Feel for all the cast and crew who have now been impacted by this, but ABC really should have known better from the outset.
Reminds me of Top Gear with Clarkson. You can have a great show (and I don’t know if hers was, I’ve never watched it) but you’re basically left with no choice but to scrap it because of the repeated actions of the lead star.
You can blame and be angry at Nestle's practises, but you should really be looking at government and local state regulations allowing it to happen in the first place. And clearly somebody is buying it. It's Peckham Spring.
People always complain about these companies but when it comes down to it, the masses will keep on buying it.
>strawberry floating STARBUCKS NOT PAYING ANY TAX > OOOOOOH, BUT I DO LOVE MY MILKY CUM DRINK WITH 0.01 OF FARKING COFFEE ESSENCE IN IT.
KK wrote:I don't know why he's still doing these campaign rallies.
He likes to be adored by his fans, if he keeps seeing masses of people coming to see him he can maintain his belief that the whole of everywhere loves him.
KK wrote:Feel for all the cast and crew who have now been impacted by this, but ABC really should have known better from the outset.
Reminds me of Top Gear with Clarkson. You can have a great show (and I don’t know if hers was, I’ve never watched it) but you’re basically left with no choice but to scrap it because of the repeated actions of the lead star.
The crew will be less affected. They will be tied to the studios not the show.
After the raids on Cohen’s home and office, Cohen and Trump asked the judge to block prosecutors from reviewing the seized documents, citing attorney-client privilege.
Wood responded by appointing former U.S. District Judge Barbara Jones as a so-called special master to review whether any of the documents were shielded by attorney-client privilege before turning them over to prosecutors.
In a court filing on Tuesday evening, Jones said she had already turned over to prosecutors more than 290,000 seized items that were not marked privileged by Cohen or Trump.
She said that more than a million items from three seized phones had also been designated as not privileged by Cohen and Trump, and would be turned over to prosecutors Wednesday after a final review.
Cohen and Trump have made at least 252 claims of privilege, according to the filing.
Trump signs Right to Try Act for terminally ill patients
President Donald Trump has signed a bill giving terminally ill patients the right to try experimental treatments not approved by the government.
Patients were able to apply to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for access to non-approved drugs before, and most were granted permission.
The new bill does not mandate that drug makers give access to unapproved drugs to patients asking for them.
Advocacy groups including the American Cancer Society had opposed the bill.
"America is a nation of fighters. We never give up, right?" Mr Trump said to patients and their families during a bill signing ceremony at the White House on Wednesday.
After signing the bill, Mr Trump handed his pen to nine-year-old Jordan McLinn, who has been diagnosed with a form of terminal muscular dystrophy.
Jordan, who the bill is named for, has been accepted into a clinical programme in Chicago where he has been receiving weekly infusions.
He and his mother, Laura, had travelled from Indianapolis for the White House event.
What has changed with the Right to Try act?
The new Right to Try act allows patients with life-threatening diseases to bypass the FDA's application process for "compassionate use" of experimental drugs.
Patients seeking access to "investigational drugs" now need only the approval of their physician and the drug manufacturer.
The new bill protects doctors and companies from the legal risks of allowing unapproved treatments unless they intentionally harm a patient.
The policy that patients must have exhausted all other approved treatments and clinical trial options remains.