Tag Archives: Clayton

Cook County state’s attorney election results today: Eileen O’Neill Burke wins primary election over Clayton Harris III – WLS-TV

  1. Cook County state’s attorney election results today: Eileen O’Neill Burke wins primary election over Clayton Harris III WLS-TV
  2. O’Neill Burke wins Democratic primary for state’s attorney Chicago Tribune
  3. Former Justice Eileen O’Neill Burke wins Democratic primary in Chicago-area prosecutor’s race WGN TV Chicago
  4. Harris edges a few votes closer to O’Neill Burke as state’s attorney primary nears counting finish line Chicago Sun-Times
  5. AP: Eileen O’Neill Burke projected to win Democratic primary for Cook County State’s Attorney NBC Chicago

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The Bachelor’s Clayton Echard Reveals Results of Paternity Test Following Woman’s Lawsuit – E! NEWS

  1. The Bachelor’s Clayton Echard Reveals Results of Paternity Test Following Woman’s Lawsuit E! NEWS
  2. Clayton Echard Confirms He Did Not Father Twins After Receiving Paternity Test Results: ‘Good News’ PEOPLE
  3. Clayton Echard’s Paternity Test Confirms He Didn’t Father Ex’s Twins Us Weekly
  4. ‘Bachelor’s Clayton Echard Shares Alleged Results of Paternity Test Amid Lawsuit Parade Magazine
  5. ‘Bachelor’ Nation Star Clayton Echard Claims Paternity Test Concludes He’s Not the Father of Unborn Twins HollywoodLife
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Bachelor Star Clayton Echard Served With Paternity Lawsuit From Alleged Pregnant Ex – E! Online – E! NEWS

  1. Bachelor Star Clayton Echard Served With Paternity Lawsuit From Alleged Pregnant Ex – E! Online E! NEWS
  2. The Bachelor’s Clayton Echard’s Ex Claims She’s Pregnant With His Twins Us Weekly
  3. The Bachelor alum Clayton Echard’s ex-fling demands a paternity test after she allegedly became pregnant with Daily Mail
  4. ‘Bachelor’ alum Clayton Echard’s ex-fling pregnant, demands he take paternity test Page Six
  5. Does ‘Bachelor’ alumni Clayton Echard have children with ex-girlfriend Susie Evans? The paternity rumors, explained We Got This Covered
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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2023 NFL Draft: Best fits for mid-round QB prospects, including Stetson Bennett, Max Duggan, Clayton Tune – CBS Sports

  1. 2023 NFL Draft: Best fits for mid-round QB prospects, including Stetson Bennett, Max Duggan, Clayton Tune CBS Sports
  2. NFL draft might see four quarterbacks taken with first four picks The Washington Post
  3. Big Ten Quarterbacks 2023: The Dregs. Let’s see what Northwestern, Indiana, and Rutgers have (or rather don’t… Off Tackle Empire
  4. 2023 NFL Draft: Don’t Expect Fantasy Success From Rookie Quarterbacks Sports Illustrated
  5. How Many QBs Will Be Drafted In Round 1 of 2023 NFL Draft? The Draft Network
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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The Bachelor recap: Season 27, Episode 1

The Bachelor’s Zach Shallcross
Photo: ABC/Nino Muñoz

The premiere of a new season of The Bachelortwo hours of being waterboarded by workout montages and wannabe influencers professing their love for a man they haven’t even met yet—is always a little bit of a mindfuck. Our new bachelor is Zach Shallcross, and the recurring line of the contestants’ gushing intros was that he has “kind eyes.” Several of the women also refer to themselves as “the future Mrs. Shallcross,” which does not exactly roll off the tongue.

“Some people are saying, ‘Why me?’” Zach admits in his voiceover. It’s a fair question, one that I have asked. Host Jesse Palmer says they chose him because “he’s just a genuine guy who came here looking for love and love alone.” Sure, Jan. Zach is as bland and generic as most of the men who have filled the Bachelor shoes before him—the kind of guy who says “freakin’”—but he does have one wrinkle of interest (at least, of interest to me): He’s related to David Puddy.

If you don’t remember this from Zach’s unremarkable run in that last season of The Bachelorette, I’ll refresh your memory. On his hometown date, his Uncle Pat spoke in strikingly deep voice that made me look up from my phone and say, “Is that David Puddy?” Yes! Zach’s uncle is Patrick Warburton, who played Elaine’s on-again-off-again boyfriend on Seinfeld. This was never addressed in the show but lives rent-free in my mind. I was hoping for a full segment with Uncle Pat in the premiere. Alas, he does not show up.

We do get an advice session from Sean Lowe, literally the one man in the history of the show who is still with his selected winner. I will admit I am a sucker for Sean Lowe and the blank way he smiles like a human golden retriever. His season (all the way back in 2013, yikes) was the first time I watched The Bachelor, and you never forget your first. Why isn’t he hosting this show now?

The producers clearly want us to connect Zach with Sean. He’s ready to settle down! He wants a family! He’s a Good Guy™! Five minutes into the episode, my three-year-old got out of bed to go to the bathroom and then called down that he had pooped and needed me to come wipe his butt. Are you really ready to settle down, Zach? Are you ready to be responsible for wiping someone else’s butt?

The final line from Zach before we transition to meet the women: “Do I deserve this? I don’t know.” Perfect. No notes.

We then meet a lot of nurses and content creators and medical sales reps in their mid-twenties. Zach has already met five of them on After The Final Rose, a detail I didn’t remember because my brain refuses to retain information about The Bachelor for longer than three months. One of them, Briana, already has a rose (referred to as “America’s rose”), so she’s safe. Another, Bailey, tried to get him to remember her name by rhyming Bailey with daily, and he then called her Bailen. For the rest of the episode, my husband referred to her as either Balon Greyjoy (Game Of Thrones) or Balin (The Hobbit).

There’s also Christina, who has a five-year-old and seems like a potential villain; rodeo girl Brooklyn; and family therapist Charity. It’s hard to come off great in an intro video unless you’ve survived a tragedy or work with children. Onto the limo entrances!

The first car pulls up and the girls all scream “Zach!” at the top of their lungs before chanting, “I am beautiful. I am confident. I am strong.” in unison like they’re holding a séance. First out is Jess, who is so adorable she looks like she could play a 15-year-old in a CW show. Her lack of hair extensions and severe contouring makes me want to root for her, which is how the producers want me to feel. “Great smile, very pretty,” Zach says to himself as she walks into the house. I know they make him do this for narration purposes, but it still feels extremely weird.

There are some normal entrances, but then we suffer through the usual gimmicks. Someone makes him drink maple syrup. Another looks at his crotch and says she knows everything is bigger in Texas. One girl brings a pig; Christina arrives on a party bus; Vanessa walks out to New Orleans trumpets. They all blend together. Bailey (Balon/Balin) reminds him about that time he forgot her name, and it gets worse because they suffer through one of the most awkward first kisses I had ever seen on this show. He promises to remember her name, but how funny would it have been if he had yelled, “See you later, Brenda!” as she walked in?

Briana is the last to arrive, and she’s wearing a stunning red dress covered in roses to match the rose she already has. Good branding, Briana. Zach says he likes her confidence, not understanding how easy it is for a woman to project confidence when she feels secure. Once she’s inside, Jesse pops up to ask Zach if he feels like he just met his wife. He says, “No, actually, do you have any more?” Just kidding. He actually says, “My gut is telling meI might have.”

Zach enters the mansion to address his group of 30 women and begins with, “I’m just a dude who loves family, football, and frozen pizzas.” It’s made so much worse by the fact that he clearly rehearsed this speech and determined that was a winning opening line. The rest could have been cut and pasted from any other opening Bachelor toast, and then the night is a blur of awkward get-to-know-you gimmicks and first kisses. Zach and Katherine bond over how they’re both “weird,” and is there anything worse than two hot people insisting that they’re actually huge weirdos? Christina lures him onto the party bus for a game of compatibility questions, including the critical “dinosaurs or dragons?” (Zach prefers dragons, which disappoints Christina.) One woman makes him demonstrate his future dad bona fides by changing the diaper on a baby doll, which looks possessed. Get that thing in the M3GAN sequel.

His first impression rose goes to Greer, who made the incredible play of talking about how much she wants to settle down in Austin, the city in which he resides. Their kiss evolves into a make out session that prompts the funniest moment of the night. “Who is it?” someone asks as they try to get a look at who Zach is kissing. “It’s that girl!” another woman yells.

Photo: ABC

Because this episode has to follow the same beats of every premiere, someone must fill the crazy role, and that someone is Madison. They have a normal conversation, but her obsession with getting the first impression rose causes her to pull him a second time and go in for a kiss they both instantly recognize as horrible. “I’ll let you go,” Zach says to end their conversation in the same way I do when I’m on the phone with someone I no longer wish to speak to. Madison spends the rest of the night spiraling until confronting Zach right before the rose ceremony, forcing him to dump her minutes earlier than he would have anyway. “I cannot believe I gave up my life for him!” she sobs to the producers in the driveway. Girl.

It’s finally time for the rose ceremony and it is fully noon the next day. The sun is high in the sky as he hands out the roses. The people who go home are ones we are not invested in, surprise! Once they’ve gone, Zach says he’s here to find his best friend, which is clearly going to be the mantra of the season. I hope Zach’s actual best friend—probably some dude named Mike he’s known since high school—is mildly annoyed every time it comes up.

Stray observations

  • I’m going to need them to stop calling him “Zach the Snack.”
  • In his intro, Jesse says, “Of course, the driveway has been hosed down.” Is that what they do? Is that a thing people do?
  • As I prepared to make the point that the Bachelor is always forgettable, it took me at least 30 seconds to remember who the last Bachelor actually was. Remember Clayton?
  • “What are you drinking?” someone asks Madison after her bad kiss with Zach. “Not enough.” No, it’s definitely enough! Someone cut her off!
  • Kimberly tries to comfort Madison by saying her makeup is on fleek, a term I haven’t heard someone use since 2015.
  • Jesse tells Zach, “A lot went down tonight.” Did it? No one revealed a boyfriend back home. No one brought a playbook. No one even got in a fight! It was an extremely normal, uneventful night, Jesse!

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Clayton County 11-year-old girl found after mysterious disappearance, police say – WSB-TV Channel 2

CLAYTON COUNTY, Ga. — Clayton County police say an 11-year-old girl whose disappearance they were investigating as possible human trafficking has been found.

Police announced Friday afternoon that R’Kayla Briggs had been located. They did not offer any details on where or how she was found.

Investigators have not released any details on the circumstances surrounding girl’s disappearance.

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Channel 2′s Tom Jones attended a news conference Friday morning where police said they believed Briggs was in danger.

R’Kayla’s parents say the 11-year-old packed a bag and left home on Monday. She deleted her social media accounts and hasn’t answered the phone.

At first, her parents thought she was heading to Texas with a 22-year-old man. Investigators said Friday that she may be with a man or a woman still in Georgia.

“Bring her back. We are asking you to bring her back because we are not going to stop,” parent Kenicia Moss said.

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Moss told Jones that she thinks her daughter met someone on Instagram.

“Parents, we encourage you. Check phones. Check internet. You never know,” she said.

On Friday, the child’s mother, Brandy Mosely, told Jones that her daughter was dropped off back at home by two men. Police confirmed that is what happened. Mosely briefly took her daughter to police headquarters Friday afternoon.

Jones was there as the mother raced inside. She didn’t have anything to say. But a couple of days earlier she pleaded with her daughter to come home. “We love you girl. Come home. You know we love you. You got a village behind you. Whole village. Please come home,” her mother said.

Mosely didn’t say anything when she came out of the police station Friday night. But on the phone she told Jones God works and she is a believer in Him.

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Clayton Kershaw, Dodgers agree to deal

LOS ANGELES — Clayton Kershaw and the Dodgers wasted no time as the likely Hall of Famer will return for a 16th season as the two sides are closing in on a one-year deal, sources told MLB.com on Thursday.

The terms of the deal are still being discussed. The club has not confirmed the move.

The Dodgers didn’t extend Kershaw a qualifying offer before Thursday’s deadline, but president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman made it clear that bringing the left-hander back was “a priority” for the team this offseason. A few hours into free agency, Kershaw’s free agency came to an end.

“Things just feel more right in the world when Kershaw is wearing a Dodgers uniform,” Friedman said during the General Managers Meetings in Las Vegas. “That’s just how it lands with us, but we couldn’t respect more him and Ellen going through this process.”

Last winter, Kershaw’s future was much more uncertain. Kershaw didn’t pick up a baseball until January after ending the season on the injured list with a forearm injury. His three options were to play for the Dodgers, join the Rangers in order to stay close to his family or retire in the event his forearm didn’t heal as well as he hoped.

Before the end of the 2022 season, Kershaw confirmed he wanted to play at least another season. He’s going to sign one-year deals for the rest of his career, keeping his options open. There was a chance he could sign with the Rangers, but with the way the Dodgers played during the regular season, Kershaw wanted to return.

The Dodgers didn’t offer Kershaw a qualifying offer because they didn’t want to rush his decision. But Kershaw was ready to be back with the Dodgers, the only place he’s known as a big leaguer. Once Kershaw takes the mound next season, he’ll become the second Dodger to pitch 16 seasons with the organization, joining Hall of Famer Don Sutton, who also played parts of 16 seasons in LA.

Kershaw was one of the most effective pitchers in the National League last season, going 12-3 with a 2.28 ERA over 22 starts. He made his ninth All-Star team and started the Midsummer Classic for the first time in his career at Dodger Stadium. The left-hander missed two months due to a pair of back injuries, something Kershaw will have to monitor for the rest of his career.

Adding Kershaw this early in the offseason gives the Dodgers more clearance on what their starting pitching situation will look like next season. Julio Urías, Dustin May and Tony Gonsolin are the other three starters in the rotation. Ryan Pepiot, Michael Grove, Gavin Stone and Bobby Miller will all serve as depth options.

Friedman said adding starting pitching was “very” high on the agenda. They acted quickly and Kershaw stays home for at least one more season.

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Dodgers Close To Re-Signing Clayton Kershaw

Clayton Kershaw and the Dodgers are nearing an agreement on a one-year deal, according to Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic. Earlier today, the Dodgers decided against issuing Kershaw a qualifying offer, but it’ll be a moot point anyway now, with the 34-year-old set to return to LA for a 16th season. Mike DiGiovanna adds that the deal will be “close” to the $17MM deal Kershaw signed last winter.

While his days of utter dominance may be behind him, Kershaw turned in another elite season in 2022, throwing 126 1/3 innings of 2.28 ERA ball. For the second-straight season, injuries limited Kershaw to 22 starts, and he made two separate trips to the IL this season with lower back problems. When healthy though, he was very effective posting a 27.8% strikeout rate alongside his usual immaculate walk rates. While his fastball velocity is down considerably since his prime, Kershaw has shown his incredible skill to be able to alter his usage and lean more heavily on his slider to maintain his highly successful numbers as he’s aged.

It’s hard to imagine Kershaw in any other uniform but Dodger blue, and while there’s often been reports of possibly looking to return to his hometown of Dallas and sign for the Rangers, it’s no real surprise to see him staying in LA. By doing so he’ll move closer to ticking off more milestones along his Hall of Fame career. His 12 pitching wins in 2022 take him to 197 in his career, so he’ll certainly notch up win number 200 next season. While pitching wins are largely irrelevant when assessing a player’s ability, it is a notable milestone and one to take a tremendous amount of pride in, and Kershaw will be just the fourth active pitcher to reach 200 behind Justin Verlander, Zack Greinke and Max Scherzer. He’s also 193 strikeouts shy of 3,000. That mark is less likely to be reached in 2023, given Kershaw hasn’t reached 190 in a season since posting 202 in 2017.

The milestones are just reward for a player who has been a mainstay atop some dominant Dodger rotations decade or so. Drafted seventh overall out of high school in 2006, Kershaw would make his Dodgers debut as a 20-year-old in 2008. Just a year later Kershaw would begin a staggering run of dominance in which he’d post ten-straight seasons with a sub-3 ERA. In fact, his rookie year was the only year he posted an ERA over four, and there were only two other seasons where it was over three. It was between 2011-17 that Kershaw was at his absolute best though. During that period he won three Cy Young awards (and never finished outside the top-five), one MVP, led the league in ERA in five times, and posted one 300 strikeout campaign.

The rotation was set to be an area of focus for the Dodgers this winter as Tyler Anderson, Andrew Heaney and Kershaw all headed for free agency, with Anderson the only one to receive a qualifying offer. Kershaw will slot back in alongside Walker Buelher, Julio Urias and Tony Gonsolin to form the core of a very strong rotation. Dustin May, Ryan Pepiot and Mitchell White are all internal candidates to fill out the rotation, but it’s more likely the Dodgers seek another arm to solidify the backend. That decision may well be made for them in fact, as there’s at least a decent chance that Anderson opts to accept the qualifying offer and return to the Dodgers on a one year, $19.65MM deal.

More to come. 



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Dodgers Place Clayton Kershaw On Injured List, Reinstate Chris Taylor

The Dodgers announced they’ve placed Clayton Kershaw on the 15-day injured list, citing low back pain. Utilityman Chris Taylor is back from his own IL stint to take the vacated active roster spot. Los Angeles also recalled reliever Reyes Moronta from Triple-A Oklahoma City and optioned outfielder James Outman.

Kershaw lands on the IL for the second time this season. He lost around a month between early May and June with inflammation in his right hip area. The future Hall of Famer returned and went on to make ten more starts before yesterday’s outing. After throwing four innings of two-run ball in an eventual win over the Giants, Kershaw went out to the mound for his warm-up tosses to start the fifth. He pulled himself from the game after experiencing some pain in his lower back, and that issue will apparently keep him out of action for at least the next few weeks.

The team hasn’t provided a timetable on Kershaw’s return, and the announced diagnosis of “low back pain” remains nebulous. They’ll surely be cautious with the 34-year-old, particularly since he’s landed on the injured list at least once in each season since 2016. That included stints for back issues every year between 2016-18. With a 12 1/2 game lead over the Padres in the NL West, the Dodgers can feel comfortable playing things slowly with key players for the final couple months.

While Kershaw no longer takes on the kind of workloads he did during his prime, he’s still among the sport’s best pitchers on a rate basis. Through 85 1/3 innings this season, the three-time Cy Young winner carries a 2.64 ERA with an above-average 26.2% strikeout rate and 48.5% ground-ball percentage. Kershaw’s fastball is sitting in the 90 MPH range, but he owns arguably the game’s best command and hasn’t walked more than 6% of batters faced in a season for a decade.

Kershaw’s trip to the IL leaves Julio UríasTony GonsolinTyler Anderson and Andrew Heaney as the rotation’s top four for the time being. Ryan Pepiot and Michael Grove are depth options at Triple-A, and the club seems likely to welcome hard-throwing righty Dustin May back in the not too distant future. Manager Dave Roberts told MLB Network Radio on SiriusXM this afternoon that May is likely to return by the club’s August 19-21 series against the Marlins (Twitter link). The 24-year-old has been out all season recovering from May 2021 Tommy John surgery, but he’s been on a rehab stint since mid-July. Roberts indicated he’s likely to make two more starts in Oklahoma City before returning to the big league club, although he left open the possibility May rejoins the MLB team after just one more Triple-A appearance.

Taylor makes his return to the starting lineup, exactly a month after fracturing his left foot. It’s a quick bounceback for an injury of that magnitude, and Roberts suggested he’ll get the nod at second base tonight. It’ll be Taylor’s first infield appearance of the season, as he’s worked exclusively on the grass this year. Taylor has logged 502 innings in left field, along with 57 and 56 frames in center and right, respectively.

Of course, Taylor made a name for himself with his defensive flexibility in previous seasons. He’s capable of playing virtually everywhere on the diamond other than catcher, and it seems the club is content to get him back onto the infield on occasion. Gavin Lux and Trea Turner make for an excellent middle infield duo, with Max Muncy playing primarily third base as Justin Turner landed on the IL on Tuesday. Taylor will presumably spend the bulk of his time in the outfield still, but the ability to log some action on the dirt will allow Roberts more flexibility in managing infield reps. The 31-year-old will try to get going offensively after his month away, as he carries a .238/.319/.409 line with a huge 35.4% strikeout rate across 285 plate appearances on the year.



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Clayton Kershaw leaves with injury vs. Giants

SAN FRANCISCO — Dodgers left-hander Clayton Kershaw exited with low back pain before the bottom of the fifth inning of Thursday’s 5-3 win over the Giants at Oracle Park.

As he warmed up to pitch the fifth, Kershaw appeared to tweak something in his penultimate warmup throw. He then tried to throw one more in order to test it, but motioned over to the Dodgers dugout right away. He left the game with trainer Thomas Albert.

Immediately, Kershaw appeared to tell manager Dave Roberts that the injury was related to his back. The future Hall of Famer has dealt with back problems throughout the latter part of his career, landing on the injured list with a back injury in five of his last seven seasons.

This season, Kershaw missed a month with right SI joint inflammation, which occurred during a cross-country flight. When healthy, Kershaw has been one of the Dodgers’ best pitchers, posting a 2.64 ERA over 15 starts.

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