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Moment brand new McLaren P1 worth over $1M is washed away during Hurricane Ian

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Moment brand new McLaren P1 worth over M is washed away during Hurricane Ian

Second model new McLaren hypercar value over $1 MILLION is washed from Florida storage by floodwater from Hurricane Ian

  • Florida man Ernie shared images of his newly bought McLaren P1 being carried away by flood waters 
  •  It occurred as Hurricane Ian battered Florida on Wednesday with 150mph winds and 18ft storm surges
  • Ernie shared images of the McLaren P1 and Rolls Royce submerged in water in his Florida dwelling storage
  • Extra photos present the brilliant yellow car floating down the road – which now resembles a raging river  
  • The automobile fanatic has a fleet of high-priced vehicles, and shares images of them on social media commonly

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That is the second a model new McLaren P1 value over $1million is swept down the road in Naples by flood waters as catastrophic Ian continues to pummel Florida.

The monster storm has been ravaging the state for the final 24 hours, leaving a path of full destruction in its wake.

Authorities in Florida have warned that fatalities will likely be ‘within the a whole lot’ as scores of individuals stay trapped on the roofs of their flooded properties and a pair of.5million are with out energy.

One Florida man by the title of Ernie, who was affected by the storm shared footage of his personal heartbreaking loss as his newly bought McLaren P1 was engulfed in flood waters, swept out of his storage and down the mansion-lined road which now resembles a raging river.  

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Dramatic footage exhibits a coronary heart wrenching second for automobile lovers as a Florida man’s McLaren P1 is swept away down the road by flood waters as catastrophic Ian continues to pummel Florida

Another video shows the McLaren P1 being down the mansion-lined street which had turned into a raging river

One other video exhibits the McLaren P1 being down the mansion-lined road which had become a raging river

The automobile fanatic seems to have a fleet of luxurious vehicles – which he exhibits off commonly on his Instagram account. 

However the McLaren P1 has dominated the final 12 posts of Ernie’s account with the primary beginning per week in the past when he posted that the automobile solely had 300 miles on it. It was reportedly priced at over $1 million when it first went on sale.

On Wednesday night, Ernie shared images of his hurricane-ravaged Florida neighborhood in Naples the place streets had become rivers. His storage – the place the McLaren P1 and Rolls Royce have been housed – was utterly flooded and each automobiles have been submerged in water. 

In his most up-to-date put up, solely the highest of the brilliant yellow McLaren P1 could possibly be seen because it floated down the road. His caption learn: ‘Automobile went via the storage.’

His followers shared in his heartbreak, and wrote messages of assist in his feedback. Many reminded him that vehicles are replaceable and despatched out ideas and prayers that everybody was OK. 

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One person mentioned: ‘Keep secure, vehicles are replaceable.’

One other wrote: ‘Hope everyone seems to be alright.’

‘I am so sorry, that is heartbreaking,’ a 3rd particular person added. 

One other person wrote: ‘I am so sorry… most vital that you just and your loved ones are secure. Sending prayers.’

Ernie posted different images and movies to his Instagram tales that confirmed the devastation to his neighborhood. 

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Ernie shared photos of the McLaren P1 and Rolls Royce submerged in water in his Florida home garage

Ernie shared images of the McLaren P1 and Rolls Royce submerged in water in his Florida dwelling storage

A before look at the McLaren P1 and Rolls Royce before Hurricane Ian ripped through the state

A earlier than take a look at the McLaren P1 and Rolls Royce earlier than Hurricane Ian ripped by the state

On Wednesday , Ernie shared photos of his hurricane-ravaged Florida neighborhood where streets had turned into rivers

On Wednesday , Ernie shared images of his hurricane-ravaged Florida neighborhood the place streets had become rivers

Earlier than the hurricane struck, Ernie had posted a images of the automobile with the caption ‘My hurricane provide automobile #p1’ 

Snarky feedback later popped up on his earlier posts – one particularly about prepping for the storm. 

In a put up from hours earlier than the hurricane struck, he shared a photograph of the McLaren P1 with the doorways open exhibiting off a few grocery luggage inside. The present caption reads: ‘My hurricane provide automobile,’ however has been edited, it confirmed. 

One person commented: ‘This did not age properly…’

One other wrote: ‘It is the hurricane’s automobile now.’

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A 3rd mentioned: ‘Moments earlier than catastrophe.’ 

Before the hurricane struck, Ernie had posted a photos of the car with the caption 'My hurricane supply car #p1'

Earlier than the hurricane struck, Ernie had posted a images of the automobile with the caption ‘My hurricane provide automobile #p1’

The McLaren P1 has dominated the last 12 posts of Ernie's account with the first starting a week ago when he posted that the car only had 300 miles on it. It was reportedly priced at over $1 million when it first went on sale

The McLaren P1 has dominated the final 12 posts of Ernie’s account with the primary beginning per week in the past when he posted that the automobile solely had 300 miles on it. It was reportedly priced at over $1 million when it first went on sale

The car enthusiast appears to have a fleet of luxury cars - which he shows off regularly on his Instagram account

The automobile fanatic seems to have a fleet of luxurious vehicles – which he exhibits off commonly on his Instagram account

Hurricane Ian blasted ashore with catastrophic power on Wednesday afternoon as a Class 4 storm, however has since been downgraded to a tropical storm by the Nationwide Hurricane Heart in an replace early on Thursday.

It’s positioned round 35 miles southwest of Cape Canaveral, with most speeds of 65mph, and is shifting northeast at round 8 mph.

Nonetheless it could possibly be nearing hurricane energy once more when it approaches the coast of South Carolina on Friday, which is ready to be it is second US landfall.

Consultants predict the damages to value as much as $260billion, although the clean-up efforts are presently unable to get underway as swathes of Florida stay underwater.

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Hurricane Ian blasted ashore with catastrophic force on Wednesday afternoon as a Category 4 storm, but has since been downgraded to a tropical storm by the National Hurricane Center in an update early on Thursday

Hurricane Ian blasted ashore with catastrophic power on Wednesday afternoon as a Class 4 storm, however has since been downgraded to a tropical storm by the Nationwide Hurricane Heart in an replace early on Thursday

Ian is barreling its way across Florida, leaving a devastating trail of destruction in its wake as scores of people remain trapped in their flooded homes and 2.5 million are without power

Ian is barreling its way across Florida, leaving a devastating trail of destruction in its wake as scores of people remain trapped in their flooded homes and 2.5 million are without power

Ian is barreling its approach throughout Florida, leaving a devastating path of destruction in its wake as scores of individuals stay trapped of their flooded properties and a pair of.5 million are with out energy

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Are These Shoes Hideous or Genius?

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Are These Shoes Hideous or Genius?

Some shoes we simply wear. Others, we debate endlessly.

New Balance’s mutant 1906L is clearly in the latter category. Introduced last year, New Balance’s shoe is a mash-up of a sneaker and a loafer, christened the “Snoafer” by the internet. It’s a mutt-like design caught in the liminal space between informal and formal.

Whatever else the Snoafer may be, it has been polarizing. Versions of the shoes keep selling out (though how many have been produced is unclear), yet detractors say that the Snoafer is just plain ugly.

In an edited conversation, Jon Caramanica, Stella Bugbee and Jacob Gallagher, three members of The New York Times staff (two of whom actually purchased the Snoafers) discuss the shoe’s Frankensteinian merits, how it has been received by their respective family members and if it’s actually ugly enough.


STELLA BUGBEE There’s something profoundly perverse about these shoes.

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JACOB GALLAGHER I could see someone saying that they don’t go together in an orange juice and toothpaste sort of way, but perverse? Say more.

BUGBEE They don’t know what they want to be, and yet they are unapologetically themselves. That tension produces an uncomfortable feeling in me — in a good way, I think.

GALLAGHER I felt that way a bit when I saw them online, but when I put them on after buying them and looked down, I thought, “Oh, is that all there is?”

JON CARAMANICA Seeing them, I immediately thought of, say, vintage Geox shoes — the sort of brand you might see in a print ad deep into the cheap pages of a men’s magazine. Or even worse, those terrible attempts at athletic office footwear from Cole Haan. We all hate those things.

GALLAGHER You’re talking about Cole Haan’s LunarGrands, which were a monstrosity. They called attention to their juxtapositions. The upper was dressy, while the sole, which was often neon, was not just informal, but futuristic. Or so Cole Haan wanted you to think. The 1906Ls though, meld. They’re like the creature at the end of “The Substance.” They takes two distinct halves and distort them into one uncanny whole.

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BUGBEE The reaction I got when I posted pictures of the 1906Ls on Instagram was overwhelmingly negative, which only made me think that they were cooler. If everybody hates a thing, it must be doing something right?

GALLAGHER But to go back to your earlier point, Stella. Do you think people thought they were perverse or merely ugly? Are people reacting to this shoe because it’s new or because they find it unappealing? That’s an important distinction.

BUGBEE I can’t tell. I don’t think the 1906Ls are ugly, but that was the consensus from my friends and family.

CARAMANICA My counterpoint is that they are not ugly enough! The black pair especially.

GALLAGHER I’m with Jon here. They’re not ugly. They’re definitely not in the category of Jon’s beloved Balenciaga Triple S, a sneaker that knowingly bonked itself on every branch of the ugly tree.

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BUGBEE People especially hated the tiny “N” on the top.

CARAMANICA That’s funny about the “N” — that’s the gesture on this shoe that feels maybe a touch radical? Like some intersection of a $3 pair of “breathable sock shoes” you’d find on Temu and the very long tail of Virgil Abloh’s sense of play with text on clothing.

GALLAGHER The “N” might be the riskiest thing on the shoe! Who puts a logo there? That to me is part of the appeal. They’re giving something new to a hype consumer (after all, they keep selling out) while knowingly dipping into geriatric territory.

CARAMANICA Can I offer two more reference points for shoes that tried to walk this tightrope before? First, my beloved Jordan Two3 Cavvy from the early 2000s, which is essentially a Prada loafer with an athletic tilting sole and an accentuated elastic top. A messy blend of casual and formal. And second is the Nike Air Verdana, a golf shoe, also from the early 2000s.

In their day, I disliked both of these. But at least on the Cavvy, I have come around to its elegance. Which is to say, maybe the 1906L will just need two decades to be normalized and appreciated.

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BUGBEE I put them more in the category of the Nike Air Rift Tabis — sneakers with mutant ambitions.

CARAMANICA Yes, but the Rifts don’t pretend to any kind of formality.

BUGBEE The 1906Ls do not feel formal to me. They retain their sneakerness.

CARAMANICA Then it sounds like what you want is … a sneaker?

BUGBEE No, I wanted a comfy slip-on, with the shape of a loafer and the sole of a sneaker that would make my whole family want to walk 10 feet away from me in public.

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GALLAGHER So you wanted the repulsion?

BUGBEE Yeah, I like a little troll.

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Spencer Pratt and Heidi Montag Lose Home in Los Angeles Wildfire

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Spencer Pratt and Heidi Montag Lose Home in Los Angeles Wildfire

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‘School of Rock’ Cast Reunites for Caitlin Hale and Angelo Massagli’s Wedding

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‘School of Rock’ Cast Reunites for Caitlin Hale and Angelo Massagli’s Wedding

Angelo Massagli and Caitlin Hale met as co-workers. They were 10 years old.

The pair, former child actors, were both cast in the 2003 film “School of Rock” in which Jack Black plays a substitute teacher who creates a rock band out of his classroom of musically gifted elementary-aged prep schoolers. Ms. Hale’s character was a braided pigtail-wearing backup singer named Marta. Mr. Massagli played Frankie, who was part of the band’s peewee security detail.

Mr. Massagli recalled being spontaneously asked to sing at his audition for the film in New York City. He was nervous to perform after Ms. Hale, who had just impressed the production team with her voice, including a rendition of “Everything’s Coming Up Roses” in which she changed the lyrics to be about the film’s director.

“I was like, ‘wow, that girl’s really, really, really something else,’” Mr. Massagli said. He performed the only song he knew the words to at the time: “Crazy Train” by Ozzy Osbourne.

A year later, the pair and the other children cast in the film spent several months shooting the movie in New York. The group bonded quickly, Ms. Hale said, attending real school on set and having meals at Benihana. Mr. Black, the film’s adult star, would eat lunch with the group and play games between scenes. Their moms, often present on set, also became close during this time.

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Back then, there was not even a hint of a youthful crush between them, the couple said. After the film’s release, the cast stayed in touch through a long-running group chat.

Eventually, Mr. Massagli and Ms. Hale both left show business to pursue other careers.

Ms. Hale, now 33, has a bachelor’s degree in journalism and public relations from Arizona State University. Mr. Massagli, 32, graduated from Northeastern University, majoring in English. After completing their undergraduate studies, both Mr. Massagli and Ms. Hale pursued further degrees, coincidentally both finding their way to schools in Florida, where they reconnected in 2018.

At the time, Mr. Massagli was a law student at the University of Miami. Ms. Hale was completing a bachelor’s of science and a master’s degree in health leadership at Nova Southeastern University in Fort Lauderdale. (Both eventually graduated from their respective programs. Mr. Massagli is now a lawyer for TikTok where he works as music product counsel. Ms. Hale is an Ob/Gyn sonographer.)

After realizing their proximity, the pair got lunch and caught up. They even sent a selfie to their moms.

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“We thought that was kind of it,” Mr. Massagli said. “But we just kept grabbing dinners and going out for the weekends. We were like, ‘something’s brewing here.’”

On an early date, Ms. Hale recalled going to the bathroom and returning to the restaurant table to find Mr. Massagli had ordered coconut cake for dessert, a flavor she’d previously mentioned was one of her favorites. She appreciated his close listening, she said.

Their relationship moved quickly, the years spent as childhood friends offering a strong foundation.

“Even though it wasn’t romantic, that familiarity we had and our families had when we were younger, really cut through some of those early relationship hurdles,” Mr. Massagli said.

“I knew very early,” Ms. Hale said. “I actually said to one of my close friends, I remember being in an Uber on the way down to Miami one weekend and we were going out and I was like, ‘I think I’m gonna marry this guy.’”

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The first time Mr. Massagli told Ms. Hale he loved her his exact words were, “I think I love you.”

“You think?!” Ms. Hale exclaimed in pseudo-exasperation.

Later that year, Mr. Massagli offered up his home as a short-term stay to help Ms. Hale cut down on the commutes between her home in Fort Lauderdale and a residency program in Miami. He was going out of town for a week and gave her a key and permission “to crash.” By the time he returned, she had moved in.

The couple moved to Brooklyn in 2019 and got engaged in June 2023 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Mr. Massagli proposed in front of the Temple of Dendur, the light-filled gallery featured in the film “When Harry Met Sally…” Dinner at Nino’s, an Upper East Side Italian restaurant, and champagne at the Carlyle followed. Upon hearing the news via FaceTime, Mr. Massagli’s mother burst into tears.

For their wedding, the couple knew they wanted to “go all out,” Ms. Hale said. On Jan. 4, they celebrated their wedding at Park Château Estate & Gardens, a Versailles-like wedding venue in East Brunswick, N.J. (They had previously made things legal on Aug. 30 at Brooklyn Borough Hall. Waldo Ramirez, a staff member of the City Clerk’s Office, officiated.)

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Ms. Hale started her day at 8:30 a.m. getting glammed up for the evening celebration. Ms. Massagli had a more leisurely morning, including a massage.

The couple, who now live in Long Branch, N.J., had read private vows to each other the night before the main event. Ms. Hale’s father, Gary Hale, officiated a brief ceremony before the party began.

Binge more Vows columns here and read all our wedding, relationship and divorce coverage here.

Guests were then whisked into cocktail hour where they sipped the couple’s signature drinks: a Bellini for her and a dirty martini with blue cheese olives for him. The venue was decorated with exclusively white flowers and, per Ms. Hale’s vision, many, many white candles.

For the reception, Ms. Hale changed into a pair of custom-made rhinestone-studded, thigh-high Berta boots that peeked out of the slit of her strapless gown.

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“Once I saw those boots, I was like, I need to do whatever I can to make sure to have those,” she said. “The dress can follow.”

The couple entered the reception to “Through the Wire” by Kanye West, which transitioned into Chaka Khan’s “Through the Fire” for their first dance. They asked their D.J. to play songs that felt like “if Studio 54 never closed,” Mr. Massagli said. A live saxophone player roamed the party riffing over the piped-in music.

During “Edge of Seventeen” by Stevie Nicks, the duo danced with their castmates from “School of Rock,” a nod to a bar scene from the film. Nine cast members were there, as well as more than a dozen of the actors’ parents and siblings. (Jack Black politely declined, citing an ongoing film project, but “was so nice and generous with his words and definitely commemorated it privately,” Ms. Hale said.)

Not wanting to throw off the party vibe, at one point Ms. Hale and Mr. Massagli stepped away for a private cake cutting where they fed each other “delicate, small bites,” Ms. Hale said, laughing.

Ms. Hale recalled another moment on the dance floor with her fellow former “School of Rock” backup singers as a “time capsule moment.”

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“We were just dancing together to some old-school disco and then there was some sort of ad lib in the song and we all just hit it,” she said. “We looked at each other and we’re like, ‘That just happened. We still got it.’”


When Jan. 4, 2025

Where Park Château Estates and Gardens, East Brunswick, N.J.

The Family Stone Both the bride and groom wore sentimental rings. Mr. Massagli’s wedding band was passed down from his grandfather. “He’s big Ang, I’m little Ang,” Mr. Massagli said. Ms. Hale’s oval diamond engagement ring was a repurposed ring from her mother.

Late Night Snacks In addition to a three-tiered wedding cake — each tier was a different flavor — guests were served cannoli on the dance floor. When the night ended, guests walked out past a food truck handing out McDonald’s.

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