Resident Alien SYFY Trailer
Meet the latest citizen of this blue marble we call Earth. He’s not from around here. In fact, he’s not even from here! SYFY has dropped the first trailer for its TV adaptation of Resident Alien, a Dark Horse comic of the same name about an alien who crashes on our planet and impersonates a doctor. The newcomer (played by Doom Patrol’s Alan Tudyk) is benevolent enough, but he does struggle with the philosophical question of whether or not humanity deserves to be saved.
Watch trailer below????
As you can see, the new Doctor Harry Vanderspeigle does an alright job of fitting in, although his true form can be seen by a young boy in the small Colorado town in which the titular character makes his new home. The pilot episode wastes no time in kicking off the action when “Harry,” fresh off his impersonation transformation, is forced to interact with his fellow flesh bags in order to solve a mysterious murder.
“The longer he is on Earth, it starts to play upon him. He starts to feel emotions,” Tudyk said over the weekend at the Winter Television Critic’s Association Press Tour.
“I love the humor in the comic and try to preserve all that,” creator Chris Sheridan said of the comic book source material by Peter Hogan and Steve Parkhouse at NYCC 2019. “I felt like there’s a lot of optimism in the comics. I wanted to capture that [too]. There’s a lot of great stuff on TV, but a lot of dark stuff [as well]. I didn’t want it to be one of those.”
Resident Alien premieres on SYFY this summer. The show also features the acting talents of Sara Tomko (Sneaky Pete), Corey Reynolds (The Closer), Alice Wetterlund (Silicon Valley), and Levi Fiehler (Mars).
Get More clips and Trailers https://www.syfy.com/syfywire/resident-alien-first-footage
Minnesota landlord charged over eviction attempt during pandemic
Authorities in Minnesota have pressed charges against a landlord who evicted a tenant during the coronavirus crisis and thus violated a state order forbidding kicking people out of their homes as the pandemic spreads across the US.
The move is one of the strongest actions yet taken to guard vulnerable people against the threat of eviction as unemployment in the US soars to levels not seen since the Great Recession in the wake of the economic crisis caused by the virus as widespread shutdowns cover the US.
Numerous cities and states have deployed eviction moratoriums. Among them is Minnesota, one of 15 states and territories to suspend both the enforcement of evictions and the filing of them in court, according to a tracker on new eviction policies being maintained by a professor at Columbia University.
Minnesota’s attorney general, Keith Ellison, worked with Governor Tim Walz to craft the state’s executive order suspending evictions. Landlords have so far been supportive, including the state’s biggest landlord advocacy group, the Minnesota Multi Housing Association.
But last week, in a case that was one of the first of its kind across the country, Ellison’s office pressed charges against a small landlord, Howard Mostad of rural Pine county, for violating the executive order against evictions.
According to the complaint filed in court, Mostad had advised his tenants, a family of three with a four-year-old daughter, that their lease was ending on 1 April, but as the date approached, they had trouble finding a new place because of the coronavirus pandemic and the state’s “stay-at-home” order.
Mostad then allegedly showed up at their door on 2 April, and asked to be let in so he could show the property to a potential buyer. The family refused, saying they feared letting new people into their home, as their daughter has a pre-existing medical condition making her more vulnerable to the virus. Mostad responded by forcing his way in and then removing circuit breakers in the boiler room, leaving the family without electricity, heat or hot water, the complaint says.
Ellison said that while he understood many landlords were in a difficult situation, he thought Mostad’s actions were “particularly heartless” and he hoped the state would be sending a message by pressing charges. He said that forcing people into homeless shelters would increase the risk for public health.
“We want to encourage small business people, including landlords, to seek help when they need it. But understand that by putting people out into the street, what they’re doing is not only hurting a family, but they’re actually exposing all of us to potential transmission,” Ellison told the Guardian.
When reached by the Guardian, Mostad, 77, said that the family was not behind on rent, but that he had been planning to sell his farm, including the home where they lived, as business had been tough for several years.
In an interview, he lashed out against undocumented immigrants, refugees and Black Lives Matter activists, and what he sees as government overreach in response to the coronavirus outbreak.
“What’s happening with the coronavirus shutdown is a communist takeover,” he said.
Mostad now faces up to $25,000 in fines. Ellison said while his office would continue to enforce the eviction moratorium, he worries about what will happen when the order is lifted, and called for action at the federal level.
“We’re going to need a way to figure out how to deal with the rent that eventually will come due for people who have been out of work through no fault of their own. We need a societal response to that, we need a national response to that,” he said.
Ellison’s fear is shared by Alieza Durana, a writer with the Eviction Lab, a team of researchers and students at Princeton University dedicated to mapping and understanding eviction causes and trends across the country.
She described a patchwork of different approaches across the country.
She noted that California had attempted to address the problem Ellison described by creating a six-month window in which tenants will be able to pay back rent. However, like several other states, California’s eviction moratorium also allows for “local discretion”, meaning cities in different parts of the state could interpret it differently. That, she said, could potentially leave residents in suburban and rural areas without strong tenant-rights organizations more vulnerable.
Evictions continue meanwhile, in states such as Alabama and Oklahoma, where 1,156 evictions have been filed since 15 March, according to Open Justice Oklahoma.
“The legal advocates that I’ve been speaking to have become very concerned that if we do not close these loopholes, the court system is going to receive an onslaught of eviction notices once the state of emergency is lifted,” she said.
Durana cited a survey published by the Federal Reserve last year indicating four in 10 Americans would have difficulty covering an unexpected $400 expense.
“So given that that was true prior to the pandemic, there’s a very real possibility that moving forward, without government intervention, we could see the return of greater numbers of homelessness across the United States, and other types of hardship,” she said.
via: https://currently.att.yahoo.com/att/xandr/landlord-charged-over-eviction-attempt-103044313.html
Photo Credit: Joshua Roberts/Reuters
Florida Man Accused of Murdering His Wife, Using COVID-19 as Cover
A Florida man is accused of killing his wife and using coronavirus as a cover story for her disappearance.
David Anthony, 48, was arrested on March 31st in Las Cruces, Mexico, in connection with the disappearance of his wife Gretchen, 51. He is charged with second-degree murder and kidnapping.
According to a witness, who is not being identified publicly, someone purporting to be Gretchen sent her a “suspicious” text message on March 23rd claiming she had been diagnosed with COVID-19, and was being detained by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). Police also said another witness contacted them with a similar story, saying they had received a text from Gretchen claiming she had an “acute” case of COVID-19 and was being “sedated” by a CDC task force.
When contacted by police, officials at the Jupiter Medical Center said there was no one with Gretchen’s name at the hospital. Reports of someone claiming to be Gretchen sending an additional text message to her mother saying she was on a ventilator at a local hospital also failed to check out.
When police arrived at Gretchen’s home, they were unable to locate her. A neighbor informed them that she had heard screams at the residence the previous Saturday, including the sound of a woman yelling “No, no! It hurts.” Upon searching her residence, police found towels in her kitchen containing a “reddish substance” that appeared to be blood, as well as evidence of what appeared to be blood droplets in her bedroom.
According to the Anthonys’ friends, the couple had separated earlier this year, with Gretchen filing for divorce in February. Anthony is currently awaiting extradition to Palm Beach County, Florida.
Photo Credit: The Jupiter Police Department
Key and Peele – Mary Magdalene’s Pimp
I finally found a Key and Peele skit I’ve never watched before! Enjoy 😉
Donkey of the day goes to Kentucky doctor social teen for not social distancing
Folks are just wilin’ an out here
Man jailed for stealing masks from hospital amid coronavirus crisis
A British man will spend the next three months in the slammer — for ripping off a trio of medical masks from a hospital during the coronavirus crisis, according to cops.
Lerun Hussain, 34, was busted Sunday for stealing three masks from King’s College Hospital in south London, according to the Metropolitan Police.
He pleaded guilty to theft on Tuesday and was sentenced at Croydon Magistrates’ Court to three months in prison, or a month for each mask, the force said.
The sentence comes amid a global shortage of medical masks because of the global COVID-19 pandemic.
The contagion has hit Britain hard, with almost 66,000 confirmed cases and more than 6,000 deaths as of Wednesday, Johns Hopkins University data shows.
via: https://nypost.com/2020/04/08/man-jailed-for-stealing-masks-from-hospital-amid-coronavirus-crisis/
Photo Credit: Metropolitan Police
Woman busted for licking $1,800 in groceries during coronavirus crisis
A California woman was busted for licking $1,800 worth of items at a grocery store amid the coronavirus crisis, local authorities said.
Jennifer Walker, 53, picked up various items at the Safeway store in the resort city of South Lake Tahoe on Tuesday afternoon, licked them and put them in her cart, police said in a statement.
But Walker apparently had no intention of purchasing anything in the cart — including costume jewelry, meat and liquor, NBC News reported.
An employee informed officers that everything Walker handled was “deemed unsellable due to the cross-contamination,” authorities said.
She was arrested on a felony vandalism charge and booked into the El Dorado County Jail. Bail is set at $10,000, jail records show.
Walker does not have an arrest record in the city, located near the Nevada border, but “we’ve had local contact with her, we’re familiar with her,” police Lt. Shannon Laney told NBC.
It’s unclear whether Walker has an attorney.
via: https://nypost.com/2020/04/09/woman-busted-for-licking-groceries-during-coronavirus-crisis/
Photo Credit: South Lake Tahoe Police
Woman suffers fatal heart attack at funeral for mom who died of coronavirus
A 32-year-old British woman suffered a fatal heart attack while attending the funeral for her coronavirus-stricken mother, according to a report.
Laura Richards, 32, began experiencing chest pains Tuesday while her mother, Julie Murphy, 63, was being buried at Atherstone Cemetery in Warwickshire, according to The Sun.
Richards’ sister Lisa Green said she, her husband and other sister Kelly Murphy desperately tried to administer CPR, taking turns to keep the woman alive before paramedics arrived.
But despite their efforts, Richards, who had underlying health problems that affected her heart, was declared dead at a hospital, the news outlet reported.
“Everyone was really upset and Laura said she was light-headed and had pains in her chest,” Green told the news outlet. “We thought it was just anxiety at first but then I called 999.”
Richards’ half-sister Sadie, 45 — who was unable to attend the funeral because she had a kidney transplant and is at high risk for the coronavirus – said her daughter was among the few relatives who attended the service.
“They were lowering my mum into the ground and Laura suddenly said, ‘I can’t breathe, I can’t breathe,’” Sadie told The Sun.
“But there was nothing that could be done. She had a massive heart attack,” she said. “To lose your sister at your mum’s funeral – it’s like a horror film. She was only 32.”
Murphy, who had suffered from multiple sclerosis and dementia, died March 15 after contracting COVID-19 in a nursing home. She was buried next to her husband, who died in 2012, the outlet reported.
Richards was buried next to her mother — with only five people in attendance due to lockdown rules.
“We had to wear masks when we saw mum in the hospital just before she died, and I think it really upset Laura seeing her in that environment,” Sadie said.
“She hadn’t been out of the house until the funeral. Losing mum must have really affected her,” she added. “I think her body just gave up on her.”
Photo Credit: Facebook
South Africa’s president and ministers are taking a 33% pay cut and extended its lockdown
South Africa’s president Cyril Ramaphosa and ministers will take a 33% pay cut for the next three months, and the money will be diverted towards social and economic relief measures to help the country weather the Covid-19 pandemic.
Ramaphosa on Thursday said the country would extend its original 21-day national lockdown, instituted on Mar. 27, until the end of April. “Unless we hold to this course for a little longer, the coronavirus pandemic will engulf, and ultimately consume, our country,” he said in a live address to the nation.
While one of the most developed countries in sub-Saharan Africa, South Africa has the highest number of HIV infections in the world, with about 7.7-million people living with the disease. Authorities are worried that Covid-19, which has already claimed more than 85,000 lives worldwide, will ravage the country’s vulnerable population and that its already beleaguered healthcare system will buckle under the weight of severe Covid-19 cases. To date South Africa has confirmed 1845 cases and 18 deaths from the viral disease.
However, the economic situation in the country is dire. The South African economy contracted in the last quarter of last year, and the World Bank now predicts that the Covid-19 pandemic will push the whole of sub-Saharan Africa into a recession.
An economic stimulus package was one of the three pillars of South Africa’s Covid-19 response strategy, Ramaphosa said. The country would also intensify its public health response to slow down and reduce infections, and would increase social support to poor and vulnerable households.
South Africa’s Unemployment Insurance Fund has set aside 40 billion rand ($2.24 billion) to assist employees who cannot work due to Covid-19 restrictions, and has already paid out 356 million rand, Ramaphosa said. The state had also made 500 million rand available for small business debt relief reprioritized 1.2 billion rand ($67 million) to provide relief for smallholder farmers to contribute to national food security, he said.
Ramaphosa encouraged businesses and citizens to contribute to the Solidarity Fund, a fund to buffer the population from the effects of Covid-19. So far 2.2 billion rand had been raised, he said. Of that, 1 billion rand had been set aside to purchase sterile gloves, face shields, surgical masks, test kits and ventilators. The country has an ambitious plan to begin manufacturing ventilators locally, with a target of 10,000 ventilators by the end of June.
The president also said that he and his deputy, as well as ministers and deputy ministers, would donate a third of their salaries to the Solidarity Fund. South Africa has one of the world’s largest ministerial cabinets, with 28 ministers and 34 deputies. The US, whose population is almost six times larger than South Africa’s, has 15 Cabinet members.
Malawi’s president and his cabinet said they’d be taking a 10% pay cut to help the country fund its response the pandemic.
Photo Credit: qz.com