Sunday, October 16, 2016

Woman killed by drunk driver when helping daughter who ran out of gas on Hwy 59 - KHOU.com

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HOUSTON- A woman was hit and killed while helping her step-daughter and grandchildren whose car had stalled in southwest Houston Saturday evening. 


According to the Houston Police Department, the 62-year-old woman was fatally hit by a drunk driver, identified as 45-year-old Stephen Alan Cook.


The woman's step-daughter and grandchildren had apparently run out of gas on US 59 and had called the woman for help.


Police said the victim's step-daughter, was driving a Nissan on the Southwest Freeway with her two children when they ran out of gas and moved into the emergency lane. 


Around 8 p.m., while the women were putting gas in the vehicle, Cook clipped the front end of the woman's van with his Mercury Grand Marqe and slammed into the back end of the Nissan.





HPD said this pushed the van into the Nissan, placing the step-mom in between the two cars.


The step-daughter and her 15-year-old daughter were both struck, but her 9-year-old son managed to jump out of the way. 


The entire family was transported to the hospital, where the 62-year-old woman died. 


The woman's daughter is in serious condition, but is expected to survive. The 15-year-old had minor injuries and the 9-year-old was not injured. 


Cook was treated for minor injuries and arrested. He faces intoxication manslaughter charges and two counts of intoxication assault. 


(© 2016 KHOU)



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Donald Trump Won't Stop Attacking Paul Ryan - Huffington Post

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Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump continued his feud with House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) on Sunday, after Ryan distanced himself from Trump in response to the bombshell recording of Trump boasting about sexual assault.


In a series of tweets, Trump called Ryan “a man who doesn’t know how to win,” referring to his loss in 2012, when he was the GOP’s vice presidential nominee, and said that the House speaker “does zilch” to help him defeat Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton.




Trump has regularly launched attacks against Ryan since The Washington Post published a 2005 video of the nominee bragging about sexual assault. Subsequently, multiple women have come forward alleging Trump sexually assaulted or harassed them.


In response to the video, Ryan disinvited Trump from a scheduled joint appearance in Wisconsin on Oct. 8. On Monday, he announced that he would no longer defend Trump, after repeatedly condemning his offensive remarks while nonetheless standing by him as the nominee. Ryan told fellow Republicans that he wants to instead focus on maintaining GOP control of the House, fearing the presidential nominee’s effect on competitive House seats.


Trump fired back, calling Ryan “very weak and ineffective” and insisting that he didn’t “care about his support.”


Ryan has largely been silent on Trump since distancing himself.


Trump is scheduled to campaign in Wisconsin on Monday. Ryan will not attend that event; instead, he is scheduled to speak at a GOP fundraiser in Texas.


Editor’s note: Donald Trump regularly incites political violence and is a serial liar, rampant xenophobe, racist, misogynist and birther who has repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims — 1.6 billion members of an entire religion — from entering the U.S.

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Cole Swindell Celebrates the Hit Song That's Become His 'Answered Prayer' - PEOPLE.com

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In the first months after his father’s shocking accidental death in 2013, Cole Swindell tried to channel his grief into writing a song.


“It was all right,” Swindell, 33, recalls, but “I knew that wasn’t how I wanted the song to be” – and so he gave up.


Then, in 2014, songwriting partner Ashley Gorley came to him with a title that Swindell knew immediately was “an answered prayer.”


On Thursday, the duo celebrated the extraordinary success of “You Should Be Here.” Since its February release, the single has resonated the pain of loss to millions, turning it into a platinum-selling No. 1. It also has gone on to become a career-defining song for a singer previously known for feel-good and love-gone-wrong music.


“It gives me chills thinking [Ashley] had the title exactly at the right time when I was ready, and I think that’s why we wrote it the way we did,” Swindell said before their No. 1 party at a downtown Nashville honkytonk.


As it turns out, Gorley – who has 27 No. 1 songs to his credit – was thinking about an entirely different kind of separation when he brought the title to Swindell. Gorley was on the road with the singer, who was opening for Luke Bryan, and the two were working on songs during Swindell’s down time. Before a stadium concert in Foxboro, Massachusetts, Gorley took a cell-phone panorama shot of the crowd and texted it to his daughter with the caption, “You should be here.”


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“Obviously that’s what you look for as a songwriter – just a random phrase here and there – to get lucky,” Gorley recalled.


The moment Swindell heard the words, he thought of his dad. William Keith Swindell had died, just weeks after his youngest son inked his record deal, when a truck he was working on at his Glennville, Georgia, home fell and crushed him.


“Please,” Swindell begged Gorley, “let me write that with you.”


“That’s why I brought it up,” Gorley replied.


It quickly become apparent to the two that this was one of those songs that would almost write itself. “Some songs are hard work, and you try all these angles,” Gorley said. “That one we were just trying to catch in the air before it got away.”



“This is so special,” Swindell recalled thinking. “Just don’t mess it up.”


In fact, the only major decision they made was to keep the lyrics personal to Swindell’s loss. Somehow, though, the words have become universal to listeners’ ears. Now, when Swindell performs the song, he’s accustomed to looking out and seeing eyes brimming with tears and glowing cell phones raised in mournful solidarity.


“Songs like that are why I love what I do,” Swindell said. “It is about having fun, and I love what I do on stage, but … as powerful as ‘Ain’t Worth the Whiskey’ and some of the others are, there’s nothing like the bond you feel [during ‘You Should Be Here’]. You’re seeing someone in the third row with tears, and all I’m thinking about is, who are they missing? … It’s crazy to think that it’s that powerful. It’s helped me more than I think I’ve ever wanted to help anybody else, because I know I’m not alone.”


Now that he’s had “a taste of how really powerful music is,” Swindell added, “I think that’s what I’m here to do.”


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Keith Urban charms at Smoothie King Center in New Orleans ... - NOLA.com

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Just minutes after kicking off the New Orleans night of his latest tour, Keith Urban made a promise to the thousands gathered at the Smoothie King Center to see him Oct. 15.


"It's a Saturday night, and it's like a full moon out there," he said. "This is going to be one night to remember, I'm sure."


It was indeed, especially in light of his previous local performance at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival in 2015, which was cut short when severe lightning forced a quick finish to his festival debut set. His 2016 return, then, would not be truncated.


"We made it, and we're not playing outside for once," Urban laughed, and, with the swagger that befits his status as a rock star babe, the Australian-born musician continued on to charm his way through a night packed with searing guitar and a bit of country twang. 


Leading the night with "Gone Tomorrow" from Urban's ninth studio album that lends the tour its name, "ripCORD," he and his team of four bandmates offered up a powerhouse set fueled by high energy, laughter and fun. It's clear these guys like working together, and Urban likes working for his fans. 



Wearing a pair of tight jeans and a black v-neck t-shirt, Urban stood at the center of a stage dressed primarily by various lights, saving any high-production tricks for his own guitar work instead. He often addressed his audience directly, veering off the well-trod path of leading cheers to instead invite a pair of women up from the front row. They were introduced to the audience, and the entire arena became the background for their selfie.


At other points, Urban declared his guitar had gotten "too heavy," so he pulled it off, signed it and handed it to a fan. And, when the show had finally come to a close, Urban was the last one to leave the stage as he spent several minutes high-fiving fans and signing autographs even after the house lights had come up and folks headed for the exits. 


They were genuine moments of interaction, all the more heartfelt because Urban took time to make them happen within the kind of massive production he fronts. 


"OK, here's the deal. ... If you wanna sing, if you wanna dance, and if you wanna stand on a chair and completely annoy the people around you, this is your night," he said. 


Urban led the band in "Somewhere in My Car" before singing a verse or two of "Louisiana Saturday Night." It was just one of several covers for the night, which ranged from Bob Marley to John Mellencamp and even, briefly, Eminem. 


The band took on "Gettin' in the Way," "You Gonna Fly," "Blue Ain't Your Color," "Raise 'Em Up," "Wasted Time" and "Days Go By," leaving Urban to occasionally slip into meaty solos, which he'd finish by hoisting his guitar into the air as if to say, "No, don't thank me, thank this thing." 


Urban's band did get a little help, though. He invited Maren Morris for a duet in the show's first half, and he brought out Brett Eldredge for a take on "Somebody Like You," which they performed at a miniature stage behind the sound booth. This secondary stage was outfitted with stationery cameras, which allowed the two singers to take turns as goofballs when both sets of their blue eyes loomed large over the screens back at center stage while they blinked at the big crowd. 


Introducing bass player Jerry Flowers, Keith Urban recalled a much earlier show in New Orleans.


"We used to be in The Ranch together, and we played down here a long time ago at the Howlin' Wolf," he said. "About 12 people showed up. This is a marked improvement, and I appreciate it." 






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Chris Stapleton to Be Honored With ASCAP Vanguard Award - Taste of Country

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chris-stapleton-ascap-vanguard-awardRick Diamond, Getty Images

Chris Stapleton will be honored with the ASCAP Vanguard Award at the 2016 ASCAP Country Music Awards, which take place at Ryman Auditorium on Oct. 31.

“Every so often, someone comes along with songwriting so masterful, a voice so powerful and a presence so captivating, that it stops you in your tracks,” says ASCAP President Paul Williams in a press release. “Chris Stapleton does just that. By distilling Southern sounds and themes into potent songs, he has brought raw soul back to the country charts, and established himself as one of the most respected and original artists in American music today. We are thrilled to honor him with the ASCAP Vanguard Award.”


The Vanguard Award “recognizes the impact of outstanding ASCAP members on musical genres that will help shape the future of American music.” Previous recipients include Walk the Moon, St. Vincent, fun., the Civil Wars, Third Day, Band of Horses and Sara Bareilles, among others.


In addition to Stapleton, the 54th annual ASCAP Country Music Awards will recognize Ricky Skaggs with the ASCAP Founders Award, as well as reveal the ASCAP Country Music Songwriter of the Year, Song of the Year and Publisher of the Year. Live performances of the top five most performed songs by the award-winning songwriters and the artists who recorded them will also be featured.


Stapleton’s success continues to skyrocket within the country genre. The singer-songwriter has co-written six No. 1 hits and has gone on to success of his own as a solo artist with his critically acclaimed debut album, Traveller.


Watch Chris Stapleton’s Most Iconic Moments


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See Pictures of Chris Stapleton + Brandy Clark Live




Next: See a List of 2016 CMA Nominees


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'Make America Rape Again': A libertarian candidate's argument against 'rape culture' - Washington Post

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Nick Bata ignited a firestorm when he made a “Make America Rape Again” comment on his friend’s Facebook page. (Photo courtesy of Nick Bata.)

Nick Bata concedes that his “Make America Rape Again” comment could have been executed a little better, but he wants to clear a few things up.


He’s not a Donald Trump supporter. (Or a Hillary Clinton supporter, for that matter. He’s running as a Libertarian for North Dakota insurance commissioner.)


His campaign slogan is not “Make America Rape Again.” He made a punny joke.


And although he has qualms about what he calls an out-of-control obsession with rape culture, he is not, and has never been, pro-rape.


“This is just an online discussion that got a little bit wacky, its all academic,” he said in a Facebook message to The Washington Post. He declined to be interviewed by telephone, saying his words had been mischaracterized by other news organizations. “It’s an online argument. Everyone has been apart of one of these and most of the times they turn out ugly, just like this one did.”


The conversation started on Sept. 30, when Bata’s (now former) Facebook friend Jess Roscoe posted a Buzzfeed article about a woman’s explanation of the term “consent.”






The Buzzfeed story was about a Twitter thread that compared giving consent to giving someone $5. There’s only one real way to give someone $5, the argument goes; everything else is stealing.


Jess Roscoe (Photo courtesy of Jess Roscoe.)Jess Roscoe (Photo courtesy of Jess Roscoe.)

Roscoe thought it was a “very cool way to explain consent to people who might not understand it or understand why it’s such a big issue now…It was just a casual post.”


Not for long.


The first person to reply was Bata, who taught physical education to Roscoe’s younger sister. Bata and Roscoe had exchanged political banter before.


His reply: “Rape culture is a myth [social justice warriors] created.”


The social media downward spiral was on.


Bata brought up the Duke lacrosse and University of Virginia rape scandals. In both cases, the accusers were found to have lied.


“Gender activists created the Duke lacrosse, UVA, and other false rape scandals. Making it harder for actual rape victims to be heard. … How hard is it for some men. Do you really think the US, men or college campuses are pro-rape or promote immunity for rape?”


“I love hearing different perspectives, and I think he does, too,” Roscoe said. She leans left. He’s a Libertarian, espousing a political philosophy that is generally skeptical of political and economic systems. “We usually just have good political conversations. He’ll say these are three reasons why you’re wrong, I’ll say here are three reasons why you’re crazy — things like that … This is the first time things really went negative.”


The problem, Roscoe said, was not Bata’s opinion. She and her Facebook friends took issue with what they saw as his flippant dismissal of the crime of rape. Friends who have been victims of sexual assault have been approaching Roscoe for weeks, telling her Bata’s comments burned.


Perhaps the worst comment came nearly two weeks after the initial post. Bata had been going back and forth with a man named Juan Carlos Gomez and a few others for days.


“Why are you so dead set against seeing the reality women live through on a daily basis?” Gomez asked. “Is the reality that women you care about go through this too much for you to handle? Or can you be so arrogant to think that only your life experience is valid?”


“Make America rape again,” Bata replied shortly after.


A day later, Bata’s opponent for insurance commissioner, Ruth Buffalo, seized on his comments and put out a news release.


“The people of North Dakota deserve an Insurance Commissioner who has an appropriate temperament for the office, and who is compassionate to victims of sexual assault. These comments are completely unacceptable. We call upon Mr. Bata and the Libertarian Party of North Dakota to apologize and recant these statements.”


The Libertarian Party did not return phone messages left Saturday.




Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump mocked Jessica Leeds, who accused Trump of putting his hand up her skirt on an airplane decades ago during a rally in Greensboro, N.C. (The Washington Post)


The comment was made while the “Make America great again” candidate Donald Trump is at the epicenter of a growing national discussion about consent. The Washington Post published a 2005 video of Trump bragging to “Access Hollywood” host Billy Bush that he could grope and kiss women without their permission because he was a celebrity. A few days later, during the presidential debate, he told Anderson Cooper he had never touched a woman without her consent. Since then, a series of women have come forward saying yes, Trump had.


In a Saturday tweet, Trump called the allegations “100 percent fabricated and made-up charges, pushed strongly by the media and the Clinton Campaign.”


Prompted by the controversy, thousands of people have shared stories of being sexually assaulted on social media using the hashtag #NotOkay.


Roscoe said that’s why she went public about Bata’s acerbic comments on her Facebook page — because he’s asking people to elect him to a public office.


“I think the voters need to know about this,” she said. “It speaks to a temperament and a perspective. I’m not endorsing or demonizing him, but this is the thing that should be looked at when you’re thinking who to vote for.”


He said he believes the attention is overblown for what amounts to a Facebook comment.


“I made that comment as an individual. This has nothing to do with the party,” he said. “…I regret that we live in a society that is so worried about not offending anyone and less interested in intellectual inquiry and diversity of opinions.”


Read more: 


This GOP candidate’s plan to woo black voters? ‘Kool Aid, KFC and watermelons.’


‘Learn your manners,’ a white man wrote to his black neighbor. This was the response.


Yesterday’s Ku Klux Klan members are today’s police officers, councilwoman says


Is voting for Hillary Clinton a symptom of low testosterone? This Florida doctor says, yes.


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Box Office: Ben Affleck's 'The Accountant' Adds $9M Friday, 'Kevin Hart: What Now?' Nabs $4.7M - Forbes

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Forbes

Box Office: Ben Affleck's 'The Accountant' Adds $9M Friday, 'Kevin Hart: What Now?' Nabs $4.7M
Forbes
Speaking of star power, Kevin Hart gets… oh, at least 99% of the credit for what will be a solid debut for his third theatrical stand-up comedy release. Kevin Hart: What Now? opened in 2,567 theaters yesterday with a solid $4.755 million gross ...
Weekend Box Office: Ben Affleck's 'The Accountant' Targets Strong $25M DebutHollywood Reporter
Box Office: Ben Affleck's 'Accountant' Nearly Doubles 'Kevin Hart: What Now?' on Thursday NightVariety
'The Accountant' Accumulating $25M+; Audiences Assess Affleck Movie With An 'A' CinemaScore – Saturday AMDeadline
ABC News -Milwaukee Journal Sentinel -Box Office Mojo
all 800 news articles »


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Saturday, October 15, 2016

Conor McGregor Calls Out Floyd Mayweather Jr. About Potential Fight - Bleacher Report

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Conor McGregor Calls Out Floyd Mayweather Jr. About Potential Fight

Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC/Getty Images





MMA star Conor McGregor might be preparing for his UFC 205 bout against Eddie Alvarez on Nov. 12, but he proved on Saturday that he wouldn't back down from any would-be challenger—even if it comes in the form of retired, undefeated boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr., who might not share McGregor's feelings for a fight. 


Speaking with the Lad Bible, via Dan Hiergesell of MMAMania.com, the 28-year-old stated he is waiting for Mayweather to come around:



Floyd is afraid of fighting. Floyd doesn't want to fight. Floyd wants a boxing match. And I've already said 'No problem. Get my f--king money!' and when he gets my money then we can box in this boxing match under these set of specific rules that will keep you alive. So, I'm here. Where's my money? Because if you keep dropping my name and you haven't got my money then I am going to show up at your front door. So we will see. But Floyd does not want to fight me. Floyd wants a match under a specific set of rules. I don't need rules. So I'm open. Let's see what happens. Right now it is just talk.



Mayweather, who turns 40 in February, hasn't boxed competitively since September 2015, when he defeated Andre Berto to improve to 49-0 and retain the world welterweight title. 


Even after a hiatus that has lasted over a year, Mayweather told TMZ that there still is a chance that he and McGregor could meet in the ring:


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McGregor has been calling out Mayweather since December 2015, when he spoke with GQ's Alastair Campbell: "I know if we had a fight, I would win. I could box against him, give him a fight, but he couldn't fight against me."


While the two have had exchanges through the media, Mayweather hasn't committed to any real intention of fighting McGregor. That included a conversation with Showtime's Steve Farhood in May (via Scott Christ of BadLeftHook.com):



It's really not a rumor. The fight may happen. We really don't know, as of right now. As of right now. But do I think the fight will happen? Absolutely. We're the A-side, of course. It has to be a boxing match, because most fights that Conor McGregor won inside the Octagon, he was a stand-up guy. So I'm pretty sure it's gonna be a tough fight for me. We really don't know as of right now, but there's been a lot of talk, and hopefully we can make the fight happen.



While the two high-profile champions dish it out through microphones instead of with fists, the fighting world will continue to wait for what could be a bout for the ages. 


Of course, it will all come down to the almighty dollar before anyone can look forward to actions in the ring. 



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Unattended guns a danger to children - The Ledger

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Nearly three years ago, a 2-year-old Lakeland boy was killed after shooting himself in his family's driveway. In 2010, a 10-year-old boy was shot in the hand by his brother.



LAKELAND — Nearly three years ago, a 2-year-old Lakeland boy was killed after shooting himself in his family's driveway.


In 2010, a 10-year-old boy was shot in the hand by his brother.


Both cases have a common theme:


A firearm was left out in the open by an adult.


In Florida, 29 children ages 11 years old and younger have been killed or injured just this year because of a firearm, according to the Gun Violence Archive, a not-for-profit corporation that provides information about gun violence in the United States. 


There have been no child fatalities nor injuries because of firearm accidents in Polk County this year.  


The Gun Violence Archive reported in May that 202 children had been killed or injured nationally this year because of a firearm, and that number has already increased by about 158 percent: 521 through October.


Studies by Everytown for Gun Safety and Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America have shown the national consensus of publicly reported unintentional child gun deaths from December 2012 to December 2013 "undercounts the scale of the phenomenon" in the nation.


Although the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention indicated that 311 children age 14 and under were killed in unintentional shootings nationally between 2007 and 2011, the Everytown analysis shows the number was 61 percent higher. 


The Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence estimates that 48 children are shot every day, with seven being fatalities. 


The campaign says the reality is that children often have easy access to guns in the home. 


"My 3-year-old is so curious, she would be messing with it in a heartbeat," Kaley Parker of Lakeland said about whether her daughter would mess with an unsecured firearm. 


Parker said she does worry about that, adding that her daughter "play shoots" and knows what a gun is. 


"But that's why we have a safe that is mounted into the wall in the bedroom," she said. 


However, Parker said it concerns her how others handle their firearms in their own homes, which could affect her daughter.  


Because 70 percent of accidental shootings involving children happen in the home, the campaign suggests mothers like Parker simply ask whether there is an unlocked gun in a household where the child will be.


The CDC used to ask Americans whether they store guns in their homes and lock them up, but there is no longer federal data on this topic because of laws passed by Congress. 


According to the National Rifle Association, there is no one right way to store a firearm. 


"We encourage gun owners to find a solution that works for them," said Jason Brown, media relations manager for the NRA. 


Brown said the main thing to remember is that if someone other than the gun owner can get to it, it's not secure. 


"When people think firearm storage they say 'Where am I going to put this thing' but that's not enough," he said. 


"It needs to be 100 percent secure."


Brown said there is a "plethora of options" from vendors around the country that offer products that can keep a firearm safely stored away in either a car or a house. 


Storage is a fundamental part of gun safety, Brown said, adding that it is just as important to learn about securing a gun as it is to operate one. 


When it comes to children gaining access to guns, Brown said parents can't always be in control. 


Even if the family keeps their firearms safely secured, another family might not. 


"Education is the best medicine," he said. "It needs to be a dialogue with families and parents and children constantly."


Brown said reminding children not to touch a gun, run away from it and tell an adult is key to the child's safety. 


"This conversation shouldn't happen once," he said. "We want it to become an almost instinct."


Children can participate in the free program offered by the NRA, Eddie Eagle GunSafe, to learn about gun accident prevention, Brown said. 


About 29 million children around the country have taken or participated in the program that Brown encourages communities to take advantage of. 


"It's important for us to offer this program," he said. "Safety is the No. 1 priority in any venture."


Jamie Gilt, a Jacksonville woman who quickly rose to fame in March after her 4-year-old son accidentally shot her while she was driving down State Road 60, visited a NRA group in Winter Haven in July to discuss her interest in becoming a gun-safety instructor. 


A pro-gun activist, Gilt said she usually wore her gun in a holster on her hip, but that day decided to put it under her driver's seat. 


Her son got his hands on it and shot through her driver's seat, the bullet lodging in her back. 


Being careless could have resulted in a fatal accident, Gilt said, but she was lucky enough to pull through. 


She now focuses on sharing her story with others so the same doesn't happen to them or their children. 


"Something as simple as staying 10 steps ahead, no matter what," she said. "Always think of what could possibly happen."


Gilt said anyone with a gun should always keep it in sight or keep it locked up so a child isn't able to get to it.


"Kids are curious and they need to be trained from an early age," she said. "Train them not to handle it at all or to handle it in a way that they can't hurt themselves or someone else."


Two Polk County residents, Brett Upthagrove and Kira Perkins Morrison, have their own methods for securing their firearms. 


Upthagrove used to keep his firearm behind the driver's seat of his pickup, but said after speaking with Police Chief Larry Giddens of the Lakeland Police Department about it, he removed it from his truck. 


(He) reminded me in several private conversations how I might feel if it was stolen and a young kid was shot," he said.


Morrison said she keeps her firearm loaded and in her center console without a lock on it in her vehicle. 


Morrison said she keeps it that way in case she needs to get to it quickly, adding that she never has children in her vehicle. 


"Once I have my own kids, I will lock it up," she said. "I would never endanger a child."


— Tori Walker can be reached at tori.walker@theledger.com or 863-802-7590. Follow Tori on Twitter @Torilwalker863. 


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Tom Cruise is the new running man in movie supercut - Entertainment Weekly

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Whether you asked for it or not (you probably didn’t), here’s a supercut of Tom Cruise running — not walking, not jogging — in movies. 


Burger Fiction, the same YouTube channel behind this supercut of jump scares, compiled various scenes of Cruise in Risky Business, Mission: Impossible 4, All the Right Moves, Legend, Oblivion, Edge of Tomorrow, and more films throughout his immense body of work. 


Who would’ve thought there’d be enough instances to fill out a nearly 19-minute-long video? But there are. Cruise will next be seen in Jack Reacher: Never Go Back (Oct. 21), so there will likely be more running footage to add in very soon. 


All that’s left to be said seems to be: Run, Tom! Run!


frameborder=”0” allowFullScreen>


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The rise of the (truly awful) webcam job interview - The Sydney Morning Herald

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  • Rebecca Greenfield





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The future of job interviews might horrify you. It horrified Jake Rosen.


A recent graduate of UCLA, Rosen was applying to be a page at NBC when he learned he wouldn't be going to an office to talk to a human being about his skills. Instead, he interviewed by webcam, on a laptop.


The robo-interview: You talk to your computer, record the responses, and send them back to the company. The robo-interview: You talk to your computer, record the responses, and send them back to the company. Photo: Oliver Ledoux

So Skype, right? Nope, nothing as personal as that. He recorded his answers and sent them back to a hiring manager at NBC for review at the company's convenience.


It's the robo-interview, and it goes something like this. In the more humane experience, a hiring manager, who also isn't all that practiced in the art of digital video, delivers taped questions.



Or, if it's truly Mr Roboto, a question pops up on the screen. You have a limited amount of time to answer. You talk to your computer, record the responses, and send them back to the company.


Sometimes there's a practice question to get prospective employees used to talking to a camera. Sometimes there isn't. Often, at the end, you have the chance to re-record your answers.



For shy people, it may be a dream come true. No firm handshake needed, and sure, you smell fine. And wouldn't we all love the redo option after making up an answer and mumbling it, too?


For everyone else, it's awkward at best. It's a pretty slick encounter, a little like FaceTime, except you're forced to stare at your big, nervous face as you wax on about why you want to work at the company. It feels more like performing for an invisible audience than having a conversation, because that's essentially what it is.


Not used to being on camera, Rosen felt flustered from the first question, which coloured the rest of his interview, he said.


"I'm not a YouTube star, obviously," he said. "It's such a weird experience talking to a camera. It honestly was pretty horrible."


Jamie Black, who suffered through the video interview experience for a job at a school, said it felt "more like a game show than an interview".


For many of us, the experience will soon be unavoidable. The human-free video job interview is on the rise.


HireVue, one of a handful of companies making video interview software, works with 600 large organisations, including Deloitte, JPMorgan Chase, Under Armour, and most of the major US airlines.


This year, the company will do 2.5 million interviews, up from 13,000 five years ago. Nearly 90 per cent of those are "on demand" interviews, with nobody live at the other end.


For a hiring manager, the draw of the video interview is mainly efficiency.


"Companies want to get to know way more people," said Mark Newman, the founder of HireVue. A recruiter can only get through so many 30-minute conversations in a day. And that doesn't take into account time lost to scheduling or on bad candidates.


With a video interview, human resources staff members only have to review the answers, and can do so on their own schedule, without having to travel for on-campus recruiting.


Using HireVue, Hilton got its hiring cycle down to 4.5 days, almost 20 days shorter than the average interview process. All of this saves companies money. Cigna has cut travel expenses for recruiters from $US1 million a year, in some cases, to under $US100,000.


For the job candidate, the benefit of robo-recruiting is convenience-and that's about it. Generally, a company will give an interviewee a day or two to complete the interview, which can happen anywhere. That might sound like another plus, but for Rosen it only added to his stress.


"You start to think about things you wouldn't normally think about in interviews. I started thinking about my surroundings," Rosen said. "I had to find a blank wall to sit in front of. ... Should I put a bookshelf behind me? A plant?"


Recruiters say they don't judge candidates on their performance, appearance, or locale.


"Judging is an interesting word," said Heidi Soltis-Berner, the managing director for talent at Deloitte. "I would say the on-demand interview is truly for fact sharing." Other recruiters said they do evaluate people on their communication abilities and eye contact.


Even if hiring managers are instructed not to make decisions on how well a potential new employee can perform in front of a camera (which is a bit hard to believe), the whole set-up can be trying.


"You just see yourself and a stopwatch ticking down," said Black, who said his answers often got cut off by the timer.


If and when he has to do it again, Black said, he would practice in front of a mirror with a stopwatch before the interview.


Rosen said it might help to have someone sit behind the computer, as the interview happens, so it's like talking to a person instead of a screen. Just look at the camera so your focus isn't off.


The best advice might be to just relax.


"It's OK to come across as uncomfortable in front of the camera, because everyone is," said Scott Mitchell, a recruiter for American Wedding Group, which uses video interviews to pre-screen the 1900 independent contractors it works with.


"We all assume you're going to be uncomfortable. We're putting you in an uncomfortable position."


The robo-interview hasn't replaced human interaction completely. Many companies use it as a replacement for first-round screening interviews, followed by more traditional one-on-ones.


But for interviewees who would rather go back to the old way ... that's not happening. Organisations can look at more people, and a more diverse set of people, with the video interviews, and save money on top of that.


"Candidates will generally say, 'I would have preferred an in-person interview to this,' but that's not the right comparison," HireVue's Newman said. "The alternative is no interview at all."


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Hayes uses 'GameDay' sign to make NCAA statement - USA TODAY

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Wisconsin basketball forward Nigel Hayes spent some of his Friday arguing why student-athletes deserve to be paid by conferences who make millions off their games.



Then, he spent Saturday holding a sign during ESPN's College GameDay in a what appeared to be a protest of sorts.


Here's the sign, no doubt a nod to the smart fan who recently asked for "beer money" and posted his Venmo username:









The Venmo username Hayes wrote doesn't appear to link to his own account.


Here are some of Hayes' tweets from Friday, which include a snapshot from a USA TODAY Sports story:





































For more on Hayes's history of seeking payment for college athletes, head over to USA TODAY Sports.



Read or Share this story: http://usat.ly/2eDDehp

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Six-hundred episodes later, "The Simpsons" is still breaking ground - CBS News

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The classic Western series “Gunsmoke” rode off into the sunset after 20 seasons and more than 600 episodes. The record still stands -- no other scripted show in U.S. television history has made it to that mark. But that changes Sunday night.


“The Simpsons” has been a fixture on Sunday nights since 1989. And Sunday night, viewers will make that familiar trip to Springfield for the 600th time, reports CBS News’ Dana Jacobson.


For 28 seasons, millions have followed the animated exploits of that mustard-skinned family of five. 

  

Creator Matt Groening named the dysfunctional clan after members of his own family, including his mother, Marge, and father, Homer.


The family is surrounded by a vibrant array of more than 150 recurring characters, including an incompetent police chief, a miserable television clown and a sinister billionaire, who happens to be Homer’s boss.



The Simpsons made their television debut as a series of animated shorts that aired during “The Tracey Ullman Show” on the fledgling Fox television network back in 1987.


The cartoons were so popular that by 1989 Fox made the decision to part with network TV conventions and put an animated sitcom in prime-time. The show became an instant hit.


Executive producer Al Jean has been with the Simpsons since their prime-time debut. 


“They were called the dysfunctional family, there were some criticisms at the beginning, but who comes from a functional family, really? I mean who comes from a family where everything is perfect and it’s like “Leave It to Beaver”? This doesn’t exist,” Jean said.


“The Simpsons” generated some controversy in those early days. A Simpsons T-shirt with the quote, “I’m Bart Simpson. Who the hell are you?” was expelled from school. The show even drew the ire of President George H. W. Bush in 1992, when he vowed to help American families become “a lot more like the Waltons and a lot less like the Simpsons.”


The show’s creators responded to that charge with Bart Simpson saying on the show, “Hey, we’re just like the Waltons. We’re praying for an end to the depression, too!”


It was clear from the start that the Simpsons weren’t your ordinary cartoon. 

Early reviews described the show as “wicked,” “skewed,” “weird” and “wonderful.”



“It was just a show that kids would like because of the form but that adults would like because of the content, and since then, everybody -- the writers and animators -- everybody had just worked so hard on preserving the quality of the show. I think that’s one reason we’re still around,” Jean said. 


With a knack for incisive pop cultural references, celebrity guest appearances and a willingness to tackle social issues, it wasn’t long before “The Simpsons” went from subversive phenomenon to part of the cultural fabric.


“’The Simpsons’ hasn’t even really had an impact on American culture so much as it is American culture,” said Matt Singer, editor-in-chief of screencrush.com. “Six-hundred episodes of a TV show but also a movie, books, music, toys, video games, clothing -- every aspect of popular culture has been contained within ‘The Simpsons,’ and ‘The Simpsons’ has commented on every aspect of popular culture.” 


The show’s producers are always looking to keep things fresh, and they’ve done shows set in the real world, including one where Homer was voiced live. There has even been a Lego episode. 


On Sunday night, they’ll continue to break new ground. Part one of the 600th episode will be presented in virtual reality -- the first television show to feature that technology. 



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It's finally here, Jared Bednar's first regular-season game as an NHL coach - The Denver Post

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Avalanche coach Jared Bednar Friday night was able to reflect about his imminent NHL coaching debut with his parents, Wally and Yvonne, who traveled in for the occasion from their home near Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.


“It’s something I’ve been working towards my whole coaching life, so it’s exciting for me,” Bednar said after Saturday’s morning skate, a few hours ahead of Colorado’s regular-season opener against the Dallas Stars at the Pepsi Center. “I’ve had a chance to sit and talk with my family about it. We went out to dinner last night. But for me, it’s just the first step. To me, winning is what I want to do here, it’s not just to be here and see how it goes. I’m all in on this deal and in order for me to be happy, we’re going to have to have success.”


Wally Bednar is a retired Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer, and his nomadic career in Saskatchewan meant that Jared lived mostly in small towns while growing up. Jared met his wife, Susan, while playing in the East Coast Hockey League for the Huntington (W. Va.) Blizzard in the home of Marshall University. Susan and the Bednars’ daughter, Savega, have remained at the family home in Charleston, S.C., this weekend, and plan to join Jared in Denver from around Christmas on. The Bednars’ son, Kruz, 16, already is with his dad and is attending Valor Christian High School.


So regardless of where everyone in the family is this weekend, Bednar’s NHL debut — he didn’t play and hasn’t previously coached in the league — is a big deal. Bednar has been asked about that virtually since the moment he was hired on Aug. 25, and on Saturday he deftly at first addressed follow-ups about opening night with comments about the team, not him.


“We’re excited,” Bednar said. “I think our whole group’s excited. It’s our first chance to make an impression on our fans and try to establish our ability in our home building. Our guys are excited, we’re excited, we want to get started and see how we match up against one of the league’s best.”


The NHL season opened Wednesday, and the Avalanche, Canucks and Coyotes are the three teams that haven’t played a game. On Saturday, Arizona is at home against Philadelphia and Vancouver has a home game against Calgary.


After facing the Stars, the Avalanche has a testing four-game road trip that begins at Pittsburgh Monday night.


Previous:


Terry Frei’s profile of Bednar: The man from Elbow, Saskatchewan, and a lot of other places 



As opening night approaches, Terry Frei’s look at Bednar and his system


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Charlie Puth Celebrates Education With New Piano And Keyboards For School - University Herald

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Does music drive you? For famous singer and song writer Charlie Puth, it does. Puth, a Youtube sensation and Ernie Boch Jr., the CEO, president and spokesman of Boch Enterprises, celebrates music with 'Music Drives Us.'



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'Music Drives Us' is a charitable organization that is founded by Boch in 2006. 'Music Drives Us' is a regional project supporting music in the New England area. And it focuses on music preservation, music education, and music awareness.


And to make sure all three foci are realized, recently, they just unveiled a new piano and keyboards at the Josiah Quincy Upper School in Boston coming from the 'Music Drives Us' grant.


Charlie Puth's appearance was on behalf of the VH1 Save the Music Foundation, according to the Boston Globe. The VH1 Save the Music Foundation is another national non profit organization that supports instrumental music education programs in American schools. Partnering with Boch, being one of the foundation's board members, they set out to celebrate music.


Boch himself is a local celebrity in the Greater Boston area. He is passionate about music and he is known for it (aside from advertising and selling cars).


And Charlie Puth himself knows Boston. He graduated from the Berklee College in 2013. He is a son of a music teacher and is known for his perfect pitch. They call his perfect pitch a rare auditory phenomenon that allows him to recreate music without a reference tone. At a young age, he is introduced to classical music and learned how to play the piano at four years old.



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For his higher education, he attended the Manhattan School of Music Pre-College, taking jazz piano as a major and classical studies as his minor. In 2013 he graduated from the Berklee College of music where he majored in music production and engineering. Talk about a full circle, his passion for the piano keys brings him to the Josiah Quincy Upper School to champion music.


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Russia chooses myth over history in new WWII movie - PRI

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A massive blockbuster looks set to take Russia by storm. It’s the story of one of the best-known and most iconic episodes of World War II (for the Soviets): The sacrifice made by “Panfilov’s 28 Men" to save Moscow from the Germans.




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There is just one small problem.


It’s not true.


This is a tale known to pretty much everyone who grew up in the old Soviet Union. Twenty-eight men, armed only with light weapons, heroically stopped a massed German tank attack on the very outskirts of Moscow in the darkest days of the war, on Nov. 16, 1941. It was a time when the Nazis seemed unstoppable. All the men died. It was a sacrifice comparable to Leonidas and his 300 Spartans, the story goes. There was no surrender.


All 28 men were posthumously made Heroes of the Soviet Union — that’s something like getting the Congressional Medal of Honor. Streets have been named for them. Giant statues stand in their honor. A quote from their commander became one of the mantras of the war effort: "Russia is vast but there is nowhere to retreat. It's Moscow behind us."


Their sacrifice is probably as iconic for Russians as the image of the Marines raising the flag on Iwo Jima is for Americans.


The men are real, but their story still isn't.


Though there are elements of truth. Their unit — the 316th Rifle Division, led by Gen. Ivan Panfilov — did fight the Germans to a standstill on the day in question. A Soviet division had about 10,000 men, and anyone who took part in that battle probably deserves the name hero. Panfilov himself was killed two days later, but the division was nicknamed “Panfilov’s Men” throughout the war.


However, according to an official Soviet military investigation in 1948, the details about the 28 men were entirely a work of fiction.


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The Soviet military prosecutor set up a historical commission to investigate the incident after one of the famous soldiers turned up alive.


The man in question was Ivan Dobrobabin. He had been captured by the Germans, or surrendered. He survived the horrors of Nazi captivity, and escaped, joined a pro-Nazi police force in Ukraine, then deserted and re-enlisted in the Red Army. He fell afoul of the authorities in 1947. 


Being a prisoner of war was not an option for Soviet soldiers. Stalin ordered everyone to fight to the death rather than surrender. What’s rarely heard in Russia is the fact that millions of young Soviet soldiers were captured in the first two years of the war — thanks in part to Stalin’s own incompetence as a military commander. Thousands of liberated POWs were executed by their own country after the war.


Dobrobabin was lucky and was simply carted off to a gulag in Siberia. He was eventually released and lived until 1996.


The official probe, led by military judge Lieutenant-General Nikolai Afanasyev, reported that five more of “the 28” did, in fact, survive. Another of them was found to have been killed two days before the great battle of November 16. In his final report to Stalin himself, Afanasyev said that the last stand of the Panfilov 28 "did not occur. It was a pure fantasy."


The 1948 investigation concluded that the details of what happened that day were all invented by reporter Vasiliy Koroteev and other "journalists" with the Red Army's "Red Star" newspaper. Koroteev visited the unit a few weeks after the event, collected the names of 28 dead or missing soldiers, and filled in the blanks himself — the quotes, the details of who did what, and so on, and propelled them to hero status. He and his editors later defended their actions by saying the Soviet Union needed heroes. 


Stalin needed the myth. He was pushing a “no surrender, no retreat” policy. He needed examples of sacrifices that appeared to make a difference. Many Soviet conscripts had no love for Stalin or communist oppression, and he was uncertain if they would fight. Many came from persecuted religious and ethnic minorities. Having Kazakh and Kyrgyz men fighting so heroically fit the propaganda needed to show the country coming together.


So the findings of the investigation in 1948 remained classified, and the legend of “The 28” was allowed to continue.


The documents were briefly released in the 1990s but did not attract publicity. It was only in 2015, when the movie was already in production, that the facts of the incident came back into public attention.


Russia's chief state archivist, Sergei Mironenko, published the documents online last year as buzz about the movie was starting. He felt that all 10,000 men of Panfilov’s division deserved recognition, not just the mythical 28.


That created a social media firestorm. Mironenko lost his job in early 2016.


Now, every nation’s movie industry plays fast and loose with history. “The Patriot” and “Braveheart” irk many with historical knowledge. But at least in the West, Hollywood does not monopolize history. If you’re curious about a historical episode, you can find more accurate sources of information. But in Vladimir Putin's Russia this is becoming increasingly difficult.


It’s apparent Putin prefers myth to history. Mironenko’s case is not isolated. College professors who deviate from the official line are losing their jobs as well. A blogger who noted how the Soviet Union cooperated with Nazi Germany to conquer Poland in 1939 was fined. Widely respected foreign scholars of the eastern front in World War II, like Anthony Beevor and John Keegan, find their books banned in Russia.


Supporters of Putin’s efforts to control how history is told argue that Russia is simply too big to have competing narratives. Putin wants to project a Russian-speaking world that rallies together in the face of foreign threats.


History is much more complex and interesting than that.


Sergei Medinsky, Russia’s culture minister, defended the movie, saying that "even if this story was invented from start to finish, if there had been no Panfilov, if there had been nothing, this is a sacred legend that shouldn't be interfered with. People that do that are filthy scum."


"Panfilov’s 28 men" is also a big deal in the former Soviet republics of Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan, since most of the men in this unit were from the central Asian nations.  


Last week, Putin went to the Kazakh capital, Almaty, and sat down with his Kazakh counterpart, Nursultan Nazabayev, to enjoy a preview of the movie. Both governments helped fund it, after a crowd-sourcing effort showed there was huge public interest.


History shows that despite Stalin’s fears about their loyalty, Russians and other "Soviet" peoples were indeed prepared to fight and die to stop the Nazi invasion. They were hampered by Stalin’s strategic and tactical ineptitude, and by tyrannical discipline.


They did fight to defend the motherland, despite Stalin. There were millions of real heroes. The Soviet Union lost an estimated 20 million people in the war, compared to about 400,000 Americans. So in some sense the movie is a tribute to them.


Just don’t get caught up in the facts.


"Panfilov's 28 Men" releases in Russia on Nov. 24.


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Olivia Wilde Gives Birth! Actress and Jason Sudeikis Welcome a Baby Girl - E! Online

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And a baby makes four!


Olivia Wilde and Jason Sudeikis officially expanded their family after the actress welcomed a baby girl into the world named Daisy Josephine.


Wilde shared the exciting news on Instagram, captioning a sweet photo of the couple's newborn, "There goes the neighborhood.  Daisy Josephine Sudeikis. Born, like a boss, on #internationaldayofthegirl."


The happy news comes shortly after the A-list actress revealed the sex of her child while discussing Decision 2016. "As someone who is about to have a daughter, this hits me deep in my core. #NeverTrump," she wrote on social media with a political ad. 


Back in April, the Vinyl star announced the news that she was expecting in an adorable Instagram post with her first child Otis Sudeikis. "Matching baby bumps," she shared online while smiling next to her growing son.




Before welcoming her second child, Olivia sat down with Yahoo! Beauty where she talked all things parenting and babies. During the conversation, the actress expressed the high hopes for her children. 


"I hope to raise a child who values people for what's within them, and yet I hope he experiments with his own identity and who he wants to be," she shared. "I look forward to helping him feel that type of confidence growing up...I'm grateful now that my parents let me go through my own process of self-discovery, and I think you can't restrict kids in that way. They have to make mistakes, play, and then figure it out in the end."


And if she really had her way, Olivia would like her second child to be raised with feminist values, just like Otis.



"I want to promote the idea that the definition of feminism is equality, and it's something that's not difficult to teach children because they are born with that sensibility," she explained. "They are only taught to separate people and value them differently once they get older. Luckily, I'm just embracing the perspective he was born with."


As for Jason, he's more than thrilled to have another baby in the family. After all, his first child has been nothing but a great experience.


"My own kid [makes me want more], because I made it with Olivia and that seems like a good cocktail," he previously joked to E! News. "I'm all for it." 


Congratulations to the couple on their happy news!


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Tim McGraw Shares Cute Photo of 20th Anniversary Surprise - PEOPLE.com

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Their wedding anniversary was on Oct. 6, but Tim McGraw and Faith Hill are just now sharing how they celebrated their special day on social media.


McGraw, 49, took to Instagram on Friday to share a photo of how the couple was surprised last Thursday.


“Woke up to on our anniversary!!!” McGraw wrote.





In an interview last Wednesday after their joint Music City Walk of Fame ceremony, Hill, 49, said the two were going to “be in sweats on the couch watching some TV show we gotta find.”


“We’re gonna binge-watch something,” McGraw said with relish. “And I’ve made a request, but I don’t know if I’m gonna get away with it or not — I want cornbread and peas.”


“That would be me cooking cornbread and peas,” Hill said, pausing to add, “We’ll see.”



It’s been a busy time for the couple. Last Tuesday, they played their first Ryman Auditorium concert to a large crowd and announced their first joint tour since 2007. Then, they celebrated their induction into the Music City Walk of Fame on Wednesday and on Thursday they celebrated 20 years together.



So much time together feels “good,” Hill said. “It feels like one, like our first-year anniversary.”


“I agree, baby, I do,” McGraw said. “It’s awesome. It’s an accomplishment, you know. It really is.”


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Ann Coulter tried to call out Michelle Obama, confused Beyonce with Nicki Minaj instead - Mic

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Right-wing provocateur and terrible roaster Ann Coulter proved on Friday that, if you try hard enough, you too can have one of the most garbage tweets of all time. 


Overnight on Friday, Coulter tweeted to her 1 million followers: "Beyonce, cited by Michelle Obama as role model for her daughters, sings about 'pussy curvalicious, served delicious.' Oh my. I just fainted." 





There's several big problems with this tweet. First among them: Beyoncé didn't sing those lyrics. In fact, no one did: the lyric, which Nicki Minaj spit, not Beyoncé, goes: "Curvalicious, pussy served delicious." 


Minaj rapped the lyric on a remix to Beyoncé's song, "Flawless." 



Source: YouTube

Besides mixing up two very different music superstars, Coulter is also attempting to indict Beyoncé for a sexual lyric that isn't even hers. And even if it were Beyoncé's lyric, the lyric would be about consensual sex with her own husband, which is not the same as sexual assault, which Trump has condoned in the past in his infamous "grab them by the pussy" remarks. 


Trump's remarks prompted Obama to speak out against Trump at a New Hampshire rally, which may have prompted Coulter's late night tweet. 


People have been dragging Coulter on Twitter since failing to tell two black women apart while simultaneously failing to criticize our black First Lady. 




















Ann, what a noble effort to try to drag two of the most successful black women in America. Too bad you ended up dragging yourself. 


In the words of another famous black woman, "If at first you don't succeed, you dust yourself off and try again." 


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Friday, October 14, 2016

'Please Hurry,' Teen Tells Dispatcher After Shooting Sister - ABC News

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They were, says Denise Kirchner, "the worst three hours of my life" — the agonizing moments after her son accidently shot her and her 14-year-old daughter Madison while cleaning his semi-automatic gun in their Iowa home.

Madison skirted death, but survived. She is living proof, her mother says, of what can happen when otherwise responsible gun owners have a safety lapse.

Dylan, 18, had been trying to remove bullets from the chamber of the .40-caliber handgun when it fired, Toledo Police Chief Bob Kendall said. The bullet passed through the left breast of his younger sister Madison, narrowly missing her spine but leaving six holes in her stomach and intestines. It then passed through the thigh of Denise, who was at her kitchen sink doing dishes, before lodging in a cupboard.

"My sister just actually got shot. We were cleaning guns," Dylan told a 911 dispatcher. "Please hurry. She's having trouble breathing. Please hurry."

The accidental shooting last November was one of three involving minors in their rural Iowa county in roughly a year's time; the others ended in deaths for two teenage girls.

The cases also were among more than 1,000 accidental shootings involving minors nationwide over a 2?-year period. The Associated Press and the USA TODAY Network analyzed every such shooting and found that the official tally kept by the federal government undercounts the problem by roughly a third.

Emergency responders came quickly and rushed the daughter and mother to a hospital about 20 miles away. Denise Kirchner's injuries turned out to be minor, but doctors told her Madison would not survive the 17-minute flight to a children's hospital in Des Moines and had to undergo surgery immediately.

She survived the surgery, and a 10-day stay in intensive care.

The high school freshman still suffers from an occasional stomach bleed, has trouble sleeping and is trying to catch up on the weeks of school she missed. But Kendall, the police chief, said it's amazing she survived.

The chief recently brought the girl the bullet, which she might put on a necklace.

Dylan Kirchner is an experienced hunter and marksman who had plans to compete on a sports shooting team at a local community college.

"He knows what he's doing. I just don't know what the deal was that day," Kendall said. "This was an accident, yes. But could it have been prevented? Yeah."

Denise said her son violated a cardinal safety rule: When guns are getting cleaned, nobody else should be in the room.

"You are living proof that obviously we weren't careful enough," Denise tells Madison, hugging her after she returns home from school.

———

Follow Ryan Foley on Twitter at https://twitter.com/rjfoley

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Pinterest Shows It Can Compete With Facebook, Twitter - Wall Street Journal

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Pinterest logos on an Apple iPad Air in Washington, D.C., in 2015. The online scrapbooking company says it has 150 million users world-wide.
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Pinterest logos on an Apple iPad Air in Washington, D.C., in 2015. The online scrapbooking company says it has 150 million users world-wide.


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Oil edges up on tighter US fuel market; doubts over OPEC cuts weigh - Reuters

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Crude oil storage tanks are seen from above at the Cushing oil hub, in Cushing, Oklahoma, March 24, 2016.

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