A crystal Fabergé egg crafted for Russian royalty is expected to sell for more than $26 million

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By JILL LAWLESS

LONDON (AP) — A rare crystal and diamond Fabergé egg crafted for Russia’s ruling family before it was toppled by revolution is going up for auction, valued at more than 20 million pounds ($26.4 million).

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Christie’s auction house says the Winter Egg is just one of seven of the opulent ovoids remaining in private hands. It will be offered for sale at Christie’s London headquarters on Tuesday.

The 4-inch tall egg is made from finely carved rock crystal, covered in a delicate snowflake motif wrought in platinum and 4,500 tiny diamonds. It opens to reveal a removable tiny basket of bejewelled quartz flowers symbolizing spring.

Margo Oganesian, the head of Christie’s Russian art department, likened it to a luxurious Kinder Surprise chocolate.

The Winter Egg is a superb example of craft and design, “the ‘Mona Lisa’ for decorative arts,” Oganesian said.

One of just two created by female designer Alma Pihl, the egg was commissioned by Czar Nicholas II for his mother Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna as an Easter present in 1913. Pihl’s other egg is owned by Britain’s royal family.

Craftsman Peter Carl Fabergé and his company created more than 50 of the eggs for Russia’s imperial family between 1885 and 1917, each elaborately unique and containing a hidden surprise. Czar Alexander III started the tradition by presenting an egg to his wife each Easter. His successor, Nicholas II, extended the gift to his wife and mother.

The Romanov royal family ruled Russia for 300 years before it was ousted by the 1917 revolution. Nicholas and his family were executed in 1918.

Bought by a London dealer for 450 pounds when the cash-strapped Communist authorities sold off some of Russia’s artistic treasures in the 1920s, the egg changed hands several times. It was believed lost for two decades until it was auctioned by Christie’s in 1994 for more than 7 million Swiss francs ($5.6 million at the time). It sold again in 2002 for $9.6 million.

Now it is expected to surpass the record $18.5 million paid at a 2007 Christie’s auction for another Fabergé egg created for the Rothschild banking family.

There are 43 surviving imperial Fabergé eggs, most in museums.

Wild keep rolling, besting Colorado in a shootout

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As far as Black Friday deals go, ticket buyers to Friday’s midday showdown between the NHL’s two hottest teams certainly got their money’s worth.

It may be too early to talk about playoff previews when fans of the Wild and Avalanche are still munching on cold turkey and leftover sweet potatoes, but Minnesota’s 3-2 shootout win over Colorado had all of the markings of a showdown between two teams with designs on meeting again in May.

Mats Zuccarello and Matt Boldy scored in the post-overtime shootout as Minnesota asserted its dramatic and thorough re-entry into the Central Division title race after a sluggish first month of the season.

Kirill Kaprizov had a pair of late second period goals as the Wild rallied from a mid-game deficit, improving to 11-1-1 in November. Colorado has now gone 15 games without a regulation loss.

Jesper Wallstedt’s case for NHL rookie of the year got just a tiny bit stronger, as he made 39 saves and improved to 7-0-2 with the win. He stopped Nathan MacKinnon and Cale Makar in the shootout

Both teams had early power plays and both goalies were tested before the first media break. In a game where mistakes were rare, the Avalanche jumped on a miscue to take the early lead. Tied up along the boards in the defensive zone, Kaprizov’s no-look pass missed two Wild teammates and went right to the stick of Colorado star Nathan MacKinnon who was alone at the top of the crease. His quick shot resulted in an NHL-best 19th goal of the season.

But Kaprizov atoned for any perceived error just a bit past the midway point of the game. His 200th career goal came with hulking Avalanche defenseman Brent Burns draped all over him, but still unable to stop a Zeev Buium pass from deflecting off Kaprizov and past Wedgewood for the equalizer.

With the goal, Kaprizov passed Zach Parise for third all-time on the Minnesota franchise scoring list. It also snapped a streak of more than 212 minutes Colorado had gone without allowing a goal.

But the Wild star was far from done, and gave Minnesota the lead before the second period was done. Ryan Hartman, who had missed the previous four games with a lower body injury, made an emphatic return when he circled the Colorado net, then fed Kaprizov for a rising shot that beat a sprawling Avalanche goalie Scott Wedgewood.

Gabriel Landeskog scored his third goal of the season in the latter half of the third to tie the game at 2-2.

Wedgewood finished with 35 saves for Colorado, which suffered its only regulation loss of the season on Oct. 25 in Boston. The Avalanche will be back in Minnesota in three weeks for a Dec. 21 rematch versus the Wild.

The Wild complete their holiday weekend back-to-back on Saturday evening with the Buffalo Sabres lone visit to St. Paul this season.

Briefly

Friday’s contest was the 400th career game for Wild forward Yakov Trenin, who assisted on Kaprizov’s second goal. He entered the NHL in 2019 and has spent time with Nashville, Colorado and the Wild since then. Trenin entered Friday’s game leading the NHL in hits with 108 this season.

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Lawsuit: Meta allowed sex-trafficking posts on Instagram as it put profit over kids’ safety

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A significant new court filing claims Facebook and Instagram owner Meta had a “17x” policy allowing sex traffickers to post content related to sexual solicitation or prostitution 16 times before their accounts were suspended on the 17th “strike.” The allegation is one of many in the filing claiming Meta chose profit and user engagement over the safety and well-being of children.

The description of the purported sexual content policy at Instagram is contained in a new court filing by plaintiffs in an ongoing lawsuit against Meta, Google’s YouTube, Snapchat owner Snap and TikTok brought by children and parents, school districts and states — including California. They accuse the companies of intentionally addicting children to products they knew were harming them.

The filing makes the same general allegations against the four companies — that they targeted children and schools, and misrepresented their social media products — along with company-specific claims.

“Despite earning billions of dollars in annual revenue — and its leader being one of the richest people in the world — Meta simply refused to invest resources in keeping kids safe,” claimed the Friday filing in Oakland’s U.S. District Court. The lawsuit also targets products it deems harmful from Facebook, YouTube, Snapchat and TikTok. The plaintiffs seek unspecified damages, and a court order requiring the companies stop alleged “harmful conduct” and warn minor users and parents that their products are addictive and dangerous.

The new filing also claims Meta’s “outright lies” about its products’ harms prevented “even the most vigilant administrators, teachers, parents, and students from understanding and heading off the dangers inherent to Instagram and Facebook.”

A Meta spokesperson denied the accusations: “We strongly disagree with these allegations, which rely on cherry-picked quotes and misinformed opinions in an attempt to present a deliberately misleading picture.” For more than a decade, Meta has “listened to parents, researched issues that matter most, and made real changes to protect teens – like introducing Teen Accounts with built-in protections and providing parents with controls to manage their teens’ experiences,” the spokesperson said.

Snap criticized the allegations for misrepresenting its platform, which unlike other social media has no public likes or comparison metrics. “We’ve built safeguards, launched safety tutorials, partnered with experts, and continue to invest in features and tools that support the safety, privacy, and well-being of all Snapchatters,” a Snap spokesperson said in an emailed statement Tuesday.

Google and TikTok did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The plaintiffs cited what they described as internal company communications and research reports, and sworn depositions by current and former employees. The records are largely sealed by the court and could not be verified by this news organization.

The new filing claimed an account-recommendation feature on Instagram in 2023 recommended nearly 2 million minors to adults seeking to sexually groom children. More than 1 million potentially inappropriate adults were recommended to teen users in a single day in 2022, an internal audit found, according to the filing.

Facebook’s recommendation feature, according to a Meta employee, “was responsible for 80% of violating adult/minor connections,” the filing said.

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In March 2020, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg told reporters his Menlo Park company was “actually surging the number of people” working on sensitive content including “child exploitation,” but internal communications cited in the court filing indicated that was not true, and the company had only about 30% of the staff it needed to review child-exploitation imagery.

Instagram as of March 2020 had no way for people to report the presence of child sexual abuse material, the filing said. When Vaishnavi Jayakumar, head of safety at Instagram from 2020 to 2023, first started at the company, she was told a reporting process would be too much work to build, and even more work to review reports, the filing said.

Even when Meta’s artificial intelligence tools identified child pornography and child sexualization material with 100% confidence, the company did not automatically delete it, the filing claimed. The company, which made $62.4 billion in profit last year, declined to tighten enforcement for fear of “false positives,” but could have solved the problem by hiring more staff, the filing said.

Jayakumar testified in a deposition that when any proposed changes that might reduce user engagement went up to Zuckerberg for review, the result would be a decision to “prioritize the existing system of engagement over other safety considerations,” the filing said.

Instead of simply making kids’ accounts private by default to protect them from adult predators, Meta “dragged its feet for years before making the change — allowing literally billions of unwanted adult-minor interactions to happen,” the filing claimed. Key to the delay, the filing alleged, was the internal projection that the change would cut daily users by 2.2%.

The company didn’t apply default privacy to all teens’ accounts until the end of last year, the filing said.

The lawsuit — still in an evidence-gathering discovery phase — also takes aim at Meta’s approach to children’s mental health and the purported damaging fallout for schools, where social media, the filing claims, has created “a compromised educational environment” and forced school districts to spend money and resources “to address student distraction and mental health problems.”

Internally, Meta researchers said of Instagram, “We’re basically pushers,” and “Teens are hooked despite how it makes them feel,” the filing said.

Meta “allowed its products to infiltrate classrooms, disrupt learning environments, and contribute directly to the youth mental health crisis now overwhelming schools nationwide,” claimed the filing, which accused Zuckerberg and Meta of lying to Congress.

Zuckerberg testified three times to Congress that he didn’t give his teams goals to increase time users spent on Meta’s platforms. But several internal messages referred to goals for teens’ time spent, and Zuckerberg himself said of growth metrics, “The most concerning of these to me is time spent,” the filing said.

When Meta in a late 2019 internal study called “Project Mercury” found that people who stopped using Facebook for a week reported feeling less depressed, anxious, lonely and judged socially, the company killed the project, the filing alleged. But in a U.S. Senate hearing, a company representative (who was not identified in the filing) was asked if Facebook could tell if increased use of its platform by teen girls was connected to increased signs of anxiety, and responded, “No,” the filing claimed.

Meta said publicly that a maximum of half a percent of users were exposed to suicide and self-harm material, but its own study found the number was around 7%, the filing said.

Brian Boland, who rose over 11 years to a vice-president position in Meta and left in 2020, testified in a deposition, “My feeling then and my feeling now is that they don’t meaningfully care about user safety.”

When a Meta employee criticized the company’s move, intended to protect children’s mental health, to hide “likes” on posts but only for users who opted-in, a member of Meta’s “growth team” responded. “It’s a social comparison app,” the member said, “[expletive] get used to it,” the filing said.

Melania Trump launches production company ahead of controversial Amazon doc

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First Lady Melania Trump announced on Friday that she’s launched her own production company, “Muse Films,” ahead of the release of a controversial Amazon documentary billed to focus on her life as she prepared to return to the White House alongside her husband, President Trump.

“PRESENTING: MUSE FILMS, my new production company,” she wrote on X. “MELANIA, the film, exclusively in theaters worldwide” on Jan. 30.

The announcement was posted alongside a 10-second clip revealing the company’s logo: a sleek, silver, superhero-style “M” set against a black backdrop.

It’s unclear what, if any, role Muse Films is playing in the documentary, though Melania is serving as an executive producer.

While the first lady often avoids the political spotlight, the upcoming film has promised to offer “unprecedented access” to the 20 days leading up to Trump’s second inauguration in January, according to Amazon MGM Studios.

“Step inside Melania Trump’s world as she orchestrates inauguration plans, navigates the complexities of the White House transition and reenters public life with her family,” reads a logline for the documentary. “With exclusive footage capturing critical meetings, private conversations and never-before-seen environments, ‘MELANIA’ showcases Mrs. Trump’s return to one of the world’s most powerful roles.”

SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images

First Lady Melania Trump smiles as she boards the plane to depart from Albert J. Ellis Airport in Jacksonville, North Carolina, November 19, 2025. First Lady Melania Trump and Second Lady Usha Vance are returning to Washington after visiting military families at Marine Corps Air Station New River in Jacksonville, North Carolina. (Photo by SAUL LOEB / AFP) (Photo by SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)

Amazon MGM Studios reportedly shelled out $40 million for exclusive rights to the film, making it one of the largest known licensing deals for a political documentary to date. The agreement, first reported by Puck News earlier this year, is said to include a two-to-three-episode follow-up docuseries about Melania’s life as she bounces between New York, Florida and Washington, D.C.

The deal was reportedly hammered out shortly after Trump was reelected. It also came around the same time that Amazon founder, Jeff Bezos, announced the company would donate $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund.

The film, set to have a limited theatrical release before it hits Amazon Prime, is helmed by disgraced director Brett Ratner, who retreated from Hollywood during the height of the #MeToo movement after multiple women accused him of sexual misconduct.

Ratner has stayed largely out of the public eye in the years since, but has maintained ties to several Trump administration figures and allies. Steven Mnuchin, the Treasury secretary during Trump’s first term, was in business with Ratner on RatPac-Dune Entertainment until he sold his stake in the film financing firm in 2017.