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Piers Morgan
Piers Stefan Pughe-Morgan (born 30 March 1965) is an English broadcaster, journalist, writer, and television personality. He is currently a co-presenter of the ITV Breakfast programme Good Morning Britain from Monday to Wednesday each week. Morgan began his career in Fleet Street as a writer and editor for several tabloid papers, including The Sun, News of the World, and the Daily Mirror. In 1994, aged 29, he was appointed editor of the News of the World by Rupert Murdoch, which made him the youngest editor of a British national newspaper in more than half a century.
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Piers Morgan reveals the one sense he hasn’t got back seven months after Covid battle

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www.thesun.co.uk

PIERS Morgan revealed he still has no sense of smell almost eight months after contracting Covid. The former Good Morning Britain anchor, 56, told his followers on Twitter that his sense of smell was 'non-existent'. "Taste back, energy back, smell still non-existent," he replied to one person who questioned him over his long Covid symptoms.

Another cynic then pressed Piers on his sense of smell, arguing that if he could taste food he "must have some degree of smell because taste relies on the presence of smell." Piers replied: "Yes, I know they're intertwined, but doesn't feel like I have any smell at all though most things - not all - taste almost normal now." The TV host was double jabbed when he was struck down with coronavirus and has told how the vaccines may well have saved his life.

Piers, the new host of NewsCorp's TalkTV channel, told how he was left bed-bound for a week at the height of his illness. He has today taken to Twitter to reassure fans he's on the road to recovery after completing his first exercise bike fitness session at home.

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South Carolina inmate picks firing squad over electric chair - fox29.com - state South Carolina - Columbia, state South Carolina - county Spartanburg
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South Carolina inmate picks firing squad over electric chair
COLUMBIA, S.C. - A South Carolina prisoner scheduled to be the first man executed in the state in more than a decade has decided to die by firing squad rather than in the electric chair later this month, according to court documents filed Friday.Richard Bernard Moore, 57, is also the first state prisoner to face the choice of execution methods after a law went into effect last year making electrocution the default and giving inmates the option to face three prison workers with rifles instead.Moore has spent more than two decades on death row after being convicted of the 1999 killing of convenience store clerk James Mahoney in Spartanburg. If executed as scheduled on April 29, he would be the first person put to death in the state since 2011 and the fourth in the country to die by firing squad in nearly half a century.The new law was prompted by the decade-long break, which corrections officials attribute to an inability to procure the drugs needed to carry out lethal injections.In a written statement, Moore said he didn’t concede that either method was legal or constitutional, but that he more strongly opposed death by electrocution and only chose the firing squad because he was required to make a choice."I believe this election is forcing me to choose between two unconstitutional methods of execution, and I do not intend to waive any challenges to electrocution or firing squad by making an election," Moore said in the statement.Moore’s attorneys have asked the state Supreme Court to delay his death while another court determines if either available method is cruel and unusual punishment.
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