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Tony Hsieh: Newly released incident reports paint timeline of the fire that led to former Zappos CEO’s death

Police said they found “no criminal violations and/or aspects in association with” the November 18 fire.

Hsieh’s death was announced in late November by a spokesperson for DTP Companies, an enterprise for which he served as the visionary. The spokesperson at the time said Hsieh died peacefully and surrounded by family. Dozens of tributes poured in on social media following the news, some calling Hsieh a “brilliant entrepreneur” and others praising his kindness and generosity.

In an incident report, the New London Fire Department said that while the cause of the fire is “undetermined,” human factors such as alcohol and drug impairment may have contributed to the blaze.

According to witness accounts in police incident reports, Hsieh had gone outside to sleep in a shed that was attached to the house he was staying in, after having an argument with the homeowner, who some witnesses described as Hsieh’s girlfriend, others as a friend.

Hsieh’s brother, friends and employees were also at the house as they were scheduled to leave to the island of Maui, Hawaii, early in the morning, the police reports say.

According to one report, Hsieh “was taking everyone to Hawaii for a get away.”

Witnesses told police Hsieh was being checked on every 10 minutes.

Hsieh’s personal assistant told police that before the fire, they saw Hsieh laying down in the shed with a blanket on, adding Hsieh had candles and a propane heater lit to provide heat inside the shed, according to the police report. The assistant noticed the “blanket was almost touching the flame of the candle” and pointed the possible hazard out to Hsieh, and told Hsieh to put the candle out, the police report says. Hsieh put the candle out, according to the report.

Hsieh eventually “asked that he be checked on every 5 minutes instead,” which the group complied with, according to one incident report.

The same report says that during that first five-minute check, witnesses “discovered smoke coming from inside the shed and they could not get inside because it was locked from the inside.”

Witnesses told police they broke a window and attempted to extinguish the fire, according to the police reports.

Hsieh’s personal assistant told police Hsieh’s dog had recently died and Hsieh was “distraught.” The assistant added they had “never heard the victim make (any) suicidal or homicidal statements.”

Emergency services personnel arrived at the home around 3:30 a.m., according to police, where firefighters forced the shed’s door open and removed Hsieh. He was then transported to the hospital.

The police report says the fire department was notified of Hsieh’s death on November 27 and that, according to a medical examiner’s investigator, Hsieh had brain edema from the hot gases and soot from the fire and was placed on a ventilator. The family requested that he be extubated, the police report says.

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Billie Eilish recalls ‘horrible body relationship’ that led to her signature baggy clothes style

Hitmaker Billie Eilish is opening up about her signature baggy clothes style, which has been both celebrated and critiqued by fans in her ascent to superstardom.

The 19-year-old “Therefore I Am” singer has long battled body shamers and has even stopped to defend herself on social media more than once. Last year, Eilish went viral after photographers snapped paparazzi shots of her wearing a tank top outdoors which sent her fans into a frenzy because it was a form-fitting article of clothing her fans know she’d never be caught in onstage or in a music video.

In a new cover story for Vanity Fair which she conducted ahead of the release of the Apple TV Plus documentary about her life, “The World’s a Little Blurry,” Eilish said she approached the now-viral moment rather calmy.

“I think that the people around me were more worried about it than I was, because the reason I used to cut myself was because of my body. To be quite honest with you, I only started wearing baggy clothes because of my body,” Eilish said.

BILLIE EILISH SHUTS DOWN BODY-SHAMERS WHO PREVIOUSLY CALLED HER ‘FAT’: ‘THIS IS HOW I LOOK’

Billie Eilish poses at the 62nd Annual GRAMMY Awards at Staples Center on January 26, 2020 in Los Angeles, California. In a new cover story for Vanity Fair, the 19-year-old reflects on her past struggles with her body.
(Steve Granitz/WireImage)

Eilish said the trending photos actually resulted in her being proud of herself for how far she’s come today in terms of her dealing with body insecurities.

“I was really, really glad though, mainly, that I’m in this place in my life, because if that had happened three years ago, when I was in the midst of my horrible body relationship—or dancing a ton, five years ago, I wasn’t really eating,” she said.

Eilish revealed that she used to take diet pills as a pre-teen. Prior to her chart-topping career in music, she was a dancer.

“I was, like, starving myself. I remember taking a pill that told me that it would make me lose weight and it only made me pee the bed—when I was 12. It’s just crazy. I can’t even believe, like I—wow. Yeah. I thought that I would be the only one dealing with my hatred for my body, but I guess the internet also hates my body. So that’s great,” she said.

BILLIE EILISH SAYS SHE HAS A TATTOO THAT FANS ‘WON’T EVER SEE’

Eilish went on to declare, “The internet hates women.”

Of course, when those viral photos of her in a tank top became a topic online, the Grammy winner defended herself. She uploaded a screenshot from a video she had filmed months prior that discussed why she prefers to hide the shape of her body.

“Do you really wanna go back in time?” she captioned the pic, referencing the video titled “NOT MY RESPONSIBILITY.” In the video, the hitmaker states that other people’s opinions of her are not in her control. 

Fans rallied around Eilish and defended the musician. 

The platinum-selling artist has previously addressed body confidence issues and explained why she wears oversized clothes on red carpets and during performances. 

BILLIE EILISH DEBUTS NEW SINGLE ‘THEREFORE I AM’ AND MUSIC VIDEO

She told Forbes, “It kind of gives nobody the opportunity to judge what your body looks like. I want layers and layers and layers and I want to be mysterious.”

Billie Eilish has defended her decision to wear baggy clothes in public and during onstage appearances.
(AP)

Eilish echoed her statements in British GQ for its July/August 2020 cover story, saying that she’s learning to love her body as she gets older and her decision to not show it off is her realization of her power.

While the world weighing in on her looks continues to be something she discusses — she recently admitted she has a tattoo fans “won’t ever see” — the 19-year-old said being in front of the camera is something she’s always enjoyed.

“I just have always loved cameras,” she continued to Vanity Fair, adding she’s particularly fond of “watching videos of myself, since I was a little kid.”

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.The Grammy winner revealed that she used to take diet pills at age 12
(AP Photo/John Loche)

“I remember being 10 and being like, ‘Mom, can I watch home movies?’” she recalled.

She’s also appreciative of her ability to make her own decisions, she acknowledged. Eilish recalled growing up with peers who “would all be drinking and smoking and doing drugs and whatever.”

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“I think because of the way that my personality is—I’m a very strong-willed person, and I think at the time I was very alpha—I’m coming to realize that I may have felt a feeling of superiority,” she said.

“The World’s a Little Blurry” is set to be released on Apple TV Plus on Feb. 26.

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‘The Lady and the Dale’ Reveals Tucker Carlson’s Dad Once Led Trans Bullying of Grifter Elizabeth Carmichael

If you’re going to be a criminal, it’s wise to maintain a low profile. Alas, playing it safe isn’t in most lawbreakers’ DNA, and that was certainly the case with Geraldine Elizabeth “Liz” Carmichael, who in 1974 took the world by storm by taking on Detroit’s “Big Three” auto manufacturers with the Twentieth Century Motor Car Corporation and its flagship product: the Dale, a three-wheeled car that promised to deliver 70 miles per gallon, thus making it the ideal vehicle for an oil crisis-wracked America. By the time Liz launched this dodgy creation, she had already begun transitioning into a woman, which added even more fuel to the media-frenzy fire that would soon engulf her.

Directed by Nick Cammilleri and Zackary Drucker, and executive produced by Jay and Mark Duplass (Wild Wild Country), HBO’s four-part docuseries The Lady and the Dale (debuting Jan. 31) begins with the rollicking early years of Liz’s life, when prior to transitioning she married and abandoned two wives—and the multiple kids she had with them—before shacking up with third spouse Vivian. They had five children together, and as Vivian’s brother Charles remembers, Liz (then known as Jerry) was always a gregarious sort of grifter, adept at creating fake identities and swindling suckers (especially businesses) out of their hard-earned cash. Given Liz’s fondness for con-artist schemes, it wasn’t long before the Michael clan was fleeing from federal agents thanks to an elaborate counterfeiting ruse. Present-day recollections from daughter Candi paint a picture of an itinerant life on the run, such that she and her siblings’ birth certificates boast phony names—a situation that still causes them headaches.

The Lady and the Dale spends almost its entire first installment on Liz’s wild backstory, which is enlivened by pop-up book-esque animated reenactment sequences created with old photos of the players in question. It’s a novel stylistic twist that further conveys the craziness of the Michaels’ early years, in which family gatherings were organized through coded newspaper messages, and everyone had to be ready, at a moment’s notice, to take flight in the middle of the night to a new town and home. In short, Liz was an inveterate charlatan. She was also a trans woman, and while evading authorities, she slowly began the process of transitioning—a development that was readily accepted by her children and, after some minor initial hesitation, her wife Vivian.

Following a surgical procedure in Tijuana, Liz began living publicly as a woman, and in 1973, while working at a marketing company, she discovered an invention that was as brash and unconventional as she was: the Dale, a three-wheeled car (created by Dale Clifft) that she immediately decided would be her revolutionary ticket to world domination. After overhauling Clifft’s original designs to make the Dale more attractive (replete with a canary yellow paint job), Liz got a prototype into the Los Angeles Auto Show. Then, she went on a press blitz to announce her intentions to take on America’s auto bigwigs—including by getting the Dale featured on The Price is Right. Before long, Liz was a front-page sensation, with the uniqueness of her product matched only by the boldness of her claims.

Considering Liz’s criminal past—and her ongoing status as a federal fugitive—it will come as no surprise to learn that she soon began enlisting the assistance of mob figures for the Twentieth Century Motor Car Corporation, whose name came from Atlas Shrugged, written by libertarian Liz’s favorite author, Ayn Rand. She also began taking customer deposits for the in-production car, which she was supposed to hold in an escrow account, but which she instead used to finance her upstart venture. This was a clear case of fraud, especially since the makeshift Dale—being constructed by a few random engineers in hodgepodge fashion with borrowed parts—was doomed to fail. A series of investigative stories by KABC reporter Dick Carlson soon exposed the sham, leading to criminal prosecution and, after Liz was convicted, yet another flight from justice and her shady, quasi-illegal business operation.

The Lady and the Dale thrives when it remains focused on Liz’s audacious scam, bolstered by first-hand accounts from relatives and colleagues who describe her as both a wily crook and loving wife and mother. For the majority of its first three episodes, it proves an entertainingly gonzo portrait of rebellious self-definition, as Liz strives to buck legal and social norms to make something of herself. Unfortunately, though, by the time its final installment rolls around, Cammilleri and Drucker’s series becomes infatuated with eliciting sympathy for its subject as a victim of intolerant anti-trans discrimination, largely because the media’s attitude toward Liz—led by Carlson, whose son Tucker carries on his ugly legacy on Fox News—was to ridicule and demean her as a man posing as a woman in order to elude law enforcement. (Dick Carlson eventually won a Peabody for his transphobic coverage of Carmichael and would later make headlines for outing the transgender tennis player Renee Richards.)

…the media’s attitude toward Liz—led by Carlson, whose son Tucker carries on his ugly legacy on Fox News—was to ridicule and demean her as a man posing as a woman in order to elude law enforcement.

That Liz was treated unfairly (and sometimes horribly) by journalists is undeniable from the archival footage on display. Yet via talking-head commentary and a score that makes its celebratory attitude clear, The Lady and the Dale attempts to depict Liz as an unjustly persecuted trans outlaw hero, which simply doesn’t jibe with her considerable rap sheet. To do this, it downplays and/or rationalizes her criminality, which only further mires it in messy and dubious logic. Most confounding of all, the series argues that Liz’s trans identity was not a deception and thus not related to her criminality (which makes sense), only to then turn around and contend that, had she grown up in a different, more tolerant era, she might have led a very different, law-abiding life—a contradictory stance which winds up suggesting that there is a link between her trans-ness and chronic charlatanism.

Consequently, The Lady and the Dale eventually loses the thread, culminating with a history lesson about maligned trans men and women that, by its very inclusion, casts Liz as a likeminded oppressed trailblazer rather than as the outlandish grifter she was until her dying day. It’s ultimately so consumed with imbuing its material with hagiographic import—with making Liz’s saga meaningful—that it forgets what made it compelling in the first place.

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