Fareed Zakaria Looks Back at 2024 This issue is preventing our website from loading properly. Please review the following troubleshooting tips or contact us at [email protected]. Your guide to the most important world stories of ... 12/26/2024 - 3:00 am | View Link
The fall of Assad is an ‘emperor has no clothes’ moment for Putin It took Assad’s regime to fall and Putin to accept it meekly for the West to appreciate that things weren’t all that rosy in Tsar Vladimir’s rotting kingdom. 12/23/2024 - 1:00 am | View Link
Opinion: Fareed Zakaria: Biden’s international achievements are Trump’s opportunities Fareed Zakaria Washington Post Iran might be in its weakest state in decades. During those decades, the Islamic republic developed a careful and complex asymmetrical strategy to undermine the U.S ... 12/22/2024 - 4:00 pm | View Link
Jake Sullivan: 'America’s competitors and adversaries are weaker' Speaking in a wide-ranging interview that aired Sunday on CNN's "Fareed Zakaria GPS," Sullivan said, "America’s competitors and adversaries are weaker than they have been." He added: "I’m proud of ... 12/22/2024 - 4:56 am | View Link
Cooking Up A Storm With Arif Zakaria: 'I Feel Human Beings Overburden Our System With Food Since It's So Easily Available' Arif Zakaria loves experimenting with roles from the onset. He played a hermaphrodite in Darmiyaan and characters as diverse as Jawaharlal Nehru in the Marathi web series Hutatma and Jinnah in Freedom ... 12/21/2024 - 1:30 pm | View Link
Denis Zakaria View the profile of AS Monaco Midfielder Denis Zakaria on ESPN. Get the latest news, live stats and game highlights. 12/24/2024 - 9:09 pm | View Website
CNN Profiles Fareed hosts Fareed Zakaria GPS, is a columnist for The Washington Post and the author of “In Defense of a Liberal Education” and “The Post-American World.” 12/23/2024 - 10:14 pm | View Website
Fareed Zakaria GPS | CNN The Global Public Square helps you make sense of the world, with insights from CNN’s Fareed Zakaria. 12/23/2024 - 9:14 am | View Website
Fareed Zakaria Fareed Rafiq Zakaria (/ f ə ˈ r iː d z ə ˈ k ɑːr i ə /; born January 20, 1964) is an Indian-born American journalist, political commentator, and author. He is the host of CNN's Fareed Zakaria GPS and writes a weekly paid column for The Washington Post. [2] 12/22/2024 - 11:13 pm | View Website
Fareed Zakaria: To save democracy, save its institutions Looking back on those events, Fareed Zakaria examines a crisis of faith in and adherence to democratic institutions around the world, warning that abandoning them would be a grave error. 12/22/2024 - 9:04 pm | View Website
While Bob Dylan was known in the national folk scene, mostly for his protest songs, The Byrds were the ones who soared to the top of the charts with their cover of "Mr. Tambourine Man".
Their version was released in April 1965 and reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and the UK Singles Chart.
The Denver Broncos lost to the Cincinnati Bengals 30-24 in overtime at Paycor Stadium in Cincinnati, Ohio on Dec. 28, 2024.
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CINCINNATI — The fans were screaming “M-V-P!” Then they were yelling “O-M-G!”
The game was over. Then it wasn’t. It went off the rails. Then it went off the left upright. My word, it was unbelievable. The only thing that made any sense in context with the past eight years was the final result in overtime.
Bengals 30, Broncos 24.
The Broncos remain wanting, yearning, stewing.
CINCINNATI — Sean Payton felt good about the Broncos’ standing in the moment and overall.
He liked the paths to the finish line from eight seconds left in regulation at Paycor Stadium.
Not just to a win or a tie, but to a long-elusive postseason berth.
He liked the way his offense hit its stride and the way his defense had rattled Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow through a wild first 59 minutes, 52 seconds.
Instead of victory and a postseason berth, however, the path Payton chose eventually led Denver to a second straight week of heartbreak.
The Broncos’ fate remains unsettled after a 30-24 overtime loss to the Bengals that pushed what once looked like a glide path to the playoffs to the uncomfortably steep terrain of Week 18.
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“We’ve got to turn ourselves into winners and we’ve got to make sure that, when we control the outcome of certain things, that we finish,” Denver right tackle Mike McGlinchey lamented after his team fell to 9-7.
For the second straight week, Denver had a chance to do just that.
CINCINNATI — Riley Moss didn’t hide from his mistakes Saturday afternoon at Paycor Stadium. He owned up to them.
In Denver’s 30-24 overtime loss to the Bengals — Moss’ first game since Week 12 — he was at a complete disadvantage against Tee Higgins. The veteran wide receiver had seven catches for 101 yards and two touchdowns, including the game-winning reception against Moss, according to NFL’s Next Gen Stats.
“Sometimes you eat a (explicit) sandwich and you have to own it,” the second-year defensive back said.
Throughout the game, quarterback Joe Burrow rarely let Moss rest, especially on the Bengals’ final scoring drive of the game.
Facing second-and-10 from Denver’s 34-yard line, Burrow found Higgins for a 31-yard pass along the sideline.
Colorado State arrived at the Snoop Dogg Arizona Bowl with a prime opportunity to howl and put a holiday bow on its season.
Instead, dogged by mistakes, four turnovers, penalties and poor execution, the Rams were dominated by Miami of Ohio on Saturday afternoon in sunny Tucson, Ariz.
The final score: RedHawks 43, Rams 17.
Woof.
“(Miami) played a very similar game that they have played all year,” coach Jay Norvell told reporters in Tucson.