Disneyland reopening: Resort will require mandatory face coverings for cast members, guests
When the Disneyland Resort plans to reopen in July, there will be some new health and safety measures in place including mandatory face coverings and temperature checks for guests and cast members.
When Disneyland Resort plans to reopen in July, there will be some measures in place to ensure the health and safety of guests and cast members.
According to Disneyland’s website, these enhanced health and safety measures include:
- Mandatory face coverings for both cast members and guests
- The addition of hand-washing stations and physical barriers throughout the resort, where appropriate
- Reduced theme park capacity to ensure physical distancing
- Appropriate signs added to help guests move throughout the resort
- Temperature checks for guests prior to entering the theme parks, Downtown Disney District
- Daily health screenings and temperature checks for cast members
- Expansion of Mobile Order through the Disneyland app, Apple pay and more
- Enhanced cleaning and sanitation throughout the resort
The resort’s decision to make face coverings mandatory comes after Orange County announced it would no longer require the public to wear face masks.
“I want to be clear. This does not diminish the importance of face coverings. I stand with the public health experts and believe wearing cloth face coverings help to slow the spread of COVID-19 in our community and save lives,” said Dr. Clayton Chau, the interim health officer and recently appointed Health Care Agency director.
To promote physical distancing, the resort also announced that Disneyland and California Adventure Park will track attendance through a reservation system, that will require all guests to obtain an advanced reservation for park entry.
Additionally, new ticket sales and Annual Passport sales and renewals have been temporarily paused.
“We are purposefully taking baby steps during this very intentional phased approach,” said Josh D’Amaro, chairman of Disney Parks, Experiences and Products. “As one of the first major theme parks to close our operations and the last to reopen, we have been deliberate about keeping the health and safety of our cast, guests and local communities top of mind.”
Disneyland and California Adventure were temporarily shut down in mid-March due to the coronavirus pandemic.
The Disneyland resort announced a proposal to begin a phased reopening of the popular tourist destination in Anaheim on July 9, followed by a reopening of the location’s theme parks on July 17. Disney’s Grand Californian Hotel & Spa and Paradise Pier Hotel plan to reopen on July 23, the news release said. The Downtown Disney district will begin reopening July 9.
The planned July reopenings are pending local and state government approvals, according to a statement on the Disney Park’s blog.
Shanghai Disneyland, Florida’s Disney Springs and several Disney stores have reopened in recent weeks. A proposed reopening of Walt Disney World in Orlando was announced last month for July 11 and Hong Kong Disneyland will reopen on June 18.
Article via ABC7
College Football Players Have Found Their Voice. Coaches Beware.
Athletes who have been subject to strict social media policies from universities are now calling out racist behavior and holding their coaches and teammates to account
College football players are barely allowed by their coaches to publicly discuss the game they play, much less systemic racism in the U.S. But in the past two weeks, they have suddenly found their voice in the wake of George Floyd’s killing.
The same young men who’ve been subject to strict social media policies from universities are now calling out racist behavior and holding their coaches and teammates to account. And former players are surfacing allegations from their college playing days.
Candid tweets by players have forced an apology from a coach who exaggerated his outreach; gotten one assistant suspended; opened an investigation into the highest-paid strength and conditioning coach in the country; and caused at least one program-wide reckoning. And that’s just in the past week.
“Us players, just being who we are, we kind of stray away from posting things just because people like to interpret it and make it something that it’s probably not,” said Jamal Morris, a linebacker at Oklahoma who joined protests in Oklahoma City last month. “But this is not that situation.” He added: “I know I’m not the most famous college football player but I know my voice means something.”
It’s a remarkable shift for a sport in which athletes’ actions off the field and online have been micromanaged for decades. It comes against a backdrop of large-scale turmoil in college athletics due to the coronavirus, which paused NCAA sports in mid-March and sent athletes away from their campuses and coaches for weeks at a time. And it comes as the long debate about compensating collegiate athletes is coming to a head.
The combination of these forces could yield a much different gridiron experience come fall.
Nowhere has this dynamic been put on starker display than at Iowa. Coach Kirk Ferentz has spent 21 years building the program with pillars of discipline. He bans anyone on the roster from using Twitter, though they can use other forms of social media.
Then on June 5, former Iowa offensive lineman James Daniels, now with the Chicago Bears, shook up the discussion. “There are too many racial disparities in the Iowa football program,” he tweeted. “Black players have been treated unfairly for far too long.” Daniels went pro in 2017 after three seasons at Iowa.
More than 50 former Hawkeyes chimed in, describing the culture at Iowa as one of conformity that subjected black players to harsher scrutiny. Their allegations included taunts from coaches to “go back to the ghetto,” abusive behavior during conditioning sessions, more frequent random drug tests than white teammates and team-wide policies that disproportionately affected black athletes, such as a ban on cornrows.
Many of the complaints were leveled against strength and conditioning coach Chris Doyle, who arrived in Iowa City with Ferentz 21 years ago and in 2019 was the highest-paid strength coach in the country with a salary of $800,200, according to USA Today. Doyle previously was named Iowa’s assistant coach of the year in 2011, the same year one of his workouts resulted in 13 players being hospitalized for rhabdomyolysis, a potentially life-threatening condition caused by the breakdown of skeletal muscle tissue.
Former defensive back Manny Rugamba alleged that Doyle openly mocked how black players spoke and told them he would “put them back on the streets.”
Jaleel Johnson, now a defensive tackle with the Minnesota Vikings, also singled out Ferentz’s son, offensive coordinator Brian Ferentz in a tweet. Johnson did not give specifics, though Sharonda Phelps told Iowa athletics blog Hawkeye Nation that Brian Ferentz asked her son if he was on his way to “rob a liquor store or bank” after seeing him in a team issued Nike cold weather face-mask.
Iowa officials announced Saturday that Doyle had been put on paid administrative leave pending an independent investigation. Brian, who reports to Barta due to nepotism laws, was not disciplined. That night, the exterior of Kinnick Stadium in Iowa City was spray-painted with profanities.
Amid criticism, Ferentz relaxed the team’s social media policy and granted current players one tweet per month subject to approval. In statements released via Twitter, white players expressed solidarity with their black teammates; black players highlighted the need to speak out against racism.
“If you can not support us right now with this movement and with our team taking a knee during the national anthem, DO NOT support us during the football season,” tweeted junior safety Kaevon Merriweather, raising the possibility of continued protests in the fall.
Kirk Ferentz held a news conference Sunday to address questions about his job security. “If [the former players] feel like I’m part of the problem or if they feel like we can’t move forward with me here, then I’d appreciate that feedback. That’s not what I’ve heard thus far,” he said.
Doyle also released a statement Sunday, in which he admitted that the university asked him to stay silent. He said, “At no time have I ever crossed the line of unethical behavior or bias based upon race. I do not make racist comments and I don’t tolerate people who do.”
Utah last week suspended defensive coordinator Morgan Scalley upon learning that he used a racial slur in a text message in 2013. Scalley, a 2019 finalist for the Broyles Award given to college football’s top assistant, reportedly used the slur when describing four recruits from Texas and said Friday “I made a terrible mistake.”
At Florida State, senior defensive tackle Marvin Wilson called out first-year coach Mike Norvell for exaggerating his outreach in the wake of Floyd’s death. Norvell told the Athletic that he had gone “back and forth individually with every player,” a claim Wilson described with the poop emoji on Twitter by explaining that every player received the same generic text message.
“We will not be working out until further notice,” he tweeted on June 4.
A team meeting was immediately called, Norvell admitted to bending facts via a public apology and Wilson and his teammates were back to voluntary workouts by the next morning. Wilson said in a video posted to Twitter that the meeting also produced a new agenda for the Seminoles beyond winning games: get every player registered to vote, raise funds for organizations that support black teenagers pursuing higher education, and volunteer in Tallahassee’s underserved schools.
“Shoutout to Colin Kaepernick for being the first athlete I ever saw really take a stand for something that he believed in,” said Wilson about why he spoke up. “Me being a man of color, I want to be that change.”
Uncomfortable conversations of race are playing out in locker rooms across the nation between players, the majority of whom are black, and their coaches, mostly white men who reap millions of dollars from the success of their unpaid athletes. Not everywhere have these discussions been as contentious as at Florida State.
At Eastern Michigan, coach Chris Creighton let senior Jeff Hubbard, who is black, take the reins in a team-wide Zoom discussion days after Floyd died. “The players started out by speaking and the coaches kind of just sat back and listened and soaked up as much information as possible,” said Hubbard.
The team produced a public service announcement-type video featuring Eastern Michigan players and coaches urging togetherness. Players agreed to gather weekly throughout the fall for discussions about current events led by a rotating cast of black players.
“I feel like this weekly meeting will do a great job of having guys get a better feeling of what their other teammates go through,” said Hubbard. “It’s hard to put yourself in somebody else’s shoes of the opposite race.”
Article via WSJ
Queen Latifah criticizes ‘Gone with the Wind,’ notes Hattie McDaniel’s Oscar win wasn’t what people think
Queen Latifah said she supports HBO Max’s controversial decision to remove “Gone with the Wind” from its library due to racial sensitivity.
The 1939 Oscar-winning film set during the Civil War was removed from the platform due to concerns over its depiction of black people from that era amid heightened sensitivity to racial issues sparked by the death of George Floyd. Floyd died while in police custody on May 25 after an officer knelt on his neck for more than 8 minutes.
Many were quick to deride the decision, noting that “Gone with the Wind” gave actress Hattie McDaniel an Oscar for her role, making her the first black American to win the coveted award. Although the streaming service eventually reversed its decision, Latifah, who plays McDaniel on Ryan Murphy’s Netflix series “Hollywood,” noted that it might be time to “let ‘Gone with the Wind’ be gone with the wind.”
In an interview with the Associated Press, Latifah noted that McDaniel’s Oscar win was far from the massive win for film diversity that it’s being touted as.
“They didn’t even let her in the theater until right before she got that award. Someone came outside and brought her into the auditorium. She wasn’t even allowed to sit in there. And then she had to read a speech that was written by a studio. You know that’s not what the hell she wanted to say,” The 50-year-old actress said.
She added: “Then after that, all she could do was play the same kinds of roles … So the opportunities at that time and the way that those in power in that business were relegating us and marginalizing us and not allowing us to grow and thrive after that was just terrible. And a lot of that is still around today.”
When the film returns to the streaming service, it will include an introduction from Jacqueline Stewart, a Turner Classic Movies host and professor in the Department of Cinema and Media Studies at the University of Chicago.
Elsewhere in the interview, Latifah was asked her thoughts on the ongoing protests sparked by Floyd’s death. The actress and musician noted that the movement is a long time coming while highlighting how this current time feels different than previous generations of protests.
“This is like nothing I’ve ever seen in my life. And it’s also the fact that it’s happening worldwide. It’s time, you know? It’s time,”” she explained. “What an opportunity we have right now. I can only liken it to what it was like for me as a kid, as a teenager — young 20s, early ’90s when there was apartheid in South Africa, and we weren’t with that. And rappers, we stood up and used our voices, and everybody used their voices.”
Article via FoxNews
‘The Walking Dead’ Star Khary Payton Introduces His Transgender Son To The World
The actor described 11-year-old Karter as “one of the most happy, well-adjusted individuals I’ve ever known” alongside an adorable photo on social media.
Khary Payton is beloved by fans around the world as Ezekiel on “The Walking Dead,” but his off-screen role as a doting dad is earning him the most praise this week.
The Georgia-born actor introduced the world to his 11-year-old son Karter, who is transgender, in heartfelt posts on Instagram and Twitter Tuesday.
Describing Karter as “one of the most happy, well-adjusted individuals I’ve ever known,” Payton wrote: “Man, there is nothing more beautiful than watching your child feel the joy of exploring what it means to be true to themselves.”
“I hope you all have the opportunity to feel the unquenchable love that I am feeling right now.”
Payton’s wife Stacy offered similar sentiments on Instagram over the weekend, saying she was “overjoyed” that Karter was being true to his authentic self.
“Karter is so confident in who he is and was thrilled for me to let everyone know that he’s finally living as his true self,” she wrote. “As a boy. As my son. As Karter. I am so incredibly proud of him and feel blessed every single day to be his mama.”
Payton’s announcement garnered praise from fellow actors, including Mark Hamill of “Star Wars” fame.
“These kids are truly amazing!!” Reno Wilson of CBS’s “Mike and Molly” wrote on Instagram. “Teaching us how to be human on the regular! Let’s go Karter!
Added “Walking Dead” co-star Samantha Morton: “Karter we love you! You are incredible.”
As a number of outlets have pointed out, Payton’s announcement came roughly four months after retired NBA star Dwayne Wade publicly opened up about his transgender daughter Zaya.
Zaya, who turned 13 last month, made her red carpet debut alongside her father and stepmother Gabrielle Union at the Better Brothers Los Angeles’ sixth annual Truth Awards in March.
While Union said she’s grateful for the support she and her family had received from LGBTQ rights advocates, she opened up about the criticism they’ve endured for allowing Zaya to live as her true self.
“With all of the love comes the hate too,” Union told Variety last month. “It’s watching the love handle the hate that has been encouraging. We’re just loving and accepting our kids, which is not revolutionary. To some people it’s nuts.”
Article via HuffingtonPost
Christopher Columbus statue removed from Saint Louis park
ST. LOUIS (KMOV.com) – The statue of Christopher Columbus was taken down in Tower Grove Park Tuesday after years of controversy.
Officials with the Tower Grove Park board posted the following statement to their Facebook page Tuesday morning as the statue was being removed:
“Tower Grove Park celebrates the diversity of our community every day and serves as the centerpiece of the region’s most vibrant neighborhoods. When a statue of Christopher Columbus was placed in the park 140 years ago, its purpose was to celebrate the contributions of immigrants in this region. But now, for many, it symbolizes a historical disregard for indigenous peoples and cultures and destruction of their communities.
In order to ensure a safe, inclusive and pleasant environment for park visitors and team members alike, the Park’s Board of Commissioners has authorized the removal of the Columbus statue to begin the week of June 15. By taking this action, Tower Grove Park reaffirms its commitment to being a place of welcome, and to caring for the people’s park in the best way possible.”
The statue’s removal comes during a growing push across the country to take down controversial statues, including Christopher Columbus. In some states, statues of the European explorer have been torn down, beheaded and dumped into water.
Historical records reveal Columbus forced many natives to be slaves. According to History.com, Columbus treated them with ‘extreme violence and brutality,’ a far cry from the story many learned growing up of the Italian explorer who became a hero after discovering America in 1492.
“He’s not the person that we thought he was or that we were taught he was. Maybe the history has been out there all along but our educational system prioritizes the stories that benefit those in charge,” said Mary Schum, who supports removing the Christopher Columbus statue in Tower Grover Park.
Last week, a petition had over 1,000 signatures to remove the statue that sat at the entrance of Tower Grove Park near Grand Avenue.
There have been calls to remove the statue for years. Last year, the park’s board announced the statue would stay and said it would post signs “with important historical context about Columbus and the history of the park’s land.”
“When you have very few statues in this particular park I just think there are so many other people that represent freedom, that represent creation, that represent inclusiveness and knowing the history of Christopher Columbus is definitely different than what I learned growing up. I would certainly like to see someone that better represents the neighborhood,” said Randazzo.
One person at the park, who asked to not be identified, said he thinks the statue represents our country’s history and supports leaving it in Tower Grove Park.
Before the statue’s removal, the park’s executive director told News 4:
“Tower Grove Park is a place of inclusion and diversity. All three statues in the park were placed there approximately 140 years ago to celebrate the contributions of immigrants to this region.”
“He wasn’t even the first person to land here so I don’t really understand putting him on a statue in the first place so if it offends people, yeah, just get rid of it,” said Josey Rodrigquez, who signed the petition to remove the statue.
A protest was planned for June 23rd at Piper Palm House where the Tower Grove Park Board of Commissioners is scheduled to meet.
The statue has been a controversial one for years in St. Louis and was vandalized in 2016 on Columbus Day. The same thing happened in 2017 when someone spray-painted “murder” and “Black Lives Matter” on the statue.
“We Italians are just tired of it,” a protester said at the time. “There’s no reason to be rude, disgraceful, or even just … Horrible. There”s just no reason for it.”
People gathered around the statue in 2018 on Columbus Day and demanded its removal because of his treatment to indigenous people. In October, 2019, Tower Grove Park’s board decided to keep the statue until the decision was reversed on June 16, 2020.
Photo Credit: kmov.com/News 4
Woman smashes car with hammer, tells neighbor to ‘go back to Mexico’
(KCAL/CNN) – A viral video shows a California woman repeatedly hitting her neighbor’s car with a hammer and shouting, “Go back to Mexico.”
Natalie Mason witnessed the bizarre incident outside her home in Chatsworth on Wednesday.
“I was trying to calm her down, but she didn’t respond,” Mason said.
Mason is the roommate of the man who owns the car. He was in Florida for work when it happened, but Mason and the man’s sister were home at the time. They said they came outside after they heard the banging.
“I really thought it was an ex-girlfriend, an angry ex-girlfriend,” Mason said.
It turned out that the woman damaging the car was their neighbor, a woman Mason said they have had run-ins with in the past and who has repeatedly told them to go back to Mexico.
“It’s kind of hard to explain to the kids, because they witnessed it,” Mason said. “It’s kind of hard to explain, you know, what racism is.”
Another neighbor who heard the commotion came out and restrained the woman.
The victims said the police told them the woman was upset with where the car was parked — even though it was on a public street — because she felt it was too close to where she parked her car.
“There’s more than 50 dents on that car,” Mason said.
The owner of the car said he only has liability insurance for the vehicle and set up a GoFundMe page to help cover the cost of the damage. As of Monday afternoon, more than $12,000 had been raised.
Mason said she hopes people take the video seriously.
“It’s not funny,” she said. “It’s really sad to see somebody at that age act that way, but I think at the same time it brings awareness to what can really happen.”
The Los Angeles Police Department said the woman was booked on suspicion of felony vandalism, but her bail was set at zero due to the COVID-19 pandemic and she was released the following morning.
Photo Credit: kmov.com
Police bust man who shoved elderly woman to ground in NYC
Police have collared the heartless cur who knocked an elderly woman to the ground in a random attack.
“Thanks to the outstanding work of @NYPDDetectives, this suspect has been apprehended,” Police Commissioner Dermot Shea tweeted Tuesday.
The 92-year-old woman was pushed down while walking down Third Avenue near East 16th Street in the Gramercy Park neighborhood at about 3:30 p.m. Friday, police said.
Video footage was released of the attack Monday night.
Police sources said cops recognized the attacker, whose name was not released, who has had dozens of run-ins with law enforcement.
Additional reporting by Larry Celona
via: https://nypost.com/2020/06/16/police-bust-man-who-shoved-elderly-woman-to-ground-in-nyc/
Photo Credit: nypost.com
Women jailed for attacking cop with toilet roll holder at illegal party
Two UK women have been sentenced to prison for attacking police officers — including with a metal toilet paper holder — and threatening to infect them with the coronavirus when they broke up a lockdown party, according to reports.
“I’ve got corona, watch out!” Millie Rose Robinson, 21, shouted at one of the cops and kicked him in the chest when he tried to arrest her during the party in Eastbourne on April 8, the BBC reported.
Bayleigh Meadows, 21, also claimed to be infected as she threw the toilet roll holder at an officer’s head during the illegal party, where she and Robinson had been boozing it up.
Meadows, who pleaded guilty to assault occasioning actual bodily harm, was sentenced to a year behind bars. Robinson received a six-month sentence after pleading guilty to two charges of assaulting an emergency worker.
The Lewes Crown Court heard that a drunken Robinson repeatedly taunted an officer with her threats and then turned violent when a sergeant tried to arrest her.
Robinson’s defense lawyer, Rebecca Upton, said her client had found lockdown “extremely hard” and felt “extremely isolated,” leading to her unhinged behavior.
Meadows caused a cut on the sergeant’s forehead when she flung the heavy toilet roll holder at him.
Her attorney, Adam James, said she had underlying mental health issues and could not recall much of what happened that night.
Prosecutor Carl Smith said: “The verbal and physical abuse our officers were faced with in this situation was absolutely disgraceful.
“This happened during the height of the coronavirus lockdown period, when officers were continuing to do their job in challenging circumstances,” he added.
A third defendant, 20-year-old Nicole Stonestreet, was charged with assaulting an emergency worker and is due to appear in court on June 26.
via: https://nypost.com/2020/06/15/women-jailed-for-attacking-cop-with-toilet-roll-holder/
Photo Credit: Sussex Police
Cop laughs after breaking black man’s ankle with flying tackle
Shocking video shows an Atlanta cop sprinting to tackle a black driver, breaking his ankle — then laughing and calling him a “little girl” as he forced him to walk on it, according to a lawsuit filed Monday.
Tyler Griffin, who was pulled over by an unmarked police car for an alleged traffic violation in April last year, looked confused in bodycam footage as an officer waved a gun at him and screamed, “Get out of the f–king car!”
Once out, Griffin gently brushed off the white officer’s arm when he grabbed his shirt, according to the lawsuit filed against the same force that just lost its chief over Friday’s shooting death of Rayshard Brooks.
A second white officer then sprinted for a flying tackle, knocking Griffin to the ground and breaking his ankle, footage released by Griffin’s lawyers shows.
“He’s supposed to protect and serve, not act like he’s on WWE,” said Griffin’s attorney Jeb Butler.
That officer — identified in court documents as Donald Vickers — later laughed to a fellow cop, who pointed out the “skid marks” from the crash landing.
“We’re laughing because you fell pretty hard after pushing an officer, man. I find that funny, man,” Vickers told the suspect as he screamed in pain.
Griffin was then made to stand and walk, with the officers still laughing as he wailed, “It hurts! It hurts!” and “Oh my God — help me, please! Take the pain away!”
“You sound like a little girl right now,” Vickers told him, according to the lawsuit filed in district court in Atlanta.
Griffin’s injury later required emergency surgery to install a metal plate and 10 pins, according to his lawyers.
The lawsuit claims the officers tried to cover up causing the injury, alleging that Griffin hurt himself driving and that they were not “strong enough to take down Griffin.”
The officers also claimed Griffin’s inability to walk was proof that he was under the influence — their reason for not administering sobriety tests, the documents allege.
Griffin’s lawyers say they have yet to learn if Vickers and the other officer with him — identified as Matthew Abad — have been fired or disciplined.
Griffin said he is only pursuing the case because he doesn’t want it to “happen to anybody else.”
“I grew up believing that if you cooperated with officers, everything would be okay,” he said.
“I still think most police officers are good people. But what happened to me is not acceptable, and this story has to be told.”
Griffin was charged with DUI and various traffic violations, and the charges are still pending, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution said.
The Atlanta Police Department, Vickers and Abad did not immediately comment on the case, the paper said.
The police brutality lawsuit came on the same day Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms announced police reforms in the wake of Brooks’ shooting, including a “duty to intervene” policy within the department ranks.
via: https://nypost.com/2020/06/16/cop-laughs-after-breaking-black-mans-ankle-with-tackle-video/
Photo Credit: Butler Law Firm
Former MP questions Kellogg’s over Coco Pops monkey when Rice Krispies characters are white
A former Labour MP has written to Kellogg’s to ask why its Rice Krispies packets feature “three white boys” while Coco Pops boxes display a monkey, amid the Black Lives Matter protests.
Fiona Onasanya, who last year became the first sitting MP to be jailed in three decades after being convicted of lying to police officers over a speeding fine, took to Twitter to question the cereal company’s choice of mascot.
The intervention comes after protests have erupted across the world following the killing by police of George Floyd, a black man who had repeatedly told officers who were restraining him that he was unable to breath.
She said: “@KelloggsUK, as you are yet to reply to my email – Coco Pops and Rice Krispies have the same compòsition (except for the fact CP’s are brown and chocolate flavoured)… so I was wondering why Rice Krispies have three white boys representing the brand and Coco Pops have a monkey?”
Kellogg’s said that it “stands in support of the black community” and that the monkey mascot features on both white and milk chocolate Coco Pops and highlights the “playful personality” of the brand.
Ms Onasanya later tweeted: “Well, given John Harvey Kellogg co-founded the Race Betterment Foundation (the Foundation’s main purpose was to study the cause of and cure for ‘race degeneracy’), it would be remiss of me not to ask.”
The cereal company was founded by John Harvey Kellogg’s brother William Keith Kellogg, although the pair did come up with the recipe for Corn Flakes together.
A spokesman for the company said: “It’s important that we are all talking more about how we can build racial equality. Kellogg stands in support of the black community.
“We do not tolerate discrimination and believe that people of all races, genders, backgrounds, sexual orientation, religions, capabilities and beliefs should be treated with the utmost dignity and respect.
“The monkey mascot that appears on both white and milk chocolate Coco Pops, was created in the 1980s to highlight the playful personality of the brand.
“As part of our ambition to bring fun to the breakfast table, we have a range of characters that we show on our cereal boxes, including tigers, giraffes, crocodiles, elves and a narwhal.”
via: https://currently.att.yahoo.com/news/former-mp-questions-kelloggs-over-113654224.html
Photo Credit: currently.att.yahoo.com