Pakistan's imprisoned ex-PM Khan to get medical treatment after reported partial vision loss

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Pakistan's imprisoned former Prime MinisterImran Khan will undergo treatment for an eye conditionat a specialized medical facility, a Cabinet minister said Saturday, days after the Supreme Court ordered a medical evaluation amid growing concerns about his eyesight.

Associated Press

Information Minister Attaullah Tarar wrote on X that an examination would be conducted by leading eye specialists as part of Khan's ongoing treatment which began in late January afterKhan reported a partial loss of visionin his right eye.

The minister did not say at which medical facility and when Khan would be treated.

"A detailed report will also be submitted to the Supreme Court. Conjecture, speculations and efforts to turn this into political rhetoric and mileage for vested interests may please be avoided," Tarar said.

Earlier this week, Khan's lawyer, Salman Safdar, told the Supreme Court that the former premier had lost roughly 85% of vision in his right eye. The court subsequently directed authorities to arrange a medical assessment by a panel of doctors and facilitate a telephone call between Khan, 73, and his sons before Feb. 16.

Supporters of Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party, or PTI, have staged protests in Islamabad and other cities, demanding he be moved from prison to a hospital for specialized treatment. Some of the lawmakers from PTI and its allies are also staging a sit-in outside the parliament.

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Khan's family angrily responded to Tarar's announcement, saying it had not been consulted before he was taken for treatment and has called for family members and his personal physician to be present during any future procedures.

Khan's sister, Aleema Khan, said Saturday on X that the authorities had arranged the call and Khan had spoken with his sons for about 20 minutes. Khan was "extremely happy" to hear their voices after a long gap, she said, adding the family was awaiting urgent treatment of Khan at an eye hospital under the supervision of Khan's personal doctors.

The former cricket star turned politician has been in prison since 2023 after being convicted in a graft case.

He was removed from office in a parliamentary no-confidence vote in April 2022. He has alleged that his ouster was the result of a U.S.-backed conspiracy involving political rivals and Pakistan's former army chief, Qamar Javed Bajwa — allegations denied by Washington, Pakistan's military, and his political opponents.

Despite his legal troubles, Khan remains a central and popular figure in Pakistan, and the PTI wants his release. The issue of Khan's partial vision surfaced in late January when Tarar said the former premier had undergone a medical procedure for an eye condition and was in good health.

The PTI party made a strong showing in the Feb. 8, 2024, parliamentary election but did not win a majority of the seats in the National Assembly, or lower house of the parliament. The party claimed the vote was rigged. The government denies such claims

Pakistan's imprisoned ex-PM Khan to get medical treatment after reported partial vision loss

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Pakistan's imprisoned former Prime MinisterImran Khan will undergo treatment for an eye conditionat...
Steve Bannon courted Epstein in his efforts to 'take down' Pope Francis

Steve Bannon, a former White House adviser to US President Donald Trump, discussed opposition strategies with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein against Pope Francis, with Bannon saying he hoped to "take down" the pontiff, according to newly released files from the US Department of Justice.

CNN The late Pope Francis, left, and former White House adviser Steve Bannon. - AP, Getty Images

Messages sent between the pair in 2019, released in the massive document dump last month, reveal Bannon courted the late financier in his attempts to undermine the former pontiff after leaving the first Trump administration.

Bannon had been highly critical of Francis whom he saw as an opponent to his "sovereigntist" vision, a brand of nationalist populism which swept through Europe in 2018 and 2019. The released documents from the DOJ appear to show that Epstein had been helpingBannon to build his movement.

"Will take down (Pope) Francis," Bannon wrote to Epstein in June 2019. "The Clintons, Xi, Francis, EU – come on brother."

Pope Francis was a significant obstacle to Bannon's brand of nationalist populism. In 2018, the former Trump aide described Francis to The Spectator as"beneath contempt,"accusing him of siding with "globalist elites" and, according to "SourceMaterial," urged Matteo Salvini, now Italy's deputy prime minister, to"attack" the pontiff.For his part, Salvini has used Christian iconography and language when pursuing his anti-immigrant agenda.

Rome and the Vatican have been important for Bannon. He set up a Rome bureau when he ran Breitbart News and has been involved in trying to establish a political training "gladiator school" to defend Judaeo-Christian values not far from the Eternal City.

Former White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon speaks at Atreju 2018, a conference of right wing activists, on September 22, 2018, in Rome, Italy. Bannon was in Rome to drum up support for The Movement, his organization designed to help right-wing political parties in Europe. - Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post/Getty Images Former White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon talks with Giorgia Meloni, leader of the Brothers of Italy, before speaking at Atreju 2018, a conference of right wing activists, as aids block cameras from viewing through the bushes behind on September 22, 2018 in Rome, Italy. Meloni, known for her conservative ideals, is now prime minister of Italy. - Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post/Getty Images

Francis, meanwhile, was a counterweight to the Trumpian worldview, strongly critiquing nationalism and making advocacy for migrants a hallmark of his pontificate.

The recently released DOJ files reveal Bannon messaged Epstein on several occasions in his efforts to undermine the late pope.

In his messages with Epstein, Bannon references "In the Closet of the Vatican," a 2019 book by French journalist Frédéric Martel that lifted a lid on secrecy and hypocrisy at high levels of the church. Martel created a storm with his book by claiming 80% of the clergy working in the Vatican are gay, while exploring how they keep their sexuality secret.

The whole question of homosexuality in the church has been a lightning rod for some conservatives, who see it as evidence of a deeper, systemic crisis in the church, with some linking it to the wider sexual abuse scandals. Most experts and researchers view any conflating of sexual orientation with abuse as scientifically inaccurate.

Bannon showed an interest in turning Martel's book into a film after meeting the author in Paris at a five-star hotel. In the messages, Bannon appears to suggest that Epstein could be the film's executive producer. "You are now exec producer of 'ITCOTV' (In the closet of the Vatican)," Bannon wrote.

It is not clear how serious the proposal from Bannon to Epstein was, and, in the exchange, Epstein doesn't mention the offer and asks about Bannon filming Noam Chomsky, the philosopher and public intellectual. Martel said when he met Bannon at the Hotel Le Bristol he told him that he could not agree to any film deal as his publishers controlled the film rights and had already signed a deal with another corporation. He told CNN that he thinks Bannon wanted to "instrumentalize" the book in his efforts against Pope Francis.

Steve Bannon and Jeffrey Epstein in a handout image from the estate of the late financier and convicted sex offender, released by Democrats on the House Oversight Committee in Washington, DC, on December 12, 2025. - House Oversight Committee Democrats/Handout/Reuters

The Epstein files show Epstein, on April 1, 2019, emailed himself "in the closet of the vatican," and later sent Bannon an article titled "Pope Francis or Steve Bannon? Catholics must choose" to which Bannon replies "easy choice."

Austen Ivereigh, a biographer of the late pope, said Bannon thought he could use Martel's book to embarrass and damage Pope Francis, while claiming to "purify" the church. "I think he badly misjudged the nature of the book – and Pope Francis," Ivereigh told CNN.

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Yet, as it now turns out, it appears that Bannon was messaging Epstein several years after his 2008 conviction for child sex offenses and just before he was arrested for the sex trafficking of minors.

Rev. Antonio Spadaro, a Vatican official who collaborated closely with Pope Francis, told CNN Bannon's messages show a desire to fuse "spiritual authority with political power for strategic ends."

The late pope, Spadaro explains, resisted such a link: "What those messages reveal is not merely hostility toward a pontiff, but a deeper attempt to instrumentalize faith as a weapon – precisely the temptation he sought to disarm."

The period of 2018 to 2019 saw intense opposition to Francis, which culminated in an August 2018 dossier released by Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, the former papal ambassador to the US, accusing him of failing to deal with abuse committed by Cardinal Theodore McCarrick.A Vatican inquiry later cleared Francis.

But Bannon's desire to make a film out of Martel's book saw him lose an ally in the Vatican. Cardinal Raymond Burke, a prominent conservative critic of Francis, said: "I am not at all of the mind that the book should be made into a film."

Former White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon makes his way through crowds surrounded by his entourage after speaking at Atreju 2018. - Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post/Getty Images

Burke was also portrayed in an unflattering way in Martel's book. Burke's split with Bannon came when he cut ties with Dignitatis Humanae, a conservative institute founded by Benjamin Harnwell, a British political adviser and a close associate of Bannon's based in Italy.

Harnwell had been working with Bannon to set up an academy to train nationalist-populist leaders in an 800-year-old former monastery called "Certosa di Trisulti" in the province of Frosinone, 47 miles south-east of Rome. Harnwell is engaged in an ongoing legal battle with Italy's culture ministry over the monastery's conversion, with a hearing taking place on February 11.

In 2019, the Italian government revoked a lease given to Harnwell's institute for the monastery, stating irregularities, non-payments and misrepresentations by Harnwell. In 2024, however, a Roman court cleared him, and he is seeking to win back the lease.

The Epstein files also reveal that Bannon forwarded an email to Epstein in July 2018 with an article from Italian newspaper "La Repubblica" headlined "Bannon the European: He's opening the populist fort in Brussels." Bannon was forwarding an English translation of the article, which had originally been sent by Harnwell.

Harnwell told CNN that Epstein was "not involved in Trisulti."

Director of the Dignitatis Humanae Institute Benjamin Harnwell at the Trisulti Monastery Certosa di Trisulti in Collepardo on May 2, 2019. Harnwell was behind a would-be "gladiator school" for populists in Italy. - Alberto Pizzoli/AFP/Getty Images The Trisulti Monastery Certosa di Trisulti in Collepardo on May 2, 2019. - Alberto Pizzoli/AFP/Getty Images

Elsewhere in the files, Epstein jokes with his brother, Mark, about inviting Pope Francis to his residence for a "massage" during the US papal visit in 2015. Three years later, he messages Bannon to say he's trying to "organize a trip for the pope to the Midde East," adding "headline – tolerance."

When Bannon shares with Epstein an article about the Vatican condemning "populist nationalism," Epstein quotes John Milton's biblical poem "Paradise Lost," when Satan has been cast out of heaven.

"Better to reign in Hell, than serve in Heaven," Epstein tells Bannon.

CNN has contacted a representative of Bannon for comment. Trump has consistently denied any wrongdoing in relation to Epstein or any allegation of sexual misconduct.

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Steve Bannon courted Epstein in his efforts to ‘take down’ Pope Francis

Steve Bannon, a former White House adviser to US President Donald Trump, discussed opposition strategies with convicted ...
Former<strong> </strong>federal workers, who were either laid off or accepted buyouts<strong> </strong>last year amid the Department of Government Efficiency's massive cuts to the federal government.

For Ashley Garley, the past year has been "messy, challenging and heartbreaking."

Garley, a former contractor and malaria expert with the US Agency for International Development, was among the first people impacted by the Department of Government Efficiency'smassive shrinkingof the federal workforce last year, led by billionaire Elon Musk, which began almost immediately after President Donald Trump returned to the White House.

Garley, who lost her job after theUS froze all foreign aidin late January 2025, is struggling to find a full-time job with benefits more than a year later. To contribute to the bills, she has returned to a job she held in her teens and 20s: swim instructor.

Going from a jet-setting job with global impact, to teaching part-time at her county pool in Maryland has been "pretty emotional," Garley told CNN.

Ashley Garley - Ashley Garley

Like Garley, hundreds of thousands of federal workers and contractors have had their lives upended by Trump's quest to clamp down on the federal workforce, whom he sees as a threat to his ability to execute his priorities.

More than 350,000 workers have left the federal government's payroll since the president started his second term on January 20, 2025, according to the Office of Personnel Management.

After accounting for new hires, the federal workforce shrunk by 242,000 people – or just over 10% – between his inauguration day and December. Nearly 2.1 million federal civilian employees remain.

Trump said last month that he doesn't feel bad about the downsizing, claiming without evidence that former federal workers are now making more money in the private sector.

But that's not been everyone's experience. CNN spoke with several former federal workers who were laid off or accepted buyouts amid DOGE'saggressiveand controversial cuts last year. Some of them, like Garley, have struggled to find a job and pay the bills. Meanwhile, others have pivoted careers, moved across the country for new jobs or are dedicating their time to volunteer work – and finding a silver lining in their new lives.

Here are some of their stories:

Emotional toll

The stress of losing her dream job at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention landed Morgan Hall in the hospital.

A few months after she received herfinal paycheckin August, Hall told CNN that she had been in bed for days without eating or answering the phone. Her son ultimately found her, and she was hospitalized in October for 10 days with severe depression, anxiety, and physical complications tied to a preexisting medical condition that can be worsened by stress.

Hall – who worked as an analyst for CDC's violence prevention division – was initially placed on administrative leave on February 14, 2025, and later terminated as part of the sweeping layoffs known as a "reduction in force," or RIFs. She is among the 10,500 people across agencies who were affected by RIFs.

Hall says she has fallen behind on bills, which includes roughly $57,000 in hospital costs. For two months, she relied on food stamps to buy groceries, sought state assistance for utilities, and a relative helped cover her mortgage so she would not lose her home.

In January, Hall began a temporary 12-week stint that placed her back at CDC, working through a contractor. However, she says she is still unable to meet her expenses. She is also continuing to apply for jobs, submitting at least five applications on most days.

"My hope and prayer is that one day I can go back and continue to complete my mission at CDC," Hall told CNN, adding "I feel like a part of me is gone."

Grueling job search

When Casey Hollowell decided to take the secondbuyout offer, known as the deferred resignation program, from the US Department of Agriculture in April, he figured he'd have no trouble finding a job by the time his federal paychecks would stop at the end of September.

An Army veteran who served in Iraq, Hollowell hadn't wanted to leave his post as an investigative analyst but felt he had no job security after being laid off in the administration'spurgeof probationary workers last February and thenreinstatedby a federal judge.

Initially, he thought he could be picky, looking for remote jobs so he could stay in Biloxi, Mississippi, close to his teenage son. But Hollowell, 40, grew concerned after applying for multiple positions and not getting any responses. So he widened his search, applying to as many as 30 jobs a day, including ones that were in-person or part-time or entry level.

Though his grandparents helped him cover his bills, the fruitless job hunt weighed on him. He stopped hanging out with his friends because he felt he couldn't afford it.

"I became a hermit," said Hollowell. "I just stayed at home, like, all the time."

Casey Hollowell - Casey Hollowell

Then in December, he got a big break. Hollowell applied for a data analyst position at an insurance claims management company, and less than a week later, he was asked to interview. He started on February 2, nearly one year to the day after his initial layoff from USDA.

Now Hollowell is making some other big changes. He just put an offer on a house, which was accepted. And the whole ordeal prompted him to switch from being Republican to an independent.

Similarly, Kit Rees, a former investigator at the Department of Justice's Civil Rights Division, also accepted the administration's second deferred resignation offer and ended their tenure in the federal government in September.

Rees' journey to securing a full-time job in their field has been difficult and tiring, they told CNN.

Before their federal paychecks stopped, Rees began piecing together whatever work they could find. They picked up a job at an ACE Hardware store in May 2025 and found part-time work with a restoration construction company, filling in on job sites when it needed additional help.

Kit Rees - Kit Rees

The jobs didn't pay nearly as much as their federal government salary but it gave Rees the mental break they said they needed.

"It was healing, lifting mulch, helping people match screws and working through house projects," Rees said. The customer service job allowed them to talk "to dozens of people," and those conversations reminded them "that tragedies don't happen to everybody."

However, struggling to pay the bills, Rees took out a $15,000 loan.

Just weeks away from asking their family for financial help, Rees secured a job in their field earlier this month.

"It's more than a $30,000 pay cut. But it's still the best offer that I've gotten," they told CNN.

Rees said they are cautious about feeling relieved after securing the job.

Changing careers

After accepting a deferred resignation offer, Steve Leibman says he was lucky to be at the point of his career where he didn't feel immediate pressure to take a new job right away. He took some consulting work and helped a non-profit, but it was his trek on Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania that changed his perspective on his next real move.

Leibman – who worked remotely from the Boston area at the US Digital Service, which later formally turned into DOGE – is now enrolled in a teacher license program at Harvard University. The program is a one-year master's degree, after which he hopes to teach high school math.

Steve Leibman - Steve Leibman

"A big part of it was just interacting with people whose perspective of the world are just different and gives a different view of how can you have impact in the world," Liebman told CNN about his trip.

Meanwhile, David Schwark began looking for another job when a court order brought him back to the Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights in Cleveland after he had been laid off in March 2025. He was uncertain when he would be formally let go.

David Schwark - David Schwark

The Department of Education was the second hardest hit agency in the federal government overhaul, losing 49% of its staff, according to OPM. Meanwhile, agencies that are a higher priority for Trump were shielded. For instance, staffing at the Department of Homeland Security only dipped 11%.

Schwark, who was a prosecutor before he joined the Department of Education, is now a magistrate in a local municipal court in Lakewood, Ohio.

"It's a lot different. I loved my job with Ed," Schwark told CNN. "It's been a big shift to go back to dealing with criminal law and being in the court room for a long time."

When Cameron Hilaker was laid off as an emergency manager at USAID, his wife was six-months pregnant with their first born. Their son is now eight months old and Hilaker still has not found work. He has defaulted to being a stay-at-home-dad.

"I'm very happy to be a stay-at-home dad, don't get me wrong by any means, but this was never anywhere in our sketch of what our life would look like."

Cameron Hilaker - Jemal Countess/Getty Images for Tuesday Group Fired Feds

Hilaker says his family is really starting to feel the crunch financially and are considering moving out of Washington, DC, for a better cost-of-living.

"I feel burned by Elon Musk and DOGE," Hilaker, a member of AFGE Local 1534 union, told CNN. "They came in, they said they were going to slash and burn the federal government, they were going to reduce the deficit."

For Vi Le, a former behavioral scientist and violence prevention researcher at the CDC, finding a new role has become its own full-time job.

She has a small contract related to violence prevention, but it is not enough to replace her previous salary. Until she finds a job in her field, Le told CNN that she is trying to expand a hobby business designing floral arrangements for events.

"For now, flowers might be the full-time job, and my career might be the hobby," Le said.

Cross-country moves

After losing his DC-based contractor job at USAID, Nathan Karrel said he "went straight into survival mode." He found a new role with the city of Tucson, Arizona, where he knew nobody – and moved there "sight unseen."

"I'm not in international development anymore, which was my plan," said Karrel, 42. "But I really love Tucson, except for the heat. It's a whole different culture than DC. The food scene is amazing. The people are kind, and the mountains are great. Now I know all about mesquite trees and cacti."

Nathan Karrel - Nathan Karrel

He is one of several federal employees who told CNN that the Trump-era cuts were sodisruptiveto their lives that they moved across the country – highlighting the nationwide impact of DOGE, which affected communities far beyond DC where the bulk of federal workers live.

CivicMatch, a jobs platform thatconnectednearly 190 former federal workers to new jobs last year at state and local governments, said roughly 33% of those people moved to a new state, and 10% did cross-country moves.

One of these people moved all the way from DC to Honolulu, Hawaii. An employee from the Department of Interior moved from Pennsylvania to Oregon. A federal health official moved from Texas to Richmond, Virginia.

"As the federal government retrenches, the work obviously does not disappear. It shifts to cities and states," CivicMatch founder Caitlin Lewis said. "This has become a talent redistribution engine, to the benefit of local governments. Federal workers were desperate to continue serving."

Heading back home

Lucas King, 36, who was also a USAID contractor, relocated from DC to Idaho, where he grew up. He previously managed some of USAID's largest projects in Africa, includinginitiativesfrom Trump's first term. Now he oversees permits and inspections for Ketchum, Idaho, a ski town with 3,600 residents.

"I wasn't getting traction in DC, so we moved back to Idaho," King said. "My new boss was clear that this was kind of a step down, given my experience. It was traumatic, but it worked out. I feel lucky that I found a place to live, a good employer, with good benefits, and I'm back with family and friends."

Lucas King - Courtesy Lucas King

The DOGE layoffs also sent Nathaniel Haight on a path closer to family.

He started as an intern at USAID in 2015, and worked his way up over 10 years, handling grants and contracts. But after getting swept up in the dismantling of USAID, he cast a wide net during his job search, looking far beyond DC, so he could start providing again for his wife and four children.

He landed a new role handling grants for the city of Indianapolis, which came as a relief. His parents and four siblings live in Indiana. His kids had to switch to new schools, but they now have much deeper bonds with their cousins, he said.

"I found a new job in public service, much closer to my parents and siblings," Haight said. "I'm seeing a lot of positives that have come out of it."

Continuing the mission

After being placed on administrative leave from USAID, Julianne Weis began going to Capitol Hill to stress the impacts of the agency's funding cuts and advocate for foreign aid to be restored. She co-founded Aid on the Hill, a volunteer advocacy organization.

Julianne Weis - Vera Zlidar

Weis worked in USAID's global health bureau, particularly in the areas of family planning and reproductive health. She eventually was formally terminated from the agency as part of reduction in force efforts.

These days, Weis spends most of her week meeting with congressional staffers — sometimes virtually and other times, taking her kids along to Capitol Hill.

Weis will be starting a full-time job soon, and she shared with CNN that she plans on having "a side role in helping" Aid on the Hill in her own time.

Similarly, as Deborah Kaliel – who worked at USAID's Office of HIV/AIDS – searches for a job, she is dedicating her time as a volunteer for Crisis in Care, a fundraising effort she co-founded to provide support for HIV services in other countries.

Deborah Kaliel - Courtesy Deborah Kaliel

"That has kind of taken over my life," Kaliel told CNN. She added: "It's been really rewarding and, and a really wonderful way for me to stay engaged with the topic and the people and the communities that I'm most passionate about."

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

New careers, relocations and medical problems: How ex-federal workers’ lives have been upended since DOGE

federal workers, who were either laid off or accepted buyouts last year amid the Department of Government Efficiency's massive cuts t...
What Happened to Little Mix? A Look at the Girl Group Members' Lives 4 Years After They Split

Niki Nikolova/FilmMagic

People Leigh-Anne Pinnock, Perrie Edwardsand Jesy Nelson and Jade Thirlwall of Little Mix on May 6, 2012 in London, England. Niki Nikolova/FilmMagic

NEED TO KNOW

  • In 2011, Jade Thirlwall, Jesy Nelson, Perrie Edwards and Leigh-Anne Pinnock formed Little Mix while competing on The X Factor

  • Nelson took a break from the group in 2020 to focus on her mental health while Edwards, Pinnock and Thirlwall continued to perform as a trio

  • Little Mix announced that they were going on a hiatus in 2022

It's been over 10 years sinceLittle Mixbrought back the girl group.

Jade Thirlwall,Jesy Nelson,Perrie EdwardsandLeigh-Anne Pinnockformed the British ensemble in 2011 while competing onThe X Factor. They became the first group to win the U.K. competition series and went on to release multiple hit songs, including "Wings" and "Black Magic."

In a February 2026 interview withThe Sun, Nelson said the reason Little Mix was so successful was that they "genuinely were like sisters at one point" and "best friends." As for a future reunion, she told the outlet, "Never say never."

"We're all mums now [aside from Thirlwall] and I can't speak on behalf of them, but I'd like to think that we probably see things a lot differently now," Nelson explained ahead of her docuseriesLife After Little Mix, which released on Prime Video on Feb. 13. "I have so much love for them and always will."

Little Mix started to unravel when Nelson left in 2020, writing on Instagram that being in a band had "taken a toll" on her mental health. Though Thirlwall, Edwards and Pinnock continued to perform as a trio, they announced a hiatus a year later in a post onX. They maintained that they were "not splitting up" but taking a break to "recharge" and work on other projects.

So, what happened to Little Mix? Here's everything to know about where the former members are now.

Jade Thirlwall

Jade Thirlwal attends InStyle's 10th anniversary party on November 22, 2011 in London, England ; Jade Thirlwall at the Pre-Grammy Gala on January 31, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. Mike Marsland/WireImage ; Earl Gibson III/Deadline via Getty

Mike Marsland/WireImage ; Earl Gibson III/Deadline via Getty

After Little Mix's hiatus, Thirlwall released her first solo album under the stage name JADE titledTHAT'S SHOWBIZ BABY. She took home the BRIT Award for Best Pop Act for her song "Angel of My Dreams," and thanked her "Little Mix sisters" in heracceptance speechfor changing her life.

Thirlwall toldHarper's Bazaar UKin November 2025 that she felt like she "struggled the most to adapt to life after the group" because her bandmates had families and kids.

"They went into a new chapter willingly. It was just me," she told the outlet. "I didn't know what to do with myself. Since I was 18, I lived and breathed Little Mix. It just took me a minute to adjust."

Jesy Nelson

Jesy Nelson attends InStyle's 10th anniversary party on November 22, 2011 in London, England ; Jesy Nelson attends her music video screening on April 13, 2023 in London, England. Mike Marsland/WireImage ; Ricky Vigil M / Justin E Palmer/GC Images

Mike Marsland/WireImage ; Ricky Vigil M / Justin E Palmer/GC Images

In December 2020, Nelson announced on Instagram that she was leaving Little Mix to focus on her mental health.

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"I find the constant pressure of being in a girl group and living up to expectations very hard," she wrote, adding that it was time to "embark on a new chapter."

Though she released three singles as a solo artist, she put her music career on hold after welcoming twin girls,Ocean Jade and Story Monroe, in 2025 with her then-boyfriend,Zion Foster.

Months later, the singer announced that her daughters werediagnosed with spinal muscular atrophy(SMA) Type 1, an inherited neuromuscular disorder that is caused by the loss of a spinal cord nerve cell, which can weaken muscles over time, according to theCleveland Clinic.

Though children diagnosed with the condition can die before the age of 2 without treatment, Nelson said during a February 2026 episode of Jamie Laing'sGreat Companypodcast that she believes her daughters will "defy all the odds."

Perrie Edwards

Perrie Edwards attends InStyle's 10th anniversary party on November 22, 2011 in London, England ; Perrie Edwards attends Capital's Jingle Bell Ball 2024 on December 07, 2024 in London, England. Mike Marsland/WireImage (2)

Mike Marsland/WireImage (2)

After Little Mix went on hiatus, Edwards released a solo album titledPerriein September 2025 and continued to grow her fashion label Disora. In 2023, the brand became one of only 6% of labels that sell a size 18 and up,Graziareported.

The singer alsowelcomed her second child, a daughter named Alanis, with her partner, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, in January 2026. The couple also share a son, Axel, who was born in August 2021.

Leigh-Anne Pinnock

Leigh-Anne Pinnock attends InStyle's 10th anniversary party on November 22, 2011 in London, England ; Leigh-Anne Pinnock attends Capital's Jingle Bell Ball on December 06, 2025 in London, England. Mike Marsland/WireImage ; Karwai Tang/WireImage

Mike Marsland/WireImage ; Karwai Tang/WireImage

Pinnock continued to release new music after Little Mix went on hiatus, and announced onInstagramin October 2025 that her first solo album —My Ego Told Me To— would be released in February 2026. She also appeared in the 2021 comedy-dramaBoxing Dayand wrote a memoir in 2023 titledBelieve.

"I definitely think there's alot more to Leigh-Annethan you even know," she told PEOPLE in June 2023.

She continued, "When you're in a group, there's only so much you can show of yourself, so I think that's the exciting part. I get to unlock all this potential now and show everybody what I'm made of and what I can do."

The British singer welcomed twins in August 2021 with professional soccer playerAndre Gray. Theytied the knotless than two years later in June 2023.

Read the original article onPeople

What Happened to Little Mix? A Look at the Girl Group Members' Lives 4 Years After They Split

Niki Nikolova/FilmMagic NEED TO KNOW In 2011, Jade Thirlwall, Jesy Nelson, Perrie Edwards and Leigh-Anne Pi...
Where Are Audrey Hepburn's Children and Grandchildren Now? All About Their Lives Abroad

Bettmann/Getty ; Ernesto Ruscio/Getty

People Audrey Hepburn ; Sean Ferrer and Luca Dotti attend the 'Audrey In Rome' Opening Exhibition on October 25, 2011 in Rome, Italy. Bettmann/Getty ; Ernesto Ruscio/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Audrey Hepburn welcomed two children, Sean Hepburn Ferrer and Luca Dotti, with two different partners

  • Both Sean and Luca went on to welcome children of their own after Audrey's untimely death at 63

  • Audrey's granddaughter, Emma Kathleen Hepburn Ferrer, has continued her legacy of philanthropy

Audrey Hepburnis remembered far and wide as an Oscar-winning actress, a humanitarian and a fashion icon, but she also left a family behind to carry on her legacy.

Before her untimely death on Jan. 20, 1993, at the age of 63, Audrey gave birth to two sons, Sean Hepburn Ferrer and Luca Dotti.

Unfortunately, pregnancy didn't come easily for Audrey. After tying the knot with Mel Ferrer in 1954, she had two miscarriages, one of which reportedly occurred during the filming of her 1961 movie,Unforgiven, when she fell off a horse, perVanity Fair.

Her first child, Sean, was born on July 17, 1960. Though her marriage to Ferrer didn't last, with the couple divorcing in 1968, she became a mother again on Feb. 8, 1970, with the birth of her second son, Luca. Audrey shared the little boy with her second husband, Andrea Dotti, whom she wed in 1969. The pair would later divorce in 1982.

Here's everything to know about Audrey Hepburn's children and grandchildren.

Audrey's Hepburn's children

Sean Hepburn Ferrer, 65

Sean Hepburn Ferrer and his wife on September 14, 2017 in Marbella, Spain. Gtres Informacion mas Comuniacion on line,S.L./Alamy

Gtres Informacion mas Comuniacion on line,S.L./Alamy

Sean Hepburn Ferrer was born to Auudrey and Mel Ferrer on July 17, 1960, in Switzerland andspent part of his childhoodin a farmhouse in Tolochenaz, Switzerland — the same city where his parents wed six years earlier.

"I didn't grow up the son of a movie star; I didn't grow up in Hollywood, not the place, not the state of mind," Sean toldFilm Talkin 2016.

In fact, it wasn't until Sean moved to Rome at the age of 10 that he experienced paparazzi. "People wanted to photograph her all the time," he recalled.

Sean, for his part, stayed out of the limelight, attending primary school at Lycee Chateaubriand in Italy before heading back to Switzerland, where he became a student at the Swiss boarding school Le Rosey.

Though he spent a semester at the University of Geneva International Law School upon graduation, he ultimately followed in his mother's footsteps, working in the film industry.

However, Sean retired from Hollywood after his mother's death in 1993, pivoting instead to furthering her humanitarian efforts through the Audrey Hepburn Foundation.

"I left the business when my mother passed away and devoted myself to her work," he explained to Film Talk. "That was to me much more important than to produce a few more films … That's something we felt she would have very much appreciated,"

Sean also released his book,Audrey Hepburn, An Elegant Spirit, which gave an intimate glimpse into the actress's daily life, in 2003. "She wanted a normal life for herself and for us," he toldCBSof the memoir. "And it's a valuable and beautiful memory that she left us."

In his personal life, Sean married multiple times, welcoming three children. In 1994, he welcomed daughter Emma Kathleen Hepburn Ferrer with then-wife Leila Flannigan. He went on to marry Giovanna Gregori Ferrer, with whom he welcomed sons Gregorio Ferrer and Santiago Ferrer.

He and Giovanna ultimately split, and Sean married his wife, Karin Hofer. Together, she and Sean released a 2020 children's book,Little Audrey's Daydream: The Life of Audrey Hepburn, about his mother's life.

Today, Sean splits his time between Los Angeles and Florence with Karin.

Luca Dotti, 56

Luca Dotti attends new exhibition

David M. Benett/Dave Benett/Getty

Luca Dotti was born to Audrey and Andrea Dotti on Feb. 8, 1970, in Switzerland, but grew up in Rome. Similar to his big brother, Luca was unaffected by his mother's fame in his formative years, laterwriting in his 2015 book,Audrey at Home, that he had no idea his mom was a movie star.

When asked about her, he recalled telling reporters, "I don't know who you are talking about. You must be mistaken. My mother is called Dotti."

"I didn't know she was Audrey Hepburn until I was 6 or so," he said.

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Luca, a graphic designer, was just 23 years old when his mother died. It was in her honor that he created the Audrey Hepburn's Children's Fund with his brother Sean, which aimed to support underprivileged children.

In addition to Audrey at Home, Luca also publishedAudrey in Romein 2011.

"I wanted to connect these two parts, the public and the private Audrey," he toldPEOPLEof the former book, a memoir. "I hope it will give new insights into her. The most special thing about her was how normal she was. She never spoke about life as a fashion icon, her career as an actress, or her history. She lived her life as she wanted to."

In his personal life, Luca married his wife, Domitilla Dotti, and the two welcomed multiple children together.

Audrey Hepburn's grandchildren

Emma Kathleen Hepburn Ferrer, 31

Emma Ferrer attends the

Carlos Alvarez/Getty

Emma Kathleen Hepburn Ferrer was born to Ferrer and his then-wife Leila in Switzerland in May 1994, just one year after her grandmother died.

Though Emma never met her grandmother, she still reckoned with what Audrey meant to her, as both a celebrity and her family.

"I've been questioning a lot lately what she means to me," she toldHarper's Bazaarin August 2014. "I knew her image, of course, and that I happened to be, by pure chance, related to her."

She continued, "But as a child I couldn't really relate to Audrey Hepburn, the actress. To me, she was family. I can live with her through my father. His stories are all about his growing up."

Emma spent her first year of life at the Hepburn family country house, called La Paisible in Tolochenaz, Switzerland, before her parents moved with her to Los Angeles when she was 2 years old, she toldHarper's Bazaar.

Her formative adolescent years were largely spent in Italy, however. Her parents split when she was 6 years old, and, at 14, she moved to Florence with her mom to be closer to her dad, who was living in the Tuscan countryside.

The relocation had a major impact on Audrey's granddaughter, who attended the International School on viale Michelangelo and fell in love with art. At 18, Emma became one of the youngest students to ever attend the Florence Academy of Art, where she studied advanced painting, per herwebsite.

She also shared her grandmother's passion for charity. Emma joined UNICEF, which Audrey had been an ambassador for, to continue her grandmother's efforts.

"I think it's so important to have a history and a legacy that you want to carry on in your family, whether you're famous or not," she told theorganizationin 2019.

Gregorio Ferrer and Santiago Ferrer

Giovanna Ferrer and Sean Ferrer during

Sylvain Gaboury/FilmMagic

Sean Ferrer's middle child, Gregorio Ferrer, was born to the film producer and then-wife Giovanna Ferrer, whoserved on the board of directorsfor the Audrey Hepburn Children's Fund.

The couple, who have since divorced, also have a younger son named Santiago.

"My children inspire me," Giovanna said in a 2007 interview withThe Florentineabout her work.

Luca Dotti's children

Domitilla Dotti and Luca Dotti attend Doris Brynner's 90th Birthday party on September 16, 2021 in Paris, France. Rindoff Petroff/Castel/Getty

Rindoff Petroff/Castel/Getty

While Luca has participated in several book projects about his mom, opening up about his childhood and his famous mother, he has kept his own family life private.

As of 2014, he lived with his wife and children in Rome.

Read the original article onPeople

Where Are Audrey Hepburn's Children and Grandchildren Now? All About Their Lives Abroad

Bettmann/Getty ; Ernesto Ruscio/Getty NEED TO KNOW Audrey Hepburn welcomed two children, Sean Hepburn Ferre...
Ryan Seacrest hosts 'Wheel of Fortune' Eric McCandless/Disney

Eric McCandless/Disney

A recentWheel of Fortunepuzzle had some viewers raising their eyebrows.

Things began innocently enough on Thursday's episode, with the category introduced as "Pet Life." Contestant Tiffany Godshalk of Jamison, Pa., ultimately came up with the correct answer, though she uttered it cautiously.

"Wearing my new dog collar," she said, shaking her head in surprise after she won.

HostRyan Seacrestacknowledged that it "sounds weird," but it was in fact the right solution.

Godshalk's opponents, Moses Sankey of Chicago and Yumn Elkhoja, of Ypsilanti, Mich., appeared as amused as members of the audience, who laughed as they applauded.

Seacrest also noted that the phrase was one he didn't expect anyone to get.

'Wheel Of Fortune' features a surprising puzzle ABC

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Godshalk went on to take home $53,498 by winning the entire game.

But what received attention from the long-running series' dedicated fans was that blush-worthy moment. "Should have been called 'Pet Life or Kink?,'" a viewer said on Reddit.

Another added simply, "That was weird!"

One viewer said their son had suggested the category was called "Never Have I Ever."

Entertainment Weeklyhas reached out to the show for comment.

Wheel of Fortunehas been on the air since 1975 and is generally pretty no-nonsense. In October, for instance, Seacrest scolded Derek Hough, theDancing With the Starsjudge, when he toyed with the show's most important element during a game ofCelebrity Wheel of Fortuneagainst costars Jenna Johnson-Chmerkovskiy and Bruno Tonioli.

"In the commercial break, [Hough] was jumping on the center of the wheel and having Bruno spin it, much like the top of a cake ornament," the host toldUSA Today. "We did say, 'Please don't do that. That would break it, and there's only one of those wheels. If that breaks, we have a real problem.'"

Tiffany Godshalk on 'Wheel of Fortune' ABC

Seacrest has hosted since September 2024, after the retirement of longtime host Pat Sajak.

"I still can't believe my luck in being here with you tonight, to continue this legacy of this incredible show with all of you, and of course my good friend Vanna White," Seacrest said on his first episode with the title.

"HostingWheel of Fortuneis a dream job," added Seacrest, who also hostsAmerican Idol. "I've been a fan of this show since I was a kid watching it in Atlanta with my family. And I know how special it is thatWheelhas been in your living rooms for the past 40 years, and I'm so grateful to be invited in. I also know I've got some very big shoes to fill — so let's play."

Wheel of Fortuneairs weekdays; check local listings for details.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Ryan Seacrest and “Wheel of Fortune” fans baffled by bizarre, kinky-sounding puzzle as contestant wins $54K

Eric McCandless/Disney A recentWheel of Fortunepuzzle had some viewers raising their eyebrows. Things began innocently enough on Thursda...
Climate and energy experts praise Trump's Endangerment Finding repeal

(The Center Square) – Climate and energy experts have praised President Donald Trump's recent elimination of former President Barack Obama's Endangerment Finding, with several noting the freedom the action will bring to the auto industry and others stating this is only a beginning step.

The Center Square EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin speaks to reporters outside the White House in Washington, July 8, 2025. Photo: Andrew Rice / The Center Square

American Energy Institute CEO Jason Isaac told The Center Square that repealing the Endangerment Finding "for mobile sources is a necessary first step toward correcting course, restoring the Clean Air Act to its proper role, and putting reliable, affordable energy back at the center of federal policy."

Isaac told The Center Square how "President Obama once said that under his energy policies, electricity prices would 'necessarily skyrocket.'"

"For many American families and small businesses, that prediction proved accurate," Isaac said.

"The Endangerment Finding became the legal engine behind regulations that raised energy costs, distorted markets, and made affordability an afterthought," Isaac said.

TheEndangerment Findingwas signed in 2009 under Obama's EPA and declared that certain greenhouse gases threatened public health, including carbon dioxide (CO2).

President of the Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow Craig Rucker said in a statement to The Center Square that "at its core, the Endangerment Finding defies basic science and common sense."

"CO2, the odorless, colorless, gas you just exhaled, is essential to life," Rucker said. "It is what plants rely on for photosynthesis to produce oxygen and food."

"We are all made of that carbon," Rucker stated; thus, labeling CO2 "a 'pollutant' is absurd, akin to declaring water vapor a threat."

Rucker said that "a rigorous cost/benefit analysis reveals the folly: trillions in economic costs from climate mandates that yield no meaningful environmental benefits, stifle innovation, jobs, and energy independence and distract from genuine environmental priorities."

Similar to Rucker, president of the Heartland Institute James Taylor told The Center Square in a statement that the Endangerment Finding defied science.

"CO2 is the gift of life for planet Earth, not a pollutant or a threat to public health and welfare," Rucker said.

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One expert told The Center Square of the freedom rescinding the Endangerment Finding will bring to the auto industry.

President of Truth in Energy & Climate Frank Lasee said in a statement to The Center Square that the EPA's move is "a clear win for buyers everywhere."

"This action liberates the auto industry from burdensome emission restrictions and money-losing electric vehicle mandates, allowing manufacturers to build the cars and trucks consumers truly want," Lasee said.

"President Trump deserves strong applause for this decisive step," Lasee said.

Sterling Burnett, director of the Arthur B. Robinson Center on Climate and Environmental Policy at The Heartland Institute, also noted the victory the EPA's rescinding brings to the car industry, telling The Center Square in a statement: "Today is a win for car and truck buyers.".

Repealing the Endangerment Finding is "long overdue and good for the American people," Burnett said. "Trump should be applauded for taking this action."

"Now it's time to strike another blow for affordability and strike while the iron is hot to rescind endangerment for power plants as well," Burnett said.

Executive Director of the CO2 Coalition Gregory Wrightstone noted that "rescinding the endangerment finding is great but it's not the ballgame."

"Not only does the rescission have to stand up in court, it must result in the overturning of the 2007 Supreme Court decision in Massachusetts v. EPA, where the Court wrongly ruled the EPA could regulate greenhouse gases even though Congress did not expressly authorize it," Wrightstone said.

"Even if the Trump EPA wins in court with respect to rescinding the endangerment finding, without also overturning Massachusetts v. EPA, the next Democrat-run EPA will simply re-issue the endangerment finding and all the Trump EPA's great work will have been erased," Wrightstone said.

Marc Morano, publisher of Climate Depot, said in a statement to The Center Square that "removing the CO2 Endangerment Finding from our lives will remove the legal basis for the misguided nonsense in the name of climate we've had to endure for the last several decades."

EPA Administrator Lee Zeldinannounced Thursdaythat he and Trump would be repealing the Endangerment Finding in the "single largest deregulatory action in U.S. history."

Climate and energy experts praise Trump’s Endangerment Finding repeal

(The Center Square) – Climate and energy experts have praised President Donald Trump's recent elimination of former ...

 

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