“The truth is, gravity takes its toll. But! Gravity has also built your strength,” Porizkova wrote on Thursday.
Paulina Porizkova, 60, models pink lingerie while addressing ‘smoke and mirrors’ of social media
“The truth is, gravity takes its toll. But! Gravity has also built your strength,” Porizkova wrote on Thursday.
MUST SEE! TGP’s Jordan Conradson and Cara Castronova Star in Latest Baby Trump Video
The Gateway Pundit’s Cara Castronuova and Jordan Conradson made the ‘Baby Trump” video this week.
For months now, the Diaper Diplomacy outlet has posted weekly videos of “Baby Trump”, his administration, and DC Democrats and officials discussing major issues, including foreign policy, the economy, and bickering in congressional committee hearings.
According to USA Today, Diaper Diplomacy videos use artificial intelligence software to transform some of the nation’s most well-known political figures, such as President Donald Trump and U.S. Senator Cory Booker (D-N.J.), into irritable infants while using the actual audio from the interviews or press conferences.
Diaper Diplomacy now has 127,000 subscribers.
This week Diaper Diplomacy included a shot of reporters at the Pentagon attending a war update by Secretary of War Pete Hegseth.
And, The Gateway Pundit’s Jordan Conradson and Cara Castronuova are traveling with President Trump this weekend.
President Trump flew back to Mar-a-Lago and is playing golf this afternoon.
He deserves the rest.
The post MUST SEE! TGP’s Jordan Conradson and Cara Castronova Star in Latest Baby Trump Video appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
Brittany Aldean shows off green bikini in spring break beach photos with family
Brittany Aldean is sharing some “spring break snaps” on Instagram.The 37-year-old mom of two posted a series of pictures from her beach vacation with her family, including some of her posing on the beach in a green bikini.In one of the photos, Aldean can be seen leaning on a palm tree and looking off into the distance, while wearing a green bikini. She paired the look with a yellow skirt, dangling earrings and a pair of brown sunglasses.Another photo shows her posing in the same bikini, but looking into the camera rather than off in the distance. She can be seen posing in the same outfit in her hotel room, this time carrying a green and white beach bag and smiling at the camera.BRITTANY ALDEAN ENJOYS GIRLS’ TRIP IN BEACHSIDE BIKINI SNAPSHer two kids, daughter, Navy, and son, Memphis, can be seen smiling at the camera while enjoying some smoothies in one photo, and her husband, country singer Jason Aldean, can be seen cuddling with their daughter in another.”I know y’all are having a super time!!! I love the pictures!!!” one fan wrote, while another added, “Love these cutie spring breakers.””Simple perfection!! Enjoy the beach and sunshine w the babes!!!” a third fan wrote.She previously posted snaps from her family vacation, which featured her in a yellow bikini and her kids playing in the swimming pool.CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSLETTERBrittany and Jason first met in 2012 when Jason was still married to his ex-wife, Jessica Ussery. Their relationship began in scandal when they were photographed kissing while he was still married, leading him to file for divorce in April 2013.They confirmed they were dating in March 2014, getting engaged later that year in September 2014. Less than a year later, the two tied the knot in March 2015.After more than a decade together, the former “American Idol” contestant and her husband collaborated professionally for the first time, releasing their first duet, “Easier Gone,” in January 2026.”People have always asked if we were ever going to do anything, and I think we were kind of nonchalant about it for a long time, and I think Jason always said, ‘It would have to be the right song.’ Finally, one came along,” Brittany said in a fan Q&A.LIKE WHAT YOU’RE READING? CLICK HERE FOR MORE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSWhile their marriage is going strong, the duet tells the story of a couple who are singing about the breakdown of their relationship after they decided to part ways.”You were easier gone / You were easier out of this town / And I almost had this letting you go thing figured out / Yeah, it was easy to lie / To myself on a Friday night / When I wasn’t face to face / With how good you looked movin’ on / Yeah, you were easier gone,” they sing in the song.
NYT Pips Today: Hints, Answers And Walkthrough For Sunday, March 15
Looking for help with today’s New York Times Pips? We’ll walk you through today’s puzzle and help you match dominoes to tiles.
Trump: ‘Many Countries’ Will Send Warships to Patrol the Strait of Hormuz
President Donald Trump announced on Saturday that “many countries” will be dispatching warships to patrol the Strait of Hormuz amid the ongoing conflict with Iran, suggesting that it is “still easy” for its military to inflict damage on vessels there “no matter how badly defeated they are.”
The post Trump: ‘Many Countries’ Will Send Warships to Patrol the Strait of Hormuz appeared first on Breitbart.
With dogs, dance and uncovered hair, Iranians defy ‘unholy alliance’ of socialists, radicals: ‘Hypocrites!’
“You’re hypocrites!”The shout cut across H Street NW last week as about 500 Iranian Americans supporting regime change in Iran marched toward a smaller group of pro-China socialists gathered two blocks away across from the White House, backing the radical clerics leading Iran.”We are here for freedom of Iran,” Jay Gorbani, an Iranian American, explained, as he held his Labradoodle puppy, Bella, while other members of a fledgling group – National Solidarity Group for Iran – marched by. “We are against the religious mafia regime of Iran.”The far-left activists they confronted had assembled under bright green and yellow signs pulled out again this weekend, reading “STOP WAR IN IRAN,” But the organizers aren’t simply “peace” activists, a Fox News Digital analysis of scores of pages of communications by protest organizers reveals. Fox News Digital has identified at least 75 organizations that have protested in support of the regime in Iran since the war began, including 50 organizations that are far-left, Marxist, socialist or communist, 22 that are Muslim organizations that support Islamism, or political theocracy, and the remaining three that are socialist-Islamist adjacent.They parrot the pro-regime messages that the Chinese Communist Party has expressed in recent days, as China sends military equipment to Iran, according to national security experts.Last weekend, they coordinated demonstrations in 63 cities across 29 states and Washington, D.C., using identical signs, chants and protest infrastructure, available now in a digital toolkit, and they are replicating the protests this weekend and in the coming days. The main organizers are funded by an American-born tech tycoon, Neville Roy Singham, based in Shanghai, and lawmakers in the House Ways and Means Committee and House Oversight Committee have accused the network of promoting the interests of the People’s Republic of China. Singham didn’t respond to repeated requests for comment.The Singham-funded network includes the People’s Forum Inc., the ANSWER Coalition, the Party for Socialism and Liberation, CodePink Women for Peace and the Palestinian Youth Movement, which has helped organize these protests. The Democratic Socialists of America, which helped elect Zohran Mamdani as mayor of New York, also co-sponsored the protests. The organizations didn’t respond to requests for comment.The confrontation in the nation’s capital reflects a broader struggle unfolding not only in Iran but also in the West.From Phoenix to Dallas, Indianapolis, Toronto and Manchester in the U.K., members of the diaspora are increasingly challenging far-left activists they accuse of amplifying propaganda that favors the clerical rulers Islamic Republic.This weekend, Gorbani and other Iranian Americans took to the streets again. They argue their advocacy for a secular democracy – and rejection of Islamism, or theocracy – offers the strongest response to rising acts of extremism by Muslim ideologues. In recent days, incidents of violence in Austin, Tex., New York and Norfolk, Va., have been punctuated by shouts of Allahu Akbar, or “God is great.These tensions reflect a political dynamic with deep historical roots.In 1965, Time magazine published an article, headlined “Unholy Alliance,” bluntly describing “the Communists and fanatical Moslems” working together to oppose Iranian leader Shah Reza Pahlavi’s efforts to “modernize and Westernize Iran” as a secular democracy.Time quoted Pahlavi warning of “an unholy alliance between two extremist wings,” communist revolutionaries that he called “unpatriotic, destructive Reds,” and radical Muslims, many wearing black robes, turbans and headscarves.”This is the very familiar, what we call, unholy alliance between the black and the red, that is the communists and the very reactionary people or strata. We always see it because they are both against the progress and happiness of the country,” Pahlavi said years later.It’s an alliance now called the “red-green alliance,” with green symbolizing the color of Islam.PROTESTERS HOST QUDS DAY RALLY IN NYC: “SHAME, SHAME USA!”This past weekend, an Iranian American woman with another nascent group, DCProtests4Iran, faced off against women in black robes from the Manassas Mosque in northern Virginia, where mosque leaders support the Iranian theocracy. Her hair loose in the wind, she flashed a “V” for victory and shouted, “Down with the Islamic regime!”Staring down H Street NW at the socialists, Reza Rezavi, an engineer from Rockville, Md., and a volunteer with DCProtests4Iran, said his group supports Pahlavi’s son, Reza Pahlavi, as the leader of a new transitional government that would realize a “democratic Iran.””Freedom for Iran!” screamed another Iranian American woman, holding her Lhasaapso dog, Cocoa, rescued in 2019 from Tehran, where the regime has ruled dog walking illegal in many cities.Across protests from London to Washington, D.C., Iranian diaspora activists say they are confronting far-left groups they accuse of stealing democracy from them, dating back to 1979, when they defended radical clerics who came to power in 1979, overthrowing Pahlavi. Singham didn’t respond to requests for comment.”It’s cultural warfare,” said Paul Mauro, an attorney, former New York Police Department counterterrorism inspector and a current Fox News contributor.”Marxism is probably the most malevolent single idea ever devised,” Mauro said, “and our culture has now become infected with a tolerance for Marxism that is being translated into a very dangerous political energy that is working with Islamists to undermine America as we know it.”LIke clockwork, members of the Party for Socialism and Liberation, the ANSWER Coalition and other socialist organizations had arrived at 2:28 p.m. last weekend to the corner of 16th and H Street NW. One woman sipped an iced coffee, while another pulled a red wagon piled with megaphones. A third pushed a grocery cart filled with a marching drum and fluorescent yellow signs reading “STOP THE WAR ON IRAN!” A young woman dragged a dozen or so signs asking, “Would you like a sign? Sign? Anyone like a sign?”Tourists looked away, as far-left activists, including CodePink co-founder Medea Benjamin and DC coordinator Olivia DiNucci arrived with a new protest banner. Ignoring the approaching crowd of Iranian Americans, Benjamin posed for a photo with Korean Americans who support China, Iran and North Korea’s communism. Soon, the group broke into familiar anti-American chants heard at protests for years, but this time they were muffled by the chants of the Iranian protesters, chanting, “USA! USA!”Asked about Singham’s funding of the protest’s socialist sponsors, Benjamin said, “I’d rather not talk about it.”Minutes later, the Iranian American groups rounded the corner from L Street NW and stopped about 200 yards from the far-left activists on 16th Street NW. They blasted Iranian music and danced.In defiance of strict interpretations of Islam, families walked pet dogs near Bella and Cocoa, as women shouted with their hair in the wind, and men and women freely danced beside each other to Iranian pop music, acts mostly banned in Iran. The scene stood in defiance of the strict religious rules imposed by Iran’s clerics, who have barred pet dogs, forced women to cover their hair and suppressed music, dancing and dissent.An Iranian American woman smiled and slowly raised her middle finger at the socialist activists, their chants of “Down, down with the USA,” drowned out by music blaring in Farsi.Across the police line, field marshals from the Party for Socialism and Liberation corralled elementary-aged girls swaddled in black headscarves to the microphone, filming them close up as the children stumbled over their words, reading chants from a phone as activists egged them on.When a girl got in the shot, the field marshal filming the canned chanting tried to shoo her away. “Those people are supporting terrorists,” said one Iranian American with the reform-era Iranian flag draped over his shoulder, like a cape, featuring a lion emblem. “We are against them.””We do not support the regime,” said Siamak Aran, an organizer with the National Solidarity Group for Iran, as Iranian Americans marched behind him, chanting, “USA! USA!”Fox News Digital’s Azziana Solomon contributed to this report.
Dick’s Sporting Goods says this fan favorite is here to stay
Sneakerheads have a lot to celebrate today. During its Q4 FY2026 earnings call on March 12, Dick’s Sporting Goods revealed that its Fast Break stores are here to stay. “This is the evolution of the 11-store pilot we discussed last quarter,” Dick’s Sporting Goods Executive Chairman Ed Stack told investors. “Based on the strength of the pilot results, we’ve already expanded Fast Break to an additional 10 stores… and we’re very pleased with the strong early performance.” “Now looking ahead, we’re excited to rapidly scale Fast Break by back-to-school 2026,” Stack continued.Fast Break stores are a product of Dick’s 2025 acquisition of Foot Locker. The existing locations are stocked with footwear and limited apparel options, similar to the Foot Locker stores of yore, but in a more streamlined fashion.“The improvement is coming from the basics: clearer storytelling, better presentation, and a more focused assortment where we removed roughly 30% of the styles on the shoe wall that were unproductive and eliminated the run-on sentence that we’ve been talking about that was not showing the customer what product was important,” Stack told investors.Dick’s Sporting Goods acquisition of Foot LockerIn September 2025, Dick’s Sporting Goods (DKS) completed its acquisition of Foot Locker and its portfolio of brands. “We are very enthusiastic about the future of Foot Locker,” Stack said in a statement at the time. Even with that enthusiasm, Stack acknowledged that it would take a good deal of work to return Foot Locker to profitability. One major impediment has been Foot Locker’s large amount of unproductive inventory. At the end of Q2 FY 2025, the company reported having $1.709 billion in merchandise inventory, up 3.7% year over year. More retail:Costco shares surprising plan to add more storesTarget makes bold change to win back customersKohl’s CEO tells customers major revamp is on the wayPost-acquisition, Dick’s has slowly been dealing with that excess of inventory, selling much of it at a discount through its Going, Gone! stores.“Our first priority was to clean out the garage, starting with addressing unproductive inventory,” Stack told investors earlier this month. “The team moved quickly and decisively to get this done, and we’re pleased to report that the inventory cleanup is now essentially complete.” “We were able to recover a higher cash amount by putting it through the DICK’S value chain than if we sent that out through a jobber,” he continued. “We’re really well-positioned. This inventory at Foot Locker is probably cleaner than it has ever been. That should bode well for our margins and our sales going forward.”
Dick’s Sporting Goods will make its Fast Break stores a permanent part of its lineup.Getty Images
Dick’s continues to expand its fleet New Fast Break stores aren’t the only Dick’s locations set to open this year. In 2026, the company said it has plans to open 14 new House of Sport and 22 Fieldhouse locations. These experience-oriented stores, replete with amenities like turf fields and rock walls, have been wildly successful for the retailer.“House of Sport and DICK’S Field House remain two of our most powerful and long-term growth drivers, and we will continue expanding these formats with discipline,” Chief Financial Officer Navdeep Gupta told investors. Related: Bath & Body Works makes big change customers will notice right awayThe expansion plans don’t end there. Approximately 15 Golf Galaxy Performance Center locations will open in the calendar year, as well as at least one new distribution center.Interestingly, Dick’s executives say they have plans to open some of these locations in malls. While other retailers such as Bath & Body Works are consistently closing their in-mall locations thanks to declining foot traffic, the sporting goods company is taking another route.The mall locations may not be a bad bet. According to data from Placer.ai, indoor malls have begun to regain momentum, with visits increasing by 5% in February 2026 year over year. Outlet malls are doing even better, with foot traffic increasing by 7.3% in the same time period.The “momentum may reflect a broader shift in how outlet centers are positioning themselves,” Placer.ai’s report said. “Rather than serving solely as transactional shopping destinations, some are expanding their food and experiential offerings to encourage longer, more social visits.”Perhaps the new Fast Break stores will be able to capitalize on this shift, turning around Foot Locker’s fortunes once and for all. Foot Locker outlookDuring March’s earnings call, executives made three significant predictions regarding Foot Locker’s future:In 2026, Dick’s Sporting Goods expects Foot Locker to deliver growth and comp sales of between 1% and 3%.Foot Locker is expected to generate an operating income of between $100 million and $150 million.Back-to-school 2026 is expected to be the sales and profitability inflection point for Foot Locker.Related: Why Dick’s Sporting Goods has thrived while rivals fail
Amazon is selling a $76 3-pack of sun hoodies for only $20, just in time for spring
TheStreet aims to feature only the best products and services. If you buy something via one of our links, we may earn a commission.Why we love this dealHaving fun in the sun is the best part about the warmer months, but between hiking, fishing, swimming, kayaking, travelling, and relaxing, our skin is exposed to a lot of sun. Protecting yourself from the sun’s harmful rays can be one of the best ways to prevent premature aging, sun damage, and skin cancer, and while sunscreen is super useful when it comes to staying protected from the sun, it can be easy to forget to reapply, or it doesn’t work as well during water sports or occasions like hiking, where you’re just sweating too much for it to stick. In these instances where you’d like to enjoy being in the sun instead of worrying about sunburns, the Zity Sun Hoodie 3-Pack is a perfect solution. They’re lightweight and offer UPF 50+ protection to keep your skin safe during all your fun outdoor adventures. Thankfully, shoppers can save 74% on the original price of $76 for this 3-pack, paying less than $7 for each hoodie.Zity Sun Hoodie 3-Pack, $20 (was $76) at Amazon
Courtesy of Amazon
Why do shoppers love it?While wearing a long-sleeve shirt in the sun may seem counterintuitive, these sun hoodies provide high sun protection with quick-dry material that keeps you cool. The advanced breathable construction ventilates body heat and provides airflow, while also staying soft and featuring a comfortable four-way stretch that moves with you, no matter what your day entails. The material is also wrinkle-resistant and machine washable, and it includes a hood to protect your neck and ears.Related: Walmart’s effortlessly cool denim jackets are a spring wardrobe staple, starting at just $17The UPF 50+ sun protection makes these hoodies perfect for any outdoor activity, and the 3-pack allows you to pack an extra to change into if you want something fresh for pizza on the patio after a long hike. They feature a tagless design that prevents irritation, and could even be worn in the water during paddleboarding or water skiing. The versatility is endless, from afternoon walks, to vacation boating, to gardening and mowing the lawn. Details to knowSizes: Choose from Medium, Large, X-Large, XX-Large, and 3X-LargeColor: They offer tons of color combinations, with blue, gray, white, and black being included in the best deals. Material: This sun hoodie is 100% polyester.”I was very happy with these. I used them on a recent trip. I like having the hoods to block the sun on my neck. Better than a hat,” said one buyer.Another reviewer said, “It’s surprisingly comfortable and easy to wear, especially if you like performance-style fabrics. The material feels very similar to a workout shirt or a rash guard. It is thin, breathable, and clearly designed for warm weather. The hood is functional without feeling bulky, and the fabric dries quickly if you sweat. Comfort-wise, they feel good against the skin and do not trap heat as much as thicker hoodies.”Shop more dealsRoadbox UPF 50+ Fishing Sun Hoodie, $13 (was $14) at AmazonRoadbox UPF 50+ Hoodie with Mask, $13 (was $15) at AmazonRyly 2-Pack Sun Shirt, $24 at AmazonThe Zity Sun Hoodie 3-Pack offers a quick and easy way to stay protected from the sun year-round. The high protection, thin, quick-dry material, and convenient hood make it great for everything from gardening to boating. Shoppers can save 74% at Amazon and get this pack for just $20.
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Not Without Hope’ on Paramount+, a Real-Life Survival Story Starring a Shipwrecked Zachary Levi
This is a solid dramatization of a tragedy that took the lives of three men, including two NFL players, in 2009.