Friday, June 14, 2024

Entertainment News & Latest Celebrity Headlines

 

Entertainment News & Latest Celebrity Headlines

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Keep up with all the newest in Entertainment news with fresh and breaking stories. Know what is going on with the Royals and what Celebrities from your favorite movies and TV shows are wearing right now. We will also help make sure you can hear your TV and browse this site and the web with the best tablets.


Teen Mom' star Amber Portwood makes plea for missing fiancé: 'Very scared right now'

 

Teen Mom' star Amber Portwood makes plea for missing fiancé: 'Very scared right now'

Amber Portwood, who made her debut on "16 and Pregnant" before starring on the spinoff show "Teen Mom," is asking for fans' help in locating her fiancé.

"Teen Mom" alum Amber Portwood is pleading for information about fiancé Gary Wayt, who went missing earlier this week shortly after the two reportedly got engaged.

"My fiancé is missing right now, and we don't know where he is," the 34-year-old said tearfully Tuesday during a livestream on the Elle Bee YouTube channel. "He is missing. This is a huge deal. His parents, everybody is very worried. I'm worried. ... We are very scared right now."

She described their last conversation before Wayt disappeared as "emotional."

The Bryson City Police Department in North Carolina posted a missing person alert for Wayt on Tuesday, describing him as a 39-year-old, 6-foot-1 man with brown eyes who was last seen Sunday in the Arlington Avenue area of Bryson City, located more than 60 miles west of Asheville.

According to Us Weekly and E! News, police located Wayt in Oklahoma via video footage.

Bryson City Police Chief Charlie Robinson told local ABC affiliate WLOS News 13 that Wayt and Portwood were visiting from Indiana for Portwood's brother's wedding on June 8 and had also recently gotten engaged.

USA TODAY has reached out to Portwood and Bryson Police for comment.

Congratulations to Kailyn Lowry! 'Teen Mom 2' star announces she gave birth to twins

Amber Portwood hits back at claims she and her fiancé had a 'blowout fight'

Portwood made her reality TV debut on MTV's "16 and Pregnant" and went on to star on six seasons of the spinoff show "Teen Mom" – which was later renamed "Teen Mom OG" – from 2009 to 2017. For more than a decade, she has faced legal issues due to domestic violence and drug possession.

The former MTV star claimed people were speculating online that the couple had an explosive argument before Wayt went missing. "There was not a big blowout fight or anything like that, OK?" she said. "I am not what people have been saying about me all of these years. I changed a long time ago."

She added, "We have not had explosive fights; we are very in love. This man asked me to be with him. This man then asked me to marry him. I have not touched this man in any horrible way. He does not touch me in any horrible way. We do not yell at each other. We have a wonderful relationship."

Portwood, who called Wayt "the love of my life," pleaded, "Please don't just make up stories and think that something happened when it comes to me and him. We have a beautiful relationship. ... This is the first time in my life that I've had a good man."

Amber Portwood's troubles with domestic violence, drug possession

In 2011, Portwood pleaded guilty to domestic battery following an incident involving her partner at the time, Gary Shirley. Shirley is her 15-year-old daughter Leah's father.

She ultimately served time in prison for violating her probation terms and graduated from the Clean Lifestyle Is Freedom program during her sentence, she told Indiana's The Herald Bulletin in 2015.

"In any 12-step program, you learn that you have to change your people, places and things. When I got out of prison I stayed with my grandmother for a little while. I needed to change everything. I didn’t hang out with my old friends. I didn’t go to the same places," she said at the time.

'16 and Pregnant' star's death: Jordan Cashmyer died from fentanyl, cocaine intoxication

Then in October 2019, Portwood pleaded guilty to two felony charges of domestic battery and intimidation and was sentenced to probation. Police had claimed several months earlier that she'd swung a machete at boyfriend Andrew Glennon while he was holding their son, James, who was 1 year old at the time.

"This is not about my past. It's not about the show. It's about this person is missing. His family is hurting; I am hurting so bad. This is my love," she said in the Elle Bee livestream on Tuesday. "Don't worry about me; I am stable. I've been stable for years now, OK? I've been stable. Do not think the worst."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: 'Teen Mom' star Amber Portwood says fiancé Gary Wayt is missing


Newly discovered species found in Ecuador lives up to its name, A. miraculum

 

Newly discovered species found in Ecuador lives up to its name, A. miraculum

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On the western slopes of the Andes in Ecuador, John L. Clark, a research botanist at Florida’s Marie Selby Botanical Gardens, happened upon what he calls a miracle.

In an area of formerly lush cloud forest known as Centinela devastated by clearing, Clark spotted a tiny, 2-inch-high (5-centimeter) plant with delicate white petals and spiky, iridescent leaves in 2022.

That he could see it at all, nestled there on a moss-covered rock in a remnant patch of untouched land, was impressive. That it was a never-before-documented species was even better. But the best part of all was the hope it gave Clark.

“That area was sort of written off as just agricultural wasteland,” he said. The diminutive flower told another story.

“A lot of the things that we thought were gone, they’re still there. And then on top of what we thought was gone, we found this,” said Clark, lead author of a paper describing the finding, published Tuesday in the journal PhytoKeys.

Back in the lab, Clark and his team confirmed that the little plant was a species new to science, and he and his team named it Amalophyllon miraculum.

The 2-inch-high plant's deeply serrated leaves and purple-green iridescence stand out in forest fragments that remain after years of widespread clearing in the Centinela region. - John L. Clark

“To find extant and undescribed species, in a degraded area that others may overlook, makes the research especially exciting,” said Laurence Skog, curator emeritus in botany at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Natural History in Washington, DC. He was not involved in the research. “What other areas of the world are we overlooking and need to visit for new discoveries?”

In the decades after World War II, western Ecuador lost more than 95% of its forests below 3,280 feet (1,000 meters), according to Martin Schaefer, head of the Jocotoco Conservation Foundation, which collaborated on the new study.

First came the loggers, then growing cities and clearing for cattle, palm oil and banana plantations. By the 1980s, deforestation reached Centinela, perched on an Andean ridge.

“The situation was already dire with very few forest fragments still surviving,” Schaefer said. “Each of these forest fragments protects highly threatened species and species found nowhere else.”

The devastation was documented in a 1991 study called “Biological Extinction in Western Ecuador.” A biodiversity hot spot seemingly had been extinguished. The renowned late naturalist E.O. Wilson coined the term “Centinelan extinction” to refer to the loss of entire species before they are even known and scientifically described due to wholesale habit loss.

But in the bits and pieces of forest that remain — mostly thanks to landowners who have chosen to preserve wild habitat on their properties — life, as it turns out, persists.

The tiny plant clings to mossy rocks in the formerly lush cloud forest. “It’s a miracle that the forests are still there. That’s why we decided to call it miraculum,” research botanist John L. Clark said. - John L. Clark

Clark’s research focuses on primarily tropical and subtropical flowering plants in the family Gesneriaceae, so he’s adept at spotting them in the wild. With a combination of a keen eye and good fortune, he saw a tiny bloom clinging to a mossy rock near a waterfall. The plant’s deeply serrated leaves and purple-green iridescence made it stand out to him immediately.

“I told my assistant, ‘Oh my gosh, hold the camera here. You gotta get this on recording, because this thing is amazing,’” Clark said. (The recording is on Clark’s Instagram page. To an untrained eye, it’s nearly impossible to see the plant about which he’s so excited.)

“It’s a miracle that the forests are still there. That’s why we decided to call it miraculum,” Clark said, crediting the farmers who chose not to cut down the trees on their land. “They’re heroes.”

The nonprofit Jocotoco works with landowners to help them get government funding for preserving forests on their properties. Recent botanical research such as Clark’s impelled the foundation to expand into Centinela.

“By now, some of our reserves have become the largest contiguous forests in their provinces,” said Schaefer, who has worked in Ecuador since 2002. “They are like Noah’s ark, ensuring the survival of thousands of species. This is what we will do for Centinela as well.”

Clark said he is excited for the support. The foundation typically touts the preservation of habitat for birds and other charismatic species, but in Centinela it’s promoting conservation of the forest for the benefit of plants — such as ​​Amalophyllon miraculum.

Perhaps more miracles are in store. “Nature heals itself — if we allow it,” Schaefer said.

Amanda Schupak is a science and health journalist in New York City.

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