Society's Child
Kwik-E-Mart owner Apu, who is voiced by white actor Hank Azaria, first appeared in 'The Telltale Head' episode in 1990. However this year the character came under fire following the documentary, The Problem with Apu.
The controversy prompted Azaria to say that he is willing to step aside from the character if producers wanted to hire a more appropriate voice actor. He also called for an Indian or Asian writer to decipher how best to proceed with the issue.
One of a trio of immediate post-9/11 CIA-themed TV series, 24 is widely recognised as having done more than any other TV show in promoting, apologising for and excusing the black site torture program. Supreme court justice Antonin Scalia even cited 24 and the 'ticking clock' scenario to argue in favour of rendition and torture, saying:
Jack Bauer saved Los Angeles. He saved hundreds of thousands of lives. Are you going to convict Jack Bauer? Say that criminal law is against him? 'You have the right to a jury trial?' Is any jury going to convict Jack Bauer? I don't think so. So the question is really whether we believe in these absolutes. And ought we believe in these absolutes.That he was talking about a fictional character using torture to stop fictional terrorist plots that have no relationship to reality appears to have gone over the head of Justice Scalia. But the show's creators knew what they were doing.
Less than a month after Elon Musk agreed to step down as Tesla chairman and pay a hefty $20 million to the US Securities Commission for a couple of misleading tweets about taking the company private, new legal troubles could now be looming for the embattled entrepreneur.
The Wall Street Journal reported on Friday that the FBI has intensified its previously unreported investigation into Tesla's production statement. The agents allegedly believe that Tesla might have deliberately set unrealistic production goals to fire up investors.
Comment: See also:
- Tesla IPO successful: Stock up 40% on day one
- Elon Musk gets sued by the SEC for misleading investors
- Shares in Tesla dip as investors worry about Elon Musk's unpredictable behavior
- Elon Musk to step down as chairman, must get pre-approval before saying anything about Tesla as part of SEC fraud settlement
He's a Florida resident
Media reports say Sayoc is a resident of Fort Lauderdale, Florida. He was arrested in nearby Plantation. Both locations are just a few minutes north of Opa-locka, home to a mail facility raided by federal agents on Thursday evening, and believed to be the source of the suspicious packages.
Sayoc has lived in Florida since 2006, and before then lived in New Jersey, Alabama, and Michigan, but was born in Brooklyn, New York, according to public records.
He has a criminal record
Sayoc's alleged mailbomb blitz is not the first time the Floridian has appeared on law enforcement's radar. The 56-year-old was sentenced to a year's probation in 2014 for theft and battery.
Comment: RT reports Sayoc has quite an eclectic background:
Even before the suspect's name was confirmed by law enforcers, the media started to methodically dig into Sayoc's past - his jobs, family and political preferences. And they did find some juicy details!
It turned out that the 56-year-old man worked as a bouncer and a stripper at nightclubs, according to his cousin, who called his relative "the maniac who's been doing this [mailing pipe bombs]."
And that wasn't the end of Sayoc's string of odd jobs: he once worked as a DJ and as a Papa John's pizza deliveryman. He apparently lacked talent as a disc jockey, however, and sometimes let songs run for so long that dancers would start to complain. "He wasn't doing his job, I'll tell you that," the suspect's longtime friend and fellow DJ Scott Meigs admitted. "He wasn't paying attention."
The mail bomb suspect was an avid bodybuilder, he trained in mixed martial arts and hoped to become a pro wrestler, but steroid abuse did nothing to make his dream come true. Distribution of steroids was among a litany of offenses for which he was brought to court in the past. Back in 1994, he was also accused of domestic violence by a woman who was reportedly his grandmother.
More than three weeks after an NBC interview where Kavanaugh accuser #3 Julie Swetnick contradicted the sworn affidavit she gave Avenatti, the network is publishing text and phone exchanges with a supporting "witness." Recorded around the time of Swetnick's interview, the second woman appears to tell two different stories when Avenatti is around and when he isn't.
The supposed witness signed an affidavit, made public by Avenatti on October 3, describing in no uncertain terms how she saw a young Brett Kavanaugh (now a US Supreme Court justice) spike the drinks of girls at student parties so that they could then be gang-raped. When questioned by NBC, however, she said she hadn't actually witnessed it, and Avenatti had grossly misrepresented her words in the document she had only "skimmed" before signing.
Comment: Looks like the investigation into shady porn lawyer Avenatti and his equally deceptive client is well deserved. Avenatti's presidential aspirations need to be nipped in the bud.
- Grassley refers porn lawyer Avenatti and client Julie Swetnick to DOJ for criminal charges over Kavanaugh accusations
- #Creepypornlawyer Avenatti slapped with $4.85m verdict in lawsuit from fmr law partner
- With the spotlight on lawyer Avenatti, his own dodgy past is emerging
- Shady lawyer Avenatti threatens news site for reporting allegations about his past misconduct
After initially taking a belligerent stance Kentucky man Brant Goldbach now says that he regrets dressing his five-year-old son as Adolf Hitler for the family photo, in which he was dressed as a Nazi soldier.
Goldbach posted photos of the Halloween costumes during a local trick or treat event on Thursday. He initially attempted to justify the costumes by saying that he and his son love dressing as "historical figures" and he condemned those who approached and threatened him and his son during the party.
"Anyone who knows us knows that we love history, and often dress the part of historical figures," he wrote in the now deleted post.
Up to now, it's an argument that's been easy enough to dismiss given the very people making it are usually the ones responsible for the campus censorship we read about. But a BBC 'Fact Check', purporting to back-up their claims, has, irritatingly, given them a bit of a boost.
The BBC sent freedom of information requests to universities across Britain to ask if they had made any changes to courses, removed any books from libraries or cancelled any speakers as a result of complaints from offended students. Of 120 responses, they found that, since 2010, there have only been four instances of course content being removed, six occasions of universities cancelling speakers and zero instances of books being removed or banned. 'The number of incidents uncovered are small', it concludes - to much applause from the higher-ed Twittersphere.
But there are gaping holes in this supposed takedown of campus censorship hysteria.
The incident took place on the night of October 14 but the police only issued a detailed report on the matter after all major suspects were detained. The victim, whose identity has not been revealed, attended a disco party at one of the local clubs, where she became acquainted with a Syrian asylum seeker, the police said in a statement.
He bought her a drink and the pair then left the club together, the statement adds. The man is alleged to have then dragged the woman into nearby bushes and raped her. The perpetrator then left his victim in the bushes and returned to the club to "call his friends," the German Bild daily reports.
Comment: AfD's popularity likely just went up several percentage points overnight.

Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen speaks during a visit to President Trump's border wall in the El Centro Sector in Calexico, California.
The two-and-a-half-mile-long, 30-foot-tall barrier was built over eight months and unveiled by US Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen at a ceremony in Calexico, California on Friday. Nielsen pleaded for further government funding to complete the mammoth project, saying that "walls work." She also refuted the oft-repeated claim that the barrier of steel bollards was actually just a fence.
Earlier this year, Trump unveiled eight border wall prototypes in California, some concrete and some metal structures like this one. "It's different than a fence in that it also has technology. It's a full wall system," she said. "It's a wall, this is what the president has asked us to do. It's part of a system."
The ceremony celebrated the replacement of shorter, older fencing that was installed in the 1990s. On Friday, a plaque was installed on the 'wall' to "commemorate the completion of the first section of President Trump's border wall," it read.
"Walls work, it's not my opinion," Nielsen said. "It's not a tagline. It's not a political statement. It's a fact."
The station is opting to bring the coordinator on board to monitor sex scenes in every production that has them, after an actress playing a porn star and prostitute asked for a little more protection on set than her character had in the series.
When Emily Meade, who stars in the TV drama 'The Deuce,' approached production staff in the immediate aftermath of the #MeToo revelations last year to request an "advocate purely for sexual scenes," HBO hired Alicia Rodis, whose practices have since so endeared her to 'The Deuce' showrunner David Simon that he told Rolling Stone he'd never work without an intimacy coordinator again.
HBO shows are somewhat notorious for their copious sex scenes, and 'The Deuce' is no exception. An hour-long drama about prostitution and the porn industry set in 1970s New York, the show is chock-full of nudity and sexual encounters.














Comment: That a covert government facility bases its understanding and approval of its actions upon a television series in order to forgo its boundaries boggles the mind...but then boggling the mind of chosen victims, through torture of the body and psyche, is exactly what they do.