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Ford recalls more than 254,000 vehicles due to software issue

Ford Motor Co. is recalling 254,640 Lincoln and Explorer vehicles due to a software issue that may disrupt the rearview camera and other features intended to enhance safety while driving.

CBS News

The recall,announcedlast week by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), affects some 2022 to 2025 Lincoln Navigator vehicles, 2024 to 2025 Lincoln Nautilus vehicles, 2025 Lincoln Aviator vehicles and 2025 Explorer vehicles.

NHTSA said image processing software in the vehicles could unexpectedly reset, leading to a loss of the rearview camera image and advanced driver assistance (ADAS) features, which include pre-collision assist, lane-keeping assist and blind-spot monitoring. This can reduce the driver's ability to detect hazards and increase the risk of a crash, according to the recall report.

In the event of a reset, NHTSA said the vehicles' display panel may show warnings such as "Front Camera Fault," "Pre-Collision Assist Not Available" or "Lane-Keeping System Off." The blind-spot indicators may also illuminate, the agency said.

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Impacted drivers can bring their vehicles to a dealership for a free update. Ford will also be issuing an over-the-air (OTA) update free of charge, NHTSA said.

The car maker is planning to mail notification letters to affected owners on March 30. The recall number is 26V165.

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Ford recalls more than 254,000 vehicles due to software issue

Ford Motor Co. is recalling 254,640 Lincoln and Explorer vehicles due to a software issue that may disrupt the rearvie...
Supreme Court appears likely to set limits on mail-in ballots

The Supreme Court's conservative majority on Monday appeared sympathetic to arguments by the Republican National Committee seeking tolimit the counting of mail-in ballotsthat arrive after Election Day, even if they were postmarked on or before.

ABC News

Many justices voiced concerns about a Mississippi law being challenged by the RNC for allowing tabulation of absentee ballots that arrive as late as five days after polls close. "Both sides agree there needs to be a final decision by the voter and receipt [of the ballot] -- by somebody -- by Election Day," said Justice Neil Gorsuch. "I think the disagreement is receipt by whom."

For more than a century, Congress has established the Tuesday after the first Monday in November as the day for election of members of the House, Senate, and presidential electors, in specified years.

Republicans argue that the term "election" means both "ballot submission and receipt" by state election officials. Mississippi and several voter advocacy groups defending the state law insist "election" means when voters make their "choice" by marking and submitting their ballots to a mailbox, drop box, or polling place.

"I think if you were looking at the text in isolation -- day for the election -- your first instinct might be in-person voting on that day, is what that text literally meant," posited Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who sounded skeptical of the state law.

Twenty-nine states plus D.C. have measures providing a grace period for voters, including military service members overseas, who rely on the Postal Service or other commercial letter carriers,according tothe National Conference of State Legislatures.

Justice Samuel Alito suggested that allowing each state to set its own policy for late -arriving ballots has created challenges for administering a national election. "We don't have Election Day anymore. We have election month or we have election months," he said, skeptically.

Justice Amy Coney Barrett raised the potentially thorny prospect of states allowing voters to recall -- or, change -- their ballots once mailed. "Would that be illegal?" she asked Mississippi Solicitor General Scott Stewart. He said he was unaware of any instance of that happening.

The court's three liberal justices were largely united in support of states' ability to develop their own voting guidelines, pushing back on claims by lawyers for the RNC and Trump administration, which has advocated for "getting rid of mail-in ballots" altogether.

Gary Hershorn/ABC News - PHOTO: A mail-in ballot issued by Hudson County, New Jersey, for the 2024 U.S. general election is seen on September 22, 2024, in Hoboken, New Jersey.

"The Constitution vests the issue of elections in states, unless superseded by Congress," said Justice Sonia Sotomayor. "If there is a policy he people who should decide this issue is not the courts."

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson noted that, despite decades of precedent of states counting some timely-cast but late-arriving ballots, Congress has never sought to override the laws. "The idea of votes being cast and counted after an election is not new," she said.

Justice Elena Kagan warned that the Republicans' rationale for eliminating some mail-in ballots could also implicate early voting. "How are you not taking issue with early voting?" she asked RNC attorney Paul Clement. "You say casting and receipt [of ballots] has to be on Election Day."

"These things have to be consummated by Election Day," Clement replied.

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"Once we go down this road," said Kagan, "where are we going to end up?"

Most Americans, 58%, support allowing any voter to cast a ballot by mail, according to a Pew Research Center survey late last year. But there is sharp division among parties, with 83% of Democrats and Democratic-leaning voters favoring mail-voting with 68% of Republicans and Republican-leaning voters opposed.

In March 2025, President Donald Trump signed anexecutive orderthat attempted to cut federal election funding to states that have mail ballot receipt grace periods, but it has largely been blocked by federal courts for now.

Trump has also been pushing Republicans in Congress to approve the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE America) Act, which would -- in part -- outlaw voting by mail for anyone without a legitimate excuse, such as military service, illness, or disability, making it impossible to vote in person.

In a nod to Trump and fraud concerns raised by many conservatives, Justice Kavanaugh suggested late-arriving ballots might "open up a risk of what might destabilize election results" — namely, a swing in election outcome as tardy votes are tabulated.

"Is that a real concern?" Kavanaugh asked Stewart. "Does that factor into how we think about how to resolve the scant text and the maybe conflicting or 21 evolving history here?"

"I certainly respect the perception," replied Stewart, a Republican. "I think one thing notable in this case and I think helpful is that there has not been much of a showing about actual fraud from post-Election Day ballot receipt itself."

Hundreds of thousands of mail-in ballots in the 2024 general election arrived after Election Day but were still legally counted that year across 22 states and territories with a post-election grace period,according tothe U.S. Election Assistance Commission.

Data on which party benefitted more from those ballots is not clear, neither is the impact of any possible changes to mail ballot rules following a Court decision.

Voting rights advocates warn that an abrupt change in policy could lead to widespread rejection of ballots that were properly cast by well-intended voters but experienced unintended delivery delays by the Postal Service or other circumstances.

Republicans insist there is ample time to educate the public on timely submission of mail-in ballots ahead of the November vote and that limiting late-arriving ballots could bolster election integrity.

A decision from the high court is expected by the end of June.

Editor's note: This story has been updated to reflect that 29 states plus the District of Columbia have mail-in ballot grace periods for voters.

Supreme Court appears likely to set limits on mail-in ballots

The Supreme Court's conservative majority on Monday appeared sympathetic to arguments by the Republican National Comm...
Valerie Bertinelli Talks About Her Latest 'Sex Dream' with Drew Barrymore

Valerie Bertinelli and Drew Barrymore talked about their recent experiences with erotic dreams

People Credit: CBS

NEED TO KNOW

  • Bertinelli shared that it was "not too long ago" that she had a sex dream

  • The star recently talked with PEOPLE about a moment that lit her "pilot light" and made her happy to know she's not "dead inside"

Valerie Bertinelliis speaking on intimate dreams.

On the Tuesday, March 24 episode ofThe Drew Barrymore Show, Bertinelli andDrew Barrymorediscussed their recent (or not-so-recent, for one) sex dreams.

After introducing the topic with a 2025TIMEarticle about what sex dreams actually mean, Barrymore asked Bertinelli, who is a lifestyle expert in the "Drew Crew," when she last had a sex dream.

"Not too long ago," Bertinelli said, admitting to Barrymore's "Drew's News" co-host Ross Matthews that the dream was about someone she knows.

Bertinelli asked Barrymore whether she's had a sex dream where she climaxed.

"Thank you for going there," Matthews said.

"I mean when I was younger, yes, absolutely," Barrymore replied.

"That's the good one," Bertinelli said.

Barrymore said she doesn't think that experience is "exclusive to men," and Bertinelli agreed.

Bertinelli and Barrymore on The Drew Barrymore ShowCredit: CBS

Matthews joked about how Bertinelli can sit in front of "so many people, and like, climax." Barrymore spit out her drink, and Bertinelli laughed with her hands clasped in front of her face.

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Barrymore also shared that it has been "years" since her last erotic dream.

"This brain ain't workin'," she said. "I don't know what is going on. I feel like I used to have really sexy dreams and wake up really turned on, and it's just, it's gone, it's not there."

"Even the men in your dreams are ghosting you," Matthews joked. "100%," Barrymore replied.

Bertinelli told PEOPLE recently that being single is somethingshe and Barrymore discuss frequently.

"We're very happy being single," Bertinelli shared. She added that she hasn't been on many dates as she's learning how to "differentiate" between "butterflies" and anxiety when dating.

"I'm not ruling [dating] out," she said. "There's so many great men out there. I love men but I don't want them to make me crazy and I don't want to make them crazy."

She shared in her book a moment when her "pilot light" was lit while watching Metallica's James Hetfield on stage.

"It was so nice to know that I'm not dead inside," she said, laughing. She continued that after her second divorce from Tom Vitale in 2022, she was content with being a "cat lady" and watching her son,Wolfgang Van Halen, tour as a musician.

"But when I got my little pilot light lit by watching someone on stage be magnetic, I was like 'Wait, did I just say someone was hot?,'" she said.

"Even though I don't want to date this person, I liked that I found somebody attractive because it meant I wasn't dead inside," she said. "Love when it's right can be magical. And one day, I might get that. But I also have to be okay with not getting it."

Read the original article onPeople

Valerie Bertinelli Talks About Her Latest 'Sex Dream' with Drew Barrymore

Valerie Bertinelli and Drew Barrymore talked about their recent experiences with erotic dreams NEED TO KNOW Be...
What is ICE doing inside Atlanta airport? Passengers aren't really sure

ATLANTA — Monday marked the first day travelers were met with Immigration and Customs Enforcement officersinside airportsacross the country, includingHartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport.

USA TODAY

Lines for securityMonday morning topped four hours long, with some passengers reporting waits even longer, forcing airport officials to stop keeping an official wait time count visible inside the airport and on the webite. Instead, a blanket four-hour warning was given to all travelers hoping to catch their flight.

The idea whenPresident Trumpdeployed ICE and DHS to our nation's airports was that the immigration officers would be able to assist TSA officers with getting through security faster. This would in turn cut down the wait time as officers continue to call out of work in their second month of working without pay.

But as you walked around the airport Monday, most of the ICE officers you could see were standing around in groups, sitting in the small food court grabbing a bite to eat or a coffee break, or even watching airport staff struggle to direct lines without stepping in.

Here's what we saw.

What was ICE doing inside the airport?

Between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. Monday, USA TODAY did not observe ICE officers or DHS personnel interacting with passengers inside the airport. Officers were instead spotted standing on the second floor of the baggage claim area observing the winding lines from above, standing in small groups near the entrance of the terminals chatting among themselves, or even sitting in the small food court area outside the TSA checkpoint having coffee, eating or looking at their phones.

In one instance outside the food court's Auntie Anne's restaurant, a group of three officers with "Department of Homeland Security Police" on their vests crossed an open area behind a group of passengers that were being moved to another line.

When the passengers reached a member of airport staff, the staff member said they couldn't join the line there, and instead had to go around another restaurant to the back of the line. The passengers pushed back and said they had been told by another staff member to enter here. While the conversation became slightly heated, the DHS officers stood along the railing of the sitting area and watched the interaction. They did not engage in the conversation, step in to redirect the passengers or back up the airport staff member.

Three DHS officers watched as a conversation became heated between passengers and a member of airport staff in Atlanta, but did not intervene to aid the staff member or redirect the passengers, to our observation.

Another group of officers spotted near the entrance of the north terminal early in the morning were seen moving to new spots to stand every hour or so, again not interacting with passengers. The group talked among themselves, spoke with officers from other agencies as they passed and with airport staff standing near the check-in desks.

Over the course of five hours, USA TODAY observed an ICE agent interacting with a passenger just one time. A woman asked an agent if she was standing in the general boarding line or the TSA PreCheck line, to which the officer answered "this is general boarding."

USA TODAY was not able to observe the actual TSA checkpoint, but photos and videos posted by passengers on social media show ICE officers standing behind the TSA officers while they checked identification before sending travelers through the security screening.

This matches what sources told Reuters on Monday.

"For now, ICE personnel will not bedeployed in areas behind airport security checkpointsbecause they lack the specific clearance needed," ‌the outlet reported.

This means that while they may have a very visual presence in the terminals outside TSA in Atlanta, you're unlikely to see ICE officers sifting through your bag or giving pat downs as nearly 40% of TSA officers call out of their shifts.

Whether their role will evolve as the shutdown continues remains unclear.

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What do travelers think of ICE in Atlanta airport?

"Yeah, we saw them everywhere. They're outside the doors, they just walk past, a few of them, and I don't know exactly what they're doing. Hopefully they're helping," Saad Hassan, a 32-year-old from Virginia who was traveling with his band, said. When asked if he had seen ICE officers interacting with any passengers or helping the lines, Hassan said "no, nothing. Not that we saw."

Other passengers echoed what USA TODAY observed inside the airport.

When asked if he had seen ICE in the airport, Maddox Gates said yes, but that he hasn't seen them interact with anyone other than fellow ICE officers. Gates is originally from Atlanta but now lives in New York City and was traveling home with his debate team.

"It feels kind of like a photo op, I don't know, posturing," he said. "Now they want to come, mask off, when they're kind of seen in the caricature of like, being helpful, but when they want to do snatch-and-grabs, like they are doing atSFO (San Francisco's airport), I saw families that had already made it through security were harassed and detained, and so it's kind of like we want to see their face when they're the good guys, but not during the rest of all the structural violence they're imposing."

ICE officers were unmasked as they walked around Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on Monday, March 23, 2026.

Gates wasn't the only one that noticed ICE officers were not wearing masks as they wandered the airport.

"No I haven't seen any snatch-and-grabs so far, but at least their faces are not covered. Be a man. Uncover your face," Ronnie Lee Taylor said while waiting in the general boarding line. When asked whether ICE officers should uncover their faces during other operations, Taylor answered "I believe so. Yes, coming from an extensive military background, I think they should uncover their faces."

In apost on Truth Socialon Monday, President Trump said he would "greatly appreciate" if officers chose not to wear masks while they were deployed in U.S. airports.

However, he said he was a "BIG proponent" of the officers wearing masks during their other duties, according to the post.

Is ICE helping or 'just in the way'?

Border CzarTom Homantold SiriusXM on Monday that heexpected protestsfrom the ICE deployments in airports, and there has been pushback already not just from passengers but from representatives of TSA.

"We're going to first send out to the biggest airports with the biggest wait lines. I don't want to give the specific airports right now because what's going to happen is we have massive protestors out there and we want to start this out low-key and without fanfare," Homan said. "So they're deploying this morning across the country to the biggest airports with the biggest wait lines."

Aaron Barker, president of the TSA union representing workers in Atlanta (AFGE Local 554), however called the deployment a "recipe for disaster" in an interview with CNN.

"You know, we have extensive training, as you just stated. And it takes months to be able to — and even after months of training, there's still things that you encounter that you don't see every day or situations that arise that don't come up every day. So, to just throw them on the checkpoint like that, I think that that is a recipe for disaster. It's going to create chaos," Barker said. "In Atlanta, there are people already out there directing the lines and directing passengers to navigate the airport. I don't think that that helps. I think that would probably put more passengers on the edge, just from my experience and talking with family and friends, I don't think that's a welcomed thing there by the traveling public."

This was the case for other TSA representatives, including Pascual Contreras who works as the union assistant director in Phoenix, Arizona.

"They've been standing around outside the whole time," Contreras said. "So I would hate to call out another agency, but what I'm getting from some of the officers is that they (ICE) is just in the way."

Irene Wright is the Atlanta Connect reporter with USA Today's Deep South Connect team. Find her on X @IreneEWright or email her at ismith@usatodayco.com.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:What are ICE agents doing inside ATL airport? Passengers are not sure

What is ICE doing inside Atlanta airport? Passengers aren't really sure

ATLANTA — Monday marked the first day travelers were met with Immigration and Customs Enforcement officersinside airports...
Lady Marina Windsor Shares Photos from Her Bachelorette Weekend

Lady Marina Windsor appears to be gearing up for her wedding after sharing photos from her bachelorette weekend. Thegranddaughter of the Duke of Kentpostedimages and videos to Instagramfrom her "hen do," as a bachelorette party is referred to in the UK, on the Isle of Sheppey, off the northern coast of Kent and approximately 40 miles from London.

Town & Country

Describing her guests as her "magical hens" and writing that her heart was "bursting with love and gratitude," Lady Marina, 33, could be seen in a simple white silk dress with a veil in one photo, and a white scarf top with a boho maxi skirt in others. Her younger sister, Lady Amelia Windsor, 30, was among those present.

Lady Marina got engaged to Nico Macauley, 32, an account executive at the American cybersecurity firm Zscaler, last year. The coupleannounced their engagementon June 8, a date that carried particular meaning as it was the wedding anniversary of her grandparents, the Duke and Duchess of Kent.

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Celebrity Sightings At Wimbledon 2022 - Day 5

The daughter ofGeorge Windsor, Earl of St. Andrewsand historian Dr. Sylvana Tomaseli, Lady Marina is notably not in the line of succession, having been removed after converting to Catholicism in 2008. (Before that, she was 25th in line.) Her younger sister,Lady Amelia Windsor, is still in the line of succession.

Her grandfather,Prince Edward, Duke of Kent, is a cousin of the late Queen Elizabeth. He married Katharine Worsley in 1961.The Duchess of Kentdied last September, and both Lady Amelia and Lady Marina wereat the funeral at Westminster Cathedral. "I love my grandpa. He's an amazing man and he's definitely inspired me," Lady Marinasaid in an interview in 2024.

The Duchess Of Kent's Coffin Is Taken To Westminster Cathedral

Her grandmother, the Duchess of Kent, was also Catholic, andher funeral was the first Catholic serviceto be held for a member of the royal family in modern British history.

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Bridgertonis gearing up to tell its first major queer love story acrossseason 5.

Entertainment Weekly Masali Baduza and Hannah Dodd in 'Bridgerton' season 5Credit: Netflix

TheShonda Rhimes-created Netflix drama just unveiled its first teaser for season 5, and fans can expect the romantic hit to center on queer characters as leads in the upcoming narrative.

In the new clip (below), actresses Hannah Dodd (Francesca) and Masali Baduza (Michaela) step out onto a balcony, looking ahead as their hands graze each other's.

The clip teases a queer storyline that will take center stage onBridgertonseason 5, which Netflix also announced is currently filming.

"Do not fret, dearest readers, for a certain countess shall find love again," the company's release reads. "BridgertonSeason 5 is now in production."

The release also revealed light plot details for the upcoming season.

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Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with ourEW Dispatch newsletter.

"The fifth season ofBridgertonspotlights introverted middle daughter Francesca (Hannah Dodd). Two years after losing her beloved husband John, Fran decides to reenter the marriage mart for practical reasons," the official synopsis reads. "But when John's cousin Michaela (Masali Baduza) returns to London to tend to the Kilmartin estate, Fran's complicated feelings will have her questioning whether to stick to her pragmatic intentions or pursue her inner passions."

Fran will first navigate the new season as "reserved and contained," having "long felt out of place in the world." Michaela, however, will stir up "new feelings inside her," leading Fran to "make discoveries about herself that could change everything."

Dodd first joined the show's cast as Fran on season 3, though her character was originally played by actress Ruby Stokes from seasons 1-2, ahead of the star's departure from the project. Baduza appeared in a smaller capacity before joining the main cast for season 4.

Hannah Dodd on 'Bridgerton'Credit: Liam Daniel/Netflix

In addition toBridgerton's new season,Rhimes also recently spoke about which characterfrom the series she's considering spinning off into a separate project, following the success of 2023'sQueen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story.

"That's an area that we're excited about and know that that could be really rich and really mined well," Rhimes said on a recent episode of Craig Melvin'sGlass Half Fullpodcast."I've always said that I thought that if we were gonna do something like that, Violet would be a great person to tell the story about, theBridgertonmom," Rhimes added, with a clear nod toRuth Gemmell's character. "So yeah, that's a possibility."

The streaming network announced that the season will contain eight episodes, with a release date set for an undisclosed time in the future.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

“Bridgerton” season 5 to follow show's first major queer love story

Bridgertonis gearing up to tell its first major queer love story acrossseason 5. TheShonda Rhimes-created Netf...
Man allegedly beaten up by Alan Ritchson says

The man involved in analleged physical altercationwithReacherstarAlan Ritchsonis speaking out to share his version of events.

Entertainment Weekly Alan Ritchson in New York City in 2024Credit: Craig Barritt/Getty

According to Ronnie Taylor, who lives in the Brentwood suburb of Nashville, it all "started on Saturday morning" when he "heard this [incessant] revving" throughout the neighborhood according to an interview Taylorgave TMZon Monday.

The outlet firstreleased videoof the altercation on Sunday, hours after Taylor alleged it took place. "I'm an experienced motorcycle rider. I've been riding for most of my life," he explained.

Alan Ritchson on 'Reacher'Credit: Amazon

Taylor claimed that after Ritchson's first pass through the neighborhood on Saturday, he approached him from "quite a ways away" and asked, "'Can you slow it down please?'"

He claimed he "didn't know who it was" riding motorbikes with two younger individuals that TMZ reported are Ritchson's sons.

Reiterating what he shared in his initial account of events, Taylor claimed that the altercation ensued the following day "when I was cleaning my bike outside my house."

"He rode past once, twice. On the second time I walked outside in front of him and said, 'You've got to stop,'" he said. In the confrontation that ensued, Taylor claimed that the actor "kicked the crap out of me."

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TMZ quotes sources close to Ritchson claim that Taylor "initiated and instigated" the entire altercation. Taylor originally admitted to the outlet that he also flashed an obscene hand gesture at Ritchson, who returned it in kind.

Brentwood Police Captain Steve PepintoldThe Hollywood Reporteron Monday that an investigation has been opened into the incident, but no arrests have been made.

Entertainment Weeklydid not immediately hear back from Taylor, or from representatives from Ritchson or Brentwood P.D.

The video of the altercation shows the man alleged to be Ritchson repeatedly punching Taylor while he huddles on the ground with his hands raised up in defense over his head. A green motorcycle lays on its side in the suburban street, which Ritchson picks up and rides onto the lawn opposite Taylor's. Finally he rides off with the two younger individuals as Taylor gesticulates toward him, eventually walking back up his driveway.

Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with ourEW Dispatch newsletter.

"I don't really wish the guy any malice or ill will, but we just don't need people riding through neighborhoods like this," Taylor shared. "I just decided I'm going to take a stand because someone has to, or it's going to end up way worse."

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Man allegedly beaten up by Alan Ritchson says “Reacher” star 'kicked the crap out of me'

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