Hmmm... the page you're looking for isn't here. Try searching above.- U.S.Scary Mommy
Teacher Who Went Viral For Students Hugging Each Other Dies Of COVID
A video Zelene Blancas posted to Twitter of her 1st grade students hugging each other gained national attention No one ever said the pandemic was fair. After a holiday season that saw millions gather in opposition of public health officials’ warnings of a third wave of infection, followed by a stalled COVID-19 relief package, 2021 []
- EntertainmentComplex
Snoop Dogg Had Anderson Cooper Absolutely Losing It While Talking Weed on CNN's NYE Special
During the giggle-filled moment, Andy Cohen asked Snoop to reveal a number of locations where he's gotten high. Anderson subsequently lost it.
- WorldReuters
Mexican doctor hospitalized after receiving COVID-19 vaccine
Mexican authorities said they are studying the case of a 32-year-old female doctor who was hospitalized after receiving the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine. The doctor, whose name has not been released, was admitted to the intensive care unit of a public hospital in the northern state of Nuevo Leon after she experienced seizures, difficulty breathing and a skin rash. "The initial diagnosis is encephalomyelitis," the Health Ministry said in a statement released on Friday night.
- NewsFOX News Videos
VideoWARNING GRAPHIC VIDEO: Minneapolis releases footage of Wednesday night police-involved shooting
The police killing was the city’s first since the death of George Floyd in May.
- StyleFootwear News
Melania Trump Styles Oversized Checkered Coat with Black Knee Boots to Return to the White House After Mar-a-Lago
The cozy outerwear piece featured wide sleeves and hidden buttons.
- CelebrityYahoo Celebrity
Jana Kramer celebrates husband Mike Caussin's 'sober birthday' as he recovers from sex addiction: 'I'm proud to be your wife'
Caussin marked the "most sober year of my entire life" in a post earlier this week.
- LifestyleMarketWatch
What it’s really like to retire on a Caribbean island — on $3,000 a month
Nestled in her 1960s hillside home perched high above the glittering sea, Julie Lea awakens each morning to the sound of rustling palms, chirping birds and the gentle bleating of goats that wander a nearby farm. Vibrant flowers burst from the gardens surrounding her home, and if she’s up early enough to see the sunrise — which she often is these days — she watches from her terrace as the West Indian sky goes from black to grey to an eruption of pinks, oranges and yellows. “There is something magical about life here,” says the 76-year-old artist and painter, who with her writer husband of 50 years, moved full-time to the Caribbean island of Bequia in 2005.












