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Motorworks Brewing in Bradenton, Fla., is labeling beer cans with dogs available for adoption in a unique promotion of animal rescues.

In partnership with Shelter Manatee, the brewery is selling cans of Kölsch lager featuring dogs in need of forever homes at the Manatee County adoption center. Each label contains a story about the featured dog, as well as information about Shelter Manatee’s plans to build a new shelter.


Since the project’s purpose is to advocate for adoption, there is no guarantee that the dogs on the cans will still be available at the time of purchase, but the rescue has plenty of equally adorable, loving dogs awaiting new families.


Brewery customers who aren’t currently looking to adopt a dog will still be helping animals in need, as a portion of the proceeds are donated to Shelter Manatee and will go towards the construction of its new facility.


“Money is going directly to the shelter for that,” the brewery’s director of sales and marketing, Barry Elwonger told Fox 13 News, “and we want to make sure that the people know about the different dogs that are looking for homes.”


The custom cans debuted last Sunday at an event featuring silent auctions, drink specials, and food trucks. Thus far, the campaign has received an overwhelming amount of support.


The beer is available in four-packs and cases of 24 at Motorworks Brewing in downtown Bradenton until it sells out. For more information, visit the brewery’s website.


A beer can campaign, intended to promote dog adoption in Bradenton, Fla., helped one Minnesota resident find her long-lost friend.


Monica Mathis of St. Paul, Minn., lost her beloved dog, Hazel, three years ago while living in Iowa. Recently, she noticed a picture of beer cans featuring dogs available for adoption on Facebook. One of the dogs had an uncanny resemblance to Hazel.


Skeptical because Florida is so far away from Minnesota, Mathis doubted that Day Day, a name given to the dog by the Manatee County Animal Shelter, could be Hazel. She decided to call the shelter to double-check, and they verified through records that the dog is actually Mathis’s long-lost companion.


“I really didn’t think I was ever going to see her again,” she told FOX9. “I’ve been thinking about her every day, but you know, that was my baby.”


As it turns out, Hazel is microchipped, but Mathis’s contact information was outdated, and the shelter was unsuccessful in locating her. Mathis had lost the contact information for the microchip company when she moved to Minnesota and was unable to update them.


“Keep track of exactly what company you use.” she told Fox13, “Make sure your stuff gets updated, especially if your pet goes missing, and don’t ever give up.”


No one knows how Hazel ended up in Florida. The non-profit Friends of Manatee County Animal Services will transport her to Minnesota in a few weeks, free-of-charge.


“I was so lucky,” Mathis said. “So lucky that I saw that … that she actually got picked and put on a can, because I would have probably never seen her again had I not seen that.”


Circuit Solicitor Byron E. Gipson

Scarred and malnourished, six dogs were found suffering in cages at a suspected dogfighting operation. One poor dog, kept in a small, homemade crate, had extensive scars and fresh bite wounds on his head, face and muzzle. These injuries are typically indicative of dogfighting or “baiting.”


After receiving calls about suspicious activity, officers in Columbia, S.C., found the heartbreaking scene, according to reports.


“Bait dogs,” tortured in an effort to train competing dogs, are generally tied up with their mouths taped shut and brutally attacked. Most of these animals suffer agonizing deaths.

The dogs supposed caretaker, Chasity Katherine Hammonds, has been arrested and charged with animal fighting and baiting.


These six dogs deserve justice. Sign this petition urging Circuit Solicitor Byron E. Gipson to treat this case with the severity it deserves and prosecute Hammonds to the fullest extent of the law, including a life-long ban on having animals.


Today on Monday, we are liberating 300 sweet birds from a battery cage egg farm. They have lived almost 2 years in a wire, metal cage. Their feet never touched the earth. They never felt the sun on their backs. They never flapped their wings or raced across a pasture. Soon, they will be free.


The Animal Place team is excited, though this rescue does not come without its challenges. To name a few:

  • The chicken barn at the Rescue & Adoption Center in Petaluma is finally up...BUT it has no water or power running to it.

  • We hired a manager for the property, but he started training last week!

  • We have not yet hired other staffing for the Rescue & Adoption Center.

But, we’re making it happen. This will be the first group of lucky birds to step foot at the new Rescue & Adoption Center. Their stay in Petaluma will be short, though. They will be health-checked and tested for Newcastle. When results return, partnering sanctuaries will pick up their hens and the remainder will head back to Grass Valley where we prepared an open barn for them.


They will spend 10 days being cared for until they are re-treated for parasites and placed into pre-screened, pre-approved forever homes. Any bird who exhibits illness will remain at our sanctuary as permanent residents.


We will share photos and video of the hens when they get to Petaluma. I’m sure you will love seeing these girls fly free for the first time! (If you can’t wait, here’s a video from another rescue).


How can you help? Follow us on facebook, and keep your eyes peeled for our livestream on Monday. We’ll show you the transport, arrival, and release of the birds! You can also donate to our facebook fundraiser, to help pay for supplies, transport, and medical costs.


We can’t wait to meet 300 precious individuals, and share the experience with you!


Dillan Rescue Update: Relaxing at The Wild Animal Sanctuary

Dillan, a morbidly obese Asiatic black bear who suffered for years at the Union County Sportsmen's Club in Millmont, PA, is now relaxing at The Wild Animal Sanctuary in Keenesburg, CO. Dillan had spent his days rocking back and forth, a sign of extreme distress and likely pain from his severe dental disease, but since arriving at the sanctuary, he no longer exhibits this abnormal behavior. He is on the road to recovery and will soon be released into multi-acre naturalistic habitat where he'll be able to roam, forage for food, hibernate, and finally be a bear.


Fasby survives THREE coyote attacks - see his survival techniques at the end!

Fasby had to be rescued TWICE, and it's just a miracle that he survived to tell the story. For this Valentine's Day, please give your Valentine a meaningful gift that saves lives: https://www.HopeForPaws.org/Valentine...


Valentine's Day for Motan and Pisa

Motan and Pisa enjoyed their special Valentine's enrichment.️ The duo was rescued from Gaza have made significant improvements since arriving at our project, LIONSROCK Big Cat Sanctuary & Lodge .



Fox gets his HEAD stuck in a METAL PIPE!

We've seen foxes stuck in everything from garden fences to car tyres, but this particular patient (filmed for Wildlife SOS series 9) left us scratching our heads a little! He was rushed into the centre after the RSPCA found him with his whole head stuck in a metal pipe. Despite efforts, Simon and the team were unable to dislodge him with the plastic funnel technique, so it was time to break out the power tools...


Fixing a buzzards BROKEN BEAK... like a dentist!

In our line of work, we always have to be ready to adapt to any situation that comes our way. When this buzzard arrived at the centre with a fractured beak after an impact, our vet team had to think of a way to fix it quickly! Using a special cement used in human dentistry, Maru (our lead vet) carefully set everything back into place before leaving the bird to recover for three weeks. Amazingly, her work was a complete success and the buzzard was soon able to fly free once more!


This bird is covered in GLUE! Can we save it?!

This pigeon was recently admitted to the centre covered in an unknown sticky substance. Although initial reports thought it to be tar, further investigation found it to be glue - likely from a glue trap or flypaper. Pigeons, like all birds, have very delicate feathers, and our vet team spent several days making sure this little guy was fit for release once again!


The future of The Wildlife Aid Foundation! Simon will be talking about the future of Wildlife Aid and what that entails.

From humble beginnings The Wildlife Aid Foundation has grown into one of the most influential and experienced wildlife care charities in the UK. It is based at the same site it was first established on almost 40 years ago, a site which can no longer accommodate the charity’s growing workload and ambition. We have outgrown our home, and we need to move.


For almost a decade we have been investigating relocation possibilities and, thanks to a generous legacy left to us in 2014, we were able to purchase 20-acres of land less than a mile from our current site in Surrey. In 2017 we were granted planning permission to build a new centre on this land... here are our plans for the future!


We can only make this happen with your help. If you would like to support us, please see www.wildlifeaid.org.uk/thewildlifeaidcentre/ for details.


Volunteer with the Animal Rescue Team

One of the most commonly asked questions for our Animal Rescue Team is, “How can I volunteer?” Our team has—and relies on—a strong network of volunteers to help us make a real difference for animals in rescue and disaster relief work. We truly depend on them to help us get this important, lifesaving work done.

One of the most common mistakes prospective volunteers make is waiting until a natural or man-made disaster strikes to begin the application process and to begin proper training and preparation for becoming an Animal Rescue Team volunteer. Unfortunately, by then, it’s too late. If you want to volunteer, it’s important to apply before a disaster. If you get everything done early, you, like our many other volunteers, will be ready to deploy when animals need our help.

I can’t speak enough to the impact people feel from saving animals in need. If you want to make a difference, this is a way to do it. I encourage you to start your application today. With hurricane season on the horizon, our team will be ready to deploy at a moment’s notice - The Humane Society of the United States





Welcome to the Animal & Wildlife Welfare, Abuse & Crime Report brought to you by the Sustainable Action Network (SAN)!


Angela 'Felicia' Means Strips Nude at 50 to Reveal What Vegans Look Like

"Friday" star and popular restaurateur Angela Means goes nude at age 50 to show the benefits of vegan living—and it has us exclaiming, "Daaamn!" https://www.peta.org/features/angela-...


Carmen Carrera Wants You to ‘Transform Your Wardrobe’

Model and actor Carmen Carrera is known for fearlessly using her platform to raise awareness about transgender and LGBTQ issues. And now she’s making a bold statement of another sort: Carmen bared all to bring attention to the suffering endured by animals who are caged and killed for their fur and to encourage her followers to “transform” their wardrobes by going fur-free.


2019 U.S. Animal Protection Laws State Rankings


The 2019 U.S. State Animal Protection Laws Rankings Report has been released. Illinois continues to rein as #1 — with Mississippi bringing up the rear at #50. Find out where your state ranks!


Court Rules Kansas Ag-Gag Law Unconstitutional


Kansas’ Ag-Gag law is the most recent to be struck down as unconstitutional for violating the First Amendment. Enacted in 1990, Kansas’ was the oldest Ag-Gag law in the country. Check out our progress on defeating Ag-Gag laws across the country.


In a triumph for animal welfare, the U.S. Court for the District of Kansas has ruled that the state’s “ag-gag” law violates the First Amendment and is therefore unconstitutional.


Challenged in 2018 by a coalition led by the Animal Legal Defense Fund (ALDF), the law bans undercover investigators from taking photographs or filming animal facilities, such as slaughterhouses and factory farms, ultimately preventing the documentation of animal abuse.

On January 22, the U.S. Court for the District of Kansas rejected the state’s motion to dismiss the case and accepted the majority of the coalition’s motion for summary judgment, thus prohibiting Kansas from implementing the Ag Gag law.


ALDF maintains that the almost 30-year-old legislation prevents undercover activists from investigating inhumane conditions at animal facilities, stifling free speech. This enables unscrupulous companies to hide systemic animal abuse and avoid public scrutiny.


“For 30 years, Kansas lawmakers have suppressed whistleblowers from investigating cruel conditions on factory farms with this unconstitutional law,” explains ALDF Executive Director Stephen Wells. “Today’s decision is a victory for the millions of animals raised for meat on factory farms.”


ALDF explained the importance of undercover investigations in both regulatory practice and public informational awareness.


“It is critical that investigations are not suppressed,” the organization said in a statement. “The public relies on undercover investigations to expose illegal and cruel practices on factory farms and slaughterhouses. No Federal laws govern the condition in which farmed animals are raised, and laws addressing slaughter and transport are laxly enforced.”


“Undercover investigations are therefore the primary avenue through which the public receives information about animal agriculture operations,” ALDF continued. “Investigations also reveal health and worker safety violations. Factory farms and slaughterhouses are major polluters, so undercover investigations are important for learning about violations of environmental laws as well.”


This victory in Kansas follows other federal courts in Idaho, Iowa and Utah ruling that those states’ ag-gag laws also violate the U.S. Constitution.


Pursuit Channel CEO Rusty Faulk

A frightened coyote yelping out in pain as she’s shot at point-blank range, unable to escape a foothold trap; her cold, lifeless body thrown carelessly into the back of a pickup truck, as host Robby Gilbert describes the torture as “an artform” and “a heritage built upon hard work, dedication, and pride” in the name of “conservation.” This is Trapping Time, a disturbing television series that subjects innocent animals to cruel trapping practices in the name of entertainment.


Trapping often involves ensnaring animals’ necks with wire, gripping their bodies, and crushing their bones with vice-like jaws. These methods are not immediately lethal, instead causing creatures to suffer excruciating pain until death from conditions like hypothermia, blood loss, and dehydration.


Many animals die trying to break free from traps, chewing or wringing off their trapped limbs and breaking their teeth and bones in the process.


Traps do not discriminate. Millions of animals, including household pets and endangered species, are victimized by traps annually in the United States, where trapping is minimally regulated.


By airing Trapping Time, the Pursuit Channel condones and supports the barbaric and gruesome trapping industry.


Promoting cruelty to animals for “entertainment” is just plain wrong.



New Lawsuit Aims to Stop Yellowstone Grizzly Killings

Our fight to protect Yellowstone-area grizzly bears goes on. The Center for Biological Diversity and allies just launched a lawsuit over the Trump administration's plan to let 72 grizzly bears be killed in the name of livestock grazing in Wyoming's Bridger-Teton National Forest. Instead of making sure that measures to reduce grizzly bear conflicts are enforceable, Trump's U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has authorized more and more killings of Yellowstone's grizzlies — a unique, highly threatened population. "Wiping out Yellowstone grizzlies to make way for cattle to graze cheaply on our public lands makes no sense," said the Center's Andrea Santarsiere. "These treasured bears deserve better." Watch a news report at KPAX and consider supporting our lawsuit with a donation to our Predator Defense Fund.

On January 30, legislation to permanently prohibit horse slaughter in the United States, as well as the transportation of horses to foreign countries for slaughter, was reintroduced for Congressional consideration by the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health.

Currently, it is legal to export horses from the United States to be brutally butchered for their meat, which is then consumed overseas. Unscrupulous ‘kill buyers’ often buy innocent horses from auctions and pack them into small trailers with no food or water. If the horses survive the terrifying transport, they’re shot with bolt guns and their throats are slit at the slaughterhouse.

Additionally, horse meat is generally unsafe for human consumption because the animals are often dosed with various noxious chemical substances.


The Safeguard American Food Exports Act (SAFE), introduced by Reps. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) and Vern Buchanan (R-Fla.), would end this dreadful process.

“The SAFE Act is vital for the health of consumers and wellbeing of horses,” commented Schakowsky. “Horses are ingrained in our national story and deserve far better than being exported in inhumane conditions for slaughter. Many of the substances used to treat horses are banned by the FDA, making horse meat dangerous for human consumption. As a lifelong advocate for consumer protection and animal welfare, I welcome the focus on this legislation.”

Urging government officials to support and pass this bill, Lady Freethinker has garnered over 32,800 signatures to ban ruthless horse slaughtering. Thank you to those who have already signed this petition. If you haven’t, please take the time to help protect America’s horses.


Would you believe that the United States is the largest importer of animal trophies? This horrifying truth is made possible by a well-funded, high-powered group of people with money and influence. They hunt animals for fun and sometimes specifically target imperiled animals for their "rarity." Please support the ProTECT Act and demand a ban on the import of endangered animal trophies! While the ProTECT Act, H.R. 4804, doesn't regulate trophy hunting in other countries, it does take a huge step forward in banning the import of the trophies of endangered or threatened species. We need YOUR help to protect these beautiful animals from being slayed by trophy hunters for fun and bragging rights.

Please call your U.S. representative and ask them to support H.R. 4804, the ProTECT Act. You can simply say, "Please cosponsor the Prohibiting Threatened and Endangered Creature Trophies (ProTECT) Act, which will prohibit the import of any trophy of a species listed under the Endangered Species Act into the United States and trophy hunting in the United States of any ESA-listed species."

Judge's Sentencing of Former MLB Player Reflects Outcry from Our Supporters

Public outcry from animal advocates undoubtedly played a role in returning former MLB first-draft player, Shawn Wesley Abner, to prison for the gruesome death of his dog named Eagle. Our letter to the prosecutor in Abner’s case, along with thousands of signatures from In Defense of Animals supporters, was presented to the judge to push for the maximum punishment the law allows.


In July 2019, Shawn Wesley Abner left his Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania residence to visit his girlfriend in the state of Kansas. In August, Abner called a neighbor in his hometown to check on Eagle, who was found nearly mummified and melted into the urine buckled floor of his sweltering dwelling. Abner was subsequently detained in Kansas, extradited to Pennsylvania, and charged with aggravated animal cruelty.


In November, Abner pled guilty to the torturous death of his “best friend” Eagle, who was left to suffer in agony as he slowly dehydrated and starved to death in the brutal summer heat.

Our letter was presented to Common Pleas Judge, Albert H. Masland, by Cumberland County, Pennsylvania District Attorney Skip Ebert. At Abner’s sentencing, Judge Masland referred to the 11,493 signatures attached to our letter, which called for the maximum sentencing of Shawn Wesley Abner, and it made an impact. Judge Masland stated, "What you did is inexplicable, inexcusable and perhaps in some minds unforgivable, but it is not damnable, and it is not deserving of eternal condemnation."


While Judge Masland acknowledged the overwhelming concern of our supporters, he did not accept the defense’s recommendation of 110 days served. Instead, he drew from the minimum sentencing of nine months incarceration recommended by DA Ebert. Abner was sentenced to serve 4 ½ to 23 months incarceration with time served with the possibility of parole. Judge Masland also added a $500 fine and 200 hours of community service, with 60% to be served aiding a humane organization, and 100 hours to serve in south-central Pennsylvania. Abner was also ordered to submit to a mental health evaluation.


We are pleased Judge that Masland recognized the strong feelings of our supporters who sought justice for Eagle; however, we share your disappointment that the maximum penalty for this shocking crime was not delivered. The good news is that prosecutors and judges are listening. We sincerely appreciate your support and participation in responding to our alerts. Together, we are making the world a better place for animals!

Following an extensive investigation, Butler County police have arrested a man accused of deserting a three-year-old dog in a wire cage, leaving the poor animal to slowly die of starvation.


When a postal worker found the skeletal remains of the Cane Corso puppy in an abandoned motel parking lot in Liberty Township, Ohio, he instantly knew the dog had been severely neglected, leading to the innocent creature’s painful and needless death.


“From looking at the animal, you can literally see every bone in [his] body,” lead dog warden Kurt Merbs told WLWT.


Sheriff Richard K Jones says that a tip has now led to the apprehension of Clarence Thomas Jr., who has been charged with abandoning animals and prohibitions concerning companion animals. The accused is being held in the Butler County Jail.


“We posted this case on social media to get the word out that not only were we looking for the subject responsible for this heinous act,” Jones said in a release, “but to let offenders know, you can run, but you cannot hide.”


The arrest follows a Lady Freethinker petition urging authorities to find the suspect. Huge thanks to all of you who have signed — and thank you, law enforcement, for finding this dog’s killer.  Now, we must keep speaking out to ensure this case ends in justice. If you haven’t, please sign to ensure the guilty party is prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, including a life-long ban on having animals.

Puppy Mills are mass dog-breeding facilities that care about profit more than the animal’s healthcare. Conditions there are horrible. Dogs are forced to live their entire lives in cramped cages that are required to be only 6 inches wider than the dog on each side.


Help me change that law to increase the minimum amount of space required to keep a dog, the number of dogs allowed to be inside of it at a time, and the amount of time that the dogs can be in small cages.


This would largely decrease the profit of puppy mills by increasing the number of cages bought and the amount of land puppy mill owners need to keep dogs in. This simple law also increases the physical and emotional health of dogs in puppy mills. This does not impact people who have dogs as pets, though, because responsible pet owners do not keep dogs in very small cages for such an immense amount of time.The solution is simple. However, if the law is not passed, dogs in mills will continue to suffer and the number of dogs in puppy mills will not decrease. They will be forced to continue living in these horrible conditions. How can we be a civilized society and let this happen to man’s best friend?


My goal is to decrease the number of puppy mills in the US. Please help and sign the petition!


Pigs Left Terrified and Bloody at Despicable Event in Texas

These pigs crash head-first as they desperately try to escape.


You Have to See How These “Trainers” Treat Animals used for Film & TV

Think the animals you see on TV & film are happy? Guess again. On or off set, the animals you see onscreen are at risk. This never-before-seen footage exposes some of the dark secrets lurking behind animals used as props in entertainment industries.


This company has reportedly supplied animals for shows like Briarpatch. Urge USA Network them to commit to never using wild animals in its programs!


Cricket Hollow Zoo Rescue Continues


Court filing seeks whereabouts of nearly 100 animals missing from Cricket Hollow Zoo in Manchester, Iowa — and seeks a contempt order against the zoo’s owners who removed animals before rescue. Learn more about the progress rescuing animals from Cricket Hollow Zoo.


Protect Dogs This Winter


It’s a heart breaking reality. Every year, there are countless cases of animals being found chained up in freezing temperatures. Help protect dogs this winter!


Join Animal Legal Defense Fund staff attorney Kathleen Wood for this webinar as she discusses the annual Animal Protection Laws Rankings Report. Each year, our attorneys compile and review every state and territory’s animal protection laws and rank them according to the relative strength and weakness of their laws. Kathleen will discuss what goes into creating our Compendium and Rankings Report, as well as the highlights from 2019, including most-improved states and legislative trends.

Student Resources and Opportunities​ Facebook Live


Watch our Facebook Live on Student Resources and Opportunities. We talked about our upcoming week of action and other events, scholarships, and clerkship opportunities.


Animal Law Symposium: Oklahoma City

Join the Animal Legal Defense Fund for our Animal Law Symposium! This day-long symposium will provide attendees with the opportunity to hear from the top voices within the animal law community, including local experts. Register now. Animal Legal Defense Fund is offering travel grants to student chapters to attend the event. Grants are awarded on a first come, first served basis and they will go quickly.


National Justice for Animals Week

Join the Animal Legal Defense Fund for National Justice for Animals Week on February 23 to 29, 2020! This week is an annual event dedicated to raising public awareness about animal abuse, how to report it, and how to work within your community to create stronger laws and ensure tough enforcement. Get involved in this week by tabling during lunch or class breaks, hosting a speaker, or holding a film screening.📷

For the animals,

Take Action, Responsibility & Wildlife...

"Corporations Are People My Friends."
Our companies are known for creating products that enhance people's lives.  Through Sunset Corporation of America and its companies, we’re equally dedicated to improving lives.  Our commitment extends to helping local communities, fostering better educational systems, supporting the arts and culture, helping disadvantaged youth, protecting and improving the environment, animal welfare, wildlife issues and encouraging employee volunteerism.

The Sustainable Action Network (SAN), A Don Lichterman non-profit organization dedicated to building a global community raising awareness of corruption, injustice and the need for action across a full range of issues impacting people and animal/wildlife welfare around the world, such as conservation, climate change, campaign law, lobbying, government action and rescue work. SAN’s vision is to create safer world, free from political, environmental, and social oppression, where all the inhabitants of Earth can live in harmony within their own natural environments. Our commitment extends to helping local communities, fostering better educational systems, supporting the arts and culture, helping disadvantaged youth, protecting and improving the environment, animal welfare, wildlife issues and encouraging employee volunteerism.


Activism and Sustainability:

  • Gun Safety & Gun Laws

  • Cruelty Free

  • Death Penalty

  • Demand Action

  • Sustainable Action Network

Fairness and Equality:

  • Grammy District Advocacy

  • Privatization

  • Voters Issues & Gerrymandering

  • Private Prisons & the War on Drugs

  • Finance, Housing & the Economy Corporate Responsibility:

  • Candidates, Bills, Laws & Protections

  • Wildlife & Oceania

  • Labeling & Transparency

  • Comprehensive Captivity & Hunting Results Databases

Purchase gifts that help animals this holiday season! The Animal Legal Defense Fund’s holiday shop is now open – for a limited time. Find past favorites and new designs in options including totes, shirts, hoodies, and even options for dogs!

These items make the perfect holiday gift for friends and family who care about animals. Spread the message of compassion and support the Animal Legal Defense Fund. 100% of the profits go to our work to protect the lives and advance the interests of animals through the legal system.



On The Rampage w/ Don Lichterman brings you the voting results from Dixville Notch's whose five residents cast their ballots just after the stroke of midnight, talks about the personality police, man crushes (Joel McHale, Alexander Skarsgaard) and James Casey on Sax during “Burlap Sack and Pumps” taken from a Trey Anastasio Band Video from New Orleans, Maryland Terrapins Men's Basketball team at No. 8 (really No. 9) while going over the tops teams, the Below Deck reunion, Texas A&M, Vaping Studies, U. of VA & GA and a Court Must Reconsider USDA Inaction to Protect Birds, SSM does 1,260,290 sales in 2019, Sunset hits 2,001,030 sales in 2019 and The Grateful Dead at Radio City Music Hall, Radiohead live in SF & Get The Led Out Live is Tonight at Live Jam 107 this week and more are discussed on today's Podcast!

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