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Rosie O’Donnell's streaming Broadway charity show raised over 0,000 for virus victims. Sunday's show featured Kristin Chenoweth singing “Taylor the Latte Boy,” Gavin Creel singing “You Matter to Me,” Darren Criss singing “Being Alive” and Gloria Estefan singing “There’s Always Tomorrow.”In other entertainment news, Amazon is giving parents free streaming access to more than 40 children’s shows, including “Pete the Cat” and “If You Give a Mouse a Cookie.” And actress and singer Rita Wilson posted a video on Instagram over the weekend in which she is seen rapping along to the classic Naughty by Nature 1992 hit “Hip Hop Hooray.” 649
San Francisco, long one of the most tech-friendly and tech-savvy cities in the world, is now the first in the United States to prohibit its government from using facial-recognition technology.The ban is part of a broader 233
Students attending a vigil following a shooting at a school near Denver shouted "mental health" and stormed out of the event to protest politicians.Attendees walked out and chanted after Sen. Michael Bennet and Congressman Jason Crow spoke at the vigil Wednesday evening at Highlands Ranch High School, The Denver Post reported. It said several hundred students were at the vigil that went from a peaceful event to a demonstration, and included protests against the media and politicians.The students returned to the vigil held inside the gym, it said.The two suspects accused of carrying out a mass shooting at a Denver-area charter school made their first appearances in court Wednesday.Neither of the suspects -- 18-year-old student Devon Erickson and 16-year-old Alec McKinney -- were formally charged.Eighteen-year-old Kendrick Ray Castillo was killed and eight others were wounded in the shooting at STEM School Highlands Ranch. First-degree murder and attempted murder charges will be filed, said 18th Judicial District Attorney George Brauchler. He said he wants time to consider other charges.Erickson took the two handguns used in the shooting from his parents, according to a law enforcement source with direct knowledge of the investigation. Both guns were purchased legally, the source said.Both suspects are scheduled to appear separately in court again on Friday afternoon.Erickson spent most of his hearing Wednesday with his head bowed, his bushy head of hair -- colored with streaks of purple -- obscuring his face. He spoke only when spoken to directly by the judge, and at one point signed a court document while holding his handcuffed wrists in front of him.Prosecutors have not decided whether they will seek to try the 16-year-old suspect as an adult, Brauchler told reporters.Authorities initially referred to the 16-year-old suspect as female. But the suspect's lawyer said in court that McKinney goes by the first name Alec, and uses the pronoun "he," Colorado Judicial Department spokesman Rob McCallum said.Brendan Bialy, a student who helped disarm one of the suspects, said he knows both alleged shooters. Erickson was a student in his class, where another student was killed and several were wounded, he said.Hero student is a "legend"Bialy wants people to remember Castillo as a "legend."The two were sitting by a classroom door when someone from their class arrived late and took out a gun, he said. Castillo immediately rushed him."It was immediate, nonhesitation, immediate jump into action," Bialy said of Castillo's reaction. "The gunman was there and then he was against the wall and didn't know what the hell hit him."Bialy and a third student joined in and wrestled with the shooter, who may have fired once or twice more during the struggle, Bialy said.Once he got the gun away and the other student had the shooter pinned down, Bialy went over to Castillo, who was unresponsive. Castillo died at the school.He was a kind, hilarious jokester who was always ready to help his classmates, student Tuscany "Nui" Giasolli said.Nui's mother, Nyki Giasolli, said if not for the heroism of her daughter's classmates, "I wouldn't have my baby today.""All these kids are alive because of (Castillo's) sacrifice and the bravery of all the boys to neutralize the threat," Giasolli said.But across town, Castillo's parents are mourning.A father's mixed emotions after losing his only childAt his home in Denver, John Castillo struggles to stop sobbing.He's torn between pride and anguish after the heroics of his only child."Selfless -- that's what my son was. And it got him killed. But he saved others," the father said."Because of what he did, others are alive, and I thank God for that. ... But there's another part of you that wishes he just turned and ran, retreated, hid."Like many parents, John Castillo waited at a reunification center Tuesday for buses to drop off survivors. One by one, he watched parents and children embrace with relief."We didn't have that," he said.But he takes solace in knowing other children are alive because of Kendrick.More than 1,850 students attend the STEM school, 4147
TAMPA, Fla — Amy Bottomley was raised in the suburbs of Chicago by two parents who loved her very much — a little girl who grew up and moved with her husband and son to Tampa.She says there’s always been a piece of her heart missing — and on Thursday, in front of Gate C inside Tampa International Airport, she was ready to find that missing piece.Bottomley had spent months talking on the phone with her birth mother, Kathleen Buchanan. They had connected after Bottomley got the results of a DNA test."I am feeling a mix of emotions right now,” Bottomley said as she sat in the seat and waited for her birth mom’s plane to land. “It’s going to be interesting.”Her hands were shaking, her heart was racing. She got a text that her birth mom's plane had landed. She’s been waiting for this moment, "My whole life, my entire life, 42 years.” 852
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Firefighters in South Bend, Indiana, saved a pair of raccoons from a warehouse fire that started Sunday night. The raccoons were stuck on the roof of the warehouse when the fire broke out, but the ladders set up by firefighters allowed them to escape the smoke.Video posted by the South Bend Fire Department shows two ladders propped against a warehouse on Calvert and Franklin streets in South Bend. The raccoons can be seen safely descending as kids watching nearby erupt into cheers as the two furry creatures leap to the ground. The structure fire started Sunday night but hot spots reignited it Monday, according to 652