Soap Star Tributes Pour in for Tristan Rogers After Death at 79New Foto - Soap Star Tributes Pour in for Tristan Rogers After Death at 79

Soap Star Tributes Pour in for Tristan Rogers After Death at 79originally appeared onParade. Tributes from co-stars and friends are pouring in forTristan Rogers, theGeneral Hospitallegend whose portrayal of Robert Scorpio made him one of daytime TV's most beloved figures. Tristan Rogers originated the role of WSB super spy and hero Robert Scorpio on General Hospital on December 2, 1980. He immediately captured the attention of fans and what was supposed to be a very short-term role turned into 45 years (on and off) of one of the show's most beloved characters. He was best friends with Luke Spencer (Anthony Geary), father to fan favorite daughters Robin (Kimberly McCullough) & Sasha (Sofia Mattsson), and part of not only one, but two very popular supercouples, Robert & Anna (Finola Hughes) and Robert & Holly (Emma Samms). Robert Scorpio, and his portrayer Tristan Rogers, was everything fans could want in a daytime hero- handsome, witty, smart, and he had a very sexy Australian accent to boot. Fans were devastated when his death from lung cancer was announced. Tributes poured in on every social media site, but some of the most touching came from those who knew Rogers as more than the character he played on TV. They knew him as a friend and a co-worker, and the following tributes show how truly beloved he was both onscreen and off. John J York,who plays Mac Scorpio, Robert's younger brother, shared a candid photo of the two of them and posted, "…frozen…timeless…legend…privileged…husband…father…grandfather…we will all see you again." Kristina Wagnerwho plays Robert's sister-in-law Felicia Scorpio, posted a throwback soap opera magazine cover with Tristan surrounded by beautiful co-stars and said, "Tristan, You were a real Ladykiller! Rest in peace, my friend. We'll miss you." Jon Lindstrom,who plays Kevin Collins, worked with Rogers for over 40 years and posted, "I know the sadness I feel at this news is shared by so many of you.#TristanRogerswas one of the coolest, funniest people I ever met. Whenever we were together, which wasn't nearly often enough, we never missed a chance to try to crack the other one up. I wish I'd had more of those chances. R.I.P.#FlightOfAngels#Scorpio@GeneralHospital#GH." 🎬SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox🎬 Mary Beth Evans,who played Katherine Bell on GH, also starred with Rogers onThe Bay. "Heartbroken to hear of the passing of Tristan Rogers. OnThe Bay, I had the privilege of playing opposite him — and what a gift that was. Tristan brought such charm, wit and depth to every scene, and it was an honor to share that screen time with him. Sending love and condolences to his family, friends and so many fans who adored him. He will be deeply missed." Chris L. McKenna, who plays WSB boss, Jack Brennan, paid tribute to Roger's onscreen adventures as a WSB agent, "We fly the#WSBflags at half mast today. The great@tristanrogersaka Robert Scorpio has passed on. All my love to Tristan's family and loved ones. He will be missed and never forgotten.#GH#RIPTristanRogers." Kathleen Gati'scharacter, Liesl Obrecht, was a Scorpio nemesis, but her tribute to Rogers paints a very different picture of their offscreen relationship: "There truly are no words, but I will try. I loved working with Tristan, doing@GeneralHospitalevents with him, having him as a kind friend. Deepest condolences to his family, friends, colleagues and fans. He will truly be missed but never forgotten.#GHGodspeed@tristanrogers." Tristan Rogers was 79 when hepassed awayfrom lung cancer. He is survived by his wife of 30 years,Teresa Parkerson, two children, and a grandchild. Soap Star Tributes Pour in for Tristan Rogers After Death at 79first appeared on Parade on Aug 16, 2025 This story was originally reported byParadeon Aug 16, 2025, where it first appeared.

Soap Star Tributes Pour in for Tristan Rogers After Death at 79

Soap Star Tributes Pour in for Tristan Rogers After Death at 79 Soap Star Tributes Pour in for Tristan Rogers After Death at 79originally ap...
9 Biggest Bombshells from "Fit for TV: The Reality of The Biggest Loser"

Netflix The Biggest Loserfaced plenty of controversy over its 18 seasons on air. Five years after the series ended for good, the darker side of the show that averaged 8 million viewers at its peak is coming to light with a Netflix documentary calledFit for TV: The Reality of The Biggest Loser, which began streaming on Aug. 15. The Biggest Loser, which debuted on NBC on Oct. 19, 2004, pitted overweight contestants against each other in a race to lose the most weight relative to their initial body weight over a 30-week period. Now, the new three-episode docuseries covers not only the show's public missteps, including a 2016 bombshell medical study that claimedcontestants permanently had damaged their metabolic ratesand trainerJillian Michaels' polarizing decision to give her contestants caffeine supplements, but new behind-the-scenes details about some of the shockingly unhealthy decisions made by its cast, crew and showrunners duringThe Biggest Loser's 18-season run. NBC did not immediately respond to PEOPLE's request for comment. Keep reading to find out what new bombshells were revealed about the series upon the documentary's release. 01 of 09 Netflix Before filming began, contestants were isolated in their hotel rooms, where they were presented with what season 8 contestant Tracey Yukich called "a very thick" contract. "I remember ...  reading it and thinking, 'I am not qualified to read this.' " When Yukich requested an attorney, she claimed that producers hinted that her spot on the show could be in jeopardy if she took too long to sign it. "[Producers said] 'Sure, we can get you an attorney.  ... But I got 10 other people waiting for your spot ... So sign it and move on.' " Season 8 winner Danny Cahill also recalled being "worried" about the contract's terms, which he says outlined the possibility of death, but ultimately chose to compete. "What do you do? Not sign it and walk away?" he asked. 02 of 09 Netflix Suzanne Mendonca, who appeared on season 2 ofThe Biggest Loser, said that producers discouraged her from getting healthy ahead of the show. After telling casting directors that she had started exercising and was trying to eat a more heart-healthy diet, Mendonca said she was met with a negative response. "They would say, 'No, we don't want you to do that. We want you to gain more weight,' " she recalled. "I wanted to be on the show so badly that I did gain extra weight." Mendonca continued her extreme diet and exercise routine after going home. "I was out there pounding the pavement, running 10 miles, training eight hours a day. It was just all-consuming." According to the former police officer, being on the show ultimately resulted in a loss of her identity. "I didn't know who I was, financially, emotionally, mentally, physically," she said. "I came back with a severe eating disorder. I stopped eating." 03 of 09 Netflix The Biggest Loser's medical advisor, Dr. Robert "H" Huizenga, and several contestants on the show claim that trainersBob Harperand Michaels advised trainees to eat an unsafe amount of calories against Huizenga's medical advice. PEOPLE has reached out to representatives for both Harper and Michaels for comment. "We're eating 800 calories a day," Mendonca recalled. Said Cahill: "My calorie count was lower than I think it should've been." He added, "I was eating 800 calories and burning 6,000 to 8,000 a day. When I lowered the calories, I lost more." TheU.S. Dietary Guidelines for Americansfor 2020 to 2025 recommend that adult females consume between 1,600 and 2,400 calories per day, while males are recommended to consume between 2,000 and 3,000. 04 of 09 Dave Bjerke/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Season 7 contestant Joelle Gwynn said contestants were burning more calories "than maybe even the military did in a day." "The first week, we needed to burn a minimum of 6,000 calories a day. Minimum," Gwynn said. (A 2023U.S. Army articlestated that soldiers burn up to 6,000 calories per day.) To hit those requirements, Cahill said contestants worked out at the gym or outside for "five, six, seven, sometimes even eight hours a day." Season 3 contestant Jen Kerns pointed out that their fitness routines were unsustainable. "I don't think it's realistic for anyone to maintain that level of activity unless they're a professional athlete," she said. 05 of 09 Netflix Though Cahill lost 239 lbs. over a period of six months, three weeks and five days during his time on the show, he has gained almost all of the weight back. "I thought I had it all figured out and then I didn't have it all figured out," he said. As of 2018, Cahill was "just a few pounds shy" of the 430 lbs. he weighed when he first appeared on the show. "The shame that you feel being a failure after being a success, it's a heavy load to bear," he said. Season 1 winnerRyan Benson had a similar experience. "It's no secret that I gained back all the weight," he told PEOPLE in 2024. "Within three days after the show, I had gained 25 to 30 lbs. back just in water weight alone." 06 of 09 Netflix Dr. Huizenga was not comfortable with some of the show's extremes and wasn't always consulted when he felt he should have been. "As the show really got popular, some things were being done that I really ... took issue with," he said in the documentary. "There were times, unfortunately, when challenges were done that I didn't see or hear about." One such challenge was a one-mile run in extreme heat that left Yukich hospitalized with rhabdomyolysis, a rare condition in which damaged muscle tissue releases fiber contents into the bloodstream, after she collapsed on the beach fromheat stroke. "They didn't alert me of the challenge," Dr. Huizenga said. Dr. Huizenga also disagreed with the amount of calories contestants were being told to consume by Harper and Michaels, which went against his own recommendations of at least 1,200 calories for women and 1,500 to 2,000 for men per day. "There is no question that I was giving a very clear-cut recommendation to all the contestants," he said. Despite demands to talk to trainers, Huizenga said his advice was often ignored. "Maybe some things changed, not as much as I would like," he said. "Jillian never really showed any interest in my advice." Michaels, who declined to be interviewed for the documentary, left the show after season 15 due to what she called "fundamental differences [withLoser's producers]." In addition to being portrayed with what she called a "warped negative perception" in the wake of her season 15 admission to giving contestants caffeine pills, Michaels told PEOPLE that the shocking weight loss of season 15 winner Rachel Frederickson caused her to question her role. "I had to take a hard look at my work," she said. "I came to the conclusion that moving forward, I need to be able to have an impact on the outcome of what I do." 07 of 09 Gregg DeGuire/WireImage Though Michaels and Harper had a friendly relationship on-screen ("We were really close on television," Harper said), they aren't close in real life. When Harper had amassive heart attackin February 2017 that left him "dead on the gym floor for nine minutes" and unconscious for two days, Michaels didn't reach out to him directly. Said Harper: "That to me, spoke volumes." Michaels did speak toE! Newsfollowing her costar's health scare, telling the outlet that he had a family history of heart issues. "I was there when he lost his mother to a heart attack—with him the night that she died," she said. She also suggested his diet and workout routine may have played a contributing role. "I do also think that …  you're in the middle of a CrossFit workout and you're eating Paleo, it's not going to help." Explained Michaels: "It's not a great combination ... if you have heart disease in your family." 08 of 09 Trae Patton/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Despite being a massive ratings hit, contestants were not given support following their return home from the series. Cahill said that he reached out to show producers to suggest an aftercare program that would give former contestants access to psychological help, recovery or continued exercise programs, but didn't receive a positive response. "No one was interested in doing anything like that," he said. Gwynn, who sustained a back injury during a season 7 workout that required physical therapy, also reached out to producers to no avail. "They didn't care," she said. Show creator David Broome said that an aftercare program was not possible due to financial restraints. "We would have loved to have aftercare, but we're a television show ... without endless pots of money." He added: "NBC wasn't going to give it to us." 09 of 09 Trae Patton/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Trainers Harper and Michaels were put off by the drastic weight loss that season 15 winner Rachel Frederickson achieved, having dropped 155 lbs. from a weight of 260 to 105 lbs. "Rachel came out, and she had lost so much weight, it was … shocking," Harper said. "Jillian and I were just in horror." Michaels also spoke out about Frederickson's transformation in aThomas DeLauer podcast, "She was unhealthily thin, to say the least," she said. "Personally, I wouldn't have allowed it to happen.' " Frederickson's trainer, Dolvett Quince, spoke out in the wake of backlash, writing in a Facebook message, "Biggest Loseris a journey which has its ups and downs. Please try not to look at one slice of Rachel's journey and come to broad conclusions. Rachel's health is and always has been my main concern and her journey to good health has not yet ended!" The season 15 winner was happy with her results, however, telling PEOPLE at the time, "I just love myself and I am embracing it." Read the original article onPeople

9 Biggest Bombshells from “Fit for TV: The Reality of The Biggest Loser”

9 Biggest Bombshells from "Fit for TV: The Reality of The Biggest Loser" Netflix The Biggest Loserfaced plenty of controversy over...
Tristan Rogers," General Hospital" Star, Dies at 79

ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty; Rick Rowell/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Tristan Rogers has died at the age of 79. The Australian actor was best known for playing Robert Scorpio onGeneral Hospital.He first joined the soap operain 1980. His longtime manager, Meryl Soodak, confirmed his death toABC 7 Eyewitness Newson Friday, Aug. 15. It was revealed in July that Rogers has been diagnosed with cancer. Soodak told the outlet that Rogers'General Hospitalrole "meant everything to him." "He loved being Scorpio and he created that role from nothing," Soodak continued. "He was supposed to work a day and he ended up making it into something huge. He was just a genuinely loyal, kind human being and he loved his family." PEOPLE has reached out to Rogers' manager and theGeneral Hospitalteam for comment. ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Rogers was born in Melbourne in 1946. He left school in 1964 and eventually started a rock band with his friends. At 21, he turned to modeling and commercials to make money. Then he decided to become an actor — with no experience. "As far as I was concerned, it was a way to make a bit of money. That's all," he toldSoap.comin 2022. Many of his earliest roles came on Australian television. He appeared on the Aussie soapsBellbird, Number 96in 1974 andThe Boxin 1975. He also appeared in a few British films, including 1972'sFour Dimensions of Greta. Rogers moved to the United States in 1980 and shortly after was cast as Robert Scorpio onGeneral Hospital. Robert was a spy for the fictional World Security Bureau and later served as the police commissioner and district attorney of Port Charles. The character was good friends with Luke Spencer (played by Anthony Geary) and, in 1981, was part ofLuke's wedding to Laura(Genie Francis) as Luke's best man. The wedding brought in 30 million viewers and remains the highest-rated soap opera episode in U.S. TV history. ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty "I didn't know at the time the importance ofGeneral Hospital; it was just one more job for me," he toldSoap Opera Digestin 2020 about his casting. "But it was really exciting, to be fresh off the boat and walk into this role. Of course, after that, everywhere I went, people would go, 'You're onGeneral Hospital? That's the hottest thing in the country! You're working with Luke and Laura? Oh, my God!'. . . . I got caught up in theGeneral Hospitaltidal wave and just got swept away by it." Robert eventually became a fan-favorite character and was one of the show's leading men. He was killed off in 1992 and Rogers departed the series. But — as often happens on soaps — Robert returned, alive, in 2006, when the show brought back many popular characters from the '80s. "I think this character will follow me to my grave," he toldThe New York Timesat the time. ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Rogers continued to make sporadic appearances onGeneral Hospitalthroughout the next decade, and since 2019 had appeared as a recurring character. "I've seen this show at its best and at something less than that," he told PEOPLE in 2023 forthe show's 60th anniversary. In 2008, Rogers took the character to theGeneral Hospitalspin-offGeneral Hospital: Night Shift, where Robert learned he had colon cancer and reconnected with his family. "This [storyline] was about the deconstruction of an iconic character done in a way it hadn't been done before," he toldEntertainment Weeklyat the time. "Characters like mine don't get colon cancer. They get shot, they get beaten up, they get hit by trains. They don't get colon cancer. It's not very glamorous. I thought it was a hell of a challenge, more than the usual fare that you're given going into this: Go through the investigation, find the bad guys, have a gunfight, get a schmooze….This was a whole different animal." Kevin Winter/Getty He added, "So I thought, maybe along the way, if somebody watches this and sees what we're doing, they might go out and get tested. And if we inspired that, then it's a bonus." Reflecting on the dominance of soap operas — and their decline — he said in an interview for the 2011 bookThe Survival of Soap Opera, "This is not a genre that will be around in another 50 years… in many respects, it isn't necessary. They have made their mark, and almost every type of medium owes something to the way the soaps have been put together, whether they want to admit it or not." Albert L. Ortega/Getty Rogers' other roles included an arc onThe Young and the Restlessfrom 2010 to 2011, as well as the TV seriesFast TrackandBabylon 5. He also did voice over work, most notably in the 1990 Disney filmThe Rescuers Down Under, and won a Daytime Emmy for his performance in the 2019–2020 Prime Video seriesStudio City. https://people-app.onelink.me/HNIa/kz7l4cuf Rogers married Barbra Meale in 1974, and they divorced in 1984. He briefly dated hisGeneral Hospitalcostar (and on-screen love interest) Emma Samms, but they split in 1985 when she left the show. He married Teresa Parkerson in 1995. They share two children, Sara and Cale. Rogers is survived by his wife and children. Read the original article onPeople

Tristan Rogers,“ General Hospital” Star, Dies at 79

Tristan Rogers," General Hospital" Star, Dies at 79 ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty; Rick Rowell...
Climber survives 2 days behind California waterfall before he's rescued by helicopterNew Foto - Climber survives 2 days behind California waterfall before he's rescued by helicopter

A rock climber survived two days perched behind a roaring California waterfall before he was rescued earlier this week, authorities said. The climber, identified as Ryan Wardwell, 46, of Long Beach, California, was reported missing by family on Monday. He failed to return to his vehicle Sunday night following an attempt to rappel a waterfall in the Kern River's Seven Teacups area, the Tulare County Sheriff's Office said in a statement on Wednesday. By the time first responders reached the area in Sequoia National Forest on Monday, it was getting dark, and they were only able to find a possible location for the climber using infrared technology, the sheriff's office said. On Tuesday morning, the office's swift-water dive and search-and-rescue teams used a drone that located Wardwell in roughly the same location, in an apparent cavity behind the waterfall. "Wardwell was found alive and responsive," the sheriff's office said. "He told Deputies he had come off his rappel lines and got trapped behind the waterfall because of the extreme hydraulics of the river." He was checked out at the scene and released to family on Tuesday following his rescue, the office said. Deputy Craig Douglas made the rescue with the help of colleagues and a crew on board a California Highway Patrol helicopter, it said. "They were able to lower me perfectly right next to him," Douglas said in an interview on Friday. "I was able to get him in a recovery suit, hook him up, get him back into the helicopter." Wardwell likely suffered from hypothermia, the deputy said. "He was pretty much just extremely cold," Douglas said. Temperatures were in the low 60searly Tuesday morning in Ponderosa, a community about 6 miles north of Seven Teacups. The Kern River's North Fork can also run cold, as it's generally fed by the Sierra Nevada's winter snowpack. Authorities said Wardwell had rappelled the feature previously, but they warned it can be a danger regardless. Sheriff's Capt. Kevin Kemmerling toldNBC affiliate KSEE of Fresnothat Wardwell traveled to the waterfall with a group of friends and fellow climbers who decided to retreat after determining rappelling would be too dangerous. He carried on alone, the captain told the station. He noted thatthree people drownedat roughly the same location in August 2024. The sheriff's office said visitors to the river should "always be aware of their environment and capabilities, especially when navigating white water."

Climber survives 2 days behind California waterfall before he's rescued by helicopter

Climber survives 2 days behind California waterfall before he's rescued by helicopter A rock climber survived two days perched behind a ...
Military airstrike on gem mining town kills at least 21 in MyanmarNew Foto - Military airstrike on gem mining town kills at least 21 in Myanmar

BANGKOK (AP) — An airstrike by Myanmar's military on the town of Mogok, the center of the Southeast Asian country's lucrative gem-mining industry, has killed at least 21 people including a pregnant woman, an armed opposition group, local residents and Myanmar's online media said Saturday. The incident was the latest in a series of frequent and deadly militaryairstrikes, often causing civilian casualties, that have intensified in a bid to reclaim territory from resistance groups amid the ongoingcivil warthat erupted after the army seized power in February 2021. The attack occurred Thursday at 8:30 p.m. in Shwegu ward in Mogok township, about 115 kilometers (70 miles) northeast of Mandalay, the country's second-largest city, said Lway Yay Oo, a spokesperson for the the Ta'ang National Liberation Army. The TNLA is one of the powerful ethnic militias fighting against the army near the Chinese border. "About 21 civilians were killed. Seven others were injured. Homes and Buddhist monastery buildings were also damaged," Lway Yay Oo said. Mogok, the ruby-mining center in the upper Mandalay region, was seized in July 2024 by the TNLA, a member of an alliance of ethnic militias that seized a large swath of territory in northeastern Myanmar in an offensive that began in late 2023. The group's statement released Friday night on its Telegram social media channel said 16 women were among the victims killed in the airstrike that appeared to target a Buddhist monastery in Mogok's Shwegu ward. It said 15 houses were also damaged when a jet fighter dropped a bomb. Two Mogok residents told The Associated Press on Saturday that the death toll had risen to nearly 30, though the exact casualties could not be independently confirmed. The residents, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were afraid of being arrested by the military, said the death toll was high because one of the bombed houses had been hosting visitors to the pregnant woman. Independent online media, including Myanmar Now and Democratic Voice of Burma, released pictures and videos said to be of debris in the aftermath of the airstrike. The military did not comment on the incident in Mogok. In the past, the army has said it only attacks legitimate targets of war, accusing the resistance forces of being terrorists. Myanmar has been in turmoil since the army seized power from the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi in February 2021. After peaceful demonstrations were put down with lethal force, many opponents of military rule took up arms, and large parts of the country are now embroiled in conflict. The military government has stepped up airstrikes against the armed pro-democracy People's Defense Force and ethnic militias that have been fighting for greater autonomy for decades. The resistance forces have no defense against air attacks. The TNLA's statement said that another 17 people including two Buddhist monks had been killed and 20 others were injured in the first two weeks of August by airstrikes in areas controlled by the group. About 16 people, mostly truck drivers, were killed in airstrikes last Monday on a convoy of trucks that were parked on the road due to heavy fighting near the town of Sagaing in central Myanmar, according to independent Myanmar media reports. Opponents and independent analysts estimate the army now controls less than half the country while maintaining a tenacious grip on much of central Myanmar, including the capital, Naypyidaw. It has accelerated counter-offensives ahead of theelectionit has promised to hold at the end of this year in order to retake areas controlled by opposition forces. Critics say the elections won't be democratic because there is no free media and most leaders of Suu Kyi's party have been arrested. The plan is widely seen as an attempt to legitimize and maintain the military's rule. Several opposition groups have said they would seek to derail the election.

Military airstrike on gem mining town kills at least 21 in Myanmar

Military airstrike on gem mining town kills at least 21 in Myanmar BANGKOK (AP) — An airstrike by Myanmar's military on the town of Mogo...
Native Ukrainian left speechless after 'no deal' summitNew Foto - Native Ukrainian left speechless after 'no deal' summit

Ukrainian-American Volodymyr Valchuk said he already had low expectations for thehigh-stakes summitbetweenPresident Donald TrumpandRussian leader Vladimir Putin. But after listening to the world leaders meet in person for the first time in six years to end Russia's war in Ukraine, Valchuk admitted this was a head-shaker. "I'm speechless. I have nothing to say. I really didn't expect much, but this is even worse than I thought," Valchuk, 46, told USA TODAY. "That's what I'm feeling right now." Valchuk, a respiratory therapist who lives in San Rafael, California, said he's "very disappointed" when Trump said "no deal" was reached to endthe three-year Ukraine war. "At least they could've given us a little idea what Putin said the agreement was," Valchuk said about the summit held in Anchorage, Alaska. "Trump said he will talk to NATO and (Ukrainian President Volodymyr) Zelenskyy, but I really don't know what that means? "Yeah, I'm disappointed," said Valchuk, who came from Ukraine to the US to attend college in 1996. "Very disappointed." Valchuk, who gained his American citizenship in 2004, said he doesn't know what will happen next for his homeland. "I just hope it's not going to cost Ukraine some of its land and more lives," Valchuk said. "I hope." Live updates:Trump, Putin meet in Alaska summit For two Ukrainian-born teenagers, Taisiia Grygorova and Sofiia Kopytko, who are spending this summer performing across the East Coast in a play titled"Voices from Ukraine: Stories of War and Hope,"they told USA TODAY that no matter what outcome comes from the summit in Anchorage, Alaska, the war can't end soon enough. Grygorova, 19, who lives in Kharkiv, a city near the Ukrainian-Russian border, said despite the constant rocket attacks, drones, air raids, and explosions, her thoughts are always with the people suffering through the continuous combat. Grygorova, who's studying journalism at Warsaw International University, said she regularly returns to Kharkiv to visit her parents and four younger siblings, despite the dangers. "And every time I go there I prepare myself, 'Taia, you're going for two weeks, and it's a 100% chance that you will get under a rocket attack at least four times during this time, but you'll be fine, your younger brothers and sisters live in this nightmare every day, you can handle two weeks,'" Grygorova said. Grygorova said her youngest brother, a six-year-old, is supposed to start school this year, but she wonders how with the threat of bombings. "You will ask, 'What risk?' Well, there is always a possibility that one of those bombs, which are flying over the city, will hit a school where kids are studying," Grygorova said. "My brother is going to study underground, with no sunlight, with no possibility to play outside, to run freely over a football pitch or hear the birds singing." Grygorova said her mother keeps all of the family documents near the front door, just in case they need to leave their house forever. "That's how the war looks for me and my family," Grygorova said. Sofiia Kopytko, 18, from Chernihiv, Ukraine, said the war has not only been about territory, the lack of resources and weapons, but also the doctors who work in critical conditions, and families like Grygorova's who live in occupied territories and face death daily as a result of random air strikes. "Human lives are not statistics, but the most valuable thing that each of us has, and we must protect it," Kopytko said. "After all, you never know what tomorrow holds and whether it will come at all." Grygorova said she desperately wants the war to end so that people can live their lives in peace. "I hope that when the war is over, I'll be able to visit my family without fear," Grygorova said. "I hope that my city will be renovated. I hope I'll be able to help in the rebuilding of my country, where I want my future kids to grow up." Kopytko said her wishes are quite simple. "That there will be no more news of death and destruction, just simple happiness," Kopytko said. "Of course, I can talk about building a career and a family, but for me, these are the components of the happiness I strive for. First and foremost, free people in a free country. In a free Ukraine." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Native Ukrainian 'speechless' and disappointed after 'no deal' summit

Native Ukrainian left speechless after ‘no deal’ summit

Native Ukrainian left speechless after 'no deal' summit Ukrainian-American Volodymyr Valchuk said he already had low expectations fo...

 

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