Friday, October 20, 2023

Cher The Singer Is Coming Out With Her Very First Holiday Album This Year!

Do you remember this song?




Well, Cher's first holiday album, "Christmas," has arrived.

The album features 13 Christmas songs, including Cher's take on holiday classics like "Santa Baby," "Run Run Rudolph" and more, as well as four original tunes.

"I never say this about my own records but I'm really proud of this one," Cher said in a statement. "It is one of the most amazing highlights of my career."

Cher also recruited several special guests for the record, including Darlene Love, who joins her for "Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)." A 17-year-old Cher actually sang background vocals on Love's original, which she recorded with Phil Spector.

Here is a Preview of Her Album that has just been released this year!




Story Source: GMA Or Good Morning America Live From Time Square in New York, City.

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Sunday, October 15, 2023

 There's just something magical about a well-crafted walk-through light display. Most of the experiences I've had over the years are places in Minnesota and Wisconsin like Bentleyville Tour of LightsSam's Christmas Village, and the GLOW Holiday Festival - all Christmas/winter-themed.

Those holiday-themed light shows are all very charming, and I make a point to visit at least one or two every season. I learned about a different walk-through light attraction recently that isn't holiday-themed. Occurring every fall, it offers a chance to be dazzled by some pretty magical displays of a different style - all while not combatting winter temperatures.

Here's a little about this fun family light display that's worth a family road trip during the fall!

                             Meet the China Lights Wisconsin Festival




This walking tour in Southeastern Wisconsin has grown to be a wildly popular attraction over the years, featuring dozens of larger-than-life light displays that have followed different themes over the years.

The attraction started as the first of its kind in the Midwest back in 2016 as the City of Milwaukee entered into an agreement with Sichuan Tianyu Culture Communication Co., Ltd of Zigong City in China to bring this stunning light attraction to the region.

Where is the China Lights Festival?

Since being brought to Wisconsin in 2016, the attraction has been held each fall at the beautiful Boerner Botanical Gardens in the Milwaukee suburb of Hales Corners.

The venue offers nine acres of space that allows visitors to see dozens of handmade sculptural lantern displays along a walking path that navigates the park space.


To learn or read more about it Please CLICK HERE

La Crosse, Wisconsin We’re going to save the old Kmart Building — And Blue Baby


 

To learn More Please CLICK HERE to listen to the Previously Recorded Radio Broadcast Show telling you more information on this topic.

1 dead, 3 critically injured in I-94 crash


 

One person died and three people were seriously injured in a crash Wednesday on I-90/94, according to the Wisconsin State Patrol.

The crash was reported just before 8:40 a.m. on the interstate near the Columbia/Sauk county line. In a news release Wednesday night, the state patrol said a 2005 Hyundai Santa Fe SUV was heading east on the highway when the driver, a 21-year-old Sparta man, lost control, crossed the median and hit two westbound semi-trucks.

A passenger inside the SUV, a 29-year-old man from California, died from his injuries. The driver and two other passengers, a 22-year-old Sparta man and a 36-year-old man, suffered life-threatening injuries.

The drivers of the semis were not hurt.

Officials have not released the names of those involved pending family notification.

The release did not say what led the driver to lose control of the vehicle.

The westbound interstate remained closed until 4 p.m. Wednesday.


Story Source: NEWSBREAK or CLICK HERE

Weekly Safety Report: Investigation into Daycare and Fatal Crash on I-90/94 in Sparta, Wisconsin

 The Sparta Police Department in Wisconsin has provided updates on two incidents this week. The first incident involved an investigation into possible sexual misconduct at the Great Beginnings Daycare. After closing the investigation, no adults are being recommended for charges. The second incident was a fatal crash on I-90/94, near the Columbia/Sauk county line. One person died and three others were critically injured when a driver lost control of their vehicle and collided with two semi-trucks.

The Sparta Police Department investigated a report of possible sexual misconduct at the Great Beginnings Daycare. The investigation has been closed, and no adults are being recommended for charges.

A fatal crash occurred on I-90/94 near the Columbia/Sauk county line. A 21-year-old Sparta man lost control of his vehicle, crossed the median, and collided with two westbound semi-trucks. One person died, and three others were critically injured.


Story Source to read more about these 2 stories Please CLICK HERE

A proposed gag order on Trump in his federal election case is putting the judge in a tricky position


 

A proposed gag order aimed at reining in Donald Trump’s incendiary rhetoric puts the judge overseeing his federal election interference case in a tricky position: She must balance the need to protect the integrity of the legal proceedings against the First Amendment rights of a presidential candidate to defend himself in public.

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan will hear arguments Monday in Washington over whether Trump has gone too far with remarks such as calling prosecutors a “team of thugs” and one possible witness “a gutless pig.”

It is the biggest test yet for Chutkan, underscoring the unprecedented complexities of prosecuting the former Republican president as the judge vows not to let political considerations guide her decisions.

Ending the stream of Trump’s harsh language would make the case easier to manage. But among the difficult questions Chutkan must navigate is how any gag order might be enforced and how one could be fashioned that does not risk provoking Trump’s base and fueling his claims of political persecution as he campaigns to retake the White House in 2024.

“She has to think about the serious risk that it’s not just his words that could trigger violence, but that she could play into the conspiracy theories that Trump’s followers tend to believe in, and that her act of issuing a gag order might trigger a very disturbing response,” said Catherine Ross said, a George Washington University law school professor.

“If we allow that to stop a judge from doing what is called for, that’s a big problem for rule of law. But on the other hand, if I were the judge, I would certainly be thinking about it,” she said.

Short of issuing an order, Chutkan has already suggested that inflammatory comments could force her to move up the trial, now scheduled to begin in March, to guard against tainting the jury pool. Judges can threaten gag order violators with fines or jail time, but jailing a presidential candidate could prompt serious political blowback and pose logistical hurdles.

Chutkan, who was nominated to the bench by President Barack Obama, isn’t the first judge to confront the consequences of Trump’s speech. The judge in his civil fraud trial in New York recently imposed a limited gag order prohibiting personal attacks against court personnel following a social media post that maligned the judge’s principal clerk.

Special counsel Jack Smith’s team envisions a broader order, seeking to bar Trump from making inflammatory and intimidating comments about lawyers, witnesses and others involved in the case that accuses the former president of illegally plotting to overturn his 2020 election loss to Democrat Joe Biden. Trump’s lawyers call it a “desperate effort at censorship” that would prevent Trump from telling his side of the story while campaigning.

A complicating factor is that many of the potential witnesses in the case are themselves public figures. In the case of Trump’s vice president, Mike Pence is also running against Trump for the GOP nomination. That could open the door for Trump’s team to argue that he should be permitted to respond to public broadsides he sees on television or seek a competitive edge by denouncing a political rival for the White House.

Burt Neuborne, a longtime civil liberties lawyer who challenged gag orders on behalf of defendants and lawyers in other cases, questioned whether a formal order was necessary because witness intimidation is already a crime and the court can guard against a tainted jury by carefully questioning prospective jurors before trial. A gag order may also slow down the case because it’s likely Trump either violates it and the judge will want to punish him or Trump will challenge the order in advance, he said.

“And so in some sense, you may be playing directly into his hands by essentially creating yet another mechanism for him to try to push this until after the 2024 election because my sense is that any gag order that she issues will eventually reach the Supreme Court,” Neuborne said.

But Barbara McQuade, a former U.S. attorney in Michigan, said she believes the judge can issue a narrow enough order that withstands legal challenges and protects both the case and Trump’s abilities to campaign.

“Especially in this case, where Donald Trump has made it apparent that he will say all kinds of outrageous and vitriolic things about the parties, about the judge, about witnesses unless she acts,” said McQuade, a University of Michigan Law School professor. “So in some ways she has, I think, a responsibility to act here.”

There is some limited precedent for restricting speech of political candidates who are criminal defendants.

To continue reading this story Please CLICK HERE

Story Source: NEWSBREAK 

Solar Eclipse Ring Of Fire 2023. This Was A Previous Live Stream Posted 14 Hours Ago ( Right From YouTube)



Note: You will not see one again till 2045. But there will be a partial Solar Eclipse next year (2024) April 8th . The last one that we seen was back in the year 2017.

Saturday, October 7, 2023

Israel is ‘at war’ as Palestinian militants launch surprise air and ground attack from Gaza

 



Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared that the country was “at war” on Saturday, after Palestinian militants in Gaza fired a deadly barrage of rockets and sent gunmen into Israeli territory in a major escalation of the long running conflict between the two sides.

The early-morning surprise assault, which has left at least 40 people

 dead and over 779 injured, according to Israel’s rescue service Magen

 David Adom (MDA), is unprecedented in recent history in its scale and 

scope. It comes on the 50th anniversary of the 1973 War in which 

 states blitzed Israel on Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish calendar.

A barrage of some 2,200 rockets were launched from the Gaza 

Strip into Israel on Saturday morning starting at 6:30 a.m., 

according to the Israeli military, while armed gunmen infiltrated 

across the border in a ground assault into southern Israel. 

Multiple explosions were heard over Jerusalem, Tel Aviv 

and in southern Israel – some blasts likely the interceptions 

of incoming rockets – with air raids sent Israelis pouring into underground 

shelters.


Story Source: CNN News

To continue reading about this new war. Please CLICK HERE


Friday, October 6, 2023

Police find at least 115 bodies at Colorado 'green' funeral home under investigation

 


CAÑON CITY, Colo. — The owner of a Colorado funeral home where 115 decaying bodies were found after neighbors reported nauseating smells tried to conceal the improper storage of corpses and claimed he was doing animal taxidermy at the facility, according to a suspension letter sent to him by state regulators.

The Return to Nature Funeral Home facility in the small town of Penrose had been unregistered with the state for 10 months on Wednesday when owner Jon Hallford spoke by phone with a state regulator.

A day earlier, an “abhorrent smell” from the facility was reported, launched an investigation

Hallford acknowledged that he had a “problem” at the property, though the Colorado Office of Funeral Home and Crematory Registration document obtained by The Associated Press didn't explain what Hallford meant with his taxidermy claim or how he tried to conceal improper storage of human remains.

Text messages and phone calls were not answered at the funeral home, which had no working voice mail. As of Friday, when authorities announced what they called a “disturbing discovery" in Penrose, a town of about 3,000 people in the mountains west of Colorado Springs, neither Hallford nor anyone else has been arrested or charged.

Officials declined to describe the scene inside the Return to Nature Funeral Home facility. A multi-agency effort recover and identify the remains was underway.

The funeral home performed “green” burials without embalming chemicals or metal caskets. Local residents said they smelled foul odors around the building for months but thought little of it, assuming a dead animal or septic system was to blame

Funeral home officials were cooperating as investigators sought to determine any criminal wrongdoing, Fremont County Sheriff Allen Cooper said at a news conference.

“Without providing too much detail to avoid further victimizing these families there, the funeral home where the bodies were improperly stored was horrific,” Cooper said.

Some identifications would require taking fingerprints, finding medical or dental records and DNA, Fremont County Coroner Randy Keller said.

“This could take several months. As we identify each decedent, families will be notified as soon as absolutely possible,” Keller said.

Other Colorado county coroners had agreed to help while the FBI and state police and emergency management officials worked at the scene. Meanwhile, Fremont County declared an official disaster to possibly make state funds available for the effort, Keller said.

Family members who have used the funeral home were asked to contact investigators.

The bodies were inside a 2,500-square foot (230-square meter) building with the appearance and dimensions of a standard one-story home.

Authorities declined to say if the building was equipped to properly story bodies. They also wouldn’t disclose in what state the bodies were found or how they were stored. Under Colorado law, green burials are legal but state code requires that any body not buried within 24 hours must be properly refrigerated.

Deputies were called in Tuesday night in reference to a suspicious incident officials haven’t yet described. Fremont County Sheriff’s Office investigators returned the next day with a search warrant and found the remains.

There was no health risk to the public, officials said, at the building with trash bags near the entrance and law enforcement vehicles parked in front. Yellow police tape cordoned off the area and a putrid odor was in the air.

A hearse was parked at the back of the building, in a parking lot overgrown with weeds. Nearby was a post office and a few homes on wide, grassy lots, some with parked semi-trucks.

The license for the facility expired in November of last year, according to a cease and desist order issued Thursday by Colorado state regulators. When reached by regulators, owner Jon Hallford acknowledged that he has a “problem” at the Penrose property and claimed he practiced taxidermy there.

Story Source: News8000 or CLICK HERE

Britney Spears' Estranged Father 'Severely Ill' In Hospital

 

Britney Spears' estranged father, Jamie Spears, has been hospitalized and is battling a serious infection, according to Page Six. “Jamie has been suffering with a bad infection that has required surgery,” a source told the outlet on Thursday night (October 5th). “He has been hospitalized for weeks in a special infectious disease facility.”

Another insider told the outlet that Jamie is "severely ill" and was hospitalized "several months ago." In August, TMZ reported that he was dealing with complications from a knee replacement he underwent in the mid-2000s. Sources added that he had "lost more than 25 pounds" and looked "extremely thin" as he went "in and out" of medical care.

In September 2021, Jamie was revealed as Britney's conservator and the pop star told the public that he had been "abusive" while controlling her personal, medical, and financial decisions. Shortly after, a judge in Los Angeles terminated the pop icon's conservatorship after 13 years. In October of 2022, Spears shared a scathing post about her father and her family for going "along with it and treat me like a f–king dog." She also opened up about some of the verbal abuse she received from her father.

“He was never a father to me because he was always drunk !!!” Britney wrote at the time. “The reason I’m talking about this is because I know I try to present myself as being perfect and pretty … but it’s because I know what it feels like to feel ugly and scared !!!" She added that she prays “to f–king god you get just 5 minutes of the pain I felt” and that he “burn[s] in hell you sorry son of a bitch !!!"

Story Source: (Z100 Eau Claire Radio Station) iHeart Radio Website or CLICK HERE for Story Source

Boy thrown from ride at Virginia state fair hospitalized in latest amusement park accident

 


A young boy is facing a long road to recovery after what was supposed to be a fun family day at the State Fair of Virginia.

The 8-year-old boy was enjoying a ride on an attraction called "The Storm" Friday afternoon when he sustained an injury, according to a report released by Caroline County Building Official Kevin Wightman. Virginia State Police responded to the call, arriving on scene around 3 p.m. and administered first aid before transporting the child to a nearby hospital.

The family’s attorney, David Silek, told USA TODAY that the boy sustained significant injuries when he was "sucked out" of his seat during the ride.

8-year-old boy sustains injuries

Silek said the boy slid below the lap bar meant to secure him in place and was thrown out of his seat. "The Storm" continued to operate and the boy was then stuck by another cart, which flung his body up against a nearby fence.

His father, Matthew Nungent, noticed his son's empty seat when the cart he had been riding in came back around and began trying to get the operator's attention, Silek said. He was allegedly ignored until he finally jumped over the fence surrounding the ride to reach his child, at which point it was stopped.

Silek said the boy has suffered a broken foot and a severe laceration to his leg, which cut so deep it exposed muscle beneath the skin. Doctors had to anesthetize the boy in order to investigate the extent of the wound before stitching him up.

"A broken foot at the age of eight could lead to a lifelong problem if it doesn’t heal properly," Silek said. "They're focused on making sure his foot heals properly so he doesn't have issues for the rest of his life."

While Silek said the family has not had any contact with fair organizers or other involved parties since the incident, the family is concerned with the safety of similar attractions at fairs and amusement parks.

According to the incident report, parties including Virginia State Police, a representative of the State Fair, building inspection officials, third-party inspectors and representatives from the company that produced the ride, Deggeller Attractions, arrived on scene the same day to inspect the "The Storm" and recreate the conditions leading up to the incident.

This initial inspection turned up "no obvious failures of the equipment," according to the report. A review of statements provided by the involved parties after the fact also found "no mechanical or and/or operator errors that did not comply with the manufacture's specifications or governing code."

The family and Silek are not entirely convinced, however, as the boy continues to undergo medical care. According to Silek, despite reports finding nothing wrong with the attraction's function, the posted height minimum required to board the ride was increased the day after the accident.

"This summer we seem to have had a rash of amusement park problems that started very early in the seasons," Silek shared. "So, we are hoping that every amusement park and fair and carnival really does a much better job of inspecting all rides to assure safety and continue to inspect and make sure that the people that operate these rides are properly trained."

Deggeller Attractions and representatives from the State Fair of Virginia did not respond to request for comment.

A spate of incidents related to amusement rides and attraction this summer season has left riders stuck or injured.

In August, guests were forced to walk down a 200-plus-foot roller coaster in Cedar Point, Ohio after the ride experienced a mechanical issue.

Back in July, fairgoers in Crandon, Wisconsin, ended up in a terrifying predicament when a malfunction left riders stuck upside down for hours.

Just two days prior, a North Carolina amusement park closed one of its rollercoasters after guests noticed a crack in one of its support pillars and video showed pieces moving out of place as cars moved along the tracks.

In June, a major accident killed one and injured nine after a rollercoaster derailed.

Story Source: NEWSBREAK or CLICK HERE

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Minnesota man freed after 16 years behind bars for a murder prosecutors say he didn’t commit

After serving 16 years behind bars, a Minnesota man was released from prison after a judge vacated his murder conviction for a crime prose...