Monday, September 30, 2024

Original 'SNL' cast member thought anyone watching show 'must be really stupid' during show's debut

Original "SNL" cast member Jane Curtin wasn’t confident in the show’s chances early in its run.

In a New York Times interview ahead of the show’s 50th season premiere this weekend, Curtin recalled the first broadcast being a blur.

"I never really paid much attention to the audience," Curtin said.

She continued: "I thought, well, anybody that’s watching this must be really stupid. It gave me a lot of angst. So the way I dealt with it was, I was in this bubble, and we had a job to do within the bubble."

‘HORIZON’ STAR TRIED TO ‘GET SILLY’ TO PLAY ‘SNL’ ICON GILDA RADNER IN NEW FILM

Outside "the bubble" though, Curtin noticed a shift.

"You’d pass by people and they would shake," she told the outlet. "They had a physical reaction to you, because they could feel the energy behind what was happening at 30 Rock. And it was very, very exciting."

Curtin was one of the original performers when the show debuted in 1975, along with Dan Aykroyd, John Belushi, Chevy Chase, Garrett Morris, Laraine Newman, Gilda Radner, Michael O’Donoghue and George Coe.

She also recalled her audition, when she was put on the spot to be funny by the show’s producers.

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"I walked in the door," the 77-year-old said, "and they said, ‘OK, what have you prepared?’ The classic anxiety dream."

Luckily, she had some old material on hand in her purse, and her previous experience in theater, commercials and a Boston-area improv group called the Proposition.

She also admitted she struggled to fit in on the show.

"I was quiet and nobody paid any attention to me," she said. "I didn’t know how to pitch. I had never had to do that in my life." 

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However, Curtin added she wasn’t afraid of not being featured in some way, saying, "I figured, well, they hired me. They’re paying me. So it would be foolish of them not to use me."

Curtin stayed with the show until 1980, before going on to appear on series like "Kate & Allie," which earned her two Emmy awards for best lead actress in a comedy series, as well as "3rd Rock from the Sun" and "The Librarians."

WATCH: 'HORIZON' STAR ELLA HUNT ON TAKING ON THE ROLE OF 'SNL' ICON GILDA RADNER

In the upcoming film "Saturday Night," which chronicles the 90 minutes leading up to "SNL’s" debut broadcast, Curtin will be played by actress Kim Matula. The cast is rounded out by Gabriel La Belle as Lorne Michaels, Cory Michael Smith as Chevy Chase, Matt Wood as John Belushi, Ella Hunt as Gilda Radner, Dylan O’Brien as Dan Aykroyd, and recent Emmy-winner Lamorne Morris as Garrett Morris (no relation).



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'Heroes' save animals after land 'sacrificed' in floods

The owner of a smallholding believes her property was flooded because drainage pools for a nearby main road were not being properly managed.

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Sunday, September 29, 2024

Lionsgate's bold move into AI is about to change filmmaking forever

Though the buzz in Hollywood over artificial intelligence is old news, Lionsgate’s revolutionary move into AI is about to take the industry by storm. With AI being the cornerstone issue of both the writers’ and actors’ strikes in Hollywood in 2023, the industry is now witnessing how AI is being utilized in real time. 

Lionsgate will be partnering with Runaway, a creative technology company that specializes in AI, to integrate AI into its production process unlike any other studio has done before.

While other studios have begun to use AI in their process at various stages, this new partnership intends to integrate AI technology from pre-production to post-production.

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Lionsgate will be integrating Runaway’s generative AI models as well as other technological advancements into its creative process. Lionsgate believes that AI technology can help expedite traditional manual tasks, which would help give filmmakers the ability to focus on more inspired and innovative storytelling.

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Below are a few key integration points at each stage of the filmmaking process utilizing Runaway’s technology:

Though studios have already utilized AI in the past to generate realistic backgrounds and perform editing tasks, this will be the first time a studio has deeply integrated AI in all parts of its process. In addition to streamlining and reducing production timelines, there will be more visually stunning and engaging stories spun from AI-driven content.

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With this elaborate integration of AI, there is, of course, the fear that AI will take over or replace human talent. However, the recent collaboration between Lionsgate and Runway shows that it has actually been enhancing the process versus diminishing creativity. 

Instead of replacing their human counterparts, these technologies are being used as tools to help humans cut down on time for specific tasks, which allows them to focus on the joy of creating. It also enables more creative approaches at a lower cost.

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HOLLYWOOD HIJACKED: THE AI TAKEOVER OF TINSELTOWN’S FILMS TO FAKE OUT AMERICANS

The industry has been abuzz with reactions to this groundbreaking partnership. Michael Burns, vice chair of Lionsgate, emphasized that AI will be a tool for augmenting and enhancing the creative process rather than replacing it. Runway’s CEO, Cristóbal Valenzuela, echoed this sentiment, highlighting that the best stories are yet to be told with the aid of these new technologies. As Lionsgate pioneers this comprehensive integration of AI, other studios are likely to follow suit, potentially transforming the landscape of film and television production.

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Whether or not the industry is ready for AI-driven studios, Lionsgate’s partnership with Runaway is introducing a new frontier in Hollywood. The ability for individuals in every part of the filmmaking process to have more manual, time-consuming tasks assisted by or enhanced by AI is showing that instead of being a replacement for creativity, it is an enhancer of creativity. It remains to be seen how this integrated approach of AI technology in Hollywood will be a boon or a bust for all.

Have you played around with AI? Do you think AI will enhance or ruin movie magic? Let us know by writing us at Cyberguy.com/Contact

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Trump or Harris? In a crisis-hit world, diplomats resigned to either

Behind the scenes at the United Nations, insiders tell the BBC they don't see major change whoever wins the White House.

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Saturday, September 28, 2024

Keir Starmer received more clothes worth £16,000

Downing Street says the way the donations were initially declared has been changed.

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Arizona college student stabbed twice in random classroom attack

An Arizona State University student allegedly stabbed her peer twice in a classroom in Glendale on Sept. 19 in a seemingly random attack.

Maricopa County authorities charged Kaci Lenise-Charlie Sloan, 19, with first-degree attempted murder, aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and disorderly conduct with a weapon in connection with the attack against student Mara Daffron.

Daffron's neighbors created a GoFundMe for Daffron, saying she was "stabbed several times, but luckily, she is making great progress and is on the mend."

"We’d like our community to come together and support the Daffron family during this difficult time. These funds will go towards anything the family may need," a description for the GoFundMe page titled "Support Mara Daffron's Recovery Journey" states. "We know Mara will come out stronger than ever from this unimaginable attack."

INDIANA UNIVERSITY FRATERNITY BROTHER ACCUSED OF ATTACKING MULTIPLE FEMALE CLASSMATES IN ONE WEEK

Matthew McCormick, a student who witnessed the attack unfolding in their classroom, took swift action to stop the alleged stabbing, potentially saving Daffron's life, according to FOX 10 Phoenix.

"In that moment I didn't really have a thought going through my head I just knew that I felt compelled to do something," McCormick told the outlet.

FOX TRUE CRIME PODCAST WITH EMILY COMPAGNO: 'CRIMES ON CAMPUS'

Approximately 13 witnesses present during the attack, including a professor, recounted the incident to police, who wrote in a probable cause affidavit obtained by Fox News Digital that the stabbing occurred "without any provocation or any words spoken."

Police corroborated McCormick's account in their report, stating that one of the witnesses "was able to disarm the defendant by pulling the knife away from the defendant's right hand and threw it [sic] away from them." Another witness then "kicked the knife to the back of the classroom."

"Another witness described the defendant [sic] was sitting in the classroom at a desk and suddenly got up and ran at the victim as the victim entered the classroom and stabbed her multiple times," the affidavit states.

Detectives found a handwritten note inside Sloan’s backpack that apparently referenced an act she was "about to commit," but it did "not specifically state what she was referring to."

JEWISH TEEN'S ASSAULT IN MICHIGAN UNDER INVESTIGATION AS POSSIBLE ANTISEMITIC HATE CRIME: POLICE

Sloan also apparently expressed the desire to "hurt somebody" in class that day in an interview with detectives after the alleged attack and chose to target Daffron because she was "an easier target" than the other person she apparently considered attacking, whom she referred to as "a veteran."

Authorities quickly arrived on scene and transported Daffron to a nearby hospital, where she received treatment for her wounds.

"ASU Police continue to investigate a Sept. 19 on-campus stabbing of a student. Kaci Sloan was immediately detained and arrested on suspicion of first-degree attempted murder; aggravated assault with a deadly weapon; interfering with an educational institution; and disorderly conduct. She is being held on a $250,000 cash only bond," an ASU spokesperson told Fox News Digital in a statement.  "ASU and the entire ASU West Valley community are deeply saddened by what happened. ASU West Valley is a close-knit campus of students, faculty and staff. Counseling support is available to all."

Sloan has a preliminary hearing scheduled for Monday in Maicopa County.



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Friday, September 27, 2024

Man arrested over rail terror message hack

A man who works for the company which provides some wi-fi services has been arrested.

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Thursday, September 26, 2024

Could Latinos sway the US election?

The vote could highlight the political power of the country’s largest minority group

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Wednesday, September 25, 2024

Therapy ponies in special program bring boosts of joy and humor to those in need

Pint-sized ponies — as part of a therapy team — are visiting hospitals, schools and care homes, and providing therapeutic cuddles for those in need.

Owner Sarah Woodland, 42, received two mini Shetland ponies in the summer of 2022 from a friend, as SWNS, the British news service, reported. Poppy, 16, and Tinks, 17, stand just 30 inches tall and enjoy being fussed over, the outlet noted.

Woodland started doing private one-on-one enrichment sessions with the pair before deciding to visit a local care home with the animals to encourage residents to connect for a mental health boost. 

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The session went so well, Woodland decided to make them both therapy ponies.

Providing comfort and interaction for those who need it, she now takes the animals into special schools, hospitals and care homes.  

Woodland runs Dinky Ponies from Oxfordshire.

"It's the touch and the communication. Seeing and interacting with the ponies is a form of communication for people who may have difficulty talking," she told SWNS. 

"It's almost like a form of love and it gets people up and moving."

Before this venture, she worked in human resources in London, and spent years raising her two children, ages 15 and 10, with her husband, Nick, 50, a retired military veteran. 

As her children grew older, Woodland found herself with more time and a desire to reconnect with her love for horses, SWNS noted. 

HIT THE ROAD: NEW STUDY SUGGESTS TRAVEL COULD DELAY AGING, IMPROVE PHYSICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH 

She turned to freelance enrichment sessions before stumbling upon the idea of therapeutic pony visits.  

Demand for her one-to-one riding lessons dipped during the winter months, so she decided to try a different approach.

Said Woodland, "You'll find people say animals are their best friends and [these animals] have a sense of knowing who needs to be comforted — that's part of the reason I decided to set things up."

When she reached out to the first care home with her idea in the summer of 2022, the response was "overwhelming," she said. 

"From day one, it went absolute bonkers," she told SWNS. 

"It's totally taken off, and it’s lovely to see the amazing impact the animals have on people. I think it was partially the lingering effects of lockdowns when care homes had limited visitors — so the experience of having the animals in was even more valuable."

While Dinky Ponies still does the occasional party, Woodland said her focus has shifted primarily to therapy sessions. 

During a visit, people get to meet and stroke the horses.

It's the "profound, often unspoken connection between the ponies and the people they visit" that fuels her passion to keep doing it, Woodland said.

"Animals have a special way about them. It's lots of different things — it's the empathy and communication," she told SWNS. "I really do believe they have a sixth sense and an ability to know who needs extra attention."

During a recent visit, she said one care home resident was initially very skeptical of the ponies and had a table positioned protectively in front of him in bed.  

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Despite his reluctance, he agreed to meet Poppy — and gradually, his barriers dropped.

"It was really lovely to see it from start to finish. That's the effect the animals have on people," she said. 

Woodland has expanded and currently has seven ponies — each one with its niche.

Aside from the ponies Poppy and Tinks, she also has Abby, 13, Georgie, 12, Gracie, five, Charm, 12, and Evie, 15. 

She admitted, though, that Poppy is "the superstar."

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Woodland said, "She just has a natural way of relaxing people and falling asleep in people's laps!"

She'll choose which pony to take to specific events depending on the needs at each venue. 

When visiting a new facility, Woodland typically goes to the venue with one pony to assess the setup. 

The ponies usually work one day a week, which ensures they're not overburdened or over-petted.

Now, they're so accustomed to the visits that they are even able to travel up and down in elevators, enabling them to visit children's wards at hospitals, SWNS reported.

"I want to keep doing it for as long as I can as the ponies have such a positive impact on people," Woodland said, according to the outlet. 



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Biden struggles to contain conflict as Israel and Hezbollah on the brink

As the US president called for restraint in a speech at the UN, Israel's leader vowed to continue striking Hezbollah.

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Tuesday, September 24, 2024

Monday, September 23, 2024

Exclusive: Bestselling author Jack Carr shares excerpt from 'Beirut,' his new nonfiction book on terror

FIRST ON FOX: Editors' note: New York Times bestselling author and former U.S. Navy SEAL sniper Jack Carr has teamed up with Pulitzer Prize finalist James M. Scott for a series of nonfiction books that explore key terrorist events around the world that changed the course of history.  

The first book in the series, "Targeted: The 1983 Beirut Barracks Bombing," is published this week, on Sept. 24, 2024, by Atria Books/Emily Bestler Books, a division of Simon & Schuster — and readers of Fox News can catch an exclusive preview ahead of the official release. 

"Those who have read my James Reece ‘Terminal List’ series or who follow me on social media know the importance I place on history, particularly the history of warfare, terrorism, insurgencies, counterinsurgencies and special operations," Carr previously told Fox News Digital in an interview.

JACK CARR, BESTSELLING AUTHOR AND FORMER SEAL, ANNOUNCES NONFICTION SERIES, ‘TARGETED,’ ON TERROR EVENTS 

The terror attack on the Marine Corps barracks in Beirut in Oct. 1983 killed 241 U.S. military personnel, including 220 Marines, 18 sailors and three soldiers. Another suicide bombing just moments afterward killed 58 French paratroopers; six innocent Lebanese civilians were also killed. 

By special arrangement, here is an exclusive excerpt from the new book about the devastating attack — 41 years ago this fall — by Jack Carr and James M. Scott. It's already been deemed "required reading." 

The first light of dawn stretched across the Beirut sky at 5:24 a.m. that Sunday, Oct. 23, 1983.

Colonel Geraghty climbed out of his bunk a few minutes later, pulled on his uniform and boots, and washed his face with cold water. 

The Marine commander lived on the second deck of what had once been the airport’s firefighting school, a two-story concrete structure in the shadow of the much larger building that now housed the Battalion Landing Team headquarters. 

Geraghty walked downstairs to the Command Operations Center, where he checked in with the watch officer and thumbed through the latest communications. 

"Saturday night," he recalled, "had been, by Lebanese standards, relatively quiet."

The colonel stepped outside, where the morning temperature hovered around seventy-seven degrees. A few Marines returned from patrol while a handful of others prepared for physical training. It was almost tranquil. Reveille, which normally blared at 5:30 a.m., would sound at 6:30 a.m., giving troops an extra hour of shut-eye. 

"Sunday is my favorite day," Hudson once declared, "because I get to sleep as late as I want." Brunch would follow from 8 a.m. until 10 a.m., a treat that included omelets. 

The Navy Broadcasting Service planned a 1:55 p.m. showing of the Los Angeles Raiders versus the Washington Redskins — a game that had played live twenty-one days earlier — followed that evening by the 1960 Western "The Magnificent Seven," starring Yul Brenner and Steven McQueen. 

"Sunday was normally the day people could anticipate reading a book, writing a letter, or passing a football around," remembered Staff Sergeant Randy Gaddo. "Later in the afternoon, everyone would normally enjoy a cookout, featuring hamburgers and hot dogs with all the trimmings."

Gaddo was one of the few up early. Even though it was Sunday, the "Root Scoop" editor had eight rolls of film he wanted to develop in his photo lab up on the third floor of the Battalion Landing Team headquarters. 

The previous eight-page newspaper, which had landed among the troops just three days earlier, featured a roundup of the escalating sniper attacks against American forces, including the recent killing of Soifert and Ohler and the wounding of eight others. 

In the weekly "Chaplain’s Corner" column, Father George Pucciarelli drew from the Old Testament book of Ecclesiastes to offer comfort for the Marines in these dangerous times. 

"Life is dear," the priest reminded readers, "but eternal life is dearer."

Gaddo left his tent for the headquarters building, a route he had done so many times that he knew it took him just fifty-one seconds. Like Geraghty, he noted the quiet; absent was the normal soundtrack of artillery and gunfire. 

At the last moment, Gaddo decided to slow down. It was, after all, Sunday morning. Why rush? 

JACK CARR'S TAKE ON THE 1983 BEIRUT MARINE BARRACKS TERROR ATTACK: ‘OPENING SALVO IN A NEW WAR’ 

Besides, he could use a cup of coffee. He diverted to the Combat Operations Center, where he poured a mug of dark brew, sweetening it with a couple of scoops of sugar. Coffee in hand, he returned to his tent, where he sat at his small field desk and began to jot down notes. 

"The birds were singing louder than I’ve ever heard birds sing," Gaddo recalled. "It was like a symphony."

Lance Corporal Burnham Matthews had just returned from an all-night security patrol around the south side of the airport, where the Marines had fanned out along the perimeter to intercept anyone who might infiltrate the compound. 

The towering Texan climbed three flights of stairs and turned left toward the third-floor room he shared with five other Marines on the building’s north side, anxious to collapse on his cot. 

Once inside, Corporal Kenny Farnan, who was headed downstairs to shave, pointed to Burnham’s M16.

"Your rifle is filthy," he advised him. "You need to clean your rifle before you go to bed."

"Okay, Corporal," Matthews replied, sitting down at the wooden desk by the window, where he began to field-strip his M16, beginning with the rifle’s sling. 

Followed by the handguards. Then the bolt assembly.

In the room next door, Sergeant Pablo Arroyo was also up and cleaning his rifle. "You don’t know," the native Puerto Rican said, "what the day is going to bring."

Unlike Matthews and Arroyo, most of the 350 Marines, sailors, and soldiers crowded inside the towering Beirut Hilton still slumbered. The men dozing in military-issued sleeping bags came from a wide range of cultural and religious backgrounds. 

Troops hailed from big cities like New York, Philadelphia, and Dallas as well as small towns, from Michigan’s Fire Lake to Little Mountain, South Carolina, home to just 282 residents. 

Some had grown up on sprawling farms while others came from congested inner-city public housing projects. Education ranged from high school to medical school. 

The building, and the men dreaming in it, represented a cross-section of America. Traces of the men’s lives were captured in photographs of wives, girlfriends, and children taped to concrete walls and tucked inside worn wallets.

Chaplain Wheeler, who had baptized First Sergeant David Battle the day before, snoozed in his fourth-floor bunk in the northeast corner of the building. Steps away on the same floor, Hudson slept as he always did, with his right hand over his face, palm facing upward. 

Down on the second floor dozed Lance Corporal Emanuel Simmons, who had gone to bed the night before dressed in his boots and flak jacket. When he woke up in the middle of the night to use the head, he opted to strip down to just his long underwear. 

Up on the building’s roof, Corporal Joseph Martucci and others stretched out in sleeping bags, while five stories below in the building’s basement, Hospital Corpsman Third Class Don Howell resisted the urge to find a urinal as he tried to grab just a few more minutes of quiet atop a cot in the Battalion Aid Station. 

A late-night alert had sent Howell to the basement. After the all-clear, he had decided to remain where he was instead of hiking back up to his fourth-floor bunk. 

Throughout the building, many of the Marines, who disliked sleeping in uncomfortable dog tags, had slipped them off, depositing them on bedside tables, dangling them from the edge of their cots, or lacing them up in the front of their dusty boots.

Security that morning fell to a handful of guards stationed at seven outposts that encircled the compound. Lance Corporal Eddie DiFranco manned post six, one of two sandbagged positions that protected the south side of the building. 

Linkkila, recently promoted to a lance corporal, guarded neighboring post seven approximately forty feet away. A row of concertina wire divided the Marine compound from an adjacent airport parking lot, which was often used by delivery trucks and civilians, including kids who played soccer and families who occasionally picnicked

On the weekends, many Marines liked to strip off their shirts and toss the football alongside the barbed wire, hoping to impress the attractive Lebanese women who gathered on the opposite side. Dressed in helmets and flak vests, the Marines, who had been on duty since 4 a.m., carried night-vision goggles and M16s. 

JACK CARR'S TAKE ON THE 9/11 TERROR ATTACKS — INCLUDING ‘HOPE’ AND THE LESSONS FROM AFGHANISTAN

To prevent accidental discharges, Colonel Geraghty had ordered his men to keep their rifles unloaded.

It had been an uneventful morning for the guards. The only activity was the brief appearance of a lone stake-bed truck. It had entered the parking lot with its lights off around 5 a.m. 

The truck looked like a delivery vehicle and was a common sight in Beirut, particularly near the airport. It circled the lot and departed, continuing south down the perimeter road toward the terminal.

The guards relaxed.

Thirty more minutes passed. Then an hour.

Corporal Farnan emerged from the building. Dirty and sweaty after being out all night, he walked over to the water buffalo, a portable trailer where he could brush his teeth and shave. 

"That’s the first time," Farnan recalled, "that I ever left my rifle behind."

Shortly past 6:15 a.m., a second truck pulled into the lot, which the morning light revealed to be a yellow Mercedes. It appeared to be a similar vehicle, if not the same truck that had entered and then departed the lot an hour earlier. 

The truck turned west, paralleling the concertina wire, as the driver, like before, looped the lot. Unlike earlier, DiFranco heard the rev of the Mercedes’s engine as the operator shifted into a higher gear and increased speed. 

The driver then executed a sharp turn north and aimed his five-ton truck straight toward the wire barrier. Something felt wrong.

DiFranco rammed a magazine into his rifle and chambered a round as the truck crashed through the barbed wire, producing a popping noise that survivors would later tell investigators resembled gunfire. The Mercedes accelerated, charging across the 450 feet that separated the concertina wire from the building. 

JACK CARR'S TAKE ON TERRORISM IN THE SKIES ON JUNE 14, 1985: CREW WAS ‘NOTHING SHORT OF HEROIC’ 

Before DiFranco could shoulder his M16, the truck blew past him, the operator gripping the wheel with both hands. 

"I caught only a glimpse of the driver as he passed by," DiFranco wrote in a handwritten memo for investigators. "He was wearing a blue shirt and had the smile of a crazy person on his face when he looked at me."

In nearby post seven, Linkkila had only briefly served as a guard, his punishment for getting into a fight. His first sign of trouble came when the truck tore through the wire, but like DiFranco, he simply couldn’t load his rifle fast enough.

"I would have emptied the magazine into the truck," he later testified to Congress, "but there wasn’t any time."

Sergeant of the Guard Stephen Russell manned the building’s entrance in a plywood shack reminiscent of a ticket booth, though reinforced with a double wall of sandbags. 

The twenty-eight-year-old Massachusetts native, who had followed his two older brothers into the Marine Corps, had been on duty since 8 p.m. the night before. 

His M16 was propped against the wall of his guard shack. He wore a 1911A1 .45-caliber pistol on his web belt. Russell faced the inside of the building as he chatted with a fellow Marine who was about to head out for a jog when he heard the commotion behind him. 

He wheeled around as the truck threaded a path between guard posts six and seven and then swerved around several metal sewer pipes that had been strategically placed in an attempt to prevent just such an attack. 

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The Mercedes, now traveling in excess of thirty-five miles per hour, bore down on him.

"What is that truck doing inside the perimeter?" he thought.

Then he realized.

"Get the f--- outta here!" he hollered at the Marine next to him.

JACK CARR RECALLS GEN. EISENHOWER'S D-DAY MEMO ABOUT ‘GREAT AND NOBLE UNDERTAKING’

Russell served as the last line of an impossible defense — one man armed with a handgun standing between a terrorist in a five-ton truck bomb and hundreds of sleeping Marines and sailors. There was nothing he could do.

"Hit the deck!" Russell shouted as he charged out of his guardhouse and raced north across the building’s atrium. "Hit the deck!"

Farnan, who seconds earlier had washed his face, darted toward the building but instinctively stopped. "I just watched it go in," he remembered. "Went right in the lobby."

Russell looked back over his shoulder as he ran to see the Mercedes obliterate the guard shack and penetrate the building’s atrium, spraying sand across the floor of the lobby. The truck came to a sudden stop, snagged on the atrium’s overhang. Silence followed. One second turned to two. 

"Son of a b----," Russell said of the terrorist. "He did it."

The clock in the basement recorded the precise moment of detonation: 6:21:26 a.m.

The entire attack had taken just ten seconds.

The blast, which investigators later determined exceeded 12,000 tons of TNT, proved more than six times as powerful as the one used against the American Embassy in April. 

"The FBI Forensic Laboratory," a Pentagon report later noted, "described the bomb as the largest conventional blast ever seen by the explosive experts community." 

For those on the ground, the split-second detonation, which would kill and maim hundreds, proved unimaginable. 

"It was," as one survivor later recounted, "like every atom in the universe blew apart."

The destruction was immediate and catastrophic. The building’s open internal architecture, capped by a roof that functioned like the cork on a champagne bottle, trapped and magnified the devastating violence. The explosion blew out the bottom of the building, driving the concrete slab eight feet into the earth. 

At the same time, the blast tore the upper three floors off the concrete support columns, each with a fifteen-foot circumference and supported by 13⁄4-inch iron rebar. 

"The building," one report concluded, "then imploded upon itself and collapsed toward its weakest point — its sheared undergirding."

Up on the roof, Corporal Martucci, who had heard the initial furor far below, started to sit up in his sleeping bag just as the bomb exploded. 

"We saw the center of the roof actually lift, blow out," the corporal recalled. "We had wrapped ourselves in our sleeping bags; I guess it was instinct due to the noise, but we rode the roof down after that."

Sergeant Arroyo, cleaning his rifle on the third deck, heard what he thought was gunfire, a common sound in the Lebanese capital. 

"It’s Beirut," he said to himself. "That’s like a rooster croaking in Puerto Rico in the morning." 

Next door, Lance Corporal Matthews caught the commotion as he reassembled his M16. "There is something going on," Matthews hollered to another Marine in his room. "Wake everybody up."

Matthews never heard the bomb’s explosion, but he saw a bright orange flash as the escaping rush of pressure tore the door off its hinges, lifted him out of his chair, and hurtled him through the window. Matthews flipped over once in the air and then landed on his feet three stories below, where he collapsed and rolled to a stop. 

He climbed back up onto his feet. "I turned around and looked," Matthews remembered, "and the building was gone."

Matthews was one of the lucky ones.

The explosion had thrown him clear of the building, where, like an accordion, the fourth floor had collapsed upon the third, followed by the second, and then the ground floor. 

Corporal Farnan was one of the few to witness the building’s disintegration. The blast pressure had ripped his shirt off, knocked the wind out of him, and tossed him against a nearby curb. 

He struggled to breathe as concrete fragments rained down on him and a cloud of dust rose into the sky. 

"I was in the eye of a hurricane," Farnan said. "I can’t believe I wasn’t killed." 

Hundreds of Marines and sailors lay buried beneath the rubble of a building that seconds earlier had been their home. 

Many were dead, crushed under tons of pancaked concrete and rebar — men who had gone to sleep, never to wake up.

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Others, however, had survived, trapped beneath cots, desks, and toppled walls that for the moment shielded them from the onerous weight of the wreckage.

Hospital Corpsman Don Howell, on a cot in the basement, heard what sounded like the roar of a freight train as the building came down on top of him. 

A piece of concrete struck him in the right eye. 

"It felt like a boulder," he said. "That’s when I turned around and tried to cover my head." 

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Lance Corporal Simmons, who had been asleep on the second floor, struggled to understand what happened. 

"I never heard the blast, never felt myself falling," he said. "I couldn’t see anything and all I felt was dirt." 

Chaplain Wheeler, who had been asleep on the fourth floor, experienced the same. 

"I didn’t hear anything," he remembered. "Next thing I knew, I woke up below the floor and below the debris — buried. That’s when I first realized things weren’t right. I was pinned. I couldn’t move. I didn’t know what happened."

The clock now ticked on their survival.

Excerpted from "Targeted: Beirut: The 1983 Marine Barracks Bombing and the Untold Origin Story of the War on Terror" by Jack Carr and James M. Scott, published by Emily Bestler Books/Atria, an imprint of Simon & Schuster. Copyright © by Rainsford Consulting LLC. All rights reserved. By special arrangement. 



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Swearing punishment could speed up F1 exit - Verstappen

Max Verstappen says issues such as his punishment for swearing may "decide my future" and are "really tiring".

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Sunday, September 22, 2024

Sneaky scammers drain bank account in sinister phone phishing scheme

We often receive text alerts from our banks about potential fraudulent transactions. 

While these notifications are meant to protect us, they can sometimes be exploited by savvy thieves. 

Here's a real-life example shared by Kevin from Dandridge, Tennessee, who wanted to let others know about these sneaky tactics so that they could protect themselves against these heartless scammers.

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Kevin shared a troubling experience where his wife received a text from their debit card bank questioning a potential fraudulent charge. This wasn’t unusual, as they had received similar notifications before and had to replace their cards. She responded with "NO," indicating that the transaction wasn’t theirs.

Shortly after, she received a phone call from what she thought was the bank. However, the call was from the thieves, who cleverly posed as bank representatives. They didn’t ask for account numbers or passwords but instead requested the answer to a "secret question" that was legitimately set up when the account was created.

Once the thieves had this information, they shut off notifications, transferred funds between accounts, set up an ACH transfer and withdrew most of the funds. Fortunately, Kevin’s wife checked their accounts daily and quickly noticed the suspicious activity.

They filed a report with the Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) and a local police report. The IC3 is a partnership between the FBI and the National White Collar Crime Center, providing a way for individuals to report cyber crimes, including online fraud and identity theft. The bank’s fraud department was able to retrieve the funds from the receiving bank. However, the experience was time-consuming and stressful.

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BEWARE OF THIS NEW ANDROID MALWARE THAT EMPTIES YOUR BANK ACCOUNT AND CLEARS YOUR DEVICE COMPLETELY

Scammers often ask for the answers to secret questions because these answers can provide them with a crucial piece of information needed to access your accounts. Secret questions are typically used as an additional layer of security for account recovery or verification processes. By obtaining this information, scammers can bypass other security measures and gain unauthorized access to your accounts. Kevin’s experience highlights why scammers target secret questions:

Exploiting trust: Scammers often pose as legitimate representatives from your bank or other trusted institutions. By asking for the answer to a secret question, they exploit your trust and the perceived legitimacy of the request. Kevin’s wife thought she was speaking with the bank when, in reality, she was talking to the thieves who had cleverly mimicked the bank’s procedures.

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Bypassing security measures: Once scammers have the answer to a secret question, they can use it to reset your password or verify your identity, effectively bypassing other security measures that are in place to protect your account. This is exactly what happened to Kevin’s wife; the scammers used the answer to the secret question to shut off notifications, transfer funds and set up an ACH transfer.

Easier to guess or find: Unlike passwords, which are often complex and unique, the answers to secret questions can sometimes be easily guessed or found through social engineering. For example, common questions like "What is your mother’s maiden name?" or "What was the name of your first pet?" might be discoverable through social media or public records. In Kevin’s case, the scammers cleverly posed as bank representatives and asked for the answer to a secret question that was legitimately set up when the account was created.

Understanding why scammers ask for secret questions can help you be more cautious and protect your sensitive information. Always be wary of unsolicited requests for personal information, and verify the legitimacy of the request through official channels. Kevin’s story serves as a powerful reminder to stay vigilant and protect your financial security.

WORLD’S LARGEST STOLEN PASSWORD DATABASE UPLOADED TO CRIMINAL FORUM

Protecting yourself from fraud requires vigilance and proactive measures. Here are 11 essential tips to help you stay safe:

1. Verify text notifications: Use your bank’s official app or website to verify any text notifications you receive. This ensures that you’re interacting with a legitimate source and not a scammer. If in doubt, contact your bank directly using the phone number listed on their official website. If you can, it would be ideal to have a trusted contact at your bank whom you can call to confirm any text notifications you receive. This ensures that you’re speaking with a legitimate representative.

2. Never share secret answers: Never give out the answer to your secret question over the phone in a call you didn't initiate, even if the caller seems legitimate. If you contact a bank call center, these questions are needed to authenticate your identity.

3. Hang up the phone and call the number of your bank from the back of your debit card or get your bank’s number from the bank’s official website.  If you're thinking of Googling the phone number you're seeing on your phone display, think twice as scammers easily spoof the legitimate phone numbers of banks.

4. Turn on notifications on your bank app. Most banks will send a notice when any alerts are turned off or information is changed.

5. Regular account monitoring: Make it a habit to check your bank accounts daily. Early detection of suspicious activity can prevent significant losses.

6. Report suspicious activity: If you suspect fraud, report it immediately to your bank and local authorities. Quick action can help mitigate the damage.

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7. Enable two-factor authentication (2FA): Whenever possible, enable 2FA on your bank accounts and other sensitive online accounts. This adds an extra layer of security by requiring a second form of verification, such as a code sent to your phone.

8. Use strong, unique passwords: Ensure that your passwords are strong and unique for each account. Avoid using easily guessable information like birthdays or common words. Consider using a password manager to keep track of your passwords securely.

9. Be cautious with public Wi-Fi: Avoid accessing your bank accounts or conducting sensitive transactions over public Wi-Fi networks. These networks can be less secure and more susceptible to hacking.

10. Regularly update your software: Keep your devices and apps updated with the latest security patches. This helps protect against vulnerabilities that could be exploited by cybercriminals.

11. Have strong antivirus software: The best way to safeguard yourself from malicious links that install malware, potentially accessing your private information, is to have antivirus software installed on all your devices. This protection can also alert you to phishing emails and ransomware scams, keeping your personal information and digital assets safe. Get my picks for the best 2024 antivirus protection winners for your Windows, Mac, Android and iOS devices.

12. Remove your personal information from the internet: To reduce your online presence, consider using a data removal service. While no service can guarantee the complete removal of your data from the internet, a data removal service is really a smart choice. They aren’t cheap — and neither is your privacy. These services do all the work for you by actively monitoring and systematically erasing your personal information from hundreds of websites.  

It’s what gives me peace of mind and has proven to be the most effective way to erase your personal data from the internet. By limiting the information available, you reduce the risk of scammers cross-referencing data from breaches with the information they might find on the dark web, making it harder for them to target you. Check out my top picks for data removal services here.

HOW TO PROTECT YOUR CREDIT AND BANK CARDS FROM GETTING HACKED

Kevin’s story is a reminder of how vigilant we need to be in protecting our financial information. Thieves are becoming increasingly sophisticated, and it’s crucial to stay one step ahead. By following the tips outlined above, you can significantly reduce your risk of falling victim to these banking scams. Remember, staying informed and proactive is your best defense against this kind of fraud.

Have you ever experienced a close call with a scam? What did you learn from that experience? Let us know by writing us at Cyberguy.com/Contact

For more of my tech tips and security alerts, subscribe to my free CyberGuy Report Newsletter by heading to Cyberguy.com/Newsletter

Ask Kurt a question or let us know what stories you'd like us to cover.

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Saturday, September 21, 2024

'Surprising': Gun ownership on the rise among liberals according to a new report

The Wall Street Journal reported this week that more and more liberals are buying guns, calling it a "surprising" trend among a group of voters that typically support restrictions.

For a piece published Thursday, the outlet looked at new gun ownership data and spoke to experts and several Democratic gun owners to understand what’s behind this trend.

"American gun culture has long been dominated by conservative, White men. Now, in a marked change, a burgeoning number of liberals are buying firearms, according to surveys and fast-growing gun groups drawing minorities and progressives," The Wall Street Journal reported.

HARRIS SHIFTS KEY POSITIONS ON BORDER, ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION AS CAMPAIGN PROMISES 'PRAGMATIC' APPROACH

The piece opened with the example of lifelong Democrat and gun restriction supporter Michael Ciemnoczolowski, who recently bought his first firearm.

Ciemnoczolowski, a liquor store clerk in Iowa City, Iowa told the journal that he bought the weapon because he’s worried about "street crime, armed right-wing extremists" and voiced his fear of U.S. politics getting worse.

"Domestic politics have grown increasingly acrimonious," he told the media outlet. 

The Journal noted that Democrats have historically been gun owners, but started trending away from having firearms in the "early 90s" when "increasingly divisive political battles over the role of firearms in American society led the Democratic Party to become an advocate for gun regulation. Republicans became the party of gun rights."

Now they are "rediscovering guns," the piece noted, citing statistics showing that Democratic gun ownership is on the rise from record lows.

"Twenty-nine percent of Democrats or those leaning Democrat said they had a gun at home in 2022, up from a four-decade low of 22% in 2010," the report said, citing a survey conducted by the University of Chicago’s NORC research group. 

According to another set of numbers from the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Solutions, of all the Democratic voters who bought guns after 2020, "more than half were first-time owners," the piece stated.

Lewis and Clark College anthropology professor Jennifer Hubbert told the Journal, "It’s a group of people who five years ago would never have considered buying a gun." 

The rise in gun ownership among liberals may be why Democratic presidential candidate Vice President Kamala Harris now bills herself as a gun owner, where she used to talk about supporting mandatory gun buyback programs in 2019. 

VOTER SLAMS HARRIS FOR 'RACE BAITING' AND 'FEAR MONGERING' DURING DEBATE

During the latest presidential debate, she touted how herself and her running mate Gov. Tim Walz, D-Minn., are both gun owners.

And in a campaign event with Oprah Winfrey Thursday, Harris told the media mogul, "If somebody breaks into my house, they're getting shot." 

The piece also described how this swath of liberal gun owners is "much more diverse" than it was in the 90s, stating, "Four decades ago, Democratic gun owners were typically White men, including auto or steel union workers who grew up hunting."

"Gun dealers saw the largest increase in Black Americans buying guns compared with any other racial group in 2023, according to the National Shooting Sports Foundation, an industry group," the report stated, noting that women comprised half of new liberal gun owners between 2019 and 2021. 

The outlet spoke to pro-gun liberal Tom Nguyen, a Los Angeles resident who founded a pro-gun group for liberals on Facebook in 2020 because many of them were worried about that year’s unrest regarding the pandemic and presidential election. 

"People were hungering for a space that was not this hyperaggressive, male-dominated, toxic gun world," Nguyen said, adding that he instructs 300 people a year on how to handle firearms. 

Alejandra Mendez, a gay woman who takes Nguyen’s class, told the Journal she gets criticism from her fellow liberals for owning four firearms. "I don’t understand that rhetoric of ‘protect my right’ and not protect the rights of other people," she said, arguing that she has the right to own guns, just like they have the right to free speech.

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The Journal also got a quote from former President Jimmy Carter’s grandson, Jason Carter, a former Georgia state senator and hunter who spoke at the Democratic National Convention last month about finding middle ground in America on the gun issue.

He told the Journal, "There are more people saying, ‘Let’s look for middle ground. Let’s work to respect Second Amendment rights, but let’s figure out ways to make us safer."



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Tornado in Hampshire damages properties and blows over trees

Footage of the tornado in Aldershot was captured on residents' doorbell cameras.

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Friday, September 20, 2024

'Three's Company' star says show has 'lifelong fans' because it provided 'safe haven' from 'oppressive' times

Although it's been 40 years since the finale of "Three's Company" aired on ABC, the show remains relevant in popular culture, with the antics of three single roommates all living under the same roof still resonating for its joy, humor and innovation.

Although many of the show's stars have passed, one of the leads is speaking out about why she thinks the series has seen such success.

"The most dear, precious, tender – and utterly unexpected – experiences that have come from working in ‘Three’s Company’ are the many, many adults who have told me that ‘Three’s Company’ was a safe haven they could count on during their teen years – for some, the only safe haven," Joyce DeWitt, who played Janet Wood, told US Weekly.

SUZANNE SOMERS WANTS A 'THREE'S COMPANY' REBOOT WITH A JOHN RITTER HOLOGRAM, LATE ACTOR'S SON

Although the show aired its final episode in September 1984, DeWitt says over the past four decades she's received "countless letters" and had "spontaneous conversations" with fans, all of whom she believes found "comfort" in the sitcom.

"It was a ‘time out’ from the oppressive, challenging, difficult circumstances they were navigating in their young lives," DeWitt explained of why fans enjoyed the program. "And, oh by the way, they say the characters also did stupid, crazy stuff that made them laugh. But it was the love, trust and support of the characters, one to the other, that made them lifelong fans."

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DeWitt gave an example of a particular interaction that reinforced this: a fan told her the show "was a family."

"That as an actor you could be part of such an impact or presence in a young person’s life when all you were doing was trying to make people laugh, that feedback is a blessing unimaginable!" she stated. The shenanigans portrayed by DeWitt and co-stars John Ritter and Suzanne Somers (for four seasons) and later, Priscilla Barnes, lived on television from 1977-1984.

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DeWitt spoke fondly of her costars who have died. Somers, who passed away in 2023 from breast cancer, was, DeWitt said, "absolutely wonderful," and Ritter, who passed away in 2003 during heart surgery, was "a true gift."

"I think I would not be chastised by my friends and fellow cast members in speaking for all of us in saying that working with John was a gift," she shared. "An adventure and a gift, a true gift."

But DeWitt did have one qualm with her hit show, how her character rode off into the sunset. "I was a bit offended when it was time to retire the show that they chose to ‘marry her off’ as the path forward for that character," DeWitt admitted. "I would have sent her to law school or medical school or to the Peace Corps."



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Best shots from Head's 'excellent' 154 as Australia win first ODI

Watch the best shots from Travis Head's unbeaten 154 as Australia beat England by seven wickets at Trent Bridge in the first ODI.

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Thursday, September 19, 2024

CBS reporter finds only 3 Harris supporters in 3 Nevada restaurants: 'People are really excited about Trump'

After visiting three different restaurants in Nevada, CBS correspondent Adrianna Diaz admitted she could only find three people planning to vote for Vice President Kamala Harris, while the rest were "really excited" about former President Trump.

Diaz toured restaurants in Reno, North Las Vegas and Pahrump as part of a "3 Meals" segment on "CBS Mornings" where reporters visit battleground states to gauge public opinion. 

Though a Republican has not won Nevada since 2004, co-host Tony Dokoupil reported the state remains in a statistical tie between Harris and Trump. Diaz surprised the show’s hosts on Monday by revealing she found it hard to find Harris supporters.

"What was really incredible is, in every single restaurant, of the people willing to talk to us, we could only find one Harris supporter in every restaurant — and we left no stone unturned. I approached every single person, except for this one guy... But people are really excited about Trump," Diaz said.

KAMALA HARRIS IN 'DANGER ZONE' IN SWING STATES SAYS CNN DATA REPORTER: NATIONAL POLLS 'DON'T MATTER'

In Pahrump, married couple Leanne and Stephen Schaefer openly expressed their support for Trump and their concern for the country.

"I want someone who’s strong, who demands respect and gets the respect and can deal with foreign leaders. I think Trump’s the guy," Leanne said.

Stephen added, "I tell ya, I’ve never owned a gun in my life, and I own four of them now. I fear for our country."

Another group of women explained their frustrations with the economy, linking it to the current administration.

"Everything has gone up. Everybody feels it at the grocery store, at the gas pumps. And yes, I do attribute that to [President] Biden," one woman said.

Another added, "I think they think if they keep throwing money at it, it will fix the problem. It's the same as an old house, 'Oh, let's just keep fixing it.' Sometimes the solution is to tear it down and rebuild."

Only one first-time male voter in the restaurant expressed support for Harris as potentially the first Asian-American president.

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Though Diaz described Pahrump as a deep red area in Nevada, the sentiment continued in Reno and Las Vegas.

In Reno, a table of women supporting Trump said their greatest concern was the border.

"Illegals. They got to go," Trump supporter Debra Canestrini said.

When Diaz said many of them were seeking asylum, Canestrini responded, "Baloney. They're coming here for the freebies." 

Another woman, Tomoko Rogers, added, "When people talk about immigration, they're thinking we're saying that we don't want immigrants of any kind, and that's not what we are saying. People are saying that there are people who have come here legally — why do they get pushed aside to allow people who have not even worked one day in our country, have not paid into the system?"

By contrast, Ken Lasker, a Harris Reno voter, was more concerned about democracy. 

"We’ve had a democracy for 250 years. I think that it’s clearly being threatened now by Trump and the Republican Party," Lasker said.

In Las Vegas, voters discussed their opinions on the economy.

Harris supporter Joey Herbert said, "For me, it’s been the economy. And that’s what I really like about the current administration. There’s been nothing but job growth."

However, Francisco Barres, who owns a taco truck, remarked, "Tacos used to be, what? A dollar, $1.50? After the pandemic, they don't go under $3.50 or $4 because the meat’s expensive."

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A CNN poll earlier this month found Harris leading Trump 48% to 47%, but with a margin of error of 4.9%.



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Pager and Walkie-Talkie Explosions in Lebanon

And a row over Sue Gray's pay.

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Wednesday, September 18, 2024

Top House committee ramps up pressure to obtain 'important' docs on Harris' role in border crisis

FIRST ON FOX: A top House committee is doubling down on its efforts to get documents from the Biden administration about Vice President Kamala Harris’ role in what lawmakers call "the worst border crisis in American history."

House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer, R-Ky., wrote to acting Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Commissioner Troy Miller following up on a request last month for documents and communications between Harris’ office and CBP.

"It is important the Committee and the American people understand Vice President Harris’s role as the border czar in the ongoing border crisis," Comer said in the letter obtained by Fox News Digital.

TOP HOUSE COMMITTEE DEMANDS INTERNAL DOCS ON HARRIS' ROLE IN BORDER CRISIS: ‘ABJECT FAILURE’
 

"The mass illegal entry and release of illegal aliens into the United States under the Biden-Harris Administration has contributed to murders, sexual assaults, and serious bodily injuries committed against numerous Americans at the hands of illegal aliens. These crimes should have never happened."

The letter notes a number of crimes more recently committed allegedly by illegal immigrants, including one by an MS-13 gang member and a rape in New York City, allegedly by two migrants.

Comer says the committee set an Aug 20., deadline, reiterating the request on Aug. 20 and Sept. 6. It now sets a deadline of Oct. 1 and Comer threatens additional action if the request is not met.

TRUMP REVEALS NEW PLEDGE AMID HAITIAN REFUGEE CONTROVERSY: ‘I WILL SAVE OUR CITIES’ 

"If CBP continues to withhold documents and communications on this matter, the Committee will consider alternative measures to obtain this information, including through the compulsory process," he says.

The fight over the documents comes amid an ongoing debate about who is responsible for the border crisis and which presidential candidate is best suited to fix it. Republicans have blamed the crisis on the policies of the Biden-Harris administration, saying that the historic three-year crisis came as a direct result of the rolling back of Trump-era policies and the implementation of what they say are "open borders" policies by the administration.

They have focused on Harris due to her role tackling "root causes" of migration, which she was given in 2021. It led to her being dubbed the "border czar," but it’s a title the White House rejected.

The Biden administration has argued it is dealing with a historic hemisphere-wide crisis that needs more funding and immigration reform from Congress to fix a "broken" system. It has pointed to a sharp decrease in numbers since Biden signed an executive order limiting arrivals in June.

Officials say there has been a more than 50% decrease in encounters since then, including August encounters that were 68% lower than August 2023.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE COVERAGE OF THE BORDER SECURITY CRISIS

Harris, meanwhile, has been critical of former President Trump for not supporting bipartisan legislation introduced earlier this year that conservatives said would regularize high numbers, but supporters said would increase funding to the border and limit entries into the U.S.

"Last year, Joe and I brought together Democrats and conservative Republicans to write the strongest border bill in decades. The Border Patrol endorsed it. But Donald Trump believes a border deal would hurt his campaign, so he ordered his allies in Congress to kill the deal. Well, I refuse to play politics with our security, and here is my pledge to you: As president, I will bring back the bipartisan border security bill that he killed, and I will sign it into law," she said at the Democratic National Convention last month.

On Tuesday, a spokesperson for the vice president said Republicans "continue to block a bipartisan border security bill supported by the Biden-Harris Administration and a bipartisan group of Senators."

"This Administration has delivered record border security funding, and continues to fight to ensure the border is properly resourced, including by deploying cutting-edge fentanyl-detection machines. The Administration’s executive actions have brought unauthorized crossings to a lower level than when Trump left office," spokesperson Ernesto Apreza told Fox News Digital. "President Biden and Vice President Harris are leading on border security solutions while congressional Republicans continue to exploit the issue to score political points."



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Liverpool fan in Italy for match dies in crash

Philip Dooley, 51, died after he was hit by a vehicle in Bergamo, where he had gone to watch the team.

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Tuesday, September 17, 2024

Jane’s Addiction cancels tour after Dave Navarro, Perry Farrell’s onstage fight

After a weekend fight on stage between the band’s frontman Perry Farrell and guitarist Dave Navarro, Jane’s Addiction has officially canceled the remainder of their tour.

They announced the news in a statement on X.

"To all the fans, The band have made the difficult decision to take some time away as a group," the statement read. "As such, they will be canceling the remainder of the tour."

Fans were directed to seek refunds from their point of purchase or whatever ticketing site they used.

JANE'S ADDICTION'S PERRY FARRELL PUNCHES GUITARIST DAVE NAVARRO ONSTAGE, SHUTTING DOWN CONCERT

Navarro also posted a statement on his Instagram addressing the cancellation.

"Due to a continuing pattern of behavior and the mental health difficulties of our singer Perry Farrell, we have come to the conclusion that we have no choice but to discontinue the current US tour," he wrote.

"Our concern for his personal health and safety as well as our own has left us no alternative. We hope that he will find the help he needs," he continued.

Navarro concluded his comments, writing, "We deeply regret that we are not able to come through for all our fans who have already bought tickets. We can see no solution that would either ensure a safe environment on stage or reliably allow us to deliver a great performance on a nightly basis."

OASIS REUNION ENDS 15-YEAR FEUD FOLLOWING NASTY BACKSTAGE FIGHT: ‘GUNS HAVE FALLEN SILENT’

He signed the message, "Our hearts are broken," with his and fellow bandmates Eric Avery and Stephen Perkins’ names.

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A source told Fox News Digital that "Perry is heartbroken at his actions. He realizes that he waited too long to prioritize his well-being. His exhaustion and the toll it has taken on both his physical and mental health has gone too far." 

They added, "He had the best of intentions heading out on tour with the band and feels like he’s let his fans and family down."

Last Friday, a fan captured video showing Farrell throwing a punch at Navarro on stage during their show in Boston.

Farrell, 65, lunged his body in a forceful manner toward Navarro, 57. The guitarist appeared to place his hands on the frontman’s chest in an apparent bid to stop him from moving forward. 

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During the tense encounter, Farrell appeared to be yelling at Navarro until he threw a punch at the guitarist. 

Security guards quickly broke up the fight and told Farrell to "stop," while they held him down to prevent further attacks on the guitarist. Navarro grabbed Farrell’s arm, and he was enraged, as he attempted to attack the guitarist again. 

The venue went dark during the incident and the show abruptly ended.

In a statement to Fox News Digital, Farrell said, "This weekend has been incredibly difficult and after having the time and space to reflect, it is only right that I apologize to my bandmates, especially Dave Navarro, fans, family and friends for my actions during Friday’s show. Unfortunately, my breaking point resulted in inexcusable behavior, and I take full accountability for how I chose to handle the situation."  

Farrell’s wife, Etty Lau, also spoke out about the altercation on her social media the next morning and explained the events that unfolded. 

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"Clearly there had been a lot of tension and animosity between the members... the magic that made the band so dynamic. Well, the dynamite was lit. Perry got up in Dave’s face and body checked him," she explained on Instagram.

Lau added that the fight stemmed from Perry’s patience wearing thin, as his health wasn’t in the best condition ahead of the band's performance, saying he had been "suffering from tinnitus and a sore throat every night. But when the audience in the first row, started complaining up to Perry, cussing at him that the band was [playing] too loud and that they couldn’t hear him, Perry lost it."

She also wrote the Eric Avery, the founding bass guitarist and co-songwriter of Jane’s Addiction, "won the fight" after putting Farrell "in a headlock" and punching him three times.

"Perry was a crazed beast for the next half an hour – he finally did not calm down, but did breakdown and cried and cried."

After the Friday incident, Jane’s Addiction canceled their show in Bridgeport, Connecticut. 

"We want to extend a heartfelt apology to our fans for the events that unfolded last night," the band wrote in a statement shared on their Instagram story. "As a result we will be canceling tomorrow night's show in Bridgeport."

Before announcing the entire tour was canceled, they were scheduled to perform in Toronto on Wednesday.

Fox News Digital's Stephanie Giang-Paunon and Caroline Thayer contributed to this report.



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Women dominate 2024 Booker Prize shortlist

Five out of the six authors short-listed are women, including Anne Michaels and Rachel Kushner.

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Monday, September 16, 2024

Vance slams Harris focus on calling Springfield, Ohio, residents 'racist' instead of 'undoing her open border'

Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, said Vice President Harris is more focused on calling the residents of Springfield, Ohio, "racist" than "undoing her open border." 

While making the rounds on CNN, NBC and CBS Sunday morning shows, Vance was confronted about recent controversy in Springfield, where residents have been pointing to an uptick in crime, mayhem and car crashes due to the massive influx of roughly 20,000 Haitian immigrants since the COVID-19 pandemic into a small town of approximately 58,000 people. 

Residents at city council meetings have alleged that Haitians are killing and eating ducks and geese in parks, as well as pet cats and dogs, unverified allegations that Vance has referenced on social media and former President Trump repeated during the Philadelphia presidential debate last week. 

"I trust my constituents more than I do the American media that has shown no interest in what's happened in Springfield until we started sharing cat memes on the Internet, which is disgraceful that the American media ignored this town," Vance told NBC "Meet the Press" host Kristen Welker. "And that's the most important part, Kamala Harris' open border, Kristen, has led to skyrocketing housing costs in Springfield, rising rates of crime, rising rates of communicable diseases. They have dropped 20,000 immigrants into a town of 40,000, and it's caused a host of social problems."

Welker cited officials in Springfield and Dayton, Ohio, as claiming there is "no evidence" of immigrants eating park animals or pets, and noted recent threats of violence forcing closures in Springfield. The NBC host also quoted Vance's past comments from 2016 accusing Trump of making "people I care about" afraid. 

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"This week in Springfield, buildings were closed because of bomb threats. Haitian immigrants say they are afraid for their lives. Are you not doing the very thing you once called reprehensible, Senator?" Welker asked.

"First of all, Kristen, we condemn all acts of violence and all threats of violence. But, Kristen, the reason that I changed my mind on Donald Trump is actually perfectly highlighted by what's going on in Springfield, because the media and the Kamala Harris campaign, they've been calling the residents of Springfield racist," Vance said. "They've been lying about them. They've been saying that they make up these reports of migrants eating geese. And they completely ignored the public health disaster that is unfolding in Springfield at this very minute." 

"Donald Trump is the only person who brought Springfield to national attention and is the only president who's going to fight for the residents, not just their right to live safely in their communities, but for their right to complain about what's going on in their own community," Vance added. "I think it's disgraceful that Kamala Harris has heard these complaints, has decided to call people racist instead of actually trying to make their lives better by undoing her open border." 

"We don't blame the Haitian migrants for coming to Springfield," he said. "We blame Kamala Harris for opening the American southern border and inviting 20,000 people to get dropped in a small Ohio town." 

Fox News Digital reached out to the Harris campaign for comment but did not immediately hear back. 

During a heated exchange on CNN's "State of the Union," Vance said he would "fact check" host Dana Bash for failing to clarify how the Haitians were in the United States "legally." 

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"You said that all of these migrants are in the country legally. They are in the country through what's called temporary protective status. That is when Kamala Harris waved a magic amnesty wand, taking people and giving them legal status," Vance said. "That is not to say that they're here legally. That is a terrible indictment of her amnesty policies that have further opened the border." 

In June, the Biden-Harris administration announced that about 300,000 Haitians already in the United States will now be eligible for temporary legal status allowing them to remain in the U.S. and work because Homeland Security said conditions in the strife-torn Caribbean nation are considered unsafe for them to return. The decision marks a major expansion of Temporary Protected Status for Haitians who were in the United States on June 3 and will last until Feb. 3, 2026. Anyone arriving after June 3 would not qualify. DHS also extended the Temporary Protected Status of an estimated 200,000 Haitians who already had it.

On CBS' "Face the Nation," Vance also brought up the subject of temporary protected status when asked by host Margaret Brennan if he would work to get Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine federal assistance. 

"The most important thing that we can do to assist Gov. DeWine and the whole state of Ohio, and frankly, the whole country, Margaret, is to stop Kamala Harris' open border. And for two years, I've been fighting for policies that do exactly that. You have to ask yourself, why have these 20,000 Haitian migrants been dropped into a small Ohio town in just a few years, Margaret?" Vance said. 

"And the answer is because Kamala Harris implemented what's called temporary protective service for over 100,000 Haitian migrants. She basically, with a magic wand, granted amnesty to thousands of people who shouldn't have been in this country, and now a small Ohio town is dealing with the consequences," the senator continued. "And to anybody listening, Margaret, this is what Kamala Harris wants to do to every town in this country. Overwhelm them with migration, stress their municipal budgets, see communicable diseases on the rise. What is happening in Springfield is coming to every town and city in this country if Kamala Harris's open border policies are allowed to continue. We've got to stop this. American citizens are suffering because of what she's done."

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 



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Before breaking the WNBA's single-season assist record Friday night, Caitlin Clark was called for her sixth technical foul of the year.

It came in the opening minutes when she knocked Las Vegas guard Tiffany Hayes to the hardwood while defending. When Clark heard the whistle, she slammed her hands on one of the basket supports, which made it a technical foul. 

With six technical fouls on the year, Clark is just one away from a suspension. Clark is tied for second in the league in technical fouls with Mercury guards Diana Taurasi and Kahleah Copper. Mercury guard Natasha Cloud leads the league with seven and has been suspended for a game already this season.

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The Fever have two games left, against the Dallas Wings and Washington Mystics. If refs call a technical foul on Clark in either, she'll be assessed a one-game suspension. However, a technical won't cause her to miss a playoff game because the WNBA's technical foul counter resets for players once the postseason begins. She could end up having to serve that suspension in the first game next season if she is called for a technical in either of the last two games. 

Clark criticized the referees for calling the foul on her record-breaking night in a postgame press conference. Clark admitted she has tried to appeal past technical fouls, but the league hasn't granted her any exceptions. 

"They're never going to overturn that," Clark said. "It's just one of the rules, I guess, of the game. So, it's in the rule book. It is what it is. That's why I tried to get my last one taken away. They just don't take it away." 

Clark also questioned the validity of previous technical fouls called against her by WNBA referees this year. She specifically pointed to her most recent technical against the Minnesota Lynx Sept. 6 and another where she was called for slapping the basket support. 

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"And it stinks because I feel like half of my technicals this year, I got one for that inadvertent contact to the face in the Minnesota game and then two for hitting the stanchion of the basket," Clark said. "One was a complete accident, and then the other two were just a little frustration with myself. So, I think I could have done a better job keeping my emotions in check, but at the same time, like, … really?" 

Fever coach Christie Sides did not question the refs in her press conference. Sides held Clark accountable for the technicals. 

"We've just got to make sure we let outside things have no control over affect us, especially early in the game," she said. "We've got to handle those things. Those guys aren't going to be perfect. We're not perfect, but I think we've lost some time with that frustration. So, that's just something we're talking about, we're working … just can't have that first quarter lapse like that.

"We can't let that affect us so much. The officials are the officials."

The technical foul was not the only officiating decision that went against Clark on a night she broke the WNBA's single-season record for assists with the 317th of her rookie season. She broke the record with her fifth assist of the night and finished the game with a total of 10, good for a double-double. 

After the game, officials reduced the assist number to nine because Clark did not fulfill the full criteria of earning an assist. 

"She just needed a reset. She's passionate. She's competitive. She just needs to move on to the next play," Sides said when asked about Clark's double-double being taken away on her big night. 

Clark has not only been frustrated by the fouls called on her lately. She also took issue with a hit that knocked her to the floor in a recent game that was not called a foul in the Fever's 99-88 loss to Minnesota Sept. 6. 

Clark got knocked to the floor by Minnesota's Napheesa Collier. Collier's arms appeared to hit Clark in the head and shoulder area when Clark tried to score in the paint. 

The officials did not call a foul on Collier, and Clark lay on the floor with her arms to her sides. 

After the game, Clark referred to multiple instances in which she was hit by opposing players but refs didn't blow the whistle.

"I thought I got fouled a couple times there in the second half on mid-range jump shots," Clark said. "It happens. Sometimes they get calls, sometimes they don't. It is what it is. I think I settled a little bit too much for mid-range jump shots, but I thought I got bumped a little bit, and I was honestly trying to shot-fake them to get them to foul me.

"I mean, I think I could have done a little bit better of a job controlling my own emotions."

Clark has had to manage her emotions quickly since coming to the WNBA. In her most recent game against the rival Chicago Sky, Diamond DeShields sent Clark flying across the floor for a foul that was later upgraded to a flagrant foul.

Clark took an infamous illegal hip check from Chicago Sky forward Chennedy Carter June 1. Clark said the hit "wasn't a basketball play" after that game. Sky rookie Angel Reese struck Clark in the head with her arm while trying to block a pass during a game June 16. 

Hits against Clark have become such an issue during the superstar's rookie year that former NBA player Joakim Noah suggested the Fever sign an "enforcer" to protect her from harm. 

"If I was the owner of the Indiana Fever, I would get a real enforcer in there to protect her," Noah told Fox News Digital. "Sometimes I feel like she is getting hit because she is a very talented person. But, at the end of the day, we’re in the business of winning games. So, if I’m the owner [of the Indiana Fever], I’m getting a real enforcer in there." 

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