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Sanders Townsend notes that she has experience with Secret Service evacuations and protocol because of her with then-Vice President Biden: "And what happened tonight in terms of protocol, from what I know, having experienced it was not protocol." Stephanie Ruhle notes the ticket was a flimsy paper one with...

29,338 次观看 • 2 个月前 •via X (Twitter)

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MS NOW host Symone Sanders Townsend recounts how poor security was at the WHCD. She says she was able to roll up to the front door on a scooter and security did not ask to see her ID nor see her ticket, they assumed she was a guest at the hotel: "I actually showed up to the Hilton shortly after 8 P.M. And I actually took a scooter right up to the front of the Hilton driveway. And this matters because, as you know, usually there's a lot of protesters outside that's outside of those barricades before you can actually enter into the driveway of the Hilton. But this year, there are no protesters outside. I come to find out the people were actually milling about into the lobby. When I got off of the scooter and into in front of the barricade, usually you have to show ID and a ticket. The folks, the security at the gate, these were not agents, the Secret Service agents. They were not identified as Secret Service agents that I could see at the gate, but they did not ask me to show ID, and they did not ask me to show a ticket. They said, 'Oh, you're good. I'm sure you're going to your room.' I am not staying at the Washington Hilton. As I entered into the driveway, I saw the president's vehicle. The Beast was driving around in the circle of the Hilton driveway, and people walking around near it, taking photos. Secret Service was not keeping a perimeter. And it went around about two or three times while I was outside. When I entered into the Hilton, I asked Secret Service agents, which I saw they were identified as Secret Service agents, which way the ballroom was, and they said they didn't know. When I finally got my way onto elevator, no one asked me to show ID. No one asked me to show a ticket. I got all the way down to the red carpet area without ever showing a ticket to anyone in the Hilton. I am saying it like this because this is unusual."

Nicholas Fondacaro

508,488 次观看 • 2 个月前

A rude stranger bumped into a woman at a supermarket, didn't apologize, and kept walking. She won $10 MILLION because of it. – LaQuedra Edwards had $40. That was her lottery budget. Forty dollars, same as always. – In November 2021, she walked into a Vons supermarket in Tarzana, Los Angeles, fed her $40 into the Scratchers vending machine, and started picking her usual cheaper tickets. – Then someone walked into her from behind. – Hard enough to knock her hand into the wrong button. – Out came a $30 ticket she never asked for. – A single ticket had just swallowed 75% of her entire budget. – The man didn't stop. Didn't turn around or even say a word. He just walked out the door. – She stood there, annoyed, holding a ticket she didn't want. – She got in her car and started scratching while still annoyed. – Then she stopped. She looked at the ticket. Then looked again. – She got on the 405 freeway, one of the busiest highways in America, and could not stop glancing down at what was in her hand. – She almost crashed her car. – She pulled over, opened the California Lottery app and scanned the ticket. – She said this out loud “This can't be right” and she scanned it again. – The $30 ticket she bought by accident was the top prize winner. 10 MILLION dollars won by accident. – *"All I remember saying once I found out how much I just won was: I'm rich."* – She bought a house and she started a nonprofit. – The Vons store got a $50,000 bonus for selling the winning ticket. – The man who bumped into her never found out. A stranger bumped into a woman at a Los Angeles supermarket, didn't say a word, and kept walking. She won $10 MILLION because of it.

Aisar

735,970 次观看 • 24 天前

In 1980, a 22-year-old Michelle Pfeiffer walked onto The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson having never taken an acting class, never met anyone in the industry, and having found her agent through the Yellow Pages. She had been boxing groceries at Vons supermarket in Orange County. Then she got promoted to checker. "What am I doing here?" she asked herself. That question changed everything. It was her hairdresser who first planted the seed. He kept asking her why she wasn't pursuing acting. For a long time, she dismissed it. Fear of failure. What will people think? The usual voices that talk most of us out of the things we actually want. Then she stopped listening to them. "I said, 'What do you want to do?' And not what everybody else wants you to do. And acting was it." With no money, no contacts, and no roadmap, she did what any resourceful 22-year-old from Orange County would do. She opened the Yellow Pages and started calling agents. Her pitch to the first one she reached was almost absurdly direct: "This is what I want to do. I don't have any money to go through your school. I don't have any money to pay for pictures. I don't want to sign any contracts with you." She laughed recounting it to Carson, noting that somehow that call still worked. Within two years of that phone call, she was sitting across from Johnny Carson on national television, with two film credits to her name. She credited her naivety as a kind of protection. "I look back and I think it's been very fortunate because I was very naive and I could have been taken advantage of." The industry she walked into had a reputation for chewing up hopeful newcomers. She walked through it without knowing enough to be afraid of it. Her parents were worried. That was real. But the moment she showed them this was not a whim, that it was a genuine calling, the dynamic shifted completely. "I certainly had their support once they knew. I mean, this is really what I wanted to do. Once they knew that, I had their support 100%."

History Nerd

876,508 次观看 • 19 天前

I genuinely cannot understand how someone can watch this story and still stand there, looking at two women, and somehow decide that the wrong one is the victim. On one side, you have a girl (Yıldız) who has been mistreated her entire life. Since the moment she was born, she was treated like a sacrifice for a conflict she was never even part of and later we find out that this conflict never even existed. Her right to study was taken from her. She was pushed into a marriage at a very young age just imagine being six, seven, eight years old, living in fear of being tied to someone you don’t even know. She was treated like a servant in her own home, by the very people she thought were her family. And just when she gets close to the happiness she dreamed of, the man she was engaged to shows up with another wife. She gets mistreated by that wife, by his family, and even (unintentionally) by him, because he was trying to run away from his own feelings, and that only caused her more heartbreak. The whole world was literally against her. She fought through all of that, only to find out in the end that everything she suffered for was based on something that wasn’t even real. Her entire life was built on a lie. That she isn’t even part of that family that she has literally no one in this world. Now on the other side… You have a girl (Melek) who, yes, was taken from her biological mother but she was raised by loving parents. She had everything anyone could wish for: education, freedom, a happy childhood, a healthy environment. She lived her life, fell in love, went out, made choices and no one questioned her, no one controlled her. And then what did she do? She found out that her man was engaged to another woman before marrying her (and even saw him marry her) and instead of holding on to her dignity, she chose to stay, to fight for a man who lied to her, to hold onto a marriage he tried to end multiple times. She used her unborn child to keep him tied to her. She lied constantly, and her excuse was that she was “protecting her marriage” a marriage that was already broken from the moment Serhat removed that ring at the airport in episode one. She tried to hand Yıldız (a woman who had already suffered enough) over to dangerous people. Then she found out the truth about her own birth (that her father ra*ped her mother.)And still no empathy. No moment of humanity toward her own mother. All she cared about was herself. And even though none of this had anything to do with Yıldız, she still found a way to blame it on her. Instead of holding her father accountable, she went and made a deal with him to get rid of Yıldız. She literally made a deal with the devil just to hurt Yıldız one more time. And after all of that… you want me to feel sorry for her? You want me to call her a victim? I honestly cannot believe we are living on the same planet with people who see this and still say, “she’s the victim.” Not morally. Not logically. Not emotionally. There is no world where this makes sense. It’s like watching someone clearly cause harm, and still calling them the victim and actually BELIEVING it. #HalefKöklerinÇağrısı

Maurora🫦

10,530 次观看 • 3 个月前

Zeudi: I was saying that Scarlett is wonderful. Yes, that’s what I was saying. I’m really happy to have met her. Anyway, aside from that, we were with the girls and had fun. It was the last night because the next day we woke up early to go to the airport. It’s always kind of tragic when we have to say goodbye, but then it’s okay. I mean, we’re sad, but it’s also nice because we know we’ll see each other again. And of course, everyone has to work—her life in London, my life in Naples—so it makes sense. But the funny thing—do you want to know what happened this morning? We went to the airport, all organized, everything done, perfect, as always. We get there, she’s about to go in, we’ve already said goodbye, everything’s fine, she’s about to enter. The first ticket doesn’t work. It doesn’t scan. What do you mean it doesn’t work? Okay, maybe it’s nothing. I see her trying several times from a distance. I’m thinking, “Until she’s completely gone and I can’t see her anymore, I’m not leaving.” She tries the second gate, again, it doesn’t work. She tries twice. Nothing. Third one, still nothing. It just won’t work. I’m like, “What happened? Maybe the airline got confused and didn’t give her the right QR code.” QR, whatever you want to call it. In the end she goes to the assistant and asks, “Excuse me, what’s wrong?” “Miss, you got the day wrong. This ticket is for the following Sunday.” “What do you mean?” And that was the reality, nothing could be done at that point. She comes back and I say, “What happened?” I had already figured out she bought the ticket for the wrong day. It happens, those were really intense days, and honestly I’ve done it before too. When you have so much going on, it can happen. She probably picked the wrong Sunday because the dates were so close. So in the end I said, “Alright, you know what? Here we go again.” She was able to move that ticket to another return in the future and bought a new one. And in fact, she ended up leaving later. But guys, it happens, seriously, always double-check when you buy tickets. After I messed up the first time, I actually missed a flight, I get anxious now and always go early, that’s one. Second, another time I made a mistake, not with a flight but with a train ticket. Actually, not the day… you know what I messed up? Not the date, but I mixed up the route. I bought, for example, Rome–Naples, and then Naples–Rome, but in reverse—like my departure was from Rome instead of Naples. And then again the return to Rome… I made such a mess. In the end, buying tickets online is always chaos—honestly, I’m like this every time.

Korslayage

19,658 次观看 • 2 个月前