Sabtu, 06 Juli 2019

'Teen Mom OG': Amber Portwood Is in Hot Water with the Law Again - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Amber Portwood and Gary Shirley might consider each other family now, but it seems like they are on different sides of the law at the moment. Earlier in the week, Shirley’s wife, Kristina Anderson, announced that the 32-year-old television personality was recently sworn in as a police officer. Yesterday, media outlets revealed that Portwood, 29, was arrested on suspicion of domestic violence. She was hauled in by police after they responded to a call about a domestic disturbance.

Why was Amber Portwood arrested?

According to E! News, Indianapolis police responded to a call about a domestic disturbance. The call came in around 3 am on Friday. When the police arrived, Portwood’s boyfriend, Andrew Glennon told police that he and his live-in girlfriend were in a heated disagreement.

Amber Portwood
Andrew Glennon (L) and Amber Portwood | Photo by Jon Kopaloff/FilmMagic

Glennon, whom Portwood met on the set of Marriage Bootcamp, also told the responding officers that Portwood attacked him while he was holding their son. Portwood and Glennon share one child, James. James is just 1-year-old.

Indianapolis police have not released the cause of the disagreement between the pair, but according to OK! Magazine, Glennon is the individual who reported the disturbance. Allegedly, dispatchers received a text from the victim claiming he and his child were in danger.

Could she serve jail time?

Portwood’s most recent run-in with the law is not her first. In December 2010, Portwood was arrested for domestic battery against Gary Shirley. At the time, Shirley and Portwood were in a relationship. Portwood was booked on two felony charges. She was initially placed on probation for the incident.

The following year, Portwood violated the terms of her probation and was offered two options; she could head to a rehab program, or she could go to jail. According to the Huffington Post, Portwood decided she would prefer to spend her time in prison. She served 17-months behind bars.

Considering her past convictions, jail time is not off the table. Authorities have not released the exact charges, nor what the next legal steps are for the Teen Mom OG star. CPS, however, has been notified about the incident. James, 1, is believed to still be in the custody of his father.

Amber isn’t the first Teen Mom star to find herself behind bars

Portwood isn’t the only teen mom who has run afoul of the law. Jenelle Evans, Portwood’s franchise nemesis, has been arrested multiple times. Her charges range from assault to drug possession to probation violations. Evans was most recently in the news when her husband, David Eason, shot and killed the family dog. The couple just regained custody of three of their five children after a two-month court battle.

Nathan Griffith, the father of Evans’ son Kaiser, was arrested on more than one occasion, too. Evans’ ex-boyfriend, Keifer Delp, is currently serving time for running a meth lab. Delp had appeared on Teen Mom 2 with Evans.

Adam Lind, the father of Chelsea Houska’s daughter Aubrey, has also spent time behind bars. Lind’s charges seemingly all stem from substance abuse issues. Ryan Edwards, the father of Maci Bookout’s eldest child Bentley, was recently released from jail after serving three months behind bars for violating his probation and theft charges.

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https://www.cheatsheet.com/entertainment/teen-mom-og-amber-portwood-is-in-hot-water-with-the-law-again.html/

2019-07-06 14:01:24Z
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Prince Harry, Meghan Markle Holding Private Christening for Baby Archie - Newser

(Newser) – A "very different royal event" is taking place Saturday in the UK. The BBC reports that baby Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, the son of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, will be christened in a chapel at Windsor Castle by the Archbishop of Canterbury, and CNN notes the baptism is causing an "almighty storm." That's because the Duke and Duchess of Sussex are keeping the event completely private, with a mostly secret guest list, sealed lips on who the baby's godparents will be, and no TV coverage or media photographers allowed—not even to snaps pics as guests arrive, which has often been the case even for private royal christenings. The AP notes the controversy surrounding the event centers on an increasingly frustrated public, which thinks events like this should be public, especially since taxpayer money pays for much of the couple's lifestyle.

Who Buckingham Palace would confirm is going: Prince Charles and his wife, Camilla, as well as Prince William and Kate Middleton. Markle's mother, Doria Ragland, is also expected to be there. Who won't be at the royal event: Archie's great-grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II, who had a prior engagement. Harry and Meghan won't be completely breaking from tradition for their baby's big day: People reports Archie will be sporting the same baptismal robe that his cousins George, Charlotte, and Louis wore, and he'll be christened in the silver Lily Font, a basin commissioned by Queen Victoria and Prince Albert in 1840 and used for every royal baptism since. The baptismal water for 2-month-old Archie will come from the River Jordan. (Read more Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor stories.)

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https://www.newser.com/story/277432/a-royal-christening-leads-to-almighty-storm.html

2019-07-06 11:00:00Z
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It’s Time to Talk About That Ending of ‘Stranger Things’ Season 3 - The Ringer

The Mind Flayer is back, Hawkins has a shiny new mall, and the kids have to confront puberty: Stranger Things has never been scarier. Throughout the Fourth of July weekend, The Ringer will be covering all the happenings in Stranger Things’ third season with episodic breakdowns highlighting the biggest scenes, themes, and character moments. Below, we dive into Season 3’s eighth and final episode, “The Battle of Starcourt.”


Between its interdimensional monsters and the stress-inducing trials of growing up, Stranger Things is unquestionably a crowd-pleaser. The Emmy nominations the first season garnered were a welcome surprise, but the Duffer brothers seem to have a more vested interest in racking up entertaining set pieces, adorable kid moments, and myriad ’80s throwbacks. Dropping the third season on the Fourth of July, while the series simultaneously tracks the events around Independence Day in 1985, seems to affirm those intentions. Stranger Things’ third season has the look and feel of a summer blockbuster—and the first seven episodes lived up to that promise with fleshy monstrosities, zombie-like citizens, hot lifeguards, evil Russians, and a new mall so awash in neon lights it’d probably arouse Nicolas Winding Refn.

Bad things happen frequently in Hawkins, and characters do sometimes die (rest in power, Bob and Barb!); however, these moments don’t come at the expense of the show’s good vibes. But “The Battle of Starcourt” offers a devastating turning point for the series and its immediate future. With our ensemble cast siphoned off to take out the Mind Flayer once and for all, Chief Jim Hopper finds himself on the wrong side of the Russians’ Upside Down portal-opening device, which has gone haywire. Despite defeating the Russian Terminator in a gnarly fight sequence, he’s resigned to his fate—it’s the only way to stop the Mind Flayer. With a look of solemn acceptance, Hopper consents to Joyce’s destroying the machine, which incinerates him and anyone close to the wreckage in the process.

In a flash, Hopper—the show’s most compelling figure, the lord of dad-bods, and the very reason David Harbour has blossomed from a character actor into a full-blown star—is dead. While we don’t technically see Hopper die—and a post-credits scene in Russia makes the curious decision to note that the Russians hold an unseen “American” prisoner in a cell—the fact that the rest of the finale soaks in the post-Hopper pathos should alleviate any speculation that we’re looking at a Jon Snow–type situation. (But it’s worth stressing to the Duffers: Please don’t bring Hopper back from the dead!)

The decision to kill Hopper is bold and certainly antithetical to the erstwhile summer blockbuster thrills, but Stranger Things has never been more emotionally resonant. The ambitious storytelling choice is also indicative of the show’s own maturation process. In a tear-jerking voice-over—courtesy of a speech Hopper writes to Eleven about her ongoing makeout sessions with Mike, which Eleven later reads—Hopper delivers what amounts to the third season’s thesis statement: “I know you’re getting older. Growing. Changing. And I guess, if I’m being really honest, that’s what scares me. I don’t want things to change.” (Side note: Give David Harbour another Emmy nomination.)

Stranger Things couldn’t escape the inevitable growth of its young actors, and instead of trying to retain the charms of its earlier seasons—the games of Dungeons & Dragons, the Ghostbusters-themed group outings on Halloween—the series evolved along with them. That transitional phase left characters like Will Byers and Hopper, who struggled to handle Eleven’s natural teenage urges to make out with her boyfriend, yearning for the old days. Perhaps, on some level, the audience was too.

Hopper’s speech also touches on the other things that define the universal experience of growing up: making mistakes, learning from them, and understanding that change is an inescapable event to cherish, rather than avoid. It’s crushing that Hopper can’t share these moments with Eleven, who’s now lost the only paternal figure she’s ever had in her life. Their bond was strengthened by the trauma both endured in their lives—Eleven at Hawkins Lab; Hopper’s losing his daughter—and even though they spent most of the season at odds with one another, the mutual love and respect they shared was never in doubt.

But while watching Eleven lose Hopper is heartbreaking, the season does reach a touching resolution. She is moving in with the Byers clan, who’ve decided—quite understandably!—that they need a fresh start outside of Hawkins, the most cursed town on television since Buffy the Vampire Slayer’s Sunnydale. Elsewhere, Robin and Steve may no longer have a job at Scoops Ahoy—one of the downsides of Starcourt’s being ground zero for a climactic battle against the Mind Flayer—but they’ve both got a gig at the local video store, which could keep them stably employed until the very streaming site that this show exists on puts that store out of business. Max and Lucas are still going strong; it also turns out that Dustin’s science camp girlfriend, Suzie, is actually real; Jonathan and Nancy will give long distance a shot, along with Mike and Eleven. Everyone’s paths are diverging more than they’ve had all series, and Hopper’s death is more trauma for characters who’ve experienced an overwhelming amount of it. But you also get the impression all the kids are going to be fine because of the lessons derived from battling Upside Down creatures and the perpetually awkward stages of puberty.

With a fourth season almost assuredly on the way—the Duffer brothers have envisioned making four or five seasons, and there’s no way in hell Netflix will cancel this thing—Hopper’s death will likely seep into the show’s ethos far more than Barb’s or Bob’s ever did. Stranger Things now enters uncharted territory, with several protagonists moving outside of Hawkins, the allure of more nefarious Russian villains (they appeared to have captured the Demogorgon in the motherland!), and the void left by one of its most important and beloved characters.

It would’ve been easy for the Duffer brothers, who wrote and directed the finale, to coast on the familiar feelings of ’80s nostalgia throughout the third season—the thing that most highlighted the show’s massive appeal. But “The Battle of Starcourt” and its excellent, emotionally shattering coda make it clear the series will do its best moving forward to echo Hopper’s parting words. Change is a scary thing, and not all shows are equipped to handle big narrative and thematic developments. In not just reacting to the literal growth of its actors but actively establishing a future that shifts the status quo, Stranger Things is striving to do so anyway.

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https://www.theringer.com/tv/2019/7/6/20683166/stranger-things-season-3-episode-8-recap

2019-07-06 09:40:00Z
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Crowds gather outside Windsor Castle for the Royal baby's christening - The Sun

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DcAioEhmQyk

2019-07-06 07:44:49Z
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Why J. Jonah Jameson hates Spider-Man so much in Marvel comics - Polygon

The very first thing about J. Jonah Jameson that any comic reader knows is that he hates Spider-Man. The editor in chief of the Daily Bugle has virtually never rested from his mission of turning public opinion against the wall-crawler.

But, in the immortal words of Ryan Reynolds, “But why?”

With Spider-Man back in the conversation, we thought we’d revisit the nosy news-hound of a nuisance.

Why does J.J. Jameson, Jr. hate Spider-Man so dang much?

Spider-Man himself did once, briefly, offer an alternative explanation, in the pages of the 2004 She-Hulk series.

Spider-Man on the stand while suing J. Jonah Jameson for libel in She-Hulk #4, Marvel Comics (2004). Dan Slott, Juan Bobillo/Marvel Comics

But in this story — which predates the creation of Miles Morales — he was merely joking.

Overall, J. Jonah Jameson’s seething distaste for Spider-Man is based on principle and bad luck: Peter Parker is just at the center of the Venn diagram of “Something that Jameson hates” and “Someone unable to defend themselves.”

Jameson has found that railing against Spider-Man, with full page pictures of his dangerous antics, sells papers. And that keeps The Daily Bugle in the black, in the ever more precarious industry of print journalism.

J. Jonah Jameson in The Amazing Spider-Man #1, Marvel Comics (1963). Stan Lee, Steve Ditko/Marvel Comics

But Jameson also genuinely disdains superheroes. He thinks that superheroes — totally unregulated, dangerously powerful, grandstanding charmers — receive praise that’s better reserved for police, firefighters, EMTs, and other first response workers and military personnel. And, of course, he thinks it’s his duty as a newspaperman to tell the world.

Spider-Man is simultaneously one of the better known and most vulnerable superheroes in the Bugle’s hometown turf. The Avengers and Fantastic Four can afford to hire a good libel attorney — Peter Parker can’t. On top of that, defending himself from Jameson’s claims would, in most cases, require revealing his secret identity, putting his family in danger.

J. Jonah Jameson’s son made things personal

But in one of Spider-Man’s earliest adventures, Stan Lee and Steve Ditko made JJJ’s conflict with Spider-Man hit closer to home. The two introduced Jameson’s son, John Jameson III, as a top test pilot in the US space program, who, in a story written about a year after John Glenn’s first orbital flight, was flying a new experimental orbital capsule.

During the flight, the capsule’s guidance system went haywire (much like in Glenn’s historic trip) and the US military was powerless to save John Jameson and his craft. Enter Spider-Man, who stole a plane, flew up to the capsule, and attached a replacement guidance unit, allowing it to land safely.

You’d think that Spider-Man would have purchased some leeway with Jameson by saving his son’s life. But instead, Jameson doubled down, accusing Spider-Man of orchestrating the malfunction himself so that he could steal the spotlight from a true American hero like his son, John Jameson III.

J. Jonah Jameson in The Amazing Spider-Man #1, Marvel Comics (1963). Stan Lee, Steve Ditko/Marvel Comics

This isn’t the last the comics world saw of John Jameson. Like most civilian characters in a long-running comics universe, he eventually got his own powers and code name when he contracted lycanthropy from a weird ruby he found on the Moon, becoming the character Man-Wolf. According to writer Gerry Conway, who penned the whole ruby/moon/wolf thing, J. Jonah Jameson, Jr.’s hatred of Spider-Man was a significant factor.

“[Man-Wolf] added another layer of tension to Spider-Man’s relationship with J. Jonah Jameson,” he told Back Issue! magazine in 2010. “As a writer, you always want to find a way to increase the pressure on the main character, to increase the involvement of other characters with that character. Consequently, anything that could make Jonah’s hatred of Spider-Man more intense and at the same time more understandable was a useful device dramatically.”

And if you have to turn his son into a werewolf to do it, well, that’s comics, baby!

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https://www.polygon.com/comics/2019/7/5/20681363/spider-man-j-jonah-jameson-movie-vs-comics-far-from-home-end-credits-easter-egg-cameo

2019-07-06 01:15:00Z
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Jumat, 05 Juli 2019

Kevin Spacey accuser drops lawsuit against actor - Yahoo Entertainment

BOSTON (AP) — A young man who says Kevin Spacey groped him in a Nantucket bar in 2016 has dropped his lawsuit against the Oscar-winning actor, his lawyer said Friday.

Spacey still faces a criminal charge. He pleaded not guilty to indecent assault and battery in January.

His accuser's lawyer, Mitchell Garabedian, announced in an email that the suit filed June 26 in Nantucket Superior Court has been voluntarily dismissed. No reason was provided either by Garabedian or in the court filing. Garabedian said he would have no further comment. A telephone message was left at his office.

According to the court filing, the suit was dismissed "with prejudice," which means it cannot be refiled.

An email was left Friday requesting comment from Alan Jackson, Spacey's attorney. Jackson has previously said the man is lying in the hopes of winning money in a civil case against Spacey.

The legal development could have significance for the criminal case against Spacey, legal experts say.

While there are a range of reasons why a civil suit is dropped so quickly after being filed, it could be an indicator a private settlement was reached and that the accuser may ultimately stop cooperating with prosecutors, said William Korman, a former prosecutor in the Suffolk County District Attorney's office who is now a criminal defense lawyer specializing in sexual assault cases.

"Any settlement could not be conditioned on a refusal to cooperate with the prosecution," said Korman. "Nevertheless, money is a great motivator for an individual not to follow through."

It's also possible prosecutors, upset with the timing of the civil suit, specifically asked the accuser to drop it, said David Yannetti, a former prosecutor who is now a criminal defense lawyer in Boston. The civil suit was filed months into the ongoing criminal case, but such suits are typically filed after a criminal case is decided, he said.

"Maybe the prosecution said it's either about money or it's about a crime, but it can't be about both and you have to make a decision on where you want to go with this," Yannetti said.

The civil suit was likely filed before completion of the criminal case because the three-year statute of limitations is approaching, added Yannetti.

"We're operating with very little info, but it's clear something unusual is going on here," he said. "Either the prosecution got involved or there was some sort of civil settlement."

Cape and Islands District Attorney Michael O'Keefe's office declined to comment on whether prosecutors had any role in the withdrawal of the civil suit or whether a settlement has been reached.

"The criminal case is independent from the civil case and will go forward," Assistant District Attorney Tara Miltimore said in an email.

Garabedian's client, the son of Boston TV anchor Heather Unruh, alleged Spacey got him drunk and sexually assaulted him at the Club Car restaurant where the then-18-year-old man worked as a busboy.

The criminal case has centered on the cellphone used by the accuser the night of the alleged groping, which the defense says it needs in order to recover text messages it says will support Spacey's innocence.

Nantucket District Court Judge Thomas Barrett has ordered the man to hand the phone over to the defense, but his attorney said they cannot find it. The judge has given them until Monday to produce the phone.

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https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/kevin-spacey-accuser-drops-lawsuit-130815060.html

2019-07-05 16:56:00Z
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'Teen Mom OG' star arrested in Indy for domestic battery - WRTV Indianapolis

INDIANAPOLIS — An Indiana native and star on MTV's 'Teen Mom OG' was arrested Friday morning for battery.

Amber Portwood was arrested Friday at her home in Indianapolis by the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department. Police responded to the home on Anchorage Drive just after 3 a.m. for a disturbance.

Arriving officers say the male victim told them his live-in-girlfriend assaulted him while he was holding their one-year-old child.

Portwood has two kids, ages 1 and 10. She and her boyfriend, Andrew Glennon, recently had a pregnancy scare on the "Teen Mom OG" show, according to TMZ.

Portwood is preliminarily charged with felony domestic battery with a child under 16 present.

This isn't Portwood's first brush with the law. She spent 17 months in prison in 2012 after violating her probation from a drug possession case.

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https://www.theindychannel.com/news/local-news/crime/teen-mom-og-star-indiana-native-amber-portwood-arrested-for-domestic-battery

2019-07-05 14:48:00Z
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