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‘Doggie Do Good’ Creates Special Bonds At Lompoc Federal Penitentiary

Kraig Pakulski 0 10 Article rating: No rating

LOMPOC, Calif. (KEYT) - A non-profit organization from Arroyo Grande is working with the federal penitentiary in Lompoc to teach inmates the skill of training specialized service dogs.

In a manner of speaking, “Doggie Does Good” for United States Penitentiary, Lompoc’s Cuffs And Paws program.

These dogs are being trained from puppy age for specialized service to people with disabilities such as epilepsy or diabetes.

Their trainers are inmates at United States Penitentiary, Lompoc, learning the skill while serving their sentences.

The non-profit’s goal is to make it easier for those with special needs, who can benefit from a specialized service canine, to be connected with the right dog.

Program coordinators say it can take up to 3 to 5 years for someone who needs a specially trained service dog to get one.

The dogs are carefully chosen for the program, taking breed, temperament, and intelligence into account.

Incarcerated individuals are likewise, selected through strict vetting processes to become primary trainers and live with the pups on a full-time basis.

Once these dogs graduate in a matter of a year or two, they will go to families and individuals who need them for their keen canine sensibilities.

The inmates who trained them will have the skill of service dog training on their resume once they reach their rehabilitation goals.

Program leaders say many inmates who have participated in the program go on to successfully pursue careers as specialized service dog trainers.

Participating inmates say they had never heard of this kind of program in prisons, but are glad the idea is catching on.

In recent years, similar programs have reared up in almost every state.

You can learn more about the non-profit Doggie Do Good and their service dog training programs by clicking here to visit their website.

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Las claves de “The Boys: México”, la nueva serie de superhéroes producida por Diego Luna y Gael García Bernal

Kraig Pakulski 0 13 Article rating: No rating

Por Gonzalo Jiménez, CNN Español

“The Boys”, la serie televisiva que satiriza a los superhéroes, concluyó este miércoles con la emisión del episodio final. La serie se transmitió durante cinco temporadas, pero su universo continuará a través de dos spinoffs confirmados, uno de los cuales, “The Boys: México”, tiene entre sus productores ejecutivos a Diego Luna y Gael García Bernal.

Publicado como un cómic en 2006 creado por Garth Ennis y Darick Robertson, “The Boys” es una parodia de los superhéroes, preguntándose cómo se comportarían unas personas con súperpoderes, cómo actuaría la corporación que financió los experimentos para darles estas habilidades, pero, sobre todo, ¿serían los superhéroes benévolos o abusarían de sus poderes? “The Boys” se centra precisamente en un grupo de personas comunes y corrientes que ha sufrido a manos de estos superhéroes, en especial a manos del psicópata Homelander, y deciden acabar con ellos por todas las vías posibles.

Su adaptación en serie se estrenó en 2019 y, a lo largo de cinco temporadas, enfrentó a “los muchachos”, liderados por el implacable Butcher (Karl Urban), contra Los 7 (equivalente a la Liga de la Justicia de DC Comics), comandados por Homelander (Antony Starr).

En 2023, Prime Video estrenó el primer spinoff de “The Boys” llamado “Gen V”, centrado en una universidad, fundada por la corporación Vought (creadora del compuesto V, que otorga superpoderes) para entrenar a jóvenes en el manejo de sus habilidades sobrehumanas. Su protagonista es Marie Moreau (Jaz Sinclair), capaz de controlar la sangre de cualquier ser vivo, con lo que se convierte en uno de los superhéroes más poderosos de esta historia.

Lamentablemente, “Gen V” fue cancelada tras apenas dos temporadas, dejando inconclusa su historia, aunque algunos de sus personajes aparecieron en “The Boys”.

A continuación, referimos las claves de las otras series del universo “The Boys” que están en desarrollo.

Según el sitio web Internet Movie Database, el creador y guionista de “The Boys: México” es el mexicano Gareth Dunnet-Alcocer, conocido por escribir las películas “Miss Bala” (2023) y “Blue Beetle”, basada en el superhéroe de origen latino de DC Comics. (DC Comics forma parte, al igual que CNN Español, de Warner Bros. Discovery).

“The Boys: México” fue anunciada en 2023. En una entrevista con Entertainment Weekly el pasado abril, el showrunner de “The Boys”, Eric Kripke, dijo que el guion del episodio piloto de la nueva serie fue presentado a Prime Video y que la reacción fue positiva, anque con algunas notas con observaciones por parte del estudio.

La novedad de esta serie es que cuenta como productores a Diego Luna (“Andor”) y Gael García Bernal (“Amores perros”), quienes han trabajado en conjuntos en películas como “Y tu mamá también” (2001), “Rudo y Cursi” (2008) y “Chicuarotes” (2019), entre otras.

Se ignoran los detalles de “The Boys: México”, así que cabe espera que esta serie no se estrenará antes de 2028. García Bernal dijo a Variety en 2023: “Estoy muy emocionado por lo que podemos hacer, porque podemos hacer algo muy interesante en América Latina”. Cabe esperar que la sátira de “The Boys” a la política estadounidense se traduzca en una crítica también a la política mexicana.

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House passes housing affordability bill that softens institutional investor ban

Kraig Pakulski 0 9 Article rating: No rating
Construction workers build a home at a new housing development on July 1

By Samantha Delouya, CNN

(CNN) — A landmark housing affordability package moved one step closer to becoming law on Wednesday after winning bipartisan approval in the House of Representatives.

The measure is an amended version of the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act, which cleared the Senate in March.

The bill, which won approval in a sweeping vote of 396-13, aims to tackle the housing crisis from multiple angles: expanding loans to construct housing, pushing local governments to loosen permitting rules, expanding manufactured housing, and curbing Wall Street’s ownership of single-family homes.

Together, the House and Senate proposals signal that Washington is treating America’s housing affordability crisis with new urgency. If enacted, the measures would amount to one of the most sweeping federal housing efforts in decades.

But while the two bills share broad goals, they diverge in key areas. Most notably, the House version takes a softer approach to restricting institutional investors from buying single-family homes than the Senate proposal.

The two governing bodies will have to reconcile the differences before the law hits President Donald Trump’s desk.

Senate Banking Committee leaders, Senators Tim Scott and Elizabeth Warren, will discuss the House bill with Republican and Democratic senators to get their view on the changes, a Senate aide told CNN on Wednesday.

Earlier this month, Trump expressed his support for the Senate’s bill in a social media post, writing that the measure “would ensure that homes are for people, not corporations.”

The institutional investor ban

This is the second version of the House bill to advance this year. An earlier draft stopped short of restricting large institutional investors from buying single-family homes.

But the Senate’s proposal, introduced after an executive order from Trump, would ban investors and companies from buying single-family homes if they already own 350 or more. It would also target the fast-growing “build-to-rent” industry by requiring developers to sell those homes within seven years. Critics warned the measure could severely hamper new rental construction.

The House measure passed Wednesday keeps the Senate’s broader limits on institutional investors purchasing single-family homes, but eliminates the requirement that investors sell build-to-rent and renovate-to-rent properties.

Instead, House lawmakers opted for a lighter measure: creating a hotline for tenants living in properties owned by large institutional investors.

The bill’s passage was applauded in a joint statement by 11 national housing organizations, including the National Association of Home Builders and the Mortgage Bankers Association.

“The revised Act, like all compromise legislation, is not perfect. Nevertheless, it is one that our organizations support as it encompasses some of the most significant housing proposals in a generation,” the statement said.

“As the process moves forward, it will be vital that the final language safeguards millions of BTR homes and the individuals and families that are building their lives in them,” the statement said.

What is in the bill

The bill aims to expand the housing supply through streamlined environmental reviews, grants for local housing planning and office-to-

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