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Showing posts from April, 2026

The Nobu Signal: What Dr. Dre's New Relationship Reveals About the Move Nobody Saw Coming

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 You clicked because you felt it too. Dre's been moving quietly for two years — no headlines by choice, no visible personal life, just work — and something about this particular sighting felt different from the noise. You were right to click. Here's the full story, and the part that changes how you read everything that came before it. The Nobu detail is not incidental. The casting connection is not a coincidence. And the Nicole Young timeline isn't as closed as the tabloids have been treating it. Let's go through all three. Start with who Michelle Saniei is, because most of the coverage is skipping straight to the couple angle without establishing why this particular pairing carries the weight it does. Michelle Saniei is a cast member on The Valley — Bravo's spinoff from Vanderpump Rules centered on the next generation of the same social world. She is not a peripheral figure on the show. She's positioned within a cast dynamic built on ambition, image manageme...

Suspect Taken at Presidential Dinner — Staged Photo Op or Real Threat? America Can't Agree

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 Right now, a photograph taken inside the White House Correspondents' Dinner is detonating across the internet. A shirtless man — a suspected shooter — is face-down on the carpet of a formal presidential event, restrained by federal agents. A Secret Service agent was reportedly shot. The President was in the building. And within what felt like minutes of the incident being reported, the Trump administration was already using it to make the case for a project that critics have called a vanity play for years: a new White House ballroom. The threat was real. The response was immediate. The political benefit arrived even faster. That timeline is worth examining before this becomes the only story you hear. At the 2026 White House Correspondents' Dinner, a security incident unfolded when a male suspect was apprehended inside the venue. The individual was photographed shirtless and face-down on the carpet, restrained by agents. A Secret Service agent sustained a gunshot wound. The sus...

65,000 People Upvoted This Photo of Stephen Miller in a Crisis — And It Won't Let Up

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 This morning, a photograph detonated on Reddit and refuses to stop burning. Stephen Miller — the architect of family separation at the border, the man who built his career on using vulnerable people as political shields — was caught on camera doing the same thing to his own pregnant wife during a panic at a Washington event. Sixty-five thousand people have upvoted the image. Three thousand six hundred have commented. And the conversation it started isn't just about one awkward photo. It's about what a man does when the instinct-suppressing layer of public performance drops and the raw reflex takes over. What we saw this morning was a reflex. At a Washington event this week, a security incident sent the room into chaos. Stephen Miller, Senior Policy Advisor and the primary architect of the Trump administration's most aggressive immigration policies — including the family separation policy that resulted in thousands of children being removed from their parents — was photogra...

Viral Photo of Stephen Miller and His Pregnant Wife Has the Internet Split

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 This morning, a photo of Stephen Miller guiding his pregnant wife out of a panicked crowd at a Washington event hit r/pics and rocketed to 65,000 upvotes in hours. The internet declared it proof of cowardice. The headline wrote itself: "Using pregnant wife as human shield." What the screenshot doesn't tell you — what 3,600 comment threads argue about — is whether you're watching a man's worst instinct or his most human one. The answer matters. Because the same crowd calling him a coward would call him heartless if he'd run ahead. He couldn't win. And right now, neither can you figure out what you actually saw. At a high-profile Washington event this week, a security scare sent attendees scrambling. Stephen Miller, Senior Policy Advisor and one of the most polarizing figures in the current administration, was photographed directly behind his wife Katie Miller — who is visibly pregnant — with his hand placed on her chest as they moved toward an exit. The im...

Koinly 30% Off — The Tool That Reconstructs What Your 1099-DA Won't Report

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 Form 1099-DA reports your gross proceeds to the IRS. It does not report cost basis — because the exchange filing it doesn't have basis for assets that moved between platforms. The IRS now holds one side of the ledger. Koinly reconstructs the other side: every wallet, every transfer, every cost basis preserved in an unbroken chain from original purchase to final disposal. The 30% discount is available now via the link below. THE PROBLEM The 1099-DA arrived in early 2026 for the 2025 tax year. For many investors, the cost basis field is blank. This is not a filing error. The exchange reporting your proceeds never held custody of what you paid — those assets moved in from another platform, another wallet, another year. The IRS now has a document showing what you received. It does not have a document showing what you paid. If you cannot provide that document yourself, the IRS may treat your cost basis as zero. Tax attorneys have documented a case in which a proposed assessment of $...

You Probably Can't Reconstruct Your Full Crypto History. The IRS Just Made That a Legal Problem.

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 If you were active in crypto between 2017 and 2021, your transaction history is scattered. Some of it lives in Coinbase's servers. Some of it is on a Ledger you may or may not still have the seed phrase for. Some of it went through exchanges that no longer exist — Celsius, Voyager, Poloniex — platforms that deleted user accounts when they collapsed or wound down. Some of it moved through DeFi protocols that didn't issue receipts, across bridges that didn't track cost basis, between wallets you created once and never opened again. None of those individual decisions were irresponsible. You were using the tools that existed, in the way they were designed to be used. The problem is that crypto was architected to operate without centralized record-keeping. The IRS requires centralized records. Those two facts have just collided in a new audit form. What the Form Actually Does The IRS Small Business/Self-Employed Division began issuing a new examination document in late 2025. ...

The IRS Proposed $85,000 in Taxes on a $13,000 Gain. The Investor Did Nothing Wrong.

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A quiet structural problem is inflating crypto tax bills across the board. Here is what it is, why it happens, and what to do about it before you file. The investor had been reporting their crypto taxes for years. They used a CPA. They declared their gains and losses. They filed on time. When the IRS began requiring a checkbox on Form 1040 asking whether you had transacted in digital assets, they checked the correct box. By any reasonable standard, they were doing everything right. Then the notice arrived. The IRS was proposing a tax assessment of $85,000. The investor's actual gain — the difference between what they paid for their assets and what they received when they sold — was $13,000. The discrepancy was not the result of fraud, error, or evasion. It was the result of a documentation gap so common that tax attorneys have given it a name. The investor had moved their assets between platforms over the years. The exchange that reported their sale to the IRS had no record o...