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Tag: Anniversary

  • Happy 10 Year Anniversary Pointshogger! – Pointshogger

    Happy 10 Year Anniversary Pointshogger! – Pointshogger

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    Since the beginning of 2023, we really started contemplating whether this 10 year anniversary post was going to be our last. As the year went on, it really felt like Pointshogger was coming to an end. But more on this later. 

    For now, what a ride it has been fun leading up to this day. After over 2,000 posts, we made it to our 10 year anniversary today on post 2,138! It has been a long journey since the first post. Towards the end of 2022, we were discussing how to celebrate the anniversary. Several ideas were brainstormed, in the end, we decided to keep everything online, starting with a new layout earlier this year, along with getting a byline through our interview series.

    New layout

    We tried to make this a year long online celebration, by starting with refreshing our layout. Even though we revamped our site, this will always be a work in progress (if we continue…). Feel free to let us know in the comment section below if there are any functions on our site that could use some tweaking. Personally I find the new site smoother to navigate and easier to find key information.

    Interviews

    From April 2023 onward, we started interviewing as with as many people as we could connect with. Each of them answering a question regarding our 10-year theme.

    We started the year with the top current Canadian miles and points bloggers, starting with the OG himself, Patrick Sojka, founder of Rewards Canada. Personally, I feel that he really laid the groundwork for other Canadian bloggers to follow.

    Then we featured the OG French Canadian blogger, Milesopedia who has expanded exponentially since they started. We continued with the high flying Frugal Flyer who took off rather quickly! We round out the top 4 out of 5 Canadian bloggers with Points Miles and Bling who has grown exponentially since we first met him at the 2016 Points University. We missed out on Prince of Travel this year, as his schedule became too packed, but we did catch him last year ahead of their YUL Signature Event.

    Also a big shout out to the following companies who also participated in the celebration in chronological order:

    It has been an amazing year for our interview series. Thank you so much to everyone who took the time to share their thoughts with us regarding our 10 year anniversary (read interviews by clicking on the links above).

    We are always open to expanding the series, which seems to have made us a bit unique in the miles and points world. So if you would like to participate, please reach out to set one up!

    Going Forward

    Back to the idea of this being our last post. If you have followed us, especially the first 5 years (between 2013 – 2018) when we posted at least once a day, you may have noticed a big difference in activity over the past several years. We do understand that some readers were hoping for more content and greater presence from us, even just to keep up. We completely understand when readers felt the need to move on to get more relevant information from more active bloggers. Seeing so many other bloggers (mentioned above) really carrying the torch and even growing the community made it easier for us to see people move on. At least we know that you will get the information elsewhere, so no hard feelings!

    At this very moment, we are hoping that we will have the energy to embark on the next 10 years. I’m not sure what the future holds and where life will take us. For now, the plan is to take things day-by-day. So our last post will be delayed indefinitely, but it can come at any time too. That being said, I can at least tell you what we are anticipating going forward. The slowdown in the frequency of our posts will surely continue and it may slow down even more (like in September 2023). But every now and then, you may see a blitz of content being generated in a short period of time (like the first half of this month, October 2023).

    Thank You

    Finally, we just want to give a big THANK YOU for all the readers who have to visit our site over the years, even if you come only one time before. From the bottom of our hearts, we really appreciate every second that you spend at Pointshogger and wish you all the best!

    Co-Founders Matt and Viola

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    Matt

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  • How ‘Practical Magic’ Pissed Off a Real-Life Witch

    How ‘Practical Magic’ Pissed Off a Real-Life Witch

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    Practical Magic, a heady blend of ’90s romantic comedy, domestic violence horror, and supernatural trickery, is perhaps best encapsulated by a single moment: “You have the worst taste in men,” Sandra Bullock’s Sally groans as she helps her sister, Gillian (Nicole Kidman), bury the evil ex they’ve killed in the backyard of their magical mansion.

    Twenty-five years after the film’s release, its synopsis remains spellbindingly dense. Bullock and Kidman play sisters bound by a curse that befalls any man who falls in love with a woman in their family. After their father perishes and their mother dies of a broken heart, the sisters are raised in an enviable cliffside estate by their wonderfully wicked aunts (Stockard Channing and Dianne Wiest, in roles originally envisioned for Vanessa Redgrave and Julie Christie). Sally vows to never fall in love, while Gillian flings herself toward romance.

    The sisters spend several years apart—Sally marries and has two children (Evan Rachel Wood and Alexandra Artrip) with a man (Mark Feuerstein) whose demise arrives as predicted, and Gillian gets entangled with her abusive boyfriend, Jimmy (Goran Visnjic). The pair kill Jimmy after he attempts to kidnap them, but his spirit lingers, requiring a full-on exorcism. Oh, and things are further complicated by the investigation into Jimmy’s murder by Aidan Quinn’s Gary Hallet, whom Sally discovers she’s falling in love with.

    Suffice it to say, the movie is a lot. “I remember Bob Daly, who was co-CEO of Warner Brothers—at our premiere, he sat one row in front [of me],” the film’s director, Griffin Dunne, tells Vanity Fair. “After a very lighthearted scene with girls giggling and being hilarious, [we were] having them dig up a body from a rose bush and stick needles in its eyes. He turned to the person next to him and went, ‘I wish the kid would just pick a tone.’”

    Critics tended to agree. Despite opening at number one, the film, adapted from Alice Hoffman’s 1995 novel with a screenplay by Robin Swicord, Akiva Goldsman, and Adam Brooks, was deemed “too scary for children and too childish for adults,” by the likes of Roger Ebert. Entertainment Weekly called it “a witch comedy so slapdash, plodding, and muddled it seems to have had a hex put on it.”

    Dunne, son of longtime VF contributor Dominick Dunne and an actor best known for 1985’s After Hours, never helmed another studio film. But in the decades since its release, Practical Magic has morphed into a cult classic, beloved particularly by women for its enviable soundtrack (Faith Hill’s “This Kiss”! Joni Mitchell’s “A Case of You,”! Two original Stevie Nicks tracks!) and themes of sisterhood. “Dealing with several different tones in the same film is not that unusual anymore,” says Dunne. “When I did American Werewolf in London, it was the same reaction. People were really upset that there were laughs in a horror movie. Now you can’t make a horror movie without getting laughs.”

    Fervor around the film gets particularly heightened around Halloween, Dunne says. “A little name-drop here, just two nights ago I was in my local restaurant in the Hudson Valley. Paul Rudd is one of my neighbors, and he came over and said, ‘My son’s girlfriend is obsessed with the movie. Can I bring her over? She wants to just talk to you about it.’ She joined our table and asked me the same questions you’re asking—just devoured every tiny detail about it. That was enormously satisfying.”

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    Savannah Walsh

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  • MIKE LUPICA: 9/11 showed how the worst day in the history of NYC would bring out the best in everyone

    MIKE LUPICA: 9/11 showed how the worst day in the history of NYC would bring out the best in everyone

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    Pete Hamill, who was downtown the morning the planes hit the buildings, whose immediate terror on Sept. 11, 2001, was being unable to find his wife Fukiko, always said that the true greatness of the city really began to show itself on Sept. 12, and the 13th, and all the days that followed.

    “It was,” Pete said, “like watching a fighter who’d just gotten knocked down get to one knee, and then slowly gather himself until he was standing again.”

    Somehow it is now 22 years since that day, and still we don’t think in terms of anniversaries. We just remember what it was like in those first days and nights after they’d come for us out of the sky.

    “Anniversary?” a friend of mine who lived a few miles from Sandy Hook Elementary said the year after all those innocent children were massacred. “We remember every day.”

    So now it is another Sept. 11, and all of the memories will again come flooding back. We will once again mourn the ones we lost that day, but also celebrate the heroes who, in all the big and most important ways, were not ever going to let the terrorists win.

    We will once again do all that as the names of the dead are read and the day is once again filled with the sound of bagpipes, and people will look up and see the reimagined skyline of downtown Manhattan, and try to remember what it looked like before the devastation of that morning, when it seemed as if the sky really was falling.

    On the 10th anniversary of that morning, I stood with Warren Allen of Iron Workers Local 40, across the street from St. Paul’s Chapel and he recalled heading downtown on that first night after making sure his family was safe, and then staying at Ground Zero for weeks. He was one who came out of Local 40 and the best of the city and did what everyone else in the city did in those days, however they could. It means he fought.

    “I still see smoke,” Warren Allen said 10 years later.

    Allen, who’d grown up in Washington Heights, had his tool belt with him the night of Sept. 11, and his hardhat, and his by-God ID card from Local 40. He made it as far as W. 14th St. before the cops made him stop. But when he told them he was an ironworker they put him in an ambulance and drove him all the day downtown, which is where he basically stayed until the end of the year.

    AP Photo/Mark Lennihan

    FDNY firefighters work beneath the destroyed mullions, the vertical struts which once faced the soaring outer walls of the World Trade Center towers, after a terrorist attack on the twin towers in New York.

    “You know what I remember?” he told me. “I remember the sun coming up on the morning of the 12th and thinking, ‘Okay, you bastards. We’re still here.’”

    He was now part of the strongest army in history, the army of the city of New York, an army of cops and firemen and doctors and nurses and emergency workers and everyone else who felt as if they were volunteering to fight a war. Allen was an ironworker. He cut steel.

    You remember his service today, and the service of everybody else. And if you were in the city in the shadow of Sept. 11, you remember so much more than that. You still remember the flyers posted up and down the streets, to Park and Lexington, reaching out from the victims’ information center at the old 69th Regiment Army, where family members of the missing kept showing up with DNA samples, hoping for miracles that they had to know in their hearts would not come.

    There would be a name on the flyers, a smiling face, a phone number. I remember one for a lovely young woman that had this written underneath her picture: “Opal ring. Beauty mark on left cheek.”

    There was another one, a young guy ready to cut a birthday cake with a big knife. The cake had “30” written on top of it. There was one photograph after another, part of what felt like a makeshift, hand-drawn Vietnam memorial, all these faces, so many of them young and frozen in time forever, and the names that will once again be read on Monday. This was the city of Sept. 12 and 13 and all the days to come, when first it was a week since the attack, then a month, and now 22 years.

    Here is something Pete Hamill, a child and poet of his city and my dear friend, wrote later about those days:

    “They drove all night from New Orleans to open soup kitchens for the workers at the smoldering site of carnage. They came in from upstate New York and from the surrounding states; during those weeks, I met volunteers from Indiana and Alabama and Colorado. They offered help, and solace, and gumbo too. For the first time in many years, New York began to feel like an American city, instead of a separate place. The flag you saw everywhere was the flag of New York too.”

    That flag still flies high today. The worst day in the history of the city would produce the best of everyone. Ten years after the planes hit, Warren Allen of Local 40 looked around him from St. Paul’s as the bagpipes did begin to play in the distance.

    “I had to come that day,” he said. “This is where the job was.”

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    Mike Lupica

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  • 40 Years of ‘Madonna’

    40 Years of ‘Madonna’

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    “Unlike the others, I’d do anything / I’m not the same, I have no shame,” a 24-year-old Madonna proclaimed on “Burning Up,” the second single from her eponymous debut album. At the time, the world didn’t know just how true that was about the woman who’d go from shilling her singles on the dance floor to becoming the biggest, most influential pop star of all time. Whether performing an intimate acoustic set or entertaining thousands, Madonna is not and has never been like “the others.” If anything, the others have been trying to emulate her since she burst on the scene with Madonna on July 27, 1983, forever changing pop music. Through a mix of moxie, talent, and sheer force of will, she ascended to the highest echelon of music history—inventing the idea of the modern pop star and becoming the best-selling female recording artist of all time. There was Elvis. There was Michael Jackson. And there’s still Madonna.

    And boy, have we seen the multitudes behind her artistry over the course of her four-decade career. What makes Madonna remarkable is her perpetual reinvention. From her penitent Catholic Like a Virgin era to the Kabbalah-embracing Confessions on a Dance Floor moment—she laid the blueprint for aspiring female pop stars to continue evolving. Much ink has been spilled over the myriad ways Lady Gaga has seemed to model her career after Madonna’s (a comparison Gaga has refuted). And it wouldn’t be a stretch to say Taylor Swift owes the entire concept of having various “eras” to Madonna’s legacy. But before you can reinvent yourself, you have to prove that you’re someone worth paying attention to in the first place. And 40 years ago to the day, Madonna did just that.

    Cut to New York City in the early ’80s, when a 20-something Madonna, originally Madonna Louise Ciccone of Bay City, Michigan, was just a downtown girl with a dream. After trying her hand at modern dance and fronting two bands, Breakfast Club and Emmy, Madonna decided to strike out on her own. Legend has it that her big break came when she tried to get DJ Mark Kamins to play her demo, and then met Sire Records’ Michael Rosenblatt during a night out at Danceteria. Rosenblatt introduced her to Sire founder Seymour Stein, who signed her, and thus Madonna was born—well, almost.

    She still had yet to fully establish herself in the music industry. Enter Madonna, her self-titled debut album. Making Madonna was not necessarily an easy process, but the trials and tribulations underscored something that the world would soon discover about the once and future queen of pop: She’s always known exactly what she wants. Case in point: After recording Madonna, she wasn’t happy with the finished product, and brought in John “Jellybean” Benitez, a relatively unknown DJ, to assist (a story that her main producer on the album, Reggie Lucas, refuted). A risky move, but she knew exactly what she was going for with her music and how to get there.

    It’s no wonder that the album became a slow-burning hit when it was released on July 27, 1983. Madonna slowly crept up the charts, debuting on the Billboard 200 at number 190 and peaking at number eight on that same chart in 1984, around a year after its release, having sold over 2.8 million records. Critics and fans alike were taken by Madonna’s seamless integration of disco and pop beats, with critic Don Shewey writing for Rolling Stone that Madonna was an “irresistible invitation to dance.” Of course, not everyone loved Madonna out of the gate—Robert Christgau of The Village Voice called the aspiring popstar a “shamelessly ersatz blonde” with “a shamelessly ersatz sound that’s tighter than her tummy”—but even her biggest critics couldn’t deny the confidence of her catchy debut.

    Listening to the album 40 years later, her confidence and self-assuredness are hard to ignore. It’s nearly impossible not to bop along to the funky synth of “Lucky Star,” the album’s first track. Or lose yourself in the recursive choruses on songs like “Borderline” which plays at the double entendre inherent in the title. Or get swept up in the joyous percussiveness of “Holiday,” the album’s most enduring song. It’s evident that Madonna was in complete control of her artistry, even from the jump. “You better think of me,” she demands on one earworm-y hook. And we would for the next 40 years.

    In his review of Madonna for All Music, critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine seemed to figure her out immediately. “All of the elements may not be particularly impressive on their own—the arrangement, synth, and drum programming are fairly rudimentary,” he admits. “But taken together, it’s utterly irresistible.” This remains true of both Madonna the album—sublime in its simplicity—and Madonna the performer. She has always been more than the sum of her parts and her mystique is the result of what she’s done with those parts, making herself the very personification of a pop star by simply being herself. She knows precisely who she is, what she likes, and what she loathes (note to self: Never send Madonna hydrangeas).

    This past year has been a difficult one for the queen of pop. In January, she kicked off the year by announcing her Celebration world tour. But in June, Madonna landed in the hospital with a bacterial infection, forcing her to postpone the North American leg of the tour, a total of 41 shows. “My focus now is my health and getting stronger and I assure you, I’ll be back with you as soon as I can,” she said in a statement. “I’m on the road to recovery and incredibly grateful for all the blessings in my life.”

    Of course, there’s so much more to Madonna than the music. There’s the movie stardom, the celebrity, the controversies, the fashion, but the music is where it all began. On July 27, 1983, it was impossible to know that Madonna would become forever synonymous with pop music, that indelible pop hits like “Like a Virgin,” “Material Girl,” “Like a Prayer,” “Vogue,” and “Hung Up” were in her future. But what was evident even four decades ago was that a new force to be reckoned with had burst onto the scene, fully formed and ready to take over. And you can still hear why: On Madonna, she laid the groundwork for all the iterations to come. She may have been a once-in-a-generation lucky star, but we’re the luckiest by far.

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    Chris Murphy

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  • ‘Sleepless in Seattle’ Wanted to Screw With Our Expectations About Love

    ‘Sleepless in Seattle’ Wanted to Screw With Our Expectations About Love

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    “Shall we?” Tom Hanks’s Sam asks Meg Ryan’s Annie, lifting his hand toward hers as a slight breeze blows and the music swells. The Seattle widower and Baltimore journalist finally meet—where else—atop the observation deck of the Empire State Building on Valentine’s Day, as Sam’s son, Jonah (Ross Malinger), looks on adoringly. This is only the start of their romance, but it’s the end of Sleepless in Seattle, released 30 years ago and now remembered as one of the best romantic comedies of all time.

    Unfolding during the typically dreary period between Christmas and Valentine’s Day, Annie and Sam’s cross-country meet-cute begins with a Delilah-style radio show, which Jonah calls into with one request: find a new wife for his father. At one point, Sam gets roped into joining the call. Once on the line, he heartbreakingly describes the moment he fell in love with Jonah’s mother. “I knew it the very first time I touched her,” he says. “It was like coming home, only to no home I’d ever known.” Thousands of miles away, Annie is one of many listeners entranced by the story, maybe by the mere sound of Sam’s voice. A journey to meet him ensues.

    “You don’t want to be in love. You want to be in love in a movie,” Annie’s best friend, Becky (Rosie O’Donnell), says—both a warning to the character and summary of why Sleepless in Seattle, directed by Nora Ephron from a screenplay by Ephron, David S. Ward, and Jeff Arch, endures three decades later.

    Nominated for two Academy Awards and one of the highest-grossing films of 1993, Sleepless is the kind of movie that both comforts and confounds. “What if someone you never met, someone you never saw, someone you never knew was the only someone for you?” its tagline reads, a premise as fitting of a horror film as a romance. Repeat viewings lay bare the movie’s small pleasures—a kid-aged Gaby Hoffmann booking Jonah’s flight to New York, Rob Reiner explaining new-fangled ’90s dating to a stupified Sam—but can also leave the viewer stupified. As Roger Ebert wrote in his review,Sleepless in Seattle is as ephemeral as a talk show, as contrived as the late show, and yet so warm and gentle I smiled the whole way through.”

    Writer-director Nora Ephron, who sandwiched Sleepless in between 1989’s When Harry Met Sally and 1998’s You’ve Got Mail, understood the mix of sour and sweet required to get one love-drunk. According to film producer Gary Foster, Ephron was hired as “a slightly cynical New Yorker who was looking to put a little edge in the fairy tale.” As Ephron told Rolling Stone in 1993, she was merely “looking for a cash infusion.” But she had her directive in mind, once declaring of the film: “Our dream was to make a movie about how movies screw up your brain about love, and then if we did a good job, we would become one of the movies that would screw up people’s brains about love forever.”

    In Ephron’s hands, the script was infused with her biting East Coast wit, including a pre-Seinfeld “Soup Nazi” reference. (At one point, Annie enters her office at The Baltimore Sun to hear the tail-end of a coworker’s pitch: “he’s the meanest guy in the world, but he makes the best soup you’ve ever eaten.”) There’s also the following interoffice exchange:

    Coworker: It’s easier to be killed by a terrorist than it is to find a husband over the age of 40.

    Annie: That’s not true.

    Becky: But it feels true.

    (Sidenote: there’s a very similar riff on this joke in 2006’s The Holiday, made by Nancy Meyers, the Pepsi to Ephron’s Coke.)

    But it also retained the genre’s unabashedly romantic DNA. By the time Ephron, the film’s fourth attached writer, got to the script, 1957’s An Affair to Remember had already become a character in the movie, much to Ephron’s chagrin. When she first watched the Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr–led romance, “I was a hopeless teenage girl awash in salt water,” Ephron told Rolling Stone. As an adult, she continued, “I now look at this movie and say, ‘What was I thinking?’” She got downright disdainful about it in another interview, calling Affair a “weepy” film that appeals to “one’s deepest masochistic core…. It’s really kind of hooking into those pathetic female fantasies.”

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    Savannah Walsh

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  • Sarah Jessica Parker & Matthew Broderick Celebrate 26th Anniversary: ‘Oh The Miles We Have Strolled Together’

    Sarah Jessica Parker & Matthew Broderick Celebrate 26th Anniversary: ‘Oh The Miles We Have Strolled Together’

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    By Brent Furdyk.

    Sarah Jessica Parker and husband Matthew Broderick celebrated their 26th wedding anniversary in style.

    The “And Just Like That” star took to Instagram to share a photo of the cork from a champagne bottle, and a sweet tribute to her husband of almost three decades.

    “Happy 26th anniversary my husband,” Parker wrote in the caption.


    READ MORE:
    Sarah Jessica Parker And Matthew Broderick Have Family Date Night At ‘Hocus Pocus 2’ Premiere

    “That sure was a nice celebration and a real nice bottle of champagne. And a gorgeous walk home,” she added.

    “Oh the miles we have strolled together,” she wrote, concluding with, “I love you. XOX, your SJ.”

    Both Broderick and Parker have remained fiercely private when it’s come to discussing their marriage, but back in 2020, Broderick opened up about his spouse during an appearance on Andy Cohen’s SiriusXM radio show.


    READ MORE:
    Matthew Broderick Opens Up About His 23-Year Marriage To Sarah Jessica Parker

    “I don’t know the, the, the secret at all, but I, you know, but I’m very grateful and I love her and, it’s amazing,
    he said of SJP.

    “I mean, I can’t believe that it’s been that long,” he added. “It doesn’t feel like it.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vDph0zorMPU

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    Brent Furdyk

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  • Safe States Celebrates 30 Years of Service and Progress in Injury and Violence Prevention

    Safe States Celebrates 30 Years of Service and Progress in Injury and Violence Prevention

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    Learning from the past helps to shape the future and save lives.

    The Safe States Alliance is celebrating 30 years of progress in preventing injuries and deaths. Injury prevention is often overlooked in public health discussions; yet, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in the first half of life, more people in the United States still die from violence and injuries — such as motor vehicle crashes, falls, suicides, homicides, or opioid overdoses — than from any other cause, including cancer, HIV, or the flu. 

    In May 1993, more than a dozen state health department leaders recognized the need to strengthen their capacity to apply a public health approach to prevent injuries and violence and established the State and Territorial Injury Prevention Directors Association – STIPDA – the organization that went on to become the Safe States Alliance in 2013. This approach involves systematically treating injuries and violence as predictable and preventable outcomes, as we do with infectious diseases, nutrition, and other public health priorities.

    Guided by a common mission – to strengthen the practice of injury and violence prevention (IVP), Safe States members have successfully established a strong foundation, developing core competencies for IVP, improving surveillance and data analysis, and advocating for policies and investments. These efforts not only established Safe States as a recognized leader in the field, but have helped expand the science and broaden the practice, moving beyond keeping individuals safe to improving conditions in communities (e.g., access to employment, education, healthcare, and social connections) that influence overall health outcomes.

    According to Safe States Executive Director Rich Hamburg, “It’s important to communicate that injuries and violence are not accidents or inevitable events. They are predictable and preventable. At Safe States, we support a vision of a nation free from injury and violence where all people are safe where they live, work, travel, and play.”

    These efforts remain essential and critically necessary. Despite significant progress, preventable fatalities remain high. In the U.S., every 11 minutes someone dies by suicide. On average, 124 people die from firearm-related injuries and 112 from motor vehicle crashes daily. About one in three women and one in four men report having experienced severe physical violence from an intimate partner. These incidents remain a significant burden costing the U.S. an estimated $4.2 trillion in medical and work loss costs annually.

    “Now more than ever, Safe States remains unwavering in our commitment to further strengthen the public health infrastructure necessary for prevention,” added Hamburg. Safe States is home to 700+ professionals representing local, federal, and tribal public health, healthcare, community-based organizations, students, and academic researchers. 

    To learn about Safe States or how to support the organization’s work, check out the 30in30 series highlighting accomplishments over the last 30 years, as well as the most recent annual report

    Source: Safe States Alliance

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  • Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker are ‘over the moon in love’ ahead of one year wedding anniversary

    Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker are ‘over the moon in love’ ahead of one year wedding anniversary

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    Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker‘s first wedding anniversary is coming up and as per sources they are very much in love and happy with their lives. The 43-year-old reality television personality and the 47-year-old musician tied the knot in Las Vegas in April 2022 and held a proper ceremony in Italy the next month where they celebrated with friends and family. Continue reading to know more about the duo as their anniversary comes up.

    Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker’s relationship

    According to Entertainment Tonight Online, Kardashian and Barker are “enjoying their new life together.” The source told the portal, “It’s a new chapter, so Kourtney just wants to continue to keep it sacred. Kourtney and Travis are doing fantastic and are over the moon in love. Things couldn’t be better between them and they’re growing even closer every day.”

    ALSO READ: Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker’s relationship from friends to more

    Kardashian and Barker have been very open about their fertility journey, and are “taking things one day at a time when it comes to bringing a baby into their family,” reveals the source. The Poosh founder shares her three kids, 13-year-old Mason, 10-year-old Penelope, and 8-year-old Reign with her former long-term boyfriend Scott Disick. Meanwhile, the drummer and his former wife, Shanna Moakler, have two children, 19-year-old Landon, and 17-year-old Alabama.

    “Things have been very seamless between their kids. Everyone has been getting along and hopes to keep it that way,” the source adds. Disick’s jealousy as well as insecurity about Kardashian’s marriage and blooming relationship is supposedly in the past now. “Scott’s jealousy has subsided for the most part,” the source tells the portal. “Those types of feelings have faded on his end. He will always have so much love for Kourtney, but he’s also focusing on himself,” they conclude.

    The source concluded that Kardashian and Disick have kept their differences aside and “are doing a lot better with co-parenting.” Meanwhile, Kourtney and Travis are happily in love and do not shy away from showing it off as they post PDA pictures and happily oblige the paparazzi by repeatedly kissing each other on red carpets and at other events.

    ALSO READ: What is Kourtney Kardashian’s inspiration behind her NSFW short wedding dress? Find out

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    1136922

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  • Reflecting On The Genesis Block And Bitcoin On Its 14th Birthday

    Reflecting On The Genesis Block And Bitcoin On Its 14th Birthday

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    14 years ago today, Satoshi Nakamoto created the first block in the Bitcoin blockchain. Whether consciously or not, that move kickstarted an entire movement; one that keeps on breathing and expanding these many years afterwards. The singularity of Nakamoto’s creation has been put on display countless times since the Genesis block was mined, and today, more than ever, its purpose is becoming more clear and, fortunately or not, needed.

    Engraved in the Genesis block is Bitcoin’s raison d’être.

    FILC6I2X0AEWcTh

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    Namcios

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  • Justin Timberlake Shares Tribute To Jessica Biel On Milestone Anniversary: ’10 Years Ain’t Enough!’

    Justin Timberlake Shares Tribute To Jessica Biel On Milestone Anniversary: ’10 Years Ain’t Enough!’

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    By Zoe Phillips, ETOnline.com.

    It’s the year of tin for Justin Timberlake and Jessica Biel! The beloved couple celebrated their 10-year anniversary on Wednesday, both posting tributes to Instagram.

    “10 years ain’t enough!” Timberlake captioned a carousel of photos and videos of them together. “You make me a better husband and father every day! I love you so much you beautiful human! Run it back!”

    Biel reposted her husband’s tribute in her Instagram Story, adding “Ten years ❤️” atop the photos.

    Jessica Biel/Instagram

    Biel and Timberlake tied the knot in Italy on Oct. 19, 2012.

    Later in the day, Biel took to Instagram to share her own tribute to Timberlake, writing, “Being married to you is the adventure of a lifetime! Run it back, baby. RUN IT BACK. I love you.”

    Ahead of their milestone anniversary, Biel opened up about the couple’s love story at the premiere of her true crime series, “Candy”.

    “Well, I’ll have to give Justin the credit in this moment, for this one thing that he always says to me: ‘We might be married, but we have to keep dating,’ and it’s so true,” she told ET in May. “You just have to keep making time for each other and you have to keep making each other a priority. And do the things that you love together.”

    She continued, “It’s not always easy, as we all know, but those touchpoint moments make all the hard times palatable.”

    Get ET’s full timeline of the happy couple’s relationship here.

    MORE FROM ET:  

    Jessica Biel and Justin Timberlake Celebrate 10 Years of Marriage

    Justin Timberlake & Jessica Biel Pack on PDA During Beach Day in Italy

    Jessica Biel Talks Justin Timberlake’s Surprise Role on ‘Candy’

     

     

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    Brent Furdyk

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  • FEANDREA Celebrates Its Anniversary With a Care & Share-Themed Open House

    FEANDREA Celebrates Its Anniversary With a Care & Share-Themed Open House

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    Global pet furniture brand FEANDREA invites local residents, business owners, and animal welfare organizations to celebrate its anniversary by sharing and caring for one another

    Press Release



    updated: Sep 22, 2022

    In recognition of its anniversary, FEANDREA will host a five-day open house event from Sept. 26 to Sept. 30. The event is open to all and will take place daily from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. at its Ameziel Inc. headquarters located at 8291 Milliken Ave., Rancho Cucamonga, CA 91730.

    The pet furniture brand will display its extensive product line of over 50 items designed exclusively for cats and dogs. Pet lovers in attendance will receive a special 20% discount on best sellers, new arrivals, and other popular collections. In addition, free limited edition merchandise will be given away while supplies last. Attendees are also encouraged to bring a drawing of their pet, which will be added to the “We Care, We Share” wall collage, for an additional 5% discount.

    In the spirit of caring and sharing, FEANDREA will donate 5% of the open house’s proceeds to Working Dogs for Warriors, a local nonprofit organization that trains and donates service dogs to veterans and first responders. In tandem, FEANDREA will also have community resources on local pet-related services, including information on adoptable pets from nearby shelters.

    “FEANDREA is all about creating shared memories and connecting pets and their human parents, so we are always looking for fun ways to create lasting memories,” said Rami Izadyar, marketing manager of North America. “Our hope is to make this a yearly community event, where pet owners can find community resources, support our local charity, and celebrate our fur babies.”

    ###

    About FEANDREA—FEANDREA is the pet-dedicated brand of Ziel Home Tech. Established in 2018, when an employee rescued two cats and named them Fe and Rea. Since then, FEANDREA has grown exponentially from a small startup to being sold in 13 countries. Our original award-winning designs have one mission only: To create a loving connection between pets and their human parents through products that can be shared. 

    About Ziel Home Tech—The journey began in Germany circa 2007. Since then, Ziel Home Tech has become the destination for one-stop shopping for all things home. Its vast manufacturing capabilities include indoor and outdoor furniture, storage goods, gardening tools, and pet products. Active in 68 countries and serving over 20 million consumers annually, Ziel Home Tech utilizes its three brands to produce trend-right, practical products that deliver exceptional value and enhance the joy of family life. Its design team has over 400 patents, while its distribution operations provide hassle-free logistics in Europe, North America, Japan, and China.

    • OEM, ODM, and brand distribution
    • Active in 68 countries
    • Serves over 20 million shoppers annually
    • Boasts 360 patents internationally
    • Distribution operations in Europe, North America, Japan, and China

    Contact: Rami Izadyar, Regional MKT Manager-North America | ramii@songmics.com | www.songmics.com | 8291 Milliken Ave., Rancho Cucamonga, CA 91730

    Source: Ziel Home Tech

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  • Parenting 101: 5 Facts you should know about Terry Fox

    Parenting 101: 5 Facts you should know about Terry Fox

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    The annual Terry Fox Run takes place on September 18th, and more than 650 communities across the country participate to raise money for cancer research. In honour of this hero, we present 5 facts you should know about Terry Fox.

    Terry Fox was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba.

    On April 12, 1980, Terry Fox began his run in St John’s, Newfoundland and dipped his artificial leg into the Atlantic Ocean.

    Terry ran an average of 42 kilometres a day (26 miles) and travelled through six provinces.

    On February 1, 1981, Terry’s hope of raising $1 from every Canadian to fight cancer is achieved as the national population reaches 24.1 million, while the Terry Fox Marathon of Hope fund totals $24.17 million.

    The first release of the adidas 40th Anniversary Collection launches with the replica adidas Orion shoe on April 20, 2020, an item that sold out faster than any shoe in adidas launch history, under 10 minutes.

    – Jennifer Cox

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  • Austin Pets Alive! | Austin Pets Alive! announces 10th Annual Paddle…

    Austin Pets Alive! | Austin Pets Alive! announces 10th Annual Paddle…

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    Apr 16, 2021

    Austin Pets Alive! is thrilled to announce the return of Paddle for Puppies, presented by Austin Subaru and hosted at Rowing Dock. Though the format may look a little different from years past, the concept — and the cause — are the same.

    Instead of hosting this fundraiser on one day, it has been spread out over the course of a weekend to accommodate social distancing needs. Participants can register for their preferred time slot on one of three days (May 7, 4-8 pm; May 8, 8 am-12 pm; May 9, 8 am-12 pm) and enjoy a leisurely paddle, kayak, or canoe ride on their own down Lady Bird Lake. All participants will receive an exclusive Paddle for Puppies t-shirt, and all proceeds directly benefit the APA! Parvo Puppy ICU.

    This is the 10th anniversary of Paddle for Puppies. Since its inception in 2011, Austin Subaru has raised over $20,000 each year through this community favorite activity. APA!’s Parvo Puppy ICU is a specialized facility designed to care for puppies that contract canine parvovirus, a highly contagious and life-threatening virus. Dogs with parvo are often at extremely high risk of euthanasia in certain shelters and regions that lack the resources to safely quarantine and treat these pups. Through this program, APA! provides shelters across Texas with an alternative to euthanasia and saves around 500 lives each year.

    Due to recent detection of toxins in an algae sample taken from Lake Austin, APA! is not encouraging participants to bring their dogs along for the paddle at this time. Humans of all ages, however, are welcome to attend. Registration starts at $40 per adult, with an optional boat rental fee. Children under 16 can be added on as a second rider for $25. All attendees can register on the Paddle for Puppies website ahead of time.

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  • Whittier Street Health Center Marks 17-Year Anniversary of President and CEO Frederica Williams

    Whittier Street Health Center Marks 17-Year Anniversary of President and CEO Frederica Williams

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    Under Williams’ direction, the historic Boston health clinic has experienced massive growth; including the construction of a five-story, 78,900-square foot, state-of-the-art health facility in 2012 which now bears her name.

    Press Release



    updated: May 3, 2019

     – Frederica Williams, CEO and President of the Whittier Street Health Center (WSHC) is marking 17 years at the helm of the revered community institution, which has seen massive growth in her tenure.    

    “It’s been a long journey, and I am thrilled every day to be here and serve the community,” said Williams. “The mission of Whittier is my life mission as well, so it’s personal.” 

    Williams was the driving force behind a 10-year effort to construct the health center’s first permanent medical home. After multiple setbacks and extensive property negotiations, the ambitious project was cobbled together through William’s business acumen and determination to raise funds.     

    Completed in 2012, the five-story, 78,900-square foot, state-of-the-art health facility was 14 months ahead of schedule and $640,000 under budget.

    In 2018, Williams was recognized for her efforts to make the now nationally distinguished health center a reality, and honored by the WSHC Board of Directors who officially named the building after her.

    Since joining WSHC in 2002, Williams has received dozens of awards recognizing her work as both a woman-of-color CEO and a driving force behind Whittier’s expansion and success. This includes WSHC being named by the Boston Globe as one of the top 100 Women-Led Businesses in Massachusetts from 2014-2018.

    On this anniversary Williams is also being acknowledged for her other accomplishments at WSHC, which include opening a satellite clinic on Blue Hill Avenue in Roxbury, building a 6,600-square-foot fitness center at the Tremont location, the creation of a community garden, launching a mobile health van outreach initiative, a partnership with the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, and a men’s health clinic.  

    Williams was born in Freetown, Sierra Leone and is a descendant of the Creole (Krio) people — a melding of freed slaves, who, with help from the British government, settled in Sierra Leone after the American Revolution.

    “I dedicate this recognition to my parents and pray that their legacy of service, love and social justice continue to live on in the work we do at Whittier for generations to come. The Whittier building project was a family mission with prayers and words of wisdom and encouragement from my family, and the love and support of my sons who sacrificed time with me and pitched in to support the vision for the Whittier building.”

    “I am grateful to have a loyal team of dedicated colleagues at Whittier. It is the Whittier team’s care and respect for patients that make Whittier a warm and welcoming place for everyone who comes through our doors. “  

    Williams lived in Sierra Leone and the UK before moving to Boston in 1984. She earned a bachelor’s degree in business administration from the London School of Accountancy, a Graduate Certificate in Administration and Management from the Harvard University Extension School and a MBA from Anna Maria College. She lives in Boston with three sons. 

    The mission of Whittier Street Health Center is to provide high quality, reliable and accessible primary health care and support services for diverse populations to promote wellness and eliminate health and social disparities. The health center also provides General Dentistry, HIV Services; Laboratory; Obstetrics and Gynecology; Pediatrics/Adolescent Health; LGBTQ Clinic, Eye Care, Counseling and Substance Abuse. Whittier also runs over 40 social service initiatives addressing everything from substance abuse, violence, trauma, food insecurity, to total person holistic wellbeing. Whittier Street Health Center is a 501c3 charitable organization.

    Media Contact:
    Jesse Migneault
    Phone: 617.989.3283
    Email: jesse.migneault@wshc.org

    Source: Whittier Street Health Center

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