Tag Archives: cousin

Run-DMC’s Jam Master Jay was celebrating 50 Cent’s first record deal just one day before 2002 murder, slain DJ’s cousin says – New York Post

  1. Run-DMC’s Jam Master Jay was celebrating 50 Cent’s first record deal just one day before 2002 murder, slain DJ’s cousin says New York Post
  2. Jam Master Jay ‘Was Worried,’ Started Carrying a Gun Days Before He Was Killed Rolling Stone
  3. Accused killer of Run-DMC’s Jam Master Jay can’t have his lyrics used against him, judge rules USA TODAY
  4. She hoped to sing for a rap icon. Instead, she was there the night Run-DMC’s Jam Master Jay died The Associated Press
  5. Jam Master Jay death: Eyewitness identifies suspected killer of Run-DMC star Sky News

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Parineeti Chopra-Raghav Chadha Wedding: Priyanka Chopra wishes her cousin amid reports of her skipping the wedding – PINKVILLA

  1. Parineeti Chopra-Raghav Chadha Wedding: Priyanka Chopra wishes her cousin amid reports of her skipping the wedding PINKVILLA
  2. Parineeti Chopra and Raghav Chadha’s wedding live updates: Sania Mirza confirms her presence for Parineeti and Raghav’s wedding, shares adorable picture with the bride! TOI Etimes
  3. Priyanka hints at skipping Parineeti’s wedding as she wishes her in new post Hindustan Times
  4. Parineeti Chopra-Raghav Chadha Wedding: Did Priyanka Chopra’s mom Madhu Chopra share a glimpse from their pre-wedding ceremony? PINKVILLA
  5. Exclusive: Parineeti Chopra and Raghav Chadha s mehendi ceremony decor leaked Filmfare
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Uvalde shooter’s cousin is arrested over making a school shooting threat, court records say – The Associated Press

  1. Uvalde shooter’s cousin is arrested over making a school shooting threat, court records say The Associated Press
  2. Cousin of Uvalde shooter arrested after allegedly threatening to ‘do the same thing’ Los Angeles Times
  3. Teenage cousin of Uvalde school shooter is arrested, accused of threatening to ‘do the same thing’ to a school CNN
  4. Reports: Cousin of Uvalde gunman arrested after threatening San Antonio school KXAN.com
  5. Teen related to Uvalde shooter accused of plotting to carry out similar attack, Texas police say KENS 5: Your San Antonio News Source
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Teenage cousin of Uvalde school shooter is arrested, accused of threatening to ‘do the same thing’ to a school – CNN

  1. Teenage cousin of Uvalde school shooter is arrested, accused of threatening to ‘do the same thing’ to a school CNN
  2. Cousin of Uvalde school shooter arrested for alleged threats to school: ‘Do the same thing’ Fox News
  3. Cousin of Uvalde mass shooter arrested for allegedly threatening to commit school shooting: Affidavits Yahoo! Voices
  4. SAPD: Cousin of Uvalde mass shooter accused of threatening to shoot up school, family member KSAT San Antonio
  5. Teenage Cousin of Uvalde Gunman Arrested Over Threats to a School The New York Times
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George Santos: New details link New York congressman to Andrew Intrater, cousin of sanctioned Russian oligarch

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George Santos, the freshman Republican congressman from New York who lied about his biography, has deeper ties than previously known to a businessman who cultivated close links with a onetime Trump confidant and who is the cousin of a sanctioned Russian oligarch, according to video footage and court documents.

Andrew Intrater and his wife each gave the maximum $5,800 to Santos’ main campaign committee and tens of thousands more since 2020 to committees linked to him, according to filings with the Federal Election Commission. Intrater’s cousin is Russian billionaire Viktor Vekselberg, who has been sanctioned by the U.S. government for his role in the Russian energy industry.

The relationship between Santos and Intrater goes beyond campaign contributions, according to a statement made privately by Santos in 2020 and a court filing the following year in a lawsuit brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission against a Florida-based investment firm, Harbor City Capital, where Santos worked for more than a year.

Taken together, the evidence suggests Santos may have had a business relationship with Intrater as Santos was first entering politics in 2020. It also shows, according to the SEC filing, that Intrater put hundreds of thousands of dollars into Santos’ onetime employer, Harbor City, which was accused by regulators of running a Ponzi scheme. Neither Santos nor Intrater responded to requests for comment. Attorneys who have represented Intrater also did not respond.

The congressman, whose election from Long Island last year helped the GOP secure its narrow House majority, has apologized for what he called “résumé embellishment” while rebuffing calls for his resignation. He is under scrutiny by prosecutors in New York and Rio de Janeiro.

Ties between Santos, 34, and Intrater, 60, reflect the ways Santos found personal and political support on his path to public office.

While Intrater is a U.S. citizen, his company, the investment firm Columbus Nova, has historically had extensive ties to the business interests of his Russian cousin. As recently as 2018, when Vekselberg was sanctioned by the Treasury Department, his conglomerate was Columbus Nova’s largest client, the company confirmed to The Post that year.

Intrater’s interactions in 2016 and 2017 with Michael Cohen, who at the time was working as a lawyer for Donald Trump, were probed during special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 election and possible links between Trump and the Kremlin.

Intrater’s company paid the lawyer and self-described Trump fixer to identify deals for his business, and court records show they exchanged hundreds of texts and phone calls. Neither Intrater nor Vekselberg was accused of wrongdoing in Mueller’s investigation.

In 2020, when Santos was tasked by Harbor City with locating investors in New York, he claimed in a Harbor City meeting held over Zoom that Intrater’s investment firm, Columbus Nova, was a “client” of his, according to footage obtained by The Washington Post.

He made the comment during a discussion of the difficulties of residential real estate investing, in particular for investors who put money into the 1,400-foot tall tower at 432 Park Avenue in Manhattan, which for a time was the tallest residential building in the world. Intrater did not respond to a question about whether he or Columbus Nova was involved in the project.

“You might know who they are,” Santos added in the company meeting, referring to Columbus Nova. “They’ve made the news on several occasions. They were heavily involved with the Russia probe. Unjustified.”

“But they’re a real estate company,” Santos added. “They’re legitimate.”

Santos did not respond to a text message seeking comment. Intrater did not respond to an emailed question about whether his firm was Santos’s client as claimed or about the deposit with Harbor City.

The congressman has falsified substantial aspects of his work experience. And, in the Harbor City Zoom meetings reviewed by The Post, he recounted dealings with other prominent investors or moneyed organizations that those entities denied took place.

But Harbor City was able to land a $625,000 deposit from a company registered in Mississippi that identifies Intrater as its lone officer, according to an exhibit included in the SEC’s complaint against Harbor City. The alleged deposit, which is undated, is included in a chart that lists several entities that the SEC says made payments to Harbor City.

The Mississippi company, FEA Innovations, is registered to Intrater, according to secretary of state records. Registration documents include no other officers or directors and identify Intrater’s address as the same one used by Columbus Nova on Madison Avenue in Manhattan. Columbus Nova is now known as Sparrow Capital.

In the SEC action, initiated in April 2021, regulators accused Harbor City and its founder of running a “classic Ponzi scheme” — promising investors reliable profit and instead bilking them out of millions.

The SEC complaint did not name Santos, who has denied knowledge of the alleged wrongdoing, although he had been told by a prospective investor that the firm was using a fraudulent bank document, as The Post previously reported.

Harbor City’s founder, J.P. Maroney, has denied the SEC allegations, which were brought in federal court in Florida. The company itself has not responded in court. Maroney did not respond to a text message about the alleged deposit from Intrater’s firm. The exhibit that identifies the alleged deposit from Intrater’s company does not elaborate on its purpose or suggest that Intrater had knowledge of purported wrongdoing at Harbor City.

After Harbor City’s assets were frozen, and with assistance from a fellow former Harbor City employee, Santos in 2021 formed a company, the Devolder Organization, that paid him at least $3.5 million over the next two years, according to Florida business records and financial disclosure forms he filed as a candidate. Santos loaned his campaign more than $700,000 but did not report any income from Harbor City despite having been paid by the company as recently as April 2021.

Details of Santos’s tenure at Harbor City were confirmed by a court-appointed lawyer overseeing liquidation of the company’s assets.

Columbus Nova became a subject of interest for the Mueller investigation as prosecutors probed the ties forged by Intrater and his company with Cohen, a confidant of Trump’s at the time.

Intrater donated $250,000 to Trump’s inaugural committee, according to campaign finance records, and attended the 2017 inaugural, along with Vekselberg. The Washington Post has reported that the two men encountered Cohen at the inauguration. Not long after, Columbus Nova began paying Cohen as part of a contract to recruit new investors for the company, The Post reported. Court records show the payments totaled $583,000.

Court records also show that Cohen and Intrater exchanged more than 1,000 calls and text messages between November 2016 and November 2017. Intrater donated $35,000 to attend a 2017 fundraiser for Trump’s reelection, attending at Cohen’s invitation, The Post has reported.

Federal officials questioned both Intrater and Vekselberg during the probe, interviewing the latter after his private airplane made a stop in the United States in 2018, people familiar with the investigation said.

Cohen ultimately pleaded guilty to campaign finance violations, tax and bank fraud and lying to Congress — matters unrelated to his interactions with Columbus Nova. Intrater told the New York Times in 2019 that his omission from Mueller’s final report “confirms what I knew all along — that I’ve done nothing wrong.”

Cohen later turned on Trump, criticizing him in a 2019 congressional hearing and cooperating with investigations into his former boss’ business practices.

Vekselberg and his company, Renova, were sanctioned by the Treasury Department in April 2018, cited for benefiting from Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “malign activity around the globe.” In April 2022, following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Vekselberg’s $90 million yacht was seized by Spanish authorities at the request of the United States.

Columbus Nova has long been described as closely associated with the Renova Group, a Russian conglomerate run by Vekselberg. As recently as 2017, a website for Renova Group listed Columbus Nova as one of its companies, and Columbus Nova confirmed to The Post in 2018 that Vekselberg’s conglomerate was at that time its largest client. However, the firm said at the time that it was owned by Americans and had never been controlled by Renova Group or Vekselberg.

Devlin Barrett, Emma Brown and Jonathan O’Connell contributed to this report.

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Keenan Anderson, cousin of Black Lives Matter co-founder, dies from cardiac arrest after being tased by Los Angeles police



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A 31-year-old father and English teacher died from cardiac arrest last week after he was repeatedly tased by police, according to the Los Angeles Police Department, marking the third officer-involved death in the city this year.

Police encountered Keenan Anderson, who is the cousin of Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Cullors, on January 3 at the site of a traffic collision in Los Angeles’ Venice neighborhood, police said in a news release last week.

As police struggled to arrest Anderson, they tased him repeatedly, edited body-worn camera footage released by police shows. After being arrested, Anderson was brought to a local hospital, where he went into cardiac arrest and was pronounced dead, according to police.

Cullors said in an Instagram tribute post that her cousin was “killed by LAPD.”

“Keenan deserves to be alive right now, his child deserves to be raised by his father,” Cullors wrote in the post. “Keenan we will fight for you and for all of our loved ones impacted by state violence. I love you.”

Anderson taught tenth-grade English at Digital Pioneers Academy in Washington, DC, according to a statement from the school’s founder, Mashea Ashton. Anderson was visiting family in Los Angeles over winter break, Ashton said.

“The details of his death are as disturbing as they are tragic,” Ashton said in the statement, adding, “Keenan was a deeply committed educator and father of a six-year-old son. … He was beloved by all.”

“Our community is grieving. But we’re also angry. Angry that, once again, a known, loved, and respected member of our community is no longer with us. Angry that another talented, beautiful black soul is gone too soon,” Ashton said.

Detectives from the police department’s Force Investigation Division responded to the scene where Anderson was taken into custody and are investigating the use of force, police said, explaining in the video that the department’s policy defines any death of a person in their custody as a “categorical” use of force.

So far this year, Los Angeles police are also investigating the police shooting deaths of Takar Smith, 45, and Oscar Sanchez, 35, and has released footage of those incidents.

Police said they responded to a traffic collision the afternoon of January 3 and saw Anderson “running in the middle of the street and exhibiting erratic behavior.” On one officer’s body-worn camera, released and edited by police, a woman at the traffic collision site tells police, “I think that guy up there needs help though, because the guy’s trying to run away.”

Body-worn camera video shows Anderson initially stopped and spoke to an officer before the video cuts to a text screen that says Anderson “attempted to run away.”

When the video resumes, Anderson is seen jogging into the street as the officer pursues him and stops him in a busy intersection, commanding Anderson to lay down on his stomach.

Anderson does not appear to comply immediately, and two other officers arrive and move him to lie prone on his stomach on the street, telling Anderson to “relax.” As officers struggle on top of him, Anderson can be heard screaming, “Help, they’re trying to kill me” and “Please, don’t do this.”

In footage from another responding officer, an officer can be heard repeatedly warning Anderson to stop resisting and turn over, and threatening several times to tase Anderson.

“They’re trying to George Floyd me,” says Anderson, as officers try to roll him onto his stomach.

Then, an officer deploys a taser multiple times on Anderson, who says, “I’m not resisting.”

Officers eventually handcuff and place ankle hobbles on Anderson, the video shows.

Later in the video, the Los Angeles Fire Department places Anderson, who appears conscious, onto a gurney near an ambulance. Police say in the news release that Anderson was given medical care at the scene by fire department personnel before being transported to a local hospital.

“While at the hospital, Anderson went into cardiac arrest and was pronounced deceased,” the release says.

Los Angeles police captain Kelly Muñiz said in the video that Anderson died approximately four-and-a-half hours after the use of force.

A preliminary toxicology-blood screen of Anderson’s blood samples tested positive for cocaine and marijuana, police said, adding the Los Angeles County coroner’s office is expected to conduct their own independent toxicology tests.

LAPD Chief Michel Moore said the videos were published in response to calls for their release from families.

“This is not, again, to do anything other than to demonstrate our commitment to full transparency and to judge this on the merits of what the investigation shows us and to ask for the public’s patience as we go about this engagement,” he said at a news conference Wednesday.



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Buffalo teen whose aunt, cousin were inside grocery store during attack: ‘We’ve got to come together’

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A Buffalo teen is calling on Americans to “come together” and “build each other up” in the wake of a hate-fueled mass shooting just blocks away from his home, which left 10 people dead and three more wounded.

President Biden visited the community Tuesday to condemn White supremacy after police arrested Payton Gendron, an 18-year-old from hundreds of miles away, in what FBI Director Christopher Wray is calling “a hate crime and an act of racially motivated violent extremism.”

“It’s good to see our president doing something,” Michael Cole told Fox News Digital Tuesday. “Stepped it down, showed us some humbleness.”

Michael Cole lives just blocks away from the Tops Friendly Market targeted in what the FBI calls a “racially motivated” hate crime attack. He said his aunt and cousin were inside during the massacre. Inset: Suspected killer Payton Gendron, who authorities said streamed the attack over Twitch and posted a hate-filled screed online.
(Michael Ruiz/Fox News Digital, Inset: Erie County District Attorney)

PRESIDENT BIDEN VISITS BUFFALO, MEETS VICTIMS’ FAMILIES AFTER TOPS MARKET ATTACK

The president’s motorcade arrived at the Tops Friendly Market on Jefferson Avenue around 10 a.m. Biden and first lady Jill Biden approached a makeshift memorial on Landon Street carrying flowers.

They spent about 10 minutes there before departing to meet with families of the victims and responding officers at a nearby community center. Gathered local residents cheered the president’s armored limousine as it left the parking lot.

“It was pretty cool seeing, first ever [time] seeing the president drive by in my life,” Cole said, despite the circumstances of the commander-in-chief’s visit. 

Mourners have erected multiple memorials around the area of the Tops supermarket, where 10 people were killed and there others were wounded during Saturday’s mass shooting.
(Fox News Digital/Michael Ruiz)

Cole said he lives in the immediate area and that he went to the Tops store “almost every day” – and that his cousin and aunt were inside at the time of the massacre. 

BUFFALO SHOOTING SURVIVOR RECOUNTS HARROWING ESCAPE AFTER WITNESSING START OF ‘HATE’-FUELED ATTACK

“I feel as if, if everyone was to just come together, and everyone was allowed to be just people, I feel like the world would just work a lot better,” he said. “That’s what we should just work on, just being a community together, instead of trying to hurt each other…We should all build each other up and we should all just be one.”

Dean Lewis, a U.S. Army veteran who grew up in the neighborhood and still has family members living just blocks from the scene of the crime, called the attack “senseless and ridiculous.”

U.S. President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden look at a memorial in the wake of a weekend shooting at a Tops supermarket in Buffalo, New York, U.S. May 17, 2022.  
(REUTERS/Brendan McDermid)

He also said he had previously worked with Aaron Salter, the security guard who exchanged gunfire with the attacker and died trying to save others. 

Gendron is accused of fatally shooting 10 people Saturday afternoon and livestreaming the alleged hate crime attack on Twitch. Three other people were injured. Eleven of the victims were Black, according to city police, and he is accused of posting a 180-page document online explaining his plan and motives.

“People need to set aside their differences because guess what? There are no differences,” Lewis said. “You bleed the same color I do. If your blood type was mine or vice versa, and you had a car wreck, would you want my blood if that’s gonna save your life?”

The deceased victims have been identified as Roberta A. Drury, 32, Margus D. Morrison, 52, Andre Mackneil, 53, Aaron Salter, 55, Geraldine Talley, 62, Celestine Chaney, 65, Heyward Patterson, 67, Katherine Massey, 72, Pearl Young, 77, and Ruth Whitfield, 86.

This photo dated Oct. 24, 2011 shows Katherine Massey walking near the corner of Elmwood and Tupper in Buffalo, N.Y. Massey was one of the victims killed in the grocery store shooting in Buffalo on Saturday. Her sister calls her “a beautiful soul.”
(Robert Kirkham/The Buffalo News via AP)

Three injured survivors were identified as Zaire Goodman, 20, Jennifer Warrington, 50, and Christopher Braden, 55.

FBI Director Christopher Wray has called the attack “a hate crime and an act of racially motivated violent extremism.” Federal authorities are pursuing additional charges.

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Gendron was charged with first-degree murder in Buffalo City Court. He was arraigned late Saturday and pleaded not guilty. The judge ordered him held without bail, and he is due back in court on Thursday. Prosecutors have hinted that additional charges will be forthcoming. 

After visiting a makeshift memorial outside the market, Biden met with victims’ families and responding officers at a nearby community center. Then he addressed the country, condemning hatred and calling for enhanced gun control measures.

“In America, evil will not win, I promise you,” Biden said. “Hate will not prevail. White supremacy will not have the last word. Evil did come to Buffalo. It has come to too many places.”

Fox News’ Emmett Jones and Matteo Cina contributed to this report.

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Kim Kardashian’s daughter North, 8, attends cousin True’s birthday bash wearing a Kanye West T-shirt in rare appearance

KIM Kardashian’s daughter North, 8, attended her cousin True’s birthday bash while wearing a Kanye West T-shirt amid her rare appearance.

Khloe Kardashian, 37, put together a cat-themed birthday party to celebrate True turning four. 

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Penelope and North had their birthday messages for TrueCredit: Khloe Kardashian/Instagram

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North wore a Kanye West t-shirt for True’s birthday partyCredit: Khloe Kardashian/Instagram

The Keeping Up With The Kardashians alum shared tons of photos and videos from the backyard bash on her Instagram Stories.

Kourtney Kardashian’s daughter, Penelope, nine, joined Kim and Kanye’s eight-year-old girl for a hilarious Instagram Story.

During the short clip, Penelope wore a white dress while holding a plate full of french fries. 

Penelope sent a special message out for True and gushed at the camera: “Happy Birthday! We loved you!”

After Penelope walked away, It was now North’s turn to say something for the birthday girl.

With purple dreadlocks, North had on an oversized T-shirt and baggy jeans. 

On the front, the white T-shirt had a stylish drawing of Kanye wearing white sunglasses and a matching jacket.

She said: “You are four years old.”

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North flashed a smile and added: “Four sucks!”

Khloe, off-screen, can be heard gasping.

In the background, Penelope overheard the joke and started laughing. 

In addition to North, Kim and Kanye share Chicago, four, and sons Saint, six, and Psalm, two.

Along with Penelope, Kourtney is also the mother of Mason, 12, and Reign, six.

Now that she is married to her husband Travis Barker, 46, Kourtney is also the stepmother to his teenage kids: Alabama, 16, and Landon, 18. 

THE BIRTHDAY BASH

For True’s birthday party, Khloe put together a colorful bowl of M&Ms, which featured her daughter’s face on them.

She scooped up a few pieces and showed off the words: “Happy Bday True” that were written on one side.

True looked adorable as she wore pink dress with ostrich feathers at the bottom and had on white sneakers.

True’s hair was also given a makeover and had double long braided pink extensions to match the pastel color theme.

Khloe’s little girl also played with a few kittens while they were inside an inflatable tube on the grass.

In the other photos, True screamed with excitement over the dessert, which included multiple cakes, cupcakes, and bowls of candy.

Khloe took a shot of the three-tier cake, which featured rainbows, moons, stars, and cats.

On the center of the cake, there was a sign that said “Happy 4th Birthday True,” with the letters spelled out in purple icing.

SOMEONE MISSING?

True’s father Tristan Thompson, 31, did not appear in Khloe’s slew of Stories.

The Chicago Bulls player welcomed a son named Theo with his former mistress Maralee Nichols, 31, back in December 2021 while he was exclusively dating Khloe.

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True celebrated her birthday with family, cake, and kittensCredit: Khloe Kardashian/Instagram

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Khloe Kardashian celebrated True’s fourth birthdayCredit: Instagram/khloekardashian

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Kanye posed for a photo with Kim KardashianCredit: AFP

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Khloe Kardashian shares cute video of her daughter True Thompson and cousin Dream dancing

Khloe Kardashian shares cute video of her daughter True Thompson and cousin Dream dancing to Encanto hit We Don’t Talk About Bruno

Khloe Kardashian shared an adorable video of her daughter True Thompson and cousin Dream dancing to Encanto hit We Don’t Talk About Bruno.

In the footage, posted to the 37-year-old reality star’s Instagram, her little girl, four, can be seen twirling around next to her uncle Rob and his ex Blac Chyna’s five-year-old.

The girls also adorably sang along to Aqua’s 1997 hit Barbie Girl, using their cups as makeshift microphones while busting a move in the dining room.

Doting mom: Khloe Kardashian shared an adorable video of her daughter True Thompson and cousin Dream dancing to Encanto hit We Don’t Talk About Bruno

Cousins: In the footage, posted to the 3-year-old reality star’s Instagram, her little girl, four, can be seen twirling around next to her uncle Rob and his ex Blac Chyna’s five-year-old

While True wore a jasmine green tea pajama set, Dream rocked a cute pink set and her hair in pigtail braids.  

Khloe could be heard cheering the dynamic duo along as they showed off their sassy freestyle choreography. 

The post comes just days after her sister Kim Kardashian also shared a recording of her eldest North West singing along to We Don’t Talk About Bruno. 

Best friends: The girls adorably sang along to Aqua’s 1997 hit Barbie Girl, using their pink and green cups as microphones while busting a move in the dining room

North and her friend Ryan Romulus had the lyrics memorized as they sang along to the upbeat track from the backseat of a car in video posted Tuesday.

‘North and Ryan are still talking about Bruno! And it’s still stuck in my head lol,’ Kim captioned the nearly three-minute long video.

North and her pal enthusiastically sang along to the song in sync. 

Family time: While True wore a jasmine green tea pajama set, Dream rocked a cute pink set

Like True and North, the pair had their act down pat as they belted certain parts solo before joining forces to perform other verses in unison. 

The duo had their act down pat as they sang certain parts solo before joining forces to perform other verses in unison.

They even had some hand motions to accompany the verses.

Encanto fans! The post comes just days after her sister Kim Kardashian also shared video of her daughter North West singing along to We Don’t Talk About Bruno

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BA.2, a More Contagious Cousin of the Dominant BA.1 Subvariant of the Omicron Variant of SARS-CoV-2

There are signs a new wave of COVID is building. BA.2, a more contagious cousin of the dominant BA.1 subvariant of the Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2, has been spreading fast in Europe and China in recent weeks.

Now it’s starting to show up more frequently in samples of waste water in major American cities, including Atlanta, New York City, Chicago, and Seattle, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The warning signs come as most of the U.S. and Europe drop the last few major restrictions on business, travel, schooling, and public gatherings. Stores and restaurants are fully open. Concerts and other events are back on. Mask mandates are disappearing.

Mitigation efforts ending at the same time cases are increasing might seem like a recipe for disaster. But don’t panic—at least not yet. We’re probably reasonably ready for BA.2, even without a bunch of public-health mandates. Whether we’ll be ready for whatever comes after BA.2… well, that remains to be seen.

“I’m not necessarily at the level of being worried right now, but this is something to watch because BA.2 is even more transmissible than BA.1,” Cindy Prins, a University of Florida epidemiologist, told The Daily Beast.

Experts disagree on just how much more transmissible BA.2 is, compared to BA.1. Some say 30 percent more. Others, 50 percent more. In any event, it’s all but inevitable that the subvariant will outcompete other forms of the novel coronavirus and become the dominant variant in the U.S.

More than two years into the pandemic, the march of new variants and subvariants, once they first appear, is pretty predictable. “The trend in Europe has been three-to-six weeks ahead of us, five waves of COVID-19 and counting,” Eric Bortz, a University of Alaska-Anchorage virologist and public-health expert, told The Daily Beast.

Mark your calendar. Around half of European countries registered increases in new COVID cases in the past week—almost all of them BA.2. At the same time, Chinese authorities have locked down the city of Shenzhen, near Hong Kong, after detecting a surge in infections that experts attribute to the new subvariant.

Now project a month or so into the future. BA.2, with its elevated transmission rate, could be dominant in the U.S. in early summer, Edwin Michael, an epidemiologist at the Center for Global Health Infectious Disease Research at the University of South Florida, told The Daily Beast. That chimes with Bortz’s prediction of a six-week delay between European and U.S. COVID surges.

Whether BA.2’s coming takeover in America will drive major increases in the metrics that really matter—serious illness, hospitalizations, deaths and long COVID—is an open question.

Surveillance of sewer systems—in essence, scooping up water samples and testing them for the virus—only hints at a possible increase in infections. And an increase in infections might not cause a commensurate increase in hospitalizations, deaths and long-term impacts on infected people.

“Remember, it’s not 2020,” Jeffrey Klausner, a professor of medicine and public health at UCLA who previously worked at the CDC, told The Daily Beast. “We have surveillance, widespread testing, vaccination, high levels of immunity against severe disease and highly effective antiviral therapy.”

Bortz told The Daily Beast he expects the BA.2 wave in the U.S. to be smaller and less destructive than the one that preceded it. For that reason, he referred to it as a “wavelet.”

“The peak of the Omicron BA.2 wavelet when it arrives may well be significantly smaller than previous waves in terms of severe disease—hospitalizations and deaths—because a large fraction of the U.S. population has some degree of immunity, from vaccination, infection, including with Omicron BA1, or both,” Bortz said.

That outcome would be consistent with the overall trend. The wave of BA.1 infections that began around Thanksgiving last year put a lot of people in the hospital, but it didn’t kill the same proportion as died in the previous wave, driven by the Delta variant in late 2020 and early 2021.

Two women walk by closed shops in Huaqiangbei area, the world’s biggest electronics market, in Shenzhen in south China’s Guangdong province.

Feature China/Future Publishing via Getty

It’s not hard to explain this trend. Every infection produces natural antibodies that protect a survivor for months. Each successive COVID surge crashes into the wall of immunity left behind by the previous surge. Plus, we’ve got new prescription COVID pills and an array of therapies that can reduce the risk of death in all but the most severe cases.

Most importantly, we have highly effective, safe and free vaccines. And they still work just fine, even as SARS-CoV-2 keeps mutating. “As with the BA.1 version, being fully vaccinated and boosted provides good protection against BA.2,” Prins said.

So be wary, but don’t freak out. Yes, COVID is coming for us yet again. But we’re better prepared than ever before, even with the widespread lifting of public-health measures such as mask-mandates and restrictions on businesses and schools.

The same can’t be said of our readiness for any new variant that might come after BA.2. “Right now COVID-19 remains very unpredictable and deadly,” Irwin Redlener, the founding director of Columbia University’s National Center for Disaster Preparedness, told The Daily Beast. “We have no idea of where this is going.”

Most worryingly, natural and vaccine-induced immunity wane over time. If some highly transmissible new variant strikes in a year or so, after our antibodies from the last 15 months of vaccinations and the recent Omicron waves have faded, we might be mostly defenseless.

People wearing face masks to protect against the spread of coronavirus walking in El Postiguet beach of Alicante as COVID-19 cases are increasing in Spain.

Marcos del Mazo/LightRocket via Getty

At that point, preventing catastrophic numbers of hospitalizations and deaths would require major new restrictions on businesses, travel, schools and gatherings and an aggressive effort to administer additional doses of the best vaccines.

In that scenario, early 2023 could look a lot like early 2020. To prevent this outcome, get vaccinated, get boosted, listen to the experts and be flexible and patient if and when we need to start masking up in some situations and limiting some crowds again. “This virus has taught us to remain vigilant and keep an eye on all mutations,” Ali Mokdad, a professor of health metrics sciences at the University of Washington Institute for Health, told The Daily Beast.

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