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(KGTV) - Did a record number of people with the North Carolina lottery last weekend by picking all zeroes?Yes!2,014 people chose 0-0-0-0 for their numbers in the June 22nd Pick 4 lottery ... and those numbers hit.About half bought a ticket and get ,000 apiece.The other half bought 50-cent tickets and will each get ,500.Their combined prize of .8 million sets a new record for this game. 405
(KGTV) - Did a man wearing a shirt reading "It's not a crime unless you get caught" really break into a vending machine?Yes!A laundromat in Crystal City, Missouri released surveillance pictures of the thief wearing the shirt.He got away with 0 in cash and change and caused about ,300 damage to the vending to the machine.As of this writing, he has not been caught. 378
(KGTV) - Filmmaker Ziad Doueiri is no stranger to controversy.The San Diego State University graduate's 2012 film "The Attack," about an Arab surgeon living in Tel Aviv following a suicide bombing," was banned after he broke laws forbidding him from going to Israel to film.Approaching 2018's Academy Awards, Doueiri's film "The Insult" brought more controversy — this time threatening to derail any chance of an Oscars nomination.OSCARS PARTIES IN SAN DIEGO | ODDS RELEASED FOR OSCARS FILMS"I was not conservative. I always wanted to say more, which caused me clashed with some of the teachers," Doueiri told 10News reporter Michael Chen via Skype. "It like cements your belief.""The Insult" revolves around a dispute in Beirut, Lebanon, over a broken water pipe between a Christian mechanic and a Palestinian refugee that turns violent. The legal drama that follows threatens a social uprising in the country.The film, however, was almost out of Oscars contention because of the same issues that led to "The Attack" being banned.OSCARS BINGO GAMESHEET | HOW TO PLAY THE OSCARS CHALLENGE"I was very hurt," Doueiri said of his banned film. "You know when we work on films ... we work for years on it."Doueiri eventually gained support from Lebanon's Prime Minister and others, cementing it for Academy Awards contention.Without the support, Doueiri wouldn't have been able to submit "The Insult" for the "best foreign film" award.SPOTS TO VISIT FOR OSCARS FILM BUFFS | HOW TO WATCH OSCARS FILMS AT HOME"When we got the nomination, I just sat down and I said 'you know what, yeah, this is the way to go,'" Doueiri said. "Like we scored a goal. It became about the difficulty that we overcame."Now in just a couple of days, Doueiri will be in Los Angeles, Calif., at his first Academy Awards."I cannot have any expectations. We're there and then you let destiny decide for you," Doueiri said.The 90th annual Academy Awards airs Sunday, March 4, at 5 p.m. on ABC10. 2050
(KGTV) - Hawkins, Ind., is coming to Universal Studios Hollywood this Halloween, well, the upside down version of the town, anyway.Universal Studios Hollywood is partnering with Netflix to bring the world of "Stranger Things" to the theme park's Halloween Horror Nights event beginning Sept. 14. The park's mazes will be transformed into an alternate reality, the Upside Down, from the show.It's there in the Halloween mazes where horrors await.As guests make their way through iconic scenes and locales from the show, including the Hawkins National Laboratory to the Byers home, the fearsome Demogorgon will be stalking from the shadows.The "Stranger Things" themed scares will also come to Universal Studios' Orlando and Singapore locations.Halloween Horror Nights will not only transform mazes into scenes of terror, but the streets of Universal Studios will become scare zones, with monster jumping out around every turn. 938
(KGTV) -- Billions of dollars could be at stake with Proposition 15.If passed, it would tax some commercial properties based on current market value instead of when it was bought. It could potentially bring in anywhere between .5 to .5 billion in new funding to local schools and governments, according to the Legislative Analyst’s Office.Brandon Foster is a small business owner in Oceanside. Even though he rents the space where his two gift shops are located, he is against Prop. 15.“We already have been told by our landlords, if that passes, they will be passing on that cost to us,” Foster said. “The landlords, a lot of them, have vacancies and things like that where they are struggling themselves. I understand why they need to pass that cost onto us.”The ad for No on Prop. 15 highlights a small business owner who said he had to close twice during the pandemic. The ad said Proposition 15 would raise “property taxes and rents on small business and they admit homeowners are next.”The change in property tax assessment would apply only to commercial or industrial properties valued at more than million. It would tax those properties at current market value rather than when it was bought.Residential and agricultural properties are not affected under Prop. 15.“They are very emotional, as ads are supposed to be,” said Lynn Reaser, chief economist at Pt. Loma Nazarene University.The ad has major funding from the California Business Roundtable, California Business Properties Association, and the California Taxpayers Association.“You would see a big effect especially on these older companies, not necessarily the big companies, but all companies that bought their properties some years ago,” Reaser said. “They could face more problems in terms of survival.”The ad lacks detail about time frame for Proposition 15, not making clear that it would take effect in 2022.While the ad said homeowners are next in line for property tax increases, Reaser said “no one knows” if that is actually true.“All the businesses, they’re all going to have to pass on the money, the expense, to somebody,” Foster said. 2131