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stanley cup Today s Talker 鈥?Olympic gold medalist Simone Biles is coming to the defense of her husband, Jonathan Owens. The Packers defensive back was recently a guest on The Pivot Podcast, and here s what he said. We didn t have NBC, we didn t have Olympic channels, and we re in [training] camp, Owens said. I m not paying attention, I never would have had a moment where I would have watched. Owens drew criticism on socia
vaso stanley l media for claiming he didn t know who Biles was. Now, the decorated gymnast is coming to her husband s defense. Biles recently tweeted out a GIF with the caption, Are y all done yet are yall done yet pic.twitter/HvzpHP5yJgmdash; Simone Biles @Simone_Biles December 24, 2023 Watch the full Today s Talker segment above.Its about time to watch on your time. Stream local news and weather 24/7 by searching for TMJ4 on your device.Available for download on Roku, Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV, and more.Report a typo or
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SAN DIEGO, Calif. 鈥?Throughout the pandemic, millions of people hav
stanley spain e felt relief after recovering from COVID-19, but for some, the feeling is short-lived as new symptoms appear or old ones linger.Known as long COVID or
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stanley termosar had a lot of the long COVID symptoms. Ive had some cardiac changes, Ive had the rash, Ive had shingles for six weeks, which kept moving and changing, it was very strange. I had nerve pain, said Delainne Bond.While she never got tested for COVID-19, Bond believes she contracted the virus last February. She and her husband came down with fevers after returning home from a conference.But Bond didnt initially correlate her unexplained medical conditions with the virus. Not at all. The back pain was a couple of months later, but who doesnt have back pain The shingles or the rash I got was in June, made no sense, but we thought it was shingles, I had it a year ago, said Bond.She ironically learned about long hauler syndrome through her efforts to support health care workers during the pandemic. A nurse herself, Bond created a Facebook support group for nurses. It became a place people turned to share their experiences and gather information. Someone reached out to me asking about long COVID, which I hadnt really. It was was kind of new to me, said Bond.She decided to create another support group, COVID-19 Long Haulers Support, examining the phenomenon and sharing evidence-based research.