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Wednesday, October 21, 2020

The Horny Internet Wants You to Vote

From X-rated Twitter feeds to ErectionSeason.com, sex workers are using their talents to get fans to the polls.

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Americans Took Prevagen for Years—as the FDA Questioned Its Safety

From the memory supplement’s launch in 2007 through 2016, agency officials repeatedly raised concerns as the number of consumer complaints grew.

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Pro-Ject Debut Carbon Evo Review: An Audio Nerd's Dream

For $500, the Pro-Ject Debut Carbon Evo is a fantastic turntable that will last vinyl-loving audiophiles a lifetime.

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End Sars protests: Growing list of celebrities pledge support for demonstrators

It comes amid reports that several people have been shot dead or wounded at a protest in Lagos.

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Taiwan charges Chinese captain over killing of 'Somali pirates'

Officials say the Chinese national ordered the killings while captaining a Taiwanese vessel in 2012.

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Countdown to AI Experience EMEA Virtual Conference

The AI Experience EMEA Virtual Conference is just three weeks away, and Team DataRobot couldn’t be more excited about what our speakers have in store for our virtual audience. Conference attendees will walk away with pragmatic ideas for how to accelerate time to impact and value for AI, and practical strategies to implement those ideas within their organizations — all at no cost to attend. This day-long event is an experience that no AI visionary will want to miss. 

We’re pleased to announce two keynote speakers that conference attendees can look forward to hearing from on November 10th. 

Brian Prestidge: Director of Insights & Decision Technology at Manchester City Football Club

BP 2020 21 1

With 15 years working in professional football in various roles supporting elite performance practitioners, Brian has seen the technological developments that have created an exponential growth in data available to football clubs. Whether through the use of AI & simulation for player development or the application of robust data science methods to support coaches in their game preparation, Brian & his team play a key role at City Football Group in enabling them to make better and faster decisions in the very dynamic and heavily scrutinised environment of professional football.

Dr. Hannah Fry: Associate Professor in the Mathematics of Cities, Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis at University College London 

Hannah Fry Main Website image speaking

Dr. Hannah Fry is an Associate Professor in the Mathematics of Cities at the Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis at UCL where she studies patterns in human behavior. Her research applies to a wide range of social problems and questions, from shopping and transport to urban crime, riots and terrorism.

Her critically acclaimed BBC documentaries include Horizon: Diagnosis on Demand? The Computer Will See You Now, Britain’s Greatest Invention, City in the Sky (BBC Two), Magic Numbers: Hannah Fry’s Mysterious World of Maths, The Joy of Winning, The Joy of Data, Contagion! The BBC Four Pandemic and Calculating Ada (BBC Four). She also co-presents The Curious Cases of Rutherford and Fry (BBC Radio 4) and The Maths of Life with Lauren Laverne (BBC Radio 6).

Hannah is the author of Hello World, published in 2018.


We hope you’ll join us on November 10th to hear these keynotes, and our full lineup of powerhouse speakers, share their insights on impactful, trustworthy AI. Leaders from Bayer Pharmaceuticals, Deutsche Post DHL Group, Medical Faculty Manheim, Heidelberg University, and more will help you understand how to leverage AI to address hyper-critical issues impacting your organization.

Virtual Event
AI Experience EMEA Virtual Conference: Accelerating Impact With Trusted AI

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How to Setup and Manage Log Rotation Using Logrotate in Linux

One of the most interesting (and perhaps one of the most important as well) directories in a Linux system is /var/log. According to the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard, the activity of most services running in

The post How to Setup and Manage Log Rotation Using Logrotate in Linux first appeared on Tecmint: Linux Howtos, Tutorials & Guides.



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Tuesday, October 20, 2020

GoAccess (A Real-Time Apache and Nginx) Web Server Log Analyzer

GoAccess is an interactive and real-time web server log analyzer program that quickly analyze and view web server logs. It comes as an open-source and runs as a command line in Unix/Linux operating systems.

The post GoAccess (A Real-Time Apache and Nginx) Web Server Log Analyzer first appeared on Tecmint: Linux Howtos, Tutorials & Guides.



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Boy, 15, executive produced Robert De Niro’s latest film

The comedy was number one at the box office on its opening weekend, bringing in $3.6 million.

One of the producers behind Robert De Niro’s latest film The War with Grandpa is a 15-year-old boy who pitched the project to the veteran actor after reading the classic young-adult novel of the same name. 

Tre Peart was in the third grade when he was assigned to read “The War With Grandpa” by Robert Kimmel Smith, first published in 1984. The story centers on a kid named Peter whose grandfather moves in with his family and takes over his grandson’s room. Peter responds by waging a war of pranks to get his room back, PEOPLE reports.

Read More: Robert De Niro opens about raising biracial children: ‘I take certain things for granted’

Tre Peart, Robert De Niro, and producers of ‘War with Grandpa’ (Twitter)

Peart says he loved the book so much that he asked his parents to see the movie version and learned there wasn’t one.

“I realized my parents made movies,” Tre told The Times of Israel. “They were in the movie business. I asked, ‘Mom, can you make this into a movie?’”

The rest, as they say, is history.

The resulting feature film is executive produced by Marvin, Rosa and Tre Peart.

De Niro stars alongside a supporting cast that includes Uma Thurman, Christopher Walken, Jane Seymour and Cheech Marin. The comedy was number one at the box office on its opening weekend, bringing in $3.6 million.

Read More: Robert De Niro goes in on Trump in profanity-laced speech at Tony Awards

As in the book, in the movie, grandpa comes to live with his grandson’s family after the death of his wife.

“Grandpa was mourning his [wife], mourning his change of life, he did not want to let go of the fact he’s aging,” Rosa Peart said. “It’s the transition of life, and [De Niro] really captured that.”

Marvin Peart also recalled, “There were pranks [in the book] about Monopoly pieces,” he said. “Board games don’t happen anymore. We added a lot of technology to the movie … Grandpa has trouble keeping up with technology he doesn’t understand, like an iPhone or iPad, and drones.”

A sequel to the book is reportedly in the works titled “The War with Grandma.”

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Bringing construction projects to the digital world

People who work behind a computer screen all day take it for granted that everyone’s work will be tracked and accessible when they collaborate with others. But if your job takes place out in the real world, managing projects can require a lot more effort.

In construction, for example, general contractors and real estate developers often need someone to be physically present on a job site to verify work is done correctly and on time. They might also rely on a photographer or smartphone images to document a project’s progress. Those imperfect solutions can lead to accountability issues, unnecessary change orders, and project delays.

Now the startup OpenSpace is bringing some of the benefits of digital work to the real world with a solution that uses 360-degree cameras and computer vision to create comprehensive, time-stamped digital replicas of construction sites.

All customers need to do is walk their job site with a small 360-degree camera on their hard hat. The OpenSpace Vision Engine maps the photos to work plans automatically, creating a Google Streetview-like experience for people to remotely tour work sites at different times as if they were physically present.

The company is also deploying analytics solutions that help customers track progress and search for objects on their job sites. To date, OpenSpace has helped customers map more than 1.5 billion square feet of construction projects, including bridges, hospitals, football stadiums, and large residential buildings.

The solution is helping workers in the construction industry improve accountability, minimize travel, reduce risks, and more.

“The core product we have today is a simple idea: It allows our customers to have a complete visual record of any space, indoor or outdoor, so they can see what’s there from anywhere at any point in time,” says OpenSpace cofounder and CEO Jeevan Kalanithi SM ’07. “They can teleport into the site to inspect the actual reality, but they can also see what was there yesterday or a week ago or five years ago. It brings this ground truth record to the site.”

Shining a light on construction sites

The founders of OpenSpace originally met during their time at MIT. At the Media Lab, Kalanithi and David Merrill SM ’06, PhD ’09 built a gaming system based on small cubes that used LCD touch screens and motion sensors to encourage kids to develop critical thinking skills. They spun the idea into a company, Sifteo, which created multiple generations of its toys.

In 2014, Sifteo was bought by 3D Robotics, then a drone company that would go on to focus on drone inspection software for construction, engineering, and mining firms. Kalanithi stayed with 3D Robotics for over two years, eventually serving as president of the company.

In the summer of 2016, Kalanithi left 3D Robotics with the intention of spending more time with friends and family. He reconnected with two friends from MIT, Philip DeCamp ’05, SM ’08, PhD ’13 and Michael Fleischman PhD ’08, who had researched new machine vision and AI techniques in their PhD research. Fleischman had started a social media analytics company he sold to Twitter.

At the time, DeCamp and Fleischman were considering ways to use machine vision advances with 360-degree cameras. Kalanithi, who had helped guide 3D Robotics toward the construction industry, thought he had the perfect application.

People have long used photographs to document construction projects, and many times contracts for large construction projects require photos of progress to be taken. But the photos never document the entire site, and they aren’t taken frequently enough to capture every phase of work.

Early versions of the OpenSpace solution required someone to set up a tripod in every space of a construction project. A breakthrough came when one early user, a straight-talking project manager, gave the founders some useful feedback.

“I was showing him the output of our product at the time, which looks similar to now, and he says, ‘This is great. How long did it take you?’ When I told him he said, ‘Well that’s cool Jeevan, but there’s no way we’re going to use that,’” Kalanithi recalls. “I thought maybe this idea isn’t so good after all. But then he gave us the idea. He said, ‘What would be great is if I could just wear that little camera and walk around. I walk around the job site all the time.’”

The founders took the advice and repurposed their solution to work with off-the-shelf 360-degree cameras and slightly modified hard hats. The cameras take pictures every half second and use artificial intelligence techniques to identify the camera’s precise location, even indoors. Once a few tours of the job site have been uploaded to OpenSpace’s platform, it can map pictures onto site plans within 15 minutes.

Kalanithi still remembers the excitement the founders felt the first time they saved a customer money, helping to settle a dispute between a general contractor and a drywall specialist. Since then they’ve gotten a lot of those calls, in some cases saving companies millions of dollars. Kalanithi says saving builders costs helps the construction industry meet growing needs related to aging infrastructure and housing shortages.

Helping nondigital workers

OpenSpace’s analytics solutions, which the company calls its ClearSight suite of products, have not been rolled out to every customer yet. But Kalanithi believes they will bring even more value to people managing work sites.

“If you have someone walking around the project all the time, we can start classifying and computing what they’re seeing,” Kalanithi says. “So, we can see how much framing and drywall is being installed, how quickly, how much material was used. That’s the basis for how people get paid in this industry: How much work did you do?”

Kalanithi believes Clearsight is the beginning of a new phase for OpenSpace, where the company can use AI and computer vision to give customers a new perspective on what’s going on at their job site.

“The product experience today, where you look around to see the site, will be something people sometimes do on OpenSpace, but they may be spending more time looking at productivity charts and little OpenSpace verified payment buttons, and maybe sometimes they’ll drill down to look at the actual images,” Kalanithi says.

The Covid-19 pandemic accelerated some companies’ adoption of digital solutions to help cut down on travel and physical contact. But even in states that have resumed construction, Kalanithi says customers are continuing to use OpenSpace, a key indicator of the value it brings.

Indeed, the vast majority of the information captured by OpenSpace was never available before, and it brings with it the potential for major improvements in the construction industry and beyond.

“If the last decade was defined by the cloud and mobile technology being the real enabling technologies, I think this next decade will be innovations that affect people in the real physical world,” Kalanithi says. “Because cameras and computer vision are getting better, so for a lot of people who have been ignored or left behind by technology based on the work they do, we’ll have the opportunity to make some amends and build some stuff that will make those folks lives easier.”



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Translating lost languages using machine learning

Recent research suggests that most languages that have ever existed are no longer spoken. Dozens of these dead languages are also considered to be lost, or “undeciphered” — that is, we don’t know enough about their grammar, vocabulary, or syntax to be able to actually understand their texts.

Lost languages are more than a mere academic curiosity; without them, we miss an entire body of knowledge about the people who spoke them. Unfortunately, most of them have such minimal records that scientists can’t decipher them by using machine-translation algorithms like Google Translate. Some don’t have a well-researched “relative” language to be compared to, and often lack traditional dividers like white space and punctuation. (To illustrate, imaginetryingtodecipheraforeignlanguagewrittenlikethis.)

However, researchers at MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) recently made a major development in this area: a new system that has been shown to be able to automatically decipher a lost language, without needing advanced knowledge of its relation to other languages. They also showed that their system can itself determine relationships between languages, and they used it to corroborate recent scholarship suggesting that the language of Iberian is not actually related to Basque.

The team’s ultimate goal is for the system to be able to decipher lost languages that have eluded linguists for decades, using just a few thousand words.

Spearheaded by MIT Professor Regina Barzilay, the system relies on several principles grounded in insights from historical linguistics, such as the fact that languages generally only evolve in certain predictable ways. For instance, while a given language rarely adds or deletes an entire sound, certain sound substitutions are likely to occur. A word with a “p” in the parent language may change into a “b” in the descendant language, but changing to a “k” is less likely due to the significant pronunciation gap.

By incorporating these and other linguistic constraints, Barzilay and MIT PhD student Jiaming Luo developed a decipherment algorithm that can handle the vast space of possible transformations and the scarcity of a guiding signal in the input. The algorithm learns to embed language sounds into a multidimensional space where differences in pronunciation are reflected in the distance between corresponding vectors. This design enables them to capture pertinent patterns of language change and express them as computational constraints. The resulting model can segment words in an ancient language and map them to counterparts in a related language.  

The project builds on a paper Barzilay and Luo wrote last year that deciphered the dead languages of Ugaritic and Linear B, the latter of which had previously taken decades for humans to decode. However, a key difference with that project was that the team knew that these languages were related to early forms of Hebrew and Greek, respectively.

With the new system, the relationship between languages is inferred by the algorithm. This question is one of the biggest challenges in decipherment. In the case of Linear B, it took several decades to discover the correct known descendant. For Iberian, the scholars still cannot agree on the related language: Some argue for Basque, while others refute this hypothesis and claim that Iberian doesn’t relate to any known language. 

The proposed algorithm can assess the proximity between two languages; in fact, when tested on known languages, it can even accurately identify language families. The team applied their algorithm to Iberian considering Basque, as well as less-likely candidates from Romance, Germanic, Turkic, and Uralic families. While Basque and Latin were closer to Iberian than other languages, they were still too different to be considered related. 

In future work, the team hopes to expand their work beyond the act of connecting texts to related words in a known language — an approach referred to as “cognate-based decipherment.” This paradigm assumes that such a known language exists, but the example of Iberian shows that this is not always the case. The team’s new approach would involve identifying semantic meaning of the words, even if they don’t know how to read them. 

“For instance, we may identify all the references to people or locations in the document which can then be further investigated in light of the known historical evidence,” says Barzilay. “These methods of ‘entity recognition’ are commonly used in various text processing applications today and are highly accurate, but the key research question is whether the task is feasible without any training data in the ancient language.”      .

The project was supported, in part, by the Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity (IARPA).



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Senate will vote Monday on Amy Coney Barrett court confirmation

‘Republicans are working urgently to turn back the clock.’     

The Senate has scheduled October 26 to vote on the confirmation of President Trump’s nominee, Judge Amy Coney Barrett, to the Supreme Court.

“With regard to the Supreme Court justice … we’ll be voting to confirm justice-to-be Barrett next Monday,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said during a weekly press conference, The Hill reports. 

“I think that will be another signature accomplishment in our effort to put on the courts, the federal courts, men and women that believe in the quaint notion that maybe the job of a judge is to actually follow the law,” McConnell added.

Read More: Senate Democrats highlight Black maternal health care stories amid confirmation of Amy Coney Barrett

Barrett, a federal appellate judge and Notre Dame law professor, is a devout Catholic and has hard conservative leanings, theGRIO previously reported.

The mother of seven was once a law clerk for the late Justice Antonin Scalia who was a conservative bedrock on the High Court. Trump previously chose Barrett to serve on the 7th US Circuit Court of Appeals.

“Amy Coney Barrett meets Donald Trump’s two main litmus tests: She has made clear she would invalidate the A.C.A. and take health care away from millions of people and undermine a woman’s reproductive freedom,” said Nan Aron, the president of Alliance for Justice, to The New York Times.

Read More: Amy Coney Barrett says she and Haitian-born daughter ‘wept together’ after Floyd death

Senate Democrats have warned that Barrett will take women back to the 1960s, by limiting their reproductive freedom. 

“Republicans are working urgently to turn back the clock,” said Michigan Democratic Sen. Debbie Stabenow.    

An earlier report on theGRIO noted that Trump’s action in selecting Barrett is a transparent effort to tilt the nations’ highest court further to the right with a nominee who, if confirmed, would form a 6-3 conservative majority, and would potentially impact a generation of rulings on issues ranging from Obamacare to immigration to abortion.  

As Politico reported, Barrett is expected to receive broad support from Senate Republicans — who hold a 53-47 Senate majority — since she was in consideration two years ago for the seat that ultimately went to Brett Kavanaugh.

She is also hailed by Republicans for her conservative stance on issues like abortion. Barrett reportedly stated that “life begins at conception” during a 2013 speech on Roe v. Wade.

Like Trump’s two other appointees, Neil Gorsuch in 2017 and Kavanaugh in 2018, Barrett is young enough to serve on the Supreme Court for decades, and she is the youngest nominee since conservative Clarence Thomas who was 43 in 1991.

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Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Storms Twitch

More than 400,000 people tuned into AOC's stream of a marathon Among Us session with representative Ilhan Omar and Twitch luminaries.

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Elections, are we there yet?

This week’s episode of the ‘Dear Culture Podcast’ Dr. Christina Greer and Dr. Jason Johnson ask the question, “can the president still win this thing?”

In prep for Election Day as well as the aftermath, over the next few weeks theGrio political contributors Dr. Christina Greer and Dr. Jason Johnson will be steering The Dear Culture Podcast ship with their political expertise. 

From Ice Cube, herd immunity, to the polls, unprecedented times call for unprecedented measures. The global health pandemic combined with many folks reaching their wits end with voter disenfranchisement, there has been record amounts of early voter turnout and registration. And it’s got a lot of us and The Dear Culture Podcast wondering, “Dear Culture, can the president still win this thing?”

Read More: Yes, Joe Biden can still lose the presidential election

The answer is neither a full yes or no. Though many folks are mobilizing to usher back a Democratic presidency, something Black people know all too well, is that “these polls cannot be trusted,” says Greer. As the polls say multiple things throughout the week, there are more horses in the proverbial game. Dr. Johnson reminds us that it is possible for Trump to win and “all he has to use is the courts” in his favor. 

“These polls ain’t loyal.” Jokes Dr. Johnson to Dr. Greer


As the nation watches swing states, recently in Pennsylvania, Republicans sued to say that any vote that wasn’t received on Election Day cannot be counted, and that goes for mail too. It took a 4 to 4 tie ruling from TheSupremeCourt to say that states have to at least accept votes received by November 6th. The tie came from Justice John Roberts siding with the liberals. Mind you, there’s another right wing Justice on the way.

Not only can legal challenges potentially still allow Trump to win the election, the rhetoric of white American and Black celebrities very much adds to the noise. Recently many Black celebrities have come out of the woodwork stating that “they love the tax breaks” regardless of the xenophobia, anti-semitism, anti-Muslim sentiment, and so forth. From 50 Cent to Ice Cube, Greer and Johnson do not support the concept of Black capitalism. Which is the same as capitalism, but just exploiting your own people. Regardless if it’s right or left winged, Black capitalism does not help the conditions of our peoples, rather, it divides our communities. Which is the antithesis to Blackness.

Read More: 50 Cent doubles down on Trump endorsement: ‘Don’t want to be 20 Cent’

“If the Republican party is poop, then the Democractic party is asparagus. Both of them smell bad, but only one of them I’d want to eat.” Jokes Dr. Greer. 

As Greer effortlessly stated in her metaphor, voting for the Democratic Party is not the lesser of two evils. Our current elections have shown us that sometimes it’s about voting for who you think will do the work for your communities. The difference falls between which presidential candidate is more accessible to the demands, concerns, and desires of the Black community at large. And such a difference is key to the election. 

Tune in Dear Culture, the smart, reliable Black news podcast. Now streaming on Apple Podcast, Spotify, and Stitcher.

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Kelly Rowland shows off baby bump during babymoon: ‘6 months already’

The singer said she and her husband of six years had been talking about having another child.

Kelly Rowland is expecting her second child, and she shared a video on Instagram Tuesday of her showing off her baby bump.

“6 MONTHS ALREADY!! This time passed SO FAST!!! I’m enjoying every moment! #2021,” she captioned the clip of her glowing in a black bikini and fedora. 

“Here we are at six months. This is another angle at six months. This is another angle at six months,” Rowland shared. “I see you baby,” she said. Check out the post below.

Read More: Kelly Rowland announces she’s pregnant with second child

Rowland, 39, and her husband of six years, Tim Weatherspoon, have a five-year-old son, Titan. In a recent interview with Women’s Health, she announced that she is expecting her second child. 

The pop star said she was nervous about making her joyous announcement amid the pandemic, economic downturn and months of racial reckoning in the wake of police slayings, theGRIO previously reported. However, she said she wanted to “remind people that life is important.”

“I’m knocking at 40’s door in February,” she said. “Taking care of myself means a lot to me .”

“In the interview with Women’s Health, the former Destiny’s Child member said she drinks four liters of water a day, and has smaller and more frequent meals now that she’s pregnant. 

Read More: Kelly Rowland, Lena Waithe and more talk ‘Bad Hair’ film at Urbanworld Film Festival

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She said her fitness schedule has been different during her second pregnancy, telling the magazine that with her new baby, she’s mostly sticking to yoga, walks and stretches aided by a physical therapist. 

Rowland said she and the hubby had been talking about having another child, and then the COVID crisis hit, now she has a quarantine baby on the way.

“We had been talking about it loosely, and then COVID happened, and we were just like….let’s see what happens,” she said. Rowland admits she got pregnant “right away.”

She has not yet revealed her due date or if she knows the sex of her baby.

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Chicago teen arrested for sexual assaulting girl, 7, during virtual class

The victim’s laptop microphone was muted but the camera was on.

An 18-year-old Chicago man was caught sexually abusing a 7-year-old girl during a remote learning session that was livestreamed to her first-grade class.

Catrell Walls has been charged with predatory criminal sexual assault over the incident that occurred Thursday at relative’s home on the city’s south side.

Police say the child was attending a virtual Google Meets session when that assault unfolded, New York Post reports. The girl’s laptop microphone was muted but the camera was on. Her teacher was working on another computer when she heard students say: “What’s going on? What’s happening?,” according to prosecutors. 

Read More: Chicago man dangles off of Trump Tower, ‘demands to speak to president’

When the teacher looked at the computer with Google Meets running, she saw the victim performing a sex act on Walls. The teacher told the other students to “Log off, log off,” before she saw Walls pick up the victim’s laptop and close it, prosecutors said.

The teacher reported the incident to the school’s principal, who notified the child’s family, the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services, and the police. 

The girl initially denied the assault, telling investigators that Walls “just hit her.” She ultimately admitting to being sexually abused by him for over a year.

Read More: Chicago mother denied bond after allegedly killing daughter, 5

“The victim disclosed, ‘He made me put my lips on (him) and this has happened before, and I don’t want my daddy to know, it’s a secret,’’’ Cook County Assistant State’s Attorney Andreana Turano told the court.

Walls was arrested a day after the assault and admitted to the history of abuse. 

“I don’t know why, I’m sorry, I’m sorry,” Walls tearfully told officers. It’s unclear how he and the victim are related.

Walls was already facing a felony gun charge on an unrelated incident. He is being held without bail, the report said.

“This ongoing history of assault, for approximately a year, according to the victim, leads me to believe this is not something that will just stop because I have ordered it to,” said Judge Charles Beach in denying his bail. This history and his actions from this case lead me to believe that he is a threat to an individual and the community as a whole.”

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Dave Chappelle shuts down call for celebrity activism

‘There’s no pension plan for leaders,’ said Chappelle

My Next Guest Needs No Introduction with David Letterman, is returning to Netflix and Dave Chappelle will be one of Letterman’s guests.

The show is on its third season and will return this week. In a three-minute clip provided by Netflix, the two gentlemen discuss activism today, George Floyd and the late John Lewis. The clip opens up and Chappelle is heard discussing past political legends.

Read More: Dave Chappelle says Prince ‘only person’ who cared after show departure

“There is no pension plan for leaders,” said Chappelle. “Martin Luther King died penniless, Malcolm X died penniless, I don’t want to do that.”

The men go on to discuss George Floyd, with Chapelle exclaiming, “The commentary after it was very heavy and intellectual and I was shocked that nobody ever talked about what it feels like to watch a man get murdered that way by a man in a police uniform.”

Letterman begins to draw comparisons between Lewis and Floyd. Lewis sprung to action after a police officer struck him in the head and nearly killed him in 1965. He passed away almost two months after Floyd was killed by police officer, Derek Chauvin who was seen kneeling on Floyd’s neck.

“What a tragic footnote to a tragic culture,” says Chappelle, “it’s a lot to unpack.” But Chapelle believes that what he and Letterman are doing matters.

“Nights like this are important, just talking about it, we are countrymen, all of us we live in America, we all got our problems.”

Read More: Hamilton’s Daveed Diggs asks what 4th of July means to Black people

The clip ends with Chappelle saying he is hopeful.

“I’m very hopeful that there will be real change, and that traditionally from my experience, change is never a comfortable proposition, it’s uncomfortable before its comfortable again.”

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Bill Cosby seen looking disheveled in new mugshot

The prison says it is normal for them to update an inmate’s photo

Bill Cosby’s newest mugshot was released and despite all of the accusations thrown his way, he managed to crack a smile.

According to TMZ, the prison says it is normal for them to update an inmate’s photo if their appearance has changed. Cosby was sentenced in September 2018 and is set to serve three to 10 years in prison.

Read More: Bill Cosby granted appeal in Pennsylvania sex assault case

The disgraced 83-year-old entertainer is being held at the State Correctional Institution – Phoenix in Pennsylvania for aggravated indecent assault against former basketball player Andrea Constand in his home in 2004.

via social media

Constand says she saw Cosby as a mentor. She is the former Director of Operations of the women’s basketball team at Temple University, where Cosby received an Honorary Doctorate. But the night she entered his home in 2004 changed both of their lives.

Constand said she had no qualms about trusting the actor because of his status, but when she entered the room she says he offered her three blue bills to help her relax. After she took them she says she fell in and out of consciousness as he molested her.

“My thoughts were that he was a well-respected Temple advocate and trustee,” she said in court per the Miami Herald. “He was also a community leader … and that made him a very well-respected person at Temple, and I was grateful for (him) helping me in any way that he did.”

Read More: Camille Cosby slams #MeToo in new interview: ‘They need to clean up their acts’

Back in November of 2019, Cosby did his first prison interview and at the time he had no remorse.

“I have eight years and nine months left,” said Cosby in an exclusive interview with Black Press USA . “When I come up for parole, they’re not going to hear me say that I have remorse. I was there. I don’t care what group of people come along and talk about this when they weren’t there. They don’t know.”

He also told the outlet, “I am a privileged man in prison.”

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The post Bill Cosby seen looking disheveled in new mugshot appeared first on TheGrio.



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