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Tag: Bonnie and Clyde

  • A look back at when Bonnie and Clyde hid out in the Fort Worth Stockyards

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    Texas Depression-era gangsters Bonnie and Clyde are shown here joking around.

    Texas Depression-era gangsters Bonnie and Clyde are shown here joking around.

    Everyone knows the infamous Bonnie and Clyde for their romanticized criminal life on the run. But did you know that the two stopped in Dallas and Fort Worth?

    “Bonnie Parker, auburn-haired cigar-smoking young woman has been fleeing about the country with Clyde Barrow for the last year while the Dallas desperado evaded capture.” the Star-Telegram reported on Dec. 3, 1933

    They both grew up in Dallas. Parker was 19 and married when she met Barrow in Dallas in 1930. He was 21 and single.

    Parker was a petite 5-foot-5 and only 100 pounds, according to FBI wanted signs. She didn’t come from much money and worked as a waitress and wrote poems. Barrow came from a family that wasn’t rich, but wasn’t necessarily poor. He started as a thief. With Parker, he became a killer.

    The couple’s criminal activity was prevalent in the Lone Star state. Though, there are also reports of their crimes in Oklahoma, Missouri, Louisiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Iowa and Illinois.

    So, in honor of it being Halloween season, here is a nugget of history about one of the biggest real-life nightmares that happened nearly a century ago in Texas.

    The ‘Dallas desperado’ and the ‘cigar-smoking young woman’

    Fort Worth Star Telegram collection

    Before Barrow met Parker in Dallas in 1930, he was already a criminal — arrested twice in Dallas and once in Fort Worth. Parker was not yet a criminal, but her husband, who she never crossed paths with again after 1929, had frequent run-ins with the law.

    Shortly after meeting Parker, Barrow was changed for burglary and sentenced to 14 years in a Waco prison. He spent nine days in a cell before Parker snuck him a handgun and he escaped. Later that same year, Barrow was re-arrested and spent two years in the Texas State Penitentiary before his parole in 1932.

    The Waco Times Herald reported on Clyde Barrow’s escape from a prison in Waco in 1930.
    The Waco Times Herald reported on Clyde Barrow’s escape from a prison in Waco in 1930. Newspapers.com

    The parolee and the young woman reunited (with a few others) and started a two-year string of crimes.

    The Star-Telegram newspaper reported on Bonnie and Clyde’s car burglary after escaping the police on Nov. 23, 1933.
    The Star-Telegram newspaper reported on Bonnie and Clyde’s car burglary after escaping the police on Nov. 23, 1933. Newspapers.com

    In 1933, a Texas sheriff sought to arrest Parker and Barrow in Grand Prairie after dozens of reported robberies. The sheriff failed, and the two managed to abandon the car they were driving and steal a 1932 Ford V-8 Sedan. They escaped 340 miles north to Miami, Okla. The stealing of the Ford V-8 got the FBI involved in the couple’s manhunt.

    Newspapers.com

    In 1934, the couple helped five prisoners escape from Eastham State Prison Farm in Waldo. Barrow fired a machine gun at the prison to distract from the running fugitives. Some of the prisoners shot and killed two guards with an automatic pistol.

    Parker and Barrow also shot two officers in Grapevine later that year as well.

    Star-Telegram front page on Monday, April 2, 1934.
    Star-Telegram front page on Monday, April 2, 1934.

    Other crime reports in Texas have been linked to the pair, like murders in Hillsboro, Abilene, Sherman and Dallas, as well as more robberies in Lufkin and Dallas, auto theft in Victoria and the kidnapping of a sheriff and police chief in Wellington.

    The Star-Telegram reports on Clyde Barrow on April 8, 1934.
    The Star-Telegram reports on Clyde Barrow on April 8, 1934. Newspapers.com

    These are just a few of the nefarious acts by Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow. According to the FBI, the couple is believed to have killed 13 people throughout their countless burglaries and robberies.

    Car used by Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow at time of their deaths, May 1934. Sheriff C.D. Little at far right.
    Car used by Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow at time of their deaths, May 1934. Sheriff C.D. Little at far right. C.D. Little Family Papers

    The couple was shot dead in a police shootout in Louisiana on May 23, 1934. They died together in a stolen 1934 Ford Model 730 Deluxe sedan which was shot more than 100 times during the shootout.

    “They met their death just as they had skipped across the country — with a machine gun and pistols at an arm’s reach — in a fast automobile frantically trying to move from one place to another before officers learned their whereabouts,” the Star-Telegram reported on May 24, 1934.

    Bonnie and Clyde in the Fort Worth Stockyards

    Parker and Barrow left their blood-stained mark on Fort Worth as well.

    The Stockyards Hotel at 109 E. Exchange Ave. in Fort Worth has a “Bonnie and Clyde Junior Suite” dedicated to the killer couple that features historic artifacts and a poem written by Parker to Barrow.

    Barrow allegedly stayed in the Stockyards Hotel in 1933 as a hideout during one of the couple’s heists. This corner room offered the perfect view to keep watch over Main Street and the primary north-south international highway.

    Parker stayed at the Oasis Hotel (now the Downtown Cowtown Isis Theatre and a Boot Barn) down the street at 2407 N. Main St. The two separated their hotel stays in case of police raids.

    Parker is buried at the Crown Hill Memorial in Dallas, while Barrows is buried next to his brother in Dallas’ Western Heights Cemetery.

    The FBI calls Parker and Barrow “the most notorious crime couple in American history.” And they etched themselves into DFW’s history, too.

    Related Stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Ella Gonzales

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Ella Gonzales is a service journalism reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. She is part of a team of local journalists who answer reader questions and write about life in North Texas. Ella mainly writes about local restaurants and where to find good deals around town.

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    Ella Gonzales

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  • GTA 6 Trailer Reaction Livestreams Hit With Takedowns

    GTA 6 Trailer Reaction Livestreams Hit With Takedowns

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    Screenshot: Rockstar Games / Kotaku

    Grand Theft Auto reveals are arguably among the biggest cultural events in all of gaming. It was no surprise, then, that hype for GTA VI blew through the roof as thousands of people patiently stared at a black screen, waiting for the official trailer to release. However, after someone leaked the trailer on Twitter, Rockstar made the decision to publish it early, which left livestreamers scrambling to Go Live as soon as possible to provide their reactions. Unfortunately, at least some of those reactions were hit with copyright strikes.

    According to IGN, content creators reacting to the GTA VI video ran into some trouble. Streams across TikTok were muted, possibly because the trailer makes use of Tom Petty’s “Love Is a Long Road.” The song is copyrighted, after all, and most platforms have restrictions on copyrighted materials. Meanwhile, some streams on other platforms were taken down entirely. In the video below, for instance, YouTuber TheProfessional details how his reaction video was hit with copyright strikes. Thankfully, after some time passed, most content was brought back.

    TheProfessional

    It’s hard to specify how widespread the issue was given that it was temporary, but the strikes point to the chaotic flurry surrounding the trailer’s release. GTA VI has been in development for many years now, with copious leaks providing tons of information on the highly anticipated crime simulator. We’ve learned that the game will take place in Vice City and really bring theFlorida energy, and will feature two protagonists in a Bonnie and Clyde kind of relationship. Kotaku readers also shared their many wants from the next Grand Theft Auto, and we’ve learned that it will skip PC when it launches sometime in 2025.

    The trailer sure looks stunning, with richly detailed environments and character models. Let’s hope the Xbox Series S can handle it.

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    Levi Winslow

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  • Warren Beatty accused of grooming, sexually abusing minor in 1973 – National | Globalnews.ca

    Warren Beatty accused of grooming, sexually abusing minor in 1973 – National | Globalnews.ca

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    A woman has come forward to launch a lawsuit against Hollywood legend Warren Beatty, accusing the actor of grooming her when she was only 14 years old, and coercing her into sex.

    Kristina Charlotte Hirsch filed the lawsuit on monday in Los Angeles Superior Court under a 2019 California law that opened up a three-year “lookback window” for victims of child sexual abuse to sue their abusers regardless of the statute of limitations. The window expires on Dec. 31.

    The lawsuit doesn’t cite Beatty by name, instead referring to him as Defendant Doe, but the abuser is described as having portrayed Clyde in Bonnie and Clyde, a role that earned Beatty a Best Actor nomination at the Academy Awards.

    So far, there has been no public comment on the lawsuit by Beatty, 85, or his lawyer.

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    Hirsch, then 14, alleges that Beatty, then 35, met her on a movie set where he was filming, and paid “undue attention” to her.

    The defendant “commented repeatedly on her looks, gave her his phone number, and instructed her to call him,” the lawsuit reads.

    Hirsch was initially “thrilled by the attention” of a Hollywood actor and accepted Beatty’s invitation to visit his hotel room, according to the lawsuit — an invitation that Betty would extend again and again.

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    “Over the course of 1973, Defendant Doe called the Plaintiff on numerous occasions and summoned the teenager to the hotel where he was living to spend time with him,” the lawsuit reads.

    The suit continues that Beatty would take Hirsch on car rides, offered to help her with homework, and on multiple occasions “spoke to Plaintiff about losing her virginity.”

    As their relationship progressed, the lawsuit says that Beatty used his position “as an adult and a Hollywood movie star,” to coerce her into sexual acts with him. The sexual abuse occurred on numerous occasions until late 1973 and included oral sex, simulated sex and, “finally coerced sexual intercourse with the minor child,” the lawsuit claims.

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    Hirsch is suing Beatty on charges of sexual battery, sexual assault and harassment of a child and is seeking damages for emotional, physical and psychological distress.

    The lawsuit states that Hirsch was a victim of “predatory grooming,” and “believed she was involved in a romantic relationship with a movie star.”

    In the aftermath of the childhood sexual abuse, Hirsch finds it difficult to interact with people, especially those in positions of authority, as she struggles with “trust and control,” the lawsuit states.

    Hirsch has requested a jury trial and is seeking compensation for attorney fees in addition to damages. She is being represented by Jeff Anderson & Associates, a firm that has handled child sex abuse cases against the Catholic Church and the Boy Scouts of America.

    &copy 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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    Kathryn Mannie

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  • SZA & Clyde: The “Shirt” Video Offers a Variation on Bonnie and Clyde and Pulp Fiction With Far More Betrayal Involved

    SZA & Clyde: The “Shirt” Video Offers a Variation on Bonnie and Clyde and Pulp Fiction With Far More Betrayal Involved

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    Every time SZA comes out of the woodwork, it always seems to be worth the wait (case in point: “I Hate U”). And her latest single and video, “Shirt” (soon to be frequently misspelled as “Shit”), is no exception to that phenomenon. Directed by Dave Meyers, it’s clear from the outset that SZA is riffing on the Bonnie and Clyde dynamic that Quentin Tarantino re-popularized in 1994’s Pulp Fiction with Ringo a.k.a. Pumpkin (Tim Roth) and Yolanda a.k.a. Honey Bunny (Amanda Plummer) in the illustrious diner scene that serves as beginning and end points for the film.

    Indeed, SZA’s own narrative for “Shirt” begins in a diner, with her “Clyde” played by LaKeith Stanfield (of Atlanta fame). As the two sit facing one another in a booth, close-up shots on their serene countenances present a kind of sexual tension. Or at least, a tension. Sounding a bit like Madonna talking about Kabbalah in the 00s, SZA proceeds to inform her boo, “Color is light, light is energy—energy’s everything.” “What about these salt shakers?” he asks (forgetting that it’s a set of salt and pepper shakers). She confirms, “Energy.” “This table?” “Energy.” He leans in and then inquires seductively, “You and me?” The seduction, however, is ruined by the sudden realization that there’s another “energy” at the table. Specifically, “Clyde’s” goonish friend, who shouts, “Yo, come on!” in disgust. “Shut up nigga, damn!” “Clyde” screams as he slaps him upside the happy-face-hair-design head. In irritation, “Clyde” adds, “You see we talkin’?” He turns back to SZA and says, “You were sayin’?” Without missing a beat, she concludes, “Energy.” With that, the indelible beat (courtesy of the amazing Rodney Jerkins a.k.a. Darkchild) commences as SZA casually shoots “Clyde’s” friend in the cabeza, which we see briefly from the perspective of the inside of his busted-ass mouth.

    Meyers then cuts to a scene of the two dressed in nun attire as they enter a “church” that looks plucked straight out of Baz Luhrmann’s Romeo + Juliet. Inside, pregnant “nuns” hold neon blue crosses above their head with a cowboy hat-wearing “minister” in between them as other “nuns” in various states of undress and sexual poses also populate the scene. SZA and “Clyde” then open fire as a barrage of interspersed scenes featuring them generally causing mayhem ensue. This includes the sight of a dead, bloodied old lady in a trunk (covered in money, naturally), a dead clown in a stairwell and a dead construction worker on the ground. Just some average daily carnage, it would seem. But what else were we to expect with an opening verse like, “Kiss me dangerous/Been so lost without you all around me/Get anxious/Lead me, don’t look back/It’s all about you.” Such lyrics speaking of intertwined, “crazy love” coupledom could provide no other type of video concept. It’s almost a wonder SZA didn’t go the True Romance homage route instead, but then, Tove Lo sort of has the monopoly on that right now after writing a song of the same name about that very film for Dirt Femme.

    The presence of the aforementioned “church” atmosphere also accents SZA giving in to darkness even in places of (supposed) light—this being further evident when she sings, “Broad day, sunshine/I’ll find a way to fuck it up still” and “In the dark right now/Feelin’ lost, but I like it/Comfort in my sins and all about me.” And “Clyde” is all about him, too, as he breaks the cardinal rule of “crazy love” by popping SZA in the stomach (hence, “Blood stain on my shirt”) and driving off in a car with a license plate that reads, “NOCTRL” (an overt nod to SZA’s debut album being named Ctrl). But “Clyde” didn’t seem to get the message SZA was sending about “energy” earlier—and now, even her ghost has become that as it floats up out of her body (with “Clyde’s” own face/energy flickering in and out of her visage) and ostensibly gets recycled back into the universe.

    Maybe that’s how SZA is able to return and “haunt” “Clyde.” Not just when he looks in the rearview mirror and sees her reflection in it, but also when he ends up tied to a chair in a warehouse after crashing the car as a result of the shock that came with the vision of spectral SZA. After that crash, she reanimates into a new-but-same body in the warehouse as the fitting lyrics, “It’s what you say and how you do me/How I’m ‘posed to trust, baby?/‘Posed to love?/It ain’t supposed to hurt this way/All I need is the best of you/Baby, how I got to say it?/Give me all of you” play over the scene.

    Since “Clyde” suddenly can’t, for whatever reason, give all of himself, SZA has no problem walking away from her erstwhile boyfriend as he’s left to the proverbial violent henchmen. In the next scene, she appears with a shorter haircut in front of a trashcan fire as she turns around to shoot and kill her own shadow (something Peter Pan probably wanted to do more than a few times). We then see still another “version” or “energy form” of SZA ride off into the sunset on a boat during the video’s conclusion, a moment that speaks to the lines in the forewarning chorus, “Still don’t know my worth/Still stressin’ perfection/Let you all in my mental/Got me lookin’ too desperate/Damn (You ain’t deserve).” So, yeah, she up and left.

    Generously, SZA doesn’t leave her viewer entirely at the end of the video the way she does her man. For she provides us not only with a final iconic look (bombastic yellow eye makeup coordinated with a Dole shirt), but also with a snippet of her next single, “Blind.” This as we see her in the kitchen/dishwashing area of the same diner as before, standing next to the same “Butcher” (Isaak Adoyi) we glimpsed previously watching the now-dismantled couple at the table from his sequestered perch. Hopefully, a “Part 2” of this concept will follow. Just as Quentin offered a Vol. 2 for Kill Bill.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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