Chickens on the roadway and a nearby hillside. We will go live to the scene to hear what is happening now. Reporter good morning. Officers are continuing to round up the chickens. You can see them behind me. They are actually climbing up the hillside where they found a group of 20 of them huddled together. Some of the chickens that were still in the cages when this crash happened are also alive. Were talking about 1000 chickens total involved in this crash. A few hundred to provide. They were walking all around lanes of traffic in their working to get all of them secure with animal control. There is still a lot to do. All remain lanes remain closed. When do you think lanes will reopen . We are making efforts. We are trying to get some of the cages with larger chickens out of here. We are trying to get the chicken still alive out of your away from the scene so we can begin to pick up the debris. We have a Structural Engineer that will check out part of the they should be here moalong sh
They thought it was gonna make 700 million, but it actually made 1. 3 billion. So it had a business impact, it had a community impact, it opened up doors. dramatic music Rocket Thrusting it showed that these kinds of stories, looking at black speculative fiction, looking at afrofuturism and blacks in scifi, looking at horror was also highly profitable. Scifi is really a conversation about our humanity and mans relationship to technology and exploring other worlds. Its really exciting to know that more blackcentric Science Fiction is making its way onto the television screens, finally. Black people have always loved Science Fiction and have always loved fantasy. We just didnt know it. When you think of how broad that landscape is, to not include every single individual that is participating in the world, then its a lie. We have millions and millions of stories that need to be told. And us getting our due is literally just opening the gates for everyone else. upbeat music no Ray Gun Firi
laura: hello, everyone, i m laura ingraham. there is the ingraham angle from washington tonight. shocking video of a journalist getting arrested just for doing his job. the video and that journalist are here tonight. but, first, mr. trump goes to washington. that s the focus of tonight s angle. laura: the same federal court building where many of the j-6 defendants have been sentenced to prison sentences longer than convicted rapist, donald trump appeared today as a three-judge panel, appellate panel heard arguments on his claim of presidential immunity for actions he took when he was in office. his lawyer john sawyer pointed out a key concern. we are in a situation where we have the prosecution of the chief political opponent who is winning in every poll presidential election upcoming next year and is being prosecuted by the administration that he is seeking to replace that is the frightening future. that is tailor made to launch cycles reef cripple nation that will
and republicans once again refusing to take action. they only have thoughts and prayers. then, the census killing of jordan kneeling on the u new york city subway car. how was that and not an act of unjustified vigilantism? we will discuss. and the man who leaked the papers has a warning for us all. daniel ellsberg joins me to reflect on his unique life, like a sea and what is still keeping him up at night. good evening. a bank. iraq center. our college campus. a parking lot. a nightclub. a bar. our restaurant. a grocery store. a christian school. a hospital. an apartment. a house party. albert party. and he struck out. a park. a beach. a bus stop. an intersection. an ice cream shop. and mcdonald s. aghast a shunt. a funeral home. a dance studio. a motel. a concert and now, in allen texas this weekend, and outlet mall. just some of the locations where mass shootings have taken place in america this year. everyday places. ordinary people, could have been any one of us. in
pushing a radical program. the floodgates opened in 2020 when they came up with a bright idea to defund the police. they wanted us to believe take resources away from hot police would make us safer. major cities that embraced the idea found themselves in crime. and no city saw so much of a change in life than portland, oregon. portland jumped to the defunds the police movement in 2020. the council cut its budget by $15 million. in 2020 homicides increased 83% in portland. that trend continues in 2021 and 2022. the city tried to combat growing crime by refunding the police in late 2021. but the force is struggling to bring back officers. portland has become a prime example of how quickly a city can fall into anarchy when there is a break down in the rule of law. burning down buildings, squatters. violence in the streets. last year there was k at the pry crime, it s not much better. they hapull up and break into the front door and try to drag off the atm machine. some 2,500 s