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YouTuber Smooth Sanchez charged with NYC bomb threat
nydailynews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nydailynews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Adam KlasfeldApr 14th, 2021, 12:47 pm
A self-identified “incel” short for involuntary celibate teenager going by the online name
Smooth Sanchez amassed more than 7,000 subscribers on YouTube with hoaxes and stunts, livestreaming himself illegallyclimbing the Queensboro Bridge in an admitted attempt to go viral and getting cited by Fox News host
Tucker Carlson for tricking a young white woman into kneeling in front of him as a supposed gesture of respect for people of color.
On Wednesday, prosecutors claimed that 19-year-old
Malik Sanchez committed a federal crime via a hoax bomb threat against a restaurant where two young women allegedly harassed were dining.
NYC Incel teen held without bail on federal bomb threat charge
fox5ny.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from fox5ny.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
You listened he didn’t.
Exactly one year ago this week, Mayor de Blasio urged New Yorkers to “bike or walk to work if you can” to reduce the spread of the coronavirus, setting in motion a sharp increase in bike commuting, but comparatively little city action to protect those vulnerable road users and strengthen their numbers beyond the pandemic boom, advocates say.
Sarah Pitts
Since that day March 8, 2020 at least 215 people died from traffic violence, including more than 25 cyclists and more than 70 pedestrians. One of those victims was 35-year-old Sarah Pitts, who was killed while biking past a notoriously dangerous Brooklyn intersection in September, during the bike boom. Pitts’s brother told Streetsblog that the city failed New Yorkers like his sister, a new cyclist.
Becoming a Parent During the Pandemic Was the Hardest Thing I’ve Ever Done Sophie Gilbert
Image above: The photographer Rose Marie Cromwell documented her experience giving birth and her growing child during the pandemic, in a series called
Eclipse.
In early March last year, I was heading home from a work happy hour on the subway when I realized that a woman was staring at my belly. She looked at my waist, where my coat was belted, and then at the floor, and then at my waist again, and then she very tentatively offered me her seat. I was four months pregnant. (I’d also eaten a lot of fried food at happy hour, in lieu of drinking.) I felt pitifully grateful to this woman at the time, and I ended up thinking about her a lot in the following months. She was really the only person apart from my husband, my obstetrician, some nurses, and my doormen who ever saw me pregnant. My mother didn’t. My siblings didn’t. My best friends didn’t either, or my co-worker
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