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20 years after the Million Man March, a fresh call for justice on the Mall

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© AP Photo/Evan Vucci Neal Blair, of Augusta, Ga., stands on the lawn of the Capitol building during a rally to mark the 20th anniversary of the Million Man March, on Capitol Hill, on Saturday, Oct. 10, 2015, in Washington.

 

Thousands of black men, women and children gathered on the Mall on Saturday to demand justice at a time of growing anger and fraying tensions in African American communities across the nation over the police shooting deaths of young black men.

Crowds began forming on a cool, sunny morning just beyond the west front of the Capitol, and by noon the number of participants had swelled significantly, with onlookers watching on several jumbo screens set up along the lawn. Some people set up lawn chairs and others sat on blankets to listen to a long lineup of speakers, including Louis Farrakhan, the leader of the Nation of Islam which sponsored the “Justice or Else” rally.

The event marked the 20th anniversary of the Million Man March in 1995, when hundreds of thousands of black men rallied on the Mall. Although the crowd Saturday was expected to be far smaller than that protest, the spirit of the first movement was echoed by the those who addressed the crowds.

But the speakers also pointedly tied the struggle of the black community to modern-day incidents. Tamika Mallory, a national organizer of the rally, recited a litany of young black men who have been killed by police in recent years, including Tamir Rice of Cleveland, Michael Brown of Ferguson, Mo., and Eric Garner of Staten Island.

“Twenty years ago, the death of Tamir Rice would have fallen on deaf ears and left for the police to write a false report, not broadcast for the world to know,” Mallory told the crowd.

Saturday’s rally on the Mall marked the 20th anniversary of the Million Man March in 1995. (Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post)

“Michael Brown’s body would have only traumatized the community, rather than wake up the people.”

“America, we can’t breathe,” Mallory said, echoing the phrase that Garner uttered while being held in a chokehold by police in July 2014 and that has been appropriated by the civil rights movement.

Signs of the community’s frustration were written on T-shirts for the “Black Lives Matter” movement and on posters reading “Straight Outta Patience.” One man wore a “Hands up, don’t shoot” T-shirt, marking the rallying cry in Ferguson after residents and police clashed in the wake of Brown’s shooting death in August 2014.

“Are we going to demand justice?” the Rev. Willie Wilson of Newport News asked the crowd.

Some spoke about other calls for justice. D.C. Council member Vincent Orange (D-At Large) took his turn at the microphone to make an impassioned call for voting rights and statehood for the District, which lacks representation in Congress.

“D.C. statehood or else,” Orange said.

Dennis Muhammad, 45, of Charleston, S.C., was sitting on a lawn chair watching the speakers on the big screen. He had arrived on a bus with about 55 members of his community early Saturday morning.

Muhammad, who said he attended the Million Man March, came this time to stand with the others “for the cause of justice for all of our people, especially those of our people that have been victims of overzealous police work or brutality. We have not gotten justice in the courtrooms of this country.”

He mentioned Walter Scott, a South Carolina man killed in a police shooting in North Charleston in April whose family recently received a $6.5 million settlement from the city.

“Police officers are very needed in our community, but I think the badge should not be a license to kill or a license to hide a murderer,” Muhammad said. “When a police officer steps out of the bounds of the law and what is right, then it’s for government to retaliate on behalf of the people. Our government has not done that.”

Hamil R. Harris and Michael Laris contributed to this report, credit to msn.com

Mustangs Looking to Make Playoffs for First Time in 16 Years

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By: Brittany Young

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Photo credit: Jackson Olin Mustang

The Jackson Olin High School football team hasn’t made the playoffs since 1999, but the Mustangs are hoping to turn things around this season.

Currently holding a record of 3-3, the Mustangs are only two wins away from exceeding last season’s win column. However, anything less than making it to the playoffs and competing for a championship is a letdown for J.O.

Offensive Line Coach Terrence Swift believes this year will be a breakthrough season for the team.

“The program has evolved over the years and the offensive line is improving week by week. I’m proud of the guys for working hard and I believe we’re ready to take things to the next level and make it to the playoffs,” Swift says.

J.O. has seen strides of improvement since head coach Tim Vakakes took over three years ago.

In his first season, the Mustangs finished 1-9 and last year the squad finished 4-6. He previously served as the offensive coordinator at Fairfield High Preparatory School, where he also coached Swift. In his second season with the Mustangs, Swift is now applying what he learned as a player to his offensive line.

Coming off a 41-7 victory against John Carroll Catholic, the Mustangs are now ranked No. 3 in Class 6A Region 5. But, the journey isn’t getting any easier as J.O. faces the Hueytown Golden Gophers on the road tonight in another big region game.

“We rushed for over 300 yards last week. That’s the most we’ve ever had since I’ve been here. If we play our game, we control our own destiny. The main thing is limiting turnovers, because when we don’t turn the ball over we win games,” Swift says.

Seniors DeAndre Powell and Angelo “Robo” Brown were a major part of the offensive attack against John Carroll. Wide Receiver Powell had two touchdown receptions, while Brown rushed for three touchdowns and nearly 140 yards.

The Mustangs will need more of those big plays from their senior leaders in tonight’s matchup against the Golden Gophers. Kickoff is set for 7 p.m.

 

Little boy wants to be Elsa for Halloween, his dad’s response wins over the Internet

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CHESAPEAKE, Va. — Here’s a dad who is winning at parenting.

Paul Henson, 28, from Virginia took his son Caiden shopping for a Halloween costume. Caiden said he wanted to be someone he respected and admired – he chose Elsa from Frozen.

Henson’s response has pretty much won over everyone on the Internet.

Henson posted this photo to his Facebook page and it has since been shared more than 21,000 times.

 

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Henson told Buzzfeed that his parents raised him to be himself and that’s all he wants for his own son.

Also, a quick shoutout to Elaine Maldonado-Torres, who said her daughter also has a great Halloween costume idea:

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source: pix111.com (pictures: Facebook)

UCLA Students Wear Blackface To Kanye West-Themed Party

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Kanye West Adidas Fall 2015

 

Yup, people still haven’t learned that blackface just isn’t cool.

Black student groups at UCLA are up in arms about a predominantly White fraternity and sorority holding a “Kanye West”-themed party. According to the student paper, the party-goers dressed in baggy clothes, blackface, and traditional Kardashian-like attire.

Pictures of the party filled with Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity and Alpha Phi sorority members flooded social media and ignited the hashtag #blackbruinsmatter. According to the LA Times, the Afrikan Student Union is planning to meet at noon on Thursday at the Bruin Bear statue, where students will wear black.

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“Everyone keep in mind that simply because I go to one of the top ranked institutions in the country, doesn’t mean I’m any farther away from ignorance and racism as anyone else. They just hide it behind frat/sorority themes, anonymous postings, and micro-aggressions,” she said on Facebook. “This isn’t over though.”

UCLA officials are investigating the matter. Expect way more of these stories to hit the air when Halloween parties start to roll around in a few weeks.

SOURCE: LA TimesFacebook, Twitter | 

CLASHES INTENSIFY IN SYRIA FROM RUSSIA-BACKED OFFENSIVE

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DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — Clashes intensified Thursday between Syrian troops and insurgents in central and northwestern Syria, part of what a top general called a “wide-ranging” offensive aided by Russian airstrikes and apparently aimed at clearing positions near government strongholds on the coast.

U.S. defense officials said as many as four of the 26 long-range cruise missiles that Russia said Wednesday it fired at Syria landed instead in Iran, but it was unclear if they caused any significant damage. Russia said all of its missiles fired from warships hit their targets.

Russia’s involvement in Syria, which began with airstrikes Sept. 30 and escalated Wednesday with cruise missiles, “raises serious concerns,” NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said after a meeting of the alliance’s defense ministers in Brussels.

Russia says its air campaign in Syria is aimed against militants of the Islamic State and al-Qaida-linked groups, but the West accuses it of intervening to support President Bashar against even moderate rebels in the civil war.

The Syrian government’s multipronged offensive began Wednesday, and state-run media said it seized several villages in central Syria, with fighting continuing Thursday. The government media and activists reported heavy fighting in Sahl al-Ghab, a vital plain bordering Assad’s stronghold of Latakia on the Mediterranean.

The plain also lies between Hama and Idlib, the northwestern provinces seized from government troops in September. Insurgents have been advancing there since summer, threatening the coastal region where Assad’s family and the Alawite minority, an offshoot of Shiite Islam, are concentrated.

The Islamic State – also known as ISIS, ISIL or Daesh – has strongholds in Raqqa and Aleppo provinces, while Syria’s al-Qaida affiliate, the Nusra Front, has a strong presence in Idlib.

Gen. Ali Ayoub, the Syrian army’s chief of staff, said Russia’s airstrikes had weakened the Islamic State fighters and other insurgents so that his troops could keep up the initiative.

“Today, the Syrian Arab armed forces began a wide-ranging attack with the aim of eliminating the terrorist groups and liberating the areas and towns that suffered from their scourge and crimes,” Ayoub said in rare televised remarks. The government uses the term “terrorists” to refer to all armed opposition groups in Syria.

Russia said its warplanes flew 22 sorties and carried out 11 airstrikes on IS training facilities in Hama and Raqqa provinces.

The Russian Defense Ministry also said its aircraft destroyed firing positions in rural Hama, where fighting has raged, and struck militants’ underground facilities in rural Latakia with concrete-piercing bombs.

Syrian TV showed government troops loading and firing artillery as helicopters flew over rural Hama and Idlib. It also showed tanks and airstrikes. The state run SANA news agency said joint Syrian-Russian airstrikes hit 27 targets belonging to Nusra Front.

Heavy fighting was concentrated in the rural parts of Idlib, Hama and Latakia provinces – areas of operation for an array of insurgent groups that includes the Nusra Front. The Western-backed Free Syrian Army also has a presence in the area, while the Islamic State has a limited presence in western Hama, where activists reported no fighting or airstrikes.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and other activists said a military helicopter was downed in Kfar Nabouda, in northern Hama. Local media said the helicopter belonged to the Syrian government. The Observatory said Russian jets bombed areas near the site.

The ultraconservative militant group Ahar al-Sham, part of the coalition known as the Army of Conquest that controls Idlib, posted video showing it launching Grad rockets at government troops. The troops advanced on a village previously controlled by the rebels.

Syrian Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad told state TV the Free Syrian Army, an umbrella group for dozens of Western-backed rebel groups, is no different from other militants.

“There is no difference between Nusra Front, Daesh and the Free Syrian Army – if it still exists,” he said. “They started (the armed opposition) and taught Daesh and Nusra all these crimes committed against Syria now.”

The Observatory, which has a network of activists across Syria, said the Russian airstrikes in Idlib killed at least seven civilians Wednesday.

The Violations Documentation Center, a Syrian rights group, said at least 43 civilians, including nine children and seven women, were killed Sept. 30, the first day of Russia’s airstrikes, in central Homs province. The group, relying on witnesses and video, said the strikes hit predominantly civilian areas in three villages and towns, including homes and a bread distribution center.

The Russians maintain no civilians were killed.

The group said it documented the use of at least two vacuum bombs – thermobaric weapons “which are entirely indiscriminate in nature and impossible to evade, even when taking shelter.” The group alleged the attacks constituted a “grave violation of international humanitarian law and, as a result, a war crime.”

Syria’s conflict, which began as an uprising against Assad in March 2011 but became a full-blown civil war after a fierce government crackdown, has killed 250,000 people, according to U.N. figures.

Russia said Wednesday it launched 26 cruise missiles from warships in the Caspian Sea that hit targets in the Syrian provinces in the north and northwest, taking flight paths over Iran and Iraq.

As many as four landed instead in Iran, according to three U.S. officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly. One of the officials said the number of missiles that went off course was four.

Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov said Thursday that “all rockets fired from ships found their targets.”

Iranian government officials could not immediately be reached for comment, but the semi-official Fars news agency said Western news reports of missiles going astray amounted to U.S. “psychological warfare” against Russia’s intervention in Syria. A report Wednesday by Fars quoted Iraj Saghafi, acting governor of Takab in northwestern Iran, as saying an explosion heard in the region was “possibly related to work in a nearby rock quarry.”

Russia’s intervention has alarmed the West and its NATO allies, particularly Turkey, which shares a long border with Syria and has been a leading backer of the Syrian rebels.

On Thursday, the alliance signaled its readiness to defend Turkey if needed from any threats from Moscow. Russian jets twice violated Turkish airspace over the weekend.

“NATO is able and ready to defend all allies, including Turkey, against any threat,” Stoltenberg said.

U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter said Moscow has insisted it is striking facilities of the Islamic State militant group, but that so far this hasn’t matched up with the targets Russia is blasting from the air.

“They have initiated a joint ground offensive with the Syrian regime, shattering the facade that they’re there to fight ISIL,” Carter said.

Russia’s support for Assad “will have consequences for Russia itself,” he said, adding: “I also expect that in coming days the Russians will begin to suffer casualties in Syria.”

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned that Moscow’s military action in Syria endangered trade ties with his country, saying Ankara could look elsewhere for gas supplies and cancel the construction of its first nuclear power plant, which is being built by Russia. Russia supplies 60 percent of Turkey’s gas needs.

President Vladimir Putin was informed of Erdogan’s remarks but hoped they would not affect relations between the two countries, said Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov.

“We sincerely hope that these relations will continue to expand according to the plans mapped out by Putin and Erdogan because this cooperation is genuinely mutually beneficial and is in the interests of both our countries,” Peskov said.

El Deeb reported from Beirut. Associated Press writer John-Thor Dahlburg in Brussels and Robert Burns in Washington contributed to this report.

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MCCARTHY ABRUPTLY WITHDRAWS CANDIDACY FOR HOUSE SPEAKER

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WASHINGTON (AP) — With no warning, Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy withdrew Thursday from the contest for speaker of the U.S. House, shocking fellow Republicans just before voting was to begin and plunging Congress’ GOP leadership into chaos.

Lawmakers said they were thunderstruck and in disbelief following McCarthy’s announcement, which came moments after they had showed up for an election nearly certain to end with McCarthy as their pick for speaker.

“I have never seen anything like this,” said Rep. Ryan Costello of Pennsylvania. Said Rep. Mick Mulvaney of South Carolina: “We don’t know why he did it.”

The election was postponed, as may be the scheduled Oct. 29 vote for speaker by the full House, Democrats as well as Republicans.

What happens next is unknown. McCarthy was by far the heavy favorite to replace Speaker John Boehner, who announced under pressure from conservatives that he would resign at the end of the month. Congress is facing major budget deadlines and fiscal decisions.

The other two Republican candidates for speaker – Reps. Jason Chaffetz of Utah and Daniel Webster of Florida – lack widespread support in the House GOP, although Webster has the backing of the hardline House Freedom Caucus.

But Thursday’s secret ballot – even if it had proceeded as expected – still would have been merely an early skirmish in the chaotic battle to lead the House. It was to have been followed by the vote in the full House where the Freedom Caucus could have blocked McCarthy’s ascent.

It wasn’t clear when the elections would be rescheduled, or if McCarthy, a 50-year-old Californian, would stay on as majority leader.

Associated Press writers Andrew Taylor and Alan Fram contributed to this report.

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U.S. aircraft diverted to avoid Russian fighter in Syria

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Washington (CNN)The U.S. military has had to divert two aircraft over Syria to ensure they could maintain a safe flying distance from a Russian fighter aircraft in the same area, according to Captain Jeff Davis, Pentagon spokesman.

It was the first time the U.S. needed to do so since Russia began military operations in Syria at the end of last month.

The two planes were F-16s that had departed from Turkey’s Incirlik air base and were on their way to a location near the ISIS stronghold of Raqqa, , a senior defense official told CNN. The U.S. aircraft that diverted were not able to complete their mission, the official said.

Since the Russians began operating in Syrian airspace, U.S. pilots have been under orders to change their flight path if there is a Russian plane within 20 nautical miles, according to the official.

Davis said the incident happened in the last few days but offered few additional details.

READ: John Kerry raises Syria no-fly zone despite Obama’s skepticism

“We are taking action to ensure” the planes don’t come too close to each other, he said, indicating there had only been one incident so far. There is no sign the two aircraft communicated with each other.

In the recent incident, the Russian plane came within the 20 nautical mile interval. The new U.S. rules were instituted specifically because there is no agreement with the Russians yet on maintaining mutual flight safety rules and practices. In fact, the incident happened in the days after the first round of technical talks with Russia on that issue.

Without that agreement, the official said, U.S. pilots cannot count on the Russians to fly under standard safety procedures.

The official emphasized the reason for the new rules is concern about keeping American pilots safe, given the long history of aggressive Russian military intercepts against U.S. aircraft.

Obama apologizes to Doctors Without Borders after deadly Afghanistan airstrike

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Washington (CNN)President Barack Obama has called and apologized to the head of Doctors Without Borders, whose staff and patients were killed and injured during a bombing Saturday in Kunduz, Afghanistan, the White House said Wednesday.

Doctors Without Borders: Kunduz strike an ‘attack on the Geneva Conventions’

Obama called the organization’s president Joanne Liu on Wednesday morning, White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest said during the daily press briefing.

Civilians ‘accidentally struck’ in Afghan hospital bombing, U.S. commander says

“The President assured Dr. Liu that the Department of Defense investigation currently under way would provide a transparent, thorough and objective accounting of the facts and circumstances of the incident and, if necessary, the President would implement changes that would make tragedies like this one less likely to occur in the future,” Earnest said.

The U.S. has characterized its airstrike Saturday, which killed 12 members of the Doctors Without Borders staff as well as 10 patients, as a mistake.

 

THE LATEST: US AIRCRAFT REROUTED OVER SYRIA, AVOIDS RUSSIANS

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Turkey Russia Syria

BEIRUT (AP) — The latest developments after Syrian troops, emboldened by Russian airstrikes, launch a ground offensive against insurgents (all times local).

7:05 p.m.

The Pentagon says at least one U.S. military aircraft changed its route over Syria recently to avoid coming dangerously close to Russian warplanes.

A Pentagon spokesman, Navy Capt. Jeff Davis, said Wednesday that he could not provide details, including the number of times this has happened.

He says U.S. aircraft are still flying attack and other missions daily over Syria, but he acknowledged that the air operations have had to be adjusted since the Russians began flying.

Davis said this highlights the Pentagon’s interest in talking further to Russian officials about ways to avoid accidents and potential unintended conflict in the skies over Syria. One round of talks was held Oct. 1. No second session has been scheduled for now.

6:15 p.m.

Britain’s U.N. ambassador says Russia’s military actions in Syria are strengthening the Islamic State by strengthening Syrian President Bashar Assad and forcing much of Syria’s Sunni population “into the arms” of the extremist group.

Matthew Rycroft told a group of reporters on Wednesday that “Russia’s military action is a significant escalation of this crisis.”

He says that while the Russians say they are attacking Islamic State extremists, anyone looking at a map of their strikes can see that most “are against what we consider the moderate opposition to Assad, the very people that we need to be part of the future of Syria.”

5 p.m.

France’s president says comments from Russian President Vladimir Putin suggesting an alliance of Syrian government forces and the Free Syrian Army are incorrect.

Putin was in Paris on Friday for talks with French President Francois Hollande as well as the leaders of Germany and Ukraine. The Russian leader said the idea came from French President Francois Hollande.

But in a speech Wednesday before the European Parliament, Hollande appeared to indirectly contradict Putin.

Hollande said: “Know that it will not be possible to reunite the opposition – I am talking about the moderate opposition, the democratic opposition – with the executioner of the Syrian people.”

3:25 p.m.

In an apparent spillover from the fighting in Syria, Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency says militants fired a shell at a Lebanese army position near the two countries’ shared border, wounding five Lebanese soldiers.

NNA says the attack occurred near the northeastern Lebanese border town of Ras Baalbek. It says Lebanese troops retaliated for Wednesday’s attack by shelling militant positions.

Clashes and shelling in areas along the Syrian-Lebanese border are not uncommon.

2:55 p.m.

Russian President Vladimir Putin says French President Francois Hollande last week suggested that government forces in Syria form an alliance with the opposition’s Free Syrian Army.

Putin was in Paris on Friday for talks with Hollande as well as the leaders of Germany and Ukraine.

Putin said in televised remarks Wednesday that he found Hollande’s idea “interesting” but insisted Moscow still has too little information on the Free Syrian Army. He says “we still don’t know where it is and who leads it.”

But the Russian leader added that “since (the Free Syrian Army) is supposed to be the combat unit of the so-called healthy opposition, it would create good conditions for a political settlement in Syria if they could join forces against the common enemy, terrorists, the Islamic State, the Nusra Front and others.”

2:40 p.m.

Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu says Russia is using warships in the Caspian Sea to target the Islamic State group in Syria.

Russia last week began carrying out airstrikes in Syria in what it said was a pre-emptive operation against terrorism in the Middle East.

Shoigu told President Vladimir Putin in televised remarks that Russia on Wednesday morning carried out 26 missile strikes from four warships of its Caspian Sea flotilla. Shoigu insisted the operation destroyed all the targets and did not launch any strikes upon civilian areas.

2:30 p.m.

A Syrian official says a ground offensive has been launched in central regions of the country amid intense shelling and Russian airstrikes.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulations, said the operations are concentrated in the neighboring provinces of Hama and Idlib.

Activists and rebels say Syrian troops backed by Russian airstrikes battled insurgents in central Syria on Wednesday in the first major ground fighting since Moscow began launching air raids on militants last week.

The Russian airstrikes appear to have emboldened Syrian troops to launch a ground offensive after suffering a string of setbacks in northwestern Syria over the past few months.

The Islamic State group is not present in the areas where the fighting is underway.

– Albert Aji in Damascus, Syria.

2:20 p.m.

A Syrian official says Syrian troops backed by Russian airstrikes have launched a ground offensive against insurgents in central Syria.

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Wendy Williams Wants Terrence Howard Off ‘Empire’; He Responds [WATCH]

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Terrence Howard’s personal drama is making it difficult for Wendy Williams to enjoy his popular hit show “Empire.”

Recapping last week’s episode of the drama on Thursday (Oct. 1) during “The Wendy Williams Show,” Williams went in on Howard while pointing out that the actor’s history of domestic abuse has become a distraction to the show, according to The Huffington Post.

“Terrence Howard, your personal life has taken over to where if by chance they took you off the show I would be happier than mad,” she said.

“I feel like between him allegedly being abusive to women in his personal life, him giving an 18-page nutty interview to Rolling Stone magazine, where he talked about all kinds of nuttiness… It’s usurped his entire situation at ‘Empire’ and the show could do without Terrence Howard. I’m sorry. It’s the way I feel.”

Williams’ Rolling Stone reference came in regard to Howard confessing last month that he hit his two ex-wives. The daytime TV talk show host’s comments come as “Empire” suffered a decline in ratings last week with the second episode of its much-anticipated sophomore season.

Among those taking notice of Williams’ commentary is Howard himself, who responded with the following tweet:

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For more of Williams’ “Empire” recap, check out the video below.