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News anchor Jodi Huisentruit 'vanished' 30 years ago and now a documentary reveals chilling witness' claim. Where to watch?
News anchor Jodi Huisentruit 'vanished' 30 years ago and now a documentary reveals chilling witness' claim. Where to watch?

Time of India

time15-07-2025

  • Time of India

News anchor Jodi Huisentruit 'vanished' 30 years ago and now a documentary reveals chilling witness' claim. Where to watch?

American news anchor Jodi Huisentruit has been missing for 30 years. Jodi was on her way to work shortly after 4 a.m. on the morning on June 27, 1995, when authorities believe she was violently abducted. Now, a three-part documentary on Jodi Huisentruit reveals a chilling claim by a witness. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Jodi Huisentruit docuseries What happened to Jodi Huisentruit still remains a mystery to date. The 27-year-old from Long Prairie, Minnestosa, was a morning anchor at KIMT-TV, serving north central Iowa and southeastern Minnesota. Everyday, Jodi Huisentruit was up before dawn every day for Daybreak at 6 am and she aspired to go June 27, 1995, DayBreak producer Amy Kuns called Huisentruit at home shortly after 4 am to see why she wasn't at work yet, as she was usually there closer to 3 am."I called her twice. I talked to her and woke her up that first time," Kuns remembered in a 2011 interview. "The second time, it just rang and rang. I don't remember the times. I had obviously woken her up. She asked what time it was. I told her. She said she'd be right in." She never made it to her apartment, police found signs of a struggle, including a bent key outside her car. Her disappearance was quickly ruled an abduction and over the last three decades, authorities have been unable to find her or recover her Huisentruit didn't obviously disappear into thin air. Jodi was declared dead on May 14, 2001, but, to this day, no body or any other physical trace of her has ever been search warrant sheds light that investigators placed a GPS tracker on a friend's car in 1999 and on the friend's pickup truck in 2013, according to CBS News. But the friend is yet to be charged with a crime and had been with the local TV news anchor the night before she also caught a break in 2022, when an ABC 20/20 episode on Huisentruit's disappearance led a witness to reach out to the Mason City Police Department and share information she kept secret for more than two decades, as the network highlights in the new trailer for its years after Jodi Huisentruit 'disappeared', a new three-part documentary on her disappearance is set to debut this week, reports Fox 9. " Her Last Broadcast : The Abduction of Jodi Huisentruit" is a new documentary on the disappearance of the Iowa news anchor, which will also take a look at the case, including a new tip that led authorities to search a property in Minnesota last Jodi Huisentruit documentary is being produced by ABC News Studios. The new series, 'Her Last Broadcast: The Abduction of Jodi Huisentruit', includes more than 20 new interviews with family members, detectives, witnesses and friends of Jodi Huisentruit. ABC News Studios in a press release said the series also promises "never-before-seen material and new, groundbreaking information" about the case."An exploration of the power of persistence, public memory, and journalism, Her Last Broadcast: The Abduction of Jodi Huisentruit breathes new life into one of the country's most haunting unsolved mysteries," the network says. "Her Last Broadcast: The Abduction of Jodi Huisentruit" will debut on Hulu on Tuesday, July the 30th anniversary of Huisentruit's disappearance in late June, an online group dedicated to finding the truth about what happened to the television news anchor shared a statement demanding the person responsible come forward and explain what happened."[Thirty] years. It's time,' the group Find Jodi said, according to CBS. 'Don't make Jodi Huisentruit's family and friends wait another year for you to come forward. They need answers and justice.'

Freezing tech allows luxury sushi to reach anywhere in Japan
Freezing tech allows luxury sushi to reach anywhere in Japan

Japan Times

time01-07-2025

  • Business
  • Japan Times

Freezing tech allows luxury sushi to reach anywhere in Japan

Thanks to the development of an advanced freezing technology, a Tokyo luxury sushi restaurant is gaining popularity for its service to allow customers to enjoy its dishes nationwide. In May, Ginza Onodera, a high-class sushi restaurant in Tokyo's Chuo Ward operated by Onodera Group, launched a service shipping sushi meals that are quickly frozen after being freshly made. The group has won bids for the first tuna of the year auctioned at the Toyosu fish market in Tokyo's Koto Ward for five consecutive years. The restaurant has been working on the freezing method for about three years in cooperation with DayBreak, a special freezing technique developer in Tokyo's Shinagawa Ward, in order to make sushi made with tuna purchased from Yamayuki, an intermediate wholesaler in Toyosu, available for customers even in distant locations. Artlock Freezer, a commercial freezer sold by DayBreak, "can prevent sushi toppings from drying and changing color, as it freezes them with gentle cold air from all directions," a DayBreak official said. Ginza Onodera sells vacuum-packed frozen sushi using this technology online. Customers can store the meals in their home freezers for about two weeks after their arrival. "The meals taste good, as water does not come out of them when thawing them with weakly running water for about 1 hour and 10 minutes," a Ginza Onodera official said. The sushi restaurant sells a set of frozen sushi meals for ¥5,400, with 10 different kinds of fish toppings available, including those sent directly from landing ports to the Toyosu market, such as medium-fatty and lean parts of tuna from the town of Oma, Aomori Prefecture, and splendid alfonsino from the city of Katsuura in Chiba Prefecture. The toppings vary with the season. Collaborating with a home appliance maker, Ginza Onodera is developing a microwave oven that enables short-time thawing to meet business-use demand from hotel restaurants and others. "We've become able to thaw frozen sushi meals in a delicious way in some 5 minutes, by adjusting the microwave irradiating the sushi rice and toppings," the sushi restaurant official said, aiming for commercial use.

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