Groundbreaking sickle cell fitness program pioneers new way to treat disease

Groundbreaking sickle cell fitness program pioneers new way to treat disease
Groundbreaking sickle cell fitness program pioneers new way to treat disease
Massachusetts General Hospital

(BOSTON) — A sickle cell disease center is leading the way in treatment with a new, innovative approach to caring for those with the illness.

Dr. Sharl Azar, Medical Director of the Comprehensive Sickle Cell Disease Treatment Center at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), hired a medical exercise specialist to work with their patients on fitness programs that will help improve their lives.

“One of the parts of the lore of this disease has been patients living with sickle cell disease can’t exercise or they shouldn’t, because exercising can exacerbate symptoms of their disease,” Azar told ABC News. “It can put them into the painful crises that are the hallmark of the illness.”

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), sickle cell disease is a red blood cell disorder, in which the affected individual has abnormally shaped red blood cells (sickle cells) rather than round ones because of abnormal hemoglobin, a protein that carries oxygen. Sickle cells perish early resulting in a shortage of red blood cells. They also block blood flow when they get clogged in vessels. The constricted blood flow can cause a crisis of agonizing pain for the patient.

That painful crisis is all too familiar to Amy Diawara, 27, who has had sickle cell disease her entire life. She said that a crisis feels like excruciating throbbing pains embedded deeply in the muscles of her body.

Diawara is a patient at MGH and worked with its medical exercise specialist Jen Miramontes on a personalized training program to run the Boston Athletic Association Half Marathon on Nov. 12.

“You need people that are going to want to ride with you to the finish line and I’m so grateful for Jen and Dr. Azar,” Diawara told ABC News. “They’ve encouraged me and this is how I’ve gotten to this point, and super excited to run the Boston half this Sunday.”

Miramontes, 59, isn’t only training Diawara, she agreed to run the race with her. She has competed in a total of 80 marathons throughout her life and created a training program specifically tailored to Diawara’s needs.

“We’re going to keep it at one mile, three times a week for the first two weeks,” Miramontes, who said she had to err on the side of caution when training Diawara, told ABC News. “Whereas, if I was training a person that did not have sickle cell disease, the process would have been probably two to three times faster to get to where we are [today].”

Other factors that Diawara had to be careful of were extreme heat and cold climates during her runs because dehydration and exceedingly cold temperatures could initiate a crisis, according to Miramontes. To avoid that, she instructed Diawara to run on treadmills during much of her training.

Miramontes was hired by the hospital through a grant, according to Azar. She was selected to offer medically approved fitness programs tailored to each patient she sees. Jen, who lives in California, flies to Massachusetts monthly to assess patients and create an exercise plan to meet each individual’s needs and goals. Afterward, she stays in constant communication and coaches the patients through virtual care, Azar said.

According to Azar, even though scientists have known about the genetic cause of sickle cell disease for over 100 years, population studies on the illness are far behind other chronic congenital diseases like cystic fibrosis or hemophilia. Azar says that is because sickle cell mostly affects people of color, resulting in the lack of adequate resources toward research for the illness.

According to the CDC, 100,000 people are living with sickle cell in the United States, but Azar says the data hasn’t been properly updated in decades. One out of every 365 African Americans are born with the disease and one in 13 African Americans are born with the trait inheriting a single copy of the sickle cell gene. If those numbers are expanded to today’s population of African Americans it should far exceed 100,000, according to Azar.

“It’s shameful to say that here we are in 2023, putting together the first program where we’re exploring the role of exercise in patients living with sickle cell disease.”

Most suffering from the disease have always been told not to overexert themselves with exercise because of a crisis risk, but Diawara and Miramontes are bucking the trend.

“I was shocked and just extremely disappointed to discover that there was very, very, very little research on exercise and sickle cell disease,” Miramontes said. “If you look up cancer, or MS [multiple sclerosis], or Parkinson’s and try to find research on how fitness can affect the disease, how it can impact positively the disease, you can find 1000s and 1000s of studies. I found two [for sickle cell]. And, so it’s certainly groundbreaking at a minimum.”

According to Azar, the Food and Drug Administration is set to make its first approval of a gene therapy product in December that will help to improve the lives of those with sickle cell disease. As for Diawara, she doesn’t think she’ll take the gene therapy treatment since she rarely has crises anymore. She’s more focused on her training and accomplishing her goal of running her first half marathon.

“I’m super excited because, again, this is something that I didn’t even think I could do,” Diawara said. “it’s always just been a dream. But now it’s like manifesting into an actual goal that’s about to be accomplished.”

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

ChatGPT use for wedding vows, eulogies stokes dispute over authenticity

ChatGPT use for wedding vows, eulogies stokes dispute over authenticity
ChatGPT use for wedding vows, eulogies stokes dispute over authenticity
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — When Tori Mccun found out that her father had suddenly died in June, grief and stress sapped her resolve to write a eulogy, she said. Despite the misgivings of her three sisters, Mccun turned to ChatGPT.

Mccun, 31, a data management specialist at Bloomberg, prompted the textbot to ask questions about her dad, eliciting memories from her and her siblings which she fed back into ChatGPT for a draft speech, she said. After some fine-tuning, Mccun delivered the eulogy and received a glowing response.

Her sisters are still uneasy about the decision to use ChatGPT, Mccun said.

“Engaging something so non-human in such a human moment is hard for people to comprehend,” said Mccun, who lives in New York City.

The disagreement between Mccun and her siblings exemplifies a wider cultural moment. ChatGPT has exploded over the past year, and using the technology has tested norms and raised questions around the importance of authenticity for some of life’s emotional moments, such as wedding vows, apologies and eulogies, according to experts in technology and ethics who spoke with ABC News.

In the coming years, AI could reshape conventions around emotionally charged messages, the experts said.

Generative AI, a category of digital tools that create written or other content, has surged in use since the release of ChatGPT to the public a year ago. The chatbot now boasts more than 100 million weekly users, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman announced on Monday.

To be sure, generative AI tools are open to the internet with few guardrails and users who input content into them, including details about loved ones, potentially open themselves up to false information and identity theft.

ChatGPT scans billions of pieces of digital text and uses an algorithm to string words together in response to a human prompt. OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, did not immediately respond to ABC News’ request for comment.

The use of ChatGPT for sensitive messages has occasionally stoked controversy. In February, Vanderbilt University apologized for the use of ChatGPT to compose an email to students about a mass shooting at another university.

When venture capitalist Vinod Khosla told 600,000 followers on X last month that he had used ChatGPT to write a rap song for his daughter’s wedding, the post drew both praise and derision.

The phrase “ChatGPT apology” has become social media shorthand in reference to apparently inauthentic expressions of public remorse.

The individuals ABC News spoke to for this story, who said they used ChatGPT for these types of emotional messages, said the technology allowed them to overcome the anxiety induced by a blank page and the expectation of eloquence in high-pressure moments. Startups have launched customized AI tools that help compose intimate notes such as wedding vows.

Melissa Buckley, the owner of a cosmetics business in Reading, Pennsylvania, said she used ChatGPT last month for help writing the script of a 3-minute video congratulating her stepson on his marriage.

“I was really busy at the time because we were moving offices,” Buckley told ABC News. “I just didn’t have the mental capacity to sit down and think about what I wanted to say.”

After providing ChatGPT with details about the task and her stepson, Buckley said the tool produced an AI-written speech from which she pulled out key points and recited them in her own words, she said. The video, she noted, was well received.

“There’s a little bit of stigma that I shortcutted it but it really wasn’t a shortcut,” Buckley said. “ChatGPT is only going to give you what you put into it. If you give it more specifics, that means you personally took the time to put the thought into it.”

Andrea Lynch, who sells eulogy-writing kits with advice for the use of generative AI, said she considers the technology an aid rather than a replacement. She advises clients to adapt the AI-written draft with their own speech patterns.

“I’ve realized that it’s not a substitute for a human being,” Lynch told ABC News. “I think if somebody is really searching for a way to communicate a sentiment and struggling to find the right words, particularly in times of high emotion, they sometimes could use some help.”

But one study suggests that the use of AI in personal messages draws skepticism from recipients. Researchers at Bar-Ilan University in Israel found that the use of AI for help writing apologies is perceived as less authentic and reduces the likelihood that the author will be forgiven.

The researchers presented participants with a scenario in which a colleague who speaks a different first language uses AI tools, such as translation or sentence completion, to help compose an apology. When given identical apologies, participants who were told that the writer had used the AI tools were less likely to believe that it conveyed genuine emotion.

Omri Asscher, a co-author of the study, said he suspects that the same perception of phoniness would apply to other messages like eulogies and wedding vows.

“The machines are perceived as less capable of doing that emotional work,” Asscher said. “They’re perceived to be faulty in terms of their moral authenticity.”

Differing opinions about the use of ChatGPT for intimate messages touches on a tension between two competing objectives fulfilled by them, Alice MacLachlan, a philosophy professor at Toronto-based York University who specializes in the ethics of apology, told ABC News.

Such communications are expected to be heartfelt expressions of direct emotion but also carefully crafted pieces of writing replete with rhetorical flourish, MacLachlan said.

“On the one hand, if I’m asking AI to write an apology for me, it’s not from my heart — it’s from the mixed-up word salad of a generative language collector,” MacLachlan said. “On the other hand, there’s a sense that an apology is something we craft. We want to do a good job of it.”

Ultimately, generative AI could reshape the way we view intimate communications, just as it has made college professors rethink what they glean from student essays, MacLachlan said.

While using these tools for heartfelt speeches may cause rifts between loved ones, it could also allow less-adept writers to better articulate their deepest feelings, she added.

“It’s unclear anymore how much we can use authored text as a measure of something, whether it’s a learning objective, a change of heart or a declaration of love,” MacLachlan said. “But I like the idea that language has power and that power might be shared more equitably.”

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Ohio State reports 2 antisemitic incidents against students in 24 hours

Ohio State reports 2 antisemitic incidents against students in 24 hours
Ohio State reports 2 antisemitic incidents against students in 24 hours
Stephen Zenner/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

(COLUMBUS, Ohio) — Ohio State University said police are investigating two antisemitic incidents that occurred within 24 hours against its students, including an alleged hate crime assault.

The alleged assault occurred off-campus early Friday, around 1:30 a.m., against two Ohio State students, according to an OSU public safety notice.

The victims were leaving a bar when they got into a verbal altercation with two unknown male suspects, Columbus police said.

“According to reports, the suspects yelled a derogatory term and assaulted two students while asking if they were Jewish,” OSU’s public safety notice stated.

Columbus police said both victims “believe this to be a hate crime” due to hearing an antisemitic slur and the suspects asking them their religion.

One victim reported being punched in the face, “causing redness and swelling to the left side of his face,” and the other reported being punched in the face, “causing a possible fractured nose, as well as redness and swelling,” Columbus police said.

One of the victims was treated at the university’s medical center and released, OSU said.

The Columbus Division of Police is leading the investigation with assistance from OSU’s police division. School officials said the incident is “classified by Ohio law as assault but classified by the [federal] Clery Act as a hate crime motivated by bias against the Jewish community.”

Columbus police are also investigating an incident of vandalism reported at the OSU Hillel Wexner Jewish Student Center on Thursday, school officials said.

OSU Hillel said in a social media post that two people vandalized Israeli flags in the lobby and were “shouting anti-Israel statements and threats.”

Two female suspects told the front desk they wanted to look around and once inside, one of them began taking small Israeli flags, according to Columbus police. When confronted by staff, she ran out the door yelling, “F— you,” “You support genocide” and “Free Palestine,” then dropped the flags and left in an awaiting car with the other suspect, police said.

Security cameras captured the suspects entering the building and the footage has been shared with law enforcement, OSU Hillel said.

OSU acting President Peter Mohler said in a statement that the university has “offered every resource” to assist police in the two “horrible” incidents, noting that there is a “significant number” of cameras and license plate readers in the areas where they occurred.

It is unclear at this time if Ohio State students are responsible for either incident, Mohler said, adding, “When the perpetrators are identified, Ohio State will take every measure available under the law and university policy.”

The incidents come amid heightened tensions on college campuses during the Israel-Hamas war. There have been increased reports of bias incidents against Jews and Muslims in the U.S. since the conflict started, data shows.

Hamas launched a surprise terror attack on Israel on Oct. 7 that killed at least 1,400, according to Israeli officials. Israel’s retaliatory strikes in Gaza have killed more than 11,000 people, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry. Those numbers have not been independently verified.

Mohler said he understands “people are hurting” at this time but reiterated that “Ohio State will not tolerate violations of the law or university policy” — including antisemitism, bigotry, Islamophobia, racism, sexism and violence.

OSU is increasing its security presence on campus and working with police and other law enforcement partners to increase security presence off-campus, Mohler said.

“I want to be direct and clear — the university has no tolerance for acts of hatred or violence,” Mohler said. “Antisemitism is despicable and has no place in our community. The university will pursue all action possible against anyone committing hate crimes on or near our campus.”

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine said Friday he has instructed the Ohio State Highway Patrol to immediately provide extra patrols around the campus.

“We will not tolerate hate and violence on our college campuses or anywhere in Ohio,” DeWine said in a statement. “These are despicable acts, and as Governor, I will ensure that the State continues our efforts to protect all Ohio students.”

He continued, “This includes but is not limited to antisemitism, bigotry, Islamophobia, racism, sexism and violence. We have not and will not tolerate hatred, intimidation or harassment of anyone based on their religious beliefs, nationality or identity.”

ABC News’ Jason Volack, Matt Foster and Brian Hartman contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

FBI seizes electronic devices of NYC Mayor Eric Adams

FBI seizes electronic devices of NYC Mayor Eric Adams
FBI seizes electronic devices of NYC Mayor Eric Adams
Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — The FBI seized the electronic devices of New York City Mayor Eric Adams as part of a federal investigation that previously brought the FBI to the home of his top fundraiser, a source familiar with the matter told ABC News.

The FBI declined to comment to ABC News.

The mayor’s office confirmed that the seizure took place on Monday. The mayor has denied any wrongdoing.

“As a former member of law enforcement, I expect all members of my staff to follow the law and fully cooperate with any sort of investigation—and I will continue to do exactly that. I have nothing to hide,” Adams said in a statement.

Federal prosecutors with the Southern District of New York declined to comment.

The FBI previously searched the home of Brianna Suggs, Adams’ main fundraiser. The investigation seeks to determine whether the mayor’s campaign receives illegal foreign donations from Turkey with a Brooklyn construction company as a conduit sources told ABC News.

Boyd Johnson, a campaign attorney for Adams, said that it was discovered an individual recently acted improperly and they acted on that information.

“In the spirit of transparency and cooperation, this behavior was immediately and proactively reported to investigators. The Mayor has been and remains committed to cooperating in this matter. On Monday night, the FBI approached the mayor after an event. The Mayor immediately complied with the FBI’s request and provided them with electronic devices. The mayor has not been accused of any wrongdoing and continues to cooperate with the investigation,” Johnson said in a statement.

Investigators came to Adams after an event Monday evening to ask for all devices he had on his person, including an iPad and a phone, a source familiar with the matter told ABC News.

Later, the mayor’s office turned over more devices.

Most of the devices have been returned, according to the source.

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Man arrested in connection with dismembered torso found near dumpster: Police

Man arrested in connection with dismembered torso found near dumpster: Police
Man arrested in connection with dismembered torso found near dumpster: Police
KABC-TV

(LOS ANGELES) — A Southern California man whose wife and in-laws are missing is in custody on suspicion of murder in connection with a dismembered female torso discovered several miles from his Los Angeles home, authorities said.

The unidentified human remains were found in a black plastic bag near a dumpster in Encino Wednesday morning, according to the Los Angeles Police Det. Efren Gutierrez. A man searching for recyclables discovered what he suspected were human remains and called 911, Gutierrez said.

Video evidence from the scene and vehicle information led investigators to a house in nearby Tarzana, about 6 miles from the dumpster, police said.

Once officers made entry into the home, they discovered “evidence of a crime, including some blood evidence,” Gutierrez said.

A man who lives at the residence — identified as 35-year-old Samuel Haskell — was booked Wednesday evening on one count of suspicion of murder, police said. He had been tracked to and arrested at the Topanga Mall, Gutierrez said.

The identification of the human remains is ongoing, police said Thursday.

Detectives learned that the evening before the gruesome discovery at the dumpster in Encino, a “suspicious” bag was reported outside Haskell’s home. People working at the house called 911 to report a plastic bag possibly containing human remains, Gutierrez said. Upon arriving at the home, responding officers found no evidence, Gutierrez said.

Amid the investigation, detectives also learned that Haskell’s wife — 37-year-old Mei Li Haskell — and her parents — 71-year-old Gaoshan Li and 64-year-old Yanxiang Wang — are currently missing, police said. They also live at the residence, Gutierrez said.

Police have been unable to reach any of the missing family members by phone, Gutierrez said. Mei Li Haskell’s car was found at the home, though two other vehicles associated with the residence are missing, he said. LAPD said detectives are looking for a white VW Tiguan (license 9ANC890) and a white 2014 Nissan Pathfinder (license 7FRM190).

Samuel and Mei Haskell have three elementary-aged children who were located at their schools on Wednesday and are now with family, police said.

The suspect is the son of a once-prominent Hollywood agent, Samuel Haskell Sr., who founded Magnolia Hill Productions and was the CEO of the Miss America Organization before he resigned amid the 2017 email scandal, according to Los Angeles ABC station KABC.

Haskell is currently being held on $2 million bail. He is due in court on Nov. 13, online jail records show. It is unclear if he has an attorney who can speak on his behalf.

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Court docs show Tuohys paid Michael Oher approximately $138K for ‘The Blind Side’

Court docs show Tuohys paid Michael Oher approximately 8K for ‘The Blind Side’
Court docs show Tuohys paid Michael Oher approximately 8K for ‘The Blind Side’
Streeter Lecka/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy paid over $138,000 in proceeds to former NFL star Michael Oher for the 2006 book “The Blind Side” and the 2009 film of the same name, according to court documents filed Wednesday in the Shelby County Probate Court in Tennessee.

“The Blind Side” book by Michael Lewis and the film, which was based on the book and starred Sandra Bullock, Quinton Aaron, Tim McGraw and Lily Collins, were based on Oher’s life story. Earlier this year, Oher alleged that the Tuohys had been profiting off him and his story for years.

According to one of the court documents filed this week, the Tuohy family — Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy as well as their children SJ and Collins — along with Michael Oher agreed that “the book and movie proceeds received were to be split five ways.”

The total sum of $138,311.01 was paid in multiple check payments between June 2007 and April 2023, although the few checks from 2021 and 2022 did not clear Oher’s bank account, according to court documents.

The Tuohys also claimed that they “never received any money as conservators on behalf of Michael Oher” and didn’t control any money or “dealings on behalf of Oher” during his conservatorship, and that they instead spent “tens of thousands of their own money to support” Oher, now 37, when he was in high school and college.

Shelby County Probate Court Judge Kathleen Gomes said in September she was terminating the conservatorship agreement, which was initially signed when Oher was 18 and receiving college football recruitment offers, following a petition from Oher.

Oher first filed a petition against the Tuohys on Aug. 14, alleging that Sean and Leigh Ann Tuohy tricked him into signing conservatorship papers in 2004. He claimed that they told him it was, “for all intents and purposes, an adoption,” but would be called a conservatorship since he was over the age of 18.

In his petition, Oher claimed he discovered in February that the Tuohys had been profiting off his life story and career, and that the conservatorship “to which he consented on the basis that doing so would make him a member of the Tuohy family, in fact provided him no familial relationship” with them.

Oher also alleged in the petition that he wasn’t paid for the film “The Blind Side,” which is based on his life, but that all four members of the Tuohy family — Sean and Leigh Ann as well as their two children — did. He claimed he received “nothing for his rights to a … story that would not have existed without him.”

Oher’s petition asked for the Tuohys to put together “accounting for all sums of money belonging to their said ward … and to pay over such sums received by them … plus interest from the time of receipt of such sums of money. He also asked for compensatory and punitive damages, as well as for the Tuohys to pay all his costs and attorney fees he incurs during the process “for their misconduct.”

In their response filing, Sean and Leigh Ann Tuohy claimed that earnings from “The Blind Side” were split equally between them, their two biological children and Oher, with each person receiving 20%.

The Tuohys also said they “vehemently deny that they told [Oher] that they intended to legally adopt him.” The couple added that they “occasionally referred to [him] as a son” but only “in the colloquial sense and they have never intended that reference to be viewed with legal implication.”

The conservatorship, they claimed, “only began as a result of [Oher’s] opportunity to play college football.” They said in the filing there was “never” an intent to adopt him.

The Tuohys said in their filing they had no objection to the conservatorship ending, noting that they “stand ready, willing, and able to terminate the conservatorship at any time.” They also asked for the judge to “deny all the relief sought by [Oher].”

ABC News has reached out to Oher’s representatives for comment on the latest court filings.

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Wynn Resorts workers in Las Vegas avert strike, reach tentative deal hours before deadline

Wynn Resorts workers in Las Vegas avert strike, reach tentative deal hours before deadline
Wynn Resorts workers in Las Vegas avert strike, reach tentative deal hours before deadline
Steve Proehl/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — Hotel and restaurant workers in Las Vegas reached a tentative agreement with Wynn Resorts on Friday just hours before a deadline, averting a strike against casino owners that could have disrupted the tourist industry ahead of a Formula 1 race next week that’s expected to attract thousands of visitors, the union said.

The tentative deal sets working conditions for 5,000 employees at two Wynn Resorts locations, and comes on the heels of similar agreements with Caesars Entertainment and MGM Resorts International that covered roughly 35,500 workers.

The Culinary Workers Union said in a statement Friday that the five-year contract includes the largest wage increases ever negotiated in its 88-year history, as well as increased safety protections, workload reductions for some workers, and expanded use of technology.

The tentative agreement, which must be ratified by a majority vote of the union members, ends seven months of negotiations with Wynn, according to a statement from Ted Pappageorge, Secretary-Treasurer for the Culinary Union.

“With this new union contract, hospitality workers will be able to provide for their families and thrive in Las Vegas,” Pappageorge said.

Similarly, Wynn Las Vegas applauded the tentative deal in a statement.

“We look forward to ratification of our agreement soon, and to providing the legendary service for which our employees are known to the thousands of race fans about to join us,” said Michael Weaver, a spokesperson for Wynn Las Vegas.

The union said that contract negotiations remain ongoing with 24 smaller hotels and casinos where a total of roughly 18,000 union members work.

The tentative agreement with Wynn Resorts comes amid a flurry of labor deals nationwide in recent weeks that have ended prolonged workplace disputes.

SAG-AFTRA, the union representing approximately 160,000 actors, voice talents and announcers, reached a tentative deal on Wednesday with major TV and movie studios that suspends a strike launched more than three months ago.

Additionally, the ‘Big Three’ U.S. automakers — Ford, General Motors and Stellantis, which owns Jeep and Chrysler — struck tentative agreements with the United Auto Workers last month to end a roughly six-week strike.

Addressing UAW members at a car plant in Illinois on Thursday, President Joe Biden celebrated the recent wave of labor organizing.

“Wall Street didn’t build America,” Biden said. “The middle class built America, and unions built the middle class.”

“I worked hard in negotiations to represent my co-workers and to win a better life for my family,” Araceli Villa Lobos, a kitchen employee at Wynn and a union member for 16 years, said in a statement.

The Culinary Workers Union represents 60,000 hospitality workers in Las Vegas and Reno, Nevada, and is “Nevada’s largest Latinx/Black/AAPI/immigrant organization,” the union said, with the majority of its members Latinx.

 

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Logan Paul responds to claims his Prime energy drink is unsafe for kids

Logan Paul responds to claims his Prime energy drink is unsafe for kids
Logan Paul responds to claims his Prime energy drink is unsafe for kids
Mike Kemp/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — Popular influencer-turned-businessman Logan Paul is responding to accusations his Prime energy drink is unsafe for children to consume.

Prime offers both caffeine-free drinks — their Hydration line — and caffeinated beverages — their Energy line. Prime’s energy drinks — marketed “for ages 18+” and available in multiple flavors such as tropical punch and strawberry watermelon — have zero added sugar but also contain 200 mg of caffeine, an amount that has drawn criticism from politicians like New York Sen. Chuck Schumer, who called for the Food and Drug Administration to investigate the caffeine content in the drinks and criticized Prime in July for marketing to Paul’s young fans.

When asked if he and his company are targeting children in their marketing efforts, Paul pushed back on the claim.

“That’s such a heavy claim. But I want to dive into it. You know, we are a social media-first company,” the 28-year-old told ABC News’ Eva Pilgrim. “The good thing about social media is there’s data, right? There’s analytics. 90% of my audience is above the age of 18. 93% of Prime’s audience is above the age of 18, according to Instagram’s analytics.”

“Good Morning America” reached out to Instagram to confirm Paul’s statistics and analytics but has not heard back so far.

Still, there’s a public concern over kids’ exposure to energy drinks. One report from the American Academy of Pediatrics said “caffeine and other stimulant substances contained in energy drinks have no place in the diet of children and adolescents.”

The FDA says that 400 mg of caffeine — roughly four to five cups of coffee — should be the maximum amount consumed per day for a healthy adult, but even adults have a wide range of what’s considered healthy.

Paul said his message to parents or children is to “be smart” about what they’re drinking.

“Caffeine consumption isn’t recommended for kids or anyone under the age of 18. That’s an industry standard thing, not a Prime-specific one,” Paul said. “People need to be smart about what they’re putting in their bodies.”

Paul rose to fame on social media and was one of the first to help create the world of social media influencers. Now, he has over 91 million followers combined across his social media platforms.

But Paul has also expanded his résumé over the years and in addition to being a YouTube content creator, he has also become a boxer, WWE U.S. champion and an entrepreneur.

Prime recently celebrated selling its 1 billionth bottle and reached $1.2 billion in sales.

“The hydration category was a bit archaic. A lot of the leading companies in the vertical are really high sugar and have really old formulas. We saw an opportunity to make a great product that was a better for you product,” Paul said of his motivation to start Prime.

Paul said he has also grown up a lot since his early days on social media and encourages others to not spend too much time online.

“Like social media is not real. For those of you watching this, put your phone down. Get away from social media, go outside, take a breath of fresh air,” Paul said in his interview with Pilgrim.

Paul also said he plans on having children of his own someday. He announced his engagement to model Nina Agdal back in July.

“Honestly, I just want to be a good dad,” Paul said. “It’s cool to make your own legacy. I think it’s much cooler to create someone who has the potential to make a legacy of their own.”

 

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Suspect arrested after former Sen. Martha McSally reports being assaulted while running

Suspect arrested after former Sen. Martha McSally reports being assaulted while running
Suspect arrested after former Sen. Martha McSally reports being assaulted while running
WIN-Initiative/Neleman/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — A suspect has been arrested on an assault charge after former Arizona Sen. Martha McSally said she was attacked while on a run in Iowa this week.

McSally was running along the Missouri River in Council Bluffs on Wednesday when a man “came up behind me and he engulfed me in a bear hug,” she said in a video posted on Instagram.

“He molested and fondled me until I fought him off,” she said.

McSally said she then chased her assailant and called 911 as he hid in a brush but he managed to flee.

Authorities identified a suspect in the incident as 25-year-old Dominic Henton, of Papillion, Nebraska, in part based on surveillance video, the Council Bluffs Police Department said. An arrest warrant was issued Thursday charging him with one count of assault with intent to commit sexual abuse, police said.

Henton was taken into custody by the Omaha Police Department around 3:20 a.m. local time on Friday, Council Bluffs police said.

Omaha police initially responded to his home on Thursday after Henton made a welfare call, according to Council Bluffs Police Sgt. Ted Roberts. Omaha officers were unaware of the arrest warrant in Council Bluffs at the time, since it had not been fully processed, and took Henton to the hospital, he said.

Henton was later released from the hospital and called Omaha police again, by which time officers had the arrest warrant and took him to jail, Roberts said.

ABC News’ Alexandra Faul contributed to this report.

 

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Judge rules in Prince Harry, Elton John’s lawsuit against Daily Mail publisher

Judge rules in Prince Harry, Elton John’s lawsuit against Daily Mail publisher
Judge rules in Prince Harry, Elton John’s lawsuit against Daily Mail publisher
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(LONDON) — A judge in the United Kingdom issued a ruling Friday in Prince Harry’s lawsuit against Associated Newspapers Ltd., the publisher of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday and the MailOnline.

The judge ruled that the lawsuit filed by the Duke of Sussex, as well as several other high-profile figures can move forward, according to the United Kingdom’s Courts and Tribunals Judiciary.

Harry and singer Elton John, along with John’s husband David Furnish, actress Elizabeth Hurley, actress Sadie Frost and Baroness Doreen Lawrence of Clarendon OBE, alleged in the lawsuit, which was filed last year, that they are “the victims of abhorrent criminal activity and gross breaches of privacy,” according to Hamlins, the London-based law firm representing Harry as well as Frost in the lawsuit.

In a press release published at the time the lawsuit was announced, the law firm alleged that Associated Newspapers Ltd. hired private investigators to “secretly place listening devices inside people’s cars and homes,” commissioned individuals to “surreptitiously listen into and record people’s live, private telephone calls while they were taking place,” paid “police officials, with corrupt links to private investigators, for inside, sensitive information,” impersonated individuals “to obtain medical information from private hospitals, clinics, and treatment centers by deception,” and accessed “bank accounts, credit histories and financial transactions through illicit means and manipulation.”

Harry made an unexpected appearance in March at a hearing for the case in the U.K., which also attracted Frost, John and Furnish.

In a statement to ABC News at the time the lawsuit was filed in October 2022, a spokesperson for Associated Newspapers said they “utterly and unambiguously refute these preposterous smears, which appear to be nothing more than a pre-planned and orchestrated attempt to drag the Mail titles into the phone hacking scandal concerning articles up to 30 years old.”

“These unsubstantiated and highly defamatory claims — based on no credible evidence — appear to be simply a fishing expedition by claimants and their lawyers, some of whom have already pursued cases elsewhere,” the spokesperson added.

The Duke of Sussex and his family, including his wife Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, and their two children, have lived in the United States since 2020, when Harry and Meghan stepped down from their senior royal roles.

In January, Harry released a memoir, titled “Spare,” that shared previously unknown details about his life as a member of the royal family, including his relationship with the press over the years.

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