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Natasha Lyonne hits red carpet days after reportedly being removed from Delta flight

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From plane drama to red carpet glam, Natasha Lyonne made a bold return to the spotlight.

The Hollywood actress appeared unfazed at the premiere of “Lorne” in New York despite the turbulence she faced just days earlier when she was escorted off a plane in Los Angeles on April 7 after reportedly being unresponsive to crew members’ requests.

Lyonne was all smiles at the event on April 9, rocking a black midi dress over a white button-up shirt, paired with black boots.

Lyonne attended the “Lorne” afterparty and mingled with friends, including “Saturday Night Live” alums Seth Meyers and Sarah Sherman. Following the event, Lyonne took to X and reacted to the film: “Beautiful documentary on Lorne by Morgan Neville. Laughed a whole lot.”

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On Friday, the “Orange is the New Black” actress addressed the reports of her removal from the flight earlier this week, claiming that she’d taken a sleeping pill after boarding.

“Indeed, I took a Lunesta once seated, to ensure some shut eye on the Delta One red-eye flight to NYC,” she wrote on X. She explained that she boarded the flight with nothing more than a backpack and sneakers, “eager for a nap.”

Lyonne said her plan was to “be bushy tailed & beauty rested,” as she was scheduled to head straight to glam for an event with Drew Barrymore upon landing. 

However, things took an unexpected twist when she was allegedly detained by ICE. 

“Was looking forward to seeing Drew & an in depth convo, but I guess ICE had other plans & I was detained instead. Sign of the times, I guess,” Lyonne wrote in part.

The actress quickly clarified that she’s had no issues with Delta or TSA in the past, and added, “Heart is with our unpaid @TSA workers. Apologies to any travelers who were delayed.”

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The appearance comes on the heels of a reported incident aboard a Delta flight, where Lyonne was said to be “out of it” while seated in first class. Just hours before the incident, Lyonne had attended the season 3 premiere of “Euphoria.”

According to reports, she did not respond when flight attendants asked her to close her laptop and fasten her seat belt for takeoff. Concern escalated after the plane had already taxied.

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“Ma’am, do you need medical attention?” a flight attendant allegedly asked, according to Page Six. “Ma’am, I need you to come off the plane. Do you need help with your belongings?”

“Where are we?” Lyonne reportedly responded, before being told, “We’re still in L.A. The plane hasn’t gone anywhere. The plane is not going anywhere until you come off it.”

The actress ultimately de-boarded voluntarily.

The captain later addressed passengers, saying, “We have a passenger who, for whatever reason … wouldn’t follow some basic commands … We had a passenger who didn’t seem up to the task tonight, so that’s why they were asked to be booked on another flight — I do apologize for the inconvenience.”

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Fox News Digital has reached out to Lyonne and Delta for comment.

The moment also comes months after she publicly revealed a relapse following a decade of sobriety.

“Took my relapse public more to come,” Lyonne wrote on X in January. “Recovery is a lifelong process. Anyone out there struggling, remember you’re not alone. Grateful for love & smart feet.”

“Stay honest, folks. Sick as our secrets,” she added. “If no one told ya today, I love you. No matter how far down the scales we have gone, we will see how our experience may help another. Keep going, kiddos. Don’t quit before the miracle. Wallpaper your mind with love. Rest is all noise & baloney.”

The “Russian Doll” actress shared a more hopeful update last month: “Proud to report this kid is doing a whole lot better & back on her feet. Want to thank our recovery communities & the fans who stood by & were so supportive. Aiming to keep the journey somehow private, but look forward to sharing my experience, strength & hope as makes sense. My heart is with everyone ever going through it.”

Fox News Digital’s Christina Dugan Ramirez contributed to this report.

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Iran regime uses former Soviet republic to dodge sanctions, fund war machine: report

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With Iran increasingly isolated among its Gulf neighbors, recent reports say Tehran has been deepening its ties in the South Caucasus with the Republic of Georgia.

The former Soviet republic, which was until recently seen as an aspiring European Union and potential NATO member candidate, has slowly moved closer to Tehran.

“Iran has built a vast influence infrastructure in Georgia, which includes entities sanctioned by the U.S. government for links to extremism and viewed in Washington as fronts for the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC),” Giorgi Kandelaki, former member of the Georgian Parliament, told Fox News Digital. 

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Kandelaki, co-author of a recent report with the Hudson Institute titled Georgia’s Iranian Turn: Tehran’s Rapid Expansion of Influence in a Once-Committed U.S. Ally, said that Tbilisi’s turn toward Iran is bad for Georgians but also bad for U.S. interests in the region.

“Georgia has an overwhelmingly pro-U.S. public opinion committed to Western values with it also being viewed as a traditional U.S. ally in Washington. This reality presents a terrible precedent and reversing this trajectory is in the interest of both the U.S. but also Georgian society,” he added.

While Georgia has remained diplomatically neutral, the Hudson report details the budding ties between the two countries and how Iran uses Georgia as a network for intelligence infrastructure, penetrating Georgia’s religious, educational and cultural institutions to impact society.

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As far back as 2007, Iran opened the Georgian branch of Al-Mustafa University, which is considered one of Iran’s main arms for the dissemination of Islamic Republic founder Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini’s ideology abroad, according to United Against a Nuclear Iran.

The U.S. Treasury Department stated in 2020 that Iran’s IRGC-Quds Force uses Al-Mustafa University in Georgia as an international recruitment network for Iran and acts as a conduit for the Islamic Republic’s ideological and security interests.

“Al-Mustafa has facilitated unwitting tourists from Western countries to come to Iran, from whom IRGC-Qud’s Force members sought to collect intelligence,” the Treasury Department said. It also said that the university facilitated student exchanges with foreign universities to develop intelligence sources.

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A report from the Foundation for Defense of Democracies estimated the university’s annual budget is $100 million and has trained tens of thousands of emissaries across the world who spread Iran’s revolutionary ideology.

Iran has utilized sympathetic Georgians to commit international crimes to advance its domestic agenda.

While no links have ever been made with the Tbilisi government, a Georgian national, Agil Aslanov, who had ties to organized crime, was reportedly recruited by the Quds Forces to assassinate a prominent Jewish leader in Azerbaijan in 2022. In another case in 2025, Georgian national Polad Omarov was indicted in federal court in New York City and sentenced to 25 years in prison for attempting to assassinate prominent Iranian activist Masih Alinejad, a vocal critic of the Islamic Republic’s use of violence against peaceful protesters.

Georgia once made significant inroads to foster political and security ties with the United States following the Rose Revolution in 2003, becoming a bedrock of regional security in the Black Sea region. After decades of Soviet rule, Georgia aligned itself with the United States, contributing to missions in Iraq and Afghanistan, and eventually signed a Strategic Partnership Charter with the United States in 2009.

Tbilisi’s ties with Tehran have been expanded under the pro-Russia Georgian Dream party that took power in 2012. That bond, according to analysts, has tightened after Georgia’s pro-Western President Salome Zourabichvili finished her six-year term in office in 2024 and was replaced by Mikheil Kavelashvili, who was chosen as her successor by a newly established electoral college reportedly dominated by Georgian Dream supporters.

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Kavelashvili’s installment followed parliamentary elections in Oct. 2024 marred by some irregularities, according to the U.S. embassy in Tbilisi, in which the Georgian Dream declared victory. 

Leadership ties between both countries have steadily grown since the Georgian Dream’s disputed 2024 parliamentary victory.

Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze visited Iran in May 2024 for the funeral of Iranian President Ibrahim Raisi, who died in a helicopter accident, and again in July to attend the inauguration of Iran’s current president, Masoud Pezeshkian, where Iranian news agencies reported both leaders praised the growing relationship between the two countries.

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Many Georgian companies are also importing oil and petroleum products from Iran, a key economic lifeline for the regime and its regional war efforts, according to Georgian NGO Civic IDEA. In 2024, Iranian oil export revenue was approximately $43 billion, which accounts for roughly 57% of Iran’s total export revenue.

According to Civic IDEA, between 2022 and 2025, 72 companies registered in Georgia imported Iranian oil and petroleum, including eight inked to donors of the ruling Georgian Dream party, boosting Iran’s revenue stream even while heavily sanctioned by Western nations.

“Georgia has become Iran’s primary sanctions-evasion hub . . . funneling hard currency back to Tehran’s war machine and the IRGC through specific schemes in oil imports,” Nicholas Chkhaidze, national security and strategic communications analyst based in Tbilisi, told Fox News Digital.

Chkhaidze said these Georgian companies that import Iranian oil pay in cash and can bypass international banking sanctions. 

“The scale is massive, as Tehran uses the revenue from these schemes to fund its regional operations,” Chkhaidze claimed.

Telephone and email requests for comment sent to the government of Georgia were not returned. A spokesman for Iran’s mission to the United Nations would not comment on the relations between the two countries.

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Roger Goodell dismisses 49ers coach’s concerns about playing in Australia, says it’s part of long-term plan

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NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell dismissed concerns that San Francisco 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan had about playing in Australia in Week 1.

The 49ers are playing their first game of the 2026 season in Melbourne, Australia, against the Los Angeles Rams, and Shanahan told reporters during the league’s owners meetings last month he did not see any benefit to it. 

Shanahan jokingly said it was his goal to play a game 19 to 20 hours away to start the season.

Goodell said he will send Shanahan an app that will help with jet lag.

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“You know I have an app for him, which I’m going to send to him because my wife hooked me up with an app. And I got to tell you, I feel great. I have not felt any jet lag at all. I thought it was a relatively easy trip,” Goodell told reporters in Australia Friday.

Goodell called Shanahan an enthusiastic coach and mentioned that coaches’ priorities solely lie with winning football games. He said the NFL is focused on making it a great experience for everyone.

“Coaches have a focus on winning, that’s their No. 1 job. And so Coach Shanahan is enthusiastic and a great football coach but also someone who truly understands the importance of expanding our game globally. But his job is to win, his job is to play, and I always like to say coaches like to play at 1 and 4 and don’t get in the way of that,” Goodell said.

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“We’re going to make it a great experience for the team. That’s one of the things we focus on, everybody here and so many others have focused on, and make it a great experience for everyone, the team included. When they go back, they got to make sure they are able to continue the competitiveness because this game is real, this counts, and they’ll go on to Week 2 as soon as they leave here.”

Goodell also made it clear that the 49ers-Rams game in Australia is not a one-off event but the beginning of an investment into the market.

“There is no question that we are going to be playing here again. Our view is that we are coming here for the long term. We don’t come as a one-off. This isn’t a circus. This is an investment in this market, and we believe that this is long term and will be great for the NFL long term,” Goodell said.

Shanahan and the other 31 head coaches in the NFL might not love the idea of playing a game that requires a 19- to 20-hour flight, but they have little say in the matter. While Shanahan might not see a “pro” to having to play overseas, he does think it’s cool to see the NFL globally.

“I don’t see any pro,” Shanahan said. “It’s cool for the league to play globally. I think that’s awesome. But as far as the team doing it, no, there’s not much benefit to it. Sometimes it’s nice to get a bye week after, but doesn’t happen in Week 1.”

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Ohio teacher sues high school for demanding he remove LGBT poster inside classroom

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A high school teacher in Ohio is suing his school district after the district removed an LGBTQ poster inside a classroom that read, “Hate Has No Home Here.”

An anonymous teacher identified only as “John Doe” in legal documents sued the Little Miami School district on Tuesday over the board of education’s decision to remove the flag in February, claiming it was based on the school board and School Board President David Wallace’s “history of animus” toward LGBTQ messages.

“Comments from Board Members made it clear that the decision was not based on the words of the poster itself, but rather an effort to silence the pro-LGBTQ message associated with the rainbow imagery,” the legal complaint read.

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The teacher also accused Wallace of targeting LGBTQ messages and materials after he previously campaigned to pull back on Scholastic Book Fairs until some titles could be reviewed for “inappropriate material” after a parent complained about a graphic novel series featuring a gay boy being included.

Wallace was also accused of leading the effort to remove the poster by bringing it to the school board after being denied by district leaders.

According to the complaint, the poster hung in the classroom for approximately four years without issue. The poster in question also contained images of a heart-shaped American flag alongside several Pride flags.

The teacher repeatedly argued that the poster’s purpose was not to push sexual or gender ideology but to spread a message of inclusion and feared that replacing it could send the opposite message.

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“My concern is that attempting to find a different, ‘neutral’ image may inadvertently lead to the erasure of LGBTQ+ representation. My preference would be to discuss any additional representation that could potentially be added to the existing flag, rather than removing any of the represented groups,” the plaintiff wrote in February.

The teacher is demanding declaratory relief acknowledging that the Little Miami School Board violated the First and 14th Amendments by removing the poster as well as an injunction preventing them from removing it in the future.

In a comment to Fox News Digital, the Little Miami School District said that it was aware of the lawsuit and “remains committed to supporting all students and staff and maintaining a respectful learning environment, while following state and federal law and Board-adopted policies.”

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Attorney Joshua Engel, who represents the teacher, released a statement condemning the school board after it “turned a simple message of kindness into a fight about free speech.”

“A teacher hung a flag in his classroom for four years saying every student deserves to be treated with respect— and nobody had a problem with it until some school board members decided to make it one. Now they’re trying to silence a message of kindness while letting other personal displays stay up. The Constitution demands more; school board members cannot silence speech simply because it disagrees with the message,” Engel said.

Little Miami High School previously faced criticism after suspending two football players for carrying “thin blue line” and “thin red line” flags across the field on Sept. 11 in 2020. The players flew the flags in defiance of the school, which previously denied their request to carry the flags on the field.

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