Thursday, April 18, 2024

PLANE PASSENGER OUTS WOMAN FOR CHEATING AT WORDLE BUT FANS DIVIDED AS TO THE RULES OF THE GAME

People

 

Plane Passenger Outs Woman for Cheating at Wordle on a Flight — but Fans of the Game Are Divided on the Rules

“Thank goodness for 9x zoom,” TikToker Alex Yanchura tells PEOPLE of capturing the viral scene on her flight to Dallas

By Natalia Senanayake|

Published on April 16, 2024 07:40AM EDT

 

An airline passenger says she watched a fellow flier seemingly “cheat” on Wordle during her flight to Dallas

 

She shared the scene in a TikTok that was first posted in 2023, but went viral this month when the TSA reshared it

 

Fans of the online word game appear divided in the comments as some argue the passenger is not cheating 

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An airline passenger is going viral after she appears to be caught doing the unthinkable — cheating on Wordle! 

 

Alex Yanchura, 35, was heading to Dallas from Santa Ana, Calif. when she says she caught the woman red-handed while playing the cult-favorite New York Times word game.

 

Her fellow passenger appears to be toggling back and forth between the Times app and a website of suggested words to figure out the correct answer, eliminating the challenge of the game

 

Yanchura, who’s based in Jupiter, Fla., originally shared the scene on TikTok in Feb. 2023 along with the caption: “If your wife was on flight AA2871 from SNA to DFW on 2/19… she cheats on Wordle.”

 

The TikToker tells PEOPLE, "As a daily New York Times Wordle player who takes the game more seriously than one should, I was shocked at what I was seeing — thank goodness for 9x zoom!"

 

The video got attention when Yanchura first posted it in 2023, racking up 1.6 million views and causing a frenzy among Wordle fans. 

 

Nearly a year later, the video is going viral for a second time after the official Transportation Security Administration (TSA) account reshared it on their Instagram on April 4 — leading devoted players of the game to get heated all over again.  

 

“Who cheats on wordle? Like where's the enjoyment,” one commenter wrote. 

 

Echoing a similar sentiment, another added, “I can’t imagine the rationale of cheating at a fun little game to exercise your brain. Why play if you don’t want to play lol?”

 

A different shocked user commented, “This is probably the worst thing I've seen done on an airplane.”

 

Meanwhile, others defended the cheater: “Not cheating. It’s called using your resources,” one wrote. 

 

Another added, “Checking to see if a word has already been played is not cheating. Who's going to remember hundreds of past solutions? 🙄

 

Devoted Wordle fans believed the game was actually getting harder after it was acquired by The New York Times Games in Feb. 2022. Wordle was originally created by software engineer Josh Wardle for his partner Palak Shah.

 

The outlet’s communications director, Jordan Cohen, set the record straight during an interview with PEOPLE after they acquired the game. 

 

"Since acquiring Wordle, The Times has not made the puzzle harder. We have not added any words to the solutions list, which was already predetermined by the game's original creator," Cohen told PEOPLE.

 

He added that they actually removed a few obscure words "in an effort to make the puzzle more accessible."

 

"We will continue to review the solutions, and remove obscure or potentially insensitive words," Cohen shared. 

MCDONALD'S MENU ADDS NEW TAKES ON A FAN-FAVOURITE SANDWICH

Fort Worth Star-Telegram

 

McDonald’s menu adds new takes on a fan-favorite sandwich

BY DANIEL KLINE THESTREET

UPDATED APRIL 16, 2024 7:44 AM

 

While Burger King has The Whopper and Wendy’s has the Baconator and the Frosty, McDonald’s has a huge portfolio of billion-dollar brands. That gives the chain a lot of flexibility when it comes to adding new versions of fan-favorite items to its menu.

 

That’s a strategy Wendy’s has been using leaning on its iconic Frosty to excited customers. The company drops vanilla multiple times per year in order to add something new or bring back a seasonal Frosty favorite flavor.

 

The chain has done the same thing, albeit to a lesser extent, with its Baconator brand, which has been extended into fries and a breakfast version.

 

Restaurant Brands International’s Burger King has leveraged its signature sandwich, The Whopper, in an absurd amount of ways. It recently held a $1 million contest where customers were asked to submit Whopper ideas and it regularly offers new versions of its most popular sandwich.

 

McDonald’s, at least when it comes to billion-dollar brands, has an embarrassment of riches.

 

“Core menu items – like the Big Mac, Quarter Pounder, Chicken McNuggets, and World-Famous Fries – are truly the core of this business, representing about 65% of Systemwide sales and driving profitable growth. Seventeen classic McDonald’s menu items are billion-dollar brands in their own right, beloved by customers around the world,” the company shared its website.

 

That allows it to innovate by making small changes to any one of these highly popular items.

 

MCDONALD’S BETS BIG ON CHICKEN

 

When Popeye’s, another Restaurant Brands International company, revolutionized the fast-food chicken sandwich, it left McDonald’s looking for an alternative.

 

The chain tried a few different sandwiches before settling on the Crispy Chicken Sandwich, which was renamed the “McCrispy” after it joined the chain’s permanent menu.

 

The chain’s CFO Ian Borden talked about its success during the company’s recent third-quarter earnings call.

 

“Our McCrispy Chicken Sandwich continues to be an important driver of chicken share growth, having first launched in 2022 and now a $1 billion brand across multiple markets. McCrispy was the most recently launched in Australia this quarter, where early results indicate a lift to chicken category sales while bringing a renewed focus to our chicken portfolio,” he said.

 

The chicken sandwich’s success offers menu expansion and limited-time-offer (LTO) opportunities for the chain around the world.

 

“The U.K. continued to drive excitement in chicken by creating fresh takes on our new global favorites. This past quarter, the market featured a new line extension, McCrispy Deluxe, offered alongside the McCrispy and the McSpicy in the market. By combining strong execution of our core menu offerings, with new flavor news and limited additional complexity, we continue to strengthen our chicken credibility with customers and maintain our market share leadership in the chicken category,” he added.

 

U.S. MCDONALD’S GETS A NEW MCCRISPY

 

McDonald’s often tests products around the world before bringing them to its home market. In the case of the new McCrispy, that’s not the case this time as the new version of the sandwich will incorporate some tastes that are very popular with Americans.

 

“McDonald’s has a new Bacon Cajun Ranch McCrispy rolling into stores this week,” the Snackolator Instagram page reported. “According to @mcdonalds, the “Bacon Cajun Ranch McCrispy* is stacked with a southern-style fried chicken fillet and bold, applewood smoked bacon. Then, it’s topped with crispy and cool crinkle-cut pickles and finished with a creamy Cajun ranch sauce on the top and bottom of a warm, toasted potato roll.”

 

The chain will also sell a deluxe version that will be offered with lettuce and tomatoes. McDonald’s has not shared calorie information or pricing for the new chicken sandwiches.

 

“You’ll be able to get this sandwich nationwide on the (April) 17th but many stores are selling them early so take a look if you head out near a McDonald’s,” the website added. 

CALIFORNIA INMATE SAYS SHE WAS FORCED TO SHARE A CELL WITH MAN ASSOCIATED WITH HER CHILDHOOD ABUSERS

National Review

 

California Inmate Says She Was Forced to Share Cell with Man Tied to Her Childhood Abusers

By CAROLINE DOWNEY

April 15, 2024 12:38 PM

 

Throughout childhood, Alissa Kamholz, who is serving a 39-year sentence at a California women’s prison, suffered sexual abuse.

 

Her mother remarried a member of the motorcycle gang The Hells Angels, who routinely preyed upon her, she told the Independent Women’s Forum in the latest episode of their video series, Cruel & Unusual Punishment: The Male Takeover of Female Prisons.

 

“For ten years, I was violated continually by him and his biker buddies,” she said.

 

As a wedding present, she said, “my mother gave me to him.”

 

Over the years, The Hells Angels had earned a reputation for their criminal activity, including assaulting and gang-raping strangers or their members’ own girlfriends and family members.

 

Kamholz described her abusers as long-haired white men who were all part of the club.

 

Battered by these experiences, Kamholz eventually ended up at Central California Women’s Facility (CCWF) under the state’s three-strikes law. In 2004, she was convicted of carjacking which, with prior convictions for residential burglary and robbery in 1999, met the “second strike” criteria for a doubled prison sentence, the San Diego Union-Tribune reported.

 

At least in prison, she said, she felt a reprieve from the abuse. “Prison was my safe place,” she said.

 

That was true until California’s Senate Bill 132, known as the Transgender Respect, Agency, and Dignity Act, went into effect in 2021. That law allowed male felons to relocate to the women’s facility if they declared themselves to be women.

 

A year and a half into the law being on the books, at least 321 requests for transfers based on gender identity had been filed. An attorney for a group of transgender inmates accused California prison officials of refusing to “fully implement” the law because the Department of Corrections had granted only 46 of those requests.

 

Administrators assured Kamholz and other concerned women that none of the men would be members of security-threat groups — the DOC’s term for prison gangs — be classified as above a Level II on the DOC’s threat scale, or have committed crimes against women. Kamholz said she was also told that male transfers would have received hormone therapy and transition surgery.

 

Ranging from Level I to Level IV, the security levels in the California prison system correspond to inmate case factors such as the type of crime committed and whether it was violent, prior incarcerations, and gang involvement. Level II facilities are usually open dormitories with a secure perimeter, which may include armed coverage, according to the CA DOC website. Level IV facilities usually include a secure perimeter with internal and external armed guards and housing units or cell block housing.

 

In November 2023, Kamholz learned that a long-haired, white male inmate would become her new cellmate. The familiar features reminded her of her abusers and amplified her already-recurring nightmares and PTSD. She lived in a constant state of panic.

 

“It was very hard for me to sleep,” she said.

 

Despite the Department of Correction’s claim to the contrary, Kamholz said that many of the male arrivals at CCWF were members of gangs.

 

“A large majority of them have crimes against women or children, and they’re Level IVs,” she said.

 

Former inmates and guards in the Washington state prison system previously told National Review that male felons have exploited the state’s trans accommodations to gain access to vulnerable female inmates. Kamholz said she’s witnessing the same dynamic in California.

 

“They’re very honest once they get here,” she said. “They say, ‘I’ve been down all this time. I’ve exhausted all my appeals. I’m never going home,’ and excuse my language but they say, ‘I just want p***y.’”

 

Kamholz initiated a private conversation with her male roommate to share her and other female inmates’ serious safety concerns with him. He allegedly agreed to move, saying he would be uncomfortable if he was in her position too. But then the man changed his mind, Kamholz said.

 

From subsequent conversations with the man, Kamholz discovered that he was from her town, El Cajon, Calif. She asked if he knew of the San Diego Hells Angels chapter clubhouse where she had been regularly abused. He confirmed he did, and that it was his frequent hangout spot.

 

“I know he wasn’t one of my own abusers because he’s only, I think, seven years older than me,” Kamholz said. “But there’s a 97 percent chance that [he was] there in the building or even the room while I was being raped and stuff.”

 

His background hit too close to home, and it haunted Kamholz.

 

“I feel like even being sentenced to prison was easier than having to deal with that,” she said.

 

After three weeks of living with him, he allegedly exposed himself to Kamholz’s female roommates while she wasn’t there, she said. Despite the incident, the prison moved him to a pre-honor dorm, a special-housing unit for well-behaved inmates who have gone six months without an infraction. There, he misbehaved more egregiously, and was promoted another level up to an honor dorm despite his conduct, Kamholz alleged.

 

“Then once he was in here, he choked out one of his roommates and beat up the other one,” Kamholz told IWF. “They went and reported it, the alarm got pushed, everything, and they rewarded him by moving him into the honor dorm in his girlfriend’s room. It’s ridiculous.”

 

The double standard of treatment extended to the dress code, which was observably relaxed for the transgender-identifying men but not the female residents.

 

“The men can do anything they want,” she said. “They can look any way. They can dress any way. I mean, there’s one that walks around with his shirt tied up like it was a halter top,” Kamholz said.

 

Female inmates, on the other hand, are expected to wear clothing that hides their body shape, keep their nails short, and only wear neutral makeup if any, she said.

 

“It’s shamefully hypocritical for the California prison system to proudly boast about their ‘commitment to rehabilitation,’ and ‘positive experiences’ while survivors of abuse are being re-traumatized day in and day out,” Andrea Mew, storytelling manager for IWF and co-producer of the documentary series, told National Review.

 

“How are women like Alissa Kamholz ever going to rehabilitate and reintegrate soundly into society when states that kowtow to the transgender lobby (like California) are compromising their mental and physical health,” she added. “Kamholz demonstrated true grit by telling her story from behind bars in this interview with Independent Women’s Forum, but not every incarcerated woman can comfortably do so. This is more than just a ‘gender’ issue – this is a matter of life and death.”

 

In November 2021, feminist advocacy organization Women’s Liberation Front sued the state DOC over the prison-housing law. Plaintiff Krystal Gonzalez said she was sexually assaulted by a male who was transferred to CCWF under the law. According to the suit, when Gonzalez filed a complaint and requested to be housed away from men the prison’s response called her alleged attacker a “transgender woman with a penis.”

 

The California Department of Corrections did not respond to request for comment. 

MADOC'S OPEN MIC THIS FRIDAY 6:30 P.M. AT THE LEGION

Dear Friends:

So nice to see Spring back again! Hopefully it stays with us this time!!

So this Friday coming up is another Madoc's Open Mic at the Legion. :D It just keeps being wonderful and more fun all the time! We've seen so much fantastic local talent come out and come back again. We have a strong core of musicians who come regularly, some who come occasionally and always somebody new.(:  Everyone is welcome!! With the better road conditions, people get interested in traveling further afield - so I look forward to seeing some of our friends from further away.

Jerry Whyte, our sound man, has big news this week!! His sons' band "Arm's Length" has been featured on CBC as one of Canada's "Up and Coming" https://www.cbc.ca/music/5-new-acts-shaping-canadian-pop-punk-right-now-2024-1.7168113

VERY EXCITING!!
 
SO we'll see you Friday! Everyone's Welcome! Come and play for a friendly audience or just come and enjoy Madoc's (and surrounding area) Live Local Music!!
 

Elizabeth & Robert 

WOMAN STOPS COOKING DINNER FOR HER HUSBAND AFTER HE REFUSES TO DO THE DISHES

PEOPLE

 

Woman No Longer Cooks Husband Dinner After He Refuses to Do Dishes: 'He Can Handle His Own'

In an anonymous Reddit post, a woman said her husband won't clean up after she makes family meals

By Virginia Chamlee|

Published on April 16, 2024 11:10AM EDT

 

An anonymous woman is stirring conversation on Reddit after revealing that her husband refuses to clean the dishes when he cooks dinner for the family — so she's no longer making enough food for him.

 

Identifying herself only as a woman in her 30s who loves to cook, the anonymous poster writes that she was making dinner every night for herself, her husband and their 4-year-old son.

 

"I don’t typically make things that take 100 dishes or leave a massive mess but there’s usually a couple of pots and pans, some utensils and a cutting board," she writes.

 

While both her son and husband will typically rinse their dinner plates and place them in the dishwasher, the poster writes that she ends up with all the cooking dishes to clean.

 

"I have brought this up to my husband and asked if he could do the dishes after I cook as I’m tired from doing the cooking," she writes. "He says that since I made the mess I should deal with it myself. I was mad but didn’t ask again."

 

So the next night, she changed her routine.

 

"The next night I made dinner that was just enough for me and my son. None for husband," she writes, adding, "He was confused."

 

She continues: "I told him if he wasn’t going to do his part for the meal then he could make his own. I think this is fair! If he thinks cleaning our dishes from our shared meal that I worked to make then he can handle his own food!"

 

The anonymous Reddit user ended her post by adding that she is "not a stay at home parent."

 

"We both work full time and I handle most of the house and kid stuff. His job is manual labor and mine is a desk job," she adds.

 

Fellow Reddit users were quick to come to the poster's defense, saying that if she did the cooking, her husband should do the cleaning.

 

"I cook every night. My spouse does the dishes. It's called division of labor. Your spouse should get a clue. I like your malicious compliance?" wrote one.

 

Another wrote: "By your husband’s logic you should also stop doing his laundry, making his side of the bed, and any other household chores that involve things he uses."

 

Still others were a little more straightforward. "And he contributes what, exactly (besides mess)," wrote one commenter. 

SATIRE: WALGREENS CASHIER ASKS IF YOU WANT TO ROUND UP TO HELP PAY FOR THE MERCHANDISE STOLEN THAT WEEK

Babylon Bee

 

Walgreens Cashier Asks If You Want To Round Up To Help Pay For Some Of The Merchandise Stolen This Week

U.S.

Apr 18, 2023 · BabylonBee.com

 

SAN FRANCISCO, CA — To help recover losses from rampant, unprosecuted shoplifting in San Francisco, Walgreens is now letting customers round up their orders to help cover what was stolen that week.

 

"That will be $37.15. Would you like to round that up to an even $38?" said one cashier to a customer, according to sources. "That will help us cover the loss from Monday when 2 thieves dumped our entire cosmetics aisle into garbage bags and walked out freely to do it again next week!"

 

Walgreens execs confirmed the new "round up for restorative justice" campaign has seen moderate success, but thus far has been inadequate to help them completely recoup losses from operating in cities run by Soros-backed DAs.

 

"The problem is we only have 12 actual customers left in San Francisco," said Kelvin Kwok, the San Francisco District Manager. "Literally everyone else is shoplifting." Kwok's interview was cut short, however, when he was mugged by a group of shoplifters who had just exited the Walgreens.

 

At publishing time, Walgreens had elected to just fire all their cashiers and let everyone take whatever they wanted. 

Tuesday, April 16, 2024

WHY WOULD GOD MAKE PEOPLE GAY IN THE FIRST PLACE?

This short gives an excellent response to a question many have asked.


Additionally, when one looks into the testimonies of former lgbters, it is quite evident that for individuals of that type, every bad thing that can happen to a child can cause them to become one of the letters  in that acronym: from sexual and physical abuse, to exposure to pornography, to broken homes, to not connecting with a parent.