After His Wife's Death, Man Still Uses The Last Coffee Can She Bought

When his wife of 41 years died of skin cancer in 2012, David Hoskins packed up and moved in with his daughter to nearby Hazard, Kentucky.

Hoskins didn’t take much with him, but he kept two things: the last can of coffee his wife Karen bought before she got sick and the spoon she used to stir her coffee every morning. 

Five years later, the 66-year-old widow still uses both every day. 

“Looking at that picture of him with his coffee can, you’d never know that that’s all he has left of her,” his daughter Kim Hoskins Fields wrote in a now-viral Facebook post shared on the page Love What Matters on Saturday. “Because that’s how they always started their day was with coffee, and so each day he starts his day with my mama.”

In an interview with The Huffington Post, Hoskins Fields said the spoon and the Maxwell House coffee canister ― which her dad refills when it starts to get low ― are sacred items in her home.

“When he moved in his things, he told me to never throw the can away and to never touch the spoon inside of it,” she said. “He didn’t want it mixed up with my other spoons.” 

“I kind of laughed and asked him why,” Hoskins Fields said. “He explained that it was all he kept because it made him feel close to her, like she was still there each morning.” 

The couple had six kids during their marriage (two from Hoskin’s previous marriage), so couple-time was often in short supply. Every morning, though, they made time for coffee. 

“Even when I was little and she went to work super early he would get up with her and have a cup,” their daughter said. 

Karen’s diagnosis of melanoma in October 2012 came out of nowhere and he grappled with the news, according to his daughter. Two months later, Karen died.

“When she was dying, he made himself sick with worry and tried to save her,” Hoskins Fields said. “He begged and pleaded with God. He would have traded anything, gave anything or done anything to save her.” 

These days, coffee is all Hoskins needs to remember his late wife. 

“He says he has all the pictures and memories he wants in his mind,” she said. “He kept what he knew would make him feel the closest to her.” 

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Tattoo Of Packer's Aaron Rodgers In Jockstrap Has Homophobes Losing Their Minds

A tattoo artist in Denver, Colorado, enraged a group of homophobic trolls on Friday when she posted a new piece of work depicting a male figure wearing a jockstrap and Green Bay Packer Aaron Rodgers’ football jersey.

Alisha Rice did not expect the backlash when she posted the photo on her Instagram ― but trolls were quick to emerge from the depths of the internet.

One user wrote, “What in tarnation is this gay ass sh*t? This is what y’all do up in Wisconsin? Don’t even look like his face and that helmet is severely f**ked. This some homo ass sh*t.”

Another added, “The gayest tattoo ever. I’m sure A rod don’t want this shit on anyone.” There are many, many other comments that can be viewed on the artist’s Instagram.

“The idea for the tattoo was a combination of the client wanting a traditional American style male pinup and a packers tattoo,” Rice, who has been tattooing since 1992, told The Huffington Post. “The tattoo was never supposed to be Aaron Rodgers specifically but his jersey was added as a detail to make the Packers idea more prominent. That particular jersey was selected because Aaron Rodgers is a football legend and the client admires him as a player and as a person.”

Two days after posting the initial image of the tattoo, the 43-year-old artist followed up with another post directly challenging the “homophobic football fans and armchair tattoo critiques” she had received: 

Rice told The Huffington Post the tattoo was never meant to be a comment on Rodgers’ sexuality, as some commenters charged, but instead was “just meant to be a fun, tongue in cheek ode to team.” 

She added, “If anyone has an issue with the tattoo I’d challenge them to ask themselves why and reflect on the apparent double standard regarding the sexualization of the male and female forms.”

Alisha Rice is tattoos at Think Tank Tattoo in Denver, Colorado. For more from her, check out her Instagram page here.

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May We All Be As Chill As Pope Benedict On His 90th Birthday

The best job in the world right now is ex-pope.

Case in point, Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI.

Far removed from Vatican scandals and intrigue, Benedict quietly enjoyed his 90th birthday on Monday, listening to traditional Bavarian music from his native Germany, enjoying the sunny Italian weather, and sipping on a tall glass of beer. 

Benedict, formerly Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, was elected as head of the global Catholic Church on April 19, 2005. His papacy was riddled with troubles, including accusations that the church hadn’t done enough to help victims of clergy child-abuse, and the alleged theft of Benedict’s private papers by his own butler. 

The former pontiff broke with six centuries of tradition back in 2013 by stepping down from his post, citing health concerns and prompting the election of Pope Francis. It was an unexpected move for Benedict, a pope who was known for being staunchly conservative and a stickler for the rules.

But that’s old news for Benedict right now. 

Free from the demands that his successor Francis has to shoulder, Benedict now lives in a monastery on Vatican City grounds and spends much of his time in prayer. 

In a recent interview with the Italian newspaper Il Messaggero, one of Benedict’s close friends Archbishop George Gänswein, said that although the pope emeritus has troubles with his health, he still writes “a lot” and responds to mail from around the world. 

The German pope was born on April 16, 1927 in a Bavarian town called Marktl-am-Inn. Since his birthday coincided with Easter Sunday this year, he had a small, informal celebration on Monday with a few close friends ― and some men dressed in traditional German attire. His birthday celebration helped to bring his hometown alive, with gifts of pretzels and beer.

According to the Catholic News Service, Benedict said he was thankful for the “90 years the good Lord has given me.”

“There have been trying and difficult times, but he always guided me and pulled me through.”

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Sexual Assault Survivors Gather Outside Fox News To Demand Bill O'Reilly Be Fired

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NEW YORK, NY ― On Tuesday, a few dozen women and men gathered outside of Fox News headquarters to send one simple message: fire Bill O’Reilly.

“Hey hey, ho ho, Bill O’Reilly’s got to go,” chanted protesters, holding signs with slogans like, “Talk to me about revolution and a world without rape!!,” and the more straightforward, “Fox: Fire Sexual Predator Bill O’Reilly.” 

Women’s group UltraViolet staged the protest in response to the allegations of sexual harassment made against the “O’Reilly Factor” host, which the New York Times first reported on earlier this month.

Fox and O’Reilly have reportedly paid out a collective $13 million over the course of 15 years to settle the claims of five different women. The allegations against O’Reilly included “verbal abuse, lewd comments, unwanted advances and phone calls in which it sounded as if Mr. O’Reilly was masturbating.” (Two of the settlements were reached after former Fox News Chairman and CEO Roger Ailes left the company in the wake of his own sexual harassment scandal.)

Tuesday morning, The Hollywood Reporter reported that a new accuser came forward with allegations of harassment through the Fox News hotline. The woman, who has been identified as an African-American clerical worker at the network, said (through her attorney, Lisa Bloom) that O’Reilly would “leer at her,” and called her “hot chocolate.”

O’Reilly is currently on a two-week vacation, which he claims had been planned since last year. In his absence, advocates have been vocal in their insistence that he not be allowed to return to air. The Intelligencer reported that “while no final decision has been made, the Murdochs are leaning toward announcing that O’Reilly will not return to the air.”

Speakers at today’s demonstration connected a culture of condoning workplace sexual harassment with President Donald Trump, an accused sexual predator who has publicly defended O’Reilly

“It is outrageous that Fox News is even considering whether or not they should fire Bill O’Reilly. It’s not a question,” said speaker Carol Barash, who is a rape crisis advocate and sexual assault survivor. “We have a man in the highest position of power right now ― our president ― who is a serial sexual predator who came out and said, immediately without hearing the details of what’s going on, with this Bill O’Reilly scandal that he did nothing wrong; that he was a nice guy. Well, that’s not the story that we’re hearing from all of these women. So by not condemning this behavior, Fox News is elevating it to a pervasive level, demonstrating to all of their employees that this is acceptable, that it is expected and allowed. It is not.” 

The atmosphere outside of Fox headquarters was tense, as several men passing by the protest became verbally combative with protesters. 

“Bill’s a good guy! Forget about it!,” a middle-aged man in a gray suit yelled as he walked by. 

“Bill O’Reilly’s a legend!,” fist-pumped another, younger, suited man. 

“Stop acting like fools, people,” said diamond wholesaler Auri Ambalu, who stopped to engage with protesters. “It happens in life, what are you going to do? There’s nothing you can do about this, that’s world that we live in today. You have to accept certain things the way they are and that’s the way it is.”

But the protesters, including 69-year-old Brooklyn resident Sally Moses disagreed with Ambalu’s sentiments.

“There are a lot of people who are part of the problem and they’re not in touch with their own personal power,” she said. “They don’t understand what can happen with a voice… If I can say one thing that might wake someone up and there’s no guarantee but I’m willing to take five minutes, then I’m willing to try.”

Moses explained to HuffPost why she had made the time to come out and demonstrate:

For one thing, I don’t want people to get away with things that are so hurtful, as is misogyny [and] sexual assault. And I made the time to be here because I’ve been subjected to this kind of thing and I know how pervasive it is.

I remember the days that the relatives of two of my very close friends ― one in junior high and one in college ― I was walking past them and these men grabbed my breast. It was fast, and I thought did something really happen just now? And it wasn’t until I was 38, resuming my education back at Mills College in Oakland, California that we had Sexual Assault Awareness Week and I learned what sexual assault is. And I don’t understand why a lot of these men don’t get it. But then if I were the one in power, I might not want to get it either. 

In addition to staging the demonstration, UltraViolet launched two online petitions, one calling on Fox to fire O’Reilly, and another asking “O’Reilly Factor” advertisers to pull their ads from the show. (Dozens of advertisers, including H&R Block, Lexus, BMW, Invisalign, Mitsubishi, Jenny Craig and Advil, have pulled their ads since the allegations surfaced.) The organization also published an open letter to 21st Century Fox CEO James Murdoch, signed by nearly 300 survivors of sexual assault and their allies. 

Despite the significant media attention that the allegations against O’Reilly have received, his core audience’s loyalty has not seemed to waver.

According to a HuffPost/YouGov survey, 65 percent of “The O’Reilly Factor” viewers still approve of O’Reilly, and just 17 percent reported that they believe the show should be canceled in light of the controversy. That number is even lower among viewers who identify as Republicans.

“I’m not sure why people continue to watch his show, but I do know that Fox News has an obligation to protect everyone, all of their employees, from a sexual predator,” Karin Roland, Chief Campaigns Officer at UltraViolet, told HuffPost. “It doesn’t matter what [O’Reilly’s] ratings are. He’s repeatedly assaulting and harassing women at Fox. He needs to be stopped and he has no place in their workplace.”

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Trump Orders Review Of Visa Program To Encourage Hiring Americans

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KENOSHA, Wis., April 18 (Reuters) – President Donald Trump on Tuesday ordered federal agencies to look at tightening a temporary visa program used to bring high-skilled foreign workers to the United States, as he tries to carry out his campaign pledges to put “America First.”

Trump signed an executive order on enforcing and reviewing the H-1B visa, popular in the technology industry, on a visit to the headquarters of Snap-On Inc, a tool manufacturer in Kenosha, Wisconsin.

In the document, known to the White House as the “Buy American and Hire American” orderTrump also seeks changes in government procurement that would boost purchases of American products in federal contracts, with one aim being to help U.S. steelmakers.

The moves show Trump once again using his power to issue executive orders to try to fulfill promises he made last year in his election campaign, in this case to reform U.S. immigration policies and encourage purchases of American products.

Senior officials gave few details on implementation of the order but Trump aides have expressed concern that most H-1B visas are awarded for lower-paid jobs at outsourcing firms, many based in India, which they say takes work away from Americans.

They seek a more merit-based way to give the visas to highly skilled workers.

“Right now, widespread abuse in our immigration system is allowing American workers of all backgrounds to be replaced by workers brought in from other countries,” Trump said.

As he nears the 100-day benchmark of his presidency, Trump still has no major legislative achievements. With his attempts to overhaul healthcare and tax law not bearing fruit so far in a Congress controlled by his fellow Republicans, Trump has leaned heavily on executive orders to seek changes to the U.S. economy.

The venue for Trump’s visit on Tuesday is a nod to his voter base in the manufacturing centers of the American heartland. Wisconsin unexpectedly voted for the Republican last year, partly due to his promises to bring back industrial jobs.

H-1B visas are intended for foreign nationals in occupations that generally require higher education, including science, engineering or computer programming. The government uses a lottery to award 65,000 visas every year and randomly distributes another 20,000 to graduate student workers.

Critics say the lottery benefits outsourcing firms that flood the system with mass applications for visas for lower-paid information technology workers.

“Right now H-1B visas are awarded in a totally random lottery and that’s wrong. Instead, they should be given to the most skilled and highest paid applicants and they should never, ever be used to replace Americans,” Trump said.

(Writing by Alistair Bell; Additional reporting by Mica Rosenberg and Julia Ainsley in Washington, David Ingram and Stephen Nellis in San Francisco, Sankalp Phartiyal in Mumbai and Manoj Kumar in New Delhi; Editing by Frances Kerry and Lisa Shumaker)

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Franchesca Ramsey Could Soon Shake Up Late Night TV With Her Own Show

YouTube star and activist Franchesca Ramsey could be getting her own late night show.

Comedy Central ordered a pilot for her untitled project, Vanity Fair reported Tuesday. The network hasn’t revealed many details about the show, but Ramsey told The Huffington Post that the project will explore identity.

“We just feel like there’s a great opportunity there to talk about different types of people that are part of this world and part of our nation and just really finding a way to separate ourselves from what we already see on television and I’m so excited that Comedy Central has faith in this to do that in a really compelling but also funny way,” she said.

Ramsey will be an executive producer on the pilot and work with her team from MTV’s “Decoded,” which she produces and hosts. The comedian, who was also a writer and contributor for “The Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore,” said the new show is an evolution of the work that she’s done on “Decoded” and her personal YouTube channel, which has more than 200,000 subscribers.

She said it’s a big deal that she could potentially be running her own show on late night television, which is notoriously white and male-dominated. 

“I’m just really excited to expose people to different identities, different conversations but also to kind of reframe how they think about black women just by being myself,” she said.

Ramsey’s pilot is one of nine pilots Comedy Central ordered. The network has yet to announce its run date or whether it will get picked up for a series, but we’re keeping our fingers crossed.

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Even tiny wireless carriers want their own internet TV service

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Murders, suicides and rapes: Facebook's major video problem

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Uber Central lets businesses offer you a free ride

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