News

Zak Starkey's exit interview may ruffle some feathers. The Who drummer, reinstated into the iconic rock band after being fired in April 2025, revealed he was let go a second time in a May 18 ...
Nurse Lauren Gaw alleges she was fired from her job at a subsidiary of UnitedHealth Group for bringing this water bottle to work. Another bottle featured a sticker that read “Palestine will be ...
5 Central Bucks School District staff members in Doylestown, Pennsylvania were fired after an investigation into alleged abuse in a special ed class.
Former African American In-N-Out employee sues for $3 million, claiming discrimination and wrongful termination over his natural hair texture despite California's CROWN Act protection ...
BLACKSHEAR, Ga. — A longtime employee of the library in Pierce County, Georgia has been fired after a controversial book display including a book about a transgender boy. Lavonnia Moore was the ...
The Big3 has no use for Caitlin Clark mania. Ice Cube’s basketball league fired courtside commentator Rachel DeMita after roughly one year, according to Front Office Sports, with the “final ...
Caitlin Clark’s return in Saturday’s 102-88 Indiana Fever win over the New York Liberty was big news in the sports world, and it also seemingly cost one ...
DeMita is a former host of NBA 2KTV. She has over 278,000 followers on X, 452,000 followers on TikTok, one million followers on Instagram and 362,000 YouTube subscribers. DeMita is engaged to ...
Popular sideline reporter Rachel DeMita was fired by rapper Ice Cube’s Big3 basketball league after she tweeted Caitlin Clark highlights during a game. DeMita rose to fame as the host of NBA ...
Front Office Sports reports that DeMita was fired for tweeting out Caitlin Clark highlights Saturday while she was working as a courtside correspondent covering a Big3 game.
According to Ryan Glasspiegel of Front Office Sports, the Big3 has fired Rachel DeMita after DeMita posted a Clark video on X while working a Big3 game. "The 'final straw' that led to the parting ...
A version of this article appears in print on June 21, 2025, Section A, Page 17 of the New York edition with the headline: Fired U.S. Employees Form New Networks For Jobs and Support.