Podcast host accidentally, hilariously breaks monitor with golf club Golf clubs and television monitors don’t mix particularly well. In case anyone needed a reminder, Frank Nicotero, host of the Punch Lines with Frank Nicotero podcast, provided it. Nicotero lined up in ... 05/16/2024 - 3:40 am | View Link
A behind-the-scenes look at CBS Sports broadcast of the PGA Championship CBS Sports has broadcast the PGA championship and this week in Louisville marks another year of multi-platform coverage. “Whether it's HQ, on the range, clubhouse report, or whether it's live, there's ... 05/15/2024 - 11:42 am | View Link
Top 20 Greatest TV Scenes of All Time TV doesn't get much better than this! Welcome to WatchMojo, and today we’re counting down our picks for the most memorable or iconic scenes from live-action scripted television series. So ... 05/12/2024 - 2:20 pm | View Link
LIVE: ESPN Radio | ESPN ESPN BET is operated by PENN Entertainment, Inc. and its subsidiaries ('PENN'). ESPN BET is available in states where PENN is licensed to offer sports wagering. Must be 21+ to wager. If you or ... 05/3/2024 - 7:33 am | View Link
The 25 Best New Movies Streaming in May 2024 The post The 25 Best New Movies Streaming in May 2024 appeared first on TheWrap. 05/3/2024 - 7:00 am | View Link
College students risking school discipline for their pro-Palestinian activism were celebrated by peers and supporters for their moral clarity at a church across the street from Columbia University on Thursday.
Faculty and staff from Columbia and Barnard College helped organize ‘The People’s Graduation’ at The Cathedral of Saint John the Divine.
The NFL distanced itself from Kansas City Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker after he gave a controversial commencement speech last weekend at Benedictine College in Kansas and received backlash for comments deemed sexist and offensive.
Butker, who was the commencement speaker at the private Catholic college, was applauded at the ceremony, but his speech later sparked outrage and controversy online for its conservative discourse—particularly his remarks on women.
(MADISON, Wis.) — Human bones found inside the chimney of a Wisconsin music store in 1989 have been identified as those of a man whose last known contact with relatives was in 1970, authorities said.
The DNA Doe Project, a nonprofit that uses genealogy to identify unknown persons, announced this week that the bones are those of Ronnie Joe Kirk, who was originally from Tulsa, Oklahoma, the Wisconsin State Journal reported.
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His bones and skull were found in September 1989 in Madison, Wisconsin, in a pile at the bottom of the narrow chimney of a since-demolished building that then housed a music store.
Authorities tried unsuccessfully to identify the remains of the person, whom they called “Chimney Doe.”
But in late 2018, Madison Police Detective Lindsey Ludden brought the case to the DNA Doe Project and hair samples from the skull were sent in 2021 to Astrea Forensics, a California-based DNA sequencing company that specializes in degraded samples.
Gwen Knapp of the DNA Doe Project said it took more than two years to develop a DNA profile suitable for investigating genetic genealogy.
McDonald’s plans to introduce a $5 meal deal in the U. S. next month to counter slowing sales and customers’ frustration with high prices.
The deal would let customers get a four-piece McNugget, small fries, a small drink and either a McDouble burger or a McChicken sandwich for $5 in most areas, according to a person familiar with the deal who wasn’t authorized to discuss its details.
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The month-long deal is scheduled to begin June 25 and will be advertised nationally.
U. S. Rep. Matt Gaetz evoked language adopted by the far-right Proud Boys extremist group as he appeared at court Thursday to support Donald Trump at his hush money trial, reflecting the undercurrent of activist elements present among the presumptive GOP nominee’s supporters as he seeks a return to the White House.
“Standing back, and standing by, Mr.
Many Maui residents have experienced a decline in their physical and mental health along with a decline in their economic stability after devastating wildfires scorched the island in 2023, according to a new Hawaii survey.
Researchers at the University of Hawaii surveyed 679 people in January and February to study the impact of last year’s wildfires, which was the deadliest wildfire in the country’s history in more than a century.