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Fyre Festival's McFarland courts MAGA ahead of new business launch

Fyre Festival's McFarland courts MAGA ahead of new business launch

Daily Mail​5 days ago
By
Convicted fraudster Billy McFarland is heading to MAGA-friendly television to pitch his next eyebrow-raising business. And curiously, the disgraced former owner of the Fyre Festival brand isn't offering many details about what it is.
McFarland teased his next dubious product during the first episode of a brand new show, Real America's Pop Culture, a project of the MAGA-friendly Real America's Voice (RAV) hosted by Adrienne Gray. McFarland described his forthcoming venture as one that 'has more viability and fits better with [his] skill set than trying to do a festival.' 'We've built a new tech product,' he said.
After the disaster of the first Fyre Festival, McFarland was sentenced to six years in prison in 2018 for defrauding investors out of $26 million along with over $100,000 in additional fraudulent ticket-selling schemes. McFarland agreed to pay back his victims. Along with jail time he was ordered to forfeit the cash. After serving under four years of his six-year sentence, he was released to a halfway house, and was under house arrest until September 2022.
Real America's Pop Culture debuts on RAV Saturday at 7:00 PM EST, and the maiden episode was reviewed exclusively by the Daily Mail. Some of RAV's current big-name broadcasts include Steve Bannon's War Room, Jack Posobiec's Human Events Daily, and The Charlie Kirk Show. McFarland sold the intellectual property rights to Fyre Festival brand on ebay this week for a measly $245k, which he described as 'so low' while live-streaming the internet auction. The Fyre Festival founder described the sale to Gray as a way to put a 'bow on the chapter of Fyre' which would then allow him to 'move on' and reveal his next move that he's been 'working on' which he will be 'announcing this summer.'
Gray, a 36 year old mother of two young boys who lives in the Washington, D.C. metro area, told the Daily Mail that her vision is to 'create a show where we have an intersection of politics and pop culture.' Covering popular culture is a new venture for the conservative RAV network, and Real America's Pop Culture is planned to be the first show in an entirely new division called Real America's Music. 'I think about the show as ... my girlfriends group chat. It's the top headlines of the day in politics and the top, you know, headlines in pop culture,' Gray told the Daily Mail.
The show aims to bridge the gap between diverse personalities in American pop culture while engaging conservative audiences who care about music, movies, and entertainment as much as their liberal counterparts but have been abandoned by the left. Asked by the Daily Mail who her dream show guest is, Gray replied, 'obviously Trump. He's the pop culture president.'
Back in July of 2024, Rolling Stone reported that the Fyre Festival founder was acting as an intermediary between rappers and the Trump campaign, adding that 'McFarland has helped connect rappers with Trump at least twice.' McFarland also posted a photo with Trump on President's birthday in 2024. As the former host of The Apprentice for its first 14 seasons, Trump has spent more time in the pop culture spotlight than the political one.
Gray told the Daily Mail that the Trump era seems like the ideal time for conservatives to reclaim pop culture, and that the creation of content such as her show may even help the right politically in bridging the gap the problematic demographics, including suburban women and young voters in Generation Z. The show is not explicitly political despite it's home at RAV, and Gray plans to interview progressives and liberals as well as MAGA friendly celebrities. Real America's Pop Culture can be viewed on streaming platforms including Rumble, YouTube, and Roku TV starting Saturday evening.
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Mistress of 'killer' Colorado dentist testifies he sent photo of his wife as she lay dying in hospital
Mistress of 'killer' Colorado dentist testifies he sent photo of his wife as she lay dying in hospital

Daily Mail​

time13 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Mistress of 'killer' Colorado dentist testifies he sent photo of his wife as she lay dying in hospital

The woman who met and fell in love with accused wife poisoner James Craig testified he sent her photos of his dying wife, lied repeatedly, and asked her to visit just hours after learning his spouse was likely brain dead. Texas orthodontist Karin Cain, who met Craig at a dental conference in Las Vegas in February 2023, testified that he took her on a hike, out to dinner and spent time in her hotel room when she flew to Colorado to see him on March 16, 2023. Angela Craig, 43, the mother of Craig's six children, was declared brain dead on March 15 and died on March 18. Craig is charged with fatally poisoning the devout Mormon in the weeks after he met Cain. Prosecutors say he used cyanide, arsenic and tetrahydrozoline – a chemical found in eyedrops – to kill Angela amidst financial troubles and his budding romance. The defense argues that Angela was 'manipulative' and 'suicidal' – and that Cain was just the latest in a long line of extramarital relationships. One of Craig's attorneys sensationally revealed in court on Tuesday that he'd hired a Las Vegas prostitute at the same dental conference where he met the orthodontist. Cain spent more than four hours on the stand, her voice shaking with nerves as she occasionally cried, wiped her eyes with tissues and glared at the father of six sitting at the defense table. He appeared determined not to look back at her. She was at the end stage of divorce and had been 'single for almost four years' when she met Craig the month before Angela's murder, she told the court . He was in front of her in line for the bus to a dinner at the NFL stadium, she said – and it had 'felt intimidating to go to a big dinner by myself.' She said they quickly began sharing personal details about their marital struggles, and she emphasized how hard it had been 'discussing it with my kids.' Craig, Cain told the court, said he was in the 'same situation … also at the end of a hard divorce. The dentist 'shared with me how he and his wife had told the kids that they were divorcing' and 'how the kids had responded,' Cain testified. 'That was the thing that drew me to him: The conversations were very deep and honest and vulnerable.' She repeated 'honesty' ruefully as her voice trailed off, touching her forehead and blinking. Her marriage, Cain told the court, had 'been a really not safe place, and so when I felt all this safety … I felt seen and heard, and it was extremely comforting and drew me in.' The pair ate dinner together, she invited him to her room and they 'made out,' she said – but she felt the next day that it had been 'too much too fast.' She told him that she wanted to avoid full physical intimacy 'until I know this is my forever person … that's pretty hard, being this age, so it's a difficult thing to bring up to people. 'But he was very receptive and kind and felt like that was reasonable … he understood and agreed with the gravity of what that kind of physical intimacy means. 'We just had that agreement that that would be a boundary for us.' Cain and Craig went to the airport together on the final day of the event, kissed each other goodbye and boarded separately. The Colorado dentist gave her a different number to use from the one he'd been texting her from in Las Vegas, also warning that he'd 'go dark' at times if taking care of his kids. The next day, the father-of-six texted her: 'The problem is that I might be completely in love with you after three days, and that's nuts,' the court was shown. Cain, for her part, believed she was embarking on a relationship with Craig. 'This is was the first man I had had a one-on-one conversation with in 30 years that wasn't my husband,' she said on Tuesday. 'If I texted a man, I would put my husband in the chat with me so … I don't just casually connect with people. So it was something that I felt like had a potential to be a long term relationship.' She also believed Craig when he told her he 'was in a really difficult situation.' She took his word for it but noted he had no social media – and was further drawn in by the way Craig cared for his children, she said. 'Some nights, we would be on a voice call, and he would put his AirPods in and do his nighttime routine with his girls - praying with them and talking them through their day,' Cain said on Tuesday. 'So I got to see a lot of the spiritual fabric of how he was raising the kids. 'And he was just sharing with me how difficult it was, because he was no longer emotionally in this relationship,' she said. 'They had been separated for so long, he had been living on his own in this apartment for several months. He was just back at the house when she wasn't there to help take care of the kids... he was just this amazing father. 'The way that he talked with them and handled their emotions ... it was the same way he had dealt with me - where it was just like he had this incredible gift of making people feel so understood,' she said, crying. Craig falsely told Cain that he'd rented an apartment and was no longer living in the house with Angela. Texts shown in court revealed Cain repeatedly pressed him about the details of the divorce and he insisted that he and Angela's relationship was finished. 'She wasn't giving her whole self to me,' he texted Cain. 'It was fun, but I stopped feeling connected and vulnerable. I couldn't keep living like that. I needed full commitment, which means full vulnerability. I don't know if that makes sense; it's hard to explain that feeling adequately.' The pair exchanged 4,000 text messages and more than 80 declarations of love in less than three weeks. The pair repeatedly bonded over religion, prayer and discussions of God, and Craig often used flowery language - with words like 'celestial' and 'pulchritudinous.' As Angela deteriorated, Craig told Cain about her mystery illness - and that Angela was blaming him, saying he'd poisoned her. In one bizarre test, he told his new love: 'Just for the record, I will never drug you, I mean, in case that was something you were ever worried about.' He texted her a picture of her daughter comforting her in bed during one of her hospital admissions. At the same time, the court heard previously that he was still texting loving and encouraging messages to his wife as she grew sicker. Craig and Cain planned for her to make her first trip to visit him arriving March 16 - and he still urged her to come, despite his wife's brain death - and despite being confronted about a delivery of cyanide he had ordered to the office. The office manager at Craig's practice testified earlier in the trial that Craig had ordered a personal package, had it delivered to the office and told her not to open it - but she saw it contained potassium cyanide. She googled it, connected cyanide poisoning to Angela's symptoms and raised the alarm. By the night of March 15, Craig knew that he was under suspicion. He still urged Cain to come, and they enjoyed time together as the dentist and his family planned for her funeral and police searched his house. Craig told Cain she could just be introduced to friends and family as an orthodontist friend there to support him. She initially defended Craig, she testified, when detectives knocked on her hotel room door hours after Craig left on that trip. They told her he'd been arrested, and she soon told them things he'd said about Angela's alleged previous suicide attempts and their pending divorce. It was only later that Cain realized how much had been lies. But Craig continued to write her handwritten letters from jail, she said. She burned the first two but 'got in trouble' with authorities, she said, making the court laugh; the rest continued to confess his undying love. A fellow inmate who'd been behind bars at Arapahoe County Detention Facility followed Cain's testimony. Kacy Bohannon said he'd already gotten out when he saw Craig on the news and decided to tell authorities how the dentist had offered to pay his bond and give him free dental work in exchange for help. Craig wanted him to plant a fake Angela journal in his house or in his pickup for authorities to find, Bohannon said.

Tackling the rogue roofing gang conning Cornwall homeowners
Tackling the rogue roofing gang conning Cornwall homeowners

BBC News

time13 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Tackling the rogue roofing gang conning Cornwall homeowners

Homeowners in Cornwall are being warned about a gang of "rogue roofers" who try to con people out of Standards staff, who were joined by the BBC as they carried out their investigations, said the evidence showed the gang turn up to do small jobs and then tell victims their roof is unsafe and talk them into having the roof replaced, but the work is often poor victim who was conned out of £25,000 said she felt "embarrassed and ashamed" she fell for the Standards urged people to use reputable local companies and always get a proper written quote. 'I feel embarrassed' Jane - not her real name - had a leak in the roof of her mid-Cornwall home and posted the job on a handyman said: "First they quoted me £1,300 to fix the roof and tidy up the ridge tiles but when they turned up a couple of days later, they told me the tiles were all rotten and it would cost £15,000."Later she said the workers told her the rafters in her roof were all rotten and the job would now cost £25, paid the money and the job was done, but the work was of such low quality it is still leaking, and she has been told by a reputable roofing firm it will cost another £15,000 to do it properly."I feel embarrassed and ashamed that I fell for it but they were in my face and put me under so much pressure," she said."I do feel pretty stupid." Trading Standards officers have been supporting her with a follow-up visit, helping with documentation as she tries to claim money back from her Emil Gabriel, who is working on attachment with Trading Standards, said: "It's very frustrating that these people are so persuasive and so forceful, we like to give the victims as much support as we can."Most legitimate traders are busy and haven't got time to knock on people's doors so if someone does come, just say no."If they persist, then just close your door and call 999." The next visit for the team is a bungalow in Redruth where a man who had a small job completed on his roof is now being bombarded with calls, insisting more work needs to be Standards officer Matt Rawson has come to talk to him to prevent him from being ripped Rawson said: "Initially he needed four tiles replacing and they said they'd do it for just £25 per tile."But now they've upped the ante, saying his rafters are rotten and they're bombarding him with calls, telling him he has to honour the contract he signed. "Thankfully he has got in touch with us so we'll be taking the numbers he's been given and maybe we can take this further and move towards prosecution." According to Trading Standards guidance, home owners should check whether the firm has been vetted on Cornwall Council's Standards officers said many rogue traders were now using online directory services or social media and have moved away from "traditional" cold-calling on the advised people to get a quote which has details including what work was needed, the cost of materials and the timeframe for the agreeing works over the phone or at home have the legal right to cancel the contract within 14 days of the agreement, they added.

Congress to subpoena Maxwell amid political firestorm over Epstein files
Congress to subpoena Maxwell amid political firestorm over Epstein files

The Guardian

time39 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Congress to subpoena Maxwell amid political firestorm over Epstein files

Congress will subpoena Ghislaine Maxwell, the imprisoned sex trafficker who was a close associate of the notorious pedophile Jeffrey Epstein, to testify amid a political firestorm over the Trump administration's decision not to release its remaining Epstein files. The Tennessee Republican Tim Burchett introduced a motion to compel Maxwell, who is serving a 20-year sentence in a Florida prison for crimes related to the Epstein case, to testify before the House oversight committee. The move appears to skirt an announcement early on Tuesday that officials from the Department of Justice are also planning to meet with Maxwell. 'We got to send a message to these dirt bags,' Burchett said in a statement posted on X, referring to the list of clients and other Epstein enablers who are assumed to be included in the remaining Epstein files, the details of which are not publicly known. 'We've just got to get to the bottom of this thing, folks. It's four years and we don't need to tolerate this stuff any more.' Soon after Burchett's announcement, Mike Johnson, the Republican House speaker, said he was shutting down operations in the chamber early, sending lawmakers home before a five-week summer recess. They were scheduled to leave Washington for their districts on 24 July and be out through the month of August, but will now leave a day earlier. The decision comes as Democrats and a handful of Republicans continue to press for files related to Epstein, sending regular legislative schedules into chaos. 'We're not going to play political games with this,' Johnson said at a news conference. Separately, a New York judge has ordered that the Trump administration must send more documents to support its call to release secret grand jury testimony from the 2021 Maxwell prosecution. Judge Paul Engelmayer said New York federal court would like to 'expeditiously' resolve the Trump administration's request, but that it could not do so due to a number of missing submissions, including 'why disclosure is being sought in the particular case' and 'what specific information is being sought for disclosure', he wrote. Engelmayer said the government must file a memorandum of law no later than 29 July and ordered Maxwell and the victims to file their positions on the proposed disclosure by 5 August. The Epstein issue has plagued the Trump administration as the president's own supporters buck him and clamor for more information, and as details continue to emerge about Trump's personal connections with Epstein, who was a friend of his for many years until they fell out. Last week, the Wall Street Journal reported that Trump had sent Epstein a lewd drawing along with a suggestive dialogue between the two men. The Trump administration responded by suing the newspaper and its owner, Rupert Murdoch. The issue has also riven Capitol Hill. On Tuesday, the Republican-led House of Representatives, led by Trump ally Johnson – who recently undermined the president by calling for the release of all files, only to back down several days later – voted to start its summer holiday early in order to avoid Epstein-related votes planned for Thursday. Burchett said he had introduced the motion directing James Comer, chair of the committee, to authorize and issue a subpoena for Maxwell. Comer was 'down with it', Burchett said. 'I believe he's going to issue the subpoena. He's a stand-up guy.' Sign up to This Week in Trumpland A deep dive into the policies, controversies and oddities surrounding the Trump administration after newsletter promotion He also acknowledged that he would receive 'blowback, and folks up here are going to be mad at me, but ultimately and with all sincerity, I'm gonna answer my creator on this issue'. Burchett told Axios that he did not consult Trump before calling on the committee to subpoena Maxwell. He has previously written to Comer urging him to bring Maxwell in to testify. 'She's the last one standing,' he told Axios. 'There's nobody else alive that can tell us anything.' He also said he believes Maxwell could 'tell us the operation, how it went down, who were the supporters of it … Ultimately I'd like to see justice.' The announcement came hours after the justice department said it was planning to send Todd Blanche, the US deputy attorney general, to Florida to meet with Maxwell. Lawyers for Maxwell said on Tuesday evening in a court filing that they had spoken to Blanche, Reuters reported. Last week, Trump directed the attorney general, Pam Bondi, to ask a court to release all relevant grand jury testimony in Epstein's case. Maxwell attorney David Oscar Markus confirmed on X 'that we are in discussions with the government and that Ghislaine will always testify truthfully'. On Tuesday morning, Blanche also released a statement, posted by Bondi, saying that he plans to meet with Maxwell 'in the coming days'. Blanche's statement also defended the department's early July release, saying it was 'as accurate today as it was when it was written'.

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