Hawaii
The Valley Cast Enjoy Trip to Hawaii Without Jax Taylor
Jax Taylor has undergone quite a bit of change over these last months. Life in The Valley will never be the same.
First came the news that he and Brittany Cartwright filed for divorce. Then, Jax checked himself into rehab due to his “mental health struggles,” according to a rep. Just recently, Jax checked out of rehab. While there, he found himself diagnosed with bipolar disorder and PTSD.
That would be a lot for anyone to go through in just a few months. And while Jax doesn’t exactly make himself easy to sympathize with, fans would still hope that he’s bettering himself. But the blows keep coming. His castmates just flew out to Hawaii, leaving him behind. Rest easy, sunglasses stores!
Jax Taylor hosts an event at his bar while his castmates take a vacay
On September 3, Instagram user @bravobravobravobri put together a collection of IG stories from Valley cast members. Each story showed the cast members on a plane from “LAX” to “OGG” as Kristen Doute wrote on her story. OGG is the location identifier for the Kahului airport.
Notably absent from the plane ride was Jax. It remains unclear if Jax plans to join the cast at any point on their Hawaiian vacation. However, Bravo Bri knew for certain that Jax wouldn’t leave for Hawaii on September 3 with his castmates. On that same night, Jax hosted an event at his bar – a Bachelorette watch party. So, who’s really having the better time?
The disappointing Bachelorette finale aside, fans of The Valley have a lot to look forward to. Jesse Lally and Michelle Saniei will head to Hawaii together. But the two aren’t together together. Michelle brought her new boyfriend along, which may create some turbulence.
The Valley is streaming on Peacock.
TELL US – WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THE CAST TRIP TO HAWAII? WHAT DO YOU THINK OF JAX STAYING BEHIND?
Hawaii
Brown Water Advisory Issued For Entire East Side Of Hawaii Island
(BIVN) – A Brown Water Advisory has been issued for the entire east-side of Hawaiʻi island, from Kohala to South Point, due to recent heavy rains.
A Flood Advisory was in place for East Hawaiʻi overnight and into Monday. In Kaʻū, the east end of Wood Valley Road was closed due to flooding.
The Hawaii Department of Health advised beach users to stay out of waters when the water appears brown or murky.
“After storms or heavy rain, the water may contain higher than normal pollutant levels,” health officials said. “The Department recommends staying out of the water for 48-72 hours after the rain has stopped and after the beach has received full sunshine.”
The health department also advised the public to “avoid swimming, wading in, or drinking water from any freshwater streams or pond to prevent leptospirosis, a bacterial infection caused by the Leptospira bacteria.”
From the National Weather Service in Honolulu:
The fuel for the rainfall is moisture accompanying a mid-level trough that is drifting westward over the island chain. Precipitable water remains quite high, between 1.6 to 2 inches based on satellite and sounding data, and an increase in shower frequency is expected over windward areas tonight. With some drier trade wind flow moving in from the east and undercutting the moisture, rainfall totals should be significantly less than last night. However, expect humid conditions to linger as dew points remain elevated in the low to mid 70s.
Hawaii
Alleged Trump Gunman Was My Hawaii Pickleball Partner
Before Ryan Wesley Routh allegedly became the second man to try and kill Donald Trump in as many months, he was something else entirely: A fiend on the pickleball court.
“He was a reasonably good player. He played really hard,” Bryant Schultz told The Daily Beast in a phone interview. “He was the only one out at the courts who would dive for the ball. Most pickleball players do not dive to make a shot.”
Schultz, 62, of Kaneohe, Oahu, played frequently with Routh, 58, over a period of several years as part of a loose coalition of residents who showed up at Swanzy Beach Park three mornings a week to get their pickleball on.
Both on and off the court, Routh was “always personable and good-natured,” Schultz said, as well as chatty, on friendly terms with many of the park’s regulars. Hard on himself when he made mistakes, he never chastised his partners. “Except for his own errors, he was the most mild-mannered player out there.”
Routh first appeared at the park after the worst of the pandemic had passed, Schultz recalled. “He never appeared to have a bunch of money,” he said. “He was often borrowing paddles. For quite a while, he played with a really chewed-up wooden paddle—because of his dive, you know.”
During a federal court appearance on Monday, Routh was charged with two firearm possession counts. He told the court that he had “zero funds” in savings and had no assets beyond two trucks in Hawaii, according to CNN.
It wasn’t totally clear to his teammates what Routh did for a living. Schultz heard that he “worked on building tiny houses” and would do odd-job repairs around the community, including on a local pier. “He wasn’t paid or contracted,” as far as Schultz knew, he said. “He just went out and made the surface safe for people to walk on.”
On his LinkedIn page, which remained live on Monday, Routh advertised his work with a company called Camp Box Honolulu, which he wrote builds storage units and “very simple housing structures for the less fortunate.” In 2019, a year after Routh moved to Oahu, the Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported that he’d pledged to build tiny homes for Kalaeloa’s homeless community.
One thing Routh didn’t appear to be—at least on the pickleball court—was political.
“I can’t recall him ever talking politics,” Schultz said. He’d had no idea Routh had self-published a 291-page book last year in which he called for Trump’s assassination, criticizing the former president for his 2018 withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal. (Authorities have not yet laid out a possible motive in Sunday’s assassination attempt.)
In a section apparently directed at Iran’s government, Routh wrote, “You are free to assassinate Trump as well as me for that error in judgment and the dismantling of the deal,” according to The Wall Street Journal. “No one here in the US seems to have the balls to put natural selection to work or even unnatural selection.”
Routh has a scattered political history tracing back to his time in his native North Carolina, where he registered as an “unaffiliated” voter in 2012. In his book, he groused that he was “so tired of people asking me if I am a Democrat or Republican as I refuse to be put in a category and I must always answer independent.”
On social media, he had professed support for Bernie Sanders, Tulsi Gabbard, President Joe Biden, and Trump, whom he disavowed in mid-2020.
“I and the world hoped that president Trump would be different and better than the candidate, but we all were greatly disappointment and it seems you are getting worse and devolving…” he tweeted that June. “I will be glad when you gone.”
Schultz and his fellow picklers were aware, however, that Routh left Hawaii for Ukraine shortly after the Russian invasion, intent on fighting for Kyiv.
With no military experience and a lengthy criminal record, however, Routh was rebuffed by the Ukrainian defense ministry, he told Newsweek Romania in an article recently unearthed by CBS News.
“My initial goal was to come fight… but I’m 56, so initially they were like, I have no military experience, so they were like, you’re not an ideal candidate,” he told the magazine. “So they said, not right this minute. So plan B was to come here to Kyiv and promote getting more people here.”
Routh spent some time in the city trying to act as an informal recruiter for Ukraine’s International Legion, and spoke to both The New York Times and Semafor last year about his efforts. But several foreign soldiers involved with the legion told Slate on Sunday night that Routh “was not associated with them, recruited nobody to the cause, and did little during his time in Ukraine aside from garner publicity for himself.”
In a statement to NBC News, a spokesperson for the legion said, “We would like to clarify that Ryan Wesley Routh has never been part of, associated with, or linked to the International Legion in any capacity. Any claims or suggestions indicating otherwise are entirely inaccurate.”
After failing in his recruitment efforts, Routh eventually made his way back to Hawaii, where he took up pickleball again. The last time Schultz saw him was around four or five weeks before the assassination attempt, he said. Nothing seemed out of the ordinary; it was just another day on the court.
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