Latest news with #Portlandia


Time Out
a day ago
- Entertainment
- Time Out
Brooklyn is now home to the only Sloppy Joe restaurant in NYC
Do you remember that one skit in 'Portlandia' where artisanal entrepreneurs Bryce Shivers and Lisa Eversman (played by Fred Armisen and Carrie Brownstein) encouraged that everything can be art if you just put a bird on it? Sam Saverance seems to speak the same language. But instead of birds, his mantra is that any food, if you really try, can be Sloppy Joe, uttering the phrase, 'You can slop anything.' And slop everything he has, as Saverance has opened New York's (and quite possibly, America's) first Sloppy Joe-themed restaurant. Saverance is the mind behind Farley's Sloppy Joe's (439 Marcus Garvey Blvd, Brooklyn), Bed-Stuy's home for everything Sloppy Joe-related. Making its debut in June, the tight, quick-service operation reads like the corner of a 1950s diner with black and white tiles that line the floor and the walls, a handful of red stools inside and tables and chairs outside for sitting and a small window that looks into where the 'magic' all happens. You can most commonly find Saverance living his best lunch lady life in the kitchen, spooning up his version of the sandwich on cafeteria trays. But of course, your most pressing question right now might just be a resounding, 'Why?' Simply put, Saverance was ready for another restaurant he could 'go nuts with.' You see, Saverance is already a well-known figure in the dining scene, who, alongside co-founder Liyuwork Ayalew, has been the driving force behind Bushwick's long-running Bunna Cafe, New York's first vegan Ethiopian restaurant. But as Bunna Cafe stands firmly in its authenticity, being carefully creative in certain parameters, Saverance was ready to go out of the box, using the nostalgic snack/meal as a jumping-off point. 'There's nothing sacred about it,' said Saverance of the sandwich. 'It's a goofy, not the most attractive sandwich. But it has a really great personality, because it hits. ' Tasked with improving on the joe, Saverance tapped his friend and fellow neighbor, chef Fred Hua of Ridgewood's Nhà Mình. After trying his first Sloppy Joe ever, Hua got to work, riffing on the original to try to push the sandwich forward. 'We have a mother sauce, and we apply it to all of our different Joe's,' said Saverance. 'There's a base of a mix of veggies—celery, carrot, onion and garlic—and a couple secret things in there to spice it up a little bit.' What resulted at Farley's is a Sloppy Joe menu, seven sammies deep. The Original Joe is just like you remember it, only better. Wrapped in paper in an attempt to keep you and your clothes scot-free, the orange-tinged sandwich is made heartier with its veggie-forward base, with an underlying hint of mustard and Worcestershire, served on a plush Big Marty's sesame seed roll. Variations on the OG continue with The Cajun Joe, made with a few good shakes of Slap Ya Mama! seasoning and cut up andouille sausages. There's even a meat-free Vegan Joe with Beyond Meat and tamari on a vegan roll. And if you come with a little one who is new to the 'slop' game, you can christen their taste buds with the Jr. Joe served on a slider. Following its company ethos, you can even slop your hot dog, just pick a sauce of your choosing. But Farley's takes this Joe on the road, with takes from around the world. There's the Mekong, a Southeast Asian mash-up with fish sauce, crab meat and coconut. The Cubano Joe tackles the iconic, layered sandwich, albeit in 'slop' form, mixing in ground pork and cubed ham, with Swiss cheese and dill pickles. Saverance maintains that, in a way, every culture has some form of food that 'slops' as customers have already suggested Filipino versions with spam or adobo and Polish alternatives that riff off of goulash. 'We can 'slop' any culture if you try,' said Saverance. 'That's what I love about this venture. To have fun with it, respectfully, but also have a sense of humor with it." And if after reading, you've started to feel just that bit of nostalgia for a Manwich, Farley's is hosting a grand opening party this Sunday, July 27, with a live DJ, new menu items and activities for the kids, so you can get your Sloppy Joe on.


CBC
04-07-2025
- Entertainment
- CBC
Your hottest July just got cooler: CBC's packed with sweet treats, wild experiments & high seas adventures
As summer turns up the heat, stay cool with a new wave of entertainment on CBC. Be inspired as CBC On Design takes you behind the scenes to meet Canadian designers who are making our world more beautiful. Spend some time with the weird and wonderful characters in the sketch comedy series Portlandia. The documentary T he Last French Canadian takes a personal look at culture and belonging outside of Quebec. Find a new favourite recipe and cheer on young bakers in a new season of Junior Baking Show. While the kids are home for summer vacation, keep their curious minds engaged. Have you ever wondered how to read clouds or how to catch someone in a lie? The Nature of Things has these answers and more in their new 101 series. Hear stories about the most lawless place on earth in season two of the podcast The Outlaw Ocean. All this and more in CBC's Top 5 for July. CBC On Design - Watch Free starting July 4 on CBC Gem CBC On Design explores the evolution of an idea and the path that idea takes to becoming an item in your everyday life—but that journey is rarely a straight line. Between the initial concept and finished object lie sketches, prototypes, material experiments, user testing, manufacturing puzzles, and countless hidden steps. Each product tells its own story, whether it's traditional craftsmanship meeting modern manufacturing, an international business born from hybrid work constraints, or a secretive method for creating colourful concrete for a famous actor's brand. We will get a look behind the scenes and meet some of the designers who are making our country brighter and more beautiful. We rarely pause to consider the designers behind the objects we see around us, or the countless decisions that shape the things we hold, use, and love, and CBC On Design invites us to do just that. Portlandia - Watch Free starting July 4 on CBC Gem Whether it's dumpster diving to host a dinner party, grabbing a bite to eat at Around the World in 80 Plates, or visiting the Women and Women First bookstore, in Portlandia, there's always something absurd going on. This sketch-based comedy is created, written by and starring Fred Armisen and Carrie Brownstein. Watch the first four seasons this July. The Last French Canadian - Watch Free on CBC Gem *English Canadian Premiere* Following host Pascal Justin Boyer as he endeavours to figure out just who he is within Canada's diverse mosaic. Born to two French-speaking parents in Quebec, who then moved the family to Ontario when Justin was in school, our host shares how he could never put a finger on his identity. He self-identifies as French Canadian when the documentary begins, but wonders if that leaves him a minority within a minority. Junior Baking Show - Watch Free on CBC Gem *Exclusive Canadian Premiere* Summer is always the best time for a little sweet treat. Join young aspiring bakers between the ages of 9 and 12 as they put their skills to the test and compete to be crowned the best young baker in Britain. The Nature of Things 101 - Watch Free on CBC Gem The Nature of Things 101 is an exploratory science and nature series of original short episodes, hosted by the co-hosts of The Nature of Things, Anthony Morgan and Sarika Cullis-Suzuki. Each episode poses a question that tickles the brain, like: "Can anyone become a human polygraph?" or "Could a human beat a chimp in an arm-wrestle?" Throughout each episode, Anthony and Sarika engage in scientific demonstrations and expert interviews to explore the answer. Deep-sea anglerfish: survival of the weirdest Can a human arm-wrestle a chimp and win? How to catch a liar: deception expert explains Not all crabs are crabs How to read clouds, with a professional storm chaser Your brain is lying to you You don't know sh*t about eggs How to cry on command Can you guess an athlete's sport? Podcast The Ocean Outlaw Where the law of the land ends, the story begins. Pulitzer-prize winning journalist Ian Urbina returns with a new season of his riveting podcast anthology, The Outlaw Ocean, which explores the most lawless place on earth — the vast unpoliceable ocean. In Season 2, Urbina sheds light on the secretive Libyan prisons swallowing up sea-faring migrants; flagrant human rights abuses in China's massive offshore fleet; the horrors of a shrimp processing plant in India; and the wild story of a modern-day James Bond — if he were a repo man. Urbina and his team repeatedly risk their safety to tell stories powerful people don't want you to know. As podcast reviewer Lauren Passell notes, "Ian's not relying on research, he was there [...] Outlaw Ocean makes you feel like you're there, too." Looking for more? CBC had new series and films to keep you entertained all summer long. CBC Films' award-winning Something You Said Last Night (July 5) and Newfoundland-set drama Sweetland (July 26), plus Sound of Metal (July 25) starring Academy Award-nominee Riz Ahmed. New documentaries include the exclusive Canadian premiere of Parenthood (July 4), a five-part series narrated by Sir David Attenborough exploring the challenges faced by animal parents. Don't miss the series Friday Night Lights (July 4) and Mary Kills People (July 11) and a new season of the critically acclaimed drama series The Affair (July 2).


Buzz Feed
04-07-2025
- Lifestyle
- Buzz Feed
30 Things That Are Both Practical *And* Fun Because You Deserve The Best Of Both Worlds
A cool checkered cutting board you'll want to buy for aesthetics alone — but this piece isn't just a looker. It has deep grooves to catch juices, hidden handles on the bottom, and rubber anti-skid pads. A pack of food-themed bandages to make injuries feel a little more bearable. After all, who could stay upset while wearing a pickle or pizza slice on their arm? Not me. A pair of silicone frond leaf bookmarks you have to admit are a lot cuter than a crumpled pharmacy receipt. You can even shove one in the middle of the page if you wanna be super specific about where you left off. A sardine tin cosmetic bag because why should fish corner the market on cute packaging? Now your makeup, credit cards, or random baubles can enjoy the Fishwife treatment with an adorable-looking home. A set of 10 peel-off jelly masks so you can feel like a frosted dessert during your next self-care session. The electrolyte-infused hydro masks come in styles like lavender, hyaluronic acid, tea tree, and chamomile and work to hydrate, soothe, and balance your pH level. A set of vinyl coasters offering a retro (and super cute) way to protect your furniture from condensation. Guests that actually want to use a coaster? How the turntables. A fuzzy pet blanket in a sweet heart design so your snuggle-obsessed pal can get warm and cuddly without coating your favorite throw in fur. The fleece blanket is easy to wash and cute enough to cover your furniture (in case you're looking to protect some investments). A solid lotion bar shaped like Totoro or Rilakkuma that's so cute, you may never actually use it. But you should because the almond butter-based lotion will make your skin feel softer than the Catbus. (I just assume a furry bus would be super soft?) An ornate curtain set for people who still sagely follow the old Portlandia adage: put a bird on it! There are sheer and peek-a-boo styles you can layer together for a bird decor extravaganza. Curtains don't have to be boring and birdless. A pair of aromatherapy gemstone soaps sure to make your guests' bathroom experience seriously rock. Dad jokes aside, these soaps come in amazing fragrances (think: lavender, lemongrass, sandalwood, etc.) and have real crystals inside, like amethyst and tiger eye. A pretty tea cup set that looks like your mug is floating on a cloud. How delicate! How dreamy! Untethered and unbothered! Am I envious of a teacup right now? Time to whip up a cuppa and watch the leaves falling outside. A bear-y nice under-eye stick formulated with skincare darling niacinamide, along with soothing Icelandic mineral water and seaweed extract, to soothe puffiness and dark circles. If a beauty item isn't shaped like an animal, is it even worth getting? A cutie pie planner to help you be a busy bee, or more likely a take-it-slow sloth. There's room for appointments, errands, and people to in due time. A birria bomb — a delicious spin on the bath bomb. Dunk one of these spice balls into a pressure cooker with meat and water for a comforting consomme ready for dipping. In a way, these really are bath bombs, but for tacos and quesadillas. A Godzilla microwave cleaner that shoots out cleansing steam instead of lasers. Not as cool, but definitely more helpful. Just fill the silicone tool up with water and vinegar, microwave it, and then marvel at how you found a cleaning supply that's actually fun. A disco ball watering globe to make your plant feel like they're at their own personal dance party. It'll keep your plant hydrated between watering sessions and, when the sun hits just right, create a fun light show in your home. That's a lot of benefits from what seemed like an impractical purchase at first. 🤔 Soot sprite dryer balls that'll look sooo cute bouncing around in your dryer. Besides being adorable, they could reduce drying time, prevent wrinkles, and soften clothes, all without coating your stuff in a waxy residue like dryer sheets do. A set of travel "books" inspired by the Assouline travel series that open up to reveal secret compartments for all your most precious belongings. Whether you're hiding a diary or just trying to declutter your coffee table, you'll love having some extra storage space. A Grim Steeper silicone tea infuser that doubles as a useful reminder to people not to bother you until you're done with your morning cuppa. A set of LED lightsaber chopsticks to make fights over the last dumpling extra dramatic. They can change colors (red, blue, yellow, purple, and multicolor) so you can either make them match or change to red and blue to recreate The Duel on Cloud City. A set of card-shaped sponges for anyone who's not playing when it comes to clean dishes. Each design features a face card also engaging in a light cleaning session — too cute! Iridescent pimple patches in fun shapes because zapping zits might as well feel like an art project. I wish all problems could be solved with a sticker. A clever two-sided travel cup for people who need several drinks throughout the day (one to hydrate, one to take the edge off, one to add the edge back, etc). Fill with two of your desired drinks and marvel that you can bring both coffee *and* water to your next meeting and still have a hand free for your laptop. Tissues in cylinder boxes so they can easily fit in your car's cup holder. And even if you don't have a cup holder in need of tissues, the packaging is just really stinkin' cute. A 16-piece Brink House mix-and-match cutlery set that is certainly a lot more fun than your usual Ikea fare. I suggest getting a clear utensil holder to show them off. A compact, typewriter-themed Bluetooth label maker so charming, you'll find yourself labeling everything, down to individual Diet Coke cans. The corresponding app lets you customize your designs with frames, stickers, and different fonts, so your labels will look super cute even if they're possibly a bit passive aggressive. A color-changing moisture indicator because plants can't speak and scream "WAAAATER!" These monstera-shaped stakes start off as a vivid green when the soil is wet (wait 30 minutes after watering to see the effect) and then pale to a ghostly white when the soil dries out. Guesswork is no longer the worst part of houseplant ownership! Now it's the bugs. >:( The TikTok-loved Maldon flaked salt packaged in a box so beautiful, you'll be hesitant to ever open it. Of course, you should, because everything from fish to brownies tastes better with a dash of really nice sea salt. A fanciful mushroom kitchen timer, which is so much more endearing than using your phone or screaming at Alexa. It also has a glowing 4.4-star rating on Amazon, which is kinda unheard of for novelty timers. A Lifeline aromatherapy pen filled with an essential oil that slowly diffuses as you write. Now, the smell of lavender or crisp mountain air can calm you down before you write a passive-aggressive note to stick to the office microwave.
Yahoo
30-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
11 new and returning Netflix shows arriving this week (June 29-July 5)
If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, BGR may receive an affiliate commission. We share the list of all the shows, movies, and specials coming to Netflix every month, but with as much content as the streaming service releases, it can be hard to keep track of it all. We are here to help with a breakdown of all the new and returning shows hitting Netflix this week, from comedies and dramas to reality shows and docuseries. Netflix rolls out several original series every week, but licensed shows from other networks have become a rarity in recent years. That's why this week is so notable, as Netflix's streaming library is adding three bingeable series in the form of Mr. Robot, Portlandia, and Mom. If you're looking for shows to sink your teeth into, you've got three great new options. Today's Top Deals Best deals: Tech, laptops, TVs, and more sales Best Ring Video Doorbell deals Memorial Day security camera deals: Reolink's unbeatable sale has prices from $29.98 Netflix says this harrowing documentary series about the 7/7 bombings on London's trains and subways that killed 52 people and injured hundreds more features 'insider accounts and never-before-seen footage' from the terror attacks. Long-running sitcoms are the comfort food of streaming, and this week, Netflix is getting a large helping with all eight seasons of Mom. The series ran from 2013 to 2021, starring Anna Faris as a single mother and recovering alcoholic who moves to Napa, California, and Allison Janney as her mom, who is also a recovering addict. The search and rescue dog Ryder and his crew are back with two more seasons of the insanely popular children's animated TV show Paw Patrol on Netflix. If you have kids, prepare for them to be completely obsessed with the latest episodes for at least the next few weeks. In 2011, SNL alum Fred Armisen and Sleater-Kinney frontwoman Carrie Brownstein teamed up to create Portlandia, one of the most peculiar sketch comedy shows you'll ever see. Set in and around the city of Portland, Oregon, the show features sketches starring Fred and Carrie as a rotating cast of eccentric characters, often joined by guest stars such as Andy Samberg, Parker Posey, Jason Sudeikis, Greta Gerwig, and Heather Graham. Showtime continues to drip-feed Netflix audiences one of its biggest shows of the decade. This week, the second season of the thriller series Yellowjackets makes its way to Netflix, picking up two months after the death of a major character in season 1. Netflix quietly canceled its behind-the-scenes sports documentary series Tour de France: Unchained earlier this year, but fans still have one more season to watch. The third season covers the 2024 Tour de France, which started in Florence, Italy, and finished in Nice, France. Before Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano face off for the third time live on Netflix on July 11, you can see behind the curtain in Countdown: Taylor vs. Serrano. The docuseries follows their training and preparation leading up to the highly-anticipated bout. Sam Esmail's drama thriller series Mr. Robot aired on USA Network for four seasons from 2015 to 2019, giving Rami Malek a role that catapulted him into stardom. Malek plays Elliot Alderson, a talented hacker who suffers from anxiety, depression, and dissociative identity disorder. He is recruited to join a hacking collective known as 'fsociety,' which seeks to take down the monolithic conglomerate E Corp and cancel all consumer debt. The second and final season of The Sandman debuts this week, kicking off the final chapter of one of the most popular Netflix fantasy shows. The new season begins a few weeks after Dream destroyed the Dream Vortex that threatened to destroy reality. 'Four teams of shark experts and enthusiasts travel the globe trying to find the most elusive shark species in this fin-tastic reality competition,' says Netflix. 'Six months ago, Hikaru vanished for a week,' reads the synopsis for this anime series coming to Netflix this week. 'Now, as his best friend Yoshiki senses something amiss and confronts him, the harrowing truth emerges.' Don't Miss: Today's deals: Nintendo Switch games, $5 smart plugs, $150 Vizio soundbar, $100 Beats Pill speaker, more More Top Deals Amazon gift card deals, offers & coupons 2025: Get $2,000+ free See the
Yahoo
07-06-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
The Great Un-Awokening
Ambitious Democrats with an eye on a presidential run are in the middle of a slow-motion Sister Souljah moment. Searching for a path out of the political wilderness, potential 2028 candidates, especially those hailing from blue states, are attempting to ratchet back a leftward lurch on social issues some in the party say cost them the November election. Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, who is Black, vetoed a bill that took steps toward reparations passed by his state legislature. California Gov. Gavin Newsom called it 'unfair' to allow transgender athletes to participate in female college and youth sports. And Rahm Emmanuel has urged his party to veer back to the center. 'Stop talking about bathrooms and locker rooms and start talking about the classroom," said former Ambassador to Japan Rahm Emmanuel, the two-term Chicago mayor who said he is open to a 2028 presidential campaign. "If one child is trying to figure out their pronoun, I accept that, but the rest of the class doesn't know what a pronoun is and can't even define it,' Each of these candidates are, either deliberately or tacitly, countering a perceived weakness in their own political record or party writ large—Emmanuel, for example, has called the Democratic Party 'weak and woke'; Sen. Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.) has said the party needs more 'alpha energy'; others like Newsom are perhaps acknowledging a more socially liberal bent in the past. On diversity, equity, and inclusion, some in the party are also sending a signal they're no longer kowtowing to their left flank. Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg removed his pronouns from his social media bio months ago, and questioned how the party has communicated about it. "Is it caring for people's different experiences and making sure no one is mistreated because of them, which I will always fight for?' he said in a forum at the University of Chicago earlier this year. 'Or is it making people sit through a training that looks like something out of 'Portlandia,' which I have also experienced," Buttigieg said. Buttigieg added, "And it is how Trump Republicans are made.' Moderate Democrats are having a moment and there is a cadre of consultants and strategists ready to support them. Ground zero for the party's great un-awokening was this week's WelcomeFest, the moderate Democrats' Coachella. There, hundreds of centrist elected officials, candidates and operatives gathered to commiserate over their 2024 losses and their party's penchant for purity tests. Panels on Wednesday featured Slotkin, Reps. Jared Golden (D-Maine) and Marie Gluesenkamp Perez (D-Wash.), described as 'legends of the moderate community,' and included a presentation by center-left data guru David Shor, who has urged Democrats to shed toxic positions like "defund the police." Adam Frisch, the former congressional candidate and director of electoral programs at Welcome PAC, said his party is 'out of touch culturally with a lot of people.' "I think a lot of people are realizing, whether you're running for the House, the Senate, or the presidential, we better start getting on track with what I call the pro-normal party coalition,' Frisch said. 'You need to focus on normal stuff, and normal stuff is economic opportunity and prosperity, not necessarily micro-social issues." Then there is Newsom, the liberal former mayor of San Francisco, who has also distanced himself from so-called woke terminology and stances. The governor claimed earlier this year that he had never used the word 'Latinx,' despite having repeatedly employed it just years earlier and once decrying Republicans who've sought to ban the gender-neutral term for Latinos. Newsom made the claim on his podcast episode with conservative firebrand Charlie Kirk — one of several MAGA personalities the governor has hosted on the platform in recent months. 'I just didn't even know where it came from. What are we talking about?' Newsom told Kirk. The governor, who gained national notoriety in 2004 for defying state law and issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples in San Francisco, has also pivoted on some LGBTQ+ issues. Newsom broke with Democrats this spring when he said, in the same podcast episode with Kirk, that he opposes allowing transgender women and girls to participate in female college and youth sports. 'I think it's an issue of fairness, I completely agree with you on that. It is an issue of fairness — it's deeply unfair,' Newsom said, a comment that was panned by many of his longtime LGBTQ+ supporters and progressive allies. Newsom for months has also muted his tone on immigration issues, avoiding using the word 'sanctuary' to describe a state law that limits police cooperation with federal immigration authorities even as he defends the legality of the policy. The governor is proposing steep cuts to a free health care program for undocumented immigrants, which comes as California faces a $12 billion budget deficit. In recent days, however, he joined a chorus of California Democrats criticizing Trump administration immigration efforts in his state. Moore, who recently trekked to South Carolina, vetoed legislation that would launch a study of reparations for the descendants of slaves from the Democratic-controlled legislature. Moore urged Democrats not get bogged down by bureaucratic malaise and pointed to the Republican Party as the reason why. 'Donald Trump doesn't need a study to dismantle democracy. Donald Trump doesn't need a study to use the Constitution like it's a suggestion box," he told a packed dinner of party power players. "Donald Trump doesn't need a white paper to start arbitrary trade wars that will raise the cost of virtually everything in our lives,' Moore said. There are some notable exceptions to the party's border pivot to the center. Govs. Andy Beshear of Kentucky, JB Pritzker of Illinois and Tim Walz of Minnesota haven't shied away from social issues. Beshear, who has vetoed several anti-LGBTQ+ bills, including during his own reelection year, attacked Newsom for inviting conservative provocateurs Steve Bannon and Charlie Kirk onto his podcast. He also drew a distinction with Newsom on transgender athletes playing in youth sports, arguing that 'our different leagues have more than the ability to make' sports 'fair,' he told reporters in March. 'Surely, we can see some humanity and some different perspectives in this overall debate's that going on right now,' Beshear added. The Kentucky governor said his stance is rooted in faith — 'all children are children of God,' he often says. Walz called it 'a mistake' to abandon transgender people. 'We need to tell people your cost of eggs, your health care being denied, your homeowner's insurance, your lack of getting warning on tornadoes coming has nothing to do with someone's gender,' he told The Independent last month. Pritzker, too, recently said that it's 'vile and inhumane to go after the smallest minority and attack them.' This spring, Pritzker declared March 31 as Illinois' Transgender Day of Visibility. 'Walz, [Sen. Chris] Murphy, Pritzker, Beshear — they're not going around talking about it all the time, but they're also not running away from their values,' said one adviser to a potential 2028 candidate granted anonymity to discuss the issue candidly. 'They're in the both-and lane.' The party's reckoning with social issues is far from over. In 2021, then-Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro vocally opposed a GOP bill that aimed to ban trans athletes from participating in women's school sports, calling it "cruel" and 'designed to discriminate against transgender youth who just want to play sports like their peers.' This year, as the state's Republican-controlled Senate has passed a similar bill with the support of a handful of Democrats, Shapiro has remained mum on the legislation. It's not likely to come up for a vote in the state's Democratic-held House, so he may be able to punt — at least a while. As Emmanuel sees it, his party has a long way to go to over-correct for what he paints as the excesses of the last few years. 'The core crux over the years of President [Joe] Biden's tenure is the party on a whole set of cultural issues looked like they were off on a set of tangential issues,' Emmanuel said. Dasha Burns, Dustin Gardner, Holly Otterbein, and Brakkton Booker contributed to this report.