Updates Viral PH

  • Home
  • Updates Viral PH

Updates Viral PH Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Updates Viral PH, Media/News Company, .

Dakota Johnson brought out some familiar faces for her “Saturday Night Live” monologue this weekend.While hosting the Ja...
28/01/2024

Dakota Johnson brought out some familiar faces for her “Saturday Night Live” monologue this weekend.

While hosting the Jan. 27 episode, the “Madame Web” star said in her opening remarks that the show was “a bit of a reunion” for her and musical guest Justin Timberlake.

“We were actually in a movie together called ‘The Social Network,’” Johnson said as Timberlake slowly walked onstage to roaring applause.

The 2010 film, which also starred Jesse Eisenberg and Andrew Garfield, centered around the founding of Facebook. In the movie, Timberlake played Napster founder and former Facebook president Sean Parker, while Johnson portrayed, Amelia Ritter, a woman who Timberlake sleeps with after they meet at a bar.

As the singer starts to reminisce about their time together during the movie, Johnson turns to him and asks, “Justin, what are you doing up here? Are you lost?”

After she clarified that his job for the evening was to be the musical guest, Timberlake said, “Oh, well if you want me to be in sketches —” before being cut off by the screaming audience.

“I have hosted before,” he continued, holding up his hand and mouthing the words “five times.”

“Yeah, well that was 10 years ago,” Johnson responded, holding up both her hands.

The last time the “Sexy Back” singer hosted “SNL” was in 2013, when he joined the 5-Timers Club.

The “Fifty Shades of Grey” actor then changed the subject, saying that she was excited that Timberlake chose her show for his “comeback.”

“Comeback? That’s what we’re calling it? OK,” he said, as Johnson clarified it’s a comeback “in a good way.”

As Timberlake finally backs up to give the spotlight back to Johnson, Jimmy Fallon then rushes on stage in a Bee Gees-inspired costume, asking, “Are we doing this?”

The crowd erupts in applause before Timberlake and Fallon leave and tell Johnson to break a leg.

Elsewhere in her monologue, Johnson reflected on the last time she hosted “SNL” in 2015.

“The last time I hosted was right after the ‘SNL’ 40th (anniversary). I was actually in the audience for that special,” she said, showing an image of her standing in a star-studded crowd.

As she lists some of the notable names that surrounded her in the audience, such as Sarah Palin, George Lucas and Steven Spielberg, the camera then zooms in on former President Donald Trump, who is seen sitting behind her.

“It’s just so crazy to be standing so close to someone who would become the most powerful person in America,” she said, as the camera suddenly pans to Taylor Swift.

Later in the episode, Fallon and Timberlake make a return as Barry and Robin Gibb of the Bee Gees, dressed in cream-colored matching suits and long wigs.

After their opening song, which featured them dancing under a dazzling disco ball, the two artists interview Elie Mystal (Kenan Thompson), Andrew Yang (Bowen Yang) and Joanne Carducci (Dakota Johnson) about the 2024 presidential election.

But as the political characters begin to answer questions, Fallon keeps cutting them off with random outbursts and Bee Gees songs like “Stayin’ Alive,” accompanied by Timberlake.

This story first appeared on TODAY.com. More from Today:

Bradley Cooper and Carey Mulligan’s first meeting started at a theater and ended at a hospital

Patrick Mahomes Sr. reveals which one of the Kelce brothers is the wildest

See Gwendoline Christie transform into a life-size porcelain doll at Paris Fashion Week

This story uses functionality that may not work in our app. Click here to open the story in your web browser.

Dakota Johnson brought out some familiar faces for her “Saturday Night Live” monologue this weekend. While hosting the Jan. 27 episode, the...

The meet up to sell his Rolex watch seemed to go like all of Steve Mauro’s other sales arranged through Facebook Marketp...
28/01/2024

The meet up to sell his Rolex watch seemed to go like all of Steve Mauro’s other sales arranged through Facebook Marketplace, until suddenly things took a turn.

The Massapequa man had arranged to meet a buyer on Friday morning near his home to sell the watch for $8,000. Mauro told News 4 he’s used the social media platform many times to sell less expensive items.

“I listed the thing, I got an immediate response and the guy negotiated, which they never do if they’re scammers. He negotiated, I thought I had a real deal here,” Mauro said Saturday.

He said the man whose name was listed as “Jhon” asked a lot of questions and planned to meet Mauro at his home around 11 a.m. The in-person interaction raised no red flags, that is until the man was ready to pay and invited Mauro into his car.

“He’s like, ‘go hop in the passenger [seat].’ He said it so nonchalant,” Mauro said.

The Massapequa man had tried the door and found it locked, so he immediately rushed around to the driver’s side.

“I opened [the door], he then tried to close it and then while he put the car in reverse, so that’s what threw me to the ground,” he explained.

As this is happening, a Nassau County police officer on patrol drives down Jerusalem Avenue and sees the gray Honda driving in reverse, knocking Mauro down to the ground.

“I picked myself up, jumped on the hood and then he took me for a ride. I was tossed on my front lawn, launched off of the hood. I told the cop, ‘go get the guy,'” Mauro said.

Police are now looking for the Honda, which possibly had Connecticut license plates.

Mauro’s message to others selling items online: don’t be afraid to ask for the money up front and always have your guard up.

“Large items like this, I probably wouldn’t do it out of my house. That was probably my mistake,” he said.

The meet up to sell his Rolex watch seemed to go like all of Steve Mauro’s other sales arranged through Facebook Marketplace, until suddenly...

Six people were hospitalized for minor injuries and later released following the “hard landing” of an American Airlines ...
28/01/2024

Six people were hospitalized for minor injuries and later released following the “hard landing” of an American Airlines jetliner at Kahului Airport in Maui, Hawaii, on Saturday, Federal Aviation Administration and airline officials said.

According to an FAA statement, the American Airlines Airbus A320 “made a hard landing” on an airport runway around 2 p.m. local time. Those hospitalized included one passenger and five flight attendants, American said in a separate statement.

Flight 271 from Los Angeles International Airport “experienced an issue upon landing,” the airline said. “The aircraft taxied to the gate under its own power and customers deplaned normally.”

The weather in Maui at the time was partly cloudy and windy with a temperature of roughly 80 degrees, according to National Weather Service data.

The aircraft carried 167 customers and seven crew members, American said. It was taken out of service and undergoing inspection, it said.

“The safety of our customers and team members is our top priority,” the airline said. The FAA said it was investigating the cause of incident.

Read the full story on NBCNews.com here.

Six people were hospitalized for minor injuries and later released following the “hard landing” of an American Airlines jetliner at Kahului ...

Originally appeared on E! OnlineOops!… Britney Spears fans did it again.This time, the “Toxic” singer’s stan army succes...
27/01/2024

Originally appeared on E! Online

Oops!… Britney Spears fans did it again.

This time, the “Toxic” singer’s stan army successfully banded together to stream her 2011 song “Selfish” so it would surpass ex Justin Timberlake‘s new single of the same name on the U.S. iTunes Top Songs chart.

Spears’ deep cut—a bonus track off her 2011 Femme Fatale album—climbed to number one on the chart Jan. 26, while Timberlake’s “Selfish,” released less than 24 hours before, sat at number three.

The plan to push past Timberlake’s song on the chart was concocted on X, where Spears’ army accounts urged their followers to stream her music in an attempt to tamp down sales of Timberlake’s forthcoming album, “Everything I Thought I Was”. His love song “Selfish” is the first single off the 42-year-old’s upcoming record, set to drop March 15.

Timberlake—who married Jessica Biel in 2012—sings on the track, “‘Cause your lips were made for mine / And my heart would go flatline / If it wasn’t beatin’ for you all the time.”

Secrets You Might Not Know About Britney Spears’ …Baby One More Time

All this trolling comes three months after Spears got candid about her early-aughts relationship with Timberlake in her memoir, “The Woman in Me”. In the book, published in October, the 42-year-old shared a number of revelations about their past romance, including that she became pregnant with the “Cry Me A River” singer’s baby but had an abortion.

“It was a surprise, but for me, it wasn’t a tragedy. I loved Justin so much. I always expected us to have a family together one day. This would just be much earlier than I’d anticipated,” Britney wrote of the pregnancy in the book. “But Justin definitely wasn’t happy about the pregnancy. He said we weren’t ready to have a baby in our lives, that we were way too young.”

The pair, who first met as Mouseketeers on Disney Channel‘s “The Mickey Mouse Club”, went their separate ways in 2002, with Justin breaking up with the Grammy winner over text message.

“I was so devastated,” Spears recounted. “I couldn’t speak for months.”

Timberlake has yet to publicly address the comments Spears made about their relationship in her memoir.

Originally appeared on E! Online Oops!… Britney Spears fans did it again. This time, the “Toxic” singer’s stan army successfully banded t...

A Florida man is behind bars in New York, where prosecutors accuse him of spearheading a drug operation that involved ha...
26/01/2024

A Florida man is behind bars in New York, where prosecutors accuse him of spearheading a drug operation that involved hacking physician prescription accounts to fill thousands of orders on behalf of fake patients.

Devin Magarian, 20, was arrested Jan. 16 after allegedly working alongside an undercover cop to fill phony prescriptions for oxycodone through more than a dozen pharmacies in the state, court documents explain.

Prosecutors allege Magarian gained access to doctor’s e-prescribing accounts and used a bot program to generate made-up patients that he would then order thousands of e-scripts for and send off to pharmacies. Those prescriptions would then be picked up by a team of runners working with the Florida man.

The Nassau County District Attorney’s Office said the 20-year-old would make monthly trips to New York to carry out part of his multi-state drug operation. His most recent trip in January would be the one that lead to his arrest.

Magarian is accused of initially selling ninety tablets of oxycodone to an undercover cop with the Nassau County Police Department. The cop and defendant would build a relationship following that initial sale, eventually getting to the point where Magarian felt comfortable disclosing details of his operation to the cop, according to authorities.

The two would frequently communicate via Telegram, a cloud-based messaging system. In the charging documents, Magarian is accused of explaining to the cop that he “had transmitted the prescriptions to said pharmacies using the e-prescribing credentials of a physician who operated a practice in Tennessee without that physician’s knowledge of permission.”

Eventually, according to prosecutors, Magarian enlisted the undercover cop to fill prescriptions at a handful of local pharmacies in the area. In 15 instances between Jan. 4-9, the cop picked up orders at pharmacies across Nassau and Queens County; most of the orders were for 90 tablets.

“The defendant agreed to allow the undercover to keep seven full prescriptions of ninety tablets of oxycodone 30mg, as well as the one prescriptions of twenty-five tablets of oxycodone 30mg as compensation for filling the prescriptions,” the charging documents allege.

Magarian then allegedly offered to sell the remaining prescriptions, some 630 tablets, to the cop for $14,500. Prosecutors claim the two met in New York City on Jan. 16 where the money and pills were exchanged in a deal.

District Attorney Anne Donnelly announced Magarian’s arrest and alleged crimes at a press conference on Friday alongside the NCPD and the DEA’s New York Division.

A lawyer for Magarian said the 20-year-old has no previous criminal record, and he looks forward to having him exonerated.

A Florida man is behind bars in New York, where prosecutors accuse him of spearheading a drug operation that involved hacking physician pres...

The man behind the wheel of last weekend’s double fatal crash in the Bronx was allegedly performing donuts and driving a...
26/01/2024

The man behind the wheel of last weekend’s double fatal crash in the Bronx was allegedly performing donuts and driving at a high rate of speed before striking a parked tanker truck that resulted in the deaths of two passengers.

Police arrested Enrique Lopez on Thursday evening for charges linked to the Jan. 21 crash in Hunts Point. The 23-year-old Far Rockaway man was reportedly driving with three passengers around 3 a.m. when he slammed into a parked, unoccupied oil tanker truck.

The impact of the crash resulted in the deaths of Sabrina Villagomez, 15, and Giovante Roberson, 20, according to charging documents.

Prior to the crash near Bryant and Viele Avenue, Lopez had allegedly been performing “stunts” and doing “donuts” in the Bronx neighborhood “in front of and dangerously close to a large crowd of people,” prosecutors allege. Surveillance video reportedly shows the dangerous driving before the car rotated counterclockwise and slid sideways into the truck.

A 17-year-old passenger riding in the back of the car alongside Villagomez was rushed to Saint Barnabas Hospital in critical condition, police said after the crash. According to new details in the charging documents, the girl has been placed in a medically-induced coma after suffering “sustained fractures to her cervical spine, femur, right arm, and pelvis, as well as a brain bleed, liver damage, and other related injuries.”

Vehicle data recovered after the crash suggests the Chrysler 300 was traveling at least 70 mph in the seconds right before impact, prosecutors claim. The posted speed limit on the road is only 25 mph.

Lopez faces charges of manslaughter, criminally negligent homicide, assault, criminal possession of stolen property, and other charges. He appeared in court on Friday where a judge ordered bail at $150,000.

Attorney information for the 23-year-old wasn’t immediately known.

The man behind the wheel of last weekend’s double fatal crash in the Bronx was allegedly performing donuts and driving at a high rate of spe...

What to KnowClosing arguments are set to begin in the defamation case against Donald Trump a day after the former presid...
26/01/2024

What to Know

Closing arguments are set to begin in the defamation case against Donald Trump a day after the former president left a Manhattan courtroom fuming after his 3-minute testimony gave him little time to refute a writer’s s*xual abuse claims

On Friday, lawyers on both sides will get to sum up their case for nine jurors who will start deliberating later in the day

The jury will decide what, if anything, Trump owes magazine columnist E. Jean Carroll. A jury last year found Trump s*xually abused her in spring 1996 in the changing room of a luxury Manhattan department store

“Donald J. Trump thinks the rules don’t apply to him.”

The lawyer for E. Jean Carroll delivered those words on Friday in her closing argument at Donald Trump’s s*x defamation trial, prompting a dramatic departure from the former president.

“The record will reflect that Mr. Trump just rose and walked out of the courtroom,” said Judge Lewis Kaplan.

Trump’s exit comes a day after he left the New York courtroom fuming that he hadn’t been given an opportunity to refute s*xual abuse accusations.

On Friday, lawyers will sum up their cases for nine jurors who will start deliberating later in the day whether Carroll, a former advice columnist, is entitled to more than the $5 million she was awarded in a separate trial last year.

The final remarks from the lawyers come a day after Trump managed to sneak past a federal judge’s rules severely limiting what he could say during his turn on the witness stand, which wound up lasting just 3 minutes.

“She said something that I considered to be a false accusation,” Trump said, later adding: “I just wanted to defend myself, my family and, frankly, the presidency.” The jury was told by Judge Lewis A. Kaplan to disregard both remarks.

A different jury last May concluded that Trump s*xually abused Carroll in the spring of 1996 in the changing room of a luxury Manhattan department store. It also found that he defamed her in 2022 by claiming she made up the allegation to sell a memoir.

Trump, the Republican frontrunner in this year’s presidential election, has long regretted his decision not to testify at that trial, blaming his lawyers for bad advice.

The jury in this new trial has been told that it is there for a limited purpose.

Kaplan will instruct jurors on the law before they deliberate, telling them that they must accept the verdict reached last year and only determine whether additional damages are owed for statements Trump made in June 2019 while he was president. The claims had been delayed for years by court appeals.

Carroll’s lawyers seek over $10 million in compensatory and punitive damages. Trump attorney Alina Habba has argued against damages, saying Carroll’s association with Trump had given her the fame she craved and that death threats she received cannot be blamed on Trump’s remarks.

Carroll, 80, testified at last year’s trial that she had a chance encounter with Trump at a Bergdorf Goodman store that was flirtatious and lighthearted until Trump cornered her in a changing room. Her claim that Trump r***d her was rejected by last year’s jury, though it agreed she was s*xually abused.

Last week, Carroll testified that her career was shattered by Trump’s statements about her claims over the last five years, most recently on the campaign trail for president. She said she bought bullets for a gun she inherited from her father and installed an electronic fence around her home.

On Thursday, Trump testified that he stood “100%” behind comments he made in an October 2002 deposition in which he denied Carroll’s accusations, calling her “sick” and a “whack job.”

Donald Trump

Donald Trump Jan 25

Trump briefly testifies at E. Jean Carroll s*x defamation trial, defense rests

news 19 hours ago

Former Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani raises less than $1 million from 13 donors in legal defense fund

Kaplan intends to instruct jurors Friday that the jury last year concluded that Trump had digitally penetrated Carroll in the department store, but the same jury did not find that he had r***d her, according to how r**e is defined under New York state law.

Trump attorney Michael Madaio argued at a conference Thursday between lawyers and the judge that Kaplan should not tell jurors specifically what s*xual abuse Carroll had alleged because it was “completely unnecessary and inflammatory.”

The judge rejected the argument.

The Associated Press typically does not name people who say they have been s*xually assaulted unless they come forward publicly, as Carroll has done.

What to Know Closing arguments are set to begin in the defamation case against Donald Trump a day after the former president left a Manh...

A man put to death using nitrogen gas appeared to shake and convulse on the gurney as Alabama carried out the first-of-i...
26/01/2024

A man put to death using nitrogen gas appeared to shake and convulse on the gurney as Alabama carried out the first-of-its-kind ex*****on that once again placed the United States at the forefront of the debate over capital punishment.

Kenneth Eugene Smith, 58, was pronounced dead at 8:25 p.m. Thursday at an Alabama prison after breathing the gas through a face mask to cause oxygen deprivation. It marked the first time that a new ex*****on method has been used in the United States since lethal injection, now the most commonly used method, was introduced in 1982.

The ex*****on took about 22 minutes between the opening and closing of the curtains to the viewing room.

Smith appeared to remain conscious for several minutes after the gas started flowing. For at least two minutes, he shook violently and writhed on the gurney, sometimes pulling against the restraints and shaking the gurney with the force of his movements. That was followed by several minutes of heavy breathing, until breathing was no longer perceptible.

“Tonight Alabama causes humanity to take a step backwards,” Smith, who was paid $1,000 to kill an Alabama woman more than 30 years ago, said in a final statement. ”I’m leaving with love, peace and light.”

He made the “I love you sign” with his hands toward family members who were witnesses. “Thank you for supporting me. Love, love all of you,” Smith said.

death penalty Jan 23

Alabama calls nitrogen ex*****on method ‘painless' and ‘humane,' but critics raise doubts

death penalty Jan 21

Alabama plans to carry out the first nitrogen gas ex*****on. How will it work and what are the risks?

Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey said the ex*****on was justice for the murder-for-hire killing of 45-year-old Elizabeth Sennett in 1988.

“After more than 30 years and attempt after attempt to game the system, Mr. Smith has answered for his horrendous crimes,” Ivey said in a statement. “I pray that Elizabeth Sennett’s family can receive closure after all these years dealing with that great loss.”

Mike Sennett, the victim’s son, said Thursday night that Smith “had been incarcerated almost twice as long as I knew my mom.”

“Nothing happened here today is going to bring Mom back. It’s kind of a bittersweet day. We are not going to be jumping around, whooping and holler, hooray and all that,” he said. “I’ll end by saying Elizabeth Dorlene Sennett got her justice tonight.”

The European Union and the U.N. Human Rights Office expressed regret Friday over the ex*****on. The 27-nation EU and the Geneva-based U.N. rights office say the death penalty violates the right to life and does not deter crime.

Alabama had previously attempted to execute Smith in 2022, but the lethal injection was called off at the last minute because authorities couldn’t connect an IV line.

The ex*****on came after a last-minute legal battle in which his attorneys contended the state was making him the test subject for an experimental ex*****on method that could violate the constitutional ban on cruel and unusual punishment. Federal courts rejected Smith’s bid to block it, with the final ruling coming Thursday night from the U.S. Supreme Court.

Liberal Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented.

“Having failed to kill Smith on its first attempt, Alabama has selected him as its ‘guinea pig’ to test a method of ex*****on never attempted before. The world is watching,” Sotomayor wrote.

The state had predicted the nitrogen gas would cause unconsciousness within seconds and death within minutes. State Attorney General Steve Marshall said late Thursday that nitrogen gas “was intended to be — and has now proved to be — an effective and humane method of ex*****on.”

Asked about Smith’s shaking and convulsing on the gurney, Alabama corrections Commissioner John Q. Hamm said they appeared to be involuntary movements.

“That was all expected and was in the side effects that we’ve seen or researched on nitrogen hypoxia,” Hamm said. “Nothing was out of the ordinary from what we were expecting.”

Smith’s spiritual adviser, the Rev. Jeff Hood, said the ex*****on did not match the state attorney general’s prediction in court filings that Smith would lose consciousness in seconds followed by death within minutes.

“We didn’t see somebody go unconscious in 30 seconds. What we saw was minutes of someone struggling for their life,” said Hood, who attended the ex*****on.

In their request for the Supreme Court to halt the ex*****on, Smith’s lawyers wrote that little research had been done on death by nitrogen hypoxia and the public has an interest in making sure the state “established procedures to minimize the pain and suffering of the condemned person.”

In her dissent, Sotomayor said Alabama has shrouded its ex*****on protocol in secrecy, releasing only a heavily redacted version. She also said Smith should have been allowed to obtain evidence about the protocol and to proceed with his legal challenge.

“That information is important not only to Smith, who has an extra reason to fear the gurney, but to anyone the State seeks to execute after him using this novel method,” Sotomayor wrote.

“Twice now this Court has ignored Smith’s warning that Alabama will subject him to an unconstitutional risk of pain,” Sotomayor wrote. “I sincerely hope that he is not proven correct a second time.”

In his final hours, Smith met with family members and his spiritual adviser, according to a prison spokesperson.

Smith ate a last meal of T-bone steak, hash browns, toast and eggs slathered in A1 steak sauce, Hood said by telephone before the ex*****on was carried out.

“He’s terrified at the torture that could come. But he’s also at peace. One of the things he told me is he is finally getting out,” Hood said.

The ex*****on protocol called for Smith to be strapped to a gurney in the ex*****on chamber — the same one where he was strapped down for several hours during the lethal injection attempt — and a “full facepiece supplied air respirator” to be placed over his face. After he had a chance to make a final statement, the warden, from another room, was to activate the nitrogen gas. It would be administered through the mask for at least 15 minutes or “five minutes following a flatline indication on the EKG, whichever is longer,” according to the state protocol.

Hamm, the corrections commissioner, confirmed afterward that the gas was flowing for about 15 minutes.

Some states are looking for new ways to execute people because the drugs used in lethal injections have become difficult to find. Three states — Alabama, Mississippi and Oklahoma — have authorized nitrogen hypoxia as an ex*****on method, but no state had attempted to use the untested method until now.

Sennett was found dead in her home March 18, 1988, with eight stab wounds in the chest and one on each side of her neck. Smith was one of two men convicted in the killing. The other, John Forrest Parker, was executed in 2010.

Prosecutors said they were each paid $1,000 to kill Sennett on behalf of her pastor husband, who was deeply in debt and wanted to collect on insurance. The husband, Charles Sennett Sr., killed himself when the investigation focused on him as a suspect, according to court documents.

A man put to death using nitrogen gas appeared to shake and convulse on the gurney as Alabama carried out the first-of-its-kind ex*****on t...

Trump White House official Peter Navarro, who was convicted of contempt of Congress for refusing to cooperate with a con...
25/01/2024

Trump White House official Peter Navarro, who was convicted of contempt of Congress for refusing to cooperate with a congressional investigation into the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol, was sentenced on Thursday to four months behind bars.

He was the second Trump aide to face contempt of Congress charges, after former White House adviser Steve Bannon.

Navarro was found guilty of defying a subpoena for documents and a deposition from the House Jan. 6 committee. Navarro served as a White House trade adviser under then-President Donald Trump and later promoted the Republican’s baseless claims of mass voter fraud in the 2020 election he lost.

He has vowed to appeal the verdict, saying he couldn’t cooperate with the committee because Trump had invoked executive privilege. A judge barred him from making that argument at trial, however, finding that he didn’t show Trump had actually invoked it.

Navarro said in court before his sentencing Thursday that the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack had led him to believe that it accepted his invocation of executive privilege. “Nobody in my position should be put in conflict between the legislative branch and the executive branch,” he told the judge.

Navarro’s lawyers had advised him not to address the judge, but he said he wanted to speak after hearing the judge express disappointment in him. Responding to a question about why he didn’t initially seek a lawyer’s counsel, he told the judge, “I didn’t know what to do, sir.”

Justice Department prosecutors say Navarro tried to “hide behind claims of privilege” even before he knew exactly what the committee wanted, showing a “disdain” for the committee that should warrant a longer sentence. Prosecutors had asked a judge to sentence him to six months behind bars and impose a $200,000 fine.

Defense attorneys, on the other hand, said Trump did claim executive privilege, putting Navarro in an “untenable position,” and the former adviser should be sentenced to probation and a $100 fine.

Bannon, who also made executive-privilege arguments, was convicted of two counts and was sentenced to four months behind bars, though he has been free while appealing his conviction.

Navarro’s sentencing comes after a judge rejected his bid for a new trial. His attorneys had argued that jurors may have been improperly influenced by political protesters outside the courthouse when they took a break from deliberations. Shortly after their break, the jury found him guilty of two misdemeanor counts of contempt of Congress.

But U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta found that Navarro didn’t show that the eight-minute break had any effect on the September verdict. No protest was underway and no one approached the jury — they only interacted with each other and the court officer assigned to accompany them, he found.

Trump White House official Peter Navarro, who was convicted of contempt of Congress for refusing to cooperate with a congressional investi...

A Full Wolf Moon is upon us.There are a few different ways to catch this once-a-year occurrence as it glistens in your s...
25/01/2024

A Full Wolf Moon is upon us.

There are a few different ways to catch this once-a-year occurrence as it glistens in your sky — whether it be in person or via livestream.

The first full moon of 2024 is a phenomenon that takes place when the moon is on the exact opposite side of Earth from the sun.

Here’s how you can ensure you won’t miss the Full Wolf Moon and everything you need to know about its timing:

When is the Full Wolf Moon?

January’s Full Wolf Moon is on Thursday, Jan. 25, which also marks the first full moon of the year.

What time will the Full Wolf Moon be visible?

While the full moon will peak during daylight hours at 12:54 p.m. ET. on Jan. 25, it will be bright in the night sky soon after sunset, and continue through daybreak on Jan. 26.

The good news is that this sighting will be available all night long, beginning when the sun sets.

One thing you should note is that the appearance could be compromised if your area is experiencing fog or clouds. If that is the case, the Full Wolf Moon will be available to watch on a free livestream beginning at 3:30 p.m. ET on Thursday, Jan. 25.

news Jan 20

Why there is a new global race to the moon

Emmy Awards Jan 16

Moon landing, Beatles, MLK speech are among TV's 75 biggest moments, released before 75th Emmys

What will the Full Wolf Moon night sky look like?

When you look up at the moon tonight, it will appear to be in the Cancer the Crab constellation. The constellation is one of the dimmest of the Zodiac, however, it contains one of the brightest star clusters (Beehive Cluster).

What is the meaning of the “Wolf Moon?”

Hence the name, the Wolf Moon indicates the beginning of wolf mating season.

The phase impacts social behaviors such as traveling in packs and howling for “long-distance communication to pull a pack back together and to keep strangers away,” according to the National Wildlife Federation.

What happens after the Full Wolf Moon?

Following the Full Wolf Moon, the moon will transition to the next new moon phase, which will take place on Feb 9.

In many cultures, the February new moon will mark the start of a new lunar year.

A Full Wolf Moon is upon us. There are a few different ways to catch this once-a-year occurrence as it glistens in your sky — whether it be...

Address


Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Updates Viral PH posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Shortcuts

  • Address
  • Alerts
  • Claim ownership or report listing
  • Want your business to be the top-listed Media Company?

Share