Photos shows the crawfish processing in Louisiana, an industry hit by a shortage of foreign workers

CROWLEY, La. (AP) — Spring is peak crawfish season in Louisiana, an industry worth about $300 million.

Associated Press Juan Antonio harvests crawfish traps in a crawfish pond in Crowley, La., Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) Juan Antonio displays a crawfish harvested in Crowley, La., Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) Juan Antonio harvests crawfish traps in a crawfish pond in Crowley, La., Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) Juan Antonio harvests crawfish traps in a crawfish pond in Crowley, La., Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) Juan Antonio harvests crawfish traps in a crawfish pond in Crowley, La., Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) Colin Lawson walks between his family's crawfish ponds in Crowley, La., Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) Juan Antonio harvests crawfish traps in a crawfish pond in Crowley, La., Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) Juan Antonio harvests crawfish traps in a crawfish pond in Crowley, La., Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) Alan Lawson enters the Bocage Crawfish processing facility in Crowley, La., Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) A worker peels crawfish in the Bocage Crawfish processing facility in Crowley, La., Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) Workers walk between buildings at the Bocage Crawfish processing facility in Crowley, La., Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) Alan Lawson walks through a room that normally has 110 workers in the Bocage Crawfish processing facility in Crowley, La., Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) A crawfish boat harvests a crawfish pond in Crowley, La., Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Stephen Smith)

Immigration Guest Workers

However,the industry is struggling this yeardue to a shortage of seasonal foreign workers, and some are blaming President Donald Trump's administration for what they say has been a failure to authorize enough guest workers in time.

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Large-scale crawfish producers use guest workers, many from Mexico and Central America, to shell and freeze the freshwater catch that is often pulled from swampy rice fields — physically demanding tasks that American workers are generally unwilling to do.

This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.

Photos shows the crawfish processing in Louisiana, an industry hit by a shortage of foreign workers

CROWLEY, La. (AP) — Spring is peak crawfish season in Louisiana, an industry worth about $300 million. ...
Lebanese fear another occupation as Israel threatens to use Gaza tactics in the south

BEIRUT (AP) — As Israel trades fire with Hezbollah, calls for mass evacuations and sends ground troopsdeeper into Lebanon, its leaders have hinted at a long-term occupation modeled on the devastating conquest ofmuch of Gazaafter Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023, attack.

Associated Press An Israeli soldier jumps from a tank in northern Israel near the border with Lebanon, Saturday, March 21, 2026. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit) Members of the displaced Abd el-Hajj family, and two of their cousins, right, who fled Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon, sit inside a tent used as a shelter in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, March 25, 2026. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti) Israeli soldiers atop an APC in northern Israel near the border with Lebanon, Saturday, March 21, 2026. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit) Israeli soldiers are seen along the border with Lebanon in northern Israel, Tuesday, March 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

APTOPIX Israel Lebanon Iran War

Israel says it needs to establish a zone of control in the depopulated south to shield its own northern communities, which have faceddaily rocket attackssince the Iran-backed militant Hezbollah groupjoined the wider war. Many in Lebanon fear that could mean the open-ended displacement ofover a million people, the flattening of their homes and a loss of territory.

Israel's Defense Minister Israel Katz said this week that it would create a "security zone" up to the Litani River, some 30 kilometers (20 miles) from the border in some places. He said troops would destroy homes, which he claimed were being used by militants, and that residents would not return until northern Israel is safe.

The campaign would mirror the one in Gaza, in which Israeli forces flattened and largely depopulatedthe eastern half of the Palestinian territory, Katz said on Tuesday. Israel has said it won't withdraw from the enclave until Hamas disarms as part of a U.S.-brokered ceasefire deal.

"We have ordered an acceleration in the destruction of Lebanese homes in contact-line villages to neutralize threats to Israeli communities, in accordance with the model of Beit Hanoun and Rafah in Gaza," Katz said, referring toborder towns that were largely obliterated.

From one war to the next

After a 2024 ceasefire halted Israel's last war with Hezbollah, Israeli forces gradually withdrew from southern Lebanon except for five strategic hilltops along the border.

Lebanese returned to find that homes, infrastructure, andsome entire villagesdestroyed. Israel said it had dismantled Hezbollah infrastructure that could have been used to launch an Oct. 7-style attack, and it continued to strike what it said were militant targets on a near-daily basis after the truce.

Hezbollah resumed it attacks after Israel and the United States launched the war with Iran on Feb. 28, accusing Israel of having repeatedly violated the ceasefire. Israel accused Lebanon's government of failing to carry out its pledge to disarm Hezbollah, despite its unprecedented steps toward criminalizing the group.

In the latest fighting, Israel has launched blistering air raids across Lebanon, killing more than 1,000 people — mostly outside of the border area — and displacing over a million. It has warned residents to evacuate a wide swath of the south, extending from the border to the Zahrani River, some 55 kilometers (34 miles) away.

The Israeli military says it has launched a limited ground operation. Political leaders speak of more ambitious plans.

Bezalel Smotrich, Israel's far-right finance minister and a member of its Security Cabinet, said this week that the current war must end with "fundamental change."

"The Litani must be our new border with the state of Lebanon," he said.

Echoes of an earlier occupation

Israel invaded southern Lebanon in 1982 during the country's civil war. Hezbollah, established that year, waged a guerrilla campaign that eventually ended the Israeli occupation in 2000.

This time around, Israel has bombed seven bridges over the Litani, the northern edge of a U.N.-patrolled buffer zone established after previous conflicts. Israel says Hezbollah was using the bridges to move fighters and weapons, and that its military will control the remaining crossings.

Heavy fighting has meanwhile erupted in the town of Khiam, the fall of which would cut off the south from Lebanon's eastern Bekaa Valley, another area with a large Hezbollah presence.

After the bridges were bombed, Lebanese President Joseph Aoun accused Israel of seeking to sever the south from the rest of the country "to establish a buffer zone, entrench the reality of occupation, and pursue Israeli expansion within Lebanese territories."

U.N. peacekeepers say the bombing of the bridges and ongoing clashes have hindered their operations and put personnel at risk.

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"This is the closest fighting activity we have seen to our positions," said Kandice Ardel, spokesperson for the U.N. mission known as UNIFIL. "Bullets, fragments, and shrapnel have hit buildings and open areas inside our headquarters."

Ardel said peacekeepers at observation points have seen a growing presence of Israeli troops and "engineering assets," though they have not seen any new military positions built yet.

'Different shades' of control

Mohanad Hage Ali, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Middle East think tank in Beirut, said Israel has already established "different shades" of control.

"The first line of borders is a no-man zone. This is basically a large parking lot that is facing Israel," he said. "There is nothing there, no movement, nothing at all."

Lebanese movement is restricted farther north. During last year's olive harvest, farmers struggled to reach their groves because of regular Israeli strikes and had to be accompanied by Lebanese troops and UNIFIL peacekeepers, who coordinated with Israel.

Sarit Zehavi, the founder and president of the Alma Institute and a retired Israeli military officer, said Israel will likely establish a more extensive area of control stretching farther north.

She acknowledged that Israel was unlikely to defeat Hezbollah and was at risk of having to maintain a long-term presence in southern Lebanon.

"But the other alternative is to take the risk that we will be slaughtered. It's as simple as that," she said.

No diplomatic offramp in sight

Lebanon's government has broken a longstanding taboo by proposingdirect talks with Israel. It has also taken action against Hezbollah since the last war, criminalizing its activities and claiming to have dismantled hundreds of military positions.

But neither the U.S. nor Israel has shown any interest in such talks as they focus on the wider war with Iran.

If negotiations occur, Israel could demand major concessions in exchange for relinquishing territory taken by force — an updated version of the decades-old "land for peace" formula.

Israel seized parts of Syria after the overthrow of Syrian President Bashar Assad andis in talks with the new governmentin Damascus about an updated security arrangement. In Gaza, it has vowed to keep half the territory until the militant Palestinian Hamas group lays down its arms, aseach side has accused the otherof violating the truce reached in October.

Lebanese who fled their homes are meanwhile in limbo — and some fear they may never return.

Elias Konsol and his neighbors fled the Christian border village of Alma al-Shaab with UNIFIL's help. He was reunited with his mother, who cried in his arms, at a church near Beirut where funeral services were being held for a resident killed in an Israeli strike.

Konsol said there were no weapons or Hezbollah fighters in his village, but it was forced to evacuate anyway.

"We no longer know our fate," he said. "We don't know if we will see our homes and village again."

Frankel reported from Jerusalem.

Lebanese fear another occupation as Israel threatens to use Gaza tactics in the south

BEIRUT (AP) — As Israel trades fire with Hezbollah, calls for mass evacuations and sends ground troopsdeeper into Lebanon...
What's next in the investigation into the deadly Air Canada collision at LaGuardia

An Air Canada regional jet landing at one of the country's busiest and most prominent airportsslammed into a fire truck at more than 100 miles per houron Sunday, leaving federal investigators and frightened passengers questioning what could have gone wrong.

CNN National Transportation Safety Board investigators examin the wreckage of an Air Canada Express regional jet at New York's LaGuardia Airport on Monday. - Shannon Stapleton/Reuters

The National Transportation Safety Board combed through wreckage, collecting data and physical evidence to find answers in the first days of an investigation that will take a year or longer.

"We have a lot of data right now, a lot of information, including information on tower staffing, but the NTSB deals in facts," said Jennifer Homendy, chair of the NTSB, at a news conference on Monday. "We don't speculate. We don't take one person at their word. We verify that information carefully before we provide it."

Investigators have released the plane to Air Canada, the airline said, which will move it into a secured hangar where teams will begin reuniting passengers with the personal belongings they left behind as they evacuated.

"Items will be safely returned as soon as possible, although the process of sorting and identifying all belongings from the aircraft will take time," the airline said Wednesday.

Air Canada Express flight 8646, operated by Jazz Aviation, had 72 passengers and four crew members on board for the flight from Montreal to New York's LaGuardia. The two pilots died and four of the dozens of passengers and crew who were injured in the collision remain in the hospital, the airline said.

The Transportation Safety Board of Canada, the airline and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which runs the airport, will also participate as parties to the investigation.

The first several days of the investigation are going to be focused on data collection, according to Jim Brauchle, an attorney that represents plaintiffs in aviation disasters for the law firm Motley Rice.

"They won't be doing a lot of analysis the first few days," Brauchle said. "That's more facts and data collection and getting witness statements and those kind of things, while it's still fresh."

What happened in the tower?

Questions about the people in the control tower, their responsibilities, and if all proper procedures were followed will be answered in the course of the investigation.

Homendy confirmed Tuesday there were two controllers working in the tower cab, the top of the control tower which looks out over the airfield, at the time of collision. The "local controller" manages active runways and the immediate airspace surrounding the airport. The "controller in charge" is a supervisor responsible for the safety of operations, and on the night of the crash, they were also assigned to give pilots departure information.

The NTSB says the staffing was standard operating procedure for LaGuardia at that time of the night, but whether that procedure was adequate will also be investigated.

"We saw that there was a pretty heavy workload for these two controllers where you had an emergency going on; you had several flights that they had to attend to," Homendy told CNN anchor Kaitlan Collins on The Source Wednesday. "We will look at controller staffing entirely in this tower, but then across the national airspace."

Another part of the investigation is to determine which of the controllers were responsible for the aircraft and vehicles on the ground.

The FAA Air Traffic Control tower at LaGuardia Airport, New York. - Michael Nagle/Bloomberg/Getty Images/File

"It is not clear who was conducting the duties of the ground controller. We have conflicting information," Homendy said. That person would be tasked with managing all aircraft and vehicle movements on taxiways but typically not active runways.

There is also "conflicting information, including dates and times on the logs," of who else was elsewhere in the air traffic control facility, she said. The NTSB will have to "rectify some of those inconsistencies," Homendy continued.

The controllers involved in the crash continued to work for some time after the crash, and the NTSB will also investigate why they were not relieved more rapidly.

Eighteen minutes after the collision, one controller appeared to blame himself for the crash in a conversation with a pilot who saw it happen.

"That wasn't good to watch," the pilot said in audio recorded by LiveATC.net.

"Yeah, I know. I tried to reach out to them," the noticeably distraught controller said. "We were dealing with an emergency earlier. I messed up."

The pilot responded, "Nah man, you did the best you could."

Investigators will probe far beyond the comment and investigate every aspect of what happened and always note accidents often have complicated causes.

"Our aviation system is incredibly safe because there are multiple, multiple layers of defense built in to prevent an accident," Homendy said. "So, when something goes wrong, that means many, many things went wrong."

The NTSB interviewed the local controller on Tuesday night and continued interviews with others on staff through Wednesday, Homendy said. Investigators will also examine audio recordings the Federal Aviation Administration keeps of every tower radio transmission to determine what exactly was said and by who.

"It looks like it's a communication error," Brauchle said, noting that publicly available recordings of air traffic control audio appear to show "the tower both cleared the aircraft to land, and also cleared the fire truck to cross the active runway."

But he said investigations can sometimes reveal more than is apparent in the first moments.

Why didn't the controllers see the collision coming earlier?

LaGuardia Airport has systems designed to prevent vehicles on the ground from colliding, and investigators will want to know why they were not able to stop this crash.

The airport's surface detection equipment –ASDE-X– uses radar to track ground vehicles but did not warn the controllers ahead of the collision, according to the NTSB.

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"Due to the close proximity of vehicles merging and unmerging near the runway," no alert was issued, Homendy said.

The radar returns on the screen showed two "blobs" on the taxiway, but never showed one go in front of the plane, she said.

Another revelation was that the fire truck involved in the crash was not equipped with a transponder to help air traffic controllers identify it and know its precise location. Though a vehicle without a transponder should show up on radar, no other information would be displayed, and obstructions might prevent radar returns. Why a transponder was not installed will be part of the investigation.

While stressing the need to wait for the investigation's findings, Homendy said Wednesday that she and the team believe all vehicles on tarmacs should have transponders so controllers can see them.

An aircraft rescue and firefighting vehicle lays on its side after colliding with an Air Canada Express regional jet landing at LaGuardia Airport, New York. - Ryan Murphy/AP

Did the fire truck hear the warning from the control tower to stop?

Another area of the investigation will include looking at the radio transmissions between pilots of Flight 8646, the firefighters, and the control tower.

"Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop, truck 1. Stop," one of the controllers yelled as the fire truck pulled in front of the plane landing on Runway 4.

Nine seconds after the first warning, they collided.

The first radio call the fire truck made to the control tower more than a minute before the collision was "stepped on" by another transmission and was apparently not audible in the control tower, recordings from that night show, but later transmissions appeared to go through.

Investigators will want to know what was transmitted and what was heard, and will review recordings from the control tower, the plane's cockpit voice recorder, and interview other people listening to the frequency that night.

During the investigation into the 2025 midair collision between an Army Black Hawk helicopter and an American Airlines regional jet over the Potomac River, the NTSB found the soldiers in the helicopter didn't hear all the directions given by air traffic control due to a problem with the frequency.

For Sunday's collision at LaGuardia, investigators also will be looking into the status of the airport's runway status lights. These are a type of traffic light system that is embedded in pavement of taxiways and runways.

The lights should, for instance, automatically signal vehicle operators whether it is unsafe to cross a runway,according to the FAA.

"We … know from the replay that the runway status lights were functioning," Homendy said Tuesday. "But we still have to verify that with tech ops from the FAA."

Why was the fire truck cleared to cross the runway?

Perhaps the most vexing question: Why did the controller apparently clear the fire truck to cross Runway 4 when the plane was speeding toward it?

Controllers are working in high stress situations with long hours and busy airfields to manage. Investigators want to know if something was going on with them that may have contributed to the crash.

The two controllers started their shifts about an hour before the 11:37 p.m. collision and at some point took over duties in the tower cab, the NTSB noted.

Shortly before the collision, another plane on the other side of the airport declared an emergency after an aborted landing and odor in the cabin. Controllers dispatched the fire trucks and were working to find a gate for the plane in the minutes before the accident.

"This is a heavy workload environment," Homendy noted, but said no one should jump to conclusions.

"I would caution (against) pointing fingers at controllers and saying distraction was involved," she said. "We still have to determine what happened at shift change, which was around 10:30. We have to determine who else was in the tower and the facility and available at the time. We rarely, if ever, investigate a major accident where it was one failure."

The wreckage of an Air Canada Express regional jet and Port Authority of New York and New Jersey fire truck sit on Runway 4 at New York's LaGuardia Airport, on Monday. - Seth Wenig/AP

What was going on in the plane?

The cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder, often referred to as black boxes, are two "critical" pieces to the puzzle in any aviation incident investigation, Peter Goelz, former NTSB managing director and CNN aviation analyst told CNN Monday.

The data recorders are expected to give some insight into what happened during the flight's final moments,capturing everything from what was said in the cockpit, to the sound of switches and automated warnings as well as what the aircraft's instruments were reading.

"They give you the functionality of the plane," Goelz said. "It will tell you exactly when it touched down. Did the pilots attempt to do a go-around? Did the speed brake work effectively? And it will discuss the comments between the pilots on whether they were following procedures, what they saw and how they reacted."

Investigators had to "cut a hole," on top of the aircraft to retrieve the recorders, Homendy said. They were then driven to the NTSB's headquarters in Washington, DC, for analysis.

The cockpit voice recorder contained more than 25 hours of good quality audio across four separate channels, said Doug Brazy, NTSB lead investigator. The flight data recorder contained approximately 80 hours of data and recorded more than 400 parameters.

What will the debris tell us?

While investigators moved quickly to recover data and comb the wreckage before any clue is lost to time or the elements, they have to be careful because some of what is left of the plane and fire truck is complex and hazardous.

"There is a tremendous, tremendous amount of debris from taxiway delta across Runway 4," Homendy said. "It's pretty expansive, and we want to make sure, because as you're walking around, you can get injured. There's also hazardous materials, of course, on the firefighting vehicle itself."

Runway 4 at LaGuardia remains closed until Friday afternoon, according to a FAA notice, while the NTSB conducts its investigation.

The airport, meanwhile, has reopened with flights using a perpendicular runway. As they whiz by, passengers can catch a glimpse of the wreckage and the investigators making sure they understand what went wrong so it never happens again.

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What’s next in the investigation into the deadly Air Canada collision at LaGuardia

An Air Canada regional jet landing at one of the country's busiest and most prominent airportsslammed into a fire tru...
Reality TV thrives on messy people — but the Taylor Frankie Paul backlash reveals when audiences finally draw the line

Taylor Frankie Paul didn't become a reality TV star in spite of controversy. She became one because of it.

Yahoo TV Taylor Frankie Paul

OnThe Secret Lives of Mormon Wives, her messy, highly public personal life wasn't a backstory;it was the premise. The show leaned into it, audiences responded and the formula of taking someone already generating attention online and giving that attention a bigger stage worked. Then,The Bachelorettetried to follow the same playbook.

When Paul wasannounced as the leadfor the long-running ABC franchise last September, both the public and the network were aware of her past. The mom of three was known for a"soft-swinging" scandalthat led to the dissolution of her marriage to Tate Paul and was introduced to television screensthrough the lens of her 2023 arrestfollowing analtercation with her then-boyfriendDakota Mortensen.

What viewers knew about Paul — the good, the bad and the ugly — only fed their curiosity. Reality TV has long depended on that dynamic: controversy as a draw, not a deterrent. But the past week exposed the limit of that logic, whenTMZ released videoof the 2023 incident.

The swift shift in public opinion of Paul and the unprecedentedcancellationof herBacheloretteseason, days before it was set to premiere, wasn't about new information. It was about how that information was experienced. What had been a watchable drama suddenly became unwatchable. Now media experts say it's not aboutwherethe line is, but when viewers decide it's been crossed.

The appeal of messy TV

Paul's selection as theBacheloretteinitially raised eyebrows. She was a single mother of three with no prior ties to the franchise, known largely for the volatility of her past relationships. But for a series struggling to maintain relevance, the choice was strategic. Reality TV has increasingly trained audiences to see controversy not as a liability, but as a compelling narrative.

"There is something to the controversy that draws people in,"Vassilis Dalakas, a marketing professor at Point Loma Nazarene University who has studiedthis phenomenon, tells Yahoo. "There is something to their behavior or their personality that automatically makes them more interesting to watch."

The pull isn't always easy to articulate, but Dalakas points to schadenfreude — the pleasure derived from someone else's misfortune — as a key part of it.

[Paul] was fascinating to people because she was putting it all out there, and TV bought into that.Jasmine Weg

"We're watching with the hope that justice is restored," he says. That can mean wanting to see a controversial figure face consequences. But it can also mean hoping for the opposite: a redemption arc. Reality TV thrives on both impulses at once — the desire to see someone struggle and the possibility that they might change.

"There are people who are truly wishing this is a chance for them to get everything together," Dalakas says.

Paul fit neatly into that framework. Her online presence was built on openness about a chaotic personal life, andThe Secret Lives of Mormon Wivesturned that into something that viewers could actively interpret — was she driving the chaos or caught in it? That ambiguity didn't deter audiences; it gave them a reason to keep watching.

Jasmine Weg, a New York-based attorney and host of the podcastExhibit A-List,says that kind of visibility is exactly what reality TV looks for. "[Paul] was fascinating to people because she was putting it all out there, and TV bought into that," Weg tells Yahoo.

Shows aren't just willing to include that mess; they're structured around it. FromReal HousewivestoVanderpump Rules, questionable, even ugly behavior has become part of the draw.

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In that context, casting Paul wasn't a departure, even if she felt outside ofThe Bachelorette's realm. It was a continuation of a formula that works. But this time, it came with real-life consequences.

When it becomes problematic

The rapid unraveling of Paul's casting reveals what's uncomfortable about reality TV: The line between messy and problematic isn't set at the start. It's discovered in real time by audiences and producers alike, often only after it's been crossed.

Paul's past has existed as public information that viewers could process at a distance. Viewers had previously seen bodycam footage of the 2023 incident, which was aired in the debut episode ofThe Secret Lives of Mormon Wivesin September 2024, followed by Paul's own expression of remorse. But therecent release of footagefrom the physical dispute itself, which shows Paul throwing a chair at Mortensen with her young daughter seemingly nearby, shifted the conversation.

"There's this notion of visually undeniable evidence," Dalakas says. "The moment we have that, for most people, that's when it's crossed the line."

That distinction between knowing and seeing matters. As Weg put it, people can sit with something that exists in a document, even if it's uncomfortable. But "when you actually see it in front of your own eyes, you can't really look away." What might have been framed as a storyline or backstory no longer feels contained within the show.

"At that point, you're not watching for schadenfreude anymore. You're just upset that the show is even happening," Dalakas says. That shift forces producers to respond. "Controversy translates into engagement, but producers are hoping it never reaches the point where it's gone too far."

"They will tolerate certain behavior, whether it's erratic or outrageous," adds Weg, "but if it comes to the line where the person doesn't look like they're doing well on TV, it's just no longer good TV."

It's no longer about buzz or ratings, but about risk to the show, to its advertisers and to its network's image. "It's not necessarily a moral line," Weg says. "It's thinking about how this will play out for the show."

You're not watching for schadenfreude anymore. You're just upset that the show is even happening."Vassilis Dalakas

That line is rarely fixed, though cases involving domestic violence raise the stakes in a way that extends beyond entertainment, says Katie Ray-Jones, CEO of theNational Domestic Violence Hotline.

"Domestic violence is not just a plotline or press hook; it's an epidemic. We live in a culture where shock and trauma drive clicks and views. In that skewed version of reality, people may forget that victims and survivors of domestic violence, their families and loved ones, are watching and listening," Ray-Jones says. "I wish it didn't take a public display of crisis and violence to spur a response. … 10 million people experience domestic violence every year. No one should feel as if they are alone, and all those who choose to cause harm should be held accountable — regardless of who they are or how many followers they have."

Moments like this expose a tension at the center of a genre that relies on real people and real experiences, yet packages them for consumption. When those experiences involve undeniable harm, that framing becomes harder to justify.

"There's a question we all have to ask ourselves about whether we're comfortable finding entertainment in someone's real struggles," says Weg. "We all have to decide where to draw that line." For Paul, this was it.

For anyone affected by abuse and needing support, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233, or if you're unable to speak safely, you can log ontothehotline.orgor text LOVEIS to 22522.

Reality TV thrives on messy people — but the Taylor Frankie Paul backlash reveals when audiences finally draw the line

Taylor Frankie Paul didn't become a reality TV star in spite of controversy. She became one because of it. ...

 

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