Tag Archives: Frost

Maxwell Frost, Gen Z’s congressman-elect, denied D.C. apartment over bad credit

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Rep.-elect Maxwell Frost (D-Fla.), the first member of the Gen Z generation elected to Congress, said Thursday that a company in Washington rejected his application to rent an apartment because of his bad credit score.

Frost declined to identify the building, the size of debt or credit score, but said the building where his application was rejected was in the Navy Yard neighborhood, which is just over a mile from the U.S. Capitol.

“I was excited because I had finally found a place that made sense for me, that was in my price range,” Frost said in an interview. Before applying, he said he disclosed “that my credit was bad. I told the guy my whole situation and he said ‘Apply, you’re going to be fine.’ ”

Frost said he paid a $50 application fee and submitted his information. After the rejection — and the loss of the fee — Frost said he was “told there really is nothing I can do. It’s just unfortunate. They said you can call and dispute the result, but I said I don’t know what I’d be disputing. I have a bad credit — I admit it.”

Frost, 25, famously drove an Uber to pay his bills while campaigning full time in his central Florida district. He has quickly become a potent force within the Democratic Party, hitting the campaign trail in neighboring Georgia this past week to help Sen. Raphael G. Warnock (D) win his runoff election on Tuesday.

In true Gen. Z fashion, Frost first aired his housing woes on social media.

“Honestly I just posted it because I was pretty angry about what had happened,” he told The Washington Post. His message on Twitter quickly generated thousands of responses, including some from Republican critics that Frost argued were hypocritical, considering former president Donald Trump’s multiple bankruptcies.

The median rent for a studio apartment in Washington is $2,600, compared with $1,646 in Orlando, which is in the district Frost will represent, according to Zillow.com.

Lawmakers struggling to find housing in the nation’s capital is a story as old as the congressman-elect.

In 2000, another young, newly elected House member from Florida was shocked to find a tight and expensive housing market in the nation’s capital. “It’s been a rather shocking experience, to see what the housing market is like,” Adam H. Putnam (R-Fla.) told The Post at the time. “It’s just a totally different ballgame from anything I’ve ever seen.”

Putnam, who was 26, said he and his wife visited more than a dozen places during freshman orientation, and understood why some lawmakers had chosen to sleep in their offices. Another new member of the House at the time, Rep. Betty McCollum (D-Minn.), said she found a large one-bedroom near the Library of Congress for around $1,500 a month. She said it was “a lot; my house payment in Minnesota is less than that.”

In 2018, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) voiced similar concerns. She had worked as a bartender before leaving that job to campaign full time. In November, at age 29, she was the youngest woman elected to the House, but she would not start collecting a salary until the following January.

“I have three months without a salary before I’m a member of Congress,” she told the New York Times. “So, how do I get an apartment? Those little things are very real.”

Frost said he had spoken with Ocasio-Cortez about the housing challenges they experienced, which a number of their colleagues in elected office might not have gone though.

“A lot of the members who come into the Congress don’t have these issues when they move, because they already have money,” Frost said.

One real estate agent contacted by The Post said December is typically very slow for real estate transactions, which can make finding available units challenging.

As of Thursday, there were 30 one-bedroom and studio apartments available for rent in the 20003 Zip code that generally covers the Navy Yard neighborhood, according to this agent, citing information from the Multiple Listing Service, a database that feeds popular housing sites like Redfin, though some apartments may be advertised publicly without being listed there.

The median rent in those units was $2,373; the only unit rented in the past 30 days went into contract just after Thanksgiving and had been available for more than a month, this agent said. The rent on that apartment was $1,700.

For now, Frost said, “I’m probably going to have to look at individual landlords, and mom-and-pop kind of shops as far as apartments are concerned. But also, I just might need to do some couch surfing or staying with somebody a little while I figure it out, or AIRBNB.”



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Nebraska fires Scott Frost three games into his fifth season

One of the most promising college football coaching hires of the late 2010s reached its dismal end on Sunday, when Nebraska fired Scott Frost three games into the fifth season of one of the worst coaching tenures in recent college football history, considering expectations and resources. Frost’s 16-31 record at the alma mater for which he played quarterback in the 1990s would have startled anyone present at the outset.

That was December 2017, when a swaggering Frost had completed two sweeping successes that seemed to cast him as can’t-miss: a turn as Oregon’s offensive coordinator that included tutoring quarterback Marcus Mariota, who won the 2014 Heisman Trophy in Oregon’s season as national runner-up; and a turn as head coach at Central Florida, which went 12-0 in 2017 during Frost’s second season, caused chatter about a self-declared national championship and made the Frost-Nebraska rumblings unstoppable.

Such unmistakable momentum, plus Frost’s past as both a native of little Wood River, Neb., and as the quarterback of the last of Nebraska’s five national-title teams (the co-champions of 1997-1998), prompted scores of Nebraska football dignitaries to gather in an in-person welcoming of Frost as an obvious bet to lead the Cornhuskers from pretty good back to routinely great. Gov. Pete Ricketts declared Sept. 1, 2018, a commemorative “Scott Frost Day,” and the fanfare had Frost restoring the cherished program from winning percentages deemed insufficient, such as the .551 under Bill Callahan (27-22), the .713 under Bo Pelini (67-27) and the .500 under Mike Riley (19-19), back toward the .829 of Bob Devaney (101-20-2 from 1962-1972) or the .836 of Tom Osborne (255-49-3 from 1973-1997).

Instead, the program with the decorated past never reached any bowl game under Frost, who went 4-8, 5-7, 3-5, 3-9 and 1-2, and developed an astonishing penchant for losing close games, a hallmark of failed coaching. Those began with opening losses in 2018 to Colorado by 33-28 and Troy by 24-19, unsuspected hints of things to come. The record in one-score games would reach an astounding 5-22 record in games decided by one score, 0-8 in Frost’s fourth season, 2021, a 3-9 downer that resulted in a pay cut. The drudgery ended with a 45-42 home loss Saturday to Georgia Southern, which drove 75 yards to score the winning touchdown with 36 seconds left, and whose new coach, Clay Helton, had met the same fate in the second weekend in September last year at Southern California.

“Earlier today I met with Coach Frost and informed him we were making a change in the leadership of our football program, effective immediately,” Athletic Director Trev Alberts, also a former Cornhusker, said in a statement. “Scott has poured his heart and soul into the Nebraska football program both as a quarterback and head coach, and I appreciate his work and dedication.

“After the disappointing start to our season” — a 1-2 record counting a loss to Northwestern in Ireland and a win over North Dakota — “I decided the best path forward for our program was to make a change at our head coaching position. Associate head coach Mickey Joseph will serve as our interim head coach for the remainder of the 2022 season.”

Joseph, 54, himself a former Nebraska quarterback, has coached at 14 different high schools, colleges and an NFL team, including LSU from 2017-2021, which counted its national championship year of 2019. Joseph played quarterback for Osborne from 1988-1991, mostly as a backup, completing 55 of 124 passes for 909 yards and rushing 180 times for 1,091. Joseph becomes the first Black coach in any sport at Nebraska.

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Who is Maxwell Frost, the Gen Z Democratic nominee in Florida?

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Maxwell Frost sounds a lot like others of the Gen Z generation — he’s 25, drives an Uber for extra cash and recently quit his job to pursue a more promising opportunity.

His latest gig? Winning a crowded primary in Florida’s heavily Democratic 10th Congressional District on Tuesday night, giving him a strong chance of becoming a member of the U.S. House of Representatives.

Frost prevailed over more experienced Democrats, including former members of Congress Corrine Brown and Alan Grayson, and state Sen. Randolph Bracy, to secure the nomination. He will be the favorite in November in the reconfigured Orlando-area district.

Four takeaways from the New York and Florida primaries

“I knew going into this thing that we’d be counted out because of my age,” Frost told The Washington Post in an interview Tuesday. “And I’ve been counted out a lot of my life because of my age. But I knew that if we stuck to our message, and if we kept doing the work, and we built the movement, we would win.”

He is among the new class of mold-breaking Democratic candidates this year with working-class roots. On his campaign website, he highlights the difficulties faced by his biological mother who gave him up for adoption amid what he describes as “a cycle of drugs, crime, and violence.”

Full Washington Post Elections Coverage

Frost campaigned on support for Medicare-for-all, demilitarizing the police, legalizing prostitution and recreational marijuana, expunging all marijuana convictions, and restoring voting rights to the incarcerated.

He was backed by Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.).

Polls leading up to the primary showed Frost with the lead in the 10-candidate race, but he said his campaign team was working as hard on Election Day as it has all summer, hitting the streets at 4 a.m. to drop off campaign literature at voters’ houses.

Maxwell Frost (D-Fla.), who is the first Gen Z candidate to win a congressional primary, discusses his plan to engage young people in the upcoming election. (Video: The Washington Post, Photo: Maxwell Alejandro Frost for Congress/The Washington Post)

The minimum age to hold a seat in Congress is 25. Frost has never run for public office, but he doesn’t consider himself a political newcomer. He started working in politics when he was 15, protesting gun violence after the deadly mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut in 2012.

He went on to become the national organizing director for March for Our Lives, the group organized by students who survived the deadly mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., in 2018. He also worked for the ACLU in Florida, supporting voting rights for formerly incarcerated citizens.

Frost refers to his as the “mass shootings generation.”

He gained national attention four months ago when he confronted Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) at an event in Orlando, shortly after the school shootings in Uvalde, Tex. In a video that circulated widely on social media, Frost is seen telling DeSantis he needs to do something about gun violence. DeSantis answered, “Nobody wants to hear from you,” and Frost is being seen escorted out.

Frost said he thinks voters angry at DeSantis will help propel him to Congress.

“Our positive message about the world we deserve to live in is what really resonates with folks, despite what’s coming out of the governor’s mansion in Tallahassee,” Frost said.

He argued that DeSantis’s policies have motivated voters.

“Our message has resonated at this time in spite of what the governor’s doing to queer folks being scapegoated, in spite of Black people and their rights to vote being taken away by the governor, in spite of our LGBTQ plus community and Latinos and Black folks and disabled folks being scapegoated by this governor for every issue under the sun,” he said.

Frost was the top fundraiser in the race for the open seat currently held by Rep. Val Demings (D), who won the nomination for Senate on Tuesday night and will challenge Sen. Marco Rubio (R).

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Nebraska retaining coach Scott Frost with restructured contract, vote of confidence from AD

Scott Frost will be retained as the head coach of the Nebraska Cornhuskers beyond the 2021 season, athletic director Trev Alberts announced on Monday. Frost, who is 15-27 in four seasons at the helm, has also agreed to a restructured contract. Details on the terms of the contract have not been disclosed. 

“In my four months at Nebraska, I have closely observed our football team, and had several productive discussions with Coach Frost,” Alberts said in a statement. “Scott has laid out a clear plan and vision for the future of Nebraska Football and has agreed to a restructured contract. I am excited to continue to work together with Scott. We share a love of Nebraska and this football program and want nothing more than Nebraska Football to again compete for championships.”

Frost’s overall record includes a 10-23 mark in Big Ten play. The Cornhuskers have finished fifth in the Big Ten West in each of his first three seasons.

“I appreciate the confidence Trev Alberts has shown in me to continue to lead this program,” Frost said. “I love this state, this football program and am honored and humbled for the opportunity to serve as the head coach at my alma mater. Our immediate focus is on the two games ahead against Wisconsin and Iowa, and the opportunity in front of us to build momentum heading into the offseason and 2022. I understand we have not won at a high enough level, but I am confident our football program will continue to take steps forward.”

The Cornhuskers are 3-7 (1-6 Big Ten) this season, and have lost four straight games heading into this weekend’s matchup at Wisconsin.

“We all recognize our record has not been what anyone wants it to be,” Alberts said. “I have been clear that I have been looking for incremental progress, and I have seen that in several key areas this season. Our team has continued to compete at a high level and the young men in our program have remained unified and shown great resiliency, which is an important reflection of the leadership of Coach Frost and his staff.”

The lack of success at Nebraska is a far cry from the expectations that came with Frost following his time at UCF. The Knights went 13-0 and won the Peach Bowl in 2017 — Frost’s second year leading the program. He earned numerous awards following the season, including the Home Depot Coach of the Year award. That undefeated season came just two years after the Knights went 0-12 in 2015 under George O’Leary, who resigned after an 0-8 start.

Frost was a two-time national champion quarterback at Nebraska (1995, 1997) who threw for 1,237 yards, rushed for 1,095 yards and had 24 total touchdowns (five passing, 19 rushing) during the 1997 season.

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How to watch the “frost moon” lunar eclipse – the longest partial eclipse of the century

A partial lunar eclipse is coming up this month – and it will be the longest of this century. The eclipse will take place overnight on November 18 and 19, when the moon slips into Earth’s shadow for 3 hours and 28 minutes, NASA said. The late November moon is also known as the “frost moon.”

In 2018, the longest total lunar eclipse occurred: 1 hour, 42 minutes and 57 seconds.

Total lunar eclipses occur when the moon traverses Earth’s shadow and the entire moon is covered. Partial lunar eclipses occur when the moon does not pass completely into Earth’s shadow.

There will be 228 lunar eclipses this century, between 2001 and 2100. Most years will have two while some years will experience three or four.

May’s partial lunar eclipse in Sydney, Australia. It is the first total lunar eclipse in more than two years, which coincides with a supermoon. A super moon is a name given to a full (or new) moon that occurs when the moon is in perigee – or closest to the earth – and it is the moon’s proximity to earth that results in its brighter and bigger appearance.

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May 2021 saw a total lunar eclipse, so November will be the second eclipse this year. Most eclipses last less than two hours, so the 3 hours, 28 minutes and 23 seconds the moon will be in partial eclipse far surpasses others.

NASA says weather permitting, “a huge swath of the planet” will be able to see the eclipse — including North and South America, Eastern Asia, Australia and the Pacific region — and it can occur earlier or later, depending on your time zone.

U.S. East Coast observers can begin to see it after 2 a.m., and it will reach maximum visibility at 4 a.m. West Coast observers can start to see it just after 11 p.m., with a maximum at 1 a.m., according to NASA.

Partial lunar eclipses might not be quite as spectacular as total lunar eclipses, but they occur more frequently, meaning 
“more opportunities to witness little changes in our solar system that sometimes occur right before our eyes,” NASA says.

NASA will have a livestream of the lunar eclipse, which will cover almost 97% of the full moon’s surface.

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6 Surreal Images Showing Rare Snowfall in Tropical Brazil

A man plays with snow at a farm in rural Sao Joaquim, Brazil, Thursday, July 29, 2021.
Photo: Mycchel Legnaghi (AP)

Snow has fallen in Brazil, an extremely rare event for the tropical country. Thanks to an intense cold snap, snow or freezing rain fell in at least 43 Brazilian cities on Wednesday and Thursday, according to weather service Climatempo.

South America has been buffeted in cold air ushered north from the Antarctic this week, resulting in some decided strange scenes across the continent. But none are more bizarre than those taking place in Brazil, parts of which haven’ seen snow in decades.

“I am 62 years old and had never seen the snow, you know? To see nature’s beauty is something indescribable,” a truck driver in Cambara do Sul, a municipality of Rio Grande do Sul state, told TV Globo network.

But while it’s certainly novel, the snow and attendant cold snap also had some serious consequences.

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Scott Frost addressed multiple different topics on Thursday, on top of making a big donation to Teammates. – Rivals.com – Nebraska

  1. Scott Frost addressed multiple different topics on Thursday, on top of making a big donation to Teammates. Rivals.com – Nebraska
  2. Scott and Ashley Frost donate a $125,00 match to TeamMates Mentoring 247Sports
  3. A case-by-case look at the 24 scholarship players that transferred out of Nebraska since the 2019 season ended Lincoln Journal Star
  4. Nebraska volleyball’s sellout streak may be on hold, but Huskers excited for ‘home-court advantage’ Omaha World-Herald
  5. Frost on injury updates and moving on with the team in front of him 247Sports
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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