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alamante · 6 years
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REDDING, Calif. (Reuters) – Assisted by calmer winds at their backs, firefighters in northern California on Tuesday tightened their grip on a deadly blaze raging for more than a week around the city of Redding, as 16 people listed as missing turned up safe.
Four others reported missing in the sprawling fire zone, 160 miles (260 km) north of the state capital Sacramento, remained unaccounted for, said Redding police Sergeant Todd Cogle, who has overseen efforts to find them.
The Carr Fire has claimed six confirmed fatalities since gale-force winds whipped the blaze into a flaming cyclone that jumped a river and roared with little warning into Redding and adjacent communities in the scenic Shasta-Trinity region on Thursday night.
Whole neighborhoods were laid to waste as residents fled for their lives, many with only their pets and few belongings.
Among the dead were two firefighters, as well as two young children who perished with their great-grandmother as they huddled under a wet blanket while their house went up in smoke. Also killed was a man who stayed at his home despite an evacuation order. Authorities said his remains were later found in the rubble of the house, which burned to the ground.
Nearly 1,000 dwellings and more than 400 other buildings were reduced to ruins in what state officials now rank as the seventh most destructive wildfire in California history.
The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CalFire) listed the cause of the blaze, which erupted last Monday, as the “mechanical failure of a vehicle.”
SEARCH FOR MISSING NARROWS
As of Tuesday afternoon, five days after the Redding fire storm, police were still trying to account for 20 people reported missing by family or friends.
Jul 30, 2018; Redding, CA, USA; Firefighters monitor fire movement as it crosses Highway 299 just west of Buckhorn Summit near the Trinity County line. Firefighters made progress on the fire which is now at 20 percent containment. Kelly Jordan via USA TODAY NETWORK
Discovering most homes of those in question had been spared from the fire, frustrated police took the unusual step of publicizing the names of the missing, Cogle said.
Within hours 16 of them, previously unaware they were being sought, were located when they saw their names on television or the internet and contacted authorities, he told Reuters.
“It speaks to the power of the media,” Cogle said.
Meanwhile, some 4,100 firefighters gained significant additional ground, helped by a second day of diminished winds.
CalFire reported 30 percent of the blaze’s perimeter corralled by containment lines by late Tuesday, up from 5 percent during much of the past week, even as the footprint of scorched landscape grew to almost 113,000 acres (46,000 hectares).
Some evacuees have been allowed to return home, though as many as 37,000 remained displaced.
Lighter winds also gave a boost to firefighters battling a pair of fires at the southern end of Mendocino National Forest, where some 12,200 people were under mandatory evacuation orders.
Those blazes, dubbed the Ranch and River fires, have charred more than 80,000 acres (32,000 hectares), with containment measured at 12 percent for the two together.
The Carr Fire stood as the most formidable of 94 wildfires burning across 13 U.S. Western states, from Texas to Alaska, according to the National Interagency Fire Center.
California, with 17 large active blazes reported, has been one of the hardest hit, with a volatile mix of triple digit-temperatures, erratic winds and drought-parched vegetation fueling intense wildfire activity.
Slideshow (5 Images)
Additional reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles, Brendan O’Brien in Milwaukee and Jonathan Allen in New York; Writing and additional reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Jonathan Oatis, Chris Reese, Toni Reinhold and Michael Perry
Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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latestnews2018-blog · 6 years
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Apple orders a 10-episode mystery series inspired by kid reporter Hilde Lysiak
New Post has been published on https://latestnews2018.com/apple-orders-a-10-episode-mystery-series-inspired-by-kid-reporter-hilde-lysiak/
Apple orders a 10-episode mystery series inspired by kid reporter Hilde Lysiak
Apple is continuing to flesh out its lineup of TV series for its upcoming streaming service and Netflix competitor, assumed to be offered sometime next year as part of a subscription bundle with Apple Music. The company’s latest addition is a dramatic mystery series, currently known as the untitled Hilde Lysiak project. The show is inspired by the real-life story of the 11-year-old investigative reporter who scooped local news outlets by being the first to expose a murder in her hometown of Selinsgrove, PA.
Lysiak may not be a household name, but her story is impressive.
The Columbia Journalism Review profiled her online news operation, Orange Street News, in a story titled, “Is this 8-year-old’s newspaper better than yours?”
The young reporter is not a hobbyist at her chosen profession — she attends town meetings, she covers neighborhood crime without police cooperation, and she shows up on the scene of breaking news, the article explains.
She also beat the local daily paper in being the first to cover a murder in the area when she was only 9 years old. When criticized by Facebook commenters (aren’t they lovely) for being a kid covering graphic news like this before all the facts were in, she fought back.
youtube
“I just like letting people know all the information,” the reporter said.
“Because of my work, I was able to inform the people that there’s a terrible murder hours before my competition even got to the scene. In fact, some of these adult-read newspapers were reporting the wrong news or no news at all,” she explained in a YouTube video.
As to how she got the scoop, Lysiak said, “I got a good tip from a source and I was able to confirm it.”
Her site today continues to feature a number of crime reports, included break-ins, drugs, abuse, assaults and more, alongside stories of local interest, like the gas smell that shut down Orange Street, for example.
Clearly, Lysiak’s work is great fodder for a feel-good show about smart and ambitious kids, but it’s also one of increased importance in an era where journalism itself is under attack.
Apple has given a straight-to-series order to the untitled Hilde Lysiak project, which will have 10 episodes in its debut season.
The series is produced by Anonymous Content and Paramount Television, is created and executive produced by Dana Fox (How To Be Single and Ben and Kate) and Dara Resnik (Daredevil), along with executive producers Joy Gorman Wettels (13 Reasons Why) and Sharlene Martin (Smallville). Jon M. Chu (Crazy Rich Asians, Now You See Me 2) will direct and executive produce.
The show will begin by following a young girl who moves from Brooklyn to the small lakeside down her father had left behind. The protagonist will then work to unveil the truth regarding a cold case that everyone in town, father included, has tried to bury.
Hence the “inspired by” label — in real life, Lysiak’s father didn’t try to bury the truth.
In fact, he inspired her pursuit of chasing stories by taking her with him to the newsroom of the New York Daily News, where he had worked as a journalist himself.
The show will join a varied lineup at Apple, which now includes a reboot of Steven Spielberg’s Amazing Stories, a Reese Witherspoon- and Jennifer Anniston-starring series set in the world of morning TV, an adaptation of Isaac Asimov’s Foundation books, a thriller starring Octavia Spencer, a Kristen Wiig-led comedy, a Kevin Durant-inspired scripted basketball show, a documentary about extraordinary homes, a series from “La La Land’s” director and a series about Emily Dickinson, among others.
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theinvinciblenoob · 6 years
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Apple is continuing to flesh out its lineup of TV series for its upcoming streaming service and Netflix competitor, assumed to be offered sometime next year as part of a subscription bundle with Apple Music. The company’s latest addition is a dramatic mystery series, currently known as the untitled Hilde Lysiak project. The show is inspired by the real-life story of the 11-year-old investigate reporter who scooped local news outlets by being the first to expose a murder in her hometown of Selinsgrove, PA.
Lysiak may not be a household name, but her story is impressive.
The Columbia Journalism Review profiled her online news operation, Orange Street News, in a story titled, “Is this 8-year-old’s newspaper better than yours?”
The young reporter is not a hobbyist at her chosen profession – she attends town meetings, she covers neighborhood crime without police cooperation, and she shows up on the scene of breaking news, the article explains.
She also beat the local daily paper in being the first to cover a murder in the area when she was only 9 years old. When criticized by Facebook commenters (aren’t they lovely) for being a kid covering graphic news like this before all the facts were in, she fought back.
“I just like letting people know all the information,” the reporter said.
“Because of my work, I was able to inform the people that there’s a terrible murder hours before my competition even got to the scene. In fact, some of these adult-read newspapers were reporting the wrong news or no news at all,” she explained in a YouTube video.
As to how she got the scoop, Lysiak said, “I got a good tip from a source and I was able to confirm it.”
Her site today continues to feature a number of crime reports, included break-ins, drugs, abuse, assaults and more, alongside stories of local interest, like the gas smell that shut down Orange Street, for example.
Clearly, Lysiak’s work is great fodder for a feel-good show about smart and ambitious kids, but it’s also one of increased importance in an era where journalism itself is under attack.
Apple has given a straight-to-series order to the untitled Hilde Lysiak project, which will have 10 episodes in its debut season.
The series is produced by Anonymous Content and Paramount Television, is created and executive produced by Dana Fox (How To Be Single and “Ben and Kate”) and Dara Resnik (“Daredevil”); along with executive producers Joy Gorman Wettels (“13 Reasons Why”) and Sharlene Martin (“Smallville”). Jon M. Chu (Crazy Rich Asians, Now You See Me 2) will direct and executive produce.
The show will begin by following a young girl who moves from Brooklyn to the small lakeside down her father had left behind. The protagonist will then work to unveil the truth regarding a cold case that everyone in town, father included, has tried to bury.
Hence the “inspired by” label – in real life, Lysiak’s father didn’t try to bury the truth.
In fact, he inspired her pursuit of chasing stories by taking her with him to the newsroom of the New York Daily News, where he had worked as a journalist himself.
The show will join a varied lineup at Apple, which now includes a reboot of Steven Spielberg’s Amazing Stories, a Reese Witherspoon- and Jennifer Anniston-starring series set in the world of morning TV, an adaptation of Isaac Asimov’s Foundation books, a thriller starring Octavia Spencer, a Kristen Wiig-led comedy, a Kevin Durant-inspired scripted basketball show, a documentary about extraordinary homes, a series from “La La Land’s” director, and a series about Emily Dickinson, among others.
via TechCrunch
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