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1 y

Now It’s Jack Daniels Getting Rid Of DEI Initiatives
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Now It’s Jack Daniels Getting Rid Of DEI Initiatives

Brown-Forman Corp., the company that makes the iconic Jack Daniels whiskey, has reportedly decided to terminate Jack Daniels’ diversity, equity and inclusion program after a boycott was threatened. On Wednesday, the Jack Daniels company issued a letter from its Executive Leadership Team. They announced, “[W]e launched our diversity and inclusion strategy in 2019. Since then, the world has evolved, our business has changed, and the legal and external landscape has shifted dramatically, particularly within the United States. With these new dynamics at play, we must adjust our work to ensure it continues to drive business results while appropriately recognizing the current environment in which we find ourselves.” The letter added that the company would be “removing our quantitative workforce and supplier diversity ambitions; ending participation in the Human Rights Campaign’s Corporate Equality Index survey; and reviewing training programs for consistency with an evolved strategy,” as conservative activist Robby Starbuck, who had planned to launch a boycott, reported. Starbuck revealed that the letter came from a “screenshot of one of the multiple folders we have on them. Overall we had well over 15GB of files, photos and videos.” Tickets for “Am I Racist?” are on sale NOW! Buy here for a theater near you. Big news: The next company we were set to expose was @JackDaniels_US. They must have been tipped off by us going through employee LinkedIn pages. They just preemptively announced that they’ll be making these changes: • Ending participation in the @HRC’s Corporate Equality… pic.twitter.com/0O1DkkIKrO — Robby Starbuck (@robbystarbuck) August 22, 2024   On Monday, motorcycle giant Harley-Davidson announced that it was backing away from diversity, equity, and inclusion policies after facing criticism from conservative customers in the last few months. In an open letter to the public, Harley-Davidson said it was no longer implementing DEI policies and would enact strict protocols for future corporate sponsorships and affiliations. The announcement comes as other companies like Tractor Supply have moved away from DEI after conservative customers spoke out. WATCH THE TRAILER FOR ‘AM I RACIST?’ — A MATT WALSH COMEDY ON DEI “We are saddened by the negativity on social media over the last few weeks, designed to divide the Harley-Davidson community. As a Company, we take this issue very seriously, and it is our responsibility to respond with clarity, action, and facts,” the company said. The company said it no longer had a DEI office and would no longer be participating in the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) scoring program going forward. The changes at the company took place after the company received sharp criticism from conservatives back in July when Starbuck highlighted many of the company’s LGBT-focused initiatives, including training employees to be “allies” and promoting the work of Critical Race Theory proponents. Leif Le Mahieu contributed to this article. RELATED: Harley-Davidson Becomes Latest Company To Back Away From DEI Policies
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1 y

Pelosi Compares Dems’ Election Against Trump To America’s War For Independence
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Pelosi Compares Dems’ Election Against Trump To America’s War For Independence

Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) told MSNBC on Thursday that the Democrats’ election battle against Donald Trump in November is comparable to the U.S. warring with England for its independence. Pelosi was interviewed by MSNBC host Andrea Mitchell as the Democratic National Convention begins its fourth and final day in Chicago. Many of the DNC speakers have focused on attacking Trump as a “threat to democracy,” and Pelosi repeated that rhetoric during her Thursday morning interview. “We have to defeat a person who is a threat to our democracy of the kind that we have not seen,” Pelosi said. “At the beginning of our country, Thomas Paine said ‘The times have found us — declare war, establish a new nation.’ Abraham Lincoln took up that charge to keep our country together years later, decades later.” “And now the times have found us to save our democracy,” she added. “That is what we are here to do.” The Trump campaign responded to Pelosi’s comments, calling them “unhinged.” Tickets for “Am I Racist?” are on sale NOW! Buy here for a theater near you. “Democrats are now outright alluding to political violence if President Trump wins,” the Trump campaign wrote on X. UNHINGED: Crazy Nancy compares defeating President Trump to America going to war against the British and Confederacy. Democrats are now outright alluding to political violence if President Trump wins. pic.twitter.com/ClQPPMzSWd — Trump War Room (@TrumpWarRoom) August 22, 2024 Pelosi quoted Thomas Paine’s line, “The times have found us,” in reference to Trump five years ago. In 2019, Pelosi shared a photo of herself standing up and pointing at Trump during a White House meeting between Democratic leadership and the Trump administration. “In the darkest hours of the American Revolution, Thomas Paine wrote: ‘The times have found us.’ The times have found us today to fight for our democracy,” Pelosi said at the time. “We owe it to our children; we owe it to the generations of Americans who have fought and died to defend this country.” WATCH THE TRAILER FOR ‘AM I RACIST?’ — A MATT WALSH COMEDY ON DEI Vice President Kamala Harris will formally accept her party’s nomination and address Democrats Thursday night to wrap up the convention. Pelosi reportedly played a crucial role in pushing for President Joe Biden to end his 2024 campaign and usher in Harris as the new nominee. “Sometimes you have to take a punch for the children. I did what I had to do,” she said earlier this week when asked about Biden’s exit from the race and her relationship with him. “My concern was not about the president, it was about his campaign.”
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1 y

Chick-Fil-A Rumored To Be Launching A Streaming Platform
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Chick-Fil-A Rumored To Be Launching A Streaming Platform

Rumor has it that fast food chicken purveyor Chick-fil-A will launch a streaming service of unscripted content. Deadline reported that the popular restaurant chain has been working with major players in the entertainment industry to create, license, and acquire family-friendly content. The outlet’s sources revealed that new projects include a game show from Glassman Media, creator of “The Wall,” and Sugar23, which is known for the Netflix hit series “13 Reasons Why.” Those sources noted that the projects could launch as early as this year and that there’s also been talk of animation and scripted content. They reported that Brian Gibson of “The X Factor” fame is leading the charge for programming for the as-yet-unnamed streaming platform. Tickets for “Am I Racist?” are on sale NOW! Buy here for a theater near you. Chick-fil-A has dabbled in entertainment projects in the past. The company created “Stories of Evergreen Hills,” a series of short animated films published on its website. The series “follows a young girl named Sam as she discovers how little acts of kindness can bring people together,” the description says. While fast food and entertainment may seem like an unlikely pairing, it’s not the first time two seemingly unrelated industries teamed up. The outlet noted that ride-share company Lyft produced an eight-episode game show series called “Lucky Lyft Trivia Show” hosted by Bob the Drag Queen. Also, Airbnb produced the documentary “Gay Chorus Deep South” for MTV in 2019, which was about the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus touring the South. Retail behemoth Walmart also got into the streaming business, partnering with Paramount+ to give Walmart+ members streaming access to the platform beginning in 2022. “We know Walmart+ is providing members real value in their every day – from grocery shopping to filling up their tank and more,” senior vice president and general manager Chris Cracchiolo said at the time, explaining the connection. “With the addition of Paramount+, we are demonstrating our unique ability to help members save even more and live better by delivering entertainment for less, too.” WATCH THE TRAILER FOR ‘AM I RACIST?’ — A MATT WALSH COMEDY ON DEI The fast food restaurant’s ties to entertainment are stronger than customers may realize. Chick-fil-A is owned by the Cathy family. According to The Verge, they control an independently managed trust, which helped found Atlanta-based company Trilith Studios, which frequently works with Marvel. Chick-fil-A has yet to announce or publicly comment on plans for entertainment content.
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1 y

Surfer Bethany Hamilton Tells Tucker League Ordered Her Not To Speak Out Against Men In Her Sport
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Surfer Bethany Hamilton Tells Tucker League Ordered Her Not To Speak Out Against Men In Her Sport

Hamilton said the worst responses came from TikTok, where people post videos saying they are ‘Team Shark’
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1 y

‘Crisis Levels’: How Dem-Backed Law Turned Deep Blue City Into Haven For Young Criminals
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‘Crisis Levels’: How Dem-Backed Law Turned Deep Blue City Into Haven For Young Criminals

'Crisis levels'
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1 y

‘Could Likely Die’: Criminals Getting So Desperate Police Catch Thieves Climbing Utility Poles To Steal Precious Metal
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‘Could Likely Die’: Criminals Getting So Desperate Police Catch Thieves Climbing Utility Poles To Steal Precious Metal

'If they cut the wrong cable, they could likely die'
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1 y

‘Third Rail’: Here’s Why Team Kamala Isn’t Peddling The Typical Dem Climate Panic This Election
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‘Third Rail’: Here’s Why Team Kamala Isn’t Peddling The Typical Dem Climate Panic This Election

'No one is buying their 'climate emergency' claptrap anymore'
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1 y

Billions In US Trade At Risk After Thousands Of Workers Locked Out In Union Dispute
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Billions In US Trade At Risk After Thousands Of Workers Locked Out In Union Dispute

'Boil-water advisories'
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

Manuka Honey Reduces Breast Cancer Cell Growth by 84% in Human Cells and Mice
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Manuka Honey Reduces Breast Cancer Cell Growth by 84% in Human Cells and Mice

Honey has all manner of often-hidden medicine-like qualities, but more eyes will certainly be falling on Manuka honey after it was recently shown to reduce the proliferation of breast cancer cells. It did so in a sophisticated manner that even resulted in the occasional triggering of natural cell death, or apoptosis, a mechanism that’s bypassed […] The post Manuka Honey Reduces Breast Cancer Cell Growth by 84% in Human Cells and Mice appeared first on Good News Network.
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
1 y

Read the First Chapter of Ransom Riggs’ Sunderworld, Vol. I: The Extraordinary Disappointments of Leopold Berry
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Read the First Chapter of Ransom Riggs’ Sunderworld, Vol. I: The Extraordinary Disappointments of Leopold Berry

Excerpts Young Adult Read the First Chapter of Ransom Riggs’ Sunderworld, Vol. I: The Extraordinary Disappointments of Leopold Berry How do you battle darkness when no one believes in you—not even yourself? By Ransom Riggs | Published on August 22, 2024 Comment 0 Share New Share We’re thrilled to share an excerpt from Sunderworld, Vol. I: The Extraordinary Disappointments of Leopold Berry, the start of a new young adult fantasy by Ransom Riggs—publishing with Dutton Books for Young Readers on August 27th. Read the first chapter below, or scroll to the end to listen to the audiobook version, narrated by Kirby Heyborne. Seventeen-year-old Leopold Berry is seeing weird things around Los Angeles. A man who pops a tooth into a parking meter. A glowing trapdoor in a parking lot. A half-mechanical raccoon with its tail on fire that just won’t leave him alone. Every hallucinatory moment seems plucked from a cheesy 1990s fantasy TV show called Max’s Adventures in Sunderworld—and that’s because they are. Not a good sign.In the blurry weeks after his mother’s death, a young Leopold discovered VHS tapes of its one and only season in a box headed for the trash—and soon became obsessed. Losing himself in Sunder was the best way to avoid two things: grieving his mother and being a chronic disappointment to his overbearing father. But when the strange visions return—at the worst possible time on the worst possible day—Leopold turns to his best friend Emmet for help. Together they discover that Sunder is much more than just an old TV show, and that Los Angeles is far stranger than they ever imagined. And soon, he’ll realize that not only is Sunderworld real, but it’s in grave danger.Certain he’s finally been chosen for greatness, Leopold risks everything to claim his destiny, save the world of his childhood dreams, and prove once and for all that he’s not the disappointment his father believes him to be. But when everything goes terribly, horribly, excruciatingly wrong, Leopold’s disappointments prove to be more extraordinary than he ever could have imagined. Leopold Berry had been trying to ignore the raccoon in the tree out the window, but like so many things in his life, it seemed impossible. The raccoon was perched on a branch that aligned perfectly with the head of the man Leopold was supposed to be listening to—a man who’d just asked Leopold a question he hadn’t really heard. It almost seemed like the raccoon was trying to distract him on purpose. Twice the creature had nearly fallen out of the tree, only to drag itself back onto the branch after a lot of clawing and flailing. Just now, its tail had burst into flames. The natural thing to do, Leopold realized, would’ve been to direct the attention of his father and the interviewer to the animal-on-fire as explanation for why he’d been so distracted these past minutes. He couldn’t, of course, because the raccoon’s tail was not really on fire. The raccoon was not really there at all. These things happened to Leopold sometimes. When he was twelve, a therapist told him he had a hyperactive imagination—that he saw strange and impossible things at the moments he most wanted to escape from his life. He’d once been plagued by these dissociative episodes, but it had been years since the last one. Then, a week ago, Leopold had seen a single, small rain cloud trail a harried fruit vendor down a sidewalk in Hollywood. The week before that, through the windshield of his traffic-stalled car, he’d watched a man pry a tooth from his mouth and insert it into a parking meter, prompting a fissure to open in the pavement. With a furtive glance behind him, the man had climbed into the cavity, disappearing just before it closed over his head. But these episodes had been brief, and each time Leopold had assured himself it was nothing to worry about. Who didn’t occasionally fantasize while stuck in traffic? But now the raccoon. Buy the Book Sunderworld, Vol. I: The Extraordinary Disappointments of Leopold Berry Ransom Riggs Buy Book Sunderworld, Vol. I: The Extraordinary Disappointments of Leopold Berry Ransom Riggs Buy this book from: AmazonBarnes and NobleiBooksIndieBoundTarget This episode had lasted longer than either the tooth man or the fruit vendor, which was disconcerting and, at the moment, extraordinarily inconvenient. He desperately wished the raccoon that was not really there anyway would just disappear. Then, with a peevish flick of its flaming tail, it did. The meeting had not been going well even prior to the raccoon. Leopold wasn’t purposely trying to frustrate his interviewer, an avuncular older man in golf clothes who had started off smiling but now looked like he, too, wished he were somewhere else. Nor was he hoping to piss off Richter, his tall, barrel-chested father, who was growing quietly apoplectic in the chair beside Leopold. He really was doing his best, if only to appease Richter, but he couldn’t focus. The gray suit Leopold had been forced to wear was loose in some places and tight in others. He was certain his pale skin had flushed bright red. He’d forgotten most of the canned responses his father had encouraged him to memorize, and the ones he did remember came out sounding forced. And now he’d allowed six seconds of excruciating silence to elapse as he stared out the window at a nonexistent raccoon. Leopold directed his eyes back to the man behind the desk. “Sorry, what was the question again?” There was a creak of stiff leather as Leopold’s father dug his fingers into the arms of his chair. “Larry’s just tired,” he said through peroxide-white teeth. “Poor kid was so excited about this meeting, he hardly slept last night.” Larry was a nickname Leopold had acquired in childhood and had never been able to shake. Larry Berry: It sounded like a punchline. The only person ever to call him by his given name, Leopold, had been his mother, and because it rang foreign on anyone else’s tongue, he’d long ago resigned himself to Larry, a name that made him cringe whenever it was spoken aloud. The man glanced at his watch. An electric guitar, signed by the members of some famous band, was displayed proudly on the wall. “No need to be nervous, Larry. We’re just having a friendly conversation.” He grinned in a way that was designed to put Leopold at ease. “I asked, what’s your greatest strength? What do you feel you’re best at?” Leopold cleared his throat. He could feel his father’s eyes drilling into him. “Well, um, I guess…” He tried to conjure one of the answers he’d rehearsed, something about leadership and problem-solving. “…I don’t really know?” “If you ask me, Mick,” his father cut in, “Larry’s problem is he has too many strengths. Makes it tough to decide where to focus his energy. Berry family curse!” He laughed like a sputtering engine. The man chuckled politely. “Then I’ll make this easier. How about you give me your top three.” Leopold’s mind went blank. He saw something flick among the branches of the tree out the window but forced himself to ignore it. His palms began to itch. “Larry,” his father hissed. “No need to be modest.” “I’m not.” Leopold shifted in his seat. “I’m just… not the best at anything.” His father made a strangled noise. “Now, I’m sure that’s not true,” said the interviewer. But it felt true. It was the truest-feeling thing Leopold had said aloud in a long time. What he excelled at were minor things his father thought categorically worthless: working on his old car, tinkering with small electrical objects, and making homemade movies set in the world of a certain fantasy TV show that had gone off the air before he was born. He was ashamed of these forgettable skills, so he never mentioned them. The man winked. “Don’t worry. I’m good at finding hidden talents.” “I certainly hope so,” Larry’s father muttered. In Richter Berry’s opinion, there were two types of people in the world: winners and losers. He’d argued as much in his first book, Think Like a Winner, the publication of which he’d parlayed into a career as a success coach, a profession that suited him perfectly because it involved, mainly, yelling at people. So long as he did it with a smile, a shocking number of seemingly well-adjusted people would submit to being berated, harangued, and belittled by Richter Berry in the name of self-improvement. Whole auditoriums of them, all paying for the privilege. Richter was very proud of himself, and of his two stepsons, Hal and Drake. Hal, captain of his high school wrestling team, and Drake, going into his second year at USC’s business school, were turning out to be killers in the barrel-chested mold of their stepfather. But Richter was worried—had been worried for years—that his biological son, a lean, dreamy, distractible boy with no discernible talent for, or interest in, anything practical at all, was growing up to become… not a winner. But Richter was no quitter. He couldn’t abide a failure in the family; it simply didn’t fit the brand. He’d given his son several perfectly good options for a future career: Larry could go to law school and become a lawyer (preferably corporate); go to business school and get on the executive track (Fortune 500, or what was the point); do a finance program that would lead to private equity or investment banking (Goldman, ideally, though the boy was hopeless with numbers, so that seemed the least likely of the three). All Larry had to do was choose one, and like magic he’d have the inestimable blessing of his father’s support. Richter, self-made son of a pig farmer from a hardscrabble town in the Midwest, would’ve killed for such an opportunity at seventeen. But the boy was like a cat: strange, lazy, and nearly impossible to train. His mother had been far too easy on him, so now, to compensate, Richter had to be hard; Larry had made it abundantly clear that he would never be hard on himself, that if given half the chance he’d spend the rest of his life with his head in the clouds and accomplish absolutely nothing. So when, after innumerable lectures and tirades, Larry had still not chosen one path over another, Richter had engaged the (very expensive) services of the best private college admissions counselor in Los Angeles, a man who had miracled C students with no legacy credentials into Harvard, and felonious delinquents from nothing families into Stanford. It was amazing he’d even found the time to slot them in for a meeting. And now, probably just to spite him, his son was flushing a golden opportunity down the toilet. “What about the aptitude test?” Richter asked. The interviewer’s bulletproof smile faltered. “Wasn’t too helpful, I’m afraid.” The raccoon was back on its branch, one leg extended skyward, earnestly licking its privates. “Larry’s results were a bit… inconclusive. His grades don’t reveal any special aptitude for one path over another, though that’s not especially uncommon. As for the test, Larry scored the perfect average on every metric.” He almost looked impressed. “Never seen that before.” “You mean to say,” Leopold’s father huffed, “he’s perfectly average.” The counselor hesitated. “I think results like this reveal the limitations of testing, not of your son. Which is exactly why we bring potential clients in for these little heart-to-hearts.” The word potential seemed to hang in the air. “I can help you, Larry. But first you have to be honest with me.” Stop calling me Larry, Leopold thought. The counselor steepled his fingers beneath his chin. “Let’s forget colleges and careers altogether for a minute. Here’s the most important question: What do you love? What’s your passion?” Leopold’s instinct was to give a canned answer, but there was an attentiveness in the man’s eyes that caught him off guard. He actually seemed to be listening. Leopold couldn’t remember the last time an adult had done that. And so he was compelled to do something he almost never did in front of his father: tell something like the truth. “Well, I think I might be good at editing movies,” Leopold ventured. He hadn’t quite found the courage to say directing movies and editing sounded like a more achievable but still respectable career prospect. The man leaned forward, head bobbing. “I was wondering, maybe, about… film school.” His father wafted a hand through the air. “Four-year jerk-off.” “Actually, this could be perfect,” said the counselor. “This, I can work with.” Leopold felt a small hope spark in his chest. Like maybe his whole life was about to change, and a door was opening he’d never known was there. And then the man said, “You should consider entertainment law. Some of the best-paid lawyers I know work for movie studios,” and as he began to describe the impressive house in Malibu owned by one such lawyer, a ringing filled Leopold’s head, and he saw something out the window he could no longer ignore: The raccoon, now fully engulfed in flames and leaping from branch to branch, had caught the tree on fire. As the blaze spread quickly through the canopy, a flock of small birds, also on fire, shuddered out of the leaves and scattered into the air. Leopold went rigid, suppressing a sudden urge to panic. Not because the tree was on fire—he knew it wasn’t— but because there was no denying it now. It’s happening again, he thought. He was Seeing into Sunder. Excerpted from Sunderworld, Vol. I: The Extraordinary Disappointments of Leopold Berry, copyright © 2024 by Ransom Riggs. Audio excerpt narrated by Kirby Heyborne. The post Read the First Chapter of Ransom Riggs’ <i>Sunderworld, Vol. I: The Extraordinary Disappointments of Leopold Berry</i> appeared first on Reactor.
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