Chicago residents obviously don’t G.A.F. about catching coronavirus because there’s ANOTHER video that has gone viral showing yet ANOTHER house party amid the nationwide quarantine showing folks not following proper social distancing guidelines … and this one features a stripper!
Over the weekend, viral footage showed hundreds of people (possibly 1,000) attending a massive house party in the westside area of Chicago.
While police have already hit the homeowner with fines and cited her for disorderly conduct for having so many people in one place (amid a global pandemic, mind you), it seems as though Chicago officials might have their sights on another homeowner real soon.
A second video obtained by TMZ shows another house party that went down in Chicago this past weekend.
This one features a stripper and shows dozens of people not wearing masks and not practicing social distancing as they listen to music and toss cash all around the dancer.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-RNl7ElET0
It isn’t clear exactly how many people attended this particular gathering, but TMZ noted that the stripper party had the potential to get even bigger as the woman behind the camera was inviting anyone watching on Facebook Live to come through.
For what it’s worth, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot blasted the partygoers seen in the first video, saying that their reckless behavior amid the coronavirus pandemic was “distressing.”
“They put themselves at risk, but not only that, every single person there who put themselves at risk puts the next person and the next person that they come into contact with at risk,” she said. “That’s why, for me, that scene is so distressing.”
You gotta think … if we’ve seen two videos so far of house parties in Chicago during the COVID-19 pandemic, imagine how many have gone down that weren’t on camera?
On Tuesday (Apr. 28), NBC Chicago reported that Illinois’ COVID-19 death toll rose the highest amount in a single day since the pandemic began, with 144 deaths reported in just 24 hours, raising the total number of fatalities associated with the virus above 2,000.
As of Tuesday afternoon, the death toll from the virus was at 2,125 and health officials said 80% of the most recent deaths were reported in northern Illinois.
Cook County (Chicago) has so far reported the highest number of cases (nearly 32,000) and deaths (1,347). Statewide, there have been over 48,000 confirmed cases and nearly 2,000 deaths.
25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery was jogging in a quiet suburban neighborhood near his home in Brunswick, Georgia back in February when he was pursued, shot, and killed by a father-son duo who suspected him of committing robberies in the area.
However, months later, a prosecutor said the pursuers were justified in their actions because of Georgia’s citizen’s arrest law, and they will not be facing any charges for the time being.
Ahmaud Arbery was a former football player and enjoyed running to stay fit. His friends and family said it wasn’t unusual to see him running around the town of Brunswick, Georgia.
On the afternoon of Sunday, February 23rd, Ahmaud ran past Gregory McMichael in his son’s front yard.
According to the police report, McMichael—a retired district attorney investigator—called out to his son, homeowner Travis McMichael, to grab their guns.
“Travis, the guy is running down the street, let’s go,” the elder McMichael told police he said to his son.
Gregory grabbed a .357 magnum handgun and Travis grabbed his shotgun. The two then got into a truck and proceeded to follow the young man.
Travis McMichael drove down Satilla Drive toward the intersection of Buford Road, the report said. They spotted Arbery running down Buford Road. Travis drove down Burford Road and tried unsuccessfully to cut off Arbery’s escape with the truck, the report said.
The Brunswick man then turned and started “running back in the direction from which he came,” the report said. Travis McMichael again tried without success to cut Arbery off with the truck.
Greg McMichael jumped into the truck’s bed at this point and the pursuit resumed. At one point in the pursuit, the two McMichaels hailed, “Stop, stop, we want to talk to you,” the report said.
Travis McMichael pulled up beside Arbery and again made it known they wanted to talk, the report said. At this point, Travis McMichael exited the vehicle, shotgun in hand.
“McMichael stated he saw (Arbery) begin to violently attack Travis and the two men then started fighting over the shotgun, at which point Travis fired a shot and then a second later there was a second shot,” the report stated. “McMichael stated the male fell face down on the pavement with his hand under his body.”
McMichael then searched Arbery for a gun, the report said.
“McMichael stated he rolled the man over to see if the male had a weapon,” the report said. “I observed blood on McMichael’s hands from rolling (Arbery) over.”
Arbery was shot and least twice and died from the gunshot wounds. The police report doesn’t state whether he was armed during the incident.
Arbery’s shooting death happened three days before the eighth anniversary of the 2012 killing of unarmed black teen Trayvon Martin, and the cases are eerily similar.
Neither of the McMichaels have been charged or arrested in connection with the killing, and the case has received little attention beyond Brunswick, because of the COVID-19 pandemic, though it has raised serious questions in the community about racial profiling and how the state’s self-defense laws are interpreted.
“There are a lot of people absolutely ready to protest,” Jason Vaughn, a Brunswick High School football coach who coached Arbery told The New York Times. “But because of social distancing and being safe, we have to watch what’s going on with the coronavirus.”
Pictured: Wanda Cooper and her son Auhmad Arbery
Arbery’s mother, Wanda Cooper, added: “We can’t do anything because of this corona stuff. We thought about walking out where the shooting occurred, just doing a little march, but we can’t be out right now.”
“Everybody in the community knows he runs,” Mr. Vaughn said of Arbery, adding that he himself was once followed by a white woman in a van while trying to jog through his own neighborhood and has cut down on the activity since.
Others, however, contend that Arbery was up to no good.
On the day of the shooting, and apparently just moments prior to the chase, a neighbor called 911, telling the dispatcher that he saw a black man in a white T-shirt trespassing inside a house that was under construction.
“And he’s running right now,” the man told the dispatcher. “There he goes right now!”
Pictured: Gregory McMichael and his son Travis
The case has since been transferred to another county after the Waycross County D.A., George E. Barnhill, recused himself, citing the fact that his relationship with his former colleague, Gregory McMichael, would be a conflict of interest.
According to The Brunswick News, Gregory McMichael “served for more than 30 years as an investigator for the Brunswick Judicial Circuit District Attorney’s Office before retiring last May” and was a Glynn County police officer for seven years prior to that.
However, despite recusing himself from the case, the Times reported that Barnhill still took the time to write a letter to police mentioning Arbery’s criminal past including a conviction for shoplifting and a 2018 probation violation.
Five years prior, according to The Brunswick News, Arbery was indicted on charges that he took a handgun to a high school basketball game.
Still, even if Arbery committed a property crime the afternoon he was killed, activists and family members said it wouldn’t have warranted a chase by armed neighbors, the NY Times noted.
Rev. John Davis Perry II, president of the Brunswick chapter of the NAACP, called the shooting “troubling.”
Perry wrote in an e-mail to the Times: “This incident was at the least a case of overly zealous citizens that wrongfully profiled the victim without cause. These men felt justified in taking the law in their own hands.”
Pictured: Ahmaud Arbery
Ms. Cooper said she doesn’t believe her son committed any crimes that day and the men simply judged him by his skin color. She said even if her son did commit a crime, “he should have been handled by the police.”
Mr. Barnhill wrote in his letter that he didn’t believe there was evidence of a crime because the McMichaels had been legally carrying their weapons under Georgia law, and because Arbery was considered a “burglary suspect,” the McMichaels, who had “solid firsthand probably cause,” were justified in chasing him under the state’s citizen’s arrest law.
Barnhill also stated in a separate document that video existed showing Arbery “burglarizing a home immediately preceding the chase and confrontation.”
Barnhill also wrote in his letter to police that a third pursuer filmed a video of the shooting that shows Arbery attacking Travis McMichael after he and his father pulled up to him.
Barnhill wrote that the video shows Arbery trying to grab the shotgun from Travis McMichael, which amounts to self-defense under Georgia law.
Barnhill concluded that Travis McMichael “was allowed to use deadly force to protect himself,” and noted that it was possible that Arbery caused the gun to off himself by pulling on it.
He also pointed out Arbery’s “mental health records” and prior convictions, which, he said, “help explain his apparent aggressive nature and his possible thought pattern to attack an armed man.”
Michael J. Moore, an Atlanta lawyer and former U.S. attorney in Georgia, reviewed the incident’s initial police report as well as Mr. Barnhill’s letter to the Glynn County County Police Department, and told the Times in an e-mail that he believed Barnhill’s opinion was “flawed.”
Moore said, in his opinion, the McMichaels appeared to be the aggressors in the confrontation, and aggressors aren’t justified in using force under Georgia’s self-defense laws.
“The law does not allow a group of people to form an armed posse and chase down an unarmed person who they believe might have possibly been the perpetrator of a past crime,” Moore wrote.
After Mr. Barnhill recused himself, the case was assigned to another prosecutor, Tom Durden, who is based in Hinesville, Georgia, and must now decide whether to present the case to a grand jury.
Durden said in a recent interview with the Times that he would be looking at the case with fresh eyes.
“We don’t know anything about the case,” he said. “We don’t have any preconceived idea about it.”
Ross died on Monday night (Apr. 27) due to severe injuries she sustained from what her publicist described as “a tragic hit and run car accident” in Atlanta on Sunday night.
However, Atlanta police dispute this characterization of the crash, stating that Ross lost control of her car.
According to South Fulton police, Ross’ Nissan Sentra hit a curb along Old National Highway near the intersection of Lantern Lane.
She lost control, crossed into the northbound lanes and hit a Ford Focus head-on, police spokesman Lt. Derrick Rogers said.
Ross was taken to a hospital with serious injuries after the crash. The driver of the Ford only sustained minor injuries, Rogers said.
Police did not release any more details regarding the accident, but noted that the investigation is still ongoing.
Though alcohol hasNOT been reported to have been a factor in the crash, Ross was charged for DUI in 2019. Ross—who was 4-foot-3—claimed she had consumed only one beer at the time of her arrest.
Fans of Little Women: Atlanta were shocked to wake up this morning to learn that Ashley “Minnie” Ross had tragically died.
Ross passed away on Monday night after sustaining severe injuries from a hit-and-run car accident in Atlanta on Sunday (Apr. 26). She was only 34 years old.
Many on Twitter paid tribute to Ms. Minnie, by sharing the many videos, GIFs, and memes she inspired during her tenure on Little Women: Atlanta.
Can’t believe the news about the death of Minnie from Little Women Atlanta. She gave us good TV and great meme content. Thank you for the laughs Queen ??? pic.twitter.com/632N4mbJwV
I know she wasn’t just a meme or a clip but the joy that clip brought to my life..damn this shit is sad. R.I.P. to Ashley ‘Minnie’ Ross pic.twitter.com/HUnjyBLf0y
#MINNIE this world misses you already. i just want to lie in bed and watch little women of Atlanta now. you made me laugh a lot. goodbye for now. ??? pic.twitter.com/vQze0WYEzJ
Ms. Minnie had so many iconic scenes on #LittleWomenAtlanta but seeing her and the girls having so much fun going tubing together was definitely a moment. pic.twitter.com/QkkmHXKOAW
Ross was an original cast member of LWA, which had been in the process of filming it’s sixth season. It’s unknown at this time how production will address Ross’ passing.
“She was the most beautiful, kind, giving, generous human ever. She was adored by cast and crew because she always wore her heart on her sleeve,” a rep for the show told People. “There’s nothing she wouldn’t do for those she loved.”
Several of Ross’ co-stars have also mourned her loss on social media.
UPDATE: Though Little Women: Atlanta star Ashley “Ms. Minnie” Ross’ death was initially reported as a “hit-and-run” accident via her publicist, police are now saying that Ross lost control of her vehicle after hitting a curb, which caused the fatal car crash.
Original story:
Little Women: Atlanta star Ashley “Ms. Minnie” Ross is dead following a hit-and-run car accident on Sunday. She was 34 years old.
Ross reportedly suffered severe injuries after her car collided with another vehicle near the Old National Highway in Atlanta around 11 p.m. Sunday (Apr. 26), her publicist, Liz Dixson, confirmed to multiple media outlets.
She was rushed to Grady Memorial Hospital, where she was pronounced dead about 24 hours around 10:30 p.m. Monday evening, Dixson said.
Ross’ management team also confirmed the sad news on the reality star’s Instagram account.
“It is with profound sadness that we confirm on behalf of the family of Ashley Ross aka ‘Ms Minnie’ of ‘Little Women: Atlanta’ has succumbed to injuries from a tragic hit and run car accident today at the age of 34,” the statement reads. “The family respectfully asks for their privacy as they grieve during this very difficult time.”
Ross’ LWA co-star Shirlene “Ms. Juicy” King Person, reacted to Ross’ death on IG early Tuesday morning, saying in a post: “This is too much too much!!!!!!”” and writing in the caption: “Prayers for Minnie’s family!!!”
Another castmate, Amanda Salina, also mourned Minnie’s passing on social media, writing in a lengthy post on Instagram:
“As I’m writing this I’m in tears I can’t believe it my Minnie !!!! Why did they take you away from us !!!! WHY!!!!! It always seems like we have all the time in the world, only to realize how fleeting it really is. I wish we had more time to do and say the things we saved for later which along with you is gone forever … I promise to keep you alive in my memories and be there for your mama and aunt. You were more than our best friend you were our big sister and still is !!! I still can’t believe this man why man why!!!! , I love you so much !!!! My heart is broken … Rest In Peace my love”
Minnie Ross was one of the original cast members when Little Women: Atlanta launched in 2016 as a spin-off of the popular Little Women: LA series on Lifetime.
She was one of the only three women to feature as a main cast member through all five seasons of the show so far, along with the “Tiny Twinz” Amanda and Andrea Salinas.
Tiffany “Monie” Cashette is also an OG cast member, but was reduced to a recurring cast member in Season 5 when she moved to Texas to be closer to her son.
Cashette was set to return as a full cast member for the show’s upcoming sixth season, alongside Salinas and Ross, who will now appear posthumously.
The four ladies will be joined by Ms. Juicy and Abira Green, the latter of whom has been promoted to the main cast after three seasons with the show.
Little Women: Atlanta Season 6 is due to premiere sometime in 2020, though an official date has yet to be announced. Production has not yet indicated how they plan to address Minnie’s tragic death on the show.
“She was the most beautiful, kind, giving, generous human ever. She was adored by cast and crew because she always wore her heart on her sleeve,” a rep for the show told People. “There’s nothing she wouldn’t do for those she loved.”
Ashley “Minnie” Ross is survived by her mother, Tammy Jackson, her aunt and uncle, Veronica and John Deloney, and her grandmother, Rose Deloney.
The buffoonery by the black pro-Trump duo known as Diamond & Silk has caused them to join the millions of Americans filing for unemployment during the coronavirus pandemic.
The two have reportedly been fired from Fox News after continuously spreading misinformation and conspiracy theories about COVID-19.
“After what they’ve said and tweeted you won’t be seeing them on Fox Nation or Fox News anytime soon,” a source close to the situation exclusively toldThe Daily Beast.
Lynette “Diamond” Hardaway and Rochelle “Silk” Richardson have not uploaded a new episode of their weekly Fox Nation show since March 31st, which they have regularly done since the show’s launch in December 2018.
They have also not appeared on any Fox News shows since March 7.
Following their sour peach leader, Diamond & Silk repeatedly downplayed the seriousness of COVID-19 and touted conspiracy theories, calling it “man-made” and “engineered.”
They also claimed it was caused by the “deep-state action going on behind the scenes” and 5G technology.
In early April, they were locked out of their Twitter account after advising their 1.4 million followers to disobey quarantine and stay-at-home orders.
“The only way we can become immune to the environment; we must be out in the environment. Quarantining people inside of their houses for extended periods will make people sick,” they tweeted.
They only regained access to their account when the tweet was deleted.
Diamond & Silk have been shuckin’ and jivin’ for Trump and other white Republicans since the 2016 election through social media, using ring-wing talking points and conspiracies in their online commentary.
They were ultimately paid by the Trump campaign as “senior advisers” and became favorites among white supremacists.
The duo capitalized on this by becoming regular Fox News contributors and joining Fox Nation with their own show … until they were fired.
In March, Fox also fired anchor Trish Regan for dismissing COVID-19 concerns as “yet another attempt [by Democrats] to impeach the president.”
Diamond & Silk have yet to comment on their dismissal.
Florida rapper LPB Poody was shot in Orlando along with his friend, Dexter Rentz, an 18-year-old University of Louisville recruit, who was killed in the incident.
According to reports, two others in the car with LPB Poody and Rentz were also shot and are expected to survive.
Orlando Police Department Sgt. Joe Capece said the four victims were in front of a house when the shooting happened Saturday night (Apr. 25).
Capece said when police arrived on the scene, two vehicles tried to flee, but officers were able to stop both vehicles, and Rentz was in one of them.
The teen was taken to a local hospital, where he was pronounced dead.
Capece said investigators later determined that the second vehicle wasn’t involved in the shooting.
Detectives aren’t sure of the motive in the shooting, but feel as though someone in the group was targeted.
Information on a suspect wasn’t immediately available, Capece said.
University of Louisville football coach Scott Satterfield issued a statement via Twitter following the news of Rentz’s death.
“We are deeply saddened to hear about the passing of Dexter Rentz,” Satterfield said.
“He was a great young man who had a contagious personality and able to light up a room with his smile.
“He was a great kid to be around and he will be missed. Our thoughts and prayers go out to the Rentz family during this extremely difficult time.”
Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot says she’s seen the video of 1,000 people packed like sardines at an area house party in blatant disregard to city and state social distancing guidelines, and she’s far from pleased.
Over the weekend, video footage surfaced showing partygoers packed into a home in Chicago’s westside area partying it up amid the COVID-19 pandemic that has infected over 3 million people worldwide and killed close to 210,000 so far.
“You can’t even move in this bitch!” Tink Purcell, the Chicago resident who uploaded the viral video footage, could be heard saying off-camera.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ji3EQLBRSRA
“I had my mask and sanitizer I was good,” Purcell later posted on Facebook.
Mary Lightfoot slammed the party on Twitter the next day, calling the gathering “reckless and utterly unacceptable.”
“I have seen the video which shows what appears to be a house party taking place inside a Chicago residence,” she wrote.
“What was depicted on the video was reckless and utterly unacceptable. I know this is a very difficult time for Chicagoans, but there is a reason we are asking you to stay home and socially distance: it saves lives.
The mayor also threatened to arrest party organizers for violating Chicago’s stay-at-home order.
“While most Chicagoans are doing their part to prevent the spread of COVID-19, reckless actions like these threaten our public health and risk erasing the progress we have made. We will hold those responsible accountable. I am asking everyone to be in this together,” Lightfoot continued.
She added: “Residents can anonymously submit a tip about house parties at cpdtip.com and CPD will shut them down immediately. The fewer people who comply with the ‘Stay At Home’ Order, the sicker our residents will get and the harder it will be for us to recover.”
I know this is a very difficult time for Chicagoans, but there is a reason we are asking you to stay home and socially distance: it saves lives.
— Mayor Lightfoot #StayHomeSaveLives (@chicagosmayor) April 26, 2020
Residents can anonymously submit a tip about house parties at https://t.co/Tt6O9g49ZD and CPD will shut them down immediately. The fewer people who comply with the “Stay At Home” Order, the sicker our residents will get and the harder it will be for us to recover.
— Mayor Lightfoot #StayHomeSaveLives (@chicagosmayor) April 26, 2020
Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker said Sunday that those who attended the party not only violated the trust of his stay-at-home order, but also “the trust of their friends and family,” WTTW reported.
Chicago police said they were also aware of the footage circulating on social media.
“While we cannot authenticate the nature or location of the gathering, we want to remind everyone of the social distancing requirements in place,” police spokesman Luis Agostini wrote on Twitter.
“CPD will disperse crowds in violation of social distancing requirements, and if necessary, issue citations or as a last resort, enforce via arrest,” he added.
Gov. Pritzker said he hadn’t seen the clip, but was aware of its existence.
“You’re literally putting everyone around you in danger,” he said. “You are. They are putting you in danger. And, very importantly, all of those people are putting their families and their friends who are not there with them in danger.”
Though police have the authority to enforce Gov. Pritzker’s stay-at-home order, the governor said he hopes to be able to rely mostly on self-enforcement.
“If they refuse and if they repeatedly refuse, there is the ability by the police officers to charge them with reckless conduct and take them into custody,” he said.
“Though again we have discouraged police from doing that because we believe that people will in general follow the rules.”
DaBaby continues to ride the wave of success. His third album, Blame It on Baby, has debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart.
The album sold 124,000 units and has reportedly had 158 million streams. This is DaBaby’s second consecutive No. 1 album; his 2019 release Kirk also took the top spot.
Blame It on Baby also features appearances from artists like Megan Thee Stallion, Quavo, Roddy Rich, and even Ashanti.
While there is much to celebrate about having a No. 1 album, the achievement is bittersweet for the rapper who has had to cancel or postpone several tour dates due to the coronavirus pandemic.
“I’ve already missed millions,” DaBaby revealed during a virtual interview with Big Boy.
If social distancing orders remain in place throughout the summer months, the rapper estimates he may lose close to $7 million, and will be unable to capitalize on his No. 1 album.
“I would’ve been on tour right now, and after that, I would’ve did an overseas tour. So, if we go to July, oh my God. ..I’ma hold up how many millions I think,” he said while initially holding up five fingers.
He changed it to seven after quickly consulting with someone off-camera. “No bullsh**. Tour alone,” he added.
After President Donald Trump suggested injecting COVID-19 patients with bleach as a possible cure for the coronavirus, New York’s Poison Control Center says they received a high volume of calls from NY residents who had ingested bleach and other household cleaners.
According to the New York Daily News, the agency managed a total of 30 cases of possible exposure to disinfectant between 9 p.m. on April 23rd and 3 p.m on April 24th.
An agency spokesperson said that none of the people who reached out died or required hospitalization, adding that out of the 30 cases, nine were specifically about possible exposure to Lysol, 10 were related to bleach, and 11 were about household cleaners in general.
During a coronavirus briefing Thursday at the White House, Trump suggested that disinfectants knock the virus out “in a minute” and could be used to treat coronavirus if people injected them. He also proposed hitting patients with “powerful” UV rays.
“Supposing we hit the body with a tremendous, whether it’s ultraviolet or just very powerful light? And I think you said, that hasn’t been checked, but you’re going to test it,” he said.
Trump added: “And then I said supposing you brought the light inside the body which you can do either through the skin or in some other way. And I think you said you’re going to test that too. Sounds interesting.”
He went on: “And then I see the disinfectant, where it knocks it out in a minute, one minute, and is there a way we can do something like that?
“By injection inside or almost a cleaning. As you see it gets in the lungs, and it does a tremendous number on the lungs. So it would be interesting to check that … You’re going to have to use medical doctors. But it sounds interesting to me.”
After facing backlash for his insane comments, Trump said the next day he was being “sarcastic” and simply wanted to “see what would happen” as far as media reports were concerned.
“I was asking a question sarcastically to reporters like you just to see what would happen,” the President said Friday (Apr. 24), just as the coronavirus death toll in the U.S. surpassed 50,000.
Scarface is updating fans on his health one month after he revealed that he tested positive for coronavirus.
While speaking with his Geto Boys group mate Willie D, the Houston rap legend said that the same day he revealed his COVID-19 diagnosis, he was hit with even more health issues while under quarantine.
Ice-T just gave an update on Scarface while appearing on this Hip Hop Museum fundraiser. Said he talked to Face today, and “He had kidney failure. He’s on dialysis now.”
“I fought the COVID, double bilateral pneumonia and kidney failure, all in my house,” Scarface said while hooked up to a blood stent to help regulate his kidneys.
“This is my new lifeline,” he said of his dialysis port. “I gotta change my entire diet. I gotta do dialysis four times a week, three hours a day. That’s taking all of my blood out, cleaning it, and putting it back in my body. Before the COVID, I never had kidney problems before.”
Scarface broke the news of his coronavirus diagnosis on March 26th in a separate interview with fellow Geto Boys member Willie D.
“This whole three weeks has been an ordeal, Will,” Scarface said at the time. “It’s the craziest sh** I’ve ever done and seen in my life. Like I’ve been to the point where I just felt like I was gonna die, bro.
He went on: “I threw up so much until it was just like hot sauce. Like your gases and shit in your stomach, yo acids, it’s hot. I didn’t have no food in my stomach, man. It was just coming up like bile, bro. I couldn’t breathe, Will.”
Scarface said days later, he started dealing with kidney problems. He said his issues with COVID-19 were preventing him from finding out what’s wrong with his kidneys.
“I got to feeling really, really, really bad, Will,” he recalled. “I started off with pneumonia in both of my lungs. Three, four days later, my kidneys failed. Three or four days after that, they tell me I can’t move out the quarantine … I gotta wait till this subsides so I can go see what’s going on with my kidneys now.”
Face went on to detail the multi-week ordeal he went through to get properly diagnosed.
“I woke up Sunday morning,” he explained. “I had a itch in my throat, called my doctor. He got me some Z-Pak and Prednisone. Take that, take that, take that. Come Thursday, my fever just kicks in; bam! 100, 101, 102, 103 [degrees]. Fever going up out the roof, right? It’s Thursday.”
He continued: “Then Friday, Saturday, Sunday, I go to the ER. I get in there. I’m freezing to death. They stick these needles in my arm and started running me IVs. Through my IV, they bring antibiotics through my veins. Through my IV, I couldn’t take it. So, they run me three or four bags a day of that shit. I leave. I go in Sunday, Monday, I’m out Tuesday. That next Friday, I’m back in sitting [there] even sicker.”
Face said after all of that, he finally got the news he was waiting for.
“So, I stay in [the hospital] until Sunday,” he noted. “They swab my nose trying to find out if I got coronavirus. Come back in there again that next Wednesday, Thursday. Nothing! Last night, they call me to tell me at 11:30 at night that I tested positive for the COVID-19.”
North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un is rumored to dead, according to a Hong Kong broadcast network.
The news comes just hours after a Japanese magazine reported that the North Korean leader was in a “vegetative” state after undergoing heart surgery earlier this month.
A vice director for HKSTV Hong Kong Satellite Television, a Beijing-backed broadcast network out of Hong Kong, claimed that Kim was dead, citing a “very solid source.”
The woman’s post about Kim’s reported death on the popular Chinese messaging app Weibo has gone viral on social media.
There’s also a photo that is being widely shared on social media that appears to show Kim Jong Un lying dead inside a glass coffin.
All of this is pure speculation at this point though, because until there’s a report from KCNA or other state media, there’s no way to verify whether Kim Jong Un is dead or alive.
North Korean media, known for their secrecy and propaganda, has not reported on Kim’s health or his whereabouts, despite reports from other media sparking international speculation about his well-being.
Shukan Gendai, a Japanese weekly magazine, reported Friday that a Chinese medic had been sent to North Korea to advise on the situation.
The Chinese expert reportedly told the magazine that Kim clutched his chest and fell to the ground earlier this month during a visit to the countryside earlier this month
A doctor immediately performed CPR on Kim and took him to a nearby hospital, where he reportedly underwent a procedure to insert a stent into his heart.
According to other unconfirmed reports, the operation went wrong because the surgeon’s hands were shaking so badly during the procedure.
Earlier reports said that Kim had simply left the North Korean capital of Pyongyang to recover and is sheltering in an undisclosed location to avoid catching the coronavirus.
Questions about the North Korean leader’s whereabouts were first raised after he missed an important holiday on April 15th that honors the founder of the country, Kim’s late grandfather Kim Il Sung, who died back in 1994.
For what it’s worth, President Trump said he didn’t believe reports saying that Kim Jong Un is gravely ill, but declined to say whether he’d had any recent contact with the North Korean leader.
“I think the report was incorrect,” Trump said during a White House briefing on Thursday, adding that he heard the rumors were based on “old documents.”
Former NBA player Dennis Rodman, who also has a close relationship with Kim Jong Un, said he was praying for the dictator’s recovery amid the reports.
“I hope it’s just a rumor that Marshal Kim Jong Un is sick,” Rodman told TMZ Sports. “Hopefully I will find out more soon.”
Rodman added: “There is still so much work we have to do between both the USA and DPRK … If he is not feeling well, I am praying for his speedy recovery, so that both my friends [President Trump & Marshal Kim] can continue towards a peaceful success.”
Kanye West is officially a member of the three comma club, and he wants EVERYBODY to know it.
Following months of requests, Forbes says the multi-faceted entertainer finally provided documentation that is believed to be an “authentic numeric look into Kanye, Inc.”
After a full analysis of his assets, Forbes determined that Kanye is Hip-Hop’s newest billionaire.
Kanye graced the cover of Forbes last summer, and while the magazine detailed his successful Yeezy empire, they failed to declare him a billionaire at the time, only referring to him as a “centimillionaire,” much to his dismay.
While speaking on an industry panel at the 2019 Fast Company Innovation Festival, the rapper blasted Forbes, saying: “When I did Forbes, I showed them a $890 million receipt and they still didn’t say ‘billionaire.'”
Ye also said at the time that he considered legally change his name to “Christian Genius Billionaire Kanye West” for a year “until y’all understand exactly what it is,” adding that Forbes was “purposely snubbing” him.
“When I did Forbes, I showed them a $890 million receipt, and they still didn’t say ‘billionaire,’” said Kanye West at an event in New York. Here's why he hasn't made our billionaires list yet: https://t.co/0CSuEoRXKFpic.twitter.com/3sIm0MihaY
Now, a year later, Forbes has crunched the numbers again, and can now say, with full confidence, that Kanye West is indeed a billionaire with an estimated $1.26 billion in cash, stocks and assets.
“There’s only one number that West cares about. A billion, as in dollars. And he cares a lot,” the magazine writes.
When Forbes released their annual billionaires list earlier this month, West was noticeably absent, which prompted him to text them: “You know what you’re doing. You’re toying with me and I’m not finna lye [sic] down and take it anymore in Jesus name.”
The rapper also claimed that Forbes was “part of a group of media” that was purposely trying to undervalue his self-made success because he’s black. The fact that his 22-year-old sister-in-law, Kylie Jenner, made their list of billionaires this year also had him peeved.
So he decided to make it official, and had his team send over a ton of paperwork to prove his billionaire status.
According to bank statements, he has about $17 million in cash and $35 million in stocks.
His largest assets are $81 million in “buildings and improvement” and $21 million in land, including the Hidden Hills mansion that he shares with wife Kim Kardashian, and two $14 million ranches in Wyoming.
The docs from Team West also reveals that the rapper’s music, which also includes publishing rights and his G.O.O.D. Music label imprint, is worth about $90 million.
Meanwhile, Forbes says a large chunk of Ye’s money comes from his highly successful Yeezy brand and its partnership with Adidas.
Per Forbes:
Our sources told us last year that West’s agreement calls for him to receive a royalty around 15% of Yeezy revenue from Adidas. Upon closer inspection, it appears some expenses are carved out of that slice, bringing his actual cut closer to 11%. At that rate, he would have received royalties of over $140 million from Yeezy sales last year …
Conservatively, as we typically are with such figures, a 10x multiple, applied to West’s Yeezy cut of $140 million makes his stake worth about $1.4 billion. But that’s a private, highly illiquid $1.4 billion—our rule-of-thumb for private assets like that is to lop off at least 10%. That’s $1.26 billion.
Kanye, however, insists that Forbes‘ numbers are far too low, and he’s actually worth more than $3 billion, which would make him richer than Oprah.
Forbes explained that they gave Kanye’s net worth “a 50% haircut” because of his assets’ liquidity and a lack of independent verification.
The magazine also took off $100 million for debts, which includes mortgages and advances, putting the rapper’s estimated net worth at just under $1.3 billion, which is about $300 million more than both Kylie Jenner and Jay-Z, the latter of whom was declared Hip-Hop’s first billionaire in 2019.
Still, Kanye disagrees with Forbes and claims that he’s worth nearly three times the amount they came up with.
“It’s not a billion,” the staunch Trump supporter texted reporters last night ahead of the article’s release. “It’s $3.3 billion since no one at Forbes knows how to count.”
As the magazine pointed out: “his famous affinity for President Trump makes a lot of sense. (And it continues unabated — one text to Forbes’ chief content officer this week ended with ‘Trump 2020’ and a raised fist emoji.)”
Hip-Hop producer London On Da Track and his baby mama are fighting in court over who should get full primary custody of their 3-year-old son.
According to an exclusive report from Bossip, London recently filed court docs seeking full custody of his son from the child’s mother, Erica Vorters.
In the legal paperwork, London (whose real name is London Holmes) reportedly threw his baby mama all the way under the bus, calling her “unhinged” and a possible drug abuser, which is why he’s seeking to be the full-time custodial parent.
His complaint states that his son, also named London, is living in an unstable environment with his mother, who he claims is “unraveled, was possibly abusing drugs, and had behaved erratically in person and had made worrying posts online.”
London, who has produced hits from a ton of rappers—including the Migos, Drake, T.I., Young Thug, 21 Savage, French Montana and more—said he believes Erica is not “psychologically, physically or financially capable” of being a primary caregiver and has asked for a psych evaluation for her and a special guardian to advocate for their son in court.
London says he makes more than enough money—about $25,000 per month to be exact—and is stable enough to raise his son in a safe and loving home, Bossip reported.
Last month, however, Erica fired back at London in a countersuit, saying that she went to Arizona to stay with his mother for two months, and when she wanted to leave, he threatened to cut off medical care for their son—who suffers from an unnamed medical condition—unless she left the boy with his grandmother.
Erica said “out of fear and a lack of proper legal advice,” she felt as though she had no choice but to leave her son with his paternal grandmother, but has since been blocked from getting him back or having consistent access to him, her court docs state.
https://www.instagram.com/p/B3YoE2RhnHG/
Erica also said London is capping about being a more stable parent than her because he has not been consistently involved in the boy’s life or his medical care.
Erica also accused London of being way behind on his $1,100 per month child support payments, saying that he owes her more than $20,000.
She admitted to being under the care of a psychiatrist, but said her mental health issues have been triggered by the stress of London’s lawsuit against her. She said her mental health issues have no bearing whatsoever on her ability to be a stable parent for their child.
For now, London has been awarded temporary custody, and both sides are due back in court next month, Bossip reports.
Erica filed a motion to get the case thrown out, but London—who is now in an off-and-on relationship with R&B singer Summer Walker—asked the judge to deny it. The judge has yet to rule.
https://www.instagram.com/p/B2u87ZQB4PX/
This isn’t the first time London and Erica have had drama, as the mom posted a message on social media earlier this year saying that she hadn’t seen her since since Christmas.
“These people blocked me from seeing my child who I have joint custody of,” Erica shared on her Instagram stories.
“I’d never withhold my son from having a relationship with his father. He doesn’t have custody rights to make decisions … he’s just rich and refuses to follow the joint custody order. […] That’s wrong. Bring me my baby, I know he misses his mom.”
A Philadelphia woman was arrested after police said she spit on another person during an altercation over social distancing.
Alexis Danilo told ABC 6 Action News she was waiting in line to pick up some things Sunday morning (Apr. 19) when she says the suspect, later identified as 27-year-old Jacqueline McBride, got a little too close, so she moved away. That’s when things escalated.
“I felt someone bump into me and I said, ‘That was rude there’s a pandemic going on right now,'” Danilo recalled.
Victim tells @6abc she was waiting in line to get into Di Bruno Bros when a woman got a little close to her, breaking the 6 foot social distancing guidelines. Moving out of her way, the suspect looked at the victim and said “B*tch I don’t have the disease!” pic.twitter.com/h2mrrUIgFq
Police said McBride then shouted “Bitch, I don’t have the disease!” then pulled down her mask and spit on Danilo before running off.
“She said, ‘I’ll fight you right now’ and then took off her mask and spit in my face,” Danilo said, adding that she was fortunately wearing a protective mask and glasses at the time.
“It’s jarring to be spit on in your face or just spit on in general. Again, it’s just that given the fact that there’s a pandemic and everyone is trying to respect the social distancing,” said Danilo.
Danilo wasn’t the only person who was spat on by McBride in the shop either.
A manager said the woman allegedly spat on an employee a few days earlier after a dispute over her not being able to pay for her stuff.
McBride was arrested Thursday (Apr. 23) and is facing charges of simple assault, terroristic threats and harassment.
A Di Bruno Brothers spokesperson declined to comment on camera, but said they “take the security of their employees and customers extremely seriously.”
Pennsylvania is one of many states that have been hit the hardest by the coronavirus, with over 37,000 confirmed cases and more than 1,400 deaths as of Friday (Apr. 24). Nearly 9,700 of those cases and 365 deaths have been reported in Philadelphia County alone.
Pictured: Top, Paul David Blankenship, Phillip David Guzman, and bottom, Christopher William Jay Henderson and Jacob Baughman (Lake County Jail)
After receiving her $1,200 stimulus check to help with financial obligations during the COVID-19 pandemic, an Indiana woman says that four men she knew broke into her home and held her captive for hours in an attempt to steal the money.
According to reports, the unnamed woman says that she was woken up around 1:30 a.m. on Sunday (Apr 19) when the four men, all of whom she knew, broke into her home.
One of the men had a gun on him, and another took her phone so she couldn’t call for help.
Paul Blankenship, Phillip Guzman, Jacob Baughman, and Christopher Henderson proceeded to hold the woman captive for over four hours before finally leaving.
The woman told police that when they left, they told her not to go anywhere because they would be back, the police statement read.
However, once they were gone, she quickly got into her car and fled to a nearby police station where she alerted authorities.
Since she was aware of who the four perpetrators were, police were able to find the men and place them under arrest.
Lake Station Police Chief James Richardson told reporters that all four men are being held at the local jail on a $75,000 bond.
All four men now face charges of burglary with a deadly weapon, armed robbery, criminal confinement while armed with a deadly weapon, burglary of a dwelling, and residential break and enter.
A TV news anchor in New York shared an emotional story chronicling a New Jersey man’s fight and untimely death due to complications from COVID-19 on Tuesday (Apr 21). Just seconds after, he realized that the man had, in fact, survived his fight and was very much alive.
Bill Ritter was talking about the local story of Jack Allard, a 26-year-old who had contracted the virus plaguing the world, when he said live on-air: “After spending time on a ventilator and five full weeks in the hospital, the governor announced that Jack has died.”
The broadcast then moved to the actual footage of Governor Phil Murphy’s statement, where just seconds after Ritter pronounced Allard dead, he said: “It was a long month, but slowly Jack rebounded. Last Thursday he was clapped out by the doctors and nurses who saved his life.”
Ritter, obviously surprised and shaken by the news, had to walk back the statements he made live on-air.
“I feel horrible,” Ritter said. “Jack is alive and back home. He has come home, not in the figurative sense, but in the quite literal sense.”
He added: “My deepest apologies for that; I was just … misread everything and I apologize but he is alive and we are grateful for that.”
Despite accidentally declaring the man dead on-air, the story is a glimmer of hope in these dark times.
Allard, who had been placed in a medically induced coma, had no pre-existing conditions and was healthy when he contracted the virus.
His recovery was hailed by New Jersey Republican Congressman Josh Gottheimer, who told reporters: “If that doesn’t make your month, I don’t know what will. He spent more than 20 days on a ventilator and miraculously got off. It just shows you how strong he is.”
Less than a week before turning 5 months old, the child of a New York City firefighter has died away after a month-long fight with COVID-19.
Jay-Natalie La Santa was born last November, the same month that her father, Jerel La Santa, became a member of the NYC Fire Department (FDNY).
Just four months after her birth, Jay-Natalie was rushed to a local hospital after developing a fever.
Since she was born with a pre-existing heart condition, she was admitted immediately, but she initially tested negative for the virus that has shut down the world amidst the pandemic.
However, after she didn’t show any improvements after a week, she was tested again. This time, the COVID-19 test came back positive, reports indicate.
After 16 days of fighting, doctors placed her in a medically-induced coma to help with her healing, and it seemed to be working.
Her fever dropped and her lungs started to clear, but shortly after, things took a turn for the worse, and she went into cardiac arrest. She passed away on Monday (Apr. 20).
A GoFundMe was set up to help the family with the medical bills, and in it, Jay-Natalie was described as “a little person with a big personality.”
“We call her the Warrior Princess because she fought COVID-19 like nobody’s business!!!! Her fight inspired all of the nurses, doctors, and staff members that knew her,” the description read. “We thought we were having a baby, but had an angel instead.”
“Jay-Natalie had everybody wrapped around her finger,” said Wanda La Santa, the girl’s grandmother. “Whatever Jay-Natalie wanted, she got.”
The tragic death has rocked the family and the NYC Fire Department community.
In a statement released on Instagram, Jose A. Prosper, president of the FDNY Hispanic Society, said: “One of the worst experiences as a parent is to go through the loss of a child… Rest in peace, little one, God bless you. Please keep the La Santa family close in prayer and for peace during this difficult of times.”
Wanda La Santa hopes that this tragedy will help other people take the threat of COVID-19 more seriously.
“I want people to understand and know this is something serious,” she told reporters. “This is not a joke. My granddaughter fought a big battle for a whole month in the hospital. She gave it her all.”
A virtual funeral service for Baby Jay-Natalie will be held on May 2 via Facebook Live.
Police in New Jersey are warning people not to wear N95 masks while driving alone after someone passed out while wearing a mask and crashed into a pole.
Lincoln Park police said a motorist crashed their vehicle head-on into a pole Thursday (Apr. 23), and the cops believe the driver lost consciousness while behind the wheel from lack of oxygen and breathing in excessive carbon dioxide after wearing an N95 mask for several hours
“The LPPD responded to a lone occupant single car motor vehicle crash yesterday. The crash is believed to have resulted from the driver wearing an N95 mask for several hours and subsequently passing out behind the wheel due to insufficient oxygen intake/excessive carbon dioxide intake,” the cops wrote on Facebook Friday.
The department continued: “We also know that nothing was uncovered at the accident scene that would suggest that the driver was under the influence of drugs or alcohol.
“While we don’t know [the cause] with 100% certainty, we do know that the driver had been wearing an N95 mask inside the vehicle for several hours and ultimately passed out while operating the vehicle.”
While cops say residents should continue following New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy’s guidelines for wearing face coverings in public amid the COVID-19 pandemic, wearing an N95 mask while driving with “no other occupants is unnecessary.”
The department added: “We are not trying to cause public alarm or suggest wearing an N95 mask is unsafe.”
The driver, who wasn’t named, was taken to a local hospital, where they were treated for non-life-threatening injuries, police said.
One woman learned the hard way that flexing for the ‘gram can sometimes end with disastrous results … especially if you’re not careful.
Footage surfaced online earlier this week showing a woman getting robbed in broad daylight while in her car showing off her stimulus money in a video she was recording for social media.
The short clip shows the unidentified woman wearing a protective face mask while fanning a large wad of $20 bills in front of the camera.
[videopress WVNCjk7B hd=”true”]
Within seconds, a man can be seen reaching into the woman’s driver side window—which, for some odd reason, was rolled all the way down—and snatching the cash right of her hands.
The woman struggles for a brief second, but the man appears to make off with the cash as she says “Motherf**ker just took my money!” and the video ends.
The footage comes just one week after the U.S. government started distributed stimulus checks worth at least $1,200 to cash-strapped citizens amid the COVID-19 pandemic, which has left more than 26 million Americans unemployed.
Please don’t be stupid with your money like this woman was.