Categories
Good deeds

Woman starts tiny home community in Texas for women over 60




People Magazine has a profile of a 70-year-old woman named Robyn (her last name wasn’t given) who lives in Cumby, Texas. After retiring, Robyn bought a tiny house in a tiny home community. It got her thinking about the possibility of creating her own tiny house community aimed at women who were looking for a second chance. So, she decided to invest some of her retirement savings into building 14 homes over five acres. Robyn’s community is called “The Bird’s Nest.” It’s geared towards women between ages 60 and 80, most of whom are single, divorced, or widowed.

“I bought a tiny house and lived in a tiny house community, and then decided, hey, I could do some passive income with my 401(k),” Robyn tells PEOPLE, describing the first spark of an idea that would soon take flight as The Bird’s Nest.

The Bird’s Nest now houses 11 women between the ages of 60 and 80, most of them single, divorced or widowed. Rent starts at $450 a month, but what they’re really buying is companionship and a built-in support system that’s rare to find in traditional retirement settings.

Robyn ultimately invested $150,000 from her 401(k) to build 14 tiny homes, a leap that would make most people pause. “I’m not a person that dwells on what ifs,” she notes. “I had the need, and I knew that the money in there would not help me in retirement… so I just took a leap of faith.”

Faith has since turned into a thriving neighborhood where mornings begin with coffee under a pavilion the residents call their “kitchen.” “I’m really the early riser, so I’m the first one up,” Robyn says. “I go out to our kitchen pavilion, have my coffee, let my dogs run… and there’s always a lot of work to do maintaining the property.”

Her days are spent mowing, cutting sunflowers and sharing meals, but evenings are sacred. “We all eventually gather in the evenings, every night, it seems,” Robyn says. “Just to touch base with everybody… see how their day went.”

That daily rhythm is anchored by a simple but powerful rule: no drama. “Anything that we have, you have to come out and discuss it,” Robyn explains. “We end the conversation with, ‘No feelings hurt. This is just my perspective.’ ”

The approach has created a culture of honesty and respect, where grievances are aired directly and relationships remain strong. “We have to respect each other, and we all do,” she says, her voice clear with conviction.

Demand for this kind of living has soared far beyond what Robyn imagined. Out of 14 pads, only one was left at the time of the interview — and more than 500 women were already on the waiting list. “It’s almost like a first-come, first-served that has all the boxes checked,” she says, admitting the selection process is still evolving.

For now, the community’s makeup feels just right. “The majority, 80 to 89 percent of tiny home dwellers are retired women,” Robyn observes. “That’s who this works for.”

And for those women, The Bird’s Nest offers more than just affordability — it offers a second family. They check in on each other when someone seems down, share lunches and laughter, and sit together in the fading Texas light.

“We are a community,” Robyn shares. “It’s all about women empowering women. We can’t knock women down. We have to embrace each other and take the extra step to be kind.”

As for the future, Robyn is honest about her uncertainty. “I hope that other people see all of this, all the buzz, and that they try to replicate and do one,” she says. “But when we are all gone, the original OGs… I don’t think it will be maintained, because I won’t be here.”

[From People]

”I had the need, and I knew that the money in there would not help me in retirement… so I just took a leap of faith.” I needed to hear someone say something so selfless right now. The Bird’s Nest sounds like such a lovely idea. We’re living in such a polarized, electronic age that it’s caused some people to forget our humanity. I love that Robyn tries to facilitate that every woman there is respectful to one another despite their disagreements while providing a safe space for women who need one. I’m sure once her story gets out, bigger developers will try to recreate it, but you can’t really do that without having the personal touch of an owner who genuinely cares about people. I really hope that Robyn’s fears prove unfounded and that someone is able to continue it as her legacy after she’s gone.

Anyway, at the risk of sounding too nerdy, Robyn’s story gives me hope that all is not lost. Yes, we are living through some pretty terrible times and witnessing some awful human behavior, but I have to believe that at the end of the day, there are more of us good people than there are of the bad ones. They just have the louder voices. It reminds me of one of my all-time favorite quotes, courtesy of The Lord of the Rings: “There’s some good in this world, Mr. Frodo, and it’s worth fighting for.”

Photos via Facebook and Instagram

Categories
Good deeds health

Survivor alum Scot Pollard met the family of his heart transplant donor




Former NBA player Scot Pollard played on Survivor: Kaôh Rōng (Season 32), which aired in the first half of 2015. Casual viewers may remember that season as the one with Tai Trang, who captured Sia’s attention for refusing to let his tribe eat the chickens, or as the one with Caleb Reynolds’ terrifying medical evacuation due to severe heat stroke. Scot was cast during an era where the show was into casting professional athletes, like Brad Culpepper, Jeff Kent, and Cliff Robinson.

Scot got sick in 2021 and ended up being diagnosed with a genetic heart disease called cardiomyopathy. It enlarges and weakens your heart so that it has a hard time pumping blood. Doctors told Scot that he’d need a heart transplant. The only problem was that he’s almost seven-feet tall and needed a heart that would be able to handle his giant frame. That heart came in February 2024, thanks to a donor who tragically passed away unexpectedly from pneumonia. A little over a year later, Scot was able to meet his heart donor’s family to express his “unending appreciation” and let them know that their loved one was a “hero.”

Scot Pollard owes his survival to one special person. The Survivor alum—who competed on the CBS show from 2015 to 2016—shared that he received a heart transplant in February 2024 and was recently able to meet his donor’s family to thank them in person as part of an emotional ESPN documentary Heart of Pearl. Scot—who played with for the Sacramento Kings and the Indiana Pacers in the NBA for 11 years—was diagnosed with cardiomyopathy, a genetic heart disease, after falling ill in 2021.

“I’m really attached to this heart,” he said in the hospital, per an ESPN story published June 15. “I feel like it’s the best one. That’s the one I was born with. And the biggest fear is that the next one isn’t going to be good enough.”

Indeed, the athlete was declined for multiple transplants because he needed the right match to support his 6-foot-11 body. As his doctor Jonathan Menachem explained, “You can’t put a Ford Festiva engine in an F-150 and think it’s going to work well.”

Scot, now 50, struggled to come to terms with his prognosis.

“I do remember feeling like, ‘If this is it, I’m going to be OK,’” he said. “‘But if it’s not, I’ve got a lot to do.”

Ultimately, he was matched with donor Casey Angell, who died at age 45 after being intubated following a case of pneumonia.

“You’re losing your best friend,” his wife Pamela Angell told the outlet, “but somebody else is gaining your best friend, in a way.”

In fact, Scot’s heart surgeon Dr. Ashish Shah noted, “In some respects, it was just the right heart for him.”

While Casey remained anonymous to him at first, Scot eventually learned his donor’s identity by writing a letter to his family five months after his successful procedure through a program facilitated by his hospital.

“I live in Indiana and I’m writing this letter to express mine and my family’s unending appreciation for your loved one’s gift of life,” Scot wrote, per the note obtained by ESPN. “My wife, myself, our four children, our extended family and friends are all forever grateful! We would love the opportunity to meet at some point if you’re amenable to that idea. We want to let you know that your loved one’s heart is going to be loved and cared for and will give love back.”

In addition to sharing his work raising awareness for organ donors, Scot also praised the man that was lost.

“Your loved one is our hero and he will live on forever through me and our efforts of getting more people to be selfless heroes like him,” he wrote. “If you don’t feel comfortable responding, I completely understand. I just wanted you to know my lifelong appreciation for him. He truly is my hero.”

The former basketball player received a response in October 2024 from Casey’s wife Pamela and his sister Megan Tyra.

“Scot, you warmed our hearts with your kind words concerning your donor, who was loved beyond measure,” they wrote back. “February 16, 2024, was an incredibly hard day for those of us that loved your donor, Casey. When we knew that we were going to have to let him go, and were approached about organ donation, there was never a pause or a doubt that Casey would have wanted to help.”

“Casey was a loving husband, dad, uncle, and the best baby brother anyone could ask for. Even though he was the baby, he towered over us all,” their message went on. “Thank you for caring for that big heart of his. And we are grateful to know he is loved and will continue to give love. It means the world to us. He has inspired people in his own family to donate and be a hero like him.”

They also agreed to meet in person, with Scot traveling to see them in Lindale, Texas, in March 2025.

“What we hope for moving forward,” Scot told the outlet, “is just that I can keep living a good life because of their gift.”

I followed Scot’s journey through social media, including when he was in the ICU waiting to hear if he’d ever match with a donor. He also said in an interview back in February that it wasn’t lost on him that his donor’s last name was “Angell,” which must have been a very emotional revelation for him. I can’t imagine all of the emotions that a transplant recipient and the donor’s family goes through. My friend’s husband received a transplant two years ago, and after finally meeting the qualifications to be put on the list, he waited several more months for a match. They were so grateful for the second chance at life, but were never able to find out who his donor was. It is so special that Scot and Casey’s family were able to connect and meet. I truly hope that it gave Casey’s family some closure to be able to put a face and name to the life he saved. I’ve always clicked the “donor” box when renewing my driver’s license because it’s stories like these that make you realize how important it is.

Categories
Dogs Good deeds Kids

Toddler saved by rancher’s dog is ‘fine like nothing ever happened’




Arizona parents Sarah and Corey Allen lived through every parent’s worst nightmare on April 14 when their two-year-old son Bodin went missing. The tot quietly left home around 5pm local time while his parents were distracted — Corey was working on the roof, and Sarah was changing diapers for Bodin’s one-year-old sibling. 16 harrowing hours and one 40-person search team later, Bodin was found at last… at a ranch seven miles away, with three mountain ranges and two mountain lion sightings in the path. That kid covered a lot of ground! And he made it through the trek safely thanks to one intrepid ranch worker: Buford, ranch owner Scotty Dunton’s faithful Anatolian Pyrenees. Buford regularly patrols his property, so when he spotted Bodin by a tree in the wee hours of the night, he basically shepherded the toddler to the main house, whereupon Dunton reached out to the police. And now? Bodin’s parents say “he’s fine like nothing ever happened.” Job well done, Buford.

A parent’s worst nightmare: Corey later told KPNX that he was working outside while Sarah was taking care of Bodin’s younger sibling at the time of the incident. Sarah recalled Bodin going outside to play. But when she called out his name after changing her younger child’s diaper, Bodin didn’t answer. “My instinct was maybe he got trafficked or something,” Corey said, per the Arizona Republic. “And he could be states away. Who knows what’s going on? And that feeling just kept intensifying by the minute.” … “I didn’t even know how to process it,” Sarah told KPNX. “I looked at his empty bed in the middle of the night, and I’m like, ‘This isn’t real, how is he not here? How is he out in the dark alone? How is that real?’” “It’s like the worst living nightmare any parent can feel,” Corey said.

Lost and found… 7 miles away: After 16 hours of searching for the child — who was wearing a blue tank top and pajama pants when he disappeared, according to a police missing person’s poster shared via Facebook — he was discovered on the property of a rancher approximately seven miles from home. “Upon arrival at the ranch, deputies confirmed that this indeed was the missing boy,” the police said in their statement. Scotty Dunton, who was identified as the rancher, per KPNX, said that his dog Buford had discovered the child while guarding his property.

Toddler’s best friend: Dunton said Buford “likely protected and directed the missing boy to safety,” in an on-camera police interview. The rancher told authorities that finding the child, who he said was “upset” but “in good shape,” was “a relief.” “I was ecstatic that he was ok and that my dog found him,” he added. Bodin also told the rancher that he had been discovered by the dog, and Anatolian Pyrenees, after “holing up” under a tree all night. “He loves kids, so he wouldn’t leave him when he found him,” Dunton further said of his dog. The rancher also said that Buford typically patrolled the property “all night” to ward off coyotes.

The kid is totally unfazed, thank dog: Corey later told KPNX that it felt like God sent that dog to rescue Bodin, who walked away with only some minor scratches. “It’s unreal, it’s unbelievable and it’s a miracle,” Sarah also said, according to the outlet. “[Bodin is] here, he’s healthy, he’s fine like nothing ever happened, it still feels like a dream.” The couple thanked Dunton in person on Thursday, April 17, KPNX further reported.

[From People]

I know I say this at a minimum of once a week now, but it’s true each and every time: we do not deserve these loving floofs! They are the best of us. Scotty Dunton told NBC News that he was able to trace Buford and Bodin’s paw prints to a mile out from the ranch that they walked together. I can just imagine Buford softly nudging Bodin with his snout to say “Come with me, kid. I gotcha.” Buford didn’t pose long for the cameras — he probably wants to keep a level head for simply doing what any very good boy or girl would do — but from the glimpses we got, he strikes me as a gentle giant. Ready to do battle against mountain lions and coyotes and bears, no doubt, but preferring to keep things quiet and orderly. And don’t worry, Dunton confirmed that Buford was served up a homemade steak dinner for his heroic deed.

I hope Buford and Bodin keep up a friendship. And if I could make one recommendation to Bodin’s parents, it would be to get a dog of their own! I know they have their hands full with two kids aged two and under. But the right family dog would bark his head off if he saw one of his people wandering away from home! Just sayin’…

Categories
Charitable Causes Good deeds MacKenzie Scott

Mackenzie Scott has given over $19 billion to charity since her divorce




Here’s a feel good story for your Tuesday. When Jeff Bezos and Mackenzie Scott’s divorce was finalized in 2019, Mackenzie reportedly received a $36 billion settlement. In 2019, she took the “Giving Pledge” to donate to good causes until the “safe is empty.” She updates her charitable endeavors via her website Yield Giving. Over the past six years, we’ve learned that MacKenzie has donated billions to different charities and worldwide organizations, including food banks, several HBCUs, the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund, RAINN, Planned Parenthood, European Climate Foundation, and more. According to Yield Giving, MacKenzie’s donations now total more than $19 billion to 2,450 non-profits to “use as they see fit for the benefit of others.”

The Center for Effective Philanthropy recently published a three-year study on the “transformative effects” of MacKenzie’s donations. Unsurprisingly, it found that although the total effects of her generosity won’t be fully realized for quite some time, after just five years, the results are “overwhelmingly positive.”

Since MacKenzie Scott’s marriage to Jeff Bezos ended six years ago, she has shaken up the nonprofit world with her particular brand of billion-dollar generosity. This year marks the sixth anniversary after the author and mom of four’s divorce from the Amazon founder became official in 2019, resulting in an approximately $36 billion settlement.

Since then, the 54-year-old Scott, who is currently 68th on Forbes’ billionaires list, has “transformed” philanthropy with her sizable, unrestricted donations, according to a three-year study published by the Center for Effective Philanthropy in February: She has given away more than $19 billion to more than 2,000 organizations.

“It could take decades to truly understand the effects these gifts have had on nonprofits and the sector at large,” the report reads. “However, after five years of giving, the reported effects of her gifts on recipient organizations … remain overwhelmingly positive.”

Scott’s new chapter in philanthropy began with her split from Bezos. The two share four children — three sons and a daughter. Bezos retained 75% of the former couple’s Amazon shares, which was about 12% of the company, while MacKenzie kept roughly 4%, The New York Times reported at the time.

For Scott, her focus has been on raising her family and continuing to make an impact through her philanthropic work. Last year, she made headlines when she announced she was giving away $640 million to 361 nonprofit groups across the country, which were chosen from over 6,000 applicants.

“Each of these 361 community-led non-profits was elevated by peer organizations and a round-2 evaluation panel for their outstanding work advancing the voices and opportunities of individuals and families of meager or modest means,” Scott wrote in a post on her Yield Giving website, “and groups who have met with discrimination and other systemic obstacles.”

In 2019, Scott also made the Giving Pledge, which is a list of billionaires who’ve pledged to donate half of their fortunes.

“I have no doubt that tremendous value comes when people act quickly on the impulse to give. No drive has more positive ripple effects than the desire to be of service,” she wrote in a letter. “My approach to philanthropy will continue to be thoughtful. It will take time and effort and care. But I won’t wait. And I will keep at it until the safe is empty.”

Currently, Forbes reports that her net worth totals $28.2 billion.

[From People]

$19 billion is so much freaking money that it’s hard to even wrap my head around it. I wonder if she’ll end up giving money to initiatives that will help fill in for crucial programs that have been disbanded like USAID or start a program that provides free breakfasts and lunches to public school children. Helping keep the world safe and children fed? That will definitely piss off some of her fellow billionaires. How dare she care about those in need?!

I love that Mackenzie has used her divorce money for good and have nothing but respect for her. While every other billionaire is out there working it for tax breaks and the stock market, Mackenzie is genuinely trying to make a difference in the world. Imagine if there were more rich people like her. We’d be in a totally different place than we are now. Also, it’s kind of insane that a woman who is worth $28.2 billion is “only” at #68 on the Forbes billionaire list. That is f-cking wild.

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Photos credit: Lukasz Gagulski/Avalon, Xavier Collin/Image Press Agency/Avalon, DDP/INSTARimages.com and Getty

Categories
Good deeds Michael Sheen Money

Michael Sheen paid off £1 million of debt for his neighbors in south Wales




In June 2016, John Oliver announced during an episode of Last Week Tonight that he had formed a debt-acquisition company. He purchased and forgave almost $15 million of medical debt for 9,000 people. The crazy part is that it only cost $60,000 to acquire that much money of other people’s debt. It really highlighted how corrupt the whole damn system really is.

John’s generous stunt actually ended up inspiring none other than Michael Sheen to do something similar. For the last two years, Michael spent around £100,000 of his own money to buy around £1 million worth of debt owed by approximately 900 of his south Wales neighbors. Once purchased, he immediately canceled all of it. He also filmed it as a documentary titled, Michael Sheen’s Secret Million Pound Giveaway, which aired on Channel 4 in the UK on Tuesday, March 11.

Not everyone knows that he canceled their debt: He doesn’t know who they are (data protection stopped that), but he hopes that the programme will alert those who hadn’t realised their debts had been cancelled (the people who might have been ignoring the scary letters that come through the door), as well as shine a light into the dark corners of high-cost credit, and what happens when debts are sold on to collectors.

The UK’s cost of living crisis: It feels more timely than ever, in a cost of living crisis where 20 million people are financially vulnerable – but this is an area Sheen, 56, has been working on since 2018, when he set up the End High Cost Credit Alliance. He became interested when he was still living in Los Angeles in 2016, and watched John Oliver’s Last Week Tonight show spend about $60,000 to buy up $15m worth of medical debt and wipe it. Wondering if he could do something similar, he found it was harder in the UK, but by then he was hooked – appalled at the way the poorest people were forced to use high-interest credit that had become impossible to pay off. Or, worse, were turning to loan sharks.

What opened his eyes to others’ struggles: Sheen traces his change in focus to a decade earlier, when he staged his version of The Passion, the three-day epic, in Port Talbot. Working with 1,000 local people brought him into contact with many community organisations. “I was learning about what was going on that I was totally unaware of, growing up,” he says. (He was born in Newport but moved to Port Talbot with his family when he was eight.) He realised that it was “partly because you sort of didn’t want to know”.

He saw the caregivers: It was painful to learn, for instance, about the town’s young carers – children who were looking after ill or disabled parents – and to see that among the few bits of support available was a small organisation that took them bowling or to the cinema once a week. Another woman who had lost her son, a schoolfriend of Sheen’s, had set up a small grief counselling organisation to fill a gap. “And then, a couple of months later, I come back and the money’s gone, that’s cut. It started making me not only become aware of what people were doing, but also aware of how underfunded it was. And then it made me ask the question, ‘Well, why is that?’”

Unicef also opened his eyes: There were other flashpoints. Visiting a refugee camp with Unicef, he watched a hungry child pick grains of rice out of caked mud; feeling wretched, Sheen asked how soon he could get money from his bank account to that specific child, and was told it didn’t really work like that. It had a profound effect. “I remember making a kind of a deal with myself and saying …” His voice breaks and his eyes well up. “I’m not going to get money to that kid, but I could only not do that if I’m then going to do something else. Going, ‘Right, I can see that there’s a way of walking away from here, going home, back to your life, and no one’s going to blame you. But you’re not going to do that.’”

It’s easier to be a decent human being: Being wilfully blinkered wouldn’t necessarily have been the easy option. “I suppose that’s how you end up eating yourself from the inside. So no, I would say this is the easier thing.”

On feeling powerless to help: “I think one of the most destructive things about the way we live now is that we’re constantly surrounded by injustice or a sense of things that are not right, and yet feeling like we can’t do anything about it. I’ve learned that by engaging in whatever way it is, it at least allows you to feel like you’re doing something.”

The system is broken: “The system doesn’t work any more,” he says. “But people find it easier to imagine the end of the world than something that’s a credible alternative to capitalism. I think people really feel there’s something intrinsically wrong and flawed with the system, and recognise that it needs radical change, but the only people who are offering radical change are people who are dangerous. And there’s no good end to that.”

What comes next? He knows his “heist” is attention-grabbing, “and also hopefully helps the 900 or however many people that we’ve actually been able to get rid of some of the debt. But it’s also about: how do you create change and do something that can help thousands or millions of people?” The Fair Banking Act is one solution, which would essentially encourage banks to offer affordable credit to people previously excluded based on their income, background or where they live.

Why he put up his own money: “It shows that you’re serious about what you’re doing, but it also encourages other people to take that step.” It’s the same, he says, when it comes to being so public about it. “I’ve heard people say, ‘He can’t be that selfless, because he’s letting everyone know he’s doing it.’ That’s something I had to think about, and I made a conscious choice.” He knows he can offer his profile and cash, bringing attention to issues. “I never feel like it’s about me – mainly it’s about working with other people or highlighting what they do. I’m not doing it because I want people to think I’m great; I want us to be able to imagine an alternative to this, because this doesn’t work. And in my own little way, I’m trying to create my own alternative. It doesn’t have to be the way it is.”

[From The Guardian]

This is awesome. He changed 900 lives! I just wish that we didn’t live in a world where this was even necessary. I also find it really outstanding that all of the debt owners have remained anonymous. No one has been identified against their will or hounded by the press to give statements or profess their gratitude.

So yeah, I love that Michael did this and that he even used his own money to prove that he’s serious about it. In a world that is increasingly easy for rich people to bury their heads in the sand, I’m impressed that he’s not only used his money for good but that he’s taken the time to learn about how people who aren’t as privileged as he is live. He took that and chose to grow and do good. Again, I hate that it’s come down to this, but I hope that other celebrities pick up on this trend.

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Photos credit: CelebrityPhotosUK/Cover Images, PA Images/INSTARimages and Getty

Categories
Disasters Dogs Good deeds

Max the Dog rescued from the Eaton Fire to join other rescues




For anyone who feels they haven’t yet reached maximum levels of emotional despair over the LA wildfires, here is one dog’s tail. Max lives with his people in the Pasadena area, which is currently being ravaged by the Eaton Fire. Amid the chaos, Max got separated from his people last week, which is how photographer Gabe Cortez found him while chronicling the fire’s destruction. Max was understandably skittish, so it took Cortez, a firefighter already on site, and local dog rescue owner Chris Abkarian to coax Max to trust them as he held his ground from his family’s front yard. Abkarian eventually got Max into his car (where the poor pup struggled to breathe after ingesting all that smoke) and took Max to his rescue center Whittier Dog Club. Then something truly wag-worthy happened: Cortez’s photos of Max in the fire went viral and the community stepped up, donating tons of pet necessities to Whittier Dog Club. You’re a very good boy, Max.

A firefighter, photographer, & shelter owner walk into a yard: Photographer Gabe Cortez was documenting the historic fires in Los Angeles when he found a dog barking near a home. Firefighters were nearby spraying properties with water as the timid dog barked and remained in its yard. Cortez helped contact Chris Abkarian, owner of the Whittier Dog Club. As first responders tended to the fire, Abkarian arrived on scene and was able to coax the dog into letting him leash him.

Fire & grim smoke: The dog, named “Max,” was rescued from the blaze and transported to the dog club in Whittier. “If it wasn’t for us to come and rescue him, who knows what would have happened,” Abkarian said. … “When we got there it was just black smoke and fires everywhere,” Abkarian said. “The entire scene was devastating and apocalyptic. Houses were burning down.” Abkarian said Max was rescued from his yard as the neighbor’s property burned to the ground, showing how close he was to losing his own life. “He was scared and nobody could get him because he was trapped inside this front yard,” Abkarian said.

A new leash on life: After the dog was removed from the fire zone, Abkarian set him up in a kennel at the Whittier Dog Club. There, Max joined several other dogs that were either rescued from the fires or dropped off for temporary shelter by owners who were displaced by the fire. Abkarian said he is curious about what Max witnessed before being rescued by strangers. “You don’t know what went through his mind. The soot and the smoke were ridiculous. You can imagine, dogs have a thousand times more scent glands,” Abkarian said. While Max is unable to share his story, Abkarian said the images Cortez took have helped give animals a voice during this fire.

Max has inspired heaps of donations: The photos of Max circulated online and grabbed the attention of a community hoping to help furry friends. Sasha Galperin, co-owner of Whittier Dog Club, said they have been inundated with donations from the community ever since Max’s story went viral. “They have given us treats, toys, biscuits. All of this will go to our rescues,” Galperin said. … With tears in her eyes, Galperin said she is inspired by how the greater Los Angeles area has come together to donate food, toys and even blankets to animals impacted by the fires. “Thank you, Whittier. Thank you, Los Angeles,” Galperin said. “The way the city of Los Angeles is coming together, it is overwhelming.”

[From CBS News Los Angeles]

There’s good news for Max! The dog club is in touch with his family and are working out “next steps,” as it’s not possible right now for everyone who’s displaced to have their pets with them yet. Apparently, Max’s family was all set to evacuate last week when Max got spooked and ran off. Max’s family had to make the difficult decision to continue evacuating when Max was nowhere in sight. This is a harrowing situation that many, many people are facing in LA right now (if you’re not already sobbing, check out this video of a man returning to his ruined home and finding his lost dog). So let’s give grace to Max’s family and all the persons who’ve been separated from their pets. This is the Sophie’s Choice of pup parenthood. Or Spot’s Choice, if you will. It’s so heartening to see how the LA community is showing up for their neighbors, and their little dogs, too. Thank you to everyone taking care of our animals right now, and working to minimize their distress. May all good floofs be reunited with their persons.

Categories
Good Celebrity Good deeds Paul Rudd

Paul Rudd handed out water in Philadelphia to people waiting in line to vote




Obviously, Tuesday did not go as we wanted or were hoping that it would. I know we’re all devastated. I’m devastated. I’m scared. I’m pissed. I can’t even properly enjoy that my adopted state, North Carolina, went blue in all of the big races, including defeating a member of Moms for Liberty for school superintendent. It sucks. We even gained two Democrats in our State House and broke up the Republican supermajority in the General Assembly!

So while there’s some, but not much, good news from yesterday, there is one story that I wanted to highlight. Paul Rudd made surprise appearances at both Temple University in Philadelphia and Villanova University in Villanova, PA to hand out water bottles to students who were waiting in line to vote. When asked by MSNBC what he was up to, he said that he thought it was “wonderful” that so many young people were voting and he just wanted to make sure they knew how awesome he thought it was that they were waiting in hours-long lines to do their patriotic duty.

Paul Rudd made a surprise appearance at universities in Pennsylvania to hand out water to students waiting in hours-long lines to vote. While reporting live from Philadelphia’s Temple University, MSNBC National Correspondent Jacob Soboroff spotted the “Ant-Man” and “I Love You, Man” star and sprinted over to him.

“Hey, Paul, I’m on live with Nicolle Wallace on MSNBC!” Soboroff said before asking the actor what brought him out to Pennsylvania voting lines.

“I just wanted to give people water,” Rudd said. “They’re waiting in line for a long time, and it’s a wonderful thing that all these young people are out voting.”

When Soboroff told Rudd that some people have waited up to two hours to vote, Rudd said, “That’s impressive.”

“We’ve been doing lots of stuff today here in Pennsylvania,” Rudd said. “We wanted to come out and tell these students they’re doing really great things.”

Soboroff then asked Rudd how he felt about the election, prompting Rudd to laugh and say, wryly, “I feel good about handing out some waters!”

Soboroff left Rudd and continued to interview voters, stopping to talk to a first-time voter, a young Black woman, who said it wasn’t hard to make up her mind. “It’s been ready to go, out the gate,” she said. “I didn’t need to hear people talking in my ear.”

Rudd then appeared behind them. “Want a water from Paul Rudd?” Soboroff asked. “Yes, I do!” she exclaimed, and handed her phone to Soboroff so he could take a photo of the two of them.

Based on photos posted to X, Rudd also showed support for students waiting to vote at Villanova University, which is located less than an hour from Temple. During the 2020 election, Rudd made headlines for handing out cookies to people standing in the rain while waiting to vote in Brooklyn, N.Y.

[From Variety]

I had completely forgotten about Paul handing out cookies in Brooklyn in 2020. He’s such a sweetheart. It’s pretty awesome that he does these things without being invited or announcing it to draw attention to it. And now those students at least have a cool story to tell about an otherwise depressing day.

When I heard about Paul’s good deeds, it got me thinking. I don’t know what comes next, but I do know this: It’s dark right now, but there are always going to be good people like Paul Rudd who are going to be there to help. We (Kamala voters) need to do that for each other right now. Look for the helpers when you need one. When you’re feeling up to it, try to be a helper for someone else who’s struggling. There are still almost 68 million people in this country who came out to do the right thing. We have to find each other and stick together because it’s the only way that we’ll get through whatever the next four years are going to bring.

Photos credit: Oscar Gonzalez/Wenn/Avalon, Imago/RW/Avalon