Disney gives sneak peek of its upcoming ‘Star Wars’: Galactic Starcruiser interactive hotel

Disney gives sneak peek of its upcoming ‘Star Wars’: Galactic Starcruiser interactive hotel
Disney gives sneak peek of its upcoming ‘Star Wars’: Galactic Starcruiser interactive hotel
Disney Parks/David Roarke

In a new video posted to YouTube and social media, Disney Parks has given fans a new look at its upcoming interactive hotel experience called Star Wars: Galactic Starcruiser. 

With the help of The Goldbergs‘ Sean Giambrone, the nearly 3-minute video gives a taste of what patrons can expect when the hotel — created to look like the intergalactic cruise ship Halcyon — opens in March. 

Ann Morrow Johnson, an executive producer at Walt Disney Imagineering, tells Giambrone the centerpiece of Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge at the Walt Disney World park in Orlando, is “a first of its kind vacation experience where you get to spend two days and two nights living out your very own Star Wars story.”

To that end, Johnson shows him points of interest inside the “ship” that has been modeled to appear as if it came from that galaxy far, far away.

Included on her tour for future guests is a lightsaber training room, the hotel’s “bridge,” and other refinements — though at one point, Giambrone sneaks off and takes in a show at a cantina, similar to the one seen in 1977’s Star Wars. Performing for the patrons is a Twi’lek torch singer — the alien race with tendril-like head-tails frequently seen in the Star Wars universe.

The Star Wars decor is also carried through from the rooms to the menus. And rest easy, its booking website notes: “While itineraries do occasionally experience some disruptions due to the unrest in certain parts of the galaxy, Chandrila Star Line starcruisers are well-equipped with the latest shield and turbolaser technology to defend themselves in the unlikely event of dire circumstances — which are never an issue. Well, almost never.”

Disney is the parent company of ABC Audio.

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Policeman told to shut down The Beatles’ rooftop concert remembers: “It was a discussion”

Policeman told to shut down The Beatles’ rooftop concert remembers: “It was a discussion”
Policeman told to shut down The Beatles’ rooftop concert remembers: “It was a discussion”
Walt Disney Studios

The climax of Peter Jackson‘s new Disney+ documentary Get Back is the Beatles‘ legendary concert on the rooftop of Apple Records, which turned out to be the final time they ever played together.  Now, the policeman who was sent to shut down the concert that January day in 1969 is looking back.

25-year-old constable Ray Shayler was working in London’s West End Central police station, about 150 yards away from the Beatles’ building on Savile Row, when the call came in about a disturbance. An inexperienced colleague was told to go find out what was going on, so Shayler offered to come along and help, as he tells the Daily Mail.

When they arrived, Shayler says, it was “an interesting moment” discovering that it was The Beatles making that racket. “I wouldn’t say I was a fan…but…I liked their music,” Shayler remembers. “But when I got on the roof, I had a job to do and I thought, ‘Well, we’ve got to try and stop this.’”

“I asked how long it was going on for. He said, ‘One more record,'” Shayler recalls of his conversation with Beatles road manager Mal Evans.

“So I said…’Get on with that one and then it stops,’” he adds. “It was a discussion; it never got heated.” 

The concert ended, and Shayler recalls that Paul McCartney was “apologetic,” while Ringo Starr joked, ‘Don’t put the handcuffs on me!’”

“I didn’t even put pen to paper to record it,” Shayler says of the incident.

“Someone asked me how I felt being the man who stopped The Beatles’ concert,” he says. “But I wouldn’t say that was true. I didn’t stop The Beatles – I merely suggested it would be a good idea if they didn’t carry on.”

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Mariah Carey shares a sweet video of her teaching her kids a Hanukkah song

Mariah Carey shares a sweet video of her teaching her kids a Hanukkah song
Mariah Carey shares a sweet video of her teaching her kids a Hanukkah song
FOX via Getty Image

Mariah Carey may go all out for Christmas, but that isn’t stopping her from teaching her kids about the other religious celebrations that coincide during the holidays. 

To mark the beginning of Hanukkah on Sunday, the Grammy winner introduced her 10-year-old twins Monroe and Moroccan to a song about the Festival of Lights.

“Learned this one in grade school, thought I’d teach it to Roc & Roe,” Mariah tweeted alongside a video of her performing it to her yawning children.  Because her kids appeared a little unimpressed — Moroccan rolls his eyes while Monroe dramatically yawns —  the singer jokingly added, “I don’t think they’ve got it yet.”

The video features Mariah and her family sitting at what appears to be a restaurant booth as she sings, “Hanukkah is coming!/ Hanukkah is coming!/ That’s a time we have the happiest days.”

Several fans have since asked the “Fantasy” singer to share the complete song since it appears to be original in nature.  The gesture also gained praise from Mariah’s Jewish followers, who thanked her for recognizing their holiday.

“Happy Hanukkah!! This is one of my favorite holidays to celebrate!! As a Jewish lamb, it means a lot that you posted this, love you so much Mariah,” one fan tweeted.

Hanukkah ends Monday, December 6.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Someday you will find me: Fans of Oasis cover band stuck in UK pub due to snowstorm

Someday you will find me: Fans of Oasis cover band stuck in UK pub due to snowstorm
Someday you will find me: Fans of Oasis cover band stuck in UK pub due to snowstorm
Ethan Miller/Getty Images

When Oasis sang “Someday you will find me/Caught beneath the landslide” in their classic song “Champagne Supernova,” this probably isn’t what they meant.

According to The New York Times, a crowd of people who’d gone to see an Oasis tribute band at the Tan Hill Inn in Yorkshire, England, last Friday night were stuck inside the pub for three days due to a snowstorm rendering the surrounding roads unsafe to drive.

Between the audience members, the Tan Hill Inn staff and, of course, the tribute band itself, 61 people were stranded. Eventually, a snowplow was able to reach the area on Monday afternoon, allowing all but two “young girls who are not confident to drive on the roads as they are” to return home.

The cover band, called Noasis, has since taken up the nickname “Snowasis.”

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

“I’m so grateful”: Garth Brooks matches his ticket record at Croke Park

“I’m so grateful”: Garth Brooks matches his ticket record at Croke Park
“I’m so grateful”: Garth Brooks matches his ticket record at Croke Park
Terry Wyatt/Getty Images

Garth Brooks continues to outdo himself. 

Following the announcement that his Stadium Tour will conclude in 2022 with five shows at Croke Park in Dublin, Ireland, the country legend has sold more than 400,000 tickets to the shows. But this isn’t the first time he’s accomplished a feat of this magnitude.

This marks a full circle moment for the superstar, as he sold the same number of tickets when he was supposed to launch his Comeback Tour at Croke Park in 2014, but ended up having to cancel all five concerts when the Dublin City Council would not allow for more than three shows he had been granted licenses for.  

“I never dreamed we’d get the chance to try this again. I’m so grateful to all who made this happen,” Garth shares in a statement.

The “Unanswered Prayers” hitmaker was originally scheduled to play two shows at Croke Park next year, but more were added due to overwhelming demand. 

The Dublin shows will take place September 9, 10, 11, 16 and 17.  

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Teyana Taylor cancels Saturday concert and is recovering in a Connecticut hospital

Teyana Taylor cancels Saturday concert and is recovering in a Connecticut hospital
Teyana Taylor cancels Saturday concert and is recovering in a Connecticut hospital
Scott Dudelson/Getty Images

Teyana Taylor is now recovering in a Connecticut hospital after she says her body “shut down” and she was forced to cancel Saturday night’s scheduled concert at Femme It Forward in Mashantucket, CT.

The MTV VMA winner is performing on The Last Rose Petal…Farewell Tour.

“SHUT DOWN, my body actually low key betrayed me,” Taylor commented on an Instagram photo of herself lying in a hospital bed as she thanked her fans for understanding the last-minute cancellation of her show. “Y’all have seen me with a broken foot and all types of other crazy s**t but still got on that stage and bodied it.” 

The singer/actress/choreographer/fashion designer said she is receiving the care she needs.

“I’ve since got the proper fluids and nutrients put back into my body all night/morning & will take the next few off days to continue to recover,” the 30-year-old entertainer continued.

Taylor promised fans the show would be rescheduled for a future date and that all tickets would be honored.

She concluded the lengthy post with many thanks. “Shoutout to my lovelies @arilennox & @sevyn for holdin it downnnnn!… Shout to @babyjunie4 for holding it down for mommy,” Teyana added.

Several stars sent her heart-warming messages. Niecy Nash wrote, “Wishing you a speedy recovery.” Erykah Badu commented, “Bless up,” while Marlon Wayans posted, “Get well soon sis, love you. You’re a real one. We give our best us to the people that love us… take care of you.”

Taylor was scheduled to perform the final show on the tour Tuesday in Atlanta. 

One week ago, Teyana’s husband, Iman Shumpert, became the first NBA player to win Dancing with the Stars as he took home the mirrorball trophy with his professional partner, Daniella Karagach.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

New York City chief medical examiner resigning

New York City chief medical examiner resigning
New York City chief medical examiner resigning
400tmax/iStock

(NEW YORK) — Dr. Barbara Sampson, the first woman to lead the New York City Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in its 100-year history, announced her departure Monday for a job in the private sector.

Sampson has been with the agency 23 years, nine as chief, and steered it through the grueling onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“We were so overwhelmed with the number of fatalities here in the city that we needed every OCME employee to be part of our COVID response,” Sampson recalled in an interview with ABC News.

Prior to the pandemic, Sampson oversaw the autopsies of Eric Garner, Joan Rivers and Jeffrey Epstein, each of which generated a degree of public controversy

“Keep with the truth and what is based in science and in medicine you can’t go too far astray,” she said of her guiding philosophy.

Sampson has championed new technology for DNA analysis and for opioids detection so autopsies can more quickly inform public health officials and law enforcement about what drugs are on the street.

She has maintained the office’s commitment, started under her predecessor Dr. Charles Hirsch, to keep examining human remains recovered from the 9/11 attacks. There were new identifications on the 20 year anniversary.

Sampson told ABC News she didn’t think much at the time of her appointment about being the first woman chief medical examiner in the city, but reflected on it now she is leaving her post for a position in the Mount Sinai Health System.

“I was clearly a role model for so many women who are interested in careers in medicine in science and in government. I found that now looking back extremely rewarding,” Sampson said.

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Trump’s former Defense Secretary Mark Esper sues Defense Department over book redactions

Trump’s former Defense Secretary Mark Esper sues Defense Department over book redactions
Trump’s former Defense Secretary Mark Esper sues Defense Department over book redactions
Michael Reynolds-Pool/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — Former Secretary of Defense Mark Esper, who served under former President Donald Trump until his firing in the wake of the 2020 election, has sued the Department of Defense over redactions they made to his upcoming book.

Esper’s memoir, set to be released in May of 2022, is expected to chronicle his time in the Trump administration, in which he served first as Secretary of the Army and then as Secretary of Defense until Trump tweeted about his firing on Nov. 9, 2020, following weeks of contention.

The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court in Washington on Sunday, said that Esper engaged in “extensive coordination” with the Department’s Office of Pre-publication and Security Review.

Esper alleges the review “dragged on” for six months and when he finally heard back on Oct. 7 after reaching out in May, there was no explanation given for some redactions.

“No written explanation was offered to justify the deletions,” Esper wrote in an e-mail to current Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin. “My follow-on conversations with the DOPSR official handling my case confirmed my assessment. He similarly has been unable to assert that the redacted items contain classified information or compromise national security.”

Esper said he was asked not to quote his conversations with Trump or other foreign officials, although much of the material “was already in the public domain,” according to Esper.

His attorneys argue in the lawsuit that the Defense Department “has unlawfully imposed a prior restraint upon Mr. Esper by delaying, obstructing and infringing on his constitutional right to publish his unclassified manuscript entitled ‘A Sacred Oath.'”

The former defense secretary also said he had already met with Austin’s chief of staff and the Defense Department’s Director of Administration and Management, Mike Donley.

“I should not be required to change my views, opinions, or descriptions of events simply because they may be too candid at times for normal diplomatic protocol. After all, the DOPSR process is about protecting classified information and not harming national security — two important standards to which I am fully committed. Moreover, my Constitutional rights should not be abridged because my story or choice of words may prompt uncomfortable discussions in foreign policy circles,” he said in the suit.

Pentagon press secretary John Kirby responded in a statement on Monday.

“We are aware of Mr. Esper’s concerns regarding the pre-publication of his memoir. As with all such reviews, the Department takes seriously its obligation to balance national security with an author’s narrative desire. Given that this matter is now under litigation, we will refrain from commenting further,” Kirby said.

In a memo reported first by ABC News Chief Washington Correspondent Jonathan Karl in his new book Betrayal, the Presidential Personnel Office under the direction of John McEntee, a favorite aide of Trump, made a case for firing Esper three weeks before Esper was terminated.

Reasons outlined for his firing in the memo included that Esper “barred the Confederate flag” on military bases, “opposed the President’s direction to utilize American forces to put down riots,” “focused the Department on Russia,” and was “actively pushing for ‘diversity and inclusion.'”

ABC News’ Matt Seyler contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Biden to address nation on omicron variant

Biden to address nation on omicron variant
Biden to address nation on omicron variant
Official White House Photo by Adam Schultz

(WASHINGTON) — With the COVID-19 omicron variant sending shockwaves around the world, President Joe Biden is set to address the nation surrounding the new variant following a morning briefing from his White House COVID-19 Response Team.

The president announced Friday that starting this week, the U.S. will restrict travelers from South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Namibia, Lesotho, Eswatini, Mozambique and Malawi. Experts predict it’s only a matter of time before the variant first detected in southern Africa is circulating in the U.S.

The omicron variant was first detected last week in Botswana and cases have since been confirmed in several countries including South Africa, Germany, Belgium, Japan and Canada. The World Health Organization (WHO) classified the variant as one of concern on Friday.

In an interview with ABC’s Good Morning America on Monday, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, argued omicron gives Americans more reason to get their COVID-19 booster shots — or for getting the jab if they haven’t been vaccinated already.

“We just need to make sure that we know we have tools against the virus in general,” Fauci said.

Fauci told Biden in a meeting on Sunday that it would likely take two weeks for a better picture of omicron’s transmissibility and severity, according to a White House readout of the meeting. Fauci said on ABC’s “This Week” that it will also take time to determine if the current COVID-19 vaccine is effective against the new variant.

“The pharmaceutical companies are preparing to make a specific booster for this, but we may not need that,” Fauci said on Good Morning America.

Biden will address the public twice Monday. Following a meeting with CEOs from different business sectors, Biden will also deliver remarks about the supply chain and inflation concerns.

The president continues to face low polling numbers and mounting political pressure heading into the holiday season with several crises converging, from the ongoing pandemic to supply chain woes and rising consumer prices.

ABC News’ Bill Hutchinson contributed to this report.

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Whitesnake introduces new bassist, Tanya O’Callaghan, the band’s first-ever female member

Whitesnake introduces new bassist, Tanya O’Callaghan, the band’s first-ever female member
Whitesnake introduces new bassist, Tanya O’Callaghan, the band’s first-ever female member
Srdjan Stevanovic/WireImage

Whitesnake has seen many musicians come and go during its 40-year history, but the band has never featured a female member…until now!

This past week, after frontman David Coverdale and company announced that bassist Michael Devin had parted ways with the group, Whitesnake revealed that Devin’s replacement is Tanya O’Callaghan.

“[W]e are very proud to announce & to introduce you all to our newest Snake…or should I say…SNAKETTE!!!” a message on the band’s official website reads. “Please give A LOUD WHITESNAKE CHOIR welcome to THE IRISH TORNADO!!!…A whirling dervish of a performer whom we feel will bring a fresh, new, exciting musicality & welcome energy to the band, both in the studio & onstage…here she is…Irish born & bred…the one & only…Tanya O’Callaghan!!!”

Adds Coverdale, “For whatever reason Whitesnake has never featured a female musician in the band before…Bad Boys!!!…But, when we saw TANYA performing with our friend Stephen Adler‘s Band at the M3 festival in 2019 & we were all blown away.”

According to O’Callaghan’s official website, besides playing with ex-Guns N’ Roses drummer Adler’s solo band, Tanya has “toured, recorded, written and worked with” Twisted Sister‘s Dee Snider, Extreme‘s Nuno Bettencourt, Tool‘s Maynard James Keenan, Orianthi, 10cc‘s Kevin Godley, The CorrsSharon Corr and others.

Meanwhile, O’Callaghan has shared a message about how she feels about joining Whitesnake on her Facebook page.

“What an absolute honor to be joining Whitesnake/David Coverdale for their worldwide farewell tour 2022/23,” she writes. “[T]o step into the snake shoes of my bass brothers Rudy Sarzo, Tony Franklin, Neil Murray and Michael Devin…are you kidding me…what a f#*king honor beyond belief!!! My heart is exploding.”

Whitesnake launches its 2022 tour on May 10 in the capital of O’Callaghan’s homeland, Dublin.

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