Gun homicides spiked 35% during the first year of the pandemic, CDC says

Gun homicides spiked 35% during the first year of the pandemic, CDC says
Gun homicides spiked 35% during the first year of the pandemic, CDC says
Steve Prezant/Getty Images

(ATLANTA) — Gun homicides increased 35% across the country during the pandemic to the highest level in 25 years, according to newly released data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

“Unfortunately I am not surprised,” Debra Houry, acting principal deputy director of CDC and director of the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, told ABC News, “but it is heartbreaking.”

Firearm murders increased most markedly among youth and young adults — 40% for those 10 to 24, the CDC data shows. The increases were also highest for people of color: rates of gun homicide involving Black males aged 10 to 24 years — which were already 21-times has high as white males of the same age — increased further still in 2020.

The study suggests that the rise in violence could be attributed to the social and economic pressures stemming from the pandemic that reinforced “longstanding” inequities between communities.

The report also found that while the increase in firearm suicides was less than firearm homicides, the sheer number of suicides involving guns continued to outpace homicides. There were 24,245 suicides involving firearms in 2020, the report found, compared to 19,350 firearm homicides.

“These stats have devastating effects on families, schools, and entire communities, and have lasting consequences on us as individuals and as a society,” Thomas Simon, associate director for science at the CDC’s Division of Violence Prevention, said during a press briefing on Tuesday.

“Our reports contain statistics and numbers, but it’s also important to reflect on the individual lives lost,” he added, “and even one homicide or suicide is too many.”

The new CDC data confirms trends identified by ABC News as it studied data compiled by the Gun Violence Archive over the past year. It also builds upon other research demonstrating rising rates of gun purchasing and gun violence during the pandemic.

Guns remained available for purchase throughout the pandemic — even during intermittent stay-at-home orders — due to exemptions designating firearm retailers (and shooting ranges) as “essential businesses” in all but four states. A December study found that 7.5 million Americans became new gun owners during the pandemic — 5 million of whom lived in a household that previously hadn’t had guns.

The purchasing patterns aren’t showing any sign of letting up, either. The FBI has conducted over 10 million firearm background checks — which are frequently used as a proxy for purchases —  in 2022 through April.

Gun violence has picked up alongside the increase in purchases, other studies found. According to an October study, gun violence increased in 28 states during the pandemic; another found that firearm incidents increased 15% — and non-fatal firearm injuries increased 34% — during the pandemic.

The youngest Americans have, increasingly, been collateral damage of this violence. Firearm deaths in children between 1 and 4 years old have increased 5% annually since 1999. And in the first six months of the pandemic, the risk of firearm injuries in children less than 12 years was 90% higher than in the pre-pandemic period.

Monika Goyal, a pediatric emergency medicine specialist at Children’s National Hospital in Washington, D.C., called the statistics “sobering” — adding that they reinforce what she’s been seeing clinically: that children are increasingly finding themselves in the crosshairs.

The pandemic uptick in firearm purchasing, violence and homicide has been attributed in part, to intensifying economic pressures like unemployment, housing insecurity and childcare.

“Longstanding systemic inequities and structural racism have resulted in limited economic, housing, and educational opportunities associated with inequities in risk for violence,” the authors of the new CDC study wrote, “the COVID-19 pandemic might have exacerbated existing social and economic stressors.”

Social factors like decreases in mutual aid, pausing in-person harm-reduction initiatives and political unrest may have also fueled these patterns, researchers say.

“Stay-at-home orders and physical distancing likely increased the guardianship people had over their homes and property,” the authors of a February report wrote, which could “help explain the observed relationship with violence” and the fact that “interpersonal interactions — despite happening with lesser frequency during the pandemic — may have been increasingly violence-prone.”

According to Houry, policy changes to halt the worrisome and worsening trends in gun violence are urgently necessary.

“[Gun] violence is not inevitable,” she told ABC News, “it’s preventable.”

The authors of the CDC offered various recommendations to that end, which included expanded welfare policies, empowering community-based harm reduction efforts, and promoting strategies for urban renewal among other initiatives.

“The findings of this study underscore the importance of comprehensive strategies that can stop violence,” they wrote. “Now and in the future.”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Sleeping with Sirens announces Ctrl+Alt+Del headlining tour

Sleeping with Sirens announces Ctrl+Alt+Del headlining tour
Sleeping with Sirens announces Ctrl+Alt+Del headlining tour
Francesco Prandoni/Getty Images

We now know what Sleeping with Sirens was teasing.

On Monday, Kellin Quinn and company shared a mysterious video hinting at something called “Ctrl+Alt+Del.” Today, they’ve announced the Ctrl+Alt+Del tour, a U.S. headlining run kicking off July 14 in Chicago.

And while we aren’t yet getting new Sleeping with Sirens music, which was it seemed like the video was teasing, it does appear that fresh material is in the works.

“It feels like its been forever since we were on the road and we can’t wait to play some new songs for you,” the band says.

Tickets to the Ctrl+Alt+Del tour go on sale this Friday, May 13, at 10 a.m. local time. Don Broco, Point North and Garzi will also be on the bill.

For the full list of dates and all ticket info, visit SirensMusic.co.

Sleeping with Sirens’ most recent record is 2019’s How It Feels to Be Lost, which includes the single “Agree to Disagree.” Last year, they released a one-off single called “Bloody Knuckles.”

Quinn, meanwhile, has been busy collaborating with other artists, including with Machine Gun Kelly on the single “Love Race.”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Jessica Biel credits Justin Timberlake for keeping their marriage strong

Jessica Biel credits Justin Timberlake for keeping their marriage strong
Jessica Biel credits Justin Timberlake for keeping their marriage strong
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Jessica Biel admits marriage isn’t easy and credits husband Justin Timberlake for building and maintaining its strong foundation.

The actress was at the premiere of her new true crime series, Candy, where she was asked by Entertainment Tonight about what keeps their marriage alive. “It’s a good question, right?” she remarked.  “I’ll have to give Justin the credit in this moment, for this one thing that he always says to me: ‘We might be married, but we have to keep dating,’ and it’s so true.”

“You just have to keep making time for each other and you have to keep making each other a priority. And do the things that you love together,” Biel continued. “It’s not always easy, as we all know, but those touch point moments make all the hard times palatable.”

Justin was Biel’s date to the Candy premiere and the actress said that in itself was another testament to their strong marriage. “It’s always fun to celebrate something that you’re proud of, and to do it with him and have a glass of wine — it feels special,” she grinned.

Candy is now streaming on Hulu and the actress previously revealed she drew inspiration for her character, Candy Montgomery, from her husband. Candy’s short, curly hair is reminiscent of Justin’s NSYNC days, and Biel said Justin “laughed” over the similarities.

“Let’s get serious, he had beautiful curls,” the Sinner star added.

Jessica and Justin wed in 2012 and share two sons, seven-year-old Silas and two-year-old Phineas.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Madonna teams with famed digital artist Beeple for three-part NFT, ‘Mother of Creation’

Madonna teams with famed digital artist Beeple for three-part NFT, ‘Mother of Creation’
Madonna teams with famed digital artist Beeple for three-part NFT, ‘Mother of Creation’
Stefanie Keenan/Getty Images for Burberry

Madonna is the latest star to get into the NFT business, but she’s doing it for a good cause

She’s teamed with digital artist Beeple, aka Mike Winkelmann, who made headlines last year when one of his NFT‘s was auctioned off by Christie’s for $69,400,000.  The two have created a three-part digital artwork called Mother of Creation, which “explores the concept of birth via darkness and light in our modern world.” 

The three NFTs will be sold on SuperRare on May 11 with a starting price of one dollar. All the proceeds will go to three charities: The Voices of Children Foundation, The City of Joy Foundation and Black Mama’s Bail Out.

The three parts of the work include Mother of Nature, featuring a blooming tree and new text by Madonna; Mother of Evolution, which features butterflies, lyrics from Madonna’s hit “Justify My Love,” and original music by Igor Bardykin; and Mother of Technology, which depicts how science can illuminate the world and features the poetry of Rumi.

“When Mike and I decided to collaborate on this project a year ago, I was excited to have the opportunity to share my vision of the world as a mother and an artist with Mike’s own unique point of view,” Madonna says in a statement. “It’s been an amazing journey building this together from an intellectual idea to an emotional story, giving birth to art.”

She adds, “Most importantly we wanted to use this opportunity to benefit mothers and children who are most in need right now.”

Madonna and Beeple will be on SuperRare’s Twitter Spaces on May 11 at 7 p.m. ET to discuss the project.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Michelle Williams expecting baby #2 with husband Thomas Kail

Michelle Williams expecting baby #2 with husband Thomas Kail
Michelle Williams expecting baby #2 with husband Thomas Kail
Steve Granitz/WireImage

Oscar-nominated actress Michelle Williams is expecting her third child, the second with her Hamilton director husband, Thomas Kail.

“It’s totally joyous!” Williams expressed to Variety. She and Kail welcomed their first child, son Hart, during the pandemic. She also has a 16-year-old daughter Matilda, from her relationship with the late Heath Ledger.

The 41-year-old Williams said of her news, “As the years go on, you sort of wonder what they might hold for you or not hold for you. It’s exciting to discover that something you want again and again, is available one more time. That good fortune is not lost on me or my family.”

She also shared having Hart during the lockdown days, saying, “it was a reminder that life goes on.”

“The world we brought a baby into is not the world we thought we were bringing a baby into, but the baby is ignorant of that. He experiences the unmitigated joy of discovery and the happiness of a loving home,” says Williams.

The Golden Globe and Emmy winner also tells the trade that being a mom helps her with her day job. “There’s nothing that makes you committed to a better world than raising a great kid. It’s the ultimate creative act,” she says.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

If you post your music on TikTok, chances are GAYLE has seen it

If you post your music on TikTok, chances are GAYLE has seen it
If you post your music on TikTok, chances are GAYLE has seen it
David Livingston/Getty Images

GAYLE says she loves checking out other singers when scrolling through TikTok — meaning, if you post videos of you singing in your bedroom, chances are she’s seen it.

“My favorite thing to look at on TikTok, most of the time, is just people posting their music,” the “abcdefu” singer told Seventeen. “They’re just in their bedrooms or in the bathrooms writing songs and they’re really beautiful!  The lyrics are just so stunning.”

GAYLE says she also enjoys looking at videos posted by “college students that are writing songs, even like the Berkeley kids, and their songwriting classes.”

“That’s something I really enjoy watching, or even just people playing instruments really well in ways that I could just never,” she continued. “I’m just like, ‘That’s awesome!'”

The 17-year-old hitmaker later revealed the artist she most wants to collaborate with is “Issues” singer Julia Michaels.  “I’m just going to say this over and over again until maybe, one day, she pays attention and then she can tell me ‘no’ to my face,” GAYLE joked, adding she’s “totally fine with” that.

“No pressure.  I love you and I will love you from afar,” she remarked.  “But call me.”

Gayle also revealed she wanted to be a singer since she was seven.  “I was watching this compilation of Aretha Franklin  — it was like a 15-, 30-minute video — and when I was watching it, I was just like, ‘That’s it!  That’s what I wanna do with my life,'” she recalled.  “What she was doing was just so inspiring and so powerful and I just felt something I had never felt before.”

GAYLE teased she “will definitely have more music out” and “performing more” sometime soon, adding she will also be “possibly doing some fun stuff outside of music.”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

The Go-Go’s, Soft Cell, Corey Hart and more to perform at ‘Stranger Things’ concert

The Go-Go’s, Soft Cell, Corey Hart and more to perform at ‘Stranger Things’ concert
The Go-Go’s, Soft Cell, Corey Hart and more to perform at ‘Stranger Things’ concert
Courtesy PRNewsfoto/Frito-Lay North America

Stranger Things is bringing the ’80s back to Netflix when season four premieres May 27 and to celebrate, several major acts from that era have come together for a one-night-only virtual bash.

The Go-Go’s, “Sunglasses at Night” singer Corey Hart and “Tainted Love” duo Soft Cell, along with current pop singer Charli XCX, are performing at the Live from the Upside Down concert, which isn’t actually a real concert — it’s part of a promotion for Doritos. 

The concept is that the artists are heading to “Doritos Music Fest ’86” in fictional Hawkins, Indiana — a fictional festival in the fictional town where Stranger Things takes place — but instead, they get transported to the show’s sinister alternate dimension, the Upside Down.

“I’ve played so many unique places, but the Upside Down is definitely a first, so I had to get in the Upside Down mood,” Soft Cell’s Marc Almond told Billboard. “It is such a mad thing to do that I had to accept it.”  The singer added he’s a major fan of the show and will crush just about anyone at Stranger Things trivia.

Go-Go’s lead singer Belinda Carlisle said of the concert, “We’ve done a lot of weird things through the years and we got to dress up in real 80s clothes and make-up.” Go-Go’s guitarist Jane Wiedlin added, “There was really a lot going on, much more so than at a usual concert.”  Jane adds that the group performs on a “super-slimy and creepy” set.

Corey Hart, whose hit “Never Surrender” was featured in the third season, promised the show is “quintessential, innovative and cool.”

The concert airs June 23. You can win tickets by buying a bag of Doritos or Doritos 3D Crunch snacks or by visiting Snacks.com or Doritos.com/StrangerThings.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Red Hot Chili Peppers among artists headlining 2022 Austin City Limits festival

Red Hot Chili Peppers among artists headlining 2022 Austin City Limits festival
Red Hot Chili Peppers among artists headlining 2022 Austin City Limits festival
ABC/Randy Holmes

Red Hot Chili Peppers are the artists confirmed to headline the 2022 Austin City Limits Music Festival, which will take place October 7-9 and October 14-16 in Austin, Texas.

The event’s other headliners are Pink, The Chicks, Paramore, SZA, Kacey Musgraves, Flume and Lil Nas X.

The bill also features dozens of other acts, including Asleep at the Wheel, Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats, Carly Rae Jepsen, James Blake, Phoenix, Spoon, Yungblud and many more.

Some of the artists on the undercard will only play one of the two weekends.

Tickets go on sale today at noon CT. For the full lineup and all ticket info, visit ACLFestival.com.

Red Hot Chili Peppers kick off a world tour in support of their new album, Unlimited Love, on June 4 in Seville, Spain. The North American leg of the trek gets underway July 23 in Denver.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Noose found at Stanford University prompts hate crime probe

Noose found at Stanford University prompts hate crime probe
Noose found at Stanford University prompts hate crime probe
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

(PALO ALTO, Calif.) — A hate crimes investigation has been launched at Stanford University after a noose was found hanging in a tree outside a student residence hall, officials said.

It was the third time in four years that a noose has been discovered on the Palo Alto, California, campus, and the second since November, according to university officials.

Susie Brubaker-Cole, the school’s vice provost for student affairs, and Patrick Dunkley, vice provost for institutional equity, access and community, issued a joint statement condemning the act.

“We cannot state strongly enough that a noose is a reprehensible symbol of anti-Black racism and violence that will not be tolerated on our campus. As a community, we must stand united against such conduct and those who perpetrate it,” Brubaker-Cole and Dunkley wrote in their statement to The Stanford Daily student newspaper.

The noose was discovered at about 7:45 p.m. Sunday hanging on a tree outside Branner Hall, an undergraduate residence hall, and was reported to the university’s Department of Public Safety, school officials said.

Campus police immediately launched a hate crimes investigation that included interviewing maintenance staff, students and school staff in an effort to narrow down the time frame for the incident and identify a suspect or suspects, according to a statement on the Stanford’s Protected Identity Harm Reporting website.

It was not immediately clear if any campus security video captured the culprit hanging the noose.

Brubaker-Cole and Dunkley thanked the people who saw the noose and reported it to the campus police.

“We are sharing this message with the full university community so that everyone is informed and we can move forward as one committed to ending anti-Black racism,” Brubaker-Cole and Dunkley said in their statement.

It was the second noose found on the campus in six months. On Nov. 29, a student reported seeing two long cords that appeared to be fashioned into a noose hanging from a tree along a campus walking trail. Campus police investigated the incident but could not determine if the cords were deliberately fashioned into a noose or were part of an abandoned swing or rope ladder, according to school officials.

In July 2019, campus police investigated the discovery of a noose near a residence for summer students.

No arrests have been made in any of the incidents.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Dua Lipa covers ‘Vogue,’ says she wants to be “good with being alone”

Dua Lipa covers ‘Vogue,’ says she wants to be “good with being alone”
Dua Lipa covers ‘Vogue,’ says she wants to be “good with being alone”
Tyler Mitchell/Vogue

In one of the first installments of her Service95 newsletter, Dua Lipa documented what it was like to go out to dinner in New York City alone.  Now, she tells Vogue for its June/July issue that one of her goals is to do that more often…and be happy about it.

Dua, who reportedly split with her longtime boyfriend Anwar Hadid last year, tells Vogue‘s Jen Wang, “The next chapter of my life is about truly being good with being alone.”  And for “Levitating” singer,  that’s more difficult than it sounds.

After writing about her solo dinner, Dua tells Vogue, “Some people on the internet were like, ‘Oh, Dua went out for dinner on her own, blah blah, I do this all the time.’ And I think that’s amazing if you do it all the time. You must be so confident. But it was a big step for me. I was nervous — like, ‘What am I gonna do? I don’t want to be on my phone.’”

Dua tells Vogue that her next solo “date” will be going to the movies. “I want to know I can just be there for myself, you know?” she explains.

Dua will have to fit that in between tour dates; she’s currently on the European leg of her Future Nostalgia tour. She’s also working on her next album, which she says is about half written.

“I’ve definitely grown up,” she says of the new material. “Overall, whether it’s sonically or in terms of the themes, I’ve matured. It’s like I’m coming into my power and not afraid to talk about things. It’s about understanding what I want.”

Vogue‘s June/July 2022 issue is available on newsstands nationwide on May 24th.

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