Televangelist Jimmy Swaggart, whose ministry was toppled by prostitution scandals, dies at 90New Foto - Televangelist Jimmy Swaggart, whose ministry was toppled by prostitution scandals, dies at 90

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Televangelist Jimmy Swaggart, who became a household name amassing an enormous following and multimillion-dollar ministry only to be undone by his penchant for prostitutes, has died. Swaggart died decades after his once vast audience dwindled and his name became a punchline on late night television. His death was announced Tuesday on his public Facebook page. A cause wasn't immediately given, though at 90 he had been in poor health, having suffered cardiac arrest last month. The Louisiana native was best known for being a captivating Pentecostal preacher with a massive following before being caught on camera with a prostitute in New Orleans in 1988, one of a string of successful TV preachers brought down in the 1980s and 1990s by sex scandals. He continued preaching for decades, but with a reduced audience. Swaggart encapsulated his downfall in a tearful 1988 sermon, in which he wept and apologized but made no reference to his connection to a prostitute. "I have sinned against you," Swaggart told parishioners nationwide. "I beg you to forgive me." He announced his resignation from the Assemblies of God later that year, shortly after the church said it was defrocking him for rejecting punishment it had ordered for "moral failure." The church had wanted him to undergo a two-year rehabilitation program, including not preaching for a full year. Swaggart said at the time that he knew dismissal was inevitable but insisted he had no choice but to separate from the church to save his ministry and Bible college. From poverty and oil fields to a household name Swaggart grew up poor, the son of a preacher, in a music-rich family. He excelled at piano and gospel music, playing and singing with talented cousins who took different paths: rock-'n'-rollerJerry Lee Lewisand country singerMickey Gilley. In his hometown of Ferriday, Louisiana, Swaggart said he first heard the call of God at age 8. The voice gave him goose bumps and made his hair tingle, he said. "Everything seemed different after that day in front of the Arcade Theater," he said in a 1985 interview with the Jacksonville Journal-Courier in Illinois. "I felt better inside. Almost like taking a bath." He preached and worked part time in oil fields until he was 23. He then moved entirely into his ministry: preaching, playing piano and singing gospel songs with the barrelhouse fervor of cousin Lewis at Assemblies of God revivals and camp meetings. Swaggart started a radio show, a magazine, and then moved into television, with outspoken views. He called Roman Catholicism "a false religion. It is not the Christian way," and claimed that Jews suffered for thousands of years "because of their rejection of Christ." "If you don't like what I say, talk to my boss," he once shouted as he strode in front of his congregation at his Family Worship Center in Baton Rouge, where his sermons moved listeners to speak in tongues and stand up as if possessed by the Holy Spirit. Swaggart's messages stirred thousands of congregants and millions of TV viewers, making him a household name by the late 1980s. Contributors built Jimmy Swaggart Ministries into a business that made an estimated $142 million in 1986. His Baton Rouge complex still includes a worship center and broadcasting and recording facilities. The scandals that led to Swaggart's ruin Swaggart's downfall came in the late 1980s as other prominent preachers faced similar scandals. Swaggart said publicly that his earnings were hurt in 1987 by the sex scandal surroundingrival televangelist Jim Bakkerand a former church secretary at Bakker's PTL ministry organization. The following year, Swaggart was photographed at a hotel with Debra Murphree, an admitted prostitute who told reporters that the two did not have sex but that the preacher had paid her to pose nude. She later repeated the claim — and posed nude — for Penthouse magazine. The surveillance photos that crippled Swaggart's career apparently stemmed from his rivalry with preacher Marvin Gorman, who Swaggart had accused of sexual misdeeds. Gorman hired the photographer who captured Swaggart and Murphree on film. Swaggart later paid Gorman $1.8 million to settle a lawsuit over the sexual allegations against Gorman. More trouble came in 1991, when police in California detained Swaggart with another prostitute. The evangelist was charged with driving on the wrong side of the road and driving an unregistered Jaguar. His companion, Rosemary Garcia, said Swaggart became nervous when he saw the police car and weaved when he tried to stuff pornographic magazines under a car seat. Swaggart was later mocked by the late TV comic Phil Hartman, who impersonated him on NBC's "Saturday Night Live." Out of the public eye but still in the pulpit The evangelist largely stayed out of the news in later years but remained in the pulpit at Jimmy Swaggart Ministries, often joined by his son, Donnie, a fellow preacher. His radio station broadcast church services and gospel music to 21 states, and Swaggart's ministry boasted a worldwide audience on the internet. "My dad was a warrior. My dad was preacher. He didn't want to be anything else except a preacher of the gospel," Donnie Swaggart said in avideo message sharedon social media Tuesday following his father's death. "That's what he was put on this earth to do." The preacher caused another brief stir in 2004 with remarks about being "looked at" amorously by a gay man. "And I'm going to be blunt and plain: If one ever looks at me like that, I'm going to kill him and tell God he died," Jimmy Swaggart said, to laughter from the congregation. He later apologized. Swaggart made few public appearances outside his church, save for singing "Amazing Grace" at the 2005 funeral of Louisiana Secretary of State Fox McKeithen, a prominent name in state politics for decades. In 2022, he shared memories at thememorial servicefor Lewis, his cousin and rock 'n' roll pioneer. The pair had released "The Boys From Ferriday," a gospel album, earlier that year. Donnie Swaggart said he promised his father that "I will continue the work" — distributing Bibles, sharing the gospel and "proclaiming the message of Christ." Swaggart is survived by his wife, Frances, son Donnie, daughter-in-law Debbie, grandson Gabriel, daughter Jill, granddaughter Jennifer, son-in-law Clif, son Matt, daughter-in-law Joanna and nine great-grandchildren.

Televangelist Jimmy Swaggart, whose ministry was toppled by prostitution scandals, dies at 90

Televangelist Jimmy Swaggart, whose ministry was toppled by prostitution scandals, dies at 90 BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Televangelist Jimmy Sw...
140,000 pounds of bologna recalled nationwideNew Foto - 140,000 pounds of bologna recalled nationwide

More than 140,000 pounds of ready-to-eat bologna have been recalled because the products were mislabeled, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food Safety and Inspection Service. The bologna, made by Gaiser's European Style Provisions Inc., contains meat or poultry ingredients that are not declared on the packaging. The recall includes products sold under various brand names, including: Vacuum-packed "Family Tree Bologna Veal," which contains undeclared pork Plastic-wrapped "Babushka's Recipe Chicken Bologna," which contains undeclared pork Plastic-wrapped "Fancy Bologna," labeled as containing pork but also containing undeclared beef and chicken Vacuum-packed "Gaiser's Russian Brand Doktorskaya Bologna," which contains undeclared beef Plastic-wrapped "Gaiser's Bologna Veal," which contains undeclared chicken and pork Plastic-wrapped "Gaiser's Turkey Bologna," which contains undeclared chicken and pork Plastic-wrapped "Chicken Bologna Kypoyka Paba," which contains undeclared pork The USDA said the products were shipped to both retail and wholesale outlets across the country. Although no illnesses have been reported, officials advise consumers not to eat the recalled bologna. The products may still be in refrigerators or freezers, and should be thrown away or returned to the store.

140,000 pounds of bologna recalled nationwide

140,000 pounds of bologna recalled nationwide More than 140,000 pounds of ready-to-eat bologna have been recalled because the products were ...
Lizzo says she was deeply depressed and 'very paranoid and isolated' after ex-dancers filed a sexual harassment and weight-shaming lawsuit against herNew Foto - Lizzo says she was deeply depressed and 'very paranoid and isolated' after ex-dancers filed a sexual harassment and weight-shaming lawsuit against her

A year and a half after falling into a deep depression, Lizzo is ready to talk about it. The Grammy-winning hitmaker, while chatting withWomen's Healthfor its summer issue, reflected on her declining mental health in the summer of 2023. Lizzo's poor mental health coincided with abombshell lawsuitfiled by three former dancers accusing her of sexual harassment and fostering hostile working conditions. "You look around and think about every person you've ever known and every experience, and you wonder,Was that real?" she recalled to Women's Health. "I got very paranoid and isolated. I used to walk into glam and be like, 'Oh, let me tell you about this crazy s*** that happened last night!' I couldn't do that anymore. I pushed everyone away. I wasn't even talking to my therapist." "I wasn't present. I wasn't open. I wasn't myself anymore," Lizzo added. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Women's Health (@womenshealthmag) The lawsuit was filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court on Aug. 1, 2023, by Crystal Williams, Arianna Davis and Noelle Rodriguez, who worked as Lizzo's backup dancers from 2021 to 2023 on her tour, the Special Tour, theLos Angeles Times reported. In it, they alleged that the "Juice" singer pressured them to touch a nude performer at a club in Amsterdam, made fun of them for their weight and subjected them to an "excruciating" re-audition process. Lizzo, whose real name is Melissa Viviane Jefferson, her production company, Big Grrrl Big Touring, and her dance captain Shirlene Quigley were listed as defendants in the lawsuit, according to a filing obtained byNBC News. Williams and Davis previously competed on the singer's reality TV competition show,Watch Out for the Big Grrrls. The series, which aired one, eight-episode season in 2022, saw women compete to join Lizzo's tour as her backup dancers. Rodriguez, meanwhile, was hired by Lizzo after performing in her "Rumors" video,NBC News also reported. "The stunning nature of how Lizzo and her management team treated their performers seems to go against everything Lizzo stands for publicly, while privately she weight-shames her dancers and demeans them in ways that are not only illegal but absolutely demoralizing," Ron Zambrano, the dancers' attorney, said in a statement obtained by the Los Angeles Times when the lawsuit was filed in 2023. Lizzo denied these allegationsin an Instagram post in 2023, writing, "These last few days have been gut wrenchingly difficult and overwhelmingly disappointing." "My work ethic, morals and respectfulness have been questioned. My character has been criticized. Usually I choose not to respond to false accusations but these are as unbelievable as they sound and too outrageous to not be addressed." As she grappled with the fallout of the lawsuit and associated allegations, Lizzo struggled mentally. She told Women's Health that all she wanted was to disappear. "You ever get tired of living?" she asked while reflecting. "It got to the point where I was like, 'I could die.' I never attempted to kill myself or thought about it, but I did think,If everyone hates you and thinks you're a terrible person, then what's the point?" The 37-year-old singer has previously spoken out about the lawsuit and how it affected her mental health. Her Women's Health interview is just the latest instance of that. Inan Instagram postfrom May 2024, nearly a year after the lawsuit was filed, Lizzo shared an update on how she's been moving through her depression. "I'm the happiest I've been in 10 months," she wrote alongside a mirror selfie. "The strange thing about depression is you don't know you're in it until you're out of it. I'm definitely not all the way as carefree as I used to be ... but the dark cloud that followed me every day is finally clearing up." She gave fans another update on her mental health during her Los Angeles concert in March 2025. Speaking once more on her struggle with depression, Lizzo opened up about how that experience inspired the title of her forthcoming album,Love in Real Life. "About a year and a half ago, I was in such a dark, deep depression. I was so heartbroken by the world, and so deeply hurt that I didn't want to live anymore," shetold the crowd. "And I was so deeply afraid of people that I didn't want to be seen. And eventually, I got over that fear." Despite being afraid to face the public, she attended a concert after months of isolation. "As I was walking through the crowd to get to my spot, something miraculous happened," she recounted. "Somebody, who I didn't know, looked at me and said, 'Lizzo, I love you.' And they reached out, and I reached back, and we hugged. And it felt so damn good. … It was f***ing life-saving." In May 2025, the "Truth Hurts" singer appealed to overturn a ruling from 2024 that allowed the sexual harassment lawsuit to proceed, calling it an attack on her "First Amendment right to perform her music and advocate for body positivity," accordingto Billboard. Judge Mark Epstein in 2024 tossed out a number of allegations against Lizzo, including claims that she had fat-shamed the dancers. He did, however, allow several accusations to move forward toward a possible trial, the outlet reported.

Lizzo says she was deeply depressed and 'very paranoid and isolated' after ex-dancers filed a sexual harassment and weight-shaming lawsuit against her

Lizzo says she was deeply depressed and 'very paranoid and isolated' after ex-dancers filed a sexual harassment and weight-shaming l...
Savannah Guthrie touches on 'horrible' divorce: 'It took me years to recover'New Foto - Savannah Guthrie touches on 'horrible' divorce: 'It took me years to recover'

Savannah Guthrieis offering rare insight into her divorce from her first husband. The "Today" host, 53, touched on her split from Mark Orchard during a discussion onMonica Lewinsky's"Reclaiming" podcast in an episode released on Tuesday, July 1. "It was horrible and sad, and it broke my heart," she said. "It took me years to recover." Guthrie was married to Orchard from 2005 to 2009. The topic was brought up when Lewinsky asked Guthrie about her decision to include a disclaimer in her 2024 book, "Mostly What God Does: Reflections on Seeking and Finding His Love Everywhere," stating that there were some personal subjects she would not go into depth on. Guthrie said she included this disclaimer because she wanted to establish her qualifications to write about topics like loss and suffering, without fully getting into details about her experience in those areas. "I wanted to say, 'You know what? I have experienced adversity, but I don't really want to tell you about the depths of that, because some of it was just too personal and too embarrassing,'" she told Lewinsky. "I have had my moments, and I have had my sadnesses. ... But I don't want to go there," the NBC host went on to say. "I'm down here, my feet are burning on the pavement. I just don't want to tell you why the pavement was so hot, or how many blisters I had on my feet. I don't want to give you the gory details." Savannah Guthriereveals this was 'the hardest' topic to write about in her book on faith Guthrie pointed to her divorce as an example of one of those topics she did not want to go into further detail about in her writing. "I'm not blaming anyone, but I don't really want to get into it," she said. Guthrie has been married to Michael Feldman since 2014. They have two children together. Speaking toUSA TODAY in 2024, Guthrie described "Mostly What God Does" as a "really vulnerable and personal" series of reflections on faith. "It's that way because in so many ways, this is the book that I need to read," she said. "… I need to be reminded, like we all do, that God loves us and is on our side and has an eternal promise to be present to us." Contributing: Erin Jensen This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Savannah Guthrie talks 'horrible' divorce from Mark Orchard

Savannah Guthrie touches on 'horrible' divorce: 'It took me years to recover'

Savannah Guthrie touches on 'horrible' divorce: 'It took me years to recover' Savannah Guthrieis offering rare insight into ...
Beachgoer finds $500,000 of cocaine in "Yosemite Sam" packaging

A major storm has yet to hit Florida this hurricane season but that hasn't stopped the annual deluge of drugs from making landfall. A beachgoer on Sunday morning stumbled across nearly $500,000 worth of cocaine wrapped in "Yosemite Sam" packaging washed up on shore, authorities said,marking yet another discovery of illicit drugs along coasts in the Sunshine State. The 25 kilos of drugs were wrapped in packaging with a design of the iconic cartoon character, the Walton County Sheriff's Office said in asocial media post, which included images of the cocaine. "While enjoying our beautiful beaches, if you come across any square groupers, PLEASE call the Walton County Sheriff's Office immediately and DO NOT touch suspicious packages," the office said. "The contents could be extremely harmful. We're here if you need us." Authorities said they confiscated the narcotics and logged them into evidence. It's hardly the first time illicit drugs have washed up on beaches in Florida — and often the drugs are packaged with distinct designs. In August 2024, Hurricane Debbyblew 25 packages of cocaineonto a Florida Keys beach. The packages, bearing a red geometric logo, weighed about 70 pounds and were worth over $1 million, police said at the time. That same month, tourists on a Florida beachfound a packagewith 16 bricks of suspected cocaine that were wrapped with a picture depicting a dune buggy. In June 2024, boaters off the coast of the Florida Keysfound 65 pounds of cocainefloating in the ocean. A photo released by the sheriff's office showed a package of the suspected cocaine emblazoned with an image of a bald eagle. Just weeks earlier,divers foundabout 55 pounds of cocaine about 100 feet underwater off Key West. Images released by the sheriff's office showed packages marked "Nike SB," with imitations of the footwear brand's iconic swoosh logo on the front. Researchers with the U.N.have estimated that about 90% of the cocaine consumed in North America comes fromColombia. Traffickers often try to smuggle the illicit substance over the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean with speed boats and "narco subs." Cocaine can be dumped into the water to evade detection from law enforcement or to be picked up by other smugglers, but currents or storms can carry the packages to shore. What we know about partial verdict in Sean "Diddy" Combs trial Partial verdict reached in Sean "Diddy" Combs' trial Fed Chair Powell says Trump tariffs delayed interest rate cuts

Beachgoer finds $500,000 of cocaine in "Yosemite Sam" packaging

Beachgoer finds $500,000 of cocaine in "Yosemite Sam" packaging A major storm has yet to hit Florida this hurricane season but tha...
Video captures family rescue from boat off Bahamas coast by Coast GuardNew Foto - Video captures family rescue from boat off Bahamas coast by Coast Guard

The U.S. Coast Guard rescued three people, including an 8-year-old child, from a life raft after their sailing vessel became partially submerged near Plana Cays, Bahamas, the Guardsaid in a June 30 statement. Video shows the Guardsmen of the Air Station Clearwater MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter aircrew reach the family at around 7 a.m. June 30 after a Good Samaritan called the Guard around midnight. The Guard said that no injuries were reported and that the family had been taken to Bahamian authorities in Great Inagua. The owner of the boat is coordinating the vessel's recovery with commercial salvage, according to the statement. "Our aircrews train very hard for moments like this, and we are thankful to have played a role in the safe rescue of this family," Lt. Andrew Boyle, a Coast Guard Air Station Clearwater Jayhawk aircraft commander, said in the statement. Boyle urged mariners to keep a radio and an emergency distress beacon when on the water saying, "it could help save their lives." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Video shows family rescued by Coast Guard in Bahamas

Video captures family rescue from boat off Bahamas coast by Coast Guard

Video captures family rescue from boat off Bahamas coast by Coast Guard The U.S. Coast Guard rescued three people, including an 8-year-old c...
Travis Barker Owns a Can of Ozzy Osbourne's DNA Because of Course He DoesNew Foto - Travis Barker Owns a Can of Ozzy Osbourne's DNA Because of Course He Does

ABC via Getty; Daniel Knighton/Getty Travis Barker purchased a Liquid Death can containing Ozzy Osbourne's DNA The Blink-182 drummer shared a since-expired photo of the can on his Instagram Stories Osbourne's farewell concert with Black Sabbath takes place on Saturday, July 5 Travis Barkerowns a can ofOzzy Osbourne's DNA, because, of course, he does. The Blink-182 rocker, 49, shared a since-expired picture on his Instagram Stories of an empty Liquid Death can,which contains traces of the Prince of Darkness' saliva. The empty iced tea can was among 10 that were sold for $450 each of"Infinitely Recyclable Ozzy.""Ozzy Osbourne is 1 of 1. But we're selling his actual DNA so you can recycle him forever,"Liquid Death quipped on their website. Liquid Death released its ad for the crushed cans with DNA samples, packaged in containers with an official label and Osbourne's signature. Travis Barker/Instagram The PEOPLE Appis now available in the Apple App Store! Download it now for the most binge-worthy celeb content, exclusive video clips, astrology updates and more! "Once technology and federal law permit, you can replicate Ozzy and enjoy him for hundreds of years into the future,"the ad said, teasing the seemingly endless possibilities of replicating the "Crazy Train" singer. Meanwhile, Osbourne, 76, encouraged fans to create Ozzy dupes for posterity. "Clone me, you bastards," he said. The rocker previously teamed up with Liquid Death for an electrolyte drink mix called Death Dust. It's safe to say Barker is a fan of Osbourne's. The drummer posted a picture in February 2024 ofvintage rock shirts that he had for his son Rocky, including one with Osbourne on it. "Rocky's vintage collection ‼️," he said on his Instagram Stories. Up next for the Prince of Darkness isBlack Sabbath's farewell showon Saturday, July 5, in Birmingham, England, marking the band's first concert in 20 years. In a May episode of his showSiriusXM's Ozzy Speaks, which airs each month onSiriusXM's Ozzy's Boneyard, he gave an update on how he's preparing for the concert at Villa Park. "All I can say is I'm giving 120%. If my God wants me to do the show, I'll do it," he said. Osbourne has experienced aseries of health setbacks in recent years. "I haven't done any physical work for the last seven [or so] years," Osbourne added. "By hook or by crook, I'm gonna make it there. I've got this trainer guy who helps people get back to normal. It's hard going, but he's convinced that he can pull it off for me. I'm giving it everything I've got." Liquid Death/Youtube Meanwhile, Barker was seen last month with wifeKourtney KardashianandRocky, 20 months,at a WWE match in Los Angeles in June. Barker and Blink-182 embark on theirMissionary Impossible Tourin late August touring the U.S. through early October. Read the original article onPeople

Travis Barker Owns a Can of Ozzy Osbourne's DNA Because of Course He Does

Travis Barker Owns a Can of Ozzy Osbourne's DNA Because of Course He Does ABC via Getty; Daniel Knighton/Getty Travis Barker purchased a...

 

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