Tag Archives: cheer

Alia Bhatt With Mom-In-Law Neetu Kapoor And Dad Mahesh Bhatt – Meet Ranbir Kapoor’s Cheer Squad At Animal Success Bash – NDTV Movies

  1. Alia Bhatt With Mom-In-Law Neetu Kapoor And Dad Mahesh Bhatt – Meet Ranbir Kapoor’s Cheer Squad At Animal Success Bash NDTV Movies
  2. Rashmika: From Pushpa 2 to Animal Success Bash.. Greatandhra
  3. Animal Success Bash: Ranbir Kapoor lauds Sandeep Reddy Vanga; Anil Kapoor calls Rashmika Mandanna ‘lucky mascot’ PINKVILLA
  4. Animal success party: Ranbir Kapoor, Alia Bhatt, Mahesh Bhatt, Neetu Kapoor among others arrive for the g timesofindia.com
  5. Animal success bash: Triptii Dimri makes a smashing entry in a black gown; netizens crush over Bhabhi 2 [Chec Bollywood Life

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Taylor Swift now can’t cheer Travis Kelce on in the NFL until DECEMBER – and Eras tour dates mean she WON’T be at the Super Bowl in February if the Kansas City Chiefs make it that far – Daily Mail

  1. Taylor Swift now can’t cheer Travis Kelce on in the NFL until DECEMBER – and Eras tour dates mean she WON’T be at the Super Bowl in February if the Kansas City Chiefs make it that far Daily Mail
  2. Travis Kelce Promised Taylor Swift They Wouldn’t Have a ‘Fling’: ‘He Can See Himself Marrying’ Her Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Travis Kelce Dances to Taylor Swift’s ‘Shake It Off’ at World Series Game PEOPLE
  4. Travis Kelce proves to be early spark Arizona Diamondbacks needed FanSided
  5. Taylor Swift Is Reportedly Set on Becoming Travis Kelce’s ‘NFL Wife’ as Their Whirlwind Romance Takes a Serious Turn Yahoo Entertainment
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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G20 Summit 2023: Pakistanis Cheer India’s Success | Vantage with Palki Sharma – Firstpost

  1. G20 Summit 2023: Pakistanis Cheer India’s Success | Vantage with Palki Sharma Firstpost
  2. G20 Summit Pakistan Reaction: G20 Summit 2023 India Draws Praise and Self-Reflection from Pakistan The Indian Express
  3. G20 Summit : What Pakistanis are saying about India’s G20 Success Times of India
  4. Even as India was shining after the G20 summit, Shekhar Gupta could not get over old habits – obsession with terror factory Pakistan OpIndia
  5. G20 Summit triumph: Indias diplomatic brilliance shines on the global stage as Pakistan grapples in shadows Firstpost
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Berkshire Hathaway rises as investors cheer strong earnings and Buffett’s near-record cash stockpile – CNBC

  1. Berkshire Hathaway rises as investors cheer strong earnings and Buffett’s near-record cash stockpile CNBC
  2. Warren Buffett is trying to tell us something about the economy with Berkshire Hathaway’s earnings and the $147 billion of cash on hand Fortune
  3. Berkshire Hathaway reports strong Q2 earnings; Inflation data to watch; Campbell Soup to buy Rao’s Yahoo Finance
  4. Stocks to Watch Monday: Berkshire Hathaway, Yellow, KKR The Wall Street Journal
  5. 4 Key Takeaways From Berkshire Hathaway’s Second-Quarter Earnings The Motley Fool
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Ukrainians cheer the new year as Russian drones are blasted from the skies

KYIV/DONETSK PROVINCE FRONT LINE, Ukraine, Jan 1 (Reuters) – Ukrainians cheered from their balconies while their air defences blasted Russian missiles and drones out of the sky in the first hours of 2023, as Moscow saw in the new year by attacking civilian targets across Ukraine.

Ukraine’s Air Force command said it had destroyed 45 Iranian-made Shahed drones overnight — 32 of them on Sunday after midnight and 13 late on Saturday. That was on top of 31 missile attacks and 12 air strikes across the country in the past 24 hours.

Russian President Vladimir Putin signalled no let-up to his assault on Ukraine, in a grim and defiant New Year’s speech that contrasted with a hopeful message of gratitude and unity from Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy.

As sirens blared in Kyiv, some people shouted from their balconies, “Glory to Ukraine! Glory to heroes!”

Fragments from the late-night attack caused minimal damage in the capital’s centre, and preliminarily reports indicated there were no wounded or casualties, Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko said on social media. Attacks earlier on Saturday had hit residential buildings and a hotel in the capital, killing at least one person and injuring more than 20.

U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Bridget Brink said on Twitter: “Russia coldly and cowardly attacked Ukraine in the early hours of the new year. But Putin still does not seem to understand that Ukrainians are made of iron.”

At the front line in Urkaine’s eastern Donetsk Province, troops toasted the new year. Soldier Pavlo Pryzhehodskiy, 27, played a song on guitar he had written at the front after 12 of his comrades were killed in a single night.

“It is sad that instead of meeting friends, celebrating and giving gifts to one another people were forced to seek shelter, some were killed,” he told Reuters. “It is a huge tragedy. It is a huge tragedy that cannot ever be forgiven. That is why the New Year is sad.”

In a nearby front line trench, soldier Oleh Zahrodskiy, 49, said he had signed up as a volunteer after his son was called up to fight as a reservist. His son was now in a hospital in the southern city of Dnipro, fighting for his life with a brain injury, while his father manned the front.

“It is very tough now,” he said, holding back tears.

‘HAPPY NEW YEAR’

Andrii Nebytov, chief of Kyiv’s police, posted a photo on his Telegram messaging app, showing what was described as a piece of drone used in an attack on the capital, with a hand-written sign on it in Russian saying “Happy New Year”.

“This wreckage is not at the front, where fierce battles are taking place, this is here, on a sports grounds, where children play,” Nebytov said.

Russia’s Defence Ministry said it had targeted production, storage and launch sites of Ukrainian drones with long range missiles on New Year’s Eve.

Russia has flattened Ukrainian cities and killed thousands of civilians since Putin ordered his invasion in February, claiming Ukraine was an artificial state whose pro-Western outlook threatened Russia’s security. Moscow has since claimed to have annexed around a fifth of Ukraine.

Ukraine has fought back with Western military support, driving Russian forces from more than half the territory they seized. In recent weeks, the front lines have been largely static, with thousands of soldiers dying in intense trench warfare as Moscow defends its grip on captured territory.

Since October, Russia has launched mass missile and drone attacks on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, casting cities into darkness and cold as winter sets in. Moscow says the strikes aim to reduce Ukraine’s ability to fight; Kyiv says they have no military purpose and are intended to hurt civilians, a war crime.

“The main thing is the fate of Russia,” a stern-faced Putin said in his New Year’s Eve address, speaking in front of a group of people dressed in military uniform instead of the normal backdrop of the Kremlin walls. “Defence of the fatherland is our sacred duty to our ancestors and descendants. Moral, historical righteousness is on our side.”

Zelenskiy delivered his own address in near darkness, in front of a fluttering Ukrainian flag. He described the year past as a national awakening.

“We were told: you have no other option but to surrender. We say: we have no other option than to win,” he said.

“This year has struck our hearts. We’ve cried out all the tears. We’ve shouted all the prayers,” Zelenskiy said. “We fight and will continue to fight. For the sake of the key word: ‘victory’.”

The latest air strikes damaged infrastructure in Sumy, in the northeast of the country, Khmelnytskyi in the west and Zaporizhzhia and Kherson in southeast and south, the General Staff of Ukraine’s Armed Forces said.

“Let the day be quiet,” Valentyn Reznichenko, governor of the Dnipropetrovsk region said early on Sunday, after reporting heavy shelling of several communities in the region overnight that wounded one.

Grid operator Ukrenergo said on Sunday the past day had been “difficult” for its workers but the electricity situation was “under control” and emergency outages were not being implemented.

Separately, Vyacheslav Gladkov, governor of the southern Russian region of Belgorod bordering Ukraine, said overnight shelling of the outskirts of Shebekino town had damaged houses but there were no casualties.

Russian media also reported multiple Ukrainian attacks on the Moscow-controlled parts of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions, with local officials saying at least nine people were wounded.

Russia’s RIA state news agency cited a local doctor as saying six people were killed when a hospital in Donetsk was attacked on Saturday. Proxy authorities in Donetsk also said one person had been killed by Ukrainian shelling.

Reuters could not verify the reports. There was no immediate response from Kyiv, which rarely comments on attacks inside Russia or on Russian-controlled territories in Ukraine.

Reporting by Gleb Garanich, Valentyn Ogirenko, Dan Peleshchuk and Sergiy Karazy in Kyiv and Herbert Villarraga at the front line in Donetsk province; Writing by Peter Graff, Lidia Kelly and Dan Peleschuk
Editing by Kim Coghill and Frances Kerry

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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France celebrates WCup victory, fans cheer Morocco team

PARIS (AP) — Crowds in Paris and other French cities erupted in shouts of joy as France advanced to the World Cup final Wednesday, while disappointed Morocco fans mingled with the exuberant supporters of the winning team, paying tribute to the African country’s unprecedented achievement.

Football fans streamed to the Champs-Elysees avenue in Paris, shooting off firecrackers and red flares, to an unending chorus of honking cars.

On the famous avenue, many were brandishing French flags and singing “we are in the final.”

Some Moroccan fans, wrapped in the North African country’s flag, also cheered their team in the streets of the French capital.

France beat Morocco 2-0 to reach the World Cup final against Argentina, in a historic match between the defending champion and Africa’s first ever semifinalist.

Supporters from both teams gathered in bars from the boulevards of Paris to the streets of Morocco’s capital Rabat, from the cosmopolitan French Riviera city of Nice to the historic Moroccan city of Marrakech.

Celebrating the victory near the Bastille square, in central Paris, Adrien Vignau, a 22-year-old Parisian, praised a “great victory for France” and said he was looking forward to the final against Argentina and its star player, Lionel Messi.

“Bravo to Moroccans,” said Parisian Corentin Voiseux. “Tonight it’s not only France that wins but all of the French-speaking people. … We are together and Moroccans will be with us at the final,” he added.

In central Madrid, fans celebrated on Sol Square after the match, some with red Moroccan flags draped on their shoulders, jumping up and down, and some wearing the French tricolor.

In Belgium, scuffles briefly broke out in Brussels after the game and authorities countered with water cannon and teargas after they were targeted. One and a half hours later, a tense calm had returned. Media reports spoke of 40 detentions. There also was some unrest in northern Antwerp.

In Paris, riot police vans lined the broad thoroughfare and the base of the imposing Arc de Triomphe, and white-helmeted officers roamed the crowd on the Champs-Elysees. Minor incidents briefly broke out, leading officers to occasionally use teargas to move the crowd away.

Despite their sadness, Moroccan fans expressed pride in their team, highlighting the history-making moment this game represented.

A Rabat resident, Fatima Zahra Attaq said that she was “a bit sad, but this is football. … After all, they gave their best and made us proud to reach this stage of the competition.”

“The national team made us dream,” said Reda Hakam, also working in Rabat. “The dream is now over. I am not sad. I am actually very proud.”

Kenza El Amrani said that “I think Moroccans should wipe the tears off their faces and cheer for this team.”

Those who attended the game in Qatar also paid tribute to the performance and fighting spirit of the African team.

“Morocco played with their hearts,” said Ayaz Dhrolia, a fan from Canada whose face was painted in Morocco colors as he left Doha’s Al Bayt Stadium. “They won the hearts of millions and millions of people around the world, well appreciated. Thanks, Morocco.”

Youssra Zhhata, a Moroccan woman who was at the game, stressed that “they made it to the semifinals and that’s an accomplishment. … And we had Africans, Arabs, everyone supporting us.”

Morocco was under French rule from 1912-56, giving the match political and emotional resonance for both nations.

Morocco has exceeded all expectations in Qatar by beating second-ranked Belgium in the group stage and then eliminating European powerhouses Spain and Portugal in the knockout phase to reach the semifinals.

In Gaza, Palestinians who thronged cafes and outdoor large screens expressed disappointment at Morocco’s loss.

“All of Gaza is now sad for this result. We were hoping they would win,” said Wael al-Riffi, a Gaza resident, as he held Morocco’s flag.

Crowds also gathered in the Israeli-occupied West Bank to watch the game.

The Palestinians felt empathy from the Moroccan national team as players held the Palestinian flag several times at the World Cup.

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AP World Cup coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/world-cup and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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Jeff Schaeffer and Oleg Cetinic in Paris, Tarik El Barakah in Rabat, Morocco, Lujain Jo and Helena Alves in Doha, Qatar, Fares Akram in Gaza City and Raf Casert in Brussels, Belgium, contributed to the story.



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China readies new COVID rules as investors cheer easing shift

  • New nationwide COVID rules due as soon as Wednesday – sources
  • Shift follows widespread demonstrations last month
  • Yuan firms, global markets rally on China hopes

HONG KONG/BEIJING, Dec 5 (Reuters) – China is set to announce the further easing of some of the world’s toughest COVID curbs as early as Wednesday, sources told Reuters, as investors cheered the prospect of a policy shift that follows widespread protests and mounting economic damage.

Three years into the pandemic, China’s zero-tolerance measures, from shut borders to frequent lockdowns, contrast sharply with the rest of the world, which has largely decided to live with the coronavirus.

The strict approach has battered the world’s second-largest economy, put mental strain on hundreds of millions and last month prompted the biggest show of public discontent in mainland China since President Xi Jinping took power in 2012.

Although last month’s protests largely subsided amid a heavy police presence across major cities, regional authorities have since cut back on lockdowns, quarantine rules and testing requirements to varying degrees. Top officials have also softened their tone on the dangers posed by the virus.

A new set of nationwide rules are due to be announced soon, two sources with knowledge of the matter said, paving the way for more coordinated easing.

Beijing is also weighing whether to scale down its management of the virus to reflect the less serious threat it poses as early as January, the sources added.

Analysts now predict China may drop border controls and re-open the economy sooner than expected next year.

“The risk of an earlier but managed exit has increased,” Goldman Sachs chief China economist Hui Shan said in a note on Monday, adding that the bank expected such a reopening from April. Other analysts expect a reopening in the second half.

But the patchy loosening over the past week has left some in China scared of being caught on the wrong side of fast-changing rules.

Yin, who lives in a small city near Beijing, said her in-laws had come down with a fever and she had a sore throat but they did not want to be tested for fear of being thrown into government quarantine.

“All we want is to recover at home,” she told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The yuan jumped to its strongest level against the dollar since mid-September amid a broad market rally as investors hope the unwinding of pandemic curbs will brighten the outlook for global growth.

In another hopeful sign, a source at Apple supplier Foxconn (2317.TW) told Reuters the firm expected its COVID-hit Zhengzhou plant – the world’s biggest iPhone factory – to resume full production this month or early next.

Economic data underscored the damage done by the curbs, as services activity shrank to six-month lows in November.

CHANGING MESSAGE

Alongside the easing in different cities, Vice Premier Sun Chunlan, who oversees China’s COVID efforts, said last week the ability of the virus to cause disease was weakening.

That change in messaging aligns with the position held by many health officials around the world for more than a year.

In recent days, major cities across China have continued loosening measures.

Among them, the eastern city of Nanjing dropped the need of a COVID test to use public transport. So did Beijing, though entry to many offices in the capital still requires negative tests.

“I can’t feel a very noticeable change yet,” said Randle Li, 25, a marketing professional in Beijing. Li said his firm still required him to test every day to go to the office.

Elsewhere, as testing requirements have eased, official figures of new infections have also dropped.

Hu Xijin, a prominent commentator and former editor-in-chief of state-run tabloid Global Times, said in a blog post that some official tallies were likely underreporting the spread of the virus because of lower testing rates.

While last week’s protests have died down, frustration can still boil over, as events in the central city of Wuhan, where the virus first emerged in late 2019, showed this weekend.

On Saturday, people pushed down barriers in an apparent attempt to break out of a lockdown at a garment industrial park, video clips posted on Twitter showed.

Then on Sunday, dozens of students stood in the rain outside a university in the city demanding greater “transparency” in the school’s COVID policies, other videos showed.

Reuters was able to verify that the incidents happened in Wuhan.

Reporting by Ryan Woo, Bernard Orr and Martin Quin Pollard in Beijing and Julie Zhu and Kevin Huang in Hong Kong; Writing by John Geddie; Editing by Clarence Fernandez

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Elnaz Rekabi: Fans cheer, clap as climber returns to Iran

DUBAI, Oct 19 (Reuters) – Iranian climber Elnaz Rekabi, who caused controversy by competing in an international contest without a headscarf, has returned to Iran to cheering supporters, reiterating in comments to state media she had climbed without a hijab unintentionally.

Footage had shown Rekabi, 33, scaling a wall without her head covered while representing Iran at a competition in South Korea, at a time of unprecedented protests in Iran over the death in custody of a young woman detained by morality police for “inappropriate attire.”

In comments to state TV upon her arrival in Tehran, Rekabi said she had returned in “full health” and apologised to “the people of Iran for the turbulence and worry that I created”, her head covered by a baseball cap and a hood as she spoke.

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“The struggle that I had with wearing my shoes and preparing my gear made me forget about the proper hijab that I should have had, and I went to the wall and ascended,” she added.

A crowd of well-wishers cheered, clapped and recorded the scene on mobile phones as she was driven away from the airport, according to footage posted on Twitter.

In a statement published on her Instagram account on Tuesday, Rekabi cited poor scheduling as the reason she had competed without a headscarf, saying she had been called to climb unexpectedly.

In her televised comments Rekabi, who came fourth in the competition, denied she had been unreachable for 48 hours, and said the team had returned to Iran as planned. She said she had no plan to quit the national team.

BBC Persian had reported on Tuesday that friends had been unable to contact her, and there were fears for her safety. Iran’s embassy in South Korea, on Twitter, denied reports about her going missing after the competition.

The International Olympic Committee said it had talked to the athlete and had received assurances from the Iran’s national Olympic committee (NOC) she would not face consequences.

“A joint meeting took place today between the IOC, the (international climbing federation) IFSC and the Iranian NOC, during which the IOC and the IFSC received clear assurances that Ms Rekabi will not suffer any consequences and will continue to train and compete,” an IOC spokesperson said.

Another joint meeting was then held between the groups and Rekabi, the spokesperson said, adding that the IOC would monitor the situation closely in the days and weeks to come.

The death last month of Mahsa Amini while in the custody of the Islamic Republic’s morality police, who detained her for “inappropriate attire”, prompted nationwide protests during which women have removed and burned headscarves.

The protests ignited by Amini’s death have grown into one of the boldest challenges to the Islamic Republic since the 1979 revolution, though the unrest does not appear close to toppling the system.

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Reporting by Dubai Newsroom; Additional reporting by Karolos Grohmann, Editing by William Maclean and Frank Jack Daniel

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Celebrity Cheer Coach Dominick Frizzell and Tennessee’s Premier Athletics Hit With Sex Abuse Lawsuit

The competitive cheerleading community was hit with another bombshell lawsuit on Tuesday, alleging that a Tennessee gym fostered an environment that allowed one of its celebrity coaches to sexually and emotionally abuse at least two teenage male athletes for years.

Among them: a 15-year-old boy who told The Daily Beast that the coach sent him sexually explicit messages, photographs, and videos for months earlier this year when he was still 14. When the coach became aware he was being investigated by the sport’s governing body, U.S. All-Star Federation (USASF), over complaints made by another athlete, the teenager said the messages turned sinister—and included threats that he wanted to “destroy” the initial whistleblower.

“He made it feel like it was a normal thing and it was OK,” the boy, identified as John Doe 1 in a lawsuit filed in Tennessee federal court, said about the abuse. “It wasn’t fair. I feel like it was happening to multiple people.”

John Doe 1 is one of two teenage boys in the lawsuit demanding a jury trial. Among the defendants named in the suit are Varsity Spirit, its associated brands, and its former founder Jeff Webb; USASF; USA Cheer; Charlesbank Capital Partner; Bain Capital; Premier Athletics, where the two teenage boys were allegedly abused, and the gym’s manager Susan Traylor, and coach Dominick “Nick” Frizzell.

Frizzell is well-known in the cheer world and previously competed with a nationally renowned All-Stars team. Currently, he’s a cheerleader at the University of Tennessee and has a large social media following, including 31,000 followers on Instagram and 48,000 on TikTok. (Both accounts were made private on Tuesday morning.)

A spokesperson for the University of Tennessee told The Daily Beast that Frizzell was suspended from participating in the school’s Spirit Program activities on Sept. 16 and “was formally dismissed from the program” on Tuesday.

via Facebook/Premier Athletics – Knoxville West

The lawsuit, obtained by The Daily Beast, alleges that Traylor allowed Frizzell to “emotionally, physically, and sexually exploit and abuse…Premier’s young athletes.” “Premier Athletics and Defendant Frizzell, along with other gyms and coaches, were empowered and placed in positions of trust and authority by the Varsity Defendants, all while the Varsity Defendants knew or should have known that these same coaches and gyms were pervasively abusing athletes or allowing athletes to be abused,” the lawsuit added.

In a statement to The Daily Beast, USA Cheer Executive Director Lauri Harris said the allegations are “tragic and we are heartbroken for any victims of abuse.” “Sexual abuse and misconduct in all forms is reprehensible and has no place in sport or society,” Harris added. “USA Cheer will continue to work with the entire cheer community and all relevant agencies to rid it of bad actors and hold those responsible to account.”

An attorney representing Premier Athletics denied the allegations, claiming the lawsuit contains “many inaccuracies and false statements” about the gym and Traylor. “The health and safety of athletes that train at its facilities is extremely important to Premier Knoxville,” lawyer Chad Hatmaker said. “Premier Knoxville has taken all of the appropriate and required steps based on the reports it received.”

In a statement to The Daily Beast, Varsity Spirit said they rejected “any accusation that Varsity Spirit enabled such unthinkable behavior.” “We are outraged that predators took advantage of cheerleading programs to abuse innocent children,” the statement said.

Other named defendants did not immediately respond to The Daily Beast’s request for comment.

For Mary Doe, the mother of John Doe 1, who also requested anonymity, the notion that she was forced to come forward and file a lawsuit against the people who were supposed to be educating and protecting her son “is maddening.” The lawsuit alleges that Mary Doe wasn’t informed about the allegations made by the initial athlete against Frizzell until this month—and that she and her son were never contacted by Premier after they opened an investigation.

“I am angry that we had to do this,” Mary Doe said. “I am angry that to even move forward, to expose and make sure that something happens to the people that completely botched this up and didn’t protect my son, it has to be a public situation. It’s a necessary evil that has to happen.”

The lawsuit is only the latest harrowing sexual-abuse scandal to hit the cheerleading community. Earlier this month, The Daily Beast first reported on a damning lawsuit filed against Scott Foster, a prominent South Carolina cheerleading coach who died by suicide in August. It alleges he sexually abused male and female athletes and presided over a culture that allowed his staff to do the same. His gym, Rockstar Cheer, has since been closed “indefinitely.” Both lawsuits allege that the well-known private equity firm Bain Capital cashed in on the chaos.

The cheerleading community has also been rocked by the 12-year prison sentence given to Jerry Harris, a former breakout star on Netflix’s Cheer who pleaded guilty to charges involving child porn and sex crimes against minors, and lawsuits filed against well-known Cheer Athletics Coach Jason McCartney, who is accused of “twisted” sex abuse against his Texas athletes.

“This lawsuit makes it clear that we’re not talking about some isolated incident in South Carolina,” Strom Law Firm’s Bakari Sellers, one of the lawyers who filed Tuesday’s suit, said in a statement. “This is a nationwide epidemic of abuse that infects all of competitive cheerleading enabled and concealed by Varsity Spirit, the U.S. All Star Federation (USASF) and Bain Capital.”

The lawsuit filed on Tuesday takes direct aim at Premier Athletics in Tennessee, which was purchased by Varsity Spirit in 2005. The “cheer, dance, and tumbling gym” is a USASF member gym that prides itself on “highly trained” and “highly qualified” instructors.

The lawsuit states that in 2018, when he was just 14, John Doe 2 met 19-year-old Frizzell when they were both athletes at Premier Athletics. Frizzell added the teenager on Snapchat but it wasn’t until two years later, the lawsuit states, that Frizzell “finally convinced Plaintiff John Doe 2 to meet up, and they began to engage in oral sex and other sexual conduct.”

“When Defendant Frizzell turned twenty-one, he told Plaintiff John Doe 2 that he could get in trouble for having sex with Plaintiff John Doe 2,” the lawsuit said. “Nevertheless, the conduct continued.”

The lawsuit alleges that Premier Athletics knew about the “ongoing sexual relationship,” but nobody ever questioned “Frizzell’s continued interaction” with John Doe 2 or “any other underaged athlete.” Instead, Frizzell was hired as a coach.

Around the same time, in 2020, John Doe 1 began cheering at Premier Athletics and became aware of Frizzell, who is described in the lawsuit as a “cheerlebrity.” By the end of 2021, Frizzell, who was in his early twenties, was following John Doe 1 on Snapchat—even though he was aware John Doe 1 was only 14, the lawsuit states.

In January 2022, Frizzell began sending “sexually explicit messages and photographs of himself” to John Doe 1, including photographs of his penis and videos of him masturbating, the suit alleges. On several occasions, Frizzell also allegedly asked John Doe 1 to meet up, including once in May when the two engaged in oral sex.

About a month later, the lawsuit states that John Doe 1 learned that a fellow underaged athlete was also receiving sexually explicit photographs from Frizzell—and that the other teenager had asked Frizzell to “stop behaving in a predatory manner.” (The fellow underaged athlete is not included in the lawsuit.)

Shortly thereafter, John Doe 1 changed to a new gym. The teenager told The Daily Beast that despite changing gyms—a decision he said was the “best choice”—and despite Frizzell knowing that a sexual misconduct complaint had been made against him, he still contacted John Doe 1.

In one July 2022 message, he “bragged” that he was “not permanently banned” and that Susan Traylor said she wasn’t going to fire him, the lawsuit states, adding that Frizzell sent John Doe 1 “numerous messages threatening the minor athlete who made the initial report.”

John Doe 1 told The Daily Beast that some of the messages included that Frizzell “wanted to destroy” the teenager that reported him. He said he soon found out that some people at Premier were being interviewed about Frizzell’s misconduct—but neither he nor his mother were ever contacted.

“We were never contacted, talked about it all,” Mary Doe said. “It’s infuriating.”

The lawsuit alleges that Frizzell even tried to contact John Doe 1 in an attempt to influence how he would respond to questions about their interactions. Earlier this month, John Doe 1’s new gym contacted Mary Doe to inform her that Premier Athletics was investigating allegations of abuse against Frizzell and that those allegations included her son.

“It’s been a complete whirlwind,” Mary Doe, who ultimately made a report to law enforcement, added. “It’s completely maddening to me.”

“Ultimately, Defendant Premier Athletics’ bungled internal investigation determined that insufficient proof existed to hold Defendant Frizzell accountable,” the lawsuit states, adding that the determination was based, at least in part, on the fact that John Doe 1 had left the gym.

According to the lawsuit, Premier Athletics acknowledged in a Sept. 18 Instagram statement that an “additional report” had been filed with law enforcement, but provided no information.

In a statement, Premier Athletics lawyer Chad Hatmaker stated that Traylor was told by an athlete on June 26, 2022, that he had received inappropriate photos from Frizzell. “No copies or screenshots of the photographs were provided to substantiate this claim and this was the first time Ms. Traylor or Premier Knoxville had received reports about this alleged misconduct,” Hatmaker said, adding that Frizzell was suspended and the athlete’s claim was immediately reported to local law enforcement as well as USASF.

The statement said that law enforcement “did not substantiate the complaint, nor did USASF” but Premier Knoxville terminated Frizzell. On Sept. 18, the statement adds, the gym was informed of another student—who they believed is John Doe 1—who had a “physical relationship” with Frizzell. But the gym states that neither the teenager nor his mother reported the claim—but Premiere Athletics went to law enforcement and USAF that day.

“After reporting the matter to law enforcement Premier Knoxville did not have any contact with the alleged victim or his family so as not to be falsely accused of interfering with law enforcement’s investigation,” the gym’s statement added.

For Mary Doe, the latest allegations against Frizzell are symptomatic of an ongoing problem in the cheerleading community. She and her son both said they hope this lawsuit lands Frizzell in jail and that Premier is “held accountable for what they did.”

“It’s disgusting,” she said.

According to USA Cheer’s ineligibility list, Frizzell’s membership with USASF as a coach and athlete has been temporarily suspended “pending investigation” because he violated policy “related to athlete protection.”

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Former ‘Cheer’ star Jerry Harris gets 12 years in child pornography case

Jerry Harris, former star of the Netflix docuseries “Cheer,” was sentenced Wednesday to 12 years in prison for requesting explicit photos and soliciting sex from teenagers at cheerleading competitions, according to the Associated Press.

U.S. District Judge Manish Shah directed Harris to view the sentence as “an expression of the seriousness of your crimes, tempered with some hope that all is not lost for you or for your victims, and that in the future some healing can occur,” the AP reported, noting that the prison time would be followed by eight years under court supervision.

Attorneys for Harris, 22, said in a statement that their client was “exceedingly grateful for Judge Shah’s recognition of his humanity, worthiness, and rehabilitative potential.” They added that Harris had “nothing but empathy and remorse for the people he has harmed and hopes that today’s proceeding provided them some peace.”

The statement also included remarks Harris made Wednesday in court, where he thanked his supporters and apologized to his victims for “all the trauma my abuse has caused you.”

“I pray that your suffering comes to an end and that these proceeding[s] provide you with needed closure,” he said. “I am ashamed as I know that I took advantage of your youth and weakness. I was wrong and selfish. I caused you harm and I do not blame anyone. I regret my decisions and I am deeply sorry.”

Harris rose to fame due to the immense popularity of the documentary series “Cheer,” which premiered in early 2020 and followed a nationally ranked college cheerleading team in Corsicana, Tex. He was arrested in September of that year on a federal child pornography charge. The FBI also searched his Naperville, Ill., residence.

Prosecutors filed additional charges against Harris that December, NBC News reported.

According to federal court records, Harris told agents he requested explicit photos from a 13-year-old on Snapchat throughout a 15-month period and solicited oral sex from the minor on two occasions. He also said he asked for and received photos from around a dozen other minors and engaged in sexual activity with another minor.

Harris was arrested after a lawsuit was filed on behalf of the 13-year-old and his twin brother. They both appeared earlier this year in the second season of “Cheer,” in which they detailed Harris’s behavior toward them.

In February, Harris pleaded guilty to two felony charges against him. His attorneys stated that Harris wanted “to take responsibility for his actions and publicly convey his remorse for the harm he has caused the victims in this case.”

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