
Fredlyn Pierre Louis
Production Assistant, Early Today and Contributor at NBC News
Fredlyn Pierre Louis is a producer for Early Today on NBC News and MSNBC. In addition, Fredlyn is a featured contributor for NBC News on digital and broadcast.
Articles
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1 day ago |
today.com | Fredlyn Pierre Louis
June 5, 2025, 1:58 PM EDT / Source: TODAYNetflix’s “Ginny & Georgia” closed out its third season with its trademark blend of chaos, charm and cliffhangers — but this time, the emotional wreckage feels more explosive than ever. Between Georgia’s pregnancy reveal, courtroom manipulation, and fractured relationships, the finale felt like the top of a rollercoaster ride. Now, fans are bracing for the inevitable drop, which will come in the show’s confirmed Season 4.
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1 day ago |
today.com | Fredlyn Pierre Louis
June 5, 2025, 1:12 PM EDT / Source: TODAYWarning: This post contains spoilers for “Ginny & Georgia” Season 3. When Georgia Miller turns herself in during “Ginny & Georgia” Season 3, it feels like the end of the road. But Netflix’s hit dramedy delivers a final episode that flips everything on its head — again. The real twist? Georgia’s actually pregnant. Or, at least, could be. In this last episode, she’s back home, free from jail, but her new reality is more dangerous than ever.
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2 days ago |
today.com | Fredlyn Pierre Louis
June 5, 2025, 8:00 AM EDTBy the end of Season 3 of "Ginny & Georgia," Georgia Miller’s carefully crafted image as a charming Southern mom has officially unraveled. Beneath the sunny smile and picture-perfect exterior is a woman who has killed three times. Not every act was cold-blooded murder, but each one left a body behind. Georgia may have walked out of court a free woman, but her secrets are no longer buried. Her past, once guarded so fiercely, is now in full view.
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2 weeks ago |
nbcnews.com | Fredlyn Pierre Louis |Suzanne Gamboa
May 20, 2025, 4:41 PM EDTAlthough he spoke English when he was enrolled in a truck driver training program, Kevinson Jean, a Haitian immigrant, recalled feeling self-conscious during his commercial driver's license exam. “Sometimes I was afraid to pronounce something wrong,” said Jean, who covers around 100,000 miles a year as a trucker. “I didn’t want people to laugh at me.”He recalled classmates from Iran who didn’t speak English fluently, but still passed their exams.
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2 weeks ago |
flipboard.com | Fredlyn Pierre Louis |Suzanne Gamboa
9 hours agoWalmart responds to Trump's directive to 'eat the tariffs'President Donald Trump and American retail giant Walmart are trading stern words this week over the impact of the administration’s tariffs, after the company’s announcement of impending price hikes drew ire from the Republican leader.
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RT @NBCLatino: The Trump administration restored a penalty of taking truck drivers with limited English out of service, raising concerns ov…

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The Trump administration restored a penalty of taking truck drivers with limited English out of service, raising concerns over a shortage of drivers and discrimination. https://t.co/GSYFgMumMS

RT @NBCNews: The Trump administration restored a penalty of taking truck drivers with limited English out of service, raising concerns over…