The Miami rap group is going on a fall tour to promote its third studio album. ¡Mayday! announced its next album "Future Vintage" via its official Facebook page on Monday.
As part of a federal racketeering case against him, a Pennsylvania congressman reported to a Philadelphia court complex on Tuesday to be photographed and fingerprinted.
A helper's attempt to keep an apparently distraught 19-year-old from committing suicide cost the man his own life, after he fell from the 14th floor of a University of Hawaii dormitory.
George Zimmerman has teamed up with a Florida gun shop owner to sell prints of his Confederate battle flag painting at the owner's self-proclaimed "Muslim-free" gun store.
Donald Trump continues to dominate the crowded field of Republican presidential hopefuls and clearly leads the latest poll conducted by CNN and the Opinion Research Corporation.
If you hold a Mega Millions ticket and hope to convert yourself into a millionaire tonight, the time to tune in tonight will be 11 p.m. EDT. That is when the draw for the $39 million jackpot is set to take place at the studios of WSB-TV, Atlanta's ABC affiliate.
Jason Derulo and his entourage were all booted from a Southwest Airlines flight bound for Los Angeles over the weekend, after members of his crew shouted down an airline worker, who for some reason denied them an airport escort.
The DJ responded to Zayn Malik's retweet of a photo painting Taylor Swift in a negative light. There is Taylor Swift-related drama on Twitter again, except this time, instead of the singer doing the tweeting, it's her boyfriend Calvin Harris making headlines for defending her.
A man in a yellow shirt and a black backpack was shown on video and officials want to interview him. Thai officials believe he is linked to the bombing and believe him a potential suspect.
For the first time in the program's history, two women are set to graduate from the United States Army Ranger School, often dubbed the "toughest combat course in the world."
A convoluted order issued by a federal judge on Monday means that two same-sex couples in eastern Kentucky still cannot obtain marriage licenses, even though the outcome will "prolong the likely violation of their constitutional rights."