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"It's been quite a morning": Nominees still buzzing about today's Emmys announcement

No Comments Entertainment News

Brosnahan in “Mrs Maisel” – Amazon Studios/Nicole Rivelli(LOS ANGELES) — Via a virtual ceremony that streamed this morning at 11:30 a.m. ET/8:30 a.m. PTSaturday Night Live veteran Leslie Jones and others revealed this year’s Emmy nominees, and the lucky chosen quickly took to social media to comment on the news. 

HBO’s Watchmen won the day, with 26 nominations. One of those was for Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, who played Dr. Manhattan in the series. He attached a grinning picture of himself with a heartfelt note on Twitter, thanking the Television Academy as well as the cast, crew and fans of Watchmen. “I can’t stop smiling,” he said. 

Amazon Prime’s The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel continued its comedy category domination, earning 20 nominations. For her part, Rachel Brosnahan reacted to her Emmy nomination for The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, which she won in 2018, by tweeting, “Grateful doesn’t begin to cover it.”

The just-concluded comedy series Schitt’s Creek was nominated for 15 Emmys, leading to the show’s own Twitter feed to comment, “We are currently trying to process this news.”

Responding to this, the show’s nominated co-star, Dan Levy, noted, “for once, i am speechless.”

Hugh Jackman, nominated in the lead actor category for his role in the HBO movie Bad Educationshared a thumbs-up photo of him in character as his reaction to the news.

Emmy-winner Billy Porter, nominated again for Pose in the lead actor in a drama series category, said, “It’s blessing and a gift to be part of this moment where my art and my activism meet.” He added, “POSE represents hope and is a reminder of how powerful ‘we-the-people’ are!”

Jonathan Van Ness shared a screenshot of himself trying to FaceTime his fellow Queer Eye hosts, Bobby Berk, Karamo Brown, Tan France and Antoni Porowski. “Y’all answer your phone!! We’re Emmy nominees,” he tweeted.

Mark Ruffalo said he had “enormous gratitude” for being nominated in the best actor in a limited series category for I Know This Much Is True, in which he played twins, thanking its writer and director, Derek Cianfrance, for creating a project “that will stand the test of time.”

Ruffalo’s fellow Avenger, Don Cheadle, said simply of his own nomination, in the outstanding actor in a comedy series category for Black Friday: “thanks, y’all.”

Sterling K. Brown celebrated the Television Academy for nominating him twice — once for This Is Us and once for The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel — by saying it’s “2 Good to be True!”

RuPaul Charles, host of RuPaul’s Drag Race, reacted to his show being nominated for five consecutive years, saying in part, “Thank you Television Academy. I am humbled and grateful to work with the best queens, cast, and crew in television…Together with World of Wonder and VH1, I dedicate these nominations to anyone who has been told you’re too queer, too black, or too different to achieve your dreams.”

William Jackson Harper reacted to being nominated for The Good Place by sharing a video captioned “WHAT!?” In it, he understated, “It’s been quite a morning.”

Samira Wiley reacted to being nominated for The Handmaid’s Talewriting: “With so many crazy things happening in the world, this was such a joy to wake up to. Thank you.”

Patton Oswalt said he was “blown away” to be nominated for his Netflix comedy special I Love Everything among “purely creative, brilliant, game-changing minds” like fellow nominees including Dave Chappelle and John Mulaney. Patton joked about what he will wear for a potentially virtual ceremony: “Off to buy a tuxedo shirt, jacket, and really nice pair of shorts and flip-flops. #Emmys”

The 72nd Emmy Awards will will be broadcast Sunday, Sept. 20 starting at 8 p.m. Eastern time on ABC.  Jimmy Kimmel is slated to host the event.  As of now, that ceremony will likely also be virtual.

By Stephen Iervolino and Carson Blackwelder
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Lauren Akins' book tour goes virtual

No Comments Country Music News

Julie PaisleyLauren Akins is moving her Live in Love book tour online in response to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. 

The wife of country music superstar Thomas Rhett was originally scheduled to release her memoir, Live in Love: Growing Together Through Life’s Changes, on May 5 with a coinciding book tour that month, but plans were delayed due to the pandemic. The book will now hit shelves on August 18.

The virtual tour launches on August 16 in Nashville, with an event hosted by beloved local book store Parnassus Books.

Lauren will then visit Magic City Books in Tulsa, Oklahoma on August 18 before Books-A-Million hosts her from its headquarters in Birmingham, Alabama on August 21. 

Today show host Hoda Kotb will moderate a conversation with the author through the Dallas Museum of Arts on August 24 before the tour wraps on August 27 in St. Louis, Missouri at Left Bank Books. 

“While I’m disappointed my first tour won’t look how I had hoped, I’m going to roll with it as we’ve pretty much all been doing for all of 2020 and plan some fun ways for us to connect to be sure we make the most of enjoying this crazy journey,” Lauren assures in a statement. 

Tickets purchased for the originally scheduled shows will be honored at the new dates, with fans now having the option to attend any virtual tour date. The Nashville show takes place at 4 p.m. ET while the remaining shows are at 8 p.m. ET. 

Live in Love offers a behind-the-scenes look at Lauren and Thomas’ high-profile relationship, along with Lauren’s mission work in Haiti and Uganda, the latter country from which they adopted their eldest daughter, Willa Gray.

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

"I Love My Country": Florida Georgia Line headlining virtual USO show

No Comments Country Music News

Katie Kauss Florida Georgia Line is using the gift of music to give back to our nation’s veterans.

The “I Love My Country” singers are set to headline an upcoming episode of the USO’s online series, Military Virtual Programming, on August 1. 

The pre-taped special, which also showcases pop stars The Chainsmokers and JoJo, was shot at The Anthem in Washington, D.C as part of the World’s Biggest USO Tour in 2018. FGL will perform such career-defining songs as “Cruise,” “H.O.L.Y.,” and their crossover smash hit with Bebe Rexha, “Meant to Be.” 

“So much love for our @theUSO fam. We had such a blast at @TheAnthemDC back in 2018 and are excited that the show is streaming this Saturday as part of their MVP Summer Series,” the duo writes on Instagram

The first episode of MVP took place on July 4, with a focus on continuing to bring entertaining and uplifting content to the military during the COVID-19 pandemic. 

The new episode will be streamed on the USO website on Saturday at 12 p.m. ET.

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

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sF0DV0MsYrQ&w=640&h=360]

US Navy's 1st Black female tactical air pilot set to get her wings

No Comments National News

Lt. J.g. Luke Redito/U.S. NavyBy HALEY YAMADAVIA, GMA

(WASHINGTON) — One woman is soaring to new heights as the first Black female tactical jet pilot for the U.S. Navy.

“I don’t think the goal in my life is to necessarily be the first at anything. That was never something that I set out to do, [piloting] was just something I was interested in and I found out later,” Lt. j.g. Madeline “Maddy” Swegle said in a new video released by the Navy ahead of her July 31 winging ceremony. “I am really honored that I get to wear the wings and get to fly planes and call myself a pilot.”

A Virginia native, Swegle became the U.S. Navy’s first Black female tactical air (TACAIR) pilot on July 7 after she completed her final undergraduate training in a T-45C Goshawk jet trainer, according to the Navy.

“To show up here at this level, you need to be a top performer and then you have to continue to perform while you’re here. These are the best pilots in the world that are trained here — the very best,” Matthew Maher, commanding officer of training, said in the video.

“It takes long hours, a lot of blood, sweat and tears and a commitment to excellence day in and day out. … They’re going to go out and make all of us very proud,” he added.

Now, Swegle will receive her Wings of Gold during a small ceremony at Naval Air Station in Kingsville, Texas, on July 31.

“Lt. j.g. Swegle has proven to be a courageous trailblazer,” wrote Vice Adm. DeWolfe “Bullet” Miller III, commander of the Naval Air Forces, in a statement. “She has joined a select group of people who earned Wings of Gold and answered the call to defend our nation from the air. The diversity of that group — with differences in background, skill and thought — makes us a stronger fighting force.”

Swegle said that she’s dreamed of being a pilot ever since she was young and her parents would take her to see the Blue Angels, the Navy’s flight demonstration squadron, when they would come to her hometown.

“My parents raised me and they told me that I can be whatever I wanted to be. We would go see the Blue Angels when they were in town. I don’t remember specifically how old I was, but they were just so cool I loved them. I love fast planes,” said Swegle.

Swegle called the process of training with a higher-performance aircraft at this level “daunting,” but also exhilarating and “rewarding.”

“[Jet piloting] is fun because it is difficult at the same time. I know that I had to work to get [the jet] to behave and it took a lot of fighting the aircraft and figuring out how it was going to perform,” she explained in the video about her three years of training. “Looking back it’s amazing to think about where I started and I had never been in an airplane before so, it’s just one step at a time. It’s really cool to think of all of the things I’ve done now which I’d never think I’d be able to do.”

Swegle follows in the footsteps of Brenda E. Robinson, the first Black female naval aviator, who earned her Wings of Gold on June 6, 1980, according to the statement.

On July 7, Swegle’s friend took to Twitter to share the good news about her “best friend making history.” The post has since garnered more than 191,000 likes and many congratulations for Swegle on her success.

“Her story begins, we see you Captain Marvel,” read one comment.

“I don’t know this woman, but I am so proud of her and her accomplishment,” read another.

Swegle said that she wants to uplift other women and minorities with her story.

“I think that representation is important because we are a very diverse nation. So I would like everybody to believe that they can achieve whatever they want to do,” said Swegle.

“I guess I hope that my legacy will be that there will be a lot of other women and minority women and just different faces that come forward … be encouraged and just know that they have all the tools that they need and follow their dreams,” she added.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Coronavirus deaths among Florida inmates are on the rise

No Comments National News

Leonsbox/iStockBy KARMA ALLEN, ABC News

(TALLAHASSEE, Fla.) — Florida officials are working to stem a fast-growing coronavirus outbreak among inmates as the Sunshine State quickly becomes the nation’s ground zero for the virus.

Since Friday afternoon, the number of Florida inmates testing positive for COVID-19 has jumped 20%. In total, at least 6,217 inmates had tested positive at correctional facilities across the state as of Monday afternoon, according to the most recent data released by the state’s Department of Corrections.

Separately, at least 46 inmates had died from COVID-related illnesses as of Monday, with a 28% in COVID-related deaths in just the last 72 hours, according to department data.

At least 22 Florida inmates have died from the virus so far this month, making July the deadliest month for inmates in the state since the pandemic began. The second-deadliest month was recorded in June, when nine inmates died.

According to the Florida Department of Corrections, which operates 145 facilities statewide, including 50 correctional institutions, about 1,417 staff members have also tested positive for the virus.

Staff members who test positive for COVID-19 are not allowed to return to work until a “full recovery is documented by a medical professional,” state officials said.

Infected inmates are typically relocated until they recover, the department said.

“These inmates are placed in medical isolation under the care of their treating clinician,” says the department’s website. “Inmates who have tested positive for COVID-19 receive the appropriate level of care based on their individual treatment needs.”

Once recovered, inmates are then “moved into appropriate housing based on their care and custody requirements,” the website says.

However, the state’s fast-rising numbers have raised concerns among prison reform advocates and inmates’ families about whether officials are doing enough to protect inmates from the virus.

States like Florida and Georgia, where officials were quick to reopen for business, have been hard-hit by the virus. Some 6,120 Florida residents have died from the virus while nearly 436,900 others have been infected, according to state data.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis faced harsh criticism after prematurely bragging in May about the state’s victory over the novel coronavirus.

“We succeeded and people just don’t want to recognize it,” he said outside the White House on May 20.

“You’ve got a lot of people in your profession who waxed poetically for weeks and weeks about how Florida was going to be just like New York,” he told reporters at the time.

Florida, like most states, has seen its infection rate soar since then.

Overall, more 16.5 million people across the globe have been diagnosed with COVID-19, according to data compiled by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering at Johns Hopkins University.

America has become the worst-affected nation, with more than 4.3 million diagnosed cases and at least 148,298 deaths. Health experts say the infection rates could actually be much higher than reported.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.