Appeals court sides with Dr Luke on an issue in Kesha clash
23 Apr, 2021 12:40 AM
4 minutes to read
Kesha leaves Supreme court in New York after a hearing involving her producer, Dr Luke in 2016. Photo / AP
Kesha leaves Supreme court in New York after a hearing involving her producer, Dr Luke in 2016. Photo / AP
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By: Jennifer Peltz
An appellate court ruled for music producer Dr Luke on Thursday on an important legal question in his defamation suit against pop star Kesha, saying the Grammy-nominated hitmaker isn t a public figure in the eyes of the law.
The decision isn t a final judgment in the long-running court clash between the multiplatinum-selling singer, who says Dr Luke raped her, and the producer, who denies it and says his one-time protege smeared him with lies.
Robert Weiner
Adjanni Ramos WASHINGTON, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, UNITED STATES, April 16, 2021 /EINPresswire.com/ In a brand new op-ed published on The PuLSE Institute and featured in OpEdNews (links at bottom), former White House spokesman Robert Weiner and Policy Analyst Adjanni Ramos discuss how the current trial of former officer Derek Chaivin, for the murder of George Floyd, should “be a slam dunk.but is not, if just one juror maintains an unstated racial or police-can-do-no-wrong bias.” They start by saying, “The trial of Chauvin for murdering Floyd is only half over after 35 witnesses including medical examiners, doctors, and even the Minneapolis Police Chief confirming it wasn’t the bystanders yelling ‘Don’t kill him, let him breathe.’ It wasn’t the observing firefighter asking to ‘test his pulse’ and ‘give him CPR’ who was ignored. It wasn’t any drugs or underlying heart issues. It wasn’t crowd noise. And
Owning a business can be dangerous to your health - how the three R s may help
14 Apr, 2021 05:38 AM
3 minutes to read
Entrepreneurship specialist Dr Amanda Williamson of Waikato Management School. Photo / Supplied Being your own boss is linked with greater wear and tear on the body s inflammatory, metabolic and cardiovascular systems - and the post-pandemic work mode of always being on isn t helping, suggests New Zealand-led research on entrepreneurial wellbeing.
Led by Dr Amanda Williamson, a lecturer in innovation and strategy at Waikato University s management school, the research suggests that while owning and managing a business can be one of the most rewarding jobs on the planet , it can also be dangerous to health.