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Piers Morgan ‘felt let down’ and disappointed over lack of support during GMB Meghan row

March 20, 2023 by www.express.co.uk Leave a Comment

Piers Morgan Susanna Reid let down GMB Meghan Markle

Piers Morgan is said to have felt “let down” over a lack of “solidarity” from colleagues (Image: ITV)

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Piers Morgan resigned from Good Morning Britain after refusing to apologise for not believing Meghan Markle ‘s account of life in the Royal Family . However, the 57-year-old broadcaster has now questioned why he didn’t receive the same “solidarity” that Gary Lineker recently did for his own situation.

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Piers moved to TalkTV and started his own talk show, Uncensored, in a bid to show support for freedom of speech.

However, Gary Lineker has now returned to Match of the Day after claims that he had broken the BBC ‘s “impartiality guidelines” with his comments on the government’s immigration bill – and colleagues such as Alex Scott opted not to go on air during his suspension to show support for him.

When one fan addressed the comparison, and asked: “Were you disappointed that none of your colleagues didn’t present the day after you left GMB?” Piers took to Twitter to reply.

He answered in view of his 8.4 million followers: “Would have been nice to see the same solidarity!”

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Piers Morgan Susanna Reid let down GMB Meghan Markle

Piers Morgan has said he’d like to have been shown the same “solidarity” as Gary Lineker (Image: ITV)

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One source claimed that Piers’ comment was a reference to his former GMB colleague Susanna Reid, who returned to the airwaves immediately after the episode, without making a stand for Piers.

The source, published in OK! magazine, alleges that his tweet was a “cheeky dig” at her.

“He feels not just the TV executives should have been more supportive, but his co-hosts – including Susanna – should have been, too,” they continued.

Express.co.uk has contacted representatives for Piers Morgan and Susanna Reid for comment.

Piers Morgan Susanna Reid let down GMB Meghan Markle

Piers Morgan with Susanna Reid at a showbiz event prior to him leaving GMB (Image: GETTY)

Piers Morgan Susanna Reid let down GMB Meghan Markle

Piers Morgan being playful with Susanna Reid on GMB (Image: ITV)

“No one came out and backed him, only his family, no one he worked side by side with. He felt let down.”

When quizzed about the issue a year ago in Fabulous magazine, Susanna had insisted that the pair had remained friends.

“We stay in touch and he’s a really important person in my life,” she exclaimed, praising their “incredible dynamic” together.

She added: “He really put his imprint on the programme and it was very powerful.

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Susanna recalled the way he’d led arguments on “big issues” of the time, from feminism and what it means to be a woman, to Brexit and the controversial ex-US president Donald Trump .

Describing his attitude to “lockdown, the pandemic and holding the government to account”, she exclaimed that he was “unrivalled at holding their feet to the fire”.

She concluded: “Then it ended. All presenting gigs come to an end at some point, don’t they?”

She added that the pair had “gone through some really difficult times together as a team”.

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However, according to Piers’ comments, he may have felt that Susanna wasn’t pulling her weight to support him during those difficult times.

In contrast, Gary exclaimed that he’d received an outpouring of “love and support” after commenting that he believed the government’s new measures against immigration were “immeasurably cruel”.

He’d argued that the language used about the migrants were similar to that of Nazi Germany in the 1930s – and his comments hurt some who accused him of trivialising the deaths of millions in the Holocaust with his comparison.

However, a string of celebrities boycotted the BBC in indignation when they learnt Gary had been suspended.

Everyone from Alan Shearer to Alex stood up in support of him – but when Piers spoke out against Meghan Markle , his resignation was met with little public resistance from his team.

Meanwhile, Gary was due to present the FA Cup quarter-final coverage for the BBC today, but has pulled out after losing his voice.

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The Biggest Winners and Losers of San Diego Comic-Con 2018

July 24, 2018 by gizmodo.com Leave a Comment

Comic-Con 2018 has come to a close, and whether io9 staff were seeing it up close and personal in San Diego or watching from afar back home, we experienced a lot .

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We’re all still recovering from the exhausting convention, so forgive our uneven distribution of “winners” and “losers” among the staff—we don’t all fall in either “fangasm” or “grumpy Gus” territory. Overall, we thoroughly enjoyed ourselves. Without further ado, here are io9’s winners and losers of Comic-Con 2018.


Winners

The Clone Wars Is Saved!

There was no greater surprise this year at Comic-Con than the announcement that was made at the 10th anniversary panel for the beloved Clone Wars animated series. Fans had long accepted the series as having come to a close, even if it didn’t quite get to end the way Lucasfilm Animation had planned it to . And yet, there were no leaks, no real solid rumors that it was even possible the show could get one last hurrah—after all, Rebels only just ended earlier this year , and Resistance is on the way . So to see a trailer announcing 12 brand new episodes of the series , building on ideas the Clone Wars crew have been teasing for years at this point, was simply mindblowing . Ahsoka Tano was right: It has been awhile, but it was worth the wait to get this incredible news. —James Whitbrook

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Iron Fist Looks…Good?

Despite the fact that he’s the titular hero of the series, Danny Rand was one of the most disappointing parts of Iron Fist ’s first season for a number of different reasons, one of the most egregious being that you could clearly tell actor Finn Jones really hadn’t committed himself to learning his fight choreography. With the first season still clearly in everyone’s minds, the anticipation during the show’s panel at this year’s San Diego Comic-Con wasn’t exactly high, but as Marvel’s head of television Jeph Loeb gave the audience a look at a number of scenes from Iron Fist ’s second season , it became immediately clear that Jones got it together . Not only are Danny’s fights going to be slicker, more technically complicated, and gorgeous to watch, everyone who’s coming back this season is working on a higher level that’s going to make the next chapter of the Iron Fist saga something to legitimately get hyped about. —Charles Pulliam-Moore

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Doctor Who’s Jodie Whittaker Had a Blast

Doctor Who fans were already quivering with excitement that the show’s Comic-Con presence would give us our first-ever glimpse of the next season, and a chance to see the show’s first female Doctor strut her stuff. But beyond that stunning trailer , Comic-Con 2018 was also the first major chance for Whittaker to interact with Who fandom at large, and she grabbed that chance with both hands. From the fun video heralding her arrival at the panel , to surprising audiences at the Her Universe Fashion Show , to meeting the cutest little cosplayers and kicking ass at Entertainment Weekly’s annual all-women panel celebrating female heroes, it was clear: The Doctor was in, and we loved her. —James

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Castle Rock’s Introduction to Stephen King’s Amalgam Universe

Hollywood has long had a deep love for Stephen King , but the hunger for adaptations of the horror author’s works has escalated mightily thanks to the blockbuster success of It . Hulu series Castle Rock has an offbeat premise that sets it apart from the rest: it tells an original story inspired by King’s favorite fictional small town, a place where the top employer is Shawshank prison and nearly every household’s hiding a few grisly secrets. Diehard King fans will enjoy the Easter eggs that weave into the narrative, but anyone who digs slow-burn, creepy psychological horror will want to tune into the show, which had its world-premiere screening at Comic-Con . —Cheryl Eddy

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Star Trek: Discovery Loosens Up

The first season of Star Trek: Discovery could get a little too grim and self-serious for its own good, but what we saw of the show’s second season at Comic-Con gave us a lot of hope that the bright optimism of Star Trek would shine strongly for the Discovery’s sophomore outing. Questionable use of Lenny Kravitz aside, the trailer was filled with fun humor and a grand sense of adventure and exploration—especially thanks to Anson Mount’s arrival as the pre-Kirk Captain of the Enterprise , Christopher Pike, who seems to be having the time of his life both in front of and behind the Trek cameras. —James

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Jamie Lee Curtis at the Halloween Panel

Anyone who has attended a Comic-Con panel knows that the portion of the event that’s set aside for audience questions is usually pretty forgettable, if not downright excruciating. That was not the case at the Halloween panel , where one fan stepped up to the Hall H mic and shared an incredible, deeply personal story about how he survived a very scary situation by drawing inspiration from Jamie Lee Curtis’ character in the horror classic. The man (who was wearing a “Haddonfield High” t-shirt) received a standing ovation from the audience, and Curtis herself got up from the stage to give him a hug. It was one of Comic-Con’s emotional high points, not just this year but any year. —Cheryl

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Supergirl ’s Historic Announcement

Supergirl ’s upcoming fourth season will focus on how the world begins to accept racist anti-alien sentiment in the wake of a devastating invasion that pushes Supergirl to her limits. While that story is particularly timely given our political climate, the show is also making a powerful statement about the importance of on-screen representation with the introduction of Nia Nil, a reimagined version of the Legion of Superheroes character Dream Girl, who next season will be a transgender reporter played by transgender actress and activist Nicole Maines . While the fact that Nia is trans might not play a huge role in her character’s arc this season, her introduction in the show is momentous because she’ll be the first transgender superhero on network television. Not only that, but Supergirl just single-handedly proved something we should all know to be true: It’s not at all hard to actually cast transgender people to play transgender characters. —Charles

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People Outside of the Convention Center

There were thousands and thousands of fans crammed into the San Diego Convention Center every day of Comic-Con, taking in panels and roaming the main floor, but some of the most fun and creative activities were actually the off-site pop-up events. While everything in and around Comic-Con requires waiting in line, this year it was actually worth it for those who ventured out to eat at Taco Bell’s Demolition Man restaurant , shop for supplies at the Purge City Emporium , totally immerse themselves in the DC Universe’s new streaming shows , or join a group therapy session to work through their lingering grief over the end of Avengers: Infinity War . Sure, it’s all marketing, but when it’s this clever, fun, and/or tasty, we can’t really complain. —Cheryl

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Amazing Animation

Even though there were a number of epic trailers for live-action movies that got everyone excited during this year’s Comic-Con, the animation presentations held their own and really demonstrated just how much more bold and imaginative the medium is in general right now. Nickelodeon’s upcoming Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles show is getting back to the original series’ more mystical roots while also reimagining the iconic characters in a dynamic way that makes them feel fresh and fun. Voltron ’s giving the fandom the representation it craves by introducing Shiro’s boyfriend Adam and teasing that a new Lion might be in the works that would completely transform the Legendary Defender. As impressive as the lines for Hall H were, the energy in the Steven Universe line was palpable—and the show’s panel delivered tens across the board with a surprise presentation of the newest episode “Legs From Here to Homeworld” and the announcement of a forthcoming movie that’ll see the Crystal Gems facing a new foe. Hell, Invader Zim ’s coming back , Disenchantment actually looks kinda good , and The Dragon Prince is definitely a series to look out for. We’re living in a golden age of television and a lot of it in the near future is going to be animated. —Charles

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Warner Bros.’ DC Movies Seize the Moment

At a Comic-Con with no major Marvel Studios presence, Warner Bros. and DC Entertainment had an opportunity they couldn’t afford to squander—a great chance to get fans really hyped for their next few movies. They didn’t just take the chance, they reveled in it, delivering a disarmingly charming first look at Shazam! (which looks like a lovingly goofy movie that strikes at the heart of the DC movieverse’s “grimdark” reputation) and an epic pulpy trailer for Aquaman , bright and bold and jam-packed with underwater action. If that wasn’t enough, fans in attendance got to bring the house down for an extremely early glimpse of the still-weeks-into-filming Wonder Woman 1984 , and it sounds like was an absolute blast. DC came out of Comic-Con like royalty, and it deserved to. —James

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Kevin Smith Pays Tribute to Jon Schnepp

Not all news at Comic-Con this year was happy—Wednesday brought word that writer-director Jon Schnepp, the architect behind The Death of Superman Lives and Metalpocalypse , tragically passed away after suffering a stroke. Schnepp’s legacy in pop culture criticism was honored by Kevin Smith at his Hall H panel on Sunday, a fitting tribute to a writer and director beloved by many. —James

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Losers

Hashtag Hall H Problems

Hall H was a bit of a mess this year. Thousands of fans waited for hours, or even overnight, in order to get a coveted spot at San Diego Comic-Con’s main showcase room. But in some cases, they might not have needed to. There were reports that the hall had tons of empty seats and people were just walking in at different times of the day. Of course, that wasn’t always happening, even at times when it should. Fans shared that sometimes they were kept out of Hall H —even when dozens of seats were still empty inside ! And that’s not even getting into the problems with people holding spots in line for their friends, or line cutters who weren’t stopped by security. —Beth Elderkin

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The Fantastic Beasts panel

While the new trailer for Fantastic Beasts sequel The Crimes of Grindelwald was magical on its own, Warner Bros.’ decision to bring controversial star Johnny Depp onstage— in character as evil wizard Grindewald—was not. It was a surprise, sure, but not the nice kind of surprise, since nobody in the audience (especially those that were heard booing the actor) was about to forget who was under that wig and make-up. Plus, there was the added uncomfortable subtext that the panel for Aquaman (which included Amber Heard, Depp’s ex-wife) was the next to take the stage. —Cheryl

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That Bozo Who Asked Amber Heard to Untie Him

After the uncomfortable situation that was having Heard appear on stage right after Fantastic Beasts , an audience member dressed in bondage gear had the gall to tell Heard during a Q&A that he needed her help to get out of his fetish outfit. Behavior like this is sadly more common than it should be—and by that, I mean it should never happen at all. Don’t be the person who tries to coerce a celebrity (or really anyone at conventions) into participating in your sex stuff without their enthusiastic consent. Never be that person. —Beth

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Sony, For Sharing Almost Nothing

Nobody could have predicted the James Gunn news (the timing of which meant the fired Guardians of the Galaxy director did not appear as part of Sony Pictures’ showcase panel as planned). But even beyond that, Sony was a pretty big disappointment. The studio’s current projects have enormous fan interest, especially Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse and Venom , and those few thousand who were lucky enough to score a seat in Hall H got glimpses of both. If you were watching from afar, however, you had to content yourself with breathless descriptions of the footage, which still has yet to be shared online. —Cheryl

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Marvel Movie Fans

As we mentioned, San Diego Comic-Con 2018 was a great year for DC, but fans of the Marvel Cinematic Universe were treated to a whole heap of nothing. No trailers, no announcements, not even any surprise appearances. It was a ghost con. Marvel announced earlier this year that it wouldn’t be appearing at this year’s con, and I mean, it makes sense— Captain Marvel only recently finished filming, and any question about the Infinity War sequel would have to be met with stony awkward silence. However, it did mean that one of the two largest comic book film franchises in the galaxy was nowhere to be found at the greatest fan event of the year. —Beth

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Jeph Loeb

Speaking of Marvel, executive Jeph Loeb moderated a number of the studio’s panels at this year’s Comic-Con, and while the panelists themselves all did excellent jobs at representing their respective shows, Loeb himself made a number of inappropriate gaffes at different panels that were insensitive in a way that made one wonder if he was actively trying to be offensive. Even though the next season of Iron Fist looks better than the first, it’s still really disappointing that Netflix decided to cast Danny Rand as a white guy but hey, there’s no changing that at this point. That being said, there was absolutely no reason for Loeb to moderate the panel wearing gi and making jokes about Mr. Miyagi . What’s more, kicking off the Cloak & Dagger panel by asking the audience to split into gender groups in order to chant is…just weird, especially when you go on to misgender a fan during the Q&A portion of a panel. It’s obvious that Loeb likes being up on stage and so long as Marvel’s shows come to conventions, it’s likely that he’ll be the one to introduce them to fans—but in the future, it’d probably be best if he kept his “jokes” to himself. —Charles

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The Buffy Reboot Non-Announcement

The possibility of a Buffy the Vampire Slayer TV show reboot has been talked about for months. Years, even. While fans might be divided on whether or not we need a reboot of a reboot—I personally don’t see a point, given how the show works best within the context of its time—there’s no doubt that it could be one of the most-talked-about reboots of the past decade. With that said, the announcement was a ridiculous blunder. It was teased in a story from The Hollywood Reporter during San Diego Comic-Con, but nothing was announced at San Diego Comic-Con. And creator Joss Whedon was at the con this year, appearing on the Dr. Horrible panel, so why didn’t he have something prepared? One can only speculate—I personally think it’s possible the reboot team is not super confident fans are going to respond well. But no matter the cause, it definitely left a mark that might be hard for the new show to brush off. —Beth

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Titans’ Gritty Arrival

Considering how much flack Warner Bros. gets for how gritty its big-screen adaptations of DC Comics’ heroes have been, we weren’t expecting Titans —based around characters made extra popular by a fun animated children’s show —to go that route. But go it did, and hugely so, in its first trailer . I never expected Dick Grayson to say the words “Fuck Batman” but well, now I’ll never un-hear them. We have to admit, where we were once excited by the show anchoring WB’s original content on its DC Universe streaming service (which is shaping up better than expected !), we’re now super hesitant. At least we’re still very excited about the Teen Titans Go! movie making fun of the DC film universe .—Jill Pantozzi

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Filed Under: Uncategorized San Diego Comic-Con, Losers, Lenny Kravitz, Spider-Man, Johnny Depp, SONY PICTURES, Ahsoka Tano, James Jamie Lee Curtis, Adam, Cheryl Supergirl, Kevin Smith, ..., 10458 scripps trl san diego ca 92131, sevengill shark san diego

Gang hopeful foresaw a ‘mean hiding’ instead of fatal stabbing, Supreme Court hears

March 20, 2023 by www.stuff.co.nz Leave a Comment

A gang hopeful took an associate to a house to be “disciplined” over a $300 debt but couldn’t foresee he would be fatally stabbed, the Supreme Court has heard.

Justin Richard Burke was sentenced to five years and two months’ imprisonment in February 2021 after he was found guilty of manslaughter during a jury trial in the High Court in Christchurch.

Burke was convicted for his role in the death of Shayne George Heappey at a house in Russley on December 8, 2018. His conviction appeal was being heard by the Supreme Court, sitting in Christchurch for the first time on Monday.

Matthew Winara Webber – the enforcer of the Nomads gang in Christchurch – stabbed Heappey at least 14 times over the perceived debt of $300 and for ignoring repeated requests to return a car he had borrowed and settle the debt.

READ MORE: Gang hopeful jailed for role in fatal stabbing Gang hopeful convicted of manslaughter after fatal stabbing Nomads figure who was ‘raised by the gang’ gets prison sentence reduced

Although Webber admitted carrying out the stabbing , and was subsequently jailed for life with a minimum term of 15 years, Burke took Heappey, a Nomad gang associate, to the house where the attack took place.

Burke was dating the president of the gang’s daughter-in-law at the time and had hoped to become a patched member of the gang . He wanted to prove himself and his loyalty to the gang by helping Webber give Heappey his punishment. His defence said he did not know Webber had a knife.

Burke anticipated Heappey would be given a “mean hiding” as described in text messages prior to the attack – a foresight of non-fatal violence – which did not meet the legal requirement to be a party to manslaughter, his lawyer James Rapley KC told the court on Monday.

The “discipline” attack was a punishment within the gang, much different to an attack between rival gangs, and gave context as to how Burke could not foresee death might occur.

It wasn’t in the best interests of the gang for Heappey to be killed, and it was not an authorised killing, Rapley said. Webber acted on his own and others could not have known he would kill Heappey.

“No one gets killed for $300 – this is crazy”.

Rapley argued the question trail given to the jury at trial (questions needed to be answered to reach a certain verdict) was problematic in determining whether Burke knew a knife would be used or that there would be a stabbing.

Burke’s conviction should be quashed, Rapley said.

In response for the Crown, Madeleine Laracy submitted that for a manslaughter conviction to apply, Burke must have foreseen an incident where harm would occur, and death was the result.

“(Burke) himself said in his statement, ‘I thought what was going to happen was a mean hiding’.”

Burke’s statement showed he knew harm would be caused..

The law was deliberately broad for party involvement in crimes to prevent “the evil of criminal combinations” and assign culpability to those involved consistently, Laracy said.

An unlawful act needed to be objectively dangerous for a manslaughter conviction to apply this way and in this case it was, Laracy argued, because it was clear a “mean hiding” meant a serious physical assault.

The Court of Appeal previously said Burke was prepared to help Webber with the common plan of giving Heappey “a hiding” – even though he knew Webber was the gang’s enforcer and prone to violence – and he must have known there was a possibility Webber could kill Heappey.

The Supreme Court said the question that needed to be looked at was if the Court of Appeal had correctly interpreted and applied the section of the Crimes Act that deals with the foreseeability required for proving liability for manslaughter.

Chief Justice Helen Winkelmann, Justice Susan Glazebrook, Justice Mark O’Regan, Justice Joe Williams and Justice Stephen Kós are considering the appeal.

“Sitting in Christchurch provides the opportunity for interested members of the public, the profession, and law students to see how we operate,” Justice Winkelmann previously said.

“We believe this is one step we can take to increase understanding of the role that the courts play in our society, and in particular the role the Supreme Court plays in hearing cases of public importance.”

The hearing continues..

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Mass murderer Anders Breivik secretly trying to pocket £7million by selling the rights to turn his life into a film

July 10, 2021 by www.thesun.co.uk Leave a Comment

EVIL Anders Breivik is secretly trying to pocket £7million by selling the rights to turn his life into a film, The Sun on Sunday can reveal.

Ten years on from his chilling island massacre — which left  77 dead — the vile killer has sent 20 letters to film-makers begging them to tell his story.

A Sun on Sunday probe has found the 42-year-old Norwegian mass- murderer, who writes 50 pages a  day in his prison diary, has already penned a biography and film script and has sent out invites to be interviewed in prison.

A source said: “ Breivik ’s bid for fame, money and freedom is an insult to his victims and their families .

“So too is the prison life he lives. Breivik lives a life of Riley in prison. He’s never said sorry for his wicked crimes and he has no plans to.

“He still wants to inspire others and he still believes in a fascist revolution. His plans to make money from the murders is an utter insult to his victims and their families.”

Today we can also reveal how Breivik, jailed for 21 years, is making a new bid for parole and is convinced he will one day walk free.

And despite enjoying a cushy life inside a three-bedroom “apartment” — furnished with a study, gym and kitchen area — in Skien prison, he has submitted a  list of whingeing complaints to jail bosses.

He wants a better deep-cleaning moisturiser and says too many of his meals are cooked in microwaves.

‘He feels no shame about what he did’

He is also asking for luxury pens to write with, as the biros he has been given cause him hand cramp.

Biographer Asne Seierstad, who has written a book about Breivik, said: “He’s never shown remorse. What he wants is a stage, a place to share his thoughts and his message. And to gain more supporters.”

On his prison life, she added: “He said that in prison he has never been happier.

“I’ve got to know him a little bit and he manipulates situations a lot. He gets his way in the end.

“He talks about plastic cutlery as a torture-like existence or about cold coffee or about waiting 20 minutes before he is let out. He talks about these things like they are bad room service at a hotel.”

Breivik became one of the world’s most notorious killers on July 22, 2011, after carrying out two lone wolf attacks .

In the first, he bombed the Norwegian government quarter in Oslo. This turned out to be just a distraction as,  dressed as a policeman, he then travelled to the Norwegian Labour Party’s summer camp on nearby Utoya Island and carried out a sickening massacre.

The majority of his 77 victims were teenagers — his youngest victims were aged just 14.

Before the incidents, Breivik,  who idolised Adolf Hitler, wrote a 1,500-page manifesto under the pseudonym Andrew Berwick.

In it, he blamed feminism for the “cultural suicide of Europe”, opposed Islam and called for the mass deportation of Muslims from Europe.

He was later given the longest sentence the Norwegian courts can hand out. Recently, the courts said it could be extended if he is still considered a danger to society.

Breivik has so far posted nearly two dozen letters explaining how he wants to sell book, film and interview rights.

One of the recipients was Christoph Andersson, a specialist on right-wing extremism.

Andersson said that in his letter, Breivik had valued the material at $10million (£7million). A source added: “Breivik feels no shame about what he did. In fact, he  revels in it.”

Meanwhile, his lawyer told how Breivik is appealing his sentence.

He said the killer planned to try for parole after serving the first ten years of his term.

The lawyer said: “This is a right that all prisoners have and one that he wants to use.”

Yet  Breivik’s own father thinks he should never be freed.

Jens Breivik said: “I don’t feel like his father. How could he just stand there and kill so many innocent people and seem to think that what he did was OK? He should have taken his own life, too.”

Breivik, who has changed his name to Fjotolf Hansen, is being held in  a three-room “cell” — one for sleeping, one for studying and one for exercising.

Each area is 86ft square and he has access to a private gym, a laptop and desk. His cell comes with video games, a DVD player and outside space. He also has access to books and newspapers.

But in a 27-page letter bemoaning his prison life, he whined how he would like more butter, more comfortable handcuffs and a  better view.

He groaned about the “800” strip searches he had undergone and said he would enjoy more social interaction, claiming his treatment was “inhuman”. He also complained about not having internet access. In 2017 he said five years of prison isolation had further radicalised him.

A source said: “Breivik might be one of the world’s most notorious killers but he lives like a king.

“Guards are waiting on him hand and foot and he generally gets whatever he asks for because the prison is so fed up with how much he moans.”

In most countries, including here in the UK, criminals are forbidden from profiting from their crimes after conviction.

‘He has every chance  of selling the rights’

Yet Breivik believes Norway’s liberalism, openness and availability of information means he has every chance of selling the rights to his life story.

He was further boosted when one of the country’s most senior politicians recently said many of Breivik’s far-right views were important to listen to.

Hans Jorgen Lysglimt Johansen, leader of the Alliance Alternative Party in Norway, said: “Much of what Breivik said in his manifesto was correct.

“We have not had a proper debate about that, we have not had a proper settlement with it.”

Norwegian prison officials declined to comment.

SURVIVORS RECALL THEIR FIGHT TO LIVE

KAMZY GUNARATNAM was 23 when Breivik trawled Norway’s Utoya Island preying on her friends.

She saw Breivik shoot one of them in the head .  Kamzy, now 33,  escaped by swimming across the Tyrifjorden Lake, with bullets striking the water around her as the gunman took aim.

After the tragedy Kamzy suffered depression, but seeing a picture of Breivik one day inspired her to start a political career. She is now the deputy mayor of Oslo and has met VIPs including Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton.

In her autobiography Your Struggle Is My Struggle, Kamzy told about a tightly written  22-page letter she received from Breivik in January 2020.

In an open ­letter back to the killer, she told him: “When I read your name, I got chills down my spine. My body went into panic mode for a moment. After what you did on July 22, 2011, I struggled mentally for a long time. I slept badly, sounds sounded like shots, and I could not go into a place without looking for the emergency exits.

“Your actions have caused me lasting damage.  I spent many years putting down my ­paranoia. Your letter aroused fear again.”

Sisters Lara and Bano Rashid were ­having an enjoyable break before Breivik came to the island.  When he fired into their tent,  Lara, then 16, heard the bullets whistle through the canvas.

After the 40-minute rampage, she went to look for her 18-year-old sister and found her dead — cuddled up by a dead friend.

Lara, 26, who works at the Iraqi Embassy in Oslo, says she thinks of her sister every day. She added: “Radical Muslims are not the only terrorists. There’s also a danger from right-wing extremism.”

Adrian Pracon watched his friends get killed by Breivik, and he later lay on their ­bodies and played dead to survive.

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He thought he was safe when Breivik walked past.  But the killer came back, pointed the gun to his head and fired.

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Incredibly, he survived. Adrian now leads an annual trip back to the island,  gives speeches and has written books.

Speaking about his first visit back, he said: “I needed to cry.   It will be good  for me to do this process of trying to  proceed with my life and realise that this has ­happened.”

Filed Under: Uncategorized Crime, Exclusives, Features, The Sun Newspaper, Norway, mass murderers, mass murderers in america, mass murderers in history, mass murderers list, mass murderers in the us, mass murderers usa, anders breivik book, mass murders united states, united states mass murders, worlds mass murderers

CrossFit Owner Fostered Sexist Company Culture, Workers Say

June 20, 2020 by www.nytimes.com Leave a Comment

When Greg Glassman resigned earlier this month as chief executive of CrossFit, Inc. , excoriated for comments about George Floyd’s death on Twitter and in a Zoom meeting, people who have worked there were surprised that his downfall was tied to accusations of racism.

They had assumed that the reason would be routine and rampant sexual harassment.

Interviews with eight former employees, and four CrossFit athletes with strong ties to the company, reveal a management culture rife with overt and vulgar talk about women: their bodies, how much male employees, primarily Mr. Glassman, would like to have sex with them and how lucky the women should feel to have his rabid interest.

According to the dozen interviewed, Mr. Glassman, 63, has verbally demeaned women, pulled at their clothes to try to peek at their cleavage and aimed his phone’s camera to snap photos of their breasts while they traveled with him for work (sometimes pressuring them to consider sharing hotel rooms or borrowed houses with him).

Through a company spokesman and spokeswoman, Mr. Glassman denied such conduct. The spokeswoman said Mr. Glassman has treated her only respectfully. She suggested that people speaking out against Mr. Glassman are doing so to lessen the worth of his company and then buy it from him. “There is a collective effort to devalue the company and buy it for scraps,” she said.

The former employees say reporting the harassment was not an option. Mr. Glassman is the sole owner of CrossFit, Inc. Perhaps the most powerful female executive there, Kathy Glassman , the affiliate director, is Mr. Glassman’s sister, and they were reluctant to complain to her. There was no human resources manager until 2013. That manager left the company in January and has not been replaced.

A Devoted Community

Now headquartered in Scotts Valley, Calif., CrossFit was created in 2000. It is privately held and currently employs 72 people full-time, down from 137 two years ago. A shift in the company’s focus from competitive games to health initiatives, and the pandemic, have resulted in layoffs. Most departing workers receive severance only if they signed nondisclosure agreements.

Dave Castro, a longtime deputy of Mr. Glassman’s who has taken over as the company’s chief executive, declined to speak for this article.

The spokespeople noted that the CrossFit Games, a professional competition introduced by the company in 2007, rewards men and women with equal prize money, and that the method encourages women to celebrate strength and fitness regardless of body type or weight.

Even those critical of CrossFit’s culture praised its rigorous exercise method, which is taught in thousands of mom-and-pop gyms around the country that have licensed the CrossFit trademark. For some of its devotees, CrossFit is a near-religion .

“There is so much positive in the CrossFit community,” said one female former employee who, like many others interviewed for this article, was granted anonymity because she fears legal retribution from Mr. Glassman. “Do you want to be the person who ruins people’s hopes and dreams and even their businesses? CrossFit is not just about fitness. It becomes your friends, your family, your community. People create their entire lives around it.”

Away from the local gyms where he is venerated, though, the picture of Mr. Glassman clouds quickly. “There was a constant narrative about women,” the former corporate employee said. She described his using vulgarities frequently to refer to women, enumerating which he wanted to have sex with and which he wouldn’t. He “was always descriptive in nature about it,” she said, “bragging about sexual escapades.”

This attitude was so entwined with operations that the Wi-Fi password at a company office in San Diego used to be a sexist obscenity, according to three former employees.

Male employees would rank female professional CrossFit athletes according to how much the men wanted to have sex with them, according to an email from a current CrossFit employee to a former one that was reviewed by The New York Times. (Mr. Glassman denies this, his spokeswoman said.)

One former male employee, who requested anonymity because he didn’t have permission from his current employer to speak to the media, defended Mr. Glassman. “I’m not into painting someone into an evil person just because he might have been misogynistic,” he said.

In 2012, Mr. Glassman agreed to pay a financial settlement to Julie Kelly, a former employee whose lawyers threatened to file a sexual harassment lawsuit, according to three people in the CrossFit community with direct knowledge of the situation. Among other incidents, they related, during a company get-together at a bar, Mr. Glassman stood next to Ms. Kelly and made a vulgar and obscene comment about her to another man. (Mr. Glassman denies this, the spokeswoman said, and would not comment on the settlement.)

Also that year, Mr. Glassman was being driven to the airport by Andy Stumpf, a former Navy Seal with five Bronze Star medals and a Purple Heart who oversaw CrossFit, Inc.’s partnership with Reebok and also worked as Mr. Glassman’s pilot.

“We were in the car and he was chuckling,” said Mr. Stumpf, in an interview. “I asked why he was in such a good mood and he said, ‘I finally finished up with the bullshit with Julie; I had to pay that whore.’”

Ms. Kelly declined an interview request.

‘A Very Elegant Solution’

In an interview, Lauren Jenai , Mr. Glassman’s ex-wife who founded CrossFit with him, said that the employees and athletes were accurately describing the corporate atmosphere she witnessed before divorcing Mr. Glassman in 2013. She also confirmed that Mr. Glassman entered into a financial settlement with Ms. Kelly to avoid a sexual harassment lawsuit. (Ms. Jenai received $20 million from Mr. Glassman as part of their divorce settlement, in exchange for her ownership of the company.)

“He’s the father of my kids. I care about Greg and about CrossFit,” Ms. Jenai said, “but this should be addressed.”

Of the constant sexualized assessment of women, she said, “100 percent. That happens every day, all day.”

Ms. Jenai said the vulgar Wi-Fi password was also used in the home she shared with Mr. Glassman, and was in keeping with the office patois. “They are nasty about women and they talk freely in front of them and it does make my skin crawl,” she said, but not always. “I think it does need to be said that both Greg and I, and our friends, have raw senses of humor. There is a lot of that banter that I don’t find offensive but the difference was, I was in a position of leadership so my job didn’t depend on how I responded to those remarks.”

Ms. Jenai said people were punished for challenging the culture. “If you didn’t agree with Greg, you would be ostracized, especially if you were a female,” she said. “For me, the bigger problem than the language is the culture behind it. If you speak out, you’re out. I’ve seen it firsthand, over and over and over.”

The CrossFit spokeswoman said that Ms. Jenai was motivated to lessen the company’s value so she could buy it. The spokesman forwarded an email sent by Ms. Jenai to Matt Holdsworth, CrossFit, Inc.’s chief financial officer, on June 15, less than a week after Mr. Glassman had resigned.

“My interest and intentions are solely based on wanting to help with current issues CrossFit is facing. I do not want to see the company or brand suffer,” Ms. Jenai wrote. “I’m looking at $50M as an offer — or thereabouts. Is this something CrossFit Inc would consider?”

On Saturday morning, Ms. Jenai confirmed this. “I was approached by an investment company who wants to back me in buying CrossFit,” she said. “In people’s minds, including mine, it would be a very elegant solution. I don’t want to see this thing go down the drain. I’ve talked to reporters because if I say nothing I’m complicit. If I talk to people and don’t tell the truth, I’m a liar.”

‘A Metric Ton of Inappropriate Behavior’

CrossFit’s first workouts were held in a garage in Santa Cruz, Calif. The county sheriff’s department was among Mr. Glassman’s earliest clients. The method has been popular among the police and the military, including those assigned to elite teams like Green Berets and Navy Seals, enhancing the fitness program’s credibility.

At the beginning of 2020, there were more than 14,000 affiliate gyms , according to Justin LoFranco, founder of Morning Chalk Up, a newsletter that covers the CrossFit community. Affiliated gyms pay CrossFit, Inc. an annual fee of $3,000 or less.

The company also draws revenue from CrossFit Games and sponsorships, like one from Reebok, which was valued at about $100 million over the last 10 years.

By the time the deal with Reebok was struck in 2010, CrossFit, Inc. already had a reputation.

Lindsey Johnson, a CrossFit athlete hired by Reebok to train its executives, turned down an opportunity to do additional work for CrossFit, Inc.

“I had heard too many stories about too many things I didn’t want to be a part of,” Ms. Johnson said, including “straight-up bullying and sexual harassment of women. We’ve heard this story before, this isn’t a brand-new situation, someone at the top with a God complex.”

After Mr. Glassman’s inflammatory tweet and comments about Mr. Floyd, Reebok announced that it would not renew the CrossFit deal. Morning Chalk Up reported that more than 1,200 affiliates had plans to disassociate themselves from the CrossFit brand. (“Greg thought Reebok was a terrible partner. He has been dying to get out of” the contract, the spokeswoman said. The spokesman added that only 450 affiliates have officially deactivated, some because of the pandemic.)

Last week, scrutiny of the company intensified after Mr. Stumpf, a speaker on leadership, devoted an entire episode of his podcast, “ Cleared Hot ,” to what he saw while working for CrossFit, Inc. from 2010 to 2014.

“I cannot count the number of times that derogatory and specifically sexual comments were made about female staff members directly in my presence,” Mr. Stumpf said, urging Mr. Glassman and the company to release former employees from nondisclosure agreements.

The CrossFit spokeswoman said that Mr. Glassman believes that Mr. Stumpf is working with his ex-wife to try to buy the company. (“I want nothing to do with CrossFit for the rest of my life,” Mr. Stumpf said, “and no amount of money and no position offered to me would change my position.”)

The former employees interviewed by The Times said much of the mistreatment happened openly, which made them question their own reactions and wonder if they were being too sensitive. Some worried that speaking out would cost them their jobs.

“There was a metric ton of inappropriate behavior but even worse, there was a systematic problem of undermining women,” one former employee said. “The systematic way they chip away at your self-confidence, I had never experienced anything like that.”

CrossFit, Inc. also sometimes flaunted a raunchy attitude toward women in its own promotion.

In a podcast interview for the CrossFit Journal conducted in January 2018, Sevan Matossian, a longtime deputy of Mr. Glassman’s, interviewed Stacie Tovar , an affiliate owner in Omaha, Neb., and a popular, retired professional CrossFit athlete.

Mr. Matossian asked her if she was sexually active with her husband and if she took birth control pills. He told her he preferred a bathing suit photo of her on her website to one showing her in athletic competition. “Your body is freakishly amazing,” he said. Lamenting changes brought about by the MeToo movement, he said, “You can’t even ask your significant other for” oral sex anymore.

“A fitness industry is different from an accounting firm,” the CrossFit spokeswoman said, regarding the podcast.

That summer, the company hosted a CrossFit Health Conference in Madison, Wis. A blown-up poster on social media and near the entrance of the conference featured an illustration of a doctor with money coming out of his white doctor’s coat, surrounded by scantily dressed, buxom women, including one with dollar bills coming out of her short-shorts as she grasps the doctor’s crotch.

Ms. Jenai, who now runs Manifest, which provides testing kits and personal coaching to help people deal with chronic health issues, said that Mr. Glassman’s putting Mr. Castro in charge will not solve CrossFit, Inc.’s problems, since Mr. Glassman retains ownership.

“He is a yes man,” she said of Mr. Castro. “I believe Dave being put in this position, there is no change. It is the status quo.”

The CrossFit spokesman said it was untrue that Mr. Glassman would still be calling the shots. “He wants to retire and home-school his kids,” he said.

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