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5 w

A Fresh Breath of Friday Fetterman
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A Fresh Breath of Friday Fetterman

A Fresh Breath of Friday Fetterman
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5 w

Nicolle Wallace Shovels Dirt: Noem Reveled in ‘Ghoulish and Intentionally Cruel' Deportations
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Nicolle Wallace Shovels Dirt: Noem Reveled in ‘Ghoulish and Intentionally Cruel' Deportations

On Thursday’s Deadline: White House, MS NOW host Nicolle Wallace accused former Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem of presiding over what she called a “ghoulish and intentionally cruel” deportation program that “seemed to revel” in cruelty. But Wallace opened her show by reveling in what she portrayed as Donald Trump’s supposed political woes. Wallace began with a mocking riff on why Noem might have been fired: “So there are two theories for what's happening today. Either DHS Secretary Kristi Noem is so bad at her job that even Donald Trump—Donald Trump 2.0—said, you're fired.” She then launched into a deliberately tangled theory that Trump was engaged in layers of political distraction: “Or her firing could be a distraction from the increasingly unpopular and controversial war in Iran. Which, come to think of it, could have been an effort to distract from the disastrous and bungled cover-up of the Epstein files. Their partial release might have actually been a distraction from the cruel and deeply unpopular conduct of federal agents on the streets of Minneapolis carrying out Donald Trump's mass deportation campaign and killing two U.S. citizens in the process. Now whether Trump’s distracting from a distraction that was a distraction of an unpopular distraction, we’ll let you decide.” Later in the segment, Wallace appeared particularly amused by the possibility that Noem didn’t yet know she had been fired while addressing a gathering of law enforcement officers. MS NOW’s @NicolleDWallace: Kristi Noem “reveled” in “ghoulish” cruelty. Moments later, Wallace snarks “Awkward!” about Noem’s firing. pic.twitter.com/7PlBRYacY6 — Mark Finkelstein (@markfinkelstein) March 5, 2026 After airing video of Noem speaking, Wallace remarked: “There she is. She was speaking to law enforcement, and it wasn't clear at all if she knew she'd been fired, as while she was talking, she talked about meetings she was going to have in the coming days as DHS secretary. Awkward!” Wallace’s “awkward” was worthy of a feline middle-school girl delighting in the downfall of a rival. Later, Wallace delivered a sweeping denunciation of Noem’s tenure: “Her tenure at DHS will be remembered until the end of time. It was defined by the mass deportation program that was built to be ghoulish and intentionally cruel, and to market those aspects of it. It led to the deaths of at least two Americans, ripped apart countless families, and seemed to revel in doing so.” So Wallace accused Noem of reveling in “ghoulish” cruelty—after opening her show reveling in Trump’s supposed woes—and later savoring Noem’s humiliation. PS: Wallace then turned it over to frequent MS NOW contributor Miles Taylor for Noem-shooting-the-dog wisecracks:  Miles Taylor is apparently commenting from the woods: "Nicole, what Senator Tillis should have said was that Noem will be remembered for treating Americans like she treats her dogs." She's become "the warden of the police state." pic.twitter.com/tM6SfQwyi3 — Tim Graham (@TimJGraham) March 5, 2026   Here's the transcript. MS NOW's Deadline White House 3/5/26 4:00 pm ET NICOLLE WALLACE: Hi, everybody. 4 o'clock in New York. So, there are two theories for what's happening today. Either DHS Secretary Kristi Noem is so bad at her job, that even Donald Trump, Donald Trump 2.0, said, you're fired.  Or, or, her firing could be a distraction from the increasingly unpopular and controversial war in Iran. Which, come to think of it, could have been an effort to distract from the disastrous and bungled cover-up of the Epstein files.  Their partial release might have actually been a distraction from the cruel and deeply unpopular conduct of federal agents on the streets of Minneapolis, carrying out Donald Trump's mass deportation campaign and killing two U.S. citizens in the process.  Now, whether Trump's distracting from a distraction that was a distraction of an unpopular distraction, we'll let you decide.  But here's the news. Kristi Noem has been fired from her position as the country's Secretary of Homeland Security. In tried and true Trumpian fashion, Donald Trump announced her firing on Truth Social, adding that she's been appointed special envoy to the Shield of the Americas, a position no one had heard of until a couple hours ago. Corey Lewandowski is also out at DHS.  As news of her firing was breaking, Kristi Noem was speaking. [Brief clip of Noem] There she is. She was speaking to law enforcement, and it wasn't clear at all if she knew she'd been fired, as while she was talking, she talked about meetings she was going to have in the coming days as DHS secretary. Awkward! Now, regardless, her tenure at DHS will be remembered until the end of time. It was defined by the mass deportation program that was built to be ghoulish and intentionally cruel, and to market those aspects of it. It led to the deaths of at least two Americans, ripped apart countless families, and seemed to revel in doing so. 
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5 w

POLL: What Was the Worst Media Quote of the Week? 
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POLL: What Was the Worst Media Quote of the Week? 

POLL: What was the worst media quote of the week? (Vote below)   POLL: Worst Media Quote of the Week, w/ @TJTAW44 @Justine_Brooke 1. Chris Hayes Compares Trump Bombing Iran to 9/11 2. Keith Olbermann: Trump is the John Wayne Gacy of the Epstein Scandal 3. Morgan Freeman: Trump Reminds Me of Nazi Brownshirts, He’s Leading Us Down a Sh*thole pic.twitter.com/oQiYyiQtCw — Media Research Center (@theMRC) March 5, 2026   NOMINEES:    Chris Hayes Compares Trump Bombing Iran to 9/11  “Gets far too easy to wave away the loss of human life. It’s priced in. It’s the cost of doing business. Remember, there was one instance in my lifetime when we in America experienced death from above. September 11th, 2001….For us, that kind of violence is an anomaly. It is a once-in-a-lifetime tragedy. For other people, in other countries, the terror is commonplace because, in part, of the kinds of war of aggression that Donald Trump just started.”— Host Chris Hayes on MS NOW’s All In With Chris Hayes, March 2.    Keith Olbermann: Trump is the “John Wayne Gacy of the Epstein Scandal” “For Trump, this is no longer a question of malfeasance or graft or theft or impeachment. It is a question of how many dozens of crimes he is guilty of. On Epstein, on the Epstein cover-up alone. He is the Boss Tweed of the Epstein scandal. He is the Bernie Madoff of the Epstein scandal. He is the John Wayne Gacy of the Epstein scandal!”— Former MSNBC/ESPN host Keith Olbermann on his Countdown podcast, February 26.   Morgan Freeman: Trump Reminds Me of Nazi “Brownshirts,” He’s Leading Us “Down a Sh*thole” “We have somebody sitting in the White House who’s leading us down a shit hole….I’m constantly reminded of Germany in 1935, what was happening there, the Brownshirts, those people that are marching through, particularly Berlin, rounding up people and putting them in box cars and sending them off. Now, this administration wants to build large detention centers and — for what?”— Actor Morgan Freeman on MS NOW’s The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell, February 26.      Sponsored by James P. Jimirro
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5 w

Do they hate Trump — or do they just hate America?
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Do they hate Trump — or do they just hate America?

Do the protesters angry about Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s death hate America — or do they hate the fact that Donald Trump pulled it off?The question sounds simple. Nobody outside Khamenei’s supporters can mourn his death. The answer becomes more difficult because the protesters in question rarely limit their hatred to one target.Trump’s return tore off the mask. When America acts like America again, the people who resent America stop hiding behind the language of peace.Almost 15 years ago, U.S. Navy SEALs killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan. Bin Laden led Al-Qaeda, which carried out terrorist attacks against the United States and others for years. The worst came on Sept. 11, 2001, when Al-Qaeda terrorists hijacked four American airliners, flew three into the Twin Towers and the Pentagon, and crashed the fourth in Pennsylvania. Nearly 3,000 people died.When President Obama announced bin Laden’s death, he said: “Bin Laden was not a Muslim leader; he was a mass murderer of Muslims. Indeed, Al-Qaeda has slaughtered scores of Muslims in many countries, including our own. So his demise should be welcomed by all who believe in peace and human dignity.”Nobody marched in grief for bin Laden — at least not publicly outside Al-Qaeda’s circles, which included Iran.Khamenei’s record goes further. Under his rule, Iran financed terrorism across the region and around the globe. The U.S. State Department reported in 2020 that Iran “has been the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism,” and for more than 40 years, its “malign behavior and support for terrorist proxies has spread across the region.”Iran’s clients form a who’s-who of the heinous: Hamas, Hezbollah, the Houthis, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Shiite militias in Iraq, and others. For nearly half a century, Iran’s regime threatened Iranians first, then the Middle East, then the United States and Israel.The beneficiaries of that system were predictable: regime insiders, terrorist networks, and pariah states that profit from chaos — Russia, North Korea, Cuba, Venezuela — along with China, which seeks advantage from the disorder Iran helped sow.So who, exactly, shows up in America to lament Khamenei’s death and denounce U.S. strikes as illegitimate?The protests arrived quickly in familiar cities: New York, Minneapolis, Portland.The left-wing Guardian observed that New York’s rally was sponsored by a host of left-wing groups that included the ANSWER Coalition, National Iranian American Council, 50501, American Muslims for Palestine, the People’s Forum, Palestinian Youth Movement, Code Pink, Black Alliance for Peace, and Democratic Socialists of America. Organizers called Trump’s strikes “unprovoked” and “illegal,” warned of “unthinkable death and destruction,” and promised to take to the streets.RELATED: Hegseth just delivered a precision strike on the legacy media Photo by Brendan SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty ImagesThey did not explain how action against a regime that has sponsored terrorism for decades and chants “Death to America” qualifies as “unprovoked.”New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani (D) went further, calling the strikes a “catastrophic escalation in an illegal war of aggression,” then added: “Bombing cities. Killing civilians. Opening a new theater of war.”He ignored the war Iran has waged for years through its proxies. He also ignored the brutality Iran’s regime has inflicted on its own people. Reports from within and outside Iran have described mass crackdowns, large death tolls, and systematic violence against dissent. The precise numbers vary — it could top 30,000 — and the regime itself manipulates information, but nobody disputes the core point: Tehran kills its own citizens to preserve power.Minneapolis offered the same posture. Minnesota Public Radio quoted Andrew Josefchak of the Minnesota Anti-War Committee saying: “These wars don't benefit ordinary people in the U.S., and they certainly don't benefit ordinary people in countries like Venezuela or Iran.” That claim dodges the obvious. Iranians have risked their lives for decades against this regime. Many celebrated Khamenei’s death because they know what his rule meant.In Portland, a protest organized by Portland for Palestine featured signs reading “U.S. hands off Iran” and “Stop the war on Iran now.” Hamas, Iran’s most prominent Palestinian client, tells you plenty about the moral framing at work.The sympathies here are not hard to locate. The protesters show little concern for the victims of Iran’s terror machine, whether in Israel, Iraq, or inside Iran itself. Their energy targets the United States — and Trump.If that judgment sounds harsh, consider a post from a Columbia University group that has organized activism since 2024. Columbia University Apartheid Divest posted “Marg bar Amrika” on X.com — “Death to America” in Persian — then later wrote that the platform forced deletion to regain account access but that “the sentiment still stands.”RELATED: Conservatives can’t barbecue their way through national collapse Blaze Media IllustrationThat brings the question into focus.Iran chanted “Death to America” long before Trump entered politics. The chant softened in elite American spaces when Washington adopted a posture of accommodation. Under Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, the United States projected restraint even as Iran financed proxies and pushed its nuclear program forward. Now with Trump back in office and Khamenei dead, “Death to America” appears on social media feeds tied to elite American campuses.So what do these protesters hate more: America or Trump?They carry plenty of hate for both. The better answer may be that Trump’s return tore off the mask. When America acts like America again, the people who resent America stop hiding behind the phony language of peace.
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5 w

2A win: Appeals court in DC strikes down high-capacity magazine restrictions
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2A win: Appeals court in DC strikes down high-capacity magazine restrictions

Second Amendment advocates are celebrating after a D.C. appeals court struck down a local ban on high-capacity magazines. On Thursday, the District of Columbia Court of Appeals handed down a 2-1 decision in Tyree Benson v. United States and the District of Columbia, ruling that a local law banning gun magazines that can contain more than 10 rounds is unconstitutional. 'We agree with Benson and the United States that the District’s outright ban on them violates the Second Amendment.'Appellant Tyree Benson was arrested in October 2022 on multiple charges related to possession of a Glock 45 9mm caliber handgun with a high-capacity magazine that could hold 30 rounds of ammunition.The opinion argued that the ubiquity of high-capacity magazines makes enforcing or justifying an outright ban extremely difficult.Magazines capable of holding more than 10 rounds of ammunition are ubiquitous in our country, numbering in the hundreds of millions, accounting for about half of the magazines in the hands of our citizenry, and they come standard with the most popular firearms sold in America today. Because these magazines are arms in common and ubiquitous use by law-abiding citizens across this country, we agree with Benson and the United States that the District’s outright ban on them violates the Second Amendment.RELATED: Want a machine gun? These states might soon make buying one easier Photo by SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty ImagesThe opinion of the court was written by Trump appointee Associate Judge Joshua Deahl, who was joined by Obama appointee Catharine Friend Easterly.In her dissent, Chief Judge Anna Blackburne-Rigsby argued in part that the majority's argument failed to address the unusually high capacity in this case, whereas many gun owners have guns with 11-, 15-, or 17-round magazines. Additionally, she defended the law by applying the historical legal standard of banning "dangerous and unusual" weapons, though that standard is controversial.The District of Columbia, which upholds the ban and is another party in the suit, could appeal the ruling to the Supreme Court or request that a larger panel from the local appeals court reconsider it, the New York Times reported. Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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5 w

Cracker Barrel CEO praises company's 'Google star rating' while revealing huge financial losses
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Cracker Barrel CEO praises company's 'Google star rating' while revealing huge financial losses

Cracker Barrel just had its quarterly earnings meeting, during which the CEO admitted she does not have "a crystal ball."Sales have decreased since the 2025 logo and branding change that saw Cracker Barrel deliver the biggest marketing blunder of the year. The shift was so bad that the new branding became a national story, and the board member who pushed for it soon resigned.'We know we are headed in the right direction.'Still looking to recover from the disaster, Cracker Barrel put out its second quarter fiscal report for 2026 on Wednesday, and the report showed significant losses for a company of its size.Total revenue took a hit, decreasing by 7.9% compared to the year before. Restaurant revenue dropped by 7.5%, with management explaining that traffic had declined by more than 10%.In the earnings call, CEO Julie Masino — who was at the helm when the new store design failed — boasted to investors about the restaurant's Google review rating, one of the few highlights."Our Google star rating, which over the long run is strongly correlated with traffic, was 4.28 in Q2," Masino stated, noting that it was a six-year high. "This represents the highest quarterly score since Q2 in fiscal year 2020."RELATED: Board member behind Cracker Barrel DEI rebranding disaster resigns after pressure — including from Glenn Beck Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images While Masino said, "I do not have a crystal ball," and that she does not have a "correlation that says when scores improve by X, traffic follows," she was confident that the company's "indicators" still correlate to "growth and improvement."In addition to the Google reviews, Masino cited increased guest satisfaction scores, lower manager turnover, improved traffic within the quarter, and a "meaningful percentage" of guests returning who did not visit in previous quarters."We know we are headed in the right direction, and everybody is working hard to make that a reality," Masino added.The CEO also boasted about the restaurant's business during Thanksgiving week 2025, which she called "a big week for us." However, despite bringing in $110 million in sales, which represents between 12% and 13% of total revenue for the quarter, "Thanksgiving traffic was in line with the rest of the month, so it did not crazily outperform or anything like that," Masino admitted.RELATED: 'I feel like I've been fired by America': Cracker Barrel CEO nearly brought to tears over redesign backlash "Our disciplined focus on operational excellence is driving significant improvements in several key guest metrics, many of which serve as important leading traffic indicators," Masino said in the company's press release. "We have also taken additional actions to improve financial performance and remain confident that we are well-positioned to regain prior momentum."In the end, the board of directors still declared a quarterly dividend of $0.25 per share, and the company is still expanding ever so slightly with the opening of two new stores.Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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5 w

The Who to Release ‘Live at Eden Project’ Orchestral Album
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The Who to Release ‘Live at Eden Project’ Orchestral Album

The unique venue's natural acoustics and enclosed structures created a warm, detailed sonic environment that offered a clarity and intimacy unmatched by traditional stadium settings. The post The Who to Release ‘Live at Eden Project’ Orchestral Album appeared first on Best Classic Bands.
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5 w

How Aron Ralston’s Harrowing Survival Story Inspired ‘127 Hours’
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How Aron Ralston’s Harrowing Survival Story Inspired ‘127 Hours’

In April 2003, Aron Ralston was on a solo climbing trip in Utah’s Canyonlands National Park when an 800-pound boulder suddenly fell from above him. The next thing he knew, his right arm was lodged between the boulder and a canyon wall. Quite literally caught between a rock and a hard place, Ralston was also trapped 100 feet below the desert surface and 20 miles away from the road. Though he had enough provisions to get him through a few days, Aron Ralston was forced to drink his own urine after he ran out of food. Convinced that he was going to die, he recorded goodbye messages to his loved ones on his video camera. He even carved his own epitaph into the canyon wall so that people would know when he passed away. Aron Ralston/FacebookYears after his arm was pinned by a boulder inside Utah’s Bluejohn Canyon in April 2003 and he was forced to amputate it in order to escape, Aron Ralston returned to the very place where it happened. But then, Ralston fell asleep and had a dream in which he saw himself with one arm. So after he woke up, he broke his own arm and amputated it using a cheap, two-inch knife — in a grueling process that took an hour. He was ultimately able to free himself and make it to safety in a harrowing ordeal that inspired the 2010 film 127 Hours. After seeing 127 Hours, Aron Ralston called it “so factually accurate it is as close to a documentary as you can get and still be a drama.” Starring James Franco as Ralston, 127 Hours caused several viewers to pass out when they saw Franco’s character amputating his own arm. Some viewers were even more horrified when they realized that 127 Hours was actually a true story. This is the astounding story of Aron Ralston. Aron Ralston’s Adventures Before Getting Trapped In Bluejohn Canyon Wikimedia CommonsAron Ralston in 2003 on a Colorado mountaintop. Before his infamous 2003 canyoneering accident, Aron Lee Ralston was just an ordinary young man with a passion for rock climbing. Born on October 27, 1975, Ralston grew up in Ohio before his family moved to Colorado in 1987. Years later, he attended Carnegie Mellon University, where he studied mechanical engineering, French, and piano. He then moved to the Southwest to work as an engineer. But five years in, he decided that the corporate world wasn’t for him and quit his job to devote more time to mountaineering. He wanted to climb Denali, the highest peak in North America. In 2002, Aron Ralston moved to Aspen, Colorado, to climb full-time. His goal, as preparation for Denali, was to climb all of Colorado’s “fourteeners,” or mountains at least 14,000 feet tall, of which there are 59. He wanted to do them solo and in the winter — a feat that had never been recorded before. In February 2003, while backcountry skiing on Resolution Peak in central Colorado with two friends, Ralston was caught in an avalanche. Buried up to his neck in snow, one friend dug him out, and together they rescued the third friend. “It was horrible. It should have killed us,” Ralston later said. No one was seriously hurt, but the incident perhaps should have triggered some self-reflection: A severe avalanche warning had been issued that day, and if Ralston and his friends had seen that before climbing the mountain, they could have avoided the dangerous situation altogether. But while most climbers might have then taken steps to be more careful, Ralston did the opposite. He kept climbing and exploring hazardous terrains — and oftentimes he was completely on his own. Between A Rock And A Hard Place Wikimedia CommonsBluejohn Canyon, a slot canyon in Canyonlands National Park in Utah, where Aron Ralston was trapped. Just a few months after the avalanche, Aron Ralston traveled to southeastern Utah to explore Canyonlands National Park on April 25, 2003. He slept in his truck that night, and at 9:15 a.m. the next morning — a beautiful, sunny Saturday — he rode his bicycle 15 miles to Bluejohn Canyon, an 11-mile-long gorge that in some places measures just three feet wide. The 27-year-old locked his bike and walked toward the canyon’s opening. At around 2:45 p.m., as he descended into the canyon, a giant rock above him slipped. The next thing he knew, his right arm was lodged between an 800-pound boulder and a canyon wall. Ralston was also trapped 100 feet below the desert surface and 20 miles away from the nearest paved road. Simon & SchusterAron Ralston’s arm was pinned by a boulder for 127 hours before he was forced to amputate it in order to make it out of Utah’s Bluejohn Canyon. To make matters worse, he hadn’t told anyone about his climbing plans, and he didn’t have any way to signal for help. He inventoried his provisions: two burritos, some candy bar crumbs, and a bottle of water. Ralston futilely tried chipping away at the boulder. Eventually, he ran out of water and was forced to drink his own urine. Early on, he considered cutting off his arm. He experimented with tourniquets and made superficial cuts to test his knives’ sharpness. But he didn’t know how he’d saw through his bone with his cheap multi-tool — the kind you’d get for free “if you bought a $15 flashlight,” he later said. Distraught and delirious, Aron Ralston resigned himself to his fate. He used his dull tools to carve his name into the canyon wall, along with his birth date, his presumed date of death, and the letters RIP. Then, he used a video camera to tape goodbyes to his family and tried to sleep. That night, as he drifted in and out of consciousness, Aron Ralston dreamt of himself — with only half his right arm — playing with a child. Awaking, he believed the dream was a sign that he would survive and that he would have a family. More determined than ever, he threw himself into survival. Aron Ralston’s Miraculous Escape That Inspired 127 Hours Wikimedia CommonsAron Ralston atop a mountain shortly after he survived his accident in Utah. The dream of a future family left Aron Ralston with an epiphany: He didn’t have to cut through his bones. He could break them instead. Using the torque from his trapped arm, he managed to break his ulna and his radius. After his bones were disconnected, he fashioned a tourniquet from the tubing of his CamelBak water bottle and cut off his circulation entirely. Then, he was able to use a cheap, dull, two-inch knife to cut through his skin and muscle, and a pair of pliers to cut through his tendons. He left his arteries for last, knowing that after he severed them he wouldn’t have much time. “All the desires, joys, and euphorias of a future life came rushing into me,” Ralston later said at a press conference. “Maybe this is how I handled the pain. I was so happy to be taking action.” The entire process took an hour, during which Ralston lost 25 percent of his blood volume. High on adrenaline, Ralston climbed out of the slot canyon, rappelled down a 65-foot sheer cliff, and hiked six of the eight miles back to his car — all while dehydrated, losing blood, and one-handed. Six miles into his hike, he met a family from the Netherlands who had been hiking in the canyon. They gave him Oreos and water and contacted the authorities. Canyonlands officials had been alerted that Ralston was missing and had been searching the area by helicopter — which would have proved futile, as Ralston was trapped below the surface of the canyon. Four hours after amputating his arm, Aron Ralston was rescued by medics. They believed that the timing could not have been more perfect. Had Ralston amputated his arm any sooner, he likely would have bled to death. And had he waited any longer, he probably would have died in the canyon. Aron Ralston’s Life After Amputating His Own Arm Brian Brainerd/The Denver Post via Getty ImagesAron Ralston often speaks publicly on how he saved himself by cutting off his lower right arm. Following Aron Ralston’s rescue, his severed lower arm and hand were retrieved by park rangers from beneath the gigantic boulder. It took 13 rangers, a hydraulic jack, and a winch to remove the boulder, which might not have been possible with the rest of Ralston’s body in there too. The arm was cremated and returned to Ralston. Six months later, on his 28th birthday, he returned to the slot canyon and scattered the ashes there. The ordeal, of course, sparked international intrigue. Along with the film dramatization of his life — which, Ralston says, is so accurate that it might as well be a documentary — Ralston appeared on television morning shows, late-night specials, and press tours. Through it all, he was in good spirits. As for that dream of a full life that sparked his incredible escape? It came true. Aron Ralston is now a father of two who hasn’t slowed down at all despite losing a large portion of his arm. And as far as climbing goes, he hasn’t even taken a break. In 2005, he became the first person to climb all 59 of Colorado’s “fourteeners” alone and in the snow — and one-handed to boot. How 127 Hours Brought Ralston’s Astonishing True Story To Life Don Arnold/WireImage/Getty ImagesThe true story of Aron Ralston was dramatized in the movie 127 Hours. Aron Ralston has often praised the film version of his story, Danny Boyle’s 2010 movie 127 Hours, as brutally realistic. However, the arm-cutting scene did need to be shortened to a few minutes — because it lasted about an hour in real life. This scene also required three prosthetic arms made to look exactly like the outside of actor James Franco’s arm. And Franco did not hold back as he reacted to the horror. “I actually have a problem with blood. It’s only my arms; I have a problem with seeing blood on my arm,” Franco said. “So after the first day, I said to Danny, ‘I think you got the real, unvarnished reaction there.'” Fox Searchlight PicturesAron Ralston’s survival story inspired the 2010 film 127 Hours, starring James Franco. Franco wasn’t supposed to cut it all the way through, but he did it anyway — and he believed that it paid off. He said, “I just did it, and I cut it off and I fell back, and I guess that’s the take that Danny used.” Other than the accuracy of events in the film, Ralston has also praised 127 Hours for its honest depiction of his emotions during the five-day ordeal. He was glad the filmmakers were okay with including a smiling Franco at the moment that he realized he could break his own arm to get free. “I had to hound the team to make sure that smile made it into the film, but I’m really happy that it did,” Aron Ralston said. “You can see that smile. It really was a triumphant moment. I was smiling when I did it.” After learning about Aron Ralston and the harrowing true story behind 127 Hours, read about how the bodies of climbers are serving as guideposts on Mount Everest. Then, check out some of the world’s most beautiful slot canyons. The post How Aron Ralston’s Harrowing Survival Story Inspired ‘127 Hours’ appeared first on All That's Interesting.
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Dems Mock Markwayne Mullin for 'Hiding' on Jan. 6—After Years of Calling It Worse Than 9/11
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Dems Mock Markwayne Mullin for 'Hiding' on Jan. 6—After Years of Calling It Worse Than 9/11

Dems Mock Markwayne Mullin for 'Hiding' on Jan. 6—After Years of Calling It Worse Than 9/11
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February Jobs Report Misses Expectations, but There May Be More to the Story
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February Jobs Report Misses Expectations, but There May Be More to the Story

February Jobs Report Misses Expectations, but There May Be More to the Story
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