Federal investigators comb site of San Diego plane crash in neighborhood of military housingNew Foto - Federal investigators comb site of San Diego plane crash in neighborhood of military housing

SAN DIEGO (AP) — The weather alert system and runway lights weren't working at a foggy San Diego airport where a private jet was planning to land before it crashed into a neighborhood, but the cause of the crash remains unclear, officials said Friday. Dan Baker of the National Transportation Safety Board also said investigators haven't determined a cause of Thursday's crash that likely killed all six people aboard. Baker said the weather alert system at Montgomery-Gibbs Executive Airport was down at the time of the crash due to an unrelated power surge. He said the pilot instead got weather information from Marine Corps Air Station Miramar about 4 miles (6.44 kilometers) north, but he was aware of the fog. The runway lights were also down. The plane crashed about 2 miles (3.22 kilometers) from the airport. Music talent agentDave Shapiro,and two unnamed employees of the music agency he co-founded, Sound Talent Group, were among the dead along with the former drummer for metal band The Devil Wears Prada. Shapiro, 42, had a pilot's license and was listed as the owner of the 1985 Cessna 550 Citation that plowed into the neighborhood of U.S. Navy housing shortly before 4 a.m. Thursday. The crash added to along list of aviation disastersthis year. They include amidair collisionthat killed 67 people near Washington, D.C., in January, anairliner that clipped another planein February while taxiing at the Seattle airport and a sightseeinghelicopter that broke apart and crashedinto the Hudson River between New York City and New Jersey last month, killing six people. Federal officials have tried to reassure travelersthat flying is the safest mode of transportation, which statistics support. But a cascade of aviation mishaps has drawing increasing attention. Shapiro's aircraft was trying to land in foggy weather at Montgomery-Gibbs Executive Airport when it struck power lines about 2 miles (3.2 kilometers) southeast of the airfield, Elliot Simpson of the National Transportation Safety Board. The flight took off from Teterboro, New Jersey, near Manhattan, at about 11:15 p.m. Wednesday and made a fuel stop in Wichita, Kansas, before continuing on to San Diego. That overnight schedule wouldn't be allowed for an airliner under federal crew rest rules, but those regulations don't apply to private planes. Former NTSB and FAA crash investigator Jeff Guzzetti said he thinks the dense fog and fatigue after Shapiro flew all night long were likely factors in the crash. "This accident has all the earmarks of a classic attempt to approach an airport in really bad weather and poor visibility," Guzzetti said. "And there were other airports that the crew could have gone to." Fragments of the plane were found under power lines that are about a half block from the homes. It then lost a wing on the road directly behind the homes. Guzzetti said even if the plane had missed the power lines it may have still crashed because it was coming in too low in the fog. A terrifying wakeup The crash site shows more damage on the front side of those homes, including a smashed stone landscaping wall and an incinerated truck that was parked across the street and shoved into the living room of its owner's home before catching fire. Ben McCarty and his wife, who live in the home that was hit, said they felt heat all around them after being woken up by an explosion. "All I could see was fire. The roof of the house was still on fire. You could see the night sky from our living room," McCarty, who has served in the Navy for 13 years,told local ABC affiliate KGTV. Flames blocked many of the exits so they grabbed their children and dogs and ran out the back but the burning debris blocked the gate so neighbors helped them climb over the fence to escape. "We got the kids over the fence and then I jumped over the fence. They brought a ladder and we got the dogs," McCarty said. Meanwhile, fiery jet fuel rolled down the block igniting everything in its path from trees to plastic trash containers to car after car. McCarty's home was the only one destroyed, though another 10 residences suffered damage, authorities said. Eight residents were taken to the hospital for smoke inhalation and injuries that were not life-threatening, including a person who was hurt climbing out a window, police officer Anthony Carrasco said. McCarty said his family used to enjoy living under the flight path so they could watch the planes pass overhead. "Us and our kids would sit on our front porch and we'd look up and my sons would always be excited saying 'plane plane' watching the planes go by and ironically right where we were sitting is where that plane hit," McCarty said. Now, he wants to move. "I'm not going to live over that flight line again — it's going to be hard to sleep at night," McCarty said. It could have been much worse NTSB investigators are gathering evidence to determine what happened. "Given it happened in a densely populated suburban area and the time of day when most people are asleep at home, it is surprising there were no deaths on the ground," Rod Sullivan, a transportation expert, said. But Guzzetti said in his experience there often aren't deaths on the ground when a plane crashes in a residential area unless people are right where the plane hits. The crashof a medical transport flight into a Philadelphia neighborhood in January shows what can happen when there is a direct hit in a populated area.Two people on the ground diedand about two dozen others were hurt when that plane slammed into the ground and caught fire. Six people abord that plane also died. At least 100 residents in the San Diego neighborhood were evacuated and officials said it was unclear when it would be safe for people to return. On Friday, some residents were escorted back to their homes to get essentials, like their military IDs to get back on bases after they left them in the rush to escape. Thursday's crash comes only weeks after a similar one in Southern California. Asmall plane crashed into a neighborhood in Simi Valleyon May 3 killing both people and a dog aboard the aircraft and igniting two homes, but no one was reported hurt on the ground despite residents being inside the residences at the time. The community is located nearly 50 miles (80 kilometers) northwest of Los Angeles. In October 2021 a twin-engine planeplowed into a San Diego suburb, killing the pilot and a UPS delivery driver on the ground and burning homes. ___ Funk contributed to this report from Omaha, Nebraska.

Federal investigators comb site of San Diego plane crash in neighborhood of military housing

Federal investigators comb site of San Diego plane crash in neighborhood of military housing SAN DIEGO (AP) — The weather alert system and r...
Trump administration must restore health articles scrubbed for transgender mentions, judge rulesNew Foto - Trump administration must restore health articles scrubbed for transgender mentions, judge rules

By Nate Raymond BOSTON (Reuters) -A federal judge ordered the Trump administration on Friday to restore articles by doctors and medical researchers that were removed from a government-run website focused on patient safety because they contained references to transgender people. U.S. District Judge Leo Sorokin in Boston sided with two doctors at Harvard Medical School whose patient-safety articles were scrubbed from the website after Republican President Donald Trump signed an executive order requiring agencies to remove all statements and policies promoting "gender ideology." The articles had been published on the Patient Safety Network (PSNet), an online patient safety resource. It is run by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, which is part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The judge agreed with the doctors that the removal of the articles was a "textbook example" of viewpoint discrimination that violated the free speech protections of the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment. "This is a flagrant violation of the plaintiffs' First Amendment rights as private speakers on a limited public forum," the judge, an appointee of Democratic former President Barack Obama, wrote. Sorokin ordered the administration to restore not just the two doctors' articles to the PSNet but all other content authored by private parties that were removed from the website pursuant to Trump's executive order following a word search for items that contained certain terms. Rachel Davidson, a lawyer for Drs. Gordon Schiff and Celeste Royce at the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts, in a statement called the ruling "a victory for free speech and public health." HHS did not respond to a request for comment. Trump signed the executive order on his first day back in the White House on January 20, forcing the government to "recognize women are biologically female, and men are biologically male." Among the articles that were removed from PSNet were ones co-authored by Schiff and Royce, who sued after articles they co-wrote focused on suicide risk and the disease endometriosis were removed because they included brief references acknowledging transgender patient populations. Sorokin said even passing references to people who identify themselves as transgender were deemed contrary to Trump's order, and deleting the offending words was a non-negotiable prerequisite for the articles to be reposted to PSNet. (Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Diane Craft)

Trump administration must restore health articles scrubbed for transgender mentions, judge rules

Trump administration must restore health articles scrubbed for transgender mentions, judge rules By Nate Raymond BOSTON (Reuters) -A federa...
Trump approves FEMA disaster relief for 8 statesNew Foto - Trump approves FEMA disaster relief for 8 states

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — PresidentDonald Trumpgreen-lit disaster relief for eight states on Friday, assistance that some of the communities rocked by natural disasters have been waiting on for months. The major disaster declaration approvals allow Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Mississippi, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Texas access to financial support through the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Several states requested the aid in response to damage from amassive stormsystem in mid-March. "This support will go a long way in helping Mississippi to rebuild and recover. Our entire state is grateful for his approval," said Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves, whose state experienced 18 tornados between March 14 and 15. Mississippi residents in the hard-hit Walthall County expressedfrustrationearlier this month over how long they had been waiting for federal help. The county's emergency manager said debris removal operations stalled in early May when the county ran out of money while awaiting federal assistance. Earlier this week Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem vowed to expedite Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe's request for disaster assistance, after being pressed on the issue by U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley, a Missouri Republican. "That is one of the failures that FEMA has had in the past is that people who incur this kind of damage and lose everything sit there for months and sometimes years and never get the promised critical response that they think or that they believe they should be getting from the federal government," Noem said. Trump haspointedto wait times as one reason he's looking to make major changes to the agency. FEMA's newly-appointed acting chief has said he plans to push moreresponsibility for disaster response and recovery onto states. FEMA did not immediately respond to questions about what prompted the flurry of approvals.

Trump approves FEMA disaster relief for 8 states

Trump approves FEMA disaster relief for 8 states JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — PresidentDonald Trumpgreen-lit disaster relief for eight states on Fr...
Shaquille O'Neal Offers Craig Melvin $1 Million Cash to Eat a Giant Bowl of Candy on Live TVNew Foto - Shaquille O'Neal Offers Craig Melvin $1 Million Cash to Eat a Giant Bowl of Candy on Live TV

NBC While appearing onToday, Shaquille O'Neal challenged Craig Melvin to an unexpected bet The retired NBA star told the co-anchor he would give him $1 million cash to eat a giant bowl of candy The retired NBA star also joked about his friendly beef with Melvin Shaquille O'Nealbrought the jokes — and the candy — to theTodayshow! While appearing on the the morning show to talk about his Netflix docuseries,Power Moves, on Friday, May 23, theInside the NBAhost offered co-anchorCraig Melvina sweet sum of money to eat his SHAQ-A-LICIOUS XL Gummies in the latest installment of their ongoing friendly competitions. "If you can eat this in 30 seconds, I'll give you a million dollars cash," O'Neal, 53, told Melvin while gesturing to a large bowl of his not "adult" gummies. NBC Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Melvin, 46, laughed and declined the invitation, even though the retired NBA star remarked that there was a Bank of America across the street where he could access the funds, should the broadcaster make good on the challenge. "I walk you over there," O'Neal said as Al Roker and Dylan Dreyer laughed in response. During an earlier segment on the show, O'Neal further delved into his imaginary rivalry with Melvin, who introduced the polymath as the "Black Forrest Gump." "Every time we see each other we have a competition and I beat him and he just gets mad," O'Neal joked. "He sends me rude emails, threatening emails. He says he's always gonna beat me up." Elsewhere in the interview, the former athlete talked aboutPower Moves, which documents his behind-the-scenes projects with Reebok. NBC The PEOPLE Appis now available in the Apple App Store! Download it now for the most binge-worthy celeb content, exclusive video clips, astrology updates and more! "Are you gonna bring back the Pump?" Melvin asked, referring to '80s-era Reeboks that featured an air pump button on the shoes' tongues. "Yes we are, and you won't get a pair," O'Neal hilariously replied. Co-hostSavannah Guthriethen appropriately summed up the duo's chemistry by saying: "I'm here for this, I'd like a TV show out of this." Read the original article onPeople

Shaquille O'Neal Offers Craig Melvin $1 Million Cash to Eat a Giant Bowl of Candy on Live TV

Shaquille O'Neal Offers Craig Melvin $1 Million Cash to Eat a Giant Bowl of Candy on Live TV NBC While appearing onToday, Shaquille O...
The best Stephen King adaptations, from classics like "The Shining" to recent TV fare

Michael Weinstein/Columbia; Courtesy Everett (2) With the sheer amount ofStephen Kingadaptations released in theaters and on television, there are bound to be some that don't live up to the King of Horror's genius. But there are others that not only match the greatness of the source material but expand upon King's writing with haunting imagery we'll never forget. Obviously, the true classics likeCarrie(1976),The Shining(1980), andMisery(1990) are among the best films of their genre. But we've found that many of the best King-based movies and shows also come from his work outside of horror, with films likeStand by Me(1986) andThe Shawshank Redemption(1994) proving how many of his more straightforward stories are ripe for on-screen interpretation, too. AsThe Shiningturns 45, we list some of our favorite Stephen King movie and TV adaptations that stick in our minds like a good ghost story. DirectorDavid Cronenbergbrings his signature brand of Canadian creepiness to this taut supernatural thriller.Christopher Walkenstars as a school teacher who comes out of a coma with a gift that feels more like a terrifying curse. He has the psychic ability to tell a person's fate by coming into contact with them, leading to him becoming involved in a political conspiracy. It's like aTwilight Zoneepisode spiked with arsenic.—Chris Nashawaty Sure, it may not be as well-known asThe Terminator,Predator, or evenCommando.However, director Paul Michael Glaser's dystopian sci-fi satire is Peak Schwarzenegger. Ahnuld plays a wrongly convicted man who has to fight for his freedom on a death-sport television reality show. To make matters worse, it is hosted by formerFamily Feudkissing bandit Richard Dawson (who, let the record show, is a fantastic movie villain). Timely, prescient, and highly underrated.—C.N. This powerful feminist psychodrama feels like a love letter from King to his single, working-class mother, who he says supported their family alone after his father walked out.Kathy Batesplays Dolores, a hardscrabble Maine housekeeper who hasn't seen her estranged daughter, Selena (Jennifer Jason Leigh), in 15 years. Selena returns after her mother is suspected of a murder that mirrors the events surrounding the death of Selena's abusive father (David Strathairn). Director Taylor Hackford toggles between the past and present in a way that reminds you that sometimes in life, it's hard to tell them apart.—C.N. Mary Lambert's1989 adaptationhas its hardcore fans. But, for my money,Starry EyesdirectorsKevin Kolsch and Dennis Widmyer's remakedigs into something darker and more primal. The Creed family (led by an excellentJason Clarke) moves to Maine; watches their beloved cat, Church, become roadkill; and then brings that pet back to life by burying it in a supernatural cemetery deep in the woods. Like many things that seem too good to be true, there's a catch: Those buried there do not come back the same. There's a lesson here about grief and not messing with the dead (or our cherished memories of them), but you'll be too busy digging your fingernails into your armrest to give it much thought until you're home lying in bed. Oh, and P.S.,good luck trying to fall asleep.—C.N. Frank Darabontis the go-to director when it comes to King adaptations (see also:The Green MileandThe Shawshank Redemption). And he certainly found every ounce of the author's air of locked-room dread in this one. Set almost entirely in a small-town Maine supermarket where the locals are hiding out from...well, what exactly?Thomas Janesteals the show from a great cast of character actors, especially in a final scene that is so raw and bleak and amazing that I may just go watch it again right now.—C.N. Sometimes lost in all of those volumes of white-knuckle horror prose is the fact that King is more than just creeping dread and gotcha scares. He's also a master of nostalgia.Rob Reiner'sStand by Memay be the clearest example of the author's Proustian obsession with the smallest quotidian details of youth — the recollected smells, sights, and sounds of long-ago summer nights that we're only able to share with our oldest (and first) friends. But yes, there's also a dead body. Told in sun-dappled flashback,Stand by Merevolves around four childhood friends (beautifully played byRiver Phoenix,Wil Wheaton,Jerry O'Connell, andCorey Feldman) who, in 1959, set off to find that dead body. But really, it's about male bonding, the first taste of freedom, and how the most insignificant things (a catchy pop song, a campfire story about a pie-eating contest puke-athon) can feel like the only things that matter.—C.N. Everett Stephen King andJohn Carpenter— need we say more? Carpenter, known at that point for such films asHalloween(1978) andThe Fog(1981), proved a strong match for King's pulpy tale of a seemingly sentient Plymouth Fury with a penchant for killing. While King has stated he found the movie adaptation "boring," in some ways we prefer the film's more economical storytelling compared to the book, particularly the choice to cut out the backstory of how the car came to be possessed. Rather than get bogged down in the details of an origin story, Carpenter leaves it semi-ambiguous and allows the audience to just enjoy the ride. —Kevin Jacobsen Miseryis the momentKathy Bates became an icon. Annie Wilkes, the self-proclaimed number-one fan of a jaded bestselling author played byJames Caan, is an unforgettable cocktail of G-rated verbal abuse and hard-R physical violence (the sledgehammer!). "I thought you were good Paul. But you're not good. You're just another lying ol' dirty birdy." King and Bates both make Annie, arguably King's most vivid and dementedly noble character, the perfect villain in their own ways. It should come as no surprise, then, that Bateswon the Academy Award for Best Actressfor the role in 1991.—C.N. Although it was nominated for seven Oscars, including Best Picture,Frank Darabont's adaptation of King's 1982 novellaRita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemptionwas greeted at the box office with relative indifference. Since then, thanks to an infinite loop of cable airings,The Shawshank Redemptionhas snowballed into the ultimate male weepie — a nakedly sentimental drama that guys can choke up watching and not feel guilty about afterward. Tim RobbinsandMorgan Freemanplay Andy and Red — a pair of long-term convicts who gradually become best friends despite Andy's undying dream of freedom and Red's suspicion that after so long behind bars, he might not know how to live on the outside.Shawshankhas its naysayers who dismiss it as melodramatic hooey, but they're wrong.—C.N. Before you say anything, yes, Stephen King is famously not a fan of this version of his 1977 novel. Then again, he may be too close to the story to see what everyone else loves aboutStanley Kubrick'shaunting goose-flesh adaptation. Part supernatural chiller, part psychological thriller (with a dash of sub-zero cabin fever thrown in for atmosphere),The Shiningis the ultimate combination of a typical horror movie and an art film. This dream-logic nightmare begs you to wrestle with it, rearrange it, decode it, and find your own terrifying answers. Like the frenzied conductor of a runaway train,Jack Nicholsonand his devilish smile drive it all.—C.N. A horrific but oddly relatable coming-of-age story,Brian De Palma's masterpiece starsSissy Spacekas small-town outcast Carrie White — a sheltered, picked-on wallflower with a deranged religious zealot mother at home (Piper Laurie) and a telekinetic gift triggered by a rage with which she's just beginning to grapple. De Palma's suspenseful Rube Goldberg–meets–Alfred Hitchcockpig's blood at the prom climax gets all the attention. Still, this sympathetic love letter to teenage misfits everywhere wouldn't work without Spacek's wide-eyed vulnerability and King's deep understanding of the humiliations of adolescence and popularity that every teen knows all too well.—C.N. Kent Smith/AT+T Audience Network If you are looking for an underrated crime series,Mr. Mercedesshould be at the top of your watchlist.Brendan Gleesonis simply terrific as retired detective Bill Hodges, who remains haunted by a terrifying incident in which a man dubbed Mr. Mercedes claimed the lives of 16 people. His independent investigations lead him to a supernatural serial killer (Harry Treadaway), who will seemingly stop at nothing to torment Hodges. Not unlike its 2020 contemporary,The Outsider,Mr. Mercedescombines procedural drama with supernatural scares to create an enjoyable roller coaster ride.—Clark Collis Russ Martin/Hulu Some King novels feel destined for cinematic adaptation — two hours, in and out. Others, like his sci-fi doorstopper11/22/63, are much more suited to television, as proven by this Hulu-produced limited series. Telling the story of an English teacher (James Franco) gifted with the chance to time travel back to 1960 to prevent John F. Kennedy's assassination, the eight-episode thriller is well-paced and well-performed with a strong emotional core that tackles potent themes about love and the consequences of our actions. —K.J. It is easy to poke holes intoCastle Rock's inclusion in this list. After all, it's not technically an adaptation of any particular work. Despite this technicality, this anthology TV show skillfully evokes the milieu of King asa posse of top-notch acting talent(including Sissy Spacek,André Holland, and, in season 2,Lizzy Caplanas a young Annie Wilkes) help extend the Master of the Macabre's universe. Talk about a multiverse of madness!—C.C. Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

The best Stephen King adaptations, from classics like “The Shining” to recent TV fare

The best Stephen King adaptations, from classics like "The Shining" to recent TV fare Michael Weinstein/Columbia; Courtesy Everett...

 

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