New Photo - NYT Mini Crossword Answers, Hints for Sunday, March 22, 2026

NYT Mini Crossword Answers, Hints for Sunday, March 22, 2026 Kenn C. BivinsSun, March 22, 2026 at 2:30 AM UTC 0 (The New York Times
) If you're anything like me, the day is not complete until I finish all of the free word games from the New York Times. Working on the daily Connections, Connections Sports Edition, Wordle, and Strands is a whole ritual for many of us. And we can't forget about the NYT's The Mini Crossword, too! Although the NYT is known for "The Crossword," a larger puzzle for paid subscribers, The Mini has quite the fan following as well.

NYT Mini Crossword Answers, Hints for Sunday, March 22, 2026

Kenn C. BivinsSun, March 22, 2026 at 2:30 AM UTC

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(The New York Times
)

If you're anything like me, the day is not complete until I finish all of the free word games from the New York Times. Working on the daily Connections, Connections Sports Edition, Wordle, and Strands is a whole ritual for many of us. And we can't forget about the NYT's The Mini Crossword, too!

Although the NYT is known for "The Crossword," a larger puzzle for paid subscribers, The Mini has quite the fan following as well. This particular game resets at 10 p.m., unlike some of the others that start over at midnight.

So, if you're working on today's Mini on for Today's Mini Crossword on Sunday, March 22, 2026, and need some help (I've been there), get ready to read the clues and solutions for each line. We have them separated into hints first for both "Across" and "Down" words, followed by "Across Answers" and "Down Answers," so be careful if you want to avoid spoilers as you scroll!

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Hints for NYT's The Mini Crossword on Sunday, March 22, 2026

Here are additional clues for each of the words in today's Mini Crossword.

NYT Mini Across Hints

1 Across: Jost of "Saturday Night Live" — HINT: Ends with the letter "N"6 Across: German wine valley whose name rhymes with "wine" —HINT: Starts with the letter "R"7 Across: Big name in root beer — HINT: Starts with the letter "A"8 Across: Common slot machine symbol — HINT: Ends with the letter "T"9 Across: James Talarico's state — HINT: Starts with the letter "T"

Related: 16 Games Like Wordle To Give You Your Word Game Fix More Than Once Every 24 Hours

NYT Mini Down Hints

1 Down: Cunning skill— HINT: Starts with the letter "C"

2 Down: Chicago airport — HINT: Ends with the letter "E"

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3 Down: Operating system on which Android is partly based — HINT: Ends with the letter "X"

4 Down: World's most populous country — HINT: Starts with the letter "I"

5 Down: Small salamanders — HINT: Ends with the letter "S"

Answers to NYT's The Mini Crossword for Sunday, March 22, 2026

Don't go any further unless you want to know exactly what the correct words are in today's Mini Crossword.

NYT Mini Across Answers

1 Across: Jost of "Saturday Night Live" — COLIN6 Across: German wine valley whose name rhymes with "wine" —RHINE7 Across: Big name in root beer — AANDW8 Across: Common slot machine symbol — FRUIT9 Across: James Talarico's state — TEXAS

NYT Mini Down Answers

1 Down: Cunning skill— CRAFT

2 Down: Chicago airport — OHARE

3 Down: Operating system on which Android is partly based — LINUX

4 Down: World's most populous country — INDIA

5 Down: Small salamanders — NEWTS

Related: Sam's Club's Vibrant New Stoneware Plate Set Looks Similar to a Viral Designer Style Nearly 3x the Price

This story was originally published by Parade on Mar 22, 2026, where it first appeared in the Life section. Add Parade as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

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NYT Mini Crossword Answers, Hints for Sunday, March 22, 2026

NYT Mini Crossword Answers, Hints for Sunday, March 22, 2026 Kenn C. BivinsSun, March 22, 2026 at 2:30 AM UTC 0 (The Ne...
New Photo - Wife Surprises Husband, a Longtime Costco Lover, with a Birthday Party at the Store: 'This Is How We Club'

Wife Surprises Husband, a Longtime Costco Lover, with a Birthday Party at the Store: 'This Is How We Club' Lexi LaneSun, March 22, 2026 at 2:00 AM UTC 0 People gather at a Costco (stock image)Credit: Jordan Vonderhaar/Bloomberg via Getty Wil Cid, a Costco member since 1988, celebrated his birthday with a surprise party at his favorite store His wife, Vivian, planned the party by gathering loved ones, who pretended to shop before surprising him in the aisles "We used to go clubbing in the disco days, but now this is our club," Vivian said of their love for Costco A California man got a dream su...

Wife Surprises Husband, a Longtime Costco Lover, with a Birthday Party at the Store: 'This Is How We Club'

Lexi LaneSun, March 22, 2026 at 2:00 AM UTC

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People gather at a Costco (stock image)Credit: Jordan Vonderhaar/Bloomberg via Getty -

Wil Cid, a Costco member since 1988, celebrated his birthday with a surprise party at his favorite store

His wife, Vivian, planned the party by gathering loved ones, who pretended to shop before surprising him in the aisles

"We used to go clubbing in the disco days, but now this is our club," Vivian said of their love for Costco

A California man got a dream surprise for his birthday thanks to his wife, who organized a party with loved ones at his favorite place: Costco.

Wil Cid has been a member of the retail chain since 1988 initially via Price Club, which was a Costco competitor before the brands merged as PriceCostco in 1993 and got renamed to just Costco in 1997.

He explained to ABC 10, "I used to go to the Burbank Price Club when I lived down there. ... They've been reliable for 37 years. If something happens, you can bring it back without any problem."

Wil is now a longtime Roseville resident with his wife, Vivian, who recently decided to throw him a surprise party at the new Costco location in Roseville's Baseline Marketplace.

An aerial view of a Costco in California (stock image)Credit: Justin Sullivan/Getty

"He's a total fan of Costco," Vivian said. "He knows everybody at the other store at Stanford Ranch and they'll say, 'Hi Wil.' I always laugh and say, 'Why do they know your name?' "

Vivian's plan was to gather all of Wil's closest friends and family, who would then pretend to shop at the Roseville Costco and casually happen to encounter Wil in the gigantic aisles. She wanted to "see how long it takes Wil to figure out something's up."

"I told them, 'This is how we club at our age,' " Vivian said about the group chat that was used to plan the party. "We used to go clubbing in the disco days, but now this is our club."

The Costco logo on a phone (stock image)Credit: getty

She also told Wil on his birthday that they were going to dinner with some loved ones, but she made a stop at Costco on the way. While she claimed she was getting a gift card, she had Wil go find toilet paper at another area of the store.

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"Immediately, he called me and said, 'Guess who's here?' " Vivian recalled.

"The first couple kind of threw me off," Wil said. "I thought maybe they were shopping, but then after the third couple, I realized there's something going on here."

During Wil's journey through Costco, Vivian moved to the food court where the entire party was gathered. He was pleasantly surprised. the party's menu consisted of traditional Costco items, including large pizza slices and a cake.

"I was kind of looking forward to a steak that night," Wil said, jokingly. "A steak, sweet potato and carrot cake, and it ended up being pizza and cake."

"The fact that she took the time to do it was really nice," he added lovingly about his wife.

— sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Wil expressed that he enjoyed the party purely for representing the "simple things in life" and bringing his community of close loved ones together.

"It doesn't have to be an expensive dinner," he said.

on People

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Wife Surprises Husband, a Longtime Costco Lover, with a Birthday Party at the Store: ‘This Is How We Club’

Wife Surprises Husband, a Longtime Costco Lover, with a Birthday Party at the Store: 'This Is How We Club' Lexi...
New Photo - The media may have unmasked Banksy — again. That's angered some art fans but not ruffled dealers

The media may have unmasked Banksy — again. That&x27;s angered some art fans but not ruffled dealers LAURIE KELLMAN Sun, March 22, 2026 at 5:30 AM UTC 0 1 / 0Banksy UnmaskedFILE A painting by British street artist Banksy is seen on a building destroyed by fighting in Borodyanka, Kyiv region, Ukraine, Sunday, Nov. 13, 2022. (AP Photo/Andrew Kravchenko, File) () LONDON (AP) — Years before the rise of Instagram, Banksy figured out that the key to real influence lay in not in being famous, exactly, but in being anonymous.

The media may have unmasked Banksy — again. That's angered some art fans but not ruffled dealers

LAURIE KELLMAN Sun, March 22, 2026 at 5:30 AM UTC

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1 / 0Banksy UnmaskedFILE - A painting by British street artist Banksy is seen on a building destroyed by fighting in Borodyanka, Kyiv region, Ukraine, Sunday, Nov. 13, 2022. (AP Photo/Andrew Kravchenko, File) ()

LONDON (AP) — Years before the rise of Instagram, Banksy figured out that the key to real influence lay in not in being famous, exactly, but in being anonymous.

The mystery of his identity has long been part of the value of his art, which for decades and across continents defied authority from public walls and self-shredded on the auction block. Now, Banksy's apparent unmasking by the Reuters news agency has generated talk about whether the works themselves retain their cultural and financial value.

It also raises the question: Why pop the red balloon of his mystique in the first place? Many Banksy fans mourned the loss of the mystery and lashed out at the news outlet. One said it was like being told without warning that Santa Claus doesn't exist.

"I feel like they are telling me how a magic trick is done," said Thomas Evans, a Denver-based artist on Instagram. "Sometimes I just want to enjoy the magic trick."

But some art experts say the murals and the message will survive Banksy's naming because his appeal wasn't driven solely by his anonymity. He and his works — mischievous and also dark — stand as witnesses to injustice, oppression and inequality around the world, from the artist's native England to walled-off Bethlehem and war-ravaged Ukraine. Subtract his anonymity, they say, and the work still inspires reflection and discussion.

"People buy his works because they absolutely love it," said Acoris Andipa, director of the Andipa gallery in London. "The main feedback that I get is that they really, frankly, don't care if they know who he is."

Naming the ghost — and the backlash — is engagement, too

Banksy, long thought to have been born Robin Gunningham around 1972, grew out of a tradition of street artists who viewed the undercover act of posting their art in public as a subversive form of expression. The postindustrial landscape of his native Bristol was his canvas and gallery. The walls of London, New York and elsewhere gave him a global stage just before the rise of social media.

Banksy's apparent identity has been an open secret among protective fellow artists, and long been easy to find online for those who wanted to know. The Daily Mail reported in 2008 "compelling evidence suggesting" that was the artist's birth name. It has been published by other news outlets, including by The in 2016, as part of their coverage of the detective work.

Reuters reported last week that after The Daily Mail's story, Banksy changed his legal name to David Jones — the second most-popular name in Britain. It's also the given name of another rock star, the late David Bowie, whose Ziggy Stardust avatar inspired a 2012 Banksy painting of Queen Elizabeth II.

Bansky's lawyer didn't respond to a request for comment, and the artist's spokeswoman declined to participate in this story.

Reuters pieced together that a David Jones traveled to Ukraine with a well-known associate of Banksy's in late 2022 — just before the artist's work began appearing on buildings that had been bombed by Russia. Banksy later confirmed that he'd created seven murals in the war zone, including one of a child flipping over a grown man who is wearing a black belt. Russian President Vladimir Putin practices judo.

There's evidence that even some in the establishment he was protesting have accepted Banksy. They didn't arrest him, for example, after the Royal Courts of Justice removed a Banksy stencil depicting a judge in a traditional wig and gown beating an unarmed protester with a gavel. Some street artists groused that they might be arrested for creating such graffiti — but when it's a Banksy, it's art.

Robin Gunningham wasn't always so elusive

On Sept. 17, 2000, a Robin Gunningham was arrested for defacing a Marc Jacobs billboard atop a building on Hudson Street in New York.

In a handwritten signed confession, he described the work on the night in question: "I had been out drinking at a nightclub with friends when I decided to make a humorous adjustment to a billboard on top of the property," he wrote in court records unearthed by Reuters and confirmed by the AP. "I painted eyeshadow a new mouth and a speach(sic) bubble" on the photo of a male model. He was charged with a misdemeanor.

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The artist doesn't need an alleged naming to make news. He created multiple works just in London in 2025, and grabbed headlines elsewhere for having his art sold or auctioned for millions. But Banksy has courted a public image centered around morality, justice and guerrilla tactics — he's often likened to Robin Hood or Batman.

"Banksy woz ere," he wrote with his animal murals at the London Zoo, which were removed in 2024.

Still, along with the sadness, there's ample speculation in the art world and on social media that the artist himself orchestrated this round of naming. He didn't deny the Reuters story.

That "would be very much in line with his practice of stunts and satire," observed Madeleine White, the senior sales and acquisitions consultant at London's Hang-Up Gallery, "As they say, 'all publicity is good publicity.'"

She noted, however, that the backlash is directed at the media — not the artist, or the potency of his work. Reuters says it opted to publish some, but not all, of the information its reporters uncovered about Banksy's identity, because he is a public figure, whatever his name — and he's had an outsized influence on public events and discourse. What's more, much of his work has been done on other people's property.

Banksy's star power is about far more than anonymity

Named or not, Banksy's stardom lives, art experts say.

It endures in the wonder of his ability to erect new art under the noses of authorities well into the age of closed-circuit television and social media. It appeals because his spectacle and wit draw people in and the settings — the hulk of bombed buildings, for example, or Israel's towering wall at the border of the West Bank — invite them to reflect. Now, fans are on the lookout for how and whether he'll respond to the news of Robin Gunningham and David Jones.

Joe Syer, a Banksy expert and founder of MyArtBroker, said that the artist has always responded to world events. "And that's where the real relevance, and value, sits."

"If anything, Banksy's anonymity has functioned less as a celebrity device and more as a way to keep the work universally accessible, detached from personality, ego, or biography," he said in an email. "It allows the work to sit in public space, politically and culturally, without being anchored to an individual in the way the mainstream press often frames it."

Christopher Banks, founder of the New York-based Objects of Affection Collection, reads Banksy's naming "not as a biographical event, but as a structural stress test" of the artist's system of managing his absence.

"Banksy's best works carry their meaning without the author. He was there," Banks wrote, citing the artist's murals in Ukraine and his solidarity with the war's victims.

"The name matters less than the presence. The presence was always what the work was about."

___

Michael Sisak contributed to this report from New York.

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Published: March 22, 2026 at 08:00AM on Source: RED MAG

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The media may have unmasked Banksy — again. That's angered some art fans but not ruffled dealers

The media may have unmasked Banksy — again. That&x27;s angered some art fans but not ruffled dealers LAURIE KELLM...
New Photo - Denise Richards Discusses Her Face-Lift Journey and Shares Before-and-After Photos

Denise Richards Discusses Her FaceLift Journey and Shares BeforeandAfter Photos DeAnna JanesSun, March 22, 2026 at 1:48 AM UTC 0 (Photo by Michael Tullberg on Getty Images) Denise Richards has, for better or worse, been an open book. Whether she's welcoming cameras into her home for the sake of reality TV with Denise Richards & Her Wild Things or speaking openly about spousal abuse and divorce with the Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, the Drop Dead Gorgeous star has let the public in during her most vulnerable times. And she's doing it again.

Denise Richards Discusses Her Face-Lift Journey and Shares Before-and-After Photos

DeAnna JanesSun, March 22, 2026 at 1:48 AM UTC

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(Photo by Michael Tullberg on Getty Images)

Denise Richards has, for better or worse, been an open book.

Whether she's welcoming cameras into her home for the sake of reality TV with Denise Richards & Her Wild Things or speaking openly about spousal abuse and divorce with the Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, the Drop Dead Gorgeous star has let the public in during her most vulnerable times. And she's doing it again.

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In an intimate interview with Allure magazine, the Starship Troopers actress opened up about the changes she's recently experienced, specifically her stunning face-lift.

What Did Denise Richards Have Done?

Speaking about her "shocking" transformation, she told the publication that her reason for going the surgery route was to turn back the clock a little bit.

​​"I wanted to put things back up, where they were before," Richards said.

No stranger to going under the knife for cosmetic reasons, Richards, who had breast augmentation at age 19 and revision surgery since then, said that her face-lift marked the first time she'd ever had cosmetic surgery done on her face.

"I was terrified," Richards said. "Being in the public eye since my 20s, people know what I look like — a facelift is not something that I could hide."

In addition to the typical face-lift, Allure shared that Richards' plastic surgeon, Ben Talei, M.D., said he also lifted the outer corners of her lips "to make the mouth look happier and sexier." He also performed "a very minor and conservative upper blepharoplasty," a temporal brow lift "to correct the brow position," and a repositioning of "the forehead and temples back to where they used to be."

"Dr. Talei used Richards' own fat, taken from her thighs and reintroduced in a thin, even layer underneath the skin on her face and neck, to brighten her complexion and make her look all-around smoother and healthier," the outlet writes. "And then there was the actual facelift."

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"My face was in his hands," Richards said, adding that she told her doctor, "You're the artist. Whatever you want to do."

The Before-and-After Pictures

Commenting on the results, Richards said, "It is night and day. It's shocking, actually."

As Hollywood isn't keen on sharing its secrets of staying young, the actress and mom of three said that when she opened up about her face-lift, fellow celebs "were more comfortable telling me about theirs, but I'm not gonna name names."

Denise Richards and Aaron Phypers' Split

Around the same time, Richards was going through a divorce from Aaron Phypers, her husband of six years.

"Unfortunately, I started going through my divorce 10 days after I had surgery. So the second week wasn't as calm as the first week. But I still took it easy, making sure that I took care of my incisions. Each day that went by, the swelling was getting better and better. I looked like myself, but better," she told the magazine.

Phypers filed for divorce from Richards on July 7, 2025, citing irreconcilable differences. Richards accused Phypers of abuse, death threats, and possession of unregistered weapons in a request for a restraining order. Ten days after Phypers' filing, Richards' request for a temporary restraining order was granted.

Richards' abuse accusations were discussed in a recent episode of the RHOBH, on which Richards used to star. Serving as a guest star in the 15th season, Richards shared with Erika Jayne and Sutton Stracke her experience being abused by Phypers, with the show airing an image of Richards with a black eye.

In another resurfaced scene, Phypers can be heard telling Richards "I'm going to crush your f—ing hand. Stop it," as the two hastily exit a party, per People.

If you or someone you know is contemplating suicide or struggling with suicidal thoughts, help is available 24 hours a day through the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline at 988.

Related: Nicole Kidman Linked to 'Scarpetta' Co-star as Keith Urban Reportedly Feels 'Threatened'

This story was originally published by Parade on Mar 22, 2026, where it first appeared in the News section. Add Parade as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

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Denise Richards Discusses Her Face-Lift Journey and Shares Before-and-After Photos

Denise Richards Discusses Her FaceLift Journey and Shares BeforeandAfter Photos DeAnna JanesSun, March 22, 2026 at 1:48 ...
New Photo - Brandi Glanville Says Lisa Rinna Should Only Return to 'Real Housewives' For A Huge Payday

Brandi Glanville Says Lisa Rinna Should Only Return to &x27;Real Housewives&x27; For A Huge Payday TMZ StaffSat, March 21, 2026 at 11:41 PM UTC 0 Brandi Glanville thinks her pal Lisa Rinna should go back to 'Real Housewives' if they offer her a fortune ... but, she's also encouraging her not to work as hard! The former "Real Housewives of Beverly Hills" star talked about her longtime friend on a new episode of her podcast "Brandi Glanville Unfiltered with James Maas" ... telling fans she doesn't know if Rinna wants to rejoin the program.

Brandi Glanville Says Lisa Rinna Should Only Return to 'Real Housewives' For A Huge Payday

TMZ StaffSat, March 21, 2026 at 11:41 PM UTC

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Brandi Glanville thinks her pal Lisa Rinna should go back to 'Real Housewives' if they offer her a fortune ... but, she's also encouraging her not to work as hard!

The former "Real Housewives of Beverly Hills" star talked about her longtime friend on a new episode of her podcast "Brandi Glanville Unfiltered with James Maas" ... telling fans she doesn't know if Rinna wants to rejoin the program.

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However, Glanville says she'd tell Rinna to go back to the show ... get a lot of "f***ing money" and then do "f***ing nothing."

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Glanville says Rinna carried 'RHOBH' for so long ... and, she doesn't owe the show a darn thing -- so, she should only take the job if she can do it on her terms.

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BG says that isn't LR's way -- she says Rinna puts 100% into everything she does -- but, it's what she'd recommend.

Remember ... Lisa announced her departure from 'RHOBH' in 2023 -- but, she made her comeback on "The Traitors" earlier this year.

Fans are buzzing for a 'Real Housewives' and Lisa Rinna reunion ... but, Brandi wants her to secure the bag first!

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Brandi Glanville Says Lisa Rinna Should Only Return to 'Real Housewives' For A Huge Payday

Brandi Glanville Says Lisa Rinna Should Only Return to &x27;Real Housewives&x27; For A Huge Payday TMZ Staff...
New Photo - Trump's EPA is paving the way for haze to return to national parks, conservationists warn

Trump&x27;s EPA is paving the way for haze to return to national parks, conservationists warn TODD RICHMONDSun, March 22, 2026 at 4:13 AM UTC 0 FILE Sheer cliffs rise at Zion National Park, near Springdale, Utah., Sept. 16, 2015. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer, File) MADISON, Wis. (AP) — A year ago, federal environmental regulators told West Virginia officials that their plan to clear sulfur and smog from skies over the state's national wilderness areas wasn't good enough because a dozen coal plants didn't analyze whether they needed better pollution controls.

Trump's EPA is paving the way for haze to return to national parks, conservationists warn

TODD RICHMONDSun, March 22, 2026 at 4:13 AM UTC

0

FILE - Sheer cliffs rise at Zion National Park, near Springdale, Utah., Sept. 16, 2015. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer, File)

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — A year ago, federal environmental regulators told West Virginia officials that their plan to clear sulfur and smog from skies over the state's national wilderness areas wasn't good enough because a dozen coal plants didn't analyze whether they needed better pollution controls.

Six months later, the Environmental Protection Agency, now firmly under President Donald Trump's control, blessed the same plan, saying technology evaluations wouldn't be necessary as long as visibility hit projected benchmarks.

Conservationists say the about-face in West Virginia is just one example of the Trump administration clearing the way for states to roll back pollution restrictions that have helped clear the air over beloved national parks and wilderness areas over the last 25 years.

A rule has improved visibility, but Trump's EPA says it's too tough

A federal regulation known as the regional haze rule requires states to come up with plans every 10 years to limit emissions and monitor air pollution in more than 150 national parks, wilderness areas, wildlife refuges and tribal reservations across 36 states.

Since the rule took effect in 1999, more than 90% of parks and wilderness areas have seen sulfur and smog emissions decline by hundreds of thousands of tons annually. The average visual range has increased from 90 miles to 120 miles (145 kilometers to 195 kilometers) in some Western parks, according to the Harvard Law School's Environmental and Energy Law Program.

But energy producers argue the regulations have done their job and are too costly. EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin announced in March 2025 that the agency would look to roll back 31 landmark environmental regulations, including the regional haze rule, to relieve regulatory pressure on the fossil fuel industry.

EPA pushes back on state plans

The EPA is still taking public comments on how to soften the federal rule. Meanwhile, conservationists say, the agency has weakened standards for individual state plans by rejecting state proposals the agency considers too tough on polluters and signing off on weak plans the Biden administration had rejected.

"They're blessing states that haven't done a good enough job and they're dramatically changing course on states like West Virginia, like California, like Hawaii, like Colorado," said Ulla Reeves, director of the National Parks Conservation Association's clean air program. "They're using these reversals and those changes to achieve their agenda of letting polluting facilities stay online."

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EPA spokesperson Brigit Hirsch said in a statement that the agency is committed to following the law and can't approve state plans that don't follow the law.

West Virginia about-face lowers the bar

The EPA signaled on the day after Trump took office in January 2025 that it would reject West Virginia's proposal. The agency noted that state officials decided not to ask eight coal-burning power plants to assess whether they needed more pollution-reduction technology to continue making progress toward natural visibility levels at multiple East Coast national parks and wilderness areas.

The state asked five plants to perform an evaluation, but only one complied. One plant argued it was already under federal emission restrictions. The others said they were meeting visibility benchmarks.

The EPA changed course six months later and approved the plan, adopting a new policy that state plans are good enough if the state can show visibility improvements exceed projections at national parks and wilderness areas affected by its pollution. West Virginia had done that.

The National Parks Conservation Association, the Sierra Club and the environmental law firm Earthjustice are suing EPA, arguing the new policy allowed West Virginia to avoid imposing pollution reductions and threatens air quality in national parks, including Shenandoah, the Great Smoky Mountains and Mammoth Cave, already one of the nation's haziest parks.

Environmentalists warn that the new policy has far-reaching implications. Visibility levels might hit benchmarks thanks to plants closing or switching fuels, but relying solely on those measurements allows plants that are still polluting to get away with doing nothing, said Joshua Smith, an attorney for the Sierra Club.

For example, as early as 2024, the Biden-era EPA said it planned to reject California's plan because state officials didn't consider pollutants other than smog and didn't explain why they didn't evaluate pollution levels at a number of refineries and airports. The Trump EPA approved it last summer in part because visibility was meeting benchmarks.

"We view this (new policy) as a backdoor way to kick the can down the road," Smith said.

Both the EPA and the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection said they don't comment on pending litigation.

EPA rejects plant closures in Colorado and Hawaii

Trump's EPA rejected Colorado's plan this January largely because it would have closed a coal-burning power plant near Pueblo without consent from owner Colorado Springs Utilities, according to EPA documents. The agency noted Colorado Springs' concerns about the closure's effects on the state's electricity supply and that forcing closure could be illegal. The state has challenged the rejection in federal court in Denver.

"EPA's action is not based on a failure to meet regional haze requirements or visibility protections, which Colorado continues to meet," Michael Ogletree, the senior director of state air quality programs, told The .

Hawaii's plan calls for closing six boilers at two power plants on the islands of Hawaii and Maui, as well as the option of shutting down several diesel generators on Maui. The EPA hasn't made a final decision, but in February signaled it planned to reject those closures, saying that, similar to the Colorado situation, the state hasn't shown the shutdowns would be legal.

Trump EPA to states: Focus on energy supply

The EPA also has warned that the Trump administration won't support states that push for plant closures to comply with regional haze requirements and that states have to consider plant closure or pollution reduction technology's effects on grid reliability.

"Coal-fired power plants are essential sources of baseload power necessary for addressing surging energy demand, increases in American manufacturing, national security interests, and turning the United States into the Artificial Intelligence capital of the world," the agency said in rejecting Colorado's plan. "Ensuring affordable and reliable energy supplies is a top priority of the Trump administration."

Neither the U.S. Energy Association, a consortium of utilities, engineers and government agencies that works to expand access to domestic energy sources, nor the American Coal Council, a group that supports the coal industry, responded to messages seeking comment.

Support for coal like 'digging up a grave'

Jim Schaberl is a former air and water quality manager at Shenandoah National Park in northern Virginia's Blue Ridge Mountains, less than 100 miles (160 kilometers) from the West Virginia line.

He said that when he started his job at the park in 2008, a sooty, yellowish-brown haze from West Virginia coal plants often hovered over the park. Now, he said, visibility has improved so dramatically that hikers can make out the Washington Monument 75 miles (120 kilometers) to the east. Trump is threatening to undo all of that, he said.

"To try to resurrect coal is like digging up a grave, and this administration wants to dig up that grave," Schaberl said. "It's nonsensical and, I think, lawless."

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Published: March 22, 2026 at 06:54AM on Source: RED MAG

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New Photo - Zendaya shares best marriage advice and reveals what causes a lot of wedding drama

The &34;Dune&34; actress shared her wedding tips after weeks of speculation that she secretly married Tom Holland. Zendaya shares best marriage advice and reveals what causes a lot of wedding drama The &34;Dune&34; actress shared her wedding tips after weeks of speculation that she secretly married Tom Holland. By Wesley Stenzel :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/WesleyStenzelauthorphoto32b61793a2784639af623f2ae091477e.jpg) Wesley Stenzel Wesley Stenzel is a news writer at . He began writing for EW in 2022. EW's editorial guidelines on March 20, 2026 8:53 p.m.

The "Dune" actress shared her wedding tips after weeks of speculation that she secretly married Tom Holland.

Zendaya shares best marriage advice and reveals what causes a lot of wedding drama

The "Dune" actress shared her wedding tips after weeks of speculation that she secretly married Tom Holland.

By Wesley Stenzel

Wesley Stenzel

Wesley Stenzel

Wesley Stenzel is a news writer at **. He began writing for EW in 2022.

EW's editorial guidelines

on March 20, 2026 8:53 p.m. ET

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Zendaya in Paris on March 10, 2026

Zendaya in Paris on March 10, 2026. Credit:

Marc Piasecki/WireImage

Zendaya has a few pieces of wedding advice.

The *Dune* actress shared her tips for a successful ceremony during an interview with ** at the premiere of her new film *The Drama*.

The *Euphoria* star, who has faced rampant speculation about her own marital status in recent weeks, was careful to respond with advice from the perspective of her *Drama* character, rather than indicate she has any personal experience with getting married.

"As Emma, I would say, make sure you have all the conversations before you get married," Zendaya advised. "Make sure you have a wedding DJ, because that also causes a lot of drama."

She continued, "I don't know! I think just have a beautiful day. Just have a beautiful day. It's really about you two."

The actress' stylist, Law Roach, kicked off a period of widespread speculation and confusion after he suggested that Zendaya had married her longtime partner Tom Holland. "The wedding has already happened," he said at the Actor Awards on March 1. "You missed it! It's very true."

Zendaya in Los Angeles on March 17, 2026

Zendaya in Los Angeles on March 17, 2026.

Olivia Wong/FilmMagic

Zendaya's mother, Claire Stoermer, reposted footage of Roach's comments on her Instagram Story. "The laugh...." she wrote atop the footage alongside a laughing emoji.

On March 10, the actress wore a ring that appeared to be a wedding band to the Louis Vuitton show at the Louvre during Paris Fashion Week.

Matters became even more confusing when AI-generated images of Holland and Zendaya getting married circulated on social media. The *Spider-Man: No Way Home* actress told Jimmy Kimmel that "many people have been fooled" by the AI images, including "many people" that she knows personally.

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Zendaya at the 'The Drama' premiere on March 17, 2026; Zendaya at the 2015 Oscars

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Zendaya also jokingly responded to the speculation about her wedding during her *Jimmy Kimmel Live* appearance when she introduced a clip that she hoped would "clear the confusion" about the situation.

The clip in question turned out to be an edited scene for *The Drama*, which sees her character Emma prepare for her wedding to Charlie (Robert Pattinson) amid uncomfortable revelations that shake their relationship. The version of the clip on Kimmel's show featured Holland's face comically superimposed over Pattinson's.

Zendaya in 'The Drama'

Zendaya in 'The Drama'.

"It was a beautiful day!" Zendaya said of the edited clip. "That was real!"

***Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with our EW Dispatch newsletter.***

PEOPLE reported that Zendaya and Holland got engaged after four years of dating shortly after Christmas in 2024. The couple will star together in *Spider-Man: Brand New Day* and Christopher Nolan's *The Odyssey*, both set to hit theaters this July.

*Reporting by Calie Schepp.*

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Source: Celebrity

Published: March 22, 2026 at 07:00AM on Source: RED MAG

#ShowBiz#Sports#Celebrities#Lifestyle

Zendaya shares best marriage advice and reveals what causes a lot of wedding drama

The &34;Dune&34; actress shared her wedding tips after weeks of speculation that she secretly married Tom Holland. Ze...

 

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