Sunrise star confronts his biggest troll Sunrise weather presenter Sam Mac has opened up about an online message he received from a viewer which he called a “targeted attack”.
Celebrity 27th Apr 2021 2:47 PM Sunrise weather presenter Sam Mac has opened up about the day he confronted one of his biggest trolls. Mac details the hilarious saga in his new book
Accidental Weatherman by Sam Mac which will be available on April 28 through Hachette Australia (RRP $32.99). You can read an extract below.
Hi Sam … I m actually starting to like you these days, I think you ve settled into your role and you are not so annoying now.
| Updated: 1:26 p.m.
Last week, my friend Ben Winslow made a surprising announcement.
The Fox 13 journalist and unofficial Mr. Utah Twitter with nearly 49,000 followers and 220,000 posts announced he was “stepping back” from the platform. The toxicity in the Twittersphere had just become too much.
“To be clear: I did not quit Twitter,” he told me, “but I’m trying to figure out how to set healthy boundaries. For me it was just when you start to dread opening an app because [you think] ‘How bad is this going to be?’ you have to start rethinking your priorities.”
Winslow said he’d just had enough of the rage-tweeting about his reporting, low key threats, even sexual solicitation.
By Reuters Staff
3 Min Read
LONDON (Reuters) -British engineering company Rolls-Royce said it was in constructive talks with Spain over the sale of its Spanish unit ITP Aero, after a media report said Madrid could block the deal.
FILE PHOTO: A Rolls-Royce logo is seen at the company s aerospace engineering and development site in Bristol, Britain, December 17, 2015. REUTERS/Toby Melville
Rolls-Royce is hoping to secure up to 1.5 billion euros ($1.8 billion) from the sale of turbine blade-maker ITP Aero, which it has put on the block as part of a 2-billion-pound ($2.8 billion) asset sale to help repair its balance sheet after the pandemic.
Print article When the coronavirus pandemic began last year, Carolina Tolladay Vidal’s pinata business in Anchorage went to pieces and not in a good way for a pinata maker. “Many of the projects I had were moved to other dates,” she told Alaska Public Media. “Many were canceled.” Tolladay Vidal had to find fresh ideas to rejuvenate her business and settled on making large, coronavirus-shaped pinatas. After Tolladay Vidal posted a photograph of a homemade coronavirus pinata on social media, the orders started piling up, she said. “I think you really smash them and break them and hit them with meaning,” she said. “Because it has been tough for everybody.”
Jeffree Star reveals the aftermath of Wyoming car accident on his Rolls Royce
Entertainment
Jeffree Star reveals the aftermath of Wyoming car accident on his Rolls Royce
Beauty guru Jeffree Star relives Wyoming car crash by showing off its aftereffects on his Rolls Royce.
The beauty guru showcased the aftermath of his accident with pictures of his disfigured Rolls Royce over on Twitter and captioned it with a grateful message that read, “This was hard but I had to go see my car today. Thank God a #RollsRoyce is built with highly reinforced steel because it saved our lives Time to heal and let my body repair.”