Trump Pushes Back as Ontario, ‘Caught Red-Handed,’ Suspends $54 Million Anti-Tariff Ad Campaign
Trump Pushes Back as Ontario, ‘Caught Red-Handed,’ Suspends $54 Million Anti-Tariff Ad Campaign: After Ontario Premier Doug Ford said he’d yank a taxpayer-funded, $75 million CAD anti-tariff spot—but only after it ran during the first two World Series games—President Trump scrapped trade talks with Canada and announced a 10% tariff increase. Trump blasted the ad as a “fraud,” citing the Reagan Foundation’s complaint that Ontario used selectively edited 1987 remarks without permission. Ford called the U.S. ad buy a success and vowed to let it air through Game 2 before pulling it. In other words: Ontario tried to lecture Washington on free trade during America’s pastime, and Washington responded by pitching tariffs high and inside.
Trump Imposes Tariff After Canada Airs Reagan Ad During World Series
Trump Imposes Tariff After Canada Airs Reagan Ad During World Series: President Donald Trump says he’ll slap a 10% tariff on Canadian goods after a World Series commercial featured Ronald Reagan—because nothing says free trade quite like punishing your neighbor for their TV programming. Trade policy by television spot; what could possibly go wrong?
Wardley stops Parker in major heavyweight upset
Wardley stops Parker in major heavyweight upset, as Fabio Wardley shocked London by halting Joseph Parker in the 11th round—flipping pre-fight expectations like a ringside program and rattling the heavyweight pecking order.
How Pizza Hut Fell Out of Favor Nationwide
How Pizza Hut Fell Out of Favor Nationwide: fewer diners are “hitting the Hut,” and the chain is shutting half its UK restaurants—a lukewarm slice of reality for a brand whose dine-in nostalgia is cooling faster than a forgotten personal pan.
Forget the eight-hour sleep rule: Health tips from the BBC twin doctors
Forget the eight-hour sleep rule: Health tips from the BBC twin doctors becomes less a bedtime sermon and more a sanity check, as Drs. Xand and Chris van Tulleken say you don’t need a stopwatch to be healthy. After 30 episodes, they’ve distilled four small, powerful habits—practical tweaks you can stick to, not another wellness cult of 5 a.m. martyrdom. Translation: ditch the perfectionism, keep what works, and save the guilt for people selling miracle cures.
When to Turn On the Heating, According to Readers
When to Turn On the Heating, According to Readers: turns out there are two tribes—calendar loyalists who won’t budge before a set date, and temperature realists who fire it up the instant the mercury dips below their personal threshold. Pick your ritual: circle a day, or watch the thermometer—and prepare for the annual indoor brinkmanship.
Supermarkets warn tax increases could raise food prices
Supermarkets warn tax increases could raise food prices, as bosses of the UK’s largest chains urge the chancellor to drop plans for higher levies—insisting any extra costs will be passed straight to shoppers, because nothing says “everyday low prices” like a fiscal hostage note to the Treasury.
Trump imposes 10% tariff on Canadian imports amid Reagan ad dispute
Trump imposes 10% tariff on Canadian imports amid Reagan ad dispute, slapping an extra levy on top of existing rates after a World Series ad lobbying against tariffs spliced Ronald Reagan’s 1987 “free and fair trade” lines—an homage that reportedly infuriated him. Because nothing says devotion to Reaganomics like penalizing Canada for quoting Reagan during America’s pastime.