Category: News
Review: ‘Scream 7’ is simply a horror for an otherwise sturdy franchise
It’s almost hard to describe how astonishingly bad “Scream 7” is — though it isn’t entirely surprising considering the circumstances surrounding the film and the lead-up to its production. In 2023, Spyglass Media Group summarily dismissed franchise reboot star Melissa Barrera, who anchored 2022’s “Scream” and “Scream VI,” for posting on social media in support of Palestinians. Shortly after Barrera’s firing, co-star Jenna Ortega departed the film, as well as new director Christopher Landon.
In the wake of the shake-up, Spyglass eventually lured original “Scream” queen Neve Campbell (who had co-starred in the 2022 “Scream” but sat out the New York City-set “Scream VI”) back to the franchise, in which she has played Sidney Prescott for three decades. Also returning is Kevin Williamson, the original film’s writer, who was tapped to co-write (with Guy Busick and James Vanderbilt) and direct, his first directorial effort since 1999’s “Teaching Mrs. Tingle.”
Usually, all of this extra production context isn’t necessary to explain how and why a film doesn’t work, but here it seems relevant in grappling with why “Scream 7” is such an incoherent mess. Perhaps they were stuck scrapping for parts, or rushed, or working under the dark cloud of the backlash to Barrera’s firing (there have been calls to boycott the film). Whatever the case, the result is easily the franchise’s worst effort, riddled with muddled motivations, inconsistent characters and a serious identity crisis.
The fifth and sixth installments are loosely connected to this seventh film by the presence of the unusually tenacious twins Chad and Mindy Meeks-Martin (Mason Gooding and Jasmin Savoy Brown), who are inexplicably interning for Sidney’s longtime frenemy, journalist Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox). There are also several references to Sid “skipping New York,” and questions whether a Ghostface attack even counts if she’s not there.
Because Sidney Prescott, now Evans, exists only in relationship to Ghostface, the costume worn by many different knife-wielding maniacs over the years, starting with her high school boyfriend. Much like Laurie Strode in “Halloween,” who shapes her existence around surviving Michael Myers, who is Sidney without the Halloween mask donned by so many of her nearest and dearest? She doesn’t seem to know. Her day-to-day life is defined by her trauma — she’s a heat-packing woman with a high-tech home security system married to a cop (Joel McHale) — but oddly enough, she doesn’t talk about her past with her teenage daughter Tatum (Isabel May). That doesn’t seem like Sidney at all.
Instead, she tries to live a semblance of a “Gilmore Girls” life in the bucolic town of Pine Grove, where she runs a cutesy coffee shop and is a wife and mom to three kids, whom she wants to protect from the world and her pesky ghosts. Still, it makes little sense that Tatum (named after Sidney’s best friend, played by Rose McGowan in the first film) would know so little about her mom’s past. But there’s very little about this film that makes sense.
It doesn’t help that Campbell and May have all the chemistry of two colleagues who met right before cameras started rolling, and the rest of the cast feels like a hastily assembled group of random actors tapped for their turn on the “Scream” ride. McHale, Ethan Embry, Timothy Simons, Mark Consuelos and Anna Camp are the familiar faces as various teachers, neighbors and news reporters; May, Celeste O’Connor, Mckenna Grace, Sam Rechner and Asa Germann make up the new generation of high school screamers that we barely get to know or care about before Ghostface’s blade starts swinging.
Legasequels often try to contend with the larger ideas and evolutions of these iconic properties, and “Scream 7” half-heartedly attempts that. An opening salvo featuring Jimmy Tatro and Michelle Randolph as a horror-obsessed couple seems to set up a cautionary tale about murder tourism, but that theme is quickly abandoned. In the series’ characteristic — yet now obligatory — bit of self-reflection on the genre, characters thumb their noses at “nostalgia” and the “retconning” of the Sidney Prescott story, only for the script to toy with just that, introducing a deepfake AI subplot. For such a self-conscious series, “Scream 7” doesn’t manage to impart any kind of insight about itself. It’s nothing more than an episode of “Scooby-Doo.”
Distracting from the void at its core are the extremely gory kills, splashed with pixelized blood and guts that are indeed successful in making an audience squirm. But there’s no escaping the nagging feeling that it seems like Williamson fed “Scream” into an AI chatbot and the machine spat this wretched thing out — it has all the familiar components but doesn’t move right, sound right or feel right; it’s not funny, or scary, or suspenseful. “Scream 7” is an unfortunate tarnish on this otherwise sturdy franchise’s legacy.
Katie Walsh is a critic for Tribune News Service.
“Scream 7” — 1 star (out of 4)
MPA rating: R (for strong bloody violence, gore, and language)
Running time: 1:54
How to watch: In theaters Feb. 27
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2026/02/26/movie-review-scream-7/
IndyCar ruge en el inicio de temporada en St. Petersburg. Palou va por otro campenato
Por JENNA FRYER
ST. PETERSBURG, Florida, EE.UU. (AP) — IndyCar abre su temporada con un rugiente tramo de cuatro carreras en marzo, un regreso a Phoenix Raceway, tres nuevos escenarios y el hijo de un ícono del automovilismo que debuta en una serie con base en Norteamérica.
Además, Alex Palou competirá por su quinto campeonato en seis años.
La temporada comienza el domingo en las calles del centro de St. Petersburg con una parrilla de 25 pilotos encabezada por Palou. El español inició su campaña por el título en el circuito urbano hace un año con la victoria, la primera de ocho triunfos que incluyeron las 500 Millas de Indianápolis y un tercer título consecutivo de IndyCar.
Está de vuelta con su equipo Chip Ganassi Racing intacto, con la demanda por incumplimiento de contrato con McLaren ya resuelta, y con la mira puesta en otro título. Si conquista un cuarto campeonato seguido, Palou se uniría a Sebastien Bourdais como los únicos pilotos en la historia de la serie en lograr esa hazaña.
Su competencia será interna: su compañero Scott Dixon, seis veces campeón de IndyCar, busca recuperarse de la temporada pasada, en la que apenas ganó una carrera—, además del tradicional peso pesado Team Penske. McLaren espera ser contendiente después de que el mexicano Pato O’Ward terminó segundo en la clasificación el año pasado, y Andretti Global se ha fortalecido con la incorporación del exbaluarte de Penske Will Power y otras contrataciones clave.
Mes ajetreado de marzo
IndyCar tiene este año un calendario de 18 carreras, la mayor cantidad de eventos desde la temporada 2014, y por primera vez en mucho tiempo la serie no tendrá una pausa de entre la apertura y la siguiente carrera.
Penske, dueño de IndyCar y del Indianapolis Motor Speedway, pudo programar un récord de cuatro carreras en marzo al unirse a NASCAR el próximo fin de semana para regresar a Phoenix. IndyCar escenificó una carrera por última vez en Phoenix en 2018, con victoria de Newgarden.
Desde Phoenix, la serie estrenará un evento en las calles de Arlington, en una colaboración con los Cowboys de Dallas de la NFL. IndyCar cerrará el mes en el circuito Barber Motorsports Park, en Alabama.
Arlington es uno de los tres nuevos escenarios del calendario, ya que IndyCar dejará el centro de Toronto para correr en las calles de Markham, Ontario, y tendrá un evento en Washington, respaldado por el presidente Donald Trump, para conmemorar el 250º aniversario de Estados Unidos.
La temporada terminará el 6 de septiembre con la final de vuelta en Laguna Seca por primera vez desde 2023.
El debut de Schumacher
IndyCar suele presentar algunas caras nuevas cada año, pero ninguna llega con el reconocimiento de nombre que aporta Mick Schumacher.
Schumacher es hijo del siete veces campeón de Fórmula 1 Michael Schumacher y se ha alejado de la F1 tras tres temporadas sin asiento. Corrió para Haas en la F1 y se convirtió en piloto de reserva de Mercedes después de perder ese puesto al final de 2022.
Desde entonces no ha vuelto a largar en una carrera de F1 y, en su lugar, compitió en el Campeonato Mundial de Resistencia. Ahora el alemán de 26 años probará el automovilismo de monoplazas en Norteamérica con un asiento en Rahal Letterman Lanigan.
Necesitará adaptarse rápidamente a las carreras en óvalos, algo nuevo para Schumacher, quien dijo que se apoya en su compañero Graham Rahal para recibir consejos.
De manera coincidente, Schumacher compartirá parrilla este año con Romain Grosjean, el piloto al que reemplazó en Haas en 2021. Grosjean regresa a IndyCar tras un año fuera con Dale Coyne Racing, el equipo que lo llevó por primera vez a la serie en 2021.
Coyne tiene una alineación completamente nueva este año, ya que Grosjean formará dupla con el novato Dennis Hauger, el vigente campeón de INDY NXT.
___
Deportes AP: https://apnews.com/hub/deportes
Irán estaría en desventaja en una guerra con EEUU, pero aún podría causar mucho daño
Por SAM METZ
JERUSALÉN (AP) — A medida que las fuerzas estadounidenses se concentran en Oriente Medio, Irán se enfrenta a la amenaza de ataques importantes por parte del ejército más poderoso del mundo, los cuales podrían tener como objetivo a sus líderes, sus fuerzas armadas, instalaciones nucleares e infraestructura crítica.
Irán no tiene ni de lejos las mismas capacidades, y quedó todavía más vulnerable tras la guerra contra Israel a mediados del año pasado y las recientes protestas antigubernamentales, pero aún podría infligir daño a las fuerzas estadounidenses y sus aliados, y sentir que debe hacerlo si la supervivencia de la República Islámica está en juego.
Si bien Irán sufrió pérdidas importantes en junio pasado, aún cuenta con cientos de misiles capaces de alcanzar a Israel, según estimaciones israelíes. Irán cuenta con un arsenal mucho mayor de misiles de corto alcance que pueden alcanzar bases estadounidenses en países del Golfo Pérsico y a fuerzas estadounidenses en alta mar, a las que pronto se unirá un segundo portaaviones.
Teherán ha amenazado en otras ocasiones con cerrar el estrecho de Ormuz, una arteria marítima vital para el comercio petrolero mundial, y afirmó haberlo hecho parcialmente durante ejercicios militares la semana pasada.
El líder supremo, el ayatolá Alí Jamenei, advirtió que Irán podría hundir buques de guerra estadounidenses, y altos funcionarios han expresado que un ataque de Estados Unidos desencadenaría una guerra regional. Amir Saeid Iravani, embajador de Irán ante Naciones Unidas, dijo que “todas las bases, instalaciones y activos de la fuerza hostil en la región” serían objetivos legítimos.
Capacidades persistentes
Israel llevó a cabo fuertes ataques contra los arsenales de misiles de largo alcance de Irán, así como contra su liderazgo militar y su programa nuclear, durante la guerra de 12 días en junio. A su vez, Estados Unidos atacó las principales instalaciones nucleares de Irán, y el presidente Donald Trump declaró en ese momento que habían sido “destruidas”.
Pero aún se desconoce la magnitud de los daños —y cuánto ha sido reconstruido—. Irán continuó sus ataques contra Israel con misiles y drones hasta que cesaron los combates, y pudo eludir cada vez más sus famosas defensas aéreas.
El arsenal iraní de misiles de corto alcance se mantuvo prácticamente intacto, refirió Danny Citrinowicz, experto en Irán del Instituto de Estudios de Seguridad Nacional de Israel, un grupo de expertos especializado en investigación y análisis en temas de políticas de seguridad. Eso podría hacer que Irán se sienta más inclinado a tomar represalias contra decenas de miles de fuerzas estadounidenses estacionadas en Qatar, Arabia Saudí, Jordania, Emiratos Árabes Unidos y otros lugares.
“Irán puede ser débil. Pero aún tiene maneras de infligir un daño real a Estados Unidos, y muchos más incentivos para intentarlo que antes”, escribió en la revista Foreign Affairs Nate Swanson, director del Proyecto de Estrategia de Irán del Atlantic Council (Consejo del Atlántico), una organización no partidista que promueve el liderazgo y la participación de Estados Unidos en el mundo, junto con aliados y socios, para encontrar soluciones a desafíos globales. “Los funcionarios iraníes sienten que deben darle un buen golpe a Trump o estarán en riesgo permanente”.
Irán lanzó misiles contra una base estadounidense en Irak tras el asesinato de su general de más alto rango en 2020, y contra una base estadounidense en Qatar casi al final de la guerra del año pasado. Esos ataques, que parecieron haber sido telegrafiados con anticipación, causaron daños, pero no víctimas mortales, gracias a la activación de los sistemas de alerta temprana y a que entraron en acción las defensas antimisiles.
Irán también podría llevar a cabo ataques más lejos. El país ha sido acusado de utilizar bandas criminales y grupos armados para planificar o realizar ataques en todo el mundo, incluidos contra disidentes, israelíes y objetivos judíos.
Curva de aprendizaje
Los ataques israelíes del año pasado mataron a varios generales de alto rango y a científicos nucleares, lo cual reveló vulnerabilidades importantes. En un momento dado, Trump declaró que Estados Unidos sabía dónde se escondía Jamenei y lo calificó como un “blanco fácil”.
Tras la captura del líder venezolano Nicolás Maduro, Trump podría considerar ataques de decapitación para derrocar a la teocracia chií de Irán —la cual gobierna desde hace décadas— lo cual, según expresó recientemente, “sería lo mejor que podría pasar”.
Los iraníes han tenido ocho meses para aprender de sus errores y reforzar su seguridad interna. Citrinowicz expuso que probablemente existan planes de contingencia en caso de que Jamenei sea asesinado. En lugar de nombrar a un sucesor único, el poder probablemente se transferiría a un pequeño comité hasta que las hostilidades disminuyan.
Los expertos dicen que la muerte de Jamenei, de 86 años —quien ha gobernado Irán durante más de tres décadas—, no significaría por sí misma el fin de la República Islámica. El poder quizá pase eventualmente a un miembro de su círculo íntimo, como ocurrió en Venezuela, o a la Guardia Revolucionaria de Irán.
Los aliados de EEUU podrían ser objetivos
Los aliados estadounidenses están claramente preocupados por una guerra regional. Benjamin Netanyahu, el primer ministro, ha advertido de una respuesta contundente ante cualquier ataque iraní contra Israel.
Los países del Golfo Pérsico han visto a Irán con preocupación durante mucho tiempo y se han apoyado en Estados Unidos para su defensa, pero no quieren verse arrastrados a una guerra. Arabia Saudí y Emiratos Árabes Unidos, que albergan a miles de tropas estadounidenses, han declarado que no permitirán el uso de su espacio aéreo.
Un diplomático del Golfo Pérsico dijo que líderes regionales dialogan con Irán y Estados Unidos para evitar una guerra y advierten que esta podría tener graves consecuencias, incluido un aumento súbito en los precios del petróleo. El diplomático pidió el anonimato para poder comentar sobre las delicadas conversaciones a puerta cerrada.
Irán cuenta con sus propios aliados, entre ellos los rebeldes hutíes en Yemen, grupos armados en Irak, Hezbollah en Líbano y Hamás en los territorios palestinos. No obstante, lo que denomina su Eje de la Resistencia sufrió pérdidas importantes en los combates que se extendieron por la región tras el ataque de Hamás a Israel en octubre de 2023.
Un punto de presión global
Otro objetivo cercano podría permitir a Irán infligir un daño más amplio.
Casi una quinta parte de todo el petróleo que se comercializa pasa por el estrecho de Ormuz, frente a la costa iraní. La Armada estadounidense se ha comprometido a mantenerlo abierto, pero los ataques iraníes podrían causar una disrupción al comercio, como lo hicieron los mucho más débiles hutíes en el mar Rojo durante gran parte de los últimos dos años.
Los funcionarios iraníes no han amenazado explícitamente con atacar el estrecho en el actual enfrentamiento, pero las fuerzas iraníes lo cerraron parcialmente la semana pasada durante ejercicios militares, lo que indica que podría ser vulnerable si estalla una guerra.
Otros activos petroleros críticos también estarían dentro de su alcance. En 2019, los ataques a la infraestructura petrolera redujeron temporalmente a la mitad la producción de Arabia Saudí. Los hutíes de Yemen se responsabilizaron, pero las autoridades estadounidenses culparon a Irán posteriormente.
El tema nuclear
Tras amenazar inicialmente con una acción militar por la matanza de manifestantes a manos de Irán, Trump centró su atención en su programa nuclear y advirtió que ocurrirían “cosas malas” si Irán no llega a un acuerdo. Ambas partes tienen previsto celebrar otra ronda de conversaciones indirectas en Ginebra el jueves.
Irán siempre ha dicho que su programa nuclear tiene fines pacíficos, mientras que Estados Unidos y otros países sospechan desde hace tiempo que Teherán pretende desarrollar armas. Tras la cancelación del acuerdo nuclear de 2015 por parte de Trump, Irán intensificó su enriquecimiento de uranio y acumuló una reserva de material de grado casi bélico.
Las instalaciones principales de Irán fueron alcanzadas por ataques estadounidenses e israelíes el año pasado y causaron daños significativos en la superficie. No obstante, no está claro si el uranio enriquecido fue extraído antes de que fueran atacadas o enterrado bajo tierra. Irán dice que no ha podido enriquecerlo desde entonces, pero también ha prohibido las inspecciones.
Se cree que Irán aún está lejos de desarrollar un arma nuclear utilizable, pero el material radiactivo podría representar un riesgo en caso de ataques generalizados.
_______
Samy Magdy contribuyó desde El Cairo.
Sandra Cisneros es invitada a la Academia Estadounidense de las Artes y las Letras
Por HILLEL ITALIE
NUEVA YORK (AP) — Sandra Cisneros, una de las incorporaciones de este año a la Academia Estadounidense de las Artes y las Letras, admite que desde hace mucho tiempo quería formar parte.
“Sentía que estaba esperando a que alguien me invitara a bailar. Me sentía como una tímida literaria en el rincón, porque nunca me invitaban”, dijo Cisneros, cuyos libros incluyen favoritos como “The House on Mango Street” (“La casa en Mango Street”) y “Woman Hollering Creek and Other Stories” (“El arroyo de la Llorona y otros cuentos”).
“Hay algunos clubes de los que no me interesa formar parte, pero en este sí quería estar”, agregó, y señaló que amistades suyas como la poeta Joy Harjo ya estaban dentro.
Cisneros figura entre los 11 nuevos miembros de número elegidos este año, anunció la academia el jueves. Entre los demás están el escritor de viajes Pico Iyer, los poetas Marie Howe y Carl Phillips, el narrador Rick Moody y el actual poeta laureado de Estados Unidos, Arthur Sze, quien se suma a predecesores como Harjo, Billy Collins y Tracy K. Smith.
La pintora abstracta Joan Snyder está entre los artistas visuales que serán incorporados esta primavera, junto con la pintora y grabadora Elizabeth Peyton, la arquitecta y educadora Mónica Ponce de León, el artista y cineasta Alfredo Jaar y el fotógrafo Stephen Shore.
“Ya sea a través del entorno construido, el lente de una cámara, la pincelada de un cuadro o los versos de la poesía o la prosa, estos nuevos miembros han puesto el foco en una forma de arte”, dijo el presidente de la academia, Kwame Anthony Appiah, en un comunicado. “Muestran lo que significa mirar de cerca la historia, el poder, la intimidad, el lugar. Su obra amplía el registro cultural, y nos enorgullece contarlos entre nosotros”.
La academia también sumó a tres artistas a una categoría honoraria que incluye, entre otros artistas extranjeros de Estados Unidos, a Meryl Streep y Bob Dylan: la autora y crítica rusa Maria Stepanova y la narradora argentina Luisa Valenzuela, ambas destacadas críticas de sus gobiernos, y la pintora Marlene Dumas, nacida en Sudáfrica y que ahora vive en los Países Bajos.
Los nuevos miembros serán incorporados durante una ceremonia en mayo en el complejo beaux arts de la academia en Upper Manhattan. La autora Zadie Smith pronunciará el discurso principal —el Blashfield Address.
La academia, una sociedad honorífica fundada en 1898, está dividida en categorías de literatura, música, arte y arquitectura. Tiene 300 miembros de número, y los nuevos integrantes son elegidos por los miembros actuales para cubrir las vacantes que se producen tras la muerte de alguno (no hubo vacantes en música durante el último año). Entre otros miembros de la academia hay desde los autores Robert Caro y Louise Erdrich hasta los músicos John Adams y Wynton Marsalis, y artistas como Jasper Johns y Maya Lin.
Un portavoz de la academia declinó decir quién nominó a Cisneros, y citó la política de confidencialidad de la organización.
Durante su entrevista, Cisneros se refirió a la reciente muerte del ganador del Óscar Robert Duvall. Recordó haberlo conocido en la década de 1990 en un evento en la Universidad del Norte de Texas que incluyó baile de tango, una pasión de larga data de Duvall. En un momento, él la invitó a bailar. Ella se negó.
“Estaba demasiado desconcertada para aceptar”, comenta. “La gente me pregunta si me arrepiento de no haber aceptado bailar con Duvall. No bailé con él, pero no tengo ningún arrepentimiento. Simplemente me alegró que me lo pidiera”.
3 things to know about 3 defensive linemen on the Chicago Bears’ radar at the NFL combine
INDIANAPOLIS — The Chicago Bears’ offensive revolution last season began with a revamped line.
The Bears rebuilt the interior through a couple of trades (guards Joe Thuney and Jonah Jackson) and a free-agent signing (center Drew Dalman). Thuney and Dalman earned Pro Bowl honors, and Thuney was a first-team All-Pro and the NFL Protector of the Year.
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The Bears made modest attempts to do the same for the defensive line, signing Grady Jarrett and Dayo Odeyingbo and spending a second-round pick on Shemar Turner. But partly due to injuries, a transformation never materialized.
Now the Bears are ready to take another big swing at upgrading the defensive line.
This time, however, luring a big name through free agency or a trade could be costly in terms of salary (they’re more than $4 million over the cap) or draft capital, and the Bears won’t have a top-10 draft pick either.
“I’m not sure how that’s all going to line up now,” general manager Ryan Poles said. “I know from a cap perspective we probably don’t have enough to make all of that work on the defensive line.
“There were some situations (last season), mostly injury, that didn’t allow that to really come together the way it was supposed to. So I look forward to that happening. But we’re also going to have to continue to bring talent in to create competition so that our defense can take the next step.”
Even at the No. 25 slot in the draft, the Bears could find an impact edge rusher or defensive tackle.
“It’s really deep,” NFL Network analyst Daniel Jeremiah said of the defensive line class. “There’s not a Myles Garrett in my opinion, there’s not a Nick Bosa. … But we have three legit top-10 players in this draft and we’ve got depth. I think you can get depth all the way into the fourth round where we’ll see guys making an impact next year.”
The Bears had one of the league’s worst pass rushes last year, so they’re placing a premium on speed.
“We do need to pressure the quarterback in a more consistent clip,” coach Ben Johnson said. “I do think this draft does have some guys that could possibly help us out in that regard.”
Poles said he’s looking for “motor, relentlessness, violence, explosive(ness) — and then I just want to continue to improve our defensive speed.”
Here are three prospects who might be on the Bears’ radar and what they revealed about themselves while speaking to the media at the combine.
Peter Woods, defensive tackle, Clemson
Clemson defensive lineman Peter Woods speaks during a news conference at the NFL combine Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)
1. Woods hadn’t yet met with the Bears, though he had been in 18 meetings with teams by Wednesday. “One thing about Chicago, I think back to (the) Madden (video game),” he said. “Playing Madden with Jay Cutler and some of those legends — and that can go for any team — but I would say that it’d be a blessing.”
2. Questions and debates about Woods’ arm length probably will dog him up to draft day, yet he said “that’s never really come up” in meetings with teams. “It’s easy to say, ‘His arms are short,’ but what’s on tape is on tape,” Woods said. “One of the best things that I do is getting control of a man who assumingly has longer arms than me and striking him and discarding him. So I don’t really see that as a problem.”
3. Most defensive line prospects say they can play anywhere up front, but versatility really is part of Woods’ game. “I’m a game disrupter,” he said. “I’m the type of guy … that causes offensive coordinators to lose sleep at night planning for me. You don’t really know where I’m going to line up, you don’t know where I’m going to be, but you’ve got to respect it and you’ve got to know where I’m at at all times.” However, Woods said some of his best plays have come from the 4i technique — “the inside shade of the (offensive) tackle.”
Kayden McDonald, defensive tackle, Ohio State
Ohio State defensive lineman Kayden McDonald celebrates after recovering a fumble against Illinois on Oct. 11, 2025, in Champaign. (AP Photo/Melissa Tamez)
1. The book on McDonald is that he’s a great run stuffer but might be lacking in pass-rush ability at the next level. He addressed it: “On early downs, I can stop the run. On third downs, I can push the pocket. I’m a complete player.”
2. Most prospects proclaim they’re the best at their position in their draft class, and McDonald is no different. But what makes his case? “I’ll say my preparation,” he said. “Really pride myself on being consistent, competitive, holding my teammates accountable, and I put it all together working on my diet and just staying consistent. Just doing what I’ve got to do.”
3. McDonald follows in the legacy of fellow eye-black aficionado John Randle, the Hall of Fame Minnesota Vikings defensive tackle from the 1990s who turned the face paint into an art form better suited for the set of a “Mad Max” movie than a football field. McDonald recounted his own origin story: “It was a blackout game. We played Penn State. I wanted to try something different, you know? I love football so much. I just wanted to be different. I feel like that prepared me each game. I got better and better, so I’m not going to stop doing that.”
Zion Young, defensive end, Missouri
Missouri’s Zion Young speaks to the media during the NFL combine Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026, in Indianapolis. (Justin Casterline/Getty Images)
1. Young said he met with the Bears, who are in need of an edge rusher, but they discussed his belief that stopping the run comes first. “Having a privilege to rush the passer is second,” he said. “My power and my energy, my consistency. I’m very serious during practice and it translates to the game.”
2. Wherever Young lands, he’ll probably light up the locker room. He’s something of a character. “I got a chance to be around some great guys (at the combine),” he said. “They found me very loud and funny.” Young added that he’s a high-energy, high-character guy: “I’m always laughing, talking. You hear me before you see me.”
3. Young, a transfer from Michigan State, overlapped with Bears wide receiver Luther Burden III for one season at Missouri, where they were locker mates. “What’s funny is y’all have seen more of Luther than I have seen him,” Young said. “I know he likes to play video games. … He practiced hard, but he’s more so of a game-time player. When he starts to do stuff (on the field), he more so (yells), ‘Aaaaah!’ All types of stuff.”
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2026/02/26/chicago-bears-defensive-lineman-nfl-combine/
Naperville man allegedly reported fake $1M-plus jewelry heist, officials say
A Naperville man and his accomplice have been charged with allegedly staging a fake jewelry heist of more than a million dollars’ worth of jewelry, officials said.
Mahmood Bashang, 30, of the 800 block of Greenwood Circle, Naperville, and Pezhman Gilani Yahyavi, 46, of the 100 block of Vantroba Drive, Glendale Heights, told Elmhurst police they were were run off the road and robbed by three armed people, a news release from the DuPage County state’s attorney’s office and the Elmhurst Police Department said.
According to the police account, the pair called 911 about 6:30 p.m. Sunday and told the dispatcher they were on their way home from a jewelry show in Rosemont when robbers forced them off the road and took between $1.5 million and $2 million in items, most of which was 14k gold.
Police now believe Gilani Yahyavi intentionally drove his car off the road in order to make it look like a robbery, the release said.
Both men were charged with disorderly conduct-false report of a crime, a class 4 felony. Their next court appearance is scheduled for March 23.
No information was provided as to how investigators determined it was not a real heist.
Elmhurst Police Chief Michael McLean said in the release that the initial report prompted “a full-scale response. Officers, detectives and emergency personnel from Elmhurst, Bensenville and Rosemont committed significant time and resources to what was ultimately determined to be a scheme to enrich themselves.”
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2026/02/26/naperville-jewelry-robbery-fake-staged-elmhurst/
Afganistán lanza ataques de represalia contra Pakistán
KABUL (AP) — Afganistán lanzó ataques contra Pakistán en represalia por los bombardeos paquistaníes de hace unos días, informaron el jueves autoridades afganas.
Estallaron “intensos enfrentamientos” la noche del jueves “en respuesta a los recientes ataques aéreos realizados por las fuerzas paquistaníes” en las provincias de Nangarhar y Paktia, informa un comunicado emitido por la oficina de prensa del cuerpo militar de Afganistán en el este.
No hubo confirmación por parte de Pakistán ni información sobre víctimas.
El ejército de Pakistán llevó a cabo ataques el domingo a lo largo de la frontera con Afganistán y afirmó que había matado al menos a 70 milicianos. Afganistán rechazó esa afirmación y sostuvo que habían muerto decenas de civiles, incluidas mujeres y niños.
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Esta historia fue traducida del inglés por un editor de AP con ayuda de una herramienta de inteligencia artificial generativa.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2026/02/26/afganistn-lanza-ataques-de-represalia-contra-pakistn/
DePaul Art Museum will close in June
Since 2011, the DePaul Art Museum has featured the work of contemporary artists, many of whom are based in Chicago. But on June 30, the museum will close its doors.
“As part of our responsibility to ensure long-term financial sustainability for our university, we are continuing to engage in ongoing budget planning discussions,” per an announcement of the closure from the university on Thursday morning. “As part of this review, we have made the difficult decision to stop operations in the DePaul Art Museum at the end of this academic year.”
The news comes ahead of the museum’s two spring exhibitions, featuring the work of painters Alice Tippit and Barbara Nessim, open on March 5. Their shows will be the last at the Fullerton Avenue location.
Until recently, the museum had a full-time staff of three, which was reduced to two earlier this month when curator Ionit Behar left to take a job at the Museum of Contemporary Art. According to reporting by Crain’s in 2016, the museum’s budget received half a million dollars from the university, which at the time had an annual budget of $500 million; the school’s operating budget for 2026 is $610 million.
“Besides this being a loss to the city, it’s such a loss to the university,” said Phoebe Collins, the museum’s collection and exhibition manager. “We have a lot of students that work here with us who are losing their jobs at the end of June, but we have a lot of classes that come.”
Class visits, she said, entail “working with the professor to pull pieces from our collection that will match what they’re talking about in their classes. It’s a really great way for students to learn about art and see it in a different way, because of course we get art history students, but we also get anthropology students, I have a biology art class that comes, and we’ve also worked with classes from the business school and the college of computing and digital media. It’s tragic that this resource for the students is going to be lost. DePaul also has a museum studies minor and we work with them a lot, so that’s of course a huge loss to them.”
The DePaul Art Museum has a permanent collection of more than 3,000 objects, including pieces by Andy Warhol and the surrealist Gertrude Abercrombie. It is not yet clear what the university intends to do with the collection. According to DePaul, “In the coming weeks, we will convene a discussion with our university community to explore how the museum building and its collections can continue to serve as assets to DePaul.”
The options come down to selling off or donating the collection to other museums, or the university may wish to retain it. “But without a staff to take care of the collection, preservation of the art is at risk,” said Collins. “Museum missions are often about taking care of and preserving works of art.”
As for the building itself, DePaul says it has “no plans to sell the museum building or leave it vacant. The building occupies a prominent location on our Lincoln Park Campus, and we believe it holds significant potential to be transformed into a space that continues to enrich the student experience.”
The announcement came from university president Robert L. Manuel, provost Salma Ghanem and executive vice president & CFO Sherri Sidler.
The exhibition “Alice Tippit: Rose Obsolete,” curated by Ionit Behar, opens March 5 at the DePaul Art Museum. (Provided by DPAM)
The exhibition “Barbara Nessim: My Compass is the Line,” curated by Ionit Behar, opens March 5 at the DePaul Art Museum. (Provided by DPAM)
For artists, this is one less place to show their work and earn an income from that work.
“Artists get an honorarium to show their work,” said Collins. “We also commission artists to do work for different shows. We will also pay artists to do programming here, whether it’s a panel discussion or a dance performance, for example. And we also buy artwork from artists and galleries.”
The museum world is small, she said, “and the arts and humanities don’t have any help right now from the federal government. Smaller grants from family foundations are harder and harder to get because there’s more competition for them.” As with many professions at the moment, there are fewer job openings than ever. “All museums are struggling which makes this a really hard job market.”
The museum, says Tribune contributing art critic Lori Waxman, “has been critical in giving a huge number of local and minority artists their due. Selva Aparicio, Krista Franklin, the Stockyard Institute, Karolina Gnatowski, Eric J. Garcia, Huong Ngo, among others, all had their first museum solo shows here. DPAM has been running a multiyear initiative to increase the visibility of Latinx artists, with programming, collecting, bilingual signage, and more.”
And, she added, “DPAM has been unafraid to be boldly political, exploring the connections between police torture in Chicago and human rights violations in Guantanamo; documenting the work of Artists Call Against US Intervention in Central America, a seminal activist campaign of the 1980s; showing us the truth about the Young Lords Organization, who rallied for the rights of the Puerto Rican community in Chicago in the 1950s and ’60s. No other museum in Chicagoland has done this crucial work so solidly and so consistently.”
In December, the Tribune reported that the Chicago Plan Commission approved a proposal by DePaul to build a “$42 million basketball practice facility in the heart of its Lincoln Park campus, a controversial plan that will require demolishing a row of century-old residential buildings.”
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2026/02/26/depaul-art-museum-closing/
Biden-Appointed Judge Rules Illegal Immigrants Can Dispute Third Country Deportations
Biden-Appointed Judge Rules Illegal Immigrants Can Dispute Third Country Deportations
Authored by Stacy Robinson via The Epoch Times,
A federal judge ruled on Feb. 25 that the government cannot deport illegal immigrants to so-called third countries without giving them “meaningful notice” and an opportunity to dispute their removal.
In Wednesday’s ruling, Massachusetts District Judge Brian Murphy (nominated by President Biden on March 21, 2024) declared unlawful two policy memos, one by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and another by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Those memos said that if the U.S. had received credible diplomatic assurances from a third country that deportees would not face persecution or torture, they could be sent there without any extra procedures.
“[DHS] has adopted a policy whereby it may take people and drop them off in parts unknown … and, ‘as long as the Department doesn’t already know that there’s someone standing there waiting to shoot … that’s fine,’” he wrote.
“It is not fine, nor is it legal.”
Murphy ruled that federal regulations required that illegal immigrants be deported to either their home country, or another country as designated by an immigration judge.
They also have the right to “raise a country-specific claim” against being deported to a third country, he wrote.
The case started last March, when four plaintiffs filed a class-action suit after the government tried to deport them to countries other than their home nation, without notice or opportunity to object to their destination.
In April, the judge expanded the class of plaintiffs to include anyone with a final removal order to a third country after Feb. 18, 2025.
Murphy blocked those removals on April 18, but on May 21 he found the government had violated his order by removing six individuals to South Sudan in Africa. He ordered the government to provide them with lawyers and hearings on whether they were afraid to live in that country.
In the meantime, the federal government appealed to the Supreme Court, which stayed Murphy’s order in June.
In its stay application, the government said the lower court proceedings were “usurping the Executive’s authority over immigration policy,” and “ wreaking havoc on the third country removal process.” It characterized some of the deportees as “criminal aliens who had been in the country for years or decades after receiving final orders of removal, despite having committed horrific crimes,” including sexual assault and murder.
The same day the Supreme Court stayed his April ruling, Murphy issued an order saying his May directive was still in effect, since the government had not included it in their petition. The justices had to issue a follow-up clarification saying it had intended to invalidate both of the judge’s rulings.
In a brief, unsigned order, the majority said Murphy was attempting to use his May directive—granting the deportees lawyers and hearings—to enforce the ruling from April, which he could not do.
Justice Elena Kagan, in a short opinion, noted that she didn’t want to halt Murphy’s decision from last April.
“But a majority of this Court saw things differently, and I do not see how a district court can compel compliance with an order that this Court has stayed.”
Murphy has suspended his own Feb. 25 ruling for 15 days, giving the government time to ask an appeals court to halt it for a longer period. He wrote that he didn’t think the government’s legal argument was strong, but noted that the Supreme Court had stayed his previous, temporary block on the DHS policy.
“Ultimately, this Court could be missing something in the final analysis,” he wrote.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 02/26/2026 – 11:40
PayPal Slides After Report Says Stripe Not In Takeover Talks
PayPal Slides After Report Says Stripe Not In Takeover Talks
Bloomberg’s multi-day storytelling began late Monday morning with a report that a “large rival suitor” and other firms were circling PayPal in a potential takeover bid. By late Tuesday in the cash session, the outlet reported that payment processor Stripe had expressed interest in the platform.
Now, just moments ago, Semafor reports “PayPal isn’t currently in talks to sell itself — to Stripe or anyone else — and has been working for months with bankers to prepare for a potential activist campaign or unwanted takeover bid.”
Semafor’s report, like Bloomberg’s, was based on people familiar with the matter, which makes the gap between the two reports very notable.
Here’s more from Semafor:
The process followed a steep decline in PayPal shares that executives worried could leave the company vulnerable, the people said. Bankers began working with PayPal under former CEO Alex Chriss, who was ousted earlier this year. Bloomberg reported that Stripe is considering an acquisition of all or parts of PayPal this week. PayPal declined to comment. Incoming CEO Enrique Lores officially starts next week.
Bloomberg’s reporting sent PayPal shares in New York up nearly 19% in the first half of the week. However, those gains are beginning to be eroded by the Semafor report, with the stock down about 4% as of 11:25 ET.
Who to believe: Bloomberg or Semafor?
Tyler Durden
Thu, 02/26/2026 – 11:31
https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/paypal-slides-after-report-says-stripe-not-takeover-talks












