@Phil_Lewis_ the crazy thing to me is is that everybody is congratulating him I'm not about being a hater at all but it wasn't even an official press release from @bet
@JWhiteDidIT@YungMiami305 So you mixed @indiaarie classic song That people actually play, Love and Will save that song and her to save the world from aliens with @YungMiami305 trash song that we would give up to the aliens and her to save the world That's what we doing okay then 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@HarrietEve9 It takes a delusional person to know a delusional person I just said we can agree to disagree You have your view I have mine stay cool out there it's hot outside
@HarrietEve9 Let's just hope no one ever makes fun of you for a traumatic event you will go though, be mean to your family and friends, tell lies to fuel a narrative, hang with your opps and uses freedom of speech to cause hell to you. We can agree to disagree but milagro is a loser
⚖️COURT UPDATE⚖️Fauziya Abashe has received court approval to add two out-of-state attorneys to her New Jersey lawsuit against Livingston Allen, also known as DJ Akademiks, and related defendants.
In a June 18, 2026 order, Judge Aldo J. Russo granted pro hac vice admission for attorneys Marjorie Mesidor and Heather Michelle Palmore to appear on behalf of Abashe in the Essex County case.
The order states that both attorneys must follow the New Jersey Court Rules, including the Rules of Professional Conduct, and will be subject to the disciplinary jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of New Jersey and the Office of Attorney Ethics for conduct connected to their participation in the case.
The order also makes clear that New Jersey counsel Tyrone A. Blackburn remains responsible for the matter and must continue signing pleadings, briefs, motions, and other papers unless the court permits otherwise.
The order notes that pro hac vice counsel will not be designated as trial counsel unless the court specifically orders it.
Separately, the Essex County Civil Division issued a discovery end date reminder dated June 20, 2026. The reminder states that discovery in the case will end on August 27, 2026.
The notice warns that if additional discovery is needed, the parties must make an appropriate application to the court under New Jersey Rule 4:24-1(c). Otherwise, discovery will be considered complete on that date.
The notice also says the case will then be scheduled for arbitration or trial, and that adjournments will not be granted afterward absent exceptional circumstances.
The court further reminds the parties that participation in court-ordered mediation does not pause discovery, and that mediation must be completed by the discovery end date. FULL DOCUMENTS BELOW👇🏾👇🏾👇🏾
PROPOSED ORDER - https://t.co/IW08U6Cq8i
DISCOVERY AND DATE REMINDER - https://t.co/jRI1UIBoMj
In 1994, a Pizza Hut restaurant in Santa Cruz, California, began testing online ordering, becoming one of the first businesses to ever sell products over the internet.
In 1994, when the World Wide Web was still in its infancy and most people had never purchased anything online, Pizza Hut was already exploring the future of internet-based food ordering.
Through an experimental service called PizzaNet, a Pizza Hut restaurant in Santa Cruz, California, allowed customers to order pizza through a simple website. The process was basic by modern standards: users filled out an online form, the order was sent to the restaurant, and staff confirmed the details before preparing the food. Even so, the concept was years ahead of its time.
This was long before smartphones, food-delivery apps, DoorDash, Uber Eats, or the convenience of one-tap ordering. At a time when many people didn’t even have email addresses, Pizza Hut was already testing the idea that meals could be ordered from a home computer.
PizzaNet is widely regarded as the first major online ordering system launched by a restaurant chain and one of the earliest examples of consumer e-commerce on the web. The site appeared during the internet’s earliest commercial era, when only a few thousand websites existed worldwide.
What feels routine today was groundbreaking in 1994: a major restaurant brand looking at the emerging internet and recognizing, years before the delivery-app revolution, that online ordering could eventually become part of everyday life.
Scott Pelley issues new statement after being fired by CBS for opposing their pro-MAGA bias:
“New management has instructed me to inject falsehoods and bias into a politically sensitive story. I’ve been told to include assertions that are unverified. To date, in every case, I have managed to ignore these instructions or refuse them.
Recently, politicians have been invited to choose correspondents for interviews on the broadcast. Giving politicians control over 60 Minutes interviews is not how this is done.
Finally, incompetence and unprofessionalism in the new management have wreaked havoc. In a case involving one of my stories, the entire program came within 19 minutes of not getting on the air at all.”