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Megan Rapinoe opens up about her fight for social justice, equality in memoir

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ABC NewsBy DANIELLE GENET and ANGELINE JANE BERNABE, ABC News

(NEW YORK) — Megan Rapinoe is known for leading the U.S. Women’s National soccer team to victory at the 2015 and 2019 Women’s World Cup, but off the field, she’s become an icon for speaking out on the issues that matter most.

In her new memoir, One Life, Rapinoe opens up about her journey as an athlete and how she discovered her voice.

In an interview with Good Morning America’s Robin Roberts, Rapinoe shared that her story began when she first picked up a soccer ball at the age of 4 and was introduced to the sport.

But while she would go on to win two World Cup titles, she always remembered what her parents instilled in her as a child — that how she lived her life was more important than winning.

“It’s who I am. I have a really big close family, a very opinionated family,” said Rapinoe. “I had the opportunity to really look back and really think like, how did I end up here? This small town kid from a really conservative area and all the people, although we might not agree on everything, or have very different views on things, I feel like I’m such a product of where I’m from … those sort of small town values and it was just really cool to be able to kind of go back and run through memory lane.”

She stayed true to her upbringing and those values she learned as a child even when she started training with the United States women’s national soccer team in 2006.

Perhaps no moment was as pivotal as when she took a knee during the national anthem in solidarity with former NFL player Colin Kaepernick to protest racial injustice and police brutality.

While she faced backlash for doing so, she still felt it was the right thing to do. She also recognized her privilege.

“I just think everybody deserves respect and dignity and humanity,” said Rapinoe. “Growing up, I didn’t realize that I had that respect and that I am privileged. I know I’m a woman and I know that I’m gay but at the end of the day I have this white skin, and that says a lot to everybody else.”

In One Life, Rapinoe also talks about winning the 2019 World Cup. That same year, she became a leader in the U.S. Women’s National Soccer Team’s fight for equal pay in a gender discrimination lawsuit against the U.S. Soccer Federation. The soccer star stopped by ABC News’ Good Morning America in August 2019 and said that the team wouldn’t accept anything less than equal pay.

“We show up for a game, if we win the game if we lose the game if we tie the game, we want to be paid equally, period,” she said at the time.

While a recent ruling struck down many of the team’s claims, her fight for equal pay resonated with many across the country, sparking a movement for other women to come forward and continue the conversation.

“We started this lawsuit on our own behalf but I think … we realized that we are truly speaking for millions of people,” said Rapinoe. “So to hear that sort of collective understanding of our fight knowing that it’s everybody’s fight really meant so much.”

“I just feel like the more that I’ve learned and started to understand inequality, whether that be racial inequality or pay equity or being a gay woman, I just think that everybody deserves this right,” added Rapinoe. “It’s not a zero sum game where if I do better, you have to do worse. I think that a lot of people are suffering right now and some people are suffering more because of systemic issues or systemic racism. But I think at the end of the day, I want everyone to have the opportunity to just really be their full selves and I think us as a country will be better for it.”

Now, with her memoir, she hopes to continue inspiring fans across the country and hopes they all stand up for what’s right.

“You deserve the space that you’re standing in,” she said. “Just be on the right side of history.”

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Emmanuel Acho: Don’t be scared to do anything because you can’t do everything

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ABC NewsBy NIDHI SINGH and WILL LINENDOLL, ABC News

(NEW YORK) — Emmanuel Acho wants to be a bridge of communication.

In the wake of George Floyd’s murder, the former NFL linebacker posted a nine-minute and 27-second video about systemic racism in the U.S., in which he didn’t read off a script but spoke straight form the heart.

The video garnered millions of views in a matter of days and was intended to be an educational space to fill the disconnect around systemic racism between the Black community and non-Black people.

“I didn’t do it to be famous, I didn’t do it to go viral, I just did it to make change. And I’m so grateful to God that it happened,” he said.

Acho went on to become the host of his own show called “Uncomfortable Conversations with a Black Man” on Youtube featuring celebrities such as Oprah Winfrey, Matthew McConaughey, and Chip and Joanna Gaines. Acho is also the author of a book by the same name.

“They’re really convos I’ve had my whole life,” he said.

Before becoming the host of his new show, Acho had a long life of conversations and experiences that he says equipped him to be who he is today.

Be confident in who you are.

Acho says his first introduction to racism began at the young age of 10. However, he didn’t realize he was experiencing overt racism until much later.

“It was at that age that I started hearing phrases, like, ‘Emmanuel, you don’t even talk like you’re Black. Emmanuel, you don’t even dress like you’re Black,’” he said.

“That’s to imply that I sound too intelligent to be Black,” he said.

The football star and host later realized that racism comes in many shapes and forms, even something as simple as a backhanded compliment.

Acho began to question his own Blackness because many people continued to tell him he wasn’t “Black enough.”

Looking back, he tells his younger self to remain confident in who he is.

“Don’t become insecure in who you are based on what other people say about you,” he added.

Operate your life out of care, not fear.

In a world where you don’t know who you can count on, Acho says “family is everything.”

His parents, Sonny and Christie Acho, took the football star and his three older siblings, Chichi, Stephanie and Sam, to Nigeria every summer on a medical mission trip. Through their annual trips, the Acho family helped build a hospital for a village near his parents’ hometown.

“We didn’t just talk, we acted,” he said.

As a result, they were able to help many people through their trips. However, he says, while not everyone has the means to take such trips, conversations can have just as much of an influence.

“Sometimes I encourage people to talk because talk is the easiest barrier of entry,” he said.

He adds that people never know what others are going through or what they’ve gone through in the past and having conversations is what can aid a connection.

“If we don’t expose ourselves to other cultures, to other races and religions, then you’ll navigate your life out of fear instead of care for others,” he said.

Every loss comes with its own gain.

Acho graduated from the St. Mark’s School of Texas and went on to play football at the University of Texas before beginning his NFL career.

“When I got to college, I realized so much of what I had learned about people who look like me was a lie,” he said.

The young football star graduated from a high school that had only five Black people and later went on to join a university team with close to 90 Black young men on it.

The stark difference in environments was a huge awakening for him. Acho says he grew up with Nigerian culture, not necessarily Black culture.

Once he arrived at the University of Texas, he realized there was “so much beauty, so much confidence, so much charisma, so much talent amongst Black people.”

While he had an identity crisis upon arriving to his new school, he tells his younger self as well as other young adults in this position to not worry about any missed time.

“What I went through in high school versus what I went through in college has made me who I am today, and has equipped me to have the conversations I’ve been having,” he said.

Money doesn’t change you, money exposes you.

Acho was drafted into the NFL in 2012 and joined the Philadelphia Eagles in 2013. His older brother, Sam, also played in the NFL for the Arizona Cardinals.

“Two brothers playing against each other in the National Football league, there’s nothing like that. That was a special moment,” he said.

The 30-year-old calls his experience with the NFL eye-opening because of his exposure to yet another culture. From attending a predominantly white high school to a college experience with Black students from multiple backgrounds to now a professional experience where everyone had money.

“Money doesn’t change, money exposes you,” he added.

Athletes, celebrities and public figures have been given money, fame and status, and he says more is required of them now. While they should be speaking on important topics, they need to also be educating one another and themselves.

“I don’t just want a loud voice to be loud and wrong, I want a loud voice to be loud and accurate,” he said.

Don’t be scared to do anything because you can’t do everything.

“Uncomfortable Conversations with a Black Man” is a show that Acho says he started at “one of the most polarizing and volatile times in the country.”

As protests erupted across the country after Floyd’s death, Acho knew he couldn’t sit on the sidelines waiting for change to happen. He had to do something about it.

“I said, ‘I know white people and I know Black people. And because I know white people and Black people, I know that there’s a disconnect in communication,’” he said.

Acho sat in front of an all-white wall and recorded what became the first episode.

The video later evolved into a series and a book that seeks to create real and raw dialogue about racism in the country.

Acho says what inspired him to start the series was conversations with his group of white friends.

“Through these conversations with them, I’ve realized loving, amazing, God-fearing, family-centered white people can still be ignorant,” he said. “It might not be malicious, but it can still be ignorant.”

Through his series and book, Acho hopes people realize that they have the power to make change to the immediate world around them through raw conversations about systemic racism and social injustice.

“Just ‘cause you can’t do everything doesn’t mean you don’t do anything at all,” he said.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

'Dancing with the Stars' season 29 recap: AJ McLean sent home in shocking elimination

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ABC/Eric McCandless(LOS ANGELES) — With the semifinals kicking off next week, no one was safe from elimination on Monday’s Dancing with the Stars.  While some competitors shined on the ballroom floor, others stumbled under the intense pressure to impress the judges and break away from the rest of the competition.

Once again, the stars were given a week to master two routines.  Unlike the previous challenge, which came in the form of a relay, competitors had to perform against one another in a high octane dance off for two extra bonus points.

Despite winning their respective dance off and earning those needed points, AJ McLean failed to make the semifinals and was forced to hang up his dancing shoes.

McLean’s journey was cut short due to a disastrous Viennese waltz to Queen’s “Somebody to Love,” which started out strong but was derailed by a misstep.  The 43-year-old was unable to recover and scored straight sevens.  Despite bouncing back against Johnny Weir in their jive dance off, the two bonus points did nothing to spare him from being sent home.

The Backstreet Boy found himself in the bottom two — shockingly — alongside Weir, who achieved his second perfect score of the season.   All three judges expressed dismay over how the audience voted, but ultimately decided that the figure skater accomplished more progress and, thus, opted to save him once again from being sent home.

As for the competitors who rose above the curveball of having to dance against another contestant, one example was One Day at a Time star Justina Machado.  Her first dance, a rumba to “Crazy for You” that doubled as a tribute to Madonna, showcased a softer side to her normally bold and brazen dancing style. 

However, Machado brought the spice back ten-fold when dancing the cha-cha against Kaitlyn Bristowe.  The actress clinched those two extra bonus points, which allowed her to finish the night with a 26 out of 30.

Also winning her respective dance off was Disney Channel star Skai Jackson, who went toe to toe against Nelly.  Her clean and precise salsa outshined the “Hot In Here” rapper, earning her two extra bonus points that pushed her to second place with a score of 29 out of 30.

Weir and Bristowe tied at the top of the leaderboard on Monday night as both earned straight 10’s for their respective routines.  

Kailyn dazzled with her “Toxic” Argentine tango that honored Britney Spears while Weir embraced Amy Winehouse’s unique flair for his quickstep to “Valerie.”

Lastly, while Nev Schulman was given immunity from participating in the night’s dance off because he had the season’s highest cumulative score, that didn’t stop him from baring his all on the ballroom floor.  The Catfish host tied with Jackson with a 29 out of 30 thanks to his joyful and stylized jive to Elton John’s “Saturday Night’s Alright (For Fighting.)”

With a narrowed competition paired with a volatile audience vote, even the judges don’t know who win this season’s Mirror Ball Trophy.

Find out who survives the semifinals when Dancing with the Stars returns next Monday at 8 p.m. ET on ABC.  

Here are the current standings:

First Place:
Kaitlyn Bristowe, former star of The Bachelorette, with Artem Chigvintsev — 30/30
Johnny Weir, Olympic figure skater, with Britt Stewart — 30/30

Nev Schulman, host of Catfish, with Jenna Johnson — 29/30
Skai Jackson, Disney Channel star, with Alan Bersten — 27/30
Justina Machado, One Day at a Time star, with Sasha Farber — 26/30

Lowest score:
Nelly, Grammy Award-winning rapper, with Daniella Karagach — 24/30

By Megan Stone 
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved. 

The show must go on, even after COVID-19 sidelines Lee Brice and FGL's Tyler Hubbard at the CMAs

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ABC/Alysse GafkjenJust days ahead of the 54th Annual CMA Awards, both Lee Brice and Florida Georgia Line‘s Tyler Hubbard have had to drop out of country music’s most prestigious night, after testing positive for COVID-19.

Both nominees were set to perform, but now, they’ll be recuperating instead of taking the stage.

“It’s definitely a bummer…” double-nominee Ingrid Andress reflects. “It’s a reminder that it can happen to anybody. Anybody can get it. And just because you’re famous doesn’t mean COVID doesn’t come after your body.”

With the rigid protocols the Country Music Association has in place, Old Dominion‘s Matthew Ramsey says there’s no doubt he feels safe. 

“You have to go through a million tests and shields, and masks,” he explains. “And they’re really working hard to keep everybody safe.”

“And I do wish that the cases in Tennessee were different right now,” he adds, “but that’s just kind of the way it goes… You know, you’re gonna have people test positive. That’s just… what happens in a pandemic.”

Triple nominee Ashley McBryde is enjoying seeing her colleagues — from a social distance — and thinking about the ones who aren’t there.

“We’re following the rules, and I’m so glad because we get to at least be in the same building together,” she tells ABC Audio. “And I hope Lee’s feeling okay, and I hope Tyler’s feeling okay. But that’s just the reality we’re living in.”

Lady A‘s Charles Kelley will step in to sing Lee’s part with Carly Pearce on their hit duet, “I Hope You’re Happy Now,” while FGL is no longer listed as a performer on the official CMA site.

You can tune in to watch Country Music’s Biggest Night, hosted by Reba McEntire and Darius Rucker — Wednesday at 8 p.m. ET on ABC.  

By Stephen Hubbard
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.