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LA’s 911 dispatch system may get relief from AI-powered call handling



A Florida tech firm says it can help pull Los Angeles’ overloaded 911 system back from the brink by letting artificial intelligence handle routine complaints.

Public safety technology company Aurelian has developed an AI-powered call taker that answers police non-emergency phone lines, takes reports and routes complaints.

The system handles everything from barking dog complaints and parking disputes to abandoned vehicles, lost property reports and suspicious activity calls.

The pitch comes as Los Angeles continues battling chronic dispatcher shortages and slow emergency response times.

Emergency dispatch centers across the country are struggling with staffing shortages as millions of non-emergency calls compete for attention alongside true emergencies. Andrey Popov – stock.adobe.com

A March report to the City Council found LAPD answered just 57.43% of 911 calls within California’s 15-second standard in 2024, far below the state’s benchmark requiring 90% of emergency calls to be answered within that timeframe.

Staffing remains a major challenge.

The California Post previously reported LAPD hired 144 dispatcher trainees in 2024 but only 56 in 2025 while losing 75 operators during roughly the same period.

City officials have said about 100 operators must be on duty across a 24-hour period just to meet minimum staffing requirements.

According to Aurelian CEO Max Keenan, roughly 70% of calls entering a typical emergency communications center are not emergencies at all.

“They’re barking dogs. Parking disputes. Noise complaints. Lost bicycles. Requests for city services. The same people answer both calls,” Keenan told The California Post.

Ava handles noise complaints, parking disputes, lost property reports and other non-emergency calls that often overwhelm dispatch centers. ÞûõúÃÂðýôÃ⬠ÃâºÃÆÃâ ÃµÃ½ÃºÃ¾ – stock.adobe.com

“The analogy I use now is you basically train your team as Navy SEALs and you use them as mall cops. It is like the greatest misallocation of labor imaginable.”

That reality led the company to build Ava, software designed specifically for the 10-digit non-emergency phone numbers operated by police departments and emergency communications centers.


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Keenan said the scale of the problem became clear while visiting dispatch centers around the country.

One center told him it handled about 200,000 emergency calls a year.

“I did the math and I was like, 200,000 calls a year, for 100 people, that doesn’t seem that bad,” Keenan said. “And she said to me, ‘Oh, we take a million non-emergency calls.’”

The AI system frees operators to focus on true emergencies. Ringo Chiu

According to the company, Ava automates about 74% of non-emergency calls and gives dispatchers back roughly three hours of their workday.

Keenan stressed that the technology never answers 911 calls.

“We only take calls that are dialed into the 10-digit non-emergency line,” he said. “We are not taking any calls that touch 911.”

Still, the system continuously screens calls for emergencies and immediately transfers callers to dispatchers when necessary.

AI could help rescue overwhelmed dispatchers by automatically handling up to 80% of non-emergency calls. CA Post

In one recent case, a caller reported a woman lying on railroad tracks through a non-emergency line. The AI recognized the danger and escalated the call to a dispatcher.

“About 5% of the calls in the non-emergency line are emergencies,” Keenan said. “Being able to understand what’s happening in the situation and escalate that call to a 911 call taker is incredibly important.”

Agencies using the system typically automate between 60% and 80% of their non-emergency calls, according to Keenan.

One department that previously fielded about 80,000 non-emergency calls annually now has dispatchers personally answer only 15,000 to 20,000 calls, with Ava handling the rest.

“It’s one of the hardest jobs in the world,” Keenan said of emergency dispatchers. “It’s not paid well enough for the difficulty, for the amount of skill that it requires, and in some ways there’s some level of trauma.”

Los Angeles answered just 57.43% of 911 calls within California’s 15-second standard last year. Jonathan Alcorn for CA Post

He said staffing shortages have plagued emergency communications centers for decades.

“Staffing has been a massive issue. It’s been a crisis for decades.”

Keenan says the answer is not simply hiring more people.

“You can’t hire your way out of a retention issue and oftentimes you can’t really pay your way out of it either,” he said. “You have to be more intentional about how you make the quality of life better.”

Keenan said the company serves more than 50 public safety agencies and processes hundreds of thousands of calls every month. And unlike many government technology projects, he said agencies can deploy the system quickly.

“Oftentimes we’re going live with a customer in less than 10 weeks from a contract signed to go live,” Keenan said. “Usually day one, we’re automating 60% of their calls.”





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Bizarre videos claiming sunburns ‘aren’t dangerous’ are flooding TikTok, study warns


The heat is on!

Sunscreen misinformation is running rampant on TikTok, with many users claiming lathering the lotion on can be “toxic” to sunbathers, a new study cautioned.

Despite accounting for only 13% of the content related to it on the social media platform, videos sowing doubt in the merits sunblock have sent audience engagement into overdrive — racking up significantly more likes, comments and shares than those backing the product, the study, published in PLOS Digital Health, found.

It “examined the presence, engagement levels and characteristics of sunscreen-related misinformation on TikTok” by sampling the 971 most-viewed videos in late September 2024.


A person applies sunscreen to their tanned shoulder, forming a sun shape.
Many TikTok users believe that sunburns are unhealthy. Markomarcello – stock.adobe.com

“There are currently no scientific indications that any ingredient widely used in ‘chemical’ sunscreens (e.g. oxybenzone) is harmful to one’s health,” researchers wrote.

“Consumers may prefer a mineral or ‘natural’ sunscreen that blocks UV rays versus a ‘chemical’ sunscreen that absorbs and deactivates rays, but both options are considered safe, and in no circumstance is not using sunscreen a safer option than using a ‘chemical’ product during sun exposure.”

Some TikTokers claimed sunscreen “acts as an endocrine disruptor” affecting hormone balance, taints breastmilk, contains microplastics and other “toxic” and “unsafe” ingredients — and also damages ecosystems.

Most videos promoted sunscreen — around 86% — to protect from skin damage, acne, aging and cancer. 

Only 6% of the videos contained critiques of it, with 7% of the remaining reels viewed as neutral or basic product reviews without an explicit push to avoid sunscreen. 

Nearly half of all Americans scored a “C” or lower on the American Academy of Dermatology’s sun safety quiz, despite over half of respondents saying they would rate their own habits as positive, according to the organization.


Two teenage girls sitting on a bed holding phones with the TikTok app open on their screens.
TikTok users are spreading misinformation about sunscreen. Luiza – stock.adobe.com

Among Gen Zers (ages 18-29), 33% received a “D” or “F” on the quiz.

“I would say 95% of the misinformation we can attribute to social media,” Dr. Marisa Garshick, a dermatologist at MDCS Dermatology in New York and a fellow at the AAD, told NBC News. 

“Whether it is directly because people are seeing people talk about problems with sunscreen or indirectly where it’s somebody’s favorite influencer who’s showing that they laid out in the sun for three hours and got tan lines.”



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Gia Giudice blasts ‘nasty’ Ava Dash for starting drama with mom Teresa



Gia Giudice is calling out her “nasty” “Next Gen NYC” co-star Ava Dash for accusing her mother Teresa Giudice of unfollowing her on social media.

“It came out of nowhere and it just seems very convenient. That’s why I thought the whole thing was very calculated because this wasn’t the first time Ava and I had seen each other,” Gia, 25, told “Virtual Reali-Tea” hosts Evan Real and Danny Murphy of Dash’s accusation.

As Murphy speculated that Dash, 26, possibly threw out the claim against Teresa to distract from potential headlines regarding her family’s reported money troubles, Gia said she believes “eventually viewers will see that within her a little bit.”

Gia Giudice (pictured above in her June 18 “Virtual Reali-Tea” appearance) called out her “nasty” “Next Gen NYC” co-star Ava Dash for accusing Gia’s mom, Teresa Giudice, of unfollowing her on social media. Brian Zak/Page Six
“It just seems very convenient. That’s why I thought the whole thing was very calculated because this wasn’t the first time Ava and I had seen each other,” Gia explained to hosts Evan Real and Danny Murphy. Brian Zak/Page Six

“She’s very aware of her image and how she would like to be perceived. Obviously, nobody likes bad press or bad attention. But, unfortunately that comes with this territory,” Gia continued.

Despite Dash’s alleged feud with Gia’s mom, the “Casual Chaos” podcast host added that she would “never” deny her co-star’s beauty as she told Real and Murphy, “You could be nasty and still beautiful.”

Dash, 26, first made the allegation about the “Real Housewives of New Jersey” star, 54, in a Season 1 episode of the Bravo series, which premiered last June. The incident led to tension between her and Gia, fracturing their friend group.

Gia last addressed Dash’s comments in her July 2025 appearance on Nick Viall’s “Viall Files” podcast.

Dash (pictured above at a Nordstrom and Isabel Marant event on June 4) accused Teresa of following and unfollowing her on social media during a Season 1 episode of “Next Gen NYC” last year. Yvonne Tnt/BFA.com/Shutterstock
The moment led to heightened tensions between Dash (pictured above at The Surf Lodge in May) and Gia all season long. BFA.com / BACKGRID

“Do you really think she would be able to just sit there and take the time to do that? I just know my mom and she barely knows how to film her Cameos correct,” Gia said at the time. “She’s not tech savvy in any way, so when Ava said that, I was like, ‘Girl, you’re just lying. I know my mom and she doesn’t care that much to unfollow you.’”

In her “Virtual Reali-Tea” interview, Gia addressed the rift among the cast members this upcoming season, saying she feels the drama stems from her co-stars Ariana Biermann and Hudson McLeroy’s breakup.

“So, we obviously are supporting Ariana and really being there for her. Obviously, certain people had opinions about their breakup. They’re not going to be buddy-buddy with her and be canoodling with her as they’re trying to say that the breakup was fake,” she explained.

“I know Ariana. She is my best friend. Never felt that, never thought that,” Gia said in defense of her pal. “It was truly a time when they both needed some space. It was getting too comfortable and you need to sometimes be uncomfortable to then grow.”

Gia (pictured above with her mom on an episode of “Real Housewives of New Jersey”) previously addressed Dash’s claims on a July 2025 episode of Nick Viall’s “Viall Files” podcast. Ralph Bavaro/Bravo
“Do you really think she would be able to just sit there and take the time to do that? I just know my mom and she barely knows how to film her Cameos correct,” Gia said of Teresa at the time. (The mother-daughter duo are pictured in a selfie above.) teresagiudice/Instagram

However, she noted that the estranged couple is “taking the time” to figure out their relationship, but “they haven’t made it official yet.”

“I think that definitely had something to do with the divide a little bit, but also … there was also weird energy and attitude being given to some of us during press last year during Season 1 of ‘Next Gen,’” Gia added.

“There was just always this weird energy that was kind of given to some of us, and we’ve never done anything,” she added. “So, it was kind of just like, let’s see how this goes.”

In her “Virtual Reali-Tea” interview, Gia added that the moment likely contributed to a growing divide among the “Next Gen NYC” crew. (Pictured above is Gia, Georgia McCann Emira D’Spain, Dash and Ariana Biermann). Tamara Beckwith
“Next Gen NYC” Season 2 premieres June 24 at 9 p.m. ET/PT on Bravo. Tamara Beckwith

Along with Gia and Dash, Biermann and McLeroy, returning cast members for “Next Gen NYC” include Riley Burruss, Emira D’Spain, Brooks Marks, Georgia McCann, Charlie Zakkour and Shai Fruchter.

They’re joined by new additions Rowan Henchy, Liam Obergfoll and Kendall White. 

“Next Gen NYC” Season 2 premieres June 24 at 9 p.m. ET/PT on Bravo.



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Referee in Usyk v Verhoeven fight had seen enough to stop fight in 11th round before bell sounded


The ruling added Lyson stated unequivocally: “I decided I wanted to stop the contest… I had already seen enough.”

The commission also stressed how the referee had the authority to end a contest whenever they saw fit.

“Under its rules the referee is the sole arbiter of the contest and retains the full and unfettered right to stop the contest at any time,” it said.

“There is no distinction in authority or effect between a stoppage effected during the round and a stoppage effected between rounds or during the rest period.”

A timing discrepancy identified by official timekeeper Brad William also did not meet the commission’s threshold to overturn the referee’s discretionary decision.

The panel acknowledged William’s evidence, but said “even if the physical wave-off occurred fractionally after the bell, this is, at its highest, a procedural timing discrepancy. It does not constitute bad faith, corruption, fraud, or arbitrariness”.

The scorecards at the time of the fight ending read 95-95, 95-95 and 96-94 to kickboxing legend Verhoeven.

Medical evidence given by Dr Neil Scott confirmed Verhoeven, in just his second professional boxing fight, was medically stable after the contest and did not undermine the referee’s real-time safety assessment.

“There is no evidence of bad faith, malice, corruption, fraud, partiality, or any want of integrity on the part of Referee Mark Lyson,” the commission added.

Verhoeven said fans were denied a 12th round between himself and unified heavyweight world champion Usyk and there should be an immediate rematch.



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BBC pulls new Ashley Cain series after sexist language accusations



The BBC said it has “no future projects” with Cain planned as it pulls his BBC Three documentary series Into the Danger Zone



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Where MLB’s top trade deadline arms fit as the market shapes up



The matchmaking of teams and players isn’t an easy business, and it’s especially dicey with six weeks to go before the trade deadline. Yet, I’ll give it a shot here. Here are six of the biggest starters likely to hit the market, and the best guesses for landing spots (not recommended for betting purposes):

1. Tarik Skubal

The two-time defending American League Cy Young winner showed big-time stuff but looked “rusty” in his quick, six-week return following elbow nanoscope (aka “Skubal scope”), according to an AL scout. Regardless, Skubal will be most contenders’ No. 1 target. The Cubs and Blue Jays are seen as among the more desperate big-market teams, while the Padres, Phillies and Rangers have the most aggressive decision-makers (A.J. Preller, Dave Dombrowski and Chris Young, respectively). Cubs baseball president Jed Hoyer worked for years in Chicago with Tigers baseball president Scott Harris. The Rays watched Skubal’s first bullpen session at The Trop and have new ownership. The Brewers have an opportunity to form arguably the best playoff rotation with Cy Young favorite Jacob Misiorowski and resurrected star Kyle Harrison, but the small-market team understandably doesn’t like to surrender prospects; they once did a deal like this when they acquired CC Sabathia, which may be the blueprint for others here.

Early fit: Blue Jays.

2. Freddy Peralta

Peralta makes almost any playoff rotation and stands as that rare bargain with his $8M salary. The Cubs, with Craig Counsell, Peralta’s longtime manager in Milwaukee, make sense here too.



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Stephen A. Smith downplays Knicks’ chances at repeating as champs



Don’t start planning another parade in 2027 just yet.

As millions gathered in Lower Manhattan to celebrate the Knicks’ first NBA title in 53 years Thursday morning, ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith declared the team as a heavy favorite for another deep postseason run next season – but not necessarily a championship.

“We’re gonna keep it a buck. [The] New York Knicks shouldn’t be the favorites next season, even if they are the champions,” Smith said during Thursday’s edition of “First Take.”

“If you know basketball and you’re covering basketball, you know what happened this year. You could look at this team and legitimately say the New York Knicks deserve to be the favorites coming out of the East. 

Jalen Brunson holds up the Larry O’Brien NBA Finals Trophy alongside Karl-Anthony Towns during Thursday’s festivities. Getty Images

“Without question, the Knicks should be the favorites to represent the Eastern Conference in next year’s NBA Finals — not the Celtics. I don’t give a damn if Jayson Tatum is healthy, okay?”

If the Knicks do make it out of the Eastern Conference, however, Smith believes the Oklahoma City Thunder — not the Spurs — pose the biggest challenge.

The Thunder came close to back-to-back NBA Finals appearances before falling to San Antonio in a seven-game Western Conference Finals while missing several key players.

“We can’t put anything past the Oklahoma City Thunder,” Smith added. “The Oklahoma City Thunder were in Game 7 of the Western Conference Finals. The Oklahoma City Thunder were without Jalen Williams and Ajay Mitchell, your second and third [best] scorers.”

Williams, after initially suffering a left hamstring sprain in the Western Conference Semifinals, returned with a bang in Game 1 win against the Spurs before re-aggravating the injury in Game 2. 

He missed the rest of the series.

The Thunder fell to the Spurs in seven games during this year’s Western Conference Finals. Getty Images

As for Mitchell, the Belgian guard sustained a right calf injury, which sidelined him for most of the series, including the decisive Game 7.

“When [Williams] is healthy, you can’t key on [Shai Gilgeous-Alexander] the way [the Spurs] did, double and triple teaming him,” Smith said. “As a result, the reigning two-time MVP is free to get loose…so gotta look at it from that standpoint.

“Ajay Mitchell, some were debating whether he was better than Jalen Williams or not, that’s how much of a stud they both are, and they were both out.”

Smith downplayed the Knicks’ chances of repeating as NBA champions. Getty Images

Sportsbooks agree with the sentiment, with FanDuel’s odds giving New York the fourth-best odds to take home the Larry O’Brien trophy next season, with the Thunder +250 favorites.

Knicks owner James Dolan indicated during a WFAN interview Wednesday that he would “write as big of a check as possible, but I can’t write a check that goes into the second apron.”

If that comes to fruition, the team could be without several key players from this year’s Finals run, which, partnered with a healthy OKC, could spell trouble next season.

“If they’re healthy, they beat the Spurs in the conference finals,” Smith added. “Spurs ain’t in the Finals, they beat the Spurs and they would’ve been favored over the Knicks.

“So I think because that’s the reality, Oklahoma City is number one, Knicks number two and then everybody else is behind them. I believe right now, if you’re making a prediction, it should be the New York Knicks and the Oklahoma City Thunder will meet one another in the NBA Finals next year.”





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Michael Kay clears the air on rumored John Flaherty beef



Everything is O-Kay.

Yankees play-by-play announcer Michael Kay responded to rumors that he had a hand in longtime YES colleague John Flaherty’s exit from the network. 

“I had never had friction with John Flaherty in my life, ever,” Kay said on his “The Michael Kay Show” on Wednesday. “That was not anything that I wanted nor anything that I was comfortable with.”

Michael Kay addressed rumors of an alleged rift with Flaherty during his show on Wednesday ESPN New York/YouTube

Flaherty, a former big league catcher who spent three years with the Yankees, was a part of YES Network for 20 years but did not get his contract renewed for 2026. 

“I love John Flaherty,” Kay said. “I thought that John Flaherty was one of the most valuable people that we had at the network.”

YES Network did not renew Flaherty’s contract for 2026. Robert Sabo

Kay said he’s disappointed with the rumors that started on social media about his non-substantiated hatred of Flaherty, which he attributed to an exchange the pair shared during a Yankees game against the Cubs at Wrigley Field two seasons ago.

“It stems from an exchange that turned out to be awkward on the air in Chicago last year, but totally false that there was anything between John and I,” Kay said.

The clip in question included Flaherty poking fun at Kay for being quiet on the bus ride to the stadium in the morning. Kay snapped back, saying he was not feeling well.

Kay denied having any issues with Flaherty, who spent 20 years with YES Network. Getty Images for National Father’s Day Council

He took it a step further by accusing Flaherty of wanting to work with another broadcaster, Ryan Ruocco, rather than him. 

The awkward exchange was followed by silence in the booth. 

The next day, both broadcasters addressed the awkward exchange in the first inning of the next game. Both hashed out their differences and made clear they were friends. 

Flaherty is not back in broadcasting after leaving the YES Network, while Kay is still calling games for the network. Kay added that both are still friends, even though they’re not working together.

 “We’re still absolute friends,” Kay said. 





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Horse carriage ban gains support following freak death of teen tourist



A horse carriage ban is gaining steam in the City Council following the freak accident that caused the death of an 18-year-old Indian tourist in Central Park this week.

Some Council members said the tragedy — believed to be the first time in recent memory that a passenger was killed while riding in a horse carriage — might be the proverbial final straw for the beleaguered industry.

“Is it the straw that broke the camel’s back? I think so,” said Councilman Frank Morano, a Staten Island Republican and co-sponsor of “Ryder’s Law,” which would outlaw horse carriages in New York City.

Legislation to ban horse carriages is gaining bipartisan momentum in the New York City Council following the freak accident that caused the death of a teen Indian tourist thrown from his horse in Central Park. WNYW

“We have an 18-year-old boy who came here to celebrate his graduation who is leaving in a coffin. It’s totally unacceptable,” Morano told The Post on Thursday.

“The time for treating these accidents as isolated incidents is over,” he said. “It is an industry that no longer makes sense.”

Mayor Zohran Mamdani has said he supports outlawing carriage rides in Central Park, a pledge he made on the campaign trail.

“I support removing horse carriages from Central Park,” Mamdani said in January.

Mamdani’s predecessors Eric Adams and Bill de Blasio also supported a horse carriage ban, though it never came to pass during their tenures.

Opponents — including the union representing carriage drivers — said they’ve heard the clamor in years past following accidents or deaths involving carriage horses, only to see legislation stall when controversy subsided because the record shows the animals are well treated.

Romanch Mahajan, 18, succumbed to his injuries after he was thrown off a horse carriage. Obtained by NY Post

But the new Council has expressed more of an interest in animal rights, recently creating an animal welfare caucus that includes 20 of the legislative body’s 51 members, including Morano.

Council Speaker Julie Menin has ordered a hearing next month on Morano’s bill, named after Ryder, a Central Park carriage horse who tragically collapsed while working on a hot August day in 2022. The bill stalled in committee last year.

“In the past two weeks alone, we have seen the tragic deaths of both a horse and now a teenage carriage passenger, Romanch Mahajan,” Menin said, referring to the June 9 incident in which a carriage horse named Deniz collapsed and died in Central Park, likely from consuming a toxic plant.

The death of the tourist visiting New York City might be the last straw that could end horse carriage riding as “Ryder’s Law,” is getting more backing from local politicians. Brigitte Stelzer

“These incidents demonstrate that it’s time to chart a better path forward that addresses animal welfare and public safety, and also ensures the livelihood and economic prosperity of the workers,” Menin said.

Councilwoman Kamillah Hanks, a Staten Island Democrat, said, “Something has to change. This tragedy is a call for the City Council to respond. We have to take an honest and sobering look at the horse carriage industry.”

But Queens Democratic Councilman James Gennaro argued the “unthinkable tragedy” was caused by “human error,” which had nothing to do with animal abuse.

He said he opposes an outright ban, and instead is proposing alternative legislation to tighten safety standards, including installing hitching posts in Central Park where horses can be secured when passengers get into or out of the carriages or want to take pictures, as well as more rigorous training for drivers.

But the carriage horse industry is clearly on the defensive.

“We’re absolutely gutted and stunned by this tragedy. We’ve never had a fatal accident like this before,” said Alexander Kemp, administrative vice president with Local 100 of the Transport Workers Union which advocates for carriage riders.

“We have shuttered the stables and ceased operations today while we have extensive internal discussions of safety protocols and how they can be improved,” said Kemp, who supports Gennaro’s bill, not an outright ban on the carriage industry.

Carriage driver Christina Hansen, a TWU shop steward, accused animal rights activists of “exploiting” and “politicizing” a horrible tragedy, as they have in the past.

“Let’s take a step back and not to rush judgment,” she said.



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San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie puts Giants players on blast after Pride Night ordeal



Just about everyone seems to be weighing in on the polarizing Pride Night at Oracle Park last week. San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie is the latest public figure to criticize the four Giants pitchers who protested the team’s annual celebration of the LGBTQ+ community.

Ryan Walker, Landen Roupp, JT Brubaker and Sam Hentges have sparked an outcry among San Franciscans as well other Pride Night supporters. Walker chose to wear the standard Giants hat rather than the special hat for the event, which has a rainbow-colored team logo.

San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie said he was “really upset and disappointed ” by what four Giants pitchers did on Pride Night. Anadolu via Getty Images

The latter three added a Bible verse on their Pride Night caps to demonstrate their religious beliefs.

Lurie revealed he was “really upset and disappointed” by their decision.

“This is why we need Pride. We need to lean in and we need to keep educating people, even here in San Francisco,” Lurie said. “It was a rough night, but one that we need to learn from.”

He isn’t the first to call out the Giants hurlers. and Lurie likely he won’t be the last.

Longtime voice of the Giants Mike Krukow believes the players should have been more aware of the city’s strong beliefs and ties to the LGBTQ+ community.

“I think when you’re a player and you come into this environment, it’s your responsibility to know just how sensitive this city is in regards to that cultural freedom and religious freedom, and just the way that you live your life,” Krukow said on KNBR.

“And I think they were in for a rude awakening with the response, and it wasn’t just from the gay community; it was from the Northern California community that supports the gay community.”

Giants pitcher Landen Roupp was one of four pitchers who were reprimanded by MLB. AP Photo/Scott Marshall

The four Giants pitchers have also been reprimanded by Major League Baseball, not for their beliefs but for their violation of the uniform rules.

“The writing on the cap violates our rules and consistent with normal practice we have warned the players about future violations,” MLB said in an initial statement.

“To be clear, this routine verbal warning not to wear the hat in future games is not disciplinary and had absolutely nothing to do with the content of the message,” MLB added in an additional statement. “We respect players’ right to free expression. However, writing of any kind, with any message, is prohibited.”

Giants pitcher Ryan Walker has stood firm in his beliefs and remarks despite the controversy. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

While the Giants players have been criticized in the court of public opinion, they have not issued an apology for their decision. Rather, the group has stood firm in their beliefs and remarks.

The EEOC will investigate the report that MLB warned Giants players after they displayed the biblical verses on their hats, said Harmeet Dhillon, head of the Civil Rights Division at the Department of Justice.





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