Author: Horror Reporter

  • Just going away? Was Sylvia right!?

    Just going away? Was Sylvia right!?

    Will COVID really just vanish by April?

    Is there more HOPE in this commentary than fact?

    In an op-ed for the Wall Street Journal on Friday, Dr. Marty Makary — a surgeon and a professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and Bloomberg School of Public Health — said that there are actually many more than the 28 million confirmed cases of the coronavirus in the U.S., possibly as much as 6.5 times more than that number. 

    Between that group, and the roughly 15 percent of the country which has already received one dose of the vaccine, Makary argues that much of the nation is already protected from the virus.

    “There is reason to think the country is racing toward an extremely low level of infection,” Makary wrote. “As more people have been infected, most of whom have mild or no symptoms, there are fewer Americans left to be infected. At the current trajectory, I expect Covid will be mostly gone by April, allowing Americans to resume normal life.”

    x x x 

    Meanwhile on the other side of the aisle: The idea that the variants are going to destroy all hope.. Maybe by April?

    pidemiologist Michael Osterholm issued dire warnings about the potential spread of the new, more contagious Covid-19 variants, saying that they could produce a surge of cases in the United States to levels “we have not seen yet in this country.”

    Dr. Osterholm, who is director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota and a member of President Biden’s transition team advising on coronavirus, told Meet the Press host Chuck Todd that he expects to see cases of the new Covid-19 variants to surge “in the next six to 14 weeks.” As a result, he said the US may need to execute a major shift its vaccine strategy, focusing on administering the first dose of the vaccine to as many people as possible instead of trying to get people their second doses.

    “We still want to get two doses in everyone, but I think right now, in advance of this surge, we need to get as many one-doses in as many people over 65 as we possibly can, to reduce serious illness and deaths that are going to occur over the weeks ahead,” Osterholm said.

  • Let the creep shows continue

    Let the creep shows continue

    Shudder has renewed its “Creepshow” anthology series for a third season of six episodes to premiere later this year.

    Ethan Embry and Andrew Bachelor will guest star.

    The show’s second season premieres on April 1st on Shudder and the AMC+ service.

    Shudder has also ordered a new anthology series showcasing Black horror stories from Black directors and screenwriters.

  • RUSH LIMBAUGH DEAD OF LUNG CANCER

    RUSH LIMBAUGH DEAD OF LUNG CANCER

    THE DRUDGE REPORT SPLASHED THIS ON WEDNESDAY AROUND NOON:

    It was the first official “siren” that Drudge has used in months. This time because the death of a conservative radio icon had occurred. Drudge also appeared as a guest host from time to time through the years on the “EIB” network…

    The news has broken.. “El Rushbo” had finally succumbed to cancer.

    In his final radio broadcast of 2020, Limbaugh thanked his listeners and supporters, revealing at the time that he had outlived his prognosis.

    “I wasn’t expected to be alive today,” he said. “I wasn’t expected to make it to October, and then to November, and then to December. And yet, here I am, and today, got some problems, but I’m feeling pretty good today.”

    He died Wednesday at the age of 70 after a battle with lung cancer, his family announced.Limbaugh’s wife, Kathryn, made the announcement on his radio show…

    Former President Trump honored him with a medal of freedom during the 2020 State of the Union Speech, something that rallied the base but made the rest of America recoil.

    Rush Limbaugh had been one of the most controversial figures in media and politics in a generation. His 1990s “AIDS update” featured gags in which he made jokes about gay people catching the virus. Many accused him of hatred .. Hillary Clinton accused him of being the head of the ‘vast right wing conspiracy’ that was trying to take her husband Bill Clinton out of the presidency. (And you thought our current time was divisive!)

    The legacy of Rush can be written in two chapters. One would focus on the political rhetoric. The other would focus on his ascension to the great halls of radio.

    There was always something magical about the Rush Limbaugh program on radio. He tried the same thing on syndication in the 1990s but it ended up failing, despite having a live audience and trying the same bits he used on his AM show.

    We are students and lovers of radio. It is a dying art. The stars of yesterday are quickly leaving, or at least leaving radio. Rush Limabaugh among a very famous pack of people in the 1980s and 1990s keeping AM alive years longer than expected. You can platy it all day and keep every hour occupied. Howard Stern, Rush, Dr. Laura, and Art Bell to round out the night with alien life.. It was a grand heyday for terrestrial talk. Long form radio.

    Rush had defenders and those offended. But during his prime, he was the “must listen” to show both the Newt Gingrich-led Congress and the Clinton White House. Rush Limbaugh often set the agenda or at least regurgitated the talking points in a different way that appealed to the “Dittoheads” that listened.

    During his lifetime he rose in prominence from just a few stations to hundreds. He wrote two books.. he had a TV show. And he never stopped radio. He made Manheim Steamroller famous at Christmas. He had public bouts with painkillers.. he almost went deaf. And he clearly got a new set of choppers in the mean time. Rush had a life.

    The aftermath of his death is predictable. People who love him are venerating him as a saint. While those who opposed are dancing on his body as it assumes room temperature. It is better to wait to comment on something these days than immediately react.. the herd mentality becomes a feeding frenzy of commentary. A tower of babble. Everyone is babbling.

    SE Cupp, a conservative commentator on CNN, stated that Rush Limbaugh represented the same elite that he rallied conservatives against..

    The President himself had a response to the death of Rush Limbaugh that was communicated by White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki:

    x x x

    60 MINUTES did a piece of Rush Limbaugh in 1991.. it is fascinating to go back 30 years to hear of how Rush was proud to be called the most dangerous man in politics…

  • THE HAVES ELECTRICITY AND HAVE NOTS ELECTRICITY..

    THE HAVES ELECTRICITY AND HAVE NOTS ELECTRICITY..

    THE HAVES ELECTRICITY AND HAVE NOTS ELECTRICITY..

    ABC13 in Houston posted a photo of the city skyline last night, with many of the surrounding homes and businesses in the dark..

    This photo has caused outrage and debate. While some in Texas are taking to their cars to say warm, why is the city skyline still lit while others have had their heat turned off in rolling blackouts!?

    MORE..

    ABC13 reached out to the mayor’s office after hearing residents’ frustrations. Here is the full statement: “Throughout the day, Mayor Turner has asked people to conserve energy because of the power outages. He had mentioned it in tweets, zoom interviews and during his news conference. He has been in contact with CenterPoint Energy and others urging them to restore power to Houstonians as soon as possible. CenterPoint has assured the mayor that it is asking its major providers to conserve energy. The mayor encourages everyone to do their share to help during the extreme winter weather.” Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo also weighed in on the buildings lit up, calling it “maddening.” She said she had been in touch with CenterPoint Energy Tuesday morning.

  • Hell on Earth in the cold winds of winter

    Hell on Earth in the cold winds of winter

    In so many states, scenes looked like the 2004 film THE DAY AFTER TOMORROW..

    The National Weather Service reports extremely cold temperatures ranging from -5 to 3 degrees is predicted through at least noon on Tuesday for all of North and Central Texas.

    Roughly 3.9 million Texans are without power as of early Tuesday morning after the power grid failed.

    Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced late Monday that the Texas National Guard was being deployed to help get people to heating centers. He said state agencies are sending additional resources and personnel to help local officials clear roadways and to assist essential workers.

    NPR reporting,

    Attempts to keep the heat and lights on at the onset of the severe weather failed. Rolling blackouts scheduled early Monday to conserve Texas’s energy supply turned into extended blackouts that are now expected to last well into Tuesday, and possibly longer, energy company officials said.

    The Electric Reliability Council of Texas said the grid lost some 34,000 megawatts of power. Energy sources powering the grid were knocked offline, most of which were powered by natural gas, coal or nuclear energy, according to Houston Public Radio.

    The state grid was already facing some shortages because of frozen wind turbines and limited gas supply.

    In North Texas, energy provider Oncor said power outages in the region, previously expected to last just 45 minutes, will be “significantly extended” and told customers to be prepared to be without power for awhile.

    \

    As of this moment, three people were killed in a tornado that tore through a seaside North Carolina town and millions of people in Texas remained in the dark early Tuesday amid subfreezing temperatures..

    Much of east Texas, Oklahoma and Arkansas were under winter storm warnings Tuesday in anticipation of the next round of snow and ice. In Dallas, the Weather Service said more ice and another 2 to 6 inches of snow were expected beginning Tuesday evening.

  • Rolling blackouts: Millions in Texas experiencing power outages,

    Rolling blackouts: Millions in Texas experiencing power outages,

    The Southwest Power Pool, a group of utilities across 14 states, called for rolling blackouts and power outages because the supply of reserve energy had been exhausted.
    — Read on 6abc.com/10342320/

    More..

    In Houston, where county leaders had warned that the freeze could create problems on the scale of massive hurricanes that slam the Gulf Coast, one electric provider said power may not be restored to some homes until Tuesday. More than 500 people were hunkering down at one shelter, but Mayor Sylvester Turner said other warming centers had to be shut down because those locations, too, lost power.

    State officials said soaring demand and cold weather knocking some power stations offline had pushed Texas’ system beyond the limits.

    “This weather event, it’s really unprecedented. We all living here know that,” said Dan Woodfin, senior director of system operations at the Electric Reliability Council of Texas. He defended preparations made by grid operators and described the demand on the system as record-setting.

  • DAILY BEAST CONFUSED BY HORROR FLICK ‘SHOOK’

    DAILY BEAST CONFUSED BY HORROR FLICK ‘SHOOK’

    The best of horror deals with society in the age is deriving from. All past famous horror films have emulated the moment in time is originated in.

    The DAILY BEAST writes about a new horror film ‘Shook,’ premiering on Shudder, attempts to expose the empty narcissism of influencers. But it mostly plays itself.

    This new film being reviewed by the DAILY BEAST appears to be that very type if film: It is a horror that targets the ugliness of the influencer culture of Twitter, YouTube, and other social media companies..

    From Nick Schager, a few notable quotes from the piece:

    Writer/director Jennifer Harrington wades into these digital waters with Shook, a thriller that’s heavy on censure and woefully light on scares. A Shudder exclusive premiering on the horror streaming platform on Feb. 18, its tale concerns Mia (Daisye Tutor), a young, pretty blonde influencer whose claim to fame are makeup videos for a cosmetics brand. The phoniness of Mia’s vocation is underscored by the film’s introductory scene, in which she and two other women—including “beauty influencer of the year” Genelle (Genelle Seldon)—pose for the paparazzi, only for Harrington to cut to a master shot of this newsworthy event, which is really just a staged red carpet that’s been constructed in an abandoned parking lot. This entire world’s phoniness is thus laid bare succinctly, and sharply.

    The opening urine: 

    That’s not the only pointed thing about Shook’s opening; when her dog pees all over her swanky dress, Genelle rushes off to a nearby bathroom, where she winds up getting stabbed through the chin with her designer high heel shoe. Subsequent headlines indicate that this slaying is related to a spate of recent Southern California attacks by a killer that primarily preys on dogs, and in the aftermath of her colleague’s demise, Mia takes to social media to proclaim, “I’m shook. Seriously.” Given that everything about these individuals is performative bullshit, shook she most certainly is not. In fact, she barely gives it another thought, instead turning her attention to her own dilemma: having to watch her sister Nicole’s (Emily Goss) dog Chico and, in the process, miss out on a big livestream with her boyfriend Santi (Octavius J. Johnson) and friends Lani (Nicola Posener) and Jade (Stephanie Simbari).

    Shook slowly develops into a wannabe-nightmare in which Mia is harassed by unbelievable threats from Kellan, who snatches Chico and then promises to kill her friends (and the pooch) if she doesn’t answer his questions and play his games…

    But in the end it appears the film gets a negative score:

    Shook’s revelations further underscore the disingenuousness of influencers—what they say, what they do, who they claim to be—and, by extension, everything seen and heard on Instagram et al. Yet in a 2021 grappling with a tidal wave of democracy-undermining disinformation, such notions come off as dully obvious. The cast’s performances are uniformly bland, and Harrington’s inability to bestow Mia or her cohorts with distinctive personalities turns them into mere vehicles for her material’s familiar message. Worse, however, is that the cat-and-mouse game which eventually kicks into gear is clumsily staged, its helter-skelter rhythm doing much to neuter any menace or peril. It’s also borderline illogical, hinging on incidents that make no sense regardless of the explanations provided by characters’ dialogue.

    Why Shook—a movie about pulling the curtain back on social media influencers’ narcissism and insincerity—revolves around dog murders is anyone’s guess, but such randomness is in keeping with the endeavor’s general sloppiness. 

    Perhaps the reason for the mundane nature of the dog mystery is because social media is devoid of things that matter.. the influencer culture is scripted. It’s without human emotion. So why not have a story line that borderlines on boring mindlessness.

  • Society gone haywire? Check some history books!

    Society gone haywire? Check some history books!

    Have you noticed normal content going haywire lately?

    If there was social media in ancient times, perhaps the same would have occurred.

    History, we can learn, brings out the best and the worst in people. Times when we are challenged, especially in a long-duration event, can make us recoil into the worst of humanity..

    After 9/11, the last time the world was shook to its core, a large swath of people chose to go with antiquated racist beliefs and attack Muslims.. It was the “kinder and gentler” George W. that actually did the right thing and made it a policy as a nation to visually be seen with Muslims and have events that mitigated the zealous rage against them. Of course the next choice the American government made was to embroil itself into two wars in the Middle East that largely decimated any good feelings after September 11…

    But during COVID, we are also reminded of the similar events in history in which societies became enraged and inflamed. Just because WE are living through something does not mean WE are the first. That belief system is extremely selfish and narcissistic. 

    Now narcissism? Maybe that is surging in the modern era more than past times. 😉

    From medieval times to our current crisis, plagues often accelerate extremist movements according to a Washington POST article

    From the Washington POST piece:

    Adam Crigler used to feed his YouTube following a politics-free diet of chatter about aliens, movies, skateboarding and video games. Then came the pandemic. Now, he devotes much of his talk show to his assertion that mask mandates are an assault on personal freedom and that Democrats somehow stole the 2020 election from Donald Trump. Result: a much bigger audience.

    “The pandemic has made more people want to blame someone else because they’ve lost their jobs or they’re lonely,” Crigler said.

    And so many others.

    But when this pandemic ends–and it will–what happens to society? How do we go back to mindless videos on social media again.. Or do we?

    Does it change back? Or does a new generation forget mindlessness and innocence .. until the next generation is born and makes it happen..?

  • WILD TEXAS WEATHER: ROLLING BLACKOUTS AND SINGLE DIGITS DALLAS!

    WILD TEXAS WEATHER: ROLLING BLACKOUTS AND SINGLE DIGITS DALLAS!

    The entire nation is facing a massive, complex, and historic winter storm this week. When leaders told us months ago that we had the prospects of a dark winter, only HAARP could expect it being this dark. This week perhaps it the darkest of them all..

    Temperatures on one side of the Gulf Coast were a balmy 73 in Tampa. But Texas was shivering .. Just 27 in Austin. 18 in Houston.. And 5 single digits in Dallas!

    Along with that, millions are without power nationwide and at least 11 are dead as a result of the large winter storm sweeping the entire United States!

    Nearly 170 million people are under winter weather advisories Monday, with icy roads, power outages, and dangerously low temperatures threatening to snarl traffic and paralyze cities from coast to coast! At least 11 people have died in weather-related vehicle accidents since cold temperatures took hold of the country. Nine died in three separate incidents in Texas Thursday, one person was killed in Kentucky, and another died in a wreck in Oklahoma Sunday…

    Snowing in Texas.

    10 degrees and snowing in Little Rock Arkansas..

    Thundersnow in Galveston Texas.

    2 million without power in the lone star state.

    Winter weather warnings.

    Wind chills.

    Half of the nation’s map is deeply frozen..

    The state of Texas is now performing rolling blackouts as a way to save the grid!

    But some are Twitter are saying their power has been out for 8 hours plus, and their homes are quickly dipping into the 40s and the 30s…

    DEVELOPING..

  • ANGEL breaks silence on boss Joss: Joins the slaying

    ANGEL breaks silence on boss Joss: Joins the slaying

    It was reported this weekend that David Boreanaz, one of the most successful Buffy the Vampire Slayer alumni, has been publicly silent since Charisma Carpenter came forward to accuse Buffy franchise creator Joss Whedon of abusing his power during the show’s production. Boreanaz deleted every post on his Instagram page, leaving just a trailer for the new season of his CBS series. Fans lashed out and criticized Boreanaz for not commenting on the allegations against Whedon while other Buffy stars have spoken out to support Carpenter..

    Until now.

    \Perhaps/ some PR firms had to test waters on the best response, since clearly no response stopped being an option..

    On Sunday, David Boreanaz became the next name to go public with his support of Carpenter, responding to the actress’s original post with the message, “I am here for you to listen and support you. Proud of your strength♥️🙏”.

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