Mar. 16, 2025
Photo: Jonah Rodriguez/888 Productions
Amazing Raceseason 32 winnersWill JardellandJames Wallingtonhave tied the knot!
The couple wed Friday, Dec. 3, PEOPLE exclusively reveals — exactly three years to the day after Jardell proposed to Wallington on screen when they won the CBS competition series.
“Now that the moment is over, we can breathe, we can celebrate, we wipe all the joyful tears and start our new lives as husbands!” the couple tells PEOPLE.
Mar. 16, 2025
More than 30 years later,Amazing Storiesis back!
The trailer opens with a conversation between two women. The first asks, “Just how many of these things have you dealt with?” leading the second to respond, “More than most people would feel comfortable knowing about.”
“And how many times have you failed?” the first follows up — to which the other replies with almost the same answer: “More times than most people would feel comfortable knowing about.
Mar. 16, 2025
Photo: WJZ/CBS
Ten-year-old Sara Hinesley has never been one to back down from a challenge.
“The things I can’t do, I try to figure out the ways I can do it and try my best to make it work,” thethird-grader told WJZ. “I just try my hardest and put my mind to it and this is what happens.”
Hinesley, of Maryland, was born with no hands. And, recently, she won the Nicholas Maxim Award in the 2019 Zaner-Bloser National Handwriting Contest.
Mar. 16, 2025
Colleen Weimer
Born following a tough pregnancy, little “Sully Bear" underwent major heart surgery for a rare cardiac birth defect and spent 158 days in the NICU at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. She finally made it home in September.
From the beginning, Weimer, 37, said she knew there was a “possibility” that she could havepreeclampsia —a serious blood pressure condition during pregnancy, per the Cleveland Clinic — which she experienced while pregnant with 7-year-old daughter Quinn, who was born at 28 weeks.
Mar. 16, 2025
Dorothy Morgan.
Days before the 20th anniversary of 9/11, two additional victims of the terrorist attacks have been identified.
Dorothy Morgan and a man whose name has been withheld per his family’s request are the 1,646th and 1,647th people to be identified, the New York City Chief Medical Examiner’s office announced on Tuesday.
“Twenty years ago, we made a promise to the families of World Trade Center victims to do whatever it takes for as long as it takes to identify their loved ones, and with these two new identifications, we continue to fulfill that sacred obligation,” Dr.