Magic in need of direction after third loss in a row: ‘We’ve got to be better’

Following Orlando’s third straight loss, the Magic are still trying to find a balance between playing fast on offense and remaining stout on defense.

“It’s hard to do anything in this league, but there is a way to do both,” Desmond Bane said. “And we have to in order to win.”
https://www.orlandosentinel.com/2025/10/28/orlando-magic-philadelpia-sixers-paolo-banchero-desmond-bane-folo-detroit-pistons-nba-jamahl-mosley/

Former WWE champion to replace Jon Moxley, Heel faction FINALLY implodes? – 3 major surprises that can happen on AEW Dynamite this Wednesday

After receiving mixed reviews for WrestleDream 2025, AEW has quickly shifted its focus to the upcoming pay-per-view, Full Gear 2025, which is less than a month away. The Jacksonville-based promotion has already started building momentum for Full Gear during recent episodes of Dynamite and Collision.

On the flagship show, the Women’s World Title match was confirmed for the upcoming PPV after champion Kris Statlander accepted Mercedes Mone’s challenge—originally issued at WrestleDream. Additionally, a major No. 1 Contenders’ match was scheduled to determine World Champion Hangman Page’s next challenger. This crucial match is set to take place on this week’s episode of Dynamite: Fright Night.

With Dynamite: Fright Night airing this Wednesday, AEW President Tony Khan is poised to take the next step in generating excitement for Full Gear. Fans can expect some intriguing twists and surprises on the show. Here’s a look at three potential surprises AEW might unveil on Dynamite: Fright Night.

### #3. Claudio Castagnoli Betrays Jon Moxley on AEW Dynamite: Fright Night

Jon Moxley has been facing a turbulent stretch in AEW lately. The Purveyor of Violence’s recent track record in big matches has been less than stellar—from losing the World Championship to Hangman Page, to falling in the Lights Out Steel Cage match at Forbidden Door against Will Ospreay’s team, and more recently, losing to arch-nemesis Darby Allin in an “I-Quit” match at WrestleDream 2025.

Given these setbacks, Moxley’s faction, the Death Riders, could hold a vote of no confidence in their leader during Dynamite. Leading this possible coup is former WWE United States Champion and multi-time WWE Tag Team Champion, Claudio Castagnoli (formerly Cesaro). As the Swiss Superstar and the group’s most experienced member after Moxley, Claudio might convince the faction to abandon the One True King, potentially taking over leadership of the Death Riders.

### #2. The Don Callis Family Could Implode

Tensions within the Don Callis Family have been building for some time, particularly between Konosuke Takeshita and Unified Champion Kazuchika Okada. Their dynamic took a hit after the duo failed to capture the AEW World Tag Team Championships against Brodido at WrestleDream 2025. During that match, Okada accidentally struck Takeshita, showing no remorse; instead, he grinned at the reigning IWGP World Heavyweight Champion.

Takeshita did not take this lightly and attempted to confront Okada on last week’s Dynamite, but was stopped by Don Callis and AEW TNT Champion Kyle Fletcher. In response to these internal frictions, Don Callis has called for a family summit on this week’s Dynamite: Fright Night.

While this summit aims to resolve internal disputes, it could very well backfire. The massive egos of both Takeshita and Okada might spiral out of control, causing the faction to implode. This could result in the formation of rival subgroups within the family or even result in the eviction of one of the two stars.

### #1. Cedric Alexander Joins the Hurt Syndicate

WWE released Cedric Alexander in February of this year. Although he signed with TNA shortly after, speculation has swirled among fans that the 36-year-old could reunite with his former Hurt Business allies—MVP, Bobby Lashley, and Shelton Benjamin—now rebranded as the Hurt Syndicate in AEW.

With Cedric’s contract set to expire soon, these rumors may finally come to fruition this week. Tony Khan is expected to sign Cedric Alexander and debut him on Dynamite: Fright Night.

This week’s Dynamite: Fright Night also features a pivotal four-way match where Bobby Lashley of the Hurt Syndicate will face Samoa Joe, Ricochet, and Hook for a chance to become the No. 1 Contender for Hangman Page’s AEW World Championship.

As the match unfolds, interference from the allies of each competitor is highly likely. Amid the chaos, Cedric’s debut could play a critical role in helping Lashley secure the No. 1 Contender spot—marking a major win for the Hurt Syndicate and their newest member.

With Dynamite: Fright Night just around the corner, AEW fans have much to look forward to as the promotion ramps up toward Full Gear 2025. Whether it’s shocking betrayals, faction drama, or surprise debuts, this week’s show promises to deliver plenty of excitement.
https://www.sportskeeda.com/aew/former-wwe-champion-replace-jon-moxley-heel-faction-finally-implodes-3-major-surprises-can-happen-aew-dynamite-wednesday

Joe Torre Documentary Directed by John Turturro in Production

Joe Torre, the longstanding Major League Baseball player, manager, and executive, takes center stage in a new documentary directed by John Turturro and produced by Motto Pictures. The film, titled *Joe Torre*, chronicles the remarkable career of this iconic figure, who managed the New York Yankees to four World Series championships—and achieved much more along the way.

Torre remains the only person in MLB history to have recorded 2,000 hits as a player and 2,000 wins as a manager, a testament to his extraordinary dual success in the sport.

“Joe Torre’s lifelong journey to the World Series is full of ups and downs, twists and turns, through a changing landscape and turbulent times. There’s something deeply human about Joe Torre’s quiet strength,” said Turturro in a statement. “In a time when men in sports hid their emotions behind toughness, Joe defied convention. His strength comes from compassion, his victories from understanding people.”

Currently in production, the documentary explores Torre’s life story—from a nervous child with an abusive father to a professional baseball player who won the league’s Most Valuable Player award (MVP) in 1971, and later to a manager who was fired three times before taking on his role with the Yankees.

Torre played in 4,272 games as a player and experienced a career as a manager before finally leading the Yankees to a World Series victory against the Atlanta Braves.

“It’s hard to imagine that a nervous Brooklyn kid who had low self-esteem could go on a journey like mine across more than 60 years,” Torre reflected in a statement. “I once didn’t think I was going anywhere. But baseball gave me a place to hide and ultimately the opportunity to find things in myself that I never knew were there. I am grateful that John Turturro, who witnessed the hometown dream I’ve been fortunate enough to live, is joining me to look back and tell the story in a personal way.”

Stay tuned for more updates on this compelling documentary that celebrates the life and legacy of one of baseball’s most respected figures.
https://variety.com/2025/tv/news/joe-torre-documentary-directed-john-turturro-1236563435/

This NY rabbi’s job is so specialized, he hasn’t vacationed in 26 years. But now, technology can help.

(New York Jewish Week)

Around 6:15 a.m. on a recent Thursday, Rabbi Moshe Tauber parked his van in the merge lane of the Henry Hudson Parkway at 72nd Street. He turned on his hazard lights and ran out of the vehicle with a flashlight. His wife, Chaya, sitting in the passenger seat, watched anxiously.

Tauber, 51, turned his head upward, shined his flashlight on the nylon fishing wire strung up 30 feet from the ground between two poles, and ran back to the car. All clear — the boundary was unbroken.

For the past 25 years, this process has been the rabbi’s routine on both Thursday and Friday mornings: leaving his home in Monsey, an Orthodox enclave in Rockland County, hours before sunrise in order to circumnavigate the entire island of Manhattan.

His mission: to check every part of the borough’s eruv — the symbolic boundary, marked by strings and other man-made and natural elements, inside of which observant Jews may carry objects like food, keys, and even babies on Shabbat and certain holidays.

Maintaining the eruv, which must be unbroken to be considered kosher, has been Tauber’s job since 1999. Tauber says it doesn’t make sense for someone else to sub in for him, simply because he knows the eruv so well and can do it so efficiently, after having inspected it for so many years.

With Chaya’s approval, he even missed the early-morning birth of his 13th and youngest child, now 7, to check the eruv on a Friday morning. He immediately went to the hospital to visit mother and baby after his inspection was done.

“I don’t know if I can explain what I like in this job,” Tauber said. “I like it.”

Now, for the first time, the eruv inspector is getting some high-tech assistance. Installed in August, a new sensor system created by technology entrepreneur Jerry Kestenbaum — also the creator of the residential building software company BuildingLink — magnetically snaps onto multiple locations of the eruv.

The 142 sensors detect changes in the angle of the wire and send a signal to a receiver held by Spectrum on Broadway, the lighting and electrical company responsible for maintaining the line per Tauber’s instructions. The sensors themselves are battery-operated and meant to last for six to 10 years, sealed in a waterproof case.

“It gives me more comfortability,” Tauber said. But he’s not planning on ceding oversight entirely to the machines, saying, “I know I need to check because the sensors are not 100%.”

The sensors mark the first major innovation to Manhattan’s biggest eruv, installed in 1999 after Adam Mintz, then the rabbi of Lincoln Square Synagogue, requested its installation to surround his Upper West Side neighborhood.

Prior to the borough-wide eruv, different parts of the city each had their own, but travel between them while carrying anything was prohibited on Shabbat.

According to Jewish law related to Shabbat, no items can be carried outside the home on what is supposed to be a day of rest and prayer. Recognizing this as a potential burden, rabbis in the Talmudic era devised a workaround: The boundary defined by the eruv would extend the “private” zone where carrying is permitted.

Despite some community objections — sometimes from Jews and non-Jews who worry that the eruv will change the “character” of their neighborhoods, or civil libertarians who worry about the blurring of church and state — nearly every observant community, from big cities to small towns, is surrounded by an eruv.

The Lincoln Square eruv has expanded multiple times since 1999, now encompassing most of Manhattan, from 145th Street between Riverside Drive and Malcolm X Boulevard at its northernmost point, roughly down FDR Drive all the way to the bottom of Manhattan at the South Street Ferry, and back up the Henry Hudson Parkway.

In the years since he became its inspector, Tauber’s dedication to the eruv has been unflagging. He made sure it was unbroken after 9/11 (it didn’t extend all the way downtown at the time), after the 2003 citywide blackout, after Hurricane Sandy in 2012, and throughout the COVID-19 pandemic.

In Tauber’s 25 years of inspections, the eruv has only been down once over a Shabbat, during a snowstorm in 2010.

In addition to checking the eruv twice a week, Tauber helps his wife run a daycare, and he teaches boys at a yeshiva. He hasn’t taken a vacation longer than a few days for a quarter century.

Chaya Tauber said she has a theory about why he likes the eruv job so much.

“[It’s] many hours of a busy week — he has more jobs, it’s not the only job that he can be by himself,” she said. “Quiet time. I think he likes the traveling, also.”

Just two weeks ago, he helped establish an eruv around Columbia University Medical Center in Washington Heights and the surrounding apartments. Eventually, the plan is to connect it to the main Manhattan eruv and potentially to other smaller eruvs in Upper Manhattan.

There, smaller eruvs serve portions of Washington Heights with many observant Jews, including one that is home to the Orthodox flagship Yeshiva University.

Kestenbaum, whose new business, Aware Buildings, provides sensors for home security, said the idea for the electronic eruv technology came about during a conversation with Mintz, now the rabbinic leader of Kehilat Rayim Ahuvim (The Shtiebel) on the Upper West Side at the Marlene Meyerson JCC.

“I was saying to him that the sensors can be applied to many, many things that we’re used to doing manually,” said Kestenbaum, whose wife converted to Judaism under Mintz’s supervision.

“It’s a complicated eruv where the deployed environment changes,” Kestenbaum explained. “It’s not [like] in the suburbs, where the outline of the eruvs remains constant. Things go wrong. You’ve got scaffolding that gets put up. You’ve got other things that happen. The weekly eruv job is not just fixing, sometimes it’s rerouting.”

The complications are what gets Tauber out the door around 3:30 a.m. on inspection days. Not only does he beat rush hour, but once the sun begins to come up, it’s far more difficult to see the wire.

Now, the sensors can help him locate the wires more easily and safely.

“I used to walk [out of the car] because I couldn’t see it without the sensors,” Tauber said, pointing to a section near the Manhattan Bridge. “See the sensors? You don’t have to see the actual line.”

Tauber has been surprised by the willingness of various city agencies and construction crews to accommodate him in his unusual line of work.

“Even though we are Jewish, and we know we are not the most liked people here, but I never, ever had a problem with any organization or department officials, or even a construction company — they always come across,” he said. “They always look like they admire something which is religious.”

For Chaya Tauber, the early mornings and constrained vacations are worth it because of the way her husband’s work allows Manhattan Jews to observe one major law of Shabbat with ease.

“There is so much less desecration of Shabbos,” Chaya Tauber said, adding that when the eruv is up, “at least they’re not transgressing on this particular halacha. That makes this job such a responsibility.”
https://www.sun-sentinel.com/2025/10/28/this-ny-rabbis-job-is-so-specialized-he-hasnt-vacationed-in-26-years-but-now-technology-can-help/

“Not something we’re going to tolerate”: NASCAR’s Elton Sawyer vows a stern response for Sam Mayer’s Martinsville action

NASCAR senior vice president of competition Elton Sawyer has confirmed that officials are reviewing Sam Mayer’s post-race retaliation against Jeb Burton at Martinsville Speedway.

The incident occurred shortly after the race concluded, drawing attention from both fans and NASCAR officials. Sawyer emphasized the importance of maintaining sportsmanship and said that the review aims to ensure fair competition.

Further updates will be provided once the investigation is complete. Fans are encouraged to stay tuned for any official statements regarding potential consequences.
https://www.sportskeeda.com/nascar/news-not-something-we-re-going-tolerate-nascar-s-elton-sawyer-vows-stern-response-sam-mayer-s-martinsville-action

Children’s Hospital Ranked No. 1 in Connecticut

Yale New Haven Children’s Hospital (YNHCH) has once again been ranked the No. 1 children’s hospital in Connecticut and No. 2 in New England.

In the recently published 2025-2026 Best Children’s Hospitals rankings by U.S. News & World Report, YNHCH is recognized as one of the best children’s hospitals in the nation in five out of 11 pediatric subspecialties.

This prestigious ranking highlights YNHCH’s continued commitment to excellence in pediatric care and its outstanding performance across multiple specialties.

The post Children’s Hospital Ranked No. 1 in Connecticut appeared first on Westfair Communications.
https://westfaironline.com/newsmakers/childrens-hospital-ranked-no-1-in-connecticut/

“No one does it like him”: Fans react as BTS’ Taehyung dominates social media platforms with over 2.5M mentions following Vogue World debut

On Sunday, October 26, BTS’ Taehyung attended Vogue World 2025: Hollywood, an annual runway event hosted by the global fashion magazine Vogue.

This prestigious event showcases the latest trends and styles, drawing celebrities and fashion enthusiasts from around the world. Taehyung’s presence added star power to the occasion, highlighting his influence not only in music but also in the fashion industry.
https://www.sportskeeda.com/us/k-pop/news-no-one-like-him-fans-react-bts-taehyung-dominates-social-media-platforms-2-5m-mentions-following-vogue-world-debut

Applied Industrial Technologies beats Q1 estimates, increases guidance

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https://seekingalpha.com/news/4509170-applied-industrial-technologies-beats-q1-estimates-increases-guidance?utm_source=feed_news_all&utm_medium=referral&feed_item_type=news

U.S. winter weather outlook and how La Niña will factor in

EarthSky isn’t powered by billionaires. We’re powered by you. Support EarthSky’s 2025 Donation Campaign and help keep science accessible.

**La Niña’s Impact on the U.S. Winter Weather Outlook**

The Climate Prediction Center has issued a La Niña Advisory, confirming that La Niña has formed in the tropical Pacific Ocean and is likely to continue through February 2026.

La Niña is one phase of ENSO, or El Niño Southern Oscillation — a global climate system that impacts atmospheric circulation worldwide, influencing weather patterns across the globe. La Niña is often considered the cool phase of ENSO because it occurs when waters of the tropical Pacific Ocean are cooler than average.

This cooling causes dry, sinking air over the tropical Pacific while air rises near Southeast Asia, leading to increased clouds, rainfall, and storm activity in that region.

### What Does La Niña Mean for U.S. Winter Weather?

The effects of La Niña on winter weather vary depending on where you are in the United States.

During a La Niña winter, the jet stream across North America tends to be more variable. It usually drifts farther north over the northern Pacific and sometimes farther south across the southern United States, though the exact position can fluctuate.

This pattern generally results in:

– **Cooler and wetter conditions** from southern Alaska through western Canada and into the northern Plains of the United States.
– **Drier and warmer weather** stretching from California through the Gulf Coast and extending toward the Carolinas.
– **Wetter than average conditions** around areas close to the jet stream’s path, typically near the Ohio and Mississippi River Valleys.

### Winter Weather Outlook from the Climate Prediction Center

The Climate Prediction Center’s Winter Weather Outlook for the U.S. reflects these La Niña influences and covers December, January, and February — the meteorological winter.

Meteorologists prefer meteorological winter (December 1 through February 28/29) over astronomical winter (which starts around December 21) for forecasting seasonal temperature and precipitation averages, since the dates remain consistent each year.

According to the CPC outlook:

– Much of the U.S. from California through Texas, the Gulf Coast, Southeast, and up toward the Mid-Atlantic is likely to experience **warmer-than-average temperatures** this winter.
– The **northern Plains** of the U.S. have the highest chance of **cooler-than-average temperatures**.
– For precipitation, much of the northern and central U.S. is favored to receive **wetter-than-normal conditions**, while drier weather is expected over the southern half of the country.

### Important Note: A Winter Outlook Is Not an Exact Forecast

Seasonal outlooks provide broad trends, not precise daily forecasts. While La Niña will influence this winter’s weather, it doesn’t guarantee consistent conditions.

– Areas predicted to be drier than normal may still experience rainy or snowy days.
– Regions expected to be cooler on average might still see warm winter days.

This outlook represents the most likely scenario over the entire three-month winter season. For the most up-to-date and localized forecasts, be sure to consult your local National Weather Service office throughout the season.

### Bottom Line

La Niña has developed in the tropical Pacific and is expected to remain through February 2026. This will shape the winter weather we experience, but the exact impacts depend on your location.

For more information, read more about [El Niño](#).

Thank you for supporting EarthSky — your contributions help keep science accessible to all.
https://earthsky.org/earth/us-winter-weather-outlook-la-nina/

Woman, 19-month-old killed in Route 222 crash in Berks

A 19-year-old woman and a 19-month-old child were killed Monday in a crash on Route 222 at the overpass for Kutztown Road in Richmond Township, police said.

The woman and child, both residents of Columbia, Lancaster County, were passengers in a car driven by a 27-year-old woman from Pottsville, according to Fleetwood police, who provide coverage in the township. Police confirmed that the child was in a safety seat, but it remains unknown whether the adult passenger was wearing a seat belt.

The driver and a 7-year-old boy, who was also a passenger in the car, sustained serious injuries. Authorities stated that the driver was not wearing a seat belt, and it is unclear if the boy was secured in a safety seat.

Here is the police account of the incident: The car was traveling southbound on Route 222 at approximately 10:50 a.m. Monday. As it entered a curve, the vehicle went off the road, crossed the center median, and entered the left northbound lane, where it collided with an SUV driven by a 44-year-old woman from White Marsh, Maryland. The car then went over the bridge and crashed onto the road below.

Tragically, three of the four occupants of the car were ejected from the vehicle.

Following the collision, the SUV spun and was struck by a tractor-trailer driven by a 42-year-old male. The SUV ended up partially underneath the trailer. The SUV driver was wearing a seat belt and suffered minor injuries. The truck driver was also wearing a seat belt and was not injured.

The injured parties were transported to Lehigh Valley Cedar Crest Hospital for treatment.

Police have not released the names of those involved. Northbound traffic on Route 222 was detoured for more than five hours while the investigation continued.

Authorities are still investigating the crash. Further updates will be provided as more information becomes available.
https://www.mcall.com/2025/10/28/woman-19-month-old-killed-in-route-222-crash-in-berks/

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