Bruce Hornsby talks having Grateful Dead's Bob Weir on new album – 'That stuff hits hard'

Bruce Hornsbywasn't planning to write a new album. Or even new songs.

USA TODAY

After a nearly seven-year span from 2019, when he'd written more than 40 compositions for four records and collaborated with New York chamber sextetyMusic, Bon Iver frontmanJustin Vernonand Shins founderJames Mercer, he was, admittedly, burned out.

Then the "germ of an idea" for what would become the title track to his new album,"Indigo Park,"out now, infiltrated his brain.

"I was giving it the stiff arm for months and months," Hornsby, 71, says, chatting from the wood-paneled studio at his longtime scenic home in Williamsburg, Virginia ("My next move is into a pine box," he jokes).

But he couldn't quash the burgeoning song concept.

In addition to acknowledging the 40th anniversary of his biggest commercial hit, "The Way it Is," Bruce Hornsby releases the album "Indigo Park" April 3, 2026.

"It would wake me up in the middle of the night so I finally said, 'OK, I will take this deep dive and write the song'," Hornsby says. "A lot of this record could be called myRoger McGuinnrecord because the Rickenbacker 12-string is in full force."

Indeed, though Hornsby'sheady musicianship as a pianistis well-documented, he's also playing the electric 12-string guitar on the first five songs of what he calls "a pretty wild record."

Amusical adventureis expected from an artist who broke into the mainstream in 1986 with the philosophical jazz-pop smash"The Way It Is"(hardly typical MTV fodder), cowrote and played on Don Henley's"The End of the Innocence,"toured for a couple of years with The Grateful Dead, composed numerous scores for Spike Lee's films and worked with artists including Chaka Khan, Stevie Nicks, Robbie Robertson and Bonnie Raitt.

The latter adds to the electronic-spiked, beat-propelled"Ecstatic,"while Vampire Weekend's Ezra Koenig guests on the sprightly "Memory Palace" and late Grateful Dead stalwart Bob Weir adds his unconventional style to "Might As Well Be Me, Florinda."

The cerebral Hornsby – who willtour most of the yearstarting April 9 with his band The Noisemakers – delved into how "The Way It Is" still resonates, working with Weir and Raitt on"Indigo Park", and why hallway-walking is his fallback exercise.

(This interview has been edited for length and clarity.)

Bruce Hornsby releases his latest album, "Indigo Park," April 3, 2026.

Question: Before we talk about the new album, it's the 40thanniversary of "The Way It Is." When you wrote the lyrics"some things will never change," what were you thinking about?

Bruce Hornsby: I was just reflecting on my upbringing, growing up in a small, Upper South Town where those narrow-minded attitudes prevailed. That's how I grew up. It's referenced in a sort of interesting way on this new record on "Silhouette Shadows," which is a look-back song. The last verse is about where I was and what happened when Kennedy was assassinated. (Recites lyrics) "The kids erupted in glee/shouting 'Hooray, Nixon can take over'/Ms. Nimmo jumped their ass and tore 'em down/I was really alarmed and confused/watching the children parroting parents' views." And that was sort of Exhibit A of the pervasive mindset in Williamsburg, Virginia, at that time and "The Way It Is" is sort of another version of that.

And the song has lived on.

It seems to be a song set up for the ages, and that's lucky me. The hip-hop community's embrace of ("The Way It Is") plays no small part. Tupac's is of course the most notable(1998's "Changes"). But hell, in 2021, the great Chicago young rapper, Polo G, did an amazing version called"Wishing for a Hero."It was basically his homage to Tupac, but then (laughs), it's my song. But he had a beautiful gospel choir. So it's still being sort of refreshed in that way.

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Is it the one song you can't take out of your set list?

Well, occasionally I won't do it. And the reason I won't do it is that we're up there and the place is so deeply involved and so intensely demonstrative about (the music) that I go, well, you know, we don't need to play this tonight because (the audience) is so ready to receive what we're doing now. But invariably I'll get a nasty Facebook or Instagram screed from some fan, quote, unquote, who's not really a fan, but …

He knows your hits.

Exactly. I understand that. But I'm not going to be a prisoner to that idea, that I have to be that guy who plays those old songs. I could never do that. I'd rather teach driver's ed than do that.

Bruce Hornsby's new album, "Indigo Park," includes guest appearances from Bonnie Raitt and Bob Weir.

What's the backstory on getting Bob Weir on "Might As Well Be Me, Florinda"?

I ran into him at theRobbie Robertson tribute concertat The Forum in Los Angeles (in October 2024) a few months after he had passed. It was a wonderful night and we were hanging out in this bus and I thought, "hmm, this might be a good match, Bobby and this song." So I told him I had this song I wrote with (longtime Grateful Dead collaborator Robert Hunter) and if you hear yourself singing on it, great. He went, "Send it to me. Yeah, maybe. Oh, forget it, I'm in." It was so funny, so great. We finally got it to him in May last year and he sent us this wild vocal. His vocal is crazy.

It's so him.

It really was just perfect. And that was really lucky. You never know when you ask somebody to perform for you what it will be like when you get it back … We called and gave him all the laudatory remarks and then he went off to do the Dead & CompanyGolden Gate Park concerts. I was hearing little rumblings about some health challenges that he was dealing with, then I didn't hear anything else and all of a sudden, wham, in January, I get the call abouthis passing. That stuff hits hard because you're not expecting it. So I feel fortunate and so happy we have this last little recorded document that might be the last thing he recorded.

It's also great to hear Bonnie Raitt's voice on "Ecstatic." You played on her"I Can't Make You Love Me,"and the last time you were on record together was for your 1993 "Harbor Lights" album. Why was this the ideal song for her?

I thought that it wasnot her standard wheelhouse. Stylistically, it's not a bluesy thing. I did give her one blues thing and she said, "Hey, thanks, at least I've gone this one thing where I can lay into a blues note." (Hornsby sings) "I'm committed to the unseen" – it's that line. So I thought if she was feeling adventurous that this would be something fun for her. Bonnie, I feel like she's my big sister in music. We've been so close. We'll get on the phone and talk for an hour, often.

Let's talk about the upcoming tour. You've spent so much of your career on the road. Do you still tolerate it well?

I hate it. Well, tolerate, yeah, and here's why. It's 2-2 1/2 hours of playing that is great fun. I always say it's more fun than anything you can do outside of a bed and that's still true. But the other 21 hours, the long bus rides, the overnight rides when you're in the bunk and you're being jostled by the funky road. Who likes that? I mean, Bob Dylan probably likes it (laughs) because he's done this never-ending tour for 20-25-years plus. So that's my conflicted feeling about the road. Love the playing. The rest you can have.

Do you try to get out and go for a walk or do something to break the monotony when you're traveling?

I have my routine and it includes a walk. I'm also good at hall walking when it's terrible weather.

You mentioned that you also do that at home when it's too cold to go outside.

Yeah, although in my house I don't have maids looking at me going, who is this tall, goofy guy who keeps passing by?

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Bruce Hornsby on new 'wild' record featuring Bob Weir, Bonnie Raitt

Bruce Hornsby talks having Grateful Dead's Bob Weir on new album – 'That stuff hits hard'

Bruce Hornsbywasn't planning to write a new album. Or even new songs. After a nearly seven-year span from 2...
Is 'The Drama' with Zendaya, Robert Pattinson safe for teens to see?

Spoiler alert! The following story contains major details about the plot twist of "The Drama."

USA TODAY

Save the date for the most polarizing film of the year.

"The Drama" (in theaters April 3) has been marketed as an offbeat romantic comedy about a woman named Emma (Zendaya) who, during a wine-fueled game with friends, reveals a horrible secret that makes her fiancé, Charlie (Robert Pattinson), question whether he's marrying a sociopath. The unsettling revelation is even darker than anything that Zendaya has been asked to do on her HBO series "Euphoria," and will most certainly shock fans who have been following the A-lister since her Disney Channel and "Spider-Man" days.

Here's everything that parents need to know about "The Drama," and whether it's safe for kids and teens to see:

What is the twist in 'The Drama' movie?

Emma (Zendaya) is partially deaf after firing a gun too close to her ear in "The Drama."

Written and directed by Kristoffer Borgli ("Dream Scenario"), the pitch-black satire follows Emma and Charlie in the week leading up to their wedding. Late one drunken night, she makes the disquieting revelation that at age 15, she was ruthlessly bullied and planned a school shooting. But just as Emma was about to carry out her attack, there was another mass shooting at a local shopping mall that killed a student.

Emma's shaken classmates welcome her in, and she's soon recruited into a gun violence prevention group – effectively burying her brutal inclinations. But when Charlie eventually discovers her past, he's forced to ask himself whether it's OK to wed someone who could even conceive of doing such a terrible thing.

What is 'The Drama' rated?

The film has been rated R by the Motion Picture Association for language, sexual content and some violence.

What age is 'The Drama' appropriate for?

Charlie (Robert Pattinson, left) starts to see Emma (Zendaya) in a whole new light after learning about her dark past.

We would have to side with the Motion Picture Association here and advise that you should be 17 or older to see the film. The movie deals with extremely serious subject matter, with multiple flashbacks to a younger version of Emma, who is physically and verbally bullied during high school.

There are sequences of teenage Emma practicing shooting her gun outside, walking around her house with a rifle and filming a suicide manifesto. During the video, she uses explicit language as she lists off the names of her classmates, saying that one girl will be the first to die.

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In an earlier scene, Emma's friend, Rachel (Alana Haim), confesses that she once locked a developmentally disabled kid in a closet and left him there, which prompted a search party to find him. Charlie, too, ultimately gets fed up with Emma and decides to cheat on her with his assistant (Hailey Benton Gates).

"The Drama" is both macabre and morally complex, and could be triggering in a variety of ways for teenagers. If your kid does indeed go see the film, it would be prudent for parents to start a discussion about it and welcome any questions that they might have.

How much sex and nudity are in 'The Drama?'

<p style=Zendaya and Robert Pattinson attend the Los Angeles premiere of A24's "The Drama" at DGA Theater Complex on March 17, 2026, in Los Angeles.

The romantic comedy, written and directed by Kristoffer Borgli, tells the story of a "happily engaged couple," whose union is "put to the test when an unexpected revelation sends their wedding week off the rails," according to the film's IMDb page.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Zendaya rewears her 2015 white Vivienne Westwood Oscars gown to the 2026 premiere, according to Variety.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Robert Pattinson and Suki Waterhouse

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Mamoudou Athie, Robert Pattinson, Kristoffer Borgli, Zendaya, Alana Haim, Jordyn Curet, Zoë Winters, and Sydney Lemmon

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Alana Haim

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Maura Higgins

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Salem Mitchell

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Jordyn Curet

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Kehlani

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Cazzie David

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Coco Jones

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Rico Nasty

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Tove Lo

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Kate Berlant

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Caroline Polachek

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Georgia Geraldine Dane, Rebecca Gayheart, and Billie Beatrice Dane

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Chris Perfetti

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Miguel Harichi and Leah Kateb

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Madelaine Petsch

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Robert Pattinson

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Zendaya

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" />

See Robert Pattinson, Zendaya, Kehlani, more at 'The Drama' premiere

ZendayaandRobert Pattinsonattend the Los Angelespremiere of A24's "The Drama"at DGA Theater Complex on March 17, 2026, in Los Angeles.Theromantic comedy, written and directed by Kristoffer Borgli, tells the story of a "happily engaged couple," whose union is "put to the test when an unexpected revelation sends their wedding week off the rails," according to the film'sIMDb page.

The sex scenes themselves are relatively brief. In the opening montage, Charlie enthusiastically describes to his friend, Mike (Mamoudou Athie), how much he likes having sex with Emma, and there is a quick flash of the couple in the throes of passion.

Later, after learning that Emma planned a mass shooting, she starts to slap Charlie's face mid-coitus and he worries that her violent fantasies extend to the bedroom. Charlie masturbates and almost has sex with his assistant at their office, but the encounter is hasty and they remain fully clothed.

And although the images themselves aren't explicit, Charlie at one point does flip through an art book featuring lingerie-clad women holding guns, and he begins to imagine Emma in similarly skimpy garb as she straddles a rifle.

Is there violence in 'The Drama' with Zendaya and Robert Pattinson?

A wedding photographer (Zoë Winters) is blissfully unaware of her clients' matrimonial drama.

Most of the violence is purely talked about, although Charlie does have grisly stress dreams, of sorts, about Emma as a potential killer. In one nightmarish sequence, she starts bleeding from the ear while they're in the middle of dinner. And in another gruesome moment, there is a frightening shot of dozens of wedding guests covered in blood, with bodies strewn across a banquet hall.

There is also gallows humor. In one scene that's played for laughs, Charlie can't stop fixating on how many times the wedding photographer says she is going to "shoot" their family and friends. Later, as they are having portraits taken, Charlie imagines that he is going on a series of dates with a joyful, teenage Emma.

When will 'The Drama' be released?

"The Drama" will be in theaters on April 3. No streaming release date has been announced yet.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Is 'The Drama' movie OK for all ages? A guide to Zendaya's movie

Is 'The Drama' with Zendaya, Robert Pattinson safe for teens to see?

Spoiler alert! The following story contains major details about the plot twist of "The Drama." Save t...
Kylie Jenner reveals the Timothée Chalamet film she's seen seven times

Kylie Jennerisn't justTimothée Chalamet's girlfriend; she's a fan.

USA TODAY

OnKid Cudi's new "Big Bro" podcastthat debuted on April 1, the "Kardashians" star, 28, revealed she saw Chalamet's "Wonka" movie "like seven times."

Jenner was asked to choose a favorite project from her Oscar-nominated boyfriend's plethora of work.

"That's hard for me because I feel like I really love them all, but 'Call Me by Your Name' is pretty perfect. It's just pretty perfect," she toldKid Cudi.

Kylie Jenner and Timothée Chalamet attend the 2026 Vanity Fair Oscar Party hosted by Mark Guiducci at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art on March 15, 2026, in Los Angeles.

She said she loves both 2021's "Dune" and its 2024 sequel "Dune: Part Two" before revealing that "Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory" 2023 adaptation was the Chalamet film she frequently returned to.

Kid Cudi recounted seeing it in a theater with Jenner, who then corrected him, saying she didn't attend the screening he was referring to.

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The "Day 'n' Nite" rapper recalled Chalamet buying his ticket and taking him to "Call Me By Your Name" at a Los Angeles theater. "Ever since then, it's been our thing to watch his movies together. It's like tradition," he said.

Kylie Jenner reveals she wants more kids

In a March 11interview with Vanity Fair, the beauty mogul also opened up about how she wants toconclude her 20s and revealed her plans to have more children.

"In the last years of my 20s, I want to focus on just me, my businesses, my work, traveling with my kids, enjoying my kids," she told the outlet. "And then I do want to have more kids."

Kylie Jenner has two children, whom she shares with ex‑boyfriendTravis Scott, including 3‑year‑old son Aire and 7‑year‑old daughter Stormi.

Her relationship with Chalamet started in 2023 and the pair have become more public in the years since. She frequently accompanied him at several award shows during his Oscar campaign as a best actor nomineefor "Marty Supreme."Last year, they sported matching outfits to a"Marty Supreme"premiere, a look that went viral online.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Kylie Jenner reveals the Timothée Chalamet film she's seen seven times

Kylie Jenner reveals the Timothée Chalamet film she's seen seven times

Kylie Jennerisn't justTimothée Chalamet's girlfriend; she's a fan. OnKid Cudi's new "Big B...
How a tiny island and a small minority helped America win its freedom

PHILADELPHIA — Jewish people were a very small minority in Colonial America, said Josh Perelman. But, he added, they played an outsized role in thefight for freedom.

USA TODAY

A senior advisor for content and strategic projects at the Weitzman National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia, Perelman recently gave USA TODAY a tour of the museum ahead of its exhibit, "The First Salute," opening April 23, which highlights the role of a tiny Jewish community − and a tiny Caribbean island − in the Revolutionary War effort.

Jewish people had first permanently settled in the New World in 1654, coming from Amsterdam to live in New Amsterdam, the Dutch colony that would eventually become New York City. Others came from Brazil, where they'd enjoyed some measure of self-determination while it was under Dutch rule but, when the colony came under Portuguese rule, decided to leave rather than face forced conversion to Christianity, persecution or worse.

Many of America's earliest Jewish families had surnames likeLopez, Rodriguez and Gomezfrom their roots on the Iberian Peninsula,from which they were expelled in 1492by order of the Catholic King Ferdinand II of Aragon and Queen Isabella I after the horrors of the Spanish Inquisition.

"As Isabella and Ferdinand were waving goodbye to Christopher Columbus, they were waving goodbye to the Jews, too," Perelman said. "... by kicking them out of the country."

Like so many others before and after them, Perelman said, Jewish people came to America because they saw it as a land of opportunity, a place to start anew, and a place where they could determine their own future.

New Amsterdam, old prejudices

"There are mythologies about Jews that exist to this day," Perelman said as he walked through the museum steps from Independence Hall and the Liberty Bell. "But Jews are no different than any other minority. Not one is a monolith."

Josh Perelman of the Weitzman Museum points to some of the Americas' earliest Jewish settlers. Many families had Spanish surnames, he noted, pointing to their Iberian origins.

The Jews who landed in New Amsterdam found it wasn't so immediately welcoming. Peter Stuyvesant, the governor and a strict Calvinist, considered Jewish people "hateful enemies and blasphemers," and warned that if they were allowed to stay, then "we cannot refuse the Lutherans and the Papists."

Jewish leaders − and those who valued their skills as merchants and traders − advocated successfully for them to stay in New Amsterdam, but under the conditions that they not worship publicly. Jewish people were also forbidden from owning real estate, serving in the militia, opening shops or holding public office. They were to take care of their own, Perelman said, so they did, forming their own mutual aid groups and community organizations.

"There was this confrontation," Perelman explained. "Would this New World be a monoculture, or an open society with diversity and homogeneity?"

Soon, there would be Jewish communities in Newport, Rhode Island; Savannah, Georgia; Charleston, South Carolina; and Philadelphia, as well as in New York.

A dispute over economics turns to war

In the pre-industrial Old World, wealth meant owning land, so Jewish people were relegated to "lower" professions like finance, mercantilism and trade. They brought those skills and connections to the New World, settling in cities with busy ports. Philadelphia, with its Quaker tradition of religious tolerance, New York and Newport were particularly hospitable to Jewish people.

An exhibit inside the Weitzman Museum shows Jewish migration patterns to the Americas during the Colonial period.

"In many ways, Jews enjoyed more freedom here than in Europe," Perelman said, and while antisemitism was a reality in America, it wasn't the violent, virulent antisemitism of the Old World. Jews here "felt a greater sense of agency, and they were able to navigate through it without the fear of violent reprisal."

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The American Revolution began as a series of grievances over taxation, representation and self-determination that evolved into more high-minded ideas about liberty, Perelman noted.

"One of the more remarkable aspects of it is that you see these ideas about liberty gestating and coming to live," he said. "Something that is a revolution, and is revolutionary."

Josh Perelman of the Weitzman Museum shows a letter that includes a Hebrew prayer for the country, written in 1789 by Jacob Cohen of Richmond, Virginia.

The island that helped arm a revolution

St. Eustatius is a small island in the Caribbean that,according to the U.S. Naval Institute, served as "the arsenal of the American Revolution," an 8-square mile Dutch outpost that became a way of eluding British blockades once war broke out, with ships bringing gunpowder and munitions to the Continental Army, facilitated by Jewish traders and merchants.

Jewish traders' connections "became invaluable to supplying the Continental Army with gunpowder, munitions and clothing," Perelman said. "Their networks of family and trading put them in places like Amsterdam, Paris and the Caribbean" that were out of reach for the British military, crucial because there was no munitions industry in the colonies.

A display at the Weitzman Museum shows reproductions of letters between Moses Seixas a leader in Newport, Rhode Island's Jewish community, and George Washington, in which the first President affirmed the promise of religious freedom.

In 1781, British forces led by General John Vaughan and Admiral George Rodneyseized the island, and Rodney's first order of business was to imprison all the Jewish men on the island, stripping them of their wealth and deporting them, even exhuming graves to plunder them, drawing widespread condemnation. But Rodney, an inveterate gambler, lingered too long on the island − giving French forces the opening they needed to reach the Americans with much-needed aid.

A plea from Gen. Washington: 'Send for Haym Salomon'

Haym Salomonwas born in Poland but arrived in New York in 1775, joining the Sons of Liberty and establishing a brokerage house, working alongsideRobert Morris, a Philadelphia merchant, to secure and manage funding for the Revolutionary cause. Salomon, though, was captured by the British, accused of being a spy.

During his captivity, Salomon, who was multilingual, served as a translator between British and Hessian forces — convincing some of them to desert or turn to the American side. Arrested again in 1778, Salomon escaped to Philadelphia, where he worked alongside Morris again, securing money for the Continental Army, even donating much of his own money to the cause. At Yorktown, Congress and General George Washington found themselves low on funds to pay troops; Washington told Morris, "Send for Haym Salomon," who got the financing, and turned the tide of the war's final battle.

But Salomon, for all his efforts, is often overlooked in historical accounts,wrote historian James A. Percocoin Battlefields.org. He died penniless in 1785.

The Weitzman National Museum of American Jewish History is steps away from the Liberty Bell and Independence Hall in Philadelphia.

A risk worth taking

Jewish people in America, Perelman said, saw their efforts to support the American Revolution as "a risk worth taking," and for many of them, the risk paid off. Washington, as the new nation's first president, reiterated the guarantee of religious freedom. After a 1790 visit to Newport and meeting one of its Jewish leaders,Moses Seixas, Washington wrote that the new nation's government should give "to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance."

By leveraging their skills and connections, Jewish people were "participating side by side [with the Founding Fathers]" in the Revolutionary cause, including about 100 Jews who fought with the Continental Army.

"Like everyone else, they had to choose between the status quo, or risk everything, their lives and their livelihoods for these aspirational ideals and an uncertain future," Perelman said. "Most of them in the colonies and in the Caribbean believed in those ideals."

Phaedra Trethan is a national correspondent for USA TODAY, writing about history and Americana. Contact her by email at ptrethan@usatoday.com, on X @wordsbyphaedra, on BlueSky @byphaedra, or on Threads @by_phaedra

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:How a Jewish minority and a tiny island helped America win its freedom

How a tiny island and a small minority helped America win its freedom

PHILADELPHIA — Jewish people were a very small minority in Colonial America, said Josh Perelman. But, he added, they play...
North American farmers pinch pennies on farm machinery as profitless growing season approaches

By Ed White

Reuters

REGINA, Saskatchewan, April 3 (Reuters) - Farm machinery salespeople are wrapping up a dismal season of farm shows across North America as farmers gear up for spring planting without much new equipment.

Farmers have not stopped buying, but many have ‌slashed spending and are avoiding big-ticket items due to high machinery, fertilizer and fuel prices, as well as a global grains ‌glut pushing down crop prices.

"They might not buy the million-dollar combine, but they'll buy a $100,000 implement," said Chad Jones of manufacturer Degelman Industries, standing among his company's rockpickers, harrows, ​rippers and other yellow-painted equipment at Canada's Farm Show in March.

Farmers are still spending money, but far less than in other years, according to sales data from the Association of Equipment Manufacturers, the organization that represents big players in the North American industry.

The group told Reuters that sales of big-ticket items like tractors and combines were down between 30% and 40% in the U.S. in March compared to a year ago.

Farm machinery sales have been hammered by a squeeze ‌on farmer finances exacerbated by U.S. President Donald Trump's ⁠trade war tariffs that have escalated the production cost of already-expensive machines like tractors and combines. These items, known by farmers as "big iron," are manufactured from large amounts of steel and often with imported components.

The Trump administration ⁠is reported to be planning a 25% tariff on the value of finished imported goods that contain steel and aluminum, rather than just 50% on the metals content of those goods. That will likely raise the overall price of those products. However, goods that are mostly made from steel and aluminum, including ​tractors ​and combines, will still face the 50% tariff that has been in place ​for almost a year.

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In its most recent quarterly earnings call, ‌a John Deere official said the company estimates tariffs will cost it $1.2 billion in 2026, and that not all of 2025's tariff costs had been passed on to farmers.

Last Friday, Trump called on the manufacturers to cut prices in order to help farmers.

But for the beleaguered industry, Trump's tariffs are the problem. The easiest way to bring the cost of machinery down would be "to significantly scale back on the tariffs that are hitting the manufacturers, and the retaliatory tariffs that are hitting farmers," said Kip Eideberg of the Association of Equipment Manufacturers.

Trade fights have hurt U.S. ‌crop export sales, with China absent from the U.S. soybean exports market for ​months, depressing North American crop prices and creating huge stockpiles.

"They were looking at profitability ​being very tight to even potentially negative for the upcoming growing ​season, and this has led to slower decisions on equipment replacement," said Farm Credit Canada economist Leigh Anderson. ‌Farmers have delayed planned purchases, hanging on to aging equipment ​for longer, he said.

Signs of that ​lack of interest could be seen at the farm show in Regina, with few farmers kicking the tires of tractors and other large machinery. Despite over 5,000 people attending the show, many of the equipment displays were relatively quiet.

"It's fair to characterize it as ​purchasing behavior shifting from wants to needs," said ‌Eideberg of AEM. Fertilizer and machinery production costs are hard to reduce once they have risen, which is why the ​AEM is hoping to see tariffs chopped.

"That's the immediate relief that will make a significant difference for farmers and manufacturers," ​said Eideberg.

(Reporting by Ed White, Editing by Emily Schmall and Aurora Ellis)

North American farmers pinch pennies on farm machinery as profitless growing season approaches

By Ed White REGINA, Saskatchewan, April 3 (Reuters) - Farm machinery salespeople are wrapping up a dismal seas...
Exclusive-US upends global supply program for malaria and HIV amid warnings of gaps

By Ammu Kannampilly and Jennifer Rigby

Reuters

NAIROBI/LONDON, April 3 (Reuters) - The U.S. is upending the way it delivers medical supplies for diseases such as HIV and malaria to lower-income countries, according to seven sources and an internal email, risking a second dislocation of life-saving services in just over a year.

The U.S. has until now ‌managed its medical donations through the Global Health Supply Chain Program - Procurement and Supply Management - run by the private contractor Chemonics. From its establishment in 2016 to 2024, ‌it delivered a total of more than $5 billion of HIV and malaria products to 90 countries, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia.

That program was halted when President Donald Trump froze international aid on the first day of his presidency ​in January last year, stranding millions of dollars of supplies in ports and warehouses - from drugs for HIV, which causes AIDS, to insecticide-treated bed nets. Much of that work restarted after the U.S. issued a waiver for products that were life-saving.

However, its future has been up in the air as the administration has reduced and reshaped foreign aid, dismantling the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), cutting budgets, and switching from management by contractors to bilateral agreements with other countries.

U.S. AID UPHEAVAL LIKELY TO CAUSE MORE MEDICINE SHORTAGES

Five sources said the speed of the change could cause shortages or gaps in the ‌provision of life-saving products in some countries, with grave impacts.

The U.S. ⁠State Department asked U.S. staff in 17 African countries and Haiti in an email on Tuesday to cease implementing the supply program by May 30.

It said the contract with Chemonics was ending on September 30, in line with all USAID awards - although its official end date is in November.

The email, ⁠seen by Reuters and verified by two sources, also said there could be "immediate risks to service continuity if (the) transition is rushed or incomplete".

It did not lay out a clear transition plan, instead asking each U.S. country office to set out how it would implement the handover, and to inform Washington of any risks or need for more time.

A spokesperson said the State Department had "not provided any technical direction to Chemonics ​to ​cease operations by May 30 or any other date". Chemonics declined to comment.

Six sources said the U.S. was ​talking to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria about ‌using its supply platform to procure and deliver donations of global health products in future.

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The Global Fund, a Geneva-based health initiative, already manages the purchase and supply of around $2 billion a year in health products for the three deadly infectious diseases, alongside partner organisations in the countries where it works. It also has an online procurement platform used by partners.

Two of those sources said earlier discussions between the organisation and the U.S. government had focused on a November 2027 transition.

They said the new timeline was unrealistic as ordering medical products for use in hard-to-reach locations could take up to a year, rather than the matter of weeks now being envisaged.

The Global Fund declined to comment. The State Department did not respond to specific questions on whether it was talking ‌to the Fund, but said it would use available pooling mechanisms to buy supplies at the lowest prices ​from private manufacturers.

AMERICA-FIRST AID

Last year, the Trump administration said its global health plans would prioritise funding front-line health supplies, ​health workers and technicians, and working directly with individual countries.

The America First Global Health ​Strategy, published in September, said contractors were part of the "significant inefficiency and waste" that it was trying to root out of the system.

But the speed ‌of the changes to how the U.S. delivers aid has already caused ​problems around the world, including shortages of malaria ​drugs for children and gaps in HIV prevention.

The State Department spokesperson said the current system was "a bloated piece of an obsolete development model" that "does not put the American taxpayers first and instead helps to line the pockets of large U.S.-based development firms".

They said the U.S. government had now signed 28 bilateral health pacts with recipient governments, and would ​mostly use private logistics firms to distribute supplies.

In recent months, Washington has ‌pledged to provide funding directly to the governments of countries including Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda, alongside promises of increased national spending.

But details are still being hammered out. ​The Kenya agreement faces a court challenge by Kenyan activists over data privacy concerns, while negotiations with the Zambian government have been delayed.

(Reporting by Ammu Kannampilly ​in Nairobi and Jennifer Rigby in London; additional reporting by Jonathan Stempel; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

Exclusive-US upends global supply program for malaria and HIV amid warnings of gaps

By Ammu Kannampilly and Jennifer Rigby NAIROBI/LONDON, April 3 (Reuters) - The U.S. is upending the way it del...
Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Dorit and Erika

Welcome toThe Real Housewives of Beverly HillsSeason 15, Episode 16 recap. Last time, Doritstranded Kyle and Erikain San Miniato during an argument. The fireworks continued at dinner when Kyle and Dorit faced off. Here's what happened in Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Season 15, Episode 16: "The Last Supper."

What happened in Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Season 15 Episode 16?

Real Housewives of Beverly Hills

The group's final dinner in Italy ended with a blowout between Erika, Kyle, and Dorit. Thefuture of their friendshipwith Dorit is in doubt. And back in Beverly Hills, Rachel prepped for her disco-themed birthday bash.

Dinner drama in Italy in The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills

Real Housewives of Beverly Hills

The episode picked up during the explosive dinner in Italy. Kyle shared that Boz claimed that Dorit was "in financial crisis." Cue the flashback of Boz and Kyle's FaceTime chat, where Boz commented that Dorit had "a looming financial crisis." Boz also said that Dorit's name was on the cars and the house. Boz told Kyle, "I think her name is on debt."

Dorit then called out Boz for sharing these details. "I have been concerned about your finances. And that's not a new conversation between you and I," Boz said. "And I actually do believe that Kyle's very concerned for you." When Boz apologized, an irritated Kyle chimed in. "Of course, you appreciate that from Boz," Kyle said.

Meanwhile, Dorit insisted that Kyle discussed her "erratic" behavior,tardiness, and spendingwith several people. "Can you people speak up and say what you've been saying?" Kyle said to her RHOBH co-stars. "I've only had conversations with people that were saying the same thing."

When Dorit complained that Kyle hadn't given her "grace," Kyle fired back. "You just walked onto a plane after leaving us on the tarmac for an hour and a half. Didn't even apologize. We didn't call you out," Kyle said, "because we were giving you grace."

While Dorit questioned whether she had apologized, the other ladies let her know that she hadn't. "I apologize for every time I'm late," Dorit said. Then Dorit went around the table, naming everyone. However, she skipped over Amanda. Was it a mistake, or a shady dig?

According to Dorit, she didn't see her, and she apologized. "How did you just skip over Amanda when she's sitting right in front of your face?" Kyle exclaimed as Erika shook her head.

Is Kyle trying to take down Dorit in RHOBH?

Real Housewives of Beverly Hills

"I feel like Kyle's on a mission to make me look bad," Dorit said in her confessional. "First, it's constantly defendingPK [Kemsley]." She added that Kyle "talks to all the women about me" instead of "coming straight to me."

Next, Dorit accused Kyle of deflecting, while Kyle claimed that Dorit was "always looking for something with me." Kyle added that she was "tired of being a punching bag." In addition, Erika brought up how Sutton mentioned a comment that Dorit made about Kyle. "At our lunch, she said, 'I could … I could have ended Kyle,'" Sutton said earlier that day.

Cue another flashback of that lunch with Sutton, Dorit, and Rachel, where Dorit claimed that she "protected Kyle for years. If I took that lead, I would have blown up her whole life," Dorit said. WOW.

Of course, Dorit denied knowing what Sutton was talking about. In her confessional, Kyle said that Dorit is using the "excuse" that Kyle "didn't jump on the 'I hate PK' bandwagon. I don't talk to PK." She continued, "So, what is your real reason for having this resentment towards me?"

Finally, Kyle told Dorit, "If you want to continue to look for the negative with me all the time, you don't have to be my friend." She added, "I'm done fighting with you. I love you, and I wish you the best." The RHOBH ladies were shocked that Kyle was ready to say goodbye to Dorit.

Erika is on the attack in The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills

Then, Erika chimed in. "You're really guarded, and you're really like, protective right now. I don't know that you think that Kyle really cares about you, because it just feels very defensive," she told Dorit.

Dorit agreed. "But do you not see that this group of friends supports you?" Erika asked. However, Dorit's next comment stunned both Erika and Kyle. "Boz, you came to me, and you have shown me, in this group, more support than everyone put together. Period," Dorit stated.

"Wow," Erika and Kyle both stated. "You have a really bad memory," Kyle added. "Mother*cker. Really?I am beyond mad, and, like, are you forgetting history?" Erika said in her confessional. Cue the flashbacks of Erika supporting Dorit over the years. "I have respected the fact that Dorit has not been in a great place. She's at her absolute limit, but there are limits to my patience," Erika explained. And Dorit has vaulted over that line.

Back at the table, an activated Erika said, "I'm mad, actually, that we sat down at this table, Dorit, and we had to sit here and wait for you. Where were you?" Dorit explained that she was "checking on my kids."

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Erika responded, "Great. How long does that take? We all have kids. Why would you keep us all waiting?" She added, "Because your kids are more important than everybody else's kids?" One point for Erika.

"I didn't f*cking say that," Dorit said. Then Erika instructed her to text them next time she was running late. You know, like a responsible adult.

Dorit and Erika throw grenades in RHOBH

Erika Jayne and Dorit Kemsley on stage at BravoCon 2023

Meanwhile, Dorit wasn't backing down. "Guess what? I left you guys today. I didn't owe you anything," Dorit said.

"I don't owe you anything other than the truth, which is we don't like it. I'll say it 'cause these  motherf*ckers won't," Erika said. "We don't like it. How about that?"

Rachel chimed in that she spoke to Dorit about being late and added that Dorit's "going through a f*cking ton." That excuse didn't work for Erika. "We're all going through a f*cking ton, Rachel," Erika replied.

However, Dorit made a telling comment. "Really? You're going through a f*cking time?" Dorit asked. Erika looked stunned. "Are you kidding?" she asked. "What the f*ck do you think it is? My husband went to prison.I'm going to trial." Dorit exclaimed, "You haven't shared that you're going through a f*cking time!" Of course, Erika and Dorit continued to squabble.

"When I said you need to work, and you need to contribute, I didn't mean you need to be a c*nt," Dorit said. The remark rolled off Erika's back as Amanda's jaw dropped. "Dorit, you're an *sshole," Erika said calmly, "and you're a c*nt." At the other end of the table, Rachel remarked, "I really save that word for very special occasions."

Dorit walks off again in RHOBH

Real Housewives of Beverly Hills

While Dorit denied knowing about Erika's upcoming trial, Kyle and Erika insisted that she knew. "It's all over the news," Kyle said. "Of course, Erika's going through a lot. But I only know that because of the tabloids," Dorit admitted in her confessional. "Not from Erika." And she claimed that she would be in Erika's corner if Erika shared with her.

"Do you have to leave now?" Erika asked sarcastically. "Oh, hell, yes," Dorit exclaimed. When Erika asked why, Dorit said that since her separation, she "doesn't put up with sh*t like this." So, Erika clapped back, "Dorit, you lay everybody out. All of a sudden, it's you and I, and you walk away?"

Anyway, Dorit left the table. "I lay everyone out, Erika? Think again, sweetheart." As she rounded the corner, Dorit said, "Oh, please. Weirdos."

For some reason, Kathy went to try to bring Dorit back, but Dorit was done. "I would much rather be alone than around a bunch of f*cking c*nts," Dorit said. As she walked away, shelit up a ciggy.

"I really thought I could count on Erika," Dorit said in her talking head. "But I guess it's just more important to her to be in Kyle's good graces than to be a real friend to me."

At the table, a weepy Erika said, "These two have protected me, and helped me, and the three of us are very tight. I don't like to see them fighting." In her confessional, Erika admitted, "I don't give out my heart or my friendship easily. But, I don't know where Dorit and my friendship stand." She added, "I've never really felt this angry, or this hurt, by her before."

Welcome to Studio 54!

Real Housewives of Beverly Hills

Four days later, in Beverly Hills, Dorit shot thecover of her book. Of course, Rachel and Boz showed up to support Dorit. Meanwhile, Dorit reflected on her blow-out with Erika. "Erika and I, we had an issue once, the first year we ever met," Dorit told the ladies. She added that it "felt like there was an unprovoked attack."

As for Rachel, she planned a Studio 54 disco-themed party for her birthday. Once everyone arrived in their glittery best, the tension was palpable. This party will be memorable, for better or for worse.

The Real Housewives of Beverly Hillsairs on Thursdays at 8/7c on Bravo. It streams on Peacock.

TELL US – WHAT DID YOU THINK OF REAL HOUSEWIVES OF BEVERLY HILLS SEASON 15 EPISODE 16? WAS DORIT OUT OF POCKET WITH ERIKA AT DINNER?

The postReal Housewives of Beverly Hills Season 15 Episode 16 Recap: Dorit and Erika's Friendship Implodesappeared first onReality Tea.

Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Season 15 Episode 16 Recap: Dorit and Erika’s Friendship Implodes

Welcome toThe Real Housewives of Beverly HillsSeason 15, Episode 16 recap. Last time, Doritstranded Kyle and Erikain San Miniato during an ...

 

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