To make these Freakshake Cakes I started with 18 pounds of my Ultimate Vanilla Cake, stacked in glasses coated with Irish green buttercream. It's all about decorating these shake cakes to your wildest ...
In this video we turn a couple of regular wine glasses into medieval looking fantasy inspired goblets. This is a simple diy that anyone can do, with just a bit of clay and paint! MATERIALS: Wine Glass ...
Editor's note: Among his final actions in office, President Joe Biden signed an executive grant of clemency Jan. 19 commuting Leonard Peltier's prison sentence. The commutation, which takes effect ...
It’s not even past.’ It’s the sort of twist no screenwriter would dare invent: “Free Leonard Peltier,” a persuasively well-researched and often infuriating documentary about the American ...
Peltier is expected to be released from U.S. Penitentiary Federal Correctional Complex in Coleman, Florida, in mid-February.
Leonard Peltier, a member of the American Indian Movement (AIM), was convicted in 1977 for the deaths of two FBI agents. Activists and human rights organizations have long argued that his conviction ...
“Free Leonard Peltier” serves in many ways as a brief for the defense, making a strong case for the claim that Peltier’s trial was rigged because local and government officials were enraged ...
But “Free Leonard Peltier” makes it very clear what a terrible injustice it has been for the serving of justice to have taken so much time. The final moments might make you smile, or maybe ...
Leonard Peltier was convicted of killing two FBI agents in 1975. President Joe Biden has sparked outrage after commuting the sentence of Leonard Peltier in a last-minute move before leaving office ...
One of President Biden’s final acts as US president was to grant clemency to American Indian Movement (AIM) activist Leonard Peltier (Turtle Mountain Ojibwe), who will be released into home arrest ...
What is 49 times 365? 17,885. It would be 17,885, but he also had 13 leap years… Leonard is still in prison. Biden signed on ...
It’s the sort of twist no screenwriter would dare invent: “Free Leonard Peltier,” a persuasively well-researched and often infuriating documentary about the American Indian Movement activist convicted ...