JAMISON, Pennsylvania — Karate stars and twins Shane and Weston Fox have been practicing karate since they were 3 years old. .
They were inspired by their older brother, who stepped on the mat before them.
In order for the twins to earn their junior black belts from Action Karate Jamison, they had to participate in some kind of community service, or give back to the community in some way.
They hosted a lemonade stand outside their studio and raised $800 for the Warminster Food Bank.
Warminster Food Bank is the new name of an organization that has been serving the community since 1958.
They use donations like these to prepare grocery baskets for families in need.
To learn more about the Warminster Food Bank, visit their website.
It is May 12, 2023, The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom release day, and the temperature in New York City is creeping dangerously close to 90 degrees. In Midtown, bankers are sweating through their Brooks Brothers dress shirts and slacks, while tourists have busted out the cargo shorts. As I make my way out of the subway station near Rockefeller Center, I walk smack into a massive line of people. I sneer, assuming it’s the wildly long Nintendo Store line from more than a block away that our managing editor Carolyn Petit saw earlier this morning (I hate the idea of waiting in lines), but nope, the Jonas Brothers are at Rough Trade.
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Hours later, I head out to sit in the blazing sun for a bit to recharge my battery and notice the front of the Nintendo store looks conspicuously spacious. I hustle over, figuring I’ll snag a copy for someone else at Kotaku who wants to play (I do not). But as soon as I approach the front entrance to the building, which is on the corner of Rockefeller Plaza and 48th street, I realize the line is snaking down the adjacent street. It sits directly in the sun, many of the people waiting are visibly sweating.
At random intervals, a huge gap of bodies indicates the presence of a driveway, a few security guys making sure it remains open for cars passing through. Several future Tears of the Kingdom owners are hunched over playing Nintendo Switch. One woman is sitting on the sidewalk in shorts, a New York City no-no.
“Oh, fuck this,” I mumble before heading back to the dry, frigid air of the G/O Media offices. I may not be a big Zelda fan, but I don’t think there’s anything in the world that could make me wait hours on a line in Midtown Manhattan in the midst of a heatwave.
Zelda Tears of the Kingdom lines feel very nostalgic
Despite my beliefs, I’m fascinated to see people waiting in lines like this across the U.S. for the Breath of the Wild sequel. It feels sort of like a bygone era of gaming has returned—the last time I went to the midnight release of a game was November 2012 for Halo 4 at a Best Buy in Long Island, New York. I was 22 years old, and I was incredibly hyped.
The need to wait in long lines for midnight game releases has disappeared over the years, as more and more gamers turn to digital storefronts and downloads in order to get a new game the moment it releases, and the need for physical media wanes. (Though the side effects of a shift to entirely digital have been felt in the loss of access to so many movies—like sci-fi thriller Strange Days, which for some time was nearly impossible to watch without a physical DVD, only just becoming available to stream this year—and will undoubtedly soon affect games.) In 2012, you couldn’t play Halo 4 in any way other than on the two discs that came in the Master Chief-adorned case, but that’s simply not the case now.
What is it about Tears of the Kingdom that’s brought lines back in such a big way? After all, the Nintendo eShop is open 24/7, you can download the game right now without having to stand up for hours at a time, shuffling every 10 or so minutes a few inches closer to the shining glass Nintendo store doors. You can play Tears of the Kingdom right this second, no long-time exposure to stagnant, exhaust-filled NYC air required. Why, people in line, are you not doing this?
For many, the promise of special swag beckons. The Nintendo store has special-edition pins (and other “surprise giveaways”), many of which will undoubtedly end up on eBay for thousands of dollars. Meanwhile, Target has a fanny pack that people are freaking out over. The allure of impossible-to-get swag will always attract gamers, a group known to be completionists and collectors through and through.
But perhaps, despite my decidedly Grinch-y attitude about waiting in long lines for a video game, people are happily queuing for Tears of the Kingdom for the vibes, y’all. They’ve waited six years for a sequel to Breath of the Wild; what’s a few, sweaty hours more, especially in the company of your fellow die-hard fans?
A Missouri man charged in connection with the murders of two brothers from Wisconsin over cattle has pleaded guilty to his role in their deaths.Garland “Joey” Nelson of Braymer, Missouri, pleaded guilty to two counts of first-degree murder Friday in Cass County. Nelson was facing the possibility of the death penalty in the killings of 24-year-old Justin Diemel and 35-year-old Nicholas Diemel. He was originally charged with two counts of first-degree murder, armed criminal action, tampering with a motor vehicle, abandonment of a corpse and stealing of a motor vehicle. In a release, Caldwell County Prosecutor Brady Kopek said Nelson has been sentenced to two terms of Life Imprisonment. He will serve those terms consecutively – one right after the other. Kopek added that all remaining charges against Nelson will be dropped. The brothers were in Braymer on business in July 2019 to collect a $250,000 debt stemming from a cattle deal when they went missing. They had rented an F-250 truck for that trip. It was later found parked in a commuter lot in Holt, Missouri, with the keys still in the ignition. Nelson previously admitted to driving that truck from his farm to the commuter lot, however, he pleaded not guilty to that charge. Then, human remains were found both on his farm and in a livestock trailer in Nebraska, which the owner said he’d recently bought in Missouri. Nelson told prosecutors in 2020 that he’d disposed of the brothers’ bodies but denied killing them.In Friday’s plea hearing, Nelson admitted to shooting both of the brothers as part of the dispute over the cattle agreement. Nelson said after shooting them, he placed their bodies in barrels, burned them, then dumped the remains. One set of remains was dumped in a large pile of cow manure on the Nelson farm. The other was dumped in a mineral supplement bucket that was eventually located in Nebraska. “The matter has been pending for over three years, and it is now finally over,” said Special Assistant Prosecutor Stephen Sokoloff. “I am hopeful that the Diemel family will now be able to return to their lives without this hanging over them.”I know that no sentence will bring Nick and Justin back to them, but they can sleep knowing that Nelson will be behind bars for the rest of his life.”
BRAYMER, Mo. —
A Missouri man charged in connection with the murders of two brothers from Wisconsin over cattle has pleaded guilty to his role in their deaths.
Garland “Joey” Nelson of Braymer, Missouri, pleaded guilty to two counts of first-degree murder Friday in Cass County.
Nelson was facing the possibility of the death penalty in the killings of 24-year-old Justin Diemel and 35-year-old Nicholas Diemel. He was originally charged with two counts of first-degree murder, armed criminal action, tampering with a motor vehicle, abandonment of a corpse and stealing of a motor vehicle.
In a release, Caldwell County Prosecutor Brady Kopek said Nelson has been sentenced to two terms of Life Imprisonment. He will serve those terms consecutively – one right after the other.
Kopek added that all remaining charges against Nelson will be dropped.
The brothers were in Braymer on business in July 2019 to collect a $250,000 debt stemming from a cattle deal when they went missing. They had rented an F-250 truck for that trip. It was later found parked in a commuter lot in Holt, Missouri, with the keys still in the ignition.
Nelson previously admitted to driving that truck from his farm to the commuter lot, however, he pleaded not guilty to that charge. Then, human remains were found both on his farm and in a livestock trailer in Nebraska, which the owner said he’d recently bought in Missouri.
Nelson told prosecutors in 2020 that he’d disposed of the brothers’ bodies but denied killing them.
In Friday’s plea hearing, Nelson admitted to shooting both of the brothers as part of the dispute over the cattle agreement. Nelson said after shooting them, he placed their bodies in barrels, burned them, then dumped the remains. One set of remains was dumped in a large pile of cow manure on the Nelson farm. The other was dumped in a mineral supplement bucket that was eventually located in Nebraska.
“The matter has been pending for over three years, and it is now finally over,” said Special Assistant Prosecutor Stephen Sokoloff. “I am hopeful that the Diemel family will now be able to return to their lives without this hanging over them.
“I know that no sentence will bring Nick and Justin back to them, but they can sleep knowing that Nelson will be behind bars for the rest of his life.”