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Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Media Today
« Reply #440 on: April 28, 2023, 04:55:58 AM »
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Jerry Springer, influential US talkshow host, dies aged 79
Family of famed TV figure and former mayor of Cincinnati announces he died ‘peacefully’ at home in Chicago on Thursday



The talkshow host Jerry Springer, a former mayor of Cincinnati whose work was vastly influential in daytime TV worldwide, has died. He was 79.

Springer’s family said he died “peacefully” on Thursday at home in Chicago.

In a statement, the family said: “Jerry’s ability to connect with people was at the heart of his success in everything he tried whether that was politics, broadcasting or just joking with people on the street who wanted a photo or a word.

“He’s irreplaceable and his loss hurts immensely, but memories of his intellect, heart and humor will live on.”

Springer was best known for his 27-year, near-4,000-episode run as host of his eponymous talkshow, which featured guests who purportedly engaged in controversial, excessive and often overtly sexual behavior.

Episode titles that could have been ripped from tabloid headlines included I Slept with 251 Men in 10 Hours!, I’m a Breeder for the Klan and I Married a Horse.

Guests often broke into chair-wielding brawls or fretted while Springer read paternity test results on air.

The show often generated negative headlines. A 15-year-old boy in Florida charged with sexual battery of his half-sister, aged eight, told detectives he learned what incest was from Springer. A woman in a segment entitled Secret Mistresses Confronted was found dead within hours of broadcast.

Despite it all, in 1998, seven years into its run, the show briefly enjoyed stronger ratings than Oprah Winfrey’s more mainstream daytime offering.

It catapulted Springer to fame, including the 1998 Hollywood comedy Ringmaster, loosely based on his life, and a cameo in Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me in 1999, the same year he signed a contract worth $30m. The show also inspired a musical, Jerry Springer: the Opera, which logged more than 600 performances in London from 2003 to 2005.

On Thursday, the journalist and Twitter influencer Yashar Ali said the weekday daytime slot Springer’s show held at the height of its popularity helped it make an indelible impression on American millennials.

“Jerry Springer wasn’t just a host,” Ali wrote on Twitter. “He was also the babysitter for many millennials who were home sick from school.”

KSI, a YouTube celebrity, said: “RIP Jerry Springer. You made my off days at school so much more entertaining.”

The show was taken off the air in 2018, years after its audience began to dwindle. Springer later hosted a courtroom show that was canceled after three seasons. From 2007 to 2008, he hosted America’s Got Talent.

Some credited his success with inspiring other critically panned ratings magnets including Real Housewives and 90-Day Fiance.

In November last year, Springer said he was “so sorry” for the cultural impact his show had at the turn of the century.

“I just apologize,” he told David Yontef, host of the Behind the Velvet Rope podcast. “What have I done? I’ve ruined the culture. I just hope hell isn’t that hot because I burn real easy. I’m very light-complected.”

Yet he would also bristle when his work was dismissed as “trash”.

“It’s basically elitist,” Springer said. “You have all these celebrities [coming on other shows to] … talk about who they slept with, what drugs they’ve been on, what misbehavior they had, and we can’t buy enough tickets to their shows. We can’t buy enough of their albums. We go to see their movies. We buy their books.

“We think they’re god-like.”




Gerald Norman Springer was born in London during the second world war after his family fled Nazi Germany. He was four when his family moved to New York.

In 1965, he earned a bachelor’s degree in political science from Tulane University in New Orleans. He received a law degree from Northwestern University in Illinois three years later, and advised the presidential campaign of Robert F Kennedy before being elected to the Cincinnati city council in 1971.

He resigned his seat in 1974, after admitting soliciting a sex worker. Styling himself as a liberal, Springer successfully ran for re-election to the council after apologizing and addressing the scandal head-on in his advertising, and the panel picked him to serve a year as Cincinnati’s mayor, beginning in 1977.

According to the Hollywood Reporter, while apparently resorting to a double entendre referencing both his sex worker solicitation and his demoralizing resignation, Springer said of his elevation to mayor: “When I think of being flat on my back three years ago, having this happen is almost unbelievable. This is the best feeling I’ve ever had in my political life.”

In 1982, Springer ran unsuccessfully for governor of Ohio. In one campaign ad he said: “Nine years ago I spent time with a woman I shouldn’t have. And I paid her with a check. I wish I hadn’t done that. And the truth is, I wish no one would ever know. But in the rough world of politics, opponents are not about to let personal embarrassments lay to rest.

"...… The next governor is going to have to take some heavy risks and face some hard truths. I’m prepared to do that. This commercial should be proof. I’m not afraid, even of the truth, and even if it hurts.”

On Thursday, the political commentator David Axelrod wrote on Twitter that Springer was “funny, self-effacing, incisive” during his political career.

Henry Gomez of NBC News added that as recently as the early 2000s, Springer was the Democratic party’s best hope of securing statewide office in conservative Ohio.

Springer left politics to become a news anchor and commentator at the Cincinnati television station WLWT, setting the stage for his talkshow career.

WLWT reported on Thursday that plans for funeral services and a memorial gathering were still being formed. His family asked the public to consider honoring him by donating to “a worthy advocacy organization” or simply being kind to someone.

“As he always said [at the end of his shows], ‘Take care of yourself – and each other’,” WLWT added.

Springer’s family said he died from pancreatic cancer.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/apr/27/jerry-springer-talkshow-host-dies-79

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Re: Media Today
« Reply #440 on: April 28, 2023, 04:55:58 AM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Media Today
« Reply #441 on: April 29, 2023, 09:00:52 AM »
Major hurricanes expected to increase in 2023, researchers forecast
This hurricane season could be similar to 2017, the year of Harvey and Maria.



Researchers at the University of Arizona, whose computer model has since 2014 accurately predicted hurricane activity, are calling for a very active hurricane season in 2023, after two years of relative calm. Of nine hurricanes forecast for the period between June and November, five are expected to be “major.”

Forecasters are predicting activity similar to the 2017 hurricane season, which saw Maria, Harvey, and Irma make landfall to devastating effect. Though fewer hurricanes overall are expected to make landfall this year, the number of major hurricanes like Maria is expected to be roughly the same.

Major hurricanes refer to those classified as Category 3 and above, with wind speeds up to 150 miles per hour. The average number of major hurricanes per year is two.

A big contributor to a more active hurricane season is hotter ocean temperatures and rising sea levels, according to Xubin Zeng, a researcher at the University of Arizona who leads the forecasts each year.

“With global warming there will be more water vapor over oceans, and water vapor is a fuel for hurricanes,” said Zeng. “That means on average we expect to see more hurricane activity, not necessarily in terms of the [total] number but in terms of the major hurricanes.”

Another phenomenon impacting hurricane season is hotter-than-average ocean-surface temperatures that can create ideal conditions for a hurricane to form.

In addition, rising sea levels are impacting storm surges, when fast-moving storms push a wall of water onto the shore, which dramatically increases the chances of flooding. A 2020 study from the journal Nature projected that by 2100, 68 percent of coastal flooding will be caused by tides and storms.

Zeng noted that with a potentially active hurricane season, federal and local government agencies have an important role to play. Forecasts like Zeng’s are crucial for the emergency management agencies that provide critical services to people living in affected areas. 

Additionally, Zeng noted that people who live on the coast and in the path of hurricanes should be aware of the increasing threats to their home and property  as climate change progresses. With a potentially more dangerous hurricane season approaching the East and Gulf coasts, people need to prepare, said Zeng.

https://grist.org/climate/major-hurricanes-expected-increase-2023/

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Media Today
« Reply #442 on: April 29, 2023, 09:43:18 PM »
And they want to keep trying to claim "it's not the guns".


5 fatally shot, including 8-year-old, after neighbors ask Texas man to stop shooting rifle outside

A manhunt was underway on SaPersonay after five people were fatally shot, including an 8-year-old child, inside a home in southeast Texas, police said.

Deputies with the San Jacinto County Sheriff’s Office were initially called to a residence in the Trails End area of Cleveland, Texas, late Friday night to investigate reports of harassment, Sheriff Greg Capers told reporters. While they were en route, authorities received a series of 911 calls about a shooting at the same location.

Capers said the suspect has been known to shoot his AR-15 in the yard of his home. Investigators believe he was intoxicated and began firing the weapon on his front porch in the moments before the killings, KTKR reported.

Around 11:30 p.m., his neighbors requested that he limit the noise, explaining they had a baby trying to sleep inside, but he came enraged by the request and opened fire on them instead.

When deputies arrived on the scene, they discovered four people dead inside the home, according to Click2Houston. A child was also wounded and airlifted to a nearby hospital, where they were pronounced dead a short time later.

Authorities also found three other children at the scene. They were evaluated by paramedics and taken to a hospital, where officials concluded they were not injured. Two more people were evaluated by a medical team, and have since been released.

In total, 10 people were inside the house when the violence unfolded, Capers said. The victims ranged in age from 8 to 40 years old and they are all from Honduras, KHOU reported.

Police have described Oropeza as a Hispanic man who is 5-feet-8-inches tall with a goatee and short black hair. They have issued a warrant out for his arrest on five counts of murder. His bond is set at $5 million.

Capers said he likely fled the county and that “he’s at least 10 to 20 miles away from here.”

The identities of the victims won’t be released until next of kin has been notified.

© New York Daily News

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Re: Media Today
« Reply #442 on: April 29, 2023, 09:43:18 PM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Media Today
« Reply #443 on: April 30, 2023, 04:45:26 AM »
Tornado near North Palm Beach topples trees, flips cars and cuts electric power

Trees toppled and cars flipped when a twister roared through Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, on SaPersonay, about a dozen miles northwest of swanky Palm Beach.

The tornado, born of severe rain and thunderstorms in the area, touched down somewhere between 5:15 and 5:30 p.m, according to the National Weather Service.

At one point, roughly 7,500 people in the area were without power, reports WPTV, an NBC affiliate in nearby West Palm Beach.

Local meteorologist Jennifer Collins caught some of the tornado on video, posting to her Twitter page what appears to be a car being picked up and dropped by the twister.

Building damage was reported at Sandalwood Estates, a Palm Beach Gardens neighborhood. One resident told WPTV that he grabbed his dog and hid in the bathroom as trees began to fall.

“We ducked down in our car as it went over us,” said Shawn MacNamara, a resident at Sanctuary Estates in Palm Beach Gardens. “Scariest thing ever.”

One image shared on Twitter by a resident of Palm Beach Gardens shows a trio of cars all piled on top of one another, after seemingly being moved during the storm.

WPTV photojournalist Alex Hagan shared that a window was shattered at his North Palm Beach complex and trees were knocked over.

The Weather Service confirmed that a tornado touched down in the area, and was surveying the damage, said WPBF, another West Palm Beach TV station.

© New York Daily News

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Media Today
« Reply #444 on: May 01, 2023, 03:27:11 AM »
Church bombing set off alarms over rise of white supremacists in Ohio



According to a report from Cleveland.com, a recent firebombing of a small-town church is setting off alarms that a rise in "do-it-yourself" white supremacist domestic terrorism is on the rise.

The report notes that Aimenn Penny was infuriated after watching coverage of a drag-queen storytime in France which led the member of White Lives Matter Ohio to attack a church in a small Geauga County town with Molotov cocktails for having similar plans.

According to the report, as Penny faces federal hate crime charges, Jonathan Lewis, a researcher at George Washington University’s Program on Extremism raised a red flag about the rise of extremism in the Buckeye state and beyond.

In an interview, he stated, "It paints a really disturbing picture of the state of domestic terrorism and domestic violent extremism in this country. I think that the case that was recently brought in in Ohio is, unfortunately, a really good indicator of the types of violent extremism bubbling to the surface today.”

According to Cleveland.com's Adam Ferrise report, Lewis maintained, "Most white supremacists are no longer affiliated with organized groups, like the Proud Boys or Oath Keepers, he said. The new trend is groups that are very loosely affiliated. There’s no set hierarchy in the groups or membership dues. Meetings aren’t in person, but on apps like Discord, 4Chan and Telegram, among others."

"The chatrooms stop just short of saying, ‘Hey go commit a hate crime tomorrow.' It’s basically do-it-yourself terrorism,” he explained.

The report adds, "The group [White Lives Matter Ohio] launched in April 2021. It is loosely affiliated with a nationwide group and uses Telegram to spread propaganda and disrupt drag shows like the one the Chesterland Church of Christ organized," adding, "The Anti-Defamation League report said there were 85 incidents of reported white supremacist propaganda efforts in Ohio in 2021 and 128 last year. Most of the efforts include dropping fliers at various locations, and the dominant group in Ohio in the last two years has been the Patriot Front."

According to Anti-Defamation League of Cleveland Director Kelly Fishman, "White Lives Matter had the most incidents in Ohio. We’re seeing crossover with certain groups and more participation in the groups.”

You can read more here: https://www.cleveland.com/court-justice/2023/04/do-it-yourself-terrorism-neo-nazi-accused-of-firebombing-geauga-county-church-highlights-rise-in-white-supremacist-activity-in-ohio.html

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Re: Media Today
« Reply #444 on: May 01, 2023, 03:27:11 AM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Media Today
« Reply #445 on: May 01, 2023, 10:32:35 PM »
More than 2,200 guests to attend King Charles' coronation at Westminster Abbey

LONDON (Reuters) - More than 2,200 people will attend the coronation of Britain's King Charles, Buckingham Palace said on Monday, including international representatives from 203 countries as well as community and charity workers.

The congregation at London's Westminster Abbey on SaPersonay, May 6, will also comprise Nobel Prize winners, religious representatives, and heads of state and foreign ministers, the palace said in a statement.

In addition to those guests, 400 young people representing charitable organisations will be able to watch the coronation service and processions from inside St Margaret's Church, next to the Abbey, the statement said.

The palace has been steadily releasing details of Charles' coronation, which is set to be smaller in scale than that of his mother Queen Elizabeth in 1953 but still replete with pomp and pageantry, reflecting traditions dating back 1,000 years.

More than 8,200 guests attended Queen Elizabeth's coronation ceremony, which also took place at Westminster Abbey, according to the royal family's website. Elizabeth died last September aged 96.

© Reuters

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Media Today
« Reply #446 on: May 02, 2023, 08:55:20 AM »
Canadian singer-songwriter Gordon Lightfoot dead at 84

His 1970s hits, including "Sundown," "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald" and "If You Could Read My Mind," were fixtures of baby boomers' coming-of-age soundtrack



Gordon Lightfoot, Canada's answer to U.S. singer-songwriters who provided the soundtrack for baby boomers coming of age amid a countercultural revolution, died Monday, his publicist said. He was 84.

Lightfoot died at Sunnybrook Hospital in Toronto of natural causes, publicist Victoria Lord said.

On April 11, he announced the cancellation of his 2023 performance schedule in North America. A statement cited unspecified "health related issues," and it said he expected to recover.

Lightfoot accomplished a feat more rarefied in popular music today, essentially becoming a one-man act who performed his own critically acclaimed music, including his most noted mid-1960s songs, "Early Mornin' Rain" and "For Lovin' Me."

He wrote songs for Peter, Paul and Mary and Marty Robbins, and his 1968 album "Did She Mention My Name?" earned him his first Grammy nomination, for best folk performance.

There would be four other Grammy nominations, as well as induction into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2012.

He recorded five core albums for United Artists before he continued his career with Warner/Reprise from the 1970s through the 1990s. The 2012 release “All Live” represented his only live album since those original United Artists releases.

Lightfoot’s easygoing but melancholy "Sundown" would be his only U.S. No. 1 hit, peaking in late June 1974 and spending 18 weeks on Billboard's Hot 100 chart.

In 2012 he appeared as the headliner at the Grammy Museum's "An Evening With" series in Los Angeles to talk about his epic narrative hit from 1976, "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald."

"It's a whole story unto itself, from start to finish," he said, "and it still goes on this day."

Some big names recorded or performed his songs. They included Bob Dylan, Elvis Presley, Sarah McLachlan, Barbra Streisand, Harry Belafonte, Jane’s Addiction, Glen Campbell and Toby Keith.

His official biography even notes that house music icon Ultra Naté was joined by noted dance music performers Amber and Jocelyn Enriquez in recording a club version of his song "If You Could Read My Mind" in 1998.

Lightfoot was recognized early by his parents as having musical talent, and at age 12 he won a contest that allowed him to perform at Massey Hall in Toronto, which became a frequent tour stop.

He started out as a performer in barbershop quartets and then became a member of musical duos, but his time didn't come until he shed the other musicians around him and wrote prodigiously.

He tried to make his way in Los Angeles in the late 1950s, but he found success only after he returned to Toronto and embraced its folk music scene the next decade.

Lightfoot's rolling, guitar-based music, influenced by Dylan and the era's other folk artists, was equally as at home on radio alongside his fellow Canadian Anne Murray as it was next to the Eagles.

At least seven of his albums have been certified gold in the U.S., a designation that means sales of 500,000 or more.

In 2002, he suffered a near-death bout with illness but survived, according to his official biography, and he continued to record and perform.

The next year, the Office of the Governor General of Canada said Lightfoot, born in Orillia, Ontario, in 1938, was one of the country's most beloved musicians.

"Gordon Lightfoot has been telling our stories in song for over five decades," it said as part of an award under his earlier Order of Canada recognition. "He possesses a unique ability to blend contemporary urban music with our traditional roots. Genuine and reserved, he has a down-to-earth style that defies categorization."

On Monday night, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called Lightfoot one of the country's greatest singer-songwriters.

"Gordon Lightfoot captured our country’s spirit in his music — and in doing so, he helped shape Canada’s soundscape," Trudeau said. "May his music continue to inspire future generations."

Lightfoot is survived by his wife, Kim Hasse; his six children, Fred, Ingrid, Eric, Galen, Miles and Meredith; and several grandchildren, his publicist, Lord, said in a statement.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/obituaries/gordon-lightfoot-singer-songwriter-dead-84-rcna82370

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Media Today
« Reply #447 on: May 02, 2023, 10:38:17 PM »
Shooting suspect at Memphis television station arrested: report

A suspect has been arrested in connection with a shooting involving an AR-15 at a FOX13 Memphis, Tennessee, the television station reports.

No injuries were reported in connection with the shooting.

The gunman fired one shot before running to a nearby Ubee's restaurant, where he barricaded himself and streamed the standoff on Facebook Live, according to the report.

ATF agents and police officers responded to the scene.

The investigation prompted the closure of South Highland Street.

The standoff ended when the gunman was taken into custody about two hours after the shot was fired, according to Memphis police.

Negotiators got the shooter to disarm himself before his arrest, FOX 13 anchor Dakarai Turner tweeted.

FOX13 employees were for about 30 minutes. while police secured the area but all have since safely returned to work inside the station.

According to the report, “the gunman first approached a FOX13 employee outside of the gate wanting to talk. The suspect then showed the FOX13 employee that he had a gun.”

“The FOX13 employee then ended the conversation and left before the suspect went to the front of the building and fired a single shot.”

The University of Memphis, located directly across the street from the FOX13 station, said in a statement: “The University and Police Services are issuing this message in a continuing effort to communicate safety information to our students, faculty, staff and visitors.”

The shooting suspect’s mother called FOX13 to say their son has experienced mental health issues and has been receiving ongoing treatment at a mental health center since he was 16.

The University of Memphis, located directly across the street from the FOX13 station, said in a statement: “The University and Police Services are issuing this message in a continuing effort to communicate safety information to our students, faculty, staff and visitors.”

The shooting suspect’s mother called FOX13 to say their son has experienced mental health issues and has been receiving ongoing treatment at a mental health center since he was 16.

https://www.rawstory.com/shooting-suspect-at-memphis-television-station-arrested-report/

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Re: Media Today
« Reply #447 on: May 02, 2023, 10:38:17 PM »