
Trump administration releases portion of frozen North Carolina education funding
Why it matters: The nearly $36 million in funding released will allow North Carolina's after-school and summer programs to continue operating.
The programs, which served more than 10,000 K-12 students last year, "provide critical academic support and safe environments for students, particularly those in high-poverty areas," North Carolina's Department of Public Instruction said in a statement.
Catch up quick: North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson is one of a dozen attorneys general nationwide who are suing the U.S. Department of Education for withholding more than $6 billion in education funding nationwide. Those funds were expected to be accessible July 1.
North Carolina's portion of that — more than $165 million — made up more than 10% of the state's federal education funding.
The freeze comes amid what the Trump administration's Office of Management and Budget called an "ongoing programmatic review" and pointed to initial findings that they said "show that many of these grant programs have been grossly misused to subsidize a radical leftwing agenda," Axios' Avery Lotz reported earlier this month.
Driving the news: Nearly 30 statewide full-time jobs would have been in jeopardy had the federal government not released $36 million as part of the 21st Century Community Learning Centers program, which supports academic enrichment during non-school hours, per data released by North Carolina's Department of Justice.
Wake, Durham and Charlotte-Mecklenburg school districts had not been awarded any funding under that program, according to the data.
State of play: Around $130 million in K-12 education funding remains frozen and under review, North Carolina's education department said. More than 900 jobs remain at risk.
Those funds come from four programs, which support migrant children, help students learn English, ensure the "quality and effectiveness of educators," and improve school conditions and the use of technology to improve academic achievement, according to the Learning Policy Institute, which conducts research to improve education policies.
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Forty years ago, he began leveraging an in-your-face patriotism (complete with 'Real American' as his theme song) and a naked demand for dominance to become a self-spun celebrity who helped turn pro wrestling from a niche form of entertainment into an international billion-dollar industry. He created the template for reality-star brand management when Kim Kardashian was still in diapers; he amassed millions of devoted followers by speaking to them directly, and in all caps long before social media was invented. He was canceled (for racist language), only to be uncanceled after a successful apology tour. He not only survived the release of a sex tape, he sued (with the help of billionaire Peter Thiel) the media site Gawker for publishing it and won, putting Gawker out of business and striking fear into the heart of the free press. He thwarted unions, starred in movies, had a restaurant chain and co-owned his own brand of beer. Tap any portion of modern celebrity culture — good, bad and ugly — and there's Hulk Hogan, all handle-bar mustache and 'Let me tell you something, brother.' The take-no-prisoners combative style that made him stand out in the 1980s has become just as mainstream as professional wrestling. Even those who would rather eat glass than watch pro wrestling know who he was; he was a pioneer of personality as profession. Six foot eight and built like a tank, Terry Bollea became a professional wrestler in 1977 and cultivated the kind of self-aggrandizing personality that had made Gorgeous George (George Raymond Wagner) a star decades earlier. But Hulk Hogan cast himself as a hero, unleashed to lay the bad guys flat. He spoke directly to his audience, including children, and soon gained national, and then international, fame, for himself and the World Wrestling Federation. So much so that, in 1993, the World Wildlife Fund sued the organization over its initials, forcing it to change its name to World Wrestling Entertainment — WWE. The name change made perfect sense — pro wrestling has always been more about entertainment than sport. Yes, the participants are super-fit and strong and their bodies endure all manner of injury, but their brawls are not true competitions. The matches are carefully choreographed, with winners chosen beforehand (though the outcomes are kept from the audience). With its reliance on over-the-top personas categorized as 'faces' (good guys) and 'heels' (villains), pro wrestling, like many modern reality programs, was all about audience preference. In many ways, Hulk Hogan was the first reality TV star, a champion not because he was a better wrestler (or at least not in the nonprofessional sense) but because he was a better performer, pushing back against the rise of the new, gentler, feminist man of the 1980s with his physicality and bravado. Not that he was above modifying his persona for increased popularity — in his early years, he was a 'face' before becoming a 'heel,' a growling villain renamed Hollywood Hogan. 'I did it to upset the fans,' he told The Times in 2019. 'But it didn't really work. They still loved me.' By the late 1980s, 'Hulkamania' was everywhere, feeding off Hogan's signature colors (yellow and red), moves (the leg-drop) and catchphrases ('Whatcha gonna do when the Hulkamania runs wild on you, brother?'). Not even an admission that he used steroids, after years of claiming otherwise, derailed his popularity. Everyone wanted a piece of him, and Hogan began showing up in film and television. In 1982, he played Thunderlips, a version of himself, in 'Rocky III,' taking on Sylvester Stallone's Rocky Balboa in an exhibition match. Hogan would also show up on the small screen in 'The Love Boat,' 'The A-Team,' 'The All New Mickey Mouse Club' and, more recently, 'The Goldbergs'; he made some terrible movies, including 'Suburban Commando' and 'Mr. Nanny,' did voice-work for video games and appeared, of course, in countless WWE productions. He set the stage for other pro wrestlers to become actors, including the Rock, John Cena and Dave Bautista. In 2005, he went full-bore reality, starring in 'Hogan Knows Best' which focused on his family life with wife Linda, son Nick and daughter Brooke. (Hogan agreed in part to support Brooke's burgeoning singing career.) 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In 2016, the jury found for Bollea and awarded him $115 million; Gawker folded a few months later and Hogan found himself in the middle of a debate about the 1st Amendment and the decreasing popularity, and profitability, of the press. More damaging, however, were leaked portions of that tape in which Hogan used racist slurs, including the N-word, when discussing his daughter's boyfriend. In 2015, the WWE terminated Hogan's contract and removed all mention of him from his website. Hogan's subsequent apology tour led to him being reinstated in 2018. These were not the only scandals in which Hogan was involved — in the late 1980s, he was instrumental in preventing an attempt by other wrestlers to unionize; his divorce from Linda was messy, and he and his daughter were estranged for years. His appearance at the RNC convention last year divided his fans. 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