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Kathie Lee Gifford lists her Connecticut waterfront estate for a staggering $100 million asking price

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Kathie Lee Gifford has listed her Greenwich home for $100 million.

Gifford’s home, which is listed by Leslie McElwreath of Sotheby’s International Realty, has eight bedrooms, nine full baths and five partial baths.

The living space within the home is 13,163 square feet, and it sits on nearly three acres of land in Riverside, Connecticut. Gifford’s home is in Riverside’s prestigious Indian Head Association and on a secluded road.

The property was built in 1930 and originally owned by a shoemaker who gave it the name “Cedar Cliff.” According to the listing, Cedar Cliff is “a designation that eventually defined the very road on which it stands today.”

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Gifford’s home offers around 1,250 feet of direct water frontage with manicured lawns, perfect for entertaining. All eight of the bedrooms have views of the water, and the home has an elevator and a private recording studio.

The property also offers a deep-water dock for boat lovers, a pool and spa, a private tennis court and a fitness center.

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“Cedar Cliff is a singular offering for the most discerning buyer—an incomparable experience of refined luxury, inviting residents and their guests to revel in the natural beauty of one of the finest estates on the East Coast of the United States,” the listing stated.

Gifford is a television host, singer, actress, songwriter and author who is best known for co-hosting “Live! with Regis and Kathie Lee” from 1985 to 2000 and later the fourth hour of NBC’s “Today” show with Hoda Kotb from 2008 to 2019.

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She was born Kathryn Lee Epstein on August 16, 1953, in Paris, France, where her father was stationed in the U.S. Navy. She later grew up in Maryland and discovered a love for music and performing at a young age. Before pursuing a career in daytime television, Gifford had a passion for singing.

Gifford’s long career earned her many honors, including multiple Daytime Emmy nominations, a Daytime Emmy win with the “Today” team, induction into the Broadcast & Cable Hall of Fame, and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2021.

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Iran signals ‘mass sacrifice’ in ‘high stakes’ Saddam-era warning amid Trump deal talks

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President Masoud Pezeshkian invoked one of Iran’s strongest wartime symbols on May 24, signaling Tehran’s resolve to hold its ground against the U.S. and Israel across the region, a counterterrorism expert said.

The Iranian leader’s remarks came at a key moment in diplomacy, as President Donald Trump said a deal with Tehran to end the war is “largely negotiated” and warned the U.S. would either sign “a great and meaningful” agreement or walk away entirely.

While Iran signaled broad agreement with Washington on some points, it said a final deal is not imminent and that negotiations over the remaining details are still underway.

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In an X post marking the anniversary of the 1982 recapture of Khorramshahr from Iraqi forces during the Iran-Iraq War, Pezeshkian said, “Khorramshahr today is Iran, the Persian Gulf, and the Strait of Hormuz,” adding that “resistance, self-sacrifice, and repelling aggression are rooted in the culture of this land.”

Analysts claimed Pezeshkian was deliberately invoking one of the deepest ideological touchstones of the Islamic Republic — the battle that came to symbolize national resistance, civilian sacrifice and defiance against invasion.

“This is the Iran-Iraq War reference, and the timing is the point,” said Dr. Omar Mohammed, director of the Antisemitism Research Initiative Program on Extremism at George Washington University.

May 24 marks the anniversary of the 1982 liberation of Khorramshahr, the southwestern city Saddam Hussein captured early in the war and Iranian forces retook after months of brutal urban combat.

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“This is one of the Islamic Republic’s foundational mythological moments — civilian resistance, mass sacrifice, repelling an ‘aggressor army.’ Roughly what the Great Patriotic War is to Russia. The rhetorical move is the extension,” Mohammed told Fox News Digital.

“He’s mapping the 1980-82 defensive-war frame onto the current confrontation: Iran attacked by an aggressor, ordinary citizens (‘battle-untested but brave’) expected to stand and fight, with ‘resistance, sacrifice, repelling aggression’ cast as the cultural default mode.”

Some of the phrasing, Mohammed said, also evokes volunteer and Basij fighters versus a professional invading army. The analyst noted that Pezeshkian’s “Hormuz line” comment reflects a standard Iranian escalation tactic.

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“Invoking the strait inside a wartime-mobilization frame — even rhetorically — is a deliberate signal, not throat-clearing,” he added.

“The Khorramshahr frame is the deepest register the regime has. It’s what they reach for to signal existential war, not a managed crisis.”

Mohammed explained that Pezeshkian’s X post is framing the current confrontation from the presidential account to send a “high-stakes message.”

“It’s also a tell on internal posture: Khorramshahr, in short, means ‘we are being invaded and we will not negotiate,’” he added.

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