Bigfoot hunting season
An Oklahoma lawmaker has proposed a bill to instate an official sasquatch hunting license and season. ABC’s Will Ganss reports.
An independent advisory panel of infectious disease experts, doctors and scientists voted unanimously to recommend the COVID-19 vaccine from Johnson & Johnson for emergency use authorization from the Food and Drug Administration, a step closer to making a third COVID-19 vaccine available to Americans. The recommendation paves the way for official emergency authorization by the FDA, allowing the vaccine to be provided to Americans while the company continues to study it. "If the FDA [authorizes] the use of this new vaccine, we would plan to roll out as quickly as Johnson & Johnson can make the vaccine," President Joe Biden said Thursday.
Known for his intense but colorful rap lyrics, rapper Styles P has swapped his microphone for a blender. On the corner of Castle Hill and Chatterton Avenue in the southeast section of the Bronx, New York, is an unexpected but needed storefront: a healthy juice bar. Juices For Life is a small, fresh fruit juice bar that has been in the neighborhood for almost a decade, catering to an underserved community living in a food desert.
At the White House COVID response team briefing Friday, top U.S. health officials warned that recent progress in declining case numbers appears to have stalled and that restrictions shouldn’t be eased until the U.S. baseline is much lower. Fauci said he wants to see where the numbers go in the next week or so before advising people to loosen restrictions. Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, agreed.
A 15-year-old boy and a 16-year-old boy have been charged after allegedly vandalizing five Holocaust statues at a Jewish museum in Oklahoma, authorities said. The statues at the Sherwin Miller Museum of Jewish Art in Tulsa are made out of wire. Each is filled with several hundred stones with the names of Jewish children who were murdered during the Holocaust, the executive director of the museum, Drew Diamond, told ABC News.
For the first time, Sephora is having a "Buy More, Save More" sale on all of its Sephora Collection products. From bestselling makeup brushes and lipstick to skin care and accessories, now is the time to stock up on some of the retailer's top beauty essentials.
NASA officially named its headquarters in the nation's capital after Mary W. Jackson, the agency's first Black woman engineer, with a ceremony honoring her legacy on Friday. "With the official naming of the Mary W. Jackson NASA headquarters, we ensure that she is a hidden figure no longer," NASA acting Administrator Steve Jurczyk said during Friday's ceremony, which was largely virtual due to the pandemic. Because of engineers like Jackson, Jurczyk said, "America and the world was not only able to dream of landing among the stars but to make that dream a reality."
At Cape Coast Castle on the shores of the Ghanaian city, a sordid history belies its beauty. The castle overlooking the Atlantic Ocean, a former slave-trade outpost, is home to the so-called "Door of No Return," through which millions of Africans were forced onto slave ships bound for the United States. "Even though you may not know the exact village you come from, the township you come from, the clan -- the family -- you come from, you can be assured that this is one of the last places that our ancestors touched before leaving these shores," said Rabbi Kohain Halevi, a board member of the Diaspora African Forum, a nonprofit that in part helps connect visitors to their ancestral history.
A group of Russian diplomats and their families were obliged to use a hand-powered railway trolley to get home to Russia from North Korea because of travel restrictions imposed by the pandemic. A video published by Russia's foreign ministry Thursday shows the diplomats pushing the handcar, stacked with their suitcases, along a railway track through the barren landscape near North Korea's northern border. The group of eight embassy staff and members of their families, including children, first took a 32-hour train ride and then a bus to reach the border area, the ministry said, where the handcar was readied and mounted on to the tracks.
Texas will deploy more than 1,100 National Guardsmen to help administer COVID-19 vaccines to homebound seniors in rural and isolated areas. "We are announcing today a statewide program to save our seniors," Gov. Greg Abbott said in a press conference Thursday. The "Save Our Seniors" program, which will launch Monday, will expand upon a model already rolling out in the Texas city Corpus Christi.
The Office of Director of National Intelligence on Friday released its highly anticipated report on the murder of Saudi dissident Jamal Khashoggi Friday, making public the U.S. intelligence community's assessment that Saudi Arabia's crown prince approved an operation to capture or kill him. The brutal killing has roiled the United States' longstanding ties with Saudi Arabia, and President Joe Biden has vowed to recalibrate the relationship after his predecessor Donald Trump shielded the kingdom from U.S. pressure.
A federal judge has ruled the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's pandemic eviction ban is unconstitutional. J. Campbell Barker, a Trump-nominated judge in the Eastern District of Texas, issued the 21-page ruling Thursday in response to a lawsuit from a group of landlords and property managers. "The federal government cannot say that it has ever before invoked its power over interstate commerce to impose a residential eviction moratorium," Barker wrote, noting that it did not do so during the Spanish Flu pandemic or during the Great Depression.
LaToya Ratlieff, a Florida woman who was shot in the face by a police officer's rubber bullet during a Black Lives Matter protest, said her "heart dropped" when she learned the officer was exonerated but said she wasn't surprised. On May 31, 2020, Ratlieff was at a George Floyd protest in Fort Lauderdale that turned violent. Video showed Ratlieff walking about 30 feet from a group of officers who were wearing riot gear and firing tear gas canisters and rubber bullets.
Health care provider One Medical has been cut off from the vaccine rollout in five California counties after ineligible patients jumped the line to get the coveted shot. Vaccine allocations were stopped in San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Marin and Alameda counties for the San Francisco-based national health care provider following complaints that people younger than the state's vaccine eligibility cutoff age of 65, jumped ahead in line for the scarce shots. One Medical confirmed to ABC News Wednesday that they terminated several clinical staffers for their "intentional disregard" of eligibility requirements.
The life of a premature, 1-pound baby born during a catastrophic winter storm in Texas was saved thanks to the ingenuity of a team of doctors and nurses, including some who packed a truck with neo-natal intensive care unit equipment and drove through snow to help. The baby, a girl named Zaylynn, was born at 24 weeks on Feb. 17, just as snow and ice dumped on central Texas, causing power outages and making roads impassable. A baby born at 24 weeks has only a 50% to 60% chance of survival in the best of times, according to Dr. Curtis Copeland, a family medicine physician at Baylor Scott & White Medical Center in Marble Falls, Texas, the hospital where Zaylynn was born.
A 23-year-old has been charged with second-degree attempted murder as a hate crime after allegedly stabbing a 36-year-old Asian man in the back in New York City's Chinatown, police sources said. Salman Muflihi, of Brooklyn, allegedly pulled an 8-inch knife on the victim at about 6:20 p.m. Thursday, according to police sources. The victim was taken to Bellevue Hospital in critical condition, sources said.
As rich countries race to inoculate their populations against COVID-19, poorer nations have fallen behind in the biggest vaccination campaign in history. "It has also highlighted the vital importance of global solidarity that is epitomized by COVAX."
President Joe Biden traveled to Houston, Texas, on Friday to survey damage from the winter storm last week that left millions in Texas without power and in need of drinking water. The trip to Texas marks the first time Biden is traveling to address a crisis beyond the COVID-19 pandemic that has consumed his young presidency. Biden traveled with first lady Jill Biden and will spend the day with Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Thursday.
"The Bachelor" contestant Rachael Kirkconnell shared a video on Thursday in which she addressed the controversy around her past social media activity. In a video posted to Instagram, Kirkconnell discussed the reactions she's received from fans and viewers of the show after issuing her first apology two weeks ago for how "offensive and racist" her past actions were.
Chloe x Halle premiered the music video for their single "Ungodly Hour" this week. "When you decide you like yourself / When you decide you need someone / When you don't have to think about it / Love me at the ungodly hour," the duo sings on the chorus. "Ungodly Hour" was taken from their 2020 album of the same title.
Kelly Clarkson is keeping herself busy amid her divorce -- so busy, in fact, that's she's had the time to write 60 songs. The 38-year-old original "American Idol" winner opened up to "Entertainment Tonight" about using music as an outlet after splitting from Brandon Blackstock, with whom she shares two children -- daughter River Rose, 6, and son Remington Alexander, 4 -- last June.