Tag Archives: donate

Alan Moore Told DC Comics to Donate His Future Screen Royalties to Black Lives Matter – Hollywood Reporter

  1. Alan Moore Told DC Comics to Donate His Future Screen Royalties to Black Lives Matter Hollywood Reporter
  2. ‘Watchmen’ Creator Alan Moore Asked DC to Send His Film and TV Royalties to Black Lives Matter: Recent Movies Don’t Stand By Their ‘Original Principles’ Variety
  3. Alan Moore Says He’s Asked DC to Send All His Future Adaptation Royalties to Black Lives Matter IGN
  4. ‘Watchmen’s Alan Moore Is Putting His Royalty Money Where His Mouth Is Collider
  5. Alan Moore Refusing DC Royalty Checks: Send Them to BLM Instead IndieWire
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Outrage as Dwayne Johnson, Oprah Winfrey ask fans to donate to Maui fund – Insider

  1. Outrage as Dwayne Johnson, Oprah Winfrey ask fans to donate to Maui fund Insider
  2. Oprah Winfrey Faces Accusations of Hiring Firefighters to Protect Her Massive Estate During Maui Wildfire After Requesting Donations for Displaced Victims Who Lost Their Homes Atlanta Black Star
  3. “Families are heartbroken. I donated $5 Million”: Dwayne Johnson Rattled by ‘Deadliest’ Natural Disaster in 100 Years That Has Devastated the Polynesian Community FandomWire
  4. Oprah Winfrey and Dwayne Johnson launch fund with $10 million for displaced Maui residents AMNY
  5. Dwayne Johnson, Oprah Winfrey Slammed Over Maui Wildfire Fundraiser Pirates & Princesses
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Jodie Sweetin “Disappointed” That New Film Landed at Great American Family, Will Donate Earnings to LGBTQ Groups – Hollywood Reporter

  1. Jodie Sweetin “Disappointed” That New Film Landed at Great American Family, Will Donate Earnings to LGBTQ Groups Hollywood Reporter
  2. Jodie Sweetin is ‘disappointed’ her upcoming film was sold to Great American Family Entertainment Weekly News
  3. ‘Fuller House’ star Jodie Sweetin slams film sale to Candace Cameron Bure’s Great American Family network Fox News
  4. Jodie Sweetin Claims Upcoming Film Was Sold to GAC Unbeknownst to Her PEOPLE
  5. Jodie Sweetin “Disappointed” Her New Movie Was Sold to Former Costar Candace Cameron Bure’s Network Yahoo Entertainment
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Jodie Sweetin ‘Disappointed’ Her New Film Sold to Candace Cameron Bure’s GAF Network, Vows to Donate Sales Money to LGBTQ+ Groups – Variety

  1. Jodie Sweetin ‘Disappointed’ Her New Film Sold to Candace Cameron Bure’s GAF Network, Vows to Donate Sales Money to LGBTQ+ Groups Variety
  2. Jodie Sweetin is ‘disappointed’ her upcoming film was sold to Great American Family Entertainment Weekly News
  3. Jodie Sweetin Claims Upcoming Film Was Sold to GAC Unbeknownst to Her PEOPLE
  4. Jodie Sweetin ‘Disappointed’ New Film Will Air on ‘Traditional’ Great American Family Channel AOL
  5. Jodie Sweetin ‘Disappointed’ Her New Film Was Sold to Great American Family TV Insider
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Ramiro Gonzales: Texas death row inmate is seeking a 30-day reprieve to donate a kidney. A court just stayed his execution for another reason

“Applicant has also presented at least a prima facie showing that testimony of recidivism rates (Dr. Edward) Gripon gave at trial were false and that that false testimony could have affected the jury’s answer to the future dangerousness question at punishment,” the Texas Court of Appeals wrote in its order.

The judges on Monday sent the case back to the trial court to review the merits of the claim. Two other claims were denied review.

CNN reached out to Gripon for comment and did not immediately hear back.

Gonzales’ execution had been scheduled for Wednesday.

A day before filing their motion, Gonzales’ attorneys had asked for an execution reprieve in a June 29 letter to Gov. Greg Abbott, writing in part that Gonzales’ request to donate an organ to a stranger was “in keeping with his efforts to atone for his crimes.”

Since then, at least two “preliminarily compatible” kidney recipients have been identified, including a cancer survivor in Bellingham, Washington, with the same rare blood type as Gonzales who has spent four years on dialysis “hoping for a lifesaving kidney transplant,” the inmate’s lawyers wrote Monday to the governor in a letter they shared with CNN.

“It seems almost impossible, but God moves in mysterious ways,” wrote the potential recipient, Judy Frith, in a letter Sunday to Abbott that Gonzales’ attorneys submitted with their own. “Whether or not Mr. Gonzales could donate to me, I cannot emphasize enough what a precious gift you would be giving someone if you allowed Mr. Gonzales the opportunity to donate his kidney.”

CNN has reached out to the governor’s office for comment.

The Texas Department of Criminal Justice, which let Gonzales get evaluated for the organ donation, has objected to Gonzales’ donation efforts because of his impending execution date, his lawyers wrote.

‘He still wants to save a life’

Gonzales initially sought to donate his kidney to a member of a Jewish congregation in Maryland whom he’d learned about in correspondence with its faith leader. But his rare blood type meant he was not a match. Since then, he has sought to make an altruistic kidney donation, that is, to donate his kidney without a known or intended recipient.

However, he was deemed ineligible under the state criminal justice department’s health care policy, a department spokesperson confirmed July 3 to CNN. The agency does not allow an altruistic kidney donation because it could introduce an “‘uncertain timeline, thereby possibly interfering with the court-ordered execution date'” and does not guarantee coverage of the costs, it told Gonzales’ attorneys, they said in a statement.

“He still wants to save a life,” Cantor Michael Zoosman, the ordained Jewish clergyman whose letters with Gonzales first catalyzed the inmate’s desire to donate a kidney, told CNN. “And Texas is denying him that.”

Gonzales’ attorneys had also asked the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles to recommend that the governor commute their client’s sentence to life in prison, their statement said. Alternately, they requested a 180-day reprieve to complete a potential kidney donation.

But on Monday, the board voted against the request, refusing to recommend a commutation or a 180-day reprieve, according to the results of the vote shared by the board.

Gonzales ‘very eager’ to make donation

Gonzales was convicted in 2006 for capital murder in Townsend’s killing. Gonzales, who was 18 at the time, was looking to get drugs one day in January 2001 from Townsend’s boyfriend, who was his drug supplier, according to a court of appeals opinion from 2009.
When he called, Townsend answered the phone and told Gonzales her boyfriend was at work. Gonzales then went to the home “in order to steal cocaine,” stole money, tied Townsend’s hands and feet and kidnapped her, the records state. Gonzales then drove Townsend to a location near his family’s ranch, where he sexually assaulted and fatally shot her.

In October 2002, sitting in a county jail waiting to be taken to prison on an unrelated matter, Gonzales led authorities to her body and eventually confessed to Townsend’s killing, records show.

Since Gonzales and Zoosman began corresponding in January 2021, the inmate has “never made excuses for what he’d done,” Zoosman, a federal hospital chaplain and founder of L’chaim! Jews Against the Death Penalty, told CNN.

Gonzales first got the notion to donate a kidney when Zoosman mentioned someone in his congregation needed a donated kidney, Zoosman told CNN.

“I just mentioned it offhand in a letter to him … and he jumped on it,” Zoosman said, adding Gonzales was “very eager” and even wrote a letter to the person who needed the kidney.

“It was something he wanted to do to make expiation for the life he had taken,” Zoosman said.

Rare blood type makes Gonzales an ‘excellent match’

Gonzales has “actively sought” to be evaluated for organ donation since that time, his attorneys, Thea Posel and Raoul Schonemann of the University of Texas at Austin’s Capital Punishment Clinic, said in a statement last week to CNN.

The state criminal justice department this year allowed him to be evaluated, lawyers said in their letter to the governor, by the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, where Gonzales was determined an “excellent candidate” for donation. However, Gonzales’ rare B blood type meant he was not a match for the member of Zoosman’s congregation.

“But that didn’t stop Ramiro,” Zoosman said. “On his own volition, he sought through his legal team to find another way to do it, to become an altruistic kidney donor.”

The medical center told Gonzales’ attorneys his rare blood type would make him “an excellent match for persons who have been on UTMB’s waiting list for close to 10 years because of the same rare B blood type,” according to the attorneys’ statement. The medical center — which declined to comment for this story, citing federal medical privacy law — assured Gonzales’ team in March the donation process could be completed within a month, the attorneys said.

In recent weeks, Gonzales’ attorneys repeatedly have asked the state criminal justice department to reconsider its position on altruistic donations, Posel and Schonemann’s statement said. The department has denied the requests, they noted.

It remains to be seen if the identification of two potential recipients will prompt the state criminal justice department to alter course or will impact the governor’s decision-making. One of the possible recipients hopes it does, whether the precious organ goes to her or someone else in need.

Frith knew she “had to be prepared for a long wait for a rare kidney” because of her Type B blood, she wrote in her letter to Abbott shared by Gonzales’ attorneys. She was shocked to learn Gonzales had a matching blood type.

“Imagine a potential recipient who may have been waiting 6 years or more for an elusive Type B kidney, feeling sicker and more hopeless with each passing day,” she said. “You have the ability to save that person’s life by allowing Mr. Gonzales to donate.”

‘He never expected it to lead to his clemency’

Gonzales has other litigation still pending before the courts: In one case, he sought to have the state criminal justice department let his spiritual adviser — who is not Zoosman — lay a hand on his chest, hold his hand and pray audibly at the time of his execution.

This request had previously been denied, but a federal judge in a preliminary injunction this month ruled the state may only execute Gonzales on Wednesday if it allowed this, court documents show.

But while those legal proceedings might be efforts to halt or delay Gonzales’ execution, Zoosman strongly believes the inmate’s attempt to become a kidney donor is not.

“Never in his correspondence with me, did he indicate that he felt that this would be a way out or a way to save his life. He never expected it to lead to his clemency,” Zoosman said. In fact, per Zoosman, Gonzales didn’t want to reveal publicly he was seeking to donate a kidney. He only decided to, the chaplain said, because his request was denied.

“There’s been a lot of discussion in the press lately about who is pro-life and who is not pro-life,” Zoosman said, a reference to the ongoing fights over abortion rights following the US Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade. “And of course, that’s another issue.

“But I can say this: I cannot fathom a more pro-death stance than a state that not only engages in state-sponsored murder of defenseless human beings,” he added, “but one that prevents those in line for that murder from donating their organs to save others’ lives.”

CNN’s Steve Almasy and Raja Razek contributed to this report.

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Friends co-creator to donate $4m amid embarrassment over show’s whiteness | Friends

The co-creator of the TV sitcom Friends is planning to donate $4m to an African and African American studies project because she’s so “embarrassed” by – and feels such “guilt” at – the white homogeneity of the characters on the classic coming of age series.

Marta Kauffman told the Los Angeles Times that she intends for her planned gift to fund the Marta F Kauffman ’78 Professorship in African and African American Studies at her alma mater, Brandeis University, a liberal arts college in Massachusetts.

Kauffman said it was initially “difficult and frustrating” to see Friends criticized for its lack of diverse characters in a show that ran for 10 seasons after it premiered in 1994, according to the Times. The show earned tens of millions of dollars in syndication and streaming for its creators and cast, including Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Lisa Kudrow, Matt LeBlanc, Matthew Perry and David Schwimmer.

After Netflix announced it would drop the sitcom in 2019, Saul Austerlitz, who wrote Generation Friends: An Inside Look at the Show That Defined a Television Era, said Friends occupied a central place in American pop culture.

“Yes, it’s a sitcom, but it’s also a soap opera,” Austerlitz told the Times. “So you can watch it in order, or you can watch your favorite episodes.”

But after Minneapolis police murdered George Floyd in 2020, triggering racial justice protests across the country, Friends became a target of criticism. Many wondered how, on Manhattan’s racially diverse Upper West Side, the characters seemed to exist without interacting with any residents or visitors of color.

When HBO last year streamed Friends: The Reunion, an LA Times diversity writer said it wasn’t “a moment of celebration for everyone” and that it might have been subtitled: “The One Where They Ignored Diversity – Again”.

“At a time when the television landscape is becoming increasingly diverse and inclusive, it’s uncomfortable – if not outright inappropriate – to raise a glass to a sitcom that was so blind to the multiculturalism of the world where it took place,” Greg Braxton noted.

Kauffman said that she had initially felt Friends was unjustly singled out for its racial and ethnic homogeneity, saying, “It was difficult and frustrating.” But she said now she feels that criticism was fair.

“It was after what happened to George Floyd that I began to wrestle with my having bought into systemic racism in ways I was never aware of,” Kauffman said. “That was really the moment that I began to examine the ways I had participated. I knew then I needed to course-correct.”

Kauffman said Friends’ lack of diversity illustrated how she had internalized that systemic racism.

“I’ve learned a lot in the last 20 years,” she said to the Times. “Admitting and accepting guilt is not easy. It’s painful looking at yourself in the mirror. I’m embarrassed that I didn’t know better 25 years ago.”

Characters of color on Friends were largely fleeting. Schwimmer said in a 2020 interview that the lack of broader cultural representation was “wrong” and he described advocating for his character Ross to date diverse women.

“I really felt like Ross should date other people, women of all races,” Schwimmer said.

The professorship Kauffman plans to establish within Brandeis’ African and African American studies department aims to support scholarship on the peoples and cultures of Africa and the African diaspora.

Kauffman said she had received supportive messages after announcing her gift.

“I’ve gotten a lot of, ‘It’s about time,’” she told the Times. “Not in a mean way – it’s just people acknowledging it was long overdue.”

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Buffalo Bills’ Micah Hyde to donate portion of proceeds from charity softball game to support shooting victims

BUFFALO, N.Y. — A day after 10 people were killed and three others injured in a shooting at a Buffalo supermarket, Bills safety Micah Hyde committed to donating a portion of the proceeds from his charity softball game to the families of the victims.

Hyde said that the long-planned softball game was almost canceled due to the weekend’s events, but that he felt it was important to bring the community together after such a tragedy and do something positive.

The attack took place Saturday afternoon when a white 18-year-old man opened fire at a Tops Friendly Markets located in a predominantly Black neighborhood in Buffalo. Authorities have described the act as “racially motivated violent extremism.”

“I still can’t believe it,” Hyde said. “But when there’s hate in the world, you kind of erase it with love, and coming out here today and showing the community love and love to the youth, love to the community, love to the foundation. I guess that’s the way to combat it.”

A $200,000 check was presented to Hyde’s IMagINe For Youth foundation by the event’s sponsors prior to the game. In addition to a portion of other proceeds, the money collected from the silent auction held at the event is going to the victims’ families. Everything raised from the softball game is going back to Western New York.

The event attracted over 10,000 people to Sahlen Field in downtown Buffalo, after less than 2,000 attended Hyde’s first charity softball game back in 2019. More than three dozen Bills players were in attendance, including quarterback Josh Allen, tight end Dawson Knox, cornerback Tre’Davious White and safety Jordan Poyer.

“Praying for and with our Buffalo community,” the Bills tweeted Saturday evening. “Our hearts are with the victims, their families and friends.”

With voluntary OTAs continuing this week for the Bills, multiple players said that they expect the team to get together Monday during meetings to figure out the best approach for the larger group to help the community and those most directly impacted by the shooting.

“My heart goes out to the victims and their families,” Allen said. “We really haven’t talked as a team yet. We’ll be in the building tomorrow and I’m sure we’ll talk about it and figure out a way to help the situation, help the families out. It’s something that you never think it’s gonna happen in your community and when it does, it hits home. I was sick to my stomach all day yesterday. I was flying back from my sister’s graduation, and it was just, it’s gut wrenching. It really is.

“And again, we’ll talk as a team tomorrow and kind figure out what we want to do, but there’s no doubt that we’re gonna do something.”

Allen said that he was glad Hyde decided not to cancel the event as it gave Bills players an opportunity “to get out here, show face and show that we care for this community.”

“The microcosm of one NFL football team, the locker room is different ethnicities, races, personalities, all mixed into one,” Allen said. “Coming out here, having a good time and showing the community this is who we are as a team. This is who we are as a community, and we want to be a part of this community.”

While the events of the day included a home run derby and a seven-inning softball game between the offense and defense, the weight of what occurred in the community over the weekend was omnipresent, including during a moment of silence and the emotional national anthem sung by Buffalo Police Officer Armonde “Moe” Badger.

“If we stopped and canceled everything because of hate, we wouldn’t move forward,” Hyde said. “There’s a lot of it, and I think all you can do is just, like I said, spread love and love one another. I think that it was big throughout the last couple years in society, obviously going through COVID and all that type of stuff to really just reach out, help each other and love on each other.”

The Associated Press contributed to this story.



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Houston Texans’ Laremy Tunsil mints draft-night gas mask video into NFT, will donate portion of proceeds to charity

HOUSTON — The day before the 2022 NFL draft begins, Texans left tackle Laremy Tunsil tweeted that he’s moving past his draft night incident by minting a non-fungible token (NFT) of his “infamous gas mask video.”

Just before the start of the draft in 2016, a video of him smoking marijuana out of a gas mask was posted on his Twitter account. Tunsil, who was projected as the draft’s top offensive tackle, slid down the draft board and was eventually drafted by the Miami Dolphins with the 13th pick.

Tunsil later told then NFL Network analyst Deion Sanders that his Twitter account was hacked.

“Man, it was a mistake,” Tunsil said at that time. “You know, it happened years ago. Like I said before, somebody hacked my Twitter account. That’s how it got on there, man. It’s just a crazy world — things happen for a reason.”

Tunsil tweeted that a portion of the proceeds from the 1 of 1 NFT will benefit The Last Prisoner Project, which supports those incarcerated for cannabis offenses.

“I’m looking toward and excited for the future and am grateful for all of those that supported me on my draft night and those that have and will continue to support my journey!” Tunsil tweeted.

Tunsil was traded to the Houston Texans in August 2019 in exchange for a package that included two first-round draft picks. In 2020 he signed a three-year, $66 million extension with the Texans that included $50 million guaranteed.



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Kansas City Chiefs fans donate $178,000 to New York children’s hospital after playoff victory over the Buffalo Bills

Chiefs fans began donating Tuesday to Oishei Children’s Hospital in Buffalo, New York, in $13 increments, the hospital tweeted. The $13 contributions represented the 13-second drive the Chiefs made to send the game into overtime.

By Wednesday, the donations totaled $178,000 from about 9,800 donors, the hospital tweeted.

“Thank you all!” the hospital tweeted. “These donations help the ongoing need and ensure our team has the tools, training and programs to care for the kids in WNY [Western New York].”

The Chiefs will take on the Cincinnati Bengals in the AFC Championship game on Sunday.

The Bills Mafia is known for making donations after games for various reasons, sometimes to make a point. In December, the Bills Mafia began making $17 donations to the Buffalo nonprofit VIA: Visually Impaired Advancement after their 33-27 overtime loss against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, according to CNN affiliate WKBW.

The donations were made as a way to troll the referees, who fans felt “missed calls against the Tampa Buccaneers, including two on (Bills wide receiver) Stefon Diggs in the end zone,” the affiliate said.

In January 2021, the Bills defeated the Baltimore Ravens 17-3 in the AFC divisional round. The mafia celebrated the win by donating to Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson’s favorite charity, Blessings in a Backpack, because Jackson was injured during the game.
The donations totaled at least $75,000, according to CNN affiliate WLKY.



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Wordle! and Wardle team up to donate proceeds from an unrelated app’s popularity spike

Wordle is a free browser game, and a browser game only — it has no accompanying apps, something that some people (myself included, regrettably) might not realize during a time when nearly everything has an app.

This leaves plenty of room for fake Wordle apps to crowd app stores in an attempt to leech off of the word puzzle game’s sudden rise in popularity. But there’s one app coincidentally called Wordle! that’s not a clone — it actually existed before the browser game itself. That’s why its developer is teaming up with the mind behind the browser-based Wordle, Josh Wardle, to use its accidental success as an opportunity to give back, according to a report from GameSpot.

The story unraveled in a thread on Twitter, with Wordle! app developer, Steven Cravotta, detailing how his coding project blew up five years after its creation, unknowingly riding on Wordle’s coattails. He developed an iOS app called Wordle! in 2017 to brush up on his coding skills, and while it got around 100,000 downloads, it wasn’t as successful as a previous game he built, called Grid, so Cravotta decided to stop updating and promoting the app.

Cravotta says that downloads for Wordle! slowed to around one to two per day, but when the browser-based Wordle started taking off, so did his app. The app racked up 200,000 downloads in a single week, albeit from confused users who mistook it for the browser-based Wordle. Cravotta reached out to Wordle app developer, Josh Wardle, and let him know about his plans to donate the proceeds from his app to charity — Wardle sent out a tweet of his own to acknowledge the gesture.

Cravotta later confirmed that he and Wardle decided to donate any money earned by Wordle! to BoostOakland, a charity geared towards tutoring and mentoring young people in Oakland, California. When The Verge reached out to Cravotta, he told us that he has collected a little more than $2,000 so far and that he’ll donate the total amount earned at the end of this month.



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