close Video Fox News Flash top entertainment headlines for March 4 Fox News Flash top entertainment and celebrity headlines are here. Check out what's clicking today in entertainment. Dr. Mehmet Oz is recalling the "miracle" that occurred at Newark Liberty International Airport in New Jersey on Monday which resulted in him saving a man's life . The cardiothoracic surgeon and talk show host helped revive a 60-year-old man who had collapsed at the airport on Monday night. Speaking to "Good Morning America" co-host Robin Roberts, Dr. Oz detailed the grim situation when he turned around to find the man on the ground surrounded by blood. "I saw this gentleman had face planted basically with a pool of blood under his head where he smacked onto the ground. I ran over, I couldn't get a pulse, which is the first thing you check for. He wasn't responsive," Dr. Oz said. From there, the TV personality said he rolled the man onto his back and noticed he was "purple -- the color of an eggplant." He called this a "bad combination" and began doing CPR . DR. MEHMET OZ SAVES A PERSON'S LIFE AT AIRPORT, PERFORMS CPR Dr. Oz helped revive a man who collapsed at the airport on Monday night in New Jersey. (Dr. Oz) "It's that soul-zapping moment where you realize you're losing a life so I started doing CPR which is my training," Oz continued, noting that nearby officers also "rushed" in to help. Oz explained the signifcance of doing chest compressions to viewers. "If the heart's not beating you've got to beat for it which is what the chest compressions do. 100 times a minute, push down at least two inches, simple message, everyone whose hearing my voice right now can learn how to do that today," he said. The man was also foaming at the mouth. Dr. Oz said he was able to "use a piece of plastic to push his tongue down and push air into his lungs." From there, the man was hooked up to a defibrillator. ...
82 year old man cuts fingernails
Bergen County Moms Volunteer Around The Clock To Help Teachers Book Vaccine Appointments To Keep Schools Open And Safe
HILLSDALE, N.J. (CBSNewYork) — New Jersey teachers are eligible to get COVID vaccines , but it’s hard work to book an appointment. As CBS2’s Lisa Rozner reports, a group of working moms are becoming “vaccine angels” by night. READ MORE: COVID Impact: Jersey City Schools In-Person Learning Back On, But Some Parents Have Concerns About Phased-In Approach With one set of hands on the computer and another on the phone, Jamie Bozzo and Melissa Gade are like vaccine appointment ninjas. “You can’t hesitate… You have 10 seconds sometimes to secure an appointment,” Bozzo said. COVID VACCINE New York State book online here or call 1-833-NYS-4-VAX New York City book online here or call 877-VAX-4NYC Track NYC Vaccinations By Zip Code Nassau County more info here Suffolk County more info here Westchester County more info here New Jersey book online here or call 1-855-568-0545 Connecticut book online here The two moms from Hillsdale , New Jersey both have full-time jobs. They also have their eyes on vaccine appointments 24/7. They’ve helped vaccinate almost half the staff at Hillsdale schools, where in-person learning is five days a week. Teacher Lauren Lio said she’d already spent hours on the weekends trying to get her mom a spot. It was a major help when the superintendent told teachers to just register on a Google Doc for help. “Honestly, it was life changing,” Lio said. “He sent out an email to the staff members that we had vaccine angels.” “It was basically magic,” said Nicole Doniloski, a 4th grade teacher. “It’s nice to know that I’m protected.” The women knew they had a knack for this when they booked appointments for their parents. Then they volunteered to help senior citizens. READ MORE: Education Secretary Cardona Impressed With White Plains Schools' Approach To Getting Kids Back In The Classroom “We made an agreement. We’re just going to do it to 50…. We’re doing this at all hours of the ...
Nolte: What Should’ve Won the Best Picture Oscar – 1970 to 1979
In part six of this series we look at the movies that should have won the Best Picture Oscar between 1970 and 1979. By 1970 the old studio system and the Production Code were officially dead, the New Hollywood-era was in full bloom, and what an era it was. As you will see below, the swingin’ seventies produced classic after classic, and although many were filled with R-rated content, they were almost old-fashioned in their morality, especially when it came to one of this decade’s overriding themes: the importance of the individual over the collective. The noble cause of Individualism, of fighting the Establishment, of laughing at prudes, snitches, corporatism, bureaucracies, and busybodies drove this decade, and what a decade it was. Let’s begin… 1970 What Did Win: Patton Francis Ford Coppola would win a well-deserved Oscar (his first) for a masterpiece of a screenplay that delivers one of the most fascinating, complicated, irritating, and sympathetic characters ever put on film. That such a movie could be released in the Vietnam era, a mature movie that sought to explain and examine militarism rather than condemn and lecture against it, is what made the seventies so special. Sure, the kids had taken over, but these kids were talented and mature artists. What Should’ve Won: Five Easy Pieces What can you say about a movie that twists Tammy Wynette’s classic “Stand By Your Man” into the anthem for a clingy, needy, insufferable woman (a fantastic Karen Black) suffocating her lover (Jack Nicholson). Brilliant from beginning to end, Five Easy Pieces doesn’t demand we like our protagonist, only we understand him. See also: Little Big Man, M*A*S*H, The Ballad of Cable Hogue, Gimme Shelter, and Joe. 1971 What Did Win: The French Connection Director William Friedkin’s directs the hell out of what is still the greatest urban cop movie ever made. Hackman is perfectly cast as Popeye Doyle, a casual racist who’s so ...
Ramon Ramirez Identified As Father Of 3 Shot, Killed While Pumping Gas At Lehigh County Wawa
UPPER MACUNGIE TOWNSHIP, Pa. (CBS) — Detectives are searching for answers as to why a man went on a shooting spree today in Lehigh County . One person was killed — Ramon Ramirez, a father of three. He was simply gassing up his truck. Around 5 a.m., Ramirez had likely just dropped off the trailer portion of his truck, according to his employer, and stopped at Wawa to fuel up before heading off to his next stop. He didn’t make it there, as the hard-working family man’s life was taken seemingly at random right here. READ MORE: $1 Million Pennsylvania Lottery Scratch-Off Sold At Philadelphia CVS The sad and confusing series of events began about four miles away from this Wawa in the westbound lanes of Route 22 between Route 309 and Cedar Crest Boulevard when a woman heard a loud bang while driving. “That woman was not injured. She did not realize that her vehicle had been shot upon,” Lehigh County District Attorney James Martin said. That is until she pulled into the Upper Macungie Township Wawa and noticed a bullet hole in her vehicle, according to authorities. The man who police believe shot at her happened to pull in too and drove around to the south side of the business. “There was a Jeep vehicle there, which was occupied by its driver. He was shot,” Martin said. Authorities say that driver was injured but expected to be OK. Then, the drive-by gunman, identified by investigators as 45-year-old Za Uk Lian of South Whitehall Township, directed his aim at a man pumping gas. READ MORE: Body Of Missing Amish Teen Linda Stoltzfoos Found In Ronks, Lancaster District Attorney's Office Confirms “He was definitely a great father, always providing for his family,” said Willy Holmes, a childhood friend of Ramirez. Ramirez was rushed to the hospital where he died. Holmes grew up with Ramirez in Norristown. “My heart just breaks for the family, especially his kids,” Holmes said. Ramirez was a married father of three working for A. Duie Pyle ...
Derek Chauvin found guilty of murder, manslaughter in the death of George Floyd
MINNEAPOLIS — Former Minneapolis Officer Derek Chauvin was convicted Tuesday of murder and manslaughter for pinning George Floyd to the pavement with his knee on the Black man’s neck in a case that touched off worldwide protests, violence and a furious reexamination of racism and policing in the U.S. Chauvin, 45, could be sent to prison for decades. The verdict set off jubilation around the city. People instantly flooded the surrounding streets downtown, running through traffic with banners. Cars blared their horns. Floyd family members who had gathered at a Minneapolis conference room could be heard cheering and even laughing. The jury of six white people and six Black or multiracial people came back with its verdict after about 10 hours of deliberations over two days. Chauvin was found guilty on all charges: second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. His face was obscured by a COVID-19 mask, and little reaction could be seen beyond his eyes darting around the courtroom. His bail was immediately revoked and he was led away with his hands cuffed behind his back. Sentencing will be in two months. Defense attorney Eric Nelson followed Chauvin out of the courtroom without comment. As the judge asked jurors if they reached a verdict, a hush fell on the crowd 300 strong in a park adjacent to the courthouse, with people listening to the proceedings on their cellphones. When the final guilty verdict was announced, the crowd roared, many people hugging, some shedding tears. At the intersection where Floyd was pinned down, a crowd chanted, “One down, three to go!” — a reference to the three other fired Minneapolis police officers facing trial in August on charges of aiding and abetting murder in Floyd’s death. Janay Henry, who lives nearby, said she felt grateful and relieved. “I feel grounded. I can feel my feet on the concrete,” she said, adding that she was looking forward to the “next case with joy ...