Shane Lowry sends Tommy Fleetwood a message after missing out on winning DP World India Championship

Shane Lowry came close to winning the DP World India Championship in New Delhi last week. After four rounds of thrilling golf at the Delhi Golf Club, Lowry tied for third place alongside Aaron Fitzpatrick and Thriston Lawrence.

While Lowry missed out on the opportunity to claim the title, he made sure to send a heartwarming message to the tournament winner, Tommy Fleetwood. On X (formerly Twitter), Lowry congratulated Fleetwood and summed up his memorable time in India. Shane Lowry wrote:

“Incredible week here in India, great people, great hospitality and some good golf too. Congrats to Tommy on another win. ☘️”

If Shane Lowry had won the DP World India Championship, it would have been his first professional victory since April 2024. Last year in April, Lowry teamed up with his good friend Rory McIlroy to win the Zurich Classic of New Orleans.

### How Much Did Shane Lowry Earn for Finishing Third?

The DP World India Championship featured a total prize purse of €3,447,880 (approximately $4 million). Out of this amount, Shane Lowry earned €176,746.78 for his tied third-place finish. The tournament winner, Tommy Fleetwood, received €580,057.00.

Here is a detailed look at the payout for the top finishers:

| Position | Player | Prize (€) |
|——————|———————-|——————–|
| 1. | Tommy Fleetwood | 580,057.00 |
| 2. | Keita Nakajima | 375,331.00 |
| T3. | Alex Fitzpatrick | 176,746.78 |
| T3. | Thriston Lawrence | 176,746.78 |
| T3. | Shane Lowry | 176,746.78 |
| 6. | Viktor Hovland | 102,363.00 |
| T7. | Joost Luiten | 102,363.00 |
| T7. | Jayden Schaper | 102,363.00 |
| T9. | Daniel Hillier | 72,336.52 |
| T9. | Michael Kim | 72,336.52 |
| T11. | Jorge Campillo | 60,735.38 |
| T11. | Ben Schmidt | 60,735.38 |
| T13. | Dan Bradbury | 53,569.97 |
| T13. | Tom Vaillant | 53,569.97 |
| T15. | Brandon Robinson Thompson | 49,134.24 |
| T15. | Andy Sullivan | 49,134.24 |
| T17. | Martin Couvra | 40,111.13 |
| T17. | Jens Dantorp | 40,111.13 |
| T17. | Alfredo Garcia-Heredia | 40,111.13 |
| T17. | Casey Jarvis | 40,111.13 |
| T17. | Andrea Pavan | 40,111.13 |
| T17. | David Ravetto | 40,111.13 |
| T17. | Marcel Schneider | 40,111.13 |
| T17. | Freddy Schott | 40,111.13 |
| T17. | Bernd Wiesberger | 40,111.13 |
| 26. | Eugenio Chacarra | 32,414.95 |
| T26. | Andreas Halvorsen | 32,414.95 |
| T26. | Brian Harman | 32,414.95 |
| T26. | Frederic Lacroix | 32,414.95 |
| T26. | Rory McIlroy | 32,414.95 |

The payout continued down the rankings, with players receiving varying amounts based on their finishing positions.

Shane Lowry’s performance at the DP World India Championship was commendable, and his gracious message to Tommy Fleetwood highlighted the sportsmanship and respect between the players. With more tournaments ahead, golf fans will be eagerly watching to see if Lowry can add more victories to his resume soon.
https://www.sportskeeda.com/golf/news-shane-lowry-sends-tommy-fleetwood-message-missing-winning-dp-world-india-championship

Netflix shares slide on rare earnings miss — snapping six-quarter profit streak

Netflix Misses Earnings Target, Cites Brazilian Tax Dispute as Cause

Netflix missed the earnings target set by stock market analysts during its latest quarter, marking a break in the company’s six-quarter streak of posting profits that exceeded expectations. The Los Gatos, Calif.-based streaming giant attributed the earnings shortfall to an unexpected $619 million expense related to a tax dispute in Brazil.

Despite this setback, Netflix highlighted its strong lineup of distinctive TV series and films, which have kept its audience engaged. The company also noted a successful combination of subscriber fees and increased ad sales that helped deliver revenue in line with analyst forecasts.

Investors, however, were not entirely reassured by the explanation. Following the earnings announcement on Tuesday, Netflix’s shares fell approximately 6% in extended trading.

Diverging Analyst Opinions

Analyst reactions to Netflix’s third-quarter report were mixed. Thomas Monteiro, an analyst at Investing.com, expressed concern that Netflix might be using the Brazilian tax hit to mask underlying signs of slowing subscriber growth and advertising revenue amid economic uncertainty. “The truth is that the company failed to deliver the kind of growth we’ve grown used to over the past couple of years,” he said.

Conversely, Jeremy Mullin of Zacks took a more optimistic view, stating that Netflix’s “underlying story remains solid” and sees little cause for concern.

Financial Highlights

In the July-September quarter, Netflix earned $2.5 billion, or $5.87 per share, representing an 8% increase from the same period last year. Revenue rose 17% year-over-year to $11.5 billion.

Analysts surveyed by FactSet Research had expected Netflix to earn $6.96 per share on revenue of $11.5 billion. While the company matched revenue estimates, it fell short on earnings per share, primarily due to the Brazilian tax expense.

A Shift in Focus

Netflix has increasingly emphasized delivering solid financial growth over quarterly subscriber gains. As part of this strategic shift, the company stopped disclosing its subscriber numbers at the end of last year. This change has so far been effective, with Netflix’s stock price rising approximately 40% this year—though the dip in extended trading following the earnings release suggests some of those gains may be at risk.

Subscriber Growth and Market Position

Although Netflix no longer reports specific subscriber data, this year’s revenue growth suggests its worldwide subscriber base has increased from roughly 302 million at the end of last year, maintaining the company’s lead among video streamers. This is notable even as well-funded rivals such as Amazon and Apple continue expanding their programming selections.

In the company’s quarterly conference call, co-CEO Ted Sarandos revealed that Netflix’s total worldwide audience—including multiple viewers within the same subscriber household—is approaching 1 billion.

“We have a better understanding of the streaming business than any of our competitors,” asserted Greg Peters, Netflix’s other co-CEO, during the call.

Diversification Efforts

Netflix has sustained its market leadership by diversifying its offerings, adding live sports and video games alongside its extensive scripted programming. The company plans to expand this diversification further by introducing video podcasts in partnership with Spotify next year.

As the streaming landscape evolves, Netflix’s strategy focuses on broadening its content portfolio to maintain user engagement and drive continued growth.
https://nypost.com/2025/10/21/media/netflix-shares-slide-on-rare-earnings-miss-snapping-six-quarter-profit-streak/

Saving lives in Ukraine will require Trump to play the strong cards at his disposal

President Donald Trump’s mission to stop the killing in Ukraine has hit a wall. His strategy to let both Moscow and Kyiv “claim victory” and halt the fighting is missing the agreement of one man: Vladimir Putin, the last obstacle to peace.

Last week, Trump and Putin held yet another high-stakes phone call to end the war. Once more, they talked for two hours and appeared to make progress. A peace summit between all sides seemed possible—only for Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov to derail the process by repeating Putin’s maximalist demands.

Putin has not altered his original aim: “The whole of Ukraine is ours,” as he has asserted. The Kremlin is repeating a familiar pattern. Putin clearly does not want peace, even if he keeps talking about it with Trump endlessly.

As Putin filibusters, Russia’s military is ramping up efforts to replace its catastrophic losses, recruiting troops as if the war will never end. Here, Russia faces a major limitation in sustaining its invasion: it cannot conscript soldiers, but must buy them.

The fact is any traditional call-up of Russian soldiers for Ukraine would threaten the regime’s stability—a significant weakness for the Kremlin. Russian officials learned this lesson the hard way back in September 2022 when they attempted a “partial” call-up of young men. The move sparked widespread public opposition, causing the Kremlin to quickly back down.

This leaves the “golden handshake”—lucrative cash bonuses and incentive packages for volunteering—as Russia’s primary option for recruiting cannon fodder. But this cost is reaching new heights.

To meet recruitment targets, some of Russia’s regions have significantly increased pay for voluntary service in Ukraine. In Tyumen, Siberia, officials this month began offering a lump sum of $36,560—approximately three times the area’s average yearly salary—on top of Moscow’s $5,086 cash bonus for volunteering to fight in Ukraine.

Other regions have similarly made extravagant increases to their signing bonuses and are adding extra cash to recruits’ lavish monthly salaries. But few volunteers live long enough to collect their regular pay: one recent report estimated the average life expectancy of a Russian recruit to be just one month after signing a contract.

Worse still for the Kremlin, even as the payroll and golden handshake costs rise, Russia’s economic might is shrinking. This puts Putin in a tight financial corner—and Ukraine, the United States, and the Europeans hold all the cards.

To end the war, Trump must make Putin pay an exponentially higher price for it.

Ukraine has taken the first step, targeting Russia’s ability to refine oil. No military or society can function for very long without diesel and gasoline, and Ukraine’s planners have clearly identified this weak point in the Kremlin’s war economy.

In a series of spectacular drone attacks, they have struck Russian refining plants, doing significant damage to this key industry.

During his meeting with Trump on Friday, Zelensky stressed his country’s need to sustain this “oil war” with US-made weapons that can strike even deeper inside Russia.

So far, the White House has waffled on delivering this hardware—but Trump has told Putin that he was considering it. The US foot-dragging must end. Ukraine should have the ability to take out Russia’s major military-industrial targets.

Next, the United States and Europe must be more aggressive in eliminating Russia’s “shadow fleet” of oil tankers. This fleet consists of older, poorly insured vessels that operate outside of Western-imposed price caps on oil and regulatory oversight, effectively allowing Russia to sell its oil and fund its war while circumventing sanctions.

NATO’s navies can and must play a more aggressive role in seizing Russian tankers that violate international law and sanctions.

Finally, and perhaps most important, the United States must drop the hammer of secondary sanctions on countries that continue to buy Russian oil.

Trump has repeatedly called on Europeans to stop funding both sides of the Ukraine war, noting that while the European Union sends military aid to Ukraine with one hand, members like Hungary, Slovakia, and Austria have funneled billions to Russia through energy payments.

They need to halt this back-door support for the Kremlin—or pay a price for their stubbornness.

On October 6, Ukraine’s helpline for Russian servicemembers, “I Want To Live,” released what it claimed were internal Russian documents showing that 86,744 Russian soldiers were killed in Ukraine during the first eight months of 2025—an average of 10,842 per month.

In addition, 33,966 soldiers are missing, 158,529 were wounded, and 2,311 captured.

Saving lives in Ukraine will require Trump to play the strong cards at his disposal just as he did this month in the Middle East. But to make that move, he must first make it clear that he views Russia as the aggressor.

*Peter Doran is an adjunct senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, where Dmitriy Shapiro is a research analyst.*
https://nypost.com/2025/10/21/opinion/saving-lives-in-ukraine-will-require-trump-to-play-the-strong-cards-at-his-disposal/

Crash on northbound lanes of I-75 at Mile Marker 42 shuts down all lanes; 1 hospitalized

**Man Rushed to Hospital Following Serious Crash on I-75 in West Broward**

WEST BROWARD, FLA. (WSVN) — A man has been rushed to the hospital following a serious crash on Interstate 75 in West Broward County.

Broward Sheriff Fire Rescue (BSFR) and Florida Highway Patrol units were dispatched to the scene near Mile Marker 42 after reports of a traffic crash. According to BSFR officials, a car involved in the crash rolled over onto its side.

The crash occurred in the northbound lanes. However, authorities have shut down both the northbound and southbound lanes while air rescue transports the injured man to Broward Health Medical Center. He is being treated as a Level 2 trauma alert.

Motorists are advised to avoid the area and seek alternate routes as emergency crews continue to manage the scene.

Please check back on WSVN.com and 7News for more updates on this developing story.
https://wsvn.com/news/local/broward/crash-on-northbound-lanes-of-i-75-at-mile-marker-42-shuts-down-all-lanes-1-hospitalized/

Gas station employee killed by Parker police after brandishing gun, agency says

A gas station employee was shot and killed by Parker police on Monday night after brandishing a gun at officers who were responding to calls about shots fired, officials said.

Officers responded to the area of Jordan Road and Mainstreet at around 10:20 p.m. after residents called 911 reporting gunfire, the Parker Police Department said in a news release Tuesday. Upon arrival, officers found shell casings and live ammunition in the parking lot of the T Square gas station located at 17050 E. Mainstreet.

The officers spoke with a gas station employee, who initially claimed to have witnessed the shooting. Police attempted to convince the man to surrender peacefully. However, the 32-year-old employee grabbed a gun from his waistband and pointed it at the officers, prompting them to open fire.

Officers immediately started medical aid, but the man later died at the hospital. No officers were injured during the incident. Six officers involved in the shooting have been placed on administrative leave.

The 23rd Judicial District Critical Incident Response Team is currently investigating the shooting.
https://www.denverpost.com/2025/10/21/parker-police-shooting-t-square/

“Didn’t realize you’re still bounty hunting”: Russell Wilson takes brutal shot at Sean Payton 2 days after Broncos HC seemingly shaded Giants QB

Russell Wilson clapped back at former coach Sean Payton a day after the Denver Broncos’ leader threw shade at the one-time Super Bowl champion.

The exchange between the two sparked reactions across the NFL community, highlighting the tension that can arise between players and coaches even after their official partnerships end.

Wilson’s response demonstrated his confidence and readiness to address criticism head-on, adding another chapter to the ongoing dialogue surrounding his career and legacy.
https://www.sportskeeda.com/nfl/news-didn-t-realize-you-re-still-bounty-hunting-russell-wilson-takes-brutal-shot-sean-payton-1-day-broncos-hc-seemingly-shaded-giants-qb

Kim Kardashian is minty fresh in zip-up vintage Dior at ‘All’s Fair’ Paris premiere

Hulu’s “All’s Fair” press tour is shaping up to be a supremely stylish affair for all parties involved. Thanks in part to perpetual fashion plate Kim Kardashian, who plays high-powered divorce attorney Allura Grant on the new Ryan Murphy-produced show, the female-led drama is getting just as much attention for its top-tier cast as its next-level costumes.

Since the cameras stopped rolling, the fashion party has continued to escalate offscreen—first in Los Angeles, and now in Paris. Even Kris Jenner has joined in on the red carpet parade of vintage and haute couture ensembles.

Today, Kardashian stepped out for the Paris premiere wearing a vintage John Galliano for Dior gown. The mint-colored, asymmetrical dress was crafted from embossed silk and featured roll-tab sleeves with a pointy collar. The reality TV star-turned-actress, who celebrates her 45th birthday today, left the dress dramatically unzipped, showing off her bare décolletage and signature cleavage. Her hair was parted in the center and slicked back into a bun with a piece left out, dangling like a ribbon.

Never one to forgo a photo op, Jenner, 69, accompanied the birthday girl on the red carpet. The MAC Cosmetics spokeswoman looked just as dazzling as the rest of the cast in a black-and-white Oscar de la Renta silk taffeta gown from the ’90s.

Earlier this year, the two were spotted in the City of Light when Kardashian testified about the 2016 Paris robbery in May, wearing a vintage John Galliano blazer dress inside the courtroom. Jenner also attended the “All’s Fair” premiere in Los Angeles last week, where the business-savvy duo was photographed together in equally stunning fashion on the red carpet.

At the LA premiere, Kim wore a sculptural Schiaparelli Haute Couture gown, crafted from nude satin overlaid with sheer black tulle. Her body-hugging look featured a dramatic draped skirt, corseted waist, and a halter neckline. She accessorized with nude diamond studs and a pear-shaped diamond ring by Lorraine Schwartz.

Kris, meanwhile, opted for a more colorful look, wearing a butter yellow Givenchy coat jacket with exaggerated lapels. It was tied at the waist with an oversized velvet ribbon that matched the matriarch’s long black gloves and opaque tights.

And while the red carpet attire for “All’s Fair” has been statement-making, the wardrobes for Kim and co-stars Teyana Taylor, Niecy Nash, Naomi Watts, Glenn Close, and Sarah Paulson leave absolutely no room for objection.

“All’s Fair” is available to stream on Hulu beginning November 4—the day before Kris Jenner’s 70th birthday. Until then, we can count on the mother-daughter duo to keep the fashion celebration going.
https://pagesix.com/2025/10/21/style/kim-kardashian-wears-vintage-dior-at-alls-fair-paris-premiere-with-kris-jenner/

Review: Add ‘Bugonia’ to Yorgos Lanthimos’ resume of strange, compelling films

Any film with the name Yorgos Lanthimos attached to it means you’re in for one strange and outrageous head trip. Depending upon your sentiments regarding the filmmaker’s, ahem, unique canon—*The Lobster*, *The Favourite*, *Poor Things*, *The Killing of a Sacred Deer*, and so on—you’ll either be super hyped or devoutly disinterested when a new film of his comes out.

*Bugonia* is a different beast, and I’d bet even the filmmaker’s staunchest detractors might find a kernel or two to savor in this latest insane and insanely brilliant concoction. It promises to be one of the wildest cinematic rides of 2025. That said, *Bugonia* does stick to the Lanthimos surreal playbook, hurling out shocks, reveling in abundant weirdness, and dousing everything in dark humor.

Surprisingly, the screenplay is written by someone else: hotshot Will Tracy (*Succession*, *The Menu*). His seamless script springboards off the 2003 Korean film *Save the Planet!*. But Lanthimos doesn’t always write his films’ screenplays. In fact, some of his best works, including *Poor Things* and *The Favourite*, were penned by others.

With *Bugonia*, the loopy twists, turns, and unexpected trap-door gotchas bind together and orbit a parable that taps into an irritated, angry zeitgeist—much like the creatively inspired and culturally relevant *One Battle After Another*.

The plot presents a focused scenario—but don’t be fooled by its simplicity. An unstable “worker bee,” so to speak, named Teddy (Jesse Plemons, getting a chance to flex his acting might) and his sidekick cousin Don (Aidan Delbis) launch their crackpot alien conspiracy theories by kidnapping Michelle (Oscar-winner and frequent Lanthimos collaborator Emma Stone, delivering another awards-caliber performance), the CEO of a pharmaceutical bioengineering company.

The two buffoons shave her head, chain her in the basement of a messy remote home, and accuse her of being an alien. The shrewd, mostly composed Michelle subjects both men to an earful of strategized corporate speak as she tries to finagle her way out of this mess. Michelle is a heartless professional who sees this as a battle of wits (herself) versus dimwits (her captors). As the days inch closer to a lunar eclipse, Teddy grows increasingly antsy.

That’s about all you should know about *Bugonia*, which morphs into something far more extraordinary than its mostly confined-space thriller trappings.

The performances are exceptional across the board, including Stavros Halkias as a cop who once babysat Teddy. The fine-tuned production values, mesmerizing cinematography (filmed in extra-defined VistaVision), wardrobe choices (Plemons’ grungy clothes and Stone’s pricey couture reveal much about their characters), and the mood-appropriate score from Jerskin Fendrix (*Poor Things*) heighten and accentuate Tracy’s screenplay.

All these excellent, exacting details coexist harmoniously to produce one of Lanthimos’s best films yet—a movie of startling ingenuity that also doubles as a humorous but pointed warning to us all.

**Details:**
Rating: 4 stars out of 4
Rated: R (bloody, violent scenes including a suicide, language)
Starring: Emma Stone, Jesse Plemons, Aidan Delbis, Stavros Halkias
Director: Yorgos Lanthimos
Running Time: 1 hour, 58 minutes
When & Where: Opens in select theaters Oct. 24, expands Oct. 31
https://www.mercurynews.com/2025/10/21/review-add-bugonia-to-yorgos-lanthimos-resume-of-strange-compelling-films/

Why Mariska Hargitay Jokingly Calls Her Kids “Losers”

**Watch: See Mariska Hargitay and Peter Hermann’s Rare Family Outing With 3 Kids on Red Carpet**

Mariska Hargitay isn’t pulling out the cuffs for her kids. The *Law & Order: Special Victims Unit* star recently shared insight into how she playfully handles her and husband Peter Hermann’s sons, August, 18, and Andrew, 13, and daughter, Amaya, 14, when they misbehave.

“I would say humor and comedy has saved my life,” Mariska explained in the October 21 episode of the *Good Hang with Amy Poehler* podcast. “I’m so grateful for that. When my kids do bad things, I call them losers, and then they say, ‘Oh, it’s not that bad if she’s calling us a loser.’ And we laugh through it. We just rip on the kids.”

She added, “I just say, ‘Don’t do that ’cause if you do that, you’re a hack and a loser. Is that what you want to be?’”

Indeed, the 61-year-old revealed that their dynamic has kept her family stronger than ever, thanks to Peter, 58, whom she married in 2004.

“This is why I’m still married, because my husband, sometimes I’m so upset or something’s happened and I’m so scared,” she recalled. “I’m like, ‘No, Peter. Something’s wrong. I feel a tightness in my chest and I might need to go to the hospital.’ He immediately goes into the comedy,” she continued, “and then as soon as I laugh, I go, ‘Should I be scared or not?’”

For Mariska, finding love — let alone on the set of *SVU* — was something she never imagined.

“We didn’t get married ‘til I was 40 and we dated for two years and then once he asked me to marry him, we got married in four months,” she explained. “I don’t think I could have handled a marriage earlier. I don’t think I’d be married. I just had too much to learn.”

Since saying “I do,” the *My Mom Jayne* filmmaker has learned a lot about what it takes to keep a relationship stronger than ever.

“We listen to each other and root for each other,” she told *E! News* in October 2024, “and challenge each other and are committed and so invested. We want the same things, and we cherish our union — that comes first.”

Despite being married for over two decades, she and the *Younger* actor have continued to learn more and more about each other.

“Peter is such a deep and soulful human,” she shared with *E!* in January 2024. “I just love getting to know him on a deeper level. And so there’s always more.”

For more eyebrow-raising celebrity confessions, keep reading.
https://www.eonline.com/news/1424096/mariska-hargitay-jokingly-calls-her-kids-losers?cmpid=rss-syndicate-genericrss-us-top_stories