Trump's DOT has officially scrapped a Biden-era rule requiring airlines to pay passengers cash compensation when flight disruptions are caused by airlines.
Flying already sucks — and Trump wants to make it suck even more.
@HiltonHotels Error: "Oops! Something went wrong in our end. Please re-enter your login details."
Please fix your app. This extremely frustrating & time wasting as I am currently traveling cross country.
Smoke from the Gifford Fire north of Santa Barbara continues to filter into the Las Vegas Valley, reducing visibility and air quality. Here's the view of The Strip from Black Mountain. Webcam Courtesy of @NVSeismoLab and @ALERTWildfire.
#NVwx#CAwx
🚨1. It’s time to speak out. I don’t usually in such cases apart from the odd joke here and there. But the Baldoni/Lively case has taken a very dark turn. It is def not Amber v Johnny and never was. It now involves us all and is way more serious than gossip columnists would have you believe.
Recap of timeline:
After release of the film #ItEndsWithUs last August, Blake Lively promoted this movie about domestic violence by (amazingly) pushing her various alcohol brands. This tone deaf marketing - by Ryan Reynolds’ marketing company Maximum Effort - received a massive backlash as a significant connection between alcohol consumption and domestic violence is a known fact.
Yet instead of apologising and moving on, Blake claims the online criticism of her was all an “untraceable” smear campaign.
To effectively “uncancel” herself - and deflect from the catastrophic marketing campaign of the movie by husband Ryan - she then launched a smear campaign of her own accusing her co-star and director of movie Justin Baldoni of sexual harassment with a much publicised article in the New York Times, Dec 21st.
After Baldoni’s lawyer Bryan Freedman dropped receipts that no sexual harassment had taken place AND the man Blake accused of orchestrating the smear campaign against her - crisis PR manager Jed Wallace - being DISMISSED from the case, she is now going for any one who has criticised her online: 16 content creators on @YouTube and 20 on @X. Literally tracing the supposedly “untraceable” content to these people, some of whom have as little as 38 followers.
This has massive implications on free speech attempting to stifle and chill voices who are simply interested in the case and commenting on it. These people are now being dragged into federal court. Fortunately they are all firing back and the previously silent mainstream media are now saying 'When you demand IP addresses and PayPal receipts from hobby vloggers, you risk being seen as mugging the First Amendment in broad daylight.' (DM online)
The big issue here is privacy trust with social media platforms giving up personal information to people like Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds so they can bully and threaten them away from the cameras. This is disgusting.
And why are they doing this? Blake Lively seems to be her own worst enemy. This is a strategy that can only blow up in her own face. Ryan too. Believe it or not I like these two. Or did. But this behaviour has shown us who they are.
No one should be fearful of speaking out against the actions of rich and privileged actors who continue to behave disgracefully with impunity. They cannot use mainstream media to control their false version of events and then punish social media users when the public goes against their narrative seeded through high profile media outlets.
Shame on Blake and Ryan’s law firm for issuing these cowardly subpoenas. If you want to subpoena me for saying so go ahead, make my day.
Especially when we all know - even you - that the real culprits are staring at themselves in the mirror.
Never never never buy/fly .@ITAAirways they are horrible and refuse to help international customers. They will charge customers to fix clerical error caused by their website.
Just so you know...
Kroger raked in a whopping $466 million in the second quarter of 2024, with year-to-date earnings hitting $1.4 billion.
That's nearly double the amount it earned last year.
The company paid its CEO $15.7 million last year, 502x a typical Kroger employee.