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Glen Powell is an undercover quarterback in the teaser for comedy series Chad Powers – Flickering Myth

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Hulu has released the first look at their Glen Powell-headlined half-hour comedy series Chad Powers, which stars the Hit Man and Twisters actor as a disgraced hotshot quarterback who goes undercover in order to save his career.
Co-created and written by Powell and Michael Waldron (Loki), Chad Powers also stars Perry Mattfeld as Ricky, Quentin Plair as Coach Byrd, Wynn Everett as Tricia, Frankie A. Rodriguez as Danny and Steve Zahn as Jake Hudson. Check out the teaser below…

“When bad behavior nukes hotshot QB Russ Holliday’s college career, he disguises himself and walks onto a struggling Southern football team as the talented, affable Chad Powers.”

Chad Powers will touchdown on Hulu sometime in Fall 2025.
 
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Tri-State lottery players react to Mega Millions jackpot won on Friday – WGEM

HANNIBAL (WGEM) – Following a three-month wait, the Mega Millions jackpot was finally won by a player in Northern California.
On Tuesday, the Mega Millions lottery jackpot reached into 10 figures for the 7th time in history. Millions of tickets were purchased around the country, but no winner was picked for three months. However, on Friday, a victor was found.
One local lottery player said there’s no hard feelings for him even though he’s not taking home the jackpot.
“Anytime anyone wins money in this economy, it’s always a good thing so good for them,” said lottery player Don Hall.
The final total jackpot was $1.22 billion, the 5th highest total in the history of the game. However, despite the high number, the winner will not walk away with all of it and will have two options to take their prize.
The winner, who is anonymous, can take the money in annual installments or take a lump sum totaling around $550 million. Those totals do not include the high tax rate on large lottery winnings.
Another local lottery player said if you don’t play, you can’t win.
“Scared money doesn’t make money so you got to bet it to win it. I’m a fan of it, I support anyone that. Clearly it paid off this time,” explained Ryan Dempsey, another lottery player.
The next Mega Millions drawing takes place on Tuesday, with an estimated jackpot of $20 million.
Copyright 2024 WGEM. All rights reserved.

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We ‘have our head in the sand’: Health experts warn US isn’t reacting fast enough to threat of bird flu – WESH 2 Orlando

‘The pandemic clock is ticking,’ one scientist said. ‘We just don’t know what time it is.’
‘The pandemic clock is ticking,’ one scientist said. ‘We just don’t know what time it is.’
‘The pandemic clock is ticking,’ one scientist said. ‘We just don’t know what time it is.’
The U.S. hasn’t learned lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic that it could use to mitigate the threat of pathogens like H5N1 bird flu that keep showing signs of their own pandemic potential, health experts told CNN Friday.
Related video above: First severe bird flu case in the US reported
“We kind of have our head in the sand about how widespread this is from the zoonotic standpoint, from the animal-to-human standpoint,” Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus response coordinator under President Donald Trump, said on “CNN Newsroom” with Pamela Brown.
Birx called for much wider-spread testing of farm workers who make up the majority of identified cases in the U.S., noting the country is heading into an even higher-risk period as seasonal flu begins to circulate. That raises the possibility a person could get infected with both seasonal flu and H5N1, and the viruses could swap gene segments, Birx said, giving the bird flu virus more tools to better infect humans, a phenomenon known as reassortment.
A spokesperson for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention pushed back on Friday, telling CNN in a statement that the “comments about avian flu (H5N1) testing are out of date, misleading and inaccurate.”
“Despite data indicating that asymptomatic infections are rare, CDC changed its recommendations back in November to widen the testing net to include testing asymptomatic people with high-risk exposure to avian flu, and during the summer, it instructed hospitals to continue subtyping flu viruses as part of the nationwide monitoring effort, instead of the normal ramping down of surveillance at the end of flu season,” the spokesperson said.
“The result: more than 70,000 specimens have been tested, looking for novel flu viruses; more than 10,000 people exposed to avian flu have been monitored for symptoms, and 540 people have been tested specifically for H5N1,” the spokesperson continued. “Additionally, CDC partnerships with commercial labs mean that H5N1 tests are now available to doctor’s offices around the country, significantly increasing testing capacity.”
The CDC added it has a seasonal flu vaccination campaign underway for farm workers in states with infected herds to help protect them from seasonal flu and to reduce the chance of reassortment with the H5N1 virus.
The agency has also said there’s currently no human-to-human spread of H5N1. But risks continue to emerge that the virus could evolve to more easily infect people.
The CDC reported Thursday that a genetic analysis of samples from the patient in Louisiana recently hospitalized with the country’s first severe case of H5N1 show the virus likely mutated in the patient to become potentially more transmissible to humans, but there’s no evidence the virus has been passed to anyone else.
The patient was likely infected after having contact with sick and dead birds in a backyard flock, the CDC said earlier this month. In its Thursday analysis, the agency said the mutations it identified in samples taken during the patient’s hospitalization weren’t found in the birds, suggesting they aren’t in the virus widely circulating in wildlife.
The mutations, similar to ones observed in a hospitalized patient in British Columbia, Canada, may make it easier for the virus to bind to cell receptors in humans’ upper respiratory tracts, the CDC said.
“The changes observed were likely generated by replication of this virus in the patient with advanced disease rather than primarily transmitted at the time of infection,” the agency said. “Although concerning, and a reminder that A(H5N1) viruses can develop changes during the clinical course of a human infection, these changes would be more concerning if found in animal hosts or in early stages of infection … when these changes might be more likely to facilitate spread to close contacts.”
The CDC emphasized the risk to the general public has not changed and remains low, but said the detection of the genetic mutations “underscores the importance of ongoing genomic surveillance in people and animals, containment of avian influenza A(H5) outbreaks in dairy cattle and poultry, and prevention measures among people with exposure to infected animals or environments.”
The analysis found no changes associated with markers that might mean antiviral drugs wouldn’t work as well against the virus, the CDC added, and noted the samples are closely related to strains that could be used to make vaccines, if needed.
The sequences also didn’t show changes in genes associated with adaptation to mammals, the CDC found. The patient was infected with a strain known as D1.1 that’s closely related to viruses circulating in wild birds and poultry in the U.S.; another strain known as B3.13 has been spreading widely in dairy cows and hasn’t been found to cause severe disease in humans in the U.S.
“While this sounds like good news, the H5N1 situation remains grim,” Dr. Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at the Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization at the University of Saskatchewan in Canada, posted on Bluesky on Thursday.
“There has been an explosion of human cases,” she said. “We don’t know what combination of mutations would lead to a pandemic H5N1 virus … but the more humans are infected, the more chances a pandemic virus will emerge.”
The CDC has confirmed 65 cases of H5N1 bird flu in humans in 2024. Of those, 39 were associated with dairy herds and 23 with poultry farms and culling operations. For two cases, the source of exposure is unknown. The severe case in Louisiana is the only one associated with backyard flocks.
Dr. Paul Offit, a vaccine scientist at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, noted the CDC said the mutations “may” enable the virus to bind better to cell receptors in humans’ upper respiratory tracts, not that they clearly do.
“I’d like to see clear evidence … that it binds well,” Offit told CNN Friday. “That hasn’t happened yet.”
“And more importantly,” Offit added, “there’s not the clinical relevance that you see human-to-human spread.”
The spread among animals like cows, though, has some health experts on high alert. Since the virus was first found in cattle in March, outbreaks have been detected in herds in 16 states.
This month, the U.S. Department of Agriculture began a national milk testing program to track the spread of the virus through dairy cattle, and the agency has thus far brought on 13 states that account for almost half of the country’s dairy production.
The program requires that raw milk samples be collected before the pasteurization process and shared with USDA for testing.
Government agencies say pasteurization inactivates the virus, making pasteurized milk safe to drink. The Food and Drug Administration and other health agencies warn consumers not to drink raw milk, not just because of the risk of H5N1 but also E. coli, salmonella and listeria.
That the H5N1 virus has already spread so rapidly among cattle, though, suggests “the USDA has basically dropped the ball, big-time,” said Dr. Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, in an interview with CNN Friday. “I think it was out of fear to protect the industry. And they thought it was going to burn out, and it didn’t.”
Osterholm also said the US and others around the world should have done more to examine lessons from the Covid-19 pandemic, and to accelerate work improving flu vaccines.
And, he noted, “You’ve got the new administration coming and saying they’re going to do in infectious diseases [research] for the next eight years,” referring to comments made by President Trump’s nominee to lead the US Department of Health and Human Services, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
Osterholm said his risk assessment for H5N1 hasn’t changed as a result of the Louisiana findings this week, but that he’s always concerned about the threat pathogens like the bird flu virus pose.
“The pandemic clock is ticking,” Osterholm said. “We just don’t know what time it is.”
Hearst Television participates in various affiliate marketing programs, which means we may get paid commissions on editorially chosen products purchased through our links to retailer sites.

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We ‘have our head in the sand’: Health experts warn US isn’t reacting fast enough to threat of bird flu – WAPT Jackson

‘The pandemic clock is ticking,’ one scientist said. ‘We just don’t know what time it is.’
‘The pandemic clock is ticking,’ one scientist said. ‘We just don’t know what time it is.’
‘The pandemic clock is ticking,’ one scientist said. ‘We just don’t know what time it is.’
The U.S. hasn’t learned lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic that it could use to mitigate the threat of pathogens like H5N1 bird flu that keep showing signs of their own pandemic potential, health experts told CNN Friday.
Related video above: First severe bird flu case in the US reported
“We kind of have our head in the sand about how widespread this is from the zoonotic standpoint, from the animal-to-human standpoint,” Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus response coordinator under President Donald Trump, said on “CNN Newsroom” with Pamela Brown.
Birx called for much wider-spread testing of farm workers who make up the majority of identified cases in the U.S., noting the country is heading into an even higher-risk period as seasonal flu begins to circulate. That raises the possibility a person could get infected with both seasonal flu and H5N1, and the viruses could swap gene segments, Birx said, giving the bird flu virus more tools to better infect humans, a phenomenon known as reassortment.
A spokesperson for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention pushed back on Friday, telling CNN in a statement that the “comments about avian flu (H5N1) testing are out of date, misleading and inaccurate.”
“Despite data indicating that asymptomatic infections are rare, CDC changed its recommendations back in November to widen the testing net to include testing asymptomatic people with high-risk exposure to avian flu, and during the summer, it instructed hospitals to continue subtyping flu viruses as part of the nationwide monitoring effort, instead of the normal ramping down of surveillance at the end of flu season,” the spokesperson said.
“The result: more than 70,000 specimens have been tested, looking for novel flu viruses; more than 10,000 people exposed to avian flu have been monitored for symptoms, and 540 people have been tested specifically for H5N1,” the spokesperson continued. “Additionally, CDC partnerships with commercial labs mean that H5N1 tests are now available to doctor’s offices around the country, significantly increasing testing capacity.”
The CDC added it has a seasonal flu vaccination campaign underway for farm workers in states with infected herds to help protect them from seasonal flu and to reduce the chance of reassortment with the H5N1 virus.
The agency has also said there’s currently no human-to-human spread of H5N1. But risks continue to emerge that the virus could evolve to more easily infect people.
The CDC reported Thursday that a genetic analysis of samples from the patient in Louisiana recently hospitalized with the country’s first severe case of H5N1 show the virus likely mutated in the patient to become potentially more transmissible to humans, but there’s no evidence the virus has been passed to anyone else.
The patient was likely infected after having contact with sick and dead birds in a backyard flock, the CDC said earlier this month. In its Thursday analysis, the agency said the mutations it identified in samples taken during the patient’s hospitalization weren’t found in the birds, suggesting they aren’t in the virus widely circulating in wildlife.
The mutations, similar to ones observed in a hospitalized patient in British Columbia, Canada, may make it easier for the virus to bind to cell receptors in humans’ upper respiratory tracts, the CDC said.
“The changes observed were likely generated by replication of this virus in the patient with advanced disease rather than primarily transmitted at the time of infection,” the agency said. “Although concerning, and a reminder that A(H5N1) viruses can develop changes during the clinical course of a human infection, these changes would be more concerning if found in animal hosts or in early stages of infection … when these changes might be more likely to facilitate spread to close contacts.”
The CDC emphasized the risk to the general public has not changed and remains low, but said the detection of the genetic mutations “underscores the importance of ongoing genomic surveillance in people and animals, containment of avian influenza A(H5) outbreaks in dairy cattle and poultry, and prevention measures among people with exposure to infected animals or environments.”
The analysis found no changes associated with markers that might mean antiviral drugs wouldn’t work as well against the virus, the CDC added, and noted the samples are closely related to strains that could be used to make vaccines, if needed.
The sequences also didn’t show changes in genes associated with adaptation to mammals, the CDC found. The patient was infected with a strain known as D1.1 that’s closely related to viruses circulating in wild birds and poultry in the U.S.; another strain known as B3.13 has been spreading widely in dairy cows and hasn’t been found to cause severe disease in humans in the U.S.
“While this sounds like good news, the H5N1 situation remains grim,” Dr. Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at the Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization at the University of Saskatchewan in Canada, posted on Bluesky on Thursday.
“There has been an explosion of human cases,” she said. “We don’t know what combination of mutations would lead to a pandemic H5N1 virus … but the more humans are infected, the more chances a pandemic virus will emerge.”
The CDC has confirmed 65 cases of H5N1 bird flu in humans in 2024. Of those, 39 were associated with dairy herds and 23 with poultry farms and culling operations. For two cases, the source of exposure is unknown. The severe case in Louisiana is the only one associated with backyard flocks.
Dr. Paul Offit, a vaccine scientist at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, noted the CDC said the mutations “may” enable the virus to bind better to cell receptors in humans’ upper respiratory tracts, not that they clearly do.
“I’d like to see clear evidence … that it binds well,” Offit told CNN Friday. “That hasn’t happened yet.”
“And more importantly,” Offit added, “there’s not the clinical relevance that you see human-to-human spread.”
The spread among animals like cows, though, has some health experts on high alert. Since the virus was first found in cattle in March, outbreaks have been detected in herds in 16 states.
This month, the U.S. Department of Agriculture began a national milk testing program to track the spread of the virus through dairy cattle, and the agency has thus far brought on 13 states that account for almost half of the country’s dairy production.
The program requires that raw milk samples be collected before the pasteurization process and shared with USDA for testing.
Government agencies say pasteurization inactivates the virus, making pasteurized milk safe to drink. The Food and Drug Administration and other health agencies warn consumers not to drink raw milk, not just because of the risk of H5N1 but also E. coli, salmonella and listeria.
That the H5N1 virus has already spread so rapidly among cattle, though, suggests “the USDA has basically dropped the ball, big-time,” said Dr. Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, in an interview with CNN Friday. “I think it was out of fear to protect the industry. And they thought it was going to burn out, and it didn’t.”
Osterholm also said the US and others around the world should have done more to examine lessons from the Covid-19 pandemic, and to accelerate work improving flu vaccines.
And, he noted, “You’ve got the new administration coming and saying they’re going to do in infectious diseases [research] for the next eight years,” referring to comments made by President Trump’s nominee to lead the US Department of Health and Human Services, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
Osterholm said his risk assessment for H5N1 hasn’t changed as a result of the Louisiana findings this week, but that he’s always concerned about the threat pathogens like the bird flu virus pose.
“The pandemic clock is ticking,” Osterholm said. “We just don’t know what time it is.”
Hearst Television participates in various affiliate marketing programs, which means we may get paid commissions on editorially chosen products purchased through our links to retailer sites.

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🚨Pi Network Mainnet Updates: What You Need to Know About Price and Listing 🚨📢 – Binance


The Pi Network has been one of the most anticipated blockchain projects in recent years, capturing the attention of millions worldwide with its unique promise: allowing users to mine cryptocurrency directly from their smartphones. As we edge closer to the Pi Network’s full mainnet launch, excitement is building around its potential price and listing on major exchanges like Binance. Here’s everything you need to know about the latest updates.
What is Pi Network Mainnet?
The Pi Network mainnet marks the official launch of Pi’s blockchain. Up until now, Pi users have been mining on a testnet, earning Pi tokens that will eventually migrate to the mainnet once it is fully operational. The Pi Network’s main goal is to provide everyday people with the ability to mine cryptocurrency without needing specialized hardware—essentially making crypto mining accessible to everyone.
With over 35 million active users, the project’s community-driven approach and focus on decentralization are what set it apart in the crowded crypto space. But, as the mainnet approaches, everyone is asking the big question: when will Pi be listed on major exchanges like Binance?
Will Pi Be Listed on Binance?
While the Pi Core Team has yet to announce an official listing date, there’s plenty of speculation within the community that Pi could be listed on major exchanges by late 2024. The team has been laser-focused on ensuring the network is fully decentralized and secure before going live on any trading platform.
Rumors of potential listings have swirled, but the team is taking a cautious approach. This gives users hope that when Pi finally hits exchanges like Binance, it will have a robust and secure foundation for trading.
Keep in mind: There’s no confirmed date just yet, but Pi’s growing community and expanding ecosystem suggest we’re inching closer to that long-awaited listing.
What is Pi’s Mainnet Price Today?
As of now, Pi is trading at $40.19 (PI/USD), with a daily trading volume of $38,655.47 USD. While Pi doesn’t have an official market cap due to the network’s current phase, its live price reflects the growing excitement and speculative interest surrounding its mainnet launch.
Important to note: Pi is not officially listed on major exchanges like Binance or Coinbase yet, so its current price is speculative and based on secondary markets. The real test of Pi’s value will come after it goes live on established exchanges and is accessible to a wider audience.
Will Pi Coin Reach $100?
There’s no crystal ball when it comes to predicting Pi’s future price, but some crypto enthusiasts are optimistic that Pi could reach $100 or more. However, this depends on several key factors, such as:
User adoption: Pi Network already has a massive user base, but continued growth will be crucial.
Demand: If more users want Pi tokens for transactions, staking, or utility within its ecosystem, demand could drive the price up.
Market conditions: The overall state of the cryptocurrency market will also influence Pi’s value—bullish trends could provide the lift Pi needs to reach new heights.
That said, there’s also a possibility that Pi may take time to gain significant value or could experience volatility after launch. Always remember to do your own research and weigh the risks before investing.
The Path Ahead
As the Pi Network edges closer to its mainnet launch, it’s clear that the community has high hopes for this revolutionary project. From the potential Binance listing to the speculation around Pi’s future price, there’s plenty to be excited about. Pi Network’s focus on decentralization, accessibility, and user empowerment could make it a game-changer in the world of blockchain.
🚨 Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and is not financial advice. Always trade or invest at your own risk and do thorough research before making any financial decisions.

#PiNetworkkyc #CryptoNews #Binance #PiCoin #CryptoCommunity

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13 Best Places To Turn Coins Into Cash for Free – AOL

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People have saved money by keeping their cash and coins in clay pots, metal boxes, piggy banks and more for years. Whether you find it between the couch cushions, stuffed in jeans pockets or gathered at the bottom of a purse, change adds up over time. In fact, saving it may be the easiest part. Finding a place to change loose coins for cash can be a bit trickier.
Check Out: Pocket an Extra $403 Per Month With This Simple Hack
You can cash coins in for free at Coinstar kiosks, banks, credit unions and more. Read on for more on how and where you can deposit coins and get cash for free.
Some banks and credit unions offer free coin-counting services. Most limit this service to customers, and you’ll find some variations in how the services work. Some have self-service coin counters on site. Others restrict the amount of change you can convert in a single visit.
The following list includes a sample of some of the places where you can cash in your coins for free:
PNC Bank
Bank of America
Chase
Citizens Bank
JBT
Manasquan Bank
Republic Bank
U.S. Bank
State Employees’ Credit Union
Penn East Federal Credit Union
Suncoast Credit Union
Coinstar
QuikTrip
PNC Bank accepts rolled coins for deposit into your PNC account. Just visit a branch and make your deposit with a teller. Tellers can also provide coin wrappers.
Bank of America, Member FDIC, accepts U.S. coins, but they must be presented in full rolls at any of the bank’s local financial centers. Find your nearest one by entering your address in Bank of America’s branch locator.
If you have a Chase account, you can deposit your coins there. In fact, Chase has recommended that customers deposit coins to help alleviate the coin shortage. Not all branches accept them, however. To see if yours does, use the branch locator on the Chase website to search your local branches. Branches that don’t accept coins have a “No coin transactions” notation in their listing.
Citizens Bank accepts loose change in amounts below $20 and rolled coins amounting to $20 or more. Some branch locations provide wrappers. Citizens gives you a choice between depositing the coins and exchanging them for cash, but you’ll need to have a valid photo ID and your account information handy when you go.
JBT offers self-serve coin-counting machines at each of its branches. Customers can count change for free. Noncustomers pay a fee, which JBT donates to charity through its Make Change Count program.
New Jersey’s Manasquan Bank has coin machines at many, if not all, branches. Bank clients can bring their coins in for free. Non-clients pay a 15% redemption fee. Check the bank’s location finder to see if your branch offers this service.
Republic Bank’s branches feature Magic Money coin-counting machines for customers only. You can even win a prize for using one.
At least some U.S. Bank branches have a coin counter available for bank customers only.
State Employees’ Credit Union accepts coins and has a Coinstar coin counter to do the work for you. However, the service is for members only. You can deposit the coins into your primary SECU checking or CPG account and access it immediately using your SECU debit card. Or take the voucher to a teller to receive cash, deposit the money or make a loan or credit card payment.
Members of Penn East Federal Credit Union have access to complimentary coin-counting services. Nonmembers pay a 2% fee. The service is available at every branch, and you can either deposit the proceeds or keep the cash.
Suncoast Credit Union has self-service coin-counting machines in each branch lobby, but while they’re cheaper than machines in retail stores, they’re not free. Members pay a 5% fee on the coin total. Nonmembers pay 10%. Note that coins must be loose — Suncoast doesn’t accept rolled coins.
Banks, Walmart stores, supermarkets, gas stations and many other retailers — over 24,000 in all — have Coinstar kiosks that make it easy to cash in your change. Pour your loose change into the receiver and let the machine do the work of sorting and counting the coins.
Coinstar offers a few ways to cash out, some of which are free:
Cash: You’ll get a voucher to take to the cashier to exchange for cash.
E-gift card: You receive a code instead of a physical card. The code works like cash when you make a purchase at the store or restaurant.
Charitable donation: You’ll receive a receipt for tax purposes.
Coinstar’s fees, which may vary by location, include a service fee of up to 12.5% and a 50-cent transaction fee if you want to receive your money as cash. However, the e-gift card option is free. Choose an e-gift card from a Coinstar partner merchant, including Apple, Outback Steakhouse, Nike and Southwest Airlines, and you won’t pay a penny to convert your change.
Charitable donations are also free, but Coinstar keeps 7.5% as a processing fee for regional charities and 10% as a processing fee for national charities.
During the change shortage spurred by the COVID-19 pandemic, QuikTrip gas stations allowed customers to exchange coins in full dollar amounts in order to keep enough coins on hand to make change for customers paying in cash. Search your local QuikTrip on the company’s location finder to see if it’s still offering cash for coins.
If rolling coins doesn’t appeal to you, you’ll have to cash in your change at a coin-counting machine. To do it for free, you’ll likely need to go to a bank where you have an account because most only do free coin exchanges for their customers.
Coinstar has a kiosk lookup tool you can use to find the nearest machines.
Loose change can really add up when you’re intentional about saving it to cash in in the future. You don’t need a piggy bank to do it — any container will do as long as it’s convenient to where you accumulate coins, such as in your car, and where you empty out your pockets and/or wallet.
Citizens Bank suggests motivating yourself or your kids to try to do a 52-week challenge, where you start by “depositing” $1 worth of change into a large container the first week, and then increase your savings by $1 each week for a year. At week 52, you’ll sock away $52, for a grand total of $1,378 you can put toward a vacation, luxury purchase or rainy day fund.
Coins you plan to exchange at a coin-counting machine should be clean, dry and sorted through to remove any debris from the container. You’ll also want to load them into a sturdy box or container to keep them from spilling as they’re poured into the machine.
Banks and credit unions might require rolled coins. For that, you’ll need wrappers, which you can get for free from a bank or credit union or at a very low cost from a dollar store.
To wrap the coins, first sort them by denomination — pennies, nickels, dimes and quarters. Then count the coins into piles. Each pile should have the number of coins that fit in a wrapper:
Pennies: 50 coins
Nickels: 40 coins
Dimes: 50 coins
Quarters: 40 coins
Spare change can provide a nice little windfall, and every now and then you might even find a rare coin in your stash that’s worth a few bucks. But cashing it in can be more trouble than it’s worth. Sometimes it’s better to just eliminate change by avoiding using cash at the register. Credit cards might be one alternative, but only if you use them judiciously and pay off the balance each month. The following methods are safer alternatives:
Debit card: Debit cards are almost like cash because the money comes out of your checking account right away. Some banks reward debit card holders with cash back and other rewards, so you could earn a few cents in statement credits every time you pay.
Digital wallet: Digital wallets from Apple, Google, Samsung, Amazon, Walmart and others let you pay for purchases using your smartphone. For added convenience, your digital wallet can also store event tickets and other documents.
Payment apps: Payment apps like PayPal, Cash App and Venmo are a convenient way to send payments to family and friends, and in some cases, you can use them to make purchases.
It is still possible to convert your spare change to cash, and you can do this for free if you know where to look. The easiest way to do this is at a bank or credit union with coin-counting machines that do the work for you. Otherwise, buy some coin wrappers and set aside some time to sort, count and roll the change before depositing it in your account. You’ll be able to avoid paying a service fee and can keep more of your cash.
Here are the answers to some of the most frequently asked questions about converting your spare change to cash.
What is the fee for Coinstar?
Coinstar's fees may vary by location, but its kiosks generally charge a service fee of up to 12.5% and a 50-cent transaction fee if you want to walk away with cash in your hand.
How do I avoid Coinstar fees?
You can avoid Coinstar fees by converting your change to an e-gift card, which can be an appealing option if you frequently make purchases at Starbucks, Lowe's, Domino's Pizza or one of the other partner businesses.
How can I cash in coins without fees?
If you want to turn your coins into cash without paying a fee, be prepared to roll up your sleeves and roll up your change. Many banks accept rolled coins as a deposit. You'll need to sort the change, count it out and insert it into coin wrappers. A single coin wrapper can hold 50 cents in pennies, $2 in nickels, $5 in dimes and $10 in quarters. Deposit the rolled coins into your checking account and withdraw the money as cash.
Allison Hache contributed to the reporting for this article.
Information is accurate as of March 19, 2024.
This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: 13 Best Places To Turn Coins Into Cash for Free
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'I Let Him Coach': A Look Into the Working Relationship Between Devils' Tom Fitzgerald & Sheldon Keefe – BVM Sports

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