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Catherine O’Hara has died at 71. See her career in photos.

  • Comedy legend Catherine O’Hara has died at 71.
  • O’Hara was known for her many roles, including Schitt’s Creek,” “Home Alone,” and “Beetlejuice.
  • Her final public appearance was at the Emmys last year.

Catherine O’Hara, two-time Emmy Award winner and beloved movie star, has died at the age of 71.

A representative for O’Hara confirmed the news to Business Insider on Friday afternoon. Her agency said in a statement that her death on Friday came after a “brief illness,” per The Associated Press.

O’Hara has been a fixture of TV and movies since breaking out on the Canadian sketch comedy series “SCTV” in the early ’80s alongside John Candy, Eugene Levy, Martin Short, Andrea Martin, and Rick Moranis.

Since then, she’s become beloved to audiences for her roles in
“Beetlejuice,” “Home Alone,” “Schitt’s Creek,” “The Studio,” “Best in Show,” “The Last of Us,” and many voiceover roles, including Sally in “The Nightmare Before Christmas” and Susan Frankenstein in “Frankenweenie.”

See her legendary career in photos.

Catherine O’Hara’s breakout was performing with the Canadian comedy troupe Second City in the ’70s and ’80s.

Catherine O’Hara during a taping of “SCTV.”

Reg Innell/Toronto Star/Getty Images

“SCTV,” a sketch series about a fictional TV network, ran on Canadian television from 1976 to 1984 and on NBC from 1981 to 1983.

O’Hara was just one of the many Canadian comedians who were introduced to American audiences through “SCTV,” which was something of a cult classic.

She won her first Emmy, for writing on “SCTV,” in 1982.

She met many of her longtime collaborators there, including Eugene Levy.


John Candy, Catherine O'Hara, Andrea Martin, and Eugene Levy.

John Candy, Catherine O’Hara, Andrea Martin, and Eugene Levy.

John Mahler/Toronto Star/Getty Images

“You’re lucky to work with friends, and I think it’s nice to see friends together. I like knowing when people know each other and have a history; that comes across on screen. I think it’s fun for people to see. It is for me,” O’Hara told BuzzFeed about working with Levy in 2014.

Her first major film role was 1988’s “Beetlejuice,” sparking another long collaboration between O’Hara and director Tim Burton.


catherine o'hara in beetlejuice

O’Hara in “Beetlejuice.”

Warner Bros.

The “Day-O” scene in “Beetlejuice” is perhaps the most iconic in a film filled with iconic scenes, and it all starts with O’Hara’s character.

O’Hara went on to work with Burton in “The Nightmare Before Christmas,” “Frankenweenie,” and “Beetlejuice Beetlejuice.”

“Beetlejuice” was also important for her personal life — she met her husband, production designer Bo Welch, on the set.


bo welch and catherine o'hara in 1989

Welch and O’Hara in 1989.

Ron Galella, Ltd./Ron Galella Collection/Getty Images

They were married from 1992 until her death. They shared two sons.

O’Hara will always be known for playing Kate McAllister in 1990’s “Home Alone” and its 1992 sequel.


catherine o'hara in home alone

O’Hara in “Home Alone.”

20th Century Fox

O’Hara has been a staple in homes around the world every December for 35 years due to her role as Kevin’s mom, Kate, in “Home Alone” and “Home Alone 2: Lost in New York.”

She also appeared in multiple mockumentaries written and directed by Christopher Guest in the ’90s and 2000s.


eugene levy and catherine ohara in best in show

Levy and O’Hara in “Best in Show.”

Warner Bros. Pictures

Specifically, she was in “Waiting for Guffman” in 1996, “Best in Show” in 2000, “A Mighty Wind” in 2003, and “For Your Consideration” in 2006.

Starting in 2015, she became known to an entirely new generation as Moira Rose in “Schitt’s Creek.”


cast of schitts creek

The cast of “Schitt’s Creek.”

Andrew Lipovsky/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank /Getty Images

“Schitt’s Creek” became a full-blown phenomenon across its run from 2015 to 2020, and many of the show’s most memorable moments came from her character, Moira.

She won an Emmy for her performance as the lovably kooky Rose matriarch.


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O’Hara with her Emmy Award.

Frank Ockenfels/ABC/Getty Images

She won in 2020 after receiving a nomination for the prior year, as well. It was her second win from eight nominations.

Her last public appearance was the 2025 Emmys, where she was nominated for her performances in “The Last of Us” and “The Studio.”


catherine o'hara at the 2025 emmys

Bo Welch and O’Hara at the 2025 Emmys.

Unique Nicole/WireImage/Getty Images

O’Hara was a double nominee at last year’s Emmys: she was nominated for outstanding supporting actress in a comedy series for “The Studio” and outstanding guest actress in a drama series for “The Last of Us.”




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Dramatic photos show how massive the winter storm is that’s pummeling the US

  • A huge winter storm struck the US this weekend, impacting hundreds of millions of people.
  • The storm stretched over 2,000 miles from New Mexico to Maine.
  • Photos show how the storm affected travel and the economy.

A major winter storm blanketed the US this weekend with heavy snow and ice, threatening nearly 180 million Americans from the Southwest to New England.

The National Weather Service (NWS) said there were widespread travel disruptions due to the storm. Over 10,000 flights were canceled over the weekend, the most since the pandemic, according to Cirium, an aviation analytics firm. Nearly 2,000 are already canceled on Monday morning, and authorities are urging many Americans to skip the morning commute.

Take a look at the impact of the potentially historic storm below.

States across the South, Midwest, and Northeast were blanketed in snow and ice by Sunday night.

Little Rock, Arkansas, on Saturday.

Will Newton/Getty Images

Snow turned to ice in many affected states as the storm moved from the Southwest to the Northeast.

The heavy snowfall is disrupting traffic on roadways and highways.


Snowplow in Little Rock, Arkansas, during winter storm 2026.

Roadways in Little Rock, Arkansas, were covered in snow on Saturday.

Will Newton/Getty Images

The Departments of Transportation in several states, including New York and Texas, have urged residents to avoid roadways during the winter storm and through Monday.

As a result of the snow, people are getting creative.


Man in Indianapolis during US winter storm.

A man in Indianapolis uses snow skis during the winter storm on Sunday.

AP Photo/Obed Lamy

Some Americans ventured into the frosty weather with skis, including folks in Indianapolis and Washington, D.C.

Thousands of flights are being canceled as a winter storm moves across the US.


American Airlines plane during winter storm 2026.

The winter storm disrupted air travel on Saturday.

Ron Jenkins/Getty Images

Aviation analytics company Cirium said over 10,000 flights were canceled over the weekend. Nearly 2,000 flights have been canceled so far on Monday. Over 50% of American Airlines flights were canceled on Sunday and over 75% of JetBlue flights.

Ice is a major concern during the winter storm.


US winter storm in New York City

Icy weather conditions are affecting several parts of the US on Sunday.

AP Photo/Heather Khalifa

Ice and sleet are other factors at play during the winter storm. On Sunday, the National Service Prediction Center said parts of the country have received over 0.5 inches of ice.

Ice storm warnings remained in effect for much of the storm’s path.

The freezing weather is causing power outages.


Man walks amid the 2026 winter storm Prairie Village, Kansas.

A man walks in Prairie Village, Kansas, during the winter storm on Saturday.

AP Photo/Charlie Riedel

The power was out for nearly a million Americans by Sunday night, according to poweroutage.us, an analytics firm tracking electricity outages across the United States.

Texas and other states were seeing the most outages as of Sunday evening.

Grocery store shelves were cleared out ahead of the storm.


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Empty store shelves at a grocery store in Washington, DC.

Nathan Howard/Reuters

Shoppers across multiple states emptied grocery shelves on Friday and Saturday as they prepared to hunker down for the winter storm.

Consumers have been known to panic-buy during emergencies. During the pandemic, panic-buying across the US led to a short-term shortage of toilet paper and other essential items.

City workers are spreading salt to prevent ice.


Salt truck filled with salt

A truck is filled with salt in Louisville during

Jon Cherry/Getty Images

Salt is spread on roadways to improve traction and make plowing easier.

In Louisville, city workers used a mixture of salt and calcium chloride.

“Calcium chloride helps salt remain effective in extremely cold temperatures,” the city said on its website.

Crews across the country as clearing snow.


Workers clearing snow in New York City during winter storm.

Workers in New York City help with snow-clearing efforts on Sunday.

Anadolu/Anadolu via Getty Images

While many Americans stayed inside, swaths of workers across the country braved the weather to help clear snow and perform other storm-related tasks.

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani praised city workers in an X post on Sunday, writing, “Thank you to all of the city workers who have been working around the clock this weekend to keep us safe. No job is too small, no storm is too big.”

Many cities are canceling school for students on Monday.


Sledding in Texas during the US winter storm.

Residents sled in Austin during the winter storm on Sunday.

Austin American-Statesman/Hearst Newspapers/Austin American-Statesman via Getty Images

New York City’s public schools have canceled in-person classes on Monday due to the “extreme cold.” Instead, students will do remote learning. Boston Public Schools and Baltimore City Public Schools issued similar announcements on their websites.




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Photos show empty supermarket shelves as millions across the US brace for Winter Storm Fern

Preparations are underway as over half of all US states brace for what could be a historic winter storm this weekend.

Across the country, Americans are stocking up on essentials and picking store shelves clean as they brace for Winter Storm Fern, which is expected to span from the South and Mid-Atlantic to the Northeast and Midwest, starting Friday morning.

Local authorities have begun salting roads and establishing emergency protocols in anticipation of potential power outages and limited travel.

Experts and authorities are advising people in affected states to stock up on food items that don’t need to be cooked or refrigerated, and to have at least one gallon of water per person or pet per day. They are also recommending that people charge all electronic communication devices in case of power outages. They’re warning to watch out for pipes bursting, snow blocking exhaust vents, and iced-over roads.

The Weather Channel predicted Thursday that wintry conditions, including ice, snow, and dangerous wind chills, could affect up to 230 million people — or two-thirds of the country’s population — across the US.

The Midwest will experience the coldest temperatures as a polar vortex dips south, with lows possibly reaching -50 degrees Fahrenheit in states like North Dakota, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, the Associated Press reported Thursday.

The Appalachians and the Northeast Corridor could see the most snow accumulation, with the mountains of Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia expected to receive at least a foot of snow over the weekend.

From Texas to the Carolinas, the South and Southeast can expect ice accumulation on roads and power lines. Local authorities are warning of potential multi-day power outages in the region.

See how Americans are preparing for what could be a historic storm, from stocking up on necessities to salting roads.

Shelves in a North Carolina Walmart were almost completely empty on Thursday as residents stocked up ahead of the storm.

A Morganton, North Carolina, Walmart had empty bread aisles by Thursday afternoon ahead of winter storm Fern.

Jesse Barber for BI

In Marietta, Georgia, residents also cleared a store’s shelves of bottled water.


A shopper searches for water on near empty shelves in grocery store ahead of winter weather, Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Marietta, Ga.

Experts advise storing at least 1 gallon of water per person or pet per day during the storm.

AP Photo/Mike Stewart

In Nashville, locals are following the “bread, milk, eggs” approach in their pre-storm shopping.


A shopper buys groceries Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Nashville, Tenn., ahead of a winter storm expected to hit the state over the weekend.

Eggs often sell out before winter storms, even though they require refrigeration and power to cook.

AP Photo/George Walker IV

Experts recommend stocking up on items that don’t need to be cooked or refrigerated.


A loaf of bread sits on empty shelves in the bread isle in grocery store ahead of winter weather, Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Marietta, Ga

Shoppers in Marietta, Georgia, are selling out bread from local supermarkets in preparation.

AP Photo/Mike Stewart

This supermarket in Nashville was also low on fresh produce on Wednesday.


A shopper buys groceries Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Nashville, Tenn., ahead of a winter storm expected to hit the state over the weekend.

Bananas are selling out in Nashville ahead of Winter Storm Fern.

AP Photo/George Walker IV

Many are preparing to be stuck at home for days, with forecasts warning of roads icing over.


Luz Lopez shops for groceries Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Nashville, Tenn., ahead of a winter storm expected to hit the state over the weekend.

Travel will likely be limited in places like Nashville during the storm.

AP Photo/George Walker IV

A sign outside a Lowe’s in North Carolina listed storm-supply items that had sold out.


Lowes store in Morganton, North Carolina, has a sign announcing different products they are out of on Thursday, January 22, 2026, ahead of winter storm Fern.

A sign outside a Lowe’s in North Carolina announced to shoppers that the store had run out of a variety of storm-prep supplies.

Jesse Barber for BI

Other hardware stores advertised available supplies.


ACE Hardware store in Morganton, North Carolina, ahead of winter storm Fern on Thursday January 22, 2026.

Residents of the North Carolina town rushed to buy supplies before the storm hit on Friday.

Jesse Barber for BI

Shoppers in Morganton, North Carolina, bought up supplies like ice melt ahead of the storm.


Shoppers buy ice melt salt in Morganton, North Carolina, ahead of winter storm Fern on Thursday, January 22, 2026

Many North Carolina residents went to stores like Ace Hardware in preparation for heavy snow.

Jesse Barber for BI

Lines for gas also formed as residents stocked up.


Shoppers refuel gas in Morganton, North Carolina, ahead of winter storm Fern on Thursday, January 22, 2026

Residents in Morganton, North Carolina, stocked up on cooking gas ahead of the storm.

Jesse Barber for BI

Others bought up wood as the storm threatened power outages across multiple states.


Shoppers in Morganton, North Carolina, buy lumber ahead of winter storm Fern on Thursday, January 22, 2026

Morganton residents stocked up on lumber and gas as alternative heating methods in case of power outages.

Jesse Barber for BI

A “Winter storm special” was even available at one North Carolina store.


Fuel inside store in Mroganton, North Carolina, ahead of winter storm Fern on January 22, 2026

In the North Carolina town, some hardware stores ran specials for supplies like fuel.

Jesse Barber for BI

In Richardson, Texas, authorities were salting roads on Wednesday in anticipation of the storm.


A digital billboard along Highway 75 warns of road preparations for upcoming inclement weather expected in the region Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Richardson, Texas.

Texas is expected to see freezing rain and sleet beginning Friday.

AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez

Illinois and other Midwestern states could be hit with life-threatening wind chills.


A plow clears snow from a snow-covered sidewalk during a cold day in Lake Forest, Ill., Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026.

Wind chills in the Midwest are expected to drop to -30°F in some areas, posing a threat of frostbite in exposed skin in as little as 10 minutes.

AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh

Nashville was also mobilizing salt trucks as of Thursday.


A Nashville Department of Transportation truck applies salt brine to a roadway Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, in Nashville, Tenn. ahead of a winter storm expected to hit the state over the weekend.

Nashville could see heavy snow, ice accumulation, and record-low temperatures during the storm.

AP Photo/George Walker IV

Salt brine helps prevent roads from icing ahead of snowstorms.


A Nashville Department of Transportation truck applies salt brine to a roadway Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, in Nashville, Tenn. ahead of a winter storm expected to hit the state over the weekend.

The National Weather Service said that travel during the storm could be “impossible” in Nashville.

AP Photo/George Walker IV

Some parts of New York are expected to see heavy snow accumulation in the double digits.


A snowplow works among piles of snow in Lowville, N.Y., on Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026.

In Lowville, New York, snow has begun to accumulate as of Thursday, before the storm arrives.

AP Photo/Cara Anna




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THEN AND NOW: Vintage photos show how department stores have changed

  • Department stores have changed dramatically over the last 100 years.
  • Department stores once sold necessities. Now, many are struggling to remain in business.
  • While some classic chains cease to exist, other retailers have found ways to increase sales.

In the early 1900s, department stores existed to sell necessities, including food, home goods, and apparel.

Today, many luxury department stores are struggling to survive.

The rise of the internet and surge in online sales have placed a major strain on department stores. Saks Global, the parent company of Saks Fifth Avenue, Bergdorf Goodman, and Neiman Marcus, became the latest department retailer to file for bankruptcy on Tuesday.

Take a look at how department stores have changed over the last 100 years.

In the early 1900s, department stores were focused on selling the necessities.

A Harrods department store.

Heritage Images/Getty Images

Core products included clothing and home goods. During times of war, the necessities on sale included military jackets, coats, and accessories.

That’s why Harrods, a famous department store in London, featured an in-house tailoring room throughout World War I. The space was utilized to alter used uniforms and sell new ones.

Department stores still sell the basics, but novelty items are also typically present.


Harrod's Department Store holidays

A modern Harrods department store.

Prisma by Dukas/Getty Images

You can find everything from household tools and fashionable clothes to toys and knickknacks at modern department stores — they seem to sell everything, in an apparent bid to compete with online retailers.

Harrods also sells store-branded items, including bags, stationery, and teddy bears.

Leading up to the 1930s, department stores were often crowded.


An old photo of a crowded department store.

A crowded department store.

Bettmann/Getty Images

Around 1929, people were encouraged to shop in order to help boost the nation’s sinking economy, Fortune reported.

But that same year, the stock market crashed, and the Great Depression officially began. The period lasted for 10 years, causing major layoffs, failing banks, and mass poverty.

Today’s department stores rarely see such large crowds, aside from major shopping events like Black Friday.


Macy's on Black Friday/

A Macy’s department store on Black Friday.

Kamil Krzaczynski/Getty Images

Even during major holiday sales, many modern shoppers still prefer to shop online from the comfort of their homes.

In 2025, shoppers in the US were projected to spend a record $11.7 billion online on Black Friday, an 8.3% increase from 2024.

It marked a contrast from the wild Black Friday scenes that could be seen in stores in the decade before the COVID-19 pandemic.

In the 1920s, employees worked in department store basements to make change for cashiers upstairs.


Making change for department store cashiers.

The basement of a department store in the 1920s.

Underwood Archives/Getty Images

In large stores that existed across multiple floors, vacuum systems transported the change upstairs through tubes.

None of those “tube rooms” are needed anymore, thanks to computers and credit cards.


A Macy's cashier.

A cashier at Macy’s.

Kena Betancur/Getty Images

Modern shoppers often don’t even have to interact with a cashier if they don’t want to. Instead, they can use touchscreen self-checkout machines to purchase products from many department stores.

Starting in 1924, Macy’s celebrated the holidays with its first annual “Christmas Parade.”


macy's first thanksgiving day parade

A photo from the first parade was taken in 1924.


Macy’s


Live animals such as elephants were included in the early days of the Macy’s parade. Balloons depicting popular characters such as Mickey Mouse appeared a little later in the ’30s.

The name has since been changed to the “Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.”


The Radio City Rockettes at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade.

The Radio City Rockettes at the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.

Scott Gries/NBC via Getty Images

Other aspects of the yearly tradition have also been changed. For example, live animals have been replaced with people dressed in costumes, and giant marching bands have become a staple. Tons of celebrities have also appeared on floats.

Minimal merchandise was showcased in store window displays throughout the ’40s.


department store display window

A department store display window.

Kirn Vintage Stock/Getty Images

Beginning in the 1870s at Macy’s, some chain retailers in New York City have made it a tradition to decorate store-front windows each holiday season.

There was some art to these displays, as props were placed alongside mannequins and merchandise to create a scene.

Contemporary display windows are unlike anything of the past.


A holiday display window at Macy's.

A holiday display window at Macy’s.

Nicolas Economou/NurPhoto

Modern department stores often incorporate technology, moving props, and bright lights into window displays.

As early as 1923, Barneys New York was a popular department store.


barneys new york

Barneys New York.

Peter Morgan/AP

Barneys New York was created by a man named Barney Pressman when he pawned his wife’s engagement ring and opened a shop on Seventh Avenue and 17th Street in New York City.

By the ’60s, Barney’s son, Fred, had turned the location into a luxury store, and the company became a national sensation throughout the 1990s and 2000s. By 2019, there were 22 stores in the US.

However, the chain faced difficulties and shuttered all stores in 2020.


A closing sale at Barneys New York.

A closing sale at Barneys New York.

WWD/Penske Media via Getty Images

Barneys New York filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in August 2019 and closed all remaining stores in February 2020.

Bonwit Teller was once a prominent luxury department store with a flagship location in New York City.


Bonwit Teller Department Store

A Bonwit Teller department store.

George Rinhart/Getty Images

The store was known for selling a range of high-end women’s clothing inside a luxurious Art Deco building. It grew to more than a dozen locations across cities, including Chicago, Philadelphia, and Columbia, South Carolina.

By 2000, every Bonwit Teller store had gone out of business.


Bonwit Teller out of business

Bonwit Teller’s closing sale.

Barbara Alper/Getty Images

In 1979, the Bonwit Teller company was sold from its original owners to outside corporations. Ten years later, in 1989, the store filed for bankruptcy and began shutting all of its stores, with its last location closing in 2000.

While the flagship Bonwit Teller store would have been exempt from the closure, the building was purchased by Donald Trump in 1979, who demolished it to build Trump Tower.

The Saks Fifth Avenue flagship store in New York City opened in 1924.


Saks Fifth Avenue in New York City.

Saks Fifth Avenue.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

Saks Fifth Avenue was once a bustling destination for luxury shoppers. At 650,000 square feet, the store spans an entire city block.

Saks Global filed for bankruptcy on Tuesday.


Saks Fifth Avenue.

Saks Fifth Avenue in New York City.

ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images

Saks Global’s 2024 acquisition of Neiman Marcus for $2.7 billion left the company in debt and struggling to pay luxury vendors, some of whom have withheld inventory.

Business Insider reporter Madeline Berg visited the Saks Fifth Avenue flagship store the day Saks Global announced it was filing for bankruptcy and found it to be “nearly empty” with little foot traffic.




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Vintage photos show Hollywood icons mingling at the Golden Globes

  • The 83rd annual Golden Globes will air on CBS and Paramount+ on Sunday night.
  • Photos taken throughout the event’s long history show Hollywood icons celebrating together.
  • From Marilyn Monroe to Marlon Brando, every big star has been in attendance.

The very first Golden Globes were held on January 20, 1944, to celebrate the films of 1943.

Over the last eight decades, the Golden Globes have evolved to include television, have endured a few scandals, and — after a one-year hiatus in 2022 — are one of the first major events of Hollywood’s awards season.

These photos were taken across the Globes’ 82 years in existence. See how the ceremony has changed.

The Golden Globes were first held in 1944 by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, a band of writers who came together in 1943.

Tony Curtis and his wife, Janet Leigh, at the 1958 Golden Globes.

Archive Photos/Getty Images

The first ceremony was held at the 20th Century Fox lot. It then moved around for two decades until finding its permanent home, the Beverly Hills Hilton, in 1961.

The award ceremony became more glamorous over time.


golden globes

Dorothy Malone presented Angela Lansbury the award for best supporting actress for “The Manchurian Candidate” at the 20th Annual Golden Globe Awards.

NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

By the 20th Golden Globes, the stage looked more like the one we see today.

All of Hollywood’s best and brightest attended the awards.


barbara stanwyck golden globes

Barbara Stanwyck and Gilbert Roland attended the Golden Globe Awards on February 21, 1952.

Earl Leaf/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

In 1952, Barbara Stanwyck chatted with fellow screen icon Gilbert Roland.

Roland was nominated the following year for his part in “The Bad and the Beautiful.”

Stanwyck wouldn’t receive a Golden Globe nomination until 1966, and she was given the Cecil B. DeMille Award, a lifetime achievement award, in 1986.

The Golden Globes are known as the “fun” awards show because alcohol is famously served at every table.


golden globes

Deborah Kerr, Stewart Granger, and Jean Simmons attended the Golden Globe Awards.

Earl Leaf/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

According to The Hollywood Reporter, over 7,500 glasses of bubbly are normally consumed over the course of the night.

And since the attendees are seated at tables, not in rows, there are more opportunities for mingling.


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Judy Garland with Marlon Brando at the 1955 Golden Globe Awards.

Archive Photos/Getty Images

It leads to iconic table-mates like Judy Garland and Marlon Brando, who sat next to each other at the 1955 awards.

They both took home statues that night: her for best actress in “A Star is Born” and him for best actor in “On the Waterfront.”

Shirley MacLaine embodied old Hollywood glamour at the 1955 awards.


shirley maclaine golden globes

Shirley MacLaine at the Golden Globe Awards.

Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

MacLaine is part of a Hollywood dynasty — her brother is Warren Beatty.

Even future royalty appeared, like Grace Kelly.


grace kelly golden globes

Grace Kelly at a Golden Globe Awards ceremony.

Silver Screen Collection/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Kelly won the now-discontinued award for world film favorite (female) in 1956.

She retired from acting that same year when she married Prince Rainier III of Monaco and became the Princess Consort of Monaco.

The Golden Globes’ lifetime achievement award is named after Cecil B. DeMille, seen below.


cecil b demille golden globes

Cecil B. DeMille with Corinne Calvet at the Golden Globe Awards.

Earl Leaf/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

DeMille, pictured talking to French actor Corinne Calvet in 1952, is known for directing and producing some of the most famous films of all time, including “The Ten Commandments,” “Cleopatra,” and “The Greatest Show on Earth.”

This year’s Cecil B. DeMille Award honoree is Helen Mirren.

You never know which celebrities might end up sitting together.


lucille ball desi arnez

Desi Arnaz and Lucille Ball (right) chat with Hollywood gossip columnist Louella Parsons (left) at the Golden Globe Awards.

Jack Albin/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

In 2026, this would be the equivalent of DeuxMoi sitting with George and Amal Clooney …

Elizabeth Taylor, her third husband, Mike Todd, and her future fourth husband, Eddie Fisher, rubbed elbows at the 1958 awards.


elizabeth taylor eddie fisher mike todd

Eddie Fisher standing with Elizabeth Taylor and her husband, Mike Todd, at the Golden Globe Awards.

Hulton Archive/Getty Images

The 1958 awards were held in February. Todd died one month later in a plane crash.

While grieving, Taylor and Fisher, one of Todd’s best friends, began an affair, leading to the divorce of Hollywood golden couple Fisher and Debbie Reynolds.

Jayne Mansfield and Mickey Hargitay also attended in 1958.


jayne mansfield mickey hargitay

Actors Jayne Mansfield and Mickey Hargitay attend the Golden Globe Awards.

Earl Leaf/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

These two have a famous daughter of their own, Mariska Hargitay, who is best known as Olivia Benson of “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.”

Hargitay directed a documentary about her famous mother, “My Mom Jayne,” in 2025, in which she revealed that Mickey Hargitay isn’t her biological father.

Marilyn Monroe looked every bit the ’60s starlet at the 1962 awards.


marilyn monroe golden globes

Marilyn Monroe posed for a portrait at the Golden Globe Awards.

Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

That same year, she won her fourth and final Golden Globe, for world film favorite (female). Previously, Monroe won the best young box office personality in 1951 and the world film favorite (female) in 1953. She died just five months later, in August 1962.

In 2023, Ana de Armas was nominated for best actress in a motion picture (drama) for playing Monroe in “Blonde.”

Another iconic old Hollywood duo seen at the awards was Dean Martin and John Wayne.


dean martin john wayne golden globes

Dean Martin and John Wayne.

Bettmann/Getty Images

Wayne held Martin’s drink as the singer/actor presented a Golden Globe during the show.

Julie Andrews is a Golden Globes queen.


julie andrews golden globes

Julie Andrews received a Golden Globe.

Paul W. Bailey/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

One of the most iconic moments in award-show history was when she famously shaded Jack Warner, the man who didn’t cast her in “My Fair Lady.”

When the stage musical “My Fair Lady” was made into a movie, Warner, head of Warner Bros. studios, decided to cast Audrey Hepburn as the lead, even though Andrews had played the role on Broadway and in London.

This snub proved to be a blessing, as it freed up Andrews for what might be her most iconic role of all time: Mary Poppins.

When Andrews won her Golden Globe in 1965, she thanked “the man who made all this possible in the first place, Mr. Jack Warner.”

It’s also a big night for couples. Just ask Mark Hamill and his wife, Marilou York.


mark hamill marilou york golden globes

Mark Hamill and his wife, Marilou York, at the 35th Golden Globe Awards.

Frank Edwards/Archive Photos/Getty Images

The “Star Wars” star and his wife have been married for more than 40 years.

Or Sonny and Cher.


sonny and cher golden globes

Sonny and Cher at the Golden Globe Awards.

Max B. Miller/Fotos International/Getty Images

The duo’s show, “The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour,” was nominated for best television series musical or comedy in both 1973 and 1974.

Natalie Wood and Robert Redford caught up at the 1966 ceremony.


natalie wood robert redford

Natalie Wood and Robert Redford at the Golden Globes.

Max B. Miller/Fotos International/Getty Images

Wood and Redford, who died in 2025, met in high school and starred in a few movies together, such as 1966’s “This Property Is Condemned,” according to an appearance by Redford on Turner Classic Movies.

Some stars take their parents. It helps if your dad is a living legend like Henry Fonda, seen here with his daughter, Jane.


jane and henry fonda golden globes

Henry Fonda with his daughter, Jane Fonda, at the 36th Annual Golden Globe Awards.

Frank Edwards/Archive Photos/Getty Images

This father-daughter duo would team up two years later to film Henry’s last on-screen role, 1981’s “On Golden Pond.”

Jane was awarded the Cecil B. DeMille Award in 2021.

The Golden Globes can be kid-friendly, too. Here’s a 15-year-old Michael Jackson with his father.


michael jackson joe jackson golden globes

Michael Jackson and his father, Joe Jackson, posed at the Golden Globe Awards.

Frank Edwards/Fotos International/Getty Images

The Jackson 5’s album “Skywriter” was released in 1973.

A Michael Jackson biopic, simply titled “Michael,” will hit theaters in 2026.

But usually, it’s a night filled with love between A-listers like Doris Day and Rock Hudson.


doris day rock hudson golden globes

Rock Hudson and Doris Day as they held their Golden Globe awards.

Bettmann/Getty Images

Hudson and Day were both chosen as the “world’s favorite performers” multiple times.

Christopher Reeve attended the 36th annual Golden Globe Awards with his partner, Gae Exton.


christopher reeve golden globes

Gae Exton and Christopher Reeve.

Ron Galella/WireImage/Getty Images

We’ll see if any couples make their red-carpet debut on Sunday.

Tom Selleck and his wife, Jillie Mack, attended in matching tuxedos.


Jillie Mack and Tom Selleck during The 45th Annual Golden Globe Awards

Jillie Mack and Tom Selleck at the 45th Golden Globe Awards.

Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection/Getty Images

Mack and Selleck have been married for 39 years.

Some of the most iconic actors of all time attended as they were just starting out.


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Dustin Hoffman at the Golden Globes with his award for most promising newcomer.

Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Back in 1968, Dustin Hoffman won the now-defunct award for new star of the year.

Hoffman won for his breakthrough performance in “The Graduate” when he was 30 years old.

Barbra Streisand won her first Golden Globe for her performance in “Funny Girl” in 1969.


barbra streisand golden globes

Barbra Streisand with her Golden Globe award for best performance by an actress in a motion picture — comedy or musical at the 26th Golden Globe Awards.

Max B. Miller/Fotos International/Getty Images

At 27 years old, it was her first Golden Globe nomination and win.

Now, Streisand is one of a few people to have received an EGOT — an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, and Tony Award — though not all of them were competitive awards.

Young Arnold Schwarzenegger won new star of the year in 1977 for his role in “Stay Hungry.”


arnold schwarzenegger golden globes

Arnold Schwarzenegger held Raquel Welch in the air at the Golden Globe Awards.

Frank Edwards/Fotos International/Getty Images

Schwarzenegger wouldn’t be nominated again until 1995 for “Junior.”

Here’s John Travolta at his very first Golden Globes in 1978.


john travolta golden globes

John Travolta at the 35th Annual Golden Globe Awards.

Ron Galella/WireImage/Getty Images

Travolta was nominated for his role in “Saturday Night Fever” but lost. He would be nominated multiple times and scored a win in 1996 for “Get Shorty.”

Robin Williams won his first of six Golden Globes in 1979.


robin williams golden globes

Robin Williams with his award for the television show “Mork and Mindy” at the Golden Globe Awards.

Frank Edwards/Pictorial Parade/Archive Photos/Getty Images

He was nominated for 12 in total.

Angela Lansbury was already a much-loved actor when she won a Golden Globe in 1987.


Actress Angela Lansbury holds up her Golden Globe award, which she won for best performance by an actress in a TV-series drama in 1987.

Angela Lansbury at the Golden Globes.

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Lansbury won for best performance by an actress in a TV series drama for her role in “Murder, She Wrote.” She died in 2022 at 96 years old.




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Photos show the Pacific Palisades one year after the Los Angeles wildfires, from empty lots to rebuilt storefronts

  • The Palisades and Eaton fires began in Southern California on January 7, 2025.
  • They destroyed over 16,000 structures and burned 38,000 acres.
  • One year later, photos show the remaining devastation as rebuilding work continues.

In January 2025, the Palisades and Eaton fires burned 38,000 acres across Southern California.

Over 16,000 homes and businesses were destroyed as windstorms propelled the flames, according to the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services. At least 31 people died in the fires.

One year later, some of the damaged areas have been rebuilt and repaired, while others remain scorched shells.

Here’s what the Pacific Palisades looks like one year after the devastating fires.




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Gold domes, historic statues, and nods to state flags: Photos show what the capitol looks like in every state

Updated

  • Every US state has a capitol that houses its state legislature.
  • Many state capitols are domed buildings similar to the US Capitol, but others are more unique.
  • Maryland’s State House is the oldest capitol in continuous legislative use in the US.

A state’s capitol can tell you a lot about its history and government.

Many state capitols feature references to their locations, like Kansas’ statue of a Kansa warrior atop its dome, or the New Hampshire State House, which was built with locally sourced granite.

Every capitol has a unique look and distinct origin, and you can learn more about them here.

Montgomery, Alabama

Alabama’s capitol in Montgomery.

Carol M. Highsmith/Buyenlarge/Getty Images

Alabama’s capitol is where the Confederacy began, and there’s a brass star on one of the porticos marking the spot where Jefferson Davis was sworn in as its president, according to the Alabama Historical Commission.

The building that stands today was constructed in 1851, after a fire burned down the original building in 1849, according to the Alabama Historical Commission.

One of the more famous parts of the capitol grounds is the Avenue of Flags. It has the flag of every state plus a native rock from each state at each flag’s base. It was dedicated in 1968, according to Exploring Montgomery.

Juneau, Alaska


Alaska's capitol in Juneau.

Alaska’s capitol in Juneau.

Leamus/iStock/Getty Images Plus

The Alaska State Capitol, completed in 1931, doesn’t look much different from any other office building in Juneau, save the marble columns. According to Alaska’s official website, it is one of few state capitols to not feature a dome.

As The New York Times reported in 1981, neither the building nor the location were popular with locals — both were chosen because the residents of Alaska had to fund construction themselves — but efforts to move the capitol have failed, even though a vote passed to move the location in the ’70s.

As recently as 2022, Alaskan senators sponsored a bill to move the capital, this time to Willow, reported Alaska Public Media, but for now, Juneau remains the Last Frontier’s capital city.

Phoenix, Arizona


arizona capitol building

The Arizona Capitol Museum in Phoenix.

Visions of America/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

Arizona’s capitol was dedicated in 1901. It stopped being the home of the legislative branches of government in 1960 — and by 1978, all government officials had been moved to other buildings nearby in an area called the Capitol Complex.

The original building was then officially converted into a museum that anyone can visit.

Little Rock, Arkansas


arkansas capitol building

Arkansas’ capitol in Little Rock.

Don & Melinda Crawford/Education Images/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

Arkansas’ capitol took 16 years to complete. Construction lasted from 1899 to 1915, and the building was designed by architects George R. Mann and Cass Gilbert, according to the Encyclopedia of Arkansas.

This building replaced the State House, which is now the Old State House Museum, according to Arkansas Heritage.

Sacramento, California


california capitol building

California’s capitol in Sacramento.

David Paul Morris/Getty Images

The building was constructed between 1860 and 1874, and designed by Reuben S. Clark. It has been listed as a California Historical Landmark since 1974, according to the Historic State Capitol Commission.

Its design was based on the US Capitol in Washington, DC, among other well-known American buildings, according to the State of California Capitol Museum.

The California State Capitol is located inside the 40-acre Capitol Park, which contains trees from around the world, a World Peace Rose Garden, and the Civil War Memorial Grove.

Denver, Colorado


colorado capitol building

Colorado’s capitol in Denver.

John Moore/Getty Images

The Colorado Capitol, which was completed in 1901, was also designed to look like the US Capitol, but with a Colorado twist: The dome is covered in real gold leaf donated by gold miners to reference the Colorado Gold Rush from 1858 to 1861, according to the Colorado General Assembly.

Hartford, Connecticut


connecticut capitol building

Connecticut’s capitol in Hartford.

Rolf Schulten/ullstein bild/Getty Images

The current Connecticut State Capitol is actually the third capitol the state has had since the American Revolution. This one, designed by Richard M. Upjohn, opened in 1879, according to Connecticut’s official state website.

The golden dome is surrounded by six pairs of statues representing agriculture, commerce, education and law, force and war, science and justice, and music, according to the State Capitol Preservation & Restoration Commission.

Dover, Delaware


delaware capitol building

Delaware’s Legislative Hall in Dover.

Harvey Meston/Archive Photos/Getty Images

The Delaware Legislative Hall was dedicated in 1933 and replaced the Old State House, which is opposite the Hall on the capitol mall. It was designed in the Colonial Revival style by E. William Martin, according to Delaware’s official state website.

Washington, DC


us capitol building

The US Capitol.

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The United States Capitol is located on Capitol Hill in DC. It was in construction for decades, partially destroyed in 1814, and then finally finished in 1829, according to Architect of the Capitol. The famous, gigantic dome was later added during an expansive addition in 1855, designed by Thomas U. Walter.

Atop the dome sits the “Statue of Freedom,” a 19-foot statue of a woman wearing a battle helmet, holding a sheathed sword in one hand, and a laurel wreath and shield in the other. She’s been there since 1863, according to Architect of the Capitol.

Tallahassee, Florida


florida capitol building

Florida’s capitol in Tallahassee.

Mark Wallheiser/Getty Images

The current capitol, also called the New Capitol, is located directly in front of the original — together, they form the Capitol Complex. The New Capitol was built in 1977 by architect Edward Durell Stone and the firm of Reynolds, Smith, and Hills, according to the Florida Capitol website.

The website reports the building was designed in an “international style to reflect a modern Florida,” and includes a 22-story central tower.

The Old Capitol still stands, and it was restored to its original 1902 glory in the ’80s. Currently, the building is the Florida Historic Capitol Museum.

Atlanta, Georgia


georgia state capitol

Georgia’s capitol in Atlanta.

Kevin Fleming/Corbis/VCG/Getty Images

Georgia’s capitol was finished in 1889 and designed by Willoughby J. Edbrooke and Franklin P. Burnham, according to the city of Atlanta’s website. It sits on the site of the former Atlanta City Hall/Fulton County Courthouse, which was there from 1854 to 1994.

According to the city, it’s one of 43 National Historic Landmarks in the state.

Honolulu, Hawaii


hawaii capitol building

Hawaii’s capitol in Honolulu.

Rolf Schulten/ullstein bild/Getty Images

At the dedication of the Hawaiian capitol in 1969, then-Governor John A. Burns explained the design of the building, the Honolulu Star Advertiser reported.

“In this great State Capitol there are no doors at the grand entrances which open toward the mountains and toward the sea,” he said. “There is no roof or dome to separate its vast inner court from the heavens and from the same eternal stars which guided the first voyagers to the primeval beauty of these shores.”

The building is also surrounded by a reflecting pool meant to symbolize the Pacific Ocean, which surrounds the chain of 137 recognized islands that make up Hawaii, according to the State of Hawaii.

Boise, Idaho


idaho state capitol building

Idaho’s capitol in Boise.

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Idaho’s capitol was designed by architects J.E. Tourtellotte and Charles Hummel, and was constructed between 1905 and 1920. According to Idaho’s Capitol Commission, it’s the only capitol in the US that is heated by geothermal water. It comes from a spring 3,000 feet underground.

Springfield, Illinois


illinois state capitol

Illinois’ capitol in Springfield.

Daniel Acker for The Washington Post/Getty Images

According to a pamphlet by the Illinois Secretary of State’s office, the current capitol (the state’s sixth) was completed in 1888, 20 years after crews broke ground. At the time of its construction, the limestone dome was illuminated by 144 gas jets. However, the carbon emitted by those jets eventually turned the dome black.

It took 100 years, but it was finally cleaned in 1986.

Indianapolis, Indiana


indiana capitol building

Indiana’s capitol in Indianapolis.

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According to the Indiana Department of Administration, Indiana’s capitol was completed in 1888, and is home to all executive offices, the Indiana State Senate, the Indiana House of Representatives, and the Indiana State Supreme Court, among others. It was constructed with Indiana limestone.

Des Moines, Iowa


iowa capitol building

Iowa’s capitol in Des Moines.

Carol M. Highsmith/Buyenlarge/Getty Images

The large golden dome is 23 carats, and the entire building is 275 feet tall, according to a visitor’s guide. It’s been re-gilded four times since its construction in 1886.

Overall, Iowa’s capitol has a total of five domes, making it the only capitol in the US with five.

Topeka, Kansas


kansas capitol building

State capitol in Topeka.

Joe Sohm/Visions of America/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

Kansas’ capitol dome is topped with a statue called “Ad astra” (Latin for “to the stars”), which is part of the state’s motto, “ad astra per aspera” (“to the stars through difficulties”), according to the Kansas Historical Society.

The statue itself is a bronze depiction of a warrior from the Kansa tribe (also known as the Kaw Nation or Kanza), who call Kansas home and gave the state its name.

The entire building took 37 years to construct, also according to the Kansas Historical Society, from 1866 to 1903. 

Frankfort, Kentucky


kentucky capitol building

Kentucky’s capitol in Frankfort.

Bill Pugliano/Getty Images

Kentucky’s capitol was designed by Frank Mills Andrews, according to Kentucky’s official state website. There are also statues lining the front portico that represent Kentucky, the central figure, with Progress, History, Plenty, Law, Art, and Labor as her “attendants,” according to the state website.

The current building is the fourth capitol in the state, and it was completed in 1910.

Baton Rouge, Louisiana


louisiana capitol building

Louisiana’s capitol in Baton Rouge.

David LEFRANC/Gamma-Rapho/Getty Images

The Louisiana Capitol is just one of nine capitols in the US that doesn’t feature a dome — and at 450 feet tall (or 34 floors), it’s also the tallest capitol in the country, according to Louisiana’s House of Representatives.

It was dedicated in 1932, without the person who had spearheaded the effort to build it, Senator Huey P. Long, a controversial figure in Louisiana’s history, as reported by Encyclopedia Britannica.

Augusta, Maine


maine capitol buildings

The Maine State House in Augusta.

Joe Phelan/Portland Press Herald/Getty Images

The capital of Maine was originally Portland when the state broke away from Massachusetts in 1820. But when Mainers asked for a more centrally located capital city, Augusta was chosen in 1827, according to the Maine State Legislature. The building was completed by 1832.

The State House’s dome is topped with a female figure of Wisdom, which was designed by sculptor W. Clark Noble of Gardiner, a town 6 miles from Augusta.

Annapolis, Maryland


maryland capitol building

Maryland’s state capitol in Annapolis.

Education Images/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

Maryland’s State House is the oldest capitol in continuous legislative use in the US, built in 1779, according to its official website. It’s also the only state capitol to have once served as the US capitol when the Continental Congress met there from 1783 to 1784, according to the website.

Boston, Massachusetts


massachusetts state house

The Old State House for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in Boston.

Joe Sohm/Visions of America/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

The Massachusetts State House, built in 1789, originally had a wooden dome, but Paul Revere’s own company was responsible for covering it in copper in 1802, CBS News reported.

And the land it was built on? It used to be owned by none other than John Hancock, who was Massachusetts’ first elected governor.

Lansing, Michigan


michigan state capitol

Michigan’s capitol in Lansing.

Bettman/Getty Images

The floors of Michigan’s capitol, which was dedicated in 1879, are made of limestone and have visible fossils in them, as you can see on the capitol’s official website.

St. Paul, Minnesota


minnesota capitol building

Minnesota’s capitol in St. Paul.

Raymond Boyd/Getty Images

According to Explore Minnesota, the state’s capitol is the second-largest self-supporting marble dome in the world, only behind St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome.

Architect Cass Gilbert insisted on using Georgia marble for the dome, according to the Minnesota Historical Society. Some were critical of using out-of-state materials, so as a compromise, the contractor leased the quarry in Georgia and imported the rough marble so Minnesotans could do the work in-state.

It took nine years, but was completed in 1905.

Jackson, Mississippi


mississippi capitol building

Mississippi’s state capitol in Jackson.

RORY DOYLE/AFP/Getty Images

Designed by architect Theodore Link and constructed between 1901 and 1903, Mississippi’s state capitol was built on the site of an old state penitentiary, according to the state capitol’s official website. The building spans 171,000 square feet and features 4,750 original electric light fixtures, as well as an 8-foot statue of an eagle on the top of its dome.

Jefferson City, Missouri


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Missouri’s capitol in Jefferson City.

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Missouri’s state capitol was completed in 1917, according to its official website. Ceres, the goddess of grain, sits at the top of its dome.

In addition to Missouri’s state legislature, the 500,000-square-foot building houses the Missouri State Museum with exhibits about the state’s history and natural resources.

Helena, Montana


montana state capitol

Montana’s state capitol in Helena.

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The main building of Montana’s state capitol was completed in 1902, and its two wings were added in 1911 and 1912, according to the Montana Historical Society. Inside, the building features works of art such as the mural “Lewis and Clark Meeting Indians at Ross’ Hole,” painted by Charles M. Russell in 1912.

Lincoln, Nebraska


nebraska capitol building

Nebraska’s state capitol in Lincoln.

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Nebraska’s state capitol was designed by architect Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue and completed in 1932, according to its official website. The 400-foot tower is topped with a 19-foot bronze statue called “The Sower.”

It is the only state legislature to be unicameral, meaning it only has one chamber.

Carson City, Nevada


nevada state capitol

Nevada’s state capitol in Carson City.

Joe Sohm/Visions of America/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

Nevada’s state capitol was built from 1870 to 1871 out of sandstone sourced from a quarry belonging to Abe Curry, the founder of Carson City, according to Travel Nevada. It features a silver-colored dome, a nod to Nevada’s nickname as “the silver state.”

Concord, New Hampshire


new hampshire capitol

New Hampshire’s state capitol in Concord.

Joe Sohm/Visions of America/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

The New Hampshire State House was constructed between 1816 and 1819 with locally sourced granite from Rattlesnake Hill in Concord, according to the New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources.

In 1818, a wooden sculpture of an eagle painted with gold was installed on top of the capitol dome. It was replaced with a copper replica in 1957, but the original sculpture can be viewed on display inside the capitol, according to EverGreene, the architecture firm that restored the State House’s gold-plated dome.

Trenton, New Jersey


new jersey capitol building

New Jersey’s state capitol in Trenton.

Bobby Bank/WireImage/Getty Images

After Maryland, New Jersey State House is the second-oldest capitol still in use, completed in 1792, according to the state of New Jersey’s official website. Much of the original building, designed by architect Jonathan Doane, was destroyed in a fire in 1885.

Architect Lewis Broome restored the capitol and added a cast-iron dome plated with copper and gold and featuring the Latin phrase “Fiat Justitia Ruat Coelum,” meaning  “There must be justice even though the heavens fall.”

Santa Fe, New Mexico


new mexico capitol building

New Mexico’s state capitol in Santa Fe.

Robert Alexander/Archive Photos/Getty Images

New Mexico’s capitol, known as the Roundhouse, is the only round capitol in the US, according to Santa Fe’s official tourist website. Architect Willard C. Kruger modeled the design after the Zia sun symbol, which he also incorporated into the capitol rotunda skylight. The symbol is also part of New Mexico’s state flag.

Albany, New York


new york state capitol building

New York’s state capitol in Albany.

John Greim/LightRocket/Getty Images

When New York’s state capitol in Albany was finally finished after 32 years in 1899, it was at a cost of $25 million, making it one of the most expensive government projects in the US. In 2013, The New York Times reported the figure was equivalent to more than half a billion dollars today.

Inside the granite building, visitors can find 25 murals by William deLeftwich Dodge in the Governor’s Reception Room.

Raleigh, North Carolina


The capitol building in Raleigh, North Carolina

North Carolina’s capitol in Raleigh.

LOGAN CYRUS/AFP via Getty Images

Completed in 1840, North Carolina’s 3-story capitol includes a copper dome, according to the National Park Service.

Bismarck, North Dakota


north dakota capitol building

North Dakota’s capitol in Bismarck.

KAREN BLEIER/AFP/Getty Images

North Dakota’s state capitol is the tallest building in the state at 241 feet and 8 inches tall, according to the official government website. The Art-Deco structure is nicknamed the “Skyscraper on the Prairie,” according to the Society of Architecture Historians.

Columbus, Ohio


ohio capitol building

Ohio’s capitol in Columbus.

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Construction of the Ohio Statehouse took over 20 years, from 1839 to 1861, according to its official website. Much of the work was done by prisoners at Ohio Penitentiary, some of whom left graffiti on the walls that was uncovered during restoration work, the website says. Built in the Greek-Revival architecture style out of Columbus limestone, the Statehouse is a designated National Historic Landmark.

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma


oklahoma capitol building

Oklahoma’s state capitol in Oklahoma City.

Jordan McAlister/Getty Images

Built in 1917, the dome on Oklahoma’s capitol was added more recently, in 2002, according to the Oklahoma Historical Society — it was left out of the original construction due to costs. The grounds of Oklahoma’s capitol also had active oil rigs until 1986. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1976.

Salem, Oregon


Oregon's state capitol building in Salem.

Oregon’s state capitol in Salem.

Education Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Oregon’s Art Deco capitol is made of white Vermont marble with a gold statue of an “Oregon Pioneer” atop the dome, according to the capitol’s official website. In-person guided tours are paused due to construction.

Harrisburg, Pennsylvania


pennsylvania capitol building

Pennsylvania’s state capitol in Harrisburg.

John Greim/LightRocket/Getty Images

Pennsylvania’s capitol, designed by architect Joseph Huston, cost $13 million to build when it was completed in 1906, which would be over $403 million today, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The building’s 272-foot dome is decorated with green glazed terra cotta tile, according to the capitol’s official website.

Providence, Rhode Island


rhode island capitol building

Rhode Island’s state capitol in Providence.

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The Rhode Island State House, built between 1895 and 1904, features the fourth-largest freestanding marble dome in the world, according to the Rhode Island Restoration Committee‘s official website. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1970.

Columbia, South Carolina


south carolina capitol building

South Carolina’s state capitol in Columbia.

Epics/Getty Images

The construction of the South Carolina State House began in 1854, but halted due to the Civil War. The building still features cannonball marks from when the Union army captured Columbia in 1865, according to Discover South Carolina. The State House was finally completed in 1903, and it was designated as a National Historic Landmark in 1976, according to the South Carolina Department of Archives and History.

A portrait of state senator Clementa Pinckney, who was killed in the 2015 shooting at Charleston’s Mother Emanuel AME Church, hangs in the Senate Gallery.

Pierre, South Dakota


south dakota

South Dakota’s state capitol in Pierre.

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South Dakota’s state capitol was constructed between 1905 and 1910, not long after South Dakota became a US state in 1889, according to the South Dakota Bureau of Administration. An annex was added in 1932. The Neoclassical building features scagliola plaster columns, war memorials, and stained-glass windows, according to Travel South Dakota.

Nashville, Tennessee


tennessee capitol building

Tennessee’s state capitol in Nashville.

Raymond Boyd/Getty Images

The Tennessee State Capitol opened in 1859. The architect, William Strickland, died during its construction in 1854 and was buried on the capitol grounds along with President James K. Polk and first lady Sarah Childress Polk, according to the Tennessee State Museum.

Austin, Texas


texas capitol building

Texas’ state capitol in Austin.

James Leynse/Corbis/Getty Images

Completed in 1888, the Texas State Capitol dome is topped with a statue of Libertas, the goddess of liberty, according to the official website for the Texas House of Representatives. It stands 14 feet taller than the US Capitol.

Salt Lake City, Utah


utah capitol building

Utah’s capitol in Salt Lake City.

Universal Images Group/Getty Images

Utah’s State Capitol was designed by architect Richard K.A. Kletting and was completed in 1916, according to its official website. The rotunda features bronze and marble statues of Native American leaders, LDS pioneers, and US presidents such as Abraham Lincoln, according to its website.

Montpelier, Vermont


vermont capitol building

Vermont’s capitol in Montpelier.

MyLoupe/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

The Vermont State House, designed in the Greek Revival architecture style, dates back to 1857, according to the National Park Service. A statue of Ceres, the goddess of agriculture, adorns the top of the dome.

Richmond, Virginia


virginia capitol building

Virginia’s capitol in Richmond.

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Thomas Jefferson designed Virginia’s state capitol to look like the ancient Roman temple of Maison Carée, according to the Virginia General Assembly‘s official website. The building also features a bronze statue of Jefferson, who is depicted holding the capitol’s architectural blueprints.

Olympia, Washington


washington state capitol

Washington’s state capitol in Olympia.

Greg Vaughn /VW PICS/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

The Washington State Legislative Building features the tallest freestanding masonry dome in North America at 287 feet, according to the Washington State Department of Enterprise Services. Designed by Walter Wilder and Harry White, it was completed in 1928.

Charleston, West Virginia


west virginia capitol building

West Virginia’s capitol in Charleston.

Michael S. Williamson/The Washington Post/Getty Images

West Virginia’s capitol, designed by Cass Gilbert, took eight years and almost $10 million to construct before its completion in 1932, according to its official website. The dome stands at 293 feet tall — 5 feet higher than the US Capitol in Washington, DC.

Madison, Wisconsin


wisconsin state capitol

Wisconsin’s capitol in Madison.

Scott Olson/Getty Images

Wisconsin’s state capitol features the only granite dome in the US, according to Travel Wisconsin. On top of the dome, a gilded bronze statue by Daniel Chester French is aptly named “Wisconsin.”

Cheyenne, Wyoming


wyoming state capitol building

Wyoming’s capitol in Cheyenne.

Michael Smith/Newsmakers/Getty Images

Wyoming’s state capitol, constructed between 1886 and 1890, was built in the Renaissance Revival architecture style, according to the Wyoming Department of Administration and Information. It is one of 20 state capitols designated as a National Historic Landmark, according to the National Park Service.




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Photos show how US presidents have redecorated the Oval Office through the years, from Taft to Trump

  • US presidents have redecorated the Oval Office in different ways since it was first built in 1909.
  • Most presidents have sat at the Resolute Desk, but others brought in their own personal furniture.
  • President Donald Trump has added numerous gold embellishments to the Oval Office.

It’s been nearly 100 years since the Oval Office was first built under President William Howard Taft. Throughout that time, US presidents have each made different design choices to redecorate the formal workspace.

Some presidents, like President George H.W. Bush, have brought in their own furniture to replace the Resolute Desk. Others, like President Donald Trump, have reinstated vintage Oval Office pieces while adding their own personal flair.

Take a look at how the Oval Office has changed through the years.

The first iteration of the Oval Office was built under President William Howard Taft in 1909 as part of an expansion of the West Wing.

President William Howard Taft in the Oval Office.

B.M. Clinedinst/Library of Congress/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images

Inspired by the White House’s oval-shaped Blue Room, the president’s formal workspace was designed by architect Nathan C. Wyeth.

Taft’s Oval Office featured an olive-green color scheme.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt redesigned and moved the Oval Office as part of another West Wing expansion in 1934.


FDR in the Oval Office.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt in the Oval Office.

History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

The Oval Office was moved to the southeast corner of the White House.

Roosevelt kept a variety of items on his desk, including photos of his sons, ceramic animal figurines, and an appointments easel with his daily schedule, according to the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum.

President Harry Truman’s Oval Office was the first to feature a rug with the presidential seal.


Harry Truman in the Oval Office.

President Harry Truman with staff in the Oval Office.

FPG/Archive Photos/Getty Images

Truman decorated the Oval Office with the turquoise rug and matching curtains. The walls were painted a lighter seafoam green.

President John F. Kennedy was the first president to use the Resolute Desk in the Oval Office.


The Resolute Desk in the Oval Office.

The Resolute Desk in the Oval Office.

Cecil W. Stoughton/White House Photo

The Resolute Desk, made of wood from the British ship H.M.S. Resolute, was gifted to President Rutherford B. Hayes by Queen Victoria in 1880. Previous presidents kept the desk in the second-floor office of the White House Residence and the Broadcast Room, according to the White House Historical Association.

President Lyndon Johnson replaced the Resolute Desk with his own desk, which he’d used as a US senator and vice president.


Lyndon Johnson in the Oval Office.

President Lyndon Johnson in the Oval Office.

Corbis via Getty Images

He also redecorated the Oval Office with white drapes with red trim, evoking the American flag.

President Richard Nixon chose bold hues of blue and yellow to decorate the Oval Office.


Richard Nixon's Oval Office.

President Richard Nixon’s Oval Office.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

Nixon’s Oval Office rug, in the same blue color as the American flag, was designed by first lady Pat Nixon.

President Gerald Ford changed the color scheme of the upholstery to burnt orange and khaki.


Gerald Ford in the Oval Office.

President Gerald Ford in the Oval Office.

Historical/Corbis via Getty Images

Ford’s decor included the wheel from the SS Mayaguez, an American container ship that was seized by Cambodian forces in 1975 and rescued at Ford’s direction.

Ford also added a mahogany Seymour tall case clock in 1975.


The Oval Office in 1975.

The Oval Office in 1975.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

The clock, built between 1795 and 1805, has remained in the Oval Office under every subsequent president since 1975.

President Jimmy Carter brought the Resolute Desk back to the Oval Office.


Jimmy Carter in the Oval Office.

President Jimmy Carter in the White House’s Oval Office.

Corbis via Getty Images

Otherwise, he left most of Ford’s decor.

President Ronald Reagan redecorated the Oval Office during his second term with a rug designed by first lady Nancy Reagan.


Ronald Reagan in the Oval Office.

Ronald Reagan in the Oval Office.

HUM Images/HUM Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

The rug featured the presidential seal in the center with sunbeams emerging from the middle, surrounded by a border of olive branches.

President George H.W. Bush redid the Oval Office in shades of blue and gold and brought in the C&O desk that he used as vice president.


George HW Bush's Oval Office.

President George H.W. Bush’s Oval Office.

Susan Biddle/White House via CNP/Getty Images

The Resolute Desk was moved to the Residence Office.

President Bill Clinton chose Arkansas-based interior designer Kaki Hockersmith to give the Oval Office a new look.


Bill Clinton's Oval Office.

President Bill Clinton’s Oval Office.

BILL O’LEARY/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Hockersmith designed the yellow curtains and the blue rug with the presidential seal. Clinton also chose to bring the Resolute Desk back to the Oval Office.

First lady Laura Bush designed a new rug for President George W. Bush’s Oval Office.


George W. Bush's Oval Office.

President George W. Bush in the Oval Office.

Greg Mathieson/Mai/Getty Images

The rug featured a sunbeam design with the presidential seal at its center, reminiscent of Reagan’s rug, and a lone star in a nod to Bush’s home state of Texas.

President Barack Obama added striped wallpaper and a new rug with a quote from Martin Luther King Jr.


Barack Obama in the Oval Office.

President Barack Obama in the Oval Office.

HUM Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

The quote on the border of the rug read, “The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.”

During his first term, President Donald Trump reinstalled Reagan’s rug and added a portrait of President Andrew Jackson.


President Donald Trump in the Oval Office during his first term.

President Donald Trump in the Oval Office during his first term.

Official White House Photo by Joyce N. Boghosian

He also brought back Clinton’s gold curtains and chose a new off-white wallpaper.

President Joe Biden brought back Clinton’s Oval Office rug and added new portraits.


The Oval Office during Joe Biden's presidency.

President Joe Biden’s Oval Office.

Bill O’Leary/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Biden hung portraits of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Thomas Jefferson, and Alexander Hamilton.

In his second non-consecutive term, Trump has made significant changes to the Oval Office, adding numerous gold embellishments.


Donald Trump's gold-filled Oval Office.

President Donald Trump in the Oval Office.

Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Many of the gold decor pieces in Trump’s Oval Office came from the White House collection, but Trump also imported some statuettes from his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida.

Trump also added flags representing different branches of the US military and additional presidential portraits, with President George Washington in the prominent center spot above the fireplace mantle.




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Epstein files feature photos of some famous figures within the disgraced financier’s orbit

  • The Justice Department released a large trove of files related to the Jeffrey Epstein investigation.
  • Documents include photos of the disgraced financier with some high-profile figures.
  • The photos are not evidence of wrongdoing.

The Justice Department on Friday released thousands of documents related to its investigation of Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced financier.

The trove of files, many of which were redacted, includes uncredited and undated photos that provide a snapshot into Epstein’s inner life and circle.

In 2008, Epstein pleaded guilty to solicitation of prostitution and solicitation of prostitution with a minor under the age of 18. Nine years later, the financier was charged with the sex trafficking of minors. He died by suicide in 2019 while in federal custody.

Some of the images are of his longtime associate Ghislaine Maxwell, who was convicted in 2021 on multiple felony counts, including the sex-trafficking of a minor. Other photos show the wide spectrum of high-profile figures Epstein came into contact with during his life.

The images include former President Bill Clinton, billionaire Richard Branson, actor Kevin Spacey, and The Rolling Stones lead vocalist Mick Jagger, among others.

The photos are not evidence of wrongdoing, nor do they detail what relationship the financier had with any of the figures. Some of the figures aren’t pictured with Epstein.

Here’s what the Friday document dump included. The following list is not exhaustive.

Check back for more updates.

Bill Clinton, former US president

Former President Bill Clinton and Jeffrey Epstein.

Department of Justice

Clinton has shown up several times in investigations into Epstein, including in the flight logs of Epstein’s private jet. Clinton traveled internationally with Epstein on several occasions after his two terms as president ended in 2001.

There have been no public accusations of wrongdoing against Clinton related to his friendship with Epstein.

A spokesperson for Clinton did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

In a statement posted on social media, Angel Ureña, a spokesperson to the former president, suggested that Clinton knew nothing about Epstein’s criminal activity.

“There are two types of people here. The first group knew nothing and cut Epstein off before his crimes came to light,” he wrote. “The second group continued relationships with him after. We’re in the first. No amount of stalling by people in the second group will change that.”

Mick Jagger, The Rolling Stones front man


Mick Jagger Jeffrey Epstein

The Rolling Stones singer Mick Jagger sits between former President Bill Clinton and Jeffrey Epstein.

Department of Justice

A legal representative for Jagger did not respond to a request for comment. The Justice Department included no information about where or when the photo was taken.

Richard Branson, Virgin Group founder


Richard Branson

Virgin Group founder Richard Branson with Jeffrey Epstein.

Department of Justice

Branson and a spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment. Similar photos of Branson and Epstein were released by the House Oversight Committee earlier this month.

Kevin Spacey, actor


Kevin Spacey

Actor Kevin Spacey seen with former President Bill Clinton and Jeffrey Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell.

Department of Justice

A spokesperson for Spacey did not respond to a request for comment.

Michael Jackson, singer


Image from the Epstein files.

Epstein is pictured with pop star Michael Jackson.

Department of Justice

A spokesperson for Jackson’s estate did not respond to a request for comment.

Chris Tucker, actor


Chris Tucker

Comedian and actor Chris Tucker with Jeffrey Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell.

Department of Justice

A spokesperson for Tucker did not respond to a request for comment.

Jean-Luc Brunel, global modeling agent


Jean-Luc Brunel

Jean-Luc Brunel, the French modeling agent, with Ghislaine Maxwell.

Department of Justice

Jean-Luc Brunel was a French modeling agent who founded Karin Models in 1977. He also founded MC2 Model Management with funding from Epstein.

Brunel was found hanged in an apparent suicide in his prison cell in 2022. He was being held in a Paris prison while awaiting trial on charges of rape of a minor and trafficking of minors for sexual exploitation.

A legal representative for Brunel’s estate did not respond to a request for comment.

Sarah Ferguson, former Duchess of York


Sarah Ferguson

Former Duchess of York Sarah Ferguson.

Department of Justice

Former Duchess of York Sarah Ferguson has faced public scrutiny for her associations with Epstein. Her ex-husband, Prince Andrew, relinquished his royal titles earlier this year amid ongoing public inquiry into his own friendship with Epstein.

A representative for Ferguson did not respond to a request for comment.




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Before-and-after photos show changes Trump has made to the White House decor, so far

Updated

  • Donald Trump has brought his love of maximalism and gold furnishings to the White House
  • He added gold embellishments to the walls and ceiling of the Oval Office and Cabinet Room.
  • He has also renovated the Rose Garden and demolished the East Wing to build a ballroom.

The Oval Office is looking a little bit different lately.

Every US president makes new interior design choices upon entering the White House, often reflecting their personal tastes or political views.

In his second nonconsecutive term, President Donald Trump has incorporated his love of maximalism and gold furnishings into the Oval Office.

More White House renovations are in the works. The East Wing was demolished in October to make way for the construction of a $200 million, 90,000-square-foot state ballroom.

Take a look inside Trump’s redecorated White House to see the changes he’s made since former President Joe Biden left office.

The White House did not respond to a request for comment.

The West Wing Colonnade was unadorned during the Biden years.

Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. and Joe Biden in the West Wing colonnade.

CAROLYN KASTER/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

President Joe Biden walked through the West Colonnade alongside Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. in May 2023.

Trump added a “Presidential Walk of Fame” where Biden was depicted with a photo of an autopen producing his signature.


The White House

The “Presidential Walk of Fame” along the West Wing Colonnade.

Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Trump has criticized Biden’s use of an autopen and sought to invalidate Biden’s pardons and commutations that were signed with the device.

The Palm Room, which connects the White House Residence to the West Colonnade, was previously furnished with plants, green benches, and a tile floor.


The Palm Room of the White House during the Biden years.

The Palm Room of the White House in 2023.

BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images

The Palm Room leads out into the Rose Garden.

In September, Trump refinished the room with a new chandelier and a white marble floor.


The Palm Room of the White House.

The restyled Palm Room of the White House.

Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

“New lobby leading to Oval Office — Magnificent marble floor, compliments of President Donald J. Trump!” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

During Biden’s time in the White House, the door to the Oval Office was not decorated in any way.


Joe Biden leaves the Oval Office.

Joe Biden leaving the Oval Office.

Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

Aside from a presidential seal above the door to the West Wing, the walls were empty.

President Donald Trump added new gold signage outside the Oval Office.


Gold signage outside the Oval Office.

A new sign outside the West Wing of the White House marks the entrance to the Oval Office.

Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images

The gold lettering spelling out “The Oval Office” was set in the Shelley Script font. Trump also added a gold decal to the top of the door.

Biden’s dark-blue Oval Office rug was originally designed for Bill Clinton.


Joe Biden's blue Oval Office rug.

Joe Biden’s Oval Office rug.

Official White House Photo by Adam Schultz

The rug, which featured the presidential seal in the center, was designed by Kaki Hockersmith, an interior designer based in Little Rock, Arkansas.

Upon returning to the White House, Trump replaced it with a lighter rug used by Ronald Reagan.


Donald Trump's Reagan rug in the Oval Office.

Donald Trump’s Oval Office rug during his first term.

Official White House Photo by Joyce N. Boghosian

The rug’s design includes the presidential seal, a sunbeam pattern, and olive branches along the border as a symbol of peace.

Trump also used the rug during his first term.

Biden only had two flags in the Oval Office.


Joe Biden in the Oval Office.

Joe Biden in the Oval Office.

Alex Wong/Getty Images

Biden displayed an American flag and a flag with the presidential seal.

Trump added the flags of different branches of the US military.


Donald Trump in the Oval Office in 2025.

Donald Trump at the Resolute Desk.

JIM WATSON/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

Trump’s Oval Office features the flags of the Army, the Marine Corps, and the Navy.

During Biden’s presidency, the Oval Office’s ceiling didn’t feature any additional embellishments.


Joe Biden in the Oval Office.

Joe Biden on a video call in the Oval Office.

Official White House Photo by Erin Scott

The crown molding on the ceiling matched the cream wallpaper.

Trump added gold trim to the crown molding on the ceiling.


Gold trim in the Oval Office.

Donald Trump’s Oval Office.

Avi Ohayon /Handout/Anadolu via Getty Images

The gold embellishments matched the gold curtains, which remained in place from Biden’s presidency.

Biden’s Oval Office featured a prominent portrait of President Franklin D. Roosevelt.


Donald Trump and Joe Biden in the Oval Office.

Donald Trump and Joe Biden in the Oval Office.

Alex Wong/Getty Images

Biden also hung portraits of Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton together to symbolize the benefits of different opinions, as well as portraits of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln.

Trump added additional portraits and numerous gold embellishments to the space.


Donald Trump's gold-filled Oval Office.

Donald Trump in the Oval Office.

Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Trump added more portraits with decorative frames to create an Oval Office gallery wall. He also replaced Biden’s portrait of FDR with one of George Washington and displayed historic gold urns and baskets from the White House collection on the mantle.

Trump also incorporated smaller gold details, such as coasters, branded with his name.


A gold

A gold coaster in Donald Trump’s Oval Office.

MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images

Trump’s love of gold decor is well-known. His Trump Tower penthouse in New York City features numerous gilded ceilings, furniture pieces, and artwork. Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida, also includes a ballroom covered in gold from floor to ceiling.

Before Trump took office for the second time, the presidential seal on the ceiling of the Oval Office was a subtle adornment.


The Oval Office ceiling.

The ceiling of the Oval Office before President Donald Trump took office.

PAUL J. RICHARDS/AFP via Getty Images

President Franklin D. Roosevelt added the plaster relief of the presidential seal to the Oval Office during a 1934 White House renovation.

Trump added gilded gold detailing to the design, making it more visible.


The seal of the president on teh ceiling of the Oval Office gilded with gold.

The new ceiling of the Oval Office.

ALLISON ROBBERT/AFP via Getty Images

Both the seal and the stars surrounding it were covered in gold paint.

Biden chose to display President Barack Obama’s official White House portrait in the Entrance Hall.


The Bidens stand next to a portrait of Barack Obama at the White House.

The Bidens in the White House Entrance Hall next to a portrait of Barack Obama.

BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images

The hyperrealistic portrait, painted by Robert McCurdy, was unveiled at the White House in 2023.

Trump replaced Obama’s portrait with a painting of himself.


A painting of Donald Trump surviving an assassination attempt hanging in the White House.

A new painting of Donald Trump in the White House Entrance Hall.

Win McNamee/Getty Images

Artist Marc Lipp painted a rendering of an Associated Press photo that captured Trump raising his fist in the air following an assassination attempt at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.

The White House Rose Garden previously featured a grass lawn.


Joe Biden in the White House Rose Garden.

Joe Biden in the Rose Garden.

SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images

Before it was used for press conferences and events, first lady Ellen Wilson originally designed the outdoor space as a formal flower garden in 1913.

First lady Melania Trump added a limestone border around the lawn in 2020.

Trump decided to pave over the grass in the Rose Garden, turning it into an outdoor terrace rebranded as “The Rose Garden Club.”


Donald Trump's new White House Rose Garden.

The new Rose Garden.

ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP

Trump told Fox News that the grass in the Rose Garden was impractical for large events because it stayed wet when it rained and was too soft for attendees who wore high heels.

“The grass just doesn’t work,” Trump told Fox News host Laura Ingraham in March.

Workers began transforming the lawn into a patio in June, replacing the grass with concrete and stone tiles. “The Rose Garden Club” was completed in August.

Biden and previous presidents occasionally held large events, such as state dinners, in decorative tents on the White House lawn.


Joe Biden hosts a state dinner in a tent on the grounds of the White House.

Joe Biden hosted a state dinner for Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in a tent on the White House lawn.

Astrid Riecken For The Washington Post via Getty Images

The East Room, the largest state room in the White House, has a seating capacity of 200 people. When Biden hosted Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in 2023, he held the state dinner in a tent outside the White House to accommodate the larger crowd of over 300.

Trump announced plans to build a state ballroom with a capacity of 650 in July and demolished the East Wing for its construction in October.


The demolished East Wing of the White House.

The rubble of the East Wing of the White House.

Eric Lee/Getty Images

The 90,000-square-foot ballroom, which the White House called a “much-needed and exquisite addition,” will cost approximately $300 million to construct. Trump and other “patriot donors” will foot the bill for the project, the White House said.

During the Biden administration, the Cabinet Room featured minimal artwork and decor.


Joe Biden in the Cabinet Room.

The Cabinet Room during the Biden administration.

ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images

Located in the West Wing near the Oval Office, the Cabinet Room overlooks the Rose Garden and features a large, oval-shaped mahogany table purchased by President Richard Nixon in 1970, according to Obama’s archived White House website.

Seating at the table is assigned in order of when each department was established, with the oldest departments sitting nearest to the president.

Trump added additional paintings to the walls and gold furnishings along the ceiling.


The Cabinet Room with new gold furnishings added by Donald Trump.

Donald Trump in a Cabinet meeting.

Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Trump chose portraits of past presidents, including George Washington, John Adams, Andrew Jackson, James Polk, Abraham Lincoln, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Dwight Eisenhower, to decorate the Cabinet Room.

“The vaults are where we have a lot of great pictures and artwork,” Trump told reporters in July. “And I picked it all myself, I’m very proud of it.”

The Cabinet Room featured eagle-shaped wall sconces during Biden’s presidency.


Joe Biden in the Cabinet Room.

Joe Biden in the Cabinet Room.

Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post via Getty Images

The eagle sconces were installed as part of a 2004 refurbishment of the Cabinet Room that also included a new rug, curtains, and paint color.

Trump added 24-karat gold decals to the walls and installed matching gold curtains.


The Cabinet Room decorated with gold furnishings on the walls.

Donald Trump in a Cabinet meeting in the Cabinet Room.

MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images

“Some of the highest quality 24 Karat Gold used in the Oval Office and Cabinet Room of the White House,” Trump wrote in a Truth Social post in September. “Foreign Leaders, and everyone else, ‘freak out’ when they see the quality and beauty.”




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