Robbie in the Giorgio Armani Privé couture gown with silver Aquazzura heels.
(Photo by Tristan Fewings/Getty Images)
It’s going to be hard to beat Thursday night’s season opener. None of the rest of the 272 games might live up to what the Cowboys and Eagles delivered.
It had everything, including an ejection before the first offensive snap, an hour-long weather delay and plenty of chippiness from the NFC East rivals.
The Eagles, after raising their Super Bowl LIX banner, outlasted the Cowboys 24-20.
The game got off to an ominous beginning for the Eagles. They lost fullback Ben VanSumeren to a knee injury on the opening kickoff and saw defensive lineman Jalen Carter ejected during the injury timeout for spitting on Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott. The Cowboys then marched 53 yards in six plays and 3:11 to take a 7-0 lead.
The teams traded punches, with points coming on eight consecutive possessions.
The Cowboys, though, didn’t score on their fifth possession despite going 61 yards to the Philadelphia 11. Miles Sanders, who had a 49-yard run before Zack Baun saved the touchdown, fumbled. Jihaad Campbell forced the fumble, and Quinyon Mitchell picked it up and would have been off to the races with a 90-yard touchdown if not for Prescott’s first career tackle.
That was the final play before a weather delay just before 10:30 p.m. ET. The game ended at 12:18 a.m. ET.
Neither team scored after the thunderstorm, with five punts, Dallas turning it over on downs on their final possession and the Eagles ending in victory formation.
The Cowboys’ last chance for a comeback victory ended on fourth-and-3 at their own 45. Prescott lofted a long ball to CeeDee Lamb, who earlier in the game uncharacteristically dropped three passes. The All-Pro receiver dove for the pass and got his hands on it but couldn’t haul it in, with the Cowboys turning the ball over on downs.
The Eagles were able to run out the clock when Jalen Hurts scrambled for 4 yards on third-and-3 with 1:29 remaining. The Cowboys used their final timeout, and Hurts had three kneel downs to end it.
Hurts and Prescott have played only four times, and the series now is tied 2-2.
The Eagles gained 302 yards, including 158 rushing. Hurts had 62 yards on 14 carries, scoring on scrambles of 4 and 8 yards, and Saquon Barkley gained 60 yards and a touchdown on 18 carries.
Hurts completed 19 of 23 passes for 152 yards. A.J. Brown did not have his first target until1:45 remained, catching one pass for 8 yards, but Jahan Dotson had three catches for 59 yards, including a 51-yarder.
The Eagles had nine penalties for 110 yards.
The Cowboys gained 307 yards. Prescott was 21-of-34 for 188 yards, while Javonte Williams ran for 54 yards and a pair of 1-yard touchdowns and Sanders went for 53 yards on four carries but had the costly fumble. Lamb finished with seven catches for 110 yards.
Some 154 million people get health insurance through their employer — and many could see their paycheck deductions surge next year. Some will likely also see co-pays and other out-of-pocket costs rise.
Jeff Chiu/AP
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Jeff Chiu/AP
The United States has the most expensive health care in the developed world. Now it’s about to get even more expensive.
Some 154 million people get health insurance through their employer — and many could see their paycheck deductions surge next year, by 6% to 7% on average. Some will likely also see their out-of-pocket costs rise as employers pass along the spiking costs of care.
That’s because employers will be paying a lot more — almost 9% more per employee on average, for the same level of coverage — to provide health benefits for their workers. Even after cutting or changing their health care benefits, employers are facing the biggest price increase in 15 years, according to a new survey of more than 1,700 organizations by Mercer, a benefits consultancy.
And 59% of those employers told Mercer they plan to pass those higher prices along to their workers in the form of “cost-cutting changes,” such as higher deductibles, copays or other out-of-pocket costs, such as prices for filling prescriptions.
“It’s almost a perfect storm that’s hitting employers right now,” says Larry Levitt, executive vice president for health policy at KFF, a health policy research nonprofit.
“The price of health care is going up faster than it has in a long time,” he adds. “And typically when an employer is getting a big increase from an insurer, the employer is turning around and trying to pass on some or all of that to its workers.”
The surging health benefit costs come at a time when consumers are still feeling the hangover of pandemic-era record inflation and are generally uneasy about the U.S. economy. Though inflation has cooled considerably in the past two years, prices are starting to tick up again, as many of President Trump’s sweeping taxes on imports go into effect.
These soaring costs also underline a hidden-in-plain-sight truth about the broken U.S. health care system: For the majority of Americans under age 65, their employers ultimately decide how much they pay for health insurance and medical care.
Employers themselves are at the mercy of entities that have even more market power: Drug companies, pharmacy benefit managers, hospitals and others have collectively driven up the costs of accessing medical care in the United States. Health insurers, some owned by gigantic for-profit conglomerates, often draw the blame for the high costs of U.S. health care — as demonstrated by the national outpouring of rage and frustration against UnitedHealth Group, one of the world’s largest companies, after the head of its health insurance business was shot and killed last December.
But when it comes down to determining how much most working Americans pay to stay healthy, the buck stops with employers. And now they’re planning on charging a lot more.
“It’s kind of hidden, because [premium deductions are] coming out of your paycheck and if you’re not paying close attention, it may not be obvious,” Levitt says. “But your take-home pay is going down.”
Some of the reasons for the rise in health care prices are actually good news. For example, pharmaceutical companies have developed more effective cancer treatments and weight-loss drugs — which they can also charge more for. And after several years when the COVID-19 pandemic and soaring inflation made many people reluctant to seek non-urgent care, more people are going to the doctor or other providers. But that surge in demand has also led to a surge in prices.
Other reasons have to do with a loss of competition. Some hospitals, doctors’ offices, insurance companies and other businesses within the health care system have merged or consolidated, often allowing the remaining businesses to raise prices for their services.
“What’s missing in health care is: It’s not a traditional free market. You don’t have those competitive forces,” says Sunit Patel, Mercer’s chief actuary for health and benefits in the United States.
This isn’t the first time employers are facing this problem: The costs they pay to provide health care are steep, and those have been rising for years.
Last year, the average U.S. employer spent more than $19,000 per employee to provide family coverage while the employee kicked in $6,000, according to KFF. The total average family premium of $25,572 has increased 52% in the past decade.
Beth Umland, Mercer’s director of health and benefits research, says that employers have tried to avoid passing on all the recent cost increases to employees, in part to try to retain workers during a tight post-pandemic labor market. But after years of elevated costs, she says, “I think just something had to give.”
Employers tend to consider health care benefits as part of the total compensation they pay workers — meaning that if they are spending more on health care, they will probably spend less on traditional salary increases.
And while workers have tried-and-true methods of asking for salary raises, they generally have less opportunity to bargain over the prices their employers set for health care.
“In general for workers, it’s kind of take it or leave it,” Levitt says. “And they really don’t have much of a choice but to take it.”
LONDON (AP) — Britain’s Prince Harry has arrived in Ukraine for a surprise visit in support of wounded service members.
Harry’s representatives confirmed they were in the capital, Kyiv, on Friday, though they declined to discuss the prince’s schedule for security reasons.
This is the second time Harry has visited Ukraine since the start of Russia’s full scale invasion in 2022. He made a trip to the western city of Lviv in April.
“We cannot stop the war but what we can do is do everything we can to help the recovery process,” Harry told the Guardian newspaper while on an overnight train to Kyiv.
Harry, a British Army veteran who served in Afghanistan, is the founder of the Invictus Games, a Paralympic-style event designed to inspire military veterans around the world as they work to overcome battlefield injuries. Ukraine is bidding to host the games in 2029.
The Archewell foundation set up by Harry and his wife Meghan announced this week that it had donated $500,000 to projects supporting injured children from Gaza and Ukraine. The money will be used to help the World Health Organization with medical evacuations and to fund work developing prosthetics for seriously injured young people.
The Guardian said that Harry will visit the National Museum of the History of Ukraine in the Second World War, spend time with 200 veterans and meet Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko.
His visit coincided with a trip to Ukraine by British Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper, who announced a new set of U.K. sanctions targeting Russia’s oil revenues and military supplies.
Cooper said the visit is a show of solidarity with Ukrainians facing intensified assault from Russia – including 6,500 drones and missiles in July, 10 times the level of a year ago.
Harry’s appearance in Ukraine follows a four-day trip to the U.K., where he met his father, King Charles III, for the first time in 19 months. The meeting was seen as a first step in repairing frigid relations between Harry and other members of the royal family, which deteriorated after he and his wife, the former Meghan Markle, gave up royal duties and moved to California in 2020.
Harry and his father last met in February 2024, when the prince flew to London after receiving news that Charles had been diagnosed with cancer. Harry spent about 45 minutes with Charles before the king flew to his Sandringham country estate to recuperate from his treatment.
Prince Harry’s last trip to Ukraine included a visit to the Superhumans Center, an orthopedic clinic in Lviv that treats wounded military personnel and civilians. The center provides prosthetic limbs, reconstructive surgery and psychological help free of charge.
Harry’s visit Friday come as Russia escalates its war against Ukraine.
It is less than a week after Russia’s largest aerial attack on Ukraine since its all-out invasion began more than three years ago — an attack in which the main Ukrainian government building was hit. It also comes just days after numerous Russian drones entered the airspace of NATO member Poland — the country Harry traveled through to reach Ukraine.
The red carpet overheated on Thursday as two A-listers stripped down to reveal the latest additions to the sheer dressing boom.
Naked ensembles are ubiquitous these days but Margot Robbie and Dakota Johnson upped the ante with their takes at separate events. First, the Barbie star and producer (and new mother) stepped out at the London premiere of her new film, A Big Bold Beautiful Journey, in a sheer dress from Giorgio Armani Privé’s spring 2025 couture collection. The showing comes just days after Armani died at age 91, making the appearance a sweet (and spicy) tribute to the beloved designer.
Robbie’s gown featured a sheer base with beadwork in the shape of floral and paisley designs spread across it. The show-stopping moment came when Robbie turned around to reveal that the spaghetti straps of the dress crossed to accentuate a jewel-shaped pendant on her back, while down below, the gown did little to cover her bare backside.
Robbie in the Giorgio Armani Privé couture gown with silver Aquazzura heels.
(Photo by Tristan Fewings/Getty Images)
Robbie’s barely-there ensemble.
(Photo by Tristan Fewings/Getty Images)
Colin Farrell and Robbie. The actor stepped out in a look by Dolce & Gabbana featuring a double-breasted cotton trench coat over a martini-fit button-down shirt paired with wool pants. He accessorized with a satin tie and patent leather derby shoes.
(Photo by Joe Maher/Getty Images)
Meanwhile, in New York, Johnson, who just starred in back-to-back films Splitsville and Materialists, attended Kering’s Caring for Women gala in a black barely-there number by Gucci styled by Kate Young. The sheer base, embroidered with a floral design and featuring a high neck and train, revealed a matching bra and panties set. The gala proved to be a star-studded affair, attended by the likes of Demi Moore, Jessica Chastain, Julianne Moore, Salma Hayek, Lauren Sanchez Bezos, Adrien Brody, Casey Wasserman and more. Also notable: Anna Wintour turned up and posed on the red carpet with her Vogue replacement, Chloe Malle, the newly-installed Vanity Fair editor-in-chief Mark Guiducci and good friend Baz Luhrmann.
See closer looks at the sheer ensembles below.
Johnson’s cheeky ensemble.
(Photo by Mike Coppola/Getty Images)
Johnson accessorized the look with a diamond necklace and emerald drop earrings.
(Photo by Mike Coppola/Getty Images)
Johnson in full view.
(Photo by Mike Coppola/Getty Images)
One last look for the road.
(Photo by Joe Maher/Getty Images)
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