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Hall of Famer Darrell Green trying out for spot on USA flag football team at age 66

Darrell Green may have retired from the NFL in 2002, but that isn't stopping the Hall of Famer from getting back on to the field for a different type of football at age 66.

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Green, who played 20 years in the NFL and won two Super Bowls with Washington, is in Chula Vista, California, this weekend to take part in the national flag football team trials. He will be one of many athletes attempting to earn a spot on the 2026 U.S. squad that will compete at the world championships in Germany in August.

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According to Callie Brownson, USA Football's senior director of high performance and national teams, the longtime NFL cornerback qualified for this stage of the process through a digital combine via "impressive" testing results. "He's a rare athlete who has stayed in shape and is ready to compete this week," she saidvia The Associated Press.

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Green will try to make an already competitive team. The U.S. men's national squad has won six of the pastseven IFAF world titles since 2010.

"There's nothing like getting on that field and competing on behalf of this country," Green saidvia USA Football's Instagram page. "And then topping that off standing on that top podium getting that gold [medal]. I've done it in track in college and high school; I've been in Super Bowls, this is the granddaddy of them all. Don't feel sorry for me, don't feel bad for me. I'm a competitor just like everybody else and I'm gonna give it my best and walk away with my head up, either way."

Green was the 28th overall pick by Washington in the 1983 NFL Draft. Along with two championships, he was a four-time All-Pro, seven-time Pro Bowler and a member of the NFL 100th Anniversary All-time Team.

Prior to his NFL career, Green was a track and field standout at then-Texas A&I University, earning back-to-back All-America honors in 1981 and 1982.

In October 2023, theInternational Olympic Committee executive board approvedflag football among five sports that were added to the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics schedule. This past December, theNFL voted to fund and launch a professional flag football league, months after the league approved a resolution allowingplayers to participateat the LA Games. Injury protection and salary cap credit will be offered to teams that lose players to injury.

Hall of Famer Darrell Green trying out for spot on USA flag football team at age 66

Darrell Green may have retired from the NFL in 2002, but that isn't stopping the Hall of Famer from getting back on t...
Nicholas Brendon,

Nicholas Brendon died "in his sleep of natural causes" at age 54, his family said in a statement on Friday, March 20

People Nicholas Brendon on April 15, 2012Credit: Barry Brecheisen/WireImage

NEED TO KNOW

  • Brendon is best known for playing Xander on the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer

  • The actor "had struggles in the past," his family said, but he "was optimistic about the future at the time of his passing"

Nicholas Brendon, the actor best known for his role as Xander onBuffy the Vampire Slayer, has died. He was 54.

"We are heartbroken to share the passing of our brother and son, Nicholas Brendon. He passed in his sleep of natural causes," his family said in astatement sharedon his official Instagram page on Friday, March 20.

"Most people know Nicky for his work as an actor and for the characters he brought to life over the years. In recent years Nicky has found his passion in painting and art," the family added. "Nicky loved to share his enthusiastic talent with his family, friends and fans. He was passionate, sensitive and endlessly driven to create."

Clockwise from top left: Alyson Hannigan, Charisma Carpenter, Sarah Michelle Gellar and Nicholas Brendon in

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The statement added, "Those who truly knew him understood that his art was one of the purest reflections of who he was. While it'sno secret that Nicholas had struggles in the past, he was on medications andtreatment to manage his diagnosisand he was optimistic about the future at the time of his passing. Our family asks for privacy during this time as we grieve his loss and celebrate the life of a man who lived with intensity, imagination and heart. Thank you to everyone who has shown love and support."

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Brendon rose to fame as Xander Harris onBuffy the Vampire Slayer,which aired seven seasons from 1997 to 2003, alongside costars Sarah Michelle Gellar, Alyson Hannigan, Charisma Carpenter and David Boreanaz. He also appeared in movies likePsycho Beach Party, UnholyandCoherence. His other TV shows included Bradley Cooper'sKitchen ConfidentialandCriminal Minds, in which he played the recurring character Kevin Lynch.

In the years afterBuffy, Brendon spoke out about struggling with depression as well as alcohol and substance addictions, checking into rehabbetween multiple arrests, including for domestic violence chargesand prescription fraud.

He toldThe A.V. Club in 2017that landing his role onBuffywas a "dream" come true.

"There were so many times I'd just be on set and in this place of wonder, saying, 'Oh my God. I can't believe I'm a part of this show,' " he said at the time, adding, "There were so many wonderful moments on it. You cannot just pick one. I think probably, when I booked it, when I got the phone call on a Tuesday at about 10 a.m., that's kind of where this whole journey started for me. Twenty years later, it's really still going."

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Nicholas Brendon, “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” Actor, Dies at 54

Nicholas Brendon died "in his sleep of natural causes" at age 54, his family said in a statement on Friday, Mar...
Ms. Rachel aims to help 'close Dilley' ICE facility after speaking with kids in detention there

The boy in the grainy video feed sounded desperate.

NBC Universal Ms. Rachel spoke to 5-year-old Gael, who has struggled with severe constipation, and 9-year-old Deiver, who begged to go to his spelling bee. (NBC News Illustration; Matt Nighswander; Brenda Bazán; Getty Images; Courtesy Ms. Rachel)

"I don't want to be here anymore," he said. "Nothing is good here."

Since early March, 9-year-old Deiver Henao Jimenez had been held with his parents at the Dilley Immigration Processing Center in South Texas, where children have complained of limited education, lights that never turn off and moldy food. Now he was on a video call with someone who said she wanted to help: Ms. Rachel.

Wearing her signature pink headband,the popular children's entertainerleaned toward the screen, trying to comfort the boy.

"Oh, I'm so sorry," she said in a warm, high-pitched voice familiar to millions of children and parents. "A lot of people want to try to help."

Deiver told her he missed his friends and that the food at Dilley made his stomach hurt. But that wasn't what worried him most. Before he was detained, he had won his school spelling bee and placed third at regionals, earning a spot at New Mexico's state competition in May.

"I want to leave and go to the spelling bee," he said.

Ms. Rachel tried to reassure him.

"You have a real gift for spelling. You're so smart."

Then her smile faltered.

"It was unbelievably surreal to see this sweet little face and feel like I was on a call with somebody who's in jail," Ms. Rachel, whose real name is Rachel Accurso, told NBC News in an exclusive interview this week. "It broke me, and it was something I never thought I'd encounter in life."

top Spanish spellers at Las Cruces Public Schools as they participated in the 2026 District Spanish Spelling Bee held on Wednesday, February 25, at Las Cruces High School in the Performing Arts Lab. LCPS proudly congratulates the top three winners of this year’s competition.   (Las Cruces Public Schools )

Like many Americans, Accurso said she first became aware of the family detention center in Dilley, Texas, in January, after federal immigration agents detained the father of 5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos in Minneapolis and sent them both to the remote, prisonlike facility. A photograph of the child — wearing a blue bunny hat and a Spider-Man backpack — spread widely online, drawing national attention to the center and the treatment of families held there. They were eventually released butthe family's asylum claim was denied this week.

In the first year of its expanded immigration crackdown, the Trump administration placed more than 2,300 children into detention with their parents, with the overwhelming majority held at Dilley, according to figures provided by court-appointed monitors. Many have been held forseveral weeks or months.

During that time, Accurso — whose educational videos for babies and toddlers have made her one of the nation's most recognizable kids' entertainers — has become an increasingly prominent voice speaking out on behalf of vulnerable children. She has drawn attention to the plight of children in war-torn Gaza, Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo, raising hundreds of thousands of dollars and drawing backlash from critics who have accused her of picking sides in global conflicts.

Ms. Rachel. (Nathan Congleton / TODAY)

She has repeatedly defended her advocacy under a simple mantra: "I see all children as precious and equal."

After her video call last week with Deiver and another boy held at Dilley, Accurso told NBC News she is now embarking on a new mission closer to home: working with lawyers and immigration rights activists "to close Dilley and make sure that kids and their parents are back in their communities where they belong."

Parents and immigration lawyershave described childrenthere losing weight after findingworms in their food, growing anxious as guards patrol andstanding in line for hoursfor single doses of medicine. Some havesuffered medical emergencieswhile detained.

About 50 children remained at Dilley this week, down from about 500 in January,The New York Times reportedFriday based on a review of government figures and advocacy group estimates. Some of the families were released in the U.S.; others were deported. It's unclear what led to the sharp decline, but it follows months of pressure from human rights advocates, Democratic members of Congress and immigration lawyers.

An aerial photo of a government detention center inside a barbed wire perimeter.  (Brenda Bazán)

The Department of Homeland Security didn't answer questions about the families Accurso met over video. The agency has disputed reports of poor conditions as "mainstream media lies," saying families at Dilley are provided comprehensive care in a facility "purpose-built" for their needs.

The more Accurso read about Dilley after Liam's detention, she said, the more unsettled she became. Then, last week, she got a chance to hear directly from children held there.

Journalist Lidia Terrazas, who has spent months reporting on conditions inside Dilley for theSpanish-language network N+ Univision, set up the video call.

Before chatting with Deiver, Accurso spoke to Gael, a 5-year-old with significant developmental delays. The boy, who is nonverbal, was in the process of being assessed for autism when he and his parents were detained in El Paso at a routine immigration check-in, according to the family's lawyer, Elora Mukherjee. Like Deiver's family, Gael's parents fled Colombia, have pending asylum claims and no criminal history in the U.S., and had been working and living in the country for years before their arrests, the families' lawyers said.

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Gael Valencia during a video call with Ms. Rachel; Leonardo with his son Gael. (Rachel Accurso; Courtesy Elora Mukherjee)

Mukherjee, a professor at Columbia Law School and the director of its Immigrants' Rights Clinic, said Gael has a history of severe constipation that had been managed at home with a specialized diet, including fresh fruit and soups. In detention, she said, his condition spiraled.

In a brief video interview on Friday, Gael's parents, Nelsy and Leonardo, told NBC News their son's condition had continued to deteriorate in detention, both physically and emotionally. They asked to be identified only by their first names, fearing retaliation should they be deported to Colombia.

"This is not a place for him because he needs special care," Leonardo said, as Gael wandered around the bare, gray meeting room. "No human being should ever go through this."

On Accurso's call with her, Gael's mother said her son had not been able to poop in nine days and was struggling to eat, gagging when he tried. The facility had been treating him with laxatives and later an enema, but his condition hadn't significantly improved, his mother said. His stomach was visibly distended, Accurso said, leaving her "incredibly worried."

"Imagine if your child hadn't pooped in nine days," she said. "This is not normal. This is an important medical situation."

As his mother spoke, Accurso slipped into character and tried to engage him — singing "Wheels on the Bus," holding up a toy and talking to him about his love of trains — but he appeared restless and overwhelmed, she said.

Ms. Rachel tries to cheer up Gael during their call.  (Rachel Accurso)

Amid his confusion and discomfort, Gael has grown increasingly distressed at Dilley, Mukherjee said, at times hitting himself — behavior his parents had not previously seen.

"Treating a child this way is a crime," Accurso told NBC News. "It's neglect and child abuse."

Accurso said she was no less concerned about Deiver.

In their brief conversation, he moved quickly past the conditions inside the facility to what he was missing outside it — his classmates, his gifted and talented courses and, most of all, the spelling bee he had been preparing for.

"He's so proud," Accurso said.

The juxtaposition, she said, was difficult to process: a child talking about his love of pizza and school one moment, then asking for help getting out of a federal detention center the next.

"We're trying to get a child out of a jail to do a spelling bee," she said. "I just never thought those words would go together."

Deiver with his parents. (Corey Sullivan Martin)

Accurso recalled winning her own second-grade classroom spelling bee with a lucky guess on the word "chocolate" — a small, long-ago victory she still remembers in vivid detail.

Moments like that are more than milestones, said Accurso, who has master's degrees in music education and early childhood development. They shape how children see themselves — their confidence, their sense of belonging, their sense of what comes next.

Taking those kinds of opportunities away from a child, she said, "is cruelty."

After speaking with the children, Accurso said she initially hesitated to speak out publicly.

Her advocacy for children in Gaza had led to a torrent of criticism from right-wing groups that accused her of antisemitism for centering Palestinian children rather than Israelis. Accurso has pushed back on those claims, noting that she advocates for children suffering on both sides of the conflict. The controversy has led to threats against her family, she said, and she worried that speaking out about ICE detention might inflame the situation.

But she kept coming back to the example set by Fred Rogers, the late children's television icon she considers her hero, who used his platform to speak out on behalf of children.

Rachel Accurso on a video call with NBC News. (Matt Nighswander / NBC News)

Ultimately, she said, the decision felt clear.

And unlike in the past, when she painstakingly sought to frame her activism as apolitical, Accurso said she is ready to embrace the label.

"I am political," she said. "It's political to believe that children are worthy of love and care, and that every child is equal, and that our care shouldn't stop at what we look like, our family, at our religion, at a border."

If being political is what it takes to bring Gael home, or to get Deiver to his spelling bee, Accurso said, then her conscience leaves her no other choice.

Ms. Rachel aims to help 'close Dilley' ICE facility after speaking with kids in detention there

The boy in the grainy video feed sounded desperate. "I don't want to be here anymore," he said. ...
Officials say 14 were killed in fire at South Korean auto parts plant

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) —South Koreanrescue workers on Saturday recovered the remains of 14 people from the charred wreckage of an auto parts factory in the central city of Daejeon, where an explosion and fire injured at least 59 others.

Associated Press Black smoke rises from an auto parts plant in Daejeon, South Korea, Friday, March 20, 2026. (Kim June-beom/Yonhap via AP) Black smoke rises from an auto parts plant in Daejeon, South Korea, Friday, March 20, 2026. (Kim So-yeon/Yonhap via AP)

South Korea Fire

Fire officials said 25 people were seriously injured but it wasn't immediately clear whether any were in life-threatening condition. More than 500 firefighters, police and emergency personnel were deployed to contain the fire and conduct rescue operations after it broke out Friday afternoon.

Videos and photos from the scene showed thick gray smoke billowing from the complex and some workers jumping from a building belonging to Anjun Industrial.

Nam Deuk-woo, fire chief of the city's Daedeok district, said the blaze destroyed a factory building that firefighters initially could not enter over fears it might collapse. Searches for the missing workers began late Friday after officials deployed unmanned firefighting robots to cool the structure and conducted a safety inspection.

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Nine of the 14 dead were discovered in what is believed to have been a gym on the third floor, while three were found near a water tank on the second floor. All the missing have now been accounted for.

South Korean PresidentLee Jae Myungvisited the site Saturday afternoon, meeting with relatives of the victims and calling for safety measures to prevent the damaged structure from collapsing during search operations.

The fire was reported at about 1:18 p.m. Friday. Nam said the cause was not immediately known, but the blaze appeared to have spread rapidly, with witnesses reporting an explosion. Firefighters focused on preventing the blaze from spreading to an adjacent facility and isolating explosive chemicals. Nam said workers recovered more than 100 kilograms (220 pounds) of highly reactive chemicals from the site.

Some people were injured when they jumped from the building to escape, while others suffered smoke inhalation, officials said. As of Saturday morning, 28 people were hospitalized and four of them underwent surgeries for broken bones and other injuries.

About 120 vehicles and pieces of equipment, including aircraft, an unmanned water cannon vehicle and two firefighting robots for hard-to-reach areas, were deployed, along with hundreds of personnel.

Officials say 14 were killed in fire at South Korean auto parts plant

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) —South Koreanrescue workers on Saturday recovered the remains of 14 people from the charred wreck...
It's been 18 months since the last war in Lebanon. This time it's different

Lebanonis a nation that's no stranger to war, but this conflict feels different.

CNN EBOF

Just 18 months ago, Israeli bombs rained down across the country for weeks. Intent on defanging the Iran-backed militia Hezbollah and uprooting it from its strongholds, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) invaded the country's south.

Now, the country is wracked by the terror of a new, heavier bombardment, with more than 1,000 dead since March 2, when Hezbollah fired projectiles into Israel to avenge the death of Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, sparking Israeli retaliation.

In the capital Beirut, walls bear the scars of conflicts past. Although much of the city lives under an uneasy calm, the conflict is impossible to miss.

"I keep thinking it's traffic," one taxi driver told CNN. "And then I remember it's all the parked cars."

Along nearly every major road in central Beirut, cars shelter families displaced by war, turning normally gridlocked lanes into impromptu camps for desperate people.

In the southern village of Irkay, CNN attended the funeral of five children aged between six and 13, killed in a single strike on their grandparents' house.

Both grandparents died in the blast – which flattened the house – as well as two uncles, one of whom was in a house across the street.

The relatives were laid to rest as Israeli strikes blasted in the background. "May God destroy you, Israel!" yelled one woman in the congregation.

There was no sign that the destroyed house had been used for military purposes.

The Israel Defence Forces have repeatedly issued evacuation orders for wide swathes of southern Lebanon, as it targets Hezbollah personnel and infrastructure. - Odd Andersen/AFP/Getty Images The Israeli military released footage from the Golani Brigade’s preparations for targeted ground operations in southern Lebanon from the past week. - Clipped From Video

Just over 100 children died in the 2024 conflict, according to UNICEF figures, a number that has already been topped during Israel's ongoing strikes.

The Israeli military has killed at least 111 children since the war began, according to Lebanese health ministry figures – a death toll that has raised questions about the number of child or other civilian casualties that the IDF is willing to accept when prosecuting airstrikes.

But IDF international spokesperson Nadav Shoshani put the blame for the civilian losses on Hezbollah.

"We have a terror organization who have a strategy to put our civilians in the line of fire and their civilians in the line of fire. We're doing everything we can to avoid that," he told CNN.

"We've seen it with Gaza, there's a heavy price of war – it doesn't mean that one side or the stronger side is conducting it in the wrong way."

Mohammed Rida Taqi, father of four of the killed children, who was also hurt in the attack, said there was no Hezbollah presence at the home.

"Were there any Hezbollah martyrs?" he asked. "We're a family."

"The people of the south do not bow down," he added. "Not to Israel and not to America, which is supporting them with weapons."

While strikes are generally preceded by alerts from the IDF, there was no warning for the blast that struck at the heart of Irkay.

"It feels like we're living our whole lives waiting for that post or that message or that WhatsApp forwarded message that says 'Alert,'" Kim Moawad, 38, told CNN from Beirut.

"Then you're all worked up," she said. "You're almost disappointed if there's no strike because you're just waiting for it."

"You weirdly feel comforted when they strike because you feel like, okay, it's over."

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The precision of some assassination strikes in Beirut – often hitting a single window without warning – has added a new psychological terror to the conflict. These strikes have become a staple of this round of fighting, with no apparent limits: central Beirut, Christian neighborhoods, even near IDP tents of displaced people, have all come under fire.

After watching the utter devastation wrought by Israel on Gaza, with much of the Palestinian territory transformed into an uninhabitable moonscape, many in Lebanon fear the IDF has similar plans for their country.

"Lebanon used to be prosperous. But now Lebanon is destroyed; there is no Lebanon anymore," grandmother Sanaa Ghosn told CNN at a Beirut shelter for displaced people.

"Hopefully what happened in Gaza won't happen to us."

Israeli rhetoric has only inflamed those anxieties.

"The southern suburbs will become like Khan Younis," Israel's Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said in early March, referencing the Gaza city largely reduced to rubble in the Israeli campaign.

Tearing society's fabric

The influx of 1 million displaced people has strained relations locally with the communities that welcomed their compatriots.

CNN heard stories from multiple displaced families of landlords questioning them on their family names or how they looked – questions they believed were designed to root out Shiite renters, who may have links to Shiite Muslim Hezbollah.

The United Nations haschartedspikes in online attacks on internally displaced people around these assassination strikes, with some sectarian cracks beginning to show. It has also tracked similar calls by prominent Lebanese.

"There is a risk that this initial shock will turn into anger, frustration and potentially tensions between communities," Karolina Lindholm Billing, representative of the UN refugee agency in Lebanon, told CNN in a Beirut school sheltering displaced families. The shelter, in the Sin El-Fil area of the capital, houses some 170 families, and filled to capacity within an hour of opening on the night the war started.

Lindholm Billing said that many displaced people had not had the chance to properly rebuild or recover after the last war. According to the UN, some 13% of displaced persons returned to the shelters that housed them in 2024.

More than 1 million people have been internally displaced in Lebanon since the start of the current conflict. - Reuters

Shifting opinions

While the 2024 war saw relative unity in Lebanon behind Hezbollah's clashes with the IDF – feelings driven by anger at the war in Gaza – this latest conflict has seen emboldened opposition to the armed group.

With the government promising to crack down on Hezbollah's arsenal, there was tangible support for that on the streets, at least in the early days of the IDF strikes.

"Young men, children, and babies are dying. I mean, there was no need to get into this war. And then they're saying that they're supporting Iran. I mean, what's that got to do with us?" mechanic Sako Demirjiane told CNN in an ethnically mixed neighborhood of Beirut.

"We saw before, the support was for Gaza, and we saw what it brought us. And now they are supporting Iran too, and we saw what it brought us," he said. "It's unliveable here."

This all comes as international aid organizations weather brutal cuts to their budgets, after the US government under President Donald Trump slashed its contributions.

"I've worked almost 30 years for UNHCR and I don't want to sound alarmist, but I can't remember having been as concerned and worried about the situation as this," Lindholm Billing said, using the formal name of the UN refugee agency.

Hand to mouth

Along Beirut's waterfront, lines of tents have appeared, each sheltering a family.

"I've never seen it like this," one volunteer, Samr Zahwi, who was leading a team offering evening iftar meals to those breaking their Ramadan fast, told CNN. Some had come from the city's southern suburbs – areas with close ties to Hezbollah – and others from across the country's south.

The newest residents of some of the city's most expensive real estate pitched their shelters in the shadow of the port where, in 2020, a massive blast rocked most of Beirut, killing hundreds and destroying a chunk of the capital.

In Lebanon, trauma piles on trauma.

Additional reporting by Lisa Courbebaisse and Elina Baudier Kim.

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It’s been 18 months since the last war in Lebanon. This time it’s different

Lebanonis a nation that's no stranger to war, but this conflict feels different. Just 18 months ago, Israe...

 

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