Feel the speed as sports biopic ‘Gran Turismo’ races into theaters

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:20:22 GMT

Feel the speed as sports biopic ‘Gran Turismo’ races into theaters Words of wisdom can come from all kinds of places, like Rihanna’s hit 2007 song “Shut up and Drive.”Words to live by.Speaking of driving, there’s a new movie speeding into theaters this week and Deco’s going for a ride with the cast of “Gran Turismo.”Take the nearest exit, Fast and the Furious because David Harbour and Archie Madekwe have a need for speed in the biographical sports drama, “Gran Turismo.”The film shares a name with the classic video game but actually is based on the real story of Jann Mardenborough, who went on to become a professional race car driver.Sounds like the kind of movie where you need to know what you’re doing right?Archie Madekwe: “I got my license a week before I arrived on set, and then it was kind of head-first, full immersion, cars 24/7.”A week?That might explain why the cars had a bone to pick with Archie.Archie Madekwe: “I’m a shell of a human. I need to lie down for...

Owner speaks out after car slams into restaurant in Plantation injuring 20

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:20:22 GMT

Owner speaks out after car slams into restaurant in Plantation injuring 20 Newly released video showed a new angle of a vehicle crashing into a South Florida restaurant. Several customers inside were left injured, and now, the restaurant’s owner is trying his best to move forward. “We get a call, frantic, by one of our employees that a car had come through the window, through the front of our storefront and injured a bunch a people, and it made it all the way to the back of our restaurant, almost hitting the counter,” said Pete Montanez, owner of the damaged restaurant. Montanez and his wife own Thai Meal, located at 8257 W. Sunrise Blvd. The two weren’t at the restaurant Friday when the crash happened because of a family emergency. Some of their family members were at the restaurant when the car came flying through.“There was only one empty table in the whole restaurant and it was packed at 6:30 on a Friday night, and my brother in-law was here, my sister, regular customers that we know and love,” Montanez said. From th...

Brick of cocaine found at Crandon Park near Key Biscayne

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:20:22 GMT

Brick of cocaine found at Crandon Park near Key Biscayne A suspicious package found at a South Florida beach prompted a quick response by police.Miami-Dade Police arrived at the scene at Crandon Park near Key Biscayne, Monday afternoon. 7Skyforce hovered over the scene as officers assessed the situation. According to police, they received a call about a brick of cocaine that washed up on the shore. Officers are in the process of interviewing a kite-surfer who found the suspicious package.

Biden says federal government will help Maui ‘for as long as it takes’ to recover from wildfire

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:20:22 GMT

Biden says federal government will help Maui ‘for as long as it takes’ to recover from wildfire LAHAINA, Hawaii, (AP) — President Joe Biden on Monday told survivors of Hawaii’s wildfires that the nation “grieves with you” and promised that the federal government will help Maui “for as long as it takes” to recover after touring damage caused by the deadliest wildfire in the United States in more than a century.Biden arrived in Maui 13 days after the wildfires that have taken at least 114 lives ravaged the western part of the island. Standing near a burned, but still standing, 150-year-old Banyon tree, the president acknowledged the “overwhelming” devastation but said that Maui would persevere through the tragedy.“Today it’s burned but it’s still standing,” Biden said of the tree. “The tree survived for a reason. I believe it’s a very powerful symbol of what we can and will do to get through this crisis.”Biden and first lady Jill Biden got a close look at the devastation wrought by the flames that ripped through the western part of the Hawaiian island, seeing for themselves the ...

2 men jump overboard when yacht goes up in flames off Maine coast

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:20:22 GMT

2 men jump overboard when yacht goes up in flames off Maine coast GEORGETOWN, Maine (AP) — Two boaters jumped overboard to save themselves after a fire engulfed a 48-foot yacht off the Maine coast, the Coast Guard said. Several lobster boats came to the rescue, and one plucked the men out of the water.The two unharmed men watched along with the lobstermen as the vessel burned and sank in 200 feet of water on Saturday off the coast of Seguin Island, near Georgetown.“It was a very heartbreaking scene. It was really scary,” said Deb Kremer, who witnessed the fire and took photos from her boat.The Coast Guard emphasized the importance of fellow boaters who came to the rescue, averting tragedy.“The moral of the story: Without the good Samaritans responding to calls and helping the Coast Guard, some lives could’ve been lost on this incident. We credit the good Samaritans,” said Lt. j.g. David Letarte in South Portland.The Coast Guard did not identify the two men aboard the yacht, the Titan. It was unclear where the yacht was based.The Coast Guard estima...

Chicago White Sox are considering a move from Guaranteed Rate Field, a report says — and possibly out of town

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:20:22 GMT

Chicago White Sox are considering a move from Guaranteed Rate Field, a report says — and possibly out of town What’s the future for the Chicago White Sox at Guaranteed Rate Field?According to a Crain’s Chicago Business report, the Sox are considering a move from the place they’ve called home since 1991 when the team’s lease expires six seasons from now.No decision is imminent, according to the report, which lists a new stadium in the city or suburbs and relocating to Nashville, Tenn., among the possibilities.The article also details that Chairman Jerry Reinsdorf might look to sell the Sox.“We have not had any conversations about our lease situation, but with six years remaining, it is naturally nearing a time where discussions should begin to take place,” the Sox said in a statement Monday. “The conversations would be with the city, ISFA (Illinois Sports Facilities Authority) and the state and most likely would be about vision, opportunities and the future.”The Sox moved into Guaranteed Rate Field, then named new Comiskey Park, after calling C...

Another 100 migrant families could be housed in Woburn soon, mayor says

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:20:22 GMT

Another 100 migrant families could be housed in Woburn soon, mayor says The mayor says the city of Woburn can expect about 100 migrant families to join the dozens already there as the state struggles to find shelter for tens of thousands of newly arriving people.According to Mayor Scott Galvin, the city of 41,000 has already seen 59 migrant families placed in area hotels under the state’s Right to Shelter law, but the Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities has informed them that an additional 100 families could arrive very soon.“The State has also indicated its intention to establish an emergency family shelter in Woburnfor as many as 100 families beginning as early as next week,” the Mayor’s office said in a Monday release.According to the Mayor, the nation’s immigration policies, when coupled with the state’s requirement that families with children and expecting mothers be provided with a place to live, have created a perfect storm that is battering already hard pressed municipalities.“Federal inaction on immigration reform has created an...

Mets Notebook: International prospect suspended for PED’s, Francisco Alvarez gets a rest

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:20:22 GMT

Mets Notebook: International prospect suspended for PED’s, Francisco Alvarez gets a rest Cristopher Larez, a Mets minor leaguer who was one of the team’s biggest international signings this year, was hit with a 56-game suspension after testing positive for a performance-enhancing substance, Major League Baseball announced Monday.The Venezuelan shortstop, 17, tested positive for Boldenone, according to the announcement.Larez signed a $1.4 million signing bonus with the Mets in January. MLB Pipeline ranked Larez as the No. 43 prospect on this year’s international list, describing him as “one of the most polished shortstops in the class” who “has a chance to be a five-tool player at a premium position.”“Larez shows good bat-to-ball skills and has a chance to be a plus hitter in the future,” the MLB Pipeline scouting report reads. “He shows some strength now. There’s also a chance he develops more power as he grows and his body matures.”The teenager received the third-highest ranking among international free ...

Still no sports betting license for Raynham Park

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:20:22 GMT

Still no sports betting license for Raynham Park Despite operating a gambling establishment in Raynham for most of the century, the owners of the former greyhound racing track are struggling to convince the state’s gaming commission they should be allowed to take bets on professional sports.While more than half-a-dozen companies have entered the state and started taking bets from Massachusetts residents since the industry was made legal and launched earlier this year, the Massasoit Greyhound Association, the business behind Raynham Park, can’t seem to get passed the licensing phase of operations.“I have a number of questions that, to me, kill a claim that good cause has been shown on this record,” Commissioner Eileen O’Brien said.Raynham Park is, according to lawyers speaking for the company on Monday, owned by George Carney, Jr., who inherited the business from his father.The involvement of his son Chris Carney, who has other business interests and companies working with the track, was of particular concern to the commissio...

Robbins: Loyal Afghan allies still waiting for safety they deserve

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 06:20:22 GMT

Robbins: Loyal Afghan allies still waiting for safety they deserve “America,” wrote novelist Thomas Wolfe, “is a fabulous country, the only fabulous country; it is the only place where miracles not only happen, but where they happen all the time.” We’re having more than our share of trouble doing the fundamentally right things, let alone achieving miracles. But a properly bipartisan bill pending before Congress would at least do the fundamentally right thing for tens of thousands of Afghans, most of them women and children, whose families risked their lives helping us confront Al Qaeda and the Taliban, and who now depend on us to offer them the permanent safety they deserve.In the 20 years following Sept. 11, 2001, untold numbers of Afghans chose to help American forces attempt to ensure that the kind of mass murder visited upon us when planes smashed into lower Manhattan never happened again. They were drivers, interpreters, soldiers, nurses, social workers, cooks, construction workers and more, and they enlisted alongside our own men and women se...