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Donald Trump Cornered With List of Right-Wing Attacks on Democrats

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President Donald Trump’s narrative on political violence faltered Monday when a reporter confronted him with a list of right-wing attacks on Democrats.

The president has sharply escalated his attacks on “the left” since right-wing activist Charlie Kirk was assassinated last week in Utah, placing blame for political violence on the side of the aisle that isn’t his.

“If you look at the problem, the problem is on the left. It’s not on the right,” he told reporters on Sunday. “When you look at the agitators, you look at the scum that speaks so badly of our country, the American flag burnings all over the place—that’s the left. That’s not the right.”

President Donald Trump has stoked fears of a power grab by vowing to investigate “the left,” which he blames for political violence. Kevin Dietsch/Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

On Monday, however, CBS News’ Chief White House Correspondent Nancy Cordes challenged that claim by presenting Trump, 79, with a list of political violence targeting Democrats.

“Given the killing of [Minnesota Democrat] Melissa Hortman, the attack on [former House speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband] Paul Pelosi, the attack on [former Arizona Democrat] Gabby Giffords, the attack on the Pennsylvania governor’s mansion, why make the case that violence is only on one side?” Cordes asked.

, early Saturday, June 14, 2025. State Sen. John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette Hoffman, were shot at their home in Champlin, just prior to the Hortman murders. (Photo by Glen Stubbe/The Minnesota Star Tribune via Getty Images)
Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman, a Democrat, was killed in June by a gunman who also targeted other Democrats and pro-abortion advocates. Glen Stubbe/Star Tribune/Getty Images

Cocking his head back, Trump replied “I didn’t say it’s on one side,” before continuing, “but I say the radical left causes tremendous violence and they seem to do it in a bigger way.”

He claimed that the “radical left really causes a lot of problems for this country,” saying, “I really think they hate our country.”

When another reporter asked about his plans to crack down on the “radical left,” Trump deferred to his deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller, who was also in the Oval Office for the presser.

White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller appearing with guest host Vice President JD Vance on The Charlie Kirk Show.
Vice President JD Vance spoke of an “incredibly destructive movement of left-wing extremism” while discussing the Trump administration’s plans to crack down on the “radical left” with White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller on Monday. x.com

Miller said the administration would target those who are “paying for violence,” echoing a plan he outlined earlier on Charlie Kirk’s talk show, which Vice President JD Vance hosted on Monday.

Miller and Trump at times appeared to conflate political violence with not inherently violent protests such as the Black Lives Matter movement and June’s anti-ICE protests in Los Angeles.

Trump went on an extended tangent about protesters using “beautiful, brand new hammers” to break concrete apart, apparently referring to an incident during the Los Angeles protests.

The president was also asked why he didn’t lower flags to half-staff after Hortman’s assassination, as he had ordered following Kirk’s killing.

“Well if the governor had asked me to do that I would have done that. But the governor of Minnesota didn’t ask me,” he said.

However, CNN’s Chief White House Correspondent Kaitlan Collins later pointed out on X that Trump had said after Hortman’s murder that calling Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, a Democrat, would “waste time.”



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Fantasy football waiver wire Week 3: Troy Franklin, Bhayshul Tuten, streamers and more

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We had our first wave of significant fantasy football injuries. Unfortunately — especially for SuperFlex leagues — most came at the quarterback position. Don’t worry, as I’m here to offer waiver wire options, both for quarterback streamers and some running back and wide receiver pickups. In fact, we have a few must-add options in Week 3.


Heads Up

  • Players must be under 60% rostered on Yahoo
  • Listed in order of preference: I’ll regularly prioritize potential upside over immediate replacement production
    • RB backups have a separate secondary list based only on whether the lead option got hurt
  • No FAB suggestions: It varies wildly by league tendencies and always relative (ex: if you lost your RB1 to injury and there is a clear backup, you’re going to be more aggressive)
  • Streaming QB and TE are grouped together — weekly ranking can change once projections/ranks run — DST could shift a bit too
  • Emojis for brevity
    • 😏 = mentioned multiple times, multiple weeks — either you want him, or don’t
    • 🫡 = Next Man Up but with deeper startability

Worry Report
(Scale 1-5: more ducks = more worry)

  • Justin Fields, NYJ: 🦆🦆 — Of course, a week after I said, “You have to roll with the good and bad with Fields, as you can’t predict his performances. So, make him your QB if you can handle it,” Fields plays poorly, and is now in concussion protocol. Fields was on his way to potentially having his worst game as a full starter since Week 18 of 2023, but I would still have considered him a QB1 against the Buccaneers (and he will be if cleared). The single-digit games will come, but the 20+ point ones outweigh them. Again, it’s a matter of whether you can stomach it.
  • Kyren Williams, RB, LAR: 🦆 — Williams ceded snaps to Blake Corum in Week 1 but also had a few more touches in Week 2 (90.5 RBTouch% for Williams, down to 79.2% in Week 2). I’m still not concerned, as that’s still Top 10 for the week, and the Rams were solidly in control for four of Corum’s five touches. This is more about Corum clearly being the No. 2.
  • Brian Thomas, WR, JAX: 🦆🦆 — I rewatched every BT7 target this year. Yes, he made a “business decision” in Week 2, but he’s far from the first wideout to do so. And, yes, there were clear drops early in Week 1 and on the fourth-down play in Week 2. Sure, he made the mistake of turning upfield on both before completely securing the reception — both Thomas’ fault. The rest? Off target, knocked out of bounds (one each week) and good coverage were the issues. So, three of his 14 incompletions are completely his fault, which is worth one duck. Trevor Lawrence’s throws are another duck. In fact, only four wideouts (min. 10 targets) have a lower Catchable TGT% than Thomas’ 61.1%. That gets us to two ducks, and it also means I’m not panicking, but rather, buying low.
  • Drake London, WR, ATL: 🦆 — Give the Vikings defense some credit (and some blame to the inability to stop the run). It’s one game. I’m far from worrying. It just came at a bad time with a nationally-televised game and the similarly drafted duo of Malik Nabers and Amon-Ra St. Brown going off in Week 2.

Power Up Players
(Scale 1-5: more Mario mushrooms = more excitement)

  • Daniel Jones, QB, IND: 🍄🍄 — What does this say about the Giants? There are still some Jones mistakes, but they’ve been fewer, and the rushing upside hasn’t stopped. To that end, if Jones isn’t rushing for as many yards and fails to find the end zone, his decent — not great — passing may keep him from the QB1 tier that week. But the production is there so far.
  • J.K. Dobbins, RB, DEN: 🍄🍄🍄 — Top 20 in RBTouch%, FPPG and Yards per Touch. RJ Harvey will improve as the year goes on, but Dobbins is a solid RB2 until further notice.
  • Rome Odunze, WR, CHI: 🍄🍄🍄🍄 — Odunze: 96.4 Route%; DJ Moore: 90.5%  — Odunze: 29.9 TmTGT%; Moore: 16.4% (also, Olamide Zaccheaus 17.9%) — Odunze: 3 RZ targets, 3 EZ targets; Moore: 0 and 1 — Odunze: 20.5 FPPG on 20-13-165-3; Moore: 7.1 on 11-8-114-0 — Odunze is already the Bears’ WR1.
  • Troy Franklin, WR, DEN: 🍄🍄🍄 — See below. Franklin is a great find already and must-add if still available.

Streaming Quarterbacks

  • Daniel Jones, IND at TEN — Praise Shane Steichen. Blame the Giants. It doesn’t matter, because it’s working now.
  • Jake Browning, CIN at MIN — Outside of Daniel Jones, no one has near-Joe Burrow upside, particularly with the matchup. In fact, only Jones and Browning are likely to come close to filling the Burrow void. Despite their risks, if I’m a Burrow team, I’d gamble on them long-term in 1QB leagues.
  • Tua Tagovailoa, MIA at BUF — He’s a box of chocolates.
  • Mac Jones, SF vs ARI — Spider-Man pointing meme with Brock Purdy.
  • Michael Penix, ATL at CAR — Good rebound opportunity.
  • Trevor Lawrence, JAX vs HOU — Not a great matchup, and Lawrence hasn’t improved much. Brian Thomas is dealing with a wrist injury.
  • Carson Wentz, MIN vs CIN — Hasn’t thrown for over 163 yards since Week 5, 2022 (five games, including four starts, with 15+ attempts in that span).
  • Cam Ward, TEN vs IND — Through two games, Ward has the fifth-highest OffTGT% (21.3) and lowest Catchable Percentage (67.2). Colts matchup helps, but it’s on Ward to improve.
  • Bryce Young, CAR vs ATL — Young threw 55 balls, 18.2% which were Off Target (h/t FantasyPoints). Falcons defense is decent.
  • Tyrod Taylor, NYJ at TB — Decent floor, modest upside.
  • Marcus Mariota, WAS vs LV — Kind of a floor option.
  • Joe Flacco, CLE vs GB — Rough Week 2. Still passing aplenty.
  • Geno Smith, LV at WAS — Not the best rebound situation.

“Thou Shall Not… Pass!”

  • Matthew Stafford, LAR at PHI
  • Aaron Rodgers, PIT at NE
  • Russell Wilson, NYG vs KC
  • Sam Darnold, SEA vs NO
  • Spencer Rattler, NO at SEA

Waiver Wire Running Backs

  1. Cam Skattebo, NYG — Tyrone Tracy barely touched the ball late and in overtime. If the shift isn’t officially here yet, it’s coming soon.
  2. Bhayshul Tuten, JAX — With Tank Bigsby gone, Tuten is the clear No. 2 and could see weekly RB3/Flex value if he’s seeing double-digit touches.
  3. Woody Marks, HOU — Here purely on upside. Marks looks to have taken the No. 2 role, and that alone could lead to timeshare value (RB3 range). There’s the added future ceiling if the Texans see enough to give Marks the lead and timeshare Nick Chubb. 
  4. Tyler Allgeier, ATL 🫡
  5. Trey Benson, ARI 🫡
  6. Blake Corum, LAR 🫡 — In thin weeks and great matchups, could be worth an RB3 flier play. More importantly, clearly the next man up for the Rams with Top 20 upside if Kyren Williams gets hurt.
  7. Kenneth Gainwell, PIT — The lead with the lowest RBTouch% in the league?
  8. Miles Sanders, DAL — Complete gamble each week but the No. 2 with weekly work.
  9. Kyle Monangai, CHI — After just one touch in Week 1, Monangai had eight (34.8 RBTouch%), with nothing for Roschon Johnson in his return.
  10. Jeremy McNichols, WAS — If the Commanders whittle down to a two-man timeshare, McNichols would come close to Austin Ekeler’s value in half and full-PPR.
  11. Chris Rodriguez, WAS — He was supposed to see short-yardage and goal-line touches and will now be active. Not expecting much, but deeper leagues should take a flier just in case.
  12. Zavier Scott, MIN — Who? The next RB behind Aaron Jones and Jordan Mason. Was seen as not a pure runner or receiver — as in, he’s decent at both, great at neither, but if something were to happen to Mason…
  13. Najee Harris, LAC — Clear No. 2 for the Chargers and unlikely to have standalone value as such.
  14. Ollie Gordon, MIA — Down to handcuff value. Whether it’s the offense, lack of confidence in Gordon, or whatever, the preseason excitement bubble has burst.
  15. Tyjae Spears, TEN — Eligible to return in Week 5.
  16. Jaydon Blue, DAL — Still inactive. Still long-term upside.
  17. Tank Bigsby, PHI — Bigsby could be the next man up, but if Will Shipley gets healthy, he could lead, or most likely, this is a timeshare or even committee (A.J. Dillon too) in the event of a Saquon Barkley injury.

Purely Next Man Up Ranks
(if an injury ahead of them)

  1. Tyler Allgeier, ATL
  2. Trey Benson, ARI
  3. Blake Corum, LAR
  4. Brian Robinson, SF
  5. DJ Giddens, IND
  6. Ray Davis, BUF
  7. Rachaad White, TB
  8. Najee Harris, LAC
  9. Tyjae Spears, TEN (injured)
  10. Ollie Gordon, MIA
  11. Woody Marks, HOU
  12. Kareem Hunt, KC
  13. Rico Dowdle, CAR
  14. Tahj Brooks, CIN
  15. Kendre Miller, NO
  16. Jerome Ford, CLE

Junk Drop

  • LeQuint Allen, JAX — Tuten is the two — Two-ten. He should have chosen 20 for his jersey number.
  • Roschon Johnson, CHI — Maybe it changes in time, but Johnson is the No. 3 right now.
  • Jerome Ford, CLE — Judkins wasn’t eased in, so it’s only getting worse — the time has ended for Ford.
  • Kaleb Johnson, PIT — This is only for 10-teamers or shallower, and if you can’t cut anyone else. Johnson isn’t close to the mix, currently.

Waiver Wire Wide Receivers

  1. Quentin Johnston, LAC — This should be the final week we see Johnston’s name. Rectify the fact he’s still under 60%.
  2. Troy Franklin, DEN — Led in Route% in Week 2. Yes, ahead of Courtland Sutton. The connection is real… after all, he played with Bo Nix in college, and bunked together, and sat together at breakfast, lunch and dinner, and walked dogs together, and took long beach walks together…
  3. Romeo Doubs, GB — The only constant we know for the Packers is that Doubs is a top-two option, especially with Jayden Reed out.
  4. Kayshon Boutte, NE — Clearly the No. 1. Clearly showing the upside of his pre-injury self from college. Clearly ranking higher this week.
  5. Cedric Tillman, CLE 😏 — No, I’m not counting on many more ricochet touchdowns. Also, tough matchup this week.
  6. Darnell Mooney, ATL — A WR4 who’s back to 100% health.
  7. Christian Kirk, HOU — If he returns, Kirk could be the answer for who’s No. 2. Jayden Higgins has seen two-WR work the most, but he’s still limited as the Texans (inexplicably) are playing the long game. You needed major OL help, drafted two Day 2 wideouts, fully guaranteed a contract for one, and barely play them both…?! Kirk is near the bottom if he’s not already practicing on Wednesday.
  8. Elic Ayomanor, TEN — The first two games have made it very clear he’s the No. 2 for the Titans.
  9. Hunter Renfrow, CAR — Until Jalen Coker returns, Renfrow looks to be the No. 2, especially with Xavier Legette’s struggles.
  10. Wan’Dale Robinson, NYG — Half and full-PPR only, and we’ve been here before… Russell Wilson isn’t going to have elite Russ games every week.
  11. Dontayvion Wicks, GB — Many expect the Reed injury to increase opportunities for Matthew Golden, but there is a chance the Packers aren’t ready for that, with Wicks stepping up as the No. 2.
  12. Tyquan Thornton, KC — Only if Xavier Worthy is still out, and only if you think the lottery offers good odds.
  13. Calvin Austin, PIT — This is the floor of the No. 2 in an Arthur Smith offense and with Aaron Rodgers. Still the No. 2.
  14. Isaac TeSlaa, DET — If anything ever happens to Amon-Ra St. Brown or Jameson Williams, look out.
  15. Tory Horton, SEA — Still a long-term stash if anything happens to Cooper Kupp… or Jaxon Smith-Njigba.
  16. Jayden Higgins, HOU — As mentioned, you can drop Higgins if you need the help. It’s clearly a long-term upside stash, but I know some teams might not have that luxury.

Stashes

  • Brandon Aiyuk, SF — Weekly reminder to stash despite uncertain timeline.
  • Jalen Coker, CAR — Like Tyjae Spears, an injury stash, as Coker now has a chance to return to the No. 2 role with outside work.

 Equipping Dislike

  • Dyami Brown, JAX — Even though he’s “ahead” of Travis Hunter in the pecking order, that’s kind of a technicality and doesn’t change Brown being the Jaguars’ Rashod Bateman.
  • DeAndre Hopkins, BAL — Rinse and repeat Week 1 — “He can’t keep getting away with this.”
  • Devontez Walker, BAL — Said, “I see you, DeAndre Hopkins, now hold my beer.” Five routes. Two targets.
  • Parker Washington, JAX — 17 routes on the year.

Junk Drop

  • Xavier Legette, CAR — In fairness to Legette, only 58.3% of his targets have been catchable, but that’s still over twice as many as he’s caught (26.7% or 4-for-15).
  • Marvin Mims, DEN — Sure, a touchdown, but from 62.8 Route% to 40.6% in Week 2.
  • DeMario Douglas, NE — Like Mims, 73.6 Route% down to 36.7% and behind three WRs and two TEs.


Streaming Tight Ends

  • Juwan Johnson, NO — As long as Spencer Rattler is at QB, Johnson is a top-two option for the Saints.
  • Zach Ertz, WAS — As long as Daniels is starting, but not much of a hit if it’s Mariota.
  • Ja’Tavion Sanders, CAR — Won’t see nine targets every week, but a matchup problem.
  • Harold Fannin, CLE — It’s tight end, and 5-for-48 makes you a fringe TE1… sadly.

All of the next options have at least 76.8 Route% (more than Mark Andrews and Hunter Henry), and only Mason Taylor doesn’t have 9+ targets.

  • Chig Okonkwo, TEN
  • Jonnu Smith, PIT
  • Brenton Strange, JAX
  • Mason Taylor, NYJ

Junk Drop

  • Mark Andrews, BAL — Lumiere here: drop him and chase production. It’s tight end. I won’t argue much, especially when… checks notes, rubs eyes, adjusts resolution, squints… Andrews has seven yards in two games.
  • T.J. Hockenson, MIN — I’d wait a week if you can with Wentz at quarterback, but Jordan Addison is back next week. Wentz could surprise, though, and make Hockenson a Top 10 option even with Addison. That said, if he’s your TE2, at least try to trade him.

Streaming DST
(First team listed is streamer)

Week 3

  • GB at CLE
  • SEA vs NO
  • NE vs PIT
  • LAC vs DEN
  • ATL at CAR
  • IND at TEN
  • CHI vs DAL

Week 4

  • GB at DAL
  • LAC at NYG
  • NE vs CAR
  • SEA at ARI

(Photo of Troy Franklin: Christine Tannous / USA TODAY Network via Imagn Images)

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Against the odds, Americans are still spending

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Washington
 — 

Americans still opened their wallets last month, despite persistent fears about the economy, a slowing labor market and higher tariffs.

Spending at US retailers rose 0.6% in August, the Commerce Department said Tuesday, unchanged from July’s upwardly revised 0.6%. Last month’s figure came in much better than economists’ expectations of a 0.2% increase, according to a poll by data firm FactSet. Retail sales are adjusted for seasonal swings but not inflation.

Employers have hit the brakes on hiring in recent months as Americans once again grow pessimistic about the economy’s future. President Donald Trump’s widespread tariffs have also began to push up some prices, according to the Consumer Price Index.

Yet, US consumers haven’t cut back their spending meaningfully, and they may continue to spend so long as layoffs don’t surge.

Retail spending was up across most categories last month, with online sales and purchases at clothing stores rising the most, increasing 2% and 1%, respectively.

The so-called control group of retail sales — a measure that strips out volatile components — rose 0.74% in August, up from July’s 0.5% and well above economists’ expectations of a 0.4% increase.

Sales last month were down at specialty stores and furniture retailers, falling 1.1% and 0.3%, respectively. Spending at health shops and department stores were both down 0.1% each.

“The economy seems to be doing just fine for now and perhaps the slow-down in payroll jobs is one gigantic head fake when it comes to forecasting the economy,” wrote Christopher Rupkey, chief economist at Fwd Bonds, in an analyst note Tuesday. “Consumer spending is resilient. Interest rate cuts do not need to be adjusted as the economy is sailing along just fine.”

Spending at restaurants and bars rose 0.7% in August from the prior month, according to the report.

This story is developing and will be updated.





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Robert Redford, magnetic Hollywood icon and Sundance founder, dies at 89

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Robert Redford, the actor and director who sailed to Hollywood stardom with turns in classics such as “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid” and “All the President’s Men” and invigorated American independent cinema as one of the founders of the Sundance Film Festival, died Tuesday morning.

He was 89.

Cindi Berger, his publicist, said he died at his home “in the mountains of Utah — the place he loved, surrounded by those he loved. He will be missed greatly. The family requests privacy.”

Redford was best known as a go-to leading man of the late 1960s and 1970s, instantly recognizable for his windswept hair and widely beloved for his easy charisma. But he was also an accomplished filmmaker, committed political activist, and culture-shaping entrepreneur.

He won the best director Oscar for the family melodrama “Ordinary People” (1980), the first of his nine stints behind the camera.

Redford’s expansive spirit will live on through the Sundance Institute, a nonprofit organization he founded in 1981 that sponsors the Sundance Film Festival. The festival, held annually in snowy Park City, Utah, showcases offbeat projects and helps launch the careers of new artists.

“I saw other stories out there that weren’t having a chance to be told and I thought, ‘Well, maybe I can commit my energies to giving those people a chance,’” Redford recalled in a 2018 interview. “As I look back on it, I feel very good about that.”

In a career that stretched across more than six decades, Redford won two Academy Awards, including an honorary prize in 2002 and three Golden Globe Awards, including the Cecil B. DeMille Award lifetime achievement honor in 1994.

President Barack Obama presents the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Robert Redford on Nov. 22, 2016.Andrew Harnik / AP file

President Barack Obama awarded Redford the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2016, saying in remarks at the White House that Americans “admire Bob not just for his remarkable acting, but for having figured out what to do next.”

Charles Robert Redford Jr. was born Aug. 18, 1936, in the beachside community of Santa Monica, California, to Martha Hart and Charles Robert Redford Sr., a milkman turned oil company accountant.

The younger Redford described himself as a poor student who was more interested in the arts and athletics. He graduated from Van Nuys High School in 1954 and briefly attended the University of Colorado Boulder. He later ambled around Europe, soaking up the culture in France, Spain and Italy.

He eventually moved to New York City, enrolling in the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. He made his Broadway debut in the play “Tall Story” (1959) and went on to appear in several popular television shows of the early 1960s, including “Alfred Hitchcock Presents” and “The Twilight Zone.”

Redford’s most high-profile theatrical performance from the period was opposite Elizabeth Ashley in the original Broadway run of Neil Simon’s “Barefoot in the Park” (1963), playing the uptight newlywed Paul.

“Barefoot in the Park” catapulted Redford to supporting roles in movies, including the off-kilter Alec Guinness comedy “Situation Hopeless … But Not Serious” (1965) and the show business tale “Inside Daisy Clover” (1965), starring Natalie Wood.

Robert Redford, Elizabeth Ashley, and Kurt Kaznar
Redford, Elizabeth Ashley and Kurt Kaznar backstage after opening night at New York Biltmore Theater in1963. Marty Lederhandler / AP file

“Inside Daisy Clover” handed Redford his first Golden Globe (for best new star), and the actor earned wider attention co-starring with Jane Fonda in both the prison break yarn “The Chase” (1966) and the 1967 big-screen version of “Barefoot in the Park.”

Redford reached a career turning point in 1969 with George Roy Hill’s “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.” He was the sharp-shooting Sundance Kid to Paul Newman’s quick-witted Butch Cassidy, two charming Wild West outlaws trying to make their way to Bolivia.

“Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,” anchored by one of the most electric star pairings in Hollywood history, conquered the box office and won over critics. Redford was suddenly a bankable leading man with his pick of projects — and legions of admirers across the country.

The same year, Redford starred as a relentless skier in “Downhill Racer” and a lawman in “Tell Them Willie Boy Is Here.” He followed those parts with turns as a motorcyclist in “Little Fauss and Big Halsy” (1970) and a jewel thief in “The Hot Rock” (1972), but both movies fizzled at the box office.

“The Candidate,” a political satire starring Redford as a callow U.S. Senate aspirant, performed respectably and collected largely positive reviews. Obama, in his remarks at the Presidential Medal of Freedom ceremony in 2016, called it “the best movie about what politics is actually like, ever.”

Redford’s next several projects were among his most commercially successful, lighting up multiplex ticket booths and cementing his status as one of the key A-list performers of the era.

He captivated audiences as a rugged mountain man in Sydney Pollack’s “Jeremiah Johnson” (1972) and Barbra Streisand’s romantic partner in “The Way We Were” (1973). He teamed again with Paul Newman and director George Roy Hill for the light-hearted caper “The Sting” (1973).

Robert Redford, left, as Sundance Kid and Paul Newman as Butch Cassidy in the 1969 western "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid."
Robert Redford, left, as Sundance Kid and Paul Newman as Butch Cassidy in the 1969 western “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.”John Springer Collection / Corbis via Getty Images
American actors Robert Redford, left, and Paul Newman
Robert Redford as Johnny Hooker and Paul Newman as Henry Gondorff on the set of the film “The Sting,” in 1973.Silver Screen Collection / via Getty Images file

“The Sting,” starring Redford and Newman as too-cool-for-school grifters in the 1930s, dominated the box office, scooped up the Oscar for best picture, and delivered Redford his first and only nomination for best actor at the 1974 ceremony. (He lost to Jack Lemmon for “Save the Tiger.”)

Redford scored more hits in the middle of the decade, playing the title character in a 1974 retelling of “The Great Gatsby,” a cocky aviator in “The Great Waldo Pepper” (1975), and a CIA analyst swept into a high-stakes conspiracy in “Three Days of the Condor” (1975).

He next co-starred in one of the most celebrated movies of the 1970s: “All the President’s Men” (1976), an adaptation of a bestselling memoir of the same name by The Washington Post journalists Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, who doggedly investigated the Watergate scandal.

“All the President’s Men,” a commercial and critical triumph, represented one of the peaks of Redford’s influence in the film industry. He orchestrated the project, including purchasing the film rights to the book and hiring “Butch Cassidy” scribe William Goldman to write the screenplay.

Carl Bernstein, and Bob Woodward, are flanked by actors Dustin Hoffman and Robert Redford as they attend the premiere of the motion picture "All the President's Men,"
Washington Post reporters Carl Bernstein, second from left, and Bob Woodward, third from left, are flanked by actors Dustin Hoffman and Robert Redford as they attend the premiere of “All the President’s Men” in 1976.AP file

The film, a tense and fast-paced account of how Woodward (Redford) and Bernstein (Dustin Hoffman) unraveled the conspiracy that brought down President Richard Nixon, also reflected Redford’s political consciousness and sense of civic responsibility.

“Accuracy was the big, big objective in making the film,” Redford recalled in a 2006 interview. “We had to be accurate, otherwise we would fall under that perception that Hollywood was messing around with a very vital event.”

Redford closed out the 1970s with a relatively small part in the war epic “A Bridge Too Far” (1977) and the role of a shambolic rodeo star in “The Electric Horseman” (1979), co-starring frequent collaborator Jane Fonda.

The dawn of the 1980s marked the start of a crucial career chapter. He appeared in the 1980 prison flick “Brubaker,” but Redford’s more significant project that year was his wrenching directorial debut, “Ordinary People.”

“Ordinary People” chronicles an upper-middle-class Midwestern family wracked by grief and dysfunction. The film, starring Timothy Hutton, Donald Sutherland and Mary Tyler Moore, examines the emotional fault lines underneath America’s clean-cut suburban ideal.

Oscar voters lavished the acclaimed drama with four awards, including best picture and a director trophy for Redford. (“Raging Bull” fans are still smarting from the knockout punch.)

Actor Robert Redford holding Oscar he won for best director "Ordinary People,"
Redford holding the Oscar he won for best director for “Ordinary People” at the 1981 Academy Awards.AP file

Redford acted in only three more films in the 1980s — the baseball picture “The Natural” (1984), the best picture winner “Out of Africa” (1985) and the courtroom comedy “Legal Eagles” (1986) — and directed the largely forgotten dramedy “The Milagro Beanfield War,” released in 1987.

But in that same period, Redford helped form one of the signature institutions of modern film culture. He founded the Sundance Institute in 1981 with the goal of discovering talent from outside the Hollywood system, highlighting independent productions and supporting new artists.

The Sundance Film Festival, named for one of the actor’s most iconic characters, grew into a cornerstone of the film industry and eventually one of the most glitzy extravaganzas on the Hollywood social calendar, known as much for screenings as for executive deal-making and VIP parties.

The festival was a launching pad for some of the most well-known auteurs of the last quarter-century — Quentin Tarantino, Paul Thomas Anderson, Steven Soderbergh, Gina Prince-Bythewood — and continues to be an incubator for promising young writers, directors and other creative personalities.

It has likewise focused national attention on seminal independent films such as Soderbergh’s “Sex, Lies, and Videotape” (1989) and Tarantino’s “Reservoir Dogs” (1992) as well as “Clerks” (1994), “The Blair Witch Project” (1999), “Donnie Darko” (2001) and “Little Miss Sunshine” (2006).

In the 1990s and early 2000s, as Sundance helped turn independent film into a lucrative business, Redford continued to act steadily.

In those years, Redford starred in the heist comedy “Sneakers” (1992), the erotic potboiler “Indecent Proposal” (1993), and the back-to-back 2001 thrillers “The Last Castle” and “Spy Game.”

He was also an active director during that period, helming “A River Runs Through It” (1992), “Quiz Show” (1994), “The Horse Whisperer” (1998), “The Legend of Bagger Vance” (2000), and “Lions for Lambs” (2007), and more recently “The Conspirator” (2010) and “The Company You Keep” (2012).

“A River Runs Through It” and “Quiz Show” drew praise, and the latter received Oscar nominations for best picture and best director. Redford’s subsequent directorial outings received mixed reviews, however, although “Lions” and “Company” allowed him to explore political themes.

Robert Redford and family in 2015 in New York.
Sibylle Szaggars, Redford and their family attend the 42nd Chaplin Award Gala at Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York in 2015.Kevin Mazur / Getty Images file

In his later years, Redford took on a challenging role in “All Is Lost,” a 2013 survival story that featured virtually no other characters and barely any dialogue. The actor received a standing ovation after the film screened at the Cannes Film Festival.

He portrayed former CBS newsman Dan Rather in “Truth” (2015) and introduced himself to a new generation of moviegoers as the villainous government operative Alexander Pierce in the Marvel franchise entries “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” (2014) and “Avengers: Endgame” (2019).

Redford’s leading role as a gentlemanly bank robber in David Lowery’s character study “The Old Man & the Gun” (2018) was his last, adding a gentle grace note to an illustrious Hollywood career.

“I just figure that I’ve had a long career that I’m very pleased with. It’s been so long, ever since I was 21. I figure now as I’m getting into my 80s, it’s maybe time to move toward retirement and spend more time with my wife and family,” Redford told the Associated Press in 2018.

He is survived by his wife, Sibylle Szaggars, and two children from a previous marriage to Lola Van Wagenen: Shauna Jean Redford and Amy Hart Redford. Redford and his first wife lost two sons: Scott Anthony Redford, born in 1959, died of sudden infant death syndrome; David James Redford died of cancer in 2020.



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