AfricaAmericasAsiaAustralasiaBusinessClimateCultureEast AsiaEuropeIndy TVMiddle EastMusicNewsNews & AdviceNFLSportTravelTV & RadioUKUK PoliticsUS Crime NewsUS politicsUS SportWorldWorld - Crime

Japanese leader calls Barron Trump a ‘good-looking gentleman’ during White House dinner

Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi said that Barron Trump was a “good-looking gentleman” during a dinner at the White House.
Takaichi paid a compliment to Barron last night, just a day before Trump’s youngest child’s twentieth birthday.
The Japanese leader also remarked upon Barron’s height. The NYU student stands around 6-foot-9, according to estimates, with photos often showing him towering over his father, President Trump, and mother, First Lady Melania Trump.
“I know he has grown up so much into a very tall, good-looking gentleman,” Takaichi said. “As I see you, Donald, it is very clear where he got it. Of course, from his parents.
“There is no doubt about it,” she continued. “So Donald, if I may ask you, please convey my sincere happy birthday wishes to him.”
open image in galleryJapanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi says that Barron Trump is a ‘good-looking gentleman’ (Getty)Trump has previously joked about his son’s height, telling crowds in Iowa in 2024 that his mother..

AfricaAmericasAsiaAustralasiaBusinessClimateCultureEast AsiaEuropeIndy TVMiddle EastMusicNewsNews & AdviceNFLSportTravelTV & RadioUKUK PoliticsUS Crime NewsUS politicsUS SportWorldWorld - Crime

Australians brace for ‘significant damage’ as tropical Cyclone Narelle makes landfall

Severe tropical Cyclone Narelle lashed Australia's northeast coast on Friday, bringing destructive winds, heavy rain and power outages as authorities urged people to brace for significant damage.
Narelle made landfall in remote parts of the Far North Queensland region as a category four system, one rung below the strongest category five, with winds reaching about 195kmph.
The cyclone, which authorities initially said could be among “the worst in living memory”, appears less damaging than feared, but concerns over severe flooding remain.
After crossing the coast, the storm dropped to a category three system, Australia's Bureau of Meteorology said, adding that Narelle was still packing wind gusts of around 140kmph.
The cyclone was expected to weaken as it moves west across the Cape York Peninsula over the next 18 hours.
“There is a lot of rain in this system, and as it moves it will be hard and fast,” Queensland premier David Crisafulli told a press conference. “I don't ..

AfricaAmericasAsiaAustralasiaBusinessClimateCultureEast AsiaEuropeIndy TVMiddle EastMusicNewsNews & AdviceNFLSportTravelTV & RadioUKUK PoliticsUS Crime NewsUS politicsUS SportWorldWorld - Crime

Beyonce’s mother’s food stand shuttered by health department in Texas

Beyoncé's mother’s food stand in Texas was shuttered by the health department this week, according to reports.
Tina Knowles, the 72-year-old mother of the Texas Hold ‘Em singer, opened her Mama Tina’s Gumbo booth at this year’s Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo. The food stall sells Knowles’ famed gumbo, which she has often talked about in interviews.
According to an Instagram post shared by Knowles, Mama Tina’s Gumbo was scheduled to serve up food at the Texas event from March 2 until March 22.
However, a statement from the Houston Health Department, obtained by ABC 13, revealed that the business was closed on March 16.
open image in galleryTina Knowles’s gumbo stand was temporarily closed down by the Houston Health Department, according to reports (Getty Images for Netflix)”On Monday, March 16, 2026, the Houston Health Department issued a temporary closure of Mama Tina's Gumbo booth at the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo as a result of a complaint investigation,” the sta..

AfricaAmericasAsiaAustralasiaBusinessClimateCultureEast AsiaEuropeIndy TVMiddle EastMusicNewsNews & AdviceNFLSportTravelTV & RadioUKUK PoliticsUS Crime NewsUS politicsUS SportWorldWorld - Crime

Aid deals with religious element risk ‘fanning flames’ of division, senior Nigerian minister says

Foreign aid arrangements with a religion-dependent focus risks “fanning the flames” of division, a senior Nigerian government minister has said
Mohammed Idris Malagi, Nigeria’s minister for information and chief government spokesperson, spoke to The Independent to mark Nigeria’s first state visit to the UK in 37 years.
In December, Nigeria was one of 14 countries that signed bilateral aid agreements with the US – known as health compacts – which included new stipulations about data sharing and restrictions on how the money should be spent.
The $2.1 billion (£1.6bn) agreement with Nigeria included “significant dedicated funding to support Christian health care facilities”, the US State Department said, and was “negotiated in connection with reforms the Nigerian government has made to prioritise protecting Christian populations”.
The religious make-up of the Western African country, which is split around almost equally between Muslims and Christians, had been under scrutiny by Washing..

AfricaAmericasAsiaAustralasiaBusinessClimateCultureEast AsiaEuropeIndy TVMiddle EastNewsNews & AdviceNFLSportTravelTV & RadioUKUK PoliticsUS Crime NewsUS politicsUS SportWorldWorld - Crime

Will the Iran war really lead to a global pivot to renewable energy?

As the Middle East conflict sends fuel costs skyrocketing and threatens to put a dent in the global economy, the argument for reducing the world's dependence on oil and gas and moving towards renewables has grown louder.
Ships have been blocked – and in some cases burning – at the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow passage near Iran through which a fifth of the world's oil and gas passes. The key supply route has been effectively closed, stopping oil, gas and other essential exports from the Gulf region and sending commodities on a rollercoaster ride.
Skyrocketing oil and gas prices are leaving many countries rationing fuel and staring at rising food prices. The International Energy Agency is calling it the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market.
With no sign the conflict will end imminently, bodies including the UN have called for the world to reduce its dependence on oil and gas, with renewables cited as the most obvious alternative. “The resources of the..

AfricaAmericasAsiaAustralasiaBusinessClimateCultureEast AsiaEuropeIndy TVMiddle EastNewsNews & AdviceNFLSportTravelTV & RadioUKUK PoliticsUS Crime NewsUS politicsUS SportWorldWorld - Crime

Trump will pay his respects in Delaware to 6 US service members killed in the Middle East

President Donald Trump is set to pay his respects on Wednesday at a Delaware military base when the remains of six U.S. service members killed in the crash of a refueling aircraft are returned to their families.
It will be the second time since launching the war on Iran on Feb. 28 that the Republican president will attend the solemn military ritual known as a dignified transfer, which he once described as the “toughest thing” he has had to do as commander in chief.
All six crew members of a KC-135 Air Force refueling aircraft were killed last week in a plane crash over friendly territory in western Iraq while supporting operations against Iran. They were from Alabama, Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio and Washington state.
The crash brought the U.S. death toll in Operation Epic Fury to at least 13 service members. About 200 U.S. service members have been injured, including 10 severely, the Pentagon has said.
Trump last traveled to Dover Air Force Base on March 7 for the dignified transfer of s..