Cecilia Lei
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
This year's Nordic combined competition wraps up today.
And for better or for worse, all eyes are likely to be on the viewership numbers it generates.
And finally, a few other stories were following.
The billionaire and former Victoria's Secret CEO, Les Wexner, told Congress he was naive, foolish, and gullible for trusting the late sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein.
Wexner described Epstein as a loyal friend back in 2003, and the two had close financial connections.
But in his statement, he accused Epstein of stealing vast sums of money after hiring him to manage his personal wealth.
88-year-old Wexner was described as a potential co-conspirator of Epstein's in a 2019 FBI document, but no charges were ever brought against him.
Wexner has always denied knowing about or participating in any wrongdoing.
Democratic Congressman Robert Garcia said Wexner was the single most responsible for providing Epstein with financial support.
Mark Zuckerberg took to the stand on Wednesday in the landmark social media addiction trial.
In a Los Angeles courtroom, the Meta CEO defended his company against claims that it targeted young users.
The lead plaintiff in the case is a woman known as KGM, and she alleges that using social media in her youth led to mental health issues.
Her lawyer, Mark Lanier, confronted the tech CEO with internal documents raising concerns that the platform's age limits were not being enforced and that children's safety was not being prioritized.
Zuckerberg maintains that communications are being mischaracterized and taken out of context.
He said the company has taken action to protect young users and bars people under the age of 13.
The trial, in which Google's YouTube is also defendant, is being watched closely as it may have implications for thousands of existing similar lawsuits filed by families, state prosecutors, and school districts.
And finally, for chicken wing lovers, it's a debate that has raged on for years.
Is a wing a wing if it has no bones?
A man in Illinois filed a lawsuit in 2023 against the restaurant chain Buffalo Wild Wings.
He had ordered their boneless version and expected a traditional wing deboned, but that's not what he got.