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Sunday, December 7, 2025

Christmas unplugged: Australian teen social media ban brings holiday headspace woes

December 07, 2025
Christmas unplugged: Australian teen social media ban brings holiday headspace woes

By Byron Kaye and Cordelia Hsu

SYDNEY, Dec 8 (Reuters) - Sydney teenager Ayris Tolson believes the start of her first summer holiday under Australia's youth social media ban will be relatively easy as she spends time with family, but as the weeks drift by, she fears being alone and isolated.

From December 10, Australia will impose a ​world-first social media ban on under-16s, blocking them from TikTok, Alphabet's YouTube and Meta's Instagram.

More than one million under-16s will lose their accounts and nine days later break ‌for the long December-to-January holidays when most of Australia shuts down until February.

"You're basically isolated for about six weeks during the school holidays," Tolson, 15, told Reuters. "As it continues on, I will probably feel more attached to social media. ‌It's not such a good time."

Mental health experts say a rollout right before the longest school holiday of the year may worsen the shock for teenagers who rely on the technology for socialisation and won't have the grounding routines, or institutional supports, of school.

The cold turkey effect of no school and no socials will be especially pronounced for children in remote locations or minority groups like migrants and LGBTQI+ people, who lean more on the internet for connection with like-minded people, the experts say.

No quantitative studies show how many Australians under 16 use social media to access mental health services, but a 2024 ⁠survey by youth service ReachOut.com found 72% of those aged 16-25 ‌use it to seek mental health advice and nearly half use it to find professional help.

"If you were at school, there would have been a lot of conversation and chatter around it; it's a shared experience," said Nicola Palfrey, head of clinical leadership at headspace, a government-funded youth mental health ‍service.

"If you've got more time on your hands and you're in your head quite a bit, if you're feeling quite anxious or worried or sad, that's the sort of thing where time alone with your thoughts is not ideal. It's those people that are starting to feel concerned."

The Australian government has pitched the ban - which threatens platforms with a fine up to A$49.5 million ($33 million) - as beneficial to mental health since it will ​protect young people from bullying, harmful content and addictive algorithms.

At a conference this month, eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant said some young people in marginalised groups "feel more themselves online than ‌they do in the real world", and should visit various exempted online spaces including those run by headspace.

The government will collect two years of data following the ban on its "benefits, but also the unintended consequences", she said.

YOUTH SERVICES READY FOR INCREASE IN CASES

Already the timing - a byproduct of when the law passed through parliament - is prompting changes in youth services which rely on social media to reach young people.

Kids Helpline, a telephone and online service, typically experiences a lull over the summer. This year, it is training 16 additional counsellors, an increase of 10%, for a possible deluge of referrals due to the social media ban, said its head of virtual services Tony FitzGerald.

School-related stress typically eases over holidays, but "with young people being disconnected from being able to communicate, potentially, with ⁠each other on these platforms, that may actually increase anxiety", he said.

"We'll be making sure that we've got ​adequate counselling resources available to support that surge."

Lauren Frost, head of policy for the Youth Affairs Council Victoria, said ​she was getting so many inquiries from youth organisations about how to function without social media, she was planning a new national body to discuss reaching young people offline. But over the holidays, even offline options will be in short supply.

"The interaction that young people have with teachers or support staff or ‍youth workers will be less, so they won't be ⁠able to play that role of supporting young people through this time of transition," Frost said.

"They're feeling a lot of fear and a lot of anxiety."

At Fiona Stanley Hospital in Perth, a clinic treating addiction to gaming and social media will monitor for an uptick of presentations over the holidays, said its head of mental health and addiction ⁠services Daniela Vecchio.

Annie Wang, 14, said she uses various social media apps but wasn't too worried about the ban because she did most of her communicating on Discord, which is exempt since its main purpose is messaging.

For those without ‌Discord, she said: "They're basically just shut off from everyone, and they will be probably inside all of the school holidays, which is not good".

($1 = 1.5053 Australian dollars)

(Reporting ‌by Byron Kaye and Cordelia Hsu, with addition reporting by Stefica Bikesh; Editing by Michael Perry)

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Golden Globe nominations should give a skewed Oscar picture, plus a new podcast category

December 07, 2025
Golden Globe nominations should give a skewed Oscar picture, plus a new podcast category

Nominations to the 83rdGolden Globeswill be announced Monday morning. Expect to hear these movies called out more than once: "Sinners," "Wicked: For Good" and "One Battle After Another."

Those are some of the movies likely to among the top nominations getters. Since the Globes split their awards between drama and comedy-musical, and each category gets six nominees, there will be plenty of room for the favorites to get in, and for a few unexpected nominees, too.

Nominations will be revealed beginning at 8:15 a.m. Eastern on CBSNews.com and on CBS News YouTube and TikTok channels. A second wave of nominees will be read starting at 8:30 a.m. Eastern live on "CBS Mornings." This year's presenters are Marlon Wayans and Skye P. Marshall.

As the Globes continue to transition out of theirscandal-plagued past, there's one notable change this year. For the first time, the Globes are giving a best podcast trophy. That adds to the two-year-old award for cinematic and box-office achievement, a prize that so far has gone to "Barbie" and "Wicked."

After a series of scandals for the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, the group that previously put on the ceremony, the Globes were sold in 2023 to Todd Boehly's Eldridge Industries and Dick Clark Productions, a part of Penske Media. A new, larger voting body of 300-plus people now vote on the awards, which moved from NBC to CBSon a shorter, less expensive deal.

Nikki Glaseris returning as host to the Jan. 11 Globes, airing on CBS and streaming on Paramount+. In January, Glaser won good reviews for her first time emceeing the ceremony. Ratings were essentially unchanged, slightly dipping to 9.3 million viewers, according to Nielsen, from 9.4 million in 2024.

In the early going in Hollywood's awards season, Paul Thomas Anderson's"One Battle After Another" has dominatedand is seen as the Oscar best picture front-runner. Also in the mix areChloé Zhao's "Hamnet,"Joachim Trier's"Sentimental Value"and Josh Safdie's "Marty Supreme."

Helen Mirrenwill receive the Cecil B. DeMille Award in a separate prime-time special airing Jan. 8.Sarah Jessica Parkerwill be honored with the Carol Burnett Award.

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What to know about changes to Disney parks' disability policies

December 07, 2025
What to know about changes to Disney parks' disability policies

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Changes thatDisneymade to a popular program that lets qualifyingdisabled peopleskip long lines at its California and Floridatheme parksare too restrictive, disabled fans contend in a federal lawsuit and shareholder proposal that seek to expand eligibility.

The battle over who can skip long lines on popular rides because of their disabilities marks the latest struggle by Disney to accommodate disabled visitors while cracking down on past abuses. But some Disney fans saythe companyhas gone too far and has no right to determine who is disabled.

"This isn't right. This isn't what Walt and Roy would have wanted," said Shannon Bonadurer, referring tothe Disney brotherswho founded the entertainment empire. Despite being unable to wait for long periods of time in the heat because she uses an ileostomy bag, Bonadurer was denied a pass for the disability program.

In a statement, Disney said it was committed to providing a great experience to all visitors, particularly those with disabilities who may require special accommodations.

Here's a look at changes to Disney parks' policies for disabled visitors.

What is the disability program?

The Disability Access Service, or DAS, program allows pass-holders and their immediate family members to make an online reservation for a ride while in the park and then get into an expedited line that typically takes about 10 minutes when they're ready to go on the ride. DAS guests never have to wait in normal standby lines, which on the most popular attractions can be two hours or more.

The DAS program started in 2013in responseto past abuses by disabled "tour guides" who charged money, sometimes hundreds of dollars, to accompany able-bodied guests, enabling such guests to go to the front of lines. Disney says the DAS program needed changing because it had grown fourfold. Before last year's changes, the percentage of guests having DAS passes jumped from around 5% to 20% over the past dozen years "and showed no signs of slowing," the company said in court papers.

Disney parks make other accommodations for disabled visitors, including maps in Braille, a device that helps transfer visitors from wheelchairs to ride seats, quiet break locations and American Sign Language interpreters for some live shows. The parks permit some service animals on rides and allow some disabled guests to leave a line and rejoin their party before boarding a ride.

Who qualifies now?

Disney narrowed the scope from people with a wider range of disabilities to mostly guests who "due to a developmental disability such as autism or similar" have difficulties waiting in a long line. Under the changes, guests seeking a DAS pass must be interviewed via video chat by a Disney worker and a contracted medical professional who determine if the person is eligible. Visitors found to have lied can be barred from the parks.

Some people with disabilities who have been denied say the new policy is too restrictive. Not only was Bonadurer denied a pass, but so was her 25-year-old son, who is blind and has cerebral palsyand autism.

"They are making a determination about whether you're disabled enough," said Bonadurer, a professional travel adviser from Michigan. "I would love to wait in line with everyone else, and so would my son, since that would mean he has a normal life. But we don't, and unfortunately for us, we need adaptations to how we wait."

Disney says the Americans with Disabilities Act doesn't require equal treatment of people with varying disabilities. The company accommodates those visitors who don't meet the new DAS criteria with alternatives, Disney said in court filings responding to a federal lawsuit in California.

"For example, in a crowded movie theater, a person using a wheelchair may be entitled to priority seating even if they arrive shortly before the movie starts, while a deaf person may only be entitled to a seat with closed captioning," the company said.

At Disney's main theme park rival, Universal, disabled visitors can get shorter lines if they have a card issued by an international board that certifies venues for their accessibility.

What's next?

A shareholder proposal submitted on behalf of DAS Defenders, an advocacy group of Disney fans opposed to the DAS changes, calls on the company next year to commission an independent review of its disability policies and publicly release the findings. The shareholder proposal claims the change to the DAS program has contributed to lower park attendance.

Disney's attorneys told the Securities and Exchange Commission in a November letter that it intends to block the proposal ahead of the company's 2026 shareholder meeting, saying it was false and misleading about the reasons for an attendance decline, which the company attributed to hurricanes. The company also argued the shareholder proposal amounts to micromanaging day-to-day operations.

Follow Mike Schneider on Bluesky:@mikeysid.bsky.social

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Trump set to unveil $12 billion farm aid package, Bloomberg News says

December 07, 2025
Trump set to unveil $12 billion farm aid package, Bloomberg News says

Dec 7 (Reuters) - The United States is set ​to unveil a ‌long-awaited farm aid package on ‌Monday, offering assistance of $12 billion to farmers hit by low crop ⁠prices and ‌tariff policies, Bloomberg News said on ‍Sunday, citing a White House official.

President Donald Trump plans ​to announce the ‌package during an event attended by farmers, alongside Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Agriculture Secretary ⁠Brooke Rollins, the ​agency said.

Growers ​of cattle and crops from grains to ‍soybeans, cotton ⁠and potatoes will attend the event.

Reuters could ⁠not immediately verify the ‌report.

(Reporting by Anusha Shah ‌in Bengaluru)

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China's November exports top expectations, imports underperform

December 07, 2025
China's November exports top expectations, imports underperform

BEIJING, Dec 8 (Reuters) - China's exports topped forecasts in November, buoyed by a boost from atarifftruce with ​the U.S. even as weak factory activity and vanishing ‌returns from front-loading point to a challenging 2026.

Outbound shipments from the world's second-biggest ‌economy grew 5.9% year-on-year, customs data showed on Monday, reversing from a 1.1% contraction a month prior, and beating a 3.8% forecast in a Reuters poll.

Imports were up 1.9%, compared to a 1.0% ⁠uptick in October. ‌Economists had expected a 3.0% increase.

November kicked off with news that the United States and China had ‍agreed to scale back some of their tariffs and a raft of other measures after President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping ​met in South Korea on October 30.

Economists estimate that diminished ‌access to the U.S. market has reduced China's export growth by roughly 2 percentage points, equivalent to around 0.3% of GDP.

October's unexpected downturn, following an 8.3% surge the month prior, signalled that Chinese exporters' tactic of front-loading U.S.-bound shipments to beat Trump's ⁠tariffs had run its course.

Although Chinese ​factory owners reported an improvement in new ​export orders in November, they were still in contraction, underscoring continued uncertainty for manufacturers as they struggle to ‍replace demand in ⁠the absence of U.S. buyers.

An official survey tracking broader factory activity showed that the sector contracted for an eighth ⁠consecutive month.

China's trade surplus stood at $111.68 billion in November, from $90.07 billion recorded the ‌previous month, and beating a forecast of $100.2 billion.

(Reporting by ‌Joe CashEditing by Shri Navaratnam)

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Records reviewed by AP detail online monitoring, arrests in New Orleans immigration crackdown

December 07, 2025
A Border Patrol agent wears a tactical vest during an immigration operation in Kenner, Louisiana, on Friday. - Seth Herald/Reuters

New Orleans (AP) —State and federal authorities are closely tracking online criticism and demonstrations against theimmigration crackdown in New Orleans, monitoring message boards around the clock for threats to agents while compiling regular updates on public "sentiment" surrounding the arrests, according to law enforcement records reviewed by The Associated Press.

The intelligence gathering comes even as officials have released few details about the first arrests made last week as part of "Catahoula Crunch," prompting calls for greater transparency from local officials who say they've been kept in the dark about virtually every aspect of the operation.

"Online opinions still remain mixed, with some supporting the operations while others are against them," said a briefing circulated early Sunday to law enforcement. Earlier bulletins noted "a combination of groups urging the public to record ICE and Border Patrol" as well as "additional locations where agents can find immigrants."

Immigration authorities have insisted the sweeps are targeted at "criminal illegal aliens." But the law enforcement records detail criminal histories for less than a third of the 38 people arrested in the first two days of the operation.

Local leaders told the AP those numbers — which law enforcement officials were admonished not to distribute to the media — undermined the stated aim of the roundup. They also expressed concern that the online surveillance could chill free speech as authorities threaten to charge anyone interfering with immigration enforcement.

"It confirms what we already knew — this was not about public safety, it's about stoking chaos and fear and terrorizing communities," said state Sen. Royce Duplessis, a Democrat who represents New Orleans. "It's furthering a sick narrative of stereotypes that immigrants are violent."

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security did not respond to questions about the intelligence gathering and referred the AP to a priornews releasetouting "dozens of arrests." The agency has not released an accounting of the detainees taken into custody or their criminal histories.

Few initially arrested had violent criminal records

DHS has publicly detailed only six arrests stemming from the operation — all people with criminal histories — including a man they vaguely said was convicted of "homicide" and another convicted of sexual assault. The agency, which has several hundred agents on the ground in southeast Louisiana, has said it aims to makeat least 5,000 arrestsin the region over an operation expected to last up to two months.

"Americans should be able to live without fear of violent criminal illegal aliens harming them, their families or their neighbors," DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said.

DHS and Republican leaders have framed the crackdown as targeting the most violent offenders. But the records reviewed by the AP identify only nine of the 38 people arrested in the first days as having criminal histories that rose beyond traffic violations — information the intelligence bulletins warn "should not be distributed to the media."

Customs and Border Patrol agents question occupants of a vehicle they pulled over,during an immigration crackdown in Kenner, Louisiana, on Friday. - Gerald Herbert/AP

New Orleans City Council President J.P. Morrell said the stated goals of the operation to arrest violent offenders did not align with the reality of what is taking place.

"There's literally no information being given to the city of New Orleans whatsoever," Morrell said. "If the goal was for them to come here and augment existing law enforcement, to pursue violent criminals or people with extensive criminal histories, why wouldn't you be more transparent about who you've arrested and why?"

Morrell and other officials have said the crackdown appears to be a dragnet focused on people with brown skin, citing viral videos of encounters such as masked agents chasing a23-year-old U.S. citizenreturning home from the grocery store.

Law enforcement officials have been carefully tracking such footage and public reaction. "For some supporters, the videos with sounds of children crying in the background as their parents are placed under arrest, is weighing heavy on their hearts," one briefing stated.

Authorities monitoring public sentiment and protests

The records also shed new light on cooperation among state and federal authorities in an operation welcomed by Louisiana's Republican Gov. Jeff Landry. Both the FBI and Customs and Border Protection have stationed agents at the Louisiana State Analytical and Fusion Exchange, an intelligence and data sharing center that is closely following discussions on the online forum Reddit that local residents have used to exchange information about the immigration raids.

One briefing noted that some "have gone so far as to accuse agents of racially profiling Hispanic areas specifically." Another flagged social media posts suggesting agents "are not keeping with the mission of targeting criminal immigrants only." And a third pointed out that critics of the raids "bring up past hurricanes and the work done by immigrants" in their aftermath.

"The chatter is slower during the night, mainly just commenting on posts from earlier in the day," one of the briefings states. "Once daylight arrives and agencies are back out, the chatter and new posts will pick back up."

Wilma Fuentes yells at Customs and Border Patrol commander Gregory Bovino and some of his agents as they walk through a neighborhood during an immigration crackdown in Kenner, Louisiana, on Friday. - Gerald Herbert/AP

The briefings have identified no threats to law enforcement, but the fusion center has sought to debunk what it called false reports that a pedestrian was fatally struck by law enforcement. "It has been confirmed that this actually did not occur," the center told law enforcement on Saturday.

One briefing described an incident involving "suspicious persons/protesters" who showed up early Saturday at an ICE facility in St. Charles Parish, where records show the detainees were expected to be processed.

Some local officials said they had been unaware of the state's role in the online monitoring. Louisiana State Police pledged "operational support" to immigration authorities and warned the public that troopers will arrest anyone who assaults a federal agent or causes criminal damage to property.

"The Louisiana State Police remains vigilant in monitoring social media activity related to protests, activism and other forms of public response," Trooper Danny Berrincha, a state police spokesperson, wrote in an email to the AP. "Through the LSP Fusion Center, we actively track developments and facilitate the sharing of information and communication among our partner agencies."

The fusion center also has tracked the tools used by protesters to foil federal immigration enforcement, highlighting social media links to whistle handouts, trainings on filming federal agents and the emergence of a hotline for reporting arrests. The surveillance extended to activist discussions about immigration authorities' presence near an elementary school and recapped demonstrations inside the New Orleans City Council chambers and elsewhere.

"They can monitor me all they want," said Rachel Taber, an organizer with the New Orleans-based grassroots advocacy group Union Migrante, which shares crowdsourced reports and videos of the federal immigration enforcement operations. "We are not doing anything illegal."

Beth Davis, a spokesperson for Indivisible NOLA, which has organized some of the trainings described in the law enforcement briefings, said it was sad authorities seemed preoccupied with law-abiding citizens. "That they feel threatened by a bunch of community organizers that have nothing other than phones and whistles blows my mind."

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Behind the scenes shots from classic cinema sets people still talk about

December 07, 2025

Behind the Scenes Shots from Classic Cinema Sets

Every film has a different story behind the camera. Let's take a look at some behind-the-scenes shots from classic cinema sets that film fans still love to talk about.

Image Credit: IMDb

The Silence of the Lambs

Anthony Hopkins and director Jonathan Demme on the set of The Silence of the Lambs.

Image Credit: IMDb

Leon: The Professional

Behind the scenes shots from Leon: The Professional, with young Natalie Portman.

Image Credit: IMDb

Stir Crazy

Behind the scenes of Stir Crazy with Poitier and Richard Pryor.

Image Credit: IMDb

Pulp Fiction

Pulp Fiction behind the scenes with Uma Thurman and Quentin Tarantino.

Image Credit: IMDb

Blue Velvet

Kyle MacLachlan, Laura Dern, and David Lynch.

Image Credit: IMDb

Jaws

Steven Spielberg and Bruce the mechanical shark.

Image Credit: IMDb

The Shawshank Redemption

Director Frank Darabont with Morgan Freeman.

Image Credit: IMDb

Behind the Screen

Charlie Chaplin and Edna Purviance on the set of Behind the Screen.

Image Credit: IMDb

Joker

Joaquin Phoenix and director Todd Phillips on the set of Joker.

Image Credit: IMDb

Goodfellas

Martin Scorsese, Joe Pesci, Ray Liotta, and Robert De Niro.

Image Credit: IMDb

Black Panther

Chadwick Boseman on throne with director Ryan Coogler.

Image Credit: IMDb

Plenty

Tracey Ullman and Meryl Streep.

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This article was produced and syndicated byMediaFeed.us.

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