Premiering Aug. 16, the new spinoff features 12 drag queens from around the world here’s how to stream the show, including outside of the U.S.
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As the crisp air of autumn begins to sweep in, there’s no better way to embrace the season than by filling your home with the warm and comforting scents of fall. Whether youre a fan of the earthy aroma of fallen leaves, the spicy sweetness of pumpkin spice or the cozy essence of a crackling fireplace, fall-scented candles are the perfect addition to your seasonal decor. Video above: How to decorate your home for fallThe candle-making business is more unique than ever. From traditional pumpkin candles to wood-burning wicks to candles inspired by specific experiences, there’s something for everyone this fall.Get ready to cozy up your space and immerse yourself in the scents of the season with these must-have candles:Apple Picking in the Hudson Valley Candle from Literie: What’s fall without apple picking? This candle will recreate the warm sky, hayrides and sweet, cinnamony scents of the apple-picking season right in your home. From the candle company Literie, this crisp candle is a must for the fall. Click here to see more.WoodWick Pumpkin Gourmand Hourglass Candle Jar: The WoodWick Pumpkin Gourmand Medium Hourglass Candle Jar fills your home with the warm, inviting aroma of spiced pumpkin, complemented by sweet vanilla and buttery caramel. Featuring a crackling wooden wick, this candle creates a cozy ambiance perfect for autumn evenings. Check it out at Khol’s today.Threshold 2-Wick 15.1oz Lidded Glass Bourbon Pumpkin Jar Candle: Lift your spirits with the refreshing, pleasant fragrance of sweet bourbon and pumpkin. This candle infuses your home with vanilla and spiced wood that creates an inviting fall vibe youre sure to appreciate. Head to Target.com to add to your cart.Homesick Autumn Hayride Candle: This candle creates the feel of fresh gusts of fresh hay and birch wood mixed with sweet maple and warm amber. With notes of oakmoss, nutmeg, tonka and clove, this candle from Homesick is the perfect mix of all the best outdoor scents of autumn. Click here to get yours before the rush.Sweet Water Cozy Season Candle: Made with notes of woods, warm spice and citrus, this candle is perfect for anyone who might not love sweet scents. Made with sustainable and non-toxic soy, this candle makes a great gift for fall birthdays. Click here to shop this candle on Amazon.For more coverage of our favorite fall products, click here.
The iconic Gillian’s Wonderland Pier announced recently they were shutting down after 94 years in business.
A non-profit is planning to restore and conserve the Amache National Historic Site. It’s all with the help of an $87,000 grant from the National Park Foundation.
Stumpy lives on [Video]
Stumpy lives on!The stunted and gnarled cherry tree that became an unlikely social media celebrity was cut down after the 2024 National Cherry Blossom Festival, along with more than 100 other trees, to make way for a massive repair project on the crumbling seawall protecting the Tidal Basin.But thanks to the efforts of the National Arboretum, little Stumplings actually clones of the tree have taken root and could be returned to their parent’s home in the next couple of years.Related video above: The End of an Era for Washington D.C. Cherished Cherry TreeEarlier this year, workers collected multiple clippings and samples from Stumpy, transporting them to the Arboretum in a protective cooler. In a tree-mendous story of survival, those clippings have been replanted and nurtured to the point where the Arboretum now has five small self-sustaining plants in its care. The process was complicated and delicate with no guarantees that it would actually work, said Piper Zettel, a horticulturist at the Arboretum.”Rooting the cuttings of woody plants is not a guaranteed success. Timing and the condition of the cutting material are probably the most critical elements, but many variables could have influenced the results of this process,” Zettel said.In horticultural terms, the original Stumpy is referred to as the “parent plant.” However, the five young seedlings under the Arboretum’s care are closer to being Stumpy’s clones than its children, since they are genetically identical to the original. The rooted cuttings are still vulnerable and will require years of patient nurturing before any of them are ready for their public debut. The National Park Service, which oversees the Tidal Basin in front of the Jefferson Memorial, is targeting spring 2026 for the completion of the seawall repair project anticipating a larger-than-usual flood of tourists that summer for the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence.However there’s no guarantee that Stumpy 2.0 will be ready for replanting by that deadline.”The new trees have a long way to go, but we are doing all we can to ensure NPS receives strong, healthy and vigorous trees,” Zettel said. “The process takes a long time as trees grow very slowly. We need to be patient.”Stumpy became a social media star during the pandemic. Its legacy has spawned T-shirts, a calendar and a fanbase. News that 2024 was Stumpy’s final spring prompted people to leave flowers and bourbon and had one Reddit user threatening to chain themselves to the trunk to save the tree.At the Tidal Basin, the long-overdue seawall repair project kicked off in earnest Thursday with the official launch of construction. Rather than use a golden shovel or cut a ribbon with oversized scissors, National Park Service officials chose to paint one of the 90-foot tall metal piles gold. Observers applauded as the golden metal cylinder one of about 700 that will be used was inserted into the ground by a giant construction crane. “This has been a long time coming,” said Catherine Townsend, president of the Trust for the National Mall, which uses private donations to support the publicly funded NPS projects. “It’s hard to see all these construction fences and cranes, but it has to happen.”The $133 million project to repair the seawall has been desperately needed for years. In addition to standard deterioration, the actual water level has risen by about 13 inches since the seawall was originally constructed in the 1940s. As a result, the Tidal Basin waters have been overflowing the wall twice a day at high tide, blocking pedestrian pathways and soaking the cherry blossom tree roots with destructive brackish sea water.”It was a sad moment for us to have to cut down so many cherry blossom trees,” said National Park Service Director Chuck Sams. “Stumpy is a real symbol of resilience, simply for having survived in those conditions.”While the Park Service is aiming to have everything completed by spring 2026, the construction work will inevitably impact the 2025 cherry blossom season next spring. “We just ask that people be patient, because on the other side of this is going to be improved facilities and an improved visitor experience,” Sams said.
Thursday, President Joe Biden approved the South Dakota Disaster Declaration.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KJH6b09_X2IEver wonder how some of the Big Apples worst reviewed businesses manage to stay afloat? On this episode of…
Los Angeles police have arrested four suspects in the fatal shooting of former “General Hospital” actor Johnny Wactor.The four suspects who have been arrested range in age from 18 to 22 and hail from Huntington Park, Inglewood and cities in LA county. Three of the suspects were booked on arrest warrants for murder and the fourth was booked as an accessory.A news release from the LAPD states that officers conducted search warrants that led to the arrests early Thursday morning and recovered additional evidence. No further details have been shared about the arrests or the evidence.Wactor was shot and killed when he interrupted thieves stealing the catalytic converter from his car in the early morning of May 25. Police said the 37-year-old had left work at a rooftop bar with a coworker when he saw three men who had hoisted his car. Police said one of them fired at him without provocation and killed him.The men fled in a car and Wactor was taken to a hospital where he was later declared dead, police said. The county medical examiner said Wactor died from a gunshot wound to the chest and ruled the death a homicide.Police on Aug. 5 asked for the public’s help in identifying the suspects, releasing surveillance images of them and their getaway car.Wactor, a South Carolina native, portrayed Brando Corbin on the ABC soap opera from 2020 to 2022. He also appeared in a variety of films and TV series, including “Station 19,” “NCIS,” “Westworld” and the video game “Call of Duty: Vanguard.”His agent, David Shaul, said just after Wactor’s death that he “always kept his chin up and kept striving for the best he could be.”At a news conference earlier in the week, his mother described the feeling of losing him.”Grief is my constant companion,” Scarlett Wactor said. “I can’t wish him happy birthday on Aug. 31 he would have been 38. I can’t ask if he’s coming home for Christmas. I can’t ask how his day went.”
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Polk County deputies say four people from South America stole about $1.7 million in property from nine homes in six Florida counties. Most victims were Asian-American business owners, according to Sheriff Grady Judd.