top of page

Art & Craft Group

Public·63 members
Mason Collins
Mason Collins

60 Days In - Season 1



Among the participants in Season 2, all of whom agreed to be incarcerated at the jail for 60 days: A criminology student, a retired state police captain, a former corrections officer, an attorney for the California department of corrections, and the founder of Parents of Incarcerated Children.




60 Days In - Season 1


DOWNLOAD: https://www.google.com/url?q=https%3A%2F%2Fmiimms.com%2F2ugxNQ&sa=D&sntz=1&usg=AOvVaw07wtV-nEAd64hE56v6KhVN



A&E went on to film four more seasons of "60 Days In," including one more at Clark County Jail and two at Fulton County Jail in Atlanta. The fifth season, filmed at a jail in Pinal County, Arizona, will premiere in January 2019.


The program is kept a secret from inmates and most prison staff with the cover that the series is about the jail and its inmates. The volunteers are given pseudonyms, cover stories, and are trained on how to interact with the inmates. With a concept like this, you can guarantee that there have been some wild moments as 60 Days In explores the faults in the prison-industrial complex throughout its seven season run, and these are those seasons, ranked.


Season one set a precedent for being the first season. It gave audiences an honest insight into what life in jail is like. This season was filmed in Clark County Jail in Indiana. Clark County was a rough jail for both the men and the women and the men heavily saw overcrowding in their pods. This season had a mix of people including law enforcement, a recent high school graduate, and Maryum "May May" Ali (Muhammad Ali's daughter).


Season six premiered on January 2, 2022, and was filmed in Etowah County Detention Center in Alabama. This was a rough jail and the season featured law enforcement professionals including Ashley, Tony, and Donovan.


This season was one of the worst jails to ever be featured on the show and made the COs look horrible. One participant had even found multiple shanks throughout his stay. There were numerous fights during the season including one with a broom, and some participants had to be immediately pulled due to the fear of violence with covers being blown.


Season five premiered on January 3, 2019, and was filmed in Pinal County Detention Center in Arizona. The male section of this jail saw a massive racial divide and a lot of fights. One of the main reasons to watch this season was for ex-convict and ex-Latin King, Abner, who became the enforcer of his pod. The COs were very aggressive in this season and at times you felt for the inmates. This season was also interesting because most of the action happened within the inmates' rooms where there were no cameras.


Season seven is the most recent season of 60 Days In, premiering on August 18, 2022. This season was filmed in Henry County Jail in Georgia and featured all ex-convicts. Although other seasons had ex-convicts, this was the first to have every participant serve some amount of time.


What also made this season different was the fact that it was filmed during the coronavirus pandemic. This meant that upon entering the jail the inmates were immediately quarantined in their cells for what practically was solitary confinement and forced a lot of contestants to drop out. It was also very interesting to watch how quickly some participants reverted to their old ways.


With no word yet on if 60 Days In will be returning for season eight, it will be exciting to see what A&E does next with one of its most entertaining reality TV shows. 60 Days In is now available on A&E and Hulu.


60 Days In depicted nine men, including Nate, who volunteer to be jailed for two months under assumed identities. Burrell appeared in the third and fourth seasons of the series in 2017 and 2018. After Season 3, he was offered and extension after establishing a rapport with the other inmates.


Get Louisville news and weather from WLKY News. Watch live weekdays at 4:30am, 5am, 6am, 7am, 12pm, 5pm, 5:30pm, 6pm, 10pm and 11pm. Watch live Saturdays at 5am, 6am, 7am, 6pm and 11pm. Watch live Sundays at 5am, 6am, 7am, 8am, 6:30pm, and 11pm.


* The article below contains spoilers for the first eight seasons. Do not continue reading if you don't want to find out the winners! Check out all of the past winners of the HISTORY Channel's hit survival series, Alone, and relive their victories by watching every season. Who took home the prize in your favorite season?


Zachary Baker, also known as Zac Holland on the production, was raised in a very conservative community in Tennessee before he left to become a Combat Engineer in the Marine Corps Reserve. Soon after, he met and married Ashleigh (who later participated in season 2) and learned that she had struggled with addiction and alcohol abuse. Because Zac wanted to see what it was like for her when she was incarcerated and gather further insight that may help him pursue a career in law enforcement, he entered the A&E show.


After 15 episodes of political scheming, terrorist plotting and pressure, Designated Survivor: 60 Days bows out with a somewhat anticlimactic finale. With the final reveal of whose working with the bombers inside the Blue House, most of the finale here polishes up the assembled pieces, moving things toward a finale that closes out most of the big plot points whilst leaving a faint glimmer of hope alive for a possible second season.


You have 60 days from the date you receive an IRA or retirement plan distribution to roll it over to another plan or IRA. The IRS may waive the 60-day rollover requirement in certain situations if you missed the deadline because of circumstances beyond your control.


Under the basic rollover rule, you don't have to include in your gross income any amount distributed to you from an IRA if you deposit the amount into another eligible plan (including an IRA) within 60 days (Internal Revenue Code Section 408(d)(3)); also see FAQs: Waivers of the 60-Day Rollover Requirement). Internal Revenue Code Section 408(d)(3)(B) limits taxpayers to one IRA-to-IRA rollover in any 12-month period. Proposed Treasury Regulation Section 1.408-4(b)(4)(ii), published in 1981, and IRS Publication 590-A, Contributions to Individual Retirement Arrangements (IRAs) interpreted this limitation as applying on an IRA-by-IRA basis, meaning a rollover from one IRA to another would not affect a rollover involving other IRAs of the same individual. However, the Tax Court held in 2014 that you can't make a non-taxable rollover from one IRA to another if you have already made a rollover from any of your IRAs in the preceding 1-year period (Bobrow v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2014-21).


If you have not elected a direct rollover, in the case of a distribution from a retirement plan, or you have not elected out of withholding in the case of a distribution from an IRA, your plan administrator or IRA trustee will withhold taxes from your distribution. If you later roll the distribution over within 60 days, you must use other funds to make up for the amount withheld.


You may enroll or change enrollment during Open Season or within a specific timeframe of experiencing a Qualifying Life Event. For most of the enrollment opportunities, you will have up to 60 days after the date of the event. Note that if you take the full 60 days, you will be without FEHB coverage until the effective date of your enrollment. This gap or delay in your coverage may be of concern if you are enrolling because of a loss of other group health insurance coverage. However, as long as you enroll within the required enrollment timeframe, it will not count against you for purposes of meeting the requirements for continuing your FEHB into retirement.


If you are a new employee, you may enroll in any available plan, option, and type of enrollment within 60 days after your date of appointment, unless your position is excluded from coverage. If you were employed in a position that was excluded from coverage and then appointed to a position that conveys coverage, you may enroll within 60 days after the change.


If you are a non-enrolled annuitant, you are not permitted to enroll during an open season unless you had suspended your FEHB enrollment to join an Medicare managed care plan or because of your eligibility under Medicaid or a similar State-sponsored program of medical assistance for the needy.


You may enroll, decrease enrollment, increase enrollment, change from one plan or option to another, or make any combination of these changes during the period beginning 31 days before and ending 60 days after a change in your family status. You can change your enrollment only once during this time period (unless there is another event during this time that would permit an enrollment change). You can also change your premium conversion status as long as the change in enrollment is on account of and consistent with a qualifying life event.


If you are a former spouse who has coverage under the spouse equity or temporary continuation of coverage (TCC) provisions of FEHB law, you may increase enrollment or change from one plan or option to another, or both, within 60 days after the birth or acquisition of an eligible child. To be eligible, the child must be that of both you and the employee or annuitant on whose service your coverage is based.


Generally, you may enroll or increase enrollment, decrease enrollment, chnage from one plan or option to another, or make any combination of these changes within 60 days after a change in your employment status. You can also change your premium conversion status if the enrollment change is on account of and consistent with a qualifying life event. Various changes in employment status and the allowable enrollment changes that you may make are described below.


If you move from one employing office to another (other than by retirement) with a break in service of more than 3 days, you may enroll the same as a new employee. If you are a Nonappropriated Fund (NAF) employee who returns to Federal employment, you are eligible for coverage, even when you have continued coverage under the NAF retirement system.


If there is a break in service of more than 3 days, your old enrollment terminates at the end of the pay period in which your temporary appointment ends. You have a new opportunity to enroll based on the new appointment. 041b061a72


About

Welcome to the group! You can connect with other members, ge...

Members

  • Benjamin James
    Benjamin James
  • A Lion Nesterov
    A Lion Nesterov
  • Mason Perez
    Mason Perez
  • Rocky Irvin
    Rocky Irvin
  • cancute10
Group Page: Groups_SingleGroup
bottom of page