Lifestyle / apology 5 Apologies of the Week From TurboTax to Hitler, again By Newser Editors, Newser Staff Posted Jan 24, 2015 12:10 PM CST Copied File photo of a customer picking up TurboTax. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma) A look at some of the public apologies that made headlines this week: Crash footage: "Unfortunately a very bad choice was made to use a real crash instead of creating a VFX shot, without realizing the impact it could have on the families. ... I want to also extend my deepest apology to the families, and also to the U.S. Air Force."—Michael Bay, film producer whose Project Almanac included a clip of a real B-52 crash that killed four. Tax time: "We messed up. We made a change this year to TurboTax desktop software and we didn’t do enough to communicate this change to you as proactively and broadly as we could or should have. I am very sorry for the anger and frustration we may have caused you."—TurboTax general manager Sasan Goodarzi. The company is offering a $25 rebate to customers who suddenly discovered they needed to upgrade. Soccer woes: "I accept and respect the Federation’s decision, and more importantly, I apologize for disappointing my teammates, coaches and the Federation who have always supported me."—Hope Solo, following her suspension from the women's national team after yet another run-in with police. story continues belowRob Gronkowski Chooses These Shoes As His FavoriteShoes Much More Comfortable Than Traditional Dress Shoes. Italian Leather and Running Shoe Technology Providing First Class Comfort All Day Long.Wolf & ShepherdLearn MoreUndoNvidia Faces Off with DeepSeek in AI BattleMotley FoolUndoHow to Fit Cowboy BootsAriat Learn MoreUndo Hitler, again: "I apologize to everybody who has felt attacked by my online postings."—Lutz Bachmann, leader of a right-wing movement in Germany, after a photo emerged of him posing as Hitler. Then there was the "Three Ks a day keeps the minorities away" caption under a KKK photo. (A Hilter apology made news last week, too.) No-go zones, again: “In the wave of the Paris attacks, several guests on this program mentioned ‘no-go zones’ in France. I didn’t challenge them and twice referred to them as well. I should have been more skeptical, I won't make the same mistake again."—Anderson Cooper, CNN host joining Fox News in apologizing for remarks suggesting that parts of French cities are off-limits to non-Muslims. (Paris plans to sue Fox News.) Report an error