Friday June 12, 2026


Tim DeKay - June 12, 1963 - Videos - Filmography


The future is being shaped by events beyond our control.


More Birthdays and News




"Disclosure Day"


Thursday June 11, 2026 - I was invited to a premiere of Stephen Spielberg's Disclosure Day before it opened in theaters across the country the next day. How you relate to the storyline depends on your background and experiences in the world of UFOlogy. I will say no more at this point. To be continued ...


FYI - I dressed in orange with royal blue and gold earrings that look like clocks - in celebration of the Knicks winning Game 4 of the NBA finals ... as they get one step closer to taking the series.


Human, Extraterrestrial, or Artificial Intelligence - the story is based on the journey of humanity in the alchemy of time. Blue and gold are the colors of my book and screenplay - the story of Sarah and Alexander in the alchemy of time. The screenplay got as far as Spielberg's and Roland Emmerich's readers.





UFOs in the News


Extraterrestrials and UFOs



Where not to look in the search for ET


Consciousness likely not unique to earthlings, paper says


How Steven Spielberg Convinced the Cast of Disclosure Day That Aliens Are Real


Disclosure Day Review: Steven Spielberg's Coda to a Lifetime of Alien Movies




The Knicks Take Game 4


Watch the Highlights on YouTube


Like a step out of time from the momentum of the Knicks' 13-game winning streak - to Monday night's loss to the Spurs - the energy that fueled New York's victories in the first two games of this series showed proudly once again. Here's what happened ...


The New York Knicks pulled off the greatest comeback in NBA Finals history rallying from a 29-point deficit to defeat the San Antonio Spurs in Game 4 by a score of 107-106. They now lead the best-of-seven NBA Finals 3-1 with a chance to clinch the title on Saturday in San Antonio in Game 5.


Not only did the Knicks come all the way back to stun the Spurs, but the way they did it - a tipped-in rebound by OG Anunoby with 1.2 seconds remaining to take the lead - was simply stunning at the end of one of the most remarkable halves of basketball in NBA history.


The Spurs dominated the first half, right from the opening tip, even before Knicks fans, including celebrities Taylor Swift, Timothe Chalamet and others had a chance to sit down in their seats.


Just over a minute into the game, Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns picked up two quick fouls, including a controversial second one that came following a review, forcing the 30-year-old to the bench.


New York never truly recovered in the opening two quarters of the game. The Spurs went on an offensive onslaught, breaking numerous NBA Finals records in the process.


San Antonio went into halftime with a 76-49 lead over the Knicks, the largest lead by a road team in Finals history, excluding the 2020 Covid-19 bubble series. The Spurs also connected on 14 three-pointers, the most made in the first half in Finals history.


But the second half was where the fun for the New York faithful started.


The previous largest comeback in Finals history came almost 20 years ago when the Boston Celtics came back from 24 points down against the Los Angeles Lakers. History was against the Knicks and it felt like the series was slipping away.


But the start of the second half gave them a small glimmer of hope after the Knicks went on a 13-0 run and eventually cut the lead to 15 points heading into the final quarter.


The Knicks continued to chip away at the Spurs' lead little by little throughout the fourth quarter, with Madison Square Garden getting louder and louder as belief surged through the building. The lead got into single digits and then got closer until it was finally just one possession.


Knicks All-Star guard Brunson was the spark plug, giving New York their first lead of the game with just 1:22 left in the fourth quarter.


The Spurs took a 106-105 lead with just 30 seconds remaining, and the Garden was on its feet, hoping to witness history.


With just over five seconds remaining, Brunson got the inbounds pass and chucked up a long three-pointer that hit the front of the rim. Anunoby leapt above the Spurs defenders and tipped in the shot, which proved to be the game-winner with 1.2 left, sending the Garden into delirium.


The Spurs still had plenty of time to get a shot up, but Stephon Castle wasn't able to hoist it on the inbound pass, securing the historic victory for New York, who are now just a game away from their first title since 1973.


While Brunson's game-high 36 points led the way, it was Anunoby's 33 points on 7-for-9 shooting from three that really did the heavy lifting for the Knicks.


Early in Monday's Game 3, Victor Wembanyama appeared to shove Jalen Brunson, but no call was made on the court. The league retroactively reviewed the no-call but decided not to upgrade the play to a flagrant on the 22-year-old French superstar. On top of that, Knicks head coach Mike Brown was critical of the refs over the Spurs' free-throw discrepancy of 24 to New York's eight in the second half.


Fast forward to Wednesday and Wembanyama heard it from the Garden crowd before tip off and every time he touched the ball. The Frenchman was at the center of some big moments throughout the game. Mitchell Robinson elbowed Wembanyama in the first quarter, with the big man getting a flagrant.


Early in the third quarter, Wembanyama elbowed Towns in the face and was charged with a flagrant I, meaning he now has three flagrant points this postseason and is one more away from an automatic suspension. Wemby downplayed having to change the way he plays the rest of the series after the game.


Inside and out, New York City erupted into absolute pandemonium and chaotic celebration. Minutes after OG Anunoby tipped in the game-winning basket with 1.2 seconds remaining, thousands of fans flooded Seventh and Eighth Avenues. Others swarmed Manhattan streets, climbed light poles, and blocked traffic after witnessing the team pull off a historic, 29-point comeback to defeat the San Antonio Spurs 107-106 in Game 4 of the NBA Finals.


Mass crowds completely blocked intersections around Madison Square Garden. City buses, garbage trucks, and taxis blared their horns to join the celebration. Fans shimmied up light poles, lit flares, and swarmed vehicles. Nearly a dozen people climbed on top of parked NYPD box trucks and cruisers in Midtown Manhattan.


Street corners from the East Village to Astoria and Harlem echoed with thunderous chants of "Knicks in Five!" and "Go New York, Go New York, Go!". The rowdy atmosphere prompted the deployment of hundreds of officers, including the NYPD's Strategic Response Group. Police used loudspeakers to disperse crowds blocking the roadways, resulting in multiple arrests.


Inside the Garden, the roaring crowd completely drowned out standard postgame television interviews. Broadcasters reported that even 10 to 15 minutes after the final buzzer, almost no one had left the arena as fans stayed to scream and dance. Arena security guards playfully directed the lingering crowd toward the exits by shouting, "Goodnight! See you at the parade!"


The star-studded "Celeb Row" courtside mirrored the frenzied energy of the streets. Taylor Swift and Mariska Hargitay jumped up and down while aggressively waving Knicks rally towels. Timothe Chalamet clapped his hands in utter disbelief and appeared to fight back tears of joy. Ben Stiller, Larry David, and Jerry Seinfeld were also spotted in a state of shock, celebrating while walking through the arena tunnels.


On social media, the sports world went into meltdown over what was widely called the largest comeback in NBA Finals history. Many fans noted that after two decades of having the worst record in the NBA and 14 head coaches, the unhinged behavior was totally justified. Fans flooded the comments sections praising Jalen Brunson for leading the second-half charge and crowning OG Anunoby a New York legend for finishing the job.


With Game 5 looming, the city is on edge and ready to explode if the Knicks can close out the series which now shifts back to San Antonio for Game 5 on Saturday at the Frost Bank Center.




June 11 - July 19, 2026


FIFA World Cup Website - Tournaments - Live From ESPN - Wikipedia


The matches are underway, but this year's tournament isn't just a test of tactical brilliance - it's an absolute endurance test for everyone involved. Spanning three nations, four time zones, and a massive 104-match schedule, the sheer scale of this World Cup is introducing major logistical and environmental challenges. Cross-continental travel is wreaking havoc on recovery.


Other challenges for players and fans: expenses, drones, heat, trafficking networks in drugs and people, crowd diseases, fake merch, to name a few. Through it all history will be made, memories will be created, friendships will develop, as the world's most popular sport will once again prove its unique power to unite a fractured world.


When the final whistle blows, the true legacy of World Cup 2026 won't just be the scores or the trophies. It will be the resilience of the human spirit - the athletes who pushed through physical exhaustion, the cities that stood up to protect the vulnerable, and the millions of fans who crossed borders to share a simple, universal passion.




June 14 marks a historic moment in Washington, D.C. as Donald Trump celebrates his 80th birthday on the White House South Lawn by hosting UFC Freedom 250. A massive, 600-ton steel arch and a 4,000-seat outdoor stadium have been built right on the lawn, turning the presidential grounds into an official sports arena.


The historic card, part of the nation's 250th-anniversary celebrations, will feature fighters walking straight out of the Oval Office and into the Octagon setting the stage for an event unlike anything in White House history. To quote Trump, "Like nothing the world has ever seen before".


From the high-stakes hardwood of the NBA Finals to the global stage of the World Cup, and now to a championship UFC night at the White House - the summer is defined by nonstop momentum and global attention. From NY to San Antonio to Washington and stadiums around the world, the season moves from one defining moment to the next, as the kinetic energy of sport, spectacle, and competition never lets up.


Huge '8647' etched into grass on the National Mall, aerial images show




Astronomy in the News


Astronomy Index


See the 'crawling,' ball-shaped robot that rolled around the moon during Japan's historic first landing


On the edge of the Milky Way, a dwarf galaxy is being ripped in half by its big sibling


Astronomers Unveil Record-Breaking Haul of 161 New Black Hole Collisions


Astronomers Find Strongest Evidence Yet for Magnetic Fields on Alien Worlds


Ancient Meteorite Reveals a Forgotten Planet That Existed 4.5 Billion Years Ago


NASA's Latest Update on International Space Station Leak


NASA Moves to Preserve Hubble With Ambitious Orbital Rescue Mission





Physics in the News


Physics


Hidden Phase of Matter Finally Captured After Decades of Predictions


The Strange 'Spacetime Crystal' That Can Suddenly Turn Into a Black Hole


'Crystals' of space-time could be the origins of certain rare black holes, theoretical study hints


An underground detector in China unveils its first major findings about mysterious ghost particles


What is space-time? A mystery at the heart of reality


Physicists harness potential of quantum phase transitions


Giant underground neutrino detector brings scientists closer to cracking the neutrino puzzle


Hidden Phase of Matter Finally Captured After Decades of Predictions




Chemistry in the News


Chemistry ~ ~ Metallurgy ~ ~ Minerals


This yeast-based 3D printed biomaterial could one day replace your wallpaper and drapes





Technology in the News


Artificial Intelligence ~ ~ Technology


They Spent Years on a Math Problem. Then They Were Scooped by A.I. Artificial intelligence is mastering the kinds of projects that have long helped to build the careers of young mathematicians. What does that mean for their future?


Scientists Are Building Electronics That Stretch Like Human Skin and Learn Like a Brain


AI could consume up to 3% of world's electricity the UN warns


5 ways data centers endanger their local communities and the country as a whole





Walking in the News


Walking


Scientists Discover a Strange Global Pattern in The Way Humans Walk


Scientists Uncover Why Walking Gets Slower and More Exhausting As We Age




Health in the News


Health Files ~ Alternative Healing



World's First AI‑Designed Vaccine Tested in Humans For The First Time


World First: Patient Receives High-Risk Therapy to Make Cells Young Again


The Tragic Case of The Youngest Person Ever Diagnosed With Alzheimer's


Animal vs. Plant Protein: Scientists Found a Surprising Nutritional Difference


Protecting heart health in an era of temperature extremes





Brain in the News


Brain Index


Scientists discover the brain chemical that helps you break bad habits





Genetics in the News


Genetics


Scientists Edit Human Embryo Genes With Startling Precision





Cloning in the News


Cloning Files Updated


More Top Horses Are Being Cloned, Rattling the World of Equestrian Sports





Planet Earth In the News


Planet Earth Index


Haunting Sounds of The World's Largest Living Thing Recorded. A forest, made up of a single tree known as Pando, has 47,000 stems (all with the same DNA) sprouting from a shared root system across 100 acres (40 hectares) in Utah


Hail Is Changing, And Scientists Warn It Could Become More Dangerous


A Strange 'Cold Blob' in The Atlantic Signals We're Almost at a Tipping Point


Atlantic 'cold blob' caused by weakening ocean current system that's likely nearing a tipping point, reanalysis finds


Shallow M6.0 earthquake hit Auckland Islands, New Zealand region on Tuesday


A 7.8 magnitude quake in the Philippines kills at least 19, fells buildings and sets off a tsunami on Monday


6.1-magnitude earthquake near Cuba felt across southern Florida





Archaeology in the News


Archaeology


Scientists have brought back the legendary golden sea silk of antiquity - and revealed why its dazzling color can survive for centuries without fading


Ancient clay figurine from Guatemala may bear the oldest written numbers in Mesoamerica

A Student Searched a Dataset on a Hard Drive and Found a Massive Lost Maya City Hidden Beneath the Jungle


- - -


Scientists Uncover Surprising Secrets of a Mysterious Man Buried in Finland 400 Years Ago


A Roman helmet treasure hidden beneath the sea for centuries has been revealed as evidence of a vast medieval weapons trade network.


While Exploring Their School Basement, Students Came Across a Locked Door That Led to an Ancient Roman Villa Forgotten for Generations




Paleontology in the News


Paleontology Index


Extraordinary Fossils Solve a 500-Million-Year Evolution Mystery


Scientists Identify The World's Biggest Known Scorpion, The Size of a Dog   Science Alert - June 10, 2026


Scientists have finally identified the New Mexico reptile that had puzzled paleontologists for decades


Earth's first animals barely evolved until sex changed everything


Buried for 1.7 Billion Years: These Ancient Fossils May Rewrite the Story of Complex Life












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