Biden gets COVID-19 booster shot before cameras, pushes vaccinations

Biden gets COVID-19 booster shot before cameras, pushes vaccinations
Biden gets COVID-19 booster shot before cameras, pushes vaccinations
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — President Joe Biden publicly received his COVID-19 booster shot on Monday afternoon as his administration promotes new booster guidance that has spurred some confusion among Americans on when to get a third dose.

“Like I did with my first and second COVID-19 vaccination shot, I’m about to get my booster shot and do it publicly. That’s because the Food and Drug Administration, the FDA, the Center for Diseases Control and Prevention, the CDC, looked at all the data, completed their review, and determined the boosters for the Pfizer vaccine — others will come later, maybe, I assume — but the Pfizer vaccine are safe and effective,” Biden began.

Delivering remarks ahead of receiving a third dose of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine in the South Court Auditorium, provided Biden the opportunity to address some of that confusion.

He joked, “Now I know it doesn’t look like it, but I am over 65 — I wish — I’m way over. And that’s why I’m getting my booster shot today.”

The president already received his first dose of the vaccine on Dec. 21, 2020, and his second dose on Jan. 11, 2021. At age 78, Biden qualifies for a third shot under the new CDC guidance issued last week recommending booster shots to older Americans at least six months after their first series of shots.

Additionally, CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky overruled her agency’s independent advisory panel last Friday by also adding a recommendation for a third dose for Americans ages 18 to 64 considered high risk to COVID-19 due to where they work.

Biden repeated the administration’s messaging that while booster shots are rolling out, baseline vaccinations are the priority.

“The bottom line is that you’re fully vaccinated, and you’re highly protected now from severe illness, even if you get COVID-19. You’re safe and we’re going to do everything we can to keep it that way, with the boosters. But let me be clear, boosters are important, but the most important thing we need to do is get more people vaccinated,” he said.

“The vast majority of Americans are doing the right thing. Over 77% of adults have gotten at least one shot. About 23% haven’t gotten any shots. And that, that distinct minority is causing an awful lot of us, a lot of damage for the rest of the country,” he added.

“This is a pandemic of the unvaccinated. That’s why I’m moving forward with vaccination requirements wherever I can,” Biden said.

As Biden walked over to receive his shot, he did a double-take back to the podium to put his mask back on, in apparent modeling of CDC recommendations.

He said first lady Jill Biden, at age 70 and working in a school, considered a high-risk environment for COVID-19, would receive her shot booster soon too.

On ABC’s “Good Morning America” on Monday, Walensky acknowledged the confusion around the decision and the categories of people it applies to as the administration promotes the rollout of booster shots.

Asked also on CBS about Biden’s comment last week that boosters could be offered to the general population anyway, despite the more narrow recommendations from the Food and Drug Administration and CDC, Walensky said, “I recognize that confusion.”

“Right now, our recommendation is for these limited people in the population, over 65, high-risk workers, high-risk community occupations, as well as high-risk by comorbidities,” she said.

On when the general population will be eligible, Walensky said it’s being looked at every few weeks but did not offer the same optimism as the president had last week.

“We are evaluating this science in real-time. We are meeting every several weeks now to evaluate the science. The science may very well show that the rest of the population needs to be boosted. And we will provide those guidances as soon as we have the science to inform them,” she said.

The new CDC current policy does not apply for boosters to be given to people initially vaccinated with the Moderna or Johnson & Johnson shots.

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Hey Ho, it sold! Johnny Ramone’s famous Mosrite guitar fetches over $900K at Boston memorabilia auction

Hey Ho, it sold! Johnny Ramone’s famous Mosrite guitar fetches over 0K at Boston memorabilia auction
Hey Ho, it sold! Johnny Ramone’s famous Mosrite guitar fetches over 0K at Boston memorabilia auction
Credit: Ian Harper

A rare electric guitar that The RamonesJohnny Ramone played and recorded with from 1977 to 1996 sold for more than $900,000 at a rock memorabilia auction held over the weekend in Boston.

The 1965 Mosrite Ventures II model, which the late guitarist used at every Ramones gig from November 1977 through the band’s final concert in August of ’96, fetched $937,500, according to the Boston-based RR Auction company.

Ramone, born John Cummings, played the Mosrite at nearly 2,000 shows and also used it to record most of The Ramones’ albums.

The guitar has a white body and a black pickguard, and Johnny signed the back in black marker, “Johnny Ramone, My Main Guitar, 1977-1996.”

The instrument was one of many Ramones-related items sold at the auction, which offered memorabilia from a collection belonging to veteran producer and musician Daniel Rey, a longtime associate of the legendary punk band.

“The consignor was thrilled with the results and is very happy that the guitar is in the hands of someone who will curate Johnny Ramone’s Mosrite for future generations to enjoy,” says RR Auction executive Bobby Livingston.

The winning bidder wished to remain anonymous.

Among the other items sold at the auction was a blue Mosrite Mark-2 Johnny Ramone signature model guitar owned and played by Johnny, which brought $46,875. In addition, three Shure microphones that Ramones frontman Joey Ramone used at the group’s final concert, which took place in Los Angeles in August 1996, fetched $13,125.

You can check out the full results of the sale at RRAuction.com.

Johnny died of prostate cancer at age 55 in 2004.

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Demi Lovato talks alien abductions and why there’s nothing to fear

Demi Lovato talks alien abductions and why there’s nothing to fear
Demi Lovato talks alien abductions and why there’s nothing to fear
Courtesy Peacock

Before the release of Demi Lovato’s new Peacock series Unidentified with Demi Lovato this week, the singer is opening up about their experiences with UFOs and extraterrestrial beings.

In an interview with Entertainment Weekly, Demi says in making the show, they now believe they may have been abducted by aliens at one point.

“We were looking into [abductions], and as I started talking to these abductees, I was realizing that I had some very similar experience[s],” Demi says. “I had an experience where I feel like I astral-projected in my sleep, and I’m realizing that maybe it wasn’t that and it was possibly that I went somewhere.”

The unscripted series features Demi, their skeptical friend Matthew and their sister Dallas, as they visit known UFO hot spots, talk to experts, examine alleged “secret government reports” and interview people who’ve had first hand encounters with E.T.s. 

Demi says they hope that people will watch with an open mind and realize that these “beings” are nothing to fear.  “You would think that I would be freaked out, but what I have found in these experiences is the love, and there’s no fear,” they say.

Demi adds, “I think they’re very caring, very intelligent beings that are just looking out for the best interest of our planet, because we need some help.”

All four episodes of Unidentified with Demi Lovato debut September 30 on Peacock.

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Maren Morris says her next album is “my happiest work”

Maren Morris says her next album is “my happiest work”
Maren Morris says her next album is “my happiest work”
ABC/Randy Holmes

Maren Morris is bidding a fond farewell to the Girl era as she welcomes in new music. 

During an appearance at Pilgrimage Music & Cultural Festival in Franklin, Tennessee, just outside of Nashville on Saturday, Maren revealed that it was her final show before she releases new music. She followed up the claim with a social media post with photos from the stage, writing, “End of an era” with a blue heart. 

She bared even more of her heart on her Instagram Stories, citing the past two years since Girl was released, along with the COVID-19 pandemic, as “quite possibly, the most formative years of my existence thus far.” 

In addition to growing in her marriage with husband Ryan Hurd and becoming a mother to one-year-old son Hayes, Maren says she also developed a closer relationship with her fans.

“I am ready to rest and recalibrate so I can finally give birth to what I’ve been toiling away at for the last two years. It is my happiest work. I can’t wait to share it,” she reflects, adding, “I love you, I do.”

Following its release in 2019, Girl spawned three singles: the chart-topping title track, crossover smash “The Bones,” and current single “To Hell & Back.” 

Maren and Ryan’s first duet, “Chasing After You,” is currently climbing into the top 10 on country radio.

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WWII veteran finally meets woman who wrote him a letter 12 years ago

WWII veteran finally meets woman who wrote him a letter 12 years ago
WWII veteran finally meets woman who wrote him a letter 12 years ago
Ratstuben/iStock

(NEW YORK) — In 2009, when Dashauna Priest was just 9 years old, her third grade class project was to write letters of gratitude to military veterans. Priest’s letter was sent to Frank Grasberger, a World War II veteran, and he’s kept it ever since.

“It meant so much to me and touched my heart so much,” Grasberger told “Good Morning America.” “Keeping it with me made me feel like I was with her, protecting her.”

In addition to the note of thanks, Priest drew a helmet with flowers coming out of it and an American flag on the letter, which Grasberger said “really touched” him.

“I felt like how could such a young girl understand what war was and how could she be so kind writing to someone she didn’t even know?” he said.

Grasberger knew he wanted to meet Priest immediately after reading the letter but was unable to find her, he said. Jill Pawloski, an employee at VITALIA Senior Residences in Strongsville, Ohio, where Grasberger lives, stepped in and tracked Priest down on social media.

“I reached out and sent her a private message explaining the situation,” Pawloski told “GMA,” adding that Grasberger was unaware that she was searching for Priest on his behalf. “I then asked her if she’d be interested in coming to our community to surprise Frank and without hesitation she said yes. I was thrilled and so full of joy that I could do this for Frank. He has such a huge heart and I knew this would fill his heart up.”

Priest, now 21, told “GMA ” that Pawloski’s message went to the requests folder on Instagram, which she “usually doesn’t open” but for some reason did that day.

“It’s so ironic because two weeks before I had opened up my memory box and went through it and I actually picked up [Grasberger’s] letter and read it,” Priest said. “So when she had messaged me, I had opened it around 12 at night and I actually cried because it was like, ‘Wow, this is crazy I just read the letter.'”

In response to Priest’s original letter, Grasberger wrote her a letter back in 2009, but he said he “never knew if she ever received it.”

After 12 years, the pair were able to finally meet on July 23 of this year. With the help of Grasberger’s family, Pawloski was able to keep the meeting a secret from Frank so that it could be a surprise.

“We told him that someone was coming in to interview him about his story,” Pawloski said. “We were all in tears watching [them] meet for the first time. It was beautiful and heartwarming and showed what a little act of kindness can do for two strangers.”

“Oh God, I was in shock like it couldn’t be the girl,” Grasberger said. “I never thought I’d find her let alone see or meet her. It was amazing. I went through a box of Kleenex.”

Priest said of the meeting: “It was amazing. He’s a very amazing person. He has a great personality. I was really thrilled to meet him. He was just full of life.”

Grasberger, along with his family and Pawloski, had another surprise waiting for them. In a full-circle moment, Priest arrived wearing her National Guard uniform as she herself has joined the military.

“No one had known I was in the military so when I showed up in my uniform it sparked something in everyone to start crying and it made me cry,” Priest said, adding that she’s not typically a crier.

“I’m so proud of her,” Grasberger said. “She’s like a third daughter to me. She has become such a wonderful nice girl. I hope her son knows one day what a difference she made in my life.”

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How Lee Pace got into godly shape for Apple TV+’s sci-fi epic ‘Foundation’

How Lee Pace got into godly shape for Apple TV+’s sci-fi epic ‘Foundation’
How Lee Pace got into godly shape for Apple TV+’s sci-fi epic ‘Foundation’
Apple TV+

When one is playing a god-like character, it’s safe to say you say you can’t prepare by sitting around with Pringles and Netflix. Lee Pace certainly didn’t do that to play the magnificently fit emperor of the galaxy in Apple TV+’s Foundation

“We started shooting before the pandemic and and I was lifting a whole lot of weights, and then the pandemic started, and I basically cleared off a corner of the barn and did a bunch of yoga,” Pace tells ABC Audio about how he got into shape to better look the part. “I did yoga every day for about two hours. And that was my kind of, you know, throughout the entire quarantine, through that time.”

The regimen helped both Pace’s body, and his acting.”It was such an opportunity to think about my health, to think about, you know, this character that I was playing and really kind of think about…you know, your balance, thinking about what you’re stretching, thinking about a specific part of the body and how you can control it,” he says. I thought so much about the character and what the limits of control are, the fantasy of what control is.”

In the series, Pace’s Brother Day confronts the reality that his family’s grip over the galaxy is under threat, because he learns that every empire eventually falls.

“That’s what the character is, he’s about control,” says Pace. “It’s like, you know, trying to hold sand in your hand. It’s a slippery thing. You can try to keep it, but you won’t be able to.”

Foundation, also starring Chernobyl’s Jared Harris, is now streaming on Apple TV+.

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Netflix drops trailer for ‘Jeen-Yuhs’ Kanye West documentary

Netflix drops trailer for ‘Jeen-Yuhs’ Kanye West documentary
Netflix drops trailer for ‘Jeen-Yuhs’ Kanye West documentary
Netflix

A 25-year-old Kanye West previews a song from his debut album in the trailer for his new Netflix documentary, titled Jeen-Yuhs.

Yeezy appears with Yasmine Bey, then known as Mos Def, and they rap “Two Words” from West’s 2004 album, The College Dropout. The project was RIAA-certified four-times Platinum and remains Kanye’s best-selling project of his 17-year recording career. It features Jay-Z, Jamie Foxx, Ludacris, Common, Talib Kweli, Freeway, Twista, and the Boys Choir of Harlem.

Jeen-Yuhs has been in production for 21 years for a reported $30 million, according to Pitchfork, and will debut in 2022. A release date will be announced later.

In other news, Kanye’s Donda album falls from number two to number four this week on the Billboard 200 after debuting at number one earlier this month.

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Metallica plays ‘The Black Album’ in full & in reverse during Louder than Life festiva

Metallica plays ‘The Black Album’ in full & in reverse during Louder than Life festiva
Metallica plays ‘The Black Album’ in full & in reverse during Louder than Life festiva
Blackened Recordings

Metallica continued to celebrate the 30th anniversary of The Black Album at his past weekend’s Louder than Life festival.

For their second of two headlining sets at the event, the metal legends performed their iconic 1991 record in its entirety and in reverse order, starting with closer “The Struggle Within,” and ending the main set with “Enter Sandman.”

While Black Album singles “Sandman” and “Nothing Else Matters” are staples in Metallica’s sets, the band hadn’t played deeper cuts such as “Struggle” or “Don’t Tread on Me” in concert since 2012.

Earlier this month, Metallica released a deluxe reissue of The Black Album in honor of its 30th anniversary. They also put together The Metallica Blacklist, a 53-track tribute compilation featuring covers of every song off the record.

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Celine Dion quasi-biopic ‘Aline’ will open in the U.S. in early 2022

Celine Dion quasi-biopic ‘Aline’ will open in the U.S. in early 2022
Celine Dion quasi-biopic ‘Aline’ will open in the U.S. in early 2022
Valérie Lemercier, director and star of Celine Dion-inspired biopic “Aline;” Daniele Venturelli/WireImage

Aline, the movie that’s a thinly-veiled biopic of Celine Dion, will get an American release in early 2022 after premiering earlier this year at the Cannes Film Festival, Variety reports.

Aline was directed and co-written by French actor/comedian Valérie Lemercier, who also stars as the title character and plays her from youth to adulthood, though Lemercier is 57.  In the film, Aline is a singer from Quebec who grew up with 13 siblings, just like Celine Dion did. 

The movie follows Aline as she’s discovered by a producer, who makes her a star and then marries her — just like Celine’s late husband René Angelil did.  And just like Celine, she does a Las Vegas residency and has three children after struggling with infertility problems.  Celine’s songs are featured, with Aline’s singing voice provided by a Celine soundalike named Victoria Sio.

When the movie opened in Cannes, Lemercier told Variety of its inspiration, “Nothing is against [Celine], but some things are invented to be more cinematic and romantic sometimes.”  She also claimed Celine’s French manager O.K.’d the project, but that Celine hadn’t read the script and, at that point, hadn’t seen it.

Aline will be distributed by Roadside Attractions and Samuel Goldwyn Films, who brought you the Oscar-winning movies Judy and Another Round.  In a joint statement published by Variety, the two companies said, “Valérie’s tour de force performance…created an enormous splash at Cannes this year, and we think American audiences will be every bit as thrilled to discover this one-of-a-kind entertainer.” 

They also called the film a “love letter” to Celine.  In July, Variety described it as “kooky.”

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Shinedown bassist Eric Bass tests positive for COVID-19

Shinedown bassist Eric Bass tests positive for COVID-19
Shinedown bassist Eric Bass tests positive for COVID-19
Credit: Sanjay Parikh

Shinedown bassist Eric Bass has tested positive for COVID-19.

In an Instagram post announcing the news, frontman Brent Smith writes that Bass is “doing fine” and is currently quarantining, and is set to return to the road once he tests negative.

“To be crystal clear everyone on the tour including bands, and crew were tested today all of which are all negative,” Smith says.

With Bass out of commission for a bit, the remainder of Shinedown — Smith, guitarist Zach Myers and drummer Barry Kerch — performed as a three-piece during their two shows this past weekend. Josh Sturm, husband of ex-Flyleaf singer Lacey Sturm, will fill in going forward.

Bass is the second Shinedown member to contract COVID-19 in as many months — Kerch tested positive back in August.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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