COVID-19 live updates: TSA vaccine mandate won’t impact holiday travel

COVID-19 live updates: TSA vaccine mandate won’t impact holiday travel
COVID-19 live updates: TSA vaccine mandate won’t impact holiday travel
Powerofflowers/iStock

(NEW YORK) — As the COVID-19 pandemic has swept the globe, more than 5.1 million people have died from the disease worldwide, including over 771,000 Americans, according to real-time data compiled by Johns Hopkins University’s Center for Systems Science and Engineering.

Just 59.1% of the population in the United States is fully vaccinated against COVID-19, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Here’s how the new is developing. All times Eastern:

Nov 22, 10:01 am
TSA vaccine mandate won’t impact holiday travel

About 93% of TSA employees are in compliance with Monday’s deadline for the federal employee vaccine mandate, TSA spokesperson Lisa Farbstein said.

“In compliance” means employees have had at least one shot or have filed for a medical or religious exemption.

Holiday travel won’t be impacted by the mandate, Farbstein said.

-ABC News’ Gio Benitez, Anne Flaherty

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

‘CMA Country Christmas’ reveals the festive songs list for this year’s show

‘CMA Country Christmas’ reveals the festive songs list for this year’s show
‘CMA Country Christmas’ reveals the festive songs list for this year’s show
CMA/ABC

Country stars are lining up to bring seasonal cheer to fans next week with the airing of the annual CMA Country Christmas special. Following the lineup announcement earlier in November, the CMA has now revealed which songs will be performed on the 2021 show.

BrelandCarrie Underwood and Brett Eldredge are all sticking with the classics, performing “The Christmas Song,” “Mary, Did You Know?” and “Merry Christmas, Baby,” respectively.

Show hosts Gabby Barrett and Carly Pearce will perform Christmas standards, too, with Gabby offering her version of “Silent Night” and Carly putting her spin on “O Holy Night.”

Gabby and Carly will also take the stage together. They’re planning a duet version of “Sleigh Ride” that features two student musicians: eight-year-old Carter Hammonds and 17-year-old Truman Eltringham, both of whom are from Nashville.

The CMA Country Christmas special will offer some original holiday music, too. The Pistol Annies are performing “Snow Globe,” off their newly-released Christmas record, Hell of a HolidayLady A will offer “Christmas Through Your Eyes,” a holiday song inspired by their kids, and Jimmie Allen taps Louis York and the Shindellas for a performance of “What Does Christmas Mean,” a song they put out together last year.

Finally, Lainey Wilson will keep it country with her spin on George Strait’s “Christmas Cookies.”

The 2021 CMA Country Christmas will air on Monday, November 29 at 8 p.m. ET on ABC.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Ahmaud Arbery death trial live updates: Closing arguments begin

Ahmaud Arbery death trial live updates: Closing arguments begin
Ahmaud Arbery death trial live updates: Closing arguments begin
Stephen B. Morton – Pool/Getty Images

(BRUNSWICK, Ga.) — A jury is expected to begin deliberating the fates of three white Georgia men charged in the fatal shooting of Ahmaud Arbery after first hearing final arguments on Monday that the 25-year-old Black man was either “hunted down” and murdered or was killed in self-defense when he resisted a citizens’ arrest.

The radically different theories based on the same evidence are expected to be laid out in closing arguments set to commence Monday morning in Glynn County Superior Court in Brunswick, Georgia. The closing arguments are expected to take all day as the prosecutor and attorneys for the three defendants are each expected to speak to the jury.

The jury is expected to begin deliberations on Tuesday morning.

Travis McMichael, the 35-year-old U.S. Coast Guard veteran; his father, Gregory McMichael, 65, a retired Glynn County police officer, and their neighbor, William “Roddie” Bryan, 53, each face maximum sentences of life in prison if convicted on all the charges.

The defendants have pleaded not guilty to a nine-count state indictment that includes malice murder, multiple charges of felony murder, false imprisonment, aggravated assault with a 12-gauge shotgun and aggravated assault with their pickup trucks.

The McMichaels and Bryan were also indicted on federal hate crime charges in April and have all pleaded not guilty.

Here’s how the news developed. All times Eastern:

Nov 22, 10:17 am
Prosecutor says defendants attacked Arbery because he was Black

Prosecutor Linda Dunikoski began her closing argument by telling the jury that the three defendants chased and killed Arbery based on “assumptions and decisions” made in their driveways based on rumor and neighborhood gossip.

“The state’s position is all three of these defendants made assumptions, made assumptions about what was going on that day and they made their decision to attack Ahmaud Arbery in their driveways because he was a Black man running down the street,” Dunikoski said.

She stressed that the “bottom line” is that the defendants assumed Arbery had committed a crime “because he was running real fast down the street.”

“They did not call 911. They wanted to stop him and ‘question’ him before they called 911,” she said. “How do we know that? Because that is what they told the police that night.”

She asked the jury to closely consider the evidence she said shows beyond reasonable doubt that the men committed murder.

“This is your search for the truth,” Dunikoski told the jury. “You are Glynn County.”

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Ahmaud Arbery death trial updates: Closing arguments set to begin

Ahmaud Arbery death trial live updates: Closing arguments begin
Ahmaud Arbery death trial live updates: Closing arguments begin
Stephen B. Morton – Pool/Getty Images

(BRUNSWICK, Ga.) — A jury is expected to begin deliberating the fates of three white Georgia men charged in the fatal shooting of Ahmaud Arbery after first hearing final arguments on Monday that the 25-year-old Black man was either “hunted down” and murdered or was killed in self-defense when he resisted a citizens’ arrest.

The radically different theories based on the same evidence are expected to be laid out in closing arguments set to commence Monday morning in Glynn County Superior Court in Brunswick, Georgia. The closing arguments are expected to take all day as the prosecutor and attorneys for the three defendants are each expected to speak to the jury.

The jury is expected to begin deliberations on Tuesday morning.

Travis McMichael, the 35-year-old U.S. Coast Guard veteran; his father, Gregory McMichael, 65, a retired Glynn County police officer, and their neighbor, William “Roddie” Bryan, 53, each face maximum sentences of life in prison if convicted on all the charges.

The defendants have pleaded not guilty to a nine-count state indictment that includes malice murder, multiple charges of felony murder, false imprisonment, aggravated assault with a 12-gauge shotgun and aggravated assault with their pickup trucks.

The McMichaels and Bryan were also indicted on federal hate crime charges in April and have all pleaded not guilty.

The charges stem from a Feb. 23, 2020, confrontation in the Stella Shores neighborhood near Brunswick, Georgia. Lead prosecutor Linda Dunikoski alleged in her opening statement that a series of wrong “assumptions and driveway decisions” led the men to surmise that the Black man she said was just jogging through their neighborhood on a balmy Sunday afternoon was a burglar they needed to detain at gunpoint.

Travis McMichael was the only defendant to testify during the nationally-televised trial.

He described a “life-or-death” encounter with Arbery and claimed he had no choice but to shoot the man with his Remington pump-action shotgun. He also conceded under cross-examination that Arbery never verbally threatened him or his co-defendants nor did he brandished a weapon during the five minutes Dunikoski said Arbery was running for his life.

During the trial, prosecutors relied heavily on a cellphone video recorded by Bryan. The video repeatedly played for the jury showed the unarmed Arbery trapped between Bryan’s pickup and Travis McMichael’s truck and partly captured a struggle that ended with Travis Michael shooting Arbery.

The trial, which began on Nov. 5, began with controversy when a jury of 11 white members and one Black member was seated to hear the case after a nearly three-week jury selection process.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Biden nominates Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell to second term

Biden nominates Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell to second term
Biden nominates Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell to second term
pabradyphoto/iStock

(WASHINGTON) — President Joe Biden announced Monday he will nominate Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell to a second four-year term.

“While there’s still more to be done, we’ve made remarkable progress over the last 10 months in getting Americans back to work and getting our economy moving again. That success is a testament to the economic agenda I’ve pursued and to the decisive action that the Federal Reserve has taken under Chair Powell and Dr. Brainard (as vice-chair) to help steer us through the worst downturn in modern American history and put us on the path to recovery,” Biden said in a statement.

“Fundamentally, if we want to continue to build on the economic success of this year we need stability and independence at the Federal Reserve — and I have full confidence after their trial by fire over the last 20 months that Chair Powell and Dr. Brainard will provide the strong leadership our country needs,” he added.

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Taylor Swift drops new version of “Christmas Tree Farm” as ‘Red (Taylor’s Version)’ hits #1

Taylor Swift drops new version of “Christmas Tree Farm” as ‘Red (Taylor’s Version)’ hits #1
Taylor Swift drops new version of “Christmas Tree Farm” as ‘Red (Taylor’s Version)’ hits #1
Amazon Music

Taylor Swift is just full of surprises these days, and this one is sure to bring the holiday cheer.

The singer has released an “Old Timey Version” of her 2019 Christmas tune, “Christmas Tree Farm,” exclusively on Amazon Music. The reimagined track was recorded at Abbey Road Studios in London and features a new arrangement complete with a 70-piece orchestra.

Taylor also released a video with behind-the-scenes footage of her recording the song, as well as home video clips of her as a kid. “Christmas Tree Farm” was inspired by her childhood growing up on a Christmas tree farm in Pennsylvania.

Meanwhile, Red (Taylor’s Version) hit number one on the Billboard 200 chart. It marks her 10th number one on the chart, making her the second woman with at least 10 number ones after Barbra Streisand, who has 11.

The album sold 605,000 equivalent album units — with 369,000 in physical sales. It’s the highest selling release from a female artist in 2021, as well as the biggest selling physical album of 2021.

Red (Taylor’s Version) also broke Spotify’s 24-hour streaming record, with 90.8 million streams on day one. The previous record holder was Taylor’s folklore.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

‘Bachelor’ alums Astrid Loch and Kevin Wendt welcome first child

‘Bachelor’ alums Astrid Loch and Kevin Wendt welcome first child
‘Bachelor’ alums Astrid Loch and Kevin Wendt welcome first child
Richard Lautens/Toronto Star via Getty Images

The Bachelor family just got a little bit bigger! Alums Astrid Loch and Kevin Wendt have welcomed their first child. 

Strategically covering the newborn’s face, Astrid shared an Instagram photo of her holding the baby’s hand and announced, “My whole world. Born 11/20/2021 & finally home with the rest of the @thewendtgang.”

She added, “Sorry to keep you all waiting, just had to soak this moment up for ourselves first #babywendt #ivf #ivfbaby #infertility.”

Meanwhile, Kevin wrote, “November 20th 2:02am @astridloch made my dreams come true,” alongside a snapshot of the baby resting on his forearm. “She is my absolute hero for everything she went through the last 2 days in the hospital, and the last 2 years doing everything it took to get this perfect munchkin into the @thewendtgang I never thought a love like this existed.#ivfbaby #ivf.”

They did not reveal the name or sex of their child. 

Astrid and Kevin, who met three years ago on Bachelor in Paradise, first announced they were expecting in May and opened up about their struggles with infertility. 

“To all the couples trying to get pregnant, my heart is with you. We know first hand how hard it can be to see these kinds of posts and feel sad & discouraged,” Astrid shared at the time. “We too struggled with fertility and conceiving naturally – it’s the toughest thing we’ve ever been through and I can’t wait to share more of how we got here. But today is finally about some good news & we hope you can enjoy it with us.”

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by ASTRID LOCH (@astridloch)

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Ghostbusters: Afterlife slimes the competition, tops the box office with $44 million debut

Ghostbusters: Afterlife slimes the competition, tops the box office with  million debut
Ghostbusters: Afterlife slimes the competition, tops the box office with  million debut
Sony Pictures

Ghostbusters: Afterlife beat expectations, scaring up an estimated $44 million in its debut weekend.

The latest installment in the Ghostbusters franchise — starring Paul RuddFinn WolfhardMckenna Grace and Carrie Coon — added an estimated $16 million overseas, bringing its worldwide total to $60 million.

Marvel’s Eternals delivered an estimated $10.8 million in its third week of release, good for second place. It’s earned a total of $135.8 million domestically and $200.3 million internationally, bringing its worldwide haul to $336.1 million.

Coming in third was Clifford the Big Red Dog, grabbing an estimated $8.1 million after two weeks. The film opens internationally in December.

This week’s other newcomer, King Richard, stumbled in its opening weekend, only managing an estimated $5.7 million. The drama — starring Will Smith, as Richard Williams, father of tennis greats Venus and Serena Williams — delivered an estimated $2.5 million overseas, bringing its worldwide tally to $8.2 million.

Dune rounded out the top five with a little under $3.1 million. That puts its total domestic take at $98.2 million, putting it on track to break the $100 million mark later this week. So far, Dune has pulled in an estimated $268.9 million overseas, bringing its global total to $367.1 million.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Where prices are rising and how Americans can navigate inflation this holiday season

Where prices are rising and how Americans can navigate inflation this holiday season
Where prices are rising and how Americans can navigate inflation this holiday season
Aja Koska/iStock

(NEW YORK) — Prices on household essentials like groceries and gas are climbing at a rapid clip, causing new financial distress for Americans right as they plan their first holiday gatherings since the rollout of a COVID-19 vaccine.

After hibernating out of sight for a generation, inflation has made an insidious and unwelcome return to the U.S. economy — fueled by supply chain snags, a shortage of workers in the service industry and pandemic-era economic policies that aimed to alleviate the financial suffering wrought by the public health crisis.

When the unemployment rate hit double-digits last March, lawmakers rallied to send stimulus money to American households and businesses shuttered for months. The Federal Reserve pulled out all the stops to keep financial markets healthy, flushing them with liquidity and easing interest rates. As the economy reopens, Americans now have a pent-up demand to consume on all the things they couldn’t for the past year — and having spent most of the year at home, many have pandemic savings to do so.

Issues with the global supply chain, coupled with struggles of major companies to find staff, however, means production is unable to keep up with the surging demand. Simplistically, this ongoing supply-demand imbalance is why economists say we are seeing prices rise right now.

Navigating inflation can cause headaches for those buying gifts for or hosting loved ones this holiday season, and can inflict further pain for households with less means to absorb higher prices on essentials.

Here is a look at where consumers are feeling the price pinch as the holidays approach, and what they can do about inflation.

Where are prices rising?

In short, prices are rising across the board, but the biggest jumps are being seen in the cost of energy, gas and used cars. Moreover, online shoppers this year likely won’t see the big holiday discounts they are used to in traditional gift items such as electronics and apparel.

Consumer prices surged at their fastest rate in more than three decades, the Labor Department said last week, reporting a 6.2% jump over the last 12 months in its consumer price index. This was the largest one-year increase since November 1990 for the index, which tracks price stickers on a market basket of everyday goods and services.

Breaking the government’s data down further indicates that the overall price hikes were driven by large increases over the past year in the energy index (a 30% jump) and used cars and trucks index (a 26.4% spike). The gasoline index soared 49.6% over the past 12 months, and the energy services (electricity and gas) index ticked up 11.2%.

While it can be hard for some to wrap their heads around what this data on rising prices means, “It’s a big deal,” Matt Schulz, a personal finance expert and chief industry analyst at LendingTree, an online lending company, told ABC News.

“Most people’s financial margin for error is pretty tiny anyway, then when you factor in inflation, an already dicey situation gets to be even more so,” Schulz said. “When you’re making that budget for your holiday spending, it’s important that you don’t just take your budget from last year and move it forward.”

Americans will likely “see a lot of inflation in things that are really close to home,” Connel Fullenkamp, a professor and director of undergraduate studies at Duke University’s Department of Economics, told ABC News.

“We’ve already seen a lot of inflation at the gas pump,” he said. And as the weather chills, he predicted, “We’re definitely going to see it in the price of heating this winter.”

The inflation we’re seeing now is especially sneaky and unpredictable, Fullenkamp added, because of all the issues contributing to it this year from many different angles.

“I think people are going to be surprised occasionally by big price hikes in certain types of items, especially ones that have been affected by the supply chain issues that a lot of companies are having,” Fullenkamp said. “And those are frankly pretty hard to predict, because for some companies it’s parts that they can’t get, and for some companies, it’s just the cost of shipping, so it’s really going to be difficult to predict, but it is definitely going to cause some sticker shock among holiday shoppers.”

How will inflation impact Thanksgiving plans?

As for how inflation is expected to affect Thanksgiving celebrations, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said that Americans should expect Turkey Day staples to be up 5% in price compared to last year.

Overall, this means the cost of “large” turkeys “will only cost $1 dollar more than last year,” Vilsack said in a statement Wednesday.

This is in line with DOL’s data, which indicates the price of food at home rose 5.4% over the past 12 months — with the index for meats, poultry, fish, and eggs spiking 11.9%, the beef index soaring 20.1% and the pork index climbing 14.1%.

Consumers should keep these figures in mind as they plan their Thanksgiving menus and celebrations. And with gas prices rising at among the fastest rates, people should also factor that into their travel plans.

“If you’re planning on doing a road trip during the holiday season, gas is probably going to be a good bit more expensive than it was last year and that’s a big deal, especially if you’re traveling a good distance to get to grandma’s house,” Schulz said.

What about online deals on Black Friday or Cyber Monday?

Data compiled by Adobe Digital indicates that holiday shoppers likely won’t see the Black Friday or Cyber Monday deals they are used to in the past while shopping online for gifts this year.

“Consumers are now seeing a double hit to their pocketbooks, with everyday expenses like rent and gas rising, while the big holiday shopping season is going to get more expensive,” Vivek Pandya, the lead analyst at Adobe Digital Insights, said in a statement Thursday. “After 17 consecutive months of online inflation, we are entering a new normal in the digital economy.”

Online prices were up 1.9% year-over-year in October, according to Adobe’s Digital Price Index released Thursday. For comparison, prices in October 2019 were down 6.6% year-over-year going into the holiday season. In early November, discount levels for electronics were at 8.7%, the Adobe data indicates, well below the 13.2% discount level at the same point last year.

In categories like tools and home improvements — popular gift items — prices are up 1.2% compared to being discounted 6.8% at the same time last year. Apparel is up 9.81% year-over-year in October, compared to usually being down 1.08%. Fresh flowers and related gifts are also up 14.14%, the data shows, compared to usually being down by a fraction of a percentage point.

The Adobe Digital Price Index reveals that in all the 18 categories tracked, all but one (books) saw higher prices online this year when compared to the historical averages. Persistent supply chain challenges may be partly to blame, the Adobe researchers say, as consumers saw over 2 billion “out-of-stock” messages while online shopping in October.

All of this is important to keep in mind so Americans aren’t surprised by their credit card bills at the end of the month, experts say.

What can Americans do to protect themselves from inflation this holiday season?

As Americans look forward to celebrating the holidays with their families and friends again this year, experts say it is more crucial than ever to budget, plan and be as thoughtful as possible with purchases. While small increases in everyday items can seem manageable or ignorable, this is one of the biggest dangers of inflation that economists urge Americans to keep their eyes on.

Many Americans now are too young to remember the pain and uncertainty inflation wreaked on the economy in the 1970s, when it snowballed out of control, eating away at the value of savings before a painful correction that led to double-digit unemployment rates in the early 1980s. While policymakers are better-equipped to respond to inflation now and prices are rising under very different circumstances than before, many consumers a generation later are having trouble grasping inflation’s risks.

“I’m in my upper 40s and I don’t ever remember inflation. I was tiny during the gas shortages of the late ’70s and all that,” Schulz told ABC News. “It’s just important to understand that you’re not going to be able to necessarily predict what individual things get more expensive or by how much.”

“The best thing that you can do is just create your budget and assume a certain amount of increase, and just assume that everything that you buy is going to be a little bit more expensive,” he said. “If you end up overshooting, then that’s great, maybe you’ll end up having extra money at the end of the month.”

“But the danger in a time of inflation is when people think that it’s not going to affect them as much as it does, and they find themselves short at the end of the month more before that paycheck comes in,” Schulz added.

Now it is more important than ever to keep close track of how much money is coming in and going out of your household each month, Schulz said, and practice financial planning and building up a rainy day fund to protect as much as possible from unexpected price increases.

Duke’s Fullenkamp added that the new generation of Americans “just don’t have a good feel for how relentless and kind of sneaky inflation is.”

“I think people who haven’t experienced it don’t really have a good feel for how much it can really drive prices up if you let it go long enough,” Fullenkamp said. “That’s the thing that is most threatening to the individual budgets and spending, you take your eye off that ball for very long and then you’ll always be surprised, and in a really bad way, because prices keep going up.”

“One of the things that is most dangerous about inflation is it’s just so darn insidious,” he added. “Once it gets into the system — it does really, eventually, percolate through to everything.”

This is why planning ahead of time and sticking to a budget can help protect Americans from financial pain down the line as inflation sets in.

“Any holiday shopping season, impulse buying is what gets you in trouble,” Schulz said. “If you can take the time to make that list and check it twice, and shop around to look for the best deal that you can get on things, it’s as important this year as ever since we’ve seen prices increase.”

Schulz said it might also be worth looking into things like credit card reward offers if you know you are going to spend a lot this season, adding, “Obviously, you have to use the card wisely, and not just see it as a reason to go crazy spending.”

Fullenkamp noted that the more you can gather information ahead of time and comparison shop, the better. He also recommends keeping an eye on online subscription services that many Americans flocked to during the e-commerce boom of the pandemic, saying, “A lot of people aren’t paying a lot of attention before they buy stuff, and they’re getting shocked after the fact.”

Looking beyond consumerism this holiday season, families who are going to be hit hardest by inflation overall are those living paycheck-to-paycheck or without the extra funds to absorb even slightly higher prices on household essentials. But even for those with savings stashed away, the value of cash will start to erode as a result of inflation, so storing investments in things like high-interest savings accounts, money market mutual funds and inflation-protected bonds could help provide some protection.

Meanwhile, while the stock market historically has responded negatively to inflation — in large part due to uncertainty among investors and other macroeconomic factors — experts say it has also been a good vehicle for long-term investing for those who don’t need to touch their money for a few decades or until retirement.

Finally, as inflation lingers and drives up the prices of some items faster than others, Fullenkamp said consumers should not assume that the cheapest stores during times of low-inflation will still be offering the best prices.

“We might see a return to the to the good old days of more comparison shopping,” Fullenkamp said. “That’s really the best thing to do — is to make sure make sure you’re familiar with what the prices are going to be before you go out and buy.”

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Adele has emotional reunion with her favorite teacher during UK concert

Adele has emotional reunion with her favorite teacher during UK concert
Adele has emotional reunion with her favorite teacher during UK concert
Simon Emmett

While you were crying to Adele’s new album, 30, this weekend, she was shedding some tears, too.

The singer got emotional during her U.K. special An Evening with Adele when she was surprised by the teacher who changed her life.

Actress Emma Thompson, who was in the audience, helped introduce the surprise by asking Adele if there was anyone from her past who particularly supported or inspired her. Adele began talking about her Chestnut Grove Academy English teacher, Ms. McDonald.

“She was so bloody cool, so engaging,” Adele said, adding, “She really made us care, and we knew that she cared about us.”

It was then revealed that Ms. McDonald was actually in the audience. Adele welcomed her to the stage, immediately welling up with tears.

“I’m so proud of you,” McDonald told her. “Thank you for remembering me.”

After briefly catching up and asking to exchange numbers, Adele had to step off stage to have her makeup touched up from crying.

Also over the weekend, Adele got Spotify to make a major change. The music streaming service has removed the shuffle button as the default option when playing albums.

“This was the only request I had in our ever changing industry!” Adele tweeted. “We don’t create albums with so much care and thought into our track listing for no reason. Our art tells a story and our stories should be listened to as we intended. Thank you Spotify for listening.”

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.