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A Group Meant To Help Cash-Strapped House Republicans Seeking Election Has Turned Its Back On George Santos

George Santos may have been caught repeatedly and creatively lying during his House election campaign, but will that stop him from running for a second term? Of course not. Only problem is the serial fabulist’s campaign is already in the red. Luckily there’s a House group set up to help cash-strapped members with this very problem. Unluckily they’re turning their back on the erstwhile Kitara Ravache.

As per Politico, Protect the House, a fundraising committee that helps vulnerable candidates keep their seats, and according to paperwork filed Monday they were ready to dump cash on a number of New York representatives. Santos’ name was not on the list.

Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy, a member of the committee, was asked whether he would support Santos’ re-election campaign. He responded with a laugh, then added that he would “wait and see.”

McCarthy has never formally denounced Santos, but others on the committee have. Santos has tried to spin his infamy, claiming he was an outsider and not an untrustworthy sort who lies about his mom dying in the World Trade Center attacks.

Last week, first quarter fundraising data for Santos’ campaign was released and it was not pretty. In the first three months of 2023, he raised a mere $5,333.26. Worse, he had to refund over $8,000 in donations, meaning his campaign has a net loss of about $3,000. Best of luck with that and with that Nicki Minaj bill.
(Via Politico)

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The Kanye West ‘Jeen-Yuhs’ Directors Were Sued By A Chicago Woman For Revealing Her ‘Dark Past’

Love Is Blind viewers thought they’d never see the footage of the live reunion special. It was later revealed that this was due to the extreme technical difficulties faced by Netflix. But reality television enthusiasts aren’t the only ones anxious about the streaming giant. A short clip of the show featured in Ye’s (formally known as Kanye West) 2022 Netflix documentary Jeen-Yuhs: A Kanye Trilogy is at the center of a new lawsuit, according to TMZ.

A Chicago woman named Cynthia Love is seeking $30,000 in damages from the three-part series directors Coodie Simmons and Chike Ozah as well as Netflix. Love, who had appeared in the video for Ye’s breakout single “Through The Wire,” which was also directed by Simmons, claims in the lawsuit that the extended version of her used in the series shows her in an “altered state” in which she “was not capable of providing consent.”

The defendant alleged that when the footage was first captured, she was compensated $20. Her appearance in the music video was minor as she is seen dancing in what appears to be a restaurant while not in a right state of mind. Love shared that use of the extended footage shows her “dark past” from which she’s worked nearly two decades to escape.

Love insists that she was not personally contacted for consent to use the extended footage, claiming Simmons told her son “he assumed she was dead” instead of trying to contact her before the documentary was released.

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De’Aaron Fox Won The NBA’s Inaugural Clutch Player Of The Year Award

De’Aaron Fox has turned himself into a crunch time killer for the upstart Sacramento Kings, and as a result, his efforts late in games are being recognized by the league. As part of the NBA’s rollout of its end of season awards this week, it was announced on TNT on Tuesday evening that Fox has won the inaugural Clutch Player of the Year award.

While there are a myriad of reasons why Sacramento broke its 17-year playoff drought and finished with the 3-seed in the Western Conference, the play of Fox in tense moments late in games was a major reason why. Fox took his game to another level this season, which saw him earn the first All-Star nod of his young career thanks in large part to his fearlessness down the stretch of close games. This has continued through the first two games of the postseason, where Fox has been a menace in the fourth quarter against the Golden State Warriors.

On the year, Fox averaged 25 points on 51.2 percent shooting from the field with 6.1 assists, 4.2 rebounds, and 1.1 steals in 33.4 minutes a night. Fox beat out two other finalists for the honor: Miami Heat star Jimmy Butler and Chicago Bulls ace DeMar DeRozan.

The NBA announced that this would join its collection of awards prior to the 2022-23 season. Fox joins Jaren Jackson Jr. of the Memphis Grizzlies as award winners this year — Jackson was named Defensive Player of the Year on Monday — while the Coach of the Year and Sixth Man awards will be announced on TNT later this week.

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Singer Aaron Carter’s Tragic Cause Of Death Has Been Revealed

Back in November, singer and rapper Aaron Carter tragically died. For the weeks to follow, close friends and family shared kind words about the musicians and their latest moments with him. His brother, Nick Carter, even took to Instagram to upload a touching message to Aaron’s fans.

“Even though my brother and I have had a complicated relationship, my love for him has never ever faded. I have always held on to the hope that he would somehow, someday, want to walk a healthy path and eventually find the help that he so desperately needed. Sometimes we want to blame someone or something for a loss, but the truth is that addiction and mental illness is the real villain here. I will miss my brother more than anyone will ever know. I love you, Chizz. Now you can finally have the peace you could never find here on earth….I love you, baby brother,” wrote Nick.

Now, nearly six months late, Variety has obtained a document that revealed the pop star’s cause of death. According to the outlet, “Aaron Carter’s death was caused by drowning and the effects of alprazolam (an ingredient used in cans of compressed air), a generic form of Xanax, and inhaling difluoroethane.”

The entertainer was found unresponsive at home and his death was ruled an accident by the Los Angeles County Department of Medical Examiner-Coroner’s office.

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Like Drew Barrymore, Parker Posey Thinks Her Slain ‘Scream’ Character Should Come Back To The Franchise

The Scream franchise is back and arguably stronger than ever, and usually with a longtime franchise that means lots of callbacks. Problem is, this is a horror franchise, with the requisite high body count. A lot of great and famous actors have been brutally murdered over the seven films, but that hasn’t stopped some of them from wishing to come back, somehow. Drew Barrymore, the first to ever eat it in the series, wants back in. And now so does Scream 3 victim Parker Posey.

As caught by Variety, the legendary actress, who can currently be seen in a memorable role in Ari Aster’s Beau is Afraid, recently did an interview with ComicBook.com. They asked her what she thought of Barrymore’s pitch, which was that her character was only faking being dead. Posey responded with a similar but less far-fetched idea:

“Well, I did an interview for WNYC Radio, like three weeks ago, for the play I was doing. And they said, ‘Well, there’s some people here that want to say hi.’ And it was the Scream team. And I actually pitched, ‘Can I just be in another dimension and come back? And continue to …’ I hope so. I would love to do that. That was really fun. I can’t believe Wes Craven let me get away with some of the silly stuff I was doing. I loved him, and that was fun.”

Multiverses are hot right now, so why not? Scream isn’t that realistic, so they could get in on the same action as Rick and Morty and the MCU. Besides, Posey is an always welcome presence, so if the Scream team isn’t into going the multiverse route, why not just give her an entirely new character? As Barrymore said about her idea, “With good writing, you can make anything happen.”

(Via Variety and ComicBook.com)

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Jake Tapper Couldn’t Help But Laugh At Fox News’ Post-Settlement Statement Touting Their Alleged ‘Journalistic Standards’

So Fox News isn’t being sued into kingdom come. Their stars won’t have to take the stand and admit what leaked texts and emails have already revealed: that they thought the voter fraud nonsense they were parroting on the air was bunk. Instead of $1.6 billion, as Dominion Voting Systems, sought, the network will only have to fork over $787.5 million — about half. Clips from The Simpsons won’t be played in a courtroom. In a statement on the settlement, Fox News sort of admitted partially lying, while touting their “journalistic standards” — a line that an anchor at one of their rivals couldn’t even say with a straight face.

As per Mediaite, CNN’s Jake Tapper was on the clock when the settlement was reached and when Fox News released their clearly very lawyered-up statement. He tried to stay detached, but this one was tricky.

“Fox putting a positive face on what can only be interpreted as one of the ugliest and most embarrassing moments in the history of journalism,” Tapper told viewers. He then read their statement, and it didn’t take long for him to crack up.

“Fox issued a statement saying, ‘We are pleased to have reached a settlement of our dispute,’” he read, stopping to sarcastically repeat the word “dispute.” He then tried to solider one, but it was tricky.

“‘We acknowledge the court’s rulings finding certain claims about Dominion to be false. This settlement reflects’ — I’m sorry. This is going to be difficult to say with a straight face,” Tapper said before trying to solider on.

“‘This settlement reflects Fox’s continued commitment to the highest journalistic standards,’” Tapper said, making a face at the words “journalistic standards” being touted by a news network busted deceiving their viewers. “‘We are hopeful that our’ — sorry,” he said, now laughing. “‘We are hopeful that our decision to resolve the dispute with Dominion amicably instead of the acrimony of a divisive trial, allows the country to move forward from these issues.’”

It’s been reported that as part of the settlement Fox News doesn’t have to apologize or even acknowledge their expensive wrongdoing on air, as once expected. Its viewers may never even know that they narrowly avoided both forking over more money and having the likes of Tucker Carlson admitting under oath that they lied. Meanwhile CNN doesn’t get anywhere near the audience Fox News does. But one of their own stars being physically unable to get through words like “journalistic standards” without cracking up may at least go viral and live on to shame them in the future.

(Via Mediaite)

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People rally to support grandmother raising 12 children after their mother died giving birth

When most people have children, they hope that their own parents will be around to watch them grow up. They’re not often thinking about their own mortality at that stage of life. But sadly, sometimes parents are the ones that don’t get to watch their children grow up, and it’s the grandparents tasked with raising their grandchildren.

Patricia Pouncey is one of those grandparents left caring for her grandchildren after her daughter, Nikita Washington, gave birth to her 12th child on December 22. Washington went into Harper University Hospital in Detroit due to high blood pressure before requiring a cesarean section, according to ABC12. The 35-year-old was at the hospital alone as her mother was caring for her other children and her husband is currently incarcerated.

But after learning of the cesarean, her family did not hear from her again, which prompted her sister to go to the hospital to check on Washington. This is when the family discovered that the mother of 12 had passed away after complications from the surgery.


With Washington’s husband in jail, Pouncey is left as the sole caregiver of the children, now aged 3 months to 19 years old. Taking on a child without warning is a lot to handle, but taking in 12 grieving children while you are also grieving has to feel nearly impossible. But Pouncey has been doing whatever she can to make sure the children continue to stay together in her home, and others have been pitching in to help.

grandmother raises kids; 12 grandchildren; maternal mortality; Black maternal health

Washington’s sister Daveia Knox started a GoFundMe to help with funeral expenses and to assist Pouncey with money to raise the children. So far, the account has raised more than $104K and helped the grandmother purchase a more reliable vehicle and a larger home to house all of the children. The comments on the GoFundMe have been extremely supportive of the grieving family.

“May God strengthen you & bless you with much prosperity to raise your grandchildren without lacking anything! I’m extremely sorry for your loss & pray you got the answers you need. Blessings,” wrote one donor.

This was such an unexpected tragedy, the generosity & sacrifice of grandma, and to care for the children. May God bless the family and all those who donate in any way they can: money, food, childcare, etc.,” another donor wrote.

There have been donors giving donations of all sizes, from $5 to $3,000, hoping to help the grandma care for her dozen grandchildren. Surely each donation is appreciated and will be used for things like groceries, baby formula, clothing, shoes and other things required to raise children.

Pouncey hasn’t received information on what happened to her daughter while at the hospital that led to her death.

“I haven’t talked to anyone from the hospital. I have not received anything from them. All I have is the death certificate,” the grandmother told CNN.

“If she died naturally, I want to know. If one of them doctors did something, I wanna know that too,” Pouncey told Fox 2 Detroit. “I’m hurt, I’m confused.”

Currently, Black maternal mortality is 2.6 times higher than that of white women, and Black infants are more than twice as likely to die after birth than white infants. Unfortunately, Washington became one of the Black women who make up the statistic, and Pouncey is hoping no other mother has to go through what she is going through.

“I’m worried about every mother,” Pouncey told CNN. “Don’t ever, ever make the mistake that I made, letting your child go (to the hospital) alone. We need to give more attention to what’s going on.”

April 11 to 17, 2023 was Black Maternal Health Week, during which events and campaigns were held to raise awareness around Black maternal mortality rates. The annual week also focuses on programs and initiatives to support Black mothers.

If you’d like to donate to support the family, you can find their GoFundMe here.

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Over $2.9 million raised in one day for Ralph Yarl, the teen shot after going to the wrong address

Ralph Yarl, a Black 16-year-old high school junior, narrowly survived being shot twice on April 13 after going to the wrong Kansas City address to pick up his younger twin brothers. Yarl had simply rung the doorbell when, with no exchange of words, he was shot in the head by the homeowner Andrew D. Lester, an 84-year-old white man. Lester shot Yarl once more after he fell to the ground. Miraculously, Yarl was able to run away, but he would have to run to multiple homes before finally getting help from a neighbor.

Since the incident, people have rallied to demand justice for the teen, including raising over $2,900,000 on GoFundMe. On the fundraiser page, which was created by his aunt, Faith Spoonmore, Yarl is described as a “fantastic kid,” “ a kind soul,” “quiet,” “friendly,” “well-mannered,” “always willing to help,” “super smart,” and a “musical genius.” He was looking forward to visiting West Africa before attending college, where he planned to balance his love of music with pursuing a major in chemical engineering.


“Life looks a lot different right now,” Spoonmore writes of her nephew. “Even though he is doing well physically, he has a long road ahead mentally and emotionally. The trauma that he has to endure and survive is unimaginable. He is our miracle. We have heard these types of stories many times, and unfortunately, most black boys are not alive to get another chance.”

ralph yarl gofundme, andrew lester

Spoonmore posted a fundraising goal of $2.5 million to cover Yarl’s medical and therapy expenses. Within a day of the GoFundMe launch, donations began pouring in. Thus far, $2,905,680 has been raised, meeting the family’s goal and adding funds toward Yarl’s college expenses and long-awaited trip to West Africa.

Support for the young man has shown up in other ways as well. An illustrated retelling of Yarl’s story, created by cartoon activist Pan Cooke (aka @thefakepan), went viral online, prompting others to share and demand Lester’s arrest.

Meanwhile, actual protests mounted in Kansas City. As of Monday, April 17, Lester will face two felony charges—assault in the first degree and armed criminal action. Authorities issued a warrant for his arrest, and Lester turned himself in on April 18.

Spoonmore did give the hopeful update that Yarl is currently at home and able to move around and even communicate. She also wrote that he has been smiling at the kind words being sent to him through emails.

Though Yarl’s family has reached their initial goal, there is indeed still a long road ahead and every bit of support counts. As Spoonmore eloquently put it, “Ralph deserves to have the future that he has dreams about. He deserves to be the light that shows the world that LOVE wins and that humanity is still Good.”

If you are able to donate, you can find Yarl’s GoFundMe page here.

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‘Killers Of The Flower Moon’ Author David Grann On Survival, Storytelling, And Scurvy In His New Book, ‘The Wager’

David Grann, staff writer for The New Yorker and author of Killers Of The Flower Moon, is back with another must-read work of historical narrative non-fiction. This time, he’s back in adventure-mode (as he was with The Lost City Of Z) with The Wager, which charts the mutiny and aftermath of the HMS Wager’s 1741 shipwreck on the coast of an inhospitable Chilean island. Mayhem and murder abound, followed by the struggle to tell warring versions of the truth. Grann’s work pieces together countless firsthand chronicles of the disaster, and what emerges is unlike any other story of savagery and survival on the printed page.

Let’s just say that I devoured the book, even while being in a phase that doesn’t allow for much energy to swallow most books whole. And this is not only a Grann volume that history buffs will want to read but, like Killers Of The Flower Moon, could appeal to true crime lovers, too. As well, Martin Scorsese and Leonardo DiCaprio signed on almost one year ago to develop The Wager as a movie, which we should hear more about after the pair debuts their Killers Of The Flower Moon Apple Original film at the Cannes Film Festival.

Grann was gracious enough to discuss this “crazy yarn” (how he initially described the book), which arrives on April 18, with us.

David Grann: Hey, Kimberly, how are you? Are you in Tulsa?

Hi David. Yes, somehow? I don’t know how this is still happening.

You know, I like Tulsa. Oklahoma’s an interesting state, but Tulsa’s got a lot of stuff happening.

You did spend a lot of time here doing research years ago.

I did. It’s got good music, some restaurants, and a bit of an art scene. You’ve got that great bookstore.

Ahhh yes, Magic City Books. And the last time we did this, your Killers Of The Flower Moon book was about to come out while Lost City Of Z had just landed in theaters. This time, The Wager is about to come out, and Killers Of The Flower Moon will soon arrive in theaters.

It is a funny thing. It’s also a testament to how slow I am at working on my books!

Hey, a lot has happened over the past few years. Since this is the earliest interview I have ever done, I must know this: are you a morning person?

Yes, I definitely am. I tend to get up pretty early. That’s probably a factor of old age. I’ve never been a great sleeper, but the mornings are my most productive time, so I really try to make sure that I try and pack in my writing and research. I’ll write in the afternoon too, but I’m far more effective in the morning.

I recently talked about this topic with a coworker, too. We’re pretty sure that morning and nighttime people don’t trust each other.

I think when you age, you become more of a morning person. [Laughs] I just get more tired as the day wears on. I find that my brain synapses fire more slowly. I think it was forced upon me and less of a choice.

My daughter knows not to speak to me for an hour after I wake up, so the morning-person thing hasn’t hit me yet.

Hopefully, it won’t! Then you can choose whether you’re a morning person or not.

I hope so. And I don’t want to spoil much of the book, so let’s go here: you did something crazy to prep for The Wager by traveling to this island.

When I began researching, I started in the way that is most suited to my character, which is in the safe confines of archives. For about two years, I was pulling these 18th-century logbooks and records and diaries and that had survived shipwrecks and typhoons, kind of remarkably. But there came a certain point where I began to fear that there were certain gaps in my knowledge, so that I didn’t really fully understand what the castaways had gone through. That’s when I decided to do something foolish, which was to make my own journey to Wager Island, which is located in the Gulf of Sorrows, or as some prefer to call it, the Gulf of Pain.

For good reason, as readers will learn from you.

I found this Chilean captain who had a wood-heated boat to take me there. Now, in the photographs, the boat looked pretty big, but then when I got there, I was very surprised to see that it wasn’t very big. It was very top-heavy, and for about three days, we were trapped on Chiloé Island, which is where we were departing from for about a 350-mile journey south. The weather was so bad, the Coast Guard had closed some ports…eventually, we slipped out at dawn and went through a pretty tumultuous gulf, and then we slipped into these channels that are more sheltered, you’re kind of weaving in and out of these fractured islands and these chillingly beautiful channel ways, and I was like, “This doesn’t seem so bad.”

Some famous last words right there.

Then after about five days, the captain said, “Well, now we have to go out into the open ocean.” And that was when I got my first glimpse of those terrifying waters. The waves dwarfed the boat, which was being tossed about so violently that I had to just sit on the floor. If I stood, I might break a limb. I sat there for hours. To pass the time, I put on an Audible book of Moby Dick.

[Laughs] What were you thinking with that selection?

In retrospect, that was probably not the most soothing thing that I could do. But the captain was very skilled, and he managed to guide us through the Gulf of Pain and get us to Wager Island. We went ashore in a little Zodiac, and it was really helpful to me to get a sense of what the island was like and see how much it conformed to the descriptions of the castaways. It was so barren and windswept, and it was freezing cold, and it was constantly raining and sleeting. I had all these clothes on. I was bundled up in wool and longhorns and hats and boots, and I was still so cold. And you know, the castaways only had scraps of clothing, much of which disintegrated during their time on the island. They had also described severe starvation because there wasn’t any food, and sure enough, there were no animals other than birds who fly off in the distance. And being there really helped me understand why one British officer had called the island “a place where the soul of a man dies.”

Much of this book is about the warring versions of the truth on what these men went through.

They generally agree on the basic facts, but like all of us, they are kind of shading their stories to emerge as the heroes of them, and in their case, the stakes are even higher. Joan Didion famously said, “We Tell Ourselves Stories In Order To Live,” but if they didn’t tell a convincing tale, they could literally be hanged afterwards because they’d been summoned to face a court-martial for their alleged crimes on the island. So you can really see how they are shaping certain facts, burnishing other facts, to try and spare their own lives.

And somewhere in there lies the truth.

What I really tried to do was to focus on three of the main participants’ competing perspectives and let the reader decide. I think when you read the accounts, you can tell what each one of them is shading, and by showing them, you’re getting closer to what the truth really is … you can see the difference in emphasis and the way that they’re manipulating their tales. And when they get back to England, they’ve already waged this war against the elements, and now, they’re waging a war over the truth. And there’s disinformation and misinformation and even an 18th-century form of Fake News.

A timely subject during your research.

And then the British Empire looks at all these stories and isn’t sure that it likes any of them, and there are efforts by those in power to cover up the scandalous truth and manufacture their own mythic tale. Hopefully, by showing the complexity of the competing accounts, you get to see how each participant is manipulating the truth, and it helps you to get closer to what the genuine truth really is.

In 2023, do you think the truth is any easier to parse? Seems like the internet makes it both easier and harder to search for truth.

What’s so interesting is that I’d go through these 18th-century journals and archives and this war over the truth and disinformation and allegations of fake journals being written, and then I would come home and would follow the news. You’d turn on the TV and see people claiming alternative facts and fake news. You go on Twitter and see trolls and disinformation, and so when I was researching and when I really decided to tell this story, I felt like it was a parable for our own turbulent times, and that we could learn something about the fragility of truth and the dangers of manipulating the truth and what happens when nations try to cover up the truth and don’t reckon with the past.

Now, some of these log books you read got pretty graphic, I take it?

These log books really helped me really understand what was happening each day, a chronicle of events. You can see with the typhoons, the descriptions of the waves. And then you also see the descriptions of the scurvy outbreak. You see it beginning with a few deaths, and then you see more and more people being listed as “departed this life.” Even before the Wager wrecked, this expedition had nearly a thousand people, and hundreds of them had already died of scurvy and other incidents. So these log books were a really helpful record. They were kind of an early template for a lot of forms of travel literature. Many of the log books and journals that were published after this expedition would become wild bestsellers. The great bestsellers of their time.

You mentioned scurvy. After I finished The Wager, I’ve remembered to take vitamins every single day.

Yeah! Take your vitamins, and always suck on a lime.

That’s a good note, too.

I had no idea! The thing for me that’s the richness about being a reporter and a generalist is that often I go on these projects, and I know virtually nothing about the subject. It’s like getting a full education. My images of scurvy were just like, “Okay, don’t your gums turn black?” I had no idea how severe it can be. Your hair falls out, your teeth fall out. Even the tissue that connects your bones seems to come undone. There’s an account of one of the men who had fought in battle 50 years earlier and broken a bone, which had long since healed. Suddenly, it just fractured again in the very same spot, and I had no idea that it could affect your senses so much. Many of the witnesses to the scurvy outbreak on the ship described it as getting into the seamen’s brains and causing them to go raving mad.

You did a public service on scurvy. And I also love digging into the acknowledgements of books. You praised your New Yorker editor, and you said that you would feel “marooned” without him, which fits here.

Daniel Zalewski — he was my editor from really my earliest days at the New Yorker. He’s a good friend, and he’s just a brilliant editor, and he read the text. He always makes sure that I’m precise. If I’m overwrought, he cuts it back. And so one of his insights, too, was toward the end of the book, thinking about the unwitting complicity of so many members of this expedition in the British Empire. They’re so focused on their daily survival, their families, on glory and, obviously ultimately, on saving their own lives, that they don’t dwell too much upon imperialism. There’s that kind of almost unconscious, unthinking complicity in the system that allows empires to persevere. And that was an idea that he really helped me hone. And I have a wonderful book editor, Bill Thomas at Doubleday … He is really smart about structure and pacing in a story. He read the manuscript and told me where I needed to deepen certain parts and expand on the reporting or the research.

You’re very fortunate to have those relationships. I also happen to have a wonderful editor [coughs] who puts up with me.

Writing is very solitary, but I don’t think you can get across the finish line unless you have great readers who can see things clearly with a fresh eye and then point you in directions where you can improve manuscripts. I’m not one of these people who believes that writers would be better off without editors. You need to find the right editors and then you hold onto them and feel marooned without them. And early in my career, I didn’t always have great editors. I’ve been very lucky for the past 15 or 20 years, to work with one of the great magazine editors of all time and one of the great book editors, so yeah, I feel fortunate.

So, we can’t end this chat without you telling me about your Killers Of The Flower Moon set experience.

I was really struck by the level of care, both in developing the story and the level of research. The production team would often ask me questions about the research, but they did their own as well. They filmed on location, which was really important, and most important of all, they worked very closely with members of the Osage nation to tell the story in a faithful and sensitive way. Chief Standing Bear appointed several ambassadors of the nation to work with the movie people, and so many Osage were involved in the process. There were Osage actors in speaking roles. I saw a very powerful scene when I visited. Several Osage were playing the roles and were astonishingly good.

The excitement is high for this movie. Scorsese, for crying out loud!

Well, I wrote that book, the main reason, was to hopefully fill in my own ignorance and the ignorance of others outside the Osage nation. So many of us hadn’t learned that history, and we had largely excised it from our conscience. And what I think will be great about the film is that it can reach even more people and hopefully lead people to a better understanding of the history.

Yeah, I would say that between your book and Watchmen, Oklahoma is having a moment that it should not be proud of, but at least people are…

… learning the history, which is really important.

My daughter even read your book for school.

That’s great. How old is she?

Older than I can deal with, but she will eventually cure all diseases, even scurvy. And thank you so much for your time today, David.

[Laughs] It was good chatting with you, Kimberly. Thank you for doing this.

‘The Wager’ will be available in bookstores on April 18.

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Fox News Has Agreed To Pay Dominion Over $787 Million (!!!) In A Settlement, Thus Saving Tucker Carlson And Sean Hannity From Having To Take The Witness Stand In Court

Fox News has been spared the indignity of airing out its dirty, insurrection-sparking laundry in court after reaching a last-minute settlement with Dominion Voting Systems.

The deal was brokered just hours before the defamation case against the right-wing media corporation was set to begin. According to reports, after swearing in a jury early Tuesday morning, the trial was delayed by two hours, leading reporters to believe the two parties were negotiating a settlement behind closed doors. Though we don’t yet know all the details involved in the deal, we do know that, as part of the settlement, Fox News must pay Dominion over $787 million. While that number is staggering, it’s considerably less than the $1.6 billion the company was initially seeking after claiming the lies publicized on Fox channels concerning potential incidents of voter fraud connected to Dominion machines harmed the company’s reputation.

Dominion’s attorney Justin Nelson says the settlement represents “vindication and accountability.”

“The truth matters, lies have consequences,” he continued. “Over two years ago, a torrent of lies swept Dominion and election officials across America into an alternative universe of conspiracy theories, causing grievous harm.”

For its part, Fox was forced to put out a statement acknowledging the network knew its voter fraud conspiracy theories were lies and admitting responsibility for the harm it caused while also claiming to have the “highest journalistic standards.”

Of course, the settlement means that a number of high-profile on-air correspondents are now saved from testifying on the stand, but the deal is still an embarrassing result for Rupert Murdoch’s conservative brainchild. Some couldn’t help but celebrate that fact.

But the larger consensus was disappointment over the fact that we were this close to watching Tucker Carlson go full Alex Jones on the stand.

(Via CNN)