>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5J8_1Wg6vuU
'Disney On Ice Presents Mickey & Friends'
>71 views | Apr 29, 2022
Jessica Lee plays Rapunzel in the latest 'Disney On Ice' show at the Toyota Arena on Ontario.
>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5J8_1Wg6vuU
'Disney On Ice Presents Mickey & Friends'
>71 views | Apr 29, 2022
Jessica Lee plays Rapunzel in the latest 'Disney On Ice' show at the Toyota Arena on Ontario.
>'Disney On Ice Presents Mickey & Friends'
>16180841
>Women
>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AOEtrt_9C90
George Conway Weighs In On Jan. 6 Public Hearings
>40,196 views | Apr 29, 2022
The chair of the House committee investigating January 6th, Rep. Bennie Thomson, recently announced that public hearings will begin in June. Conservative attorney George Conway joins Katie Phang to discuss.
>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kOSU1pngauI
A Conversation With Chairman Adam Schiff
>313 views | Apr 29, 2022
U.S. Representative and Chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, Adam Schiff, discusses the evolving situation in Ukraine, including congressional responses to the war, and the state of democracy in the United States and abroad.
Speaker
Adam Schiff
U.S. Representative from California (D); Chairman, House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence
Presider
Sewell Chan
Editor in Chief, Texas Tribune; CFR Member
>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sewell_Chan
Sewell Chan is an American journalist who is the editor-in-chief of The Texas Tribune. Prior to that he was the editorial page editor at the Los Angeles Times, where he oversaw the editorial board and the Op-Ed and Sunday Opinion pages of the newspaper. Chan worked at The New York Times from 2004 to 2018 in a variety of reporter and editorial positions.
…
Chan, the son of immigrants from China and Hong Kong, grew up in Flushing, Queens and attended New York City public schools and Hunter College High School,[1] where he was the co-editor of the school's independent newspaper, The Observer.[2] His father was a taxi cab driver. He graduated from Harvard University with an AB in Social Studies in 1998 and received a Marshall Scholarship for graduate study at Oxford University.[3] He received his MPhil in Politics in 2000. He interned for The Philadelphia Inquirer in 1995, The Wall Street Journal in 1996, and The Washington Post in 1997 and 1999.[4]
From 2000 to 2004, Chan wrote for The Washington Post, where he covered municipal politics, poverty and social services, and education.[5]
After moving to The New York Times in 2004, Chan developed a reputation as a prolific reporter.[6] From 2007 to 2009, Chan was the founding bureau chief of City Room, the newspaper's local news blog,[7][8] which "helped spark The New York Times' digital evolution."[9] Under Chan, City Room was part of The Times's 2009 Pulitzer Prize-winning breaking news reporting which led Eliot Spitzer to resign as governor of New York.[10]
In January 2010, Chan joined The Times's Washington bureau as a correspondent covering economic policy.[11]
In February 2011, Chan was named deputy editor of the Times Op-Ed page and Sunday Review section.[12] While in that role, Chan was named in 2014 to the Out magazine Out100 list of the most compelling lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people in the world.[13]
From 2015 to 2018, Chan was International News Editor at The New York Times, working in London and then New York.[14][15]
In August 2018, the Los Angeles Times named Chan a deputy managing editor to "supervise a team of journalists responsible for initiating coverage and developing content for its digital, video and print platforms."[16]
In April 2020, Chan was promoted to editorial page editor, in charge of overseeing the editorial and op-ed pages.[17] He was the lead author of a 2020 editorial examining the Los Angeles Times' fraught history with communities of color and journalists of color and apologizing for the newspaper's history of racism.[18][19]After Donald Trump lost the 2020 election, Chan faced criticism for publishing a full page of letters devoted to Californians who had voted for Trump.[20] Under Chan's leadership, editorial writer Robert Greene was awarded the 2021 Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing, for his coverage of criminal justice reform in Los Angeles.[21]
Chan was named The Texas Tribune Editor-in-Chief effective October 2021.[18][21]
Awards and honors
2021 Executive Program in News Innovation and Leadership, CUNY Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism[22]
2021 Special Citation for Excellence in Journalism, Society of Professional Journalists (for the Los Angeles Times editorial, "An examination of the Times' failures on race, our apology and a path forward")[23]
2014 Young Leader, American Council on Germany[24]
2012 Marshall Memorial Fellowship, German Marshall Fund of the United States[5]
2010 National Advisory Board Member, The Poynter Institute[25]
2009, Young Leader, French-American Foundation[26]
2003 Rosalynn Carter Fellowship for Mental Health Journalism, The Carter Center[27]
>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rdtCwAhCSnU
John Lee Hooker - Boom Boom (Black Journal #48, Jan 26th, 1970)
>5,500 views | Premiered Apr 22, 2022
John Lee Hooker performing 'Boom Boom' on TV Show Black Journal in January 1970.
Footage licensed from WNET.
>Hoary sheets…
>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-1VkNHYksYk
EXCLUSIVE: Questions arise over SFPD's response to car break-ins, fencing operations throughout city
>35,983 views | Apr 27, 2022
A San Francisco resident recorded stunning video of yet another car break-in, and a police cruiser right behind the getaway car. But, no arrests.
>San Francisco resident recorded stunning video
Couple of these may provide clues ABC7 was hesitant to identify.
Bill's fun meter has petered out.
>https://sfgov.org/policecommission/chief-police
William "Bill" Scott
Chief of the San Francisco Police Department
Photo of Chief Scott in SFPD UniformSan Francisco Police Chief William “Bill” Scott was sworn in by the late Mayor Edwin M. Lee on January 23, 2017. Chief Scott joins SFPD after serving 27 years in the Los Angeles Police Department. He rose through the ranks to become Deputy Chief of LAPD’s South Bureau after being promoted to Commander in 2012.
Chief Scott grew up in Birmingham, Alabama and attended the University of Alabama, where he earned a degree in Accounting. He is married with three children. In 1989, a cousin serving in law enforcement encouraged him to seek a similar career. Chief Scott is a graduate of Senior Management Institute of Policing.
“Any successful Police Department has to be a partnership between the community and officers,” says Chief Scott. “I am honored to work in the City and County of San Francisco, where residents, community leaders and local stakeholders are actively engaged in the process to help make our Police Department the finest in the nation.”
Chief Scott brings to the Department a keen focus on community policing and experience implementing major reforms. He leads SFPD as it undertakes key reforms laid out by the Department of Justice.
“I admire San Francisco’s proactive approach to reform in the wake of incidents in the last several years, and I look forward to continuing this work in partnership with the Mayor's Office, the San Francisco Police Commission, the community and the men and women of the SFPD.” says Chief Scott. “I believe San Francisco Police Department officers are dedicated to the community they serve, and I am committed to providing them with the support they need to do their jobs. Above all else, it is my number one priority as Chief to continue the critical work to keep San Francisco and all of its residents safe.”
>Bill's fun meter has petered out.
Fourth one over.
NS/54
risqué+
>https://kunstler.com/clusterfuck-nation/this-is-this/
“This is This”
>April 29, 2022
It’s one thing to lose your dignity as citizens, and another to just lose your country altogether….
“This is this,” DiNiro’s character “Michael” famously told Cazale’s “Stan” in The Deer Hunter, explaining the metaphysics of the bullet in his hand, and pretty much everyone watching the movie got the drift of that cryptic utterance. Likewise, Elon Musk’s character “Elon Musk” explained to America’s Maoist managerial legions: “Free speech is free speech” — as if, a week after Twitter’s surrender to Elon, there was some part of the formulation that the Left didn’t understand. (Apparently, all of it.)
What a concept! Free speech is free speech. It has bowled over the — what? — maybe twenty-three percent of the country that considers free speech “a threat to democracy.” This is what comes of inverting and subverting language itself for the purpose of mind-raping the nation like Jeffrey Epstein on a 15-year-old. The Left has exercised a Macumba voodoo death grip on free speech for years now. The deeper the Left’s crimes against the constitution and common decency, the harder they strangled the flow of news, information, and opinion until the mental life of the USA turned into a gibber of shamefully obvious unreality.
It’s one thing to lose your dignity as citizens, and another to just lose your country altogether, and that is the circle of hell that the Left has dragged everyone else into since even before Hillary Clinton booted the 2016 election. This tyrannical Maoist managerial mob, grown paradoxically rich beyond precedent, became a tool of the state itself working around the inconvenient first amendment to hog-tie public debate. Will the US government allow Mr. Musk to get away with liberating the new “public square?”
It looks like the DOJ, the SEC, and perhaps other nefarious actors of degenerate officialdom are fixing to go after the rogue Tesla mogul who had the effrontery to oppose totalitarian control of the narratives driving public life. It’s rumored that money-losing Twitter could not exist without the government footing the bill for the vast, backstage server arrays that enable all Twitter’s messaging. In an odd twist, though, the shareholders were not necessarily benefitting from that symbiotic relationship as Twitter’s stock fell from $71 a share in July ’21 to $32 in March ’22. But the C-suite of Twitter’s executives were already too massively rich to care about anything but punishing their political enemies — which they did with sadistic zeal — when Mr. Musk surprisingly stepped onto the scene.
The government’s first counter-move, under the vividly deliquescing “Joe Biden” — whose treasonous corruption became Twitter’s job-one to conceal — was to concoct a brand-new agency under Homeland Security called the Disinformation Governance Board, to be run by one Nina Jankowicz, “internationally-recognized expert on disinformation and democratization,” who also happened to be a RussiaGate shill and publicist for the fifty national security officials who labeled the Hunter Biden laptop story “Russian disinformation” (turned out: not). In other words, America now has a “truth” kommissar who is a soldier in the War on Truth.
Such a desperately stupid maneuver could only come from a regime close to collapse — just as the feculent particulars on Hunter Biden’s laptop are being revealed by many in possession of copies of the laptop’s hard-drive, and while, concurrently, the US attorney in Delaware, David Weiss, leads an investigation into Hunter B’s business dealings. Those include large-ish payments from nations hostile to American interests for opaque services rendered. So, you have a chief executive (“JB”) compromised mentally and legally, and installed via a janky primary and a dubious election, and, some young cookie fresh out of the Princeton fellowship matrix is going to defend him like Wonder Woman wielding her Magic Lasso of Aphrodite?
Homey don’t think so. Homey think the whole wretched episode of orchestrated national mindfuckery is about to come a’tumblin’ down, along with the miserable ghoul in the Oval Office. And that will be followed by the fun of seeing them try to eject Kamala Harris from the scene and replacing her with the likes of Barack or Michele Obama. (Don’t believe it? Just watch.) Of course, all that will be small potatoes to the reveal of cosmic ineptitude or gross criminality (perhaps both!) that is bound to come as Twitter opens up to discussion of our government’s role in the Covid-19 fiasco — which I aimed to help kick off with my first Tweet in long long time, viz:…
>http://www.whatdoesitmean.com/
o7
o7