Blog Page 21

Top 10 Nintendo 64 games

The Nintendo 64 is the third home console for the beloved video game company. It was the first Nintendo console capable of rendering actual 3D worlds. While the Super Nintendo Entertainment System had games that gave the illusion of a 3D environment, it wasn’t until the N64 that players had the freedom to explore these worlds. With that in mind, let’s look at the very best games for the Nintendo 64.

Paper Mario

The 22 Best N64 Games - Thrillist

Paper Mario is an RPG made on the heels of success from Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars. It’s turn-based combat, and the colorful story made it stand out as a proper successor to Mario RPG. It might not be at its height anymore, but many people love this series because of its beginnings. Paper Mario was an odd direction to take this style of game, and it ultimately paid off by delivering that classic Nintendo charm in the form of paper cutout characters.

Conker’s Bad Fur Day

55: Conker's Bad Fur Day | Conkers, Conker's bad fur day, Video games

Rare was at the height of its power while developing games for the N64, and one of its best outputs was also one of the last games to release for the console. Conker’s Bad Fur Day is one of the few mature games. Conker is an alcoholic squirrel who will face many ridiculous situations including fighting a boss that goes by the name “The Great Mighty Poo” who has an opera performance while you fight him and a sunflower who you need to get to reveal herself to a group of honey bees. Conker was an unexpected game to appear on the N64 but would go on to become a true cult classic.

Star Fox 64

Amazon.com: N64 Star Fox 64 - Wii U [Digital Code]: Video Games

Star Fox is a space combat series that started on the SNES, but Star Fox 64 is the height of the series. You play as Fox, the captain of the Star Fox crew, as you pilot his Arwing through various levels. You dodge both the environment and enemy fire on your way to defeating the evil Professor Andross. This might not be the most popular of Nintendo’s franchises, but Star Fox 64 remains in the hearts of many 90s gamers.

The Legend of Zelda: Majora’s Mask

How do you follow up one of the best video games ever made? By reusing its assets to create a creepier story within a year of the former’s release. Majora’s Mask is one of the more unique Zelda games. It lies as a direct sequel to Ocarina of Time and sees Link deal with many homages to the five stages of grief. The iconic 3D Zelda gameplay introduced in the previous game returns here with new mechanics introduced through the different masks you wear. Majora’s Mask is often seen as one of the best games in the Zelda series, as well as one of the best overall on the N64.

Mario Party 2

Mario Party 1 and Mario Party 2 Retrospective - Mario Party Legacy

Mario Party made its debut on the Nintendo 64, but its sequel is the one that stands out. In Mario Party 2, everything is made better. Four players move around a board while collecting as many stars as possible. Mini-games are held at the end of each round of turns to earn coins to buy those stars and items. Every board in the game has a theme that has all characters dressed up to match, including cowboys, pirates, and more. The mini-games in Mario Party 2 were much better than the original, either by being updated or bringing in brand new ones that felt much better.

Diddy Kong Racing

Mario Kart is not enough: The case for a Diddy Kong Racing revival

Diddy Kong Racing is a game that is still beloved by many 90s gamers. It introduced many colorful characters that made playing as each racer feel different, even though it was not. Races could take place in cars, hover vehicles, or airplanes, and truly made this a unique racing game during this time. The item selection is small, but between the extensive adventure mode and fun multiplayer racing, Diddy Kong Racing is a 90s classic for the N64.

007 Goldeneye

Definitive Ranking of GoldenEye N64 Levels - The Fandomentals

Imagine whatever first-person shooter game you enjoy. A big reason you can enjoy that game is from the success of 007 Goldeneye. Even though the N64 controller is not great by any means, the work Rare put in to make this game feel good was essential to making FPS’s feel the way they do today. The single-player campaign was great, but the real fun of this game comes from its multiplayer. Numerous nights were spent between friends and siblings battling each other in Goldeneye’s matches. It is rough to go back to play today, but this game’s importance cannot be overstated.

Banjo-Kazooie

Banjo-Kazooie Xbox 360 is the definitive version of Rare's N64 classic

Our fourth (and final) Rare game on the list goes to Banjo-Kazooie. A 3D collect-a-thon platformer that features so much charm. Banjo and Kazooie need to save Banjo’s sister Tootie from Gruntilda, a rhyming witch who is trying to steal her pretty looks. The diverse worlds all are unique to each other and give you plenty (but not too many) items to gather in your quest. Combine these colorful worlds with a brilliant soundtrack composed by Grant Kirkhope and the kind of characters you only find in a Rare game, and you have one of the most beloved games of the 90s.

Super Mario 64

The Best N64 Games, From Super Mario 64 to Super Smash Bros ...

Super Mario 64 is Mario’s first time jumping into the 3D plane. It was an instant success and became one of the most important 90’s video games released. At the time, game companies were trying to figure out how to make 3D games properly. There were issues from how to control the camera to how to make moving in the 3D environment feel right, and Mario 64 hit it out of the park on both accounts. This game gave Mario a bunch of new moves, and every world was varied and fun. Mario 64 is a true classic that introduced many to what a 3D game could achieve and still feels great to play today.

The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time

The Legend of Zelda Ocarina of Time Nintendo 64 - RetroGameAge

The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time is one of the greatest video games ever created. Like Mario, Link made his first adventure in a 3D environment on the N64 and smashed it. In this game, you travel back and forth through time carrying out classic Legend of Zelda mechanics in an (at the time) expansive world that enamored so many people. Ocarina of Time took advantage of everything the N64 could offer at the time and put out an epic adventure that lives on today as one of many people’s favorite games. Breath of the Wild might have overtaken it as the best game in the series, but if you have access to any of its versions, The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time will still put a smile on your face.

3rd Russian Doctor ‘Falls’ from a Window Over Coronavirus Concerns

Three Russian doctors have “fallen” out of hospital windows in the last two weeks. The most recent, Dr. Alexander Shulepov, fell out of a 2nd story window, allegedly during an argument over being forced to work even after he was diagnosed with COVID-19. He is recovering now and has retracted all inflammatory statements made prior to his accident. He is the third physician to suffer from such a fall, and the only one to survive. Dr. Natalya Lebedeva was killed from a 6 story fall out of a Moscow hospital after being blamed for spreading coronavirus within the hospital, and Dr. Yelena Nepomnyashchaya, who also fell from a 6 story window, dies from fatal injuries caused by the fall. Nepomnyashchaya had been pushing to not receive more patients due to a massive shortage of PPE.

Read more on Dr Shulepov here

Sources claim Shulepov fell after arguing over PPE shortage

Read more on Dr Nepomnyashchaya here

Chief of hospital claims coronavirus is not the cause for any of these falls

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Vince McMahon, David Schultz, John Stossel and pro wrestling’s kayfabe conundrum

Kayfabe (ˈkāˌfāb), noun – a professional wrestling term used to put forth the impression that staged events with a predetermined outcome are authentic and real.

Most current fans of professional wrestling are too young to remember when the events were regulated by state athletic commissions and there was a wink and nod acknowledgement that, yeah, it’s staged, but we won’t admit as such. In 1989, however, Vince McMahon was in the relatively early stages of his establishing his global monopoly. To further his ends and provide greater evidence of his lack of concern about adhering to long-held industry standards, there was a means to an end public admission that it is entertainment and should not be subject to the same regulation and oversight as “real” sports. With that, there was no longer a need to give athletic commissions the cut they once demanded.

Like almost anything McMahon has done in his career as impresario of the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) which was later renamed as World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE), it was about money: maximizing the value of his company and profiting from it. There’s no denying he succeeded. What he surrendered for that success is undoubtedly irrelevant to him, but for many fans and people who were involved with professional wrestling at every level, the loss of the tradition of kayfabe was a death of sorts.

The most recent episode of Vice’s Dark Side of the Ring revisits one of the most infamous events in pro wrestling history when 20/20 reporter John Stossel spoke to WWF wrestler “Dr. D” David Schultz and told him – not asked him as Stossel now claims, but told him by way of declarative statement – “I think this is fake.”

Schultz responded with an open-handed slap to the side of Stossel’s head, knocking him to the ground. After Stossel stood up, Schultz hit him on the other side of his head, knocking him down a second time. Wisely, Stossel left.

 

 

Obviously, there was no justification for an assault which, technically, is what Schultz smacking Stossel was. Still, according to Schultz, he was told by McMahon to “tear his ass up and stay in character.” That can have endless connotations, but given Schultz’s seriousness about the business and that he was ornery by nature, it’s obvious what would happen. In addition, Stossel’s confrontational tone almost invited Schultz to take a whack at him. Would the result have been different had Stossel done as he now claims he did and asked Schultz whether wrestling is fake rather than say to the wrestler’s face that what he does for a living is fake?

Maybe.

Maybe not.

Regardless, Schultz’s refusal to break kayfabe was the residue of the code he learned in his formative years in the business.

Prior to McMahon’s public disavowal of any pretense that the matches were predetermined and for entertainment only, kayfabe was a sacred part of being involved in wrestling. Schultz was a wrestler’s wrestler who was fully invested in being his character. His teachers and mentors hammered home the point that breaking kayfabe was about as low as a wrestler could possibly go in damaging it, potentially destroying the business and losing his job and everyone else’s too. Tradition required that if the wrestlers agreed to one thing when they became part of the club, it was to uphold the code. That code was destroyed by McMahon three decades ago through the same ruthlessness that made him a billionaire, but it was done purposely and not as part of a television news investigation.

Whether you are a wrestling fan, were a wrestling fan or have a perverse fascination with the suspension of disbelief necessary to become emotionally invested in an event with a predetermined outcome, the notion of kayfabe was a foundational part of enjoying the show. The old-school wrestlers took it seriously. Perhaps not as seriously as Schultz did, but still seriously because their livelihoods were at stake.

Kayfabe is the crux of the chasm between purists and McMahon. Veterans of the business hated the financially motivated admission that it was staged. McMahon was trying to turn wrestling from a somewhat tawdry niche diversion into a family-friendly event that would make him and his wrestlers an exponential amount of money compared to what they would have made had they clung to the past. To achieve that, kayfabe needed to disappear.

When McMahon bought the WWF from his father Vince McMahon Sr., he had his plan already mapped out and within a decade had turned it into the equivalent of a license to print money. Unimpeded by relationships and collusion with fellow promoters throughout the world, he set out to invade their previously sacrosanct territories. He poached talent, changed the way stories were told, and tried to make it something that went beyond a diversion for men by branching out into television, film, toys, clothing and more by appealing to children and women. He did it and then increased his and his wrestlers’ income by detonating the notion of kayfabe.

The key difference between Stossel’s subversive attempt to destroy kayfabe and McMahon intentionally destroying it was one was doing it for no real reason and the other was doing it for a fully acceptable reason of growing the business and making money.

The insular nature of professional wrestling and the locker room camaraderie that the wrestlers were working together came with a compact that they do not break the code to outsiders and ruin the game for everyone. They were not putting something over on the fans who were paying good money. They were trying to give them an enjoyable show and sacrificing their bodies and minds to achieve that knowing the consequences. Unlike Stossel’s unsaid implication that people who were watching were somehow hoodwinked because it is “fake”, it was kayfabe that shielded the unsaid truth as to what the show was all about. With that in mind and in retrospect, it’s no shock that Schultz reacted the way he did. In fact, it should have been expected.

The Best VR Games You Can Play Right Now

Video games have been a saving grace for many people during the current pandemic. While we may all be stuck at home for the foreseeable future, we can still go on grand adventures either alone or with friends. If you happen to own a virtual reality headset, you are even better off. They are excellent means of taking you to another world, and with everyone stuck at home, being about anywhere else would be welcomed, even for a small time. Also, virtual reality games can be a decent means of exercise, depending on the game you are playing. Here are some of the best virtual reality games you can play right now.

Half-Life: Alex

Valve believes Half-Life: Alyx will be modded to play without VR ...

For the first time in what seems like forever, Valve made a new Half-Life game. It may not be Half-Life 3 like everyone has been waiting on, but at this point, we will take any game Valve decides to make. In this VR game, you control Alyx before the events of Half-Life 2. It is a first-person shooter, so you can get right into the action of this game. It is the latest game to release on this list and quickly added 1 million players to Steam’s VR player base.

Beat Saber

Beat Saber on Steam

Beat Saber is mostly Guitar Hero played with lightsabers. You choose a music track that will hurl blocks in your direction to the beat of the song. Use your sabers to slice the blocks coming at you while also dodging red walls with your head. Beat Saber is an example of a simple VR game that works brilliantly in its execution, making it one of the most popular games you can buy for your headset. As a bonus, the game is filled with great songs and is available on nearly every VR headset.

Superhot

Superhot VR (for Oculus Rift) Review | PCMag

Superhot is a game that places you in an action movie where you are the protagonist. Red people attack you in progressively harder levels, but time only moves as you do. When standing still, time comes to a crawl, giving you a chance to think about your next move. Will you dodge incoming bullets or fire your weapon where you predict the enemy will be. This unique mechanic not only works well for the regular version of the game but VR as well.

Astro Bot: Rescue Mission

Astro Bot Rescue Mission Gameplay Demo - IGN Live E3 2018 - YouTube

Astro Bot: Rescue Mission is a 3D platformer where you need to help Astro Bot rescue his crew of 212 lost robots. The camera is controlled by your head movements and can look around corners and find secret areas. Juggling the usefulness of the VR headset as a camera and the gadgets attached to the Dualshock 4 controller has helped make this PlayStation VR exclusive the best rated virtual reality game on Metacritic.

Minecraft

Minecraft comes to VR via Oculus Rift next week | TechCrunch

Minecraft remains one of the most popular games in the world, and taking that experience to virtual reality enhances the game further. Where some VR ports take away features from the base game, you can enjoy everything Minecraft has to offer in VR, including survival and creative mode, and even cross-play on some versions.

The Walking Dead: Saints and Sinners

The Walking Dead: Saints & Sinners review | PC Gamer

This game based on The Walking Dead universe takes place in New Orleans, away from the Atlanta/Washington D.C. setting of the books and show. Get up and close with both the undead and the living who are waging war on each other while making decisions along the way that will affect everyone around you. The Walking Dead: Saints And Sinners is one of the newest game on this list, and also regarded as one of the best you can buy.

Vader Immortal

In Vader Immortal: Episode III, You'll Finally Duel Darth Vader ...

Set between the events of “Revenge of the Sith” and “A New Hope,” Vader Immortal sees you train under and fight the infamous sith lord. Everything in the Star Wars universe is available from force powers to imperial blasters, and, of course, the iconic lightsaber. Vader Immortal delves into new aspects of Darth Vader’s past and is a must-play for the Star Wars enthusiast. With three different episodes to play, you will find yourself getting enamored with this world.

Carole Baskin Tricked into Interview by Fake Jimmy Fallon Producers

Carole Baskin, of Tiger King infamy, has refused all interviews since the Netflix documentary aired weeks ago. Her silence was broken this week when YouTubers pretended to be producers from the Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon. Josh Pieters and Archie Manners contacted Baskin and convinced her to give an interview over Zoom, ostensibly with Fallon. They explained to her that she wouldn’t be able to see Jimmy Fallon during the interview and utilized clips from past episodes to make it appear to be a back and forth conversation.

Read more on the story here

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Off-Duty LAPD Officer Arrested For Shooting Fellow Officer

Three off-duty LAPD police officers were on a hunting and camping trip this weekend when one of the officers, Ismael Tamayo, shot one of his fellow officers in the upper body. The man was airlifted to a trauma center and is expected to make a full recovery. “The events overnight culminating in the serious injury to our off-duty officer apparently at the hands of another member of this Department, give me great concern” said Police Chief Michel Moore. Tamayo is still under investigation for this event.

Read more on the story here

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What would an A-Rod-Mets ownership look like?

When the news broke that the Wilpons were indeed selling the New York Mets, the idea of Alex Rodriguez being part of an ownership consortium was quickly floated. For some, it was a joke. For others, it was wishful thinking. However, given his financial wherewithal, love of the spotlight, long-held interest in being an owner and his boyhood affinity for the Mets, it made sense for A-Rod to make a bid.

The price tag of nearly $2 billion was exorbitant, with few individuals capable of getting their hands on the cash and credit to make a viable bid on their own. Steve Cohen could do it, but disagreements over control and the structure of the sale torpedoed an apparent agreement for him to be the principal owner.

Now, A-Rod and his fiancé Jennifer Lopez are reportedly trying to put a group together to buy the team. Until a buyer is concretely identified and the ink is dry on the deal, this type of glossy speculation will be common. The seriousness of A-Rod’s bid is difficult to classify. With the lack of sports news due to COVID-19, it was unavoidable that the mere mention of A-Rod as a potential buyer for the Mets would be explosive.

Despite the apparent urgency for the Wilpons to sell, it’s difficult to envision them jumping at an offer just to get it done. Exacerbating this point is the pandemic placing the 2020 season in jeopardy and the decline in revenue due to canceled games. Regardless, judging by the latest franchise valuations, the Mets are worth around $2.4 billion. Presumably, even with the Wilpons’ loans estate planning concerns exacerbating the need to sell, they will receive some leeway with the banks to maximize the value and not take a penny less than the Cohen offer of $2.6 billion.

A-Rod owning the Mets would certainly be tabloid fodder. His checkered past with suspensions, lies, performance enhancing drugs and more is problematic, but Cohen and most people who have the wealth to even consider buying a sports franchise have skeletons large, small and perhaps still alive in their closets. A-Rod can navigate around those.

That said, there are fundamental factors with A-Rod owning the Mets.

Any gratuitous comparison between Jeter and A-Rod is coincidental. It’s difficult to mention one without the other and it is relevant.

The dichotomy between Jeter and A-Rod is exemplified by how The Last Dance portrays Dennis Rodman and Michael Jordan and how each went about their business on and off the court. Rodman and A-Rod had relationships with Madonna and learned valuable lessons – for their ends – from her. Jeter learned from Jordan. A-Rod was awkward. Taking advice from Madonna was the opposite of anything Jeter had interest in. Their career trajectories in sports and the business world has mirrored that.

A-Rod’s relationship with Madonna was classified as a romance. Maybe it was. But it may have been closer to a master/apprentice-type agreement with him learning how to stay in the public eye regardless of whether it was good or bad publicity. Rodman learned the same thing and, to paraphrase, understood one key lesson from her that a person must control his or her image. Few in history have been as successful as cultivating an image of her own making as Madonna. Rodman was good at it. A-Rod slipped up, but reinvented himself to largely return to the public’s good graces and put himself in the position where his past is not an insurmountable obstacle to team ownership.

A-Rod’s frenemy Jeter never indulged in similar overt attempts to get his name out there. His strategy was understated and his status as New York’s bon vivant happened naturally. He liked it; he fostered it, but he did so skillfully. Like Jordan, Jeter wanted to win above all else, but he also wanted to secure a foothold in corporate America and the world by being intriguing enough to be of interest – not willfully vanilla like Mike Trout – and to avoid controversial stances on social issues even when asked to take part and comment on them.

The respective ways in which Jeter runs the Miami Marlins and A-Rod’s blueprint for the Mets would be similarly divergent. Ironically, Jeter received an A-Rod-level series of attacks for his missteps as Marlins CEO, but still emerged largely unscathed as his restructuring of the club is showing signs of improvement.

The easy characterization is A-Rod again copying Jeter. That might be realistic if it was something less time-consuming and expensive as buying into a baseball team and agreeing to run it. Jeter’s position as CEO of the Marlins is more of a business decision and for his brand than A-Rod owning the Mets would be. A-Rod certainly likes the attention and the money such an investment creates, but he also loves baseball in all its aspects. The same has never been said of Jeter, who loved playing it, but appeared bored and indifferent watching it.

As for running the team, A-Rod will not be a figurehead. Whereas Jeter imported people he trusted to implement his preferred strategies and is the same somewhat aloof and guarded public figure he was as a player, A-Rod is a baseball rat who simply loves the game. He’ll be all in on running the team. Available, affable, in love with himself and the limelight – he’ll be seen at the winter meetings, during spring training, at the games and everywhere else related to the organization not just to maximize his investment, but to build it his way.

What that means for the current organizational structure is an open question. Just like any new boss, he’ll have his own ideas as to who he wants as his subordinates, but that does not necessarily mean current general manager Brodie Van Wagenen and his staff are on the way out. A-Rod won’t want to be the day-to-day GM and deal with the media, travel with the team and put out fires that could easily be handled by an underling. A-Rod as team president with final say on player moves is more likely. Without knowing the relationship between A-Rod and Van Wagenen, it is possible that if A-Rod likes what he sees and hears from the GM, he’ll be retained.

A-Rod will be in the trenches working with youngsters, providing tips to veterans and discussing strategies with his coaches and managers. There is a probability of micromanagement that is not evident in Miami with Jeter. Still, for anyone who uses an owner’s lack of athletic experience to say, “Who are you?” if that owner makes demands and suggestions – as if being the owner is not good enough – what can anyone say to A-Rod?

He’s A-Rod.

PEDs aside and whether he is ever elected to the Hall of Fame, he’s a Hall of Fame-caliber player whose natural ability was buttressed by a multilevel obsession with the sport itself. Other owners calling the GM or manager into the office to interrogate them as to why they used X pitcher in the seventh inning of a tie game instead of Y pitcher in that same situation can elicit a respectful, ingratiating or even supplicating response without legitimate substance for that reaction. For A-Rod, there had better be an explanation because he’s A-Rod and not some guy who thinks he knows the game better than the professionals. A-Rod does know the game better than most professionals.

A key question is whether A-Rod would resort to a big spending spree or would prefer to build the team organically. The gutting rebuild is necessary in some cases, but in others, it’s a vanity play from a baseball executive who is trying to be the next Billy Beane, Andrew Friedman or Jeff Luhnow and is seeking transcendental fame through a preposterously one-sided and agenda-laden book about the process.

But A-Rod already has transcendental fame.

Hiring, firing, analyzing players, restructuring the blueprint, making decisions based on finances and player ability – he’s qualified to do the job as more than a former player with delusions of grandeur. Amid the controversies that pockmarked his career, his keen baseball intelligence is unfairly buried. Known to predict what would happen, spot tiny nuance and take advantage of it, and set traps for opponents by intentionally looking bad on one pitch so he’d get that same pitch and hammer it later were all hallmarks of his career. This is transferrable to the ownership suite.

A polarizing figure like A-Rod with a worldwide star fiancée like J.Lo will undoubtedly seem superficial and gauche in theory and practice. But, like Rodman, there is substance to what A-Rod does and knows: baseball. If he gets the financing and takes charge of the team, his lessons in life from every angle will create a landscape that sells tickets due to star power and wins because of his love and knowledge of the game itself.

Texas Park Ranger Pushed into Lake Over Social Distancing

A large group of people were drinking around Lake Austin in Texas on Friday when a park ranger arrived and asked them to move 6 feet apart. In a move captured on camera, Brandon Hicks, 25, said “I got you,” and then tackled the ranger into the lake. Hicks also fell in the water but got up and ran. Others in the park identified him and he was arrested shortly after the incident. In a statement later Friday afternoon: “The Austin Parks and Recreation Department is saddened by the action taken against our Park Ranger…Rangers are not law enforcement officers. The Ranger program was created to provide educational services, safety, and security in Austin’s parks and recreational facilities.”

Read more on the story and watch the video here

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Los Angeles Natives Call for a Rent Strike

With thousands of people forced out of work due to restaurant closures across the country some have simply decided to stop paying rent. “It’s a decision that I have made personally that is both political and very much out of necessity,” says Chris Tyler, 31. Tyler lost his food service job the first week of the California shut down and shortly after that he and his partner decided to no longer pay rent on their one bedroom apartment. California is in its second full month of shut down due to the COVID-19 pandemic and many residents are turning to alternative economical means to stay in their homes. They are calling it a #rentstrike, and are calling for state legislature to do more for their financial stability.

Read more on the story here

More on the LA rent strike can be read here

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Funeral Home Caught Storing Bodies in U-Haul

A funeral home in Brooklyn was reportedly storing an overflow of bodies in U-Haul trucks parked in the street. Neighboring businesses complained of a “foul odor” in the area, and someone reported seeing bodies being stacked in the trucks. A police investigation discovered somewhere between 30 and 60 bodies stacked in the backs of the trucks outside of the funeral home. When the bodies were discovered, multiple agencies were brought to the scene. A spokesperson from the New York State Health Dept stated: “Funeral directors are required to store decedents awaiting burial or other final disposition in appropriate conditions.” Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams reminds everyone that this is not just on the funeral home directors. “It starts at the cemeteries. If we don’t start increasing the bodies we’re putting in the ground, then they’re going to stay above ground.”

Read more on the story here

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