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Lil Nas X Still Jailed After Arrest And Hospitalization

Lil Nas X will be jailed through the weekend following his arrest early Thursday morning, a representative for the Los Angeles Police Department confirms to The Hollywood Reporter, after the rapper was caught on camera roaming the streets in Studio City, nearly naked and seemingly delirious.
The LAPD says that Lil Nas X, whose real name is Montero Hill, will be jailed until Monday, citing “charge 69 (a) PC” a penal code for resisting or obstructing an officer. “The arrestee (Hill) cannot be cited out,” the LAPD said in an email. “It is mandatory that he appear before a judge before he is released. This will happen on Monday.”
Lil Nas X is jailed at Valley Jail in Van Nuys. It’s unclear what his current condition is. Reps for the rapper didn’t respond to a request for comment.
Lil Nas X was first caught on camera by TMZ in the early hours of Thursday morning, walking down the street on a near-empty Ventura Boulevard, wearing nothing but underwear and a pair of white cowboy boots.
In a statement to THR yesterday, the LAPD said Lil Nas X had “charged at officers and was taken into custody.”
“He was transported to a local hospital for a possible overdose and placed under arrest for battery on a police officer,” the LAPD said.
Lil Nas X, who released his Days Before Dreamboy EP back in March, has been struggling with health issues throughout 2025. Back in April, he shared an update on social media saying he’d suffered partial facial paralysis. A month later, he had to cancel a headlining appearance for West Hollywood’s Outloud pride music festival. One source tells THR that a similar mental health issue had contributed to him pulling out of the event. At the time the cancellation was announced, the festival said in a statement that “we’ve been in close contact with Lil Nas X and his team regarding an ongoing medical issue.”
“After my recent hospital visit, I – like all of you should – must prioritize my health and getting back to 100%,” the rapper said in a statement at the time.
More to come.
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Craig Jones puts Chael Sonnen to sleep twice in CJI 2 superfight

Chael Sonnen stepped in as a late replacement for Gable Steveson at Sunday night’s Craig Jones Invitational 2 in Las Vegas and did his best to survive against Craig Jones.
In a match scheduled for three five-minute rounds, Sonnen managed to get tapped twice with the same move.
A former UFC middleweight and light heavyweight title challenger, Sonnen immediately took Jones to the ground to find himself locked in a buggy choke. The choke was tight, and Sonnen apparently went to sleep.
Sonnen regained his senses, and both athletes agreed to go at it again. Sonnen took Jones down again, going for a leg lock with no real danger to a grappler of Jones’ caliber. The CJI founder against attacked with the buggy choke, again having Sonnen go lights out.
McCarthy couldn’t help but laugh as Sonnen tried to make it best three out of five — and the crowd chanted to get the two go at it again —, but the referee called the end of the contest.
The official result was read as Jones being victorious via double buggy choke.
Watch the second finish below.
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Liverpool agrees to British-record deal for Alexander Isak, sources say

Liverpool have agreed to a British-record deal to sign striker Alexander Isak from Newcastle United, sources told ESPN.
The Premier League champions have had a £125M bid accepted to sign the Sweden international, who is expected to undergo a medical ahead of Monday’s transfer deadline.
It brings an end to one of the summer’s most-protracted transfer sagas, with Isak having spent more than a month agitating for a move away from Newcastle. The 25-year-old did not join the club on their preseason tour of the Far East and has not featured for Eddie Howe’s side this season.
He also released a sensational statement earlier this month in which he claimed promises had been “broken” by the Newcastle hierarchy and insisted a move this summer would be in the best interests of all parties.
Isak is now set to become the most expensive signing in Premier League history, surpassing Chelsea’s Moisés Caicedo who joined the London club for £115M from Brighton & Hove Albion in the summer of 2023. It marks the second time this summer that Liverpool have broken their transfer record, with Arne Slot’s side having committed spending an initial £100M (plus a potential £16M in add-ons) to sign Florian Wirtz from Bayer Leverkusen in June.
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Donald Trump as the wildcard and other takeaways for India-China relationship

Vikas PandeyIndia editor and
Stephen McdonellChina correspondent

The view from India
Just a few months ago, the armed forces of India and Pakistan were locked in a brief but deadly conflict.
The conflict indirectly involved a third nation – China. Pakistan’s armed forces heavily used China-made equipment, including fighter jets and radar systems.
A senior army officer in Delhi said Beijing also provided “live inputs” to Pakistan on Indian positions.
India didn’t take a public stand against China, but this left many asking if Delhi should continue on the path of normalising relations with Beijing.
Less than six months later, peace talks between the two Asian giants have been turbocharged by decisions taken thousands of miles away in Washington DC.
The Trump administration has imposed 50% tariffs on Indian imports, saying Delhi was being punished for its refusal to stop buying oil from Russia.
Delhi had two clear choices after this stunning onslaught from a trusted ally.
The first was to cave in and stop buying Russian oil. But it has refused to do so, largely because Russia is an “all-weather” ally and giving into pressure doesn’t suit Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s strongman image.
The second was to stand firm and seek other opportunities and India appears to have to chosen this option for now.
It’s also pragmatic to look no further when your neighbour is the world’s second-largest economy and a global manufacturing powerhouse.
It was in this context, that Modi met Chinese President Xi Jinping in Tianjin over the weekend.
Statements from the two sides were not heavy on details, though they promised to work through their differences to benefit their collective population of 2.8 billion people.
The immediate takeaway from the meeting was the resumption of direct flights between the two countries and making the process of issuing visas simpler.
But beyond the promise of “the elephant and the dragon” coming together, the two countries still have major roadblocks to clear before they are able to engage meaningfully.
Their first challenge comes from their immediate history.
Modi has invested personally in the India-China relationship since coming to power in 2014, visiting the neighbouring country five times until 2018.
But the 2020 border clash put brakes on this momentum and it has taken seven long years for Modi to visit China again.
The key to making further progress will depend on how the two countries deal with their border issues.
Tens of thousands of troops from both countries are still deployed at their contested borders – though there are ongoing talks between their civilian and military leaders to ease the situation.

Both Chinese and Indian readouts after the meeting this weekend talked about maintaining peace at the border and “not turning their differences into disputes”.
For India, there is the issue of a burgeoning trade deficit with China, amounting to more than $99bn (£73bn).
Both countries still have high tariffs and duties against each other in many sectors.
Beijing would want India to open its market of 1.4 billion people to Chinese products, but Delhi would be wary of doing that without addressing the deficit.
The outreach to China, which started with Modi meeting Xi in Kazan last year, may have been supercharged by Trump tariffs, but ground realities for India remain unchanged.
The Modi-Xi meeting is being seen as part of India’s policy of “strategic autonomy” but it will also cause more geopolitical challenges for Delhi.
India is due to host the Quad (which includes Japan, Australia and the US) summit later this year. The forum was largely seen as a challenge to China’s dominance in the Indo-Pacific region.
It’s not clear if Trump will attend, but if he does and says something against China, it will immediately test the renewed synergy between Delhi and Beijing.
Delhi is also part of several other multilateral forums that are perceived as anti-China and anti-Russia.
How Delhi plays its strategic autonomy in the next few months will very much influence the direction India-China ties take.
For now, it’s clear that India-US ties are at an all-time low. A Trump aide recently called the Russia-Ukraine conflict “Modi’s war”.
Delhi has also consistently denied that Trump played any role in the ceasefire between India and Pakistan in May – this has become a constant irritant for the US president.
Despite this, India has refrained from imposing retaliatory tariffs against the US and has left the door ajar for further negotiations. After all, the US is India’s biggest trading partner.
Will going closer to China help India’s negotiations with the US or will it have the opposite impact?
This is the question that will likely dominate geopolitical discussions in Delhi and beyond in the coming months.

The view from China
When Xi Jinping met Narendra Modi he used what has become his favourite catchphrase for China-India relations: “The dragon and the elephant should come together”.
During “this period of transformation,” he added that it was vital for the world’s most populous nations to be friends and good neighbours.
In a case of spectacular timing, Prime Minister Modi’s visit has coincided with Donald Trump’s tariffs of up to 50% on India exports to the US.
This represents quite a hit on the country’s economy so New Delhi would be looking around for other business partners.
Look no further than right here, Xi may well say, as his administration attempts to rebuild from the wreckage of China-India relations following years of tension between the two.
And, if their official readouts are anything to go by, Modi’s attendance at the Tianjin Summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation seems to have paid off.
His published comments to Xi were much more specific than the those coming the other way.
There is now a very good window for Beijing and New Delhi to repair their strained relationship.
China’s leader knows that Donald Trump’s tariff onslaught is pushing India away from the United States and that this great economic rival needs other partnerships.
Considerable obstacles remain.
They include China’s backing of India’s key rival Pakistan; interaction of all types has been in the doldrums; angry rhetoric from both governments (over many years) has created a climate of suspicion between the Asian heavyweights and their high-mountain border dispute has stirred nationalist sentiment on both sides of the frontier.
However, with the latter of these, this meeting would appear to confirm that pressure has already eased.
Last Thursday China’s Defence Ministry spokesman was talking up the success of discussions between the representatives of China and India aimed at stopping the clashes along their disputed border.
He spoke of “win-win cooperation” and celebrating the 75th anniversary of ties between the two nations.
Xi also knows that the symbolism of having Modi in China right now is considerable, that images of them shaking hands and standing side-by-by side – as the Trump tariffs on India kick in – can be a powerful propaganda tool which is made even more significant by the fact that this is a multilateral gathering.
The two will not only be joined by Vladimir Putin but by the other SCO governments like Turkey (a member of Nato), Saudi Arabia (a key US ally), Iran (a key enemy of the US) as well as Qatar, Egypt and Pakistan.
And all of this in the days before Beijing holds a massive display of military might with a parade through the heart of the capital.
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