Tag Archives: John

Sen. John Thune says Trump’s GOP allies are engaging in ‘cancel culture’

Sen. John Thune is criticizing Republican activists and party leaders for engaging in “cancel culture” by rushing to censure GOP senators who found former President Donald Trump guilty of inciting an insurrection.

In his first interview since he voted to acquit Trump, the Senate’s No. 2 Republican on Thursday defended fellow Republicans who sided with Democrats on the “vote of conscience” and warned against shutting out dissenting voices in the party.

“There was a strong case made,” Thune said of the Democrats’ impeachment presentation. “People could come to different conclusions. If we’re going to criticize the media and the left for cancel culture, we can’t be doing that ourselves.”

Thune’s remarks were his first explaining his vote in Trump’s trial and assessing the turbulent GOP politics the former president has left behind. Thune, who is facing reelection next year in deeply conservative South Dakota, is among several establishment Republicans grappling with how to reclaim control of a party dominated by Trump and his most ardent supporters for years.

The senator only rarely criticized Trump while he was in office. But he called the former president’s actions after the election “inexcusable” and accused him of undermining the peaceful transfer of power.

Still, Thune last week sided with most Republican senators and GOP Senate leader Mitch McConnell in voting to acquit anyway. Thune and others argued that Trump could not be impeached because he was already out of office. Thune said after his vote that he was concerned with the idea of “punishing a private citizen with the sole intent of disqualifying him from holding future office.” Democrats fell 10 votes short of the 67 need to convict.

Since then, Trump has lashed out at McConnell and repeated the baseless claim that he won the election. The comments have inflamed a feud that is likely to play out in GOP primaries between Trump-backed candidates and those supported by the establishment wing.

Thune suggested he would be taking steps to assist candidates “who don’t go off and talk about conspiracies and that sort of thing.” He praised Rep. Liz Cheney, a Wyoming Republican, who was censured by the Wyoming GOP for voting to impeach Trump, for doing an “exceptional job on most issues” and said he was ready to jump into primary battles like the one she is sure to face.

“At the grassroots level, there’s a lot of people who want to see Trump-like candidates,” he said. “But I think we’re going to be looking for candidates that are electable.”

Thune himself was hit by Trump last year after he said efforts by some GOP members in the U.S. House to reject Electoral College results would “go down like a shot dog” in the Senate. Trump called Thune a “RINO,” meaning Republican In Name Only, and “Mitch’s boy,” in reference to McConnell. The attacks inspired some Trump loyalists in South Dakota to huddle for a primary challenge to the state’s senior senator, whose candidacy has gone unchallenged in previous elections.

On Thursday, the senator attempted to downplay those attacks, likening them to “food fights within the family” that hurt Republicans’ goals, He noted there was no evidence to support Trump’s claim of voter fraud.

“You’ve got to face the music, and at some point, it’s got to be over and you’ve got to move on,” he said, adding, “I think it’s just important to tell people the truth. The most important responsibility of any leader is to define reality.”

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John Oliver Discusses Next Pandemic on Last Week Tonight

It’s February 2021 and we’re all still up to our nasal passages in the COVID-19 pandemic, but on this week’s season premiere of Last Week Tonight, John Oliver is taking a look at our next pandemic. In other words, “If you want to see a British person do something hot or interesting, go watch Bridgerton,” he warns. “A lot of jizzing in blankets on that show. However much you expect…there’s significantly more.”

As the late-night host points out, from SARS to Ebola to Zika, infectious disease outbreaks have experienced a significant increase since 1980, and, given how flat-footed the coronavirus caught most of us at the end of 2019, we should do ourselves a solid and actually learn from this experience. However, that doesn’t really sound like us. “Unfortunately, there is every chance that, after all this is over, we’ll end up treating the coronavirus like a really bad fart at Thanksgiving,” Oliver predicts. “That is, waiting patiently for it to dissipate so we can never speak of it again, and collectively pretend it didn’t just kill Grandma.”

So, where is the next pandemic going to come from? Human’s encroachment on the earth’s ecosystems through deforestation and other land changes seems like the most likely culprit, the Last Week Night host explains. And that’s not to mention the global exotic animal trade, factory farming, and, of course, Nintendo’s Animal Crossing.

“You honestly still think it’s a good idea to live in close proximity with a raccoon, an owl, a gorilla, a tiger, a sheep, a koala, an octopus, a hamster, a penguin, a rhino, and a chicken named Goose?,” he demands. “All of whom traveled there from different parts of the world? That’s not an island paradise. It’s a disease Chernobyl waiting to happen. Shut that shit down!”
Concludes Oliver, our best bet is to remember and actually apply the lessons of 2020, and plan to invest a lot of money into practical solutions. And, if at all possible, please, do not to inhale guano. It’s just a recipe for disaster.

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John Oliver Talks Trump Impeachment Trial And How Democrats “Can’t Afford To Sit On Their Laurels Right Now”

There has been a lot of news since Last Week Tonight with John Oliver last aired in November such as the launch of the vaccine rollout, Wall Street’s Game Stop extravaganza and a week-long obsession with sea shanties — whatever that was about. That said, Oliver decided to usher in season 8 with one of the most pressing news stories from last week: Donald Trump’s impeachment trial.

“Democrats put on a compelling forensic case about Trump’s clear role as an instigator of the January 6 riots and in response, his attorneys mounted a defense that could charitably be characterized as ‘incoherent’ with lowlights ranging from one attorney reminiscing about his childhood record collection to another subjecting the senate to an 11 minute video of Democrats simply using the word ‘fight’,” said Oliver. It might have seemed that they might weren’t trying very hard but that might be because they didn’t really have to.” He pointed out that Ted Cruz even met with Trump’s lawyers while the case was still going on to tell them that the outcome was already practically determined and that they already won.

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“The thing is, he was right,” admitted Oliver. He added that Republicans were going to acquit the former Celebrity Apprentice host no matter what is a “depressing sign of how deep Trumpism runs in their party.” However, at the state level, it’s even worse.

More than a dozen state legislators participated in the “Stop the Steal” rally preceding the riots and one of them, Derrick Evans, a newly elected West Virginia state legislator actually made it inside and claimed he was a member of media to “film history”, the footage he filmed seemed to speak otherwise as he was seen yelling “Trump!” and delightfully participating in the insurrection.

Evans has since resigned — but there are more.

Oregon’s GOP put out a statement saying that the riots were a “false flag” operation designed to discredit Trump while Michigan’s top elected Republican Mike Shirkey went on tape to spread false claims saying that the deadly riots were a hoax and it was prearranged by someone funding it even though Trump who repeatedly tweeted about the January 6 protest saying things like “Be there, will be wild”.

Meanwhile, Arizona’s Republican party censured three members for not sufficiently supporting Trump including Cindy McCain. They also retweeted and tweeted out messages that helped fuel the fire that would later erupt on January 6 including a quote from the 2008 Rambo movie that read: “This is what we do, who we are. Live for nothing, or die for something” in regards to the Stop the Steal campaign.

In addition, Republican Senators in Arizona have also tried to hold the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors in contempt for refusing to turn over voting ballots and machines for inspection. A GOP lawmaker in Arizona also filed a bill that would allow the legislature to revoke election certification. In other words, if this were a law in November, the state would have given the electoral votes to Trump.

Republicans across the country have still responded to what has been called the “most secure election in U.S. history” by pushing laws that will continue to make voting more difficult. Arizona has presented 19 restrictive bills to voting rights while 33 states have introduced over 165 restrictive bills this year.

Luckily, there is H.R.1 and the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act that can curb all this voter suppression — but there’s a catch. Those bills have a good chance of getting enacted if they end the filibuster. To do this, all Democrats must be on board — Joe Manchin does not want to kill the filibuster. That makes things difficult.

“It’s bad enough [he’s] defending the filibuster to defend the legacy of Robert C. Byrd, a man who literally used to try and block the original Voting Rights Act in 1964,” Oliver said. Byrd used the thing Manchin is advocating for in the worst possible way.

“It’d be like promoting Zoom by reminding everyone that Jeffrey Toobin used it,” quipped Oliver.

In addition to Manchin, Oliver points out that Democrats like Kyrsten Sinema and Dianne Feinstein have defended the filibuster while President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris have remained “lukewarm” on the issue.

“Democrats simply cannot afford to rest on their laurels right now — Republicans definitely aren’t!” he insisted. “They made it abundantly clear they’re willing to take things to drastic levels and Democrats just don’t seem remotely prepared to meet that threat right now.”

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Lincoln Project Sinks Deeper Into Turmoil Over John Weaver Sex Allegations

The Lincoln Project was plunged into even deeper turmoil Thursday, with the anti-Trump group tapping an outsider to investigate its handling of sexual misconduct allegations against a co-founder, and former employees demanding to be released from non-disclosure agreements.

The organization fanned the flames by tweeting out what appeared to be private messages between a co-founder who left in a rancorous split and a journalist who was hoping to interview her. The Lincoln Project later deleted the tweet—which was cited by the ex-staffers as an example of retaliation.

The controversy boiled over hours after reports that leaders of The Lincoln Project knew about sexual harassment allegations against co-founder John Weaver last summer, before they became public in January. (Lincoln Project co-founder Rick Wilson is a Daily Beast columnist and co-hosts the podcast, The New Abnormal.)

More than 20 men have accused Weaver of sending unsolicited sexual messages, with some saying he tried to barter his connections for sex; one was underage when Weaver began communicating. Weaver, who is married with two children, admitted his behavior was “inappropriate” but said he thought all the interactions were consensual.

Weaver resigned, but the accusations did not end there. Last weekend, co-founder Jennifer Horn stepped down, citing what she said were Weaver’s “grotesque and inappropriate behavior” and “longstanding deceptions.” The group responded by claiming she left after making financial demands including a $250,000 signing bonus.

On Thursday, the Associated Press reported that leaders of the Lincoln Project learned about allegations against Weaver in the summer after a payroll employee emailed co-founder Ron Steslow—who then reportedly shared it with corporate counsel Matthew Sanderson and other key figures and advocated for Weaver to be removed from the organization.

Hours later, the group announced that it had hired a “best-in-class outside professional” to review claims of Weaver’s abuse and what Lincoln Project leaders knew and when they knew it.

The group said in a statement that stories about it were “filled with inaccuracies and incorrect information” but conceded in the same breath: “There is a central truth in all of them that must be reckoned with and that is John Weaver’s appalling conduct and the abuse he inflicted on people.”

It ended the statement saying that any employee bound by a non-disclosure agreement to withhold information about Weaver could request a release from such a contract.

Subsequently, according to The New York Times, several former employees went public to demand that the group’s leadership free them from non-disclosure agreements so they could speak out about “harassment perpetrated by John Weaver that we experienced or witnessed” or to provide any other information “specific to the John Weaver harassment situation that would aid the press, public, and our donors …. ”

The anonymous former employees called it “absurd, unreasonable and insensitive” for the group to suggest those seeking release from their NDAs simply contact “the organization accused of protecting the very predator at issue” to request it.

“Additionally, given the Associated Press and New York Magazine reports on Feb. 11, we lack any confidence in the organization’s remaining leadership to properly handle our allegations of (or knowledge of) sexual harassment and sexual assault by John Weaver,” the letter said.

Perhaps most damning, the former staffers said it was the “recent public behavior” of co-founder Steve Schmidt that had forced them to go public because they “do not feel safe” engaging with the group’s leadership privately.

They were referring to the tweet from The Lincoln Project that contained screenshots of a purported Twitter direct-message conversation between Horn, one of the organization’s founding members, and Amanda Becker, a reporter for the political news site The 19th.

After accusing Becker of “preparing to publish a smear job” with Horn’s help, the group deleted the tweets (although they remain available via the Internet Archive.)

The 19th’s co-founder and CEO Emily Radshaw said the outlet had sent the Lincoln Project a list of questions for Becker’s story just before the group tweeted the screenshots. Radshaw wrote, “We’re not going to be bullied or intimidated out of pursuing critical journalism.”



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Pennsylvania man Michael John Lopatic assaulted police officer, stole another’s bodycam during Capitol riot, prosecutors say

Court records show that Lopatic, of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, is charged with assaulting a police officer, civil disorder, entering restricted grounds, physical violence on restricted grounds, and disorderly conduct in a restrictive building.

The criminal complaint and FBI affidavit filed against Lopatic remain under seal, but a motion for pretrial detention is shedding light on the government’s case against him.

According to the motion, an officer with the Washington DC Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) was trying to rescue another officer from rioters outside the Capitol when Lopatic “emerged from the crowd, climbed over a handrail, and charged” at the officer.

In describing the assault, which was caught on police bodycam video, prosecutors say that Lopatic, “assaulted (the officer) by continuously punching him in the head,” and that, “at one point, the defendant grabbed (the officer) by the head and appeared to hit him with an uppercut.”

Prosecutors also said that after the alleged assault, Lopatic was seen stealing “the body worn camera of another MPD officer and later destroyed it.” In stealing the bodycam, prosecutors said that Lopatic had to break through a “human shield” of “protesters trying to protect (the officer) from the violent mob.”

Lopatic told FBI agents that he stole the bodycam and got rid of it while traveling back home from the riot, according to the motion.

In the months and weeks leading up to the riot, prosecutors also said that Lopatic posted, “threatening messages about elected leaders in Washington.” Lopatic allegedly posted a number of photos of the birds he shot while hunting, writing in the captions that he’d named them after Democratic politicians.

“I got a double today,” Lopatic allegedly wrote, according to a screenshot in the motion. “Two shots, two kills. Both head shots. I got a rooster and a hen. I named them Joe and Kamala.”

They also say he wrote on January 1, advocating for others to “ASSEMBLE ON THE CAPITAL JANUARY 6TH, 2021. UNITED WE STAND, GO FORTH AND WE FIGHT.”

CNN reached out to Lopatic’s lawyer who declined to comment on the charges. Court records show that a federal judge granted the prosecutor’s motion for the pretrial detention of Lopatic.

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Elton John and Michael Caine star in video encouraging Brits to get vaccine

The legendary British singer tries out a Michael Caine impression but fails to impress the casting team — before Caine himself makes a cameo. Both celebrities have already been vaccinated against the coronavirus, the NHS said.

Their appeal for more Brits to get inoculated comes as the UK looks to broaden its rollout. Britain has already vaccinated more than 12 million people with at least one dose, and is now asking people aged 70 and over in England who haven’t been vaccinated to book an appointment.

“I wanted to take part in this film to help show people the benefits of getting vaccinated and how it helps protect ourselves and the people we love,” John said. “So, I hope we can all come together and do our bit in the fight against this wretched disease.”

In the video, the 73-year-old sings his 1980s hit “I’m Still Standing” after pretending to receive a shot. The spoof also sees Caine, 87, tell viewers the vaccine doesn’t hurt — before adding his trademark phrase, “Not many people know that.”

Chief Executive of NHS England Simon Stevens said that vaccine uptake in older populations had been very high, and that the campaign was a way to encourage others who can take up the vaccine to do so.

“Well over nine out of ten people aged 75 and over have already taken up the offer of their NHS Covid vaccination, and now we want to encourage everyone in the high priority groups to do so,” Stevens said.

“That’s why we’re grateful to Sir Elton and Sir Michael for helping the NHS promote vaccine uptake,” he added.

The government has pledged to offer a vaccine to everyone in its four highest-risk groups by mid-February.

Despite the strong uptake, community protection can only be achieved when a vast majority of the population has been vaccinated, and scientists have warned of the challenges posed by misinformation and vaccine hesitancy in achieving that milestone.

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John Fetterman launches Senate bid in Pennsylvania

Fetterman kicked off his Senate campaign by highlighting his support for organized labor, a $15 minimum wage, marijuana legalization and LGBTQ rights. In his launch video, he made an appeal to residents throughout the famously divided state — his motto is “every county, every vote” — and pointed to his efforts to revitalize Braddock.

“I’m running because it’s kind of closing the circle on a 20-year journey I’ve been on,” he said in an interview with POLITICO. “I came to Braddock here 20 years ago in 2001, and it was a deliberate choice to do that. It was one of the most marginalized, forgotten, overlooked and abandoned communities in the state. And I wanted to work [for] issues — the central theme was inequality — and that’s what I did.”

The lieutenant governor is beginning his campaign with the support of two labor unions: United Steelworkers District 10 and the United Food and Commercial Workers Local 1776, which together represent a total of nearly 80,000 workers in Pennsylvania.

Fetterman previously ran as an underdog for the Senate in 2016, unsuccessfully vying for Republican Sen. Pat Toomey’s seat in a Democratic primary against the party favorite Katie McGinty and former Rep. Joe Sestak. In the midterms two years later, Fetterman defeated Democratic incumbent Lt. Gov. Mike Stack in a primary and won on the same ticket as Gov. Tom Wolf in the general election by double digits.

Fetterman, while again not expected to be the establishment choice, is now viewed as an early frontrunner in the Democratic primary with a strong base in western Pennsylvania.

Political insiders see Rep. Conor Lamb, who hails from the same part of the state, and Rep. Brendan Boyle, another labor ally, as two potential candidates who could compete for some of the same voters as Fetterman. State Rep. Malcolm Kenyatta, who is eyeing the seat, could also contend with him for the support of progressives.

Fetterman did not take a position on whether the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee should, unlike in 2016, stay neutral in the primary: “I haven’t truthfully given it really any thought.” He said he has not spoken with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer.

Asked about his position on the legislative filibuster, which requires 60 votes to pass most bills, he said it should be eliminated.

“Let’s be honest here: If Mitch McConnell is for something, that should give anyone pause to be like, ‘well, then I probably should be against it,’” he said.

Fetterman said he disagrees with lawmakers who want to limit additional stimulus checks so that they are phased out beginning at individuals earning more than $50,000 annually, and called it “a tragedy” that a higher minimum wage is looking like it won’t be passed in the economic rescue package.

Fetterman could face opponents in the Democratic primary challenging him from his left and right. He opposes a ban on fracking, a critical industry in Pennsylvania, and has not embraced the “Green New Deal.” He is also a self-described progressive who endorsed Sen. Bernie Sanders for president in 2016.

Fetterman said he agrees with parts of the Green New Deal — he wants to create millions of union jobs to transition away from fossil fuels — and has vowed to not take money from the fossil fuel industry. But when it comes to fracking, he said, “We can’t just throw [out] all of these union jobs and all these workers’ jobs and say, ‘Well, just go learn to code and maybe you can get on at Google or someplace.’”

Toomey announced last year that he will not seek reelection in 2022. The Pennsylvania race is widely seen as the best opportunity in the country for Democrats to gain a seat in the chamber. For Republicans, it is a must-win election in their campaign to take back the 50-50 Senate, which is now controlled by the Democrats due to Vice President Kamala Harris’ ability to break ties.

The rare chance at an open Senate seat has attracted a number of potential candidates. Along with Lamb, Boyle and Kenyatta, other possible Democratic contenders include Rep. Chrissy Houlahan, Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney, Montgomery County Commissioner Val Arkoosh, state Sen. Sharif Street and Philadelphia City Council Member Helen Gym. John McGuigan, a former Norristown borough councilman, has declared his candidacy.

Among Republicans, former GOP Rep. Ryan Costello, ex-Navy Secretary Kenneth Braithwaite, real estate developer Jeff Bartos, 2018 gubernatorial candidate Paul Mango, former U.S. Attorney William McSwain, past U.S. Ambassador Carla Sands, 2020 House candidate Sean Parnell, business consultant Craig Snyder, and Reps. Mike Kelly and Guy Reschenthaler are prospects.

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Olivia Newton John WON’T take the coronavirus vaccine as Chloe Lattanzi shares anti-vaxxer rant

Martha Stewart, Joan Collins and Sir David Attenborough are among the growing list of A-list celebrities to have received the COVID-19 vaccination.

But for ‘natural’ medicine advocate Olivia Newton-John, 72, getting a jab isn’t on the cards.   

Speaking to The Herald Sun with her daughter Chloe Lattanzi, 34, on Sunday, the pop icon said she has no plans to get vaccinated against the deadly virus.  

‘Not at this point, no’: Olivia Newton-John, 72, (pictured) revealed she WON’T take the coronavirus vaccine in an interview with The Herald Sun on Sunday 

‘Not at this point, no,’ said Olivia, who is suffering from stage-four breast cancer.  

While the Grease star provided no further explanation, Chloe was more than happy to share her bizarre and unscientific beliefs about vaccines with the publication.  

‘I’m not an anti-vaxxer, I’m anti putting mercury and pesticides in my body, which are in a lot of vaccines,’ proclaimed Chloe, who runs a medicinal cannabis farm in Oregon with her beau James Driskill. 

Anti-vaxxer: In the same interview, Olivia’s daughter  Chloe Lattanzi, 34, (right), shared her bizarre beliefs about vaccinations and ‘natural’ medicine  

She went on: ‘To me real medicine is what comes from the earth. I think people trust vaccines because the doctor says it is safe, I used to.’ 

Chloe, who has no medical nor scientific qualifications, claimed that she’s ‘done research’ and now believes vaccines aren’t safe.    

‘If I had a chance to take herbs and plants as a baby rather than have toxins injected into me I would have done that,’ she insisted.  

‘If I had a chance to take herbs and plants as a baby rather than have toxins injected into me I would have done that’: Chloe, who has no medical nor scientific qualifications, claimed that she’s ‘done research’ and now believes vaccines aren’t safe 

Vaccinations are vital to reducing the spread of preventable diseases, and any suggestion otherwise flies in the face of science and the advice of medical experts around the globe. 

It comes after Chloe shared her outrageous and unscientific views about vaccines and the COVID-19 pandemic in a bizarre Instagram rant last month.

In a now-deleted post, Chloe outed herself as an anti-vaxxer and claimed that face masks can cause ‘health problems’. 

Controversial: The post comes after Chloe shared her outrageous and unscientific views about vaccines and the COVID-19 pandemic in a bizarre Instagram rant last month 

‘Natural medicine saved my mum’s life,’ Chloe, who has no medical training, began, referring to Olivia’s long-term battle with breast cancer and well-publicised use of medical marijuana.

‘So natural medicine is the party I belong to. Not Republican!!! Not Democrat!’ continued Chloe, who runs a cannabis farm in Oregon with her partner, James. 

‘What do you do when you don’t fit in a box!? When you are a vegan, cannabis growing, LGBTQ supporting Buddhist that doesn’t agree with vaccines? Anyone relate?’ she added. 

Discussing face masks, Chloe clarified that while she does wear a face mask inside public places, she still believes that masks are ‘causing harm to little ones, and poor people that aren’t sick that have to suffocate 9 hour days’.

She even claimed that people have ‘cried to her’ because ‘they can’t breathe and are now having health problems’ after wearing masks. 

Unscientific: Discussing face masks, Chloe clarified that while she does wear a face mask inside public places, she still believes that masks are ‘causing harm to little ones, and poor people that aren’t sick that have to suffocate 9 hour days’ 

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John Chaney, commanding Temple basketball coach, dies at 89

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — John Chaney’s raspy, booming voice drowned out the gym when he scolded Temple players over a turnover — at the top of his basketball sins — or inferior effort. His voice was loudest when it came to picking unpopular fights, lashing out at NCAA policies he said discriminated against Black athletes. And it could be profane when Chaney let his own sense of justice get the better of him with fiery confrontations that threatened to undermine his role as father figure to scores of his underprivileged players.

Complicated, cranky, quick with a quip, Chaney was an imposing presence on the court and a court jester off it, all while building the Owls perched in rugged North Philadelphia into one of the toughest teams in the nation.

“He wrapped his arms around you and made you a part of his family,” said Chaney’s successor, Fran Dunphy.

Chaney died Friday, just eight days after his 89th birthday, after a short, unspecified illness.

Chaney led Temple to 17 NCAA Tournament appearances over 24 seasons, including five NCAA regional finals. Chaney had 741 wins as a college coach. He was twice named national coach of the year and his teams at Temple won six Atlantic 10 conference titles. He led Cheyney, in suburban Philadelphia, to the 1978 Division II national championship.

When Chaney retired in 2006, the scowl was gone, the dark, deep-set eyes concealed behind sunglasses, and the over-the-top personality turned subdued: “Excuse me while I disappear,” he said.

He became a de facto father to dozens of his players, many coming to Temple from broken homes, violent upbringings and bad schools. He often said his biggest goal was simply to give poor kids a chance to get an education. He said the SAT was culturally biased and he joined Georgetown’s John Thompson — another giant in the Black coaching community, who died in August — in denouncing NCAA academic requirements that seemed to single out “the youngster who is from a poor, disadvantaged background.

Eddie Jones and Aaron McKie, perhaps Chaney’s two best players, were Prop 48 recruits who parlayed their Temple years into successful NBA careers. McKie is now Temple’s coach and leaned on his mentor when he had to shape the program.

“Coach Chaney was like a father to me,” McKie said. “He taught not just me, but all of his players more than just how to succeed in basketball. He taught us life lessons to make us better individuals off the court. I owe so much to him. He made me the man I am today.”

When Chaney joined Temple in 1982, he took over a program that had only two NCAA tournament bids in the previous decade and wasn’t widely known outside Philadelphia. Often, as he exhorted his team, he put himself in situations he later regretted. He was known for a fiery temper — sending a player he called a “goon” into a 2005 game to commit hard fouls. Chaney served a suspension and apologized.

In 1994, he had a heated exchange following a game against UMass in which he threatened to kill coach John Calipari. Chaney apologized and was suspended for a game. The two later became friends.

“Coach Chaney and I fought every game we competed – as everyone knows, sometimes literally – but in the end he was my friend,” Calipari tweeted. “Throughout my career, we would talk about basketball and life. I will miss those talks and I will my friend.”

In 1984, Chaney grabbed George Washington coach Gerry Gimelstob by the shoulders at halftime during a game.

Chaney, whose deep, dark eyes seemed fitting for a school whose mascot is the Owl, was intense on the sidelines. His loud, booming voice could be heard across an arena, and his near-perfect designer clothes were in shambles after most games. After an especially bad call, he would stare down referees. He once gazed at a referee for an entire timeout with a look he dubbed the “One-Eyed Jack.”

Though he seemed permanently cranky, especially during games, Chaney was often tender and funny. He loved telling stories. His postgame news conferences were sometimes more entertaining than the games that preceded them. His retirement news conference in March 2006 wasn’t about hoops but about education’s role in helping the poor and disadvantaged. They included amusing anecdotes, pokes at the school administration and playful threats to slap the mayor.

After losing to Michigan State in his last trip to the NCAA regional finals, in 2001, he was the same old John Chaney — with water-filled eyes, wearing a tie torn open at the collar and waxing poetic about another missed chance at the Final Four.

“It is something we all dream about, but very often dreams come up short,” he said. “Very often you don’t realize everything. But you have to realize that the growth you see in youngsters like these is probably the highest accomplishment you can reach.”

Temple’s style of play under Chaney’s guidance was never as pretty as that of Duke or North Carolina. Slow, patient and disciplined, his best teams rarely made errors, rarely turned the ball over and always played tough defense. Chaney was simply fearless in all aspects of his work.

He refused to load his schedules with easy teams, and instead traveled to hostile courts to play teams supposedly brimming with talent. He was outspoken about the NCAA’s recruiting rules, which he said hurt players trying to improve their standing in life.

“John Chaney was more than just a Hall of Fame Basketball coach. He was a Hall of Fame in life,” Dunphy said. “He touched countless lives, including my own.”

Chaney arrived at Temple before the 1982-83 season. sitting in one of Philadelphia’s toughest neighborhoods, Temple was the perfect match for a coach who prided himself on helping players turn their basketball skills into college degrees.

He was 50 and already had success at Cheyney State University, where he had a record of 225-59 in 10 seasons.

Chaney was born on Jan. 21, 1932, in Jacksonville, Florida. He lived in a neighborhood there called Black Bottom, where, he said, flooding rains would bring in rats. When he was in the ninth grade, his family moved to Philadelphia, where his stepfather got a job at a shipyard.

Though known as a Hall of Fame coach, he also was one of the best players ever to come out of Philadelphia. He was the Philadelphia Public League player of the year in 1951 at Benjamin Franklin High School.

A graduate of Bethune-Cookman College, he was an NAIA All-American and an NAIA tournament MVP before going pro in 1955 to play with the Harlem Globetrotters. With black players still being discriminated against in the NBA, he spent 1955 to 1966 in the Eastern Pro League with Sunbury and Williamsport, where he was a two-time league MVP.

“He knew what I needed when I started coaching. He just fostered that and allowed me to grow and allowed me to make mistakes and was there to pick me up when things weren’t working out as I thought they should,” said South Carolina coach and former Owls coach Dawn Staley. “Everybody in their lives, whether they’re in coaching, outside of coaching, or whatever profession, needs a person like coach Chaney in their life.”

_____

Associated Press writer Jonathan Poet contributed to this report.

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Rumor Roundup: Royal Rumble finish, spoiled surprises, John Cena return, more!

Speculating on the rumors surrounding pro wrestling is a favored pastime of many fans, perhaps second only to actually watching the matches. In this daily column, we take a look at the latest rumors being churned out by the pro wrestling rumor mill.

Important reminder: Rumors are just that — rumors. None of this has been confirmed as fact, it’s just circulating around the pro wrestling rumor mill. We track rumor accuracy in a weekly feature called Rumor Look Back you can find here. Remember, take it all with a grain of salt.

Rumors for the Day:

  • For whatever it’s worth, WrestleVotes is saying they have a source saying there is a finish for the men’s Royal Rumble match under consideration that “scares the death out of” said source.
  • Fightful Select notes that WWE has announced potential surprises like Edge returning in the Royal Rumble match ahead of time because there won’t be live fans in the building. If there were fans, they wouldn’t have announced him ahead of time.
  • Per SK Wrestling, WrestleMania 37 will be “a parade of former stars,” with a large number of past stars appearing on the event.
  • Ringside News says John Cena is a lock for WrestleMania 37 this year. They also say it’s unclear who his opponent will be and it’s possible not even he knows who it is yet.
  • Dave Meltzer indicated on Wrestling Observer Radio that there are issues between WWE and ESPN after the Peacock deal was announced, as ESPN was in talks for the WWE Network. They may be done airing WWE content moving forward.

If you have heard of any interesting rumors that you’d like to add, feel free to post them in the comments section below. Just remember they are rumors and not confirmed as fact, so please take them as such. And check our weekly Rumor Look Back here to keep track of how often rumors turn out to be correct.




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