Kylie Jenner, Travis Scott change son’s name from Wolf: “Didn’t feel like it was him”

Kylie Jenner, Travis Scott change son’s name from Wolf: “Didn’t feel like it was him”
Kylie Jenner, Travis Scott change son’s name from Wolf: “Didn’t feel like it was him”
David Livingston/WireImage

Over a month after giving birth to her son with Travis ScottKylie Jenner announced that they’ve changed his name. 

“FYI our sons [sic] name isn’t Wolf anymore,” the Kylie Cosmetics founder shared in an Instagram Story on Monday evening. “We just really didn’t feel like it was him.”

“Just wanted to share because I keep seeing Wolf everywhere,” she explained, adding the praying hands emoji. 

Kylie didn’t reveal her son’s new name.

Kylie and Travis welcomed their son on February 2, 2022. The baby boy joins big sister Stormi, who turned four the day before her brother was born. The couple first revealed their son’s name as Wolf Webster about a week after he was born.

The name change announcement came hours after Kylie and Travis released a 10-minute YouTube montage titled “To Our Son,” where the proud parents reveal clips from throughout Kylie’s pregnancy all the way up to the birth. Messages from family members — including Kylie’s mom Kris Jenner and Travis’ mom Wanda Webster — are interspersed as well.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Experts say Biden’s risk-averse approach to Russian could create greater threat

Experts say Biden’s risk-averse approach to Russian could create greater threat
Experts say Biden’s risk-averse approach to Russian could create greater threat
Alex Wong/Getty Images

(WARSAW, Poland) — President Joe Biden’s high-stakes summit with other NATO leaders on Thursday will be one of the most scrutinized meetings on the world stage in decades, and could have enormous implications for both the war in Ukraine and the global balance of power.

Despite calls from Ukraine to do more to help stave off Russia’s ruthless invasion, Biden has erred on the side of caution — wary of escalating the conflict by drawing in U.S. forces as part of a more direct NATO response. But after nearly a month of fighting, some foreign policy and national security experts ABC News spoke to say it may be time for the alliance to take on a more direct role.

Preparing for ‘the worst case’

Since before the fighting broke out, Biden has insisted that American troops would not fight Russian forces inside Ukraine, warning that going head-to-head would lead to “a third world war.”

But Barry Pavel, a former National Security Council senior official during the Bush and Obama administration and the senior vice president and director of the Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security at the Atlantic Council, says that’s far from inevitable.

“There have been other cases where U.S. and Russian forces have unfortunately come into friction and World War III didn’t start,” Pavel said, characterizing the strategy as simplistic. “There are hundreds of options that could be done between what NATO is doing now and risking World War III.”

The greater threat, warns Pavel, might be in leaving Putin unchecked.

“If he is emboldened by success in Ukraine, then he will be more aggressive in his efforts to nibble and to move into areas of perceived weakness in NATO members,” he said. “If he achieves his goal, you’ll have Russian forces on the borders of seven NATO members, including nuclear forces in Belarus, and so he’ll use that new posture to really heighten European insecurity to a great degree.”

And it isn’t Biden’s — or NATO’s — choice alone. Moscow could also escalate the conflict by striking a NATO member, either intentionally or accidentally, triggering a sweeping response.

“Article 5 — in the most basic sense — is NATO’s ‘Three Musketeers’ provision, which is to say, ‘all for one and one for all’ — an attack against any member is an attack against every member of NATO,” said Sean Monaghan, a former civil servant in the U.K. Ministry of Defence and a visiting fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, calling it “the most important red line in international politics.”

“This is a contingency that NATO forces are already preparing for,” said Monaghan. “That’s what the military does — prepare for the worst case.”

While the response to a Russian strike wouldn’t necessarily need to be eye for an eye, Monaghan says in theory, the alliance would be obligated to provide “an overwhelming response” if any member state was hit.

“The practice, some would say that NATO being collective of 30 nations, that have to reach consensus for any actions to be to be taken, that might hinder a response. But I think in this conflict, NATO has shown itself to be quite a lot more resolute and speedier of action than many people would have predicted,” he added.

The next phase for NATO

While the Biden administration has underscored the power of NATO’s overwhelming unity in the face of Russian aggression, when it comes to charting a path forward to counter the Kremlin, cracks within the alliance are beginning to emerge. While the summit will be an opportunity for the powers to get on the same page, it may also cast a spotlight on areas of disagreement.

For instance, Poland plans to propose a peacekeeping mission to Ukraine — a move the U.S. has effectively ruled out. Article 5 lays plain that an attack on a member merits a response, but will the alliance retaliate if Russia resorts to chemical weapons in Ukraine? And while NATO may not be willing to establish a no-fly zone over the country, Pavel says that doesn’t mean there isn’t a debate to be had about what more can be done to help the country defend its own airspace.

“In terms of the weapons pipeline, we should be doing much more. We can’t let the Ukrainians fly aircraft in their own defense? Forget these ridiculous restrictions on what equipment we can provide a sovereign country who asks for it to defend themselves against an invading force” he said, referencing the U.S. and other allies’ hesitancy to hand over fighter jets to Ukraine for fear of Russian retaliation.

Pavel added that additional anti-aircraft and anti-ship weaponry, as well as enhanced intelligence support and humanitarian aid on the ground, could go a long way in resistance efforts.

Thomas Graham, a former NSC senior director for Russia and a distinguished fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, says that beyond discussing support for Ukraine, NATO leaders should use the upcoming summit to make sharpen their signaling to the Kremlin.

“NATO leaders want to make sure that they’ve done everything that they can in order to deter the Russians,” he said. “Have we augmented the forces in Eastern Europe to the appropriate levels? And have we convinced the Russians that in fact we are determined to honor the Article Five guarantee and protect every inch of NATO territory?”

Monahan predicts this week’s gathering will result in a reversal to a mindset not seen since the days of the Soviet Union.

“We can foresee it as the beginning of a step change, almost a return to NATO’s Cold War posture of, if not territorial defense, then a much increased forward presence designed to deter a Russian regime that is clearly willing to resort to war” he said.

Battle lines of the future

Beyond addressing the immediate crisis, experts say NATO must ensure it is ready to respond to a more aggressive Russia and prepare for the new geopolitical frontier it is forging.

“The war in Ukraine will end at some point will end, but Russia will remain,” said Graham. “And what the conflict has demonstrated is that the hopes we had had for integrating Russia into the Euro-Atlantic community are dead.”

Pavel says plotting out a strategy not only for ending the conflict — but for managing exactly how the conflict ends — will be critical.

“When wars have ended in the past, the new boundaries have been drawn where the force set, through the middle of Germany, through the middle of Berlin,” Pavel said. “When the dust settles, where do we want Russian forces to be and where do we want Ukrainian and potentially NATO forces to be?”

Another repercussion may be an onslaught of arms races. Russia’s alleged deployment of hypersonic missiles — a technology the U.S. has not yet mastered — is an area of competition, but Pavel says it’s not the only one.

“Putin has spent 10, 15 years modernizing the Russian nuclear forces — a lot of new types of exotic Russian nuclear weapons, pretty significant,” he said. “Certainly, the U.S. and some NATO members have nuclear capabilities, but they are aging. They have not been modernized at the pace that we should be doing.”

“All of this means that we’ll have we’ll have a lot more to do, unfortunately, on the security agenda going forward,” Pavel added.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Trial of Theranos executive Sunny Balwani to begin

Trial of Theranos executive Sunny Balwani to begin
Trial of Theranos executive Sunny Balwani to begin
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

(SAN JOSE, Calif.) — The criminal fraud trial of Ramesh “Sunny” Balwani, the ex-boyfriend of convicted Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes and a top executive at the blood-testing company, is expected to begin Tuesday in California after a series of COVID-19 related delays.

Balwani’s trial was first pushed back in January by the surge of omicron cases and then again last week when it was discovered someone who attended jury selection was exposed to someone who tested positive for COVID-19.

On Monday, juror No. 1 was excused after reporting a fever and a sore throat to the court and replaced by an alternate.

Federal prosecutors will take the floor first to give their opening statement, and then lawyers for Balwani will have a chance to unveil their defense.

Balwani’s trial is being held in the same San Jose courthouse where Holmes was convicted earlier this year. He’s also facing the same charges: two counts of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and 10 counts of wire fraud.

He has pleaded not guilty to all counts and could face decades in prison if convicted.

The government alleges Holmes and Balwani perpetrated a yearslong scheme to defraud investors and patients by intentionally misleading people about the capabilities of their blood-testing technology.

A federal jury found Holmes guilty on four counts of fraud in January. The 38-year-old is scheduled to be sentenced in September after the expected conclusion of Balwani’s trial.

The pair was originally charged in the same case, but their trials were severed after Holmes revealed she planned to testify that Balwani subjected her to mental and physical abuse. She held back tears on the stand in December as she told the jury that Balwani forced her to have sex and “impacted everything about who I was.”

Balwani firmly denied the allegations in a filing.

A Holmes juror exclusively told ABC that the jury largely disregarded the emotional testimony in deliberations.

Holmes also testified to the Silicon Valley jury that Balwani ran the day-to-day lab operations and took care of company’s financials.

But juror No. 6 told ABC News that the jury convicted Holmes regardless because “everything went through her.”

Theranos was the brainchild of 19-year-old Holmes, who dropped out of Stanford to pour herself into building the blood-testing business. Her company later created a miniature device dubbed the “Edison,” which investor witnesses at her trial said they believed could run any blood test.

Holmes paraded the novel technology to the likes of media mogul Rupert Murdoch and the DeVos family, raising hundreds of millions of dollars.

By 2013, the Silicon Valley startup began to roll out its testing to Walgreens stores, with plans to expand nationwide. Holmes also recruited several prominent people to sit on her board of directors including Gen. James Mattis and former U.S. Secretaries of State Henry Kissinger and George Shultz.

But Theranos came under fire in October 2015 when a Wall Street Journal investigation revealed less than 10% of the company’s blood tests were ran on the Edison, according to the report.

Three years later, in March 2018, the Securities and Exchange Commission filed charges against Holmes, Balwani and Theranos, claiming they had fraudulently raised more than $700 million from investors.

Federal prosecutors later filed criminal charges against the former couple.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

I Love the 90’s Tour offers a dose of nostalgia with Vanilla Ice, Tone Loc, All-4-One, Color Me Badd, Sir Mix-a-Lot and more

I Love the 90’s Tour offers a dose of nostalgia with Vanilla Ice, Tone Loc, All-4-One, Color Me Badd, Sir Mix-a-Lot and more
I Love the 90’s Tour offers a dose of nostalgia with Vanilla Ice, Tone Loc, All-4-One, Color Me Badd, Sir Mix-a-Lot and more
Gabe Ginsberg/Getty Images

If you like to spend time on streaming services checking out the music your older brothers and sisters or your parents listened to, we’ve got the perfect tour for you.

The I Love the 90’s Tour, a celebration of all things musical and pre-Millennial, gets underway June 14 in San Diego, CA.  The 20 announced dates run through an October 8 show in Evansville, IN, but more dates are expected to be announced in the near future.  Tickets go on sale to the general public on March 24 at ilovethe90stour.com.

You can also check the tour website to find out who’s playing on each date, because there’s a huge rolling lineup that includes Vanilla Ice, Tone Loc, Six Mix-a-Lot, Color Me Badd, Coolio, All-4-One, 2 Live Crew, Sugar Ray‘s Mark McGrath, Treach of Naughty by Nature, C+C Music Factory featuring Freedom Williams, Montell Jordan, Kid ‘n Play and more.

“Ice is back, and so is The I Love the 90’s Tour… FINALLY,” says Vanilla Ice in a statement. “We’ve been waiting what seems like forever for the chance to hit your town LIVE and IN PERSON, and I know you have too — so you better get in where you fit in and get back to the 90’s where the party never stops!”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

I Love the 90’s Tour is back with Tone Loc, Vanilla Ice, All-4-One, Color Me Badd, Sir Mix-a-Lot and more

I Love the 90’s Tour is back with Tone Loc, Vanilla Ice, All-4-One, Color Me Badd, Sir Mix-a-Lot and more
I Love the 90’s Tour is back with Tone Loc, Vanilla Ice, All-4-One, Color Me Badd, Sir Mix-a-Lot and more
Gabe Ginsberg/Getty Images

Get ready to relive your youth once more, because The I Love the 90’s Tour is back.

The celebration of all things pre-Millennial gets underway June 14 in San Diego, CA.  The 20 announced dates run through an October 8 show in Evansville, IN, but more dates are expected to be announced in the near future.  Tickets go on sale to the general public on March 24 at ilovethe90stour.com.

You can also check the tour website to find out who’s playing on each date, because there’s a huge rolling lineup that includes Vanilla Ice, Tone Loc, Six Mix-a-Lot, Color Me Badd, Coolio, All-4-One, 2 Live Crew, Sugar Ray‘s Mark McGrath, Treach of Naughty by Nature, C+C Music Factory featuring Freedom Williams, Montell Jordan, Kid ‘n Play and more.

“Ice is back, and so is The I Love the 90’s Tour… FINALLY,” says Vanilla Ice in a statement. “We’ve been waiting what seems like forever for the chance to hit your town LIVE and IN PERSON, and I know you have too — so you better get in where you fit in and get back to the 90’s where the party never stops!”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Dua Lipa, Doja Cat, Glass Animals, The Kid LAROI set for Lollapalooza 2022

Dua Lipa, Doja Cat, Glass Animals, The Kid LAROI set for Lollapalooza 2022
Dua Lipa, Doja Cat, Glass Animals, The Kid LAROI set for Lollapalooza 2022
Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images

Dua Lipa, Doja Cat, Glass Animals and The Kid LAROI are among the big names booked for Lollapalooza 2022, taking place July 28-31 in Chicago’s Grant Park.

The bill also includes Måneskin, GAYLE, WILLOW, Charli XCX, J. Cole, Kygo, Lil Baby, Machine Gun Kelly, Metallica, Green Day, Surf Mesa, Zoe Wees, Emmy Meli and dozens more.

Tickets go on sale today at noon CT. For the full lineup and all ticket info, visit Lollapalooza.com.

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Tornado outbreak in Texas, Oklahoma kills one, injures at least 10

Tornado outbreak in Texas, Oklahoma kills one, injures at least 10
Tornado outbreak in Texas, Oklahoma kills one, injures at least 10
PBNJ Productions/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — At least three southern states were under a tornado watch Tuesday following an outbreak of twisters Monday night in Texas and Oklahoma that cut a path of destruction, killed one person and injured at least 10 others.

Twenty tornadoes were reported Monday night, 19 of those in central and northern Texas, where multiple homes and businesses were damaged, according to the National Weather Service. Heavy damage occurred from funnel clouds touching down in Round Rock, Texas, where roofs were ripped off homes, according to the local fire and police departments.

At one point, police in Round Rock, about 20 miles north of Austin, Texas, urged residents to stay off the roads. A tornado also ripped through a strip mall in Round Rock, damaging a restaurant, a bank, and cars in a Home Depot parking lot, authorities said.

In Jacksboro, Texas, about 60 miles northwest of Fort Worth, a high school and elementary school both sustained heavy damage, according to Jack County Rural Fire Chief Jason Jennings. Sixty to 80 homes were damaged in Jacksboro, Jennings said.

News helicopter footage Tuesday morning showed major damage to the Jacksboro High School, where the roof of a school’s gym either collapsed or was blown away.

The Texas Department of Public Safety confirmed that one person was killed in Northwest Grayson County, Texas.

Sarah Somers of the Grayson County Office of Emergency Management said at least 20 homes were damaged or destroyed in Grayson County, according to ABC affiliate station KTEN in Ada, Oklahoma.

Significant damage also occurred in the Kingston, Oklahoma, area, where officials said a likely tornado touched down. Multiple structures including a marina were damaged or destroyed, in the Kingston area, officials said.

During the tornado outbreak, wind gusts of up to 64 mph and hail the size of golf balls were also reported across central and northern Texas.

On Tuesday morning, tornado warnings were issued for parts of Louisiana, Arkansas and Texas, including the Houston area.

NOAA’s Storm Prediction Center forecast the tornado threat to parts of Mississippi and Alabama as well.

Severe weather is zeroing in on Alexandrian and Baton Rouge, Lousiana., to Hattiesburg, Jackson and Meridian, Mississippi, and into western Alabama, west of Tuscaloosa, according to NOAA.

ABC News’ Jim Scholz and Melissa Griffin contributed to this report.

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Iron Maiden invites you back to 1982 while celebrating 40th ‘The Number of the Beast’ anniversary

Iron Maiden invites you back to 1982 while celebrating 40th ‘The Number of the Beast’ anniversary
Iron Maiden invites you back to 1982 while celebrating 40th ‘The Number of the Beast’ anniversary
Iron Maiden in 1982; Ebet Roberts/Redferns

Iron Maiden is taking a trip down memory lane while celebrating the 40th anniversary of the metal legends’ 1982 album, The Number of the Beast.

“Happy 40th anniversary to The Number of the Beast!” Maiden tweeted Tuesday. “Did you get the record on the day of release in ’82?!”

In honor of the milestone, Maiden has been sharing various archival photos and videos from the Beast era, as well as retweeting all sorts related posts from fans, such as photos of ticket stubs. If you have any 1982 memories to share, be sure to tag your post with #NOTB40.

The Number of the Beast was released March 22, 1982, and was the first Maiden album with vocalist Bruce Dickinson. The RIAA Platinum-certified record spawned classic Maiden tunes in both the title track and “Run to the Hills.”

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Metallica, Green Day, Jane’s Addiction part of Lollapalooza 2022 lineup

Metallica, Green Day, Jane’s Addiction part of Lollapalooza 2022 lineup
Metallica, Green Day, Jane’s Addiction part of Lollapalooza 2022 lineup
Courtesy of Lollapalooza

Metallica, Green Day and Jane’s Addiction are among the many artists confirmed to perform at the Lollapalooza 2022 festival, scheduled for July 28-31 at Chicago’s Grant Park.

Metallica and Green Day have been announced as headliners, while Jane’s Addiction will perform as a special guest. Jane’s frontman Perry Farrell, of course, co-founded the festival.

This year’s other headliners are Machine Gun Kelly, Dua Lipa, Doja CatJ. Cole, Lil Baby and Kygo.

The bill also includes Måneskin, Glass Animals, Billy Strings, Charli XCX, Royal Blood, Dominic Fike, WILLOW, Manchester Orchestra, Dashboard Confessional and many, many more.

Tickets for Lollapalooza 2022 go on sale today at noon CT. You can check out the full lineup and all ticket info at Lollapalooza.com.

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Chris Stapleton covers John Fogerty with new single, “Joy of My Life”

Chris Stapleton covers John Fogerty with new single, “Joy of My Life”
Chris Stapleton covers John Fogerty with new single, “Joy of My Life”
ABC

Chris Stapleton is looking at the “Joy” of life in his new single. 

The country titan adds his smooth, smoky voice to “Joy of My Life,” originally written and recorded by Creedence Clearwater Revival co-founder and frontman John Fogerty in 1997. The lyrics depict a heartfelt picture of a man in love, who declares himself “the luckiest man alive.” 

“Joy of My Life” follows Chris’ most recent #1 hit, “You Should Probably Leave.” Both tracks are featured on his latest album, Starting Over, which is nominated for Best Country Album at the 2022 Grammy Awards. 

The superstar continues on his headlining All-American Road Show Tour with a two-night stay in Atlantic City, NJ on April 8 and 9. 

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