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ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — A long-simmering feud between a pair of Tampa Bay radio personalities is headed to court.A lawsuit was filed Wednesday on behalf of Bubba Clem — better known as "Bubba the Love Sponge" — in Pinellas County. Clem is seeking unspecified damages from his former employer, Cox Media Group, and two of his former employees, Mike "Cowhead" Calta and Matthew "Spice Boy" Lloyd.Calta is the current morning show host on Cox station WHPT and a former coworker of Clem's. Lloyd, is a former Cox employee and a former member of Clem’s crew. The complaint alleges Cox engineered a scheme to that led to Clem’s termination from Beasley Media Group, a competing radio group.“As our complaint alleges, Cox Media has engaged in improper, anti-competitive acts that no major media company should ever employ,” said Clem’s attorney Jeffrey E. Nusinov in a statement. “Cox Media set out to destroy Bubba Clem — not through honest competition, but through dishonest and illegal means.”Clem’s show is currently broadcast on WHBO 1040 AM in Pinellas Park, Florida. Last year the former top-rated shock jock in Tampa Bay reached a settlement with consumer research company Nielsen over a ‘ratings tampering,’ lawsuit.The terms of the settlement between Clem and Nielsen were not disclosed.In Wednesday’s filing, Clem’s lawyers claim Calta and Lloyd played a major role in leaking footage of professional wrestler Hulk Hogan having sex with Clem’s wife to Gawker.Gawker and Hogan settled their lawsuit in November 2016.Hulk Hogan is also suing Calta, Lloyd and Cox Media group over the leak in Pinellas County.Calta had no comment when asked about the lawsuit. 1671
Republican Greg Murphy will win in the special election to replace Walter Jones as the congressman from North Carolina's 3rd District, CNN projects.In another race on Tuesday, North Carolina state Sen. Dan Bishop will defeat Democrat Dan McCready in the North Carolina 9th District's special congressional election, giving Republicans a narrow victory in the GOP-leaning district where President Donald Trump won by 12 points in 2016.The race drew national attention as a potential 2020 bellwether, in a district that stretched from the Charlotte suburbs to the military town of Fayetteville. Trump and Vice President Mike Pence both made eleventh hour trips to the district on Monday in an effort to bolster Bishop.The "do-over" special election came after the state board of elections refused to certify the 2018 House race results in the district after fraud allegations, ordering a new election. 911

Rock band Third Eye Blind takes pride in never canceling a tour, but with the growing coronavirus, the musicians may have to do something they thought they would never do. More and more performers are changing live concerts plans because of the virus, which has forced Mariah Carey, BTS, Pearl Jam and even the Coachella festival to postpone dates. The Who and Dan + Shay are the latest act to announce cancellations, though some performers are still on the road, including Billie Eilish and Skillet. The vast majority of people recover from the new virus, but for some, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia. 638
SUMMIT COUNTY, Colorado — A skier was declared dead after he was found unconscious at the bottom of a ski run at Keystone Resort in Colorado on Saturday.Just before 12:30 p.m. local time on Dec. 22, the Summit County Sheriff’s Office responded to a report of a 52-year-old male skier who was found not breathing at the bottom of one of the resort’s runs. There was no indication that he had collided with any object. Skiers on the run had started CPR when authorities arrived. The skier was transported to the Keystone Medical Center where he was later pronounced dead. The identity of the skier is being withheld until notification to the next of kin has been made by the Summit County Coroner. 708
President Trump seems nowhere near making a deal with Democrats over border wall funding. And instead of waiting on a compromise, Trump's claiming he can declare an "immigration emergency" to get his way. But experts aren't so sure about that. "I don't think he can go through with it," said James Thurber, professor of government at American University and author of "Rivals for Power: Presidential-Congress Relations." "Maybe it will take a judicial action to force him not to do it, but I think that he probably found out that there was such a thing as the national emergency powers of the president and that stuck with him, and so he tweeted and stated things that were well before legal advice given to him."But is there precedent for Trump's potential move? They have been used by President George W. Bush during times of war and by President Barack Obama after Russia annexed Crimea. "Emergency powers were used to build facilities in Afghanistan and Iraq, but they've also been used since the 1976 National Emergencies Act that defines what you can and cannot do. They've been used probably 30 times, primarily on trade issues but also related to war and war powers," Thurber said.An 1204
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