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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
Social media platforms had a bit of a meltdown on Wednesday.Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and Twitter were all experiencing various issues.Users reported bugs, such as images not loading on Instagram and problems with Twitter direct messages, including the app showing notifications for unread DMs that weren't there when users checked their inbox."We're currently having some issues with DM delivery and notifications. We're working on a fix and will follow up as soon as we have an update for you. Apologies for the inconvenience," Twitter said in a tweet.Issues on Facebook and Twitter were happening in pockets worldwide, according to Down Detector, which tracks issues and outages on a variety of sites."We're aware that some people and businesses are currently having trouble uploading or sending images, videos and other files on our apps. We're working to get things back to normal as quickly as possible," a Facebook spokesperson told CNN Business, on behalf of its other apps Instagram and WhatsApp.It's unclear what caused issues on Twitter and Facebook apps. Facebook said it was investigating the problem, but noted it's not the result of a cyber attack. Twitter did not immediately respond to a request for comment.In March, Facebook was hit with a 1275

So my little cousin was selling water and didn't have a permit so this lady decided to call the cops on an 8 year old. #PermitPatty pic.twitter.com/SiL61pnAgl— Sasuke (@_ethiopiangold) June 23, 2018 210
SIESTA KEY, Fla. — When owners at the Siesta Key Oyster Bar saw the destruction Hurricane Dorian did to the Bahamas, they knew they wanted to help, so they started 176
Six years ago -- on the 10th anniversary of his marriage -- Thomas Althaus decided to get a little creative with his gift for his wife.He made her jewelry out of tin cans. Of course, she loved it and encouraged him to start a business and named it 260
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