ReportWire

Tag: Monterey

  • 49er faithful from Carmel confident in team’s chances for deep playoff run

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    From head to toe, Belinda Rhodes is blinged out in 49ers gear. 

    “Love this one, Jerry Rice has one just like this too,” Rhodes told CBS News Bay Area.  “This is my latest fun piece, my Sourdough Sam hat.” 

    She has been cheering on for the Niners for as long as she can remember. 

    “My dad was a Niners fan, my brothers are Niners fans. So really, born into the Niner Faithful,” Rhodes added. 

    Since 2014, she’s been even more loyal to the Faithful.

    “We’ve been season ticketholders and attended pretty much almost every game away and home. We’ve missed very little,” she said.

    That’s no easy feat. She splits her time between Stockton and Carmel for work. Rhodes makes sure to have at least one jersey and some memorabilia in her car just in case. 

    “I probably could have bought a house. It’s been a lot, it’s an investment in just the entertainment and being a fan,” Rhodes said. 

    All eyes are on Saturday’s high-stakes regular season finale against the Seattle Seahawks. If the Niners win, they’ll lock in home-field advantage through the Super Bowl, which is being held on their home field. 

    No matter home, or away, she will be there to root on her 49ers, just like she has for decades. 

    “Super excited, but I’m really confident. We’ve been playing well. Purdy’s been playing well, we have a lot of injuries, but our team has really picked up,” Rhodes said. 

    Courtney Ferrante, Rhodes’ boss, is also a Niners fan. 

    “Two months ago, Belinda put in a request to have Super Bowl Sunday off. So that she could go see the Niners play,” Ferrante told CBS News Bay Area.

    Rhodes is confident that the Niners will secure the NFC West title and conference’s number one seed. And if they do, she knows just what to wear. 

    “This is my favorite jersey, Jerry Rice, he signed it. When the stadium opened, he did a signing so we stood in line all night. I was number three in line,” she said. 

    As long as the 49ers take the field, Rhodes will be there, and you surely won’t miss her in the bleachers. 

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    CBS Bay Area

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  • Santa Cruz County sheriff confirms body found as suspected shark attack victim Erica Fox

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    Authorities on California’s Central Coast confirmed that a body recovered from the ocean by deputies was a swimmer who went missing after a possible shark attack last week.

    The Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Office announced Monday that the body was positively identified as 55-year-old Erica Fox of Monterey County. The woman’s body was recovered on Saturday about four miles south of the community of Davenport, about 25 miles from where she went missing.

    Fox had been missing since a group swim off Lovers Point in Pacific Grove on the afternoon of Dec. 21. Witnesses reported seeing a splash before she disappeared, and investigators said people in the area reported seeing a shark.

    Authorities conducted more than 15 hours of search operations, covering more than 84 square nautical miles, before suspending the search on Dec. 22.

    There have been several shark-related incidents in the area over the past several years, including a man who was bit and survived in the same spot.

    “Monterey does have its tendencies to get bites in that area,” said Chris Lowe, director of the Shark Lab at California State University Long Beach.

    Lowe noted that despite recent incidents, shark bites are rare.

    “On average we have about three injury-related shark bites in California each year,” Lowe told CBS News Bay Area. “Your probability of being bitten, is like the same as winning Powerball.”

    The scientist said that some adult white sharks are in the area, particularly in the winter months, because they are there to feed on elephant seals.

    The “Kelp Crawlers”, an open water swimming group co-founded by Fox, said they held a memorial for her on Sunday and planned to be back out in the water next weekend.

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    Tim Fang

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  • Beach hazards statement issued for Bay Area, Central Coast through Sunday night

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    The National Weather Service is warning visitors to beaches and shorelines in the San Francisco Bay Area and Central Coast this holiday weekend to be careful due to an increased risk of sneaker waves and rip currents.

    On Friday, the agency issued a beach hazards statement for the coast stretching from northern Sonoma County down to Big Sur in Monterey County. The statement is in effect through 10 p.m. Sunday.

    “Sneaker waves can unexpectedly run significantly farther up the beach than normal, including over rocks and jetties. Rip currents are typically more frequent and stronger in the vicinity of jetties, inlets, and piers,” the weather service said in a statement.

    Forecasters said breaking waves of 13 to 18 feet are expected through the holiday weekend.

    Visitors to the coast are urged to stay off of rocks and out of the water. Also, visitors should not turn their back to the ocean.

    The warning follows recent tragedies along Big Sur in Monterey County, in which three people drowned after being swept into the ocean in the last three weeks. On Nov. 14, 39-year-old Yuji Hu and 7-year-old Anzi Hu, both from Calgary, Canada, died after being pulled into the water at Garrapata State Beach.

    Eight days later, Army Spc. Amanpreet Thind of New Jersey was among three people who were swept into the ocean at Soberanes Point. The two friends who went into the water with Thind survived and were treated for minor injuries.

    Thind, 35, had been studying at the Defense Language Institute in Monterey. Search efforts for Thind ended on Wednesday evening.

    Monterey County officials offered several safety tips for visitors to the beach and coast this holiday weekend, which include staying aware of ocean conditions, never turning back on the ocean, staying off rocks, jetties and outcroppings and to respect posted warnings and barriers.

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    Tim Fang

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  • Bay Area pounded by heavy rain in atmospheric river storm

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    The Bay Area and Monterey Bay was being pounded by heavy rain and strong winds as an atmospheric river storm passed through the region Thursday.

    As of about 8 a.m., moderate to heavy rain was falling over much of the region, impacting the morning commute. The National Weather Service said there were reports of standing water on roadways and minor flooding.

    Forecasters have issued flood advisories in several Bay Area counties, which remain in effect through Thursday morning. Advisories for Alameda, western Contra Costa, San Francisco, Santa Clara and north central Santa Cruz counties are in effect through 10 a.m.

    Meanwhile, a flood advisory for southeastern San Mateo and northwestern Santa Cruz County, including the mountain communities of Boulder Creek, Ben Lomond and Felton, is in effect until 11:15 a.m. A flood advisory for Marin and Sonoma counties is in effect until 11:30 a.m.

    As for the winds, forecasters said the strongest recorded gust from the storm was 63 mph at Cobb Ridge in northern Sonoma County.

    A high wind warning remained in effect for coastal areas of the North Bay, San Francisco and the Peninsula through 10 a.m. Meanwhile a wind advisory for the nine Bay Area counties and the Monterey Bay region has been extended through 4 p.m. Thursday.

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    Tim Fang

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  • Baby sea creature spent months entangled in fishing gear. Then a ‘miracle’ in CA

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    A baby sea creature and its mama were spotted off the coast of California, a company said.

    A baby sea creature and its mama were spotted off the coast of California, a company said.

    Getty Images/iStockphoto

    A baby sea creature was caught in fishing gear for months off the coast of California, a company said.

    Chex Mix, the calf of a “well-known” mama humpback in the area, found itself trapped in a “complicated fishing gear entanglement in June of this year,” according to an Oct. 15 Facebook post by Monterey Bay Whale Watch.

    A baby humpback whale was entangled in fishing gear for months in California.
    A baby humpback whale was entangled in fishing gear for months in California. Morgan Quimby Monterey Bay Whale Watch

    For months, the baby was stuck in the fishing gear while trying to learn how to be a whale from its mama, the company said.

    The gear was wrapped around the pectoral flipper and across the whale’s back through the mouth area, and multiple rescue missions were unsuccessful, the post said.

    Then came a “miracle.”

    The baby, full of “strength” and “resiliency,” freed itself from the gear, the company said.

    A baby humpback whale was spotted off the coast of California with its mama.
    A baby humpback whale was spotted off the coast of California with its mama. Naturalist Lauren Monterey Bay Whale Watch

    Calves stay close to their mom for up to a year before weaning, with the mother being “protective” and “swimming closely and often touching them with their flippers,” according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

    Although the whale watching company said these situations don’t usually have “happy endings,” it was “thrilled” to see the pair out in the water, the post said.

    Facebook users shared their thoughts on the “wonderful news” with one person saying, “This news absolutely made my day. SO happy. YAY Chex Mix! What a survivor.”

    “So glad Chex Mix is free,” another wrote.

    Monterey is about a 120-mile drive south from San Francisco.

    Paloma Chavez

    McClatchy DC

    Paloma Chavez is a reporter covering real-time news on the West Coast. She has a degree in journalism from the University of Southern California.

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    Paloma Chavez

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  • Baby sea creature spent months entangled in fishing gear. Then a ‘miracle’ in CA

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    A baby sea creature and its mama were spotted off the coast of California, a company said.

    A baby sea creature and its mama were spotted off the coast of California, a company said.

    Getty Images/iStockphoto

    A baby sea creature was caught in fishing gear for months off the coast of California, a company said.

    Chex Mix, the calf of a “well-known” mama humpback in the area, found itself trapped in a “complicated fishing gear entanglement in June of this year,” according to an Oct. 15 Facebook post by Monterey Bay Whale Watch.

    A baby humpback whale was entangled in fishing gear for months in California.
    A baby humpback whale was entangled in fishing gear for months in California. Morgan Quimby Monterey Bay Whale Watch

    For months, the baby was stuck in the fishing gear while trying to learn how to be a whale from its mama, the company said.

    The gear was wrapped around the pectoral flipper and across the whale’s back through the mouth area, and multiple rescue missions were unsuccessful, the post said.

    Then came a “miracle.”

    The baby, full of “strength” and “resiliency,” freed itself from the gear, the company said.

    A baby humpback whale was spotted off the coast of California with its mama.
    A baby humpback whale was spotted off the coast of California with its mama. Naturalist Lauren Monterey Bay Whale Watch

    Calves stay close to their mom for up to a year before weaning, with the mother being “protective” and “swimming closely and often touching them with their flippers,” according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

    Although the whale watching company said these situations don’t usually have “happy endings,” it was “thrilled” to see the pair out in the water, the post said.

    Facebook users shared their thoughts on the “wonderful news” with one person saying, “This news absolutely made my day. SO happy. YAY Chex Mix! What a survivor.”

    “So glad Chex Mix is free,” another wrote.

    Monterey is about a 120-mile drive south from San Francisco.

    Paloma Chavez

    McClatchy DC

    Paloma Chavez is a reporter covering real-time news on the West Coast. She has a degree in journalism from the University of Southern California.

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    Paloma Chavez

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  • Monterey Bay Aquarium re-releases vintage otter tee worn by Taylor Swift to raise funds

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    After Taylor Swift was seen wearing a vintage Monterey Bay Aquarium otter t-shirt in a movie promoting her latest album, the aquarium has reissued the shirt to raise funds for its Sea Otter Program.

    The aquarium said they had been receiving a surge in donations and interest after the musician wore the shirt in the movie “Official Release Party of a Showgirl“, coinciding with the release of her latest album “The Life of a Showgirl.” Many of the donations were $13, Swift’s favorite number.

    “Intentional or not, by putting our sea otter conservation work in the spotlight, this has brought a new era of support and awareness to the Aquarium’s long history of ocean conservation,” said a statement on the aquarium’s website Thursday.

    After tracking down the original artwork of the shirt, which was first printed in the 1990s and features two otters swimming, the aquarium launched the fundraiser. The original shirt was printed by Harborside Graphics, which was later subsumed into Liberty Graphics based in Maine.

    Aquarium officials said the shirts feature PVC-free water-based inks and are 100% cotton that does not shed microplastics. Reducing pollution from plastic, which often ends up in oceans, is one of the aquarium’s main missions.

    The shirts, which are available in adult and kid sizes, are $65.13. As of about 11 a.m. Thursday, the fundraiser had raised more than $600,000 out of a $1.3 million goal. The aquarium said supplies of the shirt would be limited.

    Released on Oct. 3, “The Life of a Showgirl” is the 14-time Grammy-award winner’s 12th studio album. Swift announced the album in August on “New Heights,” the podcast hosted by her fiancé, Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, and his brother, former Philadelphia Eagles center Jason Kelce.  

    All 12 tracks of the album hold the top 12 spots in this week’s Billboard Hot 100, with “The Fate of Ophelia” holding the top spot on the chart.

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    Tim Fang

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  • Humpback whales rush to stop hungry orcas from hunting in CA. Celebration followed

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    A group of humpbacks tried to stop orcas from hunting a sea lion off the coast of California, boaters said.

    A group of humpbacks tried to stop orcas from hunting a sea lion off the coast of California, boaters said.

    Monterey Bay Whale Watch

    Humpback whales were spotted trying to stop orcas from hunting off the coast of California in a “rare” interaction, boaters said.

    The “once in a lifetime trip” took place on Oct. 5, when boaters came across the killer whale orca pod known as CA51A’s, according to a Facebook post by the Monterey Bay Whale Watch.

    When boaters arrived, the orcas were mid-hunt, attempting to snag a sea lion before a humpback whale pair decided to “charge into the area.”

    Eventually, the orcas were swarmed by at least four humpbacks trying to disrupt their hunt, boaters said.

    Although the hunt was a success, the humpback whales didn’t stop there as they even tried to prevent the orcas from feeding, boaters said.

    Then, the humpbacks “gave up,” leading to a “celebratory breaching” from the orcas, boaters said.

    Killer whales are known to be the ocean’s top predator, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

    The highly social animal usually travels in pods of a few individuals to 20 or more, NOAA said.

    As for why the humpbacks felt the need to attempt to protect the sea lion, scientists have theorized that the whales may engage in “altruistic behavior” as a means to help another species, according to Phys’ website.

    Another theory behind the protection is that humpback whales are known to “drive off killer whales” as a means to protect their babies, and any signs of attacking may cause them to enter protector mode, the idea behind wanting to help any other animal in distress “could not be ruled out,” the website read.

    A killer whale was seen breaching off the coast of California, boaters said.
    A killer whale was seen breaching off the coast of California, boaters said. Morgan Quimby Monterey Bay Whale Watch

    Toward the end of the trip, boaters saw an orca named Andi breach multiple times by the boat along with her daughter, Astrid, also leaping out of the water, boaters said.

    Monterey is about a 120-mile drive southeast from San Francisco.

    Paloma Chavez

    McClatchy DC

    Paloma Chavez is a reporter covering real-time news on the West Coast. She has a degree in journalism from the University of Southern California.

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    Paloma Chavez

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  • NOAA backtracks on alleged sea lion decapitation at Central California beach

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    Federal authorities have issued an update regarding the reported decapitation of a sea lion at a Monterey County beach, clarifying that “no marine mammal parts were removed from the beach.”  

    The NOAA Fisheries’ Office of Law Enforcement released a statement Monday about the incident, which they said took place at Point Pinos Beach in Pacific Grove on July 27.

    Officials said at the time a man was seen using a hunting knife to remove the head of the sea lion before placing the head in a bag and leaving the scene in a SUV. The office also posted a picture of a suspect and announced a $20,000 reward.

    NOAA officials now say no mammal parts were taken and removed the photo.

    “The individual has been located, and it was determined that no marine mammal parts were removed from the beach. We thank the public for their help and concern in this matter,” the agency said in its update.

    Jason Bietz of Hanford, who said he was the man in the photo, told the Los Angeles Times that he reached out to NOAA investigators on Monday to clear his name. Bietz told the newspaper that he did not decapitate the animal.

    Rashelle Diaz of Monterey, who reported the incident to authorities, told the Times that he had confronted Bietz and his daughter, saying she saw him leaning over the animal and prodding it with a knife.

    Bietz also denied accusations that he was carrying a knife on the beach.

    CBS News Bay Area reached out to the NOAA spokesperson, who was unavailable for comment due to the ongoing government shutdown.

    According to the agency, harassing, harming, killing or feeding sea lions is prohibited under the Marine Mammal Protection Act, along with collecting parts of protected marine mammal species. Civil prosecution may result of fines up to $36,498 per violation, while criminal violations are punishable up to a year in jail and a $100,000 in fines.

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    Tim Fang

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  • Play Misty For Me: The California Blueprint for Fatal Attraction

    Play Misty For Me: The California Blueprint for Fatal Attraction

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    Although the era of “free love” that commenced in the 1960s was initially looked upon by men with salivation over the opportunity to “get the milk for free” without having to “buy the cow” (that old grotesque chestnut), a new view on the matter was gradually starting to take shape in the 1970s, eventually morphing into the ultimate cautionary tale about “putting your dick in crazy,” 1987’s Fatal Attraction. But it’s quite obvious that said movie owes a great debt to the blueprint it all started with: 1971’s Play Misty For Me

    As Clint Eastwood’s first outing as director, the film might have felt like an unusual choice for the star best known as a “hero” of Western movies, and yet, who knew better than Eastwood what it meant to be “like catnip for the ladies” at that time? What’s more, the same year as Play Misty For Me was released, The Beguiled came out as well. Also a psychological thriller starring Eastwood that involved “crazy women.” Or rather, women who have gone crazy with lust. While Don Siegel’s version of The Beguiled (before Sofia Coppola came along) is based on Thomas P. Cullinan’s 1966 novel of the same name, Play Misty For Me wouldn’t get a novelization until after the screenplay by Jo Heims and Dean Riesner was written. Another “don’t become this woman” narrative that emerged in the late 70s, Looking For Mr. Goodbar, was also based on a novel, specifically by Judith Rossner. The novel itself based on the story of Roseann Quinn’s 1973 murder by a man she picked up at a bar (what was then called a “singles bar,” despite such a modifying adjective not really needing to be there). Which is exactly what Evelyn Draper (Jessica Walter) does in her bid to ensnare local Carmel radio DJ Dave Garner (Eastwood) in her spiderweb of calculated lies. The lies that include her presentation as a casual, cool, all-around “groovy chick” who just wants a one-night stand with “no strings attached.” This being the phrase that, as far as “smart men” are concerned, connotes the famous last words of a woman “trying to get her hooks in” under false pretenses.

    Apparently, though, Dave isn’t exactly a smart man. In fact, he seems so casually nonchalant in the way that only someone from California can be that there are many times when the viewer wants to shake him and shout, “Call the fuckin’ cops on this bitch, okay?!” This, at certain moments, leading one to ask who the real “psycho” is: Evelyn or Dave. Because surely any sane person surely would have sent up a red flag to authorities soon after Evelyn starts to openly stalk him at his house and his favorite local hangout, The Sardine Factory (still standing in Carmel to this very day), which also happens to be the place where she first let him believe that he was luring her. This goes for Dan Gallagher (Michael Douglas) with Alex Forrest (Glenn Close) in Fatal Attraction as well, only with Dan it makes a bit more sense as he’s still trying to protect his reputation as a “family man.” In either situation, however, the failure of both men to seek help more immediately is a direct commentary on the extent of male pride. The kind of hubris that 1) makes them believe they can do whatever they want in the first place and 2) not face any sort of fallout for it.

    Accordingly, Dave decides to write Evelyn off as nothing more than a “California kook” (that’s the trouble with California kooks: you never know for sure just how kooky they can get) as he goes back to pursuing “the one that got away,” Tobie Williams (Donna Mills), who he learns is back in town after four months spent hiding out from him and his philandering ways in Sausalito. In fact, it’s Tobie’s house we first see Dave skulking around at the beginning of the movie, a stalker element at play in two forms: for one, he’s prowling outside her house uninvited and, for another, there’s a painting of him in the window that indicates someone (i.e., Tobie) is rather fond of him. Or at least she was until he kept “catting around” with all the other available women in Carmel. And yes, there were probably a lot more to choose from back then because it was still vaguely affordable. Even to someone as “cuckoo” and ostensibly unemployed as Evelyn, who seems to spend all of her free time tracking Dave like a hunted animal. Tobie, meanwhile, can be as hippie-dippy and artistic as she wants to be thanks to having the ability to rent out a room in her picturesque house (left to her, conveniently, by her father) overlooking the sea (it is, after all, Carmel-by-the-Sea). The bottom line is, maybe the curmudgeonly bartender at The Sardine Factory is right when he shades Dave with the line, “Heard your show tonight. Sure beats the hell out of working for a living.” 

    With everyone so loosey-goosey about work (“Hey, it’s California, man”), no wonder Evelyn has enough time to develop a near-erotomaniac obsession with Dave. This in contrast to the “career woman” stylings of Alex in Fatal Attraction. A film which originated from James Dearden’s fifty-minute 1980 movie, Diversion (and yes, Dearden would go on to write the Fatal Attraction screenplay). Despite their “coastal differences,” Alex initially tries to “play it cool” in much the same way as Evelyn, offering sex up to Dan with a casual shrug and reminder, “We’re two adults.” This after asking seductively if Dan is “discreet.” The implication being: can he keep a secret about having an affair? Little does he know, it’s Alex who lacks all discretion (despite her insistence to the contrary). Much the same as Evelyn, who turns up at Dave’s house in the dead of night begging to come in. When he won’t let her, she drops her coat to reveal she’s naked so that Dave will bring her inside to avert any potential prying neighbors’ eyes. While Dave might not be a married man, he’s certainly got a lot to lose now that he’s convinced Tobie to get back together with him because he’s finally decided he’s ready for monogamy. Evelyn’s fierce and tireless presence in his life doesn’t exactly make that assertion seem true.

    Alex couldn’t care less about getting in the way of Dan and his “old lady” either. Except, in contrast to Tobie, Beth (Anne Archer), is the embodiment of the “safe,” “boring” wife trope. Tobie, instead, has far more appeal than Evelyn for her “California cool” look and attitude. Indeed, the tropes presented in Fatal Attraction are far more cliche and damaging with regard to the representation of women. This no doubt because they’re presented through Dearden’s male perspective. 

    As for Jo Heims, the “female representative” of the writing duo behind Play Misty For Me, she was the one who initially wrote the script. With later input and “polishes” from Riesner making one wonder if the overall narrative came across as slightly less misogynistic in its original form. At the same time, the internalized misogyny of most women during this period in American history (and also during this one) might have meant the script wouldn’t have been all that different from its original form. For both Evelyn and Alex lack much in the way of a, shall we say, “complex backstory.” Each one is simply a “desperate woman” who has decided to latch onto a guy who was at the wrong place at the wrong time. Or, in Dave’s case, on the wrong radio airwaves at the wrong time. 

    Similar to Alex’s outrage about Dan just deciding to “throw her away” after one fuck (even though both parties agreed it couldn’t be anything more), Evelyn cry-yells at Dave, “Why are you playing these games? Why are you pretending you don’t love me?” Dave snaps back, “You haven’t got the vaguest idea what love is. We don’t even know each other.” Dan feels trapped in the same fucked-up scenario wherein he’s effectively stuck with a woman who got too drunk off the oxytocin release while they had sex. Both women’s vacillation between the “tactics” of sobbing/sadness displays and verbal venom unleashed upon the object of their so-called affection are also consistent throughout the films. Evelyn even sets Alex up with the attention-grabbing emotional manipulation of slitting her wrists when Dave tries, yet again, to rid himself of her. Though, “at least,” she waits a little more than one fuck to start displaying that kind of behavior. Alex, not so much, delving right into her Madama Butterfly behavior the second she senses Dan is really leaving and can’t be talked out of it again with more faux jovial convincing. Just as Misty can’t be bothered with pretending to play the “laid-back dame” anymore either. Which, one supposes, is the only shared trait between crazy women who live in California and New York, respectively. 

    And yes, ableist language or not, the only word to describe this pair of obsessive temptresses-turned-nightmares is “crazy.” This being part and parcel of the era during which each movie came out. For it was apparent that, as mentioned, pop culture wanted to ensure that male viewers were “scared straight.” Aware that the boon of “free love” that arose in the 60s wasn’t really free at all. It came with a price for men who thought they were finally going to get to “bang a broad” without fear of her wanting to “tie him down.” The message of Play Misty For Me and Fatal Attraction is that a man will always be punished for such foolishness. In this sense, they serve not only as fables to uphold the capitalistic status quo ensured by monogamous marriage, but to remind men that treating women, no matter how “chill” or “up for it” they might seem, disposably is not going to fly as it once did in a pre-mid-twentieth century world. Except that, oh wait, it actually does, with Evelyn and Alex both meeting brutal, watery deaths in the final scenes.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • DNA leads to true identity of woman at center of bizarre

    DNA leads to true identity of woman at center of bizarre

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    Police have finally identified a woman who was found dead in a California home nearly a decade ago — as well as the body of another person who was discovered inside a box under her kitchen table. 

    The bizarre case began in February 2014, when the Monterey Police Department responded to the death of a woman, who was identified by her driver’s license as 58-year-old Francesca Linda Jacobs. Police said in a news release that Jacobs died from starvation and they did not suspect foul play, but while at her home they found the “decomposed remains of another person inside a box under the kitchen table.” 

    Foul play could not be ruled out, police said, and a search of the apartment found that Francesca Jacobs had left a handwritten will naming the woman in the box as her mother, who she identified as Florence Jacobs. The investigation soon became known as the “Mom-In-The-Box” case. 

    Soon, though, police began to find discrepancies in the case: Francesca Jacobs appeared much older than the age on her driver’s license, and the license seemed to show a much older woman. Records about her life only began in the 1990s, and almost no records could be found for Florence Jacobs. 

    In late 2022, the Monterey County District Attorney’s Office Cold Case Task Force began working with the sheriff’s office to try to identify all unknown humans remains cases in the county, including the “Mom-In-The-Box” case. Samples from both women were used to create DNA profiles that were tested by a private forensics lab in Texas. 

    The process led to what police called “surprising facts” in the case. The woman who had named herself Francesca Jacobs was actually Linda Rae Jacobs, born in 1942, not 1955. The DNA analysis confirmed that the woman in the box was her mother, Ida Florence Jacobs. Using these new developments, detectives were able to contact relatives of the women. 

    One relative included a previous husband who “helped confirm the true identities and the unusually strong life-long bond between daughter and mother.” 

    The investigation confirmed that there was no foul play suspected in the death of Ida Florence Jacobs. However, the biggest question in the case remains unanswered. 

    “The reasons Linda Rae Jacobs assumed a new name or why she would keep her mother’s body in a box under the kitchen table will likely never be known,” police said. 

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  • Another powerful storm front hits California amid flooding woes

    Another powerful storm front hits California amid flooding woes

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    Another powerful storm front hits California amid flooding woes – CBS News


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    The latest in series of powerful storms hit California Saturday, causing widespread damage and forcing emergency evacuations. Danya Bacchus has the details.

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  • CBS Evening News, January 12, 2023

    CBS Evening News, January 12, 2023

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    CBS Evening News, January 12, 2023 – CBS News


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    Tornadoes ravage Southeast, flood risk grows in California; Pentagon releases latest UFO sightings report

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  • Tornadoes ravage Southeast, flood risk grows in California

    Tornadoes ravage Southeast, flood risk grows in California

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    Tornadoes ravage Southeast, flood risk grows in California – CBS News


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    California’s deadly storms continued to take their toll Wednesday, as officials urged residents in Monterey County to evacuate, and members of the California National Guard joined another day of searching for missing a 5-year-old, who was swept away by flood waters on Monday. Meanwhile, tornadoes left a trail of destruction across the Southeast. Mark Strassmann and Carter Evans have the latest.

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  • Bay Area Author’s Latest Work, ’52’, Sparks Powerful Message in a Lonely, COVID-19 World

    Bay Area Author’s Latest Work, ’52’, Sparks Powerful Message in a Lonely, COVID-19 World

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    Inspired by the incredible true story of the 52-hertz whale, author Johnny DePalma’s latest rhyming picture book, ’52 – A Tale of Loneliness’, echoes emotions that may be felt at home.

    Press Release



    updated: Mar 23, 2021

     Known throughout the San Francisco Bay Area for curating the pandemic’s Emergency Art Museum (emergencyartmuseum.com), award-winning author Johnny DePalma’s latest literary accomplishment dives deep into innate human feelings, emotions, and loneliness – something all too common in a COVID-19 world.

    “I would say all my books are somewhat autobiographical,” said DePalma, regarding his latest book, ’52 – A Tale of Loneliness.’ “Loneliness is such a universal and complex emotion. For me, my days of loneliness were also my days of unlimited imagination. I would take the time to connect with all of the small, seemingly invisible things in my life. And, looking back, I think those moments we’re incredibly important. Years later, when I learned about the 52-hertz whale, (also known as the loneliest whale in the world) I knew I wanted to write a book that reconnects with that misunderstood emotion.”

    This children’s tale, recommended for ages 4-8, has recently hit home for an audience of all ages. Taking place far beneath the beautiful sea, a unique whale sings a song that is all his own. Told in short, poetic passages, this whale, simply known as 52, celebrates the joy of life he’s found beneath the ocean waves. Yet, despite his isolation, 52 remains optimistic and introduces readers to the magic, beauty, and joy found within his own invisible world.

    DePalma details the beauty of isolation with effortlessness throughout the book, writing, “And that’s all mine! I get to see, the things invisible, like me! So, every night, I say hello, to all the barnacles below. To every bubble, kelp, and shell. To every grain of sand as well. For all these things make up my home, and with them, I don’t feel alone.”

    “It’s been greatly inspired by the California coast,” said DePalma. “After all, that is where the real-life 52-hertz whale has been known to travel. In 2018, my good friend and illustrator, Kyle Brown and I took a research trip from Point Conception, to Monterey, and eventually through San Francisco to find the creative spark needed for the illustrations in this book. I couldn’t be happier with the result. It’s my hope that children and families alike will uncover that same special spark of joy that 52 has found. Considering what we’ve all been going through, I think embracing some of these feelings, and putting a voice to them is going to be an important step for children moving forward.”

    DePalma went on to say, “As children start heading back to school, social and emotional learning tools are going to be imperative. Characters like 52 are there to help guide children through those difficult feelings and to help them find their voice in a world that might suddenly feel a bit different. I want children to know that being unique can be a positive and powerful thing. Sometimes, it just takes the right perspective for them to see that.”

    One recent reviewer stated, “DePalma effectively validates feelings that are relatable to children of various ages. Although 52 experiences loneliness, and sometimes feels invisible, he still sings, and his tale is not a sad one. This good-natured whale exemplifies themes of self-acceptance, individuality, contentment, empathy, bravery, and joy.” – Cecilia_L

    Terra Jolé, of “Dancing with the Stars,” fame stated, “This book is a wonderful way for children to feel content with who they are. This speaks loudly to me as a mother isolating her family through the pandemic. Embracing a world you’re creating for yourself is a powerful message in a children’s book.”

    To date, 52 – A Tale of Loneliness has won a Mom’s Choice Gold Award, and a Reader’s Favorite Five Stars. The book also includes a downloadable companion audiobook read by Emmy Award-winning actor, Patton Oswalt.

    For more information about 52 – A Tale of Loneliness, visit: umbrellybooks.com/52tale

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    Contact: Johnny DePalma

    Umbrelly Books Publishing

    hello@umbrellybooks.com

    408-666-2722

    Source: Umbrelly Books Publishing

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