
Teacher fights discrimination against the Roma people, one Elvis song at a time
Decked out in a rhinestone shirt and oversized sunglasses, with his black hair slicked back into a 1950s-style quiff, Lakatos swivels his hips and belts out his own idiosyncratic versions of hits like 'Blue Suede Shoes' at venues throughout Romania.
But don't call him an Elvis impersonator. Lakatos prefers to say that he 'channels' the King of rock 'n' roll's global appeal to break down stereotypes about the Roma and provide a positive role model for Roma children.
'I never wanted to get on stage, I didn't think about it,' Lakatos, 58, said after a recent gig at a restaurant in the capital, Bucharest. 'I only wanted one thing — to make friends with Romanians, to stop being called a Gypsy,″ he added, using an often derided term for people belonging to the Roma ethnic group.
The Roma, an ethnic group that traces its roots to South Asia, have been persecuted across eastern Europe for centuries and are still associated with high rates of poverty, unemployment and crime. They account for about 7% of the population of Romania, where a fifth say they have faced discrimination in the past year, according to a recent survey by the European Union.
Lakatos' quest to change that began in the early 1980s when he was an art student and Romania was ruled by the hard-line communist regime of Nicolae Ceausescu.
At a time when anti-Roma discrimination was mainstream, Lakatos found that singing Elvis songs was a way to connect with ethnic Romanian students while rock music was a symbol of rebellion against the oppressive government.
Four decades later, he's added a new audience.
A school teacher for the past 25 years, Lakatos uses his music to show his students that they can aspire to something more than the dirt roads and horse driven carts of their village in northwestern Romania.
'The adjective Gypsy is used everywhere as a substitute for insult,' Lakatos said. 'We older people have gotten used to it, we can swallow it, we grew up with it. I have said many times, 'Call us what you want, dinosaur and brontosaurus, but at least join hands with us to educate the next generation.''
But Lakatos still crisscrosses the country to perform at venues large and small.
On a hot summer evening, that journey took Lakatos to Terasa Florilor in Bucharest, a neighborhood joint whose owner takes pride in offering live music by local artists who perform on a stage made of wooden beams painted in vivid colors.
The audience included those who came for the show and others attracted by the sausages, pork roast and Moldavian meatballs on the menu. A few danced and others took selfies as they enjoyed Lakatos' trademark 'Rock 'n' Rom' show, a mix of Elvis songs delivered in the Romani language, Romanian and English.
The eclectic mix of languages can sometimes lead to surprises because there isn't always a literal translation for Elvis' 1950s American English.
For example, 'Don't step on my blue suede shoes' doesn't make sense to many of the children he teaches because they are so poor, Lakatos said.
In his version, the lyric Elvis made famous becomes simply 'don't step on my bare feet.'
It's a message that Elvis — born in a two-room house in Tupelo, Mississippi, during the Great Depression — probably would have understood.
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Daily Mail
2 days ago
- Daily Mail
Outrageous reason NBA mascot claims he was fired as he hits back with lawsuit
A former Denver Nuggets mascot is hitting back after being fired by the franchise's ownership group. Drake Solomon, who had portrayed the Nuggets' mascot Rocky since 2021 when his father Kenn retired, was fired by the team in August 2024. Solomon has now sued Kroenke Sports & Entertainment (KSE), the team's ownership group, alleging disability discrimination and an unlawful severance offer. The lawsuit contends the Nuggets violated the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act through discrimination on the basis of disability, retaliation, and two claims of aiding and abetting unfair employment practices against his KSE supervisors, according to the Denver Post. The Daily Mail has contacted the Nuggets organization for comment. Solomon, whose father had performed as Rocky for more than 30 years before he took over the role, claims that he was wrongfully terminated after undergoing double hip replacement surgery. He says that he was diagnosed with avascular necrosis (AVN), a painful bone condition, during the Nugget's 2023 championship-winning season, which impacted his ability to perform. After Solomon was diagnosed with AVN, he first underwent bilateral core decompression surgery in March 2023. However, the surgery did not fix the issues and, in February 2024, he reportedly notified his superiors of his need to undergo total hip replacement surgery, according to the lawsuit. KSE allegedly informed Solomon just several weeks later that they would be hosting tryouts for the position 'regardless of the outcome' of his surgery, citing a lack of confidence in his health. Solomon claims he told his superiors that doctors had informed him that he would return to full health in three months. 'It came to a point where I was on the court shooting a half-court shot with tears dripping down my face,' Solomon told CBS News. 'It's hard thinking about those times. I really wanted to bring the same energy.' Solomon says he felt ready to return to the role following surgery but was never given the chance, which felt like a 'betrayal.' He underwent the procedure in April 2024 and returned to work the following month, performing his duties throughout the summer, according to the lawsuit. However, KSE still pushed forward with the tryouts. Solomon claims he met all the physical requirements and helped teach the other applicants how to dunk in the Rocky costume but KSE terminated his contract on August 13, 2024. The lawsuit claims that Solomon was not given a reason for his firing at the time but KSE later claimed he was terminated because he did not score first in the tryouts. He was allegedly offered offered $20,000 and a non-disclosure agreement as part of his severance agreement. But he refused the package, claiming that it seemed 'sketchy'. Attorneys say the agreement violated nearly every provision of the POWR Act (Protecting Opportunities and Workers' Rights), according to CBS. The POWR Act was passed in Colorado in 2023 and since then, Solomon believes he is not the only member of the Nuggets organization to have suffered a similar fate. He believes that other employees were offered similar deals and is bringing forward the lawsuit in their behalf as well as his own. Solomon, who says he was on the court at two-weeks-old, insists he didn't want his relationship with the Nuggets to come to an end like this. 'Never wanted things to go down this way,' he told CBS. 'But there are things they could've handled better -- not just with me -- but with others as well.' Kenn Solomon, Drake's father, originated the Rocky role, making his debut in December 1990. He acted as the Nuggets mascot for more than three decades before retiring in 2021. Drake first joined the organization as a member of the 'Promo Squad' in 2012. He also served as the backup mascot and his father's game-night assistant before taking over the role full time in 2021.


Daily Mail
2 days ago
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Priscilla Presley hits back at lawsuit claiming she 'pulled the plug' on daughter Lisa Marie's life support
Priscilla Presley has hit back at a bombshell $50million lawsuit claiming she 'pulled the plug' on daughter Lisa Marie's life support to regain control of the Presley estate. Elvis Presley's widow, 80, is being sued by former business partners Brigitte Kruse and Kevin Fialko, who allege she 'masterminded' a scheme to defraud them and exploited Lisa Marie's 2023 death - which Presley slammed as 'shameless and salacious' in a statement to the Daily Mail. The bombshell fraud and breach of contract lawsuit claims that 'opportunist' Presley 'clung' to Lisa Marie as the sole heir of Elvis' estate, and ignored her daughter's Advanced Health Care Directive by quickly taking her off life support after her cardiac arrest aged 54 in January 2023. The suit alleges that Presley 'ultimately wanted to control' her daughter's trust and Graceland' and that Lisa Marie had 'no desire to see or otherwise be near' her mother before they attended the 2023 Golden Globes in support of the Elvis biopic, two days before her death. 'Crucially, Priscilla was aware that Lisa was getting ready to remove her as the sole trustee of Lisa's irrevocable life insurance trust, and was otherwise threatening to sue her' the complaint states. Kruse and Fialko 'worked to keep the family together', per the suit, with Presley and Lisa Marie walking the red carpet together. It was claimed that a 'noticeably ill' Lisa Marie had complained to Presley about her health - who allegedly 'ignored the warning signs' and went with her to the Chateau Marmont for drinks. The suit alleges that Presley ignored her daughter's Advance Health Care Directive from 2010 which stated she wanted her life 'to be prolonged as long as possible' in making end-of-life decisions' - and 'pulled the plug within hours of Lisa being admitted.' Presley died from a small bowel obstruction caused by previous weight-loss surgery, 'Priscilla knew that Lisa's death neutralized the threat of Lisa's efforts to have Priscilla removed as the sole trustee of Lisa's irrevocable life insurance trust, and Priscilla ultimately wanted to control the Promenade Trust and Graceland' states the complaint. 'At her house the following week (before Lisa's funeral), Priscilla exclaimed, "I'm the queen. I'm in charge of Graceland", the suit added. Two weeks after Lisa Marie's death, Presley filed a legal challenge to her daughter's will - which gave control of Lisa Marie's wealthy Promenade Trust to her daughter Riley Keough. Presley's petition challenged a 2016 amendment to the Promenade Trust which removed her and former business manager, Barry Siegel, as trustees while appointing Keough and late brother Benjamin as co-trustees. The matter was settled five months later. The bombshell fraud and breach of contract lawsuit claims that 'opportunist' Presley 'clung' to Lisa Marie as the sole heir of Elvis' estate, and ignored her daughter's Advanced Health Care Directive by quickly taking her off life support in January 2023 - pictured 1970 Priscilla Presley's claims against former business partners in full - She alleges that she was pressured into signing over 20 different agreements in a 27 minute session at Kruse's house, which agreements Presley had never even seen before. - Presley contends that Kruse even tried to demand that Presley give up her cell phone and have all communication go through Kruse. - Presley alleges Kruse and her co-conspirators closed all of Presley's bank accounts and opened new ones on which they were signatories - Kruse and her co-conspirators torpedoed a deal that had been negotiated before they came into the picture and 'renegotiated' the deal, giving themselves over two-thirds of the proceeds (almost $300,000) for doing nothing. - Kruse and her co-conspirators took over $120,000 in 'commissions' from a deal that they had absolutely nothing to do with pertaining to the motion picture Priscilla. - Kruse and her co-conspirators duped Presley into shipping valuable personal property and highly confidential financial records to Kruse's home in Florida, promising to store them for free but then charging over $30,000 for moving and storage expenses. - To boost their own public profiles (not unlike what they are trying to accomplish with this latest absurd filing), Kruse and her co-conspirators negotiated to have the right to attend Presley's memorial service in the future. - When Priscilla Presley finally discovered the truth about Kruse's elder abuse and fraud, she closed a number of bank accounts that Kruse and her co-conspirators controlled, which went from having hundreds of thousands of dollars to having less than three thousand dollars. Kruse claims she and Fialko 'worked tirelessly' to negotiate a $2.4million settlement payment for Presley and 'a seven-figure deal for Priscilla's son, Navarone.' They claimed they were terminated days before the settlement was finalized, and never compensated for their work. Presley's attorney Marty Singer told the Daily Mail in a statement: 'This is, without a doubt, one of the most shameful, ridiculous, salacious, and meritless lawsuits I have seen in my practice. 'This is nothing more than a sad and vicious attempt to falsely tarnish the reputation of an eighty year old woman in blatant retaliation for bringing a lawsuit to redress the wrongful conduct of Brigitte Kruse, Kevin Fialko, and their co-conspirators. 'Kruse and her co-conspirators are now on their fourth different set of lawyers in this dispute, and this is a disgusting publicity stunt by new counsel, as evidenced by the fact that the complaint and press release were sent to the press before the complaint was served. 'Accusing a grieving mother of contributing to her daughter's death is not savvy advocacy; it is malicious character assassination, and should be broadly condemned. These fabricated claims have absolutely no validity and we are confident this case will be dismissed. 'Our client, Priscilla Presley filed a complaint over a year ago in which she alleges that she was the victim of a concerted effort by Brigitte Kruse and Kevin Fialko (among others) to isolate her from her trusted advisors and dupe her into signing a series of agreements in which Kruse contends she gave them a majority interest in Presley's own name, image, and likeness, in perpetuity, and that purportedly required Presley to get their permission before even accepting any offer of employment or otherwise. 'In an order on one of a series of motions that Kruse filed (and lost, one after the other) in a desperate effort to avoid facing responsibility for her actions, the Court found that, 'if plaintiff's allegations are true…it is classic elder abuse.' 'After suffering a series of defeats in lawsuits in both California and Florida, Kruse and her co-conspirators are desperately and transparently employing the strategy of 'the best defense is a good offense.' 'It will not work. It is also evident that Kruse, Fialko and her new 4th set of attorneys are not happy with the rulings this past year by the judge handling the existing case against Kruse and Fialko by going forum shopping to try and go before a different judge.' The statement added that Riley Keough 'stands behind her grandmother 100 per cent and is equally disgusted with this latest, vicious attempt by Kruse to attempt to ruin her grandmother's life.' The legal row first erupted in 2023 when Presley was sued for breach of contract by businesswoman Kruse - who said that she managed Presley's business and personal affairs when she was nearly broke and had outstanding tax debts of nearly $700,000. Presley denied these claims and in July 2024 sued for 'financial elder abuse' - claiming Kruse, Fialko, Vahe Sislyan and Lynn Walker Wright 'preyed on her' and stole over $1million from her - which was denied by their lawyers. In the lawsuit Kruse and Fialko filed in Los Angeles Superior Court on Monday, Stan Lee 's ex- business manager Keya Morgan - who was previously acquitted of theft charges against the Marvel icon - was accused of orchestrating Presley's elder abuse claims against Kruse and Fialko. Presley allegedly first approached Kruse and Fialko in 2022 when she was in 'severe financial distress'. They claim they restructured her finances, negotiated settlements and increased her event profits from under $10,000 to as much as $50,000 per show. The plaintiffs claim they formed several companies with Presley to 'exploit her NIL [Name, image, likeness] and invested 'large sums of money in merchandise, events, and marketing tied to Presley's image to enhance her depleted value.' The suit also alleges Presley falsely claimed ownership of her NIL, despite secretly selling the rights to the last name Presley and Graceland in 2005 for $6.5 million. It was alleged she 'never disclosed' this to Kruse and Fialko and later claimed that she 'forgot' about the deal. Morgan is accused of befriending Presley, threatening Kruse, and helping persuade Presley to sever ties with the plaintiffs by making elder abuse claims. It was claimed Morgan contacted Presley after the settlement saying that he could get the rights to her name, image and likeness back from Elvis Presley Enterprises, which manages Elvis Presley's intellectual property. The suit alleges after the settlement in 2023 Presley 'cut ties' with Priscilla Presley Partners, 'undermined their ventures, and began exploiting her NIL on her own, including high-profile appearances on NBC's Christmas at Graceland,, comic conventions, and promotional events) without disclosing or sharing proceeds. Presley is also accused of taking funds from company bank accounts and closing them without authorization and diverting endorsement payments to herself. Jordan Matthews, attorney for Kruse and Fialko, exclusively told the Daily Mail: 'Our lawsuit demonstrates for the first time where Priscilla got the idea to claim elder abuse. 'We have thorough documentation to show that the idea came from Keya Morgan, who is now a co-defendant in this lawsuit, making him a serial comic book villain in what we intend to demonstrate is a real life tale of lives destroyed due to one woman's desperation and greed.' He added: 'As detailed video recordings and communications already confirm, there is absolutely no evidence of undue influence, coercion, or elder abuse involved, only a legitimate, well-documented business partnership. 'The evidence will establish that the real victims here are my clients, who invested millions and years of hard work into revitalizing Priscilla Presley's brand, only to be betrayed and falsely accused once the money was on the table and every personal and business issue had been resolved. 'Our complaint alleges that Priscilla targeted Kruse and Fialko from day one, when she was in dire financial need, faced with mounting IRS debt and multiple lawsuits, even within her own family. 'The complaint alleges that Priscilla's relationship with her daughter was in ruins for decades and long before Kruse and Fialko were involved. Kruse and Fialko invested seven figures into rebuilding Priscilla's brand, stabilizing her finances, settling her lawsuits, cleaning up numerous private family ordeals, and attempting to help Priscilla repair her relationship with her daughter. Priscilla has, in turn, smeared Kruse and Fialko with false lies and malicious campaigns.' The plaintiffs are seeking more than $50 million in damages, including punitive damages, along with injunctive relief to stop Presley from using her name, image or likeness outside of the 'agreed upon corporate structures.' The Daily Mail has contacted representatives for Keya Morgan for comment and has yet to hear back. In court papers, which were filed in September 2023, Kruse said Presley had been 'about 60 days away from financial collapse' when she swooped in and got her affairs in order. Kruse said that she and the actress began a company Priscilla Presley Partners in 2022. Kruse told the court that she spent 'a significant amount of money and time' working on projects for Priscilla to capitalize on from publicity of the Sofia Coppola biopic Priscilla, which was released in October of 2023. Priscilla's lawyer Marty Singer said that the star ceased working with Kruse when she found out 'Kruse and her associate were attempting to misappropriate Ms. Presley's assets and were engaging in other acts of wrongdoing.' In July 2024 Presley accused Kruse, Fialko, Sislyan and Walker Wright of financial elder abuse in a lawsuit, and 'forcing her into a form of indentured servitude' in a 'meticulously planned and abhorrent scheme.' Presley said she met Kruse - in 2021 when Kruse ran a business selling Elvis memorabilia through an auction house. Kruse posed alongside Presley in an August 27, 2021 Instagram post in which she advertised a September 4, 2021 luncheon in Beverly Hills, California. The lawsuit claimed Kruse convinced Presley her former financial advisors were either 'deceitful or incompetent' - before allegedly duping her into signing contracts and forming companies which allowed her and her associates to get 80 per cent of her income - leaving Presley with 'just 20 percent of her own company.' Presley claimed the group left her with minority shares in companies they created which profited off her 'name, image and likeness'. The lawsuit was also against Priscilla Presley Partners, LLC. The lawsuit alleged funds from 2023 biopic Priscilla which starred Jacob Elordi and Cailee Spaeny were also misappropriated and branded Kruse a 'con artist and pathological liar.' Presley also claimed her ex-business associates 'torpedoed' a deal for the star to get an ownership interest in a cosmetics company - but instead settled for a $300,000 upfront payment - which she says they put in their own bank accounts. The lawsuit claimed the associates were 'setting up new accounts at their preferred banks (and poisoning the relationship Presley had for many years with her financial institutions), adding themselves to her bank accounts, transferring funds between accounts (and to their own personal accounts), and entering into sham, insider transactions for their own benefit.' The lawsuit also claimed Kruse and associates took $40,000 out of an account for her son Navarone Garibaldi without authorization, tried to make deals related to the late Lisa Marie's estate and fraudulently charged Presley for moving and storage expenses. Presley sued Kruse for more than $1million in damages and wanted the contracts she signed with Kruse and the other defendants voided. Legal representatives for Kruse and Fialko told the Daily Mail at the time: 'The suit filed is a retaliatory lawsuit due to the one filed by Priscilla's business partners last year. 'We are confident that the facts will speak for themselves and justice will prevail. It saddens all of us who dropped our lives to provide aid to a woman who needed help and she is now attempting to use her celebrity status to ruin the lives of kind, hardworking people.' A description on Kruse's Instagram page, which has more than 356,000 followers, lists Kruse as an Entrepreneur and Director of Operations for the brand Kruse GWS Auctions.


Daily Mail
3 days ago
- Daily Mail
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS reviews In Flight on Ch4: Spare a thought for the Bulgarian tourist board after this dark thriller
In Flight (Ch4) The opening three minutes of In Flight were crammed with so much backstory, I had to check this rush of events wasn't a recap of an earlier series. In a blur of flashback images, we saw a bunch of lads downing beer in a rough bar, a chase, a fight, and a frantic single mother flying across Europe to the aid of her 19-year-old son facing murder charges in a Bulgarian jail. After a tearful prison visit, we caught up with mum Jo months later, trying to hang on to her job as a flight attendant while fighting a solo legal battle. That's quite a set-up. For the first half-hour, Katherine Kelly battled to maintain the pace, but like a runner who starts a marathon with a sprint, she inevitably began to flag. Twice, she flopped down onto a mattress and appeared to pass out from sheer exhaustion. I don't blame her. At first it seemed this six-part thriller, which continues tonight, would concentrate on her struggle to win freedom for her son, helpfully named Sonny (Harry Cadby). But the plot took a twist after Jo went out drinking in a bar with friends, downing shots of vodka and red wine mixed with Coke — a hellish concoction. You would think that, after the trouble that booze bingeing caused her teenage son, she would be teetotal. Instead, she starts flirting with a bearded guy (Stuart Martin) whose Northern Irish accent is as intimidating as his leather jacket. Fishy tale of the night J.B. Gill went snorkelling over a reef in the English Channel off Bognor Regis, in Coastal Adventures (Ch5). He was looking for Stompy the stingray. 'He's huge but he hasn't got a sting,' said another diver. Sounds like Stompy is a big softy. When she arrives home at the end of the night, he's already let himself into the house, which seems a bit forward. Turns out he's a drugs runner for an organised crime gang, with one of those offers-you-can't-refuse: either she agrees to smuggle heroin in her cabin crew luggage allowance, or his associates in the East European jail will kill her son. All credit to Martin - I knew I recognised him from the moment he gave Jo a wolfish smile, but it wasn't till I Googled that the penny dropped: he was the urbane but irascible Inspector William Wellington in the Victorian detective show, Miss Scarlet And The Duke. The two roles could hardly be more different, and yet he seems naturally fitted for both. His sinister presence gives In Flight an edge of menace, leaving us genuinely fearful for Jo's safety. But she doesn't make it easy for us to warm to her. When she needs money or reassurance, she turns to former lover and customs officer Dom (Ashley Thomas), phoning him in the early hours of the morning even though he's married with a small child. And the first time she brings drugs through airport security, she switches bags with her best friend, so that if anyone does get caught, it won't be Jo. Charming. But if Jo's unlikeable, spare a thought for the Bulgarian tourist board. No one's going to be booking a holiday there after watching this.