Congratulations, @_ajawilson22 and @BeckyHammon on being named to the @TIME 100 Sports list recognizing 100 of the most influential figures in sports 👏✨
SHE’S SPECIAL 🌟
Olivia Miles becomes the first rookie to win Player of the Week honors since Angel Reese and Caitlin Clark accomplished the feat in 2024.
#WNBASeason30
She was kidnapped first.
She suffered the longest.
And when another captive woman went into labor inside that house with no doctor, no hospital, and no help coming…
Michelle Knight delivered the baby herself.
With her bare hands.
But when the world learned about the horrors inside Ariel Castro’s house in Cleveland, her name was barely mentioned.
In August 2002, 21-year-old Michelle Knight was walking to a social services appointment when Castro offered her a ride.
Instead, he kidnapped her.
Locked her in a room.
Chained her up.
When she vanished, almost nobody looked for her.
Michelle came from poverty. She struggled with housing instability and a custody battle over her son.
Authorities quietly assumed she had simply “disappeared on her own.”
No major searches.
No national coverage.
No constant headlines.
Her case went cold almost immediately.
Then, in 2003, Castro kidnapped 16-year-old Amanda Berry.
The response was massive.
TV coverage.
FBI involvement.
Vigils.
Billboards.
The entire city knew Amanda’s name.
In 2004, he kidnapped 14-year-old Gina DeJesus.
Again, the community rallied around the search.
But inside the same house, Michelle had already been trapped for years.
She endured horrific abuse.
She became pregnant multiple times and lost every pregnancy due to Castro’s violence.
He repeatedly told her nobody was coming for her.
Then came Christmas Day, 2006.
Amanda Berry went into labor inside the house.
Castro threatened Michelle’s life if the baby died — then left.
Amanda was terrified.
Michelle had no medical equipment.
No training in childbirth.
But she stepped in anyway.
The baby girl wasn’t breathing when she was born.
Michelle performed CPR until the infant finally cried.
Inside one of the darkest places imaginable, a forgotten woman saved two lives.
In May 2013, Amanda escaped and called 911.
Police rescued all three women and Amanda’s six-year-old daughter.
The reunions flooded national television.
Amanda and Gina were embraced by the world.
Michelle walked out of the same house into a very different reality.
Even after surviving 11 years of captivity, she was often treated like an afterthought.
Later, she spoke openly about it.
Not with bitterness.
With honesty.
She wrote a memoir called Finding Me and explained the deeper pain of realizing the world had quietly decided she wasn’t important enough to search for.
Eventually, she legally changed her name to Lily Rose Lee.
A name she chose for herself.
A life reclaimed on her own terms.
Today, Lily Rose Lee advocates for missing people who are ignored because of poverty, addiction, unstable lives, or social status.
Her message is simple:
Every missing person deserves to be searched for.
Not just the ones society finds easier to care about.
Ariel Castro died in prison.
But Lily Rose Lee survived.
And the woman who once saved a baby in captivity now spends her life making sure nobody else is forgotten the way she was.
Sources: Ten-time Pro-Bowl quarterback Russell Wilson is finalizing a deal to become a CBS Sports analyst. Wilson won a Super Bowl, the Walter Payton Man of the Year award and now leaves the NFL to become an analyst on the network’s pregame show that includes James Brown, Nate Burleson and Bill Cowher.
- The dads shirt reading “Boom” says a lot
- Her parents filed for bankruptcy after she killed those two boys.
- Since the doc has come out the dad has recently lost his job.
✨May you all get what you deserve✨
✨Fuck that whole family✨