WebProNews

Tag: wyoming

  • Google Now Facing Third Suit, As 30 State Sue Over ‘Illegal Monopoly’

    Google Now Facing Third Suit, As 30 State Sue Over ‘Illegal Monopoly’

    Google is being sued by 30 states, as the company faces its third lawsuit over abusing its monopoly in search and online advertising.

    Google is already facing lawsuits by the Department of Justice (DOJ), as well as a coalition of 10 states. The new lawsuit is led by Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser, and includes Alaska, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wyoming, the District of Columbia, and the territories of Guam and Puerto Rico.

    “Our economy is more concentrated than ever, and consumers are squeezed when they are deprived of choices in valued products and services. Google’s anticompetitive actions have protected its general search monopolies and excluded rivals, depriving consumers of the benefits of competitive choices, forestalling innovation, and undermining new entry or expansion,” Weiser explained. “This lawsuit seeks to restore competition.”

    The scope of this lawsuit goes beyond the previous two, accusing Google of “engaging in a multi-pronged effort to maintain its monopolies.” In particular, “Google’s acquisition and command of vast amounts of data obtained because of consumers’ lack of choice has fortified Google’s monopolies and created new barriers to competition and consumer value.”

    The states have filed a motion to join their case with the DOJ’s case, which could significantly expand the scope of the DOJ’s case.

  • Jessica Biel and Justin Timberlake Have Positive Parenting Plans

    Jessica Biel is looking thin and trim these days, and it’s only been three months since she and hubby Justin Timberlake welcomed baby Silas into their world. The new parents were spotted out in L.A. on Wednesday, sans their baby boy, enjoying a bit of couple time.

    Both Justin Timberlake and Jessica Biel were dressed down for their outing. She wore jeans with holes in them, topped with a white t-shirt and dark shades. He wore jeans and a gray t-shirt–topping his look off with a baseball cap. Kudos to them for enjoying time together without dressing up for the paparazzi.

    Simplicity seems to be paramount to the Timberlake family’s way of life. It was reported earlier that Jessica Biel and Justin Timberlake plan to raise their son away from the hustle and bustle of L.A. and the constant lenses of the relentless paparazzi. The family has a home in Big Sky, Montana, where Justin and Jessica believe is the perfect place to raise their baby.

    “Their house is all set up for the baby,” a source said this past spring. “Jessica sees herself as a mom of boys, so it worked out perfectly,” the source added. “Justin is so excited, he doesn’t know what to do with himself!”

    The former 7th Heaven star and the “Suit & Tie” singer certainly seem to have their act together and their priorities straight. While many celebrities like to flaunt their babies in the limelight, Jessica Biel and Justin Timberlake seem far more interested in squirreling theirs away and raising him in a far less hectic environment.

    Don’t you think Jessica Biel and Justin Timberlake sound like they’ve got a great handle on this parenting thing?

  • Sandra Bullock Celebrates 50th Birthday in Wyoming

    Sandra Bullock celebrated her 50th birthday far away from the glitz and glamour of Hollywood last week.

    The A-list actress turned the big 5-0 on Saturday, but Thursday evening she was in Jackson Hole, WY with a handful of friends and her younger sister Gesine.

    Comedian and talk show host Chelsea Handler posted a photo of Bullock and Gesine on Instagram, captioning it simply “Happiest birthday.”

    The group celebrated at the Million Dollar Cowboy Bar, where the Southern Soul Allstars were performing.

    “They said they kept it [quiet] because she sometimes likes to just act like a normal person,” said Dianne McManus, who performs vocals, piano, and keyboard for the group. “They came out and danced and took a bunch of pictures.”

    A source told E! News that the group of friends entered the bar between 9:00 pm and 10:00 pm Thursday night: “There were probably six to ten women in the group. It appeared to be a ladies night … They just came in to listen to the band.”

    Comedian Whitney Cummings posted a photo of the bar’s neon sign on Instagram Friday. The caption read “Now I know where all the cowboys have gone. Let’s go make some bad choices!”

    Word must have spread quickly about the party because, according to the Southern Soul Allstars’ Facebook feed, the bar was packed the following night with people hoping Bullock and her friends would show up again.

    McManus had just watched Gravity on Wednesday and, unaware that Bullock was present Thursday night, she gave the movie a “pretty bad review [on stage], saying why would you do a movie where George Clooney died in the first 30 minutes and she didn’t even kiss him?”

    McManus said she’s a huge fan of Bullock and wouldn’t have made the comments if she’d known the star was in the audience.

    Image via Instagram, Chelsea Handler

  • Lone Ranger Pistol Now in Wyoming Museum

    Last year’s The Lone Ranger movie may have been a disaster with both critics and audiences, but the legend of the masked hero still lives on. Now people in Wyoming will get to see a piece of that legend as the Lone Ranger’s pistol has made its way to a Cody, Wyoming museum.

    According to a Powell Tribune report, the Buffalo Bill Center of the West is now home to the Lone Ranger’s Colt. 45 revolver. The weapon was used by the character in the famous TV series that introduced the Lone Ranger to many Americans.

    The pistol was carried by actor John Hart during his time as the Lone Ranger on the original TV series. Though the show aired from 1949 to 1957, Hart played the titular character for only one season. Actor Clayton Moore (pictured) is more widely recognized as the Lone Ranger from the TV series, but was replaced by Hart during the show’s third season due to a contract dispute Moore had with ABC.

    Hart, who had experience in TV westerns, was tapped to replace Moore for 52 episodes of the series. Hart also stepped back into the Lone Ranger’s boots for two 1980s-era TV shows, including a Happy Days episode titled “Hi Yo, Fonzie Away.” He also appeared in dozens of other TV shows throughout the 50s, 60s, and 70s.

    Hart died in September 2009 at the age of 91.

    The pistol, which belonged to Hart, is now on display in the Cody Firearms Museum at the Buffalo Bill Center of the West. This particular revolver features an engraved pattern and ivory grips displaying the skull of a steer.

    Along with the pistol the museum now also has autographed photos of Hart and a signed copy of the actor’s cookbook/memoir “Cowboys in the Kitchen.” In addition to recipes the book contains stories from Hart’s acting career and life.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Wyoming Explosion Clears Out Town of 98

    Wyoming Explosion Clears Out Town of 98

    An explosion at a natural gas plant in Wyoming has prompted the evacuation of the town of Opal, population 98. Opal is situated roughly five miles from the Williams Gas Plant, which was shut down after an explosion occurred on-site at about 2 p.m. MDT Wednesday.

    Williams Gas Plant spokesperson Michele Swaner reported that there were no injuries in the incident, and the Wyoming Department of Transportation confirmed that no one was hurt. Swaner added that all 42 plant workers have been accounted for, and that arrangements are being made to assist evacuees affected by the explosion.

    Lincoln County public information officer Stephen Malik said, “Last information we have, there’s still no confirmed reports of any injuries, and we’ve evacuated the town of Opal as a precaution.”

    Swaner also stated that the exact cause of the explosion is still under investigation – “It’s a big gas processing plant, it’s huge, and we believe the fire and explosion occurred in our turboexpander … and we have five of them at that facility so the explosion and fire occurred in that area.”

    Opal is a town in Lincoln County, Wyoming, United States comprising 38 households and 28 families, as of 2010. According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 0.39 square miles. Males in Opal have a median income of $50,750 versus $0 for females.

    How to pronounce “Opal, Wyoming” is explained by an android here:

    Opal evacuees are currently staying at area hotels including Little America and a Best Western.

    Image via Facebook

  • Wyoming Firing Squad: Lawmaker’s Execution Proposal Won’t Be Considered

    Wyoming lawmaker Bruce Burns sponsored a bill to make death by firing squad an option in his state, but the state senate voted against considering the bill on Tuesday. Burns proposed this alternate method to carry out a capital punishment sentence last month. Now that the firing squad option is off the table in Wyoming, Missouri is the only other state trying to pass this method of execution.

    Capital punishment is legal in 32 states, with lethal injection being the most common method of executing a death row inmate. A few other states have backup execution options, should the drugs needed to carry out lethal injection be unavailable, should legal issues arise or should an inmate request at alternate method of death. Death by hanging, electrocution and the gas chamber are options in other states, and two states have death by firing squad as an option–Oklahoma and Utah.

    Burns, a state senator from Sheridan, sought to make death by firing squad an option in Wyoming since the state doesn’t currently have a gas chamber, which is their backup option. “The state of Wyoming doesn’t have a gas chamber currently, an operating gas chamber, so the procedure and expense to build one would be impractical to me,” Burns said.

    “One of the reasons I chose firing squad as opposed to any other form of execution is because frankly it’s one of the cheapest for the state,” Burns said. “The expense of building a gas chamber I think would be prohibitive when you consider how many people would be executed by it, and even the cost of gallows.”

    Not only does Burns consider the costs involved in building a gas chamber to be wasteful, the senator also thinks that a gas chamber is cruel and unusual punishment. “I consider frankly the gas chamber to be cruel and unusual, so I went with firing squad because they also have it in Utah,” Burns said.

    After Burns proposed the bill, the Wyoming senate voted against considering it 17 to 13. Burns needed two-thirds of the vote to have the bill considered. Since Wyoming has only executed one inmate since 1992 and has only one inmate on death row right now, it isn’t likely that the issue of the state not having a backup to lethal injection will arise anytime soon.

    Image via YouTube

  • Wyoming Explosion Leaves Workers Seriously Injured

    Around 10:18 am yesterday, a blast was reported at Encana Corp’s Antelope 91-29H facility, a natural gas field established on the Jonah Field of western Wyoming.

    According to NBC News, firefighters extinguished the flames by 1 p.m. that same day, but not before the fire left one worker in critical condition, another in serious condition and two more in stable condition. The fifth injured worker was treated and released from a hospital that same day.

    The scene is now being investigated by The Occupational Safety and Health Administration to determine the cause of the explosion.

    Condensate tanks on location were undergoing welding work, but the spokeswoman of Encana Oil & Gas USA says that the company is not sure if that caused the explosion. Condensate tanks, which hold high amounts of pressurized steam, have the potential to be highly explosive.

    Our thoughts are with the injured and their families as we wish them a speedy recovery.

    Image: Encana Oil & Gas USA website

  • Wyoming Doomsday Bill: When Armageddon Visits The Equality State

    Wyoming Doomsday Bill: When Armageddon Visits The Equality State

    Lack of food rations. No electricity. Broken government. Money is meaningless. Lawlessness. Sounds like the end of the world, doesn’t it? To Wyoming it sure does, and accordingly the state government has drafted a bill to prepare for the consummate collapse of society so that the Equality State can march onward into a future uncertain.

    House Bill 85, which is being risibly touted as a “Doomsday Bill,” was briefly on the menu for the Wyoming House of Representatives this past Tuesday, which would have made provisions against all of the aforementioned symptoms of the end of the world. In essence, with armageddon bearing down on us and the United States government at a loss to help its citizens, House Bill 85 would have called for the assembly of a task force capable of governing the fair state of Wyoming through the dark lands of armageddon.

    As far as the composition of the task force goes, it would have contained the types of dignitaries you might expect to protect the the citizens of Wyoming should the end of the world arise: four members of state government, director of homeland security, the attorney general, and a couple of energy and agriculture specialists. This nine-member squad would be all that stands between Wyoming and the depravity that surely sweeps across the United States once the bottom falls out of society.

    House Bill 85 was eventually voted down, but just narrowly. Republican Rep. David Miller, the bill’s sponsor, said that while he didn’t expect America to slip off into armageddon anytime soon, the mounting national debt and active protests seen throughout the country inspired in him concern that Wyoming needs protection. And not just any protection, either: they want an aircraft carrier.

    And in case that joke buzzes over you, consider: aircraft carriers need an ocean. Now, go look at where Wyoming is on a map.

    What’s more incredible than the end of the world? Miller didn’t even really seem to take his own bill seriously. After it was rejected, he shared his wonderment that the bill even made it as far as it did. “I think the political class here in Cheyenne has a little myopic view of the world in relation of what government can do to people,” Miller said.

    The Twitter class, however, has a bemused view of the world of Wyoming:

    Wyoming is landlocked. Where was it going to go? MT @ByronTau: Wyoming was weighing building their own aircraft carrier http://t.co/irLER7tv(image) 4 hours ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    RT @pkedrosky: Oh, for crying out loud: Wyoming House advances doomsday bill http://t.co/wMyIS4qP <– Idiocracy has arrived(image) 3 days ago via TweetDeck ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    The United State of Wyoming. An Aircraft Carrier and a Draft. Holy New Country. Rep backed of course. http://t.co/OeKBxnnK(image) 13 minutes ago via Twitter for Android ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    in another step to the stone age:
    Wyoming narrowly defeats measure to prepare for apocalypse http://t.co/AP0bRFRt from @iNewsApp(image) 50 minutes ago via iNews ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Evidently wyoming has nothing better to do http://t.co/wCBkFZwx(image) 24 minutes ago via Twitter for Android ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Wow 27 lawmakers in Wyoming think the state should have it’s own Aircraft Carrier if armageddon hits. http://t.co/IJ2tYzxh(image) 1 hour ago via Twitter for Mac ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Wyoming Wants Their Own Currency, a Draft, and a Freaking Aircraft Carrier In case of Doomsday | http://t.co/nyVKNpP6(image) 1 day ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Wyoming: Where Armageddon Comes Home to Roost.