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San Francisco passes CAREN Act to criminalize phony 911 calls based on race

No Comments National News

LordRunar/iStockBy IVAN PEREIRA, ABC News

(SAN FRANCISCO) — San Francisco leaders voted to crack down on so-called “Karens” who use 911 calls to discriminate against minorities.

The San Francisco Board of Supervisors unanimously passed the Caution Against Racially and Exploitative Non-Emergencies, or CAREN, Act on Tuesday, which amends the city’s police code and allows anyone harmed by such calls to sue.

The bill, nicknamed for the slang term given to people who make the baseless calls, means violators would be liable in court to general damages of at least $1,000 plus costs and attorney’s fees, and punitive damages.

Supervisor Shamann Walton, who introduced the bill in July, said in a statement that the act should make residents think twice before calling the police on their Black or minority neighbors over a non-emergency.

“Rather than calling the police or law enforcement on your neighbor, or someone who you think doesn’t look like they should be your neighbor, try talking to them and getting to know them. Let’s build relationships in our communities,” he said in a statement.

The act expands the city’s definition of a protected class “to prevent false emergency calls with the specific intent to discriminate against a person or otherwise infringe the person’s rights or cause the person specified harms on the basis of the person’s race, color, ancestry, national origin, place of birth, sex, age, religion, creed, disability, sexual orientation, gender identity, weight, or height.”

Mayor London Breed has said she supports the bill, which would go into law 30 days after it’s signed.

The false reports have gained more attention in the wake of the police killing of George Floyd and the racial reckoning it prompted in the U.S.

One of the most prominent cases came in May when a woman in New York’s Central Park called police on a birdwatcher who had asked her to put her dog on a leash. She claimed an “African American man” was threatening her and “tried to assault her” — neither of which was true. She is expected to plead guilty to falsely reporting an incident at a court date next month.

Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam signed a similar bill into law Tuesday.

The bill, HB 5098, expands the state’s definition of hate crimes to include “false 911 calls or reports to law enforcement against another person made on the basis of race, religious conviction, gender, disability, gender identity, sexual orientation, color, or national origin.”

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

'Colin in Black & White': Jaden Michael to star as Colin Kaepernick in Netflix series

No Comments Entertainment News

Netflix (LOS ANGELES) — Colin in Black & White has landed its star. 

The Netflix series surrounding the life and career of civil rights activist and professional football player Colin Kaepernick has cast 17-year-old Jaden Michael in the title role as Kaepernick as a teen. Michael’s previous acting credits include Wonderstruck and the recently released Netflix comedy horror film Vampires vs. The Bronx

The limited series will feature six episodes focusing on Kaepernick’s young adult years growing up in a mixed-race household as a Black son adopted by a white family, chronicling the impactful moments that compelled him to become an athlete and activist.

The NFL player made headlines for his activism in 2016 when he, as quarterback for the San Francisco 49ers, knelt during the national anthem before the games as a silent protest against systemic racism and police brutality.

“Too often we see race and Black stories portrayed through a white lens. We seek to give new perspective to the differing realities that Black people face,” Kaepernick says about the series. “We explore the racial conflicts I faced as an adopted Black man in a white community, during my high school years. It’s an honor to bring these stories to life in collaboration with Ava for the world to see.”

Kaeperick co-created the Netflix show with Selma and 13th director Ava DuVernay.  Kapernick will also serve as the series narrator. 

By Cillea Houghton 
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Ashley McBryde plays (and smells!) Loretta Lynn’s guitar to raise funds for the Country Music Hall of Fame

No Comments Country Music News

ABC/Image Group LAKane Brown, Miranda Lambert, Ashley McBryde and Tim McGraw are just a few of the acts who’ve signed on for the Country Music Hall of Fame’s Big Night at the Museum, a benefit to raise funds for the museum.

The fundraiser features ecorded performances of current stars playing instruments that belonged to legends of past generations. Kane performs on a Gibson that once belonged to Randy Travis, Miranda takes on John Prine’s custom-made David Russell Young guitar, and Ashley gets her hands on an instrument once owned by Loretta Lynn.  That guitar, a Gibson J-50, boasts a custom Formica pick guard installed by Loretta’s late husband, Doolittle, whom she called Doo.

Ashley tells Rolling Stone that when she first walked up to the instrument, she had an unusual request for the gloved curators who placed it into her care for the performance.

“I’m terrified that my sweat is gonna somehow ruin the fretboard. I said, ‘Is it weird if I smell it?’ They said, ‘Yeah, kind of,’” Ashley remembers. “But I stuck my nose in the sound hole — old guitars smell like old library books.”

The “Martha Divine” star went on to say that she knew this was one performance where she’d have to dial down her hard-rockin’ ways.

“I play pretty hard, and I really needed to pay attention,” she admits. “You can’t play that guitar too hard because you’re gonna damage that pick guard that’s already pretty fragile.”

You can check out Ashley’s performance, along with a slew of other big names playing museum artifacts, by tuning into the CMHOF YouTube channel on Wednesday at 9:00 p.m. ET.

By Carena Liptak
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Kelsea Ballerini brings rootsy “love and hate” to ABC's 'Good Morning America'

No Comments Country Music News

Courtesy of Donovan Public RelationsIt may only be Tuesday, but Kelsea Ballerini’s already had a busy week of television performances.

The “hole in the bottle” star teamed up with Luis Fonsi of “Despacito” fame Monday night to perform a duet rendition of “Girasoles/Sunflowers” as part of the CBS special Essential Heroes: Momento Latino.

Next, Kelsea stopped by Good Morning America Tuesday to chat about how the COVID-19 pandemic inspired her to release a second album, ballerini, on the heels of her March project, kelsea.

“It was kind of my pivot,” she said, admitting a double album wasn’t necessarily the plan at the beginning of 2020.

“I made the album sound big and ready to tour, and I wanted it to sound like there would be confetti cannons and the whole thing, and then everything changed,” she added. “I needed to find a way to fall back in love with this body of work that I worked really hard on for a long time.”

So, she stripped down the songs and re-released them as ballerini, with production that better reflected the quarantine era.

“I love it differently now, and more in some ways. It’s been a real gift,” Kelsea added.

The singer then showcased the acoustic, interior sound she developed for ballerini with a performance of her new song, the reflective “love and hate.”

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-RTsSRoou64&w=640&h=360]

By Carena Liptak
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Omari Hardwick says he's "super proud" of Michael Rainey Jr. leading 'Power Book 2: Ghost'

No Comments Entertainment News

Courtesy of Starz(NEW YORK) — Omari Hardwick says he is “super proud” of Michael Rainey Jr., the young man who for six seasons played his hardheaded son Tariq on the widely popular Starz series Power.

This summer, Rainey Jr. followed in Hardwick’s footsteps when he became the lead of his own Power series, Power Book 2: Ghost. Hardwick tells ABC Audio that he was touched when he recently spoke to Rainey Jr. during his birthday because the actor acknowledged how inspirational Hardwick has been in his life.

“His text simply said, ‘I learned everything from you, Pop, you know so much,'” Hardwick says. “And he said, ‘I’ll never be able to put in words… what it meant to not only have your support as an actor, but also just as a young man.”

Hardwick reveals Rainey Jr.’s relationship with his own father wasn’t “great,” so it made sense for him to take on a paternal role on and off the camera.

“When he was acting out a bit and sometimes disrespectful on set then I had [to] lend a hand at being a disciplinarian,” Hardwick continues. “So there was so many components to me being not only the lead actor in that project, but also the father literally to that kid at times.”

Omari says he always wanted more for Rainey Jr., but what he’s been able to accomplish has exceeded his expectations.

“I constantly was in the ear of Courtney [Kemp] and Curtis [“50 Cent” Jackson] saying, ‘Hey, we got this kid here, we need to really use him. So obviously they found a steroid level of using in him,” he smiles. “He’s now the lead of the show. I never imagined that.”

“My hat goes off to what he’s been able to accomplish and continue in this legacy called Power,” Hardwick adds. “I’m super proud.”

By Candice Williams
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.