Tag Archives: discipline

People Ain’t Isht: Three Women Popped By One-Time For Brutally Beating And Choking 14-Year-Old Girl After She Was Suspended From School

We heard of disciplining children, but this is a little extreme. Girl Beaten And Choked By Women For Being Suspended From School They had the nerve to smile in the mugshot too? According to NY Daily News: A 14-year-old Florida girl was slapped, kicked and choked, and then forced to take off her clothes so she could be beaten by belts after she was suspended from school, police said. The Volusia County Sheriff’s Office arrested three women in a graphic report of child discipline. Police responded to the house Friday after a passerby saw the women chase the girl outside their Deltona home. When police arrived the girl was only wearing her bra and panties and was severely beaten, authorities said. The victim was treated at a hospital for multiple cuts and welts and was turned over to the Florida Department of Children and Families, police said. Ishiyah McGhee, 30, and Janine McGhee, 39, and Moriyah McGhee, 32, were charged with child abuse with intent to cause bodily harm. Ishiyah and Janine were holding belts and breathing heavily when officers arrived, police said. The three suspects were taken to Volusia County Branch Jail in Daytona Beach and have since been released, according to the department’s website. Ishiyah and Moriyah created unusual mug shots, as they were smiling when police took their pictures. Police did not release the relationships of the suspects and the victim. The women went to the girl’s school Friday morning for a meeting about the girl’s suspension, police said. After the meeting the discipline began. They allegedly began beating the child in the parking lot as they took her away from the school. The women slapped the victim, shoved her against cars and choked her by grabbing her necklace, police said. SMH. Only in Florida. Volusia County Corrections

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People Ain’t Isht: Three Women Popped By One-Time For Brutally Beating And Choking 14-Year-Old Girl After She Was Suspended From School

Tell ‘Em Why You Mad Son! Study Shows People Who Vent Their Anger Live Longer Lives

Here’s a lil FYI for ya! If you mad be mad cuz it might add an additional two years to your life! A new study published in the Health Psychologies journal by a team of German researchers shows that people who release their anger live an average of two years longer than those who hold their tempers in. The study followed 6,000 people, primarily Italians and Spanish folks and found that “repressors,” the patients who internalized their emotion, often experienced an elevated pulse which increases the risk of high blood pressure, heart disease and other medical problems. In findings published in the journal Health Psychologies, the analysis of 6,000 patients showed those who internalized anxiety ran the risk of an elevated pulse — increasing the risk of high blood pressure, heart disease and other ailments. On a positive note, repressors were found to recover from illness more quickly — likely due to their discipline. Shutterstock

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Tell ‘Em Why You Mad Son! Study Shows People Who Vent Their Anger Live Longer Lives

SMH…Texas Teacher Locks Kindergarten Student Up In A Dark Room As Punishment

The boys teacher gave him a ‘time out’ and forgot all about him. His parents had no idea what happened until their son didn’t come home after school…SMH. According to The Houston Chronicle , the teacher hasn’t lost her job…yet: A kindergarten teacher locked a 5-year-old boy in a small, dark room alone at the end of a school day then forgot the child there for over an hour, according to a southwestern Idaho father. School officials said Friday they were investigating after hearing from James Cagle, who says that when his wife found their son the boy was crying and had urinated on himself. “He was scared,” Cagle told Boise television station KTVB. “You know just think about that,” he added. “A 5-year-old boy.” Cagle said he and his wife panicked when their son didn’t come home from his morning kindergarten class Wednesday. About 45 minutes after he was supposed to be home, they headed to Washington Elementary School to look for him. Cagle said his wife and a school secretary found the boy crying and afraid in the small room in the dark, where he had apparently been for around an hour and a half after the teacher put him there for misbehaving. “I know that if I locked my child in a room long enough for him to urinate on himself, I’d be going to jail or child protective services would dang sure be here taking him out of my house that night,” Cagle said. School officials dispute that the room was locked, saying the teacher would not have had a key. Assistant District Superintendent Monica White also noted that the door to the room has a large window, which allows light in from the hallway. Still, officials acknowledge that the discipline was inappropriate. The teacher “should not have done that,” said District Superintendent Tim Rosandick. “That’s not a preferred practice,” Rosandick added. “That is not what we would have wanted her to do.” This is a damn shame! Images via shutterstock

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SMH…Texas Teacher Locks Kindergarten Student Up In A Dark Room As Punishment

REVIEW: Eva Mendes Brings Warmth — and the Hotcha-Cha Factor — to Girl in Progress

Teenage Ansiedad (Cierra Ramirez) is lacking in role models. Her father’s unknown, her best friend (Raini Rodriguez) is faithful but a little dull, and her mother Grace (Eva Mendes) is a hotcha-cha mess who dates married dudes and behaves less like a mom than a deadbeat roommate. So when her English teacher (Patricia Arquette, vital in a too-brief role) introduces the concept of the coming-of-age narrative, hyper-precocious Ansiedad decides to use it as a kind of emancipation blueprint. Directed by Patricia Riggen ( Under the Same Moon ), Girl In Progress starts out breezy, making wacky archetypes of the overachieving latchkey kid and her appallingly irresponsible mom. Odd-jobbing Grace shrugs about finishing the cereal (and the milk) and forgets about her child’s existence whenever her current philandering squeeze (Matthew Modine) swings into view. Ansiedad resolves to apply her discipline to a teenaged trajectory so clichéd that it’s easily converted into a giant flow chart on her bedroom wall. I got a little ahead of the script (by Hiram Martinez) when Ansiedad has her light bulb moment in English class, thinking perhaps the daughter might use a set of literary conventions to finally midwife her mother into adulthood. Instead the narrative splits off into parallel parts, similar to the way Riggen divided Under the Same Moon between the story of a Mexican woman laboring as a Los Angeles housekeeper and that of her son’s journey from Mexico to find her. Ansiedad begins acting out her acting out, ticking off bullet points (ditch your old friends; infiltrate the cool circle; offer the alpha babe your virginity) like items on a grocery list. Were the conceit a little more genre- or source material-specific — if the picture followed some overarching inspiration the way Clueless played on Emma , say, or if it featured some of the alter-ego goofing of  Youth in Revolt or the self-conscious twistiness of The Cabin in the Woods — the plot’s terms would have been more firmly grounded and we might have been brought closer to Ansiedad’s logic. Ramirez’s bad girl schtick is occasionally amusing (“I’m out of control; catch you later,” she deadpans at one point) but the idea that she would consciously risk becoming her mother just to get away from her never feels convincing. Meanwhile, Grace’s apparently bottomless self-absorption is well played by Mendes, who has always infused her man-candy roles with warmth and a weary intelligence behind her eyes. Both are on display when Grace’s latest relationship implodes after she’s confronted with an indifference to her daughter that equals and maybe even surpasses her own. At this point Girl in Progress  attempts to go deep: The best friend acts out for real and Ansiedad heads for the bus station to earn her runaway badge. Riggen doesn’t find a tonal equilibrium at this new level, though, and everything goes wobbly as Mendes and Ramirez are forced into what feels like a false moment of repentance and reconciliation. Girl in Progress feels a little trapped by its own conceits: It plays with the idea that all rebellion is in some sense performed and makes a caricature out of the immature, attention-hungry mother, but it never liberates its characters from their molds. I wanted to believe that Grace suddenly straightens up and heads to school and Ansiedad finally gets the love and care she deserves, but was left with the feeling that their movie was still a few milestones short of full maturity. Follow Michelle Orange on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Eva Mendes Brings Warmth — and the Hotcha-Cha Factor — to Girl in Progress

Maria More’s Midday Motivation | Get Out Of Your Way

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Most of the shadows of this life are caused by our standing in our own sunshine. ~Ralph Waldo Emerson Its easy to blame your worries on others but the truth is: the only person who can keep you from being happy is…YOU! Doubt, lack of discipline, laziness and negative thinking can block you from becoming the person you want to be. Take responsibility for your choices and don’t stand in the way of your success!

Maria More’s Midday Motivation | Get Out Of Your Way

Amy Lee Skates To Detention On ‘When I Was 17’

Evanescence singer, Theophilus London and Chris Klein featured on new episode, airing Saturday at 11 a.m. ET on MTV. By Nuzhat Naoreen Amy Lee on “When I Was 17” Photo: MTV From accomplished vocalist to skilled pianist, Evanescence singer Amy Lee has plenty of talents to boast. But in the latest episode of “When I Was 17,” airing Saturday, Amy reveals another skill that might surprise her fans: roller skating. In the episode, the singer-songwriter recounts how skating around her high school hallways landed her in some serious trouble. “When I was 17, our school had really slick floors. There was this really big hall, and it was perfect for roller skating,” the singer says. So, Amy decided to take advantage of the situation. “The halls are empty when people are in class, and if it’s just study hall or art or whatever, then why not go for a little skate?” Her “little skate” however wasn’t without its consequences. “I don’t know why I thought that that would be good,” she says. “So, I was skating by myself. Total nerd. And some other teacher was in the hall, and I skated by, and she was like, ‘Detention!’ ” While detention is a pretty common punishment for misbehaving high school students, it caught Amy’s father off-guard. “It was a little bit of a big deal. She got in trouble, and Amy typically never got in trouble,” says her father, John. Of course, even back in high school, Amy found a way to translate her experience with the teacher who sent her to detention into something creative. “One of my art pieces after that was her getting skated over by a giant skate,” Amy says. “When I Was 17,” also featuring Theophilus London and Chris Klein, airs Saturday at 11 a.m. ET on MTV. Related Videos ‘When I Was 17’ Sneak Peek Featuring Evanescence’s Amy Lee Related Artists Evanescence

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Amy Lee Skates To Detention On ‘When I Was 17’

T.I. Disputes Reason For His Return To Prison

Lawyer says Tip wasn’t told he could only travel with his wife during halfway-house transfer. By Rob Markman T.I. (file) Photo: Moses Robinson/ WireImage If T.I. was only allowed to travel with his wife when he moved from an Arkansas prison to an Atlanta halfway house last week, no one told him. “Bureau of Prison officials did not specifically state at any time that T.I. was limited to being in the vehicle with his wife and no one else,” Tip’s attorney Steve Sadow told MTV News. “There is nothing that was specifically instructed or directed on this.” On Thursday (September 8), TMZ published an incident report that said T.I. was on the bus with his wife, his manager and two VH1 producers. His manager and the television producers were not authorized to be aboard the bus, according to the report. The report also suggested that T.I. was conducting business during the interstate ride — a violation of his furlough. According to T.I.’s lawyer, however, the Federal Bureau of Prisons didn’t communicate any stipulations on how the August 31 transfer was to be handled. T.I. filled out a Furlough Application, which MTV News has obtained , in which he declared he would travel from Forrest City Prison to the Atlanta halfway house via a “private owned vehicle” and that he would be traveling with his wife Tameka Harris. “It doesn’t say “list all of the individuals that you are going to be with” or “you may not be with anyone else,” ” Sadow said. Click to see the Furlough Application, exclusively obtained by MTV News. MTV News has learned that the Trap Muzik rapper is now being held in United States Penitentiary in Atlanta until he is able to schedule a disciplinary hearing. Regardless of the outcome, T.I. will have satisfied his 11-month probation-violation sentence and be released from custody September 29. Initially, it was reported that T.I. was sent back to prison because the luxury tour bus in which he traveled wasn’t an acceptable mode of transportation. The rapper’s lawyer stressed that, at the moment, these are just allegations, but contends that T.I. did nothing wrong. “He had no reason to think there would be a problem traveling with these particular people, because his manager had been approved for visitation and had seen him several times at the facility in Arkansas and the producer had been approved for visitation and had seen him several times,” his attorney said. As far as the issue of whether T.I. was discussing business on the bus, Sadow made it clear that he already had a deal with VH1 for a new reality series and a separate book deal in place before the transfer. The best possible outcome at this point for the rapper is that, after his discipline hearing, he would be cleared of any wrong doing and returned to the halfway house, but as of now, no date for the hearing has been set. MTV News reached out to the Federal Bureau of Prisons and a VH1 press representative, both of whom declined to comment for this story. Related Artists T.I.

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T.I. Disputes Reason For His Return To Prison

Too Not For TV: Viral Video Film School’s ‘Lessons in Make-Up’ – Deleted Scenes

We couldn't fit every make-up tutorial into one segment, so these are a couple of the clips that didn't make the show. Brett Erlich shows off someone who can help you look like Gandalf, and then explains why adding AfterEffects to your daily make-up routine is a recipe for inconvenience. To see which clips did make the show, watch “Lessons in Make-Up”: http://current.com/shows/infomania/92604366_viral-video-film-school-lessons-in-m… Viral Video Film School is a recurring segment on the weekly television show infoMania. In each episode of VVFS, Professor Brett Erlich teaches you valuable skills in the discipline of Viral Video making. So sit down, take notes, and try not to piss him off. For more Brett visit http://current.com/viral-video-film-school-im/ and Current TV. infoMania is a half-hour satirical news show that airs on Current TV. The show puts a comedic spin on the 24-hour chaos and information overload brought about by the constant bombardment of the media. Hosted by Conor Knighton and co-starring Brett Erlich, Erin Gibson, Ben Hoffman, Bryan Safi and Sergio Cilli, the show airs on Thursdays at 10/9c on Current TV. Go to http://current.com/infomania for more, and make sure to check out our Facebook profile for special features at http://facebook.com/infomania . added by: Brett_Erlich

YouTube’s Scariest Robots

In this week's “Viral Video Film School,” Brett takes a look at the scariest videos of robots talking, climbing, coughing, fighting, and kissing that the Internet has to offer. Viral Video Film School is a recurring segment on the weekly television show infoMania. In each episode of VVFS, Professor Brett Erlich teaches you valuable skills in the discipline of Viral Video making. So sit down, take notes, and try not to piss him off. For more Brett visit http://current.com/viral-video-film-school-im/ and Current TV. infoMania is a half-hour satirical news show that airs on Current TV. The show puts a comedic spin on the 24-hour chaos and information overload brought about by the constant bombardment of the media. Hosted by Conor Knighton and co-starring Brett Erlich, Erin Gibson, Ben Hoffman, Bryan Safi and Sergio Cilli, the show airs on Thursdays at 10 pm Eastern and Pacific Times and can be found online at http://current.com/infomania/ or on Current TV. And make sure to check out our facebook profile for special features at http://facebook.com/infomania . added by: Brett_Erlich

Brett Travels to the Webbys: Viral Video Film School

It's only logical that if you win a Webby Award for fantastic viral fillmmaking, you then have to go pick it up. Brett Erlich takes us to New York City to see just how people of the internet celebrate. Even Gilbert Gottfried was there! Remember: We couldn't have done it without you! http://current.com/shows/infomania/92416502_viral-video-film-school-thanks-you-f… Viral Video Film School is a recurring segment on the weekly television show infoMania. In each episode of VVFS, Professor Brett Erlich teaches you valuable skills in the discipline of Viral Video making. So sit down, take notes, and try not to piss him off. For more Brett visit http://current.com/viral-video-film-school-im/ and Current TV. infoMania is a half-hour satirical news show that airs on Current TV. The show puts a comedic spin on the 24-hour chaos and information overload brought about by the constant bombardment of the media. Hosted by Conor Knighton and co-starring Brett Erlich, Ben Hoffman, Bryan Safi, Sergio Cilli and Erin Gibson, the show airs on Thursdays at 10 pm Eastern and Pacific Times and can be found online at http://current.com/infomania/ or on Current TV. added by: Brett_Erlich