new meme template.'
wait for it pic.twitter.com/XpU7HzK7pH
— Los Angeles Chargers (@chargers) July 21, 2025
Harbaugh has never made any secret of how much he enjoys the first day of training camp ahead of a new campaign.
Speaking in July 2024 ahead of his first season leading the team he said: 'It's like New Year's Day. It feels like being born. It feels like coming out of the womb.
'You're in there. It's comfortable and safe, and now you're out. You're born. Lights are on, it's bright, chaos, people looking at you, people talking at you, and it just feels good to have it happen.'
But perhaps Harbaugh is especially excited this time around after having a difficult offseason.
The 61-year-old underwent a successful heart procedure and hip replacement surgery earlier this year.
He told reporters in June: 'The doctors can't find anything wrong with me. It would take my heart stopping for me not to be out there on the sideline.'
The Chargers start the season with a bang, heading to Brazil to face last season's Super Bowl runners-up, the Kansas City Chiefs, in Sao Paulo on Friday, September 5.
They follow that game with a trip to Vegas to play the Raiders before hosting the Denver Broncos in Week 3.
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Jess Carter admits she was ‘scared' to play Euro 2025 final after racist abuse
Jess Carter admits she was ‘scared' to play Euro 2025 final after racist abuse

The Independent

time26 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Jess Carter admits she was ‘scared' to play Euro 2025 final after racist abuse

England defender Jess Carter admitted she was 'scared' to play in the Euro 2025 final after suffering racist abuse during the tournament as she thanked her teammates for their support. Carter returned to Sarina Wiegman 's starting line-up for the final against Spain and was the only change the England manager decided to make before the Euro 2025 final in Basel. The 27-year-old Carter revealed after England's quarter-final win over Sweden that she had received racist abuse on social media throughout the tournament. She dropped to the bench for the semi-final against Italy, even though Wiegman said Carter was ready to play if needed, but she returned to start the final against Spain. And while Carter was excellent alongside Leah Williamson in defence, as the Lionesses won their second major trophy, Carter revealed she had been apprehensive to play in the final. Carter told ITV: "I was super scared to play today for the first time in my life, but when I woke up and I saw my team, and the support I had and the belief I had from my team-mates, my family and my manager. I knew I could just come out and give it my all. That's all you can do." Carter thanked the support she had received from the England fans and said it gave her the 'courage' to play after suffering racist abuse during the tournament. 'The support I felt from the fans was incredible,' Carter explained. 'I can't thank them enough because without the fans, my team-mates and my family, I don't know if I'd have every had the courage to back on the pitch and play again. 'I'm not normally someone who struggles with the hate they received because everyone is going to have their opinion. But this tournament has been tough and I wasn't sure I'd be able to get back on the pitch and do me. "Everyone of those fans, I'm not ever going to be able to show my thanks enough, but they have been incredible, and I hope they will continue to cheer on the Lionesses every single day." England manager Wiegman explained that starting Carter over Esme Morgan, who had also impressed during the semi-final win over Italy, was a tactical decision but said she had 'belief' in Carter to deliver the performance required. 'Well, first of all, it says something about the team that we can make tactical decision,' Wiegman said. 'I've said a couple of times now that I was really happy, before the tournament, with my squad, and that we had players in the same position that can bring different things, and that was true with Esme and Jess. 'Italy was a different game than Spain and we felt we needed Jess now in the starting line-up, exactly for the reasons that you said, the fight and the duels, she can play, and she showed of course that she is a great personality. 'She was ready to perform, also against Italy, but that was a tactical decision and now we've made a tactical decision. I had all the belief in her and she had the belief in herself, that's the most important thing, that she could contribute to the team and you can tell that the team trusted her too.'

Relive the wildest wellness trends that Gwyneth Paltrow has promoted, from milk cleanse to vaginal eggs
Relive the wildest wellness trends that Gwyneth Paltrow has promoted, from milk cleanse to vaginal eggs

Daily Mail​

time27 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Relive the wildest wellness trends that Gwyneth Paltrow has promoted, from milk cleanse to vaginal eggs

Gwyneth Paltrow is a woman of many talents - she's an Oscar and Emmy award-winning actress, a mom of two to daughter Apple Martin, 21, and son Moses Martin, 19, wife to Brad Falchuk, and an author. But perhaps what she's known for most of all is being the founder of her immensely popular wellness brand Goop. Since she founded the brand in 2008, she has turned it into a multi-million dollar empire, even expanding to have a full-time team and building a clothing line out of it, G. Label by Goop. Despite its success, Goop, which sells products like an $1,000 gemstone heat therapy mat and $55 sex oil, has become embroiled in controversy on more than one occasion, as Paltrow has made headlines for some of the wild health 'tips' that she's peddled - and sold - on the platform. In the new biography about the wellness mogul authored by Amy Odell, she writes that Paltrow become 'indoctrinated' into the world of 'big wellness' after her dad was diagnosed with throat cancer, and she began searching for answers and allegedly went down a 'rabbit hole,' per People. According to Odell's book, 'big wellness,' is 'an industry that demonizes things like toxins and chemicals present in everyday items that we can't escape.' Her father's diagnosis, along with a health scare that had Paltrow believing that she had a stroke, encouraged her to seek out all different kinds of doctors and wellness practices - like rectal ozone therapy, something she spoke about during a 2023 podcast appearance. Over the years, she's backed a slew of bizarre and eyebrow-raising health trends, and FEMAIL has rounded up the craziest guidance she's doled out over the years. The vaginal jade eggs that ended up in a lawsuit and a $145,000 settlement In 2017, Paltrow began selling $66 jade and rose quartz eggs on Goop's website, which were meant to be inserted vaginally and were said to have a number of benefits to them. According to ABC News, the advertising that Goop peddled on these precious stone eggs promised to 'balance hormones,' 'prevent uterine prolapse,' and regulate your period. At the time, a blog post on Goop further peddled their magic, as the author wrote at the time that the eggs can not only help you sexually, but that they were great for your kidneys. 'Jade eggs can help cultivate sexual energy, increase orgasm, balance the cycle, stimulate key reflexology around vaginal walls, tighten and tone, prevent uterine prolapse, increase control of the whole perineum and bladder, develop and clear chi pathways in the body, intensify feminine energy, and invigorate our life force,' the author wrote in a since-deleted blog post that was obtained by Forbes at the time. 'The jade creates kidney strength - it's known as jing in Chinese energy, and it's all about sexual potency, and even beauty - if your hormones are balanced, your skin will look better,' the post continued. 'It's a holistic combination of things, where one benefit builds to another. Jade also takes away negativity and cleanses - it's a very heavy material, very powerful.' But it turns out that the jade eggs were not capable of doing all of the above, like balancing out your hormones - and it resulted in a lawsuit for Paltrow. The California Food, Drug, and Medical Device Task Force filed a complaint in 2018 against Goop for its 'misleading claims.' Days later, it was settled for $145,000, and the jade eggs were promptly removed from the website - although they came back online years later, this time described as something you can use for Kegel exercises. Paltrow went on an eight-day goat's milk cleanse that she said helped get rid of parasites In 2017, Paltrow revealed during an interview with Women's Health that she had recently completed an eight-day goat's milk cleanse in order to get parasites out of her body. For over a week, she drank nothing but goat milk. Parasites can be caused by certain foods, like unpasteurized milk, per Cleveland Clinic, and they typically make you very sick. They are often treated with medication like antibiotics or drugs that are especially targeted to get rid of parasites. 'I'm really interested in the impact of heavy metals and parasites on our bodies,' she told the outlet at the time. 'I think they're two of the biggest culprits in terms of why we feel bad. I'm knee-deep in figuring out ways to clear them from the body, looking at all sorts of potentially weird modalities,' she continued. However, it was a claim that was quickly called out by many medical experts, like Canadian gynecologist Dr. Jen Gunter, who took to her own website to pen a blog post about Paltrow's claim, calling them 'stupid' and 'dangerous.' At the time, a naturopath named Linda Lancaster had written about parasites for Goop's website, claiming that a parasite is 'anything that infests the body and has a life of its own' - and she was the one who believed goats milk was the answer. And per Dr. Gunter, that was totally inaccurate. 'This advice is stupid and dangerous and frankly insulting and if Paltrow is really a goat milk cleanse devotee it isn't just her advice that stinks, I bet her gas is atrocious too,' Dr. Gunter wrote. Paltrow was once stung by bees - on purpose - to get rid of scarring In 2016, Paltrow revealed that she had voluntarily tried a treatment called apitherapy, which she said was 'thousands of years old' and involved bee venom through an injection or even live insect bites. 'I've been stung by bees,' the former actress told The New York Times during a 2016 interview. 'It's a thousands of years old treatment called apitherapy. People use it to get rid of inflammation and scarring. It's actually pretty incredible if you research it. But, man, it's painful,' she admitted. According to Harper's Bazaar, the therapy is supposed to help heal your skin or old injuries due to the anti-inflammatory properties that are found in bee venom. At the time, Paltrow even wrote a few blog posts on Goop touting the treatments. She claimed that she had gotten it for an 'old injury,' which, miraculously, completely disappeared. Dr. David Manganaro, an internal medicine doctor, was interviewed by the site, and he claimed that the peculiar practice can also be used to 'alleviate joint pain.' However, in 2018, a 55-year-old Spanish woman passed away from apitherapy following two years of treatment, after she developed an allergic reaction. She suffered anaphylaxis, which led to her entering a coma and enduring multiple organ failure. She passed away weeks later in Ramón y Cajal University Hospital in Madrid. Goop once sold $120 'bio-frequency healing' stickers, claiming they had the same materials as NASA spacesuits Goop once sold something called 'bio-frequency healing' stickers in 2017, which the brand swore would 'rebalance the energy frequency in our bodies,' per Gizmodo. They claimed that the product, made by Body Vibes, could help reduce anxiety. The stickers were wearable, and they were said to be made with the same material as a NASA space suit. 'Human bodies operate at an ideal energetic frequency, but everyday stresses and anxiety can throw off our internal balance, depleting our energy reserves and weakening our immune systems,' the since-deleted product description read, as captured by Gizmodo. 'Body Vibes stickers (made with the same conductive carbon material NASA uses to line space suits so they can monitor an astronaut's vitals during wear) come pre-programmed to an ideal frequency, allowing them to target imbalances,' the description concluded. However, when NASA caught wind of this, they were less than pleased, and refuted claims that their spacesuits were made of any such material. A representative for NASA told Gizmodo at the time that they 'do not have any conductive carbon material lining the spacesuits,' with another former scientist at the organization labeling it a 'load of BS.' Goop recommend an at-home coffee enema but warned to only use it if you know what to do Every year, Goop produces various round-up guides on the best detox practices and beauty and wellness products, which include a myriad of tips and tricks. But in 2018, their beauty and wellness detox guide especially stood out against the crowd, as they included a $135 At-Home Coffee Enema Implant O-Rama System on the list. They boasted that it was one of Dr. Alejandro Junger's favorite products, the cardiologist and founder of cleanse system The Clean Program, who often penned pieces for their site. However, Goop added that they only recommended the product for those who 'knew what they were doing.' Though it looks like the Implant O-Rama System is now defunct, as the website's domain is expired, a coffee enema promises total detoxification. Per Healthline, a coffee enema involves injecting brewed and caffeinated coffee, along with water, into the colon via the rectum. Many report having relief from constipation as a result, but others claim intestinal and liver detoxification, and a boost to the immune system, per the medical outlet. However, they noted that there was no scientific evidence that a coffee enema is 'helpful in treating any medical condition.'

Marcus Morris Sr's brother and agent slam NBA star's 'insane' arrest 'real' reasons he was detained
Marcus Morris Sr's brother and agent slam NBA star's 'insane' arrest 'real' reasons he was detained

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Marcus Morris Sr's brother and agent slam NBA star's 'insane' arrest 'real' reasons he was detained

The twin brother of NBA free agent Marcus Morris Sr. and the player's agent are disputing the reason for his shocking arrest in Florida on Sunday. Morris was arrested at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport. According to arrest records in Broward County, Morris is being held on a charge of Fraud - Writing a Check With Insufficient Funds. But hours after the arrest, Morris' brother Markieff posted an angry statement on X, formerly Twitter: 'The wording is crazy. Damn for that amount of money they'll embarrass you in the airport with your family,' the post read. 'They could have came to the crib for all that. 'When y'all hear the real story on this s**t man. All I can say is Lesson learned. Bro will tell y'all tomorrow. This weird shit gave me a headache. Can't stop nothin!' Nearly half an hour later, Yony Noy - who represents both brothers - posted a statement of his own: 'Just so everyone understands this is zero fraud here or whatever crap outlets have said regarding fake checks or whatever the hell. This is due to an outstanding marker with a casino. Apparently if you have over $1,200 they can issue a warrant for your arrest. Absolute insanity!' A source told Daily Mail that the casino in question is in Las Vegas. According to the websites of multiple law firms, in the state of Nevada, an unpaid marker is treated as the equivalent of writing a bad check. Failing to pay a marker is treated as a class D felony and carries a penalty of fines and up to four years in prison. The Broward County Sheriff's Office did not immediately return a request for comment from Marcus has had a 13-year NBA career, beginning when the Houston Rockets selected him 14th overall in the 2011 NBA Draft. He would go on to play for the Rockets, the Phoenix Suns, the Detroit Pistons, the Boston Celtics, the New York Knicks, and the Los Angeles Clippers. Most recently, he played the 2023-24 season with the Philadelphia 76ers and the Cleveland Cavaliers. This incident is not Marcus' first run-in with the law. In 2012, he was arrested in Lawrence, Kansas on a battery charge after he and another person punched a bar employee while watching a Kansas-Missouri basketball game. Marcus entered a diversion agreement, paid a $300 diversion fee, and $60 in court fees. He also agreed to not come in contact with the victim or the bar for one year. At the time the diversion agreement was made, the prosecutor said that the case would be dismissed if Morris fulfilled the terms and remained 'out of trouble' during the 12 month period. Three years later, Marcus, Markeiff, Baltimore Ravens safety Gerald Bowman, and two other assailants were arrested in connection with the assault of 36-year-old Eric Hood in Arizona. Both Marcus and Markeiff were playing on the Phoenix Suns at the time. Hood, who had mentored the Morris twins, was allegedly 'sending an inappropriate text message' to the twins' mother. After a trial, the twins and Bowman were found not guilty while the other two assailants confessed.

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