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An Amazon Prime subscriber has a significant problem with the companys implementation of ads on Prime Video and filed a class action lawsuit on Friday challenging the move.

The plaintiff, who lives in California, leveled allegations of misleading advertising and consumer protection law breaches against Amazon in connection to its “unfair” change to ads on Prime Video. The court filing was published and earlier reported by The Hollywood Reporter.

The lawsuit comes about a week and a half after the company started automatically showing limited ads to US subscribers and asking those looking to continue streaming without them to pay an extra charge each month. The fee to go ad-free is $2.99.

The plaintiff asked the court to certify it as a class action covering people who paid for an annual Amazon Prime membership before Dec. 28 of last year. He also urged the court to grant other relief like an injunction “prohibiting Defendants deceptive conduct,” various damages and a jury trial, according to the filing. 

In the lawsuit, it argued consumers “who subscribed to Amazon Prime before the change reasonably expected that their Amazon Prime subscription would include ad-free streaming of movies and tv shows for the duration of the subscription” due to advertising the e-commerce giant had done over the years for the service. Amazons marketing of the service misled and hurt annual subscription consumers “by depriving them of the reasonable expectations to which they are entitled” after the automatic ads kicked in, the filing claimed.

It also alleged, among other things, that Amazon “breached the contracts with Plaintiff and class members by failing to provide ad-free streaming of tv shows and movies as promised” when they signed up for an annual membership.

Amazon declined a FOX Business request for comment about the lawsuit.

When Amazon first revealed in late September that it would bring limited ads to Prime Video content, the company pointed to its desire to “continue investing in compelling content and keep increasing that investment over a long period of time” as the reason for the change. It has put out content like “The Boys,” “Reacher,” “The Summer I Turned Pretty” and “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.”

The company also said at the time that it would “email Prime membersseveral weeks before ads are introduced into Prime Video with information on how to sign up for the ad-free option if they would like.” The cost of Prime stayed flat for the option with ads.

Ad-supported plans have become increasingly more common among streaming platforms in recent years as they seek to boost revenue.

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Delta Boeing 767 jet that dropped emergency slide is 33 years old — well past normal age for active airliner: experts

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The Boeing jet that dropped an emergency slide after taking off from JFK Airport on Friday is 33 years old — well past the typical retirement age for a commercial jetliner, according to aviation experts.

The chute from Delta Flight 520 had detached from a panel above the right wing shortly after the Los Angeles-bound plane took off from JFK Airport in New York last Friday. The deflated slide was recovered Sunday after it washed up on the Rockaway peninsula, about six miles from JFK, as The Post exclusively reported.

According to data from Airfleets.net, the Boeing-made 767 jet is 33 years old — above a passenger plane’s typical lifespan of 20 to 25 years, longtime commercial pilot Scott Miller told The Post.

He said Boeing stopped delivering its 767 passenger planes a decade ago, though this model is still being used by the US military.

Miller said the incident was likely due to a latch failure, as the aging Boeing 767 only deploys the slide when the emergency exit door over the wing is open.

He declined to speculate whether the freak accident was because of the plane’s age or because Delta’s maintenance crew failed to realize there was a faulty latch before takeoff.

In either case, Miller pointed the finger at Delta for the mishap — and cleared Boeing of any possible fault like the company suffered after the near-disastrous fuselage blowout on an Alaska Airlines-operated Boeing 737 MAX 9 plane earlier this year.

“Once an airplane leaves the manufacturer, Delta is responsible for maintenance and upkeep. It works like a car dealership,” said Miller, who also lectures at San Jose State University.

Former pilot Richard Levy, who flew for American Airlines for 41 years, agreed with that assessment.

“This emergency exit coming open does not happen in a vacuum,” Levy said.

“The question is who did maintenance on that airplane, and who specifically did any maintenance on the cover to the emergency overwing exits and when. Thats what the FAA will be looking at.”

Delta has said it is fully cooperating with the Federal Aviation Administration “as nothing is more important than the safety of our customers and people.

The National Transportation Safety Board told The Post that it’s “collecting information about the event, but have not launched an investigation.”

The 33-year-old plane is one of 44 Boeing 767-300s in Delta’s fleet of 963 aircraft, according to a March 31 public fling.

Delta’s 767s have an average age of 28 years, compared to the entire fleet’s average of 14.9 years, the filing shows.

“The airplane in question here the warranty on that airplane expired a number of years ago,” Doug Drury, Head of Aviation at Central Queensland University in Australia, told The Post.

This wasn’t the first chute incident suffered by Delta’s fleet of 767s.

Last June, another Delta Flight 520 taking the same route from JFK to Los Angeles was diverted to Utah due to what the Atlanta-based carrier dubbed a “maintenance issue” at the time.

Just moments after it touched the ground, the slide at the rear of the cabin accidentally deployed inside the plane, shooting a panel door at a crew member, who was then taken to the hospital, The Post earlier reported.

Sources said at the time that the plane’s catering crew had accidentally caused the slide to explode “like an airbag.”

This was not the same Boeing 767 plane, as flight numbers are attached to the same routes, rather than aircrafts, a source close to the situation said.

The 2023 incident was a matter of human error as the slides hadnt been disarmed by the flight attendant prior to opening the door on arrival, the source said.

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Disney World Guest Concerned Man Dressed in Drag Is Portraying Evil Queen at Resort Restaurant: Report

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Share Tweet By Tr Goins-Phillips Editor
May 1, 2024

A guest who vacationed at The Walt Disney World Resort in Lake Buena Vista, Florida, was reportedly concerned after encountering a person he believed to be a male portraying a female villain during a character dining experience.

The Disney employee in question was in character as the Evil Queen from “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs,” according to Disney fan blog That Park Place. The man said he noticed the individual portraying the Evil Queen “without a doubt had a mans voice” when his children posed for pictures with the villain during the Story Book Dining event at the Wilderness Lodge.

Listen to them on the latestepisodeof Quick Start ?

He didn’t notice the seemingly male cast member until he got close to the individual. He said he was taking pictures and videos while his wife and children interacted with the Evil Queen and didn’t notice the actor’s concerning tone of voice “until I got face to face” with the cast member.

“I told my waiter that I had a problem with something,” the guest told the blog. “He then asked what was the issue, and I simply stated I have a problem with Evil Queen being a man dressed in drag. The waiter immediately said he was going to get a manager and he looked panicked.”

He continued, “At first, I said I wanted to formally complain about the Evil Queen being a man and that I felt very disrespected by Disney because this is not the sort of thing my family values and they didnt give us any type of notice that this sort of thing was even a possibility.”

The man went on to say he and his family are Christians who spent thousands of dollars on their Disney vacation and that it “is not right” for a male to portray a female Disney character.

A family has reached out to That Park Place claiming they spent over $300 on a character meet and greet dinner at Walt Disney World… only to discover the Evil Queen character was almost certainly a biological male. This represents the first time we've heard of Disney using a pic.twitter.com/jHRt64wl4O— wdwpro (@wdwpro1) April 23, 2024

The concerned father said he ultimately spoke to a manager, who reportedly did nothing to resolve the situation.

“At one point, the manager stated, I can assure you that she is awoman,’” he said. “She went even further, trying to shame me, informing me that ‘she’ was so excited to get the part as the Evil Queen. For a brief moment I thought, ‘Oh, maybe Im wrong,’ but then I realized that I was just being gaslighted.”

At that point, the guest reportedly asked if the individual dressed as the Evil Queen was a “biological male,” to which the manager purportedly said, “I’m sorry, sir, I cannot answer that.”

The owner behind the That Park Place blog claimed to talk with Disney cast members who have worked with the character actor in question and spoke on condition of anonymity.

“The only thing I personally feel safe saying as a statement is that inclusion is a key for a reason,” the unnamed cast member reportedly said in response to a question about the employee playing the Evil Queen. “Its the newest key the company has introduced. Inclusion means everyone belongs. Guests and cast members alike. No matter who you are, no matter how you identify, if youre cisgendered, trans, or non-binary, you can be a performer especially a look-alike one.”

***As the number of voices facing big-tech censorship continues to grow, please sign up forFaithwires daily newsletterand download theCBN News app, developed by our parent company, to stay up-to-date with the latest news from a distinctly Christian perspective.***

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Fired ABC News weatherman's 'heated screaming match' with 'GMA' producer was 'last straw': report

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ABC News weatherman Rob Marciano was fired by the Disney-owned network this week after engaging in a “heated screaming match” with one of the show’s producers that was witnessed by other staffers, according to a report.

News of Marciano’s tirade, which was reported by the Daily Beast, got back to Ginger Zee, chief meteorologist for ABC and “Good Morning America,” who alerted her superiors, according to the report.

Marciano’s history of alleged “anger management issues” as well as complaints about his behavior prompted network executives to decide that the latest outburst “was the last straw,” insiders told the Daily Beast.

The Post reported earlier this week that Marciano, who was hired by “GMA” in 2014 to replace Zee as its weekend meteorologist, frequently clashed with Zee over a period of years.

The feud between the two was kept under wraps for years by management, which was aware of Marciano’s “hot temper” as well as Zee’s tendency to be “nasty,” sources told The Post.

She treated him as a beta and she was the alpha, a media executive told The Post.

Marciano allegedly made female staffers at “GMA” uncomfortable because of his awkward tendency to “overshare” information about his divorce from his then-wife, Eryn Marciano, according to the Daily Beast.

Marciano’s marriage to Eryn Marciano ended in January last year.

The two were married for 11 years and share two kids.

Staffers also complained that Marciano had been “cranky” throughout the course of his divorce proceedings.

The Post has sought comment from ABC News, Marciano and Zee.

Marciano was hired at the same time the network launched an around-the-clock weather unit meant to provide 24-hour-a-day coverage for ABC News various programs, including GMA and World News Tonight.

At the time, Zee was promoted to chief meteorologist at “GMA” following Sam Champion’s departure for the Weather Channel.

However, the two clashed often, and Zee immediately pulled rank on assignments, an insider told The Post.

Marciano is also reported to have alienated other staffers at the network with his behavior.

Last year, ABC network honchos banned him from the Times Square studios of “GMA” after he allegedly made a colleague feel uncomfortable. Page Six was the first to report the news.

He was found to have done something that was improper, but he was punished for it, and they still havent let him return, one insider told Page Six at the time.

Marciano contributed occasional field reports for “GMA” but was not permitted to enter the studio.

He was moved recently to “World News Tonight.”

A source speculated to The Post earlier this week that Marcianos salary which was said to be a little less than $1 million when he was hired away from Entertainment Tonight was deemed too much money.

Additional reporting by Alexandra Steigrad

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