Mets booted Pete Alonso to Baltimore, where he's 'all in' as Orioles savior

BALTIMORE – Perhaps the baseball world is still in shock that Pete Alonso moved on from theNew York Mets– Major League Baseball's deepest-pocketed team in its biggest market – to a club that's never paid a player even $25 million a year, in a town known for its pluck and perennial position as an underdog.

Yet from the moment Alonso's No. 25Baltimore Oriolesjersey was draped around his shoulders in his Charm City introduction Dec. 12, it suddenly made a lot more sense.

The Mets' franchise leader in home runs was, in this winter of high-stakes bidding, an afterthought, likely identified as part of the change that had to occur after a four-monthteamwide collapse.

In Baltimore, after agreeing to afive-year, $155 million contractthat will pay him the highest salary in club history, he's a savior.

"I've gotten hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of emails from people telling me how great this is," says Orioles owner David Rubenstein, the 76-year-old son of Baltimore. "I can't exaggerate how much the excitement is in Baltimore for this.

"People I didn't even remember, from sixth grade sending me emails. I'm really happy for Baltimore, for Pete and his family."

Winners and losers of Pete Alonso deal:Orioles reborn, Mets caught slipping

In New York, Alonso practically had to beg for a job the past two winters, signing a short-term deal with an opt out in February when his first foray into free agency resulted in insufficient offers – and no real inclination from his own team to retain him, at least not until a summit meeting with owner Steve Cohen just before spring training.

In Baltimore, the billboards along I-95 and down Russell Street trumpet the most significant free agent signing in franchise history:Polar Pete Is Here!

And Alonso, a man who may very well be halfway to Cooperstown, is, rather than trying to fight for scraps that $765 million man Juan Soto left behind in the team bank account, drawing comparisons to another Hall of Famer: Frank Robinson, whose trade from Cincinnati to Baltimore before the 1966 season preceded the young Orioles' stunning defeat of the Los Angeles Dodgers in the World Series.

Pressure? Heck, Rubenstein, a high schooler when those Orioles won it all, isn't paying Alonso $31 million over five seasons to shirk from comparisons, crazy that they may be.

"Frank Robinson's number when he played in Cincinnati was 20. Pete Alonso's number in New York was 20," says Rubenstein. "Both of them 30 (years old), both of them great power hitters, both with the ability to work with young hitters.

"We're very optimistic Pete's addition is going to be as helpful to us as Frank Robinson's in 1966."

Yep, those are the expectations Alonso faces, even if they don't land like they do in New York, with the massive media presence and the stakes constantly raised by hedge fund kingpin Cohen.

Yet what kind of destination is Citi Field now, after the Mets' very conscious choice to ghost Alonso,let closer Edwin Diaz walkto the World Series champion Dodgers and trade Brandon Nimmo?

Do the Mets have a plan?Pete Alonso's defection causes an uproar

Of course there's time for the Mets to rally this winter. Yet it was startling to see a black-and-orange fiesta in the shadow of Eutaw Street hailing Alonso's arrival, just a few Acela stops but many more symbolic miles away from Queens.

It culminates something of an 18-month gut punch for Alonso, who since the moment his 2024 Mets were eliminated in Game 6 of the NLCS by the Dodgers has had a few life changes: A home flooded by Hurricane Helene, a first dip into free agency where he crawled back to the Mets for a $54 million guarantee and a very important opt-out, and the birth of he and wife Haley's first child, Teddy.

A rough spin cycle? Sure, but don't think Alonso is as emo about his professional breakupas Mets fans.

He's freaking thrilled.

"Every offseason, it's interesting because as you step into free agency, it's, 'All right, let's see what happens.' Whatever unfolds, you have to make the best of the situation," he says. "Last year, I felt like, it was still a great situation. But this year, ultimately, this has just been such a tremendous process.

"The way that it happened, it was perfect. It was absolutely perfect. I wouldn't change anything for the world. I can't express enough gratitude and appreciation for how this has been and want to hit the fast-forward button for when spring training begins in February.

"This season is going to be great. Not just this one but for as long as I'm here."

How did seven seasons in Queens dissolve into a Charm City romance?

Since 2000, future Hall of Famer Albert Pujols' 101.3 Wins Above Replacement (WAR) leads all players, with Alex Rodriguez tied for second ways back at 89.7 WAR. See the rest of the top 25. 2. Alex Rodriguez - 89.7 3. Adrian Beltre - 89.7 4. Mike Trout - 87.5 5. Justin Verlander - 82.2 6. Clayton Kershaw - 78.1 7. Mookie Betts - 75.2 8. Max Scherzer - 74.7 9. Zack Greinke - 72.4 10. Robinson Cano - 68.7 11. Miguel Cabrera - 67.2 12. Carlos Beltran - 65.1 13. Chase Utley - 64.6 14. Freddie Freeman - 64.2 15. Paul Goldschmidt - 63.8 16. Joey Votto - 63.6 17. Roy Halladay - 62.4 18. Aaron Judge - 62.3 19. CC Sabathia - 61.8 20. Manny Machado - 61.7 21. Ichiro Suzuki - 60 22. Mark Buehrle - 60 23. Barry Bonds - 59.1 24. Evan Longoria - 58.9 25. Chipper Jones - 58.3

Top 25 MLB players from 2000-2025 ranked by Wins Above Replacement

How Pete Alonso landed in Baltimore

Scott Boras is usually the one playing offense.

Baseball's most successful agent is renowned for his exhaustive presentations to clubs, touting his blue chip free agents with binders and power points and the panache only he can provide.

Yet when Alonso made the drive from his Tampa home to Orlando and Boras and his crew squired him through a service elevator and to the suite level of this week's winter meetings, the Orioles turned the tables on them.

A charm offensive, if you'll allow it.

The secret weapon? Newly hired manager Craig Albernaz, who floored Boras and Alonso with his passion and vision for how his clubhouse will run and what to expect under his tutelage – all delivered in Albernaz's mile-a-minute southern Massachusetts dialect.

After the meeting, Boras pulled aside Orioles club president Mike Elias and simply said, "'Something's happened here. I've been in many of these meetings and something happened here.'

"He did a remarkable job of making someone in a room understand how that would be if he played here. It's a very hard thing to do but it says a lot about communication skills. Where I felt the player and the organization felt, we can have execution, we can have greatness.

"I give credit to the acquisition of a new manager in this situation and his abilities, and I think it says a lot about what's going to happen here."

Albernaz laid out for Alonso his baseball philosophies borne of stints in Tampa Bay and San Francisco and in Cleveland, where he was No. 2 in the Guardians dugout behind two-time Manager of the Year Stephen Vogt.

In the dead of winter, in a sterile hotel suite, it was a pointed bit of ball talk.

"Craig just did an unbelievable job outlining not only his managing style, but overall baseball philosophies," says Alonso. "That's going to be the guy (guiding) the ship. He has just a general passion, appetite for the game and I'm just so excited.

"I feel like this is going to be the type of situation where we get closer over time and by the regular season, everybody's going to want to run through a wall for each other."

Pete Alonso during his introductory press conference with the Baltimore Orioles.

That, too, is where Alonso comes in. The Orioles won 101 games in 2023 and again qualified for the playoffs in 2024. But it's been a season and a half of collective regression, resulting in manager Brandon Hyde's May firing amid a 75-87 season.

Through it all, Adley Rutschman and Gunnar Henderson and Jordan Westburg and Jackson Holliday felt a leadership void, or at least were not capable of filling that bill themselves.

Three of those guys have Boras Corp. backpacks stashed in their locker. And the agent's phone blew up when word of Alonso's signing spread, particularly given the franchise's aversion to mega-deals.

"Having calls from Jackson and Gunnar and Westy after this was done, the light it shines on how the players in the locker room feel about the commitment to how they can compete in really one of the toughest divisions in baseball – that comes organically," says Boras. "The minute it's done, it has that immediate impact. The excitement. It gives them a sense of pride and confidence that illustrates that this franchise is committed."

Alonso, who debuted in 2019, played through several eras with the Mets, many of them marked by dysfunction. Yet since Francisco Lindor's signing in 2021, Alonso has been a voice, but perhaps notthevoice, in the Mets' clubhouse as veterans such as Max Scherzer and Starling Marte and Jesse Winker came and went.

Now, Alonso, 31, is the senior position player in the clubhouse. And his play-at-all-costs ethos – he's posted for all 162 games the past two seasons – already brings a level of credibility.

Alonso believes he can make a difference cashing in some of that equity.

"There's a lot of talent. A lot of young talent," he says. "And I feel like I'm going to help this team achieve greatness. I want to be an open book, to everyone in the clubhouse. I take pride in that.

"Not only do I love performing, but ultimately, I love forging great relationships and being a great teammate and I want to help however I can.

"I'm all in."

The perfect fit 🤝pic.twitter.com/NyjD1NouTK

— Baltimore Orioles (@Orioles)December 13, 2025

'You're absolutely going to crush this place'

Alonso won't have to fast-forward too much: Spring training begins in two months. In a sense, he already feels like he has the keys to the castle: The Orioles laid out what he calls "their entire blueprint" during their sales pitch.

The half-billion dollars in renovations to Camden Yards. The significant upgrades coming to their Sarasota spring-training complex, about an hour from Alonso's Tampa home. And most important, how his big bat would fit into their lineup and ballpark.

That part might be most enticing. Alonso hit at least 40 home runs in three of his six full seasons with the Mets, and his 264 career home runs trail only Aaron Judge (285) and Kyle Schwarber (268) since 2019.

Like Schwarber, he's seemingly getting better with age. Alonso credits what he calls a "deeper dive" into his performance over the last offseason, including a foray into biometrics and how his body best moves, with his 2025 All-Star campaign: 38 home runs, 80 extra-base hits, an .871 OPS.

It is not hard to envision the Baltimore faithful taking to him very quickly. A conversation with Buck Showalter, his former manager with the Mets and the Orioles' skipper from 2010-2018, cemented those feelings.

"He said, this is a no-doubt, hands-down baseball environment," Alonso said of Showalter. "He said, 'Pete, you're absolutely going to crush this place.'

"Buck's one of my all-time favorites and he had nothing but good things to say."

Alonso has already crushed New York. He hit 53 homers as a rookie in 2019, hit one of the most dramatic home runs in recent franchise history – a ninth-inning blast off now-Mets closer Devin Williams to win Game 3 of the 2024 wild card series at Milwaukee – and endeared himself to the masses.

He'd toss in the occasional swear word to elevate "Let's Go, Mets" to the saltier hashtag #LFGM. Big production, undeniable lore.

And still, silence from Mets club president David Stearns.

The Orioles pounced on the opening, and possibly remade their franchise in one fell swoop. As the last of the sunlight flickered out of Camden Yards and Alonso and the Boras Posse prepared to high-tail it to the airport, Rubenstein and Boras chatted quietly in the cold air of Eutaw Street.

Baltimore is a player now, and the notion of an expanded relationship with the uber agent and the owner, a couple 70-somethings looking for another hurrah, was suddenly not something to laugh at.

No, Alonso is an Oriole, and two markets might never be the same. He knows he certainly won't be.

"The past year and a half, you have trials and tribulations. But there's moments, like this one, where you're overcome with joy," he says. "It justifies the hard work, justifies the sacrifice. It's really galvanizing. It's really energizing.

"I've really enjoyed playing in New York. I'm very gracious for that opportunity. There's some amazing people over there, whether in the locker room, the staff, clubbies – it's phenomenal.

"But this organization, this city – I'm so proud to call home."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Why Pete Alonso left Mets and signed with Orioles

Mets booted Pete Alonso to Baltimore, where he's 'all in' as Orioles savior

BALTIMORE – Perhaps the baseball world is still in shock that Pete Alonso moved on from theNew York Mets– Major League Ba...
Soccer Forward Clinic at Kansas City Girls Preparatory Academy (Brad Smith / ISI Photos / USSF / Getty Images)

With women's soccer on track to becomeone of the world's top five sports, U.S. Soccer is committing a $30 million donation from billionaire Michele Kang to researching some of the major issues facing female athletes.

The national federationannouncedearlier this month the launch of the Kang Institute, a platform focused on addressing disparities that "has left generations of female soccer players training under models built for male physiology."

It's an underfunded area of research that leaves women in sport more susceptible to different injuries as well as keeping young girls from pursuing the sport, Georgie Brunvels, female health and research innovation lead with U.S. Soccer, told NBC News.

"Football is a global game," Brunvels said. "By people seeing what is happening in football —or soccer — I think it will trickle on a global level to making people stand up and pay attention and listen."

Kang's donation will advance work that was already taking place at the Soccer Forward Foundation, which focused on community-level work aimed on inclusion and expanding access to the sport. It will take on three forms: dedicated research, a creation of best practices based on that research, and education from the youth level all the way to the national team.

And that may not just be in the United States. There are already discussions on initiatives to make it more accessible globally before the 2027 FIFA Women's World Cup in Brazil and when the U.S. hosts the tournament in 2031.

"The [Women's National Team] is an absolute icon and pioneer and leader in the space of soccer," Soccer Forward Foundation Executive Director Lex Chalat said. "And we want to support other countries in developing their best practices and developing and understanding how to raise the bar in their country as well."

The institute's first study will focus on the needs of players by targeting research around injury prevention, mental health, workload management, menstrual health, and the transition from youth to elite competition.

Kang Institute aiming to lower injury rate for female athletes

Injury prevention and recovery is an area that's been a hot topic in women's soccer, as research shows female players aretwo to eight times more likelyto tear their ACLs than men. These are devastating injuries that can require surgery and nearly a year of recovery time. USWNT defender Tierna Davidson tore her ACL in March during a National Women's Soccer League game and missed the rest of the season.

It was her second ACL tear in three years.

A number of factors have been correlated to the issue including the difference in women having looser knee ligament, their menstrual cycle, and wearing cleats designed around men's physiology.

"We don't have access to big data pools to really understand more," Brunvels said. "Someone tears their ACL and the moment that happens, someone will say, 'Were you on your period?' It's like the no-brainer question, but no one's pulling that data together."

But while these knee injuries often get the most coverage, and now investment, they are just one of the many injuries female athletes suffer at a higher rate than men, according to Brunvels. Concussions and ankle injuries are prevalent, too, she said.

Brunvels also cited pregnancy, another physical condition that poses challenges for women, as an underfunded area of research. USWNT stars Sophia Wilson and Mallory Swanson, two thirds of the "Triple Espresso" goal-scoring sensation during the gold-medal winning run at the Olympics, both gave birth this year.

"We've got seven players within our Women's National Team ecosystem who are either pregnant or returning to play postpartum," Brunvels said. "That's an injury. It's a planned injury we don't talk about that doesn't get enough air time."

More from Sports

Mental health a major concern in women's sports

Mental health is another area being targeted by the Kang Institute in its first study. Chalat says it's an "absolute priority" for the federation, especially when it comes to the next generation of female athletes.

"There are two kinds of major research projects … (the first is a) foundational research piece connecting health and performance," Chalat said. "The other project is really focusing on girls soccer dropout rates, particularly at that middle school age."

U.S. Soccer Soccer Forward Community Spotlight (Joe Scarnici / Getty Images for USSF)

According toa study by the Aspen Institute, one in three girls participates in a sport from age 6-12, but nearly one in two quit during puberty.

Chalat says the Soccer Forward Foundation's work has shown that girls drop out because they feel like they don't belong or have negative experiences with their coaches.

"We know that a lot of young people's first point of contact around sharing that they feel that they might have a mental health issue and not even know it is their coach," Chalat said. "And as a result, we're working across the board on a variety of issues that focuses on mental health — one of them being really focused on coaching, education and coaching in communities."

Research has suggested that60% of female athletes have experiencedsome form of body shaming and are two times more likely to experience depressive symptoms and eating disorders when compared to their male counterparts.

Angel City FC forward Sydney Leroux, who has had more than 70 appearances with the national team, posted on Instagram last month that she'd beendiagnosed with anorexia. The revelation came more than eight months after she announced she was taking a break from her NWSL team to focus on her mental health.

Leroux said it's not a coping skill but an important issue that she wanted to open a discussion on.

"I have been living with that for as long as I could remember," Leroux told followers. "I didn't think it was a problem. I just thought that that was the way my body reacted to the pressure I put on it, or being anxious or not being able to do it all."

For Brunvels, allowing girls and women to understand their bodies better creates empowerment through the arc of their lives both on and off the pitch. But they have to be "supported and trained as females, not as small males."

"They can understand more about their bodies, what they can do to help themselves," Brunvels said. "And as a part of that, we want to keep girls in sport for longer. We want to keep girls in soccer."

How U.S. Soccer aims to improve physical, mental health of female soccer players

With women's soccer on track to becomeone of the world's top five sports, U.S. Soccer is committing a $30 million donation from bil...
Emma McIntyre/WireImage Dylan Efron in July 2025.

Emma McIntyre/WireImage

NEED TO KNOW

  • Dylan Efron revealed that his name isn't actually "Dylan" during an appearance on E!'s Hot Goss

  • The reality television star and influencer has had a major 2025, winning season 3 of The Traitors and competing on the latest iteration of Dancing with the Stars

  • Efron's older brother is Zac Efron

Dylan Efronisn't actually Dylan Efron.

The reality television star and influencer, 33, revealed that his name is not "Dylan," but really Nicholas Dylan Harrison Efron.

Efron made the revelation during an appearance onE!'sHot Gosson Dec. 11, when he and formerThe TraitorscostarRob "Boston Rob" Marianowere asked to state the other's middle name. (The pair have a new YouTube series,Everything's a Competition.)

As Efron said, "He's gonna get this wrong," Mariano, 49, listed "Nicholas" and "Dylan," but left out "Harrison."

"Nicholas is axed off," Efron explained, adding, "That's my first name, and everything gets bumped up."

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Michael Buckner/Variety via Getty Dylan Efron in December 2024.

Michael Buckner/Variety via Getty

Efron began his career behind the camera, previously working as a production coordinator and as a producer for his older brotherZac Efron's Netflix series,Down to Earth with Zac Efron.

After winning season 3 ofThe Traitorsearlier this year, Efron went on to compete on the latest iteration ofDancing with the Stars,where he placed fourth afterJordan Chiles,Alix Earleand winnerRobert Irwin.

The PEOPLE Puzzler crossword is here! How quickly can you solve it? Play now!

Efron — who is also a brother totwo other siblings, Olivia and Henry —told PEOPLE exclusivelythat after a whirlwind 2025, he is "continuing to challenge" himself.

"I want to just keep pushing myself. If I've learned anything over this last year, it's just stepping into whatever feels uncomfortable and seeing if I can grow that way," he said. "I have to prove myself wrong all the time and just keep telling myself, like, 'Look, there's a little bit of fear from doing this type of thing because I've never been good at it, but let's change that.' "

As for something he'd like to explore more in 2026, Efron said, "I would really like to try acting. Acting would be on that bucket list of things that I never thought I would do, but I've always loved movies."

Read the original article onPeople

Dylan Efron Reveals His Name Isn't Actually 'Dylan' — Here's What It Really Is

Emma McIntyre/WireImage NEED TO KNOW Dylan Efron revealed that his name isn't actually "Dylan" during an appearance on E!...
Mark Davis/Getty Dick Van Dyke

Dick Van Dykeis 100 and feeling fine!

The actor, whose award-winning career has spanned decades, earned a Tony Award for originating the role of Albert Peterson inBye Bye Birdieon Broadway in the 1960s and captured viewers' hearts on series such asThe Dick Van Dyke ShowandDiagnosis Murderand movies includingMary PoppinsandDick Tracy.

"I feel really good for 100," he told PEOPLE ahead of his big day. "Sometimes I have more energy than others — but I never wake up in a bad mood."

"People say 'What did you do right?'" he continued. "I don't know. I'm rather lazy. I've always thought that anger is one thing that eats up a person's insides — and hate. And I never really was able to work up a feeling of hate. I think that is one of the chief things that kept me going."

In honor of Van Dyke's big milestone, take a look back on his life and career in photos.

Dick Van Dyke's Early Years

Photofest Young Dick Van Dyke

Dick Van Dykewas born on Dec. 13, 1925, in West Plains, Missouri, ultimately growing up in Danville, Illinois. Before hitting it big, the actor wed Margie Willet, with whom he had four children (from left): Carrie Beth, Barry, Chris and Stacy. After a lengthy separation, he and Willet officially divorced in 1984.

The Dick Van Dyke Show

CBS/Getty Dick Van Dyke and Mary Tyler Moore

After starting out in radio and on Broadway, Van Dyke landed on Carl Reiner'sThe Dick Van Dyke Showbeginning in 1961.Mary Tyler Mooreplayed his wife, and the two were catapulted to stardom, both winning Emmys for their work.

"People assumed we were married," Van Dyke once told PEOPLE. "I'd check into a hotel with my [real] wife, and they would say, 'Who's this?' "

Dick Van Dyke in 'Mary Poppins'

Silver Screen Collection/Hulton Archive/Getty Dick Van Dyke in 'Mary Poppins'

Van Dyke joinedJulie Andrews, Karen Dotrice and Matthew Garber in Walt Disney Pictures'Mary Poppinsin 1964. The film "was special," he told PEOPLE in 2011. Plus "I loved working with kids. You do a lot of clowning and get to know them."

After the movie came a string of film roles includingChitty Chitty Bang BangandDick Tracy,plus a plethora of TV parts, including two attemptedDick Van Dyke Showreboots.

Dick Van Dyke on 'Diagnosis Murder'

CBS Photo Archive/Getty Images Dick Van Dyke on Diagnosis Murder

The actor famously played Dr. Mark Sloan, the medic who solved crimes in his spare time, in the CBS crime dramaDiagnosis Murderfrom 1993 to 2001. His daughter Stacy and son Barry both joined him at various points on the show.

Dick Van Dyke and Brother Jerry Van Dyke

Ron Galella, Ltd./WireImage Dick Van Dyke and Brother Jerry Van Dyke

Also in the industry: his younger brother Jerry, perhaps best known for his role on the seriesCoach.Jerry died in 2018.

Dick Van Dyke and Carol Burnett

Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP/Shutterstock Dick Van Dyke and Carol Burnett

Van Dyke andCarol Burnettoften guested on each other's shows. "I love her laugh," he told PEOPLE.

Dick Van Dyke in 'Night at the Museum'

Moviestore/Shutterstock Dick Van Dyke in Night at the Museum

Ben Stillercast Van Dyke inNight at the Museum(here in 2006 alongsideMickey Rooneyand Bill Cobbs) because he was an unlikely villain, Stiller told PEOPLE.

Dick Van Dyke and Michelle Triola

Ron Galella Collection via Getty Dick Van Dyke and Michelle Triola

After his separation, Van Dyke spent nearly 35 years with longtime companion Michelle Triola. She died in 2009.

Dick Van Dyke and Wife Arlene Silver

Dick Van Dyke and Wife Arlene Silver Splash News

Dick Van Dyke and Wife Arlene Silver

In 2012,Van Dyke married makeup artist Arlene Silver,who frequently joins him on red carpets.

Van Dyke hasoften creditedbeing married to Silver as one of the things that's kept him young.

"We thought it might be [a problem] in some regard, to some extent, but it hasn't really," Van Dyke explained to PEOPLE of their age difference. "I'm infantile to start with. I think I'm about 13, so that's been a problem and she's quite mature for her age, so I don't think we haven't had any problem with age at all."

Dick Van Dyke and Emily Blunt

Paul Drinkwater/NBCUniversal/Getty Dick Van Dyke and Emily Blunt

Van Dyke had a resurgence of sorts in 2018 when he joinedEmily BluntinMary Poppins Returns.The two shared the stage at the 2019 Golden Globe Awards.

Dick Van Dyke's Political Activism

Michael Tullberg/Getty Dick Van Dyke

Van Dykestumped for presidential candidate Bernie Sandersin 2020, appearing at a rally in Los Angeles early in the year. "We love you, Bernie. Yes we do," he sang. "We love you Bernie, and we'll be true. When you're not near us, we're blue. Oh Bernie, we love you." He also supported the candidate ahead of the 2016 election, and endorsed presidential candidate Kamala Harris in 2024by reading aloud from a speech he gave in 1964 at a civil rights eventalongside Martin Luther King. Jr.

Dick Van Dyke's Kennedy Center Honor

Paul Morigi/Getty Images Dick Van Dyke at the Kennedy Center Honors

In 2020, Van Dyke was among the year's Kennedy Center Honors recipients, alongsideDebbie Allen,Joan Baez,Garth Brooksand Midori Gotō. The group's ceremony was delayed to 2021 due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

Dick Van Dyke on 'The Masked Singer'

Michael Becker/FOX; Christopher Polk/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Dick Van Dyke on The Masked Singer

You read that right! In February 2023, at age 97, the actor popped up on the season 9 premiere ofThe Masked Singer,performing "When You're Smiling" as Gnome.

"I had never even seen the show when they asked me. So I checked it out and it looked like a lot of fun,"he told PEOPLE afterward. "I was positive they wouldn't be able to guess who I was. And I was right!"

Dick Van Dyke in Recent Years

Roxanne McCann/Getty Dick Van Dyke

The number of awards he's earned — four Emmys, one Tony, one Grammy, one People's Choice Award, a Screen Actors Guild Lifetime Achievement honor — only scratch the surface of the impact, influence and artistry Van Dyke has contributed to television, film and pop culture.

In 2022,he was spotted in Malibu, handing out cash to those seeking work and meeting with homeless people at the non-profit organizationMalibu County Labor Exchange.

Dick Van Dyke's Coldplay Music Video

Laura Johansen, Alaura Imagery & Design

Laura Johansen, Alaura Imagery & Design

In the days ahead of his 99th birthday, Dick Van Dyke starred in the music video for Coldplay's "All My Love," which featured a poignant look back at his career as well as a celebration of the actor as he approaches 100, including appearances from his wife and large family.

"I'm acutely aware that I could go any day now. But I don't know why, it doesn't concern me," Van Dyke says in the extended director's cut. "I'm not afraid of it. I have that feeling totally against anything intellectual I have that I'm gonna be alright. I think I'm one of those lucky people who got to do for a living what I would've done anyway. When you think how lucky I am — I got to do what I do, play and act silly."

Dick Van Dyke Today

Amy Sussman/Getty Dick Van Dyke

Amy Sussman/Getty

On Nov. 30, the legendary entertainer and his wife,Arlene Silver, opened up their home in Malibu, Calif, for a Vandy High Tea charity event raising funds to benefit The Van Dyke Endowment of the Arts and the Dick Van Dyke Museum, which is currently in development.

"There are several reasons for having these — all good — but mine is to revive the art of conversation," the comedian said of the event. "I don't care if you're on a street, you're in a bus or in a restaurant, everybody's looking at their phones. Nobody talks. I've seen young couples having dinner together and they're both looking at their phones. I may be the only person in the United States over 10 who does not have a cell phone. I don't have a phone."

Read the original article onPeople

Dick Van Dyke is 100! See His Incredible Life in Photos as the Comedic Legend Celebrates His Milestone Birthday Today

Dick Van Dykeis 100 and feeling fine! The actor, whose award-winning career has spanned decades, earned a Tony Award for originating the r...
Courtesy of Netflix ; Courtesy of 20th Century Studios ; David Bukach/Disney Daniel Craig in 'Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery' ; Emma Mackey in 'Ella McCay' ; Walker Scobell in 'Percy Jackson and the Olympians'.

Courtesy of Netflix ; Courtesy of 20th Century Studios ; David Bukach/Disney

If you're aTaylor Swiftfan, the holidays are coming early for you.

This weekend, Dec. 13-14, the pop star is not only giving fans a behind-the-scenes look into what it took to put on therecord-breaking Eras Tour, but also bringing the concert to your couch.

Not a Swiftie? No problem, a variety of streaming platforms have fun binge-worthy options to watch, including the return of a beloved fantasy book-to-show adaptation and the third installment of a fan-favorite mystery franchise.

And there's more! Here's a list of the eight best new movies and shows to watch this weekend and where to stream them.

Taylor Swift: The End of an Era

Swift is nothing if not a content machine — and this time she's delivering a double whammy to mark the one-year anniversary of her iconic Eras Tour ending.

In addition to a full concert film, she's giving her die-hard fans aninside lookinto what it took to put on the over three-hour-long show every night.

Watch the first two episodes ofTaylor Swift: The End of an EraonDisney+.

Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery

Sharpen your detective skills because Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig) and his unplaceable accent are back on another case!

The campy investigator is taking his talents to the church after a monsignor is killed. The suspects may seem pious, but which of them committed the ultimate sin of murder? InKnives Out's darkest chapter yet, Blanc is put to the test.

WatchWake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out MysteryonNetflix.

Ella McCay

Ella McCay (whose name is not to be confused with the actress who plays her,Emma Mackey) is a young woman trying to balance it all: a demanding new position as governor, a fraught relationship with her father, who just reentered her life, and a husband (period).

That would be a lot for anyone, but thankfully, the ambitious politician has her aunt Helen (Jamie Lee Curtis) to scream with.

Ella McCayreleases in theaters on Dec. 12.

Percy Jackson and the Olympiansseason 2

It's been two years since the first season of the new adaptation ofRick Riordan's wildly successful books of the same name hit the small screen, and, OK, the formerly child actors may have gone through puberty and are now teens, but they're still the same monster-fighting trio we've loved for 20 years!

Percy (Walker Scobell) is back at Camp Half-Blood, but he finds its protective border is under attack — and his best friend Grover (Aryan Simhadri) is missing. With the help of his crush Annabeth (Leah Sava Jeffries) and his newfound cyclops brother Tyson (Daniel Diemer), can Percy survive the Sea of Monsters and save his new beloved home?

Watch the first two episodes ofPercy Jackson and the Olympiansseason 2 onDisney+.

Merv

There's nothing a parent wouldn't do for their dog, and for recently broken-up couple Anna (Zooey Deschanel) and Russ (Charlie Cox), apparently, that means going on a trip with their ex just to appease their beloved pet.

When the exes find out that their dog, Merv, is having a depressive bout thanks to their relationship ending, they decide to spend more time together (on vacation, no less!) to raise his spirits. Only along the way, they find that they miss each other more than they imagined ...

WatchMervonPrime Video.

Little Disasters

The people love a show with "little" in the title about struggling moms with questionable behavior (read:Big Little Lies,Little Fires Everywhere, just to name a few), and this new series starringDiane Krugeras a mom at the end of her rope is no different.

When Jess (Kruger) rushes her baby to the hospital, she's treated by her close friend Liz (Jo Joyner), but her trust is broken when Liz calls social services after witnessing alarming behavior from Jess. A chain of events explodes from there as Jess' mothering comes into question.

WatchLittle DisastersonParamount+.

Simon Cowell: The Next Act

Simon Cowellis known for being a reality competition show judge, fromAmerican IdoltoAmerica's Got Talent. But perhaps his greatest career accomplishment was creatingOne Direction. Now, he's hungry for more.

The iconic TV personality is back in a new show, scouting for talent to form the new global boy band sensation. Thankfully, there are plenty of adorable and talented teens and young adults desperate to make it in the music industry.

WatchSimon Cowell: The Next ActonNetflix.

Fixer Upper: Colorado Mountain House

ChipandJoanna Gainesare taking their talents outside of Texas for the first time as they venture into the mountains of Colorado.

There, they find their next project: what Joanna called a "zero-bedroom house." With a lot of work to be done, the two get cracking on fixing up the family retreat of their dreams.

WatchFixer Upper: Colorado Mountain HouseonHBO Max.

Read the original article onPeople

What to Watch This Weekend (Dec. 13-14): 8 Best New Movies and Shows to Stream Now (Including a BTS Look at Taylor Swift's Eras Tour!)

Courtesy of Netflix ; Courtesy of 20th Century Studios ; David Bukach/Disney If you're aTaylor Swiftfan, the holidays are coming early...
With Fed independence in crosshairs, will Supreme Court back Trump again?

By Jan Wolfe

WASHINGTON, Dec 13 (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court's conservative justices appear ready to endorse President Donald Trump's power to fire a regulatory agency official despite job protections given by Congress. But they have signaled reluctance to give him similar authority over the Federal Reserve in a major case set to be argued next month.

The court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority, in May cited what it called the U.S. central bank's unique ​qualities that distinguish it from other agencies also created by Congress to be independent of direct presidential control. But Trump nevertheless moved to fire Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook in August, setting in motion a major legal battle over presidential ‌powers that imperils the Fed's longstanding independence.

Trump's targeting of Cook represents one of numerous ways he has tested the limits of presidential power since returning to office in January. The Supreme Court has let his actions take effect on removing various other agency officials as well as on immigration policy, federal layoffs, foreign aid cuts, ‌rolling back transgender rights and other matters.

Arguments are scheduled for January 21 over the legality of Trump's attempt to remove Cook.

ARGUMENTS IN THE SLAUGHTER CASE

The court heard arguments on December 8 involving Trump's March firing of Rebecca Slaughter, a Democratic member of the Federal Trade Commission who sued to challenge the Republican president's action. The conservative justices indicated through their questions that they are poised to rule that Trump did not overstep his authority.

The court in September allowed Trump to remove Slaughter while her legal challenge played out. The following month it left Cook in her post while agreeing to hear arguments in that case.

Based on the arguments in the Slaughter case, the conservative justices seem poised to strike down a 1914 law passed by Congress under which FTC commissioners can be removed by a president only for "inefficiency, neglect of duty or malfeasance," not ⁠policy differences. Such a ruling could empower presidents to fire the heads of other agencies that ‌Congress sought to make independent, overturning a 1935 Supreme Court precedent in the process.

The 1913 law passed by Congress creating the Fed provided similar tenure protections, and the justices appear to be worried about creating a new legal framework that would let presidents remove Fed officials over mere policy differences. Lawmakers and economists in both parties have long viewed Fed independence as crucial to preventing monetary policy decisions like setting ‍interest rates from being subject to political whims.

Cook was appointed by Democratic former President Joe Biden. In announcing his decision to fire her, Trump said he was doing so for cause, accusing her of mortgage fraud before taking office, an allegation that Cook denied and called a pretext to oust her for her monetary policy stance.

In an earlier case, the Supreme Court in May allowed Trump's firing of a member of the National Labor Relations Board to take effect. But in its order doing so, the court said the action should not be interpreted as granting the president similar power to ​remove Fed officials.

"The Federal Reserve is a uniquely structured, quasi-private entity that follows in the distinct historical tradition of the First and Second Banks of the United States," the order stated, referring to two iterations of a U.S. central bank early in the ‌nation's history.

Justice Brett Kavanaugh, a conservative who has long sought to rein in federal agencies, has suggested in the past that the Fed enjoys a special status within the government.

In a 2009 law review article that Kavanaugh wrote while serving on a regional federal appeals court, he asserted that "in some situations it may be worthwhile to insulate particular agencies from direct presidential oversight or control - the Federal Reserve Board may be one example, due to its power to directly affect the short-term functioning of the U.S. economy by setting interest rates and adjusting the money supply."

'THE CHOPPING BLOCK'

During the arguments in the Slaughter case, her lawyer said the Trump administration's legal theories would put Fed independence "on the chopping block." Kavanaugh repeatedly asked U.S. Solicitor General D. John Sauer about that.

"The other side says that your position would undermine the independence of the Federal Reserve and they have concerns about that, and I share those concerns," Kavanaugh told Sauer, who argued for Trump's administration.

Sauer responded that the Fed is unique, quoting the court's May order. Sauer added that Trump's administration is not currently challenging ⁠the tenure protections for Fed officials, with Trump contending the Cook firing was for cause.

In the Slaughter case, on the other hand, Trump did not ​claim to have cause to fire her, instead saying she did not align with his political agenda. Because of these factual distinctions, the two cases raise ​different legal issues.

"The court clearly sees the Fed as special," said Peter Margulies, a law professor at Roger Williams University in Rhode Island. "I think the court is convinced that an independent Federal Reserve is crucial to a workable government."

"There is a longstanding tradition of regulation of the public debt that goes back to the founding (of the United States), and I think the court appreciates that," Margulies added. "The appeal to history and tradition means ‍a lot to this court."

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce pro-business lobbying group ⁠argued in a legal brief that the Fed is different than other independent agencies, so a ruling favoring Trump in the Slaughter case need not threaten central bank independence.

The Chamber of Commerce argued that there is a long history of U.S. monetary policy being set by commissions that operate outside of presidential control like the Sinking Fund Commission, a body created by Congress in 1790 to manage and repay the nation's Revolutionary War debt.

For this reason, the group argued, the authors of ⁠the Constitution would not have objected to Fed independence.

Some legal experts have said this view distorts the Fed's history and structure.

Andrea Katz, a professor at Washington University School of Law in St. Louis, said the court's eventual ruling in the Slaughter case likely will create an exception for the Fed. But Katz said the ‌justices have not articulated a principled legal rationale for doing so.

"As a historical matter, the so-called 'Fed carve-out' is intellectually indefensible," Katz said. "The Federal Reserve System is run by a board that, in practice, looks just like any ‌other multi-member commission."

"A preference for Fed independence is somehow assumed by Kavanaugh," Katz said, "but not explained."

(Reporting by Jan Wolfe; Editing by Will Dunham)

With Fed independence in crosshairs, will Supreme Court back Trump again?

By Jan Wolfe WASHINGTON, Dec 13 (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court's conservative justices appear ready to e...

 

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