The FBI has been political from the startTraveling this holiday season? 10 things the TSA wants you to know
Wisconsin football starting quarterback Tyler Van Dyke’s 2024 season was cut short by a torn ACL suffered in the first half of the Badgers' 42-10 loss to the Alabama Crimson Tide. Now, with only one game left in the season, questions still linger about Van Dyke’s future with the program. On Monday, head coach Luke Fickell offered an injury update that painted an uncertain picture for the graduate transfer’s potential comeback. “Yeah, I sat down with Tyler,” Fickell said when asked about Van Dyke’s plans. “He's got a long way to go, and his mindset is he thinks he would like to have another year. But he still doesn't know how well he's going to heal, how fast he's going to heal. He's obviously feeling better, and he's moving around, but there's still a long way to go. "I think that those are things that are on his mind.” Photo Credit: Christian Borman The uncertainty surrounding Van Dyke’s recovery timeline raises some concerns for both the player and the program's ability to plan for the future. Brought in as a graduate transfer from Miami, Van Dyke was expected to be a key piece in helping the Badgers offense take the next step under Fickell and former offensive coordinator Phil Longo . Before Van Dyke's injury, he showed flashes, completing 43-of-68 pass attempts for 422 yards, one touchdown through the air, and one score on the ground in three games. However, the injury derailed his season and added another layer of complexity to the Badgers’ plans moving forward. Absolute 🎯 from Tyler Van Dyke to Trech Kekahuna. pic.twitter.com/7hsTYQDxru As things stand, the Badgers QB room is staring down a potential overhaul after the season finale against Minnesota. Cole LaCrue has already announced his intent to enter the transfer portal when it opens on December 9, and uncertainty looms over the futures of both Braedyn Locke and Mabrey Mettauer, both brought in by Longo. Fickell’s comments indicate that Van Dyke is hopeful for a return in 2025, and he’s open to the idea. Still, the uncertainty surrounding his recovery means they'll likely have to explore the transfer portal to add stability to Wisconsin’s quarterback room. With the season finale approaching, the Badgers face an offseason full of questions at the most critical position — all while still needing to hire a new offensive coordinator. For more Wisconsin Badgers football and basketball content, subscribe to the Talkin' Badgers podcast. You can also follow Site Publisher Dillon Graff at @DillonGraff on X.A voting machine firm suing Fox News now wants to probe Murdoch family trust fight
MANCHESTER UNITED have ditched the role of sporting director after their failed Dan Ashworth experiment. Sir Jim Ratcliffe axed Ashworth following Saturday’s 3-2 home loss to Nottingham Forest . Ashworth, now a target for Prem rivals Arsenal , was United’s first ever sporting director. But he is gone after just five months — with the post consigned to history . Red Devils part-owner Ratcliffe decided that his Ineos right-hand man Sir Dave Brailsford , United chief exec Omar Berrada and technical director Jason Wilcox will share the responsibilities of the position. Ashworth, 53, was forced out of Old Trafford after losing a power battle with ex-City executive Berrada. The pair had a huge fall-out over how the club should move forward in a bid to get back to the top of English football . But Ashworth, who worked at Newcastle, Brighton, West Brom and the FA , could be offered a swift return. Arsenal are assessing options to replace Edu as sporting director at the Emirates and Ashworth’s unexpected availability has caught their eye. Ashworth has a close relationship with Gunners managing director Richard Garlick, who is leading the search to land a new sporting director. FOOTBALL FREE BETS AND SIGN UP DEALS THE blame game has another victim as things go from bad to worse at Old Trafford. Manchester United’s first sporting director, Dan Ashworth, arrived in the summer and is gone before Christmas. SunSport exclusively revealed last month that there was trouble at mill. That the new senior management team were already blaming each other for the mess the club were in. Chief executive Omar Berrada and Ashworth were trying to wash their hands of it all, claiming they had arrived too late after serving their gardening leave. New part owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe said making decisions was all down to them. Meanwhile, Jason Wilcox thought it was all a mess under previous boss Erik ten Hag but was part of the team that encouraged him to stay after every other candidate ran for cover. There is word Ashworth did not favour appointing his successor and new head coach Ruben Amorim, preferring an English manager with more experience in our game. Perhaps that was why ex-England gaffer Gareth Southgate’s name was always mentioned after they worked together at the FA. Either way, Saturday’s showing against Nottingham Forest, after their second-half capitulation at Arsenal a few days previously, proved too much. The pair worked together at West Brom for three years. Garlick was legal director at The Hawthorns and worked under Ashworth before replacing him as the club’s sporting director when he left to join the FA in 2013. Everton are also monitoring Ashworth as they wait for The Friedkin Group to complete a takeover. The club’s prospective new owners are in the process of conducting a structural review , which will lead to new appointments including a chief executive and technical director. SunSport can reveal Ashworth’s axe will also open the door to further cuts at United . Ashworth fought against too many cutbacks despite Ratcliffe wanting more . In total, 250 staff have been made redundant. But that is not the end as Carrington is set to be targeted again — with the academy and women’s footballing section likely to be streamlined.Judge rejects request to sideline a San Jose State volleyball player on grounds she’s transgenderCouple charged in ring suspected of stealing $1 million in Lululemon clothes
(Bloomberg) — Never miss an episode. Listen and follow The Big Take DC on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. After a messy, public competition between hopefuls, President-elect Donald Trump nominated hedge fund manager Scott Bessent to be the next Treasury secretary. On today’s Big Take DC podcast, hosts Saleha Mohsin and David Gura discuss why Trump chose Bessent, and how Bessent might approach the job. Listen and follow The Big Take DC on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. Terminal clients: click here to subscribe. Here is a lightly edited transcript of the conversation: David Gura: The hedge fund manager Scott Bessent is President-elect Donald Trump’s pick ... to be the next Secretary of the Treasury, and he finally got the nod ... after a very public – and kinda messy! – competition. Saleha Mohsin: It was a knife fight for a very stressful job. Gura: Bloomberg’s Saleha Mohsin covered that contest, as it played out – on television, on op-ed pages, and at Mar-a-Lago, where Trump has been preparing for his second term. And it dragged on for weeks: Mohsin: Scott Bessent looked like he was tipped to get the job, easy peasy. And then, he left town, he left Palm Beach, and Howard Lutnick, the co-chair of Trump’s transition efforts, and CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald, he moved in. Gura: And, Saleha says: Mohsin: We had Lutnick out there, talking and having his allies come in for him, and against Bessent, and then you had Bessent doing the same thing... Gura: That strategy backfired. Saleha says it made the president-elect so irritated, that he brought in more candidates, including Kevin Warsh, a former Federal Reserve governor, and Marc Rowan, the CEO of Apollo Global Management. In the end, Trump nominated Lutnick to run the Commerce Department... Warsh reportedly said he’s more interested in the job of Fed chair, when that opens up. So, Bessent got Treasury: Gura: What was it that sort of tipped things in his favor at the end? Mohsin: It might have been that no one really, other than Bessent, really wowed Trump. Gura: Trump has picked someone who knows Wall Street, and that seems to have impressed Wall Street: stocks rose and the dollar weakened, after the president-elect announced his decision. I’m David Gura, and this is the Big Take DC, from Bloomberg News. Today on the show, I’m joined by my co-host Saleha Mohsin to talk through... who is Scott Bessent? And if he’s confirmed by the US Senate, how will he approach the job, and advance his boss’ economic agenda? So President-elect Trump made this announcement after the market closed on a Friday. I think I got the email at 6:55 Eastern time. As you and our colleagues have talked to investors, what are they telling you about the president-elect’s pick? Mohsin: Markets seem happy. They see Bessent as bringing stability, which is something that we had in Trump 1.0. You know, as much turnover as you saw in Trump’s Cabinet, Steven Mnuchin stayed as Treasury secretary for all four years, and he was able to leverage relationships because people knew this man is going to stay, and he understands the plumbing of the global financial system. You know, that’s something that markets really want. They want stability, and if Bessent can somehow manage to provide that, I think he’ll end up being a successful Treasury secretary. Gura: What kind of career has Scott Bessent had up to this point? What’s his background? Mohsin: Yeah so he worked for George Soros. He was involved in the investor bet that broke the pound in the early ‘90s. And so he comes with a keen interest in currency policy. And you can tell he talks about that a lot and Donald Trump talks about dollar policy a lot. He also set up and ran his own hedge fund since about 2015 or 16, I think, he has been overseeing that and it was about a year or a little over a year ago that he re-entered Trump’s orbit, and started looking at Trump’s policies and saw that Trump’s stock was going to go up and he was right. Gura: You said “re-entered” Trump’s orbit. When did they meet? Mohsin: So, Bessent told me that he has known the Trump family for like 30 years, uh, and I think he knew Trump’s brother, and so he said, Oh, well, Donald Trump probably knew my face, but didn’t quite know exactly who I was, but he was close to Donald Trump Jr. That was sort of his door into Trump world about a year ago, and that’s how he got a first meeting with Donald Trump. Gura: What do your sources say about how the work that he’s done, so working with these big hedge funds, is likely to shape his perspective on this job, and maybe it would just be useful for you to describe all that a Treasury secretary has to do. It’s a huge remit. Mohsin: Yeah, it’s, it’s huge. People like to call the Treasury secretary the Chief Financial Officer of the United States, but that actually only refers to one third of the job. A Treasury secretary oversees debt issuance. And that’s somewhere we could see from a Treasury secretary Scott Bessent, a little bit of creativity, maybe in how our massive deficit is issued and how that’s structured and, and sort of the tenor of notes and things. He’s also going to be involved in tax policy and financial stability, international economic diplomacy. So being the representative for that at G7 and G20 meetings. And then the other big component is national security, and foreign policy by way of economic sanctions. Gura: As you talk to investors about him, do any of them express any reservations about him not having experience in Washington, not being a creature of D.C.? Not being someone like Janet Yellen, for instance, who spent the bulk of her career in Washington in a lot of these big, high profile jobs doing quite a bit of management? Mohsin: So there’s always a steep learning curve for a Treasury secretary, particularly when it comes to dealings with Congress. The example that comes up frequently, a more recent kind of screw up there or confusion or misreading of the room is Steven Mnuchin. I think it was 2017, he had to raise the debt ceiling and he went into a room full of Republican lawmakers and it was a private conference and said, just raise the debt ceiling for me. And they burst out of that room telling every reporter that this is what he said, “for me.” We’re not going to do it for you. We serve the American people, not you. And it was such a blunder. You know, Steven Mnuchin came in, he didn’t know any lawmakers very closely or how all this stuff really worked from a Washington perspective, did not have experience in the public sector. Tim Geithner knew. He came from the Federal Reserve. He’d been at Treasury as a civil servant in the 90s. Hank Paulson had no experience on that front. You would, you would hope people like that, they come in without hubris of knowing what you don’t know and then relying on people to help you navigate. And also just understanding that you come from a world where it’s about relationships and deal making, um, and just learning on the fly. You know, Bessent comes from Wall Street, but he doesn’t have the same experience of some of the big heavyweights that we’ve seen as Treasury secretary. So Bob Rubin, Hank Paulson, Steven Mnuchin, they loomed large because of their Goldman experience. Paulson, he was CEO, and he said that something about the way at Goldman you learn about serving the client, not serving your own ego, really prepared him to work in government, where his biggest client was the President. So Bessent doesn’t come from that sort of traditional part of Wall Street. Gura: After the break... What we know about how aligned Bessent is with Trump, and what that could tell us about how Bessent may approach the role of Treasury secretary.... Scott Bessent, President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee to be the next treasury secretary, helped Trump hone his messaging – about the economy – on the campaign trail. And when Trump announced he’d picked Bessent to lead Treasury, he said will quote, “support my Policies that will drive U.S. Competitiveness, and stop unfair Trade imbalances, work to create an Economy that places Growth at the forefront, especially through our coming World Energy Dominance.” How much uncertainty is there, Saleha, about where Scott Bessent stands on the president-elect’s biggest economic priorities? Mohsin: We know quite a bit, David, because he was, Bessent was kind of openly auditioning for this role. He would meet with reporters, do ed boards. He’s written op-eds for the Journal, for The Economist, for Fox, talking about different policies. I think it was Friday, November 15th, Bessent wrote an op ed talking about how supportive he is of tariffs as a tool of foreign policy, trade policy, national security. And so markets now are digging into those comments, things that he’s said, they kind of see someone with a Wall Street pedigree like Bessent as someone who might be a bit of a, a hindrance to Trump’s more protectionist or populist tendencies, but, that’s the open question to me, is how much say will Scott Bessent as Treasury secretary have over tariffs, if you have Howard Lutnick over at Commerce, who’s also overseeing USTR, the US Trade Representative’s office, to focus on tariffs and trade. I think markets should kind of keep an eye on how much sway Bessent really has with tariffs. Gura: We had this knife fight play out in the run up to these nominations of Howard Lutnick and Scott Bessent. Are people confident that the fight ends there, that when that moves into the Cabinet room, we’re not going to see the same kind of, of fighting? Mohsin: No, people are not confident in that at all. [laughs] In the first administration, we saw these kinds of knife fights play out. You know, cabinet officers leaking to the press or going on Fox News to make their case for the policy that they want implemented over someone else. And it doesn’t always bode well. Lutnick has secured a pretty big job. He has Commerce secretary, he’s also overseeing USTR, and that’s a new idea. Trump decided to put that under Lutnick’s purview, so the two men do not get along. That’s why it didn’t turn out where one is NEC director and one’s Treasury secretary, because Trump and the team realize these two men can’t work together. Gura: Scott Bessent said in an interview over the weekend, his top priority is going to be taxes. Is he going beyond just pushing for the continuation of the so called Trump tax cuts? Is it, is it bigger than that? Mohsin: Oh, I, yeah, I want, I have so many questions on how tax policy is going to unfold because you know, the first hundred day plan is a huge thing that we’re going to be watching for as we see officials rolled out and policy plans rolled out and, and signals given. Trump’s 2017 tax cuts, some of those tax cuts expire at the end of 2025, I think. Republicans own Congress, both chambers in their hands. So let’s see how far they can get. But I don’t know that Bessett has said anything, in grave detail, uh, about where that would go. We know publicly Donald Trump has talked about a lot of different kinds of tax cuts. Gura: Bessent is someone who has not shied away from talking about the deficit. He talked about it during an interview on Bloomberg Television, back in October: Bessent: I am very concerned about what is happening right now. We have never had a budget deficit like this. We are at 7% of GDP in terms of the deficit. We’ve never had this deficit. When it’s not a recession, not a war. And what do we have to show for it? Gura: How does he plan to reduce the size of the deficit? Mohsin: Yeah, I love deficit talk because everyone comes up with these great ideas of how to reduce the deficit, but Congress needs to do that, right? A Treasury secretary can lead the charge. Congress is the keeper of the purse, when it comes to spending and, and taxes. Any time an administration or a government has accomplished that, it is because Wall Street or investors or markets have thrown a tantrum that you have too much deficit. And I don’t see how a Trump administration or Congress makes the very difficult trade offs and cuts in spending that will be unpopular with voters unless they can blame it on markets or blame it on someone else. Gura: Scott Bessent’s going to play a role in picking the next chair of the Federal Reserve, advising the President elect on that. Mohsin: Yeah, let’s talk about the Fed. Donald Trump thinks that presidents should have a say on interest rates. We don’t know what that really means. And so I don’t know maybe this is some kind of creative thinking on Bessent’s part to say, okay look, he really wants to fire Powell or he really wants to set monetary policy or have a say. Maybe the way to do it where we’re not just causing a constitutional and markets crisis by sacking the Federal Reserve Chair, we do it by creating this shadow Fed Chair situation where you nominate or announce the name of who you will pick, send to the Senate for confirmation to be the next Federal Reserve Chair, and that person is providing forward guidance on what they would do, so markets start to look to that person’s comments over the sitting Federal Reserve Chair. But this is my number one question to Scott Bessent right now, is like how would that play out and how seriously should we take this plan? Gura: Effectively like a Fed chair in waiting. Mohsin: Yeah. Yeah. Gura: You covered the Treasury Department when Steven Mnuchin was running it, and he was there, as you said, for all four years of Donald Trump’s first term. If Scott Bessent is confirmed, what is going to determine how successful he is at the job? Mohsin: With Trump, it’s always maintaining Trump’s trust, and always making sure you’re aware of who he’s meeting with and trying to be the last person in the room as Bessent learned when he left Palm Beach and thought that he had bagged the job of Treasury secretary and then it kind of blew up. Mnuchin learned that. Steven Mnuchin learned that if you leave the president with Peter Navarro, then the trade advisor and like a you know a known China hawk, in the room with president too long, Trump is going to start asking questions like can we aggressively intervene in the US dollar to make it weaker and can we do x y and z that might really blow up, um, foreign relations or economic relations with other countries? So I think Scott, Scott Bessent will have to learn sort of to make sure that you stay in the good graces of the president, stay visible and are keeping tabs and keeping Treasury-related policies firmly in the hands of the Treasury department and not let others encroach on that remit.Trump chooses Pam Bondi for attorney general pick after Gaetz withdraws
On Saturday night, Donald Trump announced he intends to appoint Kash Patel as director of the FBI. The news sparked an immediate frenzy from establishment figures across media and politics. Legal and national security “experts” were deployed to the Sunday morning news shows to characterize the move as evidence that Trump intends to politicize the FBI and use it as a weapon against his many political opponents. The political establishment’s concerns about what a Trump FBI could do mirror a lot of what we’ve heard from the right in recent years as they found themselves in the Bureau’s crosshairs. But almost all of these complaints and warnings have operated under the assumption that—with maybe the exception of a few bad episodes in the 1960s—the FBI has long been an essential crime-fighting force that has only recently become—or threatens to become—corrupted by politics. In truth, the FBI has always been used as a weapon against political movements and rivals of the established political class. That’s the reason it was created. At the end of the 1800s, left-wing anarchists were attacking heads of state all across Europe. In a few short years, the king of Italy, the prime minister of Spain, the empress of Austria, and the president of France were all assassinated by anarchists. While no communist or anarchist movement had yet to take over a country, the tenacity of these activists and revolutionaries was seriously concerning those in power in the United States. Then, in 1901, President William McKinley was shot and killed by an anarchist while attending a meet-and-greet in Buffalo, New York, which brought his vice president, Theodore Roosevelt, into office. It was President Roosevelt who tapped his Attorney General Charles Bonaparte—the grandnephew of Napoleon—to create the FBI. The AG was required by law to get congressional approval before creating this new “investigative” service of special agents within the Department of Justice. In the spring of 1908, Bonaparte officially requested the money and authority to create the FBI. Congress came back with an emphatic no. Members of the House saw through the innocuous language of the request and figured out exactly what the president and AG were doing—creating a secret police force that was answerable only to them. House Democrats like Joseph Swagar and John J. Fitzgerald and Republicans like Walter I. Smith and George Waldo all loudly condemned the proposal, saying it called for a “system of espionage” comparable to the Tsar’s secret police in Russia that stood in stark contrast to the very principles at the heart of the American system. Congress explicitly forbade the AG from creating this new Bureau. So what did Bonaparte do? He waited for Congress to break for the summer and then went ahead and created the FBI anyway. Congress was only notified about the new federal police force half a year later when Bonaparte included a quick throw-away line at the end of his annual report: “It became necessary for the department to organize a small force of special agents of its own.” So, the FBI was not created in response to out-of-control crime; its creation was a crime. Immediately, the new Bureau was unleashed on anyone and everyone who was perceived as a threat to those in power. That started with left-wing anarchists but quickly expanded to include many antiwar activists as President Wilson pulled the country into World War I. From the outset, the FBI operated primarily as a domestic intelligence agency—recruiting spies within groups they were targeting and breaking into offices and homes, intercepting mail, and tapping the phones of anyone they considered a threat. As the years wore on—like most other executive agencies—the Bureau evolved away from serving the direct interests of whoever happened to sit in the Oval Office to instead serve its own interest and the interest of the broader entrenched, permanent power structure in Washington. In the ‘50s, ‘60s, and ‘70s, the FBI conducted covert operations aimed at inciting violence between domestic groups, breaking up political organizations it disapproved of, and, perhaps most famously, collecting blackmail on Martin Luther King Jr. that they then tried to use to drive him to commit suicide. Related Articles Commentary | A new Legislative session: Time for pocketbook pragmatism Commentary | Climate activists should pivot from costly pipe dreams to realistic solutions Commentary | Privacy agency oversteps authority, jeopardizes California’s opportunity to lead in AI Commentary | Newsom’s wrongheaded special session is a misuse of gubernatorial power Commentary | Scott Horton: Can Trump actually fend off the war hawks and bring peace? Although today’s FBI acknowledges and publicly disavows these past activities, they are still carrying out egregious operations that always seem to benefit the political class. The Bureau has taken up a kind of sting operation where, over and over again, agents find isolated, gullible, often mentally-handicapped young men, pretend to be political radicals or higher-ups in a terrorist organization, and then convince the young men to plan and carry out a terrorist attack with FBI-funds and resources. Agents then step in at the end and act like they heroically stopped a real plot. The FBI did this relentlessly with young Muslim men after 9/11. The arrests helped prolong the perception that the global war on terror and extreme measures like the Patriot Act were necessary. In recent years, the FBI has conducted a number of similar schemes with right-wing groups—advancing the establishment’s narrative that Donald Trump is radicalizing “uneducated” middle Americans and turning them into violent insurrectionists. And then there are, of course, all the ways the FBI directly tried to undermine and hinder Trump’s first term. Right-wingers are correctly deriding the establishment for panicking about Trump’s FBI doing to them what they have tried to do to him. But many—on both sides—go wrong when they present the Bureau as only recently, or imminently, being corrupted into serving the interests of those in power. That’s been its role since the beginning. Connor O’Keeffe ( @ConnorMOKeeffe ) produces media and content at the Mises Institute. This commentary is republished from the Mises Institute.Joe Jonas wouldn’t change a thing about being a girl dad. The Jonas Brothers singer, who shares daughters Willa , 4, and Delphine , 2, with ex Sophie Turner , finds great joy in raising his two daughters. In fact, he revealed that it has reawaken some of his child-like wonder. "As a parent myself, I’m also reliving childhood again through my kids’ eyes,” the 35-year-old shared Dec. 6 at The Wellness Oasis event in Miami, per People , “which is just the best feeling.” "I’m really making sure that I’m able to have a lot of fun," he continued. "This is so amazing that we get the opportunity to be on this earth and do what we get to do.” And as many of us do, Joe took a moment to reflect upon his childhood self and wonder what “little Joe” would do if he could see himself now. “Whether it’s enjoying your career, or hopefully on your way to enjoy your career, and you’ve got great friends and great people around you,” he explained, “I think really being able to tap into, hypothetically, what little Joe would really be into is having fun with whatever it is." While Joe and Sophie—who finalized their divorce in September—have often kept their lives with their little ones out of the spotlight, they have previously shared insight into how they are raising their girls. And for the Game of Thrones actress, part of that has included returning to the U.K after having previously lived in Los Angeles and Miami with Joe. "I'm so happy to be back," Sophie, 28, told Harper’s Bazaar in October. "It felt as if my life was on pause until I returned to England. I just never really feel like myself when I'm not in London, with my friends and family." But while she found great joy in returning home to her loved ones, she admitted that her divorce from Joe was heartbreaking —especially the time she had to spend away from her kids . "I'm going through a legal process right now where I can't really say much, but it was incredibly sad," Sophie, who is now dating Peregrine Pearson , explained. "We had a beautiful relationship, and it was hard." “Before I had kids, I was very depressed and anxious,” she added. “I would isolate [myself] a lot. Now, I think I live my life for them. I want them to see me having a social life and enjoying work, and thriving in my career and relationships. I want them to see a hard-working mum.” To look back at Joe and Sophie’s time together, keep reading... Romance rumors swirled as Sophie Turner and Joe Jonas were first spotted together at the MTV EMAs in November 2016. The duo were then spotted holding hands in Miami the following month. The lovebirds were spotted arriving to CAA's Golden Globes party at Catch LA in December 2016. In January 2017, the hot couple left a People Choice Awards after party hosted by DNCE . The pair left hand-in-hand and then got into a car together. The duo locked arms after a dinner date night at Craig's Restaurant in West Hollywood. The pair were spotted at LAX on March 5, 2017 in Los Angeles, CA. The singer was seen taking a romantic stroll with his girlfriend, who was wearing a New Kids on the Block shirt, through the SoHo district of New York City on April 13, 2017. Joe was spotted writing on his hands courtesy of his new lady, some of which read "Joe gives me da good good." Joe and Sophie were photographed while out on the town in NYC in May. Rocking denim-on-denim looks, the Jonas Brothers singer and the Game of Thrones actress walked it out in the SoHo neighborhood of NYC on May 3, 2017. Wearing workout clothes, the two held hands while taking a romantic stroll in the East Village neighborhood of NYC. Joe and Sophie walked arm in arm as they took a stroll through Venice, CA. The musician looked like quite the tourist, carrying a small camera and taking photos around town. Joe and Sophie picked a local restaurant to have lunch on the patio to bring their weekend to a end. The twosome walked their dog on September 7, 2017 in New York City. The two made out at the 2018 U.S. Open. At London's 34 Restaurant, the loved-up pair joined Nick Jonas and then-girlfriend Priyanka Chopra to help ring in the Bollywood star's 36th birthday in July 2018. For the October 2018 holiday, Joe cheekily dressed as Sophie's Game of Thrones character, Sansa Stark. She went as an adorable elephant. The DNCE member and The Staircase alum celebrated his brother Nick Jonas' wedding to Priyanka Chopra in Dehli, India on December 4, 2018. Sophie warmed Joe up with a kiss on the cheek at a March 2019 Rangers vs. Red Wings hockey game in NYC. The actress—along with Priyanka and Danielle Jonas —supported her beau and his brothers Nick and Joe at their April 2019 concert in Champs Downtown, a Penn State college bar. Joe fan was happy to be Sophie's plus-one to the HBO hit's season eight premiere in NYC on April 3, 2019. Sophie cheekily reunites with Jack Gleeson , her tyrannical lover from Game of Thrones , with her real life-beau inside the show's premiere party. After the Billboard Music Awards on May 1, Joe and Sophie shocked fans with a surprise wedding at a local Las Vegas chapel. As the couple exchanged ring pops—an Elvis impersonator officiated—pal Diplo captured the moment for Instagram live. After tying the knot in Sin City, the newlyweds lit up the 2019 Met Gala red carpet with their eye-catching designs and demure poses. This marked their first official event as a married couple. Joe and Sophie served lewks at the Louis Vuitton Cruise 2020 show in New York City. The couple brought the glitz and the glam to the Jonas Brothers ' Chasing Happiness documentary premiere. The two lovebirds attended the Dark Phoenix premiere in Los Angeles and the "Sucker" singer couldn't be more in awe of his leading lady. "I am so proud of you @sophiet and how hard you worked on this film," he shares on Instagram . "You did the research, you did the work, and you delivered. I loved this movie!!" Joe and Sophie went for an afternoon stroll with their dogs, Porky and Waldo. The two smooched in front of the Eiffel tower just shy of a week before they tied the knot in a second wedding ceremony in France. Joe shared this sweet snap on Instagram with the caption, "Nap game strong." The two get playful at Jardin De Tuileries in Paris days before their second wedding. Joe and Sophie are spotted in France days before their second wedding. The beaming bride and groom walk down the aisle after their second ceremony. Turner wore a stunning, custom-designed Louis Vuitton dress that was only outshined by the bride.
Dabney’s cannabis Thanksgiving recipes