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Tag: Christmas Eve

  • New details emerge in Christmas Eve shooting by ICE officers in Glen Burnie – WTOP News

    Weeks after a Christmas Eve shooting involving ICE officers in Glen Burnie, Maryland, the Department of Homeland Security has released a revised account of the incident.

    Weeks after the shooting of a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainee in Glen Burnie, Maryland, on Christmas Eve, the Department of Homeland Security has issued a statement that differs from the account first provided to the media.

    Initially, in a social media post on Dec. 24, DHS stated the two men who were taken into custody by ICE in Glen Burnie were in a van they claimed had been driven “directly at ICE officers” and that the driver, Tiago Alexandre Sousa-Martins, was shot by officers “defensively.”

    The account described a second man, Solomon Antonio Serrano-Esquivel, as being in the passenger’s seat of the van driven by Sousa-Martins, and that he was injured when Sousa-Martins “wrecked his van.”

    But, on Friday, Anne Arundel County Police said in a news release that Serrano-Esquivel was not in the van driven by Sousa-Martins.

    In fact, he was “already in custody in an ICE vehicle.” It added that the other individual, Sousa-Martins, “was struck by gunfire while operating a separate vehicle.”

    What did DHS say?

    On Friday afternoon, DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement to WTOP that ICE officers were involved in a “targeted immigration enforcement operation” during the Glen Burnie incident, and that officers approached the van driven by Sousa-Martins and told him to turn off the engine.

    Sousa-Martins tried to drive off and “weaponized his vehicles and began ramming his van into several ICE vehicles,” according to the release.

    “He then drove his van directly at ICE officers, it appeared he was trying to run them over.

    It was that action, the release states, that then prompted agents to “defensively” fire their service weapons, hitting Sousa-Martins who then “wrecked his van between two buildings, injuring (Serrano-Esquivel).”

    Friday’s statement indicated officers “rendered immediate medical aid” to both men.

    According to DHS, both men are in the United States illegally. Sousa-Martins is originally from Portugal and Serrano-Esquivel is from El Salvador.

    Anne Arundel County police said the Christmas Eve shooting remains under investigation, and that anyone with information should contact them.

    In Wednesday’s fatal shooting in Minneapolis, DHS officials stated 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good tried to run over officers before she was shot and killed.

    A day after Good was killed, federal immigration agents shot and wounded two people in a vehicle outside a hospital in Portland. DHS claimed the driver attempted to “weaponize” his vehicle to strike the officers.

    Kate Ryan

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  • 12-year-old boy stops burglar in his home

    A family on Long Island, New York, is crediting their 12-year-old with saving the day.They say he did all the right things when someone broke into their house. 12-year-old Tristen Taylor of Medford was home alone in his bedroom midday Tuesday when he heard the kitchen window break and footsteps inside the house.A stranger was walking from room to room.”I said, I have to get out the house,” Tristen said. It may sound like the Christmas classic “Home Alone,” but unlike the holiday movie, there were no traps or pranks — just quick thinking, a fast police response and a child who did all the right things.After getting away through a ground-floor window, he called 911. As the man rummaged through the house, Tristen hid behind the garage.”I was on the phone with them, waiting for them to get here,” he said.Suffolk County police arrived in less than three minutes, catching the thief red-handed.”He is our little hero,” said Timothea Taylor, Tristen’s grandmother.”We were very proud that he was able to keep his composure and call the police as quickly as he did. Basically, without even thinking about it, he automatically called 911.”Tristen’s family credits movies he’s seen, plus his good instincts.To his neighbors, he’s also a hero for stopping a brazen burglar.Mike Campanella, a neighbor, said, “I would hope my son would have done the same thing, when someone is breaking into the house — caution is to get out and then call the police.””You just have to be brave and call them,” Tristen said. The suspect now faces burglary charges.He pleaded not guilty at his arraignment on Wednesday.

    A family on Long Island, New York, is crediting their 12-year-old with saving the day.

    They say he did all the right things when someone broke into their house.

    12-year-old Tristen Taylor of Medford was home alone in his bedroom midday Tuesday when he heard the kitchen window break and footsteps inside the house.

    A stranger was walking from room to room.

    “I said, I have to get out the house,” Tristen said.

    It may sound like the Christmas classic “Home Alone,” but unlike the holiday movie, there were no traps or pranks — just quick thinking, a fast police response and a child who did all the right things.

    After getting away through a ground-floor window, he called 911. As the man rummaged through the house, Tristen hid behind the garage.

    “I was on the phone with them, waiting for them to get here,” he said.

    Suffolk County police arrived in less than three minutes, catching the thief red-handed.

    “He is our little hero,” said Timothea Taylor, Tristen’s grandmother.

    “We were very proud that he was able to keep his composure and call the police as quickly as he did. Basically, without even thinking about it, he automatically called 911.”

    Tristen’s family credits movies he’s seen, plus his good instincts.

    To his neighbors, he’s also a hero for stopping a brazen burglar.

    Mike Campanella, a neighbor, said, “I would hope my son would have done the same thing, when someone is breaking into the house — caution is to get out and then call the police.”

    “You just have to be brave and call them,” Tristen said.

    The suspect now faces burglary charges.

    He pleaded not guilty at his arraignment on Wednesday.

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  • 12-year-old boy stops burglar in his home

    A family on Long Island, New York, is crediting their 12-year-old with saving the day.They say he did all the right things when someone broke into their house. 12-year-old Tristen Taylor of Medford was home alone in his bedroom midday Tuesday when he heard the kitchen window break and footsteps inside the house.A stranger was walking from room to room.”I said, I have to get out the house,” Tristen said. It may sound like the Christmas classic “Home Alone,” but unlike the holiday movie, there were no traps or pranks — just quick thinking, a fast police response and a child who did all the right things.After getting away through a ground-floor window, he called 911. As the man rummaged through the house, Tristen hid behind the garage.”I was on the phone with them, waiting for them to get here,” he said.Suffolk County police arrived in less than three minutes, catching the thief red-handed.”He is our little hero,” said Timothea Taylor, Tristen’s grandmother.”We were very proud that he was able to keep his composure and call the police as quickly as he did. Basically, without even thinking about it, he automatically called 911.”Tristen’s family credits movies he’s seen, plus his good instincts.To his neighbors, he’s also a hero for stopping a brazen burglar.Mike Campanella, a neighbor, said, “I would hope my son would have done the same thing, when someone is breaking into the house — caution is to get out and then call the police.””You just have to be brave and call them,” Tristen said. The suspect now faces burglary charges.He pleaded not guilty at his arraignment on Wednesday.

    A family on Long Island, New York, is crediting their 12-year-old with saving the day.

    They say he did all the right things when someone broke into their house.

    12-year-old Tristen Taylor of Medford was home alone in his bedroom midday Tuesday when he heard the kitchen window break and footsteps inside the house.

    A stranger was walking from room to room.

    “I said, I have to get out the house,” Tristen said.

    It may sound like the Christmas classic “Home Alone,” but unlike the holiday movie, there were no traps or pranks — just quick thinking, a fast police response and a child who did all the right things.

    After getting away through a ground-floor window, he called 911. As the man rummaged through the house, Tristen hid behind the garage.

    “I was on the phone with them, waiting for them to get here,” he said.

    Suffolk County police arrived in less than three minutes, catching the thief red-handed.

    “He is our little hero,” said Timothea Taylor, Tristen’s grandmother.

    “We were very proud that he was able to keep his composure and call the police as quickly as he did. Basically, without even thinking about it, he automatically called 911.”

    Tristen’s family credits movies he’s seen, plus his good instincts.

    To his neighbors, he’s also a hero for stopping a brazen burglar.

    Mike Campanella, a neighbor, said, “I would hope my son would have done the same thing, when someone is breaking into the house — caution is to get out and then call the police.”

    “You just have to be brave and call them,” Tristen said.

    The suspect now faces burglary charges.

    He pleaded not guilty at his arraignment on Wednesday.

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  • Fa La Laaawd! A Gallery Of Santa’s Favorites, Holly Jolly Hotties & Sleigh Belles Who Gifted The Gram With Stunning Holiday Looks

    Fa La Laaawd!

    Source: IG: @jusobeytay

    Ah yes, that wonderful time of year where we unwrap the Queen of Christmas, Mariah Carey, exchange gifts with loved ones, and swoon over Santa’s favorites like Latto who stunned in a Christmas-themed birthday photoshoot ahead of the holiday.

    Festive and fine, the “Go Girl” rapper continued her holiday tradition by donating gifts from trendy brands to her hometown of South Atlanta in the heart of Clayton County.

    The benevolent baddie did her big one for her community, blessing more than 500 Atlanta families at the epic giveaway for her Win Some Give Some foundation.

    In collaboration with Amazon, Apple, and Sims, Latto made the holidays even happier for households across Clayton County, which declared Dec. 18 “Latto Day” and awarded her a key to the city.

    Latto's Christmas in Clayco charity giveaway
    Source: RCA

    Latto’s mom, Misti Pitts, and sister, Brooklyn Nikole, accompanied Latto for the family-friendly event that brought some holly jolly Christmas cheer to ClayCo.

    Latto's Christmas in Clayco charity giveaway
    Source: RCA

    With flicks and photos going viral, fans congratulated the “Somebody” stunner, not only because she gave back to the babies, but because they think she’s expecting one of her own.

    As previously reported, pregnancy predictions started in October when social media sleuths claimed Latto had a baby bump showing onstage at the Force Festival in Japan.

    Between Latto seemingly soft-launching her long-rumored relationship with 21 Savage, the beachside baecation photos, and his lyrics about pulling a Russell Wilson on someone in cheetah print, fans claimed the conception commotion wasn’t a reach.

    Naturally, social media launched an investigation after seeing the latest photos and video of Latto from her foundation’s event.

    *zooms in*

    Based on a preliminary investigation, the internet concluded that Latto was, indeed, pregnant but we’re not too sure based on the hitmaking rapper’s viral birthday sleigh.

    Do you think Big Mama is about to be a mama? If so, what would you gift Latto at her birthday shower? Tell us down below and enjoy our gallery of swoon-worthy sleigh belles on the flip.

    [ad_2] Alex Ford
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  • Pope asks that ‘clamour of weapons cease’ in Christmas address

    Pope Leo XIV issued an appeal for peace in Ukraine in his first Christmas address as pope to thousands of the faithful on St Peter’s Square in Rome on Thursday.

    Leo asked that “the clamour of weapons cease” and urged all involved in the war in Ukraine to find the courage to engage in “sincere, direct, and respectful dialogue” with the support of the international community.

    Noting other global conflicts, the pope mentioned victims of war and violence in Sudan, South Sudan, Mali, Burkina Faso, and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    Turning to the Middle East, he prayed for “justice, peace and stability for Lebanon, Palestine, Israel and Syria.”

    Leo recalled that on a recent trip to the region he had heard the fears of the people and knew their feelings of powerlessness in the face of the power relations they suffered under. He made special mention of the people of Gaza who had lost everything.

    In conclusion, he spoke the traditional “Urbi et Orbi” (to the city and the world) blessing.

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  • Christmas Eve’s Powerball jackpot worth an estimated $1.8B, 4th-largest in history

    Christmas Eve’s Powerball jackpot worth an estimated $1.8B, 4th-largest in history

    BUYING A TICKET AND A DREAM. >> POWERBALL AT 1.6 BILLION. TONIGHT, PEOPLE IN MILWAUKEE ARE TESTING THEIR LUCK. IT IS A GAME OF CHANCE. THAT IGNITES FANTASY. >> FEELING LUCKY TONIGHT. >> SO PEOPLE IN LINE AT THIS EAST SIDE CORNER STORE DAYDREAMING. >> IF I WON THE POWERBALL TONIGHT, I’D TAKE ALL OF US TO A HOTEL. >> OKAY? >> BECAUSE I’D LIKE TO WAKE UP IN A NICE HOTEL. >> OR ACTUALLY DREAMING. >> I WOKE UP WITH A DREAM, TOO. SO IT’S. IT’S IN MY CULTURE. IF YOU IF POOPED ON THAT, IT’S A GOOD DREAM. SO, HEY, WE’LL TEST IT OUT. >> ABOUT WHAT THEY WOULD DO FIRST. WITH $1.6 BILLION. >> SO FIRST, MY PARENTS WILL RETIRE. >> THE FIFTH LARGEST JACKPOT IN U.S. HISTORY. DREAMS STARTING OFF WITH FAMILY PLANNING. >> I WILL COME TOGETHER WITH THE KIDS, AND WE’LL GAME PLAN FROM THERE. >> AND ENDING WITH HORSE FARMS. >> LIZ AND I ARE GOING TO BUY A HORSE FARM TOGETHER. OKAY. NO, WE’RE NOT. >> LIZ QUICKLY OBJECTED. OR NOT? WISCONSIN HAD WINNERS BEFORE. >> I PRETTY MUCH FELT LUCKY. >> A $768 MILLION WINNER FROM NEW BERLIN IN 2019. THREE YEARS LATER, SOMEONE NEAR GREEN BAY HIT THE JACKPOT AND WON 316 MILLION. THIS TIME, EACH TICKET HOLDER CONVINCED. IF YOU HAVE A VISION FOR IT, YOU JUST MIGHT WIN THE PRIZE. >> THAT COULD BE THE SECRET. >> GOOD LUCK. >> THANK YOU. AN

    Christmas Eve’s Powerball jackpot worth an estimated $1.8B, 4th-largest in history

    Updated: 11:07 PM EST Dec 24, 2025

    Editorial Standards

    The Powerball jackpot snowballed to an estimated $1.8 billion for Wednesday night’s drawing after no ticket won the grand prize for Monday’s drawing.The numbers below were pulled for the Dec. 24, 2025, drawing.The winning numbers were: 04-25-31-52-59 Powerball: 19Power Play 2XThe jackpot for the Christmas Eve drawing is the fourth-largest in Powerball history, with a cash value of $781.3 million, the Powerball lottery announced earlier.

    The Powerball jackpot snowballed to an estimated $1.8 billion for Wednesday night’s drawing after no ticket won the grand prize for Monday’s drawing.

    The numbers below were pulled for the Dec. 24, 2025, drawing.

    The winning numbers were:

    04-25-31-52-59

    Powerball: 19

    Power Play 2X

    The jackpot for the Christmas Eve drawing is the fourth-largest in Powerball history, with a cash value of $781.3 million, the Powerball lottery announced earlier.

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  • The Morse Museum celebrates Christmas Eve with free admission, Tiffany glass and live sounds



    Christmas Eve at the the Morse Museum Credit: Courtesy Facebook

    If this doesn’t get you in the spirit, nothing will. Every Christmas Eve, the Morse Museum in Winter Park throws a quaint and low-key daytime celebration.

    From 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the afternoon, admission to the museum is free and you are welcome to amble around the space and check out all of the ornate Tiffany glass in the collection and listen to some festive live music to boot.

    And that’s it. No capital is exchanged, no dinner-and-a-show deal, just Tiffany lamps, art glass, stained glass windows and pottery to help you take a breather before shit goes down the next day.

    1 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 24, Charles Hosmer Morse Museum, 445 N. Park Ave., Winter Park, morsemuseum.org, free.


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    Matthew Moyer
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  • Powerball jackpot jumps to $1.7 billion after another drawing with no big winner

    NO ONE HAS WON THE BIG PRIZE SINCE EARLY SEPTEMBER. A CHANCE AT POWERBALL JACKPOT IS IN HIGH DEMAND AT THE SHOP THAT SELLS MORE LOTTERY TICKETS THAN ANYWHERE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE. BUYING A POWERBALL TICKET HERE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE. THE WINNING ONE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE. THIS IS THE PLACE TO BUY IT, FOLKS. COMING INTO BUNNY’S SUPERETTE IN MANCHESTER, WITH THE HOPES OF GOING HOME WITH $1.6 BILLION RIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS. ABSOLUTELY. I MEAN, IT’S GOING TO BE A CHRISTMAS GIFT. TONIGHT’S JACKPOT IS THE FIFTH LARGEST LOTTERY PAYOUT IN U.S. HISTORY. THE CASH OUT OPTION IS ABOUT THREE QUARTERS OF $1 BILLION. OVER THE WEEKEND, SOMEONE IN THE STATE WAS LUCKY ENOUGH TO SCORE A MILLION BUCKS. AS OF EARLY THIS AFTERNOON, THEY HADN’T CLAIMED THEIR WINNINGS. WE HAVE NOT SEEN THEM. I’M NOT SURE WHAT’S TAKING THEM SO LONG, BECAUSE I’M SURE THEY HAVE SOME HOLIDAY SHOPPING NOW WITH THAT NEWFOUND MONEY. WE ASKED MAURA MCCANN WITH THE NEW HAMPSHIRE LOTTERY IF LIGHTNING CAN STRIKE TWICE HERE IN THE SAME WEEK. CAN IT HAPPEN? IT’S HAPPENED 12 TIMES ALREADY HERE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE THAT SOMEONE HAS WON THE POWERBALL OR MEGA MILLIONS JACKPOT. SO WE ARE LOOKING FOR NUMBER 13. LUCKY 13. COMING UP, WHAT TO DO IF YOU WIN? MAYBE FOLLOW THIS GUY’S LEAD. FIRST OF ALL, THEY PROBABLY HIDE MYSELF IN A MOTEL ROOM. THEN I GET MYSELF THE BEST ACCOUNTANT OR LAWYER THAT I COULD FIND. A SMART MAN RIGHT THERE. AND THESE BIG DRAWS CAN BRING BIG BUCKS TO THE NEXT GENERATION OF GRANITE STATERS. THE NEW HAMPSHIRE LOTTERY SAYS THERE WAS $4.2 MILLION IN POWERBALL TICKETS SOLD HERE LAST WEEK IN THE STA

    Powerball jackpot jumps to $1.7 billion after another drawing with no big winner

    Updated: 12:51 AM EST Dec 23, 2025

    Editorial Standards

    The Powerball jackpot has jumped to an eye-popping $1.7 billion, after the 46th drawing passed without a big winner.The numbers drawn Monday night were 3, 18, 36, 41, 54 and the Powerball 7.Video above: Powerball jackpot keeps growing Since Sept. 6, there have been 46 straight drawings without a big winner.The next drawing will be Christmas Eve on Wednesday, with the prize expected to be the 4th-largest in U.S. lottery history.Powerball’s odds of 1 in 292.2 million are designed to generate big jackpots, with prizes growing as they roll over when no one wins. Lottery officials note that the odds are far better for the game’s many smaller prizes. There are three drawings each week.The estimated $1.6 billion jackpot goes to a winner who opts to receive 30 payments over 29 years through an annuity. Winners almost always choose the game’s cash option, which for Monday night’s drawing would be an estimated $735.3 million.Powerball tickets cost $2, and the game is offered in 45 states plus Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

    The Powerball jackpot has jumped to an eye-popping $1.7 billion, after the 46th drawing passed without a big winner.

    The numbers drawn Monday night were 3, 18, 36, 41, 54 and the Powerball 7.

    Video above: Powerball jackpot keeps growing

    Since Sept. 6, there have been 46 straight drawings without a big winner.

    The next drawing will be Christmas Eve on Wednesday, with the prize expected to be the 4th-largest in U.S. lottery history.

    Powerball’s odds of 1 in 292.2 million are designed to generate big jackpots, with prizes growing as they roll over when no one wins. Lottery officials note that the odds are far better for the game’s many smaller prizes. There are three drawings each week.

    The estimated $1.6 billion jackpot goes to a winner who opts to receive 30 payments over 29 years through an annuity. Winners almost always choose the game’s cash option, which for Monday night’s drawing would be an estimated $735.3 million.

    Powerball tickets cost $2, and the game is offered in 45 states plus Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

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  • At a Filipino-Cuban Nochebuena celebration, cultures blend — but karaoke is a must

    At a Filipino-Cuban Nochebuena celebration, cultures blend — but karaoke is a must

    At a Nochebuena celebration hosted by Filipino American Archie Cubarrubia and his Cuban partner, T.J. Morales, in their North Hollywood home, karaoke is a must for everyone. That includes an 89-year-old Cuban immigrant who had never performed such an act in his life.

    Frank Navarro, who came from Miami to visit his 45-year-old daughter, did not know what to do as the melody of Edith Piaf’s “La Vie en Rose” played over the television. When Cubarrubia, 44, handed Navarro a glowing microphone, Navarro put his arms down and shushed the room.

    “You have to sing. This is karaoke,” Marie, Cubarrubia and Morales’ friend, told her father as the melody to his favorite song played. Frank simply grinned and covered his forehead.

    But after Marie started singing, Frank and his 74-year-old Cuban wife, Maria, were off and running. They laughed and belted out the song as they embraced each other underneath the picture frame of a mascot of Jollibee, a fast-food chain beloved by Filipino Americans.

    The whole room of about a dozen people joined in to sing along.

    “This is amazing to me,” Frank said after his performance.

    Marie, left, Maria and Frank Navarro pull numbers for a white elephant gift exchange from Archie Cubarrubia, right, during a Nochebuena celebration.

    (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)

    Because of the centuries of Spanish colonization, which brought Catholicism to the Philippines, Filipinos share many cultural customs with Latinos. Nochebuena is no exception. In both communities, families and friends bond over a shared meal, exchanging gifts and playing games. Filipinos and Cubans, specifically, also share the tradition of eating lechón, or roast pork, on Christmas Eve.

    There are some differences — Karaoke is much more prominent in Filipino Nochebuena, for instance. Cubarrubia and Morales’ celebration featured a wide array of dishes, such as Filipino sour and savory soup of sinigang as well as Cuban picadillo and ham croquettes.

    Still, for a Filipino-Cuban couple such as Cubarrubia, a deputy director at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and Morales, a 39-year-old who handles corporate partnerships at Live Nation, Nochebuena is another reminder of how close both communities are, even as their roots are far apart geographically.

    “Whenever we go to each other’s families, it is actually just like being part of our own home cultures,” said Cubarrubia, who met Morales through Match.com in 2008. They have been married and have celebrated Nochebuena together for 10 years.

    1

    T.J. Morales unveils his white elephant gift during a Nochebuena celebration on Christmas Eve.

    2

    A crowd of friends serve their dinners during a Nochebuena celebration on Christmas Eve at their friend's home .

    3

    Damian White, left, and Todd Sokolove, right, chat during a Nochebuena celebration on Christmas Eve at their home.

    4

    Maria Navarro serves her dinner during a Nochebuena celebration on Christmas Eve at her daughter's friend's home.

    1. North Hollywood, – December 24: T.J. Morales unveils his white elephant gift during a Nochebuena celebration at he and his husband’s home. Nochebuena is celebrated across Filipinos and Latinos alike. 2. A crowd of friends serve their dinners during a Nochebuena celebration on Christmas Eve at their friend’s home. 3. Damian White, left, and Todd Sokolove, right, chat during a Nochebuena celebration. 4. Maria Navarro serves her dinner during a Nochebuena celebration on Christmas Eve at her daughter’s friend’s home. (Dania Maxwell/Los Angeles Times)

    Anthony Christian Ocampo, a sociologist who grew up in Northeast L.A., saw firsthand the cultural similarities between Filipinos and Latinos, such as having large multigenerational families and strong connections to their ancestral homelands.

    “By no means do I want to romanticize colonialism in any way, shape or form, but the truth is the shared history of Spanish colonialism has played a major role in why Filipinos and Latinos feel connected,” Ocampo said.

    In interviewing Filipino Americans for his book exploring these similarities, “The Latinos of Asia,” he learned that many were often mistaken for Latinos in their schools, workplaces, and on the street. Latino immigrants would often speak Spanish to them, he said.

    “Many of us are Catholic, we have the same last names, there are many words in Tagalog that are similar to ones in Spanish,” Ocampo said. Basura, for instance, means garbage in Tagalog and Spanish. “This is the influence of Spanish colonialism, and this is what bonds us with Latinos and their culture, even if we are technically not checking the same box on a form.”

    In that context, it’s no surprise both communities celebrate Nochebuena, even if the origin of why they celebrate Christmas Eve much more than Christmas is somewhat unknown, said Kevin Nadal, the president of the Filipino American National Historical Society.

    Nadal has called on people to think critically about Nochebuena, given its origin from the Spanish colonization. Still, he understands why the celebration matters to the Filipino diaspora.

    “It’s an opportunity for people to share their love and to share their gifts and to be kind, which is very much aligned with Filipino culture,” he said. “It just becomes this huge celebration of love.

    Eric Medina, 51, grew up celebrating Nochebuena with his Filipino family. Married to a Salvadoran American woman, he now celebrates it with her side of the family with pupusas or panes con pavo (turkey sandwiches). He always makes sure to bring a Filipino dish. It’s often biko, which is sticky rice cake with coconut milk and brown sugar.

    The couple spends Christmas Day with his side of the family, watching the Lakers and eating traditional Filipino dishes like pancit, a stir fry noodle dish, and crispy spring rolls known as lumpia. There’s also Jollibee fried chicken.

    “It’s kind of hard to explain. I felt really comfortable amongst Latinos. By happenstance, I ended up marrying a Latina,” said Medina, who met his wife at a nonprofit where they both worked.

    For Filipino-Latino couples, Nochebuena is also an opportunity for them to learn more about each other’s cultures.

    Nico Blitz, a 30-year-old Filipino DJ and producer, and Jackie Ramirez, a 25-year-old Mexican radio host for Real 92.3, have spent Nochebuena together for four years, alternating each year between Blitz’s family in the San Francisco Bay Area and Ramirez’s in East Los Angeles.

    At Blitz’s family’s Nochebuena, Ramirez learned how to karaoke, singing a 2000s R&B song with what she called a bit of “liquid courage” — Hennessy, the cognac of choice for many Filipinos.

    At Ramirez’s family’s Nochebuena, Blitz learned how to play Loteria, a Mexican take on Bingo. He also tried pozole for the first time.

    “When I had pozole for the first time, I said, ‘Oh my god, where have I been my entire life,’ ” said Blitz, who lives in North Hollywood and hosts “Mexipino Podcast” with Ramirez. “I got three servings to myself, and they said, ‘Keep going if you want.’”

    There were some awkward moments — Ramirez’s uncle would randomly bring up Filipino comedian Jo Koy and Blitz’s father would talk about the Aztec calendar — but once the two families got to know each other, they realized they share a lot in common. Both families have big gatherings on Christmas Eve, where dozens come together, often in pajamas, to exchange gifts and play games.

    “It honestly just feels like a copy and paste,” Blitz said of the two celebrations.

    Back at Cubarrubia and Morales’ house, with his right hand on Cubarrubia’s right shoulder, Morales gives a toast with a glass of Kylie Minogue-branded wine.

    The crowd cheers as Christian Pino, a 30-year-old medical resident who was born in Cuba and moved to L.A. just six months ago from Philadelphia, perfectly flips a flan out of a pot and onto a plate.

    “That’s the real flan!” Marie Navarro tells her dad as she sniffs the dish.

    Damian White, a 44-year-old friend of Morales’, serves tiki glasses with Don Papa rum from the Philippines and Bacardi Gold.

    “Bacardi is a Cuban company,” Pino tells the room. “Don’t forget.”

    And when the karaoke rolls around, Cubarrubia and Morales break out dancing as they sing Olivia Newton-John’s “Xanadu.” Marie follows along, sashaying in front of a Christmas tree as her parents look on.

    “We got the karaoke,” Cubarrubia says. “But the dancing part, the Cuban Americans have down pat.”

    Jeong Park, Alejandra Molina

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  • Life Is Worse for Older People Now

    Life Is Worse for Older People Now

    Last December, during a Christmas Eve celebration with my in-laws in California, I observed what I now realize was the future of COVID for older people. As everyone crowded around the bagna cauda, a hot dipping sauce shared like fondue, it was clear that we, as a family, had implicitly agreed that the pandemic was over. Our nonagenarian relatives were not taking any precautions, nor was anyone else taking precautions to protect them. Endive spear in hand, I squeezed myself in between my 94-year-old grandfather-in-law and his spry 99-year-old sister and dug into the dip.

    We all knew that older people bore the brunt of COVID, but the concerns seemed like a relic from earlier in the pandemic. The brutal biology of this disease meant that they disproportionately have fallen sick, been hospitalized, and died. Americans over 65 make up 17 percent of the U.S. population, but they have accounted for three-quarters of all COVID deaths. As the death count among older people began to rise in 2020, “a lot of my patients were really concerned that they were being exposed without anyone really caring about them,” Sharon Brangman, a geriatrician at SUNY Upstate University Hospital, told me.

    But even now, three years into the pandemic, older people are still in a precarious position. While many Americans can tune out COVID and easily fend off an infection when it strikes, older adults continue to face real threats from the illness in the minutiae of their daily life: grocery trips, family gatherings, birthday parties, coffee dates. That is true even with the protective power of several shots and the broader retreat of the virus. “There is substantial risk, even if you’ve gotten all the vaccines,” Bernard Black, a law professor at Northwestern University who studies health policy, told me. More than 300 people still die from COVID each day, and the overwhelming majority of them are older. People ages 65 and up are currently hospitalized at nearly 11 times the rate of adults under 50.

    Compounding this sickness are all the ways that, COVID aside, this pandemic has changed life for older adults. Enduring severe isolation and ongoing caregiver shortages, they have been disproportionately harmed by the past few years. Not all of them have experienced the pandemic in the same way. Americans of retirement age, 65 and older, are a huge population encompassing a range of incomes, health statuses, living situations, and racial backgrounds. Nevertheless, by virtue of their age alone, they live with a new reality: one in which life has become more dangerous—and in many ways worse—than it was before COVID.


    The pandemic was destined to come after older Americans. Their immune systems tend to be weaker, making it harder for them to fight off an infection, and they are more likely to have comorbidities, which further increases their risk of severe illness. The precarity that many of them already faced going into 2020—poverty, social isolation and loneliness, inadequate personal care—left them poorly equipped for the arrival of the novel coronavirus. More than 1 million people lived in nursing homes, many of which were densely packed and short on staff when COVID tore through them.

    A major reason older people are still at risk is that vaccines can’t entirely compensate for their immune systems. A study recently published in the journal Vaccines showed that for vaccinated adults ages 60 and over, the risk of dying from COVID versus other natural causes jumped from 11 percent to 34 percent within a year of completing their primary shot series. A booster dose brings the risk back down, but other research shows that it wears off too. A booster is a basic precaution, but “not one that everyone is taking,” Black, a co-author of the study, told me. Booster uptake among older Americans for the reengineered “bivalent” shots is the highest of all age groups, but still, nearly 60 percent have not gotten one.

    For every COVID death, many more older people develop serious illness. Risk increases with age, and people older than 70 “have a substantially higher rate of hospitalizations” than those ages 60 to 69, Caitlin Rivers, an epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins University, told me. Unlike younger people, most of whom fully recover from a bout with COVID, a return to baseline health is less guaranteed for older adults. In one study, 32 percent of adults over 65 were diagnosed with symptoms that lasted well beyond their COVID infection. Persistent coughs, aches, and joint pain can linger long after serious illness, together with indirect impacts such as loss of muscle strength and flexibility, which can affect older people’s ability to be independent, Rivers said. Older COVID survivors may also have a higher risk of cognitive decline. In some cases, these ailments could be part of long COVID, which may be more prevalent in older people.

    Certainly, some older adults are able to make a full recovery. Brangman said she has “old and frail” geriatric patients who bounced back after flu-like symptoms, and younger ones who still experience weakness and fatigue. Still, these are not promising odds. The antiviral Paxlovid was supposed to help blunt the wave of old people falling sick and ending up in the hospital—and it can reduce severe disease by 50 to 90 percent. But unfortunately, it is not widely used; as of July, just a third of Americans 80 or older took Paxlovid.

    The reality is that as long as the virus continues to be prevalent, older Americans will face these potential outcomes every time they leave their home. That doesn’t mean they will barricade themselves indoors, or that they even should. Still, “every decision that we make now is weighing that balance between risk and socialization,” Brangman said.


    Long before the pandemic, the threat of illness was already very real for older people.  Where America has landed is hardly a new way of life but rather one that is simply more onerous. “One way to think about it is that this is a new risk that’s out there” alongside other natural causes of death, such as diabetes and heart failure, Black said. But it’s a risk older Americans can’t ignore, especially as the country has dropped all COVID precautions. Since Christmas Eve, I have felt uneasy about how readily I normalized putting so little effort into protecting my nonagenarian loved ones, despite knowing what might happen if they got sick. For older people, who must contend with the peril of attending similar gatherings, “there’s sort of no good choice,” Black said. “The world has changed.”

    But this new post-pandemic reality also includes insidious effects on older people that aren’t directly related to COVID itself. Those who put off nonemergency visits to the doctor earlier in the pandemic, for example, risked worsening their existing health conditions. The first year of the pandemic plunged nearly everyone into isolation, but being alone created problems for older adults that still persist. Before the pandemic, the association between loneliness and higher mortality rates, increased cardiovascular risks, and dementia among older adults was already well established. Increased isolation during COVID amplified this association.

    The consequences of isolation were especially profound for older adults with physical limitations, Naoko Muramatsu, a community-health professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago, told me. When caregivers or family members were unable to visit, people who required assistance for even the smallest tasks, such as fetching the mail and getting dressed, had no options. “If you don’t walk around and if you don’t do anything, we can expect that cognitive function will decline,” Muramatsu said; she has observed this firsthand in her research. One Chinese American woman, interviewed in a survey of older adults living alone with cognitive impairment during the pandemic, described the debilitating effect of sitting at home all day.“I am so useless now,” she told the interviewer. “I am confused so often. I forget things.”

    Even older adults who have weathered the direct and indirect effects of the pandemic still face other challenges that COVID has exacerbated. Many have long relied on personal caregivers or the staff at nursing facilities. These workers, already scarce before the pandemic, are even more so now because many quit or were affected by COVID themselves. “Long-term care has been in a crisis situation for a long time, but it’s even worse now,” Muramatsu said, noting that many home care workers are older adults themselves. Nursing homes nationwide now have nearly 200,000 fewer employees compared with March 2020, which is especially concerning as the proportion of Americans over age 65 explodes.

    Older people won’t have one single approach to contending with this sad reality. “Everybody is trying to figure out what is the best way to function, to try to have some level of everyday life and activity, but also keep your risk of getting sick as low as possible,” Brangman said. Some of her patients are still opting to be cautious, while others consider this moment their “only chance to see grandchildren or concerts or go to family gatherings.” Either way, older Americans will have to wrestle with these decisions without so many of their peers who have died from COVID.

    Again, many of these people did not have it great before the pandemic, even if the rest of the country wasn’t paying attention. “We often don’t provide the basic social support that older people need,” Kenneth Covinsky, a clinician-researcher at the UCSF Division of Geriatrics, said. Rather, ageism, the willful ignorance or indifference to the needs of older people, is baked into American life. It is perhaps the main reason older adults were so badly affected by the pandemic in the first place, as illustrated by the delayed introduction of safety precautions in nursing homes and the blithe acceptance of COVID deaths among older adults. If Americans couldn’t bring themselves to care at any point over the past three years, will they ever?

    Yasmin Tayag

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