Tag Archives: responded

Sofía Vergara Responded To Joe Manganiello’s Divorce Filing, And Here’s Everything We Know About Their Prenup – BuzzFeed News

  1. Sofía Vergara Responded To Joe Manganiello’s Divorce Filing, And Here’s Everything We Know About Their Prenup BuzzFeed News
  2. Sofia Vergara Follows Up Joe Manganiello’s Divorce Filing by Asking Court to Enforce Their Prenup Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Sofia Vergara asks court to uphold prenup with Joe Manganiello in new divorce filing Fox News
  4. Sofia Vergara wears leopard print dress for girl’s night out HOLA! USA
  5. Sofía Vergara Asks Court to Enforce Joe Manganiello Prenup, Plus Preserve Her Earnings and Assets During Marriage Yahoo Entertainment
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The Cast Of “No Hard Feelings” Responded To Criticism Over The Movie’s “Creepy” Premise And Said It’s A “Cautionary Tale” About Parenting – BuzzFeed News

  1. The Cast Of “No Hard Feelings” Responded To Criticism Over The Movie’s “Creepy” Premise And Said It’s A “Cautionary Tale” About Parenting BuzzFeed News
  2. No Hard Feelings filmmakers defend premise even though it’s just a movie, calm down Yahoo Entertainment
  3. No Hard Feelings filmmakers defend premise even though it’s just a movie, calm down The A.V. Club
  4. No Hard Feelings stars respond to backlash against sex comedy Digital Spy
  5. No Hard Feelings Cast, Creators on Parents Hiring Jennifer Lawrence, Age Difference Backlash TooFab
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Rick Ross’ neighbor fears his escaped buffalo will harm her children. Ross responded by calling the massive creatures ‘gentle’ and suggested giving them snacks: ‘when you see my buffalo, give it a carrot.’ – Yahoo! Voices

  1. Rick Ross’ neighbor fears his escaped buffalo will harm her children. Ross responded by calling the massive creatures ‘gentle’ and suggested giving them snacks: ‘when you see my buffalo, give it a carrot.’ Yahoo! Voices
  2. Rick Ross’s neighbours ‘annoyed by his pet buffalo’ The Independent
  3. Rick Ross’ Pet Buffaloes Are Roaming Free and Upsetting His Neighbors Rolling Stone
  4. Rick Ross Says “Give It A Carrot” After Buffaloes Escaped Onto Neighbor’s Land AllHipHop
  5. Rick Ross’ Buffaloes Getting The Boss In Trouble With Neighbors HipHopDX
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Vanessa Hudgens Just Responded to a Video of Her Ignoring Austin Butler at the Oscars – STYLECASTER

  1. Vanessa Hudgens Just Responded to a Video of Her Ignoring Austin Butler at the Oscars STYLECASTER
  2. Austin Butler Posed With Girlfriend Kaia Gerber and Had a Viral Run-In With Ex Vanessa Hudgens at Oscar Party Yahoo Life
  3. Vanessa Hudgens Walks Past Ex Austin Butler in Awkward Video After 2023 Oscars: Watch Us Weekly
  4. Austin Butler And Vanessa Hudgens’ Awkward Run-In At An Oscars After Party Was Caught On Camera And People Don’t Know How To Feel About It BuzzFeed News
  5. Vanessa Hudgens Rocks Wet Look in Oscars Afterparty Photos Parade Magazine
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“Nobody Cares About Rolling Stone”: The Weeknd’s “Idol” Character Responded To The Magazine’s Exposé On The HBO Series – BuzzFeed News

  1. “Nobody Cares About Rolling Stone”: The Weeknd’s “Idol” Character Responded To The Magazine’s Exposé On The HBO Series BuzzFeed News
  2. The Weeknd Fires Back at Rolling Stone Report Claiming ‘The Idol’ Is in Turmoil: ‘Did We Upset You?’ Yahoo Entertainment
  3. The Weeknd slams article about alleged toxicity on his upcoming show ‘The Idol Geo News
  4. The Weeknd, Already on the Outs with the Grammys, Goes After Rolling Stone So They Rip Apart His New Show (Got That?) Showbiz411
  5. HBO, Lily-Rose Depp Deny On-Set Turmoil on ‘The Idol’ Hollywood Reporter
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How Chaim Bloom Responded After Red Sox DFA’d Eric Hosmer

After the Boston Red Sox severed ties with Eric Hosmer, chief baseball officer Chaim Bloom explained the thought process behind the decision on Friday.

As the Red Sox made their latest offseason move and acquired Wyatt Mills from the Kansas City Royals, the club needed roster space. That’s where Hosmer came in. Boston designated the veteran for assignment after playing just 14 games for the Red Sox last season.

Bloom, who is in the process of reshaping the roster after missing the playoffs in 2022, spoke about the move afterward and noted that the development of prospect Triston Casas played a factor in the decision to move on from Hosmer ahead of the 2023 season.

“Our roster isn’t complete yet, but as we build our club, we feel it’s important to give Triston a clear lane, and that carrying two left-handed hitting first basemen would leave us short in other areas,” Bloom said, as transcribed by Chris Cotillo of MassLive. “Given that, it’s important to do right by Eric and give him time to find his next opportunity. We knew when we first got him that this day would come at some point, and wanted to make sure we treated him right.”

Considering Casas is only 22 and Hosmer is in the midst of earning $39 million from the San Diego Padres for the next three years, the move didn’t come as much of a surprise.

While Casas hasn’t shown a large enough sample size to judge, he did show some pop in his bat. Casas crushed five home runs in 76 at-bats through 27 games played as he debuted with the Red Sox last season.

Meanwhile, Hosmer struggled to stay healthy and battled a back injury. The former World Series champ batted .244/.320/.311 and totaled 11 hits (no homers) with three doubles and four RBIs in Boston.



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Emily Ratajkowski Just Subtly Responded to Rumors Her Husband Was a ‘Serial Cheater’ Before Their Divorce

More to the story? Emily Ratajkowski’s response to Sebastian Bear-McClard cheating was subtle but loud. News broke on July 15, 2022, that Ratajkowski and Bear-McClard had split after four years of marriage.

A source told Page Six at the time that the former couple—who share 1-year-old son Sylvester Apollo Bear—had broken up after Bear-McClard cheated on Ratajkowski during their marriage. “Yeah, he cheated,” the insider said. “He’s a serial cheater. It’s gross. He’s a dog.” A week after the news of her divorce, Ratajkowski was photographed in New York City in a baseball cap with the French quote: “Ce n’est importe quoi,” which loosely translates to “It doesn’t bother me” in English.

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Though Ratajkowski hasn’t commented on the alleged infidelity, she seemingly confirmed the rumors by liking several negative tweets about her ex-husband in July 2022. “can’t believe that little bitch cheated on emrata,” read a liked tweet by Twitter user @tretslut. “Girls, how are we celebrating Emrata’s divorce,” read another liked tweet by Twitter user @coolpilled. Ratajkowski also liked a tweet by Twitter user @afterrpartay that read, “emrata finally free from that man just proves that god is actually very real.”

Ratajowski and Bear-McClard, an actor and movie producer, married in February 2018 less than a year after her split from music producer, Jeff Magid. “Emily has known Sebastian for years,” a source told Us Weekly at the time. “They were all in a friend group. He wasn’t a stranger.” Ratajkowski also defended her fast marriage to Bear-McClard in an interview on Busy Tonight in 2018. “We knew each other for a long time before and he likes to joke, ‘Yeah everyone thinks we got married quickly, but you vetted me for two years,’” she said at the time.

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“My Body” by Emily Ratajkowski

Buy: ‘My Body’ by Emily Ratajkowski $13

The two welcomed their first child together, a son named Sylvester Apollo Bear, in March 2021. Ratajkowski opened up about the pregnancy in an essay for Vogue in 2020. “It’s something a woman does by herself, inside her body, no matter what her circumstances may be,” she wrote. “Despite having a loving partner and many female friends ready to share the gritty details of their pregnancies, I am ultimately alone with my body in this experience. There is no one to feel it with me — the sharp muscular aches in my lower abdomen that come out of nowhere while I’m watching a movie or the painful heaviness of my breasts that now greets me first thing every morning. My husband has no physical symptoms in ‘our’ pregnancy, another reminder of how different a woman and man’s experience of life can be.”

Ratajkowski also got candid about her marriage to Bear-McClard in an essay from her 2021 book, My Body. “I am newly married to my husband when he remarks casually, ‘There are so many beautiful women in the world.’ I freeze when he says this,” she wrote. “I know it is a perfectly acceptable and truthful thing to remark on, and yet I feel a familiar twist in my gut. He can feel the switch; he can sense the instant tension in my body. ‘I don’t know,’ I reply. I press my face into his chest, ashamed of my reaction. ‘I don’t know why it hurts to hear you say that.’ I can tell he wants to console me, but he is confused. I want him to console me, too, but I am unsure why I need it. Why do I suddenly feel as if he doesn’t love me enough?”

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Uvalde City Council to investigate every city officer who responded to school massacre

“This investigation is looking at every single officer and what his actions — what he did, what our policy says — and basically, we’re gonna get a report on everybody,” council member Ernest “Chip” King III said, adding, “we will act on it, and we promise that to you.”

Uvalde police officers who responded to the scene will be interviewed by the council’s appointed lead investigator, Jesse Prado, a former Austin police detective, King said.

“He’s gonna be conducting the investigation and we’re gonna let the investigation go, see what he determines, but everybody that’s Uvalde PD that was there will be held accountable for their actions,” he said.

“We owe it to, to the families. We want to get it right,” another council member, Everardo “Lalo” Zamora, said, alluding to the heartbreak suffered by the Texas community since the assault that left 19 students and two teachers dead.
The law enforcement response to the massacre, the second deadliest at a US K-12 school, has been widely criticized due to the 80-minute delay between when the first shots were fired and the gunman was finally killed.

Uvalde police officers were some of the first law enforcement personnel to arrive at the school where a gunman fired at people outside, entered the school through a side door and went into a classroom where he fired more than 100 bullets.

In all, almost 400 officers from two dozen agencies responded to the shooting on May 24.

The Uvalde Police Department has 39 sworn officers, officials said Tuesday. Twenty-five of them went to the shooting scene, according to a report from a Texas House investigative committee.
The city has already placed a lieutenant, who was the police department’s acting chief that day, on administrative leave while it determines whether he should have assumed command.

The state’s Department of Public Safety is leading a criminal investigation into the shooting.

Two reviews of the response so far — by the Texas House investigative committee and the Advanced Law Enforcement Rapid Response Training Center at Texas State University — have faulted school district police chief Pedro “Pete” Arredondo, though neither of those reports is considered a complete accounting of the day and its failures. The investigative committee also pointed to the broad failures by the various law enforcement agencies that responded to the scene.
Arredondo has not spoken substantively to the public about his actions that day and he has declined CNN requests for comment. His lawyer, who has not responded to CNN requests for comment, told the Texas Tribune that Arredondo was not the “incident commander.”

Arredondo told the House investigative committee that he did not “consider himself to have assumed incident command,” according to the legislative report — which quoted the chief as saying, “My approach and thought was responding as a police officer. And so I didn’t title myself.”

The chief is on administrative leave and the school district superintendent has recommended he be fired. A school board meeting to vote on his dismissal was canceled following the request of the chief’s attorney, officials have said.

Calls for officers to be taken off patrol

Some people at the city council meeting called for city officers who went to the school to be placed on leave or be assigned desk duties.

“I know parents want answers. Nobody wants to give those answers more than I do on the city council,” Uvalde City Council member Hector R. Luevano said during a public portion of Tuesday’s council meeting.

“I’m a former police officer, so I have some insight into actions that need to be taken,” he added. “I can assure the families in this community that I’m going to do everything within my power as a member of this council to give you the answers that you need to hear,” he said.

“If there’s any officer that’s in violation of any policy or procedure that they needed to act on and did not and might have caused these children to die, these teachers to die, I can assure you, heads are going to roll,” Luevano said.

Council members said their investigator should finish his work within two months, then Prado will make recommendations — possibly including disciplinary actions — to the council.

Council member calls out Texas governor

The council, as the school board did the night before, passed a resolution requesting Gov. Greg Abbott calls a special session of the state Legislature to consider raising the minimum age for buying a semi-automatic, military-style rifle.

The Uvalde gunman purchased two AR-15-style rifles for his 18th birthday. He used one in the massacre.

Luevano said it is likely the governor will ignore the requests and cited Abbott’s connection with the National Rifle Association, noting that it had funded his campaign.

“So is this special session going to happen? I think not,” he said. “And why do we need to ask for a special session? Why doesn’t he take the initiative?”

“I don’t even think he cares about Uvalde,” Luevano added.

CNN has requested comment from Abbott’s office.

CNN’s Rosa Flores and Rosalina Nieves reported from Uvalde and Steve Almasy wrote in Atlanta. Elizabeth Joseph contributed to this report.

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An FCC regulator wants TikTok removed from app stores. Here’s how a company executive responded

But a TikTok executive, in a rare interview on CNN’s “Reliable Sources” on Sunday, claimed there are no security concerns linked to the hugely successful app.

The short-form video app is the most downloaded in the world, beating Instagram with 3.5 billion downloads. Users spend an average of at least 46 minutes a day on the app, sending it storming past its competition.

On the surface, TikTok is certainly lighthearted, allowing users to share content including dance videos and cooking tutorials. But critics think something more sinister may be built into its model, claiming its power comes from its data collection and algorithms.

TikTok is owned by the Beijing-based ByteDance, which means the company is essentially under the control of the Chinese government, said CNN’s chief media correspondent Brian Stelter.

Bytedance has promised to house American data on servers in the United States to quell concerns. But an explosive Buzzfeed News report published two weeks ago revealed that, according to leaked audio from internal meetings, engineers in China were able to repeatedly access US user data.

FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr told Stelter lawmakers had asked TikTok directly if any data is being accessed by Beijing. Instead of being upfront, he said, the company has repeatedly said all US user data is stored in the US.

“And that’s not just a national security problem, but to me it looks like a violation of the terms of the app store,” Carr said. He has written a letter to Google and Apple asking them to boot TikTok out of their app stores, giving them until July 8 to respond.

The FCC doesn’t have jurisdiction over social media, Stelter pointed out. But Carr said the FCC has developed an understanding of how the Chinese government can take data and infiltrate communications.

The claims that TikTok is collecting browser history is “simply false,” said Michael Beckerman, head of public policy, Americas, at TikTok. He also said that while the app scans your face for filters, it does not use it to identify individuals.

Stelter asked if any Chinese Communist Party members has seen nonpublic TikTok user data. “The answer is we have never shared information with the Chinese government, nor would we,” Beckerman said, adding they have US-based security teams.

“Are TikTok’s engineers, the people that are developing this tool, creating this tool, are they beholden to China, and is that a threat to the US?” Stelter asked again.

“No, absolutely not. TikTok is not a security threat,” Beckerman said, adding TikTok is willing to be transparent and work with stakeholders.

The Buzzfeed report also said there were concerns that China could use TikTok to “influence Americans commercial, cultural or political behavior.”

“Yeah, I just I just don’t see that,” Beckerman said, saying the videos he sees are all from US creators.

Beckerman said the app does not allow political ads and it’s primarily a platform for entertainment. Stelter pointed out investigations from The Wall Street Journal that revealed “rabbit holes” users go down on topics like eating disorders. “(Harmful content) is a problem for the internet as a whole,” Beckerman said.

“It’s something that we’ve worked really hard on to eliminate our platform anything that’s dangerous or harmful, violates our community guidelines.”

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Texas school shooting: As Uvalde funerals continue, more is learned about how those inside Robb Elementary responded to the terror

Meanwhile, families and friends have begun burying their loved ones, and the community continues to cope. In the sun-drenched town square, a park fountain is the centerpiece of a growing memorial honoring those lost.

Hundreds of flower bouquets ring the fountain, stacked alongside toys, stuffed animals, candles and letters in memory of the 21 killed. Framed posters show smiling faces, leaning against walls covered with hearts drawn and names written in chalk.
On a pathway leading to the square, visitors slowly walk past a row of crosses, stopping to pray or reflect on the devastating tragedy. Each cross — several feet tall and draped with flowers, balloons and messages of remembrance — carries the name of someone killed.
Ryan Ramirez, the father of Alithia Ramirez, said he waited for nearly 12 hours before learning she was killed. He described his 10-year-old daughter as “very lovable and kind.”

“She was just there for anybody that needed anything. And that was one thing that we all loved about her,” he told CNN’s Anderson Cooper on Tuesday.

Alithia “loved drawing,” her father said, and when he met with President Joe Biden during his Uvalde visit on Sunday, Biden told him that he would have one of Alithia’s drawings displayed at the White House.

She “always had a crayon in hand, just going to town,” Ramirez said.

As the community mourns, more details are emerging about how those inside responded to the terror.
Robb Elementary educator Nicole Ogburn said she had just turned on a movie for her students when she saw someone carrying a gun outside her classroom window.
“I just, like, looked out the window and I see this guy with a gun walking up. And I just told my class, get on the ground, get on the ground, get to the corner,” Ogburn told CNN affiliates KABB/WOAI.

“I just kept hearing shots fired, and I just kept praying, ‘God, please don’t let him in my room, please don’t let him come in this room,’ and for some reason, he didn’t.”

Several 911 phone calls were made from the classrooms where the gunman unleashed his deadly onslaught, with children pleading for police to intervene, a timeline provided by the state DPS revealed.

Three people injured by the gunman remained hospitalized Tuesday at University Hospital San Antonio. The gunman’s 66-year-old grandmother, who was shot in the face before the attack on the school, is in good condition; a 9-year-old girl is in good condition; and a 10-year-old girl is in serious condition, the hospital said.

School district police chief says he’s in contact with authorities

Meanwhile, the Uvalde school district police chief who was the incident commander during the shooting told CNN exclusively Wednesday he is in touch daily with the Texas Department of Public Safety but declined to answer further questions about the massacre.
Pedro “Pete” Arredondo has faced criticism for the decision to have officers posted in the hallway outside the classrooms where the shooting took place, waiting for more than an hour to intervene before a Border Patrol tactical team entered the room and killed the gunman.

Asked about reports he was not cooperating with DPS, Arredondo told CNN, “I am in contact with DPS every day.” Arredondo was wearing a badge and a gun when he spoke to CNN outside of his home in Uvalde.

In a separate interview with CNN outside his office, Arredondo said Wednesday he’s not going to release any information while funerals are ongoing.

“We’re going to be respectful to the family,” he said. “We’re going to do that eventually. Whenever this is done and the families quit grieving, then we’ll do that obviously.”

It’s the first time Arredondo has commented publicly since two brief news statements on the day of the attack, in which he said the gunman was dead but provided little information on the shooting, citing the ongoing investigation, and took no questions.

On Tuesday, DPS said Arredondo had not responded to a request for a follow-up interview with the Texas Rangers, who are investigating the shooting.

The school’s police department and the Uvalde Police Department are “still cooperating,” said Considine, the department’s spokesperson.

McCraw, the DPS director, said last week the person who made the decision not to breach the Uvalde elementary school classroom was the school district police chief, calling it the “wrong decision” to not engage the gunman sooner.
Texas’ largest police union, meanwhile, has called for its members “to cooperate fully with all official governmental investigations into actions relating to the law enforcement response to the Uvalde mass shooting.”

The Combined Law Enforcement Associations of Texas will refrain from commenting on the specifics of the investigation, out of respect for the families and the investigative process, it said in a news release. But it noted “there has been a great deal of false and misleading information in the aftermath of this tragedy.”

“Some of the information came from the very highest levels of government and law enforcement. Sources that Texans once saw as iron-clad and completely reliable have now been proven false, “the union’s release reads. “This false information has exacerbated ill-informed speculation which has, in turn, created a hotbed of unreliability when it comes to finding the truth.”

The Justice Department announced Sunday it will conduct a review of the law enforcement response to the shooting at the mayor’s request.
Arredondo’s spoke with CNN a day after he was sworn in as a city council member after being elected to the post last month.

On Tuesday, new members of the city council went to City Hall “at their convenience” to be sworn in, Uvalde Mayor Don McLaughlin said. No formal ceremony was held “out of respect for the families who buried their children today, and who are planning to bury their children in the next few days,” McLaughlin said.

The mayor had said Monday a special city council meeting at which new members were to be sworn in would “not take place as scheduled,” adding “our focus on Tuesday is on our families who lost loved ones.”

Arredondo’s swearing-in Tuesday night was “a private thing” out of respect for the families, he told CNN outside his house Wednesday, adding the families are the focus right now.

More resources are inbound, state says

With attention being directed at the law enforcement response, Texas officials are also working to address needs on the ground, they said. To expedite the allocation of state and local resources, Gov. Greg Abbott declared a state of disaster for Uvalde on Tuesday, according to a news release from the governor’s office.

“The disaster declaration will accelerate all available state and local resources to assist the Uvalde community, as well as suspend regulations that would prevent, hinder, or delay necessary action in coping with the aftermath of the tragic shooting,” the release said.

“The community of Uvalde has been left devastated by last week’s senseless act of violence at Robb Elementary School and should not have to encounter any difficulty in receiving the support needed to heal,” Abbott said.

Other assistance has come from acts of service by volunteers from out-of-town.

Patrick Johnson, 58, was so overcome with grief after hearing about the shooting that he drove seven hours from Harleton, Texas, to Uvalde, filling his trunk with children’s toys from a Walmart to pass out in the town square, he told CNN.

For three days, children were invited to choose any toy they liked from a table crowded with stuffed animals, miniature cars and soccer balls.

“When you lose something, especially as a child, you need something else to hold onto,” Johnson said. “It brings joy to the kids, so it brings joy to me.”

CNN’s Andy Rose, Aaron Cooper, Shimon Prokupecz, Omar Jimenez, Eric Levenson, Christina Maxouris, Amanda Watts, Alaa Elassar, Raja Razek, Joe Sutton, Jeremy Grisham and Virginia Langmaid contributed to this report.

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