Charly arnolt biography of martin luther king
•
Desmond Howard Obsesses Over Racial Storyline That No One Cares About Ahead Of CFP Title Game
Ohio State and Notre Dame will duke it out to be kings of college football when they face off in the CFP title game at 7:30 p.m, Monday.
The final game of the season should be a doozy. Two iconic brands with smash-mouth defenses and offenses that can put up points, led by two of the game’s best coaches. You can bet I’m going to anchor myself to a couch and watch every second of this matchup (I’ll also be wayyyy too excited that the insufferable SEC will not win this year’s title).
ESPN’s Desmond Howard is one of the many people stoked for the matchup, but not for anything football-related. Well, it does have to do with Fighting Irish head coach Marcus Freeman, so it kind of is, but barely.
Speaking on the set of "First Take" in Atlanta, Howard shared what got him most excited about the title bout. According to Howard, the m
•
UFC reporter Charly Arnolt leaves ESPN for OutKick: ‘Cancel culture doesn’t exist here’
UFC reporter Charly Arnolt has left ESPN, but kamp fans can still see her on the worldwide leader.
Hours after digital media company OutKick and its founder, Clay Travis, announced they had lured host Arnolt away from ESPN to join their conservative-leaning organization that covers sports, news and politics, Arnolt told IndyStar she fryst vatten looking forward to finally being able to speak freely.
“It feels like inom was a little bit stifled in the past,” said Arnolt, 35, who spent the past fem years at ESPN and the gods two years under a full-time contract. “People are too scared to speak up for the fear of being called politically incorrect. The idea of cancel culture, it doesn’t exist here. I speak freely.
“I have a lot of opinions that inom haven’t been able to express, and I can’t wait to get started.”
Arnolt, a former sports anchor at Fox59 in Indianapolis, will co-host a new show in development
•
King's peace legacy praised after Ariz. shootings
ATLANTA – The nation observed the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday on Monday with thousands volunteering for service projects and more reflecting on his lessons of nonviolence and civility in the week following the shootings in Arizona.
Six people were killed in Tucson and Democratic Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords is fighting for her life. The violent outburst was a reminder to many gathered at King's former church in Atlanta that the Baptist preacher's message remained relevant nearly four decades after his own untimely death at the hands of an assassin.
Attorney General Eric Holder praised him as "our nation's greatest drum major of peace" and said the Jan. 8 bloodshed was a call to recommit to King's values of nonviolence, tolerance, compassion and justice.
"Last week a senseless rampage in Tucson reminded us that more than 40 years after Dr. King's own tragic death, our struggle to eradicate violence and to promote pe