8.8 magnitude quake latest: Volcano erupts in Russia, tsunami waves reach CaliforniaNew Foto - 8.8 magnitude quake latest: Volcano erupts in Russia, tsunami waves reach California

A massive magnitude 8.8 earthquake struck off Russia's Pacific coast, sparking tsunami warnings and evacuations of coastal areas in Hawaii and alerts along the U.S. West Coast. In Russia, a camera captured the eruption of the Klyuchevskaya Sopka volcano -- the highest mountain in the region -- sending hot lava down its western slope. In the U.S., President Donald Trump on social media urged people to "STAY STRONG AND STAY SAFE" and to monitor updates on thetsunami.gov online dashboard. After the initial tsunami waves had washed ashore in Hawaii and along the West Coast on Tuesday, officials with the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center reduced the alert level for the Hawaiian islands to a tsunami advisory. Gov. Josh Green told reporters early Wednesday that Hawaii had so far "not seen a wave of consequence, which is a great relief to us." He added, "It's kind of a blessing to not be reporting any damage," though warned there could yet be more tsunami waves. Tsunami waves were recorded in Monterey, California, as of 12:48 a.m., the National Weather Service said, and reached San Francisco at around 1:12 a.m. However, none had caused any significant issues. Coastal areas of Alaska, Oregon, Washington and California remained under National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration tsunami advisories as of Wednesday morning. A stretch of coastline north of Cape Mendocino, California, to the border with Oregon remained under a tsunami warning. A tsunami warning means a tsunami that could cause widespread, dangerous flooding and powerful currents is expected. A tsunami watch means a distant earthquake has occurred and a tsunami is possible. Hawaiian Airlines and Alaska Airlines said they would resume flights on Wednesday morning after a pause due to the tsunami warnings. The National Weather Service said just after 7 p.m. local time -- 1 a.m. ET -- that tsunami waves "were recently detected in Haleiwa." Just after 8:30 p.m. local time, the Hawaii County Civil Defense Agency said, "It's not over yet: Initial wave impacts from the leading edge of the tsunami measured several feet at some monitoring stations, but 'follow-up' waves over the next several hours often are LARGER. Don't return to evacuated areas until the Tsunami Warning is officially lifted." Waves of up to 4 feet were recorded off of Oahu, with no large waves reported near the Big Island. In Hawaii, the NWS called for "urgent action" to protect lives and property. Officials there urged residents to leave beaches and evacuate low-lying areas for higher ground or to take shelter on at least the fourth floor of a building. Sirens sounded across the Hawaii islands 10 minutes after each hour for the three hours leading up to the expected impact as a part of a statewide warning system. Less than an hour before the waves were expected to hit, Green said officials were braced for a "significant wave" measuring 6 feet total, from peak to trough. "That means a 3-foot wave riding on the top of the ocean," Green said. All shores of the island are at risk because tsunami waves wrap around islands, officials said. "The danger can continue for many hours after the initial wave as subsequent waves arrive. Tsunami heights cannot be predicted and the first wave may not be the largest," the NWS said in an alert. "It is not just a 3-foot wave, it is a forceful wall of water," the governor said, adding that it's possible such a wave could knock down utility poles and leave debris strewn in its wake. MORE: 7.3 magnitude earthquake rattles Alaskan island, prompting tsunami advisory In the wake of the quake, a tsunami warning was issued for part of Alaska's Aleutian Islands and Northern California, from Cape Mendocino -- located about 200 miles north of California -- to the Oregon border. The rest of the California coast, as well as Oregon and Washington, were under a tsunami advisory. The U.S. territories of Guam and American Samoa were also put under a tsunami advisory, according to USGS. The intense quake occurred about 85 miles off the east coast of Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula with a depth of nearly 12 miles, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. It wasone of the most powerful earthquakesever recorded by the agency, which upgraded its magnitude from initial reports of 8.0 and 8.7. Magnitude 6.3 and 6.9 aftershocks were also reported in the area, according to USGS. Damage was reported in Russia's far eastern Kamchatka region, where emergency services said 3,000 people were evacuated. All of northern Japan was placed under a tsunami warning, with more than 2 million people evacuated. Japan's meteorological agency warned that a tsunami about 3 feet high was expected to reach Hokkaido. The Japan Meteorological Agency later revised tsunami warnings to lower level advisories, but said people should still exercise caution. In Central and South America, tsunami warnings or watches were put in place by authorities in Chile, Peru, Ecuador, Costa Rica, Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador and Colombia. In the Pacific region, French Polynesia, Guam, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Fiji, Marshall Islands, Kiribati, New Caledonia, the Cook Islands, Nauru, Australia and the Philippines issued various levels of tsunami alerts, plus warnings of expected strong currents and possible flooding. MORE: 6.2 magnitude earthquake near Istanbul rattles Turkey New Zealanders were advised to avoid beaches due to expected strong currents and surges. U.S. territories in the Pacific including Johnston Atoll, Midway Island, Palmyra Island, Howland and Baker Islands, Jarvis Island and other nearby small islands were also put on alert for possible tsunami waves. China issued tsunami alerts for Shanghai and Zhejiang regions, though those were later lifted. ABC News' William Gretsky, Anthony Trotter, Mireya Villarreal, Tanya Stukalova, Clark Bentson and Jessica Gorman contributed to this report. This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

8.8 magnitude quake latest: Volcano erupts in Russia, tsunami waves reach California

8.8 magnitude quake latest: Volcano erupts in Russia, tsunami waves reach California A massive magnitude 8.8 earthquake struck off Russia...
They lost their son in the Reagan National Airport midair collision. Now, they're fighting for aviation safety in his honorNew Foto - They lost their son in the Reagan National Airport midair collision. Now, they're fighting for aviation safety in his honor

January 29 started with such promise. Sheri Lilley visited a wedding venue in Savannah, Georgia, where her stepson Sam and his fiancee Lydia Coles were looking to get married. The date was already set: October 4, 2025. Sheri thought to herself, "This is so fortunate. This place is perfect. It's going to work out great." Sam was a commercial airline pilot on a trip, so Sheri asked Lydia to talk with him about the venue when he got back to their home in Charlotte. But several hours later their lives were shattered when a passenger plane and a Black Hawk helicopter collided over the Potomac River. Texts and calls went unanswered. No word from Sam. Sam's father, Tim, who is also a pilot, joined Sheri and Lydia on a group phone call. Everyone was in tears. They knew, even without official confirmation, something horrible had happened. "I uttered the words to (Lydia), 'A plane has crashed in DC. We think it was Sam,'" Sheri said, still haunted by that night. Twenty-eight-year-old Sam Lilley died inJanuary's midair collision, the deadliest plane crash in the US in 24 years. He was the first officer flying the CRJ-700 for PSA Airways, a regional carrier for American Airlines. Sixty-four people were onboard, including Sam and Captain Jonathan Campos. Three soldiers onboard the Army helicopter were also killed. That cold, devastating night would change the Lilley's lives forever. When Tim and Sheri share their story, there are no longer many tears. They've shed so many in the six months since January 29 and dealt with the trauma as parents and a couple. It's an unthinkable situation that would test any marriage. The couple agrees they were able to get through it because of their faith. "It takes some of the sting of death away for me, because I know when I move on, I'm going to have a chance to interact with Sam and other family members that I've lost on the way," Tim said. The night of the crash Tim and his family went straight to Washington. He was no stranger to aviation or crash investigations. A former active-duty Army Black Hawk helicopter pilot himself, he flew in combat on four tours, conducted accident investigations while on active duty, and worked for almost 16 years as an emergency medical pilot. Now, he understood more about the investigation when it was his family involved. The first time Tim walked into a conference room where victim's families were meeting with the National Transportation Safety Board, the agency responsible for investigating his son's crash, he brought an iPad loaded with helicopter routes and airplane flight paths. Tim had a lot of questions. He wanted to know what happened to his son and why. The quest for answers was a coping mechanism, but it didn't stop the traumatizing breakdowns and cries. Tim didn't sleep for the first few nights after the accident. Despite being a former Army man, he was a father yearning for his son. "Within 12 hours of the accident, I had a very strong instinct of everything that had happened and everything that went wrong, and all those instincts turned out to be true," Tim said. "I was kind of the voice of the family members that understood the aviation side of this tragedy." Tim often talked to the media, with his wife by his side, speaking for the victims' families when so many of them could not fathom what had happened. Tim and Sheri recall those initial meetings with the NTSB as "terrible," but a time when families bonded over shared trauma. In a conference room, there were 200 or so people, including representatives from American Airlines, PSA Airways, the Federal Aviation Administration, NTSB and first responders. Conspicuously absent during those first few days was the Army, according to the Lilley's. "The NTSB - they are so professional," Sheri, who spent 15 years working at Gulfstream Aerospace, said. "They're outstanding at what they do. We have so much respect for them, but I think they probably could have briefed some of those other parties a little bit better about the fact that you are not talking to law enforcement, first responders. This is an audience of grieving and shocked family members." People left the room in horror when officials described "body parts spread all over the ice." Families passed notes to the front of the conference room telling officials that night to not refer to their loved ones as "remains." Shocked and trying to grieve, the Lilley's still pressed for answers. The couple wanted to make sure this never happened again. Without answers, the questions would keep them awake at night. But it was a different kind of answer that woke Tim up early one morning in February. About a week after the accident, he knew Sam wanted him to get a tattoo. Tim and Sheri never were tattoo people, they say, but Sam had six. The next day, Tim, Sheri and Lydia, all went to get tattoos in Sam's honor at Raven's Tattoo Shop in Bethesda, Maryland. For Tim, it was a plane with a ribbon across it, remembering the crash. Sheri and Lydia got lily flowers. It was clear the Lilley family wasn't going to be out of the spotlight for quite some time. Tim'sfirst national media interview was with NewsNationon January 31 with Chris Cuomo. In the video, his hands are crossed, he is fidgeting and fighting back tears, but he told his son's story. The day before, he spoke with a few local Atlanta TV stations. At that point, hundreds of media requests started pouring in and a friend of Sheri, Amy Camp, started acting as their press representative. About four days after the crash, Tim turned to Sheri and said, "I want to go to Capitol Hill. I need to speak to some senators." Camp was able to connect the couple with a lobbyist in Washington who ultimately opened doors for them to meet lawmakers. Just a few days after the crash, Tim and Sheri were in the offices of Senators Ted Cruz, Maria Cantwell, Roger Marshall and Tammy Duckworth, who was also an Army Black Hawk pilot and traded stories with Tim. The couple also met with Rep. Buddy Carter, from their home congressional district in Georgia, who had Sam's photograph enlarged and placed on an easel on the floor of the House of Representatives. "A touching moment," Sheri said. "All three of us caught our breath." On March 6, they spoke withTransportation Secretary Sean Duffy,who was sworn in by Judge Clarence Thomason the afternoon of January 28,just one day before the crash. The Lilley's were happy with the Secretary's response to the crash. They appreciated his effort to address what had happened to their son and were glad the tragedy brought heightened attention to aviation safety. "It kind of lit a fire," Tim said. The couple knew their voices could help keep anyone else from losing their child to a tragedy like this one. "We've got a little bit of a platform here, and this is a way that we can honor Sam," Sheri said. "It's also been very healing for us to feel like we may contribute to preventing disasters like this, saving other lives. That at least helped us make some sense of this whole tragedy." The NTSB investigation into the crash will continue for about another six months but in the meantime, the couple is going to push to make aviation safer in other ways. Fighting for funding for a new air traffic control system is one of their current goals. Nine days after the crash, Sheri and Tim finally went home to Savannah. American Airlines would later provide an aircraft for their son's final trip home. It was an Airbus plane, because the CRJ regional jet Sam flew wasn't large enough to carry a casket in the cargo hold, Tim said. When the plane landed Sam was honored with a water canon salute, and dozens of pilots, including other first officers and young aviators, stood in uniform to greet him. One stood out to Tim – she told him, as he shook her hand, she wouldn't be a pilot if it weren't for Sam. He was her flight instructor and took her on her first lesson. Sam's graveside service was private, but about 500 people attended his public memorial in person, and it was livestreamed. In mid-May, Tim and Sheri went back to the site of the crash to lay a wreath in the water. The Washington DC Harbor Patrol took the couple out in a boat to the exact spot where the plane went down. What they didn't know was they'd be with the first responders who pulled their son out of the water. "They volunteered to go with us because they felt like they already had a personal connection to us, and they kind of wanted to close that loop," Sheri said. "It was a very beautiful moment on the river with them." It's been six months since Sam died. Tim and Sheri have been to Capitol Hill six times since the crash for hearings and meetings with lawmakers and have reviewed legislation. Often, they are acknowledged in the audience at the start of committee hearings. They don't plan to stop. On Tuesday, they returned to Capitol Hill to help introducenew aviation safety legislation written by Sen. Cruzand supported by the FAA, NTSB, Department of Transportation and other lawmakers. They'll also be at all three days of NTSB investigative hearings at the end of July in Washington. While they want people to remember their son, they also want accountability. Up until this point, Tim and Sheri feel like they have heard from all parties involved, but not much from the Army. "I feel betrayed," Tim said. "I'll be honest with you." In July,family members of the victims wrote a letter to the Secretary of the Army calling out the Army's refusal to engage with them. On Tuesday, after a private update from the NTSB, the families met with the Army. "The most disappointing part from the Army's perspective is the reaction to it," Tim said. "They've taken the position to hide behind the NTSB and say, 'We can't really do anything or say anything until the final report.' That's just crazy." While a probable cause of the crash has yet to be determined by the NTSB, the couple does believe the crew aboard the Army Black Hawk took actions leading to the crash. "While I do say that they made some mistakes and caused the accident, I'm not going to hold that in my heart, I have to let that go," Tim said. The couple also reached out to the parents of crew chief Ryan O'Hara, who was in the helicopter on a training mission that fateful night. "Our hearts really broke for them," Sheri said, noting O'Hara was Sam's age and had a child. "They didn't get that support like we got. Social media rallied around us." To this day, Sheri said, six or seven of the victims of the crash haven't been publicly identified. There's a Flight 5342 Slack channel that shares birthdays and anniversaries of their loved ones. Sheri said May was a hard month full of celebrations that never happened. "As a pilot, you bear this responsibility to get people safely where they're supposed to go," Tim said. "They expected them to get there and they were almost there. It's just heartbreaking." October 4 will still be celebrated between Tim, Sheri, and Lydia. Plans haven't been finalized, but they know they'll take a trip somewhere to memorialize Sam and what would have been the day he and Lydia were married. Sam met Lydia at a church camp when they were 14 and were really close friends, but she was dating a friend of his at the time. Over the years, they reconnected. About two and a half years ago, on St. Patrick's Day, Sam "accidentally" introduced his parents to Lydia, after engaging in holiday "liquid celebrations," Sheri said laughing. Very quickly, Tim and Sheri saw exactly what their son saw in Lydia. "She has so much emotional maturity, she really brought out the best in him," Sheri said. "They brought out the best in each other." Last October, just east of Dublin, Ireland, Sam got down on one knee with an emerald ring in hand and asked Lydia to be his wife. In July, Tim and Sheri went to Ireland and visited where Sam proposed. That spot felt sacred to Sheri – where Sam felt one of the most joyful moments of his life. They also sat down at a seafood tapas restaurant Sam and Lydia had gone to after she said "yes." When their server put their food down, Sheri noticed an airplane tattoo on the server's arm. "My eyes just filled with tears," Sherri said. It's those little moments that let them know whether on Capitol Hill, at home in Savanah or deep in Ireland, Sam will be with them forever. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

They lost their son in the Reagan National Airport midair collision. Now, they’re fighting for aviation safety in his honor

They lost their son in the Reagan National Airport midair collision. Now, they're fighting for aviation safety in his honor January 29 s...
Texas floods: 911 audio shows confusion and distressNew Foto - Texas floods: 911 audio shows confusion and distress

Audio recordings obtained by ABC News reveal, for the first time, some of the desperate moments faced by Hill Country residents as floodwatersraged across Texason the Fourth of July. "We really need somebody," a caller told a dispatcher. "My boyfriend is currently stuck in a tree out on the current." Another resident said that a man was stuck "in the middle of the river." MORE: Kerr County officials waited 90 minutes to send emergency alert after requested, dispatch audio shows These calls are among the more than 100 dispatch audio and 911 recordings from a Texas county -- downriver from hard-hit Kerrville -- released by the City of Boerne in response to an ABC News public records request. ABC News has also requested 911 calls and dispatcher audio from Kerr County. The county has not responded to the request. Boerne handles emergency communications in Kendall County, which borders Kerr County and was also affected by thetragic flooding. Some of the recordings show apparent confusion and distress among some Kendall County residents about evacuation orders and road closures during the Fourth of July flooding. "Do I go in my pajamas? Do I take a shower first? How much time do I have?" one caller asked a dispatcher after being warned by someone patrolling her street to be prepared to evacuate. MORE: Texas flooding victims: From young campers to a dad saving his family, what we know about the lives lost Some callers said they had heard about evacuations from social media sites, like YouTube and Facebook, but weren't sure if the orders applied to their area. In one call, a woman with a baby told the 911 operator that her house was flooding. "We can't go anywhere," she said. More than 130 people died in the July 4 flooding -- with more than 100 of the deaths occurring in Kerr County. There were nine deaths reported in Kendall County. This month, officials said the number of people believed to be missingdropped from nearly 100 to three. The recordings also provide insight into Kendall County's police response and communications with other counties. "We have located a body," a Boerne Police Department dispatcher told a Kerr County law enforcement representative. "It's definitely going to be a drowned victim or a flood victim." MORE: Camp Mystic began evacuating 45 minutes after 'life-threatening flash flooding' alert: Spokesperson In another recording, a caller stated that earlier in the day, he had been just a foot away from a body on his land. The dispatcher told him that first responders were having trouble getting to his property since a road was impassable. In addition, the recordings show how emergency orders were passed from one local agency to another -- and sometimes appeared to meet resistance. In a call early on July 4, a Boerne dispatcher told another first responder that the Comfort Volunteer Fire Department in Kendall County had relayed a warning from Kerr County that the water was rising and would reach Boerne in four to six hours. "They're requesting -- no, they're stating -- that we need to close all crossings," the dispatcher said. "What? What crossings?" the other first responder on the line asked in an agitated tone. He sighed and added, "With what?" About 20 minutes later, a first responder asked Boerne Police: "Did y'all open up a call sheet for that b------- water flood stuff?" Then he clarified, "We're not on it, right?" Even as the initial rescue operations were unfolding, first responders and 911 dispatchers discussed problems with county emergency communications and response coordination. MORE: Number of missing in Texas floods drops from nearly 100 to 3 in hard-hit county In one call, a dispatcher noted that the phone line for the Guadalupe River State Park was down. In another, a first responder called 911 to raise concerns with the local emergency operations center call sheets. "We updated and gave direction a couple of times, and it still was done a different … way by every time somebody different got on there," the first responder said. He suggested merging call sheets to better organize and unify the emergency response, to which the dispatcher replied: "That's going to be a pain." "Maybe we can go through this in the future, how we can do it differently," the first responder said at the end of the call, and the dispatcher agreed. "We all have something to bring for the after-action."

Texas floods: 911 audio shows confusion and distress

Texas floods: 911 audio shows confusion and distress Audio recordings obtained by ABC News reveal, for the first time, some of the desperate...
CBS News Digital's WGA East Union Members Reach Deal on Three-Year Contract, One Week Before Skydance Is Set to Take OverNew Foto - CBS News Digital's WGA East Union Members Reach Deal on Three-Year Contract, One Week Before Skydance Is Set to Take Over

Writers Guild of America East members at CBS News Digital reached a deal with management on their first collective-bargaining agreement, coming after more than a year of negotiations. The pact comes just over a week beforeSkydance Media is set to officially close its deal to acquire CBS parent company Paramount Globalon Aug. 7. More from Variety Tanya Simon to Lead CBS News' '60 Minutes' as Executive Producer Skydance Promises FCC It Will Appoint CBS News Ombudsman to Review 'Complaints of Bias,' Says Paramount Has Eliminated DEI Dan Rather on Paramount's $16 Million Trump Settlement: 'It Was a Sell-Out to Extortion by the President' (EXCLUSIVE) The new three-year contract establishes minimum salaries and guaranteed pay raises for all job titles for CBS News Digital's union employees. The contract also addresses severance pay in the event of job cuts due to AI rollouts and the issue of worker safety on late-night/early-morning commutes by guaranteeing extra pay for working overnight shifts, long days and weeks and standby shifts, WGA East said Wednesday in announcing the deal. The contract was unanimously ratified by the 46-member bargaining unit. The WGA East's CBS News Digital union covers writers, reporters, editors and producers at CBS News' digital platforms including cbsnews.com, its mobile website, social media channels and the CBS News app. WGA East also reps staffers at CBS News and CBS 24/7 (formerly CBSN). Highlights from the CBS News Digital contract include: Either a 3% increase or a ratification bonus in year 1 of the contract; a guaranteed minimum 3.5% pay increase in year 2 and a 3% pay increase in year 3 of the contract; guaranteed minimum severance for layoffs (two weeks pay for every year of service with a minimum of eight weeks); and a path for promotion to senior reporter. The new contract also codifies existing remote-work policies for current employees through Dec. 31, 2027, including guaranteeing employees working on a hybrid basis will not be required to work more than two days in-office; extra pay for working for short turnaround times, standby assignments and upgraded work; the option to be paid out for earned comp time; and employment protections regarding generative AI, including 1.5 times severance if union members are laid off because of its implementation. "After organizing in 2024 with the goal of securing critical workplace protections, we're proud to have won a strong first contract for our members at CBS News Digital," Beth Godvik, WGA East VP of broadcast/cable/streaming news, said in a statement. "Establishing protections like guaranteed raises and pay that actually matches the job duties being performed will allow our members to build sustainable careers in News." WGA East, affiliated with the AFL-CIO, represents more than 7,500 members working in film, TV, news, podcasts and online media. In WGA East's broadcast/cable/streaming news sector, the union also reps workers at ABC News, Audacy (WCBS-AM, WBBM-AM and KNX-AM), 1010 WINS, Fox 5 WNYW-TV, MSNBC, NBC Promo Writers, Thirteen Productions (Thirteen/WNET) and WBBM/CBS 2 News. Best of Variety What's Coming to Disney+ in August 2025 What's Coming to Netflix in August 2025 New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week Sign up forVariety's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us onFacebook,Twitter, andInstagram.

CBS News Digital’s WGA East Union Members Reach Deal on Three-Year Contract, One Week Before Skydance Is Set to Take Over

CBS News Digital's WGA East Union Members Reach Deal on Three-Year Contract, One Week Before Skydance Is Set to Take Over Writers Guild ...
'Today' star Dylan Dreyer posts sweet family photo with husband after splitNew Foto - 'Today' star Dylan Dreyer posts sweet family photo with husband after split

There might be clear skies ahead for"Today"meteorologistDylan Dreyerand her husbandBrian Ficheraafter announcing their breakup. Thethird hour cohosttookto Instagram on July 29to share photos of the pair on a family vacation with their three sons – Calvin, Oliver and Rusty – after announcing the couple's separation earlier this month. "Find joy in things around you, take a deep breath, count to 10. You'll soon find you're living under sunny skies again," Dreyer captioned the post, using a quote from her 2021 children's book"Misty the Cloud: A Very Stormy Day."Dreyer's friend and third hour cohostAl Rokercommentedfrom his neck of the woods, writing "Wow!!!" on the photo. Dreyer, who is not on "Today" this week seemingly due to her Turks and Caicos vacation, has not publicly addressed the couple's split on the NBC morning franchise. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Dylan Dreyer (@dylandreyernbc) 'Today' meteorologist Dylan Dreyerannounces split from husband Brian Fichera Dreyer, 43, and Fichera, 38, tied the knot in 2012. Dreyer joined NBC News in September that year. TheNBC meteorologistannounced the couple's separationin a July 18 post on Instagram hoursafter the show ended, writing over a sunset photograph that "for many years, I have shared my family with you -- the highs and lows, the ups and downs, and all of the blessings and beautiful memories in between." "For that reason, I want to share with you that a few months ago, Brian and I made the decision to separate," Dreyer wrote. "We began as friends, and we will remain the closest of friends. Most importantly, we will continue to co-parent our three wonderful boys together with nothing but love and respect." While Fichera is mostly missing from her Instagram posts this year, Dreyer previously wrote "Happy Father's Day Bri!!"in a June 15 caption featuring a family selfie. It's been a cloudy year so farfor NBC's third hour "Today" family. Dreyer's third hour cohostSheinelle Jones' 45-year-old husbandUche Ojehdied from an aggressive form of brain cancer in May, and she has been off air the entire year. "With profound sadness, we share this morning that Uche Ojeh, the husband of our friend and 'Today' co-host Sheinelle Jones, has passed away after a courageous battle with an aggressive form of brain cancer calledglioblastoma," show anchorSavannah Guthrieshared on May 23. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Dylan Dreyer posts first family photo amid split

'Today' star Dylan Dreyer posts sweet family photo with husband after split

'Today' star Dylan Dreyer posts sweet family photo with husband after split There might be clear skies ahead for"Today"met...
January Jones Makes Rare Red Carpet Appearance with 13-Year-Old Son Xander — Who's Just as Tall as Her!New Foto - January Jones Makes Rare Red Carpet Appearance with 13-Year-Old Son Xander — Who's Just as Tall as Her!

Michael Tullberg/Getty January Jones made a rare public appearance with her son Xander Dane, 13, as the pair attended a party in Laguna Beach, Calif. over the weekend The teenager towered beside his mom as the pair posed proudly for photographers at the event Jones takes her first and only child's privacy seriously, and rarely posts about him on social media, aside from on his birthdays January Jonesis making a rare public appearance with her 13-year-old son Xander Dane. On Saturday, July 26, theMad Menactress, 47, and Xander posed for photographers as attended the 18th annual SeaChange Summer Party in Laguna Beach, Calif. Jones' son was almost the same height as his mom as she beamed proudly beside him at the bash, which was held at the Montage Laguna Beach to mark the ocean conservation nonprofit organization Oceana's 23rd birthday, per the actress'Instagram. The star dressed to impress for the outing, donning a chic black dress and strappy sandals, while her teen son wore a pair of white pants, a striped linen shirt and black adidas sneakers. Michael Tullberg/Getty Jones takes her first and only child's privacy seriously, and rarely posts about him on social media, aside from on his birthdays. On Sept. 13, 2024, she marked Xander reaching his teenage years bysharing a snap of himposing in front of a sunset on her Instagram Stories, writing, "Bday boy is a teen 😩." The year before that, Jones celebrated her son's birthday by sharing anInstagrampost showing him dancing outside of Nobu Malibu. "Happy Birthday to my child. So proud to be yours," she wrote in the caption, adding, "Couldn't love you more." Jones has never disclosed the identity of Xander's father, previously tellingThe New York Times, "That's my son's business. It's not the public's business." The actressspoke to PEOPLEabout having a "blast" with her little one when Xander was just 4 months old. "He's wonderful," she said at the time. "Every day he changes drastically — he's getting really fun and giggly now, and I can play with him." "He's not just a little bundle," Jones added. "He's taking shape, which is really amazing to watch." Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Five years later, Jones opened up toRedmagazineabout being a single parent. "Xander has a lot of bro time with the neighbor dads and my dad, who is super young," she told the magazine at the time, noting, "It's good to have strong women around a man to teach him to respect women." Jones explained, "He doesn't have a male person saying, 'Don't cry,' or 'You throw like a girl.' All those s----y things that dads accidentally do." Read the original article onPeople

January Jones Makes Rare Red Carpet Appearance with 13-Year-Old Son Xander — Who's Just as Tall as Her!

January Jones Makes Rare Red Carpet Appearance with 13-Year-Old Son Xander — Who's Just as Tall as Her! Michael Tullberg/Getty January J...

 

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