The man dubbed "America's Mayor" after 9/11 had hoped to be "America's Diplomat," but instead he's now a White House cybersecurity advisor, setting up meetings "from time to time."
Craig Jungwirth is spending at least one more weekend in jail, before a court hearing Monday that could potentially set him free, now that federal charges against him have been dropped.
The FBI said Craig Jungwirth posted threats on Facebook in August 2016, including one to launch a Labor Day attack bigger than the Pulse massacre. But prosecutors said the evidence was weak.
The celebrity YouTuber tweeted a video showing Delta crew members and police removing him and another man from a flight out of London after other passengers raised concerns that he had spoken Arabic.
President Obama ordered a review, then came a report by The New York Times quoting senior officials as saying the CIA believes hackers broke into the GOP's computers, and yet did nothing.
The Divine Miss M removed a tweet suggesting Caitlyn Jenner might detransition now that her show has been canceled, but then excused it as having "misread the temper of the times."
After editing out details that could endanger the lives of athletes from nations where being gay is punishable by death, the editors issued an apology, then decided to withdraw the article altogether.
The legendary star of the original Star Trek, as well as Broadway, took his legions of Facebook fans on an online adventure, searching for the elusive Pokemon.
The social media numbers are in now that the four-day Republican National Convention is over, and it looks to have been a dud, with only 1.6 million tweets about it.
It's pretty tough! The owners of a moving company told the Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt star they wouldn't move his couch until he gave them a review on Yelp. Uh oh...