A Houston-area 911 caller and Texas officers mistakenly identify a sex doll as a dead body Wednesday afternoon.
Author: Anthony Robledo, USA TODAY
Instant Pot & Pyrex parent company files for bankruptcy after year of cold sales
The kitchen ware giant Instant Brands filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection as consumer habits change since early pandemic days.
Video shows Georgia couple returning home to find vulture has broken into their house
A Georgia couple were surprised to come home and find a vulture inside their house with their dog. After some quick thinking, the bird was banished.
Armed carjacking in Washington ends with I-5 shut down as patrol cars catch on fire
Officers used an Apple AirTag to find and chase a carjacking suspect along I-5 in Tacoma and other cities before the pursuit ended in flames Monday.
Aliens among us? Vegas UFO report latest in UAP sightings investigated worldwide
Recent sightings of unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP) have been reported from Las Vegas and Mexico to Ukraine.
This $250,000 apartment under an LA bridge is in demand as one of the city’s cheapest homes
This Alhambra apartment under a bridge is one of the 10 Los Angeles County properties under $250,000.
Smoke, haze impact US air quality as Canadian wildfires continue to rage
Wildfires have already burned more than 6.7 million Canadian acres in 2023 causing hostile air conditions in the U.S., from the Ohio Valley to the South.
Bob McGrath, ‘Sesame Street’ veteran, dies at 90: ‘Brought joy and wonder to generations of children’
Bob McGrath, who played portrayed friendly music teacher Bob Johnson for over four decades on “Sesame Street,” has died. He was 90.
Axl Rose of Guns N’ Roses will stop throwing mic into crowd after fan was allegedly injured
Guns N’ Roses frontman Axl Rose will no longer throw his microphone into the crowd after a woman alleged she got hurt at a concert in Australia.
Queer conversion therapy is still practiced in the US. Experts say we need to talk about it.
Though bans on gay conversion therapy exist, experts say the pseudoscientific practice still exists illegally and mainly targets transgender people.