Woman intentionally ran over boyfriend, killing him in parking lot
CHESTERFIELD, Mo. (KMOV) — A woman is facing second-degree murder charges Saturday after a man in his 40s was struck and killed in a Chesterfield Valley parking lot.
Chesterfield police said Kathryn Marsh driving a black Dodge Ram ran over the man, later identified as her boyfriend Matthew Baker in a parking lot near Babbo’s Spaghetteria on Chesterfield Airport Road around 2:30 p.m. Friday. He was pronounced dead at the scene.
A witness told News 4 Baker and Marsh were arguing in the parking lot before the incident happened.
Police said Marsh was cooperative with law enforcement during the investigation.
After a thorough investigation police determined Marsh intentionally hit Baker intending to cause serious injury.
Police said an autopsy will help determine exactly how many times Baker was run over.
Marsh, of Defiance, Missouri, is being held on a $500,000 bond at the St. Louis County Justice Center.
Man kills 6-month-old daughter, self in dispute
OHATCHEE, Ala. (AP) — Police in Alabama say an Anniston man shot and killed his 6-month-old daughter and then himself during an argument with the girl’s grandfather, who was wounded in the fight.
Calhoun County Sheriff Matthew Wade tells Al.com that authorities responded to a domestic disturbance near Ohatchee on Sunday between 23-year-old Trenton Gordon and the baby’s mother. He says the girl’s mother had filed for a protective order against Gordon.
The sheriff says Gordon brought the girl to an area home and got into an argument during which he pulled out a gun and shot the girl’s grandfather in the arm. The sheriff says Gordon then ran outside with the girl, where he shot and killed her before turning the gun on himself.
The grandfather was taken to a hospital for treatment.
Driver slams into 9-year-old girl playing in her front yard, then flees scene
(Meredith) – Georgia police are searching for a driver who struck a 9-year-old girl playing in her front yard, leaving her with multiple injuries
The girl’s family released surveillance video of the incident to help catch the suspect, who took off on foot after the crash Friday evening.
Laderihanna Holmes was playing with another young girl outside her home in Lithonia, Georgia, when a black sedan blew a stop sign, jumped a curb and slammed into her, authorities said.
The driver slipped out through the passenger-side door and ran away as family members rushed to help the 9-year-old girl. A second person inside the vehicle also fled the scene, according to the family’s attorney, Chris Stewart.
Laderihanna suffered a scull fracture, a broken pelvic bone and multiple lacerations, her family wrote on a GoFundMe page. Her right heart valve is also leaking.
“It’s a miracle that she is still alive,” a statement on the GoFundMe page reads, in part.
The girl’s mother, Charlette Bolton, issued a personal message to the suspect in an interview with ABC News.
“You know what you did. You didn’t try to help my baby,” she said. “You almost killed my baby and I hope you do the right thing and turn yourself in.”
“If I was black I’d be picking cotton, but I’m white so I’m pick you 4 prom?” Photo of racist promposal to Arizona HS student lights up social media
MESA, AZ. (3TV/CBS 5) — A photo appearing to show a racist promposal is making its rounds online.
In it, a poster says, “If I was black I’d be picking cotton, but I’m white so I’m pick you 4 prom?”
Sources tell Arizona’s Family the girl in the photo is a student at Mountain View High School.
The school district sent Arizona’s Family a statement saying, “Mesa Public Schools and Mountain View High School do not condone the contents of the message posted on a student’s personal social media account. The parents of the students involved have been notified.”
“At first when I saw it I was just like disgusted,” said 18-year-old Katrina Kelley.
She switched schools this school year, but was a student at Mountain View. Kelley said a friend sent her the promposal photo, and she decided to post it on Twitter.
“I think they did it because they thought it was funny,” Kelley said. “I really don’t think they thought about the consequences of what could happen if they posted it.”
Kelley said the girl in the photo originally posted it on Instagram, but people there took screenshots of it as it circulated online.
Naomi Wheadon goes to a different school but said people all across the district were talking about it.
“The fact that the girl was OK with it, like posted pictures about it, was fine about it, bragging that she got promposed whatever, is just like stupid,” she said.
“It’s directed to a certain racial group, and it’s a racist comment directed toward slavery, and that can be such a touchy subject for a lot of people,” Kelley said.
Jordan Peele’s twilight zone episode 2 The Comedian
To get exclusive sneak peaks and full episodes of Jordan Peele’s Twilight Zone subscribe to CBS ALL ACCESS. Click the link to watch!!
Where To Find Ti and All Things LovelyTi ?
LovelytiTV
You already know Lovelyti is a YouTube celebrity news commentator and runs a celebrity news Instagram.
Of course you can watch commentary a few times a week on Lovelyti’s Youtube channel here (and subscribe for weekly livestreams on Sunday afternoon).
Lovelyti News Network
And you can watch new stories weekly here.
Find Lovelyti on Social Media
Lovelyti.com
This website, Lovelyti.com, is primarily managed by bloggers hired by Lovelyti. We posts are viral news stories or news stories that do not gain traction in the media, the latest celebrity tea or think pieces. These articles are shared on Facebook and Twitter, you can click the links to read, and in the article you can also click the blue links to watch Ti’s YouTube videos (either new or old).
Lovelyti’s Twitter
You can follow Lovelyti on Twitter for the latest news and alerts of whenever Ti posts a new video.
Lovelyti’s Facebook
Like Ti’s Facebook page for the latest news. New videos are posted on Throwback videos will be posted there too, Tuesdays and Saturdays.
Lovelyti’s Instagram
Follow Ti on IG for breaking news and kiki.
Lovelyti Merchandise
You can buy mugs, pens, makeup bags, and tablet/lapotop bags on Lovelyti.com/shop/
You can buy mugs, t-shirts, tank tops, crewneck sweaters and more on TeeSpring.com
LovelyTea
Go to Amazon or Lovelytea.net to order matcha and wellness teas, tea bottles, tea accessories.
Lovelytea’s Healing Honey Sticks (CBD oil used)
Go on Lovelytea.net to order some Lovelyti Healing Honey Sticks!
Supporting Lovelyti
Cash app: $lovelytitv
‘Zoo hypothesis’ may explain why we haven’t seen any space aliens
Article via NBC
The hypothesis holds that they can see us, but we can’t see them.
Ask your friends why scientists have failed to find extraterrestrials, and you can be sure at least one of them will offer the following answer: Humans are not worthy.
We’re flawed beings. We routinely threaten one other, not to mention other species and the environment. That doesn’t sound very civilized, and it offers a plausible explanation for the lack of alien contact. Perhaps the extraterrestrials know we’re here but don’t want to deal with us — either by communicating or by visiting.
This idea is endlessly appealing. It’s also old. In 1973, MIT radio astronomer John Ball published a paper in which he suggested that the lack of success in uncovering cosmic company wasn’t due to a lack of aliens. It was because these otherworldly sentients have agreed to a hands-off policy.
They’ve kept their distance not because we’re imperfect, but because of our right to pursue our own destiny. Diversity is something that everyone in the cosmos is assumed to value, so life-bearing worlds should be left to their own evolutionary development.
It may occur to you that Ball’s idea sounds something like Star Trek’s famous “prime directive,” which forbade spacefaring members of the Federation from doing anything that might interfere with other cultures or civilizations, even if that interference was well intentioned. The MIT astronomer was proposing that we’ve failed to make contact with aliens not because we’re unworthy, but because we are worthy — the way endangered eels are.
Ball went further, proposing that we may live in a metaphorical zoo — a kind of cosmic Eden. The aliens of the galaxy have somehow arranged things so that our planet is shielded from them by one-way bars: They can observe us, but we can’t observe them.
One nice thing about this conjecture is that it offers a solution to a long-standing puzzle known as Fermi’s Paradox. Broached nearly 70 years ago by physicist Enrico Fermi, it rests on the fact that the universe is very old. Consequently, if intelligent life is commonplace, then some of it is surely advanced enough to have colonized the entire galaxy. We should see evidence of aliens everywhere. The fact that we don’t might be explained by Ball’s hypothesis — we’re being deliberately isolated.
The zoo hypothesis has been in the news recently because it also provides justification for an activity known as METI, short for Messaging Extraterrestrial Intelligence. Simply stated, METI practitioners transmit radio signals into space with the hope of provoking a response from any aliens who might pick them up. In 2017, a Norwegian antenna was used to beam a message to a star system 12 light-years away.
Earlier this month, this whole enterprise was discussed by researchers at a meeting in Paris. Douglas Vakoch, the president of METI International, a San Francisco-based organization that organized the Norwegian transmission, invoked the zoo hypothesis as a possible justification for broadcasting. After all, if the hypothesis is correct, then it’s understandable why our efforts to find signals from space have been unsuccessful. We’ve been mindlessly pacing our Earthly cage while the extraterrestrials maintain their distance and keep watch.
But as Vakoch argues, this one-way scenario might be changed. If a zoo animal suddenly starts barking through the bars, saying “I’m here and I think you’re out there,” those on the other side might respond.
Simply put, METI’s deliberate transmissions might lead to a discovery of cosmic company because the broadcasts would tell the aliens that we no longer require their helicopter parenting. We’re adult enough for them to get in touch.
Still, the zoo hypothesis is dependent on Earthly life being really important — our existence is apparently significant enough that it dictates the behavior of societies that might be millions or billions of years more advanced. And Ball’s idea requires a galaxy-wide compact to keep all evidence of intelligent inhabitants — radio signals, laser flashes end even the construction of easily detected megastructures — from being visible by earthlings. How would you do that, even if you’re a highly advanced alien?
In addition, the idea that all extraterrestrials are keen to keep the evolution of our planet free and natural sounds odd, self-centered and a bit too altruistic. Let’s face it: The prime directive has never been in fashion with us. Indeed, we seem to prefer the opposite: On Earth, we interfere with one another’s cultural development all the time.
So the zoo hypothesis seems more than a little forced. On the other hand, I have to admit that it’s cagey.
Justin Fairfax accuser Vanessa Tyson describes alleged sex assault: “I couldn’t feel my neck”
Vanessa Tyson is one of two women who accuse Virginia’s lieutenant governor, Justin Fairfax, of sexual assault. The women stepped forward with their allegations in February when some lawmakers were calling on Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam to resign over a racist yearbook photo. If Northam had resigned, Fairfax would have become Virginia’s new governor. Fairfax has categorically denied these allegations. Only on “CBS This Morning,” Tyson tells Gayle King her story. Warning: Some of the details she shared with us are disturbing.
Kanye West’s Sunday Service playing Coachella
Article via BBC
Kanye West has spent the last year making headlines for everything except his music.
But fans of the artist have been treated to something special each Sunday over the past few months.
Tune into Kim Kardashian’s Instagram Stories and there you’ll find Kanye and a choir belting out renditions of some of his most famous songs – as well as bits of music that seem to be brand new.
Known as Kanye West’s Sunday Service, it’s been announced the act is heading to Coachella Festival in California to perform on Easter Sunday.
But what is it?
Religion has always been important to Kanye West’s music.
And he’s got a famously big ego.
So when he debuted Sunday Service at the beginning of 2019, and it looked like he was starting his own church, people weren’t that surprised.
A lot of what goes on at Sunday Service remains pretty secretive – people are even reportedly made to sign non-disclosure agreements.
But from the snapshots we’re shown it all seems to centre around the choir/live orchestra.
Whether it’s Jesus Walks, Father Stretch My Hands Pt.1 or Lift Off, Sunday Service often seems to showcase a reinterpretation of Kanye’s tracks.
And music seems to be the main aspect to the service that makes it spiritual.
The congregation
Unsurprisingly, with Kanye and the Kardashians involved, Sunday Service has become a bit of a celeb hot spot.
A Sunday Service invitation is the “most prestigious, highly-coveted” invitation possible for musicians in LA, according to Variety – which describes it as “where spirituality and exclusivity meet”.
Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom are among the A-listers who’ve been spotted there.
But Sunday Service has also led to a whole host of new fans for five year old North West – Kim and Kanye’s oldest child – because of videos like this.
There’s speculation that Kanye West’s Sunday Service could be leading up to another gospel album from the rapper – a few years after the gospel-influenced The Life of Pablo came out.
Kanye had promised an album at the end of last year – called Yandhi – which was delayed.
Whatever is happening with new music, one thing is definite: the people at Coachella look like they’re definitely in for a treat.
Check out some Lovelyti videos:
(Part 1) “Ye Vs.The People”+Daz Dillinger Issues “Crip Alert” Against Kanye West
(part 2) Kanye Gets Checked By TMZ’s Van Lathan After Calling Slavery “A Choice”
kanye’s crazy twitter drama
Behold the Beefless ‘Impossible Whopper’
Burger King is introducing a Whopper made with a vegetarian patty from the start-up Impossible Foods.
OAKLAND, Calif. — Would you like that Whopper with or without beef?
This week, Burger King is introducing a version of its iconic Whopper sandwich filled with a vegetarian patty from the start-up Impossible Foods.
The Impossible Whopper, as it will be known, is the biggest validation — and expansion opportunity — for a young industry that is looking to mimic and replace meat with plant-based alternatives.
Impossible Foods and its competitors in Silicon Valley have already had some mainstream success. The vegetarian burger made by Beyond Meat has been available at over a thousand Carl’s Jr. restaurants since January and the company is now moving toward an initial public offering.
White Castle has sold a slider version of the Impossible burger in its 380 or so stores since late last year.
But a national rollout at Burger King’s 7,200 locations would dwarf those previous announcements and more than double the total number of locations where Impossible’s burgers are available.
Burger King’s chief marketing officer, Fernando Machado, said that in the company’s testing so far, customers and even employees had not been able to tell the difference between the old meaty Whopper and the new one.
“People on my team who know the Whopper inside and out, they try it and they struggle to differentiate which one is which,” Mr. Machado said.
Burger King is initially making the Impossible Whopper available at 59 restaurants in the St. Louis area. Mr. Machado said the company had plans to quickly expand it to every branch in the country if everything in St. Louis goes smoothly.
“I have high expectations that it’s going to be big business, not just a niche product,” Mr. Machado said.
The Impossible Whopper creates an interesting alliance between a fast-food chain that promotes its devotion to beef on every Whopper wrapper (“100% Beef With No Fillers”) and a start-up that is committed to getting people to stop eating beef.
Read more via NYTimes