Mar. 16, 2025
Jessica Simpson‘s daughters have one thing to say: Aloha!
The singer, 39, shared anadorable photoofMaxwell “Maxi” Drew, 7, andBirdie Mae, whom she and husbandEric Johnsonwelcomed in March of this year, on Wednesday. The couple also share sonAce Knute, 6.
In the snap, Maxi holds her little sister up for the camera, and both sport Hawaiian-print outfits. Little Birdie also wears an adorable straw hat, while Maxi’s longblonde hairis done in a side braid (it looks like thepink she added to her endsearlier this month may have washed out).
Mar. 16, 2025
Photo: Antonis AchilleosAlon Shaya’s 25-minute pimiento cheese dip makes for the “perfect party snack for watching sports games or getting the night started,” says the chef-owner atSabain New Orleans andSaftain Denver.To pair with it, Shaya uses ghee, or clarified butter, to turn up the flavor of a simple cracker. “Ghee can be cooked for longer and at a higher temperature than butter so it will impart the same rich flavor without scorching.
Mar. 16, 2025
Alonzo Brooks.Photo: FBI
A new autopsy has ruled themysterious 2004 death of 23-year-old Alonzo Brooksto be a homicide less than a year after federal authorities exhumed his body to investigate the case as a possible hate crime.
In a statement Monday, the Federal Bureau of Investigations said that the autopsy focused on injuries to Brooks' body that the coroner ruled were not consistent with standard decomposition.
Brooks' body was found in a creek in La Cygne, Kan.
Mar. 16, 2025
A person with alopecia.Photo: gettyA new drug to help alopecia sufferers regrow their hair has been highly successful in clinical trials, with 30 to 40% of patients seeing nearly full regrowth,the company said.The drug, from Concert Pharmaceuticals in Lexington, Mass., is intended to help people with alopecia areata. The skin disease, which affects more than 6 million Americans, is the second most common cause of hair loss and can leave people with patchy bald spots or the complete loss of all hair.
Mar. 16, 2025
As three devastating California wildfires raged across the state, Zuma Beach became a temporary refuge for many horses, llamas and alpacas.The makeshift evacuation center on the beach became the designated area for keeping large animals safe, afterover a quarter of a million peoplewho were in harm’s way were forced to flee their properties.Evacuation proved to be incredibly difficult forBig Heart Ranch, which homes rescued horses, donkey, deer, alpaca, chickens, ducks and rabbits.