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America Has Gotten Coretta Scott King Wrong

America Has Gotten Coretta Scott King Wrong

Yahoo07-04-2025

A year after Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination, the publishing company Holt, Rinehart and Winston released Coretta Scott King's My Life With Martin Luther King, Jr. A senior editor at HRW, Charlotte Mayerson, a white woman, had contracted the writer Alden Hatch, also white, for the sizable sum of $15,000 to ghostwrite the book, based on interviews Mayerson had recently completed with Scott King. All of this was 'totally confidential,' as the agreement between Hatch and the publisher spelled out, and the book, like the memoirs of many famous people then and now, was presented simply as her autobiography.
I had learned about Hatch in the process of researching Coretta Scott and Martin Luther King Jr.'s life and political partnership for my own book, King of the North: Martin Luther King Jr.'s Life of Struggle Outside the South, and was excited to find that some of the transcripts and audio recordings of those interviews had survived in papers Hatch had donated to the University of Florida. As I listened to one of the recordings, something started to bother me. Scott King didn't sound the way she did in My Life With Martin Luther King, Jr. The surviving transcripts of the interviews were a chaotic, incomplete mess—but even so, they were quite revealing: The details of Scott King's ideas were different and more substantive, her perspectives fiercer and more contemplative, than what was portrayed in the book.
And then I found something that explained why—a folder that contained letters between Hatch and Mayerson. When Mayerson sent Hatch the interviews for him to begin ghostwriting the autobiography, she explicitly instructed Hatch that although Scott King talked a 'vast amount' about herself and her family background, 'it is urgent that the focus of the book be on Martin, not on Coretta.' Despite choosing a white male ghostwriter who did not know Scott King, Mayerson wanted a 'very female, personal, and sentimental story' in a 'tone that is more like the Reader's Digest.' Mayerson's racial blinders shone through—telling Hatch that Scott King had a 'certain cold bloodedness in her attitude toward whites.' When Mayerson questioned her about the death of Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner, two white Freedom Summer volunteers killed in Mississippi in 1964, she said she was 'sad that they died,' but 'felt that it was an important event because it made the white community more aware of the problems than any number of Negro deaths would have done.' As I listened to the few recordings and read through the surviving interview transcripts, I noticed how Mayerson interrupted Scott King frequently during the interviews, her incredulity at some of Scott King's answers coming through clearly.
Months later, as Hatch started to show Scott King draft chapters of the book, both Coretta and her older sister Edythe raised objections to the book's tone and lack of attention to their family's work. Hatch was dismissive, telling Mayerson, 'I deliberately wrote it with very simple language that I believe would have a special appeal for the critics.' He instructed Mayerson to call in the 'big reserves' to intimidate Coretta to acquiesce.
'I am made to sound like an attachment to a vacuum cleaner,' Scott King had observed about the ways she was often represented in public discourse: 'the wife of Martin, then the widow of Martin, all of which I was proud to be.' This had even been true in her own 'autobiography.' 'I didn't learn my commitment from Martin, we just converged at a certain time.' Although a number of biographers since then have taken note of her politics before she met Martin, she largely disappears as a political actor throughout his life and leadership, until she moves to carry on his legacy after the assassination.
Scott King saw the deficit partly as a result of who was doing the telling. At one of the first conferences of King scholars, in 1986, she said to those gathered, 'The next time we have a conference on him, I want to see more women scholars. He allowed me to be myself, and that meant that I always expressed my views.'
Theirs was a political and intellectual partnership from the beginning. King married a feminist intellectual freedom fighter with unflinching determination, and he could not have been the leader he was without her. Scott King's activism—her understanding of the evils of racism, poverty, and militarism—started before her marriage, complemented and influenced her husband's work, and extended well beyond his assassination, in 1968. She was the family leader on issues of peace, war, and the economy. Although their relationship hewed to certain gender conventions of the time, particularly because of King's belief that she be the one to stay home and raise the children, it challenged other dominant social mores. Both refused to 'stay in their lane' despite immense pressure; they prioritized a life of struggle over a safe or materially secure family life, she spoke her mind both privately and publicly, and he relied on her thoughts and on her unwavering commitment to keep going.
Coretta was more politically active than Martin when they met. She had grown up in a proud farming family in Alabama who owned their own land. The family was harassed and threatened repeatedly. When her father started transporting lumber, a business reserved for white people, whites torched their house to the ground. And when her father refused to sell his business to a white man, whites burned the business too. Those experiences and the pride that her parents instilled in her helped prepare Coretta for what she would encounter as an adult. Growing up, 'I was tough,' and liked to fight, she told Mayerson in 1968—something that didn't make it into the book.
Her mother was determined that her daughters would get a good education, and sent them to the Lincoln Normal School, in Marion, Alabama. Coretta and Edythe then became the first Black students in decades to attend Antioch College, in Ohio. Coretta majored in music and education and got involved in numerous civil-rights and anti–Cold War efforts. She was introduced to the Progressive Party, which was created to challenge both the Democrats and Republicans on U.S. segregation and Cold War militarism. In 1948, she supported Henry Wallace for president, and attended the Progressive Party Convention in Philadelphia as a student delegate (one of about 150 African Americans at the convention). Through her Progressive Party activities, she met both the singer Paul Robeson and the activist Bayard Rustin, and heard the playwright and activist Shirley Graham (who would marry W. E. B. Du Bois three years later) give a powerful speech.
Seeking to pursue a music career, Coretta moved to Boston to attend the New England Conservatory of Music. There, through a friend, she met Martin, who was getting his doctorate at Boston University, in January 1952. They talked about racism and capitalism on their first date. Martin was smitten; he'd never met a woman like her. At the end of that date, he told her she had 'all the qualities he wanted in a wife—beauty, personality, character, and intelligence.' She was incredulous, telling him, 'You don't even know me.' But she agreed to another date. She was impressed with his vision and determination to change the country. And Martin was a good listener; he didn't judge. Their romance blossomed. Still, she worried that becoming a minister's wife would make her life small. It took her many months to decide whether to marry him. When they did wed, in June 1953, she refused to wear white and made her imposing father-in-law take 'obey' out of their vows, because it made her feel 'like an indentured servant.' She would keep Scott as her middle name, which she then always used, becoming Coretta Scott King for the rest of her life, unlike many women of her generation. Many journalists and public officials would refuse to recognize that, referring to her only as 'Mrs. Martin Luther King.'
Coretta's steadfastness came out early. Seven weeks into the Montgomery bus boycott, on January 30, 1956, the Kings' home was bombed. Both Coretta and their two-month-old baby, Yolanda, were home. Hearing a thump, she moved fast, succeeding in getting them out unscathed. Furious and terrified by the news, both Martin's and Coretta's fathers came to Montgomery to tell them to leave immediately—or, at the very least, to get Coretta and Yolanda out of there. The pressure was immense. 'I knew I wasn't going anywhere,' Coretta recalled in a 1966 interview with New Lady magazine. The next morning at breakfast, Martin was grateful: 'You were the only one who stood with me.' Had she flinched in that moment, as I wrote for this magazine in 2018, the trajectory of the bus boycott and Martin's emerging leadership could have been very different.
From that night on, they lived with the understanding that if they continued in the struggle, she too might be killed. Martin had to reckon with the possibility of Coretta's death, just as she had to reckon with his. When he grew frightened, she would remind him that the movement was bigger than they were. In key ways, the Kings were forging a way of family life and leadership different from that of many of their generation and their parents, by rejecting the 'promise of protection' that good men were supposed to provide and prioritizing a life of freedom fighting instead.
Martin came to rely on Coretta's unflinching steeliness. The one time she broke down terrified him. In 1960, King was arrested at an Atlanta sit-in; when the others were released, the state dredged up an old traffic charge to keep him, transferring him hundreds of miles in the middle of the night, his hands shackled to the police-car floor. He thought he was going to be killed. Then, when the judge sentenced him to four months' hard labor, Coretta, frightened, exhausted, and six months pregnant, started crying. Martin was shaken: 'Corrie, I've never seen you like this; you have to stand up for me.' In many ways, he relied on her strength.
In her own activism, Scott King came to zero in on global peace and anti-colonialism. In 1962, when their third son, Dexter, was not even 2 years old, she joined a Women Strike for Peace delegation for a multination disarmament conference in Geneva, Switzerland, to pressure the United States and the Soviet Union to sign a nuclear-test-ban treaty. As Scott King told the press, 'The rights that we had achieved were meaningless unless there was a world to exercise those rights.' The punishing climate of the Cold War—in which people were slandered for their political beliefs, called 'un-American,' and in some cases even fired from their job—led many people, both Black and white, including many activists the Kings knew, to stay away from such global politics. But Scott King pushed forward, the Geneva trip deepening her global commitments. In 1963, she led a march to the United Nations carrying a sign saying Let's Make Our Earth a Nuclear-Free Zone, where a delegation met with UN Secretary-General U Thant. Scott King then left New York City for another Women Strike for Peace action in Washington, D.C., telling the press she was proud to be identified with the peace movement. 'I can never be free until every black man from Johannesburg, South Africa, to Jackson, Mississippi, is free.'
After King won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964, she saw a heightened responsibility for both of them to the global community, as My Life With Martin Luther King, Jr. notes. She spoke out against U.S. involvement in Vietnam and became 'the family spokesperson on the peace issues,' though the book gives this part of her life very scant treatment. One reporter pushed King on how he had found such a political companion; had he trained her in this direction? King laughed and then responded, 'It may have been the other way around. When I met her, she was very concerned with all the things we are trying to do now … I wish I could say to satisfy my masculine ego that I led her down this path but I must say we went down together.'
Scott King tried unsuccessfully to persuade the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in 1965 to take a stand on Vietnam. At an SCLC retreat in early 1965, she explained how the war drains 'resources from education, housing, health, and other badly needed programs,' making clear to those gathered, 'why do you think we got the Nobel Prize? … Peace and justice are indivisible.' She understood that they had gotten the award, and thus the responsibilities demanded of them around racism, poverty, and militarism.
To be a peace activist in 1965 was to be seen as un-American, but Scott King was 'beyond steel,' as a fellow activist noted. In May 1965, bucking Cold War pressure, she addressed the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom conference on the topic of 'Peace, Jobs, and Freedom,' and then in June she spoke before a crowd of 18,000 at the Emergency Rally on Vietnam, in Madison Square Garden. For this work, in March 1966, the FBI put her in a category of 'subversives.'
In September 1965, after a meeting at the UN, King denounced the U.S. bombing of North Vietnam. President Lyndon B. Johnson was furious. Congressmen questioned King's patriotism, and newspapers editorialized against him. Feeling the pressure, in November, he backed out of an address to a D.C. peace rally, but Scott King kept her commitment and spoke. Addressing the 25,000 gathered, she underlined that 'unless America learns to respect the right to freedom and justice for all, then the very things which we hold dear in this country will wither away in the hypocritical ritual of the preservation of national self-interest.' Following her appearance, a reporter asked King if he had educated his wife on these issues. 'She educated me,' he replied. In fall 1966, Scott King joined the steering committee of what became the National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam. She was leading not just her husband on this issue, but the nation. King would make his historic anti-war speech from Riverside Church on April 4, 1967.
In the last six months of his life, King turned to building the Poor People's Campaign. Although many in SCLC balked, Scott King was already on board. The idea for the PPC was that a multiracial army of people from across the nation, drawing from local groups across the country, would descend on D.C. and stay there to force Congress to 'see the poor' and act. Just weeks after King was assassinated, Scott King continued that work, kicking off the PPC from the Memphis balcony where he had been killed. At a Mother's Day march of welfare recipients in D.C. the following week, she highlighted the violence of U.S. political priorities. 'Neglecting schoolchildren is violence. Punishing a mother and her family is violence … Ignoring medical needs is violence. Contempt for poverty is violence. Even the lack of willpower to help humanity is a sick and sinister form of violence.'
Scott King's story is a reminder that many of the histories we tell, even of one of the most well-known Black families in history, are deeply inadequate. 'I keep seeing these books that come out, and there are so many inaccuracies,' Scott King herself observed in a 2004 interview. 'And that becomes history if you don't correct it.' America needs the true story of its history, and part of that story was the bold, brilliant advocacy of Coretta Scott King.
Article originally published at The Atlantic

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Former Florida student schemed to overturn his conviction in friend's 2012 murder

time20-06-2025

Former Florida student schemed to overturn his conviction in friend's 2012 murder

The murder of University of Florida freshman Christian Aguilar shocked the campus and his hometown of Miami in 2012. More than a decade later, the case took stunning new turns, authorities alleging an elaborate scheme orchestrated from behind prison walls by the man convicted of killing him. Pedro Bravo was serving a life sentence in a Florida prison after he was convicted of first-degree murder and six other counts in Aguilar's death in 2014. Aguilar had been dating Bravo's former girlfriend Erika Friman, who was also a high school friend of the two men. "I was the art kid, and I was cracking jokes... and now I'm in a place where there's hardened criminals, people that have done serious things, and to add to all that, they're also calling me my best friend's killer," Pedro Bravo told "20/20" in his only interview before his death in March 2025. A new "20/20" episode, "They Know Everything," airing Friday, June 20, at 9 p.m. ET on ABC and streaming the next day on Hulu, examines the case. You can also get more behind-the-scenes of each week's episode by listening to "20/20: The After Show" weekly series right on your "20/20" podcast feed on Mondays, hosted by "20/20" co-anchor Deborah Roberts. In May 2025, two people pleaded guilty for their roles in what prosecutors called a plot by Bravo to overturn his conviction. Kelcie Edwards pleaded guilty to fraud for providing false testimony, while Michael Angelo pleaded guilty to perjury for falsely recanting his original trial testimony. According to investigators, the supposed plot unraveled after they discovered that Edwards was connected to Bravo through a fellow inmate, Brandon Campbell, with whom Edwards had two children. Digging into Edwards' phone and financial records, investigators uncovered a cache of secret messages and Cash App transactions between Bravo and Edwards. "They know everything," Campbell said to Edwards in one of a series of recorded calls which helped investigators uncover Bravo's alleged scheme. Campbell was not charged in the case and authorities said he was fully cooperative in the investigation. Investigators said Edwards claimed to be an eyewitness who saw Aguilar walk away alive after a fight with Bravo in 2012. Once the connection between Edwards and Campbell was discovered, the rest of Bravo's plan came to light, according to authorities. "I'm shocked by the complexity of it and the depth of it," State Attorney Brian Kramer told "20/20." "The amount of subterfuge, lies and creation of false evidence, is beyond what we would ever see." Around the same time Edwards came forward, Angelo, who had testified at Bravo's original trial about an alleged jailhouse confession, recanted his testimony. He previously testified that Bravo revealed details about the murder that only the killer would know. The elaborate plot by Bravo was his final attempt at freedom in a decade-long saga that began as a missing persons case in September 2012. It was then that Aguilar vanished after a routine day on the University of Florida campus. Aguilar's disappearance was first reported by his girlfriend Erika Friman, and Bravo, his high school best friend. The connection between the three former classmates from Miami's Doral Academy Charter School would later prove crucial to understanding the crime. While Bravo claimed to be "OK" with Friman dating his best friend, his private journals told a different story. "Every time that we would ask him questions, it seemed the version would change a little bit," former Gainesville Police Detective Randy Roberts told "20/20" in reference to Bravo's evolving explanations of what happened the day Aguilar disappeared. For three weeks, hundreds of volunteers searched the dense woods and swamps around Gainesville for any sign of Aguilar. His father, Carlos Aguilar, told "20/20" he made a promise: "We're not leaving. We don't care if we lose the house. We don't care if we lose everything. Christian is missing, we are going to find Christian." Meanwhile, evidence began contradicting Bravo's story. Police found surveillance footage of him cleaning his vehicle at 1 a.m. at a local car wash, focusing particularly on the undercarriage. A receipt showed he had purchased a shovel and Gatorade from Lowes. The investigation took a turn when forensic analysis of Bravo's computer revealed disturbing searches including "Where can I bury a body?" and "How many sleeping pills will it take to kill someone?" In October 2012, hunters discovered Aguilar's body in a shallow grave in Levy County. Bravo was charged with first-degree murder and later convicted. It wasn't until over a decade later, in correspondence with Edwards about his scheme to overturn his conviction, that Bravo finally admitted to killing Aguilar, although his version of events differed from what prosecutors alleged. "He said that they fought and he left him there, like he'd said in trial, but this time he admitted that Christian passed away in his car. He panicked, and ultimately went out and buried him," prosecutor Tom Mullins told "20/20." "To my knowledge, other than the confession he made to Mr. Angelo, this was the first time he'd ever come close to actually confessing to that murder." On March 12, 2025, Bravo died by suicide at the Okeechobee Correctional Institution. His death came shortly before Edwards and Angelo pleaded guilty to their roles in Bravo's failed scheme. Angelo was sentenced to seven years in prison, while Edwards will serve five years' probation.

30 Walmart Parenting Items So You Feel On Top Of It
30 Walmart Parenting Items So You Feel On Top Of It

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time14-06-2025

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30 Walmart Parenting Items So You Feel On Top Of It

A Hatch Rest baby sound machine with so many sound and lighting options, you'll have a blast picking your baby's room ~vibes~. This can also be set to use as an "okay to wake" clock when your kiddo is a little older! Promising review: "Love the wide range of volume, sounds, brightness, and color. I have one kid that prefers his sound quiet and two that like it loud. Third time purchasing this product. I have the Skip Hop sound machines as well, but they don't hold a candle to the Hatch products." —NicolePrice: $59.99 A long-range Dr. Care baby monitor that includes a motion-detecting camera (with temperature and humidity monitoring!), and a view of your snoozing baby that you can see on the monitor or the corresponding phone app. Let this setup effortlessly do the rest of the work of keeping you at ease so you can catch those sweet, sweet Zzzzz's. I got this to replace my first baby monitor that was on the fritz, and as someone who *didn't* have the app ability before, this is a GAME CHANGER. Price: $89.99 A pack of disposable table toppers for airplane seat trays and restaurant tables. These make cleanup so much easier that you won't have to stress about de-sticking fruit snacks from surfaces outside the comfort of your own home. Price: $8.97 for a 36-pack A Skip Hop baby activity center reviewers love for its grow-with-me functionality, safety, and ability to keep babies entertained for more than three minutes while you, like, run to pee by yourself or something luxurious like that. Also, it grows with your kids, so it can turn into a standing center or a table for your toddler! Promising review: "I so badly wish we would've known about this activity center or had this for our first two babies. It is PERFECT! So easy to clean, so many different ways you can arrange the little play toys on the surface, and the best part is that it encourages standing rather than tip-toe jumping! The assembly is incredible, I am so impressed with the design. The colors are not so bright that it's an eyesore for my poor, destroyed living room, but there is still color and life to intrigue my little guy. The seat is wonderful because it is so easy to pop out and clean up, or wash the lining. If I could give this 80 stars, I would. 300% worth the money!" —HaleyPrice: $141 A Baby Trend expedition stroller wagon all the parents at the park will be envious of because it's roomy enough for two whole kids and *all* of the stuff that goes along with them. If you've gotta push a stroller, it really should have space to offload everything so you can just cruise and soothe without your back getting all hot from your backpack diaper bag or feeling like a pack mule. Promising review: "I love every single thing about this stroller. I put my 3-year-old and 2-year-old in there, and they fit perfectly. They enjoy being in it as well. It took two minutes to set it up, and it's very simple to fold and store in the trunk. I get compliments on it everywhere I go." —roxannaPrice: $149 (available in two colors) A three-pack of Munchkin suction cup bowls still in my home even though my kid is past the toddler phase because they are the PERFECT snack size for cheese cubes, fruit snacks, and grapes. The suction cup bottom is GREAT because it totally works when they're younger, but isn't so obnoxiously sticky that it's a bother when they're older and don't need the functionality anymore. Promising review: "I love these bowls' perfect sizes, and the suction cup on the bottom is great. Easy for kids to use and easy to clean. This is actually my second set that I've purchased." —Akw11Price: $8.82 An Oogiebear nose cleaner and ear wax removal tool because babies can be pretty finicky about getting their nose and ears cleaned, and this relieves of stress for both babies and parents vs. the traditional snot sucker balls. Promising reviews: "Best way to get rid of boogers in babies. My daughter hated the sucker ones and this was easy and the perfect size." —Mollie"This is a great tool for babies! I use it to clean my 2-month-old's nose and it works great. Their noses are so little and cotton swabs just push boogies further. This works so well because it can scoop the boogies out." —JasminePrice: $9.97 Or an electric nose sucker that puts on a little music and light show to keep your baby entertained while you get the gunk out of their noses. No manual effort needed on this one! Power it on and tell the boogies goodbye without having to squeeze a bulb or suck through a filter (IYKYK). Promising review: "BUY IT! Amazing. My kids have always hated ANY booger suckers I've tried. This one is like magic. It works so efficiently while also being gentle enough to not bother my child at all. It does make noise, but my baby does not seem to mind, especially when you use the music or light feature. It is well worth spending a little extra compared to other brands. BEST purchase ever in regards to getting snot or boogers out! Also, it comes with different sizes — fit for baby or toddler!" —JanellePrice: $21.24+ (originally $79.99, available in two colors) An Ingenuity 3-in-1 baby bouncer to have a safe place to let your baby bounce and play without you having to worry about them suddenly learning to crawl and taking off for the great wide yonder. (Which we all know is *probably* not going to happen the moment we turn our backs, but this eliminates the fear altogether. 😂) Promising review: "This has been a great addition to our arsenal. Lightweight and easy to move around. I appreciate that the vibration is easy to remove and change the batteries, so I can still do it while baby is in the bouncer." —Walmart customerPrice: $64+ (available in three colors and two patterns) A bedside sleeper bassinet for easy night feedings and snuggles. It butts up right against the bed, so no aerobics are necessary to get to your little one when they're hungry or need some comfort in the wee hours. Work smarter, not harder than you already are! Promising review: "This has been a lifesaver! Having had a C-section, this has really made it a game changer as I can sit and access my newborn instead of bending over. It has a great little shelf on the bottom, and the side zips open and closed. I love that I can also push it around, and it doesn't feel flimsy. Wish I would have known about this style with my previous kids." —sande276Price: $85.89 (originally $159.99, available in two colors) A Baby Brezza bottle sterilizer which happily lived on my counter for a long time because it can sanitize EVERYTHING from bottles to pacifiers to teething toys with the press of a button. Bye-bye, annoying stove method, hello getting some time (and brain cells!) back. Promising reviews: "This sterilizer is great. Easy to operate. Bought a second one for grandma's house." —Stephanie "In 30 minutes we have sterilized bottle. I wish this product had been around for our first grandchild. We sterilize everything in it, including bottle brushes and pacifiers." —CindyPrice: $99.99 And a Baby Brezza Advanced Formula Dispensing Machine, affectionately called "the baby formula Keurig" in my household. This thing is MAGICAL. You check the manual and adjust the settings to your specific formula, and voila! A perfectly warmed bottle at the touch of a button. Scoops and spilled powder be gone! Promising review: "The Baby Brezza Formula Pro Advanced has been a total game changer for us! It makes bottles in seconds with the perfect temperature and consistency every time. No more late-night fumbling or worrying about mixing ratios. It's so easy to use and saves a ton of time. I honestly don't know how we managed without it. Highly recommend for any formula feeding parent!" —IrisPrice: $198 A Halo sleep swaddle a lot of hospitals will issue you as a ~free gift~ on your way out the door, but trust me: You're gonna want to be smart and have at least three of them in rotation. With Velcro wings you can use to swaddle arms or just wrap around their tummy if your kiddo likes to be hands-free, these are the easiest, comfiest swaddles around! Promising reviews: "This is amazing, especially if you have a baby that is constantly wiggling around at night. This is the only thing that seems to keep my son content." —alyissa"Love this swaddle, you can use it three different ways so you don't have to get new swaddles when they don't want their hands out of the swaddle." —DavenPrice: $34.99 A Skip Hop diaper bag backpack to hold everything but the kitchen sink, though I'm sure you could fit that in if you absolutely needed to. This bag is roomy, has plenty of pockets, and is easily cleaned, so you can spend more time soaking up cute baby sounds and less time scrubbing at spilled milk. Price: $70.99 A lightweight, travel Graco Pack 'n Play for all the adventures to Auntie's house, vacations, and everywhere in-between! No more trying to finagle a place for your kiddos to play and sleep: You've already got it ~in the bag~. (Get it? Because there's a TRAVEL BAG INCLUDED?) Promising review: "My baby loves it, it's super easy to put together and is easily portable. It's spacious but doesn't take up too much room like an ordinary crib would. The product is also super durable and sturdy, best money I've spent on a product." —KamerynPrice: $139 (available in two colors) A Momcozy baby carrier your body and your baby will love for the hands-free abilities without straining your already-tired back. Lots of reviewers note that it's also a guaranteed nap-maker for their littles, which any parent knows means an automatic, "Add it to the cart." Promising reviews: "This is a great baby carrier for an even better price! Comfortable straps, fits my petite shoulder width, and you can wear it on your front or your back! Baby loves it! Still using it with her as a 7-month-old." —Anonymous"So impressed by this carrier! I wanted a WildBird Ariel carrier and ordered both, and this is just as good of quality, if not better! Save your money and buy this!!" —MeganPrice: $59.99+ (originally $79.99+, available in nine colors) A four-pack of silicone baby bibs I loved even pre the solid food era because it caught all the lil' milk dribbles and spit up throughout the day. Also, it's ridiculously easy to clean up in a jiff in the sink. These made me feel ~super smart~ every time I avoided a huge mess! Promising review: "I love these bibs. I'm so happy I bought them. They are great for my babies. I love that they're dishwasher-safe, so they get sanitized in the dishwasher. I would definitely recommend buying these." —MelaniePrice: $10+ (available in three color sets) A Little Remedies new baby essentials kit to stock up on all the over-the-counter helpers you can before cold and flu season rears its head again. I LOVE Little Remedies and still use their stuff on my 4-year-old. This kit includes saline nasal spray and saline drops, a nasal aspirator, baby gas relief drops, infant fever and pain relief with acetaminophen, gripe water for babies, Boudreaux's Butt Paste maximum strength diaper rash cream, and baby review: "Love this kit for my newborn, it's been so convenient." —LuPrice: $25.86 A Fisher-Price portable travel play space with a dome shade and a surprising amount of room for your little one to snooze and play given how easy it is to bring along on all your outings. Promising review: "My grandson loves this play bassinet. He is mesmerized by the sounds, lights and movement. He normally uses it to take naps in the family room. His parents also uses it for travel. Very good purchase." —LoveyPrice: $82.99 (originally $119.97) A Munchkin portable diaper changing pad because rule #1 is never, ever assume "they'll have a changing table" at that restaurant/store/sporting event bathroom. Save your baby (and yourself) from the ick of being unprepared by having this cute-as-a-button folded up dream in your diaper bag always. Promising review: "The kit is exactly as pictured. It is the perfect size for baby. The area for the wipes and diapers is quite big too, which makes it perfect for storage!" —BrayleaPrice: $15.99 A stain-treating spray you'll want to keep on hand during the baby years and beyond for its amazing stain-fighting power against spilled food, spit up, and mud. Promising review: "BEST STAIN REMOVER EVER!!!!!!!!!!! Coming from a mother of 10!! Eight of them are very muddy boys!!!!!!" —MichellePrice: $13.20 A grocery cart cushion perfect for your next in-person Walmart trip so your little sidekick can come along on your bargain-hunting adventures. Promising review: "Great purchase. I use it every time I take my baby with me. Fits carts and high chairs." —PerezPrice: $23.94+ (originally $28.94+; available in three designs) A baby car camera even the Spy Kids would envy for how efficient and affordable it is. No more awkwardly angling your rearview mirror to try and catch a quick glimpse of your snoozing (or squalling) baby: Just position the camera on your dashboard for easy and safe viewing (when stopped, of course). Promising review: "This camera is awesome! It has very good video quality and definitely keeps me at ease being able to see my baby in the back!" —AnnaPrice: $37.99 (originally $49.99) A Frida Baby 4-in-1 bathtub so you don't have to worry about cleaning out your sink or baby-proofing your bathtub in order to give your little a wash. This grows from newborn to up to 24 months and the sling is machine-washable! Wins all around. Promising reviews: "The bathtub is wonderful. Love how you can use the adjustments. Baby likes it too." —Donna"All around great product for newborn to comfortable tub-sitter age." —SamanthaPrice: $49.97 A baby diaper caddy organizer because even the tightest diapering routine can involve a lot of stuff, and it's so much easier to have it all in one space, especially if your home has several floors or changing stations. (Psst, I also used mine for breast pump transpo!) Promising review: "The bag was bigger than I expected and was 109% sturdier than the other one I bought. Would definitely gift this to someone at a baby shower." —BianhkaPrice: $24.95+ (originally $28.95+; available in two sizes) A Munchkin wipe warmer and dispenser you'll love no matter your climate because trust me: As someone living in Texas where "warming" isn't usually a concern, this dispenser also keeps the diapers moist, so you don't have to worry about a whole pack going to waste because it accidentally dried out. The night light is also perfect for late-night diaper changes without light-blinding you or your baby. Promising review: "Ordered this last minute after getting home from being discharged with my baby. I quickly realized cold wipes make my diaper changes harder, so I ordered, and it's easy to load and use!!" —TaAaliyahPrice: $16.25 (originally $30.75) A Bluey and Bingo cookbook to help get your kids psyched about helping out in the kitchen. This has 13 recipes including Chile and Bingo's omelet, Shadowlands cupcakes, and Nana's ice blocks! If you've got a picky eater, sometimes getting them involved in the kitchen can get them excited to try new foods. Promising review: "Really cool cookbook. We're big Bluey fans in my house, so everyone was so excited when it arrived. There's a good variety of food to make, and if you're not from the U.S., it's got a lot of nostalgic recipes too! If you're debating buying this, don't. It's been a family night activity for months now. It's genuinely worth the purchase!" —MaverickPrice: $9.14 A pair of noise reduction ear muffs that'll cut back on the noise in your little's ears by 23 decibels and help muffle loud travel sounds whether they're awake or asleep. Promising review: "These worked great for my 2-month-old. The headband part adjusts nicely, and the headphones cover the ears well. Plus, they are super cute." —JuliePrice: $15.29+ (available in three colors) A tin of Welly color-changing bandages to give you peace of mind for any bumps and ouchies that your baby might get on the go. The colorful (and secure) bandages are so cute that you should be prepared for your kiddo to request more than one for ~aesthetic~ reasons. They change color in the sun, perfect for summer!Price: $6.94 A Munchkin portable UV light sanitizer because you know the second you find the dirtiest floor, that pacifier is going down. This will have your binky sanitized and ready to go again in just under a minute! Price: $22.42 (originally $29.95) Need ingredients for all your new recipes? Shop each recipe directly through the app, or check out Walmart's grocery selection to get veggies, meat, seafood, and more delivered right to your door. Reviews in this post have been edited for length and clarity.

Miss Florida USA 2025 is a UF Gator; five other things to know about Palm Beach resident
Miss Florida USA 2025 is a UF Gator; five other things to know about Palm Beach resident

Yahoo

time13-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Miss Florida USA 2025 is a UF Gator; five other things to know about Palm Beach resident

The Palm Beach resident who claimed the Miss Florida USA crown in May is no stranger to competing in beauty pageants — or winning them. Lou Schieffelin, 25, a longtime professional model, aspiring pilot and director of marketing for a prominent Palm Beach real estate agent, secured her second crown on the Miss USA circuit on May 25. She previously was the 2018 Miss Florida Teen USA. The title comes one year after Schieffelin finished as second runner-up in the Miss Florida USA pageant. She will represent Florida at the Miss USA 2025 competition this fall, though a date and location have not been set. The Miss USA winner represents the United States at the Miss Universe competition, which will be held in November in Thailand. Here are five things to know about Miss Florida USA 2025 Lou Schieffelin: Schieffelin, who celebrated her 25th birthday June 7, spent her childhood in Greenwich, Connecticut, a city of 63,000 in the southwest corner of the state. She moved to Winter Park as a teenager and attended The First Academy in Orlando, where she played on the school's varsity volleyball team. Schieffelin went on to graduate from the University of Florida. Schieffelin has been a professional model for 16 years, following in her mom Stacey's footsteps. Stacey Schieffelin was a cover, catalog and runway model for more than 20 years, and she was instrumental in getting Lou and her sister, Knox, into modeling at a young age. As a child, Lou Schieffelin appeared on the cover of American Girl magazine, and she went on to work with brands like Ralph Lauren, Max Mara and Oscar de la Renta. Schieffelin said she has stepped away "a bit" from modeling, but she remains grateful for what it has offered her during the past 16 years. "It's been an amazing experience," she said. Schieffelin relocated to Palm Beach a year ago, moving in with a friend. She joined Margit Brandt's real estate office team as a director of marketing and licensed executive assistant, a role she told the Daily News she really enjoys. "She's obviously been very successful on the island," Schieffelin said of Brandt, who is affiliated with Premier Estate Properties. "I feel very honored to even be on the team." Both of Schieffelin's grandfathers were involved in aviation. One was a B-17 fighter pilot in World War II, and the other was a U.S. Army paratrooper. "Planes are kind of in my family, and I'm grateful to be able to continue the legacy," she said. Schieffelin's grandfather, Ed Stetler, operates a general livestock farm in Lakeland, and Schieffelin often visited during her childhood. "I definitely was dirty more than I was clean when I was little," she said. "I grew up in the mud. We were kind of in that southern tradition, like respect and hospitality and good business and handshakes. I'm grateful for my grandfather for raising me and my sister that way." Jodie Wagner is a journalist at the Palm Beach Daily News, part of the USA TODAY Florida Network. You can reach her at jwagner@ This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: Miss Florida USA 2025: Facts on Lou Schieffelin in Palm Beach

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