Last night, December 20, Ariana Grande returned to Studio 8H to host Saturday Night Live for the second time in as many years. During her monologue, Grande parodied Mariah Carey’s recently record-breaking “All I Want for Christmas Is You” and was joined by Bowen Yang, who is leaving the SNL cast midway through his eighth season. She also appeared in sketches throughout the evening as an Elf on the Shelf, a dance instructor, and Macaulay Culkin’s Kevin McCallister from Home Alone.
In the “Random Duet Christmas Spectacular” sketch, inspired by David Bowie and Bing Crosby’s 1977 televised performance of “Peace on Earth / Little Drummer Boy,” Grande played Katy Perry and Celine Dion. The show’s cast members also impersonated Bob Dylan, Kate Bush, Yoko Ono, Björk, and Geese frontman Cameron Winter.
Making her first appearance as Saturday Night Live’s musical guest since 2011, Cher performed two songs from her 2023 Christmas album titled, simply, Christmas. She was flanked by backup dancers for “DJ Play a Christmas Song” and covered Chuck Berry’s “Run Rudolph Run.”
This year, Grande shared the deluxe version of her 2024 album, Eternal Sunshine, and joined the cast of Ben Stiller and Robert De Niro’s new Meet the Parents movie. She performed alongside her Wicked co-star Cynthia Erivo at the 2025 Oscars, where she was also nominated for Best Supporting Actress for her portrayal of Glinda. Grande will kick off her first tour in over six years in June 2026.
“Home Alone” is one of the most classic Christmas movies of all time, and it inspired a homebuilder in Utah to pay homage to the legendary film.A Utah builder decided to live his lifelong dream and build the ‘Home Alone’ home.”I mean, it could be viewed as certainly nerdy for somebody to go and invest seven million dollars into a home that’s based on a movie that they happen to love when they were kids, right?” Nathan Shaffer said.If the brickwork and windows don’t provoke a Christmastime déjà vu, the Oh-Kay Plumbing van with the Wet Bandit sticker will.A replica of the McCallister home Kevin was left alone in. “I remember watching it and a lot of us connected with that kid because it was like, dude, what would that be like to kind of be on our own,” Shaffer said.There aren’t many lookie-loos yet, but Shaffer’s crew will host community events where young and old can step into Kevin McCallister’s shoes.“We want them to just come and like be looking and using their creativity, right, to kind of use their imagination to find the things from the movie,” Shaffer said.Architect Josh Warner said the exterior is nearly identical.But since the interior was actually a soundstage, they modeled 60 to 70 percent off the real Chicago house — thanks to an online listing when it went up for sale.While there is no basement, there is an attic and a movie-style veranda with glass walls.
“Home Alone” is one of the most classic Christmas movies of all time, and it inspired a homebuilder in Utah to pay homage to the legendary film.
A Utah builder decided to live his lifelong dream and build the ‘Home Alone’ home.
“I mean, it could be viewed as certainly nerdy for somebody to go and invest seven million dollars into a home that’s based on a movie that they happen to love when they were kids, right?” Nathan Shaffer said.
If the brickwork and windows don’t provoke a Christmastime déjà vu, the Oh-Kay Plumbing van with the Wet Bandit sticker will.
A replica of the McCallister home Kevin was left alone in.
“I remember watching it and a lot of us connected with that kid because it was like, dude, what would that be like to kind of be on our own,” Shaffer said.
There aren’t many lookie-loos yet, but Shaffer’s crew will host community events where young and old can step into Kevin McCallister’s shoes.
“We want them to just come and like be looking and using their creativity, right, to kind of use their imagination to find the things from the movie,” Shaffer said.
Architect Josh Warner said the exterior is nearly identical.
But since the interior was actually a soundstage, they modeled 60 to 70 percent off the real Chicago house — thanks to an online listing when it went up for sale.
While there is no basement, there is an attic and a movie-style veranda with glass walls.
The Iowa National Guard says two of the three soldiers wounded in action in Syria last Saturday are back in the United States. Video above: U.S. strikes ISIS targets in SyriaAccording to the Iowa National Guard, the two soldiers made it back to the U.S. on Saturday. They are in stable condition with their families by their sides at a dedicated military facility as they continue recovering.”Caring for our impacted families and the safe return of our service members is our highest priority,” said Maj. Gen. Stephen Osborn, the adjutant general of the Iowa National Guard. “We are incredibly proud of their courage and sacrifice, and our focus is now on providing them and their families with the comprehensive support they need during this time. We ask that all Iowans keep them in their thoughts and prayers as they recover.”The third soldier injured was treated locally and returned to duty. None of the wounded soldiers have been publicly identified.All three soldiers were injured in the Dec. 13 attack in Syria that killed Iowa soldiers Sgt. William Nathaniel Howard, 29, of Marshalltown, and Sgt. Edgar Brian Torres-Tovar, 25, of Des Moines, and a U.S. civilian who was a contracted linguist working with the soldiers.More coverage of deadly attack in SyriaCENTCOM releases video of U.S. military strikes against ISIS targets in Syria.Trump comments on US retaliatory strikes on ISIS in Syria
According to the Iowa National Guard, the two soldiers made it back to the U.S. on Saturday. They are in stable condition with their families by their sides at a dedicated military facility as they continue recovering.
“Caring for our impacted families and the safe return of our service members is our highest priority,” said Maj. Gen. Stephen Osborn, the adjutant general of the Iowa National Guard. “We are incredibly proud of their courage and sacrifice, and our focus is now on providing them and their families with the comprehensive support they need during this time. We ask that all Iowans keep them in their thoughts and prayers as they recover.”
The third soldier injured was treated locally and returned to duty. None of the wounded soldiers have been publicly identified.
All three soldiers were injured in the Dec. 13 attack in Syria that killed Iowa soldiers Sgt. William Nathaniel Howard, 29, of Marshalltown, and Sgt. Edgar Brian Torres-Tovar, 25, of Des Moines, and a U.S. civilian who was a contracted linguist working with the soldiers.
More coverage of deadly attack in Syria
CENTCOM releases video of U.S. military strikes against ISIS targets in Syria.
Trump comments on US retaliatory strikes on ISIS in Syria
‘We all panicked and ran’: Brown University freshman speaks after deadly shooting
PROVIDENCE TODAY. THAT’S RIGHT. BEN, THAT VIGIL ACTUALLY JUST WRAPPED UP A FEW MOMENTS AGO HERE AT LIPPITT MEMORIAL PARK. AND YOU CAN SEE PEOPLE ARE STILL LINGERING AROUND HERE WANTING TO BE IN COMMUNITY AFTER THIS UNTHINKABLE TRAGEDY HAPPENED AT BROWN UNIVERSITY. IT WAS REALLY A BEAUTIFUL CEREMONY. THERE WAS SINGING, THERE WAS PRAYER, AND OF COURSE, COMMUNITY COMING TOGETHER AFTER THIS UNIMAGINABLE EVENT. I SPOKE TO SEVERAL PEOPLE HERE, BOTH COMMUNITY MEMBERS, FACULTY AT THE UNIVERSITY AND PEOPLE WHO LIVE IN THIS AREA, ALL SAYING THEY THEY COULD NOT BELIEVE SOMETHING LIKE THIS HAPPENED HERE. THERE WAS ACTUALLY A HOLIDAY EVENT ALREADY SCHEDULED TO TAKE PLACE AT THIS PARK. OF COURSE, WITH EVERYTHING HAPPENING AT BROWN UNIVERSITY, THE EVENT RAPIDLY SWITCHED INTO A VIGIL AND A MOMENT FOR THE COMMUNITY TO COME TOGETHER. HERE’S WHAT SOME PEOPLE HAD TO SAY ABOUT HOW TIGHT KNIT THIS PLACE IS. THIS IS A SMALL SCHOOL. EVERYONE KNOWS EVERYONE. IT’S GREAT. STRENGTH IS ITS INTIMACY, AND WE’RE SEEING THAT TONIGHT. AND, YOU KNOW, IT’S TERRIBLE REASON FOR US TO GET TOGETHER. BUT IT IS VERY HEARTWARMING TO SEE HOW MANY PEOPLE ARE HERE AND HOW MUCH LOVE THERE IS. THE RED CROSS WAS ALSO HERE, AS WELL AS OTHER COMMUNITY PARTNERS, MAKING SURE EVERYONE HAD EVERYTHING THEY NEEDED TO BE ABLE TO COME TOGETHER SAFELY. THERE’S ALSO ENHANCED LAW ENFORCEMENT PRESENCE HERE. I CAN TELL YOU THERE HAVE BEEN MULTIPLE PATROLS HAPPENING AROUND THIS PARK, AS WELL AS LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS WALKING THROUGHOUT THE CROWD, MAKING SURE EVERYONE FELT COMFORTABLE. BUT OF COURSE, AFTER SOMETHING LIKE THIS HAPPENS, THE COMMUNITY WANTS TO COME TOGETHER. AND FROM WHAT EVERYONE IS SAYING, PROVIDENCE IS SUCH A TIGHT KNIT COMMUNITY. THEY REALLY WANT IT TO BE TOGETHER IN THIS MOMENT. AND THAT’S EXACTLY WHAT THEY DID. FOR NOW, WE’RE LIVE IN PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND. DANAE BUCCI WCVB NEWSCENTER 5. AND OUR THANKS TO JENNY FOR THAT. AND IF YOU’RE NOT FAMILIAR WITH PROVIDENCE AND BROWN UNIVERSITY, SO HERE ON THAT SIDE OF THE STREET IS THE ENGINEERING BUILDING. BARRAS AND HOLLY ON THIS SIDE OF THE STREET ARE HOMES. THIS UNIVERSITY IS VERY MUCH INTERCONNECTED AND INTERTWINED WITH PROVIDENCE NEIGHBORHOODS HERE. AND SO THIS EVENT, THIS SHOOTING IS CERTAINLY IMPACTING MORE THAN JUST THE BROWN UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY. IT’S IMPACTING THE GREATER PROVIDENCE COMMUNITY AS WELL. OUR CAITLIN GALEHOUSE, WITH THIS PART OF THE STORY, AS A LOT OF BUSINESSES IN THIS CITY STILL REMAIN CLOSED, THE PROVIDENCE COMMUNITY HAS BEEN SHAKEN BY THIS TRAGEDY. WE’RE IN WAYLAND SQUARE. THIS IS ABOUT A MILE OFF CAMPUS, AND IT’S BEEN RELATIVELY QUIET THIS AFTERNOON. IN FACT, SOME STORES ARE ACTUALLY CLOSED BECAUSE OF THE SHOOTING. I DIDN’T KNOW WHAT WAS GOING ON AT ALL. FEAR, ANXIETY. TRAGEDY. STRIKING PROVIDENCE SATURDAY AFTER A MAN OPENED FIRE IN A CLASSROOM AT BROWN UNIVERSITY, KILLING TWO STUDENTS AND INJURING NINE OTHERS. THIS IS DEFINITELY BONDING EVERYONE CLOSER TOGETHER. KIND OF SOUNDS AS HORRIBLE AS IT IS. IT’S KIND OF LIKE TRAUMA BONDING IN A WAY. WE’RE ALL HERE AT THE SAME EXACT UNIVERSITY, YOU KNOW, GOING THROUGH THE SAME THINGS. IT’S BEEN ONE DAY SINCE THE TRAGIC INCIDENT BROKE OUT AT THE UNIVERSITY, AND MANY ARE STILL DIGESTING THE REALITY OF WHAT HAPPENED. I’M JUST SADDENED FOR THE BROWN COMMUNITY AND THE ENTIRE STATE. IT’S JUST TRAGIC, THE THE TRAGEDY BEING SO CLOSE TO CHRISTMAS AND, YOU KNOW, FINISHING OUT THE SCHOOL YEAR AND READY TO CELEBRATE YOUR ACCOMPLISHMENTS AND ALL, TO HAVE THAT TAKEN AWAY JUST BY SOME SENSELESS ACT. THE SHELTER IN PLACE ORDER WAS LIFTED EARLY SUNDAY MORNING, BUT THE STREETS ARE STILL QUIET, PROBABLY LESS PEOPLE OUT OF THE COFFEE SHOPS THERE WAS YESTERDAY. WE WERE GOING TO GO OUT TO DINNER. WE DID, AND OBVIOUSLY WE JUST STAYED INSIDE. IT’S A LOT. IT’S IT’S SAD. IT’S SCARY. WE HAD A LOT OF PEOPLE, COWORKERS, THINGS LIKE THAT, CHECKING IN ON US LAST NIGHT. AND I HAVE A LOT OF FRIENDS THAT ALSO KIND OF LIVE LIKE SURROUNDING EAST SIDE AREA. SO YEAH, EVERYONE JUST TRYING TO FIGURE OUT HOW TO HOW TO PROCESS AND HOW TO MOVE ON. BROWN UNIVERSITY HAS CANCELED CLASSES AND FINAL EXAMS FOR THE REMAINDER OF THE SEMESTER DUE TO THE CIRCUMSTANCES. REPORTING IN P
‘We all panicked and ran’: Brown University freshman speaks after deadly shooting
A shooting Saturday at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, that killed two students and injured nine others has left many students, families and city officials struggling to process the tragedy. Members of the Brown community expressed shock and sadness as they mourned the loss of the two students. Video above: Brown University students, community shaken by campus mass shootingAuthorities said the person believed to be responsible fled the scene, prompting a shelter-in-place order that lasted into the early morning hours Sunday. Students were told to stay where they were, silence their cellphones and, at one point, hide. Drew Nelson, a freshman at Brown, described the terrifying moments after the shooting. “We were running out probably a minute or two after the shooting, and there were already, I would guess, between five and 10 cop cars outside. I didn’t see anything that would, I would call a suspect. I didn’t see the shooter. I just kept running until I was nowhere near the building,” he said. Students are now leaving campus and returning home, but for many, that process of healing is only beginning.
A shooting Saturday at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, that killed two students and injured nine others has left many students, families and city officials struggling to process the tragedy.
Members of the Brown community expressed shock and sadness as they mourned the loss of the two students.
Video above: Brown University students, community shaken by campus mass shooting
Authorities said the person believed to be responsible fled the scene, prompting a shelter-in-place order that lasted into the early morning hours Sunday.
Students were told to stay where they were, silence their cellphones and, at one point, hide.
Drew Nelson, a freshman at Brown, described the terrifying moments after the shooting.
“We were running out probably a minute or two after the shooting, and there were already, I would guess, between five and 10 cop cars outside. I didn’t see anything that would, I would call a suspect. I didn’t see the shooter. I just kept running until I was nowhere near the building,” he said.
Students are now leaving campus and returning home, but for many, that process of healing is only beginning.
Last night, December 13, Lily Allen returned to Saturday Night Live as musical guest for the first time since 2007. The British pop star performed “Sleepwalking” from her new album West End Girl and brought out Dakota Johnson to play the titular other woman in “Madeline.” She also appeared as herself in a sketch themed around West End Girl’s title track. Watch Allen on SNL below.
Saturday Night Live’s 51st season has featured performances from Doja Cat, Sabrina Carpenter, Brandi Carlile, Olivia Dean, and Dijon, among others. Bad Bunny hosted the season premiere. Next week’s episode—the last of the calendar year—will see Ariana Grande hostSNL for the second time in as many years alongside musical guest Cher.
A Sacramento man was arrested for homicide in connection with another man’s death along Broadway earlier this month, the Sacramento Police Department said.On Dec. 2, officers responded to a report of a person down in the roadway just after 4:30 a.m. and found the man at the intersection of Broadway and Stockton Boulevard with life-threatening injuries. Despite receiving medical aid, the man died at the scene. (Previous coverage in the video player above)Police initially described the incident as an assault investigation. However, officials later said the victim was hit by a vehicle. On Friday, 23-year-old John Rosario was taken into custody and booked into the Sacramento County Main Jail on a homicide warrant. He is set to appear in court on Tuesday morning. See news happening? Send us your photos or videos if it’s safe to do so at kcra.com/upload.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel
A Sacramento man was arrested for homicide in connection with another man’s death along Broadway earlier this month, the Sacramento Police Department said.
On Dec. 2, officers responded to a report of a person down in the roadway just after 4:30 a.m. and found the man at the intersection of Broadway and Stockton Boulevard with life-threatening injuries. Despite receiving medical aid, the man died at the scene.
(Previous coverage in the video player above)
Police initially described the incident as an assault investigation. However, officials later said the victim was hit by a vehicle.
On Friday, 23-year-old John Rosario was taken into custody and booked into the Sacramento County Main Jail on a homicide warrant.
He is set to appear in court on Tuesday morning.
See news happening? Send us your photos or videos if it’s safe to do so at kcra.com/upload.
The state of Washington saw intense flooding this week as a powerful atmospheric river brought massive amounts of rain to western portions of the state, dumping the rain over several days and causing rivers to swell to dangerous levels.The severe weather prompted evacuations and dramatic rescues, some of which were caught on camera.In King County, the county sheriff’s office shared video of a deputy using a drone to give a life jacket to a man who was stuck on a car’s roof as Snoqualmie River floodwaters rose.A second video released by the King County Sheriff’s Office shows the eventual rescue of the man via a helicopter from NAS Whidbey Island.King County Sheriff’s Office Communications Manager Brandyn Hull said this was the first time that drone pilots had ever delivered a life jacket to a person, according to CNN.In a Facebook post, the sheriff’s office commended the deputy for using modern technology to save a life.”Another case of a deputy going above and beyond,” the sheriff’s office said in posting the social media post. See video of the drone dropping the life jacket in the player above.__CNN contributed to this report.
(Video: King County Sheriff’s Office via CNN Newsource) —
The state of Washington saw intense flooding this week as a powerful atmospheric river brought massive amounts of rain to western portions of the state, dumping the rain over several days and causing rivers to swell to dangerous levels.
The severe weather prompted evacuations and dramatic rescues, some of which were caught on camera.
In King County, the county sheriff’s office shared video of a deputy using a drone to give a life jacket to a man who was stuck on a car’s roof as Snoqualmie River floodwaters rose.
King County Sheriff’s Office Communications Manager Brandyn Hull said this was the first time that drone pilots had ever delivered a life jacket to a person, according to CNN.
In a Facebook post, the sheriff’s office commended the deputy for using modern technology to save a life.
“Another case of a deputy going above and beyond,” the sheriff’s office said in posting the social media post.
See video of the drone dropping the life jacket in the player above.
A fire damaged a home in Davenport on Friday afternoon, Polk County Fire told WESH 2. The family was able to escape and no injuries were reported. It’s unclear how the fire started. Chopper 2 video shows a hole in the home and heavy damage to the vehicle in front. >> This is a developing story and will be updated as more information is released.
DAVENPORT, Fla. —
A fire damaged a home in Davenport on Friday afternoon, Polk County Fire told WESH 2.
The family was able to escape and no injuries were reported.
It’s unclear how the fire started.
Chopper 2 video shows a hole in the home and heavy damage to the vehicle in front.
>> This is a developing story and will be updated as more information is released.
Pooh Shiesty has shared his first song since being released from prison in October. The TP808-produced “FDO” is out now alongside a homecoming-themed music video directed by Cotto0verdidit. Watch it below.
The Memphis rapper shouts out a number of contemporaries in the song’s sprawling, single verse, including Lil Wayne, former collaborator Lil Durk, and Kendrick Lamar. “If my Drac’ jam on me, we beefin’, I’ma turn Kendrick Lamar,” he raps.
In 2021, soon after the release of Shiesty Season, Pooh Shiesty was arrested after an alleged altercation at a Miami nightclub. At the time, he was already facing robbery and firearms charges stemming from a 2020 incident in which he and two associates allegedly shot and robbed two people. Pooh Shiesty eventually pled guilty to one federal count of conspiracy to possess a firearm and was sentenced to five years in prison, of which he served three.
In a windowless room at Denver police headquarters on a recent Thursday afternoon, Officer Chris Velarde activated a police drone to investigate a potential car break-in.
Officer Chris Velarde flies a drone and monitors live footage from its camera from Denver Police Department headquarters on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
Several floors above, the drone launched from the roof and flew itself — essentially on autopilot — to the site of the call, reported as a man breaking into a car with a crowbar near the Santa Fe Arts District.
The drone whizzed along, 200 feet up, in a straight line across blocks, buildings and streets during the roughly mile-long flight from police headquarters at 1331 Cherokee St. Velarde didn’t pick up the Xbox video-game controller that manually pilots the drone until it reached the area of the call. Then he took control and trolled the block for the supposed break-in, watching live video footage transmitted from the drone on his computer monitor as he flew.
After a few moments, Velarde spotted two people jiggering the passenger-side window of a vehicle. He zoomed in on the pair, and on the car’s license plate. He ran the plate to see whether the vehicle was stolen; it was not. The people on the street didn’t look up. They didn’t seem to know a police drone was hovering above them, that they were being recorded and watched a mile away by officers and a reporter.
Two more people joined the pair at the vehicle’s window and Velarde made the call — this didn’t look like a vehicle break-in. More likely, someone had just locked their keys in their car. He cleared the call with 911 dispatchers and told them there was no need to send an officer to the scene. Then he sent the drone back to headquarters; it flew itself to the rooftop dock, landing autonomously on a platform stamped with bright blue-and-yellow QR codes.
The Denver Police Department began testing drones as first responders — that is, sending them out on 911 calls — in mid-October after signing up for two free pilot programs from rival drone companies Skydio and Flock Safety. The effort has raised concerns among privacy advocates, Denver politicians and the city’s police oversight group, particularly regarding the department’s contract with Flock, the company behind the city’s controversial network of automated license-plate readers.
Police see the drones as a way to speed up call-response times and provide more information to officers as they arrive on scene, improving, they say, both public safety and officer safety. If a drone arrives at a scene before officers, and the drone pilot can tell police on the ground that the man with the knife actually put down the weapon before the officers arrived, that helps everyone, police said.
“The more knowledge, information and intelligence that we can provide our officers on the ground, the better methods that they can use to respond to certain situations, which may cause them to not escalate unnecessarily,” said Cmdr. Clifford Barnes, who heads the department’s Cyber Bureau.
Critics say the eyes in the sky raise serious privacy concerns both with how the drones and the data they collect are used now, and with how they might be used in the future as the technology rapidly changes. They worry that the drones could create a citywide surveillance network with few legal guardrails, that the footage they collect will be used to train private companies’ AI algorithms or that police will misuse emerging AI capabilities, like facial recognition.
“When it comes to the decision of, are we going to use this thing that could potentially increase public safety, that will erode privacy rights — no one should get to decide the public is willing to give away our constitutional rights, except the people,” said Anaya Robinson, public policy director at the American Civil Liberties Union of Colorado. “And when law enforcement makes that decision for us, it becomes extremely problematic.”
Almost 300 drone flights in 55 days
So far, only Skydio drones have flown as first responders over Denver.
Denver police signed a zero-dollar contract with Flock — without public announcement — in August for a year-long pilot of drones as first responders, but the company has yet to set up its autonomous aircraft. Skydio, on the other hand, moved quickly to get drones in the air after Denver police in October signed a contract to test up to four of the company’s drones during a free six-month pilot.
Skydio’s drones can reach about a 2-mile radius around the Denver police headquarters. The company advertises a top speed of 45 mph with 40 minutes of flight time; Denver pilots have found the drones average around 28 mph and around 25 minutes of battery life per flight.
From the first flight on Oct. 15 through Tuesday, two Skydio drones flew 297 times, according to data provided by Denver police in response to an open records request. Most of those flights — 199 — were to answer calls for service; another 82 were training flights, according to the data.
Skydio drones also surveilled events — a function police call “event overwatch” — seven times, the police data shows. Overwatch might include flying over a protest to track where the demonstrators are headed and alert officers on the ground for traffic control, Barnes said. (The police data showed that all seven overwatch flights occurred on Oct. 18, the day of Denver’s “No Kings” rally.)
The drones flew to 29 calls about a person with a weapon, 21 disturbances, 20 assaults in progress, a dozen suspicious occurrences and 11 hold-up alarms, according to data from Denver’s 911 dispatch records. The drones also flew to 39 other types of calls, including reports of prowlers, fights, burglaries, domestic violence and suicidal people.
The most common outcome for a call was that the officers were unable to locate an incident or the suspect was gone by the time the drone or police officers arrived, the records show. Across about 200 calls for service that included drone responses, police made 22 arrests and issued one citation, the dispatch data shows.
When responding to calls for service, the drones reached the scene before patrol officers 88% of the time, the police data shows. A drone was the sole police response in 80 of 199 calls for service, or about 40% of the time.
Barnes said answering calls with solely a drone improves police efficiency.
“If an officer on the ground doesn’t need to respond, and the drone pilot is comfortable with cancelling the other officers coming, we can assign those officers to more important, more pressing matters, so call-response times come down,” he said.
That approach raises questions about what the drones (which are equipped with three different cameras and a thermal imager) can and can’t see, and how officers are making decisions about call responses without actually speaking to anyone at the scene, the ACLU’s Robinson said.
“Humans have bias,” he said. Drone pilots might be more inclined to send officers to a potential car break-in in a low-income neighborhood and more likely not to in a higher-income neighborhood, he said. Or they might miss something from above that they could have seen at street level.
Officer Chris Velarde flies a drone and monitors live footage from its camera from Denver Police Department headquarters on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
But minimizing in-person police interactions with residents, particularly in over-policed neighborhoods, can also be a positive, said Julia Richman, chair of Denver’s Citizen Oversight Board, which provides civilian oversight of the police department.
“Where my head goes is the other outcome, where they roll up on those people who are trying to get keys out of the car and then they shoot them,” she said. “Actually, (the drone-only response) seems like a really good outcome.”
The oversight group has talked with Denver police over the last two years about developing its drone program, she said. The department created a seven-page policy to guide their use; the policy aims to ensure “civil rights and reasonable expectations of privacy are a key component of any decision made to deploy” a drone.
But Richman said she was surprised by aspects of the police department’s pilot programs despite the ongoing conversations with department leadership.
“What was never discussed, not once, was the idea of a third party running those drones or those drones being autonomous,” she said, referring to the drone companies. “What has changed with this latest pilot is the key features and key aspects that would create public concern had never been discussed with us.”
Both Flock and Skydio advertise autonomous features powered by artificial intelligence. Skydio uses AI for its autonomous flight paths, obstacle avoidance and tracking people and cars.
Flock, which also offers autonomous flight, advertises its drones as integrating with its automated license-plate readers. The license-plate readers — there are more than 100 around Denver — automatically photograph every car that passes by them. If a license plate is stolen or involved in a crime, the license-plate readers alert police within seconds.
Police Chief Ron Thomas and Mayor Mike Johnston defended the surveillance network as an invaluable crime-solving tool this year against mounting public discontent around how much data the machines collected and how that data was used — particularly around sharing information with the federal government for the purposes of immigration enforcement.
That privacy debate around Flock’s license plate readers unfolded in communities across Colorado and nationwide this year. In Loveland, the police department for a time allowed U.S. Border Patrol agents to access its Flock cameras before blocking that access. In Longmont, councilmembers voted Wednesday to look for alternatives to replace the 20 Flock license plate readers in that city.
When Denver City Council members, some driven by privacy concerns, voted against continuing Flock’s license-plate readers in May, Johnston extended the surveillance anyway through a free five-month contract extension with Flock in October that did not require approval from the council. Against that backdrop, Denver police quietly signed on for Flock’s drone pilot in August.
Barnes said the police department will not use any license-plate reader capabilities available on Flock drones. Such a feature would constitute “random surveillance,” which is prohibited under the department’s drone policy. The drones never fly without an officer’s direct involvement, he added.
The blue 2-mile-radius line seen on a computer screen shows the range of Denver police Skydio drones flown from Denver Police headquarters. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
The policy also prohibits drones from filming anywhere a person has a reasonable expectation of privacy unless police have a warrant, and says officers should take “reasonable precautions … to avoid inadvertently recording or transmitting images of areas where there is a reasonable expectation of privacy.”
Denver police do receive search warrants to fly drones for particular operations outside of the drones-as-first-responder program. In October, a Denver police detective sought and received a warrant to fly a drone over a shooting suspect’s home in Cherry Hills Village to check whether a truck involved in the shooting was parked at the wooded property.
The warrant noted that when driving home from anywhere outside Cherry Hills Village, the suspect could not reach his house without passing by Flock license-plate readers, and that photos from those license-plate readers suggested the truck was at the property.
Denver Councilwoman Serena Gonzales-Gutierrez and Councilman Kevin Flynn both told The Post they were not aware of the police department’s Skydio drone pilot before hearing about it from the newspaper, even though they are both on the city’s Surveillance Technology Task Force. The new group began meeting in August largely to consider Flock license-plate readers, as well as other types of surveillance technology, Gonzales-Gutierrez said.
“We haven’t talked about it in the task force, and the charge of our work in the task force is to come up with those guardrails that need to be put in place for these types of technology being utilized by law enforcement,” she said. “I feel like they just keep moving on without us being able to complete our work.”
Police don’t need permission from the City Council to carry out the pilot programs, Gonzales-Gutierrez said, but she was disappointed by the lack of communication and collaboration from the department.
Flynn sees the potential of police drones, particularly in speeding up officer response times, which can sometimes be dismal in the far-flung areas of his southwestern district.
“If a drone can get there to a 911 call and it can help an officer at headquarters assess the scene before a staffed car could get there, I would love that,” he said.
But he wants to be sure they are used in a way that respects residents’ rights. He would not support using the drones for general patrolling or surveillance, he said.
“This pilot is an excellent opportunity to test all of those boundaries and see if there are ways to operate a system that can be very useful for public safety without crossing boundaries,” he said.”…And maybe we don’t keep using them. That is the point of a pilot.”
‘These are flying cops’
The Skydio drones film from the moment they are launched until they drop in to land.
When the drone is on its way to a call — flying at the 200-foot altitude limit set by the Federal Aviation Administration — its cameras remain pointed at the horizon. In Denver’s denser neighborhoods, the Skydio drones at that height flew among buildings, sometimes at eye-level with balconies, offices and apartment windows, according to video of four flights obtained by The Post through an open records request.
“What if someone is in their apartment unit in one of these giant buildings and they’re changing, and they have their window open because they’re way up high and they don’t think anyone is watching them?” Gonzales-Gutierrez said. “That is crazy.”
The drones buzzed over rooftop decks, balconies and elevated apartment complex pools, the videos show. On one trip, a drone flew past the Colorado State Capitol Building, recording three people on a balcony on the tower under the building’s golden dome. Another time, the drone pilot zoomed in on a license plate so tightly that the car’s small, decorative “LOVE” decal was clearly visible.
Flynn noted that a 200-foot altitude would put the drones well above most of the homes in his less-dense district, and that people on their porches or balconies aren’t somewhere private.
“If someone is out on a balcony, sitting there reading a book… generally speaking, if you are out in public there’s no expectation of privacy,” he said.
The Skydio drones recorded about 54 hours of footage in the first eight weeks of their operation, according to data provided by the police department. Police leadership opted to have the drones’ cameras on and recording whenever the drone is in flight to boost transparency about how the drones are being used, Barnes said.
“It makes sense to keep the camera rolling,” Barnes said. “Then, if there’s an allegation, we just make sure that footage is recorded and treated like digital evidence, uploaded to the evidence management platform so it could be reviewed as necessary. We’re just trying to make sure we establish that balance, being as transparent as possible.”
Drone footage unrelated to criminal investigations is automatically deleted after 60 days, he said. While it’s retained, it’s stored in an evidence system that keeps a record of anyone who looks at it. The drone unit’s sergeant, Brent Kohls, also audits the flight reports monthly. (Footage used in criminal investigations will be on the same retention schedule as body-worn camera footage, police said.)
Kohls noted it would be unusual for the drone footage to be viewed only by the pilot. The feed is often displayed on the wall of the police department’s Real-Time Crime Center as it comes in.
ACLU attorney Nathan Freed Wessler, deputy director of the organization’s speech, privacy and technology project, would rather see police keep the recording off while flying a drone to a call, even if the camera is still livestreaming to police headquarters. In that scenario, a drone pilot might still see a woman tanning topless on her rooftop pool deck, he said, but the government wouldn’t then keep a recording of that privacy violation, amplifying it further.
“The thing we are really worried about is police start deploying drones as first responders for the majority of their calls for service and suddenly you have this crisscrossing network of surveillance all over the city,” Freed Wessler said. “You have the potential for a pervasive record of what everyone is doing all the time.”
Kohls said an officer flying a drone who spotted a different crime occurring while en route to another call would stop to report and respond to that secondary crime, just like an officer would on the ground.
“Absolutely, if an officer sees a crime happening, they’re going to get on the radio, alert dispatch to what they’re observing,” Kohls said. “Hopefully, if they have a few minutes of battery time left still, they can extend their time and circle or overwatch on that scene to provide hopefully life-saving radio traffic, whatever information they need to relay to dispatch to get other officers heading, or the fire department heading that way.”
State and federal laws have not yet caught up to how police are using drones, Freed Wessler said. The Fourth Amendment has what’s known as the plain-view exception, which allows police officers who are lawfully in a place to take action if they see evidence of a crime happening in plain sight.
“The problem here is we are not talking about police doing a thing we would normally expect them to do,” Freed Wessler said. “We are talking about police taking advantage of a new technology that gives them a totally new power to fly at virtually no expense over any part of the city at any time of day and see a whole bunch of stuff happening.”
A Denver police drone lands on its docking station on the roof of Denver Police headquarters in Denver, on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
Police have broad leeway to watch suspects without first getting a search warrant — like by peering through a fence or climbing the steps of a nearby building to look into a yard. But that’s different from using a subtle video camera to record a person 24/7 for months, the justices concluded.
So far, that’s the closest ruling in Colorado on the issue of drone surveillance, Freed Wessler said. Robinson, the policy director at the ACLU of Colorado, said lawmakers should act to regulate police drone use — either at the state or local level.
“These are flying cops,” said Beryl Lipton, senior investigative researcher at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a nonprofit focused on digital privacy. “That is another one of those slippery slopes.”
Aside from the legality of surveillance, another question is how the drone footage and flight data is used by the drone companies, Lipton said.
“We live in a time where all these AI-fueled companies have a real drive to integrate AI into everything, and they’re really hungry for new data,” she said. “And we have law enforcement helping to feed these companies in a way they don’t really understand.”
Under its current agreement with Denver police, Skydio doesn’t use drone footage to train its algorithm or improve its product. Flock spells out in its contract that the company can “collect, analyze and anonymize” drone footage, then use that anonymized footage to train its “machine learning algorithms,” and enhance its services.
Lipton added that technology is moving fast — Axon, a company that powers many police departments’ body-worn cameras — this month started testing facial recognition on its cameras to automatically alert a police officer if a person they’re encountering has a warrant out for their arrest.
Prisons are experimenting with “movement analysis” to automatically flag a person’s movements as potentially aggressive before the person perpetrates violence, she said.
“We are technologically at a place where it would not be hard for a drone to fly over an area and basically serve as a license-plate reader for humans,” Lipton said. “… Some of this analysis is just not being done because it is not publicly palatable yet. But it is not like it is technologically difficult for some of these companies.”
A Palestine benefit single from an ensemble including Brian Eno, Neneh Cherry, and Nadine Shah is out today. Credited to Together for Palestine—the British-based operation that put on a major benefit concert in September—“Lullaby” is a cover of the traditional Palestinian song “Yamma Mweel El Hawa,” which Peter Gabriel has adapted from an English translation. The Palestinian musician Nai Barghouti arranged and recomposed the song with Shards’ Kieran Brunt. Watch the accompanying video below.
Upon the song’s announcement, Eno said in a press release that they were aiming for the United Kingdom’s coveted No. 1 spot on the Christmas singles chart. “After a year defined by unimaginable loss, grief and injustice, we want to end with an act of love for Palestine’s children,” he said. “‘Lullaby’ reflects their beauty, their longing and their hope. If we rally together and download it, we have a real shot at landing Christmas No. 1—and turning that moment into vital life-saving support for Gaza’s families.”
Barghouti added, “This lullaby from our Palestinian musical heritage has been with me since early childhood. Today, it returns at a much-needed time as a reminder of what Palestinians will never lose: hope, defiance, beauty, and dignity.”
Kieran Brunt, Benji B, and Henri Davies produced “Lullaby,” which also features Amena, Lana Lubany, Leigh-Anne, London Community Gospel Choir, Sura Abdo, Tyson, Yasmeen Ayyashi, and Ysee. All proceeds go to Choose Love’s Together for Palestine Fund, which supports the Palestinian-led organizations Taawon, Palestine Children’s Relief Fund and Palestine Medical Relief Service.
Geese frontman Cameron Winter has shared a new music video for his Heavy Metal track “Love Takes Miles,” the best song of the year. The clip stars Lady Bird actor Lucas Hedges as a lovelorn construction worker. After hurling rocks outdoors while exasperatedly singing a verse from the song, “Love Takes Miles” starts up in earnest as we see Hedges get increasingly fed up with the annoyances of his job. With one too many car honks pushing him over the edge, Hedges darts away from the construction zone, slides across a car’s hood, and takes off on a long journey singing along to the song as he walks – seemingly forever. Watch the Celia Rowlson-Hall-directed video below.
Winter released Heavy Metal, his debut solo album, last December. The singer-songwriter has stayed plenty busy on the road with Geese touring behind their latest album, Getting Killed, which dropped back in September. The band has since performed on Jimmy Kimmel Live! and released a music video for “Au Pays du Cocaine.”
A few months ago, Winter seemingly recorded a cover of Bruce Springsteen’s “Dancing in the Dark” for the launch trailer for the ROG Xbox Ally. Although his distinct tenor is hard to miss, the jury is still out on if it’s actually him because Winter, Geese, and their representatives have not responded to requests for comment.
A contract security guard was hospitalized Monday afternoon after he drove onto an airport taxiway and sped past planes, authorities said.
On Dec. 8 around 1:12 p.m., the guard assigned to a security checkpoint “drove a vehicle into an airport taxiway at a high rate of speed,” according to a statement from John Wayne Airport spokesperson AnnaSophia Servin.
Video shared with ABC7 showed a white sedan speeding down the taxiway near planes. The news outlet reported that an air traffic controller advised a Southwest plane to “hold position.”
“There’s a high-speed chase on the taxiway,” the controller said.
Orange County sheriff’s deputies detained the driver shortly thereafter and requested a medical assessment from the Orange County Fire Authority, the statement said.
“The individual was evaluated on scene and determined to be experiencing a possible medical emergency,” Servin said.
He was subsequently hospitalized and suspended from his job, according to the statement. Airport operations continued on schedule.
Billie Eilish has shared the trailer for the concert film she made with director James Cameron while touring her last album, 2024’s Hit Me Hard and Soft. “No one’s shot a concert film on this scale before,” Cameron says in the clip, which cuts together footage of Eilish both on- and off-stage. “We’re using tech that’s never been used before.” Watch it below.
Released by Paramount Pictures, Hit Me Hard and Soft: The Tour hits theaters on March 20. After going home empty-handed from the 2025 Grammy Awards, Eilish is up for Song and Record of the Year at next year’s ceremony for “Wildflower,” a Hit Me Hard and Soft album track that would have fallen outside the eligibility window but was re-released as a single in Feburary.
Read about the Hit Me Hard and Soft single “Birds of a Feather” at No. 27 on “The 100 Best Songs of 2024.”
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There’s just something magical about a classic peanut butter cookie recipe—the soft, chewy centers, the warm, rich peanut butter flavor, and of course that nostalgic criss-cross pattern that makes you feel like a kid again.
If you’ve been searching for the best peanut butter cookie recipe, this is the one that will finally end your hunt.
Memories
This is the recipe our family has made for years, and it’s still the one we reach for when we want a no-fuss, guaranteed-delicious cookie. Made with simple pantry ingredients and ready in minutes, this easy peanut butter cookies recipe is the perfect blend of cozy, homemade goodness and bakery-style texture.
I originally wrote this post for old-fashioned peanut butter cookies and then had the feeling that I should dedicate this post to my parents, and I try to always follow those little feelings. Thank you for taking the time to always encourage, patiently teach and most of all love me through anything and everything. You gave me the wings to fly anywhere and become anything.
Music and food. Two things that store up memories like nothing else. I can love a book but never remember what was going on when I was reading it. A certain song though, well suddenly I’m right back in college teaching a Pilates class, or driving to a marching band practice. Yup. Totally did that. Haha, but seriously, music and food bring back so many memories and I bet a few of you have one attached to soft peanut butter cookies.
Ingredients You’ll Need
There’s just one unexpected ingredient in these cookies, but I swear to you it will make all the difference! The rest of the ingredients will be in your pantry already. Here is what you’ll need:
Butter: Adds richness, flavor, and helps create a soft, tender cookie. I prefer to use unsalted butter. Make sure it is softened.
Brown Sugar: Provides moisture, sweetness, chewiness, and deeper caramel flavor.
White Sugar: Helps the cookies spread and adds crisp edges. You’ll also use the sugar to sprinkle over the top of the cookies before baking.
Peanut Butter: The star flavor; also adds fat and moisture for a soft, dense texture. You’ll want to use creamy peanut butter and avoid natural peanut butter.
Egg: Binds the dough and adds structure and tenderness.
Vanilla Extract: Enhances the flavor and rounds out the sweetness.
Milk: Softens the dough slightly and prevents dryness if needed.
All PurposeFlour: Gives the cookies structure so they hold their shape.
Cornaby’s EZ Gel: This is the unusual ingredient. It helps keep the cookies soft and chewy by locking in moisture. Substitute with cornstarch if you don’t have the EZ gel.
Salt: Balances sweetness and boosts flavor.
Baking Soda: Gives a slight lift and creates a tender crumb.
How to Make Peanut Butter Cookies
Prep: Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F and line two baking sheets with parchment paper.
Wet Ingredients: Cream together the butter and sugars in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Add the peanut butter and them mix again.
PRO TIP: This allows the sugars and butter to beat against the bowl, incorporating more air for a lighter, fluffier cookie.
Mix: Add the egg, vanilla and milk and mix together until smooth.
Whisk: Add all the dry ingredients to a large bowl and whisk together to combine.
Combine: Add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients and mix until just combined.
Roll: Scoop the cookie dough into balls and roll them in granulated sugar.
Crisscross: Place the cookie dough balls on the prepared baking sheets and then press the dough lightly with a fork. Lift and press again in the opposite direction.
NOTE: I’m not sure how this tradition started with peanut butter cookies but it helps shape the cookies. Peanut butter cookies have a lot of fat in them, so they won’t spread much when they bake. This flattens them out some.
Bake: Bake the cookies for 8-10 minutes. Let cool on a wire rack.
Peanut Butter Cookies FAQs
Is Peanut Butter Good for You?
Peanut butter is very high in fats. The fact that it is high in fats makes it high in calories also. Peanut butter also contains many good nutrients such as protein, fiber, minerals and vitamins. In spite of the high calorie content, eating small amounts of pure peanut butter is fine on a weight-loss diet.
What Can You Substitute For Brown Sugar?
You can use an equal amount of white sugar although the flavor and texture may be just a little different. You can use white sugar and a little molasses or maple syrup–1 cup sugar plus 1 Tablespoon molasses or maple syrup. For dark brown sugar, use 2 tablespoons molasses or maple syrup and 1 cup white sugar.
Can Peanut Butter Cookie Dough be Frozen?
Roll dough into balls and freeze in heavy duty freezer bags. Thaw and make criss-cross marks on top and bake. Or, freeze dough in disc shape in a freezer bag. Thaw, roll into balls, crisscross and bake.
Tips for the Best Peanut Butter Cookie Recipe
Measure the flour correctly! Adding too much flour to these, and you will end up with dry cookies.
Don’t overmix! Overmixing the dough is usually the culprit when you have hard, dry cookies.
Use a cookie scoop to scoop the dough to keep the cookie a uniform size so that they all bake evenly.
Don’t overbake! Once the cookies start to get golden brown around the edges, pull them out of the oven and let them cool for a few minutes on the pan before transferring them to a wire cooling rack.
Storage Tips
Leftover cookies should be stored in an airtight container. They can be stored at room temperature or in the refrigerator and will keep for 4-5 days.
To freeze, let them cool completely and then place in a single layer on a cookie sheet and freeze. When frozen, transfer to a freezer bag. They will keep for up to 3 months.
Whether you’re baking for a holiday cookie plate, a late-night craving, or just because peanut butter cookies make everything better, this recipe always comes through. These homemade peanut butter cookies are soft, chewy, and so easy you’ll memorize them after one batch.
I hope they bring your home the same warmth and joy they bring to ours—because nothing beats a simple cookie made with love. Now grab a glass of cold milk, share a few with someone you love, and enjoy every buttery, peanut-y bite.
More Classic Cookies Recipes to Try:
How to Make Peanut Butter Cookies Video
Prevent your screen from going dark
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F and line 2 baking sheets with parchment or silpat liners.
In the bowl of a standing mixer, mix the butter and sugars for 1 minute on medium speed, increase to medium high for an additional 30 seconds.
½ Cup Butter, ¾ Cup Brown Sugar, ¼ Cup White Sugar
Add the peanut butter and mix another 30 seconds.
¾ Cup Peanut Butter
This allows the sugars and butter to beat against the bowl, incorporating more air for a lighter, fluffier cookie.
Add the egg, vanilla and milk and mix until smooth.
1 Large Egg, 1 teaspoon Vanilla, 1 Tablespoon Milk
In a separate bowl, whisk the flour, salt, EZ gel and soda.
1 ⅓ Cups All Purpose Flour, ¼ teaspoon Salt, ½ teaspoon Baking Soda, 2 teaspoons Cornaby’s EZ Gel
Add to the wet ingredients and mix until smooth.
Roll the peanut butter dough into balls and roll in the sugar.
½ Cup Sugar
Use a fork to gently press into the dough and then lift and repeat going the opposite direction.
If you can’t find Cornaby’s use 1 teaspoon cornstarch To freeze: cool completely, place in a single layer on a cookie sheet and freeze. When frozen, transfer to a freezer bag for up to 3 months.
Social media videos of a Catholic priest turning away Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents from his church are garnering support and thousands of shares, but they were generated with artificial intelligence tools.
An Instagram video with 22,500 views as of Dec. 5, shows a passionate priest blocking ICE agents from entering his parish and giving a speech on the steps of the church, with a crowd of parishioners behind him.
“You’re not welcome here, not today, and not on this church. I don’t know what god you worship, maybe an orange one, but my god is love,” the priest says in the Dec. 1 video post. “Now go and don’t come back.”
A background voice says, “Preach it bishop” and “hallelujah.”
@politifact Don’t fall for it! Videos of a Catholic priest turning away ICE agents from his church aren’t real. While the posts garnered support and thousands of shares, they were generated with artificial intelligence tools. AI-video detectors determine the footage was AI-generated. We also found the user that posted the clips sells courses on how to earn money with AI videos. #AI#priest#ICE#church#video♬ original sound – PolitiFact
Some people in the comments commended the unidentified bishop for his bravery to stand against law enforcement. Other commenters wrongly identified him as Chicago Auxiliary Bishop José María Garcia-Maldonado, whom ICE prohibited from giving detained Catholics holy communion back in November.
Churches have warned parishioners of ICE presence and have spoken against it in their local communities. But this video isn’t real.
The same user postedothervideosof priests with similar scripts at different churches on Instagram, Facebook and TikTok. According to the user’s social media profiles, he sells multiple courses on how to earn money with AI videos made with AI video generators such as Sora 2 and Veo.
The videos look convincing, but there are some generative AI giveaways:
We didn’t find credible news articles pertaining to the incident, specifically in local news outlets from cities such as Chicago, New Orleans and North Carolina, where the federal government has conducted recent ICE operations.
PolitiFact ran the Instagram video through Hive Moderation, which helps determine whether videos were generated with artificial intelligence. These programs are imperfect, but Hive Moderation concluded that the video is “99.9% likely to contain AI-generated or deepfake content.”
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These Pinwheel Cookies are a treasured family favorite straight from Grandma’s cookbook! Delicious vanilla cookie dough is rolled up with a sweet raisin filling that bakes into the most nostalgic treat. They’re the perfect Christmas cookies but just as delicious any time of year.
Even if you’re not a raisin lover, trust me, your whole family will fall for these!
These pinwheel cookies are sneaky little delights with delicious raisin-filled swirls, simple to look at but impossible to stop eating. They’ve been a hit with my cousins for years, and now we keep the tradition alive in our own kitchen.
I’ll never forget standing in my grandma’s kitchen, pouring the vanilla and feeling trusted to help. Baking these cookies instantly brings back those warm, silly, perfect memories. Grab a kid, make a batch, tell some stories, and pass the magic (and the vanilla) along.
Pinwheel Cookies Ingredients
This great recipe has two parts: the cookie dough and the raisin pinwheel filling. I’ve seen recipes online for date pinwheel cookies, but my family has always made the filling with raisins.
Here’s what you’ll need to make pinwheel cookies:
Vanilla Extract: Boosts flavor and adds warmth
Shortening: Provides structure and tenderness for the cookie dough
Granulated Sugar: Adds sweetness and helps with spreading
Brown Sugar: Adds moisture, chewiness, and rich flavor
Eggs: Bind the dough and add moisture
All-Purpose Flour: Forms the base of the cookie dough
Salt: Enhances all the flavors
Baking Soda: Helps cookies rise and brown
Raisins: Sweet filling for the pinwheel center
Water: Moistens the raisin filling
How To Make Grandma’s Pinwheel Cookies:
Don’t let the pretty pinwheel pattern fool you into thinking these cookies are tough to make! These Christmas pinwheel cookies require little prep work and are super simple to shape and bake.
Blend: Combine raisins, water, sugar, and vanilla in a blender and blend until smooth.
Boil: Pour the mixture into a saucepan and bring to a boil. Let it boil for 5 minutes, then set aside to cool slightly.
Mix: Prepare the cookie dough in a large mixing bowl and roll it into a large rectangle sheet of dough on a lightly floured surface.
Spread: Evenly spread the raisin filling over the piece of dough.
Roll: Roll the dough tightly into a log of dough, just like you would for cinnamon rolls.
Slice: Cut into cookies and place them on parchment-lined baking sheets.
Bake: Bake until lightly golden and set.
Can I Add Other Flavors or Mix-Ins to the Filling?
Some pinwheel cookie recipes call for chopped nuts, different flavor extracts, or other mix-ins in the filling. We’ve always stuck with the classic version, so we can’t say for sure how additions might change the texture or bake time. If you experiment with nuts or other flavors, let us know in the comments how they turn out—we’d love to hear!
Do I Need To Use Shortening?
You can use half shortening and half butter in the dough, though we usually stick with all shortening. Don’t swap all butter, the texture will change.
Make sure shortening and butter are at room temperature so the dough isn’t crumbly. If it’s still dry, add a splash of water.
Can I Make the Dough Ahead of Time?
You can easily make the dough ahead of time. The vanilla cookie dough can be prepared up to a day in advance and stored in the refrigerator to chill. When you pull the chilled dough from the fridge, it may take a few extra minutes to bake.
For longer storage, make the dough logs with the raisin filling and freeze them until ready to bake.
If freezing unsliced, wrap tightly in plastic wrap and foil. Sliced cookies can go straight into an airtight gallon-sized ziploc bag. Baking from frozen will require a little extra patience and a few additional minutes in the oven, but the cookies come out just as delicious!
Storing Pinwheel Cookies
These pinwheel cookies stay fresh for 3-5 days when kept in an airtight container at room temperature.
You can also freeze them once completely cooled. Store in freezer-safe bags or containers, and when ready to enjoy, simply thaw on the counter. They’ll taste just as delicious as when freshly baked!
These pinwheel cookies are a timeless treat your whole family will love. Bake a batch, share some stories, and enjoy a sweet bite of tradition!
More Easy Cookie Recipes:
Watch How These Cookies are Made…
Prevent your screen from going dark
Preheat your oven to 350 degrees F.
In a blender, combine the raisins, water, sugar and vanilla, mix until smooth and pour into a small saucepan.
3 Cups Raisins, ½ Cup Water, ¼ Cup Granulated Sugar, ½ teaspoon McCormick Vanilla Extract
Boil for 5 minutes and set aside.
In the bowl of a standing mixer, cream the shortening and sugars for 1 minute.
1 Cup Shortening, 1 Cup Granulated Sugar, 1 Cup Brown Sugar
Add the eggs and mix again.
2 Eggs
In a separate bowl, whisk together the dry ingredients and add into the wet ingredients until a thick dough forms.
4 Cups All-Purpose Flour, ½ teaspoon Salt, 1 teaspoon Baking Soda
On a lightly floured surface, roll out the dough in a big rectangle.
Spread the raisin mixture all over the dough and roll the dough like pinwheels or cinnamon rolls.
Slice into cookies and place on a parchment lined baking sheet.
Bake for 10-12 minutes, and allow to cool for 2-5 minutes on the pan then remove to a cooling rack.
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Our Antipasto Italian Focaccia Recipe is the ultimate way to use up leftover charcuterie ingredients for the most delicious and easy bread recipe! You’re going to love the salty, chewy crust, tender crumb and those meaty toppings!
I was on a phone call with an important business colleague who knows his stuff. I casually mentioned that we were working on both a focaccia bread and pasta recipe that helps to use up the leftovers from a charcuterie board or antipastoboard. He immediately chimed in that he loves charcuterie and is often stuck in the same dilemma; what do I do with all of this stuff?!
Why I Love Antipasto Focaccia Bread
I’m the queen of “recreate it.” I don’t love when we make something that needs a very special ingredient or a bunch of things that I just need a little of but you have no choice but to buy a lot.
I LOVE this focaccia bread because not only does it use up leftovers, but it’s also so satisfying! In fact, because of the meats and olives, it’s a hearty bread that can totally count as a main dish at dinner. It’s like pizza!
Recipe Tip
I’m a huge fan of dipping bread. This bread is perfect to serve with a little bowl of olive oil and a drizzle of balsamic vinegar!
Want to up the game? Dip in warmed pizza or spaghetti sauce. IT’S SO GOOD!
Ingredients for Antipasto Focaccia Bread
Flour: Adds structure and the base of our bread.
Water: Essential to get that yeast going and make the bread.
Salt: While many Italian breads skip the salt, like in Florence, I never do.
Sugar: Helps the yeast rise and balances the acid and salt of this dish.
Yeast: Get that bread rising and fluffy.
Meats: Grab any combination you love on a normal antipasto platter.
Olives: We love a mixture from kalamata to black.
Tomatoes: Try using fresh and sun dried for more texture and flavor.
Peppers: We love a touch of smokiness from a roasted red pepper.
Artichokes: Adds a little brine and acid to the bread.
How to Make Antipasto Focaccia Bread
Stir: Make the bread by simply stirring together the flour, salt, sugar and water.
Refrigerate: Let this bread dough sit overnight in the fridge for enhanced flavor and texture.
Chop: Chop all of your ingredients to the same size so nothing cooks more than the ingredient next to it.
Dock the Bread: Olive oil the bread. Press your fingers all over the bread and sprinkle with the ingredients.
Bake: Bake until golden and chewy!
Enjoy!
Variations
Ok, so you’re on board for making a deliciously chewy bread, but you hate olives, don’t have certain ingredients or just want to mix things up. Here are a few ideas:
Crispy Bacon
Caramelized Onions
Chopped Ham
Sauteed Mushrooms
Prosciutto and Peaches
Grapes and Brie
Whether you’re eating this as an appetizer, main dish, or side to go with your tomato basil soup, this delicious Antipasto Italian Focaccia recipe is sure to impress your friends and family. Loaded with savory meats, cheeses, and vegetables, this savory bread is perfect for any occasion.
¼-⅓CupSliced Olive Mix, (green, black and kalamata)
¼-⅓CupPepperoni Stick, sliced
¼-⅓CupHard Salami, sliced
¼-⅓CupGrape Tomatoes, halved
¼-⅓CupSun-Dried Tomatoes
¼-⅓CupRoasted Red Peppers
¼-⅓CupPepperoncini Peppers
¼-⅓CupArtichoke Hearts, marinated
¼-⅓CupRed Onions, thinly sliced
2TablespoonsParmesan Cheese
Maldon Flaked Sea Salt
1TablespoonParsley, fresh, chopped
Prevent your screen from going dark
In a glass bowl, add the flour and salt. Mix to combine.
4 Cups Bread Flour, 2 teaspoon Kosher Salt
In a glass measuring cup, mix the warm water, yeast and sugar. Allow to sit for a minute (see note) and stir into the flour with a wooden spoon until the dough just comes together.
Cover the bowl with tight plastic wrap and place in the fridge for 8 hours or up to overnight.
Remove the bowl from the fridge.
In a 9×13 inch baking pan, drizzle oil and place the dough in the center, tucking ends under.
Olive Oil
Cover with plastic wrap and allow to rise 2 hours.
Preheat the oven to 450ºF.
Once risen the dough should fill the pan. Drizzle with additional oil and use your fingers to press holes down to the bottom of the pan but not through the dough.
Olive Oil
Sprinkle with all the antipasto toppings, parmesan cheese, a little more salt and more fresh parsley.
¼-⅓ Cup Sliced Olive Mix, ¼-⅓ Cup Pepperoni Stick, ¼-⅓ Cup Hard Salami, ¼-⅓ Cup Grape Tomatoes, ¼-⅓ Cup Sun-Dried Tomatoes, ¼-⅓ Cup Roasted Red Peppers, ¼-⅓ Cup Pepperoncini Peppers, ¼-⅓ Cup Artichoke Hearts, ¼-⅓ Cup Red Onions, 2 Tablespoons Parmesan Cheese, Maldon Flaked Sea Salt, 1 Tablespoon Parsley
Place in the oven and turn down to 425ºF and bake 22-24 minutes or until golden.
If you don’t have fresh herbs you can use the dry herbs as stated above or just sprinkle with Italian Seasoning.
Activated yeast should bubble and foam up within a few minutes if your yeast is good.
Focaccia bread should be wrapped in plastic wrap and stored at room temperature for 2-3 days.
Two Detroiters tried (but failed) to will their hometown Lions to victory during the NFL team’s annual Thanksgiving Day game. Jack White opened his halftime show performance with “That’s How I’m Feeling,” from last year’s No Name, before bringing out Eminem for a mashup of the White Stripes’ “Hello Operator” and the rapper’s Eminem Show cut “’Till I Collapse.” Inevitably, the performance concluded with Elephant’s “Seven Nation Army.” Watch a replay below and on YouTube. The show has also been uploaded, as an EP, to streaming services; scroll down to listen.
It should maybe not be a surprise that Eminem showed up for White’s performance, as the rapper and his manager and Shady Records co-founder Paul Rosenberg are the executive producers of the halftime show, along with Jesse Collins Entertainment. Eminem and Rosenberg will help with the Lions’ Thanksgiving halftime production through 2027.
The Detroit Lions play annually on Thanksgiving and, despite their success in recent seasons, they lose more often than they win, and that was the case yesterday, as the team fell to the rival Green Bay Packers. Last year, however, the Lions defeated the Chicago Bears in a game that featured a halftime performance from Shaboozey.
Welcome to Skin Talk With Laura Love, our video series in which stars of fashion, film, television, and beyond share their beauty secrets with the licensed model and esthetician.
In the latest episode, Love links up with top model and activist Imaan Hammam, the Dutch catwalk queen and cover star who recently appeared in the 2025 Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show, more than a decade after her debut for the lingerie juggernaut. “My first-ever VS show, I was 18. I was a baby,” Hammam tells Love. “I didn’t know what to do with my body. This year was even more special because here I am, so much more confident with myself.”
She also discusses one of her biggest achievements—becoming a brand ambassador for Estée Lauder in 2023. “I was running errands in New York and I got a call from my agent, and I just remember screaming,” Hammam recalls of learning she’d nabbed the coveted contract. “As a Moroccan-Egyptian woman, having my background and having this strong identity—I’m so proud of who I am—[celebrating that during] a time when we need representation is amazing.”
Hammam’s identity is everything, she tells Love. Recently, Hammam started Ayni Vault, where she chronicles and shares “all the things that I love: music, art,” while creating “a platform for the MENA and African region to share their creativity with the world. I truly believe we need more of it. There’s so much from that region.”
When it comes to her skin concerns, Hammam says dryness is top of mind. She therefore touts face oils as her must-haves and is a spritz and essence fanatic. The latter products are key for what she calls her “glow airplane routine”—a skincare regimen she applies on nearly every flight. “Most of the time, I’ll land and go directly to set to work,” Hammam says. “That’s why I always make sure to give myself a little spa treatment on the plane so I can look fabulous for my cover shoots.” The in-flight routine calls for super-hydrating face masks and, of course, plenty of Estée Lauder products, like the Advanced Night Repair. The model also swears by vitamin C and hydration gels (the kind runners consume during marathons). Finally, a warm eye mask caps it all off—and even Love can’t deny the astronomical level of comfort. “I’m so happy right now,” she tells Hammam. “This is so lovely. I feel depressed that I have to take this off.”