Tom Hurley wanted to give back to the community. During a Sheridan County Chamber of Commerce luncheon, Hurley met Director of Community Engagement for Big Brothers Big Sisters Sandy Thiel.
The meeting began a chain of events that would introduce Hurley to then 10 year old, Joe Dillion.
Joe lived at home with his mother, Kelly Dillion, and his two sisters. Kelly felt Joe needed a positive male role model that would take him fishing, hunting and camping.
K. Dillion
Hurley and Joe became a big brother-little brother pair. The organization refers to them as Bigs and Littles.
Joe is now 16 years old. The relationship has lasted life changes. Hurley was a single man when he first became a Big, now he’s a husband and father to his own children.
Mary J. Blige Remembers Cicely Tyson and Discusses How Kamala Harris Inspires Her
Mary J. Blige Remembers Cicely Tyson and Discusses How Kamala Harris Inspires Her
Blige is getting attention for her new song See What You ve Done, from the documentary Belly of the Beast.
Jazz Tangcay, provided by
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Mary J. Blige is receiving potential Oscar attention for her original song “See What You’ve Done” from the documentary, “Belly of the Beast.” But she received even more buzz when vice president Kamala Harris used her 2007 song “Work That,” from her “Growing Pains” album, as her campaign anthem.
After a few months, Blige finally got to see what everyone was talking about. In a conversation with
The belly of the beast is orange
The belly of the beast is orange
December 16, 2020
Mary J. Blige said that when she heard Kelli’s story of forced sterilization, “I immediately knew I wanted to be involved … No one has the right to make decisions about a woman’s body without her consent, and ‘See What You’ve Done,’ is an indictment, a testimony, a call to be strong and an anthem for a movement whose work isn’t done yet.” Blige’s song is featured in “Belly of the Beast,” the documentary exposing the CDCR and many states’ horrific deception of women.