How will the government shutdown impact the U.S. military? Eleanor WatsonOctober 1, 2025 at 12:29 AM 4 Al Drago / Bloomberg via Getty Images Congress failed to reach a funding deal by Wednesday morning's deadline, leading to a government shutdown that will force activeduty service members to continu...

- - How will the government shutdown impact the U.S. military?

Eleanor WatsonOctober 1, 2025 at 12:29 AM

4

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Congress failed to reach a funding deal by Wednesday morning's deadline, leading to a government shutdown that will force active-duty service members to continue to serve without pay until a deal is made.

During a government shutdown, all active-duty personnel, as well as National Guard who are currently deployed, must carry out their assigned duties with their pay delayed until the shutdown is over. Civilian personnel whose work the Defense Department considers essential, or "excepted," will also continue to work, while other civilians are furloughed for the duration of the shutdown.

"After the government shutdown, all government employees will automatically receive back pay, based on the terms of the Government Employee Fair Treatment Act of 2019," said Seamus Daniels, a fellow for Defense Budget Analysis at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Active-duty service members won't get paid on time unless Congress passes a separate piece of legislation, as it did in 2013 with the "Pay Our Military Act," which ensured military pay and allowances continued during a government shutdown.

Republican Rep. Jen Kiggans of Virginia introduced a bill earlier this month with bipartisan support, the "Pay Our Troops Act of 2026," which would keep members of the military and Coast Guard paid during a shutdown, but it did not pass in time because the House is out of session until Oct 7.

During the last shutdown in 2019, the Navy Federal Credit Union and USAA offered special loans to members of the military, and they plan to do so again if there's a shutdown in October. The Navy Federal Credit Union said in a press release it would "offer 0% APR loans to eligible members whose pay may be affected, continuing a tradition of assistance seen during previous shutdowns in 2011, 2013 and 2018-2019, when nearly 20,000 members received support." USAA plans to offer eligible members who have accounts with the bank a "no-interest loan equal to the amount of one net paycheck."

The Defense Department published contingency guidance on Friday, outlining its priority missions and stating that unused funds passed in the reconciliation bill over the summer could be considered to support them. The list includes, in order: operations to secure the U.S. Southern Border, Middle East operations, the U.S. missile defense project Golden Dome for America, depot maintenance, shipbuilding and critical munitions.

The guidance estimates about 406,000 of the department's 741,000 civilian employees will be required to work in the event of a shutdown because their mission is critical and not easily carried out by any U.S. service member.

While a memo from the White House Office of Management and Budget said some civilians could be laid off during the shutdown, the guidance released by the Defense Department outlines furloughs but no cuts to the civilian workforce.

During the shutdown, medical care and dental care will be excepted, according to the contingency guidance, but elective surgeries and other elective procedures would be delayed unless they're necessary for military readiness. Private health care using the Defense Department's TRICARE medical insurance would continue uninterrupted.

Watch: Pete Hegseth addresses military leaders at Quantico

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How will the government shutdown impact the U.S. military?

How will the government shutdown impact the U.S. military? Eleanor WatsonOctober 1, 2025 at 12:29 AM 4 Al Drago / Bloomberg vi...

MLB playoffs 2025: Garrett Crochet pitches October masterclass as Red Sox take wildcard Game 1 over Yankees Jake MintzOctober 1, 2025 at 12:49 AM 0 NEW YORK — All Garrett Crochet wanted to do after delivering the most impressive playoff pitching performance of the 2020s was play "Clash Royale" on hi...

- - MLB playoffs 2025: Garrett Crochet pitches October masterclass as Red Sox take wild-card Game 1 over Yankees

Jake MintzOctober 1, 2025 at 12:49 AM

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NEW YORK — All Garrett Crochet wanted to do after delivering the most impressive playoff pitching performance of the 2020s was play "Clash Royale" on his phone.

So he did.

In the afterglow of an unforgettable October masterclass, the Boston ace plopped his substantial backside onto a sofa in the Yankee Stadium visitors clubhouse and did some mobile gaming. He looked entirely unbothered, like someone who had just completed a moderately difficult workout and not a 117-pitch gem in Game 1 of the wild-card round en route to a 3-1 Red Sox victory that put Boston just one win away from sending the Yankees home and moving on to the ALDS.

And so, for about 10 minutes Tuesday, as he waited to be summoned to the media conference room, Crochet just sat there, alone, victorious, dip-spitting into a plastic water bottle, swiping away, the bright colors of "Clash Royale" pulsing on his phone, the dopamine rushing to his brain.

Meanwhile, all around him, media members scurried about the room, asking his awe-inspired teammates to describe what they'd just witnessed.

"Unreal."

"He's a f***ing beast."

"Incredible, but that's who he's been all year."

It's true. In his first season with the Red Sox — which was also his first complete campaign as a starting pitcher — the bald 26-year-old has established himself as one of the sport's premier arms. His has been a remarkable rise. Over the past 18 months, Crochet has gone from surprise Opening Day starter for the worst team in MLB history to the unimpeachable ace of a World Series contender. He is the epitome of a frontline starter: overflowing with moxie, brimming with self-confidence, aware of his own greatness, arrogant and damn proud of it.

"He is a guy that wants it bad, to be honest with you," Red Sox manager Alex Cora said Tuesday. "He was in a situation last year that he was learning how to become a starter. He got traded to become the ace. He got paid like an ace, and since Day 1, he has acted like that."

Garrett Crochet, 100mph on his 117th Pitch. 👀11th K. pic.twitter.com/5oONH5o557

— Rob Friedman (@PitchingNinja) October 1, 2025

On Tuesday in the Bronx, making his first career playoff start, Crochet continued his ascension with an outing for the ages. He surrendered just four hits and punched out 11 hitters across 7 2/3 innings of work. The only real blemish on his ledger came via much-maligned Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe, who roped an opposite-field solo homer in the second inning.

"Just determined to keep the lead where it was, at one," Crochet said afterward when asked about the Volpe blast. "Just wanted to do everything I could to give my team a fighting chance to get back into it."

That's exactly what happened.

Following the home run, the man whose teammates call him "The Beast" went into cruise control, retiring the final 17 hitters he faced and keeping the deficit at one. Meanwhile, Yankees starter Max Fried, making his first postseason start in pinstripes, was brilliant in his own right. He had Red Sox hitters flailing and guessing all night. The gangly southpaw exited to a standing ovation with one out in the seventh and a zero next to BOS on the scoreboard.

[Get more Boston news: Red Sox team feed]

But that change provided an opening. And immediately, the Sox pounced.

Yankees hurler Luke Weaver allowed a well-worked, 11-pitch walk to center fielder Cedanne Rafaela. Then nine-hole hitter Nick Sogard lofted one for a knock into shallow right-center field. Yankees captain and reigning AL MVP Aaron Judge, playing through a flexor strain in his throwing elbow, sauntered toward the ball, scooped it up and threw meekly to second. Sogard slid in just ahead of the tag for a double.

Judge's arm has been barking for a few months now. The issue was serious enough to sideline him for 10 days this summer. He has since returned to the outfield but is undeniably wary of putting full gas behind a throw. In September, his average outfield throw velocity dropped significantly from his career norms. The Red Sox are clearly aware of these limitations, and they took advantage in a massive moment.

The extra base proved crucial, as Masataka Yoshida promptly laced a two-run, go-ahead single up the middle. Just three hitters had come to the plate since Fried's night ended at 102 pitches, yet somehow the Yankees were suddenly playing from behind.

They would never recapture the lead. Crochet made sure of that. Pitching with an advantage for the first time all night, Boston's ace retired New York in order on just six pitches in the seventh. That brisk inning encouraged Cora to send him back out for the eighth, even though he was at 100 pitches.

"I wanted to honor that decision," Crochet said after the game. "I felt like he's put a lot of faith in me this year, and I haven't let him down yet. So I was going to be damn sure this wasn't the first time."

Crochet struck out Trent Grisham, allowed a single to Volpe and then got Austin Wells looking on a dastardly, full-count fastball that clocked in at 100.2 mph. It was the 117th and final pitch of Crochet's evening. It was also his fastest.

"Every time he takes the mound, we love going out there and playing defense behind him," Red Sox third baseman Alex Bregman, who played in his 100th career postseason game Tuesday and drove in an insurance run for Boston, gushed about Crochet. "Just a performance that big-time pitchers make, and that's who he is, and I am super proud of him."

Red Sox closer Aroldis Chapman finished the eighth before returning for a hairy ninth. The former Yankee allowed three straight singles to load the bases with no outs. But the veteran flame-thrower escaped disaster via a weak flyout and a pair of punchouts, ensuring that Crochet's night won the day.

Crochet told Cora yesterday he was only going to make one call to the pen 🤯 ☎️"He was in the dugout with me... he's like, 'No, ONE. It's gonna be straight to Chappy.'"HIM. 🐷 pic.twitter.com/12xlHJSxzW

— NESN (@NESN) October 1, 2025

In an era when starting pitchers work shallower into ballgames than ever before, Crochet's performance was historic. It was the most pitches thrown by a starter in a postseason game since Stephen Strasburg threw 117 in Game 2 of the 2019 NLCS, and it was the most thrown by a pitcher in his playoff debut since Jacob deGrom's first October start in 2016.

The last time a Red Sox starter threw more than 117 pitches in a playoff game? Pedro Martinez, 2003, ALCS, Game 7, a night that lives on forever for both fan bases.

Tuesday's contest didn't carry quite that level of import, but for the outlook of this postseason, it might prove to be absolutely crucial. The Yankees, relegated to the wild-card round via the Blue Jays' division-winning tiebreaker advantage, are now on the brink, one loss away from a premature vacation. Crochet won't pitch again in this series, but the impact of his magnificent outing and the advantage he secured his team will shadow the rest of the showdown. His next start, should the Red Sox advance, would likely come in Game 2 of the ALDS in Toronto.

Until then, he'll play spectator as he readies himself for another memorable night under the lights. And in the pockets of downtime, he'll likely pass the time with more "Clash Royale."

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MLB playoffs 2025: Garrett Crochet pitches October masterclass as Red Sox take wild-card Game 1 over Yankees

MLB playoffs 2025: Garrett Crochet pitches October masterclass as Red Sox take wildcard Game 1 over Yankees Jake MintzOctober ...

Jimmy Kimmel Reveals He Was in the Bathroom When ABC Told Him the Show Was Being Pulled from Air: 'I Thought, It's Over' Ingrid VasquezOctober 1, 2025 at 12:11 AM 0 Kevin Mazur/Getty; Disney/Mark Seliger From left: Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Kimmel Jimmy Kimmel Live! returned to television on Tuesday...

- - Jimmy Kimmel Reveals He Was in the Bathroom When ABC Told Him the Show Was Being Pulled from Air: 'I Thought, It's Over'

Ingrid VasquezOctober 1, 2025 at 12:11 AM

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From left: Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Kimmel -

Jimmy Kimmel Live! returned to television on Tuesday, Sept. 23

The end of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert's was announced in July

Kimmel told Colbert he was in the bathroom when he found out ABC was pulling his show off the air, while appearing on The Late Show

Jimmy Kimmel and Stephen Colbert are addressing the recent late night TV shakeup.

Exactly one week after Jimmy Kimmel Live! returned to television following its indefinite hiatus, Kimmel opened up about the situation during his appearance on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert on Tuesday, Sept. 30.

"It was about 3 o'clock, we tape our show at 4:30," Kimmel began. "I'm in my office, typing away as I usually do, I get a phone call. It's ABC. They say they want to talk to me. This is unusual. They — as far as I knew — didn't even know I was doing a show previous to this."

"I have like five people who work in my office with me. So the only private place to go is the bathroom," Kimmel continued. So I go into the bathroom, and I'm on the phone with the ABC executives. and they say, 'Listen, we want to take the temperature down. We're concerned about what you're going to say tonight, and we decided that the best route is to take the show off the air.' "

As the audience booed in reaction, Kimmel quipped, "That's what I said!" "I started booing," he joked, adding, "I said, 'I don't think that's a good idea,' and they said, 'Well, we think it's a good idea.' Then there was a vote and I lost the vote."

Kimmel continued, "I put my pants back on, and I walked out to my office, and I called in some of the executive producers. There are about nine people in there. And I said, 'They're pulling the show off the air.' And I was — my wife said I was white, I was whiter than Jim Gaffigan when I came out of there."

Colbert then asked, "What's the first thing that occurred to you," to which Kimmel replied, "I thought, that's it, it's over. It is over. I was like I'm never coming back on the air. That's really what I thought. So we told our staff — meanwhile the whole audience was in their seats."

Kimmel shared that the audience for that night's show was "loaded, and in their seats, ready for the show," when he found out ABC had pulled the show.

Not only was the audience ready for the taping, so were the guests. "We had a chef — a guy named Christian Petroni on the show, who was making meatballs and polenta that night," Kimmel shared. "He'd been cooking that day."

"Then we had Howard Jones taping a performance to air in the future," Kimmel said, adding, "it's funny" because the song they taped — even though "they sent the audience home" — was "Things Can Only Get Better."

The appearance comes two weeks after an ABC spokesperson confirmed to PEOPLE that Kimmel's show would be on pause "indefinitely" following the host's comments during his Sept. 15 monologue.

"We hit some new lows over the weekend with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and doing everything they can to score political points from it," Kimmel shared at the time. "In between the finger-pointing, there was grieving."

Disney/Randy Holmes

Jimmy Kimmel on 'Jimmy Kimmel Live!'.

"On Friday, the White House flew the flags at half staff, which got some criticism, but on a human level, you can see how hard the president is taking this," he continued, as a clip cut to showing President Donald Trump taking questions from reporters after the assassination. One offered their condolences for the death of the president's "friend" Kirk.

However, when asked about how he was holding up, Trump, 79, replied, "I think very good, and by the way, right there where you see all the trucks, they just started construction of the new ballroom for the White House."

He continued discussing the ballroom plans, saying the result would "be a beauty." When cameras cut back to Kimmel, he said, "Yes, he's at the fourth stage of grief, construction."

Kimmel, meanwhile, previously offered his condolences to Kirk's family on social media, writing, "Instead of the angry finger-pointing, can we just for one day agree that it is horrible and monstrous to shoot another human? On behalf of my family, we send love to the Kirks and to all the children, parents and innocents who fall victim to senseless gun violence."

Randy Holmes/Disney via Getty

Jimmy Kimmel on 'Jimmy Kimmel Live!'.

The decision to remove Kimmel from the air came after the announcement by Nexstar Media — which operates 32 ABC-affiliated stations — that it would acquire rival broadcast company Tegna for $6.2 billion and place itself in 80% of America's TV-owning households, per a press release. The acquisition requires final approval from the Trump-controlled FCC.

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The late-night show being pulled off the air sparked outrage across Hollywood leading to over 400 celebrities signing a letter defending the constitutional right to free speech and supporting Kimmel. In addition to Colbert, Jimmy Fallon, Seth Meyers, John Oliver and Jon Stewart addressed his suspension, as did Conan O'Brien, David Letterman, Howard Stern, and the co-hosts of The View.

While the Walt Disney Company announced on Monday, Sept. 22, that the show would return to the air on Tuesday, Sept. 23, Sinclair — the broadcasting company that makes up the nation's largest ABC affiliate group — followed Nexstar Media's lead and announced that it would be preempting Jimmy Kimmel Live! across ABC affiliate stations and replacing it with news programming.

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Sinclair announced the end of its preemption of Jimmy Kimmel Live! on its ABC affiliates in a statement on Friday, Sept. 26, noting that it had "received thoughtful feedback from viewers, advertisers, and community leaders representing a wide range of perspectives."

Nexstar followed suit the same day, announcing the end of its preemption of Jimmy Kimmel Live! on its ABC affiliate stations. The show has since returned to airing on all stations across the United States

Scott Kowalchyk/CBS via Getty

Stephen Colbert on 'The Late Show with Stephen Colbert'

Prior to Kimmel's news, late-night was shaken up by the announcement of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert's cancelation.

In a statement from CBS shared with PEOPLE in July, the network said, "This is purely a financial decision against a challenging backdrop in late night. It is not related in any way to the show's performance, content or other matters happening at Paramount."

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The Late Show will end in May 2026 after 10 seasons. Jimmy Kimmel Live! airs weeknights at 11:35 p.m. ET on ABC.

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Jimmy Kimmel Reveals He Was in the Bathroom When ABC Told Him the Show Was Being Pulled from Air: 'I Thought, It's Over'

Jimmy Kimmel Reveals He Was in the Bathroom When ABC Told Him the Show Was Being Pulled from Air: 'I Thought, It's Ove...

Keith Urban Changed Song Lyrics Inspired by Nicole Kidman Romance to Reference New Guitar Player Maggie During Concert Ingrid VasquezOctober 1, 2025 at 12:13 AM 0 Axelle/BauerGriffin/FilmMagic Keith Urban and Nicole Kidman attend the 49th AFI Life Achievement Award Gala on April 27, 2024.

- - Keith Urban Changed Song Lyrics Inspired by Nicole Kidman Romance to Reference New Guitar Player Maggie During Concert

Ingrid VasquezOctober 1, 2025 at 12:13 AM

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Keith Urban and Nicole Kidman attend the 49th AFI Life Achievement Award Gala on April 27, 2024. -

A recent Keith Urban performance has surfaced following his split from Nicole Kidman

During the performance, Urban changed a lyric to "The Fighter," a song he wrote about Kidman

The new lyric included the name of Urban's utility player, Maggie Baugh

A recent Keith Urban performance has surfaced following his split from Nicole Kidman.

As fans speculate about what may have happened between the two, Urban, 57, caught more attention recently after he changed the lyrics to his song "The Fighter," featuring Carrie Underwood, during a recent performance.

As seen in a clip from the performance shared on Instagram by Urban's utility player and rising country star, Maggie Baugh, a lyric from the song was changed to include her name as the two performed together.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Maggie Baugh (@maggie_baugh)

The original line "When they're tryna get to you, baby I'll be the fighter" was sung as "When they're tryna get to you, Maggie I'll be your guitar player" by Urban. Baugh, 25, added two emojis over the video: "🫣 🤯."

"Did he just say that👀," she captioned the clip. Baugh shared the footage on Saturday, Sept. 26, before news of Urban and Kidman's split.

PEOPLE has reached out to reps for Urban and Baugh for comment.

PEOPLE confirmed Urban and Kidman's separation after 19 years of marriage on Monday, Sept. 29. According to documents obtained by PEOPLE, on Tuesday, Sept. 30, Kidman, 58, filed for divorce from the country star in Nashville, where the couple has lived since 2007, listing their date of separation as the date of filing, and citing irreconcilable differences as the reason for the split.

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Urban and Baugh were on tour this summer for his High and Alive World Tour, and have more shows scheduled through mid-October. He also has concerts scheduled for the Bahamas and the U.K. in March 2026.

The song, which is off Urban's ninth studio album Ripcord, was inspired by the early days of Urban's romance with Kidman.

Hubert Vestil/Getty

Keith Urban and Maggie Baugh performing during the 2024 CMT Music Awards

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"It's all from a conversation my wife and I had early on in our relationship, that when things get tough, I need to hold her tighter and just try to take care of her," Urban told Billboard in 2017.

"The song is about wanting to heal somebody, wanting to take care of somebody, wanting to protect somebody. It's really like a vow in so many ways," he continued, referring to Kidman as "female and tender."

"I want that tenderness to not have to get hardened to the world," said Urban. "That's my job as her husband, to put myself around her so she can remain that way. And that's really the chorus of The Fighter."

Matt Winkelmeyer/MG23/Getty

Keith Urban and Nicole Kidman attend the 2023 Met Gala on May 01, 2023 in New York City

Urban told the outlet that the song came into fruition while he and Kidman spent time in London, as she starred in the West End production of Photograph 51 during the fall of 2015.

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A source in Urban's circle told PEOPLE Tuesday that the country star has "just been going through some stuff" as of late.

"He has been making questionable choices for some time now and this was not the case of them just drifting apart," added a Kidman source.

Kidman and Urban tied the knot in June 2006 and share two children together — daughters, Sunday Rose, 17, and Faith Margaret, 14. Kidman is also a mom to Bella, 32, and Connor, 30, with ex-husband Tom Cruise.

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Keith Urban Changed Song Lyrics Inspired by Nicole Kidman Romance to Reference New Guitar Player Maggie During Concert

Keith Urban Changed Song Lyrics Inspired by Nicole Kidman Romance to Reference New Guitar Player Maggie During Concert Ingrid ...

Blake Lively Jokes She's a 'Hoarder' While Stepping Out in a Pair of 16YearOld Chanel Shoes Charna FlamOctober 1, 2025 at 1:11 AM 0 Blake Lively/instagram Blake Lively Sept.

- - Blake Lively Jokes She's a 'Hoarder' While Stepping Out in a Pair of 16-Year-Old Chanel Shoes

Charna FlamOctober 1, 2025 at 1:11 AM

0

Blake Lively/instagram

Blake Lively Sept. 30, 2025 Instagram -

Blake Lively celebrated the launch of Betty Booze in ABC Fine Wine & Spirits with an Instagram post on Tuesday, Sept. 30

In the celebratory post she showed off her bright red ensemble — down to her patent leather red pumps

She revealed in the caption that she's owned the red heels for 16 years

Blake Lively's showing off a fiery pair of Chanel shoes straight from her closet's archives.

The Gossip Girl alum recently joked about her extensive shoe collection as she was celebrating the launch of the newest iced tea product line from her company Betty Booze and its introduction into a new retailer.

Lively, 38, shared a post to Instagram on Tuesday, Sept. 30, thanking her collaborators at ABC Fine Wine & Spirits for stocking the drinks in its retail stores, located primarily in Florida and California.

She also thanked the minds behind her vivid ensemble, from the shoes and her lacy two-piece set to the jewelry. "Big shout out to @eliesaabworld for making me feel so fancy 🍓 🙏🥰," she wrote.

"And always to the bold and kind @particulieres.nyc for having the best taste in vintage jewelry 🩵💍 (ring pictured) and @mariatash for the cute earrings 🩵🩵."

Along with showcasing the stylists and designers behind the look, she called out her Chanel shoes — and confessed she's had them for over a decade. "[Shout out] to me for being a hoarder and keeping these gorgeous Chanel shoes since 2009. :)"

The Simple Favor actress wore the Elie Saab broderie peplum top in red — which retails for $1,170. She paired it with the matching broderie-anglaise palazzo pants. Lively's vintage Chanel red patent leather strass buckle heels completed the look.

Blake Lively/instagram

Blake Lively Sept. 30, 2025 Instagram

Earlier this year, Lively's beverage company launched vodka iced teas in two flavors, Meyer Lemonade and Passion Fruit.

In the Tuesday, Sept. 30 Instagram, Lively honored all the team members who worked on the product, saying they've all "worked so hard and so personally on every single flavor and also every element of the design."

"Getting to share it with you and see you love them too, makes us feel so proud and grateful," she wrote. "Your support and enthusiasm means the world to us. It makes all the hard work pay off."

Blake Lively/instagram

Blake Lively Sept. 30, 2025 Instagram

Lively previously opened up to PEOPLE about the launch, explaining how her Southern upbringing motivated her to create the spiked teas.

"I come from a Southern family, so iced tea, especially in the summertime is a staple," the actress and entrepreneur told PEOPLE in June. "Sweet tea, passion fruit tea, tea with fresh lemonade … it all feels like relaxation and peaceful times. Enjoying an iced tea is a feeling as much as an experience to me."

— sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Lively initially launched her Betty Buzz brand in 2021 with sparkling mixers, later expanding into tequila and bourbon canned cocktails under Betty Booze in 2023.

When Lively announced the launch in 2023, she said on Instagram, "Drinking isn't my thing. But for f--- sake, flavor is." Adding, "Homemade recipes. Real fruit. Real ingredients. Quality booze. No crap. Also a real-time saver. Which is why I really did it."

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Blake Lively Jokes She’s a ‘Hoarder’ While Stepping Out in a Pair of 16-Year-Old Chanel Shoes

Blake Lively Jokes She's a 'Hoarder' While Stepping Out in a Pair of 16YearOld Chanel Shoes Charna FlamOctober 1, ...

How could a government shutdown affect travel around the U.S.? Megan CerulloOctober 1, 2025 at 12:28 AM 0 David Tran / Getty Images Although a short U.S.

- - How could a government shutdown affect travel around the U.S.?

Megan CerulloOctober 1, 2025 at 12:28 AM

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David Tran / Getty Images

Although a short U.S. government shutdown would be unlikely to have much impact on air travel, a prolonged impasse could lead to disruptions for passengers and financial losses for businesses, according to travel experts and industry groups.

The Federal Aviation Administration and Transportation Security Administration define most of their employees as essential, requiring them to work even if the government closes and workers at other federal agencies are furloughed. That means airport screeners, air traffic controllers, federal air marshals, safety inspectors and other workers with the two agencies are expected to continue showing up on the job — without pay — even as lawmakers failed this week to strike a deal on federal funding.

But things could get messy if a shutdown dragged on and government employees suddenly deprived of a paycheck come under financial pressure, Caleb Harmon-Marshall, a former TSA officer, told CBS News.

"TSA officers are expected to continue to report to work. But in the past, if a shutdown exceeds two weeks, officers start to get frantic, and they stop going to work," he said, adding that agency personnel may call in sick and even seek other job opportunities if a shutdown persists.

Any ensuing labor shortages can lead to snarled lines at airport security. For example, roughly 10% of TSA workers called in sick during the 34-day government shutdown that started in December 2018 and extended into 2019, driving up screening times at major airports across the country.

"So if officers decide not to come to work, there is less personnel manning checkpoints, and wait times can potentially get longer," Harmon-Marshall said.

A shutdown began at 12:01 a.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 1, after the Senate on Tuesday voted down two competing Democratic and Republican proposals to keep the government funded. If lawmakers passed a spending bill, TSA and FAA workers would be entitled to back pay for any time worked during a shutdown.

$1 billion hit

The U.S. Travel Association, a trade group, warned that a government shutdown could cost the economy $1 billion a week, while also inconveniencing passengers and hurting travel industry businesses.

"A shutdown exacerbates staffing shortages among Transportation Security Administration officers and air traffic controllers, threatening longer airport security lines, flight delays and cancellations," the group said in a Sept. 25 letter. "It halts hiring and training of new air traffic controllers when we are already short more than 2,800 controllers nationwide, and restarting the process adds further delays even after funding is restored."

The U.S. is already experiencing a shortage of air traffic controllers, and has launched an effort to hire more than 2,000 additional controllers by the end of the fiscal year.

Neither the White House nor the Transportation Department responded to requests for comment about the impact of a potential government shutdown on travel in the U.S.

By contrast, train travel is unlikely to be disrupted if the government closes this week, according to the Rail Passengers Association, which represents the nation's rail travelers. Although Amtrak receives some federal funding and could eventually be impacted if a shutdown dragged on, the rail service is financially healthy enough to pay workers in the near term and keep trains in operation, the group said in a statement last week.

Passport services are also deemed essential and would be expected to operate during a government shutdown.

Watch: Pete Hegseth addresses military leaders at Quantico

Government shutdown begins after Congress fails to pass funding bill | Special Report

Watch: Homes in North Carolina's Outer Banks collapse into ocean

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How could a government shutdown affect travel around the U.S.?

How could a government shutdown affect travel around the U.S.? Megan CerulloOctober 1, 2025 at 12:28 AM 0 David Tran / Getty I...

AI drives interest in bluecollar jobs among Gen Z: "I don't feel threatened" Megan CerulloOctober 1, 2025 at 12:28 AM 1 At just 23, Jacob Palmer is already running his own electrical company.

- - AI drives interest in blue-collar jobs among Gen Z: "I don't feel threatened"

Megan CerulloOctober 1, 2025 at 12:28 AM

1

At just 23, Jacob Palmer is already running his own electrical company. He launched the business in 2024 after starting in the field as an apprentice electrician, a career path he embarked on when college turned out not to be for him.

Palmer has no regrets about his decision to forego college and instead establish himself as a tradesman. "I am very happy doing what I am doing now because it has given me the opportunity to work for myself and be independent," he told CBS News.

Experts say the skilled trades — jobs like electricians, plumbers, welders, masons, HVAC technicians and other occupations requiring extensive training and often licensing — are attracting a growing number of young people put off by high tuition costs.

More than 57% of Gen Zers surveyed by Jobber, a software tool for service businesses, cite student loan debt as a concern about going to college, according to the company's annual report on attitudes toward blue-collar jobs.

More recently, signs that artificial intelligence is starting to gobble up the kind of entry-level jobs that once went to young college graduates are also leading young workers to consider the trades. Some 77% of Gen Zers say it's important that their future job is hard to automate, with many pointing to professions like carpenter, plumber, and electrician as occupations they believe are safe from automation. By contrast, they see less security in fields like software development, data analytics, and accounting, according to the survey.

Jacob Palmer, 23, said his company, Palmer Electrical, is on track to generate more than $150,000 in revenue this year. / Credit: Courtesy of Jacob Palmer

"That route is losing some of the stigma," said David Asay, president of Advantage Reline, a trenchless pipe rehabilitation company in Mesa, Arizona. "The perception among that younger group is no longer, 'Oh, you're working construction, you didn't go to school?' It's, 'What a cool skillset. You're making a good career path.'"

Harder path for college grads

For decades, many young people shunned the trades, with everyone from economists and career experts to politicians and parents emphasizing the importance of obtaining a college diploma. That conventional wisdom isn't entirely wrong — it's just behind the times.

"The attitude was that jobs in the trades were less than desirable," said Angie Hicks, co-founder of Angi, an online home improvement services guide told CBS News.

But several factors are contributing to a shift in how people are thinking about such occupations. For one, going to college for many Americans often requires going into debt. The average cost of college, including tuition and room and board, now tops $38,000 a year and is approaching $60,000 for private institutions, according to the Education Data Initiative.

Factoring in the added burden of interest on student loans and potential income one foregoes while in school, the total cost of earning a bachelor's degree can exceed $500,000, the research firm has found.

More recently, economists also point to a jump in unemployment for recent college grads, which some experts say is an early warning sign that AI is taking jobs away from less experienced workers. The jobless rate for 23-to-27-year-old college grads this year now hovers around 4.6%, up from 3.2% for the same demographic in 2019.

Strikingly, non-college-educated workers in the same age range have experienced a much smaller uptick in unemployment, at roughly 0.5%, over the same period, according to an analysis from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.

"AI can't go out in the field"

Vinnie Curcie, founder and CEO of OC Solar, a solar installation company in Irvine, California, said the solar energy field differs from other trades in that the work requires time both in the office and in the field. OC Solar offers three main services — solar panel and battery sales, project management and installation services. But he expects AI will soon handle much of the sales and project management sides of the business.

While prospective employees once tended to have stronger interest in the company's marketing, management or other white-collar roles, more job candidates today are eager for roles in the field.

"More people are interested in the field because they know that's where the job security is," Curcie told CBS News.

Some school districts also report seeing growing student interest in blue-collar careers. Marlo Loria, director of career and technical education and innovative partnerships at Mesa Public Schools in Mesa, Arizona, said more of her students are enrolling in schools' welding, construction and auto shop programs than there is space for.

Asay, of Advantage Reline, added that students with an entrepreneurial bent can also be well-suited for the skilled trades.

"They can take their skills and create their own business, or become a bigger part of our business, outside of being someone with a shovel in a trench," he said.

Palmer said his business generated $90,000 in revenue in its first year and is on track to top $150,000 in 2025, a more than 30% increase — no college degree needed. The other upside to life as an electrician, as he sees it, is the job security.

"I don't feel overly threatened by the growth of AI in my industry. That will be a pretty impressive robot that can do my job one day, if it ever happens," Palmer said.

High school senior Kayden Evans is confident that he'll be shielded from AI if he pursues a carer in the trades. / Credit: Courtesy of Kayden Evans

Kayden Evans, an 18-year-old senior at Mountain View High School in Mesa, Arizona, has his eyes set on a career working with his hands, and to eventually start his own business. Currently an intern at Empire Cat, a company that sells, rents and services heavy equipment and tractors, he plans on going straight from high school into an apprenticeship with the company.

"I wouldn't say I am worried about AI because where I want to grow is as a field technician, and even though it helps, I don't think AI can take that over," he said. "AI can't go out in the field and take apart an engine."

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AI drives interest in blue-collar jobs among Gen Z: "I don't feel threatened"

AI drives interest in bluecollar jobs among Gen Z: "I don't feel threatened" Megan CerulloOctober 1, 2025 at 12:...

Could a government shutdown impact student loans? Here's what to know. Aimee PicchiOctober 1, 2025 at 12:28 AM 0 A government shutdown on Wednesday could have the potential to disrupt a multitude of federal activities — but people with student loans are expected to continue making their repaym...

- - Could a government shutdown impact student loans? Here's what to know.

Aimee PicchiOctober 1, 2025 at 12:28 AM

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A government shutdown on Wednesday could have the potential to disrupt a multitude of federal activities — but people with student loans are expected to continue making their repayments, according to the U.S. Department of Education.

People with student loans "will still be required to make payments on their outstanding student debt," the Education Department said in a Sept. 28 contingency plan for an Oct. 1 federal shutdown.

While loans are still due for repayment, it could be hard to reach someone at the Education Department if a problem arises, given that most of its employees are scheduled to be furloughed in the event of a shutdown, said Persis Yu, managing counsel at Protect Borrowers, an advocacy group for people with student loans.

"Student loan borrowers will still need to pay their bills during a shutdown," Yu told CBS News. "However, if things go wrong with their servicer, which they often do, borrowers are going to have fewer people to turn to to get those errors resolved."

There would also likely be little impact on federal aid, such as loans and grants, for students who are currently enrolled in colleges and university programs because most payments are disbursed at the start of the academic year, according to a statement from the American Council on Education, a higher-education advocacy group.

Still, some borrowers and students in the applications stage could encounter hurdles during a shutdown, the group added.

"Borrowers seeking assistance from [the Education Department] may face delays, and loan forgiveness applications could be impacted if the shutdown persists," the American Council on Education said.

The Education Department operates the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program, which is aimed at helping public workers — such as teachers and police officers — discharge their federal student loans after they've served in government or not-for-profit organizations for more than 10 years.

The DOE also runs income-driven repayment plans that provide forgiveness after 20 - 25 years of repayment.

About 2,100 of the Education Department's roughly 2,400 employees are expected to be furloughed in the event of a government shutdown, according to the agency's contingency plan. Those include most of the agency's Office of Federal Student Aid, the plan shows.

Could Pell Grants or the FAFSA be impacted?

The Education Department said it would continue to disburse student aid such as Pell Grants and Federal Direct Student loans in the event of a shutdown because those programs are funded through mandatory spending or carryover appropriations, and therefore don't require approval from Congress.

"More than 9.9 million students receive student aid, in the form of grants and loans, at approximately 5,400 schools through these programs," the agency noted.

The DOE said it plans to use permanent appropriations to continue processing student aid requests through the Free Applications for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA, which opened on Sept. 24 for the 2026-27 academic year. The FAFSA is used by parents and students to apply for loans, grants and work-study funds to pay for college or career training programs.

"FAFSA applications actually opened early, with the form becoming fully available as of Sept. 24," rather than the traditional opening day of Oct. 1, NerdWallet lending expert Kate Wood told CBS News. "Students shouldn't expect delays or for deadlines to be pushed back. Unless the Education Department says otherwise, there's no reason to wait to file the FAFSA."

Funding for Title I and IDEA grants, which are for low-income schools and disabled students, respectively, would also continue to be available, it added.

Likewise, most GI Bill benefits for students who are veterans should also continue without disruption if the government shuts down because the program is funded by mandatory spending that doesn't need to be re-approved by Congress, according to the American Council on Education, which cited the Department of Veterans Affairs' contingency plan.

"However, some delays [for ex-military students] could arise if the shutdown is prolonged or if students require additional verification, corrections or appeals during the lapse," the ACE noted.

It added, "In previous shutdowns, VA has experienced backlogs in claims processing and a slowdown in support services due to furloughed staff and reduced system capacity."

What Education Department activities would be impacted?

New grants would be halted during a government shutdown, the Education Department noted. But since most grants are awarded over the summer, only a small number of recipients would likely be impacted, it added.

"Grantees will continue to be able to draw down funds from these awards and, therefore, the impacts on schools and students should be minimal," the agency said. "The Office for Civil Rights would pause its review and investigations of civil rights complaints."

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Could a government shutdown impact student loans? Here's what to know.

Could a government shutdown impact student loans? Here's what to know. Aimee PicchiOctober 1, 2025 at 12:28 AM 0 A governm...

EPA's job is to protect America's air, water and land. Here's how a shutdown affects that effort SETH BORENSTEIN October 1, 2025 at 1:02 AM 0 FILE The Kyger Creek Power Plant, a coalfired power plant, operates April 14, 2025, near Cheshire, Ohio. (AP Photo/Joshua A.

- - EPA's job is to protect America's air, water and land. Here's how a shutdown affects that effort

SETH BORENSTEIN October 1, 2025 at 1:02 AM

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FILE - The Kyger Creek Power Plant, a coal-fired power plant, operates April 14, 2025, near Cheshire, Ohio. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Environmental Protection Agency was already reeling from massive stuff cuts and dramatic shifts in priority and policy. A government shutdown raises new questions about how it can carry out its founding mission of protecting America's health and environment with little more than skeletal staff and funding.

In President Donald Trump's second term, the EPA has leaned hard into an agenda of deregulation and facilitating Trump's boosting of fossil fuels like oil, gas and coal to meet what he has called an energy emergency.

Jeremy Symons, a former EPA policy official under President Bill Clinton, said it's natural to worry that a shutdown will lead "the worst polluters" to treat it as a chance to dump toxic pollution without getting caught.

"Nobody will be holding polluters accountable for what they dump into the air we breathe, in the water we drink while EPA is shut down," said Symons, now a senior adviser to the Environmental Protection Network, a group of former agency officials advocating for a strong Earth-friendly department.

"This administration has already been implementing a serial shutdown of EPA," Symons said. "Whittling away at EPA's ability to do its job."

A scientific study of pollution from about 200 coal-fired power plants during the 2018-2019 government shutdown found they "significantly increased their particulate matter emissions due to the EPA's furlough." Soot pollution is connected to thousands of deaths per year in the United States.

The birth of EPA

The EPA was created under Republican President Richard Nixon in 1970 amid growing fears about pollution of the planet's air, land and water. Its first administrator, William D. Ruckelshaus, spoke of the need for an "environmental ethic" in his first speech.

"Each of us must begin to realize our own relationship to the environment," Ruckelshaus said. "Each of us must begin to measure the impact of our own decisions and actions on the quality of air, water, and soil of this nation."

In the time since then, it has focused on safeguarding and cleaning up the environment, and over the past couple of decades, it also added fighting climate change to its charge.

EPA's job is essentially setting up standards for what's healthy for people and the environment, giving money to state and local governments to get that done and then coming down as Earth's police officer if it isn't.

"Protecting human health and the environment is critical to the country's overall well-being," said Christine Todd Whitman, who was EPA chief under Republican President George W. Bush. "Anything that stops that regulatory process puts us at a disadvantage and endangers the public."

But priorities change with presidential administrations.

Earlier this year, Trump's new EPA chief Lee Zeldin unveiled five pillars for the agency. The first is to ensure clean air, land and water. Right behind it is to "restore American energy dominance," followed by environmental permitting reform, making U.S. the capital of artificial intelligence and protecting American auto jobs.

Zeldin is seeking to rescind a 2009 science-based finding that climate change is a threat to America's health and well-being. Known as the "endangerment" finding, it forms the foundation of a range of rules that limit pollution from cars, power plants and other sources. Zeldin also has proposed ending a requirement that large, mostly industrial polluters report their planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions, canceled billions of dollars in solar energy grants and eliminated a research and development division.

Agency's shutdown plan

The EPA's shutdown contingency plan, first written a decade ago and slightly for this year, says 905 employees are considered essential because they are necessary to protect life and property or because they perform duties needed by law. An additional 828 employees can keep working because they aren't funded by the annual federal budget and instead get their pay from fees and such.

EPA officials won't say how many employees they have cut — former officials now at the Environmental Protection Network say it's 25% — but the Trump administration's budget plan says the agency now has 14,130 employees, down 1,000 from a year ago. The administration is proposing cutting that to 12,856 in this upcoming budget year and Zeldin has talked of going to levels of around Ronald Reagan's presidency, which started at around 11,000.

The agency's shutdown plan calls for it to stop doing non-criminal pollution inspections needed to enforce clean air and water rules. It won't issue new grants to other governmental agencies, update its website, issue new permits, approve state requests dealing with pollution regulations or conduct most scientific research, according to the EPA document. Except in situations where the public health would be at risk, work on Superfund cleanup sites will stop.

Marc Boom, a former EPA policy official during the Biden administration, said inspections under the Chemical Accident Risk Reduction program would halt. Those are done under the Clean Air Act to make sure facilities are adequately managing the risk of chemical accidents.

"Communities near the facilities will have their risk exposure go up immediately since accidents will be more likely to occur," Boom said.

He also said EPA hotlines for reporting water and other pollution problems likely will be closed. "So if your water tastes off later this week, there will be no one at EPA to pick up the phone," he said.

"The quality of water coming out of your tap is directly tied to whether EPA is doing its job," said Jeanne Briskin, a former 40-year EPA employee who once headed the children's health protection division.

___

The ' climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP's standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

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EPA's job is to protect America's air, water and land. Here's how a shutdown affects that effort

EPA's job is to protect America's air, water and land. Here's how a shutdown affects that effort SETH BORENSTEIN O...

Government website blames shutdown on "radical left," prompts ethics complaint Faris TanyosOctober 1, 2025 at 12:32 AM 0 Kent Nishimura / Getty Images Ahead of Wednesday's government shutdown, the U.S.

- - Government website blames shutdown on "radical left," prompts ethics complaint

Faris TanyosOctober 1, 2025 at 12:32 AM

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Kent Nishimura / Getty Images

Ahead of Wednesday's government shutdown, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development on Tuesday posted a banner in large type on its homepage blaming the shutdown on the "Radical Left," an allegation that an ethics group said was a "blatant violation" of the Hatch Act.

"The Radical Left are going to shut down the government and inflict massive pain on the American people unless they get their $1.5 trillion wish list of demands," the message read. "The Trump administration wants to keep the government open for the American people."

A complaint filed Tuesday with the U.S. Office of Special Counsel by the nonprofit consumer advocacy group Public Citizen alleged that the banner on HUD's website was a "blatant violation" of the Hatch Act, describing it as "highly partisan" and seeking to "idolize the Trump administration … without attributing any blame for the lack of compromise causing the shutdown."

The Hatch Act is a federal law passed in 1939 that "limits certain political activities of federal employees as well as some state, D.C., and local government employees who work in connection with federally funded programs," according to the Office of Special Counsel.

Its purpose, among other things, is to "ensure that federal programs are administered in a nonpartisan fashion," the office explains.

"This is such an obvious violation of the Hatch Act that it raises the question: 'How on Earth does HUD think they can get away with this?'" Craig Holman, a government ethics expert with Public Citizen, who filed the complaint on behalf of his group, said in a statement. "The answer is that the Trump administration has managed to neuter the ethics enforcement offices in the executive branch. Those who are responsible for enforcing the Hatch Act — namely, the Office of Special Counsel, followed by the Office of Government Ethics and the Attorney General's office — have all been taken over by Trump loyalists or those who are intimidated by Trump."

"The sheer crassness of this partisan advertisement by HUD using taxpayer dollars to campaign against Democrats and promote the Trump administration is going to make it exceedingly difficult for even a neutered ethics office to ignore," Holman added.

CBS News has reached out to HUD and the White House for comment on Public Citizen's complaint and Holman's allegations.

The Office of Special Counsel is an independent federal agency that is designed to enforce the Hatch Act, investigate wrongdoing within the executive branch and protect whistleblowers from retaliation.

Earlier this year, President Trump fired Special Counsel Hampton Dellinger, the head of OSC, and replaced him with acting Special Counsel Jamieson Greer. Dellinger sued over the firing, but it was upheld by a federal appeals court. Since returning to office, Mr. Trump has fired more than a dozen federal inspectors general who are tasked with investigating wrongdoing at government agencies.

The shutdown, which took affect at 12:01 a.m. Wednesday, came after the Senate failed to push through a short-term funding bill that passed the House earlier this month.

Democrats have called for the bill to include a permanent extension of tax credits passed in 2021 for those receiving health insurance through the Affordable Care Act marketplace, as well as a rollback of Medicaid cuts that were part of Mr. Trump's "big, beautiful bill" that passed this summer.

Some Republican lawmakers have argued that the "big, beautiful bill" did not cut Medicaid, but instead that it eliminated fraud within the program.

"We're not cutting Medicaid," House Speaker Mike Johnson said in June, prior to the passage of the "big, beautiful bill." "What we're doing is strengthening the program. We're reducing fraud, waste and abuse that is rampant in Medicaid to ensure that that program is essential for so many people."

Meanwhile, lawmakers from both parties cast blame on the other over the shutdown. Democratic Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said Tuesday night that "Republicans have until midnight to cut the garbage and get serious," while Senate Majority Leader John Thune called the shutdown "totally avoidable," adding that "if the government shuts down, it is on the Senate Democrats."

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Government website blames shutdown on "radical left," prompts ethics complaint

Government website blames shutdown on "radical left," prompts ethics complaint Faris TanyosOctober 1, 2025 at 12:32 ...

Homes collapse as waves from hurricanes Imelda, Humberto slam North Carolina's Outer Banks Dinah Voyles Pulver, USA TODAY October 1, 2025 at 12:33 AM 0 Huge waves and rough surf from two longdistance hurricanes have washed away five houses on North Carolina's Outer Banks, the National Park Service s...

- - Homes collapse as waves from hurricanes Imelda, Humberto slam North Carolina's Outer Banks

Dinah Voyles Pulver, USA TODAY October 1, 2025 at 12:33 AM

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Huge waves and rough surf from two long-distance hurricanes have washed away five houses on North Carolina's Outer Banks, the National Park Service said, with further destruction possible as the ocean batters the coast.

The houses were unoccupied and collapsed within 45 minutes on Sept. 30, along Cape Hatteras National Seashore as a high tide pounded the beach and washed over dunes in Buxton, the park service said. The large waves and high seas from hurricanes Imelda and Humberto are forecast to linger for a few more days.

"Buxton's in a bar fight," said Danny Couch, a real estate agent and former county commissioner who's an Outer Banks native. "The ocean is raging."

1 / 26See past storm damage as Hurricanes Humberto and Imelda cause flooding on the Outer BanksThis house at 46007 Cottage Avenue in Buxton, North Carolina is one of five that collapsed within 45 minutes on the afternoon of Sept. 30, according to Cape Hatteras National Seashore, as rough seas from two hurricanes pounded away at beaches along portions of the Outer Banks.

No injuries were reported, the seashore confirmed.

Another house washed into the ocean on Sept. 16. The destruction makes 17 houses that have collapsed on the seashore in just over five years, according to the national seashore.

Surf height on Sept. 30 was estimated at 8 to 12 feet, said Tom Lonka, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service office in Morehead City. The surf is forecast to be "extremely dangerous due to large breaking waves" through the week, the weather service said in an evening forecast.

The rough conditions are an "ongoing incident," with further collapses possible, the national seashore said in a Sept. 30 news release.

Videos and photos from Epic Shutter Photography on the Outer Banks this week show the ocean under a long row of beachfront houses.

This house at 46007 Cottage Avenue in Buxton, North Carolina, is one of five that collapsed within 45 minutes on the afternoon of Sept. 30, according to Cape Hatteras National Seashore, as rough seas from two hurricanes pounded away at beaches along portions of the Outer Banks.

An entire area of the beachfront is closed at Buxton for public safety, and the seashore warned people to stay away and use caution along the Outer Banks south of Buxton.

"Very hazardous conditions are expected to continue over the next 24 hours and visitors should stay away from closed areas," the national park said. "Seashore visitors are urged to stay away from the collapsed house sites and to use caution for miles to the south of the sites, due to the presence of potentially hazardous debris."

Hurricanes Imelda and Humberto swirl in the Atlantic Ocean on Sept. 30, 2025 in this image from NOAA's GOES 19 satellite.Which houses collapsed?

When a home collapses, it creates dangerous conditions, with building materials, glass, air conditioners, and more washing into the water.

The national seashore said the following houses collapsed: 46001, 46002, and 47007 on Cottage Avenue and 46209 and 46211 on Tower Circle Road.

Some of the homes that have collapsed over the past two years were once a few houses back away from the beach, but the dynamic nature of the barrier islands and rising sea levels have severely eroded sections of the beach. Local officials, property owners, and insurance companies have wrangled for years over how to handle the condemnation and removal of homes and over the best way to address the erosion itself.

Dinah Voyles Pulver, a national correspondent for USA TODAY, covers climate change, weather, the environment and other news. Reach her at [email protected] or @dinahvp on Bluesky or X or dinahvp.77 on Signal.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: 5 houses collapse as Imelda and Humberto slam North Carolina's coast

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Homes collapse as waves from hurricanes Imelda, Humberto slam North Carolina's Outer Banks

Homes collapse as waves from hurricanes Imelda, Humberto slam North Carolina's Outer Banks Dinah Voyles Pulver, USA TODAY ...

 

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