One hundred days ago today, the deadliest December tropical storm came ashore in Florida.

This late-season tropical storm made landfall early on December 1, 1925, with winds of 65 mph near Fort Myers as a system that was losing tropical characteristics.

Strong offshore winds blew the water out of parts of Tampa Bay in advance of the storm's landfall. The reverse was true in Jacksonville, where feet of storm surge caused damage up to100 feet inland, which was incorrectly considered safe from the sea at the time. The damage there totaled $18 million (2025 USD).

The storm brought 15 inches of rain to Miami and downed power, telephone and telegraph lines in the Tampa Bay area.Severe citrus crops damageamounted to more than $11 million in 2025 USD.

At least five vessels were fatally sunk by the storm, including the American S. S. Cotopaxi, which was moving from Charleston to Cuba with a crew of 30 aboard. All were lost off the Southeast coast.The ship was found off the coast of St. Augustine in 2020.

NOAA

After moving away from Florida, the storm strengthened to 90 mph off the coast of the Carolinas as a hurricane-strength non-tropical low pressure system.

It then made a second landfall in North Carolina between Wilmington and Cape Hatteras with a pressure of 980 mb and minimal hurricane-force winds. The storm finally made an eastward turn into the Atlantic and likely dissipated.

All told, 73 people were killed by the storm, more than 50 of which were offshore. This makes it also the deadliest tropical storm that didn't become a hurricane.

While this system was originally considered a hurricane,a 2011 reanalysisof the hurricane seasons in the 1920s found no evidence that it reached hurricane status.

Prior to this change, it was the deadliest December hurricane in U.S. history.

The 1925 Atlantic Hurricane Season was one of the least active in recorded history.

Jonathan Belleshas been a digital meteorologist forweather.comfor 9 years and also assists in the production of videos for The Weather Channel en español. His favorite weather is tropical weather, but also enjoys covering high-impact weather and news stories and winter storms. He's a two-time graduate of Florida State University and a proud graduate of St. Petersburg College.

On Today's Date: The Deadliest December Tropical Storm Makes Landfall In Florida

One hundred days ago today, the deadliest December tropical storm came ashore in Florida. This late-season tropical storm made landfall ea...

Credit - Oleksii Liskonih—Getty Images/iStockphoto

When authorities found that an Afghan asylee was the suspect in ashooting near the White House last week, President Donald Trump used the opportunity topush a "reverse migration" agendaaimed at demonizing refugees and other foreigners in America. But in his rants, he repeatedly mentioned one particular nationality: Somalis.

In response to a reporter's question during the President's call with troops on Thanksgiving, Trumpadmittedthat there was "nothing" linking Somalis to the shooting. Still, he claimed, without evidence, that Somalis "have caused a lot of trouble" for the U.S.

The day after the shooting near the White House, Trumpordered a review of green cardsissued to migrants from 19 countries of concern, including Somalia. And, in aThanksgiving messageposted on Truth Social where he announced that he would "permanently pause" migration from "Third World" countries, he particularly blasted the Somali community in Minnesota. The state has the largest population of those with reported Somali heritage in the country, accordingto U.S. Census Bureau data, and Trumpclaimedthey are "completely taking over" the state.

But even before the shooting, Trump had already scrutinized the Somali presence in Minnesota. During his first term, hetargeted themat a rally, saying "leaders in Washington brought large numbers of refugees" to Minnesota "without considering the impact on schools and communities and taxpayers."

More recently, he claimed in aNov. 21 Truth Social postthat "Somali gangs are terrorizing the people of that great State, and BILLIONS of Dollars are missing," and he announced he would end Temporary Protected Statuses for Somalis "effective immediately," causing alarm among the Somali population in Minnesota.

Here's what to know.

Why are there so many Somalis in Minnesota?

Minnesota is home to the largest Somali community in the United States—more than 61,000 persons of the state's approximately 5.7-million population have reported Somali ancestry, according to census data. Since the early 1990s, Somalis have consistently arrived in the country, often as refugees, from the East African country's civil war. Many Somali refugees found Minnesota appealing because of the available social services and welfare programs that helped them resettle and, over time, because of the growing diaspora that had already resettled there.

Over time, Somalis have become integrated into the community and have played larger roles in local and even national government, including Rep.Ilhan Omar, who in 2018 became the first Somali-American elected to Congress and has been a frequent target of Trump's attacks.

Citizens of Somalia werefirst givenTPS status in September 1991, under the presidency of Republican President George H.W. Bush. The Administration back then granted the status, recognizing that there "exist extraordinary and temporary conditions in Somalia that prevent aliens who are nationals of Somalia from returning to Somalia in safety." Since then, the TPS status for Somalis has been either extended or redesignated 27 times in recognition of the ongoing conflict in the nation, according toa report by the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service earlier this year, with the latest extension coming during the Biden Administration, when then Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas pushed the end date of Somali's TPS status to March 17, 2026.

"It was never meant to be an asylum program," Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noemsaid in a press briefing on Sunday, in defense of Trump's decision to end the TPS designation for nationals of Somalia as well as other nations, including Venezuela and Nicaragua. "It was always meant to be put in place after an incident or an event on a temporary basis, and that's what the evaluation will be."

Trumpposted on Truth Social: "Minnesota, under Governor Waltz, is a hub of fraudulent money laundering activity. I am, as President of the United States, hereby terminating, effective immediately, the Temporary Protected Status (TPS Program) for Somalis in Minnesota." He added, "Send them back to where they came from. It's OVER!"

Such a revocation would put at risk approximately 700 Somali nationals nationwide who had TPS status as of March this year, as most Somalis in the state are American nationals.

What do the Somalis in Minnesota and Gov. Tim Walz have to do with fraud allegations?

In Trump's latest tirades against the Somalis in the state, he flagged supposed incidences of corruption and fraud involving Somalis living in Minnesota, particularly in relation to welfare programs.

A COVID-19 era child nutrition program operated by nonprofit organization Feeding Our Future, withreported ties to the Somali community, was implicated in an alleged $300 million fraud scheme with more than70 defendants. Dubbed by the Justice Department as "the largest Covid-19 fraud scheme in the country," the case involved individuals creating companies that billed Minnesota agencies for meals that did not exist. Federal prosecutors said the company owners pocketed the funds instead, spending them on luxuries like cars and overseas trips. In August, a Somali-born leader of the fraud scheme wassentenced to 28 years in prison.

In September, eight individualswere also chargedwith wire fraud for allegedly defrauding the now-defunct Housing Stabilization Services Program, a component of Minnesota's Medicaid offerings. The defendants were accused of collectively billing Medicaid about $8 million byoffering vulnerable individuals—many of whom were due to be released from drug or alcohol rehabilitation facilities—assistance to look for housing, only for these individuals to remain homeless.

The same month, another fraud case emerged, this time involving the state'sautism program.A Somali woman and her partners allegedly falsely certified children to qualify for autism programs and handed their parents pay-offs for their cooperation. The defendant intends to plead guilty to the charge against her, her lawyer told theNew York Times.

"From Feeding Our Future to Housing Stabilization Services and now Autism Services, these massive fraud schemes form a web that has stolen billions of dollars in taxpayer money," former U.S. Attorney for Minnesota Joseph Thompson said in a statement after announcing the autism case. "Each case we bring exposes another strand of this network."

The scale and frequency of fraud in the state have raised questions about where the funds are going. ANovember reportby Ryan Thorpe and Christopher F. Rufo from the conservative think tank Manhattan Institute claimed to connect money flowing out of Minnesota to the terror group Al-Shabaab, citing federal counterterrorism sources.

A group purporting to represent more than 480 current staff members of Minnesota's Department of Human Services have alleged that Gov. Tim Walz, a vocal Trump critic who ran as the Democratic vice presidential candidate in 2024, was "100% responsible for massive fraud" in the state. In a lengthy statementposted on Xover the weekend, the staffers claimed they informed Walz "early on" of ongoing fraud, but instead of addressing the concerns, he "systematically retaliated against whistleblowers using monitoring, threats, repression, and did his best to discredit fraud reports." TIME has reached out to Walz's office for comment.

How are Democrats responding?

Democrats have condemned the accusations targeting Somalis in Minnesota.

Rep. Omar, in response to Trump's threat of ending TPS benefits immediately for Somalis,said on Nov. 24: "Even little kids in 8th grade know that that is not an authority that the President has, and can wield." The federal government is required by statute to publish a notice in the Federal Register 60 days before ending a TPS protection.

Minnesota State Attorney General Keith Ellison alsosuggested in a post on Xthat he may seek legal recourse if Trump immediately removes the TPS protections. "Trump's announcement of termination of Somali TPS holders in Minnesota is legally problematic—while a president does have a lot of authority to designate and revoke TPS, he cannot legally wield that power to discriminate against an ethnic group or to target a state, like MN," Ellison said. This ain't over."

Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D, Minn.)on CNNSunday disputed that Somalis in particular are a problem in the state. "Every state has a problem with crime, but what the President has done here is taken a horrific crime that occurred in Washington, D.C., where one beloved guard member is still struggling for his life, another was shot and killed. … He took that case, and then he went 2,400 miles away to Somalia and somehow indicted an entire group of people."

"He tries to stoke division," Klobuchar said, "and make people hate each other."

Minnesota Gov. Walz—whose leadership is now being tested as his Republican opponent in the 2026 elections, Kristin Robbins, has made thefight against fraudcentral to her campaign—told NBC Sunday: "We're doing everything we can. But to demonize an entire community on the actions of a few, it's lazy."

And on X, Walz appeared to accuse Trump, who just granted clemency to a private equity executive who had been sentenced to seven years in prison for his role in $1.6 billion fraud scheme, of hypocrisy,saying, "Just to be clear: There will be no pardons for fraudsters in Minnesota."

Contact usatletters@time.com.

What to Know About Trump’s Targeting of Somalis in Minnesota

Credit - Oleksii Liskonih—Getty Images/iStockphoto When authorities found that an Afghan asylee was the suspect in ashooting near the Whit...
A fraudster pleaded guilty to getting rid of his wife's body. Now a jury will decide if he killed her.

Opening statements in the murder trial of aconvicted fraudsteraccused ofkilling his wife and dismembering her bodyare scheduled to begin Monday in a Massachusetts courtroom.

Brian Walshe, 50,pleaded guilty in mid-November to two lesser chargeslinked to the 2023 disappearance and death of Ana Walshe, 39 — misleading a police investigation and improper conveyance of a body.

The trial, in Norfolk County Superior Court, is expected to last two to three weeks.

Ana Walshe. (via Cohasset Police)

Prosecutors have alleged that Walshe was motivated by money — he was the sole beneficiary of his wife's $2.7 million life insurance policy — and that he believed she was having an affair when she disappeared on New Year's Day nearly three years ago. Her body has never been found.

An attorney for Brian Walshe has denied the allegations.

Ana Walshe, a mother of three, was reported missing after her employer asked police in Massachusetts to perform a well-being check at the family's Cohasset home on Jan. 4, 2023.

During an interview with authorities that day, Brian Walshe said his wife left their home between 6 a.m. and 7 a.m. Jan. 1 for a work emergency, according to an affidavit in support of an arrest warrant. He told police that she kissed him and told him to go back to sleep, the affidavit says.

Prosecutors allege that Ana Walshe was already dead by the time the officers spoke to Brian Walshe.

Brian Walshe walks into a courtroom (Greg Derr / The Patriot Ledger via Imagn file)

Evidence presented at pretrial hearings detailed internet searches Walshe is alleged to have conducted on Jan. 1 and Jan. 2 — "hacksaw best tool to dismember" and "what happens when you put body parts in ammonia" were among them — and purchases he made from a Home Depot on Jan. 2.

Wearing a surgical mask and gloves, he paid $450 for a Tyvek suit, buckets, a hatchet, goggles, baking soda and other cleaning products, prosecutors said.

Authorities later found a bloody knife in his basement and a hacksaw, a hatchet, a Tyvek suit and other items that prosecutors accused him of dumping in an area south of Boston.

Walshe's attorney, Tracy Miner, has cast doubt on the state's physical evidence and suggested that Ana Walshe may have voluntarily disappeared. Miner accused the media of trying and convicting her client.

"It is easy to charge a crime and even easier to say a person committed that crime," she said. "It is a much more difficult thing to prove it, which we will see if the prosecution can do."

Walshe changed his plea on the two lesser charges on Nov. 18, the day jury selection was scheduled to begin. Documents filed by his attorneys admitted that he "disposed of and did convey the body of Ana Walshe after her death" and intentionally made false statements to police officers during four interviews in January 2023.

In a separate case, Walshe was sentenced to 37 months in federal prison last year after he pleaded guilty to charges linked to what federal prosecutors called a "years-long, multi-faceted art fraud scheme."

Prosecutors said Walshe sold two fake Andy Warhol paintings that he'd claimed were authentic for $80,000. He pleaded guilty in 2021 to one count each of wire fraud, interstate transportation for a scheme to defraud and unlawful monetary transaction.

A fraudster pleaded guilty to getting rid of his wife's body. Now a jury will decide if he killed her.

Opening statements in the murder trial of aconvicted fraudsteraccused ofkilling his wife and dismembering her bodyare sch...
Joe Maher/Getty;Mgm/Pathe/Kobal/Shutterstock George Clooney; Brad Pitt in 'Thelma & Louise' (1991)

Joe Maher/Getty;Mgm/Pathe/Kobal/Shutterstock

NEED TO KNOW

  • George Clooney recalled losing a role in Ridley Scott's Thelma & Louise to Brad Pitt after making it to the final test

  • "But, of course, when I saw it, I was like, 'Well, it had to be that guy,' " the Jay Kelly actor said

  • Pitt previously shared that he was offered the part after auditioning three separate times

George Clooneyis reflecting on what could have been.

While reminiscing about the early days of his career, the 64-year-old actor recently toldThe Sunday Timesthat he vividly remembers his desire to break out of his usual TV roles to become a serious film actor. But just when he thought he was going to get his big break as J.D. in 1991'sThelma & Louise,Brad Pittentered the picture.

"I got to the final test for a role inThelma & Louise," Clooney recalled of theRidley Scott-directed film. "And, motherf------, Brad got it."

"I didn't watchThelma & Louisefor years because I was annoyed," he continued. "The part launched his career in film. He was doing sitcoms and crap before, so when it was the thing that could've launched me? F---!"

Eric Charbonneau/Apple TV+ via Getty George Clooney (left) and Brad Pitt at a 'Wolfs' screening in September 2024

Eric Charbonneau/Apple TV+ via Getty

Now,the two have become longtime friendsand have starred in a number of movies together, includingOcean's Elevenand its sequels. And once Clooney finally brought himself to watchThelma & Louise, he admitted that Pitt, 61, was the obvious choice for the role.

"He gives me s---," theJay Kellyactor said of theF1star. "But, of course, when I saw it, I was like, 'Well, it had to be that guy.' "

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For his part, Pitt previously recalled that the casting agents "went through a couple of other actors" before officially offering him the part.

"I just thought, I'm the guy for this," he said in a January 2023 cover interview forWMagazine's Best Performances issue. "I didn't get the part at first, and then it came back around, and I didn't get it again, and I went, 'Huh. All right. Moving on.' And then it came back around again … I feel like it was three times."

He also went on to share insight into thefamous love scene that sparked his "entry into the big leagues."

"Geena [Davis]was so sweet and kind and delicate," Pitt recalled of his experience filmingone of Hollywood's steamiest sex scenesalongside Davis, who portrayed Thelma Dickinson. "That love scene, I think, went on for two days of shooting. She took care of me."

MGM/Pathe/REX/Shutterstock Brad Pitt and Geena Davis in 'Thelma & Louise' (1991)

Meanwhile, Davis, 69, said that sheremembered being impressed by the fresh-faced actorfrom the moment she saw his audition.

"He just has 'it,' " she told PEOPLE in February 2020. "I could tell when he was auditioning that he was super talented. He has done so many incredible things over the years."

She added, "He really is the 'star' of the moment, which is fabulous, and it is just great to see."

Read the original article onPeople

George Clooney Recalls Losing “Thelma & Louise” Role to Brad Pitt: ‘I Was Annoyed'

Joe Maher/Getty;Mgm/Pathe/Kobal/Shutterstock NEED TO KNOW George Clooney recalled losing a role in Ridley Scott's Thelma & Louise...
Amazon Studios Jerry O'Donnell in 'Bosch' season 5

Amazon Studios

In the case ofBoschactor Jerry O'Donnell, art doesn't just imitate life, it presages it.

The 65-year-old actor, who has also appeared on series likeMad MenandThe Young and the Restless, has taken his numerous law enforcement roles to heart to become a real-life cop.

Now relocated to North Carolina, O'Donnell has officially become a trainee with the Asheville Police Department, pending full-fledged officer status after completing Basic Law Enforcement Training, passing a state test, and months of field training.

"I feel blessed and grateful to still have some ability, so you know, that's like a sense of purpose — to be of service," O'Donnelltold the Asheville Watchdoglast month.

avlwatchdog.org Jerry O'Donnell

avlwatchdog.org

"When we do PT, we go on these runs in the parking garage — you run up, run down, run the parking garage," O'Donnell shared, reflecting on his training in progress. "And then you do exercises — 15 air squats, run up another level. Do 50 push-ups, run up another level. Do 50 burpees."

Despite enjoying a full, decades-long career in show business, O'Donnell said the career he's currently preparing to segue into at retirement age has given him a deeper sense of fulfillment.

"I always think when you slide into home at the end of your life, you want to be all used up... You know — dirty, scarred up, a little bloody, and spent."

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O'Donnell may be new to the police force, but he isn't new to combat training, according to the Asheville Watchdog. He previously spent four years in the U.S. Army's 82nd Airborne Division, but caught the acting bug after landing the lead role in a college play. O'Donnell then caught the attention of famed acting teacher Uta Hagen, with whom he studied, and then a West Coast talent agent, with whom he signed, and moved to Hollywood to pursue acting.

O'Donnell has appeared in nearly 50 films and series since his 1991 debut on an episode ofThe Flash.

The former actor's big break came in 1998, when he landed a role spanning 18 episodes across three seasons ofThe Young and the Restless. A part on the soap's sister series,The Bold and the Beautiful, followed over a decade later, and in the meantime, O'Donnell crafted a specialty in playing tough yet righteous law enforcement officers.

Some of O'Donnell's notable screen roles include an appearance on a season 4 episode ofDexterin which he delivers a flash drive containing information on a victim of the so-called "Vacation Murderers" to Davis Zayas' Sgt. Angel Batista. He also appeared as an officer of the law on three of the most beloved procedurals of the past two decades:NYPD Blue,JAG, and its spinoff,NCIS. On four episodes ofMad Men, O'Donnell played star Elisabeth Moss' brother-in-law, Gerry Respola.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

65-year-old “Bosch”, “Mad Men” actor becomes a police trainee in real-life “Rookie” story

Amazon Studios In the case ofBoschactor Jerry O'Donnell, art doesn't just imitate life, it presages it. The 65-year-old actor, wh...
Robert Perry/Getty A warden makes final adjustments to the Christmas tree at the Palace of Holyroodhouse on November 20, 2025 in Edinburgh, Scotland.

Robert Perry/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • The Royal Collection Trust shared photos of the Palace of Holyroodhouse being decorated for Christmas

  • This year's holiday transformation included two 12-foot Christmas trees in the throne room

  • While visitors are welcome to view the decked-out royal residence, the royal family will be spending the holidays elsewhere

The Palace of Holyroodhouse is ready for a royal Christmas!

King Charles' official residence in Scotland revealed its holiday decorations on Nov. 20, sharing photos of the throne room, dining room and more locations looking festive.

According to theRoyal Collection Trust, which cares for artifacts in the Royal Collection and manages the public opening of royal palaces such as Windsor Castle and Buckingham Palace, this year's holiday transformation includes two 12-foot Christmas trees and a mantle garland in the throne room, as well as seasonal garlands bringing extra grandeur to the Great Stair leading to the historic State Apartments.

The royal dining room has been readied for a holiday feast, with the grand table covered in fruit and foliage.

Robert Perry/Getty Members of staff putting the finishing touches to the Christmas decorations in the Great Staircase at the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh

Robert Perry/Getty

Visitors are welcome to the Palace of Holyroodhouse to see the holiday splendor until Jan. 5, 2026. However, most members of the royal family likely won't get to witness the festive decor themselves. King Charles, Queen Camilla and other members of the royal family traditionally spend Christmas at their Sandringham estate in Norfolk, England.

The British royals are known to exchange gag gifts on Christmas Eve, then attend church at St. Mary Magdalene on the Sandringham estate on Christmas Day. After mass, they head back to Sandringham House for a lunch of Norfolk turkey, followed by watching the annual Christmas broadcast delivered by the monarch at 3 p.m. U.K. time.

Robert Perry/Getty A visitor taking a selfie at the Christmas tree at the Palace of Holyroodhouse on November 20, 2025 in Edinburgh, Scotland.

Robert Perry/Getty

Other royal residences will also bedecorated for the holidays, with many open to the public.

Last year, King Henry VIII's former home of Hampton Court Palace in London featured an outdoorice skating rink, and visitors could take in adisplay of Tudor cookingenjoyed by Henry and his courtiers, "giving visitors the opportunity to explore the flavors and spices of the time," CNN reported.

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Robert Perry/Getty A member of staff putting the finishing touches to the Christmas decorations in the Dining Room at the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh.

Robert Perry/Getty

While the Palace of Holyroodhouse was getting ready for the holidays, Balmoral Castle in the Scottish Highlands had an unexpected closure due to early winter weather. The social media pages for the royal residence, where the royals gather each summer and where Queen Elizabeth died in 2022, announced on Nov. 19 that Balmoral Castle was closing early to the public due to weather, sharingwhimsical imagesof the snow covering the grounds.

The residence remained closed to the public the following day before reopening on Nov. 21.

Read the original article onPeople

King Charles' Palace in Scotland Is Decked Out for Christmas as Another Royal Residence Has an Unexpected Closure

Robert Perry/Getty NEED TO KNOW The Royal Collection Trust shared photos of the Palace of Holyroodhouse being decorated for Christmas Thi...
James Cameron Says It's 'Horrifying to Me' that AI Can 'Make Up an Actor': It Creates a 'Performance From Scratch With a Text Prompt'

Safe to say James Cameron will never cast Tilly Norwood in a movie.

During a recent interview withCBS' Sunday Morning, the director of "The Terminator" explained that even before the invention of generative AI, some Hollywood insiders thought he would use computer graphics to replace actors as he was developing the first "Avatar" film in 2005.

More from Variety

He recalled, "For years, there was this sense that, 'Oh, they're doing something strange with computers and they're replacing actors,' when in fact, once you really drill down and you see what we're doing, it's a celebration of the actor-director moment."

Cameron said now that generative AI is invading the industry, the idea that the technology could substitute for a performer is "horrifying."

"Now, go to the other end of the spectrum, and you've got generative AI, where they can make up a character," Cameron added. "They can make up an actor. They can make up a performance from scratch with a text prompt. It's like, no. That's horrifying to me. That's the opposite. That's exactly what we're not doing."

In September, comedian and producer Eline Van der Veldenintroduced AI performer Tilly Norwoodto the world at the Zurich Summit, boasting that her team had already received interest from multiple talent agencies. The presentation sparkedimmediate backlashfrom industry leaders.

In asit-down withVariety, Van der Velden said, despite the overwhelming backlash, the presence of AI is only going to grow in filmmaking.

"I think it will be a slow progression," she said. "I'm sure in the coming year, there'll be plenty of effects that will be made with AI. There'll be some establishing shots, there'll be some second-unit shots with AI, and then slowly, we'll progress to a full AI film. And whether people will pay for an AI film or not — I don't think they'll know the difference. It's good storytelling that will be the reason why people will pay for it or not."

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James Cameron Says It’s ‘Horrifying to Me’ that AI Can ‘Make Up an Actor’: It Creates a ‘Performance From Scratch With a Text Prompt’

Safe to say James Cameron will never cast Tilly Norwood in a movie. During a recent interview withCBS' Sunda...

 

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