Disney’s ‘Lightyear’ tanked expectations after its debut in theaters over Father’s Day weekend, failing to perform despite being the first animated film in theaters since the pandemic began.
Saturday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky vowed to retake all cities currently lost to Russia in an emotional video address to his nation.
Somebody get Pure Flix on the line, because Mark Appel’s story will almost certainly become a movie. Saturday, Appel, the top pick in the 2013 Major League Baseball draft and a practicing Christian, officially joined a big league ballclub nine years after establishing himself as the top prospect in the game.
It’s always uplifting when the Lord provides reminders that His power outstrips even the vilest and most violent efforts of man to destroy his Church. Recently, such a reminder emerged when archaeologists in Iraq discovered Christian relics in a church that only recently was desecrated by members of ISIS.
Ghislaine Maxwell has been put on suicide watch at a Brooklyn jail, and may seek to delay her Tuesday sentencing for aiding Jeffrey Epstein’s sexual abuse of underage girls, her lawyer said on Saturday night.
Although the United States’ newly minted gun law does not restrict most Americans’ access to any firearms, gun rights advocacy groups spent much of Saturday rallying support for a legal and legislative fight against what they perceive as a thinly veiled effort to build toward the types of tighter restrictions gun owners fear and for which leftists clamor.
U.S. President Joe Biden and his G7 counterparts will agree on an import ban on new gold from Russia as they broaden sanctions against Moscow for its war against Ukraine, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters on Saturday.
Russian President Vladimir Putin on Saturday told his counterpart from Belarus that Moscow would supply Minsk with missile systems capable of carrying nuclear weapons, the Russian foreign ministry said.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is expected to sign legislation to grant places of worship the right to keep doors open during states of emergency.
The called-for “Night of Rage” after the Supreme Court finalized their reversal of the 1972 Roe vs. Wade decision ended with protest arrests, tear gas, and one state’s senate “held hostage” by a volatile crowd.