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Robert E. Lee removed from Virginia state house and a school name as courts weigh future of Richmond statue

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Andrew Hardy/iStockBy IVAN PEREIRA, ABC News

(RICHMOND, Va.) — While the fate of the controversial Robert E. Lee outdoor statue in Richmond, Virginia, remains in limbo in court, state leaders and county school officials in Northern Virginia decided to end their association with the Confederate general.

The speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates announced Friday morning that they removed busts of Lee and eight other Confederate leaders from the Old House Chamber in the state Capitol Building overnight. The move at the statehouse came hours after the Fairfax County School Board voted to change the name of the Robert E. Lee High School, in Springfield, to the John Lewis High School, in honor of the recently deceased Georgia congressman and civil rights leader.

“Representative Lewis was a champion of the Civil Rights movement, and our Board strongly believes this is an appropriate tribute to an individual who is a true American hero,” School Board Chair Ricardy Anderson said in a statement Thursday night.

The school’s new name will go into effect this fall, according to the board.

“The name Robert E. Lee is forever connected to the Confederacy, and Confederate values are ones that do not align with our community,” Tamara Derenak Kaufax, a board member who proposed the name change, said in a statement.

The House of Delegates, which became a Democratic majority earlier this year, has the power to remove the busts from their section of the Capitol, according to Speaker Eileen-Fuller Corn. Some of the other busts removed from the House of Delegates include Stonewall Jackson and Jefferson Davis.

The Virginia State Legislature made several moves this year to lessen Confederate memorials in the state, such as a measure that allowed local municipalities to remove their Confederate monuments and another piece of legislation that swapped state holidays honoring Confederate generals for Election Day.

The recent actions by officials took place in the backdrop of the legal battle over Gov. Ralph Northam’s order to remove the Robert E. Lee statue in Richmond. The order, which was prompted by the Black Lives Matter protests following George Floyd’s death, has been blocked by an injunction filed by Virginians who want to keep the statue in place. The statue, atop a pedestal on Richmond’s historic Monument Avenue, features Lee on a horse.

During a court hearing over the case on Thursday, Attorney General Mark R. Herring requested that Richmond Circuit Court Judge W. Reilly Marchant dismiss the injunction and the suit.

“It was raised as part of a deliberate effort to intimidate and demean Black Virginians and it should come down as part of a deliberate effort to heal, reconcile, and grow,” Herring said of the statue in a statement.

The judge ordered the injunction to remain for another 30 days but said he would have a written ruling within a week.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

“Lord, I Hope This Day Is Good”: Caylee Hammack honors her classic country roots with Alan Jackson duet

No Comments Country Music News

Universal Music GroupCaylee Hammack digs into the kind of classic country that she grew up loving with the release of “Lord, I Hope This Day Is Good,” a song originally released by Don Williams in 1981.

The callbacks to her roots don’t stop there: Caylee enlisted country legend Alan Jackson to record the song with her as a duet. The pair trades verses, coming together in seamless vocal harmony in the chorus.

Caylee points out that “Lord, I Hope This Day Is Good’s” message of praying for an easy day, even amid troubled times, is especially poignant during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“During the past few months at home, I have found myself frequently visiting songs I grew up on because of the comfort it has brought me, especially this one,” she reflects. “It has always been a golden classic in my heart and I believe in many others, and its message felt much-needed today.”

The singer goes on to say that bringing in her fellow Georgia native and longtime musical icon was the icing on the cake.

“Alan Jackson was gracious enough to bring his voice and heart to this song and made it feel like chicken noodle soup for the country music soul,” she declares.

“Lord, I Hope This Day Is Good” comes off of Caylee’s debut album, If It Wasn’t for You, which she plans to release on August 14. Jackson’s not the only A-list collaborator featured on the project: Caylee recently shared a duet with Reba McEntire, called “Redhead.”

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

'Top Gun: Maverick', sequels to 'A Quiet Place' and 'Spider-Man: Far from Home' bumped to 2021

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Credit: Scott Garfield. © 2019 Paramount Pictures Corporation. All rights reserved.(LOS ANGELES) — Another day, another announcement that Hollywood studios are shelving their big pictures until 2021. 

With U.S. theaters still shuttered because of the COVID-19 pandemic and cases increasing in many states, Variety reports Paramount has grounded Top Gun: Maverick. The Tom Cruise movie, which had already been bumped from its June 26th release date to December 23, will now fly into theaters on July 2, 2021.

The studio also announced that A Quiet Place II, which had been bumped from March 20 to September 4, will now be released on April 23, 2021.

Similarly, two Spider-Man projects have swung into new release dates; the Marvel Studios co-produced follow-up to Spider-Man: Far from Home will move from July 16, 2021 to November of that year.  The move no doubt is partly to make room for Marvel Studios’ anticipated openings: the studio’s Black Widow was bumped from its May 1 slot, causing a chain reaction of conflicts with the release dates for its other superhero flicks.

Also, the sequel to Sony’s Oscar-winning animated film Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse has also been delayed by sixth months: it’s now slated for an October 7, 2022 opening.


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

Amazon Prime greenlights third season of 'The Boys'

No Comments Entertainment News

Amazon Prime(LOS ANGELES) — The Boys are back on Amazon Prime. Even before its second season premiere, the streamer has renewed the superhero vigilante drama for a third season, according to Variety

Season two will also present an after-show, titled Prime Rewind: Inside The Boys, hosted and executive produced by Aisha Tyler. The after-show will start on August 28 with a recap of the series so far. 

Based on the comic from Garth Ennis and produced by Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg, the series centers on a group of egotistical — and in some cases sociopathic — superheroes, and a group of mortals led by Karl Urban’s Billy Butcher who are intent on taking them down.

The Boys launches September 4, three episodes, with an additional five episodes premiering weekly through October 9. 

By George Costantino and Stephen Iervolino
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

The New Mutants Comic-Con@Home Panel unveils opening scene of Fox’s long-delayed X-Men film

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© 2020 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation(LOS ANGELES) — Following several delays, it seems even the COVID-19 pandemic isn’t keeping The New Mutants, the final X-Men universe film from 20th Century Fox, from sticking to its August 28 release date.

The film’s cast appeared at Thursday’s The New Mutants’ panel at ComicCon@Home, the digital version of the annual San Diego festival, to talk about the film, and even presented a glimpse of the opening sequence and a new trailer.

The psychological thriller — starring Anya Taylor-Joy, Maisie Williams and Stranger Things star Charlie Heaton — was shot in 2017, before Disney’s acquisition of the studio, and has had a rocky road to launch.

The movie, about a spooky facility where young mutants are pushed to their psychological and physical limits, was originally supposed to hit theaters April 13, 2018.  Its release was bumped to Feb. 22, 2019, and later moved to August 2, 2019.

The opening scene begins at 24:10 for those looking to find it in the recorded panel.

Disney is the parent company of ABC News.

By George Costantino and Stephen Iervolino
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.