30 Rock actor Alec Baldwin reassured fans in an Instagram video that he’s doing okay after he and his brother Stephen crashed his wife’s car into a tree in the Hamptons
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Alec Baldwin and brother Stephen in horror car crash into tree in Hamptons(Image: Getty Images)
Alec Baldwin told fans he was doing fine after he and his brother Stephen Baldwin crashed Hilaria’s car into a tree during their trip to the Hamptons. Fans rushed to share their concerns after it photos emerged of a white Range Rover that had driven front-on into a tree on the side of a highway in East Hampton, New York.
The 67-year-old 30 Rock actor and his 59-year-old brother were in town attending the Chairman’s Brunch at the 33rd Hamptons International Film Festival on Sunday evening. Alec and Stephen were seen chatting to police, with Stephen later taking pictures of the crash site.
A few hours after the shock incident, Alec took to his Instagram page to confirm the family were safe.
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“This morning, I was in a car accident. A guy cut me off in a truck, a big garbage truck, the size of a whale. It must have been commercial, to take away material from construction sites” he said.
“It was the biggest garbage truck I’ve ever seen… Anyways, to avoid hitting him, I hit a tree. I hit a big, fat tree. It crushed my wife’s car. I crushed my wife’s car; I feel bad about that. It’s all fine; I’m fine. My brother’s fine.”
He went on to thank the local police department for “coming to my aid”, adding: “My wife’s car is pretty smashed up. Big tree, big fat tree and I’m going to Los Angeles to see my family. Can’t wait.”
Fans rushed to the comment section to share their support, with one writing: “Glad all is okay. Thanks to Officer Gerken. Better get that smoke detector battery changed!” and another posting: “I’m very happy you and your brother are alright.”
One fan commented: “Very happy to see you are fine. Glad as well that your brother is fine, too,” and another added: “Love you, Man! So glad you and Stephen are not hurt! It’ll get better, pal. Trust me.”
“Thank god, they had guardian angels watching over them,” one said.
His wife Hilaria took to her own page when fans bombarded her with worried messages to reassure them that everyone is okay.
“He’s O.K., Stephen’s O.K. Everybody is O.K., nobody was hurt, and that is the most important thing. So, I love you and thank you, thank you, thank you for caring,” she told fans
Meanwhile, Hilaria was recently eliminated from US dance series, Dancing With The Stars.
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YouTubers Dan Howell and Phil Lester released a 47-minute-long video on their channel explaining why they kept their romantic relationship away from the spotlight
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YouTubers Dan and Phil ‘felt like they had to hide’ as they confirm relationship(Image: Dan and Phil/Youtube)
YouTubers Dan and Phil have finally confirmed their relationship after 16 years of speculation. Dan Howell and Phil Lester. The internet duo have been collaborating on YouTube since meeting in 2009, with them going on to work on films, books, television, radio and tours together.
They have a shared channel where they share fun reaction videos, skits and stories. The couple, who have lived together for 14 years, separately came out as gay via their channels in 2019. They later confirmed they were romantically linked at the beginning of their relationship but didn’t share any further information.
And in a bombshell 47-minute-long video shared on Monday, the duo finally confirmed they’ve been in a romantic relationship for 16 years.
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“Alright, let’s get this over with. Are Dan and Phil in a relationship?” Dan started the video as they both sat down on a bed. Phil said: “Yes,” before Dan joked: “Alright, bye.”
“We fell into it hard and fast in 2009,” Dan said. “It was so fast that we never labeled it. We just ended up living together and here we are!”
Phil continued: “We’re partners in everything. And no, it’s not always perfect. Don’t get into your head that we are the ideal of human partnerships.”
Dan then admitted he was so ‘deep in the closet’ when he was in his mid-20s that he felt like they “had to hide the relationship because I was still hiding who I was to my friends, family, myself.
“A big reason why I’ve been like I never wanna talk about this is I wouldn’t handle people’s reactions.”
Phil said he “felt like I’d gone back in a mini closet in a way, which was weird. I knew this was all very sensitive, uncomfortable and scary for you. So I kind of just wanted to give you time to figure out what you wanted to do.”
Dan and Phil shared that they kept their relationship away from the public as they wanted to be known as a comedy duo rather than boyfriends.
“It hits different,” Dan said. “Who’s to say there’s anything wrong with having the cute gay couple show? It’s just that we wanted the focus to be on what we were doing.”
Phil continued: “Being funny, entertaining. Let’s be honest, there’s a lot of homophobia out there,” before Dan added: “There’s a lot of straight guys that would simply have never watched us on YouTube because it made them uncomfortable.”
They also wanted to avoid the ‘dystopian nightmare’ of ‘couple vlogging’.
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New Delhi, India – For the last month, Indian police have raided multiple markets and homes, arresting Muslim men in states governed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist party. Some of their homes have been bulldozed.
The genesis of their alleged crime is common: writing, “I Love Muhammad”, a reference to Prophet Muhammad, on posters, t-shirts, or in social media posts. The authorities say the expression is threatening “public order”.
So far, at least 22 cases have been registered against more than 2,500 Muslims. At least 40 people have been arrested across multiple states governed by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), according to the nonprofit Association for Protection of Civil Rights (APCR).
So, what is happening? How and where did this start? And is it illegal to say ‘I Love Muhammad’ in India?
What’s happening?
On September 4, Muslims living in Kanpur city of the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh were observing Eid al-Milad al-Nabi, the celebration of the birth of Prophet Muhammad, when a neighbourhood put up an illuminated board saying, “I love Muhammad”.
But the board, mimicking the popular “I Love New York” signage that has been copied all over the world, drew criticism from some local Hindus. Initially, their complaint alleged that the illuminated board was a new introduction to traditional festivities on the occasion, when Uttar Pradesh’s laws bar new additions to public religious celebrations. About 20 percent of Kanpur’s population is Muslim.
However, based on complaints, the police filed a case against two dozen people on much more serious charges: promoting enmity on the grounds of religion. The charge carries a punishment of up to five years in jail if the accused individual is convicted.
The Kanpur episode drew widespread criticism from Muslim political leaders, and protests against the police action spread to other states, including Telangana in southern India, Gujarat and Maharashtra in the west, and in Uttarakhand and Jammu and Kashmir in the north. The “I love Muhammad” hoardings and writings came up across the country – from people’s social media handles to t-shirts.
Nearly 270km (168 miles) away from Kanpur, in Uttar Pradesh’s Bareilly, a group of people participating in a demonstration called by a local imam against the Kanpur arrests, violently clashed with the police on September 26.
The police hit back with a crackdown, arresting 75 people, including the imam, Tauqeer Raza, his relatives and his aides. At least four buildings belonging to the accused individuals have been bulldozed by the local authorities.
In recent years, hundreds of Indian Muslims have lost their homes to such demolitions, which are often carried out without any notice issued by authorities, or any court order. India’s Supreme Court has observed that demolitions cannot be used as a form of extra-legal punishment, warning that state authorities must give prior notice before razing any property. Yet, on the ground, that order is often not followed, say activists.
Meanwhile, dozens of other Muslims have been arrested in different states – including some in Modi’s home state of Gujarat – for social media posts and videos carrying the “I love Muhammad” slogan.
A bulldozer demolishes the house of a Muslim man in Prayagraj, India, June 12, 2022. Authorities claim the house was illegally built [Ritesh Shukla/Reuters]
Is it illegal?
India’s constitution guarantees the freedom of religion and the right to express it. Article 25 protects every individual’s freedom to practise their religion. Citizens are also protected under Article 19(1)(a), which guarantees the right to freedom of speech and expression, unless it directly incites violence or hatred.
In the cases of people arrested as part of the “I Love Muhammad” crackdown, the police have mostly charged them under legal provisions that bar large gatherings aimed at committing “mischief”, or for acts that allegedly provoke religious tensions. However, these provisions have been applied against those arrested for social media posts, or wearing t-shirts with “I Love Muhammad” emblazoned on them.
Nadeem Khan, the national coordinator of APCR, the nonprofit that has been tracking these cases, has fought previous lawsuits against government officials for similarly targeting Muslims for social media expressions, or when their homes have been bulldozed.
Khan told Al Jazeera that authorities were carefully using legal provisions that focus not on the “I Love Muhammad” expression itself, but on alleged offences carried out by those who used the expression or protested against related police crackdowns.
“They know that there is no law that criminalises just the mere expression of ‘I Love Muhammad’,” Khan said.
Khan noted that across India, images of Hindu gods wielding their traditional weapons have long been commonplace. “These images are at every corner of the country; should it also offend or threaten all Muslims then?” he asked. “Everyone should understand that the government cannot criminalise a religion like this,” he added, referring to Islam.
Since 2014, when Modi took over the power in New Delhi, India has consistently slid in a range of international democratic indices.
Criminalising people’s right to freedom of expression and religious belief sets a deeply troubling precedent, said Aakar Patel, the chair of Amnesty International India’s board.
“Targeting people for slogans such as ‘I Love Muhammad’, which is peaceful and devoid of any incitement or threat, does not meet the threshold for criminal restriction under either Indian constitutional law or international human rights law,” Patel told Al Jazeera.
“Public order concerns must be addressed proportionately and cannot justify the blanket suppression of religious identity or expression,” he added.
“The role of the state is to safeguard rights equally, not to police expressions of belief,” said Amnesty’s Patel. “Upholding constitutional and international commitments is not optional; it is a legal obligation.”
People carrying “I Love Muhammad” posters after the Friday prayer) outside a Mosque near Mumbra railway Station on September 25, 2025 in Thane in the western Indian state of Maharashtra [Praful Gangurde/Hindustan Times via Getty Images]
Is there a pattern?
Critics say that the crackdown is only the latest instance of Indian Muslims facing marginalisation, violence or the targeted brunt of the law since Modi came to power in 2014.
In the past 11 years, the incidents of hate speech targeting religious minorities have skyrocketed. Documented instances of hate speech jumped from 668 in 2023 to 1,165 last year, a rise of about 74 percent. A significant majority of these incidents happened in BJP-governed states, or places where elections were upcoming.
Increasingly, local Hindu-Muslim disputes now rapidly transform into national issues, said Asim Ali, a political analyst based in Delhi.
“There is an entire ecosystem in place, from pliant media to social media organisation, to spread this hate rapidly,” said Ali. “And the law is read in such a way that any expression of religious identity, especially of Muslims, can be seen as inciting religious hatred,” he added.
After the “I Love Muhammad” episode in Kanpur, BJP leaders in Modi’s own constituency, Varanasi, put up posters saying, “I Love Bulldozer” at major intersections of the city, in a reference to the bulldozing of houses of the accused.
Protesters take part in a demonstration against India’s controversial amendments to citizenship rules in New Delhi on January, 29, 2020. The rules have widely been criticised as discriminatory against Muslim asylum seekers [Sajjad Hussein/AFP]
How does it affect young Muslims?
Rasheed Kidwai, a political analyst, said that the row over “I Love Muhammad” is “overtly very political, and not religious”.
And in India, there is growing frustration among Muslims, especially youth, where they see that one set of rules is not applied for all, when it comes to matters of cultural identity and eating habits, said Kidwai.
Several of the accused, or arrested, as part of the “I Love Muhammad” crackdown, include young adult Muslims, according to data from APCR, including those who were arrested for social media posts.
The crackdown on “I Love Muhammad” expression risks alienating young Muslim adults even more, said Ali. “In theory, everyone is already guilty and can face action for just being,” he told Al Jazeera.
The Bayern Munich star is likely to start England’s match in Riga against Latvia on Tuesday night where he will be hoping to add to his superb run of 18 goals from his past 10 matches.
A minor injury meant Kane was not involved in England’s 3-0 win over Wales on Thursday night with Aston Villa’s Ollie Watkins – the only other out-and-out striker in the squad – deputising.
But during the match Watkins collided with the post and has subsequently been ruled out of the Latvia fixture through injury.
England fans are once again going through who the striker options behind captain Kane and the answer does not appear obvious.
Remarkably, only seven English players you would class as an out-and-out striker have appeared in the Premier League this season – with Chelsea’s Liam Delap the only one of the seven under the age of 26.
The other six are Dominic Calvert-Lewin, Eddie Nketiah, Dominic Solanke, Watkins, Danny Welbeck and Callum Wilson.
England’s lack of options in the centre-forward position was even noted by Under-21s manager Lee Carsley, who said on Monday: “We need more centre forwards, we need more orthodox number nines which are capable of scoring goals. We really value that position.”
“I think it is in fashion to play your centre forwards out wide or to play them withdrawn. I think it is something that we need to be aware of, the poacher and the goalscorer and the player that plays on the shoulder and the focal point is something that I value.”
While England’s senior team’s boss Thomas Tuchel has a selection headache all over the field – due to an abundance of options – who he picks as Kane’s deputy for the World Cup is a different problem for a very different reason.
With England just a win away from qualifying for the summer’s World Cup in the United States, Canada and Mexico, the race to be Kane’s back-up is very much on.
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Why not Watkins?
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Let’s begin with Watkins who scored against Wales before he was replaced at half-time.
Watkins made his England debut in 2021 and netted six times in 20 appearances, including hitting the winner in England’s Euros 2024 semi-final win over the Netherlands.
The forward has struggled at club level this term, netting just once in 10 games.
Rashford’s resurgence
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Why not play Marcus Rashford through the middle?
OK, Rashford’s best position has been widely debated with the player himself saying he prefers playing out on the left.
But if England were looking for a Kane back-up and Rashford could not get into the first XI as a winger, he has all the qualities to be an excellent makeshift centre-forward.
So far this season, the Manchester United man, on loan at Barcelona, has three goals in 10 appearances, including a double against Newcastle in the Champions League.
Does Delap do it for you?
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Injury means Liam Delap remains a potential England star for the future rather than one for right now.
Delap scored 13 goals in 40 appearances for a relegated Ipswich Town side last term, earning him a £30m move to Chelsea.
But, three games into this season, the 22-year-old tore his hamstring against Fulham and is likely to be out until December, missing England’s next international camp.
Delap has yet to make his international debut but did help England to the European Under-19 Championship in 2022.
He could be a key player for England at next summer’s World Cup, but it seems very unlikely he will be in the next England camp in November.
Super sub Solanke?
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Tottenham’s record signing Solanke has yet to be called up to a Tuchel England squad and is another striker battling an injury.
The 28-year-old has managed just 31 minutes of Premier League football this season, and has not featured since the 2-0 victory over Manchester City on 23 August due to persistent ankle issues.
Solanke just missed out on a spot at Euro 2024 after scoring 21 goals in 42 games for Bournemouth, which earned him his £55m move to Spurs.
Turn to Toney?
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Could Ivan Toney return to the England fold?
The 29-year-old was used as an impact sub during Euro 2024, assisting Kane’s extra-time winner in the last 16 and scoring his spot-kick in the shootout in the quarter-finals.
Toney’s last match for England was a two-minute cameo in a 3-1 defeat by Senegal in June 2025, Tuchel’s only defeat as England boss.
Toney’s not currently playing in one of Europe’s traditional ‘big five leagues’, having left Brentford for Al-Ahli in summer 2024.
Who else could start up front?
Against Wales Newcastle winger Anthony Gordon moved to a central position in the second half in Watkins’ absence.
Gordon has three goals in seven games in all competitions for Newcastle this season.
In September, Tuchel said he had not spoken to striker Mason Greenwood and the player was “not in our thoughts”.
The 23-year-old, who has three goals in nine matches for Marseille this term, had started the process of changing his allegiance to Jamaica.
Major media organisations, including conservative outlets, say the Pentagon is placing unlawful restrictions on journalists and their ability to cover the US military under a new set of reporting guidelines.
The guidelines were first announced in a September memo from the Department of Defense, and said that reporters must sign an affidavit pledging they would not publish unauthorised material – including unclassified documents – to keep their Pentagon press credentials.
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Following pushback from the media, the wording was modified last week to say that reporters must simply “acknowledge” the new rules, but many organisations remain critical of the latest version of the rules.
Media companies, including public broadcaster NPR, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, CNN, and the Reuters and Associated Press news agencies, have all said they will not sign the rules in recent statements.
They also say the rules violate the US Constitution, which offers broad protections for freedom of speech and freedom of the press under the First Amendment. These rights were reaffirmed in a landmark 1971 Supreme Court case, New York Times Co v United States, that allowed US media to publish classified military documents during the Vietnam War.
“The proposed restrictions undercut First Amendment protections by placing unnecessary constraints on gathering and publishing information. We will continue to vigorously and fairly report on the policies and positions of the Pentagon and officials across the government,” said Matt Murray, executive editor of The Washington Post, in a statement on X.
Conservative news outlets The Washington Times and Newsmax, a cable news channel and competitor to Fox News, also said they would not sign the rules.
Newsmax cited “unnecessary and onerous” rules in a statement to Axios.
The Pentagon Press Association, an industry group representing defence reporters, said in a statement on Monday that the Pentagon has the right to make its own reporting rules, but they cannot set “unconstitutional policies as a precondition” to report there.
The association previously said the rules were “designed to stifle a free press”, and could open reporters up to legal prosecution.
The Pentagon reporting rules have been championed by US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, a former Fox News presenter who was sworn into his post in January under President Donald Trump.