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Unlike Taylor Swift, I argue with my partner every day. We’ve been together for 30 years.

Couple arguing
  • Travis Kelce said in his podcast “New Heights” that he and Taylor Swift never argue.
  • During the podcast, the brothers asked George Clooney about how he also never argues with Amal.
  • I, on the other hand, fight with my partner regularly and we’ve been together for 30 years.

As a happily married amateur matchmaker who has helped fix up 30 marriages and was set up with my own miraculous mat, I have rooted for Taylor and Travis’s inspiring relationship from the start.

Whether they’re confirming their mutual support for each other’s work, showing kindness to their doormen and drivers, or giving to charity, I find the adorable, winning couple to be excellent role models.

Yet I admit the Kansas City Chiefs’ recent claim that they never fight set me off.

Fighting can be healthy

First, they’ve only been together for two years, most of it long-distance, during her almost two-year “Eras” tour spanning 149 shows across five continents, while Travis played a total of 31 regular-season games in the last two seasons, not to mention the hours spent in training, recovery, and travelling to see each other.

It’s amazing they had time to share a dance onstage, grab dinner, “knock on wood,” and do a few cute podcasts together.

Then George Clooney co-opted the conversation by confessing that he and Amal have never had an argument in their 10-year marriage.

As a bestselling author of books my family hates and writing professor in a successful union with someone I adore for 30 years, I felt like screaming: “That’s the opposite of a healthy message to give your children, friends, and fans!”

To leave Hollywood fantasy for a truly fulfilling and realistic connection, it’s crucial to be able to speak up, disagree with your partner, express yourself amiably, and still feel cherished and appreciated. Otherwise, you’re encouraging your partner to keep quiet, repressing their needs and longings to avoid any contention.

I fight with my partner all the time

Indeed, my beloved and I have combative words daily, whether it’s me pushing him to hurry up and get ready (he’s always late) or him admonishing me to slow the hell down (I tend to be Type A and early), or barking at him to “clean up his damn clutter” motivating him to snarl that I need to stay out of his den and leave his stacks of books, DVDS, and papers lining the floor and tables alone, where they belong.

Couple kissing
The author and her partner have been together for 30 years.

Of course, we try not to raise our voices, swear, criticize, or call each other names — although a stray “slob,” “control freak,” and “screw you” have been known to surface in the swirl of passion. Afterward, having honestly expressed our displeasure, we return to our otherwise fairly harmonious existence.

My parents also fought often

I grew up overly sensitive with a tough, brilliant doctor father and three science-brain brothers in the Midwest who trashed my opinions, liberal platitudes, and poetry. Instead of cowering under their constant criticisms, I learned to yell, “Go chew on yourself,” and became a prolific writer, probably as a way to amplify my views and talk without being interrupted. The friction taught me the toughness I later needed to conquer a big city, carry on two careers, and hold my own in a long marriage to a high-powered, hilarious, albeit stubborn urbanite.

My parents, blissfully besotted for 64 years in Michigan with four kids and five grandkids, quarreled often and well.

Once, when they had friends over for dinner, and my mother disagreed with his political stance, Dad made the mistake of responding by muttering, “Stick to your dishes.” She looked him in the face and replied, “You didn’t tell me that when I was working to put you through medical school for seven years!” which shut him up immediately. He soon apologized profusely, as he should have.

Luckily, Kylie Kelce, Taylor’s soon-to-be sister-in-law, got real by leaping right into the fray. Talking about her and Jason, her husband and the father of her four little kids, she confessed, “We absolutely argue.”

Asking brides to “love, cherish, and obey” their grooms entered traditional wedding vows in 1594, and this is now considered completely outdated. In fact, if you want your union to last, you have to love, cherish, and argue all the way down the aisle.

Susan Shapiro, an award-winning writing professor, is the bestselling author of the books “Five Men Who Broke My Heart” and “The Forgiveness Tour.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

Prosecutors need more time to deal with pandemic fraud. A top senator says Democrats are blocking a bill to give it to them.

Senator Joni Ernst at a podium
Senator Joni Ernst
  • The deadline is approaching for prosecutors to file fraud chagres related to $43 billion in pandemic aid spending.
  • Senator Joni Ernst says her Democratic counterpart is blocking a bill to give them five more years.
  • Watchdogs previously flagged the Shuttered Venue Operators Grant and a restaurant bailout fund.

The top Republican on the Senate Small Business Committee said Democrats are blocking a measure to give federal prosecutors more time to investigate bailouts for restaurants and the live-entertainment industry.

Senator Joni Ernst said Senator Ed Markey is holding up her bill that would give investigators until at least 2031 to file charges for defrauding the $28.6 billion Restaurant Revitalization Fund or the $14.5 billion Shuttered Venue Operators Grant program.

“We are not getting a lot of cooperation coming from our Ranking Member, Markey, and the Senate Democrats,” Ernst told Business Insider. “I’m not very optimistic that it’s going to happen, and it’s very, very frustrating.”

Markey’s office declined to respond to a request for comment.

Less than two weeks remain for the Senate to pass the legislation, which would enable the bill to move to the president’s desk and possibly be signed into law.

It’s not clear whether Ernst has formally sought unanimous consent to pass the statute-of-limitations extender bill because the process can take place informally, off the Senate floor. It’s possible the measure could be passed next year, though the deadline to prosecute some SVOG fraud cases could lapse as soon as April 8.

Business Insider documented how over $200 million from the SVOG program went to celebrities who used taxpayer money for private jets, lavish parties, luxury clothes, and other questionable spending.

Investigators haven’t accused any of those recipients of wrongdoing, and most of the grants discussed in BI’s stories were closed out by the Small Business Administration.

Mike Galdo, a former prosecutor who focused on pandemic fraud, said the bill could give agents, analysts, and prosecutors more time to build cases.

“Given some of the ambiguity in the language in the SVOG statute and regulations, as well as enforcement priorities other than fraud taking center stage for this Administration, it is unclear how many additional SVOG-related enforcement matters will be brought,” he said in an email.

Ernst said Democrats preferred to “rant and rail” against President Donald Trump. At a committee hearing for SBA matters on December 10, Markey accused Republicans of waging “an all-out assault” on an SBA program that sets aside billions of dollars in federal contracts for small businesses owned by women and racial and ethnic minorities.

Christmas crunch time in Congress

A similar bill to extend the statute of limitations for the SVOG program and the restaurant fund has already passed the House of Representatives with bipartisan support.

Both Ernst and Markey have pointed fingers across the aisle for delaying their legislative priorities. Ernst yesterday sought unanimous consent to pass a bill that would have clawed back more than $65 billion in unspent COVID relief funds, a measure that was blocked by Senator Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat. And Markey blamed Republicans for blocking a one-year extension of two programs that dole out billions in grants to tech-oriented small businesses.

Representative Gil Cisneros, a Democratic congressman from California, said earlier this month that the SBA’s inspector-general has 31 open Restaurant Revitalization Fund cases and six open Shuttered Venue Operators Grant cases.

A spokesman for the SBA’s inspector-general’s office didn’t respond to a request for comment about those numbers.

The two programs cut checks of up to $10 million meant to support businesses that had been hard-hit by the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and 2021, as waves of the deadly virus and government stay-at-home orders led businesses dependent on in-person gatherings to struggle.

Government auditors faulted the SBA over its internal controls, and the combined total of fraud and waste in those and other pandemic programs may exceed $400 billion. Prosecutions have barely scratched the surface compared to the scale of the suspected fraud, but some misspent money could also be recovered through administrative actions or civil lawsuits.

Read the original article on Business Insider

How to get Linkin Park tickets: Remaining 2025 and 2026 dates and prices

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Emily Armstrong of Linkin Park performs at the I-Days Festival at Ippodromo Snai La Maura on June 24, 2025 in Milan, Italy

Linkin Park’s From Zero World Tour continues with a global slate of shows extending into 2026, supporting the band’s long‑awaited 8th studio album From Zero. The tour was officially announced on September 5, 2024, when Linkin Park revealed their comeback, introduced new co-lead vocalist Emily Armstrong of Dead Sara and new drummer Colin Brittain, and shared the lead single, “The Emptiness Machine.”

This marks Linkin Park’s first full world tour in seven years and their first without former front man Chester Bennington, who tragically died in 2017.

If you’re looking to catch a piece of the action and see Linkin Park live this year, we’ve got you covered. Here’s our breakdown for how to get tickets for Linkin Park’s 2025 From Zero World Tour, as well as their festival appearances. This will include information on Linkin Park’s tour schedule, purchasing details, and price comparisons between tickets. You can also look at ticket details at your leisure on StubHub and Vivid Seats.

Linkin Park’s 2025 tour schedule

Linkin Park’s From Zero World Tour spans multiple continents with dates scheduled well into 2026. The global trek follows the band’s 2024 reunion and live return, with shows across North America, Europe, Asia, and Latin America. In 2026, the tour continues with international stops including the Middle East, India, Australia, and a European leg that runs through stadiums and festivals in Sweden, Germany, Austria, Spain, Italy, and Switzerland through late June. The run also includes high-profile festival appearances, such as Download Festival and Rock in Rio Lisboa, providing fans around the world with numerous opportunities to see Linkin Park live.

International

Date City StubHub prices Vivid Seats prices
May 29, 2026 Johanneshov, Sweden $59
June 1, 2026 Hamburg, Germany $136 $267
June 3, 2026 Hamburg, Germany $132
June 5-7, 2026* Nurburg, Germany $363
June 9, 2026 Vienna, Austria $148
June 11, 2026 Munich, Germany $157 $339
June 12, 2026 Munich, Germany $157 $351
June 16, 2026 Lyon, France $260
June 21, 2026* Lisbon, Portugal $97
June 23, 2026 Rivas Vaciamadrid, Spain $109 $230
June 24, 2026 Rivas Vaciamadrid, Spain $95 $164
June 26, 2026 Firenze, Italy $109
June 28, 2026 Werchter, Belgium $151
June 30, 2026 Zurich, Switzerland $202

* Indicates a music festival Linkin Park will be performing at, in addition to several other artists.

Mike Shinoda of Linkin Park performs at the opening ceremony before the UEFA Champions League Final 2025 between Paris Saint-Germain and FC Internazionale Milano at Munich Football Arena on May 31, 2025 in Munich, Germany

How to buy tickets for Linkin Park’s 2025 concert tour

Original tickets for Linkin Park’s From Zero World Tour are available for purchase on Ticketmaster. Tickets can also be purchased from verified resale vendors such as StubHub and Vivid Seats. As the demand for each show varies by location and performance date, you may find better options from resale vendors if you are looking for a specific seating location or are interested in attending a high-demand event.

How much are Linkin Park tickets?

Ticket prices for Linkin Park’s From Zero World Tour in 2025 and 2026 vary widely depending on the city, venue, and whether tickets are purchased through official sources or secondary marketplaces. Official tickets for tour stops are available through Ticketmaster, as long as they are still in stock. General-admission and standard seats start at different price points, based on demand and location. Verified resale platforms, such as StubHub and Vivid Seats, also list tickets, often at higher prices due to limited availability and market demand.

On resale marketplaces, the lowest secondary-market prices typically appear for less-in-demand international stops, while larger US and European shows command higher rates. For example, resale listings on StubHub show some 2025 dates with lower prices compared to high-demand stops later in the tour, and Vivid Seats currently shows resale prices starting around the mid-hundreds for select 2026 European dates.

In addition to standard tickets, many Linkin Park tour stops offer VIP packages through Ticketmaster and partner sites. These may include perks such as early entry, exclusive merchandise, premium seating, and VIP-only experiences. Popular VIP tiers for the From Zero World Tour have ranged from mid-hundreds to higher-end pricing, depending on inclusions and venue, and actual costs can vary by market and availability. Always check the specific event page on Ticketmaster for the most accurate pricing and VIP options before buying, as packages can sell out quickly.

Who is opening for Linkin Park’s tour?

Linkin Park’s From Zero World Tour has announced several opening acts for select performances, including Queens of the Stone Age, Spiritbox, AFI, Architects, Grandson, Jean Dawson, JEPG Mafia, and Pvris.

Will there be international tour dates?

There are currently 22 international Linkin Park tour dates scheduled, including festival appearances and tour stops on the From Zero World Tour. These dates span South America and Europe, extending through June 2026. Additionally, Linkin Park is scheduled to make a stop in Vancouver, Canada, on September 21, 2025.

Who is the new Linkin Park singer?

Linkin Park announced on September 5, 2024, during a livestreamed concert, that Emily Armstrong would join Linkin Park as a co-vocalist, replacing Chester Bennington, who tragically died in 2019. Emily Armstrong, previously the lead vocalist of the group Dead Sara, began collaborating with Linkin Park in 2019 during their six-year hiatus. Armstrong has been praised for her vocal abilities, which complement the established sound of Linkin Park. The group released “From Zero”, their first album with Armstrong as vocalist, on November 15, 2024.

Read the original article on Business Insider

OpenAI says its new GPT 5.2 set a ‘new state-of-the-art score’ for professional knowledge work

Sam Altman
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman
  • OpenAI said GPT-5.2, its latest model, is its best yet at doing “professional knowledge work.”
  • In a benchmark test, OpenAI said it outperformed industry professionals in tasks across 44 occupations.
  • GPT-5.2’s release comes just days after OpenAI CEO Sam Altman declared a “code red” in response to Google’s Gemini 3.

OpenAI released its anticipated update to GPT-5 on Thursday, boasting that the new AI is “the most capable model series yet for professional knowledge work.”

“We designed GPT‑5.2 to unlock even more economic value for people; it’s better at creating spreadsheets, building presentations, writing code, perceiving images, understanding long contexts, using tools, and handling complex, multi-step project,” the company said in a statement.

In a benchmark test called GDPval, OpenAI said its new AI model can outperform “industry professionals at well-specified knowledge work tasks spanning 44 occupations.”

“GPT‑5.2 Thinking produced outputs for GDPval tasks at >11x the speed and <1% the cost of expert professionals, suggesting that when paired with human oversight, GPT‑5.2 can help with professional work,” the company said.

OpenAI GPT 5.2 results from GDPval benchmark test
OpenAI’s GPT 5.2 results from GDPval benchmark test

And in a note that is sure to catch the attention of bankers, OpenAI wrote that in an internal benchmark of junior investment banking analyst spreadsheet modeling tasks — “such as putting together a three-statement model for a Fortune 500 company with proper formatting and citations, or building a leveraged buyout model for a take-private” — the new model’s score per task was “9.3% higher than GPT‑5.1’s, rising from 59.1% to 68.4%” on average.

OpenAI said that GPT-5.2 will begin rolling out today for paid ChatGPT plans. Paid users will have access to GPT-5.1 for three months under legacy models before it is sunsetted.

“We deploy GPT‑5.2 gradually to keep ChatGPT as smooth and reliable as we can,” the company said.

The company also touted its gains in agentic coding ability.

“Even without the ability to do new things like output polished files, GPT-5.2 feels like the biggest upgrade we’ve had in a long time. Curious to hear what you think!” OpenAI CEO Altman wrote on X.

The release comes just over a week after Altman declared a “code red” in a private message to employees, marshaling more resources to ChatGPT amid increasing competition from Google and other companies.

Google has been considered by many in tech to be gaining, if not surpassing, OpenAI in the AI race with its recent release of Gemini 3.

The announcement also occurred hours after OpenAI brokered a major deal with Disney, which secured a $1 billion investment and access to the media giant’s lucrative and popular IP.

“It has been a very cool last 10 years; OpenAI has been more special to work on than I could have possibly imagined,” Altman wrote on X on Thursday.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Taylor Swift knows people want her to ‘go away’ and ‘give someone else a turn’ — she just doesn’t want to

Taylor Swift appeared on "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert" on December 10, 2025.
Taylor Swift appeared on “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” on December 10, 2025.
  • Ahead of the premiere of her Eras Tour docuseries, Taylor Swift appeared on “The Late Show.”
  • Swift said she values career longevity and admires artists who can “keep a good thing going.”
  • Swift said she’s aware that some people would prefer her to “go away,” but she doesn’t want to.

Taylor Swift has been known to accept feedback from fans and critics, but there’s one request she refuses to heed: “Go away.”

Ahead of the premiere of her Disney+ docuseries, “The End of an Era,” Swift appeared on “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” to discuss her recent achievements and milestones.

When Colbert asked Swift who she could turn to for advice, she listed rock star Stevie Nicks and pop producer Max Martin as confidants.

“What I look up to the most in people is career longevity — career longevity, friendship longevity, longevity in their relationships, you know? How do you keep a good thing going?” Swift said.

“I think there are certain corners of our society that really love that and look up to longevity,” she continued. “There are also corners that are like, ‘Give someone else a turn! Can’t you just go away so we can talk about how good you were?’ And I’m like, ‘I don’t want to.'”

Swift has faced accusations of overexposure throughout her career, but particularly in the last few years. Her cross-continental, 149-show Eras Tour, which concluded in December 2024, garnered extensive media coverage and consistently went viral on social media. The New Yorker said Swift had achieved “complete domination over popular culture.”

Taylor Swift performs during the Eras Tour in France.
Taylor Swift performs during the Eras Tour in France.

When Swift released “The Tortured Poets Department” halfway through the tour’s two-year run, fans and critics alike called the album overlong and overindulgent. When it topped the Billboard 200 for 17 weeks, fans of other artists complained that Swift was sabotaging her fellow pop stars, including Billie Eilish and Charli XCX, by preventing their albums from reaching No. 1 on the chart.

Swift’s newest album, “The Life of a Showgirl,” was met with similar reproach. In his review for The Atlantic, Spencer Kornhaber wrote, “‘Showgirl’ is the sound of an overworked and overexposed entertainer reaching the mountaintop to find something worse than disappointment: burnout.” Swift’s prolificacy and sales tactics have been described as shameless and excessive.

Still, Swift has refused to shrink away from the spotlight. The first two episodes of “The End of an Era” will be available to stream on Friday, along with an extended version of her Eras Tour concert movie, featuring a new segment with songs from “The Tortured Poets Department.” The remaining four episodes of the docuseries will be released in pairs over the next two weeks.

During her interview with Colbert, Swift also joked that she prefers to think of herself as “passionate” and “hyperactive,” rather than a workaholic.

“When I take time off, it’s always just like, I can’t slow down the fact that I need to get up and do a lot of things today. But I can change what those things are,” she said. “I can figure out how to chill out, but I’m never gonna be a chill person.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

A sommelier recommends 5 of the best sparkling wines under $30 that taste more expensive than they are

Bottle of Brut Prosecco Mionetto Prosecco
Brut Prosecco
  • Even if you don’t love Champagne, you might enjoy an alternative (more affordable) sparkling wine.
  • We spoke to a sommelier who said many people actually prefer prosecco’s citrusy, fresh flavor.
  • The next time you want a warm, full-bodied red sparkling wine, reach for a bottle of Lambrusco.

It’s one of the most celebratory times of the year, bringing an onslaught of toast-filled festivities.

Though Champagne is often the de facto alcohol filling flutes, the popular sparkling French wine isn’t ideal for everyone’s palate — or budget, particularly when it comes to serving a big group.

Madison Aspinwall, a California-based sommelier, told Business Insider that there are plenty of high-quality, affordable alternatives to real Champagne, which can cost well over $60 per bottle.

In fact, some decent bottles of sparkling wine can be found for less than half that price.

Here are a few of Aspinwall’s recommendations you can feel confident about grabbing for your next celebration.

Prosecco can be an affordable alternative to Champagne

Bottle of La Marca Prosecco
La Marca Prosecco.

Made from Glera grapes in Prosecco, Italy, this sparkling white wine can be a less expensive (but still delicious) swap for Champagne.

“Prosecco is rarely over $30 a bottle,” Aspinwall said. “It’s made in a totally different style from Champagne, but I find it equally delicious.”

She said that many people who try different sparkling wines for the first time actually tend to prefer prosecco over Champagne, finding the former tastes fresher, cleaner, and more citrusy.

For a classic, easy-to-find option, Aspinwall recommends La Marca, an extra-dry prosecco that runs between $15 and $20 for a 750-milliliter bottle.

Brut prosecco is the perfect option if you prefer acidic flavors

Brut prosecco is a solid starter sparkling wine.

“I think a brut prosecco is the best for someone who is just getting into sparkling wines and doesn’t like the taste of Champagne,” Aspinwall said.

She added that brut is on the lower end when it comes to sweetness (specifically, it has between 0 and 12 grams of residual sugar per liter), giving it a fresher, more acidic taste than other varieties.

Aspinwall told BI that one of her go-to choices is Pizzolato, a brut prosecco. A 750-milliliter bottle typically costs between $20 and $25.

“It tastes amazing, and it’s in the most fun bottle with funky packaging,” she added.

Fruit-forward Lambrusco is a fitting choice for the holiday season

Bottle of Lambrusco
Bottle of Lambrusco

On the hunt for a sparkling wine that feels special? Turn to Lambrusco, a sparkling Italian red that comes in a range of sweetness levels.

“I think it’s perfect for the holiday season because, as a red wine, it has a bit more warmth to it than a prosecco or Champagne,” Aspinwall said.

She added that this type of wine tends to have more body, tannins, and fruit-forward flavors, such as cherry, raspberry, and strawberry.

You can also get it in white and rosé variations.

“It can be super complex, unique, and fun to experiment with if you’re just getting into sparkling wine,” she said, adding that one of her top recommendations is Broletto Lambrusco.

A 750-milliliter bottle typically retails for between $16 and $20, depending on the retailer.

If you love sweet wine, pour yourself some demi-sec prosecco

For those who prefer a very sweet wine, Aspinwall recommended turning to a demi-sec variety.

This type of prosecco has between 32 and 50 grams of residual sugars per liter, meaning it’s generally sweeter than a brut prosecco.

“It’s perfect for people who are looking for something that’s really approachable,” she said.

Consider trying a demi-sec variety from La Marca — a 750-milliliter bottle can cost between $15 and $20.

Moscato d’Asti is another sweet sparkling wine that pairs well with dessert

One of Aspinwall’s favorite sparkling wines is Moscato d’Asti.

The sparkling white Italian wine, which she described as tropical, fruity, and juicy, pairs well with certain sweet treats.

“I absolutely love Moscato d’Asti with soft-serve ice cream because it’s a really cool dessert combination,” she told BI. “It has that fruity, delicious tart acidity, but it’s also very sweet, so it’s super easy for people who are just getting into sparkling wine to enjoy.”

Consider picking up Vietti Moscato d’Asti, which retails between $15 and $23 for a 750-milliliter bottle.

Read the original article on Business Insider