Not this again…. Republican Commissioner Denies Being Racist Because He Has A Black Friend It’s really not surprising anymore at this point but, here’s yet ANOTHER recent instance where a Republican party affiliate used a racial slur when addressing a crowd in a professional setting. via Gawker Another day, another Republican official uses a racist term “from their youth” that hasn’t been in use for decades. County Commissioner Jim Gile, 68, of Saline County, Kansas, was in a study session with his fellow commissioners when the subject of hiring an architect to design the repairs for the county’s Road and Bridge Department building came up. Gile, a first-term commissioner who started serving in January, told the county that he preferred to hire an architect over having someone “n*gger-rigging it.” And just like Rep. [Don]Young, Gile too later blamed his “bad choice of words” on having “grown up” around the term. “I am not a prejudiced person,” Gile said in his apology. “I have built Habitat homes for colored people.” He added that he has a close black friend “whom he regards as a sister.” We honestly didn’t think it was possible to say the main two things that signify that you’re racist against black people in one breath. But this guy pulled it off. Not only did he used his probably only black friend as a reason why he should get let off the hook, he also referred to black people as “colored” ……in a serious tone……in 2013. SMH. Shutterstock
After day 1 he’ll wish he were dead. Atlanta Serial Sexual Attacker Sentenced To 8 Life Sentences Plus 130 Years Via AJC A convicted DeKalb County serial rapist was sentenced to 375 years in prison. Gary Wendale Mincey, 36, won’t be eligible for parole and will die in prison for raping or attempting to rape five women during a six-week period in the fall of 2011. “These women’s lives have forever been changed by the heinous acts of a serial rapist,” said DeKalb County Chief Assistant District Attorney Nicole Marchand Golden. “We hope this guilty verdict and sentence will bring some form of relief to each one of our victims and (their) loved ones. There is a monster who no longer roams the streets of DeKalb County.” Last month, a DeKalb County jury found Mincey guilty of all 17 charges against him – rape, sodomy, sexual battery, false imprisonment and armed robbery. On Tuesday morning, a DeKalb County Superior Court judge handed Mincey the maximum possible sentence of eight life sentences, plus 135 years. Cases like this make us REALLY wish that the U.S. believed in cruel and unusual punishment. Image via WSB-TV
Confirmed: I was definitely wrong about McKayla Maroney . This girl’s serious trouble. Because even though she’s still got almost a year to go until she turns 18, she keeps doing photoshoots like this one. Anyway, unless you want to watch McKayla’s next Olympics from the rec room in the county jail, I suggest you just move on. Same goes for the video version of this shoot too. Related Articles: McKayla Maroney Teaches The Dougie Gymnast McKayla Maroney’s Teenage Legs Maria Menounos & McKayla Maroney Are Not Impressed I Want To Bang Minka Kelly
Chief Keef has been arrested in his hometown of Chicago on a probation violation. The 17-year-old rapper (real name Keith Cozart) appeared in Cook County…
The police are still trying to put the pieces of this puzzle together. Via the Atlanta Journal Constitution : A 19-year-old found shot to death near his Polk County home was supposed to testify in an upcoming trial, according to police. Desmond Ray Kinnemore, of Rockmart, was supposed to meet this week with the county’s District Attorney, Rockmart police Chief Keith Sorrells told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution on Thursday. But Tuesday morning, Kinnemore was found dead in ditch near his Morgan Valley Road home, according to police. A 911 caller reported hearing gunshots around 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, but didn’t see the shooting, Sorrells said. When investigators arrived, Kinnemore was dead of an apparent gunshot wound, Sorrells said. It was the city’s first homicide since New Year’s Day 2011. No suspects had been named Thursday, Sorrells said. “We haven’t had much luck with this one,” Sorrells said. But investigators were working to determine if Kinnemore’s planned testimony in an upcoming trial could have played a role in his death. Details about that case were not available late Thursday. Kinnemore was no stranger to law enforcement in Polk County, according to arrest records. His record includes eight arrests, most recently Dec. 11 on drug charges. This sounds shady to us! Images via shutterstock/twitter
Cobb County police have charged a Powder Springs woman with sending death threats to Atlanta rapper Yung Teddy (real name Justin Mitchell), who was shot…
Blaec Lammer was arrested after admitting he planned to shoot up a local movie theater. By Kara Warner Blaec James Lammers Photo: Polk County Sheriff’s Dept.
As rollicking and rough as a drive down a dirt road with no suspension, Lawless is a tale of three-bootlegging brothers from Prohibition-era Franklin County, Virginia, who are, in the words of one character, some “hard-ass crackers.” Directed by Australia’s John Hillcoat ( The Road ) and written by musician Nick Cave (who’s adapted Matt Bondurant’s historical novel The Wettest County in the World ), Lawless is, like their last collaboration The Proposition , a kind of remixed Western at heart. It’s a story in which the law and the outlaws are equally outsized and dangerous — and a world in which the fighting has nothing to do with keeping order and everything to do with displays of strength. “It is not the violence that sets men apart. It is the distance that he is prepared to go,” declares oldest brother Forrest Bondurant (Tom Hardy), the hardest boiled of them all. To say that Lawless (or The Proposition ) romanticizes violence isn’t quite right — every tommy-gun bullet wound and knife wound is sickeningly visceral, and when a character gets his throat cut the man doing the deed has to saw through resisting flesh. But the film does relish and find lyricism in these tribal philosopher psychopaths who use force with the measured anticipation of an oenophile savoring a sip of wine. The sheer appreciation Lawless has for its characters and its setting makes it a pleasure to settle into, even though the film can be carelessly formless and feel like a rough draft that was never sculpted into something more meaningful. As Jack Bondurant, the youngest of the three brothers and the one most eager to prove himself, Shia LaBeouf, is both the primary focus of the film and its narrator — an unfortunate thing, since he’s also the character we least want to spend time with. Forrest is so tough he’s developed a mythology around him, that even he might believe, about being invincible — and given the ordeal he survives in this film, there might be something to that. Middle sibling Howard (Jason Clarke) is huge and half-feral, especially when he’s on one of his benders. But Jack’s been kept on the outside of the family business, allowed only to be the driver as the brothers travel the county, dispensing corn whiskey. That changes when an act of aggression by two out-of-towners gives him the opportunity to make a deal with gangster Floyd Banner (a gleeful Gary Oldman) after almost dying at his hands. At the core of Lawless is the escalating conflict between the Bondurant brothers and a corrupt Chicago lawman named Charlie Rakes (Guy Pearce) who’s coming down hard on the county to get protection money from its many moonshiners. But there are plenty of detours taken: Jack woos preacher’s daughter Bertha (Mia Wasikowska) and starts up his own stills with the disabled Cricket (Dane DeHaan). Forrest makes sparks with dancer-turned-waitress Maggie (Jessica Chastain). Lawless is really about the adventures of the Bondurants and their friends and foes during Prohibition, and the characters are so compelling it would really be enough to just spend time in their presence. Forrest in particular is a memorable contradiction: Aside from his flashes of savagery, Hardy maintains an almost grandfatherly air. Clad in cardigans and prone to muttering, he refuses to step down to anyone and yet, is utterly undone by Maggie’s arrival in his life. As Rakes, Pearce is almost too outsized for the film to contain him. With his blackened, immaculately pomaded hair, parted dramatically down the center, and his pale eyebrows, he looks like a cross between Crispin Glover and Voldemort. He wields his vague sexuality — “You’re a peach,” he croons to Jack before punching him in the face — like a threat, mincing in his flawless suit right before delivering a ruthless beating, then ceremoniously peeling off his blood-stained leather gloves. It’s a unique performance, albeit so mannered it almost rends the already accommodating fabric of the film. Factor in the prevalence of international actors in the cast and the unfocused nature of the narrative,and Lawless seems to take place in an impressionistic space rather than a historical one. It’s Charlie and Forrest that we want to see have a showdown, though it’s Jack who more often ends up in the former’s crosshairs. It’s not LaBeouf’s fault that his character is the flimsiest. The story keeps giving him foolish things to do to bring around more action, including accidentally leading the police to the family’s stills. His role as catalyst eventually becomes irritating because we don’t want the story to move along. The world that Lawless presents is so vivid and pleasing that we want to linger over the details. It’s a film that finds delicate beauty in the image of someone bleeding out in the snow, and turns a drunken, impulsive visit to church service into an overwhelming sensory experience. The appeal of Lawless is not the story it tells but rather the world that it creates. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.