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Tag: teens

  • 2 killed, 4 wounded in Mississippi shooting; man arrested

    2 killed, 4 wounded in Mississippi shooting; man arrested

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    BAY ST. LOUIS, Miss. — Police have charged a 19-year-old man with killing two teenagers and wounding four others in an early Sunday shooting at a house party on the Mississippi Gulf Coast.

    Cameron Everest Brand of Pass Christian is charged with murder and aggravated assault, jail records show. Bay St. Louis Police Chief Toby Schwartz said in a news release that police identified Brand as the sole shooter through witness and victim statements.

    An 18-year-old and a 16-year-old died in a New Orleans hospital, Schwartz said. The Orleans Parish coroner did not return a phone call seeking to confirm their identities.

    Brand was arrested at his home in neighboring Pass Christian and taken to jail, Schwartz said. Bay St. Louis Municipal Court Judge Stephen Maggio denied Brand bail, and he was being held in the Hancock County jail. It is unclear if Brand has a lawyer who could speak for him.

    Students had gathered for a party at the home on a sparsely populated road after Bay High School’s prom. Local news outlets reported that trails of blood could be seen on the pavement Sunday outside the home, while cars were peppered with bullet holes. The home is less than a mile from Bay High.

    Police said the six victims wounded by gunfire ranged in age from 15 to 18. All were taken to area hospitals, some by helicopter.

    Casey Woods, an 18-year-old student at Pass Christian High School, told the Sun Herald of Biloxi that he was at the party with a girlfriend. He told the paper he saw Brand talking to people and then walking away before he returned and the shooting started.

    “Me and my girl looked up and saw sparks coming from the gun,” Woods said, adding many people ran into the woods.

    Both of the teens who died had attended nearby Hancock High School in Kiln, officials in that school district said. Two more Hancock High students were shot and wounded, as were two students from Bay High. Those are the only two public high schools in Hancock County, on the western end of the Mississippi Gulf Coast between New Orleans and Gulfport.

    “Our hearts are broken as we mourn the tragic loss of two Hancock High School students who were victims of the shooting in Bay St. Louis last night,” the Hancock County school district said in a statement, saying counselors would be available Monday at school. “Let us come together as a community to show our support and love during this difficult time.”

    Sandra Reed, superintendent of the Bay St. Louis-Waveland school district, said both of the wounded Bay High students were expected to recover. Bay High Principal Amy Necaise said the school was making faculty and staff available on campus Sunday afternoon to counsel students.

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  • Beavis and Butt-Head return as wonderfully moronic as ever

    Beavis and Butt-Head return as wonderfully moronic as ever

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    NEW YORK — The 1990s are making a comeback, with scrunchies acceptable again, “Night Court” back on TV and fanny packs and flannel all the rage. But it’s not the ’90s until two of the most idiotic teenagers return, sniggering along the way.

    That’s right, Beavis and Butt-Head — forever un-matured — are on the streaming platform Paramount+ these days, still mocking culture and saying things like, “That cloud looks like a butt.”

    “It is almost fun sometimes to just go to that lazy part of your brain where you’re just blurting out whatever stupid thought comes out,” says Mike Judge, who created the duo and voices them.

    A second season of “Mike Judge’s Beavis and Butt-Head” kicked off this month with our heroes at school-mandated meditation class, an alternative to detention. “This sucks,” says Butt Head, the dark-haired one in braces and an AC/DC T-shirt. “Now try to empty your mind of all thoughts,” says the teacher. It is surprisingly easy.

    There’s also a visit to a polling place — the boys mistake it for a strip club — and later a scheme to buy beer by spray-painting Beavis’ hair with white paint to make him look older. It goes awry, of course, when he gets on a shuttle bus to a retirement community.

    The look, feel and snark of the show hasn’t changed even if there are fewer music videos these days. Judge relies on a producer to scour YouTube to find videos that might spark a spontaneous put-down. It’s all very timeless.

    “That’s the beauty of ‘Beavis and Butt-Head’ — no matter what decade you were born in, you’re able to find ways to connect to them and even perhaps see bits of yourselves in them,” said Domenic DiMeglio, chief marketing officer for Paramount+.

    There are a few bizarre tangents, particularly the return to an alternative universe where Beavis and Butt-Head are middle-aged. Judge devised one episode in which they marry each other without realizing it.

    The original “Beavis and Butt-Head” arrived in 1993 on MTV and became an instant hit, running for seven seasons before going on hiatus in 1997. The un-dynamic duo returned with an eighth, stand-alone season in 2011, and the series was revived last year.

    This show’s influence was so strong that it spawned a full-length film called “Beavis and Butt-Head Do America” in 1996 and another titled “Beavis and Butt-Head Do the Universe” in 2022.

    Judge says he started to think about returning to his cartoon duo after the band Portugal. The Man asked him if he could introduce them with his iconic title characters at 2018’s Coachella.

    “I thought of it as a way of ‘Let me see what it sounds like if my voice still sounds like them.’ And I did it. I played it back and it still felt like Beavis and Butt-Head. And so that’s partly what got me thinking about doing this again.”

    The targets have changed, even if some show principles have not. If something is already funny, it’s usually not a good target. And being overexposed is usually a green light. So yesterday’s Axl Rose became today’s Jack Harlow.

    This season sees Beavis and Butt-Head dunk on Lil Nas X, Audrey Nuna, Bill Gates, Ronald Reagan and even the Buddha. There’s a bizarre scene in which the boys annoy Jesus and Ganesh on an astral plane so much that the deities take turns punching the boys.

    Judge came up with the original concept at a time when TV was filled with yuppies — “The Cosby Show,” “Family Ties,” “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air” and “Mad About You.”

    “Maybe some of it was in reaction to that — finding a place in comedy that was different,” he said. “But I wasn’t trying to be shocking or edgy. I was just trying to make it funny.”

    There was plenty of blowback. Judge thinks “Beavis and Butt-Head” were badly misunderstood back then by some people who accused it of contributing to all sorts of poor teen behavior. Judge even got death threats.

    The cartoon duo have returned to a vastly different media landscape, one they had a part in cracking open. Can two snarky teens with little social consciousness have the ability to cut through the online hype?

    Yes, says Paramount+: “Beavis and Butt-Head have been doing clever social commentary long before it was cool in the age of social media and their no-filter, blissfully ignorant POV has always been part of this duo’s DNA,” said DiMeglio.

    One thing the show will not do is wade into politics. In a recent episode, Beavis and Butt-Head go hunting — “The outdoors sucks,” says Butt-Head — and accidentally drink deer urine. This was an opportunity to raise the issue of guns, but Judge has no interest.

    “I feel like this is comedy and we’re just looking for funny and just trying to give people a break from that kind of stuff. I don’t think Beavis and Butt-Head have anything to add to that conversation,” he said.

    “They’re not sophisticated enough to go there. I think that’s what’s comforting about it: Just seeing some guys who don’t know any better. They don’t have much accountability. They don’t know what the word means.”

    ___

    Mark Kennedy is at http://twitter.com/KennedyTwits

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  • 9 teenagers injured in a Texas prom after-party shooting

    9 teenagers injured in a Texas prom after-party shooting

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    Nine teenagers were shot in an east Texas residence early Sunday at a prom after-party attended by hundreds, according to the Jasper County Sheriff’s Office

    ByACACIA CORONADO Associated Press

    AUSTIN, Texas — Nine teenagers were shot in an east Texas residence early Sunday at a prom after-party attended by hundreds, local officials said in a statement.

    Just after midnight, deputies responded to shots fired at a private home in Jasper County where the party was held and found nine victims with gunshot wounds, according to a statement by the Jasper County Sheriff’s Office. The injuries are expected to be non-life threatening, according to Jasper County officials.

    About 250 people are estimated to have been present at the time of the shooting, according to a statement from the Jasper County Sheriff’s Office.

    Eight people were taken in personal vehicles to Jasper Memorial Hospital in Jasper, Texas, and “at least one” of those were transferred to Christus Southeast Texas-St. Elizabeth Hospital in nearby Beaumont, Texas for further treatment, Jasper County Sheriff’s Office spokeswoman Karli Cherry said. One person did not go to the hospital, she said.

    A second shooting within the city limits of Jasper, Texas occurred shortly after the first, the statement said. There were no injuries in the second shooting, but a connection between the two incidents is being investigated due to a “common vehicle at both locations,” the statement said.

    According to the statement, “people of interest are being questioned” and the investigation is ongoing.

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  • Homeowner who shot Black teen Ralph Yarl pleads not guilty

    Homeowner who shot Black teen Ralph Yarl pleads not guilty

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    LIBERTY, Mo. — The 84-year old man who shot Ralph Yarl when the Black teenager went to his door by mistake pleaded not guilty Wednesday in a case that has shocked the country and renewed national debates about gun policies and race in America.

    Andrew Lester walked into the courtroom with a cane and spoke quietly during Wednesday’s hearing, his first public appearance since last week’s shooting. Authorities say he shot Yarl, a 16-year-old honor student, first in the head, then in the arm after Yarl came to his door because he had confused the address with the home where he was supposed to pick up his younger brothers.

    The case is among three in recent days involving young people who were shot after mistakenly showing up in the wrong places. A 20-year-old woman was killed in upstate New York when the car she was in pulled into the wrong driveway. In Texas, two cheerleaders were shot after one of them mistakenly got into a car thinking it was hers.

    Yarl was shot at point-blank range in the head but miraculously survived the bullet. Only about 10% to 15% of people who are shot in the head survive, said Dr. Christopher Kang, the president of the American College of Emergency Physicians.

    Some civil rights leaders and Yarl’s family attorney, Lee Merritt, have urged the Department of Justice to investigate the shooting and for prosecutors to charge Lester with a hate crime, with Merritt noting that Yarl “was armed only with his Black skin.”

    Justice Department officials have not responded to calls seeking comment.

    Clay County prosecutor Zachary Thompson said first-degree assault is a higher-level crime, allowing a sentence of up to life in prison, which is more than a hate-crime charge would carry.

    Lester remains free after posting $20,000 — 10% of his $200,000 bond — and agreeing to relinquish any weapons and have no contact with Yarl or his family. He also agreed to have his cellphone monitored.

    Yarl’s relatives were not at Wednesday’s hearing because they are emotionally exhausted, Merritt said. Lester’s attorney, Steve Salmon, did not come out of the courthouse to speak with reporters.

    Merritt said Yarl is “completely humbled” by the outpouring of support.

    “He says, ‘I don’t know why everyone’s making a big deal out of me,”” Merritt said. “You know, it’s it’s just me, right? It’s not like the president was shot.”

    But Eliana Brannlund said it has been rough not having her friend and fellow band member around at Staley High School.

    “He always brought a lot of positivity and smiles to our band class as well as our rehearsals outside of school,” Brannlund said in an interview with The Associated Press. “I hope people are able to hear about who Ralph is as a person and understand that he is loving, kind and sweet.”

    Yarl was shot at about 10 p.m. last Thursday after his mother asked him to pick up his twin brothers at a home on 115th Terrace, Police Chief Stacey Graves has said.

    Yarl, who is all-state band member as well as a top student, mistakenly went to 115th Street — a block away from where he meant to be. When he rang the bell, Lester came to the door and used a .32 caliber Smith and Wesson 1888 revolver to shoot the teenager.

    Lester told police he lives alone and was “scared to death” when he saw Yarl on the porch because he thought someone was trying to break in, police said in court documents.

    No words were exchanged before the shooting, but afterward, as Yarl got up to run, he heard Lester yell, “Don’t come around here,” the statement said.

    Yarl ran to multiple homes asking for help before finding someone who would call the police, according to court documents.

    Legal experts expect Lester to claim self-defense and cite Missouri’s “Stand Your Ground” law. The state is one of about 30 with statues that say people don’t have to retreat when threatened but instead can respond with physical force.

    But Merritt said the law applies only if “someone’s on your property and they’re looking to do you harm …. We don’t have any evidence of that. The Castle Doctrine does not apply to this case.”

    The shooting outraged many in Kansas City and across the country. President Joe Biden spoke with Yarl on Monday, and on Tuesday invited him to the White House.

    “No parent should have to worry that their kid will be shot after ringing the wrong doorbell,” Biden tweeted. “We’ve got to keep up the fight against gun violence.”

    Republican Gov. Mike Parson, who had remained silent on the shooting until Wednesday, accused Biden of politicizing it.

    “I don’t want some 16-year-old kid to be getting shot because he went to the wrong house — we just don’t want those kinds of things to happen. It’s a tragedy,” Parson told the Kansas City Star. “When the president of the United States is trying to make a political statement over a very serious tragedy, it is very unfortunate.”

    Thompson, the prosecutor, said Monday that there was a “racial component” to the shooting but did not elaborate. Merritt said the Yarl family met privately with Thompson. The prosecutor said he was “echoing the words from law enforcement that obviously there’s a racial dynamic at play in this case,” said Merritt, who called the answer “shallow.”

    Lester’s next court date is June 1.

    “From this point forward, the state will be pushing to move this case forward as swiftly as legally permitted,” Thompson said in a statement after Wednesday’s hearing.

    But Merritt said Yarl’s family is frustrated that Lester is out on bond and that the next court hearing is not until June.

    “We want this process to go as quickly as possible,” Merritt said. “And we know that if a defendant is out on bond, they may feel free to push the date down a little further as opposed to if he was in custody.”

    ___

    Salter reported from O’Fallon, Missouri. Heather Hollingsworth in Mission, Kansas, and Trisha Ahmed in Minneapolis contributed to this report.

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  • 2 Iowa teens plead guilty in Spanish teacher’s beating death

    2 Iowa teens plead guilty in Spanish teacher’s beating death

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    Two Iowa teenagers admitted helping ambush and kill their high school Spanish teacher who was beaten to death in a park with a baseball bat. Both pleaded guilty Tuesday to first degree murder.

    Prosecutors said Willard Miller and Jeremy Goodale carried out the 2021 attack on Nohema Graber because of a bad grade she had given Miller. The two were 16 at the time.

    Evidence shows both Miller and Goodale struck the 66-year-old teacher while she was taking her regular after-school walk, prosecutors say. Miller admitted helping plan and carry out the killing but denied ever hitting Graber. Goodale testified that Miller initiated the plan to kill Graber and each of them struck her.

    The Fairfield High School teacher’s body was found hidden in the park under a tarp, wheelbarrow and railroad ties. The town of Fairfield is home to some 9,400 people and is around 100 miles (160 kilometers) southeast of Des Moines.

    As part of an agreement with Miller, prosecutors will recommend a sentence between 30 years and life in prison, with the possibility of parole. For Goodale, prosecutors said they’ll recommend a sentence between 25 years and life with the possibility of parole.

    Goodale testified that they planned the killing for about two weeks, after Miller recruited him to help. Goodale had previously agreed to testify against Miller at his trial, which was expected to begin later this week.

    “On Nov. 2 of 2021, I met Willard Miller at Chautauqua Park, and I understood that he had intent to kill Mrs. Graber,” Goodale said as he entered his plea. He said Miller “brought a bat among other supplies to go through with the murder.”

    “After he had struck Nohema Graber, he then moved her off of the trail where I then struck her and she died as a result,” Goodale said. “Afterwards, we removed any evidence that we could.”

    The two were charged as adults because of the severity of the crime, but they weren’t subject to a mandatory sentence of life without parole because they were 16. Willard is now 17 and Goodale is 18.

    Investigators have said that Miller met with Graber at the high school on the afternoon of Nov. 2, 2021, to discuss his poor grade in her class. Graber later drove her van to a park where she was known to take walks after work, authorities say. Witnesses saw her van leaving the park less than an hour later with two males in the front seat.

    The van was left abandoned at the end of a rural road. After getting a phone call from Goodale, a witness later picked up Goodale and Miller as they walked to town on that road, investigators say.

    Goodale and Miller were initially detained after a witness provided police with photos of a Snapchat conversation in which Goodale allegedly implicated himself and Miller in the killing.

    In a police interview, Miller described the frustrations he had with the way Graber taught Spanish and how the grade in her class was lowering his GPA.

    ___

    This story has been updated to correct Goodale’s age to 18, not 17.

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  • Kansas City police: Probe of teen’s shooting moving quickly

    Kansas City police: Probe of teen’s shooting moving quickly

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    KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas City police are working to quickly prepare evidence for the Clay County prosecutor in the shooting of a Black teenager while trying to pick up his younger brothers from a friend’s house Thursday.

    “I want everyone to know that I am listening,” Police Chief Stacey Graves said Sunday at a news conference at Kansas City police headquarters downtown, “and I understand the concern we are receiving from the community.”

    The Kansas City Star reported the 16-year-old boy, who family members have identified online as Ralph Yarl, was hospitalized Thursday night after he was shot while trying to pick up his younger twin brothers. Police said he went to the wrong house and was shot there.

    Officials would not confirm the number of times the homeowner shot the victim or where his injuries were.

    Police have not identified the shooter or his race. Information that officials have now does not point to the crime being racially motivated, but Graves said that aspect also remains under investigation.

    Investigators also will consider whether or not the suspect was protected within the Stand Your Ground laws, Graves said.

    Police initially said Yarl was in stable condition but had a life-threatening injury. His current condition has not been released, other than he is stable.

    Graves said Sunday that the homeowner who allegedly shot the teen was taken into custody Thursday and placed on a 24-hour hold. While searching the scene for evidence, detectives found the firearm allegedly used. Law enforcement released the suspect pending further investigation after consulting with the Clay County Prosecutor’s Office.

    Missouri law allows a person to be held up to 24 hours for a felony investigation. At that point, the person must be released or arrested and formally charged. In order to arrest someone, law enforcement needs a formal victim statement, forensic evidence and other information for a case file to be completed, Graves said.

    Because of the teen’s injuries, Graves said police haven’t been able to get a victim statement.

    Mayor Quinton Lucas, who attended the news conference, said the police department understands the community’s concern that the shooting could be racially motivated. He said some members of the police department attended Sunday’s protest in the neighborhood where the shooting took place to listen to community members’ concerns.

    “This is not something that has been dismissed, marginalized or diminished in any way. This is something that is getting the full attention of the Kansas City Police Department,” Lucas said.

    Civil rights attorney Ben Crump told The Star on Sunday that his Florida-based law firm has been retained by the teen’s family.

    “You can’t just shoot people without having justification when somebody comes knocking on your door and knocking on your door is not justification. This guy should be charged,” Crump said.

    Crump has represented the families in several high-profile cases including Trayvon Martin and Michael Brown, as well as Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor and George Floyd.

    He said the homeowner initially shot the teen in the head and then a second time after the boy fell to the ground. The family also has retained Lee Merritt, a Texas-based civil rights attorney who has previously represented the family of Cameron Lamb, who was fatally shot by KCPD detective Eric DeValkenaere in 2019.

    Crump said based on what he was told by the teen’s family, the shooter is white.

    “It is inescapable not to acknowledge the racial dynamics at play,” he said.

    Yarl was meant to pick up his brothers from a friend’s house on 115th Terrace. He ended up ringing the doorbell at a home on 115th Street, Faith Spoonmore, the teen’s aunt, wrote online.

    A man opened the door, saw Yarl and shot him in the head. When Yarl fell to the ground, the man shot him again. Yarl got up and ran from the property, but he had to ask at three different homes before someone helped him, Spoonmore said.

    Kansas City police officers said they responded to the area around 10 p.m.

    “Even though he is doing well physically, he has a long road ahead mentally and emotionally,” Spoonmore wrote in a GoFundMe she started to raise money for Yarl’s medical bills and other expenses.

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  • Al Jaffee, longtime Mad magazine cartoonist, dead at 102

    Al Jaffee, longtime Mad magazine cartoonist, dead at 102

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    NEW YORK — Al Jaffee, Mad magazine’s award-winning cartoonist and ageless wise guy who delighted millions of kids with the sneaky fun of the Fold-In and the snark of “Snappy Answers to Stupid Questions,” has died. He was 102.

    Jaffee died Monday in Manhattan from multiple organ failure, according to his granddaughter, Fani Thomson. He had retired at the age of 99.

    Mad magazine, with its wry, sometimes pointed send-ups of politics and culture, was essential reading for teens and preteens during the baby-boom era and inspiration for countless future comedians. Few of the magazine’s self-billed “Usual Gang of Idiots” contributed as much — and as dependably — as the impish, bearded cartoonist. For decades, virtually every issue featured new material by Jaffee. His collected “Fold-Ins,” taking on everyone in his unmistakably broad visual style from the Beatles to TMZ, was enough for a four-volume box set published in 2011.

    Readers savored his Fold-Ins like dessert, turning to them on the inside back cover after looking through such other favorites as Antonio Prohías’ “Spy vs. Spy” and Dave Berg’s “The Lighter Side.” The premise, originally a spoof of the old Sports Illustrated and Playboy magazine foldouts, was that you started with a full-page drawing and question on top, folded two designated points toward the middle and produced a new and surprising image, along with the answer.

    The Fold-In was supposed to be a onetime gag, tried out in 1964 when Jaffee satirized the biggest celebrity news of the time: Elizabeth Taylor dumping her husband, Eddie Fisher, in favor of “Cleopatra” co-star Richard Burton. Jaffee first showed Taylor and Burton arm in arm on one side of the picture, and on the opposite side a young, handsome man being held back by a policeman.

    Fold the picture in and Taylor and the young man are kissing.

    The idea was so popular that Mad editor Al Feldstein wanted a follow-up. Jaffee devised a picture of 1964 GOP presidential contenders Nelson Rockefeller and Barry Goldwater that, when collapsed, became an image of Richard Nixon.

    “That one really set the tone for what the cleverness of the Fold-Ins has to be,” Jaffee told the Boston Phoenix in 2010. “It couldn’t just be bringing someone from the left to kiss someone on the right.”

    Jaffee was also known for “Snappy Answers to Stupid Questions,” which delivered exactly what the title promised. A comic from 1980 showed a man on a fishing boat with a noticeably bent reel. “Are you going to reel in the fish?” his wife asks. “No,” he says, “I’m going to jump into the water and marry the gorgeous thing.”

    Jaffee didn’t just satirize the culture; he helped change it. His parodies of advertisements included such future real-life products as automatic redialing for a telephone, a computer spell checker and graffiti-proof surfaces. He also anticipated peelable stamps, multiblade razors and self-extinguishing cigarettes.

    Jaffee’s admirers ranged from Charles M. Schulz of “Peanuts” fame and “Far Side” creator Gary Larson to Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert, who marked Jaffee’s 85th birthday by featuring a Fold-In cake on “The Colbert Report.” When Stewart and “The Daily Show” writers put together the best-selling “America (The Book),” they asked Jaffee to contribute a Fold-In.

    “When I was done, I called up the producer who’d contacted me, and I said, ‘I’ve finished the Fold-In, where shall I send it?’ And he said — and this was a great compliment — ‘Oh, please Mr. Jaffee, could you deliver it in person? The whole crew wants to meet you,’” he told The Boston Phoenix.

    Jaffee received numerous awards, and in 2013 was inducted into the Will Eisner Hall of Fame, the ceremony taking place at San Diego Comic-Con International. In 2010, he contributed illustrations to Mary-Lou Weisman’s “Al Jaffee’s Mad Life: A Biography.” The following year, Chronicle Books published “The MAD Fold-In Collection: 1964-2010.”

    Art was the saving presence of his childhood, which left him with permanent distrust of adults and authority. He was born in Savannah, Georgia, but for years was torn between the U.S., where his father (a department store manager) preferred to live, and Lithuania, where his mother (a religious Jew) longed to return. In Lithuania, Jaffee endured poverty and bullying, but also developed his craft. With paper scarce and no school to attend, he learned to read and write through the comic strips mailed by his father.

    By his teens, he was settled in New York City and so obviously gifted that he was accepted into the High School of Music & Art. His schoolmates included Will Elder, a future Mad illustrator, and Harvey Kurtzmann, a future Mad editor. (His mother, meanwhile, remained in Lithuania and was apparently killed during the war).

    He had a long career before Mad. He drew for Timely Comics, which became Marvel Comics; and for several years sketched the “Tall Tales” panel for the New York Herald Tribune. Jaffee first contributed to Mad in the mid-1950s. He left when Kurtzmann quit the magazine, but came back in 1964.

    Mad lost much of its readership and edge after the 1970s, and Jaffee outlived virtually all of the magazine’s stars. But he rarely lacked for ideas even as his method, drawing by hand, remained mostly unchanged in the digital era.

    “I’m so used to being involved in drawing and knowing so many people that do it, that I don’t see the magic of it,” Jaffee told the publication Graphic NYC in 2009. “If you reflect and think about it, I’m sitting down and suddenly there’s a whole big illustration of people that appears. I’m astounded when I see magicians work; even though I know they’re all tricks. You can imagine what someone thinks when they see someone drawing freehand and it’s not a trick. It’s very impressive.”

    ___

    This story has been corrected to show that Antonio Prohías was the creator of the “Spy vs. Spy” comic strip.

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  • Baltimore mayor calls for ‘youth curfew’ after 2 teens shot

    Baltimore mayor calls for ‘youth curfew’ after 2 teens shot

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    The mayor of Baltimore has called for a summer curfew after two teenagers were shot while police were attempting to break up a large crowd of minors Sunday night

    The mayor of Baltimore called for a summer curfew after two teenagers were shot while police were attempting to break up a large crowd of minors Sunday night.

    A 14-year-old and a 16-year-old were shot and wounded as police attempted to break up fights among a crowd of more than 200 teenagers gathered at the city’s Inner Harbor area around 9 p.m., WBAL-TV reported.

    One of the victims was in critical condition and the other was stable, WBAL reported.

    Two suspects were arrested, police said, including one with a loaded gun who matched a description of the shooter and another who was found with a loaded gun in a police garage, WBAL reported.

    Following the shooting, Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott announced his intention to implement a 9 p.m. curfew for anyone 14 years and younger and 10 p.m. for those younger than 17 during the forthcoming summer months, WJZ-TV reported.

    “I want everyone to hear me and hear me clearly,” Scott said. “We are going back to the old days. We will be enforcing a youth curfew as we move into the latter spring and summer months.”

    Scott has seen young children away from their homes at night too often, he said.

    “It’s not just about making sure we are getting them off the street, but making sure that we are supporting them and figuring out what’s going on with them and their families,” Scott said. “It is not normal for person to be that far away from their home and no one knows where they are or cares for them.”

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  • Suspect arrested in Florida after killings of 3 teens

    Suspect arrested in Florida after killings of 3 teens

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    A 16-year-old boy has been arrested in the killings of three teenagers in central Florida was captured by authorities, days after another teenager and a 12-year-old were charged in the deaths

    OCALA, Fla. — A 16-year-old boy wanted as part of an investigation into the killings of three teenagers in central Florida was captured by authorities, days after another teenager and a 12-year-old were charged in the deaths.

    The teen was arrested Saturday by U.S. marshals in Groveland, Florida, located 30 miles west of Orlando. He is facing charges of carjacking with a firearm, aggravated assault, grand theft of a motor vehicle, fleeing or attempting to elude a law enforcement officer and tampering with an electronic monitoring device, the Marion County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement.

    The two suspects previously in custody were charged with first-degree murder last week. Prosecutors are reviewing the case to determine whether the suspects will be charged as adults. The Associated Press does not publish the names of juveniles unless they have been charged with adult crimes.

    The shooting suspects and victims were all in a vehicle belonging to 16-year-old Layla Silvernail at the time of the killings, Marion County Sheriff Billy Woods said at a news conference last week. Authorities say Silvernail was killed, but they have not released the names of the other two victims, a 16-year-old girl and a 17-year-old boy.

    Woods said everyone in the vehicle was involved in gangs and the three who died were in there of their own free will.

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  • Police: 6 people wounded in shooting on South Carolina beach

    Police: 6 people wounded in shooting on South Carolina beach

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    Police in South Carolina say six people have been wounded in a shooting on a beach during a “senior skip day” event involving numerous teenagers

    ISLE OF PALMS, S.C. — Gunfire erupted on a South Carolina beach during a “senior skip day” event involving numerous teenagers Friday, wounding six people, police in South Carolina said.

    The shooting took place around 5:20 p.m. on Isle of Palms, 94 miles (151 kilometers) south of Myrtle Beach.

    Hundreds of people including high schoolers taking an unofficial day off were on the beach at the time, and there were several altercations before shots were fired, Isle of Palms Police Chief Kevin Cornett said during a news conference.

    Six people suffered injuries that were not life-threatening. Some were taken to the hospital by ambulance, and others transported themselves. Five of the victims were teens, and another was in her mid-30s, Cornett said.

    Several people were detained on weapons charges, but police could not immediately say if the shooter was in custody or if any of the firearms recovered at the scene were used in the shooting, Cornett said.

    An investigation was ongoing.

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  • ‘Yellowjackets’ goes deeper into the darkness in new season

    ‘Yellowjackets’ goes deeper into the darkness in new season

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    LOS ANGELES — Season one of “Yellowjackets” ended with the phrase “let the darkness set us free,” and season two dares to venture into the darkness with little to no remorse.

    The breakout Showtime series blends horror, adventure, comedy, drama and more in an eerily harmonious way as two primary timelines unfold: The first feature a girls’ soccer team stranded in the Canadian wilderness in the ’90s, while the second focuses on the surviving teens now navigating adulthood and dealing with the trauma of the wilderness.

    “The first season is really about them making peace with their new surroundings and season two is about the surroundings closing in on them. It’s about the isolation and all the terrible things that can come from that,” said co-showrunner and co-creator Ashley Lyle.

    As viewers venture back into the wilderness with the surviving teens, there seems to be a dark presence and looming energy over their time. This second season raises the question of how much the audience will visibly endure, as the girls are physically, emotionally and psychologically pushed to the limit.

    “I was personally blown away. The first script made me gasp several times. I love the way the episode ends,” said Christina Ricci, who plays Adult Misty.

    Melanie Lynskey, who portrays Adult Shauna, said she was nervous about how the writers would amplify each storyline from the previous season. “I just was like, ‘Oh my God! They did it. They really did it.’ Every script. I was like,’They did it again!’ It’s really impressive,“ said Lynskey.

    Samantha Hanratty and Sophie Nélisse, who play the teen versions of Ricci and Lynskey’s characters, said that episodes five and six surprised them the most.

    Hanratty says that episode five had her “jaw just on the floor” when watching back footage. “I can’t believe Misty did what she did; I’m not ready for this,” said the actor.

    Nélisse said episode six is a huge moment for her character: “I knew it was going to happen at some point, but I didn’t know the twists and turns it was going to take me on, and I was mostly just nervous I wouldn’t live up to the task. And I cried a little because I was like, ‘I won’t be able to do it.’”

    “Yellowjackets” quickly became a fan-favorite series after its premiere in 2021 as fans scoured the internet for answers to their burning questions. The show has been renewed for a third season.

    This season explores the world of cults and potentially the supernatural. However, Tawny Cypress — who plays Adult Taissa — says it’s all up for interpretation since it is not clear if a supernatural entity has any power over either teens or adults.

    “I think the supernatural is really interpretive. There’s not necessarily anything that’s been said yet that’s written in stone,” said the actor.

    Co-showrunner Jonathan Lisco agrees and said the writers want to take the audience on an exploration of possibilities.

    “I think that we’ve got to be careful about labeling exactly what’s happening and instead exploring the possibilities of what’s happening. That’s really where we’re at,” said Lisco.

    “There are broad definitions of the term supernatural, but what we always want to explore is whether or not there is a presence in the woods that is making them do this, or whether or not energetically these women coming together alchemically produce that kind of darkness and bring out the worst in each other.”

    The trailer for season two also reveals more surviving characters. Fans got a sneak peek of Van — portrayed in the present by Lauren Ambrose — and Lottie — portrayed in the present by Simone Kessell.

    Kessell praised Courtney Eaton’s portrayal of Teen Lottie in the first season. “She set the foundation, and I got to paint the house,” said the actor. “Courtney had done such a beautiful job of creating the dark Lottie and the visionary that is Lottie.”

    The young actors said that at the end of a long day of filming, they turned to self-care and community to take themselves out of their character’s survival mode.

    “It’s a lot of recommending yoga classes to each other,” Liv Hewson said playfully. Eaton and Nélisse lived together and chose to decompress by listening to music on the way home and sitting in silence watching television.

    “I would say that to kind of decompress of the day, it really helped taking off my wig and getting rid of the dirt from under your nails and skin and just coming back to your own skin and feeling fresh again,” Eaton added.

    Season two premiered on Showtime on March 24 and already has fans raving about the unexpected twists and turns.

    Ricci, who has starred in films like “The Addams Family” and “Penelope,” said that fans are drawn to supernatural thrillers because they provide a sense of escape from reality.

    “I think sometimes being able to see the problems of real life through an extreme metaphor, it’s easier to process things. It’s more fun to follow along. But we still feel how much it resonates emotionally for us,” she said.

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  • Care Counseling Hosts Virtual Session Discussing Teen Mental Health Amid Rising Concerns About Anxiety and Depression

    Care Counseling Hosts Virtual Session Discussing Teen Mental Health Amid Rising Concerns About Anxiety and Depression

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    Apr 7, 2023 09:00 EDT

    During National Mental Health Awareness Week, CARE Counseling is partnering with Newport Healthcare to raise awareness about adolescent mental health by hosting a free virtual event on Wednesday, May 10, 2023, at 6:00 p.m. CST.

    Dr. Heidi Bausch Ryan, Psychologist and Clinical Director of Training at CARE Counseling, along with Ryan Federoff, M.Ed., Vice President of Education at Newport Healthcare, will speak on key signs of mental health concerns in high school students and how to talk with teens about seeking help. They will also provide helpful tools for supporting teens struggling with mental health.

    Studies show anxiety and major depressive episodes are on the rise in teens. Reportedly, six out of 10 high school students will have a major depressive episode. Teaching parents and educators how to recognize the signs and help support students is crucial to deescalate depressive episodes. During the informational awareness session, Dr. Heidi and Ryan Federoff will also share how to connect teens with mental health services and explain the process of finding care, scheduling services and what the first few care sessions may entail.

    All are welcome to attend! This informational event is designed for parents of high schoolers, high school counselors, high school administrators and high school teachers seeking ways to understand and support adolescent mental health and well-being. Registration is available for this free event at https://care-clinics.com/teenevent

    ***

    CARE Counseling operates out of seven locations in the Twin Cities and virtually serves the entire state of Minnesota. It staffs over 250 highly trained professionals, serving the mental health needs of the community with hour-long talk therapy sessions. Learn more about CARE and the services they provide: CAREcounseling.com 612-223-8898

    Currently, CARE Counseling supports the community with one-hour talk therapy for all Minnesotans. They believe therapy should be accessible for all, which is why they accept all major Minnesota insurance brands and strive for same-week availability to see a clinician.

    Source: CARE Counseling

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  • How Entrepreneurship Can Help Teens Overcome Peer Pressure | Entrepreneur

    How Entrepreneurship Can Help Teens Overcome Peer Pressure | Entrepreneur

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    Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

    Peer pressure is a common challenge that teenagers face as they navigate through adolescence. It can come in many forms, such as pressure to conform to societal norms or to engage in risky or negative behaviors. However, one effective way to help teens overcome these pressures is through entrepreneurship. Now, it’s important to understand not every teen has the entrepreneur DNA, but if you can convince your adolescent to take an interest in it, there will be lifelong benefits. In addition to teaching valuable business skills, teen entrepreneurship offers a sense of purpose and accomplishment that can help sway negative peer pressures.

    Let’s dive into some of the positives teenage entrepreneurship can have concerning peer pressure:

    Related: 6 Things to Consider When Starting a Business as a Teenager

    1. Critical thinking

    Developing entrepreneurial skills can help teenagers learn to make independent decisions and think critically. When teens take an interest in becoming entrepreneurs, there are many problems they must tackle creatively. With identifying problems comes developing solutions that typically directly impact the business. These skills are transferable to other areas of life, including how to respond to teen peer pressure. By learning to think independently and make decisions, teens are less likely to be influenced by negative peer pressure.

    2. Sense of purpose and accomplishment

    Another benefit of teen entrepreneurship is that it can provide a sense of purpose and accomplishment. As teenagers go down the path of starting their businesses, they develop a sense of ownership and pride in their work. Since passion is fueling them, they’re more inclined to not just “give up” but to push through and be solutions-oriented. Adopting an entrepreneurial mindset can help them develop a strong identity and purpose. When teenagers have a strong sense of purpose and accomplishment, they are less likely to feel the need to conform to peer pressure because they possess the confidence to say “no” and make their own decisions.

    3. Discover and pursue passions and interests

    Starting a business allows teens to discover and pursue their passions and interests. Having passions and something you’re looking forward to and are excited about builds confidence which can help them resist peer pressure. Teen entrepreneurship pushes internal limits and helps introverts become more extroverted, especially when seeking advice from mentors, advisors and other entrepreneurs. This can help them build positive relationships with adults and peers who share their interests and values.

    Related: 10 Things I Have Learned From Starting A Business As A Teen

    4. Leadership skills

    Starting a business can also help teens develop leadership skills. Teenage entrepreneurs face the challenges of self-management, people management, goal-setting and decision-making, which typically leads to lessons learned. They may use these abilities to become stronger and more influential leaders in other areas of their life. Possessing leadership abilities is a valuable asset for any future endeavor and one that may pave the way to financial freedom. When teenagers earn their own money through their creativity and decision-making, they understand the value of the dollar earned vs. the dollar spent — a great life-long valuable skill.

    5. Resilience and perseverance

    Entrepreneurship can help teens develop resilience and perseverance. Starting a business can be challenging, and teens may face setbacks and failures. However, these experiences can teach them to bounce back from adversity and keep going despite obstacles. This can be a valuable skill for navigating the challenges of adolescence and adulthood.

    Overall, entrepreneurship can be a powerful tool in helping teenagers overcome peer pressures and develop valuable skills for success in all areas of their lives. It teaches valuable skills such as independent decision-making, critical thinking and financial management. It provides a sense of purpose and accomplishment that can help teenagers resist negative peer pressure and become more receptive when you talk with your teens about peer pressure. Teenagers who become entrepreneurs gain not only valuable skills but also gain the confidence and resilience necessary to navigate the challenges of adolescence. So, what small project or business can you help persuade your adolescent to start?

    Here are some ideas for your teen:

    • Online reselling: Buy items at garage sales, thrift stores or online marketplaces, and resell them on platforms like eBay, Amazon or Poshmark.

    • Social media management: Offer social media management services to businesses needing help managing their accounts.

    • Pet-sitting or dog-walking: Start a pet-sitting or dog-walking service in your neighborhood.

    • Lawn care or landscaping: Offer services such as mowing lawns, trimming hedges or planting flowers to those in your community.

    • Tutoring or coaching: Offer tutoring or coaching services in a particular subject or sport to other students in your school or community.

    • Homemade crafts: Make and sell homemade crafts such as jewelry, accessories or home decor online on platforms like Etsy or eBay or at local craft fairs.

    Related: Meet 16 Teen Founders Who Are Building Big Businesses — and Making Big Money

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  • Paris Hilton’s path from party girl to icon of ‘extra’

    Paris Hilton’s path from party girl to icon of ‘extra’

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    “Paris: The Memoir” by Paris Hilton (Dey St. Books)

    Dubbed the “OG Influencer,” club kid-turned-mogul Paris Hilton pioneered becoming “famous for being famous,” in the early 2000s, a playbook since adopted by everyone from the Kardashians to Housewives and countless social media influencers.

    Hilton became a staple on the New York City club circuit in her teens in the late 1990s, decked out in designer fashion and towering heels, an irresistible magnet for paparazzi.

    In her 20s, her fame became mainstream with the nearly simultaneous debut of her reality show “The Simple Life,” and the leak of a scandalous sex tape.

    “I knew I wasn’t trying to build an ordinary career,” Hilton recalls of her early days of being paid to party and attract the paparazzi. “I was building a brand that would eventually turn into multiple income streams … but that sounds way more calculated than it was.”

    Born into the family dynasty of hotel magnate Conrad Hilton, Hilton spent her childhood in a rarefied world of privilege, collecting a menagerie of animals like ferrets, gerbils and a baby goat and earning the family nickname of “Star.”

    But a diagnosis of ADHD put a damper on the idyllic childhood, making it difficult to focus in school. Her constant need for excitement and penchant for escaping over fences and through bathroom windows branded her a troublemaker.

    “I don’t just love fun. I need fun. Fun is my jet fuel,” she writes.

    After Hilton started sneaking out at night to go to clubs, sometimes disappearing for days, her parents took a “tough love” approach and sent her to a series of schools for troubled teens, with devastating consequences. Locked away at the schools for nearly two years, Hilton says she was psychologically and physically abused and sexually assaulted during sham gynecological exams.

    Once she was released at 18, she stuck to the story concocted by her family that she’d been away at a London boarding school. She didn’t open up about the abuse for 20 years, finally discussing it in her 2020 YouTube documentary “This is Paris.” Since then, she’s become an advocate for reform in the “troubled teen” industry, testifying before Congress about her experience.

    Now embracing her ADHD as her “superpower,” these days Hilton focuses on being a mogul with a perfume and jewelry line and other ventures, with a legion of fans she calls her “Little Hiltons.”

    She married husband Carter Reum in 2021 and the couple now have a son. Hilton says she appreciates how Reum accepts the “endless spin cycle” of her life. “Where most people see a dumpster fire, Carter sees Burning Man,” she writes.

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  • Fatal shooting erupts at Georgia party with over 100 teens

    Fatal shooting erupts at Georgia party with over 100 teens

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    Two people are dead and six others injured after a shooting in a suburban Atlanta home Saturday night where over 100 teenagers had gathered for a party

    DOUGLASVILLE, Ga. — Two people were killed and six others were injured at a shooting in a suburban Atlanta home Saturday night where over 100 teenagers had gathered for a party.

    Investigators have been piecing together what transpired at the Douglasville home, the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement posted to social media Sunday morning. No suspects were apprehended as of Sunday morning, and it is unclear whether more than one person carried out the shooting.

    “We know that there was a house party where well over a hundred teenagers were attending. A confrontation occurred that resulted in two deaths and six injured from gun shots. Information is very limited at this time,” the statement reads.

    Deputies did not release the names of the victims in the statement.

    Douglasville is just over 20 miles (32 kilometers) west of Atlanta, Georgia’s capital city.

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  • Teen hikers rescued after days stuck in California snowstorm

    Teen hikers rescued after days stuck in California snowstorm

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    LOS ANGELES — When his 17-year-old son and friend headed off for a 10-day trek in the Southern California mountains, Cesar Ramirez said he wasn’t too worried. The teens were avid hikers with ample foods in their backpacks, a tent and snowshoes, plus extensive training and aspirations to join the military.

    But when the snow began pummeling the mountains east of Los Angeles by the foot-load and Ramirez lost contact with them through a tracking app, he called the San Bernardino County sheriff’s department. They dispatched a helicopter to the boys’ last known location, followed their foot tracks and spotted and rescued them. By then, Ramirez’s son had lost his jacket to the wind, and their tent had broken, the father said.

    “They’ve told us, ‘We were already convinced we were going to die,’ ” said Ramirez, of Cypress, California.

    The dramatic rescue came as California has struggled to dig out residents in mountain communities from as much as 10 feet (3 meters) of snow after back-to-back storms battered the state. Gov. Gavin Newsom has declared states of emergency in 13 counties including San Bernardino County, where the massive snowfall has closed roads, caused power outages, collapsed roofs and trapped residents in their homes for days.

    San Bernardino County sheriff ’s Sgt. John Scalise said the boys were slightly hypothermic and lucky to be alive after huddling together for three nights to stay warm. He said they were well-prepared for the hike but not for the massive amounts of snow. “They knew there was weather. But I don’t think they expected the amount,” he said.

    In a separate rescue operation further north in Inyo County, a man was found waving inside his partly snow-covered vehicle Thursday after the California Highway Patrol identified a cellphone ping linked to him and sent out a helicopter crew. He drove out from the community of Big Pine and was last heard from on Feb. 24, sheriff’s authorities in the county on the eastern side of the Sierra Nevada said in a statement.

    Another strong storm dumped more snow Saturday on Northern California mountain communities, and a winter storm warning was in effect through early Monday, according to the National Weather Service in Sacramento.

    In Southern California’s San Bernardino Mountains, authorities have been working to clear roads and distribute food, water and blankets to snow-battered residents while the Red Cross has set up a shelter at a local high school. There is a slight chance of snow showers in the region on Sunday, according to the National Weather Service in San Diego.

    Authorities have said some residents could be shut in for another week because of the challenges in clearing out so much snow.

    Katy Curtis, who lives in the San Bernardino mountain community of Crestline, said she hiked with snowshoes for five miles (eight kilometers) to get a can of gasoline to a family trapped in their house to fuel a generator.

    “I’m healthy, so I just thought, well, I can walk, and I did. But it was probably the longest day of my life,” said Curtis, adding the family had someone with medical needs. Cars are completely buried, and snow is piled up to the roof of her home. Curtis said.

    “We’re just all so exhausted in every way,” she said.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Kathleen Ronayne in Sacramento contributed to this report.

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  • Germany: Teen dies after being shot by 81-year-old neighbor

    Germany: Teen dies after being shot by 81-year-old neighbor

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    German authorities say a 16-year-old boy has died after being shot in the head by an 81-year-old neighbor

    German authorities said Thursday that a 16-year-old boy has died after being shot in the head by an 81-year-old neighbor.

    Prosecutors said the teen died of his injuries in the hospital late Wednesday, a day after the shooting took place in the northern town of Bramsche.

    The gunman, an Italian citizen, also shot at the teen’s mother, but missed, before turning the gun on himself. He suffered serious injuries.

    Prosecutors said the man, who remains hospitalized, has been arrested on suspicion of murder and attempted manslaughter.

    Authorities said there appeared to have been quarrels among the neighbors, but it wasn’t clear yet whether this was the motive for the shooting.

    The suspect, a hobby marksman, used a small caliber pistol in the killing, they said.

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  • ‘Take It Down:’ a tool for teens to remove explicit images

    ‘Take It Down:’ a tool for teens to remove explicit images

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    “Once you send that photo, you can’t take it back,” goes the warning to teenagers, often ignoring the reality that many teens send explicit images of themselves under duress, or without understanding the consequences.

    A new online tool aims to give some control back to teens, or people who were once teens, and take down explicit images and videos of themselves from the internet.

    Called Take It Down, the tool is operated by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, and funded in part by Meta Platforms, the owner of Facebook and Instagram.

    The site lets anyone anonymously — and without uploading any actual images — create what is essentially a digital fingerprint of the image. This fingerprint (a unique set of numbers called a “hash”) then goes into a database and the tech companies that have agreed to participate in the project remove the images from their services.

    Now, the caveats. The participating platforms are, as of Monday, Meta’s Facebook and Instagram, Yubo, OnlyFans and Pornhub, owned by Mindgeek. If the image is on another site, or if it is sent in an encrypted platform such as WhatsApp, it will not be taken down.

    In addition, if someone alters the original image — for instance, cropping it, adding an emoji or turning it into a meme — it becomes a new image and thus need a new hash. Images that are visually similar — such as the same photo with and without an Instagram filter, will have similar hashes, differing in just one character.

    “Take It Down is made specifically for people who have an image that they have reason to believe is already out on the Web somewhere, or that it could be,” said Gavin Portnoy, a spokesman for the NCMEC. “You’re a teen and you’re dating someone and you share the image. Or somebody extorted you and they said, ‘if you don’t give me an image, or another image of you, I’m going to do X, Y, Z.’”

    Portnoy said teens may feel more comfortable going to a site than to involve law enforcement, which wouldn’t be anonymous, for one.

    “To a teen who doesn’t want that level of involvement, they just want to know that it’s taken down, this is a big deal for them,” he said. NCMEC is seeing an increase in reports of online exploitation of children. The nonprofit’s CyberTipline received 29.3 million reports in 2021, up 35% from 2020.

    Meta, back when it was still Facebook, attempted to create a similar tool, although for adults, back in 2017. It didn’t go over well because the site asked people to, basically, send their (encrypted) nudes to Facebook — not the most trusted company even in 2017. The company tested out the service in Australia for a brief period, but didn’t expand it to other countries.

    But in that time, online sexual extortion and exploitation has only gotten worse, for children and teens as well as for adults. Many tech companies already use this hash system to share, take down and report to law enforcement images of child sexual abuse. Portnoy said the goal is to have more companies sign up.

    “We never had anyone say no,” he said.

    Twitter and TikTok so far have not committed to the project. Neither company immediately respond to a message for comment Sunday.

    Antigone Davis, Meta’s global head of safety, said Take It Down is one of many tools the company uses to address child abuse and exploitation on its platforms.

    “In addition to supporting the development of this tool and having, reporting and blocking systems on our on our platform, we also do a number of different things to try to prevent these kinds of situations from happening in the first place. So, for example, we don’t allow unconnected adults to message minors,” she said.

    The site works with real as well as artificial intelligence-generated images and “deepfakes,” Davis said. Deepfakes are created to look like real, actual people saying or doing things they didn’t actually do.

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  • Mardi Gras parade shooting in New Orleans kills 1, wounds 4

    Mardi Gras parade shooting in New Orleans kills 1, wounds 4

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    NEW ORLEANS (AP) — A teenager died and a 4-year-old girl was among the wounded when gunfire broke out along the route of a celebrated New Orleans Mardi Gras parade, police Superintendent Michelle Woodfork said Monday.

    A 21-year-old man was quickly arrested and two guns were recovered at the scene, where police were already out in force, Woodfork said. After initially jailing the man on a charge of illegally carrying a weapon, police said late Monday that the man faced a charge of second-degree murder.

    It was unclear if other arrests were imminent.

    Woodfork said homicide investigators were seeking more information, including any motive and whether more than one person may have fired shots.

    Carnival season, which began Jan. 6, is in its final raucous days in New Orleans heading into Mardi Gras, or Fat Tuesday, the day before Lent begins. The largest parades roll in the final days, drawing thousands of spectators along the routes and into the narrow streets outside the French Quarter’s bars and restaurants. A shorthanded New Orleans police force is getting help from other Louisiana law enforcement agencies to help keep the peace.

    The Sunday night shooting happened on St. Charles Avenue as the Krewe of Bacchus made it to the halfway point of its five-mile (8-kilometer) route.

    The procession of marching bands, dance troupes and 32 elaborate floats draws thousands of locals and tourists each year. Performers and revelers had passed through the city’s historic Garden District and were nearing the Central Business District when gunfire sent panicked onlookers running for cover.

    Woodfork said the teenager who died was between the ages of 15 and 18, but wasn’t immediately identified. The other four victims included the 4-year-old girl, and three adults — two men and a woman — ranging in age from 18 to 24. They were treated and released from a hospital.

    “This was an isolated incident,” Woodfork said. She and other city officials noted that the shooting marred what had largely been a peaceful Carnival celebration this year.

    However, sporadic, sometimes fatal violence is a recurring problem during Mardi Gras parades. Woodfork noted previous problems in the area of Sunday’s shooting. Two men died nearby when gunfire broke out during the Muses parade in 2015.

    ___

    This version corrects the genders of the wounded, based on corrected information provided by police.

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  • Mardi Gras brings joy – but also worry over violent crime

    Mardi Gras brings joy – but also worry over violent crime

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    NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Sunny skies and unusually warm weather fueled the street party fervor in New Orleans as the city celebrated Mardi Gras — Fat Tuesday — the annual, ebullient climax of Carnival season, marked by shoulder-to-shoulder crowds on raucous Bourbon Street and thousand lining St. Charles Avenue for family-friendly parades.

    Celebrations began before dawn in some parts of the city. TV crews captured images of The North Side Skull and Bones Gang — skeleton-costumed revelers — spreading out through the Tremé area to awaken people for Mardi Gras. As the sun rose, parade watchers were already claiming spots along the parade route. Barbecue smells wafted through the Central Business District.

    Revelers were undeterred by violence that marred a glitzy weekend parade. Gunfire that broke out during a parade Sunday night left a teenager dead and four others injured, including a 4-year-old girl. Police quickly arrested Mansour Mbodj, 21, for illegally carrying a weapon, then upgraded the charge to second-degree murder.

    Officials stressed Monday that the shooting was an isolated event.

    “It’s discouraging, but it’s not going to stop me from coming,” said Roz Walker, 55. She and her friend Tracy Dunbar are Baton Rouge residents who were among the crowd awaiting the parades of the Zulu Social Aid and Pleasure Club and the Rex Organization. They have been visiting New Orleans on Mardi Gras for decades.

    “In our 40-plus years of coming to Mardi Gras we’ve never been involved in a situation at all,” she said.

    First-time Mardi Gras participant Ken Traylor of Houston had heard about the shooting, but shrugged it off. “I just think you have to be careful with your surroundings,” he said. “Things happen nowadays everywhere.”

    Crime has contributed to dissatisfaction with New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell. She won reelection easily in 2021, but has suffered a myriad of political problems since, including criticism about crime, the slow pace of major street repairs and questions over her personal use of a city-owned French Quarter apartment.

    A recall petition launched last year is nearing a Wednesday deadline. One of the organizers, Eileen Carter, said she believes the movement has enough signatures, but will make a last-minute push.

    “We’re going to have people canvassing the parade routes,” Carter said. “That’s been really helpful to us.”

    There was no sign of political rancor as Cantrell watched St. Charles Avenue parades from a restricted access reviewing stand with city council members in front of Gallier Hall, the 19th century Greek Revival style building that once served as City Hall. She greeted leaders with hearty shouts of “Hail Zulu!” and “Hail Rex,” traditional mayoral tributes.

    It was in stark contrast to a scene from the weekend when Cantrell was captured in a social media video gesturing with her middle-finger as a parade passed a city reviewing stand. What sparked the gesture was unclear. The mayor’s press office did not respond to a request for comment from The Associated Press. A statement given to The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate shed little light.

    “Mardi Gras is a time where satire and jest are on full display,” spokesperson Gregory Joseph said in a prepared statement. “The city has been enjoying a safe and healthy Carnival,” the statement said, adding that the mayor was looking forward to continuing the celebration.

    It was a continuous costume party along French Quarter streets, where carnival revelers typically gather for a more naughty experience. Attire ran the gamut from skimpy lingerie to full nun’s habits. Some costumes shimmered with sequins. Some evoked historical eras. And some evoked current events.

    Jerome FitzGibbons wore a phony nose, mustache and glasses and carried binoculars as he strolled Chartres Street with a large white sphere strapped to the top of his head — he was a Chinese spy balloon. He and his similarly-clad wife, Jennifer, moved to New Orleans from New Jersey.

    “This is our kind of crazy,” she said.

    Mardi Gras, or Fat Tuesday, is the culmination of Carnival season, which officially begins each year on Jan. 6, the 12th day after Christmas, and closes with the beginning of Lent on Ash Wednesday.

    New Orleans’ raucous celebration is the nation’s most well-known, but the holiday is also celebrated throughout much of Louisiana and the Gulf Coast. Mobile, Alabama, lays claim to the oldest Mardi Gras celebration in the country.

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