The Five Biggest Stories You Missed This Week

Kick back, relax, and play a little weekend catch-up with us.

December 15, 2018 5:00 am
An EU flag and a Union flag held by a demonstrator is seen with Elizabeth Tower (Big Ben) and the Houses of Parliament as marchers taking part in an anti-Brexit, pro-European Union (EU) enter Parliament Square in central London on March 25, 2017, ahead of the British government's planned triggering of Article 50. (Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP/Getty Images)
An EU flag and a Union flag held by a demonstrator is seen with Elizabeth Tower (Big Ben) and the Houses of Parliament as marchers taking part in an anti-Brexit, pro-European Union (EU) enter Parliament Square in central London on March 25, 2017, ahead of the British government's planned triggering of Article 50. (Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP/Getty Images)

It’s a great big Internet out there, and we know you don’t have time to search and scour every news app or homepage during the week. So we did it for you. Take a look at some of the biggest stories of the week you might not have caught while you were hard at work. Happy reading!

(Getty)
Getty Images

Any of your apps that have location tracking on them—even just for when you check the weather—are recording your every move, a frightening new investigation in the New York Times reveals. What’s more — they’re selling that information.

Actress Jennifer Aniston attends the premiere of “Just Go With It” at Ziegfeld Theatre on February 8, 2011 in New York City. (Jemal Countess/Getty Images)
Getty Images

Jennifer Aniston told Elle Magazine that she doesn’t need a happy ending—at least, not the way you’re imagining it. Take a peek at what the timeless beauty is up to since her last divorce, including the badass just-released Netflix movie in which she plays a pageant queen.

Vince Petkosek, with the Pueblo Police Department K-9 Unit, demonstrates the skills that Sage, a yellow lab, has for smelling narcotics as they demonstrate for the media cameras outside the department on December 11, 2018 in Pueblo, Colorado. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post via Getty Images)
Denver Post via Getty Images

Marijuana might be legal in Colorado, but the state’s drug-sniffing dogs don’t kno

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