An intense search is underway for a missing 15-year-old Georgia girl who is believed to be with an accused child molester, authorities and the girl’s family tell People.
Calah Waskow was reported missing Monday morning in Evans, Georgia, authorities say. They suspect she is with 37-year-old Jason Johnson, according to the Columbia County Sheriff’s Office. The case is being investigated as a runaway.
Johnson is wanted for alleged aggravated child molestation, child molestation, enticing a child for indecent purposes and contributing to the delinquency of a minor, according to the sheriff’s office.
Investigators believe he is driving...
Calah Waskow was reported missing Monday morning in Evans, Georgia, authorities say. They suspect she is with 37-year-old Jason Johnson, according to the Columbia County Sheriff’s Office. The case is being investigated as a runaway.
Johnson is wanted for alleged aggravated child molestation, child molestation, enticing a child for indecent purposes and contributing to the delinquency of a minor, according to the sheriff’s office.
Investigators believe he is driving...
- 12/10/2016
- by Blake Bakkila
- PEOPLE.com
Knight Rider #1-8
Written by Geoffrey Thorne and Shannon Eric Denton
Illustrated by Jason Johnson and Brian Denham
Colored by Sai Studios and Milen Parvanov
Lettered by Andworld Design
Edited by Kristen Fitzner Denton
Published by Idw
In the mid-1980s, one of the hot topics in the school yard was which car was better, the Dukes of Hazard’s General Lee or Knight Rider’s Kitt. To just about any kid growing up in the 80s, Kitt was the clear winner considering it boasted turbo boosts, ejector seats, a bulletproof body, and a super-sophisticated artificial intelligence that could control the car without needing a driver behind the wheel. And that artificial intelligence, voiced by William Daniels, was just as charismatic as costar David Hasselhoff, who played Michael Knight, the infamous “man who does not exist.” The show is cheesy – as most shows from the 80s are – but brilliant all...
Written by Geoffrey Thorne and Shannon Eric Denton
Illustrated by Jason Johnson and Brian Denham
Colored by Sai Studios and Milen Parvanov
Lettered by Andworld Design
Edited by Kristen Fitzner Denton
Published by Idw
In the mid-1980s, one of the hot topics in the school yard was which car was better, the Dukes of Hazard’s General Lee or Knight Rider’s Kitt. To just about any kid growing up in the 80s, Kitt was the clear winner considering it boasted turbo boosts, ejector seats, a bulletproof body, and a super-sophisticated artificial intelligence that could control the car without needing a driver behind the wheel. And that artificial intelligence, voiced by William Daniels, was just as charismatic as costar David Hasselhoff, who played Michael Knight, the infamous “man who does not exist.” The show is cheesy – as most shows from the 80s are – but brilliant all...
- 6/4/2015
- by Merriell Moyer
- SoundOnSight
A still from Doritos Manchild..
.
Aussie director Armand de Saint-Salvy has a one in ten chance of pocketing $1 million Usd - as well as picking up a contract with Universal Pictures - after being listed as a finalist in Doritos. annual Crash the Super Bowl contest.
His advertisement, titled Doritos Manchild, is the only Australian entry to make it to the top ten finalists this year, typically dominated by Us entrants. Last year, Thomas Noakes also was listed as the solo Australian in the top ten, with his ad Finger Cleaner..
Now in its ninth consecutive year (but only the second year in which it was open to international entries), Crash the Super Bowl essentially asks consumers around the world to create a 30-second advertisement for Doritos.
A panel of judges then chooses a selection of ten finalists (this year, from nearly 4,900 submissions representing 29 countries), from which a grand prize...
.
Aussie director Armand de Saint-Salvy has a one in ten chance of pocketing $1 million Usd - as well as picking up a contract with Universal Pictures - after being listed as a finalist in Doritos. annual Crash the Super Bowl contest.
His advertisement, titled Doritos Manchild, is the only Australian entry to make it to the top ten finalists this year, typically dominated by Us entrants. Last year, Thomas Noakes also was listed as the solo Australian in the top ten, with his ad Finger Cleaner..
Now in its ninth consecutive year (but only the second year in which it was open to international entries), Crash the Super Bowl essentially asks consumers around the world to create a 30-second advertisement for Doritos.
A panel of judges then chooses a selection of ten finalists (this year, from nearly 4,900 submissions representing 29 countries), from which a grand prize...
- 1/6/2015
- by Emily Blatchford
- IF.com.au
We all have TV shows that we wish were still on the air. Well, apparently the people at NBC Universal and Lion Force Comics are going to try to do something about that. NBC Universal announced today that they are going to revive some of our favorite shows from the '80s and '90s in comic form.
Browse the press release below and enjoy!
NBCUniversal, one of the world's premier media and entertainment companies, has partnered with digital publisher Lion Forge Comics to develop licensed comic books based on popular TV shows from the 1980s and 90s. Under the agreement licensed through the NBCUniversal Television Consumer Products Group, Lion Forge will write, develop and publish digital comics based on the following shows:- "Airwolf"
- "Knight Rider"
- "Miami Vice"
- "Punky Brewster"
- "Saved by the Bell""Partnering with the team at Lion Forge to bring classic TV properties...
Browse the press release below and enjoy!
NBCUniversal, one of the world's premier media and entertainment companies, has partnered with digital publisher Lion Forge Comics to develop licensed comic books based on popular TV shows from the 1980s and 90s. Under the agreement licensed through the NBCUniversal Television Consumer Products Group, Lion Forge will write, develop and publish digital comics based on the following shows:- "Airwolf"
- "Knight Rider"
- "Miami Vice"
- "Punky Brewster"
- "Saved by the Bell""Partnering with the team at Lion Forge to bring classic TV properties...
- 7/3/2013
- by Billy Fisher
- GeekTyrant
As of April 2nd, inquiring fans of Nerdist Industries can finally find an answer to the age-old question, “Are Chris Hardwick and his motley group of teammates associated with things geek any good at bowling?” The Nerdist Channel on YouTube (which is part of the video sharing site’s $100 million Original Channels initiative) officially launched this week with a handful of the no less than 24 original web series announced as part of the programming slate at WonderCon. The shows to debut include bowling, simians, exploding puppies and a five-year-old boy that just happens to be the America’s number one action hero. First up, Chris Hardwick’s All Star Celebrity Bowling features the famous podcaster teaming up with Alex Albrecht (Diggnation), Kyle Clark (Nerdterns) and Steve Agee (The Sarah Silverman Program) for a celebrity bowling battle royale. The first opponent for Team Nerdist is a group of equally (not-so) adept...
- 4/3/2012
- by Chris Landa
- Tubefilter.com
Appearing on CNN's rapidfire Daily Buzz segment Friday, Jason Johnson, professor at Hiram College, laughed off the uproar over the Breitbart video featuring Obama hugging a controversial professor. "The most scandalous thing about this video is Obama was still rocking an afro in 1990. I mean, that was the weirdest thing i saw in the video. There was nothing strange about this whatsoever.
- 3/9/2012
- by James Crugnale
- Mediaite - TV
Associated Press Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. (Sce) Group CEO Andrew House shows off PlayStation Vita, called “Psvita” for short, during a press conference in Tokyo Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011.
In the past week I caught two telling images of Sony’s brand-new mobile gaming device, the PlayStation Vita.
The first was a man leaning face-first into the carpeted corner of a GameStop, his back turned darkly to the actual store like a Blair Witch victim, transfixed by something just out of sight.
In the past week I caught two telling images of Sony’s brand-new mobile gaming device, the PlayStation Vita.
The first was a man leaning face-first into the carpeted corner of a GameStop, his back turned darkly to the actual store like a Blair Witch victim, transfixed by something just out of sight.
- 2/24/2012
- by Ryan Kuo
- Speakeasy/Wall Street Journal
Electronic Arts Image from the videogame Syndicate
How will the nation’s wealth be divvied up 50 years from now? The division likely will be more drastic in the future than it is today, if videogames are to be believed (which, for obvious reasons, they shouldn’t, although Madden did pick the Giants to win the Super Bowl by a margin of three––just sayin’). Syndicate, released today, is Electronic Arts’ sci-fi dystopia, told through the language of recoiling machine guns...
How will the nation’s wealth be divvied up 50 years from now? The division likely will be more drastic in the future than it is today, if videogames are to be believed (which, for obvious reasons, they shouldn’t, although Madden did pick the Giants to win the Super Bowl by a margin of three––just sayin’). Syndicate, released today, is Electronic Arts’ sci-fi dystopia, told through the language of recoiling machine guns...
- 2/22/2012
- by Jason Johnson
- Speakeasy/Wall Street Journal
From his threats to his Pilates teacher to paranoia, Jared Lee Loughner's mental illness was clear to nearly everyone he met. Plus, Mansfield Frazier on the mental-health crisis in prisons.
1. In January, Loughner responded to a classmate's poem about abortion by saying people should attach dynamite to babies. He explained the comment to a school official by saying the poem reminded him of death, which made him think of suicide bombers, which made him think of baby suicide bombers.
Related story on The Daily Beast: Why Obama Won't Touch Gun Control
2. When reading his own poem for class, Loughner thumped his chest and grabbed his crotch.
3. In math class, he insisted the number 6 was 18. He explained to a school counselor, "I asked him to tell me the question he asked. He said, ‘My instructor said he called a number 6 and I said I call it 18.' He also asked the instructor to explain,...
1. In January, Loughner responded to a classmate's poem about abortion by saying people should attach dynamite to babies. He explained the comment to a school official by saying the poem reminded him of death, which made him think of suicide bombers, which made him think of baby suicide bombers.
Related story on The Daily Beast: Why Obama Won't Touch Gun Control
2. When reading his own poem for class, Loughner thumped his chest and grabbed his crotch.
3. In math class, he insisted the number 6 was 18. He explained to a school counselor, "I asked him to tell me the question he asked. He said, ‘My instructor said he called a number 6 and I said I call it 18.' He also asked the instructor to explain,...
- 1/14/2011
- by The Daily Beast
- The Daily Beast
On the morning of the Gabrielle Giffords' shooting, suspect Jared Loughner's father stopped to ask his son why he was removing a black bag from the trunk of his car. Loughner mumbled something and ran into the desert; his father gave chase for awhile in his truck, but eventually gave up. It turns out too that the police had been called to the Loughners' home before the shooting on more than one occasion, although the exact nature of those calls has not yet been revealed. Police have also found more disturbing notes from Loughner, including one that said "Die, bitch" -a reference, they believe, to Giffords. On Tuesday, the parents broke their silence, saying they "wish they could change the heinous events of Saturday."
Claire Martin and Masada Siegel talk to the Loughners' neighbors. Plus, full coverage of the Arizona shooting.
Related story on The Daily Beast: The Suddenly Quiet...
Claire Martin and Masada Siegel talk to the Loughners' neighbors. Plus, full coverage of the Arizona shooting.
Related story on The Daily Beast: The Suddenly Quiet...
- 1/11/2011
- by Claire Martin & Masada Siegel
- The Daily Beast
Cut off from the world by his iPhone earbuds and hoodie, neighbors and classmates say alleged murderer Jared Lee Loughner was a deeply disturbed young man who'd been wandering the neighborhood with an especially strange look in his eyes in recent days. But is he a calculating killer on a political mission-or a desperate young man battling severe mental illness? Eve Conant, Claire Martin and Masada Siegel report.• Jared Lee Loughner appeared in court on Monday. He did not enter a plea but confirmed that he understood the charges against him. He had a shaved head and a cut on his right temple. He was mostly silent, but appeared to smirk in front of the judge. • Loughner refuses to cooperate with officials and hasn't spoken since his arrest other than his courtroom appearance. • He'll be represented by Judy Clarke, the lawyer who defended Unabomber Ted Kaczynski and worked on Timothy McVeigh's legal team.
- 1/10/2011
- by Eve Conant & Claire Martin
- The Daily Beast
Whether you own an Xbox 360, PS3 or Wii, you may be among those frustrated gamers who have experienced console problems. One Xbox 360 owner in Wisconsin claims to have had enough with his Xbox and is seeking big money for his grievances. Though two counts were removed from plaintiff Jason Johnson's initial lawsuit, an Illinois judge has allowed him to proceed with his case against Microsoft seeking upwards of $50,000 for alleged Xbox 360 malfunctions.
Johnson contends that errors on the part of his Xbox 360 scratched his games, rendering them unplayable and filed suit under the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act, accusing Microsoft of negligence, breach of implied warranty and strict product liability, according to the Madison Record.
Microsoft's attorney, meanwhile, maintained that Johnson received the 360 as a gift and did not have sufficient standing under those circumstances to sue Microsoft.
The case will apparently continue later this fall.
Johnson contends that errors on the part of his Xbox 360 scratched his games, rendering them unplayable and filed suit under the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act, accusing Microsoft of negligence, breach of implied warranty and strict product liability, according to the Madison Record.
Microsoft's attorney, meanwhile, maintained that Johnson received the 360 as a gift and did not have sufficient standing under those circumstances to sue Microsoft.
The case will apparently continue later this fall.
- 9/4/2009
- by Brian Warmoth
- MTV Multiplayer
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