CJTV MEDIA LLC

  • Home
  • CJTV MEDIA LLC

CJTV MEDIA LLC Independent live stream journalist Working diligently to Elevate voices & build bridges. For media relations questions, please contact [email protected]

Good Evening everyone!!I know I’ve been M.I.A. For a while but it’s not for much longer… STAY TUNED!!Today is a heavy on...
14/08/2025

Good Evening everyone!!
I know I’ve been M.I.A. For a while but it’s not for much longer… STAY TUNED!!

Today is a heavy one. One of our community members and good friend is soon to make the transition to great eternal adventure.
She has been a warrior and fighting stage 4 metastatic breast cancer for years. I am so incredibly proud and inspired by the strength and will power that she has shown. It breaks my heart to say goodbye but I know that the infinite ahead is going to amazing.

I don’t normally do this but I am putting this out as an ask from the rest of our community.
There is a need for help with hospice and making the final chapter in this journey calm and smooth and provides the peace and comfort she deserves.
If you are able to help in any way, it will be so greatly appreciated.❤️

I love you all and will be seeing you very soon!!

http://spot.fund/bmmh789sc

LA coverage… let’s gooo!!
11/06/2025

LA coverage… let’s gooo!!

12/07/2023

Last week, a Western Washington District Court judge has ordered a Lynnwood-based spa to allow pre-op transwomen access ...
17/06/2023

Last week, a Western Washington District Court judge has ordered a Lynnwood-based spa to allow pre-op transwomen access to its female-exclusive facilities after a complaint filed with the Washington State Human Rights Commission (WSHRC).

Transwoman Haven Wilvich sought access to the Lynnwood spa in 2020 but was allegedly told that her request was declined because, “transgender women without surgery are not welcome because it could make other customers and staff uncomfortable.”

At the time of the alleged incident in January of 2020, Wilvich hadn’t yet gone through bottom surgery, meaning she still had male genitalia. According to her blog, Finding Haven, Wilvich successfully underwent a 4-hour vaginoplasty, on August 3, 2020, to create a va**na.

Olympus Spa, located on 196th Street near the Lynnwood Event Center, is fashioned after “Jjimjilbang” — a health and wellness facility where patrons are required to be n**e in some procedures per its Korean-inspired tradition. Because of this, it has held the requirement for members to have female genitalia – a requirement held throughout its 20 years of operation. Transgender women are only admitted at Olympus Spa if they have undergone post-operative s*x confirmation surgery.

The rally, and counter rally protest, is scheduled for Saturday, June 17, at 2 p.m. at the spa’s Lynnwood location, organized by April Morrow, Founder and Executive Director of grassroots, non-partisan, and woman-centered group Sovereign Women Speak. Fliers advertising the Antifa-led counter protest have been plastered throughout Seattle and social media.

18/05/2023

🚨BRYAN KOHBERGER INDICTED ON MURDER CHARGES🚨

A grand jury has indicted a man who was already charged in the stabbing deaths of four University of Idaho students, allowing prosecutors to skip a planned week-long preliminary hearing that was set for late June.

Bryan Kohberger was arrested late last year and charged with burglary and four counts of first-degree murder in connection with the Nov. 13, 2022, killings of X**a Kernodle, Ethan Chapin, Madison Mogen and Kaylee Goncalves at a rental home near the University of Idaho campus.

At the time, Kohberger was a graduate student studying criminology at nearby Washington State University, and the killings left the close-knit communities of Moscow, Idaho, and Pullman, Washington, reeling.

A preliminary hearing — where prosecutors must show a judge that there is enough evidence to justify moving forward with felony charges — had been scheduled to begin June 26. But on Tuesday, a grand jury indicted Kohberger on the same criminal charges, effectively rerouting the case directly to the state's felony court level and allowing prosecutors to skip the preliminary hearing process.

Court documents have already detailed much of the investigation that prosecutors say ties Kohberger to the slayings. A white sedan allegedly matching one owned by Kohberger was caught on surveillance footage repeatedly cruising past the rental home on a dead-end street around the time of the killings.

Police say traces of DNA found on a knife sheath inside the home where the students were killed matches that of the 28-year-old Kohberger. Investigators also contend that a cellphone belonging to Kohberger was near the victims' home on a dozen occasions prior to the killings, though it was apparently turned off around the time of the early-morning attack.

Kohberger was arrested Dec. 30, 2022, at his parents' home in eastern Pennsylvania, and law enforcement officials seized dark clothing, medical gloves, a flashlight and other items from the home, according to court documents. In Pullman, investigators seized stained bedding, strands of what appeared to be hair, and a single glove from his WSU campus apartment, according to another search warrant.

Still, the unsealed court documents do not appear to suggest a motive, nor whether the killer had specifically targeted any of the victims. It's also not clear if prosecutors believe Kohberger had met any of the victims before the night they died.

Kernodle, Chapin, Mogen and Goncalves were friends and members of the university's Greek system, and the three women lived together in the rental home just across the street from campus. Chapin — Kernodle's boyfriend — was there visiting on the night of the attack. The killings left many of their classmates and residents of Moscow reeling with grief and fear.

27/04/2023

🚨Students sue school district for banning 'Let's Go Brandon' sweatshirts🚨

❓Sooo, kitty litter in classrooms but no freedom of speech🤔❓

Two students are suing their school district in Michigan for not letting them wear sweatshirts to class bearing the political slogan "Let's Go Brandon" — a popular euphemism for a profane curse toward President Joe Biden.

The middle schoolers argue they have a right to protest the president of the United States. The school district maintains the sweatshirts are vulgar and it has a right to prohibit such material.

Sounds like BS, counter the students, their mom and their lawyers.
“Criticism of the president is core political speech protected by the First Amendment,” attorney Conor Fitzpatrick said in a statement. “Whether it’s a Biden sticker, ‘Let’s Go Brandon’ sweatshirt , or gay pride T-shirt, schools can’t pick and choose which political beliefs students can express.”

Fitzpatrick, an attorney with the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression , filed a lawsuit Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Grand Rapids, Michigan, against the Tri County Area Schools on behalf of two brothers and their mother who argue the students’ constitutional rights have been violated. The school district is in western Michigan, about 30 miles north of Grand Rapids.

Specifically, the lawsuit alleges that last year, two brothers wore “Let’s Go Brandon” sweatshirts to Tri County Middle School in Howard City, but an assistant principal and a teacher ordered the students to remove the shirts. According to the lawsuit, the assistant principal told one of the boys that “his sweatshirt was equivalent to the F-word.”

26/04/2023

🚨 Washington State’s governor Inslee signed a bill Tuesday banning the sale and manufacture of semi-automatic rifles. Opponents sued the state in federal court within hours. 🚨

Washington’s state Capitol was closed to the public on Tuesday due to security concerns as Gov. Jay Inslee signed into law a bill prohibiting the sale of AR-15s and more than 50 other types of assault weapons.

The law will take effect immediately, making Washington the 10th state to enact such a ban.

“These weapons of war, assault weapons, have no reason other than mass murder,” Inslee said at the ceremony, according to The Seattle Times . “Their only purpose is to kill humans as rapidly as possible in large numbers.”

The ban, which applies to the sale, manufacture, and importation of 62 different gun models, does not affect weapons that people already own.

At least one group opposing the measure has already filed a federal lawsuit seeking to have the law deemed unconstitutional. It’s also likely to face a legal challenge from the National Rifle Association, which sued Illinois in January over a similar law. “We are not intimidated by the NRA,” Inslee said at the ceremony…

❓….WHATS NEXT❓

26/04/2023

🚨Kim Potter, the former Brooklyn Center police officer convicted of killing Daunte Wright -- a 20-year-old man shot during a traffic stop -- was released from a Minnesota Correctional facility Monday.🚨

Potter was released at 5 a.m. ET, Andy Skoogman, spokesperson for the Minnesota Department of Corrections, said in a press release Monday.

Potter was convicted of first- and second-degree manslaughter in the April 11, 2021, incident. She had pleaded not-guilty to both charges. She was sentenced last year to 24 months in prison and a fine of $1,000, far below what the prosecution had asked for.

Wright was pulled over for an expired registration tab and a hanging air freshener in the rearview mirror, according to police.

Potter then determined Wright had an outstanding warrant for a gross misdemeanor weapons charge and tried to detain him, according to former Brooklyn Center Police Chief Tim Gannon, who resigned after the incident.

As officers were arresting Wright, he escaped the officers' grip and was scuffling with them when he was shot by Potter, police said. Her attorneys said she meant to grab her stun gun but accidentally shot her firearm instead.

Wright -- who was in the driver seat when he was shot -- then drove away before crashing into another car.

A judge ordered Potter to serve 16 months in prison and eight months on supervised release. She already had a credit of 58 days served in jail while awaiting sentencing.

"I recognize there will be those who disagree with the sentence. That I granted a significant downward departure does not in any way diminish Daunte Wright's life. His life mattered. And to those who disagree and feel a longer prison sentence is appropriate, as difficult as it may be, please try to empathize with Ms. Potter's situation," Judge Regina Chu said during the sentencing hearing.

Chu called the case "one of the saddest cases I have had in my 20 years on the bench."

The maximum sentence for first-degree manslaughter is 15 years and a $30,000 fine and for second-degree manslaughter -- 10 years and a $20,000 fine.

🚨Is Free speech under attack: 'Triggered' students mob athlete who spoke about women's sports🚨Riley Gaines is used to ma...
26/04/2023

🚨Is Free speech under attack: 'Triggered' students mob athlete who spoke about women's sports🚨

Riley Gaines is used to making waves. Yet the former NCAA collegiate swimmer created more of a storm than she expected when speaking this month at San Francisco State University.

Gaines has become an outspoken proponent of protecting the integrity of women’s sports, and she has relevant personal experience to share on a topic of national debate.

At the 2022 NCAA swim championships, Gaines gained notoriety when she tied in the 200-meter freestyle with transgender swimmer Lia Thomas. Thomas had earlier won a national title in a different event.

A mob of SFSU transgender rights activists couldn’t handle the fact Gaines was invited to speak. While she was able to deliver her remarks (with disruptions), a crowd of students pounced on her when she tried to leave the event.

In saying she was assaulted, Gaines tweeted: "I was extorted and held for (ransom). The protestors demanded I pay them if I wanted to make it home safely. I missed my flight home because I was barricaded in a classroom."

“In those hours where I was stuck in the room, I could hear the protesters standing outside,” Gaines, a spokeswoman for Independent Women's Forum, told me. “They were screaming, they were chanting, they were yelling vulgar and profane and violent and vengeful things and continually threatened both myself and the (campus police) officers. I was held against my will.
“It was a really terrifying experience.”

'Truly chilling' this is happening
Scary stuff.

It’s disturbing to watch the videos of what happened to this young woman, and it was certainly frightening for her.
To make it worse, the university’s response was not to apologize to Gaines, but rather to thank the “students who participated peacefully.”
“It’s truly chilling to think that this is the way that universities and administrations and institutions are going,” Gaines says.
This alarming incident is sadly just one of a growing number of examples of intolerance on college campuses.

Efforts to silence or intimidate those with whom we disagree are not free speech – they're censorship.
Last month, a conservative federal appeals judge was shouted down by disgruntled students at Stanford Law School and not given a chance to deliver his remarks.
Is it any wonder students feel they have the right to behave so badly when universities try to “protect” them from views they may find even the slightest bit upsetting?
In a show of how absurd things are getting, common words are now off-limits on some campuses, from Stanford to Michigan State University.

Luckily, all isn’t lost.
Hope for free speech exists

Some university administrators are standing up to the madness and preserving what the college experience should be about: wrestling with ideas – even uncomfortable ones.

For instance, Martha Pollack, the president of Cornell University, recently vetoed a student resolution that would have called for instructors to include trigger warnings on class readings.
“Learning to engage with difficult and challenging ideas is a core part of a university education: essential to our students’ intellectual growth, and to their future ability to lead and thrive in a diverse society,” Pollack wrote in a letter, along with the university provost.

And this month, Penn State University President Neeli Bendapudi released a short video upholding the First Amendment and defending why the university should allow speakers with controversial views – including hateful ones that could offend students and faculty.
“For centuries, higher education has fought against censorship and for the principle that the best way to combat speech is with more speech,” Bendapudi said. “To combat bad ideas is with better ideas.”

Gaines, who last year was still a college student, understands this. And while it was discouraging to be treated in such a hateful manner, she won't be silenced.
“Where is the open dialogue?” Gaines asks. “That's how we can unite and move forward. Because the way that I was met with this opposition, it's not beneficial to anyone. It's not beneficial to myself. It's not beneficial to the people who are fighting against me or what they're fighting for.”
More young people – and college administrators – should heed that advice.

24/04/2023

❓🤔 CHICAGO MAYOR-ELECT BRANDON JOHNSON DEFENDS RIOTERS WHO
LOOTED STORES, SHOT INTO CROWDS & VICIOUSLY BEAT INNOCENT CITIZENS:🤔❓

❗️Have an amazing day y’all ❗️💥9 reasons why you shouldn’t listen to people’s opinions💥1. People’s opinions are often wr...
23/04/2023

❗️Have an amazing day y’all ❗️

💥9 reasons why you shouldn’t listen to people’s opinions💥

1. People’s opinions are often wrong/ill-informed:

If you took a poll of 100 people and asked them whether the sun revolves around the earth or vice versa, chances are that a majority of them would say that the sun revolves around the earth. And yet, we know that this isn’t true.

So why would you listen to someone’s opinion if there’s a good chance that it might be wrong?

2. People’s opinions are often based on emotion, not facts:

In the world of free speech, it seems like everyone has an opinion but very few people can back up those opinions with facts. Opinions are often based on how we feel about something, not on what we actually know about it.

Someone could give you an opinion while they’re having an emotional response to something, and that opinion might not be rational or well thought-out.

3. People’s opinions are often biased:

We all have biases. Whether we realize it or not, our personal experiences and beliefs color the way we see the world. So when somebody else shares their opinion with you, it’s important to remember that it might be biased.

For example, if somebody grew up in a wealthy family, they might be biased against less fortunate people. Thus, their opinions on poverty or welfare might not be based on reality.

4. People’s opinions are often influenced by outside sources:

Have you ever noticed how easily people can be swayed by outside influences? Whether it’s a friend, a family member, or even something we see on TV or social media, our opinions can be shaped by what other people say and do.

If someone has been listening to a lot of negative news recently, their opinion might be more pessimistic than it would otherwise be, for instance.

5. You don’t know their motives:

When somebody shares their opinion with you, it’s important to remember that you don’t always know their motives. They might be trying to help you, or they might be trying to manipulate you.

If someone is constantly sharing their opinions with you, even when you don’t want to hear them, it might be a sign that they’re trying to control you or get you to do something that you don’t want to do.

6. Opinions are constantly changing:

People’s opinions are constantly changing, often based on new information or experiences. If you listen to someone’s opinion today and then listen to them again a year from now, chances are that their opinion will be different.

This isn’t necessarily a bad thing, but it does mean that you shouldn’t put too much stock into what someone says. Their opinion today might not be their opinion tomorrow.

7. Your own opinion is just as valid as anyone else’s:

What makes you think that someone else’s opinion is more valid than your own? Just because someone has a different opinion doesn’t mean that they’re right and you’re wrong.

It’s okay to disagree with other people. In fact, it’s healthy to have disagreements and explore different points of view. Just don’t forget that your opinion, in many cases, could be more valid than the person you’re disagreeing with.

8. You could be listening to the opinion of someone whose life is a mess:

We don’t always know the circumstances surrounding someone’s life. For all you know, the person whose opinion you’re listening to could be going through a tough time. Their life might be a mess and their opinion might be equally as messy.

Now, unless they’re acting as a cautionary tale, do you really want to take advice from someone whose life is falling apart? Probably not.

9. You’re never going to please everyone, so why try?

There will always be someone who disagrees with you, no matter what your opinion is. So why bother trying to please everyone? It’s better to focus on being true to yourself than on trying to please other people.

Address


Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when CJTV MEDIA LLC posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to CJTV MEDIA LLC:

  • Want your business to be the top-listed Media Company?

Share