New Photo - Bayern Munich midfielder Pavlovic fractures eye socket ahead of the new season

Bayern Munich midfielder Pavlovic fractures eye socket ahead of the new season August 2, 2025 at 6:49 PM Bayern Munich's Aleksandar Pavlovic heads the ball during the Club World Cup quarterfinal soccer match between PSG and Bayern Munich in Atlanta, Saturday, July 5, 2025.

- - Bayern Munich midfielder Pavlovic fractures eye socket ahead of the new season

August 2, 2025 at 6:49 PM

Bayern Munich's Aleksandar Pavlovic heads the ball during the Club World Cup quarterfinal soccer match between PSG and Bayern Munich in Atlanta, Saturday, July 5, 2025. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart) ()

MUNICH (AP) — Bayern Munich midfielder Aleksandar Pavlovic's bad luck with injuries and illness seems to have struck again.

The German champion said Saturday that Pavlovic has undergone surgery after fracturing his eye socket in a team training session Friday.

Bayern didn't say exactly how the injury happened or how long Pavlovic would be out, just that he "is facing a spell on the sidelines."

The 21-year-old Pavlovic is considered one of world soccer's best young defensive midfielders but has already racked up a list of absences for sometimes-unusual injuries and illness.

Pavlovic struggled with tonsillitis in his breakthrough 2023-24 season and was ruled out of Germany's team for Euro 2024 with illness. Last season, he had spells out with a collarbone fracture and glandular fever.

Bayern's season starts Aug. 16 against Stuttgart in the German Super Cup.

___

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Bayern Munich midfielder Pavlovic fractures eye socket ahead of the new season

Bayern Munich midfielder Pavlovic fractures eye socket ahead of the new season August 2, 2025 at 6:49 PM Bayern Mu...
New Photo - Yankees' trade deadline additions implode in loss to Marlins: Highlights

Yankees' trade deadline additions implode in loss to Marlins: Highlights James H. Williams, USA TODAY August 2, 2025 at 1:24 PM The New York Yankees blew multiple leads before losing to the Miami Marlins 1312 at LoanDepot Park on Friday night.

- - Yankees' trade deadline additions implode in loss to Marlins: Highlights

James H. Williams, USA TODAY August 2, 2025 at 1:24 PM

The New York Yankees blew multiple leads before losing to the Miami Marlins 13-12 at LoanDepot Park on Friday night.

While the Yankees outhit the Marlins 15-12, Miami did enough to come out on top with a win that featured a six-run seventh inning. New York blew leads of 6-0, 9-4 and 12-10.

The Yankees' bullpen struggled, including three new pitchers acquired before the trade deadline on Thursday.

Jake Bird, David Bednar and Camilo Doval all made their debut for New York on Friday. Their outings were not what fans were hoping for.

This will go down as one of the worst Yankee losses ever pic.twitter.com/RfLsJ9MQEv

— Talkin' Yanks (@TalkinYanks) August 2, 2025

The three pitchers were brought in by New York in an attempt to overhaul the bullpen.

Bird allowed three hits, including a home run, and four earned runs in just 0.1 inning of work. He entered the game with the Yankees leading 9-4 lead in the bottom of the seventh inning.

With the score at 9-8 Yankees, Bednar was brought into the game in place of Bird.

Bednar pitched 1.2 innings, allowing four hits, including one home run, and two earned runs to surrender the lead. He did manage to get the Yankees through the eighth inning without giving up another run.

Doval replaced Bednar to start the ninth inning with the Yankees leading 12-10. He allowed two hits and three runs (one earned) in 0.1 innings to take the loss.

It wasn't entirely on Doval, though — he was undone in part by a horrible error by another new addition, Jose Caballero.

Tied again pic.twitter.com/uRIKxAq3Dh

— Talkin' Yanks (@TalkinYanks) August 2, 2025

Playing his first game with the Yankees, Caballero misplayed a ground ball hit to right field. With the ball rolling nearly to the warning track, the game-tying runs were able to score and the winning run was suddenly set up on third.

Four pitches later, the Yankees' collapse was complete thanks to a dribbler that didn't even make it to the infield grass.

YES Network broadcaster Michael Kay called it the Yankees' "worst loss of the year."

"All 3 relievers that the Yankees acquired, that were so touted. They all did not do their job tonight...we keep digging new holes, Paul. And this one goes under the worst loss of the year."Michael Kay reacts to the Marlins beating the Yankees on a walk-off swinging bunt. pic.twitter.com/TnbDbHTA7v

— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) August 2, 2025

Yankees vs. Marlins highlights

Check out full highlights from the wild contest here:

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Yankees vs Marlins highlights: Jose Caballero, new bullpen implode

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Yankees' trade deadline additions implode in loss to Marlins: Highlights

Yankees' trade deadline additions implode in loss to Marlins: Highlights James H. Williams, USA TODAY August 2...
New Photo - Jeannie Seely, soulful country singer behind hits like 'Don't Touch Me,' dies at 85

Jeannie Seely, soulful country singer behind hits like 'Don't Touch Me,' dies at 85 MARIA SHERMAN August 2, 2025 at 8:13 AM 1 / 2Obit Jeannie SeelyFILE Jeannie Seely arrives at the 56th Annual CMA Awards in Nashville, Tenn., on Nov. 9, 2022.

- - Jeannie Seely, soulful country singer behind hits like 'Don't Touch Me,' dies at 85

MARIA SHERMAN August 2, 2025 at 8:13 AM

1 / 2Obit - Jeannie SeelyFILE - Jeannie Seely arrives at the 56th Annual CMA Awards in Nashville, Tenn., on Nov. 9, 2022. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, File)Evan Agostini/Invision/AP

NEW YORK (AP) — Jeannie Seely, the soulful country music singer behind such standards like "Don't Touch Me," has died. She was 85.

Her publicist, Don Murry Grubbs, said she died Friday after succumbing to complications from an intestinal infection.

Known as "Miss Country Soul" for her unique vocal style, Seely was a trailblazer for women in country music, celebrated for her spirited nonconformity and for a string of undeniable hits in the '60s and '70s.

Her second husband, Gene Ward, died in December. In May, Seely revealed that she was in recovery after undergoing multiple back surgeries, two emergency procedures and spending 11 days in the ICU. She also suffered a bout of pneumonia.

"Rehab is pretty tough, but each day is looking brighter and last night, I saw a light at the end of the tunnel. And it was neon, so I knew it was mine!" she said in a statement at the time. "The unsinkable Seely is working her way back."

Dolly Parton was one of several country music luminaries paying her tribute on Friday, saying she met Seely when they were both young and starting out in Nashville.

"She was one of my dearest friends," Parton said on her social media accounts. "I think she was one of the greater singers in Nashville and she had a wonderful sense of humor. We had many wonderful laughs together, cried over certain things together and she will be missed."

Seely was born in July 1940, in Titusville, Pennsylvania, about two hours north of Pittsburgh and raised in nearby Townville. Her love of country music was instant; her mother sang, and her father played the banjo. When she was a child, she sang on local radio programs and performed on local television. In her early 20s, she moved to Los Angeles to kick-start a career, taking a job with Liberty and Imperial Records in Hollywood.

She kept writing and recording. Nashville was next: She sang on Porter Wagoner's show; she got a deal with Monument Records. Her greatest hit would arrive soon afterward: "Don't Touch Me," the crossover ballad written by Hank Cochran. The song earned Seely her first and only Grammy Award, for best country & western vocal performance in the female category.

Cochran and Seely were married in 1969 and divorced in 1979.

Seely broke boundaries in her career — at a time when country music expected a kind of subservience from its women performers, Seely was a bit of a rebel, known for wearing a miniskirt on the Grand Ole Opry stage when it was still taboo.

And she had a number of country hits in the '60s and '70s, including three Top 10 hits on what is now known as Billboard's hot country songs chart: "Don't Touch Me," 1967's "I'll Love You More (Than You Need)" and 1973's "Can I Sleep In Your Arms?", adapted from the folk song "Can I Sleep In Your Barn Tonight Mister?"

In the years since, Seely continued to release albums, perform, and host, regularly appearing on country music programming. Her songs are considered classics, and have been recorded by everyone from Merle Haggard, Ray Price and Connie Smith to Ernest Tubb, Grandpa Jones, and Little Jimmy Dickens.

And Seely never stopped working in country music. Since 2018, she's hosted the weekly "Sunday's with Seely" on Willie Nelson's Willie's Roadhouse SiriusXM channel. That same year, she was inducted into the Music City Walk of Fame.

She appeared nearly 5,400 times at the Grand Ole Opry, which she has been a member of since 1967. Grubbs said Saturday's Grand Ole Opry show would be dedicated to Seely.

She released her latest song in July 2024, a cover of Dottie West's "Suffertime," recorded at the world-renowned RCA Studio B. She performed it at the Opry the year before.

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Jeannie Seely, soulful country singer behind hits like 'Don't Touch Me,' dies at 85

Jeannie Seely, soulful country singer behind hits like 'Don't Touch Me,' dies at 85 MARIA SHERMAN Augu...
New Photo - Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson Adorably Recreate Iconic 'Titanic' Scene

Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson Adorably Recreate Iconic 'Titanic' Scene Russell SteinbergAugust 2, 2025 at 6:10 AM Mike Marsland/WireImage Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson continue to make waves as a new couple — near, far or wherever they are.

- - Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson Adorably Recreate Iconic 'Titanic' Scene

Russell SteinbergAugust 2, 2025 at 6:10 AM

Mike Marsland/WireImage

Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson continue to make waves as a new couple — near, far or wherever they are.

In their latest adventure, the pair recreated that iconic scene from Titanic where Rose stands on the edge of the ship with her arms outstretched and Jack holds her by the waist from behind.

Anderson, 58, and Neeson, 73, were in Germany, where the Naked Gun costars took a boat ride along a river. In a video that Paramount Pictures Germany posted via TikTok on Friday, July 25, Anderson leaned over the railing on the front of the boat and did her best Rose impression. Neeson held her from behind as Celine Dion's "My Heart Will Go On" played in the background.

Unlike Jack, however, Neeson seemed to be doing it for his girlfriend's safety.

Are Pamela Anderson and Liam Neeson Dating? All the Clues and Moments That Raised Our Eyebrows

"I was scared she would fall in," he admitted to Access Hollywood in an interview shared on Monday, July 28.

Neeson's expression during the video seemed to confirm that. While Anderson appeared to be having the time of her life, Neeson spent the majority of the video with a terrified look on his face.

Courtesy of Paramount Pictures Germany/TikTok

Neeson and Anderson met while they were filming The Naked Gun, in which they play Detective Frank Drebin Jr. and Beth Davenport, respectively. A source confirmed to Us Weekly on Tuesday, July 29, that the two are, in fact, dating.

The source added that the actors "always had chemistry while they were filming and their friendship naturally developed into more."

Liam Neeson's Dating History: Natasha Richardson, Pamela Anderson and More Relationships

"They are both shy and have tried to stay private but the spark between them is obvious," the insider continued.

The pair first sparked rumors earlier this month when they were seen holding hands on the red carpet of the movie's U.K. premiere. At one point, Anderson even kissed Neeson on the cheek.

"I had never met Pamela before. We met on set. And we discovered we had a lovely, budding chemistry — as two actors," Neeson said in an appearance on the Tuesday episode of Today. "It's like, 'Oh, this is nice. Let's not mold this. Let's just let it breathe.' And that's what we did."

Anderson shares sons Brandon, 29, and Dylan, 27, with ex-husband Tommy Lee, to whom she was married from 1995 to 1998., The source told Us Anderson's kids "love seeing her happy and fully approve" of her relationship with Neeson, who was previously married to late wife Natasha Richardson.

They "think Liam is great and have gotten to know him better in the last few months," the insider added.

Anderson, for her part, gushed over Neeson in an interview with The New York Times, published Thursday, July 31.

"He has so much charm and so much charisma that you kind of just fall into it," she said. "I can't explain it because I've never experienced it before."

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Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson Adorably Recreate Iconic ‘Titanic’ Scene

Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson Adorably Recreate Iconic 'Titanic' Scene Russell SteinbergAugust 2, 2025 a...
New Photo - Jimmy Kimmel Stands Up for Stephen Colbert with an Emmys Billboard Ad

Jimmy Kimmel Stands Up for Stephen Colbert with an Emmys Billboard Ad Madison E. GoldbergAugust 2, 2025 at 12:26 PM Randy Holmes/Disney/Getty; Scott Kowalchyk/CBS/Getty Jimmy Kimmel; Stephen Colbert Jimmy Kimmel is sticking up for Stephen Colbert amid Paramount/CBS' decision to cancel The Late Show ...

- - Jimmy Kimmel Stands Up for Stephen Colbert with an Emmys Billboard Ad

Madison E. GoldbergAugust 2, 2025 at 12:26 PM

Randy Holmes/Disney/Getty; Scott Kowalchyk/CBS/Getty

Jimmy Kimmel; Stephen Colbert

Jimmy Kimmel is sticking up for Stephen Colbert amid Paramount/CBS' decision to cancel The Late Show with Stephen Colbert

Jon Stewart, Seth Meyers, and more have previously come to Colbert's defense

The network is facing allegations of political censorship due to Colbert's criticisms of President Trump's administration

Jimmy Kimmel is standing up for Stephen Colbert amid the cancellation of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.

Kimmel, 57, appeared on a billboard ad in Los Angeles encouraging Emmy voters to vote for Colbert, 61. The billboard features a headshot of Kimmel beside an announcement of his own Emmy nomination for Outstanding Talk Series. In large white text below, the billboard read, "I'm voting Stephen." Variety was first to report the news.

The billboard comes amid Paramount's decision to cancel Colbert after 10 seasons. In a statement from CBS previously shared with PEOPLE, the network said, "This is purely a financial decision against a challenging backdrop in late night. It is not related in any way to the show's performance, content or other matters happening at Paramount."

Colbert took over the show in September 2015 following David Letterman's departure. The cancellation came days after Colbert openly criticized the network's parent company for its sizable settlement with President Donald Trump.

Following the network's announcement to cancel the popular program on July 17, several late-night hosts have shown solidarity for Colbert, including Kimmel and Jon Stewart, who hosts The Daily Show.

Immediately following the cancellation news, Kimmel shared a clip of Colbert from the July 17 broadcast. "Love you Stephen," Kimmel wrote. He also called out the network behind the decision. "F--- you and all your Sheldons CBS," Kimmel added.

Scott Kowalchyk/CBS/Getty

The Late Show with Stephen Colbert during Thursday's July 17, 2025 show.

In a fiery statement on July 22, Stewart, 62, said, "If you're trying to figure out why Stephen's show is ending, I don't think the answer can be found in some smoking gun email or phone call from Trump to CBS executives or in CBS' QuickBooks spreadsheets on the financial health of late night."

https://ift.tt/Wq6oBrF

He continued, "I think the answer is in the fear and pre-compliance that is gripping all of America's institutions at this very moment, institutions that have chosen not to fight the vengeful and vindictive actions of our pubic hair doodling Commander in Chief. This is not the moment to give in."

— sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Seth Meyers weighed in too. "For as great a comedian and host he is, Stephen Colbert is an even better person," he wrote in a post on his Instagram Stories. "I'm going to miss having him on TV every night but I'm excited he can no longer use the excuse that he's 'too busy to hang out' with me."

Members of the Television Academy have until Aug. 27 to cast their votes.

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Jimmy Kimmel Stands Up for Stephen Colbert with an Emmys Billboard Ad

Jimmy Kimmel Stands Up for Stephen Colbert with an Emmys Billboard Ad Madison E. GoldbergAugust 2, 2025 at 12:26 P...
New Photo - Right degrees, wrong time: New graduates face discouraging odds of landing a job

Right degrees, wrong time: New graduates face discouraging odds of landing a job Shannon PettypieceAugust 2, 2025 at 7:00 PM Recent graduates looking to enter an increasingly shaky labor market are painting a dire picture of their job search: "A black hole," one said.

- - Right degrees, wrong time: New graduates face discouraging odds of landing a job

Shannon PettypieceAugust 2, 2025 at 7:00 PM

Recent graduates looking to enter an increasingly shaky labor market are painting a dire picture of their job search: "A black hole," one said. "I'm disheartened," said another. "I almost feel like it wasn't worth going to school," said a third.

NBC News asked people who recently finished technical school, college or graduate school how their job application process was going, and in more than 100 responses, the graduates described months spent searching for a job, hundreds of applications and zero responses from employers — even with degrees once thought to be in high demand, like computer science or engineering. Some said they struggled to get an hourly retail position or are making salaries well below what they had been expecting in fields they hadn't planned to work in.

"It was very frustrating," said Jensen Kornfeind, who graduated this spring from Temple University with a degree in international trade. "Out of 70-plus job applications, I had three job interviews, and out of those three, I got ghosted from two of them."

The national economic data backs up their experience. The unemployment rate among recent graduates has been increasing this year to an average of 5.3%, compared to around 4% for the labor force as a whole, making it one of the toughest job markets for recent graduates since 2015, according to an analysis by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York released Friday.

"Recent college graduates are on the margin of the labor market, and so they're the first to feel when the labor market slows and hiring slows," said Jaison Abel, an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

Across the economy, hiring in recent months has ground to its slowest pace since the start of the pandemic, with employers adding just 73,000 jobs in July, according to data released Friday. The number of longer-term unemployed people who have been out of work for more than 27 weeks increased last month by 179,000 to 1.8 million.

In short, it's a pretty stable market for those who have a job, but a much more challenging one for those who are trying to get one, economists said.

Driving that trend is hesitation among employers to hire new workers amid wider economic uncertainty in the midst of President Donald Trump's shifting tariff policies and federal spending cuts, economists have said. Then there is the emergence of AI, which some companies have said they are using to replace certain entry-level jobs, like those in customer support or basic software development.

"This is going to be an environment for recent college grads, as well as many workers, which is going to require more patience, more time and perhaps more diligence as they seek to attain employment," said Mark Hamrick, a senior economic analyst for Bankrate.

Here is how several recent graduates described their job search:

Adam Mitchell

23

Atlanta

Bachelor's degree, computer science

Unemployed

Adam Mitchell thought he was doing everything right. He majored in computer science at Georgia State University and interned at State Farm doing web development. He'd been told since he was a teenager that a degree in computer science was a guaranteed path to a high-paying job right out of college.

Adam Mitchell. (Courtesy of Adam Mitchell)

"I was under the impression that since I've got three years of internship experience under my belt, this will be a cakewalk," Mitchell said. "I was pretty quickly humbled. There's nothing available."

More than seven months after graduating, he's applied for more than 100 jobs and gotten two interviews and only one job offer — for the 4 a.m. shift at Starbucks, which he didn't take because the hours would make it too hard to pursue other opportunities. Among the jobs that turned him down: an hourly role at Costco and a customer service job in the call center at State Farm.

"The very few openings that there were would be so competitive that you would pretty much get a rejection notice as soon as you apply," said Mitchell, who's been living at home with his parents in the Atlanta area and spending down his savings.

"I can't be doing this forever, just waiting for the dust to settle and things to kind of normalize again — I need a job," said Mitchell, who worries about paying back his student loans.

Tech workers have been some of the hardest hit in a slowing job market, with more than 400 employers including Meta, Intel and Cisco announcing more than 130,000 jobs cut in 2025, according to tech job site TrueUp.

Those cuts mark a retrenchment after the hiring spree those companies went on after the pandemic, while an abundance of workers are vying for the remaining jobs, said Allison Shrivastava, an economist at Indeed Hiring Lab. Early adoption of AI is also likely driving some of the cuts and leading employers to rethink hiring plans in anticipation of AI's future role, Shrivastava said. Mitchell worries that could hurt his prospects long term, so he isn't limiting his search to tech jobs.

"I'm just kind of looking for anything," he said. "I don't know if the tech-side economy is ever going to be the same again."

Anthony Young

26

Emporia, Kansas

Associate's degree, power plant management

Unemployed

After Anthony Young graduated last year from Flint Hills Technical College in Emporia, Kansas, he planned to use the degree to get a job at a nearby nuclear power plant where his wife also works. But after more than a year, he hasn't succeeded.

"It is essentially a useless degree," Young said. "I wasted two years of my life, and I can't do anything with it."

Anthony Young. (Courtesy of Anthony Young)

Looking for work beyond the power plant industry has also been a struggle, as other employers in Emporia, about an hour from Wichita, have been cutting jobs. Tyson closed a meat processing plant there at the start of the year, eliminating over 800 jobs, and the Michelin tire company cut 80 jobs last year, nearly 40% of its workforce. The town had an unemployment rate of 5.8% in June, when not adjusted for seasonal employment, which was the highest in the state, where the overall unemployment rate was 4.1%, according to the state's Department of Labor.

Young recently went back to school to get a technical certificate to work as a household electrician. But when he started looking for a job, he learned that he would need to go through a five-year apprenticeship program with the local electrical workers union and travel up to two hours away for work, which would be a financial strain because he and his wife only have one car.

"I just have to figure out a way to get a car and make peace with the fact that there's a chance I may be put somewhere really far from home and I never get to see my family very much for five years, but I don't know what else to do really," Young said.

His wife makes more than $90,000 a year — a salary he would have thought would be enough in a small town in Kansas. But not anymore, he said. An apartment that would have cost $600 a month in 2019 is now $1,000. His weekly trip to the grocery store has gone from costing $80 to $180. Then there are his $20,000 in student loans, and the rising cost of insurance, gas and utilities.

"We still live paycheck to paycheck," he said, "and we shouldn't be."

Sabrina Highfield

25

Snyder, Texas

Master's degree, design with a focus on user experience

Eligibility adviser for SNAP and Medicaid benefits

Sabrina Highfield, 25, was making more than $70,000 a year as a project manager and analyst before she returned to school in 2024 in hopes of boosting her salary. But since she graduated in the spring from the University of Texas at Austin with a master's, the opposite has happened.

After applying to more than 1,000 jobs and getting only two interviews, she's living back in her hometown of Snyder, Texas, with her grandmother, making $35,000 a year working in an entry-level position helping administer food assistance benefits — something unrelated to her field of study and a job she suspects she got, in part, because the hiring manager knew her grandmother.

Sabrina Highfield. (William Conte / Courtesy of Sabrina Highfield)

"It's kind of like a black hole out there," she said on a recent morning when she was babysitting her sister's two children. "I've tailored my resume based on the job posts, I've created cover letters for each role as well, based on the company's values and everything. I would say it's a little discouraging. I did find a job, though it's not at all in the industry that I thought I'd be in."

She hopes to move up to a more senior position with her current employer, Texas Health and Human Services, but so far she's had no luck.

It's a vastly different job market than several years ago, which she doesn't think the recent economic data is capturing.

"Things look good on the surface, I guess, but when you dig a little deeper, it's concerning for Gen Z," she said.

Oliver Dolabany

22

Miami

Bachelor's degree, operations and information management

Unemployed, starting his own business

Oliver Dolabany. (Courtesy of Oliver Dolabany)

After applying to hundreds of positions, working his friend and family connections and reaching out to his school's alumni network, Oliver Dolabany has landed just one interview and zero job offers over the past six months. Like most of his classmates, he's back home living with his parents.

Getting a job feels more like luck than anything having to do with his major or academic qualifications. When a job is posted on LinkedIn, he said he can see it has received more than 100 resumes in the first hour. The one interview he got came through an alumni connection who knew the CEO of the company and put in a good word. But even then, he didn't get the position.

"It's not necessarily even like being more qualified than the guy next to you," he said. "It's like just getting luckier than the guy next to you."

While at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Dolabany worked as a teaching assistant, overseeing 500 students a semester, got A's in nearly all of his classes, and chose a major — operations and information management — that he believed would set him up for success.

"It was kind of presented to me as, this is the major that every company needs, every company wants," Dolbany said. "It was presented as, you're pretty safe compared to all the other majors at the school."

He plans to launch a skin care business with a friend while applying for jobs and living with his parents. He still hopes to find a job in New York City and move into a place of his own.

Jaylah Dorman

22

Durham, North Carolina

Bachelor's degree, health education

Clinical researcher

Jaylah Dorman landed a job doing clinical research at a private physician's practice in her hometown of Durham, North Carolina, shortly after graduating from Howard University — a success she attributes to her strong professional network and her degree in a high-demand field.

Hiring in the health care sector has been driving much of the job growth nationally, with around half of the 2.2 million jobs added to the economy last year in health care-related sectors, according to an analysis by S&P Global.

Jaylah Dorman. (Courtesy of Jaylah Dorman)

Still, she has a negative view of the job market overall and has seen a lot of her peers go to graduate school rather than head straight into the workforce.

"A lot of adults have confirmed that this is one of the worst times to come out of college," she said. "I think that is the narrative that is being confirmed by people who've been in the job market."

Dorman, who hopes to go to medical school, is also concerned about the sweeping tax cut and spending bill passed by Congress in July, which will cap how much students can borrow for graduate and professional programs.

The Trump administration has also been cutting research spending and public health jobs. Dorman had considered trying to get a job at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, but ruled that out as the administration started firing workers.

Saida Lopez-Rosales

26

Summit, Illinois

Bachelor's degree, education

Elementary school teacher

Saida Lopez-Rosales considers herself one of the lucky ones. She was able to get an elementary school teaching job in a suburb of Chicago after graduating in June when a position suddenly opened up at the school where she was student teaching. But she said she's seen her classmates at National Louis University in Chicago struggle despite a national shortage of teachers.

Last year, there were more than 400,000 teaching jobs that went unfilled or were filled by teachers not fully certified for their position, according to the Learning Policy Institute. But that shortage can vary by school district and teaching discipline. There are also indications that shortages are easing in Illinois, where Lopez-Rosales and her classmates have been looking.

Saida Lopez-Rosales. (Courtesy of Saida Lopez-Rosales)

Lopez-Rosales is expecting the local teaching job market to get increasingly competitive after Chicago Public Schools announced in July it was laying off around 1,400 employees, including around 400 teachers.

"When I was in school, everyone was like, 'You'll get a job right after graduation, you'll get a job.' That's how they were selling it," said Lopez-Rosales, who decided to go into education because she had heard there was a teacher shortage. "Luckily, that's how I got it, but I have a friend who's still looking."

Lopez-Rosales isn't particularly optimistic about the economy or her financial outlook. She will be making $55,000 — a higher salary than other teaching positions she'd looked at. But with rent in the area costing well over $1,000 a month, she won't be able to afford to move out of her parents' house.

"It's more like a paycheck-to-paycheck kind of thing, because you do have to pay bills and feed yourself," Lopez-Rosales said.

While she said she's content living with her parents, it isn't what she envisioned for herself in her mid-20s.

"I told myself, by 26, I'd have my own house, I'd have my own family, I'd have my nice little luxury car. That hasn't happened," Lopez-Rosales said. "At first, I did kind of beat myself up for it, but it's like the world's changing. Everything's changing. Everything I feel like is a little bit harder. So now it's OK."

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Right degrees, wrong time: New graduates face discouraging odds of landing a job

Right degrees, wrong time: New graduates face discouraging odds of landing a job Shannon PettypieceAugust 2, 2025 ...
New Photo - The dominant economic narrative has been revised: Chart of the Week

The dominant economic narrative has been revised: Chart of the Week Josh SchaferAugust 2, 2025 at 6:59 PM This is The Takeaway from today's Morning Brief, which you can sign up to receive in your inbox every morning along with: The Chart of the Day What we're watching What we're reading Economic dat...

- - The dominant economic narrative has been revised: Chart of the Week

Josh SchaferAugust 2, 2025 at 6:59 PM

This is The Takeaway from today's Morning Brief, which you can sign up to receive in your inbox every morning along with:

The Chart of the Day

What we're watching

What we're reading

Economic data releases and earnings

The US labor market has not been adding nearly as many jobs as initially reported.

Friday's jobs report showed the US economy added 73,000 jobs while the unemployment rate moved higher to 4.2%.

But the portion of the release that sent markets stumbling was "larger than normal" revisions to previous reports, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Changes to May's and June's reports showed more than a quarter million fewer jobs were added to the economy over those months. May's job gains were revised down to 19,000 from 144,000, while June's additions were cut to just 14,000 from the 147,000 initially reported.

Monthly jobs numbers are always revised in later months. But these are not standard revisions. Outside of the 2020 pandemic, May and June's downward revisions were the largest since at least 1979, according to data compiled by Yale Budget Lab's director of economics Ernie Tedeschi.

The job revisions came just two days after the Federal Reserve opted to hold interest rates steady at its July meeting despite two officials dissenting and arguing the central bank should be lowering interest rates. In the subsequent press conference, Fed Chair Jerome Powell described the labor market as "solid" and pointed to a "historically low" unemployment rate as a key metric to watch when assessing the health of the jobs picture in America.

Powell admitted job creation has shown slowing, but that has come with a decrease in labor supply due to less immigration, therefore keeping the broad labor market picture in balance.

But market pricing and economists argue Friday's report was likely a game changer for the overall economic narrative and how the Fed will move forward. Following Friday's jobs report, the probability of a September interest rate cut from the Fed surged to 83%, up from just 38% the day prior, per the CME FedWatch Tool.

"Surely, Chair Powell wishes he had these numbers 48 hours ago," Jefferies chief US economist Thomas Simons wrote in a note to clients. "A much more downbeat view on the health of the labor market would have made a more dovish message easier to deliver with confidence."

Powell has argued the unemployment rate is the most important metric in the labor market to watch right now. At 4.2%, it's still historically low, but it did move higher in July. The number of Americans filing for weekly unemployment claims has also been calm. This illuminates the fact that Friday's job revisions aren't sounding a code red alarm on the labor market.

But the Fed chair also talked extensively about "downside risks" to the labor market during his recent press conference. Friday's revisions certainly feed those fears.

"The picture of labor market weakening has become much clearer now," BlackRock chief investment officer of global fixed income Rick Rieder wrote in a note following Friday's jobs report. "If the slack in the labor force builds at all, or we continue to see a below 100,000 jobs hiring rate persistently, we would expect the Fed to start moving rates lower, and a 50-basis point cut in September might be possible depending on how the data evolves."

Josh Schafer is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow him on X @_joshschafer.

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