robot legs, you are not supposed to get them wet or get them in water, you know, i live on the edge. good thing it was water, not coffee. am i a baptist now? yes, that s it. to our top story, former president trump attends a college wrestling match in tulsa, oklahoma. yesterday after he said that he would be arrested on tuesday. his potential arrest is related to a $130,000 payment to ex porn star stormy daniels which prosecutors have called hush money. i wouldn t know. manhattan d.a. declining to confirm trump s claim. but he told his staff in an e-mail quote we don t tolerate attempts to intimidate our office or threaten the rule of law in new york. house speaker mccarthy is directing house committees to investigate whether any federal funds are being used for, quote, politically motivated
The Kourageous Karter Foundation is hosting the Race for Robot Legs to raise money for families to try what the Goodchild family affectionately calls "robot legs."
could we get a little bit of it? just a little bit of that technology here? i d be cool with that. i ve definitely i definitely dance better now with robot legs. i m going to self reflect on it now. emily: i will have your addition what if they turned against you? they do every day, have you not see me fall? it s like a broadway dance. i met while you re sleeping in the night and they re watching you. my dogs onto something. if my legs are off my body, if they get within 5 inches of my dogs, they bolt. they know something i don t, i m telling you right now. i think these are they wouldn t do anything. if you want some breakfast? emily: so jimmy, according to china, this technology can spot ahead of time those provoking trouble. if you look we should just send them to midtown. we actually need. we like i like the idea of getting taken down by a cyborg because it s so much better than how you get taken down in this country now, one guy with three
by TRACY ZOLLINGER TURNER
Artist Larissa Danielle’s multimedia work has often been inspired by political and social realities. In 2020, those realities felt particularly overwhelming. “I was really influenced by a lot of the Black trauma that was going on I don’t want to say until recently, because it’s always going on,” she says.
But as she researched the murder of Breonna Taylor for a sculptural collage called
We Are (Breonna), the process “was just heartbreaking,” she says. “I kept thinking, you know, someone I knew could have been her. I could have been her.” Danielle says she decided to “take a step back from ‘reporting the news’” in her artwork and turn toward something healing. “Creating work like that is very emotional. I had to let my heart rest for a second,” she says.