Summary
Transcript
He was a two time now platinum producer. Billy has worked with a lot of Atlanta artists, Lil baby wife and Lucci, a lot of people. So he’s made his mark in the city. Cal Austin worked alongside Dee Bills, whose real name is Clinton Dorsey, in the music industry. Austin says in addition to his contributions to the music scene, his friend also had a thriving dog breeding business, Dorsey kennels. So he bred french bulldogs, frenchies. So that was something that was very lucrative for him. He had a big love and passion for it just as much as the music.
Dorsey owned that business with his son, 23 year old Ed Dorsey. Austin says the father and son had been visiting him at his apartment Thursday. Austin says he had stepped out for a moment, and that’s when the Dorsey’s got into an argument. Brookhaven police say Ed Dorsey had a gun. The argument turned to being physical, and the physical confrontation turned to Mister Dorsey retrieved a firearm and shooting, shooting Clinton Dorsey. Ed Dorsey is now in the DeKalb county jail, charged with voluntary manslaughter. Austin says this hurts in more ways than one because he’s close to both the father and the son.
It was a situation that went too far. But again, that was something that was probably deeply rooted from their relationship as father and son. Honestly. Rest in peace, my good brother. I love you. That’s pretty bad. That’s pretty tragic to get killed by your own son. The person that you brought into the world is the very person that take you out. Jesus Christ. That’s pretty tragic to be killed by the very person that you brought into this earth, your own son. You get into an argument with your 23 year old son and he take you out.
That’s bad, man. It’s absolutely bad. In addition to that, let me switch over. So over at, you know, the protests that I warned y’all was going to spiral out of control, they targeted the Met gala, and they continuing to cancel graduations across the United States of America. Check it out. The fury unfolding on college campuses for weeks, trying to interrupt fashion’s biggest night. The NYPD saying close to a thousand pro palestinian protesters made their presence felt in Manhattan near last night’s famed Met gang officers making several arrests. The protests also impacting this year’s graduation season. Following violent clashes between students and police.
Atlanta’s Emory University says it will move its main graduation ceremony off campus, while Columbia University in New York is canceling its big central celebration altogether. It’s deeply saddening and honestly, I’m very angry. Nathan and Heather Wilson’s son Rory is graduating from Columbia. It is very disappointing. When protesters broke into Columbia’s Hamilton hall last week, Rory Wilson and a friend say they stepped in to try and stop them. Columbia then calling in the NYPD to clear the building. The Wilsons criticizing the university’s handling of the protests. They lost control of security and they ceased to become a place where dialogue and discourse could even happen.
A lot of these protesters are not students at these universities. A, b, it’s not a peaceful protest because they’re breaking a law, they breaking into places, they tearing up, they’re destroying stuff. They stand past the time that they supposed to be there and they’re graffiti defacing, destroying and all of that. And so I don’t know how we continue to say maybe this is just large gatherings like Brandon Johnson said. Meanwhile, consequences for demonstrators are escalating at MIT, where Massachusetts state police cleared camps yesterday. Administrators are now threatening to suspend student protesters. Harvard’s interim president writing, any students remaining in that school’s encampment will be referred for involuntary leave.
With tensions high on all sides, a new push to combat anti semitism launched by patriots owner Robert Kraft. Bring your passion, your tenacity, bring your anger, but don’t bring hate to the protest. And again, everybody here at the University of Chicago is obviously aware this is part of a national movement. A divisive conversation. Case in point, President Biden later this morning is set to deliver the keynote speech at the US Holocaust Memorial Museum’s annual Day of remembrance celebration. That speech denouncing anti Semitism and the White House noting it comes seven months after the Hamas attacks on Israel on October 7.
Isn’t it funny how we predicted that it was going to be more protests during the election year in order to distract you all from things that’s really meaningful and nobody is talking about the stuff that really is topic of conversation. We’ve already gotten past the fact that they just spent 95, almost $100 billion continuing to fund more wars, including Ukraine, Taiwan, and Israel. We’ve completely divested from the fact that migrant crisis is still raging on and Texas is still having to spend a whole lot of money in order to defend our borders while the borders over in Arizona and California continue to be open.
All of the things that’s really meaningful, we still continuing to focus on foolishness, foolishness. And they’re going to disrupt the Met gala. Last but not least, ladies and gentlemen, Oklahoma tornadoes. Absolutely. I was worried about my guy Quentin last night. He stayed on for the whole time. Shout out to Quentin. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. They had a whole lot of tornadoes, just completely destroying the whole, the whole state itself. Check it out. Relentless string of powerful tornadoes tore through Oklahoma. This twister was seen in the central part of the state. You can see it just blacking out the sky there.
Another tornado ripped through Barnsdall, Oklahoma. It is the second one to hit that very small community in just two months. At least one person there was killed. And that is where we find our Dave Malcolm this morning. Dave, good morning. Anne Marie Good morning. We are here in Barnsdall, just on the east part of the town, and you can see what this tornado did. It tore this home apart. Look how it just ripped it apart like that. It is very powerful. And if you think about it, how do tornadoes work? They come through with, through the neighborhood and just take out home after home.
And it doesn’t take a long time. It happens like that. A tornado hit there. The house is falling. There’s a curtain trap under the house. Overnight. Here in Barnsdall, Oklahoma, scenes of utter destruction. This town of about a thousand people taking a direct hit. The house is leveled or completely torn down. The Howell family, including their baby, were trapped on the front deck. I got you. I got you. We took cover in the hall, threw blankets over us, and it just, I could hear the windows blow. I could feel us being hit with ceiling tiles. Within minutes of the twister touching down, residents were warned of an impending tornado emergency, an event so severe it surpasses typical warnings.
Just up the road in Bartlesville, lightning put a spotlight on the major damage there, leaving behind a mess of mangled metal and wooden beams. At this Hampton Inn and nearby shopping center, emergency management pleaded with people to stay off the road so first responders could get to where they were going. Stay out of those damaged areas. We’re having a lot of difficulty getting in to do assessments to check on people. There’s a large tornado right up there. The overnight tornado’s culminating a day after activity in the state. This tornado was spotted about 50 miles northwest of Oklahoma City, taking down power poles in Hennessey.
In Okeen, another tornado with dark clouds menaced the community, while another stretched across state lines in Joplin, Missouri, where a funnel cloud was reported. Damage ranged from toppled tractor trailers to toss sheds from this lowe’s lumber yard. Elegance. Back here in Barnsdale, this type of destruction happened about 30 to 40 times throughout this tiny little community. We’re also hearing, Anne Marie, that a nursing home was struck by the tornado, but all the residents were accounted for, and luckily, they didn’t have to go to the hospital that yo pray for. What’s going on in Oklahoma? Oklahoma, I’m very comfortable in the Midwest.
We don’t have no earthquakes. We don’t get no tornadoes. We don’t get no hurricanes. We don’t get no, none of that. No mudslides, no forest fires. Yeah, we got to deal with some winter and all of that, but it’s way cheaper here. And we surrounded by the greatest, like, the biggest water bot body of water as far as fresh water source and the Great Lakes. I’m chilling. I’m good. I’ll just come and visit y’all, and we can go and kick it. But y’all have all of these, all of this other stuff. I’m good with it..