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What to Watch: Marathon From writer-directors Keith Strausbaugh and Anthony Guidubaldi, Marathon is âa cheeky, giggle-filled mockmentaryâ (The Film Yap) that tracks an assemblage of improbable partakers of a long-distance race âChristopher Guest-styleâ (Projected Figures). The mock-doc begins three months before Devilâs Canyon Marathon, an underfunded local race organized by shoe store owner, Ed Clap. We meet and follow the below runners, delving into their training, but more importantly, their personal relationships (or lack thereof) with friends, family, and romantic partners. Ryan OâBrien missed qualifying for last yearâs Boston Marathon by nine seconds. Heâs obsessed with everything Boston. This is his year. Or is it? A foot injury and a testy relationship with the cameraman may be his undoing. ....
Wicked Local Frank Sullivan always was the go-to guy in the family, a man who combined a solid education with a philosophy to give back to others as his central creed. And that made it even harder for his family to watch as Alzheimer s disease slowly but incessantly took away those gifts, turning his sharp mind forgetful and his giving nature into a sometimes angry man. It took a physical toll on him, stated his son, Paul Sullivan. He couldn t perform any daily functions, he needed 24-hour care. As painful as it was to watch his father battle with the disease, Paul, who grew up in Holbrook, decided to do some giving back himself. A dozen years ago, he organized Sully s Buddies, a bicycle team to ride in the Memory Ride - now called the Ride to End ALZ MA/NH - to raise funds for the Alzheimer s Association. ....
Deseret News Share this story Kristin Murphy, Deseret News It wasn’t all that long ago that police in Salt Lake City would sometimes arrest people facing mental health and addiction crises and recommend charges that could land them in prison for up to 15 years. “We would book them on that second-degree felony thinking that we had really solved the problem, and yet we were really just introducing them into the criminal justice system,” Salt Lake City Police Chief Mike Brown said this week. He called the approach “the most expensive and least effective.” The city took a new tack in 2016, hiring social workers within its police department and pairing them with officers in a “co-responder” model. The move was a recognition that simply booking people into jail wasn’t helping matters, Brown said. ....