Game 3 of the series Friday night averaged 5.25 …

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Game 3 of the series Friday night averaged 5.25 million on Prime Video, marking the streamer’s largest NBA audience thus far (as of Friday). Viewership increased 24% from Thunder-Nuggets on ESPN last year (4.24M),and also notably surpassed Lakers-Thunder on Prime Video the previous night (5.08M). Game 2, as previously noted, delivered 5.2 million on ESPN last Wednesday — the most-watched game of the playoffs on the cable network. (Note that ESPN had aired only two second round games through Tuesday.)

This article originally appeared on Hoops Hype:Game 3 of the series Friday night averaged 5.25 …

Game 3 of the series Friday night averaged 5.25 …

Advertisement Game 3 of the series Friday night averaged 5.25 million on Prime Video, marking the streamer’s largest NBA audience...
Body of soldier who went missing in Morocco recovered, U.S. Army says

Search team finds body of missing U.S. soldier in Morocco 00:21

CBS News

The body of an American soldier who wentmissing while in Moroccofor an annual training exercise has been recovered, the U.S. Army announced on Sunday.

First Lieutenant Lamont Key Jr. was one of two U.S. service members who disappeared just over a week ago in waters off Morocco's southern coast, near the Cap Draa Training Area, the Armysaid in a news release.

Army officials said search operations for the second serviceman, who has not been identified, will continue. Search efforts so far have involved more than 1,000 U.S. and Moroccan military and civil personnel, according to the Army.

Both service members were taking part in African Lion, an annual training exercise, although defense officials previously told CBS News that the incident was not believed to be related to the event. A preliminary report said the two were part of a group of service members who went on a hike to watch the sunset when a soldier known to not be able to swim fell into the water. Defense officials said the second missing soldierjumped in to attempt a rescue, but was hit by a wave. Other soldiers attempted to rescue the two, but were unsuccessful.

1st Lt. Kendrick Lamont Key, Jr. / Credit: U.S. Army Europe and Africa

Key's body was recovered by a Moroccan military search team at about 8:55 a.m. Saturday morning local time, the U.S. Army said. He was found along the shoreline, about a mile from where both soldiers vanished into the ocean on May 2, according to the army. It's not clear if Key was the soldier who fell or the one who reportedly jumped in.

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Army officials said ongoing search efforts will focus on the location where Key's remains were recovered, while still monitoring a broader perimeter.

Key, 27, was from Richmond, Virginia, according to the Army. He served as an air defense artillery officer with the 10th Army Air and Missile Defense Command.

Key "embodied the highest standards of service as a selfless, inspirational leader whose unwavering dedication to his Soldiers and their development leaves an enduring legacy within our ranks," said Lt. Col. Chris Couch, commander of 5-4 ADAR, in the statement.

The Cap Draa Training Area in Morocco. / Credit: CBS News

He is survived by his parents, his sister and his brother-in-law, according to the Army. His next-of-kin were notified prior to the announcement. His remains were transported to an area morgue, and plans are underway to repatriate them from Morocco to the U.S.

Brigadier Gen. Curtis King, commanding general of the 10th Army Air and Missile Defense Command, said in a statement that Key's colleagues were "grieving" and would "continue to support one another" as well as the soldier's family, "as we honor his life and service."

Key joined his battalion in 2025 and had become a platoon leader by the time he died, the Army said. He was described as caring, selfless and inspirational by leadership in his artillery regiment, and had earned various awards for his service, including the Army Achievement Medal and Army Service Ribbon.

Before joining the military in 2023, Key received a Bachelor of Science in marketing from Methodist University in North Carolina, where he also completed minors in international business, entrepreneurship and business administration, the Army said.

Body of soldier who went missing in Morocco recovered, U.S. Army says

Search team finds body of missing U.S. soldier in Morocco 00:21 The body of an American soldier who wentmissing while in Moroccof...
Motorcyclist killed in Jones County crash

A motorcyclist was killed in a crash Monday evening in Jones County, the Texas Department of Public Safety said in a media release.

USA TODAY

A preliminary DPS investigation determined a 2025 Kawasaki Ninja motorcycle driven by Mason Alkire, 22, of Barton, Maryland, was going north at 7:30 p.m. Monday on State Highway 6 at an excessive rate of speed as it overtook another vehicle, the agency said.

A 2022 Ford 350 truck towing a 2025 Big Tex dump semi-trailer, driven by Jeremy Harris, 42, of Stamford, was ahead of the motorcycle on the highway, the DPS said. After overtaking it, the motorcycle rider returned to the northbound lane, but he failed to control his speed.

Texas DPS trooper car Monday, Sept. 16, 2024.

More:Two-vehicle crash in Taylor County takes a life

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More:Abilene ISD donates student sculptures to Heritage Square

As a result, the motorcycle had a rear-end collision with the truck towing a dump trailer on State Highway 6 south of FM Road 704, the DPS said. Alkire was wearing a helmet.

Jones County Justice of the Peace Cheryl Guernsey pronounced Alkire dead on the scene of the crash, the DPS said. Harris was wearing a seatbelt and was uninjured.

Trish Choate is the executive editor for the Abilene Reporter-News, San Angelo Standard-Times and Wichita Falls Times Record News. Contact Trish with news tips at tchoate@USATodayco.com. Read her recent workhere.

This article originally appeared on Abilene Reporter-News:Maryland motorcyclist dies in Jones County crash

Motorcyclist killed in Jones County crash

A motorcyclist was killed in a crash Monday evening in Jones County, the Texas Department of Public Safety said in a media release. ...
Fired FBI official: I was asked to take Trump loyalty pledge

A decorated FBI official who is suing the agency for wrongful dismissal said he was asked to pledge loyalty to Donald Trump during his vetting for the role.

The Telegraph Lawsuit from Brian Driscoll accuses Kash Patel (pictured) of 'politicising the FBI over protecting the American people'

In his first interview since leaving the FBI in 2025, Brian Driscoll, who served as the interim director of the agency under the US president, told CNN he was repeatedly asked about his personal political views while being interviewed for the role.

Mr Driscoll and two other senior FBI officials are suing Kash Patel, the head of the agency, and the FBI over allegations of wrongful termination.

The lawsuit accuses Mr Patel – thesubject of recent media reportsdetailing excessive drinking and erratic behaviour during histenure as FBI director– of “politicising the FBI over protecting the American people”.

Shortly before Mr Trump’s inauguration, Mr Driscoll said he received a phone call from Mr Patel, who had already been picked as the incoming president’s nominee for the agency’s top job, pending confirmation by the US Senate.

He allegedly told Mr Driscoll that his vetting process would not be an issue so long as he wasn’t active on social media, didn’t donate to the Democratic Party and did not vote for Kamala Harris.

Brian Driscoll, who served as the interim director of the agency under the US president, is suing the agency for wrongful dismissal

Later, in a vetting call with Paul Ingrassia, a lawyer in the Trump transition team, Mr Driscoll claims he was asked about his loyalty to the president-elect.

He said Mr Ingrassia asked him who he voted for and when he started supporting Mr Trump, questions which he declined to answer.

Mr Driscoll said he had never previously been asked about his political affiliations or views in his near-20 year career with the FBI. Despite telling Mr Ingrassia that it was “inappropriate” for him to be asking such questions, he said he continued.

“He asked me, ‘Do I agree that the agents who stormed Mar-a-Lago’ – his words not mine – ‘should be held accountable?’ I did answer that one, with an absolute no,” he said, referring to Mr Trump’s Florida home, which was raided by the FBI in 2022.

In a follow-up call with Emil Bove, another lawyer who would later become Mr Trump’s acting deputy attorney general, Mr Driscoll said he was told that he had failed the vetting process.

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However, Mr Bove apparently said he had “flipped it” and Mr Driscoll would still be named acting deputy director.

Even though Mr Driscoll was approached to be the agency’s second-in-command, a “clerical error” by the White House shortly after Mr Trump’s inauguration meant he was accidentally announced as the FBI’s acting director.

“You can imagine how surprised I was,” he said, describing the process as “farcical”.

Mr Driscoll said Mr Bove later asked him for a list of all FBI agents who had been involved in theinvestigations into the Jan 6 riots.

“I was resistant – legally and professionally resistant – to providing the names unless you tell me they’re going to be subject to existing processes to investigate any accusation of misconduct,” Mr Driscoll said. “The only response I got was, ‘They will be subject to a DOJ-led review.’ He couldn’t articulate what that review would entail.”

He was accused of “insubordination” for not handing over the list.

Mr Patel was confirmed as FBI director in February 2025; Mr Driscoll was fired from the agency in August.

In their lawsuit, Mr Driscoll and the other FBI officials claim Mr Patel told Mr Driscoll that “he had to fire the people his superiors told him to fire, because his ability to keep his own job depended on the removal of the agents who worked on cases involving the President.”

In addition to the firing of senior FBI officials, a wave of resignations and retirements has added even greater tumult to the agency.

Mr Patel has denied allegations included in a report by The Atlantic magazine, which detailed “episodes of excessive drinking and unexplained absences”.

In February, he was filmedchugging a beerwhile celebrating with the US men’s ice hockey team after their gold medal win at the Winter Olympics in Milan.

Mr Patel said he had “never been intoxicated on the job”. He has sued the magazine, demanding $250m (£185m) in damages.

Fired FBI official: I was asked to take Trump loyalty pledge

A decorated FBI official who is suing the agency for wrongful dismissal said he was asked to pledge loyalty to Donald Trump during his ...
Asia braces for a second wave of energy shocks from the Iran war

BANGKOK (AP) — Asia’s first defenses againstenergy shocksfrom the Iran war are running short and a more consequential second wave of impacts is beginning to hit.

Associated Press FILE - Gasoline drops from the nozzle of a fuel pump as it fills a motorcycle as prices continue to rise at a gasoline station in Quezon City, Philippines on March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila, File) FILE - Protesters hold slogans beside police during a rally by transport workers and activists protesting the rise in oil prices on March 27, 2026, near the Malacanang presidential palace in Manila, Philippines. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila, File) FILE - Atul Lahkar, from the Assam region, chef lights a fire with wood and coal to prepare food for his restaurant following a regional gas shortage in Guwahati, India, on March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Anupam Nath, File) FILE - A person carries gas cylinders on his bicycle in Kathmandu, on March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha, File) FILE - An ANA jet flies above a gas station in Inglewood, Calif., on May 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)

Iran Asia Energy Buffer

When the war started, governmentsscrambledto adapt to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a critical artery for energy flowing to Asia. They madedifficult trade-offs: saving power at the risk of slowing businesses, prioritizing gas for households at the risk of fertilizer production and dipping into energy stockpiles for temporary relief.

But these measures were based on the war lasting only a short time, allowing a quick resumption of energy flows. That has not happened.

With no clear end in sight, the fuel crisis is nowrippling across economies. Airfare costs, shipping rates and utility bills are climbing, jeopardizing economic growth. About 8.8 million people are in danger of being pushed into poverty and the conflict may cause $299 billion in economic losses to the Asia-Pacific region, according to the United Nations Development Program.

“The countries with the least resources to respond, or the consumers who can least afford to pay, are the ones who feel everything first,” said Samantha Gross of the U.S.-based think tank Brookings Institution.

Asian governments planned their budgets assuming the price of oil would average around $70 a barrel. Subsidies helped to keep fuel prices stable. But the war pushed the price of Brent crude to as high as about $120 a barrel.

Governments now face a stark choice between maintaining those costly subsidies, straining public finances, or cutting them to pass higher costs on to consumers, risking a public backlash, said Ahmad Rafdi Endut, a Kuala Lumpur-based independent energy analyst.

Asia braces for a second wave of impacts

In India, early steps to redirect fuel supplies toward cooking gas for roughly 330 million households cut into supplies for fertilizer plants. The surging of fertilizer prices and meteorologists warning of weak rainfall in anEl Niño yearis a concern for the world’s largest rice exporter.

India has relied on subsidies to shield its 1.4 billion people until now, but on Sunday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi urged citizens to buy locally and cut down on travel abroad to save dollars. He also encouraged people to work from home and use public transport to reduce fuel consumption, and asked farmers to halve fertilizer use.

The Philippines quickly shifted to afour-day work weekto save fuel. It also rolled out targeted subsidies for poorer households. However, Fitch Ratings noted that most consumers are still paying higher energy costs, causing business activity to slow in major cities like Manila.

Thailand abandoned its diesel price cap less than a month after the conflict began, as its fuel subsidies ran out. It's now cutting other spending to manage higher oil prices while trying to keep its budget under control.

Vietnam extended a suspension of fuel taxes to ease pressure on domestic prices. Jet fuel shortages have led to flight cuts. Tourism makes up nearly 8% of Vietnam's gross domestic product — the nation's total output of goods and services — so that affects the entire economy.

“Business is not good right now," said Hanoi-based tour guide Nguyen Manh Thang. “There are already fewer tourists.”

Fuel shortages have pushed cash-strapped countries like Pakistan and Bangladesh to buy oil and gas at current market prices, which are often higher and more volatile than long-term contracts. This raises import costs and adds to pressure on their already limited foreign exchange reserves.

Governments can keep costly fuel subsidies by cutting spending from other priorities like welfare, or borrow more and risk higher inflation, said Endut in Kuala Lumpur. Alternatively, they can reduce subsidies and pass higher costs on to consumers, risking angering voters.

Once subsidies are exhausted and inflation starts to rise, countries could face what he called a “fiscal time bomb.”

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Vulnerable Asia will not see immediate relief

The war's eventual end won't bring quick respite to Asia.

The global oil and gas trade will not bounce back right away, and it will take time to restart production, said Gross with the Brookings Institution. Repairing damaged infrastructure, restarting facilities and allowing for transport time from the Middle East to final markets will take weeks or even months.

Europe will feel a similar impact to Asia, but with about a four-week lag, experts say.

Americans are also feeling the pinchasgas prices spikeacross the U.S. But Southeast Asia is currently the “biggest pain point," said Henning Gloystein of the Eurasia Group consultancy firm.

“This fuel shortage situation is going to get worse,” he said.

In Africa,higher energy and import costsare similarly straining budgets, widening deficits and driving up inflation. The war is also taking a toll on Latin America and the Caribbean, wheregrowth is projected to slowslightly.

The complex disruptions across global supply chains will continue to have broader impacts, warned Ted Krantz, CEO of supply chain risk firm Interos.ai.

The crisis also highlights the fragility of Asia’s growing middle class, said Maria Monica Wihardja of the Singapore-based ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute, with many people at risk of slipping back into poverty.

The energy shock will reshape Southeast Asia’s economies over time, she said, including shifts in job markets and how countries plan for future energy crises.

Countries are already debating and implementing longer-term solutions, likediversifying fossil fuel suppliers,developing nuclear energyandrenewables like solar.

The war is making geopolitical risk central to the economic outlook of Southeast Asia and directly slowing regional growth, said Albert Park of the Asian Development Bank.

"The longer it lasts, the larger those negative effects would be,” he said

Ghosal reported from Hanoi, Vietnam.

The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’sstandardsfor working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas atAP.org.

Asia braces for a second wave of energy shocks from the Iran war

BANGKOK (AP) — Asia’s first defenses againstenergy shocksfrom the Iran war are running short and a more consequential second wave of im...

 

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