How Taylor Swift's Denver visit will impact local economy
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:30:47 GMT
DENVER (KDVR) -- Financial experts are predicting this weekend's two Taylor Swift concerts will bring in an estimated $40 to $50 million to the Denver economy.“Well, I think this is bigger than Garth Brooks,” Metropolitan State University of Denver’s Distinguished Professor of Economics Kishore Kulkarni said.Kulkarni estimates Friday and Saturday night's concerts will surpass the amount of money Brooks generated, a few years back, when the country star also played at Empower Field at Mile High. No ‘Taygating’ without tickets at Eras Tour this weekend Kulkarni factored in money spent for parking, food and lodging into the overall economic impact.“I think these possible effects for the city, are welcome effects,” he added.Both concerts have long since been sold out. Kulkarni estimates Swift will make $5 to $7 million per concert.Woman scammed 3 times in 1 week
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:30:47 GMT
GOLDEN, Colo. (KDVR) -- Law enforcement continues to crack down on scams targeting victims on social media platforms, phone calls and emails.Tonya Goodman told FOX31 that she knew something seemed suspicious when her Facebook page appeared to be hijacked, so she called a number offered by someone saying they could help. The person asked for her personal information.“It wasn't even Facebook contacting me it was the scammer contacting me,” Goodman said.Goodman said she was victimized by what's referred to as a gateway scam. The operation uses the initial personal information to unlock access to bank accounts and financial apps.“(They took) money off all of my accounts and I actually helped them," Goodman, who lost $1,400, said. Denver renter priced out of his 20-year home amid rising rent Goodman said she came forward to warn others to verify information and disregard unsolicited offers for assistance.“They can empty your bank account, you might not be able to pay your rent, your b...Editorial: Ball’s in Ben & Jerry’s court to give back Vermont land
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:30:47 GMT
Great news for Ben & Jerry’s: the virtue-signaling ice cream company has a chance to put its money where its mouth is.After flexing social justice warrior cred with the tone-deaf Independence Day post: “This 4th of July, it’s high time we recognize that the US exists on stolen Indigenous land and commit to returning it,” the company faced backlash and threats of a boycott.Now, however, Ben & Jerry’s has a chance to make amends with the some of the indigenous people whose land was stolen, personally.As Newsweek reported, an indigenous tribe descended from the Native American nation that originally controlled the Vermont land the Ben & Jerry’s headquarters is located on would be interested in taking it back, its chief has said.Don Stevens, chief of the Nulhegan Band of The Coosuk Abenaki Nation — one of four descended from the Abenaki that are recognized in Vermont — told Newsweek it was “always interested in reclaiming the stewardship of our lands...Jury picked in trial of Las Vegas police officer accused of stealing $165k in trio of casino heists
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:30:47 GMT
By RIO YAMAT (Associated Press)LAS VEGAS (AP) — A Las Vegas police officer accused of carrying out a trio of casino heists will face trial after a jury was finalized Monday afternoon.Opening statements are set to begin Tuesday with prosecutors for the federal government expected to paint Caleb Rogers as a gambling addict who grew increasingly desperate under a crush of debt. The trial is anticipated to last through the end of the week.Rogers, 35, is accused of stealing nearly $165,000 in the robberies over four months at casinos off the Las Vegas Strip. In at least one of the heists, he was armed with a weapon issued by the police department, prosecutors have said. The officer’s attorney, Richard Pocker, has said the government’s evidence allegedly tying Rogers to two of the robberies is weak. He accused the FBI and Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department detectives of pressuring two people, including Rogers’ brother, into identifying him as the suspect in t...Manzo: Julie Su unfit for Secretary of Labor post
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:30:47 GMT
Pressure is mounting in the Senate for President Biden to withdraw his nomination of Julie Su for secretary of labor — and for good reason. Su has a long history of supporting policies that would harm businesses.During her tenure as California’s labor secretary, Su oversaw the largest unemployment fraud in the state’s history. Under her watch, the Employment Development Department (EDD) wasted nearly $40 billion in fraudulent claims, leaving many struggling to make ends meet. To make matters worse, more than $1 billion of those claims were sent to criminals, including death row inmates.Thanks to Su’s negligence, the EDD owes the federal government $17 billion for money borrowed during the pandemic.Su’s record of incompetence expands far beyond her failures with EDD. Su was a vocal advocate for the Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA). This unique law allows employees to sue their employers on behalf of the state for labor violations, costing California billions of dollars.PAGA resul...‘Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning:’ Same old, same old
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:30:47 GMT
“Mission Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One,” which is 2 hours and 43 minutes long (just typing the title is exhausting), is the sequel to “Mission Impossible – Fallout” (2018) and the 7th film in the MI series. “Dead Reckoning, Part Two” was filmed alongside “Part One.” The series began in 1996 (Cruise was 34). Are your arteries hardening as you read this? It’s based on the 1960s CBS television show with an ensemble cast and a thrilling, instrumental theme song composed by Lalo Schifrin.The new film’s cast is still led by 61-year-old Tom Cruise, still doing his own stunts, Rebecca Ferguson returns as the outlandishly-named Ilsa Faust, also Ving Rhames as tech wizard Luther Stickell, scene-stealing Simon Pegg as another tech wizard and a master of disguise Benji Dunn, and Henry Czerny is back as IMF head Eugene Kittridge. Vanessa Kirby, looking out of her mind most of the time, returns as the ”White Widow,” Alanna Mitsopolis, an arms dealer who cares not ab...Dig begins for the remains of children at a long-closed Native American boarding school
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:30:47 GMT
By TRISHA AHMED and CHARLIE NEIBERGALL (Associated Press)GENOA, Neb. (AP) — In a remote patch of a long-closed Native American boarding school, near a canal and some railroad tracks, Nebraska’s state archeologist and two teammates filled buckets with dirt and sifted through it as if they were searching for gold.They’re trying to find the bodies of children who died at the school and have been lost for decades, a mystery that archeologists aim to unravel as they dig in a central Nebraska field that was part of the sprawling campus a century ago.People toting shovels, trowels and even smaller tools are searching the unmarked site where ground-penetrating radar suggested a possible location for the cemetery of the Genoa Indian Industrial School. Genoa was part of a national system of more than 400 Native American boarding schools that attempted to assimilate Indigenous people into white culture by separating children from their families and cutting them off from their...Girls golf All-Scholastics and league All-Stars
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:30:47 GMT
GOLF ALL-SCHOLASTICSEmma Abramson (Sandwich)Isabel Brozena (North Reading)Harper Capilli (Duxbury)Nora Charnley (Bishop Feehan)Hanley Correia (Bishop Feehan)Lillian Guleserian (Westwood)Julia Imai (Brookline)Jillian Johnson (Notre Dame Hingham)Piper Jordan (Hingham)Keira Joshi (Ashland)Mya Murphy (Sturgis West)Katie Ng (Wellesley)Carol Pignato (Bishop Feehan)Erika Redmond (Concord-Carlisle)Maddie Smith (Westford Academy)Molly Smith (Westford Academy)Victoria Veator (Ursuline)Champa Visetsin (Lincoln-Sudbury)EMMA ABRAMSONSANDWICHAbramson concluded a standout career by placing third in the South Sectionals and tied for 12th at the MIAA State Championships. In the fall, she was a mainstay on the boys team that won the Cape and Islands League title and finished third at the Div. 3 States. She won the Massachusetts Girls Junior Amateur Championship as well as the Massachusetts Women’s Stroke Play Championship for the Baker Cup in 2022. The valedictorian, Class President and member of the...Dear Abby: Hubby’s sneezes heard ’round the world
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:30:47 GMT
Dear Abby: My husband sneezes really loud and it’s kind of embarrassing. What should I do about this? I told him he should see a doctor because it happens a lot. — Married to a NoisemakerDear Married: People sneeze for various reasons, not all of them allergy-related. Your husband should discuss it with his doctor because the solution could be something simple. If he’s unwilling, then earplugs might be the simplest solution — for you — if you can grab them when he starts going “Aaaaa …” before the “choo” escapes.Dear Abby: I’m having a tough time with people who video chat and play videos on their cellphones. It’s always at a volume you can hear from 30 feet away, and it happens when I’m dining at a bar or sitting in a restaurant, etc. It’s distracting, intrusive and really annoying. It’s as if this behavior is now acceptable, when it’s not — at least to me.Any suggestions on confro...UN warns its development goals for 2030 are in trouble and 575 million people will remain very poor
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:30:47 GMT
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — In a grim report, the U.N. warned Monday that at the current rate of global progress 575 million people will still be living in extreme poverty and 84 million children won’t be going to school in 2030 – and it will take 286 years to reach equality between men and women.The report on progress in achieving 17 wide-ranging U.N. goals adopted by world leaders in 2015 to improve life for the world’s more than 7 billion people said that only 15% of some 140 specific targets that experts evaluated are on track to be reached by the end of the decade.Close to half the targets are moderately or severely off track, it said, and of those 30% have either seen no movement at all or regressed including key targets on poverty, hunger and climate.The ambitious goals for 2030 include ensuring that hunger is eradicated and nobody lives on less than $2.15 a day which is the extreme poverty line, providing every child with a quality primary and secondary school education, ach...Latest news
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