Zoey 101 Star Protests Exterior Of Nickelodeon Headquarters

Actress Alexa Nikolas, who is known for her role as Nicole Bristow in Nickelodeon’s “Zoey 101,” held a protest outside of the company’s headquarters in Burbank, California on Thursday.

The 30-year-old actress said she “didn’t feel safe” during her time on the show.

In an Instagram live stream from the protest, Nikolas states,

“I didn’t feel protected at Nickelodeon as a child. She also demands that “Nickelodeon starts protecting children and not predators.”

Nikolas’ organization, Eat Predators, advocates for survivors of sexual abuse. She expressed deep concern for child stars and is protesting for networks to toss out their nondisclosure agreements as it prevents children from getting help.

Screen Shot 2022 08 26 at 6.35.23 PM

The Los Angeles Times reports, the actress seemingly calls out the “Zoey 101” and “ICarly” creator Daniel Schneider where she refers to him as “the creator of childhood trauma.”

She says in the video,

“I don’t feel safe around Dan Schneider while I was working at Nickelodeon.”

Nicole’s protest comes just weeks after the release of iCarly star, Jeannette McCurdy, memoir “I’m Glad My Mom Died”. The book details McCurdy’s experience with alleged abuse from executives at Nickelodeon. McCurdy speaks on being encouraged to drink when she was underage, receiving unwanted messages and claims the company offered her hush money if she agreed not to speak on allegations against someone she refers to as “The Creator”.

GettyImages 974039414 scaled

Protestors stood outside holding signs with the network’s logo that read words “Sickelodeon” and “Predators”. There were also signs that displayed pictures of various Nickelodeon figures including Schneider and former executives, according to Los Angeles Times.

Nickelodeon has yet to comment on the allegations.

.

Biden Mocks Trump’s Declare That He Declassified Each Single Doc – PoliticusUSA

President Biden mocked Trump’s claim that as president, he declassified every single document.

Video:

Q: President Trump said he declassified all these documents. Could he have declassified?

Biden: I declassified everything in the world. I’m president. I can do it all. Come on, declassified everything.

Biden said he is leaving it up to the DOJ and wants nothing to do with it pic.twitter.com/5sPAjcAE9F

— Sarah Reese Jones (@PoliticusSarah) August 26, 2022

Biden was asked if Trump could have declassified every single document.

The President answered by mocking the idea, “I declassified everything in the world. I’m president. I can do it all. Come on, declassified everything. I am not going to comment because I don’t know the details. I don’t want to know. I’ll let the Justice Department take care of it.”

The idea that Trump waved his hand and declassified everything is so absurd that it is worthy of mockery. Biden later was asked how he handles classified documents and he explained that he is taking the Presidential Daily Briefing home with him, but he would read it in a secure area with the military present. The document would be under lock and key. Biden will read it, lock it, and then return it to the military personnel in the secure room.

In other words, President Biden isn’t going to be hiding classified documents in his basement.

Trump has created an unprecedented situation because no former president has ever stolen classified documents before. It is refreshing to have a president who doesn’t meddle in DOJ matters and allows the Justice Department to do his job.

Biden mocked Trump’s ridiculous excuse because no president has that kind of power and it was nonsensical to suggest that a president might.

Mr Easley is the managing editor. He is also a White House Press Pool and a Congressional correspondent for PoliticusUSA. Jason has a Bachelor’s Degree in Political Science. His graduate work focused on public policy, with a specialization in social reform movements.

Awards and Professional Memberships

Member of the Society of Professional Journalists and The American Political Science Association

Figma rising inside Microsoft, testing longtime cope with Adobe

Dylan Field, co-founder and CEO of Figma, speaks at the startup’s Config conference in San Francisco on May 10, 2022.

Figma

Microsoft and Adobe have been friendly bedfellows for decades. Microsoft’s dominant PC operating system has been the gateway for Adobe to reach millions of business users with its design software.

The companies’ CEOs even attended the same high school in India, and both moved to the U.S. in the 1980s for graduate school in computer science. They share a common bond over the successful transition from desktop software to the cloud.

But inside Microsoft, an emerging challenge to Adobe is catching fire and raising questions about the future of one of the tech industry’s most intimate relationships.

Figma, a San Francisco-based startup that celebrated its 10th anniversary in August, is being used by tens of thousands of employees inside Microsoft and, for many, is at the heart of their daily work. The number of users has steadily increased in recent years, though neither company will say how many of them are editors with paid accounts.

The cloud-based design software came in the door in 2016, when Microsoft acquired mobile app development platform Xamarin and brought in a 350-person team that, months after the deal closed, would become Figma power users. The product has since become so central to how Microsoft’s designers do their jobs that Jon Friedman, corporate vice president of design and research, said Figma is “like air and water for us.” It’s also used by engineers, marketers and data scientists across Microsoft.

“Figma’s become, I would say, sort of the No. 1 common tool we use to collaborate across all of the design community in the community and beyond,” said Friedman, who’s worked at Microsoft for over 18 years. It’s “really great at helping us collaborate at scale, and at global scale. I can collaborate with teams we have in India, China, Europe, Israel and Africa.”

Venture investors have been all in on the growth.

In June 2021, during the heyday of mega financings, Figma was valued at $10 billion in a funding round that included participation from Morgan Stanley’s Counterpoint Global. That was before the 2022 market plunge sent many cloud stocks down by more than half and largely halted pre-IPO rounds.

Figma hasn’t announced plans for a stock market debut, and shareholders aren’t pressing for one anytime soon, in large part because the market for new offerings has dried up this year.

The company, backed by the likes of Index Ventures, Greylock Partners and Kleiner Perkins, now has the size and growth trajectory to land solidly on the radar of public investors. Annualized recurring revenue has more than doubled in consecutive years and is poised to top $400 million in 2022, according to people with knowledge of the company’s financials who asked not to be named because the numbers are confidential. Figma’s workforce has swelled to 800.

While Microsoft has served as a growth driver for Figma, spending millions a year on its deployment, the company’s software has also taken off at Google, Oracle and Salesforce, where it started small and grew organically as fans touted it to their colleagues. Other customers include Airbnb, Dropbox, Herman Miller, Stripe and Twitter.

After Figma founder and CEO Dylan Field tweeted earlier this month about the company turning 10 years old, he received flattering responses from Salesforce co-CEO Bret Taylor and Atlassian co-CEO Mike Cannon-Brookes. Taylor started his response with, “I [heart emoji] Figma.”

For Figma, getting traction inside big companies, particularly within Microsoft, has required going head-to-head with Adobe’s competing XD program, and winning its fair share of deals. That doesn’t mean the market has completely flipped, or that Adobe is being fully supplanted.

“We’re still heavy on Adobe Illustrator, Photoshop and XD,” Friedman said.

Adobe and Microsoft have worked together for more than two decades. In addition to Adobe gaining ubiquity by distributing across Windows machines, the two companies have been syncing their products in desktop, cloud and mobile computing, with over 50 integrations listed on Microsoft’s website.

Penetrating that alliance has not always been smooth for Figma. In 2016, Microsoft acquired Sunrise, a startup with a popular calendar app. The Sunrise team relied on Figma and continued to use it after the deal closed.

Sunrise co-founder Jeremy Le Van said his employees were among the lucky ones at Microsoft. He said some Microsoft staffers weren’t able to use Figma because of the business relationship with Adobe and were stuck using products such as Photoshop and XD. Despite executive resistance in certain departments, some designers snuck out of the Adobe ecosystem to use Figma anyway, said Le Van, who stayed on as a design director at Microsoft until 2018.

Friedman said he wasn’t aware of examples of Figma being shut out. “We have a great relationship with Adobe as well and love their products for many use cases at Microsoft,” he said.

The same year of the Sunrise deal, Adobe said it would make Microsoft’s Azure its preferred cloud for Creative Cloud, as well as the Marketing Cloud and Document Cloud. To mark the occasion, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen, who both went to high school at India’s Hyderabad Public School, appeared at Microsoft’s Ignite conference for IT professionals under a banner declaring that Adobe loves Azure.

‘We both wanted it’

Figma’s collaborative capabilities are central to its popularity. Multiple editors of a document can see one another working in real time, and non-editors can view designs and leave comments. Companies pay for Figma based on the number of editors they have for their files.

“Any designer, product manager or engineer can jump in and see the design system at play in any particular product,” Friedman said.

Last week, Figma released a version of its service that people can use in Microsoft’s Teams communication app, removing the need to open a browser tab.

“We both wanted it,” said Field, who started Figma after scoring a Thiel Fellowship, which came with a $100,000 grant from venture investor Peter Thiel on the condition that he drop out of college (Brown University) and pursue a new project.

The Teams integration is a tool that benefits any user of Microsoft products, not just employees. Adobe, which offers Teams apps for Acrobat and Creative Cloud, knows all about the power of tying into the Microsoft ecosystem. It’s been a big part of the company’s success in its 40-year run up to almost $17 billion in annual revenue.

Figma had to start small. Like many organizations, Microsoft began using it for free. Today, a customer can pay Figma each month based on the number of people who make changes to files, while a more limited version of the service is available at no cost.

In 2017, a year after the Xamarin acquisition, Field hosted Friedman at his company’s San Francisco headquarters. Field says he remembers asking Friedman why Microsoft didn’t want to keep using the free version of Figma.

“‘Look, we’re all worried you’re going to die as a company,” Field recalled Friedman telling him. “We can’t spread it inside Microsoft as a company even though we like it, because you’re not charging.”

It wasn’t just about keeping Figma alive. As a big-spending customer, Microsoft was in position to start asking for more features.

A workspace inside Building 21 at the Microsoft campus in Redmond, Washington, on March 3, 2022. Microsoft Corp. has begun calling employees back to its headquarters in recent weeks, but its return-to-office strategy hinges on hybrid work.

Chona Kasinger | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Field said Microsoft’s feedback led to several improvements. For example, Figma engineers worked to make it easier to move from screen to screen in a single Figma file. The company also added support for input from Xbox game controllers and made prototype previews work faster on mobile devices.

Ultimately, Microsoft’s requests helped Figma develop its top-tier enterprise plan, Field said, adding to the free version and paid monthly premium packages that range from $12 to $45 per editor per month. The enterprise package runs at $75 per editor and includes dedicated account managers and advanced password management.

Václav Vančura remembers when things were very different.

Vančura was a senior designer at Xamarin, whose software helped companies build Android and iOS apps with Microsoft’s C# programming language.

When Figma announced its launch in late 2015, Vančura was impressed with the company’s idea for shared design component libraries. He signed up for a preview release and received access in the summer of 2016. He encouraged his colleagues to jump on board, starting with David Siegel, Xamarin’s head of design.

Vančura and Siegel encountered snags while sharing files from design competitor Sketch. After one Xamarin employee uploaded a file to a Dropbox folder, their teammates sometimes struggled to get it running on their computers, either because they didn’t have the right fonts installed or because they had different versions of the software.

Unlike Sketch, which was only available on MacOS, Figma was on the browser. That meant fewer sharing issues. You grant others access by copying a link or entering their email addresses, just like in Google Docs. But performance was a problem.

Vančura made complex designs in Figma, causing the software to slow down, freeze and crash. The Xamarin workers sent Vančura’s files to Figma engineers, who made Figma speedier and more stable.

In 2017, Vančura flew from the Czech Republic, where he lives, to Seattle, and then made the short trek to Microsoft’s headquarters in Redmond. He took the opportunity to show Figma to his team, many of whom were accustomed to working in Photoshop and Illustrator.

“It was amazing. It was like watching Formula 1,” Vančura said. “There were so many mouse pointers on the screen, and everybody designed something, even if it meant they were pasting GIFs or drawing rectangles. All of them were so blown away. I think that was the moment these people figured out this was a huge time saver.”

Gaining traction

Siegel, who had become Microsoft’s head of design for developer services, wanted to get the word out more broadly that Microsoft was evolving and wasn’t stuck to its old isolated ways. In 2018, he posted a manifesto of sorts online.

“We use PCs, Macs, Figma, Sketch, GitHub, JavaScript, ZEIT, and other modern tools to design, prototype, and build the future of software development,” Siegel wrote on Xamarin’s website. There was a link to a Figma file that Microsoft employees could open.

The website reached the front page of Hacker News, a discussion board for software developers.

“This is some incredible self-awareness,” one commenter wrote.

Soon after, Benedikt Lehnert, a Microsoft product design director, told Friedman that the company needed everyone on the same program, whether it was Figma or XD. Microsoft chose Figma, Lehnert said.

Scott Belsky, chief product officer and executive vice president for Creative Cloud at Adobe and then a venture partner at Benchmark, speaks onstage at the TechCrunch Disrupt conference in San Francisco on Sept. 13, 2016.

Steve Jennings | TechCrunch | Getty Images

Vančura said that at Microsoft, “Figma spread across the company so fast that I don’t think Adobe was even able to catch up.”

Figma isn’t shy about going up against an industry heavyweight. On its website, Figma says, “Don’t sync to the cloud with Adobe XD. Work in the cloud with Figma.” It asserts that designers are moving away from Adobe’s Creative Cloud bundle, the product that accounts for 59% of Adobe’s revenue.

in 2020, Adobe added Figma to the list of competitors it publishes in its annual report.

Analysts have raised questions about Figma to Adobe executives on at least three occasions this year. Alex Zukin of Wolfe Research asked during a January fireside chat with Adobe executives Scott Belsky and David Wadhwani if Figma was taking market share.

Belsky, Adobe’s product chief and executive vice president for Creative Cloud, didn’t answer the question directly. But he acknowledged that venture capitalists have been funneling money into the space.

“It is exciting that VCs see the same thing we’re seeing,” Belsky said. “Five-plus years ago, you didn’t see any material dollars going into the creative tools. I think now everyone sees that.”

Belsky said Adobe can take advantage of an opportunity to bring Creative Cloud to the web, which it’s done for Illustrator and Photoshop but not XD, a product that was launched in preview in 2016.

An Adobe spokesperson declined to talk about plans for a web version of XD, and said the company will talk about plans for Creative Cloud at its Max conference in October.

“We do not see an impact to the Photoshop business resulting from players in the product design category,” the spokesperson said. “We developed and have evolved Adobe XD to address the needs of our core design customers, who are designing marketing experiences for screens, rather than the distinct category of product design and development.”

Many challenges

Still, the pressure on Adobe is intensifying.

In the past three months, Figma’s app for iOS devices has consistently ranked above Adobe XD in the graphics and design section of Apple’s App Store, according to figures from Data.ai, formerly known as App Annie.

Wells Fargo analyst Michael Turrin said Figma has potential to expand.

“What Figma is trying to create is more of a broader platform that could become more of a system of record within this market, and that’s why I think this could become more important,” he said.

Figma isn’t the only upstart in the space making waves. An open-source alternative called Penpot, which can automatically generate the underlying source code for designs people make in the software, is also gaining momentum.

Microsoft employees are using Penpot and have contributed to it, said Pablo Ruiz-Muzquiz, who co-founded the project. Of the people who test Penpot, almost 20% are coming from Figma, he said.

Penpot’s code lives on GitHub, which Microsoft owns, under an open-source license, allowing people to download the code, modify it and run it on their own servers. That’s not true of Figma, which keeps its own source code private.

But Figma is evolving. One job description suggests Figma is considering a significant update to its iPad app that would provide a space to make new designs and not just view or share them.

And Figma has been busy expanding its executive ranks. In June, the company promoted Praveer Melwani, its head of business operations and finance, to the finance chief position. The next month, former Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs executive Kate DeLeo joined Figma as vice president of investor relations and business operations.

As the company marches toward an eventual introduction to Wall Street, getting more out of its relationship with Microsoft presents an opportunity for growth. Expanding the number of ways Figma gets used is one avenue.

“It works great as a presentation tool,” Friedman said.

Figma probably won’t ever replace Microsoft’s homegrown PowerPoint software or Adobe’s PDF format, but Field said his product boasts distinct advantages. For one, Figma avoids the problem of the non-stop back-and-forth emailing of a presentation by letting people simply share a link. A Microsoft spokesperson said PowerPoint users can also use links to send documents.

“I’d be surprised if there’s no salespeople at Microsoft that use it. My guess is there’s some,” Field said, regarding Figma. “Is it significant? No, probably not.”

Not yet, anyway.

WATCH: Adobe CEO reacts to Q1 earnings: Our fundamentals continue to be extremely strong

Winchester’s Preview Teases Supernatural’s Origins

Supernatural may be over, but the fight against monsters, demons and everything else sure isn’t.

The CW released the trailer for the Supernatural prequel The Winchesters Aug. 26. Here, we find out more about how Dean (Jensen Ackles) and Sam (Jared Padalecki)’s parents met in 1972.

As John Winchester (Drake Rodger) begins to lose the fight against a particularly nasty monster, his future wife (Meg Donnelly) comes in with a well-aimed kick.

“What’s your name?” John calls after the mysterious woman who saved his life.

“I’m Mary,” she turns around in response.

Mary goes on to explain how she was raised to be a hunter, and the two join forces to complete John’s mission of “saving people, hunting things”—the same words that would drive Dean and Sam, their future sons, throughout the Supernatural series . Supernatural ran for 15 seasons on The CW, from 2005 to 2020.

And though the spin-off is introducing an entirely new cast—including Jojo Fleites as Carlos CervantezDemetria McKinney as Ada Monroe, other Nida Khurshid as Latika Desai—there are some familiar faces. Ackles will reprise his role as Dean, who is searching for answers about his family’s past.

Indian well being advisory for uncommon virus infecting kids

Tomato flu — so called due to the painful red blisters it produces — has so far been detected in more than 100 children across three states since the first case was reported on May 6.

Hindustan Times | Hindustan Times | Getty Images

The emergence of a rare, new viral infection affecting young children has prompted health authorities in India to issue a health advisory after more than 100 cases were discovered in the country.

Tomato flu — so called due to the painful red blisters it produces — has so far been detected in 82 children aged under five in the state of Kerala, where the first case was detected on May 6.

An additional 26 cases have since been reported in neighboring Tamil Nadu state and Odisha in the east, where children as old as nine have been infected.

India’s health ministry has said that the virus is non-life-threatening but issued testing and prevention guidelines to all states this week, urging parents to be extra vigilant in checking their children for symptoms, the Times of India reported.

What is tomato flu?

Tomato flu is a highly contagious viral infection, which spreads via close contact particularly among young children aged under five.

Symptoms include fatigue, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, fever, dehydration, swelling of joints, body aches, and common influenza-like symptoms, as well as the eponymous tomato-like blisters.

Scientists are still trying to identify the route cause of the virus. However, they say “it is not related to SARS-CoV-2 [Covid-19],” despite displaying some similar symptoms, according to an article published last week in British medical journal The Lancet.

More likely is that the virus is an after-effect of chikungunya or dengue fever, two viral diseases transmitted by mosquitos.

Alternatively, it could be a new variant of the viral hand, foot, and mouth disease, a common infectious disease targeting mostly children aged one to five years and immunocompromised adults.

Who can catch it and how?

Children are at increased risk of exposure to tomato flu as viral infections are common in this age group and spread is likely to be through close contact.

They are also at particularly high risk through their use of napkins, touching unclean surfaces, as well as putting things directly into the mouth.

However, older adults could be put at risk if the outbreak is not controlled and transmission limited.

“Given the similarities to hand, foot, and mouth disease, if the outbreak of tomato flu in children is not controlled and prevented, transmission might lead to serious consequences by spreading in adults as well,” the Lancet article said.

Tomato flu is a self-limiting illness, meaning it tends to resolve spontaneously without treatment.

However, health officials have urged people to take precautionary measures to prevent the spread of the outbreak, including isolating suspected cases for five to seven days following the onset of symptoms.

“The best solution for prevention is the maintenance of proper hygiene and sanitization of the surrounding necessities and environment as well as preventing the infected child from sharing toys, clothes, food, or other items with other non-infected children,” the Lancet article said .

Sharon Osbourne says Oz Media founder Carlos Watson lied about funding

Two years ago, Carlos Watson, co-founder and CEO of Ozy Media, told CNBC during a live television broadcast that heavy metal legend Ozzy Osbourne and his wife, music industry manager and former talk show host Sharon Osbourne, became friends with him and invested in his company after a legal battle.

“Fun fact: our friend Ozzy and Sharon sued us briefly, and then we decided to be friends and now they’re investors in Ozy,” Watson said on CNBC at the time. (You can watch the video above.)

It turns out none of that was true, according to Sharon Osbourne, who spoke to CNBC on Thursday just as hedge fund honcho Marc Lasry quit as Ozy Media’s chairman.

Lasry’s resignation, and the revelation from Sharon Osbourne, came days after The New York Times reported that an Ozy executive had posed as a YouTube official on a February call with Goldman Sachs over a potential $40 million investment. Beyond Lasry’s resignation, veteran journalist Katty Kay has resigned from Ozy Media and investor SV Angel has decided it’s giving up its shares in the company.

“This guy is the biggest shyster I have ever seen in my life,” Osbourne said, referring to Watson, just after CNBC answered her phone call. Osbourne said she had reviewed Watson’s claim after CNBC reached out to her team with the details in the wake of the various controversies surrounding Ozy Media.

The Osbournes filed a trademark lawsuit in 2017 over the name Ozy Fest, which is Ozy Media’s annual concert and festival. The Osbournes had for years produced a metal music festival called Ozzfest, which has featured acts such as Ozzy Osbourne’s original band Black Sabbath, Tool and Slayer.

Ozzy Osbourne and Sharon Osbourne announce that Ozzfest 2007 will be free. The announcement was made during a press conference at the Century Plaza hotel in Los Angeles, California on February 6, 2007.

Jason Merritt/TERM | FilmMagic | Getty Images

Sharon Osbourne told CNBC that Watson tried to intimidate her amidst the suit being filed, saying that his company has a ton of resources and could draw out the legal battle so much that the family would have had to continue to pay exorbitant legal fees.

Osbourne said the two sides settled after the couple finished paying around $300,000 in legal fees over the trademark battle between Ozy Media and the Osbournes’ company.

The Wrap reports that court documents filed against Ozy Media at the time claim the Ozy Fest trademarks “are nearly identical in sight, sound, connotation and commercial impression to MLC’s [Monowise Limited Corp.] well-known Ozzfest mark.”

Court documents say the settlement came in 2018. Osbourne shared with CNBC the details of the agreement.

“He couldn’t have the sort of artists that we have on our bill,” Osbourne said, referring to Watson. “So he couldn’t have any rock artists or alternative artists on his bill. Because he was starting to take rap artists and we’ve had a few rap artists on. So I’m like ‘this is getting ridiculous now.’ So, he had to approve the bills with me and he had to approve the advertising with me.”

An Ozy Media spokesperson did not return repeated emails seeking comment on Osbourne’s remarks.

Carlos Watson speaks onstage during HISTORYTalks Leadership & Legacy presented by HISTORY at Carnegie Hall on February 29, 2020 in New York City.

Noam Galai | Getty Images

Watson and his company have been under increasing scrutiny since a report by The New York Times detailed a number of controversies at Ozy Media. The report describes an instance when an Ozy Media executive allegedly impersonated a YouTube representative in a phone call with Goldman Sachs, which was thinking about investing in Watson’s firm. The FBI has reportedly started probing the phone call.

In a tweet Monday, Watson called the Times article a “hitjob.” He hasn’t tweeted since.

Watson, a former MSNBC contributor and CNN host, founded Ozy Media in 2013. The company produces online articles and television programming. It has attracted support from several big-name investors and celebrities, such as former New York Yankees slugger Alex Rodriguez. Joe Biden, Dr. Anthony Fauci and Mark Cuban have appeared at Ozy Fest events.

In 2019, Watson, while sitting next to Ozy investor and its eventual chairman, Lasry, told CNBC that after the lawsuit was settled with the star couple, they became investors in his business. Lasry, a hedge fund manager and co-owner of the NBA champion Milwaukee Bucks, was named chair of Ozy Media’s board in September.

After he was asked whether the Osbournes invested in Ozy, Watson said: “Now they’re investors. They’re part of the family.” He was appearing on CNBC to promote Ozy Fest, which was set to take place in New York at the time. CNBC was the media partner for Ozy Fest 2019, which was canceled due to extreme heat.

Osbourne, herself a longtime TV personality, said that neither she nor her husband have ever been shareholders in the company. Sharon Osbourne left the daytime show “The Talk” this year following a heated conversation on air and an internal investigation.

(L-R) Samantha Bee, Mark Cuban, CEO and Co-Founder Carlos Watson, and Jeb Bush speak onstage during OZY FEST 2017 Presented By OZY.com at Rumsey Playfield on July 22, 2017 in New York City.

Bryan Bedder | Getty Images

“We’re not ever, ever a friend, and we don’t have any interest in his company,” Osbourne said in response to Watson’s claims in the CNBC interview. When asked whether she and her husband have ever invested in Watson’s company, Osbourne said: “You must be joking. No way did we invest in anything.”

Osbourne said her husband, Ozzy Osbourne, has never spoken or met with Carlos Watson, while she and Watson have only spoken over the phone.

“He’s insane,” Osbourne said about Watson. She noted that during the legal battle he did offer her shares of the company but she declined.

“To be honest, he did say, ‘Well we’ll give you shares in the company, but I said ‘your company is worth nothing.’ He said, ‘We have all this backing. All these billionaire people. And you know we can keep on suing you and I can give you some shares.’ But I’m like, ‘Shares in what? What do you do?'”

Watson, according to Osbourne, repeatedly tried these tactics during the conversations.

“Then he tells me he’s got billions behind him because his main shareholder of the company is the wife of a guy that died [and ran] Apple,” Osbourne said, referring to Emerson Collective’s Laurene Powell Jobs. He also used Powell Jobs’ wealth as an intimidation factor, according to Osbourne. “We’ve got her money behind us. I’ll fight you all the way,” Osbourne said Watson told her.

“I’m like, ‘But it’s not right you’ve stolen this name,'” Osbourne said.

Watson has appeared on CNBC numerous times, including in January of this year — when he was on a panel with Ben Smith, The New York Times editor who broke the story over the weekend about the Goldman Sachs call.

— CNBC’s Dan Mangan contributed to this article.

Restaurant homeowners throughout the nation are pushing to make avenue meals everlasting

The pandemic pushed consumers out of dining rooms and onto sidewalks, parking lots and open streets. Now comes the urge from restaurant owners to keep their outdoor dining, tents and sheds forever.

In July, the San Francisco board of directors voted for the permanent introduction of restaurant parklets. Atlanta and Philadelphia are among the cities that are weighing similar measures. New York City is working on the technical details for more sustainable rules for outdoor dining after Mayor Bill de Blasio made his Open Dining program permanent a year ago.

Not only big cities are thinking about change. The city of Fairfax, California, conducted a survey in August, open to residents, visitors and businesses, to determine whether restaurants are allowed to operate their restaurant parklets on a permanent basis. Of the 987 respondents, 91% said they support the measure.

David Ruiz opened Stillwater Restaurant in Fairfax with his wife in June 2020. The site had a back patio, but when Fairfax began approving parklet structures, Stillwater built one of their own on the street, which is about a third of the restaurant’s total capacity.

“It sure is a game changer,” he said. “We probably have between 30 and 100 people out there every day.”

Veselka, an integral part of the Ukrainian Village in Manhattan, built an outdoor structure that increased its capacity by about 50.

“That really helped me,” said co-owner Jason Birchard. “Without these 11 tables, a total of 50 seats, it definitely deserves it.”

The additional sales at these tables have meant less pressure for Veselka to return to its pre-pandemic 24-hour service, despite the city easing the curfew on restaurants. Staff problems and noisy crowds until late at night would have made it difficult to resume those hours.

While it is popular with restaurants to make alfresco dining a fixture, there are some opponents. Some restaurants have filed complaints about noisy outdoor customers and the loss of parking space.

“Initially there was a lot of opposition to parking,” said Pietro Gianni, co-owner of Storico Fresco and Forza Storico restaurants in Atlanta. “I’d rather have four parklets in front of my building where people sit and you can see the restaurant than four Yukons or a wall of SUVs.”

In New York City, de Blasio has defended the loss of approximately 8,550 parking spaces by crediting the program with saving 100,000 restaurant jobs. The city had around 3 million spaces on its streets in 2019.

“It’s small, but it’s still a problem that needs to be addressed,” said Andrew Rigie, executive director of the New York City Hospitality Alliance, a restaurant advocate. “As many people say, parking is for one car, and usually it’s temporary, compared to how many seats can be put in a parking lot and how many jobs it creates.”

Opponents also complain about the safety of the dining facilities. On Wednesday, a garbage truck driving around Manhattan accidentally picked up a street-side restaurant with a person inside and dragged it down the street.

Hygiene is another issue.

“You keep seeing rats out of the shed,” Cue Up NYC member Stuart Waldman told CNBC’s Kate Rogers in August. Cue Up NYC, or Coalition United for Equitable Urban Policy, is an alliance of neighborhood organizations that oppose the city’s outdoor eating program.

Even as cities try to solve these problems, restaurants may find that customers don’t want to sit outside all year round. Last winter, many braved the frigid temperatures instead of eating inside, prompting operators to invest in propane heaters and other features to keep customers warm. Veselka, for example, has somewhat enclosed its outdoor facilities.

This year, many restaurateurs plan to keep their street restaurants running throughout the winter, although they can change their plans depending on demand. Covid-19 vaccines have made many consumers feel like they are eating indoors again, although a new variant or a further surge in cases could change their minds again.

“I think some people will never go to the dining rooms again,” said Gianni.

Authorities verify they discovered a physique believed to be Miya Marcano

The search for the missing 19-year-old Miya Marcano ended on Saturday morning with the worst possible result. Authorities reportedly found a body about 30 kilometers from her first disappearance. According to Orlando Sentinel, the coroner did not provide an official ID by Saturday afternoon, but police found a purse with Miya’s ID near the body. Her family was immediately informed of the discovery.

“As a community, as a sheriff, as a father, we mourn Miya,” said Orange County Sheriff John Mina. “We cannot imagine the pain and agony of Miya’s parents, family, loved ones, friends, and really our entire community that they have gone through and will continue to go through.”

When the news first broke on Saturday, authorities had not yet confirmed the cause of death. Sheriff John said the body was found around 10:45 am in a wooded area near Tymber Skan on the Lake Apartments. No description was given of the condition in which the body was found.

Disappearance and main suspect details

Miya went missing on September 24th after finishing her work shift at Arden Villas Luxury Apartments in Orlando, Florida. Miya had booked a flight for the same evening. She was supposed to be returning to Fort Lauderdale to visit her family, but she never made it. Authorities previously announced that she was last seen around 5 p.m. that day.

Days after her disappearance, a caretaker at Arden Villas became an interesting person. Apparently Armando Manuel Caballero had shown a romantic interest in Miya, but she repeatedly denied his advances. Investigators found evidence that a master key was used to enter Miya’s home at 4:30 p.m. on September 24. This means that someone who the police believe is Armando entered her apartment 30 minutes before the end of their shift at the apartment complex.

According to the findings, an arrest warrant for burglary was issued against Armando. However, he was found dead by apparent suicide. His Monday was found Monday at his Seminole County home. At that time the authorities said he had been dead for some time. “

How the police found the body and what’s next

Authorities rely on Armando’s cell phone pings to track his movements after Miya’s disappearance. Records show that Armando was “in or near” the Tymber Skan on the Lake apartments for 20 minutes between 8 p.m. and 9 p.m. on the day Miya went missing. In addition to the phone recordings, investigators found that the 27-year-old suspect had previously lived in Tymber Skan’s apartments.

“We’re not looking for other people,” said Sheriff John on Saturday. “We quite clearly believe that Armando Caballero is responsible for this crime.”

Sheriff John also made it clear that nothing in the phone record indicates that he “ever went back there before he killed himself”. Next, a coroner does an autopsy to positively identify Miya Marcano and determine the cause of death.

“It was tragic, it was terrible, we weren’t looking forward to it,” said Miya’s grandmother Violet Deville. “Even though some of us had it in mind, we still had the hope that we would find her alive.”

Would you like updates straight to your text inbox? Call us at 917-722-8057 or click here to join!

2021 QVC Buyer Alternative Magnificence Awards: 16 Should-Have Successful Merchandise

We independently selected these products because we love them, and we hope you do too. Shop with E! has affiliate relationships, so we may get a commission if you purchase something through our links. Items are sold by the retailer, not E!

Attention all beauty lovers: This award show will raise some eyebrows for all the right reasons.

On Saturday, Oct. 2, the winners for the 2021 QVC Customer Choice Beauty Awards were announced during a live broadcast hosted by Jane Treacy and Shawn Killinger.

Dozens of categories including cosmetics, haircare and skincare were celebrated. As for how the winners were calculated? They were all chosen by shoppers all across the country who trust QVC for the latest and greatest and best in beauty.  

In case you missed the show, we compiled some of the biggest winners of the night. Whether you’re shopping for Beekman 1802’s beloved goat milk hand cream or philosophy’s amazing fragrances, chances are you will find the perfect gift for friends or even yourself. 

Do not know how you can get staff again in

CEOs are at the end of their wisdom figuring out how to get their employees back into the office as high levels of Covid infections persist even 18 months after the pandemic. This is the view shared by CNBC’s David Faber and Jim Cramer, who regularly speak with business leaders about return to work challenges.

“I still hear a litany of frustration from those who run large organizations because they are unable to get people back into the office,” Faber said Friday in an exchange with his Squawk on the Street co -Moderator Cramer. “I had lunch and dinner last night,” said Faber. “It’s just a never-ending topic. Some of these CEOs are at the end of how they deal with it. ‘How do I get people back in.'”

Cramer said a possible approval of a new Covid antiviral pill from Merck and Ridgeback Biotherapeutics could be the “game changer we’ve been looking for” to make people less worried about getting sick at work to have to go to the office. Pfizer and the Swiss pharmaceutical company Roche are also racing to develop Covid drugs.

“When you talk to companies involved in the supply chain, it is often about absenteeism,” said Cramer. “People are scared. Maybe you will show up for work when it makes you less afraid. “

Merck and Ridgeback announced on Friday that they are planning to apply for an emergency permit in the US for their oral treatment for Covid after announcing “compelling results” in a late-stage clinical trial with unvaccinated participants. The drug molnupiravir reduced the risk of hospitalization or death in patients with mild or moderate Covid cases by around 50%. If approved by regulators, molnupiravir could be the first oral antiviral treatment for Covid.

Faber asked if people who did not want to be vaccinated against Covid would take an antiviral pill. “This is Merck. You know how to do exams, ”Faber said to Cramer, who nodded his head. “We wouldn’t sit here and question it. But there will certainly be those who do, I’m sure.”

The delta variant has recently led to a further increase in infections in the United States. While cases appeared to have peaked last month, the last seven-day average of new daily infections was still 114,243. New Covid deaths averaged 1,957 in the past seven days after hitting a recent high of over 2,000, the worst since March.

Corporate America has grappled with volatile cases in seizures and beginnings on how to get their employees back to work safely and whether to impose vaccination regulations.

  • On Friday, PwC announced that it will offer all US employees, nearly 40,000 of them who can telework, the ability to work virtually from anywhere in the continent of the United States in the future.
  • Many big tech names like Apple, Amazon, Google, Facebook, and Microsoft from Alphabet have postponed their return to work plans.
  • Salesforce co-founder and CEO Marc Benioff said Tuesday, “We’re not all going back” to the office. Large corporation CEOs call him and say they want their employees to return to the office, Benioff said in an interview on stage at the Code Conference in Beverly Hills, California. Benioff previously told CNBC that he expects 50 to 60% of Salesforce employees to work from home even after the pandemic.
  • Wall Street financial firms have largely recalled their office workers, with many of them having hybrid schedules. Goldman Sachs is also demanding that employees be vaccinated in order to return to their offices, following similar edicts from Morgan Stanley and Citigroup.