Daily 30: Tue 10.14.2014

Stephen A.  Fires Back at Floyd
Floyd Mayweather doesn't give "two flying f*cks" about Stephen A. Smith's opinion. He said so during an interview with Fight Hype late last week. But that didn't stop SAS from giving his opinion on Money Mayweather's refusal to fight Manny Pacquiao on ESPN First Take today.
Nike Store Apocalyptic Restock
Heads up, sneakerheads. Nike Store might be having an epic restock very soon. According to reputable sneaker personalities DeadStock NYC and TBlake, the Nike.com restock will include several Air Jordan, Nike Sportswear, and Nike Basketball styles, including "Gamma" XIs, "Cigar" and "Champgane" VIs, and "What the LeBron" XIs.
Phaedra Parks Files for Divorce
Phaedra Parks has filed for divorce from Apollo, who is currently serving an 8 year prison sentence. Plus, Katy Perry is performing at this year's Super Bowl Halftime Show and Vivica A. Fox reveals her biggest regret.
UP TO 70 EXPOSED
DALLAS (AP) — They drew his blood, put tubes down his throat and wiped up his diarrhea. They analyzed his urine and wiped saliva from his lips, even after he had lost consciousness. About 70 staff members at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital were involved in the care of Thomas Eric Duncan after he was hospitalized, including a nurse now being treated for the same Ebola virus that killed the Liberian man who was visiting Dallas, according to medical records his family provided to The Associated Press. The size of the medical team reflects the hospital's intense effort to save Duncan's life, but it also suggests that many other people could have been exposed to the virus during Duncan's time in an isolation unit. On Monday, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the infection of the nurse means the agency must broaden the pool of people getting close monitoring. Authorities have said they do not know how the nurse was infected, but they suspect some kind of breach in the hospital's protocol. The medical records given to the AP offer clues, both to what happened and who was involved, but the hospital says the CDC does not have them. "This is not something we can afford to experiment with. We need to get this right," said Ruth McDermott-Levy, who directs the Center for Global and Public Health in Villanova University's College of Nursing. Until now, the CDC has been actively monitoring 48 people who might have had contact with Duncan after he fell ill with an infection but before he was put in isolation. The number included 10 people known to have contact and 38 who may have had contact, including people he was staying with and health care professionals who attended to him during an emergency room visit from which he was sent home. None is sick. The CDC has not yet established a firm number of health care workers who had contact with Duncan. "If this one individual was infected — and we don't know how — within the isolation unit, then it is possible that other individuals could have been infected as well," said Dr. Tom Frieden, director of the CDC. "We do not today have a number of such exposed people or potentially exposed health care workers. It's a relatively large number, we think in the end." Caregivers who began treating Duncan after he tested positive for Ebola were following a "self-monitoring regimen" in which they were instructed to take their temperatures regularly and report any symptoms. But they were not considered at high risk. Typically, the nurses, doctors and technicians caring for a contagious patient in isolation would be treating other people as well and going home to their families after decontaminating themselves. The hospital has refused to answer questions about their specific duties. The 1,400-plus pages of medical records show that nurses, doctors and other hospital employees wore face shields, double gowns, protective footwear and even hazmat suits to avoid touching any of Duncan's bodily fluids. Ebola spreads through direct contact with those fluids, usually blood, feces and vomit. The virus has also been detected in urine, semen and breast milk, and it may be in saliva and tears. CDC officials said there were chinks in that protection at Texas Presbyterian, but they have not identified them and are investigating. A CDC spokesman did not dispute that the agency did not have the medical records, and said he would double check. It's unclear why those reports are not in the hands of federal health investigators. "Patient had large, extremely watery diarrhea," a nurse wrote in a report filed the day Duncan tested positive. Another nurse noted that Duncan's urine was "darker in color with noted blood streaks." It was unclear from the records released to the AP how many of the approximately 70 individuals involved in Duncan's care had direct contact with his body or fluids. Dr. Aileen Marty, a World Health Organization doctor who recently returned to Florida International University after a month fighting Ebola in Nigeria, said no amount of protection is going to help if hospital workers do not put on and take off their protective layers carefully. "The first thing in caring for someone with Ebola is to do everything in your power to never become a victim," she said. And tracking all contacts, even within the medical setting, is complicated. Generally, the first step in locating care providers for isolated infected patients is a personnel log on the door, "that should have everyone going in and out, signing in and out," said Dr. Lisa Esolen, Geisinger Health System's Medical Director of Health Services and Infection Prevention and Control. Medical records indicate the Dallas hospital had a log. On the day before Duncan died, records indicate that at least nine caregivers entered and exited the room. A spokesman for Texas Health Resources, the hospital's parent company, said the CDC probably has a log from the room door that would list everyone who got close to Duncan. Dr. Christopher Ohl, who heads Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center's infectious-disease department and has worked with the CDC in the past, said the expanding monitoring "is an abundance of caution that's probably beyond what needs to be done" because medical caregivers will notice if they're getting a fever, and they're not contagious until that point. "You start to know when you get those body aches and headaches, most people know that," he said. "It's not like you're surprised by it. Most people can figure out what to do when that happens."
Cocoa Love
A young couple's relationship is tested when a funeral for a loved one turns into a misadventure of mayhem, secrets and surprises.
The Rayful Edmond Story Pt. 1
The true king of cocaine. At his peak he sold 2,000 keys a week, reaped gross profits of $70 million a month, and ran an operation with over 150 soldiers to support him. In his life champagne flowed like water, trips to Vegas, New York, and Los Angeles were the norm, and $150,000 shopping sprees were nothing.
Danilo Gallinari: Waiting On The Sidelines
Danilo Gallinari insists Milan has way more basketball courts than New York, but the Denver Nuggets forward had to stay away from all of them while recovering from a torn ACL. Strolling down some New York neighborhoods, Gallinari fills in VICE Sports on how he spent his 18 months away from the courts: becoming a restaurateur, downing Aperol Spritz, and working on his "full throttle" dance moves.
Tip or Nah
Screen Shot 2014-10-14 at 8.28.50 AM Adrien Broner is a rich guy. He's actually so rich that he has videotaped himself flushing money down the toilet not once, but twice. But that doesn't mean that you should expect him to give you a big tip if you bring him room service. Last night, Broner posted a photo of a $24 bill that he received at a hotel on Instagram. And if you go by the 18 percent rule, Broner should have left his server somewhere in the neighborhood of $4.50 as a tip. But instead of doing that, he wrote the words "OR NAH" in capital letters as a tip before signing the bill and handing it back to his server. It was, well, not the kind of tip you'd expect from Broner. Hopefully, Broner gave his server a cash tip and then just posted his bill on the 'gram to get some free publicity. Otherwise, this incident deserves a spot right at the top of our list of Broner's most ignorant moments.
Apple Crushed Finland's Economy
Apple is more powerful than you think, apparently -- it is being blamed, in part, for an entire country's economic hardships. "The iPhone killed Nokia, and the iPad killed the paper industry, but we’ll make a comeback," Finnish Prime Minister Alexander Stubb told CNBC on Monday. For those unfamiliar with the intricacies of the Finnish economy, the paper industry and cell-phone manufacturer Nokia were once Finland's two biggest industries. Nokia in particular was Finland's pride and joy until 2007, when the iPhone was first released. Since then, Nokia has been in a steady decline. Microsoft bought Nokia for $7.2 billion last April and immediately started to cut jobs. Last July, Microsoft announced it would lay off at least 12,500 Nokia employees. A Bloomberg Businessweek story from last August pointed out that Nokia and paper were declining due to the rise of new technology and the end of print, and Stubb last June famously accused Apple co-founder Steve Jobs of taking away Finland's jobs. Sure, Finland would likely be better off if Nokia had stayed on top and if the print industry weren't dying, but Apple can't take all the blame. After all, Google sells more Android phones than Apple does iPhones, and iPads certainly aren't selling like they used to. Plus, isn't the Kindle partially to blame for the death of print as well? Maybe Stubb should have chosen a broader target than Apple -- like technology.
Addicted
Based on the best-selling novel by Zane, ADDICTED is a sexy and provocative thriller about desire and the dangers of indiscretion. Successful businesswoman Zoe Reynard appears to have attained it all - the dream husband she loves, two wonderful children and a flourishing career. As perfect as everything appears from the outside, Zoe is still drawn to temptations she cannot escape or resist. As she pursues a secretive life, Zoe finds herself risking it all when she heads down a perilous path she may not survive.
The Maze Runner
When Thomas (Dylan O'Brien) wakes up trapped in a massive maze with a group of other boys, he has no memory of the outside world other than strange dreams about a mysterious organization known as W.C.K.D. Only by piecing together fragments of his past with clues he discovers in the maze can Thomas hope to uncover his true purpose and a way to escape. Based on the best-selling novel by James Dashner.