I didn't want to go to an urgent care because of potential COVID exposure, so I did a telemed visit.
My sister, who has migraines, told me it was a migraine. At the time, I also had what people told me was a migraine aura in my right eye. This happened for the first time about a year ago during the pandemic lockdown. On Saturday, the top of my head started tingling.
It persisted and by Thursday night, I was getting waves of nauseousness. Last Wednesday afternoon, I got a bad headache.
With its steamy scenes, forbidden love and vampire-theme, Netflix will be hoping the series follows in the footsteps of the successful Twilight series. In a trailer for the series, the pair can be seen kissing in bed, as well as running across the town and discussing their responsibilities with their families.įirst Kill is a short story appearing in Vampires Never Get Old: Tales with Fresh Bite, a collection of vampire short stories published in September 2020. Having been born into a family of monster hunters, her parents think she’s finally ready to kill her first vampire. Meanwhile 'dreamy' new student Calliope is also hiding a secret. Struggling with her urges, she finds it harder to keep her supernatural behaviour under wraps at school. Meanwhile another wrote: 'Sapphic couple with a Twilight x Romeo and Juliet vibe with a POC lead?Īccording to Netflix's online description, the series follows socially awkward introvert Juliette at her high school as she grapples with the reality that she’s actually a vampire. The series has already won high praise from Twitter users ahead of its release, with one posting: 'Gay Twilight fans.first kill is for us.' by AnonymousĪ new Netflix series which follows a forbidden lesbian love story between a vampire and a monster hunter is being dubbed the 'gay Twilight' ahead of its release next month.įirst Kill, which is set to be released on 10 June, follows Juliette, played by Sarah Catherine Hook, who comes from a long line of esteemed vampires and falls for vampire hunter Calliope, played by Imani Lewis. In one instance, a child called out and the shooter shot the child dead. When law enforcement finally entered the building, they called out to the children to shout and identify their locations.
In the hour of free movement provided to the shooter by the police, he apparently shot victims in four classrooms, not just one.ĩ. Some parents took their own initiative and entered the school building to retrieve their children, while the police waited outside for backup.Ĩ. The police shoved some parents, put some parents in handcuffs and threatened parents with TASERS.ħ. The local police resisted the efforts of the many parents who had congregated at the site to encourage them to do their job and take out the shooter. Despite being fully equipped with assault weapons (we have photographs to prove it) and holding themselves out as a swat team, the local police declined to storm the building, waiting for federal border patrol agents to arrive from the Mexican border some fifty miles away.Ħ. Despite hearing a substantial amount of internal gunfire after their first retreat, the police waited an hour to storm the building, completely contrary to the Shooter Protocol adopted by law enforcement all over the country after the Colombine shootings in the late 1990s.ĥ.
What is clear is that they immediately retreated under fire from the shooter.Ĥ. Not clear if they actually entered school or only approached it. Local law enforcement arrived four minutes later. Despite a doubling of the school district's security budget in the last year and the highly touted efforts of the State of Texas to fortify their schools after the 2018 Santa Fe school shooting, the shooter simply walked through a side door of the school-unlocked, unchallenged.ģ. There was no security guard stationed at the school to heroically exchange fire with the shooter. mostly from parents and children and "new" government representatives who have replaced those who gave misinformation in the first few hours after the massacre:ġ.