Disney Hollywood Studios (George Wilson / NurPhoto via AP file)

A Disney employeethrew himself in front of a runaway rubber boulder, injuring himself as he shielded guests from the 400-pound prop during an Indiana Jones themed attraction, officials at the Florida park said Wednesday.

Fans at Disney's Hollywood Studios were all set to see a demonstration of the "Indiana Jones Epic Stunt Spectacular" when viral video captured the wild moments of the massive ball rolling off its track.

Guests appeared to be initially entertained by the mishap during a re-creation of the iconic scene from "Raiders of the Lost Ark." However, their brief laughs quickly turned to concern as the huge bouncing ball barreled off its track and toward the audience.

That's when a park employee confronted the wayward sphere, holding out his forearms and bracing for impact.

But he was no match for the faux boulder, which easily knocked him to the floor.

The man halted the prop's momentum toward the crowd, but he did not immediately stand up after having been struck as fellow employees rushed to the worker, who was flat on his back.

The officialDisney Parks Blogsays the prop is made of rubber and weighs 400 pounds.

A Disney spokesperson confirmed the incident occurred but did not offer any further specifics, such as when exactly the mishap occurred or the extent of the employee's injuries.

"We're focused on supporting our Cast Member, who is recovering," Disney said. "Safety is at the heart of what we do, and that element of the show will be modified as our safety team completes a review of what happened."

In the classic 1981 movie, screen legend Harrison Ford played swashbuckling archaeologist Henry Walton "Indiana" Jones Jr.

In an early scene of the Steven Spielberg flick, Ford's character was seeking to grab an ancient gold idol but had to overcome a booby-trapped lair that included a massive rolling boulder that he narrowly escaped.

Disney park worker hurt shielding crowd from 400-pound prop in Indiana Jones show

A Disney employeethrew himself in front of a runaway rubber boulder, injuring himself as he shielded guests from the 400-pound prop during ...
Michele Eve Sandberg/Shutterstock  Celebrity Cruises

Michele Eve Sandberg/Shutterstock

NEED TO KNOW

  • 95 passengers and nine crewmembers fell ill during a Celebrity Cruises voyage in late December

  • Symptoms reported included vomiting, diarrhea and abdominal cramps

  • The Celebrity Eclipse made a round-trip voyage

Dozens of passengers fell sick on a Celebrity Cruises voyage in late December.

According to the CDC, 95 of the 3,042 passengers aboard theCelebrity Eclipsecruise ship reported becoming sick during the voyage, which lasted from Saturday, Dec. 20 to Sunday, Dec. 28.

Nine crewmembers also reported being ill during the trip, which was a round-trip voyage from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., making stops in the Caribbean, per data tracked byCruise Mapper.

After departing the Florida port, the ship made stops at St. Johns, Antigua, Philipsburg, St. Maarten, San Juan, Puerto Rico and Puerto Plata-Amber Cove, Dominican Republic before returning to Florida.

Arterra/Universal Images Group via Getty Celebrity Cruises

Arterra/Universal Images Group via Getty

The outbreak was reported to the Vessel Sanitation Program on the final day of the trip.

The predominant symptoms experienced by the ill passengers and crew members were vomiting, diarrhea and abdominal cramps. The exact cause of the outbreak remains unknown.

In response to the wave of illness, Celebrity Cruises "increased its cleaning and disinfection procedures" along with consulting VSP about "sanitation cleaning procedures and reporting ill cases."

The crew also "collected stool specimens from gastrointestinal illness cases" to be tested, and isolated the sick passengers and crew.

Per the CDC, VSP "remotely monitored the situation, including review of the ship's outbreak response and sanitation procedures."

PEOPLE reached out to Celebrity Cruises and did not receive an immediate response.

The CDC reported22 outbreaks on cruise ships in 2025. Sixteen of these outbreaks were reported as norovirus. Before the Celebrity Cruises outbreak, the CDC reported anorovirus outbreak infecting over 100 passengerswho were aboard a 133-day cruise around the world.

The ship's stops included the U.S., England, Mexico, Japan and South Africa after departing from Germany in November.

Daniel Knighton/Getty Celebrity Cruises

Daniel Knighton/Getty

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In order to stay safe and healthy when aboard a cruise ship, the CDC recommends washing your hands often, drinking water to stay hydrated, and taking care of yourself.

If you do fall sick while on a cruise, tell the ship's medical center and follow their instructions.

Read the original article onPeople

95 Passengers Sickened by Unknown Illness on Celebrity Cruises Sailing

Michele Eve Sandberg/Shutterstock NEED TO KNOW 95 passengers and nine crewmembers fell ill during a Celebrity Cruises voyage in late Dece...
Finnish authorities took control of a vessel suspected of damaging a submarine telecommunications cable

Police from Finland have detained theRussiancrew of a tanker suspected of cutting a telecommunication cable in the Baltic Sea.

Finnish authorities seized the Fitburg, a St Vincent and Grenadines-flagged cargo ship, on Wednesday. It had been travelling from St Petersburg to Haifa,Israel.

The ship's crew consists of Russian, Georgian, Kazakh and Azerbaijani sailors, according to police, who are investigating the case as aggravated criminal damage and suspected sabotage.

The Fitburg, which was detained while anchored in Finnish waters, is suspected of being "responsible for damage to [a] cable" running between Helsinki and Tallinn in the Gulf of Finland.

The incident occurred in the Baltic Sea, which has seen a huge increase in suspected sabotage attacks on undersea cables since the start of theRussia-Ukraine war.

Western officials suspect the attacks are being carried out as part ofVladimir Putin's hybrid war campaign, which is designed to punish the West for its military support of Kyiv.

Elisa, the Finnish telecoms operator and owner of the cable, said the damage had "not affected the functionality of [its] services in any way".

The company said it had informed Finnish authorities as soon as it detected a fault in the cable earlier on Wednesday.

A Finnish police spokesman said: "At this stage, the police are investigating the incident ‍as aggravated criminal damage, attempted aggravated criminal damage, and aggravated interference with telecommunications."

The Estonian justice ministry said a second telecoms cable connecting the country toFinlandfailed temporarily on Wednesday, although it was not confirmed that it was connected to the Elisa incident.

Alar Karis, the Estonian president, said on social media: "I'm concerned about the reported damage ... hopefully it was not a deliberate act, but the investigation will be clarified."

Finnish officials at a press conference in Helsinki

Alexander Stubb, the Finnish president, said: "Finland is prepared ⁠for security challenges of various kinds, and we respond to them as necessary."

The case under investigation is reminiscent of an incident in December 2024,when Finnish authorities boarded the Eagle S, an oil tanker linked to Russia. They suspected that its anchor had damaged five cables in the Baltic.

Finland's attempt to prosecute the Eagle S's crew collapsed. A court in Finland ruled that prosecutors had not been able to prove that the crew intentionally damaged the cables. The fact that the ship had been stopped in international – rather than Finnish – waters, led to a dispute about jurisdiction.

The Baltic Sea is crossed by as many as two thousand ships a day and has become one of the most fraught flashpoints between Nato allies and Russia.

In an interview with The Telegraph earlier this year, a top German naval officer said it could be very difficult to prove that a rogue crew had dropped and dragged an anchor on purpose.

Seized vessel Fitburg rests in harbour in Kirkkonummi, Finland

"If you don't have a well-trained crew, it might drop the anchor because they've been told to wait three days, or because there is a lack of orders, or because there is bad weather, and not realise there is a cable underneath them," said Stephan Haisch, a Rear-Admiral in the Bundeswehr, the German armed forces.

"It's stupid, because the cables are marked on the nautical chart, but they just don't know. It can happen – but it is really stupid and short-sighted," he added.

Another problem is confirming whether a ship has any ties to Russia, as in many cases the vessels will sail under the flag of an obscure country with no obvious Russian links.

The Fitburg, for example, was sailing under the flag of St Vincent and Grenadines, a former UK Overseas Territory and island nation in the eastern Caribbean.

According to London Stock Exchange Group data, the owner of the Fitburg is Fitburg Shipping Company Ltd and the manager is Albros Shipping and Trading Ltd.

In addition to cutting cables, Russia-linked ships are suspected of carrying out surveillance on Nato ships and warplanes. They are typically part of Moscow's infamous shadow fleet, a group of rusty, poorly maintained ships that sail under foreign flags to evade sanctions.

When the Eagle S was boarded in Danish waters, the crew was unable to explain why it was carrying specialist equipment designed for such surveillance.

An ongoing Nato mission to crack down on suspicious Russia-linked ships in the Baltic Sea is being led by Germany, which last year opened a new headquarters in Rostock, on the country's northern coast.

Known as CTF Baltic, [Commander Task Force Baltic], the facility has angered Moscow, which claims it violates a 1990s-era treaty that banned the stationing of new Nato forces in the former communist state of East Germany.

"I could say that people are bothered by [the task force] in Russia, and that is a good sign, if people are bothered in Russia, because then we have achieved a certain effect," said Rear-Adml Haisch.

Try full access to The Telegraph free today. Unlock their award-winning website and essential news app, plus useful tools and expert guides for your money, health and holidays.

Russian crew detained after undersea cable cut in ‘sabotage’

Police from Finland have detained theRussiancrew of a tanker suspected of cutting a telecommunication cable in the Baltic Sea. Finnish aut...
Gospel singer Richard Smallwood dies at 77, leaving a legacy that inspired many in music

Richard Smallwood, a gospel singer and recording artist nominated eight times forGrammy Awards, has died. He was 77.

Smallwood died Tuesday of complications of kidney failure at a rehabilitation and nursing center in Sandy Spring, Maryland, his representative Bill Carpenter announced.

Smallwood had health issues for many years, and music gave him the strength to endure, Carpenter said in an interview.

"Richard was so dedicated to music, and that was the thing that kept him alive all these years," he said. "Making music that made people feel something is what made him want to keep breathing and keep moving and keep living."

Smallwood's songs were performed and recorded over the years by artists such as Whitney Houston, Stevie Wonder, Destiny's Child and Boyz II Men. Houston brought his music to film by performing "I Love the Lord" in the 1996 movie "The Preacher's Wife," according to Smallwood's biography at theGospel Music Hall of Fame.

Smallwood "opened up my whole world of gospel music," singer and songwriterChaka Khanwrote on Facebook after his death.

"His music didn't just inspire me, it transformed me," she said. "He is my favorite pianist, and his brilliance, spirit, and devotion to the music have shaped generations, including my own journey."

Smallwood was born Nov. 30, 1948, in Atlanta and began to play piano by ear by the age of 5, according to biographic materials provided by Carpenter. By age 7, he was taking formal lessons. He had formed his own gospel group by the time he was 11.

He was primarily raised in Washington, D.C., by his mother, Mabel, and his stepfather, the Rev. Chester Lee "C.L." Smallwood. His stepfather was the pastor of Union Temple Baptist Church in Washington.

Smallwood was a music pioneer in multiple ways at Howard University in Washington, where he graduated cum laude with a music degree. He was a member of Howard's first gospel group, the Celestials. He was also a founding member of the university's gospel choir, according to an obituary from Carpenter.

After college, Smallwood taught music at the University of Maryland and went on to form the Richard Smallwood Singers in 1977, bringing a contemporary sound to traditional gospel music. He later formed Vision, a large choir that fueled some of his biggest gospel hits, including "Total Praise."

"Total Praise" became a modern-day hymn that touched people from all types of backgrounds and walks of life, Carpenter said by phone Wednesday.

"You can go into any kind of church — a Black church, a white church, a nondenominational church — and you might hear that song," he said. "Somehow it found its footing throughout the whole Christian world. If he never wrote anything else, that would have put him in the modern hymn book."

Wonderperformed "Total Praise"at the funeral of Martin Luther King Jr.'s sonDexter Scott Kingat Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta on Feb. 10, 2024.

In recent years, mild dementia and other health issues prevented Smallwood from recording music, and members of his Vision choir helped care for him.

His legacy will live on "through every note and every soul he touched," Khan said.

"I am truly looking forward to singing with you in heaven," she said.

Gospel singer Richard Smallwood dies at 77, leaving a legacy that inspired many in music

Richard Smallwood, a gospel singer and recording artist nominated eight times forGrammy Awards, has died. He was 77. ...
Emma Heming Willis celebrates 18 years with Bruce Willis – 'So lucky'

Emma Heming Willisis celebrating a milestone withBruce Willisamid hisdementia battle.

The model and author reflected on their 18th anniversary of becoming a couple on Tuesday, Dec. 30. "18 years ago, he became my boyfriend. With one kiss on the top of my head, time stood still," the actress captioned a throwback photo of herself and her "Perfect Stranger" costar onInstagram. "I'm so lucky to know this kind of love."

In the photo, Willis kisses Heming Willis on the side of the head as she looks on. The couple wed in 2009, and now share two children: Mabel Ray, 13, and Evelyn Penn, 11. Willis has three daughters from his previous marriage toDemi Moore.

View this post on Instagram

Heming Willis, 47, previously opened up about the challenges of celebrating the holidays amid Willis declining health. The "Sixth Sense" actor, 70, was first diagnosed with aphasia, which affects how a person communicates, especially using speech,in 2022. The diagnosis led to his retirement from acting. In 2023,Willis' family announcedthat the condition had progressed tofrontotemporal dementia.

In a post on her website, titled "The Holidays Look Different Now," Heming Willis, 47, opened up about living through what she described as a "web of grief" during the holidays.

Bruce Willis' wifeEmma Heming Willis opens up about holiday 'grief'

Emma Heming and actor Bruce Willis arrive at Columbia Pictures' premiere of

Emma Heming Willisresponds to public 'judgment' amid Bruce's dementia

"For me, the holidays carry memories of Bruce being at the center of it all," she wrote. "He loved this time of year — the energy, family time, the traditions. Dementia doesn't erase those memories. But it does create space between then and now. And that space can ache."

Heming Willis went on to share that she finds herself "cursing Bruce's name while wrestling with the holiday lights or taking on tasks that used to be his," not because she is mad at him but "because I miss the way he once led the holiday charge."

But, she added, "You can miss what was and still show up for what is."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Bruce Willis, Emma Heming Willis celebrate 18 years together

Emma Heming Willis celebrates 18 years with Bruce Willis – 'So lucky'

Emma Heming Willisis celebrating a milestone withBruce Willisamid hisdementia battle. The model and author refle...
Bari Weiss invites George Clooney to newsroom after he said she's 'dismantling CBS News as we speak'

CBS News editor-in-chief Bari Weiss invited actorGeorge Clooneyto visit the network's newsroom after Clooney told Variety on Tuesday that Weiss was "dismantling CBS News as we speak."

"Bonjour, Mr. Clooney! Big fan of your work. It sounds like you'd like to learn more about ours. This is an open invitation to visit The CBS Broadcast Center, where I'm spending the holidays working to relaunch the Evening News with my colleagues. Tune in January 5," said Weiss in a statement sharedto Varietyby Paramount Skydance on Tuesday.

A representative for Clooney did not immediately returnFox News Digital's request for comment.

'Editorial Independence' Petition Unlikely To Faze Paramount Ceo David Ellison Amid Bari Weiss Saga: Ex-journo

Bari Weiss and George Clooney

The "Bonjour, Mr. Clooney" remark in Weiss's statement is an apparent reference to the actor and his wife recently being granted French citizenship.

Clooney pulled no punches in hiswide-ranging interviewwith Variety's Brent Lang. The actor touched on topics such as politics, PresidentDonald Trumpand the current state of the press.

Read On The Fox News App

One issue that Clooney seemed particularly perturbed by was CBS and ABC's decision to settle multimillion dollar lawsuits with Trump, suggesting the networks should have instead said, "Go f--- yourself."

CBS and ABC have paid at least $16 million apiece to settle lawsuits brought by Trump. But Clooney, who has been living in France after uprooting his family to get away from the culture of Hollywood, is bothered the networks didn't fight back.

Bari Weiss Suggests Cecot '60 Minutes' Piece She Delayed Wasn't 'Fair' In Memo To Staffers

"If CBS and ABC had challenged those lawsuits and said, 'Go f--- yourself,' we wouldn't be where we are in the country," Clooney toldVariety. "That's simply the truth."

"It's a very trying time," Clooney continued. "It can depress you or make you very angry. But you have to find the most positive way through it. You have to put your head down and keep moving forward because quitting isn't an option."

George Clooney and Donald Trump side-by-side

Paramount Global and CBS agreed in July to pay a $16 million upfront sum to settle the president's lawsuit against the network over how "60 Minutes" edited and released an interview with then-Democratic rival Kamala Harris in 2024. Trump's team, which initially sought $10 billion, claimed the network's use of edited clips from a single response about Israel constituted "election interference." Trump's legal team championed the settlement as a win for media accountability and the American people.

Cbs, Bari Weiss Facing Mounting Backlash From Liberal Critics Over Yanking '60 Minutes' Segment

The same month as the settlement, the Trump administration's Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approved an $8 billion merger between Paramount and Skydance Media, putting David Ellison in charge of the newly formed company.

Ellison then handpicked Bari Weiss to takeover CBS News, but Clooney isn't a fan.

"Bari Weiss is dismantling CBS News as we speak," Clooney told Variety. "I'm worried about how we inform ourselves and how we're going to discern reality without a functioning press."

Founder of The Free Press Bari Weiss

Trump's win over CBS came on the heels of ABC's apology and$16 million settlementwith Trump last December after he sued for defamation over "This Week" anchor George Stephanopoulos' claims on the air that the president had been held "liable for rape." The jury in the E. Jean Carroll case to which he was referring had actually ruled he was liable for "sexual abuse."

Click Here To Download The Fox News App

ABC and CBS did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Fox News Digital.

Fox News' Brian Flood contributed to this report.

Original article source:Bari Weiss invites George Clooney to newsroom after he said she's 'dismantling CBS News as we speak'

Bari Weiss invites George Clooney to newsroom after he said she's 'dismantling CBS News as we speak'

CBS News editor-in-chief Bari Weiss invited actorGeorge Clooneyto visit the network's newsroom after Clooney told Var...
Law enforcement ramps up New Year's security measures across the country

Washington— As cities and towns across the U.S. prepare for New Year's Eve and New Year's Day celebrations, local, state and national law enforcement agencies are on the lookout for potential threats — concerns that are heightened in the wake of the recentBondi Beach terror attackin Australia and the deadly attack on last year's celebrations onBourbon Street in New Orleans.

Lone actors and small groups with a range of ideological motives pose the most significant threat to New Year's Eve celebrations, according to a joint bulletin from the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security reviewed by CBS News.

The assessment, which is done routinely ahead of large public gatherings, notes there is no specific, credible threat this holiday. But the bulletin describes the persistent risk of small groups of people "seeking to commit acts of violence motivated by a broad range of racial, ethnic, political, religious, anti-government, anti-immigration, societal or ideological beliefs and grievances."

Colin P. Clarke, executive director of The Soufan Center, who focuses on domestic and transnational terrorism, called New Year's Eve the "Super Bowl of counterterrorism" — and the "holy grail for a terrorist."

"It's a soft target, highly symbolic with large crowds gathered," Clarke told CBS News. "It's the holy grail for a group like the Islamic state or a group or individual inspired by the Islamic state."

"New Year's is a symbolic day and it's a symbol of the West, and they're attacking the decadence of the West," he added.

In New York City, the NYPD has been working on security for the Times Square area since last year's festivities, said NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch. There are "no known specific credible threats" to the celebration, Tisch said Wednesday, but the public should expect to see "thousands" of NYPD officers in the area.

Intelligence teams will also be monitoring social media for threats, Tisch said. Times Square is expecting more than a million visitors from around the world, she noted, making it "one of the largest and the most complex safety operations anywhere in the world."

In Las Vegas, Andrew Walsh, undersheriff for the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department told reporters at a news conference this week that the National Guard will be present in Vegas, as they have been in years past.

Clarke worries that the U.S. has shifted significant resources to immigration and the border, to the potential detriment of counterterrorism operations. He said the "bench is incredibly thin when it comes to counterterrorism."

"As an American citizen it makes me nervous," Clarke said. "We are vulnerable to a large-scale terror attack."

Recent memory serves as a sobering reminder of how critical it is for law enforcement to be vigilant.

Earlier this month, the FBI announced it hadfoiledan alleged New Year's Eve bombing plot in Southern California. The four people who face charges in the alleged plot are members of a group known as the Turtle Island Liberation Front. Attorney General Pam Bondi described the organization as a "far-left, pro-Palestine, anti-government, and anti-capitalist group."

Hundreds of National Guard troops have deployed toNew Orleansone year after the devastating New Year's Day attack there, at the request of Louisiana's Republican Gov. Jeff Landry. On Jan. 1, 2025, investigators say Shamsud-Din Jabba rammed a pickup truck into the crowd onBourbon Streetin New Orleans, killing 14 people and leaving many more injured in an act of terror. The FBI said the attacker, a U.S. Army veteran, was radicalized by ISIS.

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New Orleans boosts New Year's security 1 year after deadly truck attack

Law enforcement ramps up New Year's security measures across the country

Washington— As cities and towns across the U.S. prepare for New Year's Eve and New Year's Day celebrations, local...

 

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