Documentary About Controversial LuLaRoe Clothing Empire In Works From Fyre Fraud Team And Based On Media – Deadline

EXCLUSIVE: We hear that Cinemart, the documentary team of directors Jenner Furst, Julia Willoughby Nason and producer Mike Gasparro, is partnering on the documentaryLuLaRichwith Based on Medias Blye Faust and Cori Shepherd Stern.

The doc will investigateLuLaRoe, the billion dollar clothing empire which has recently been accused of misleading thousands of American women with their multi-level marketing platform. Once promoted by Katy Perry and Kelly Clarkson, the brand has gone from an aspirational movement to a trending pyramid scheme that is now the subject of multiple lawsuits.

LuLaRoes founders DeAnne and Mark Stidham have denied all allegations and have launched countersuits of their own, defending the companys legitimacy and model. LuLaRoe is still fully operational and many women continue to enthusiastically promote the brand. The company has also dramatically reduced entry costs to attract new saleswomen during the pandemic and economic downturn.

Related StoryProducers Blye Faust & Cori Shepherd Stern Launch Based On Media

The film will chart the meteoric rise of the company, its Mormon founder and a culture of dedicated legging-clad millennial saleswomen who rose through the ranks seeking a better life for their families.

In addition to offering LuLaRoe execs Mark and DeAnne Stidham a chance to tell their story, LuLaRich will explore the broader zeitgeist of the Mormon subculture, multi-level marketing, social media, womens rights, economic equality, fraud and white-collar crime in the digital age.

Nason and Furst will direct with EP Gasparro, the award-winning team behind Hulus Fyre Fraud and Netflix docuseries The Pharmacist which we reported yesterday was being snapped up by David Permut to be made into a feature narrative. The Cinemart team is currently in production on a new sports true-con for Quibi about Baseballs recent sign stealing scandal in a co-production with Spring Hill Entertainment and executive producer Lebron James.

Cinemart will be joined by EPs Blye Faust and Cori Shepherd Stern of Based On Media. Faust won an Oscar for Best Picture onSpotlight and Stern is an Oscar-nominated and Emmy-winning producer known for diverse projects including Warm Bodies and HBOs Open Heart.

The Cinemart is repped by CAA and Jonathan Gardner and Carissa Knoll at Cohen & Gardner. Based On Media is repped by WME, along with Robert Strent and Ted Fisher at Grubman Shire Meiselas & Sacks.

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Documentary About Controversial LuLaRoe Clothing Empire In Works From Fyre Fraud Team And Based On Media - Deadline

Enough with the empty platitudes, Football must address its racist culture – Varsity Online

Arsenal's justification for not supporting their player Mesut zil, pictured above, last year calls into question their motivations behind their current support of the BLM movement. Wikimedia Commons

Arsenal Football Club, along with other Premier League teams, have been noticeably eager to perform support for the current BLM movement - from armbands to taking a knee before games. However, the football industrys record on racism, including anti-Blackness, is a chequered one and encourages us to be sceptical of their motives. Less than a year ago, when Mesut zil powerfully spoke out against the ethno-religious persecution of Uighur Muslims in China, Arsenal responded by distancing itself from their playersposition, claiming that As a football club, Arsenal has always adhered to the principle of not involving itself in politics. Inconsistencies like this suggest an ulterior motive to their support of the BLM movement.

"Gestures, however shallow, of support from other industries and celebrities, have created a situation where it would be financially damaging to appear to not support the movement."

Arsenal are at their core a business, and it was a financial decision to not stand with zil against China. The club would have been mindful of the financial damages that the NBA faced when Daryl Morey, of the Houston Rockets, spoke in solidarity with the Hong Kong protests. Chinese firms responded by suspending their sponsorship and state-run broadcasters refused to show NBA games. This came (in the words of the leagues head, Adam Silver) at a fairly dramatic cost to the League. zil was already personally feeling the financial wrath of China, with his likeness removed from the Chinese edition of PES and his 30,000 strong Chinese fan club being closed down. Arsenal were thus unwilling to risk facing financial losses by taking a principled stance.

Money informed Arsenals refusal to support zil in 2019, and financial self-interest has in part guided their response to the current protests now. The current BLM movement, to the frustration of many activists, has been heavily co-opted and monetized by many corporations and brands, including Arsenals key markets. Many have stated their support, but this often does not scratch the surface of material demands made by Black people, for BLM. Gestures, however shallow, of support from other industries and celebrities, have created a situation where it would be financially damaging to appear to not support the movement. For example, Crossfit is currently in considerable financial trouble, with Adidas having severed their partnership with the company due to its founders crude tweets about George Floyds death. As such Arsenal, and the league as a whole, have been eager to remain ahead of the cultural Zeitgeist and be seen as supporting the movement.

"Racism is structurally and linguistically ingrained into the game. It is going to take much more than empty platitudes to redeem it."

However, as the football clubs and associations are only motivated by their financial needs, rather than any actual desire to enact change, they have traded in only shallow, symbolic gestures. Whilst having Black Lives Matter on the back of their shirts, or tweeting a black tile is better than doing nothing, it fails to acknowledge the structural or linguistic racism which remains rampant within English football.

The league has refused to implement the Rooney Rule (in which a Black applicant has to be interviewed for any job opening), resulting in the shameful under-representation of Black managers within the game although a quarter of players are Black, there is one BME manager in the Premier League, Nuno Espirito Santo (who got his start in Portugal). The divergent careers of two England captains illustrates this problem. While Steven Gerrard was able to secure the managers position at Rangers (the most successful club in Scottish history), Sol Campbell had to drop down four divisions to literally the worst club in England in Macclesfield Town (at the time of hiring they were 92nd out of 92 Professional English clubs). This is symptomatic of the general lack of black representation across the institutions of English football: there are no black owners, chief executives or chairs amongst any of the 92 professional clubs in England, and only 3% of all board members are black. Hopefully this situation is about to change, with players such as Raheem Sterling speaking out, claiming that there is a need to give black people the chance they deserve. However, it speaks volumes to the failings of the footballing community that it had to be Sterling, a player, rather than someone involved in the running of football to take a stand.

This is only part of the problem. A recent study has uncovered the pervasive racist discourse within football. The League and international board claim to take a hard line on racism yet the Bulgarian FA were fined less for their spectators frequent racist chanting than Nicklas Bendtner was for wearing a pair of Paddy Power branded underwear during Euro 2012 (an obviously disgusting crime considering that the Danish FAs official betting sponsor was Ladbrokes). Underlying this, is a secondform of racist discourse. Black players are consistently reported in ways that underplay their intelligence and draw attention to their physical characteristics instead. This has been going on since at least the 1950s. The Brazilian and Austrian teams were the two most technically gifted teams in the world at that time, but this did not stop Alf Ramsay from evoking the n-word to describe the Brazilians playing style, alongside the phrase in a circus ring. In contrast, the Austrians were likened to ballerinas dancing a Viennese waltz (Evening Standard, November 26th, 1951). This problematic discourse hasnt gone away, as evidenced by the ways in which the playing styles of Bonucci and Koulibaly are described on Wikipedia. The two players are consistently top in pass accuracy and pass completion stats in Serie A, however while Bonucci is described as someone primarily known for his technique, passing range, Koulibaly is described as a large, aggressive, quick, and physically strong. I wonder if you can guess which one is the white player and which is Black? Many football fans unthinkingly take part in this type of problematic discourse, and it is our own responsibility to investigate and challenge the way we perceive Black players. Whilst we may see this as an isolated issue, it is partially the pernicious assumption that Black players as less intelligent that holds them back from getting managerial employment and it is imperative that the FA and TV broadcasters push for change and accountability regarding this.

There are real problems pertaining to race in football. It is vital that we are not fooled by the Premier Leagues financially motivated pastiches into thinking that suddenly racism in football is suddenly going to be solved. Racism is structurally and linguistically ingrained into the game. It is going to take much more than empty platitudes to redeem it.

Varsity is the independent newspaper for the University of Cambridge, established in its current form in 1947. In order to maintain our editorial independence, our newspaper and news website receives no funding from the University of Cambridge or its constituent Colleges.

We are therefore almost entirely reliant on advertising for funding, and during this unprecedented global crisis, we have a tough few weeks and months ahead.

In spite of this situation, we are going to look at inventive ways to look at serving our readership with digital content for the time being.

Therefore we are asking our readers, if they wish, to make a donation from as little as 1, to help with our running cost at least until we hopefully return to print on 2nd October 2020.

Many thanks, all of us here at Varsity would like to wish you, your friends, families and all of your loved ones a safe and healthy few months ahead.

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Enough with the empty platitudes, Football must address its racist culture - Varsity Online

With Skate 4 and Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater Remastered leading the way, the second coming of skateboarding games is here – GamesRadar+

Session. Skater XL. Skate 4. Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 1 and 2. All four of these skateboarding games have either been released or announced within the last six months, and that's more than we can say for the last several years' worth of skate games.

With two cracking indie games out, the reaction to the Skate 4 announcement at EA Play (the tweet from EA has over 142,000 likes at the time of writing), and the excitement around the Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 1 and 2 remaster, it's clear that skate games have stepped to the fore once more. It helps that skateboarding has simultaneously dropped back into the half pipe that is mainstream culture, as well. It was set to make its debut at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics before COVID-19 delayed the competition yes, skateboarding is now an Olympic sport, and the butterfly effect that has on pop culture cannot be understated.

Are we on the precipice of the second coming of skateboarding games, one that can rival the first movement kickstarted (or kickflipped) by Tony Hawk's Pro Skater in 1999? It certainly seems so. Let's break down why that is.

It's safe to say that indie developers lit the match that led to AAA studios recognizing the embers of a skate game renaissance. Both Session and Skater XL have been in development for years, both are from teams composed of current and former skateboarders, and both build off of the left foot/right foot joystick mechanic first popularized by EA's Skate. They know what skate game fans want, and they've provided.

In November 2017, crea-ture studios released Session as a free demo before launching a Kickstarter campaign to help build a fleshed-out game as PC Gamer reported, the campaign reached its initial goal in just three days. Last year, I went hands-on with Session ahead of its Steam Early Access release, and discovered how the team at crea-ture was making a hyper-realistic skate game with a learning curve as steep as skating IRL.

Then there's Easy Day Studios' Skater XL, which debuted on team Early Access in December 2018 (it'll release in full on PC, Xbox One, PS4 and Switch later this month). As we previously reported in our Skater XL hands-on, Easy Day Studios head Dain Hedgpeth was so dedicated to capturing the particular vibe of West Coast skating that he moved the entire team to SoCal. Skater XL also uses the joystick-as-feet game mechanic, but the devs consider it more of an instrument to be learned rather than an insurmountable feat to be bested.

Both studios were hell-bent on delivering a game that authentically depicts the modern skate era while nodding to its past: Skater XL has iconic skate spots built into its maps while Session has a very '90s camera option that will instantly bring you back to classic skate montages. Session, Skater XL, and the near-constant demand online for more skate game content was indicative of a shift in the video game industry tide, and publishers like Activision and EA could ignore it no longer. That's why the Tony Hawk Pro Skater 1 and 2 remaster was revealed in May and Skate 4 was announced right before the end of June's EA Play. We're undeniably in the midst of a revival but just how did that first skate game movement begin?

1999's Tony Hawk's Pro Skater was a revolution. Developed by Neversoft and released not long after Hawk himself landed the first ever 900 at the '99 Summer X-Games, THPS 1 is a pillar of the late '90s/early-aughts skateboarding zeitgeist. The PlayStation versions of the game and its sequel were the first and second highest selling console titles of 2000, according to The Magic Box. And skateboarding exploded onto the mainstream scene shortly after in 2002, MTV debuted Jackass' skateboarding hooligans and The X Games was broadcast live on television for the first time.

But the arcade quality of the THPS games left something to be desired for gamers and real-world skateboarders alike. Enter 2007's Skate, EA's realistic response to the standard-bearer that was the Tony Hawk's Pro Skater franchise. Skate's "flick-it" control system was its thesis statement that was in development long before other elements were even considered and it was a winning thesis. As IGN reported in 2008, Skate performed better than Tony Hawk's Proving Ground on PS3 and Xbox 360 it should come as no surprise to learn that EA quickly put sequels into production, with Skate 2 and Skate 3 releasing back-to-back in 2009 and 2010.

But other than the OlliOlli series, the last game of which was 2015's OlliOlli2: Welcome to Olliwood, the past decade has been a skate game wasteland. The last several Tony Hawk titles were almost uniformly bad and EA deactivating Skate's servers in 2016 was a nail in the proverbial coffin. As Hawk said in a 2018 interview with skateboarding podcast The Nine Club, "It was tricky to reinvent the wheel every time. And then once EA Skate came out with a different control scheme, it split the market. And then we both had a good run, but I think by then both companies were like we're fighting for a smaller piece of the pie and that's why they're not happening. The market became so diluted and it just became shooters, and then that was it, that was the monster, and no sports games are really going to infiltrate that."

But 2020's energy is ripe for the resurgence of skate games. It's not unlike the vibes of the early aughts - nihilistic, disenfranchised youths look to escape a world on fire and have some good, clean fun. Right now, the news is scary, we're all stuck inside, and sports are cancelled. With heavy games like The Last of Us 2 preaching about the horrors of the violence it makes you commit and battle royales taking the shooter to its logical conclusion, there's room at the metaphorical video game park for a half-pipe.

The skate game resurgence has never felt more real, or more diverse in form and style. With Session you can attack NYC's concrete jungle for hours, trying and failing to trigger the game's "catch" function that requires you to push on the joysticks to catch the board while executing a trick. With Skater XL you can coast across plazas under the SoCal sunshine, visiting famous skateboarding landmarks while learning how to play the game's controls like you'd learn an instrument.

With Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 1 and 2 you can retread memory lane, nailing a Boneless while blasting Primus' "Jerry Was a Race Car Driver" except now you can do it with a much more diverse roster composed of both the OG THPS 1 and 2 team and today's top skaters. And nobody knows what the hell you'll be able to do in Skate 4, but at least it's happening. And as GamesRadar recently reported, we the people "commented it into existence".

If the skate game renaissance is here, consider me its Da Vinci, the Italian archetype of the movement clad in checkerboard Vans.

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With Skate 4 and Tony Hawk's Pro Skater Remastered leading the way, the second coming of skateboarding games is here - GamesRadar+

Celebrate Past Olympics and More on The Criterion Channel in July – Cord Cutters News, LLC

Summer is heating up and so is the Criterion Channels lineup of content. The Tokyo Olympics may be postponed this summer, but you can still celebrate with 100 Years of Olympic Films: 19122012, or get your dose of drama with the Marriage Stories feature on Sunday, July 12.

Heres whats on the Criterion Channel in July:

Friday, July 10

Double Feature: Loving on the Edge

Mala NocheandMy Own Private Idaho

Touchstone works in the evolution of the New Queer Cinema movement, these twin tales of aimless youth by Gus Van Sant are swooning expressions of his signature concern: the emotional journeys of young men adrift on the margins of society. While editing his boldly original debut featureMala Noche,about a romantic deadbeats wayward crush on a handsome Mexican immigrant,Van Sant met Mike Parker, a Portland street kid who became the inspiration for the young hustler played by River Phoenix inMy Own Private Idaho.Further developing the themes of queer identity, transience, and unrequited longing,Van Sant created an intoxicating anthem of outsiderhood that stands as one of the defining independent films of the 1990s.

Saturday, July 11

Saturday Matinee:The White Balloon

Jafar Panahis revelatory debut feature is a childs-eye adventure in which a young girls quest to buy a goldfish leads her on a detour-filled journey through the streets of Tehran on the eve of the Iranian New Year celebration. Cowritten by Panahi with his mentor Abbas Kiarostami, this beguiling, prizewinning fable unfolds in documentary-like real time as it wrings unexpected comedy, suspense, and wonder from its seemingly simple premise.

Sunday, July 12

Marriage Stories

Bad marriages make great movies, as evidenced by these gloriously messy, cuttingly perceptive portraits of some of the most dysfunctional relationships ever captured on-screen. With raw emotion, dramatic blowups, and soul-baring self-reflection baked into the premise, these tales of marital breakups and shakeups explore everything from jealousy, infidelity, and betrayal to the procedural complexities of divorce and separation to the myriad, sometimes barely perceptible ways in which couples drift apart. They also happen to be vehicles for some of the most personal and revealing statements from major directors like Ingmar Bergman, John Cassavetes, Ida Lupino, Mike Nichols, Noah Baumbach, Lars von Trier, Asghar Farhadi, and others, each of whom brings fresh insight to that most universal of subjects: the mysterious intricacies of human intimacy.

Come Back, Little Sheba,Daniel Mann, 1952

The Bigamist,Ida Lupino, 1953

Cat on a Hot Tin Roof,Richard Brooks, 1958

La notte,Michelangelo Antonioni, 1961

Juliet of the Spirits,Federico Fellini, 1965

Whos Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,Mike Nichols, 1966

Faces,John Cassavetes, 1968

A Married Couple,Allan King, 1969

Scenes from a Marriage,Ingmar Bergman, 1973

California Suite,Herbert Ross, 1978

Kramer vs. Kramer,Robert Benton, 1979

52,Franois Ozon, 2004

The Squid and the Whale,Noah Baumbach, 2005

Antichrist,Lars von Trier, 2009

Certified Copy,Abbas Kiarostami, 2010

Tuesday, After Christmas,Radu Muntean, 2010

A Separation,Asghar Farhadi, 2011

45 Years,Andrew Haigh, 2015

Monday, July 13

Nostalgia for the Light

Master documentarian Patricio Guzmn travels ten thousand feet above sea level to the driest place on earth: Chiles Atacama Desert, where astronomers from all over the world gather to observe the stars in a sky so translucent that it allows them to see to the boundaries of the universe. The Atacama is also a place where the harsh heat of the sun keeps human remains intact, including those of political prisoners disappeared by the Chilean army after the 1973 military coup. Just as astronomers search for distant galaxies, surviving relatives of the disappeared search for the remains of their loved ones in a quest to reclaim their families histories. Melding the celestial and the earthly,Nostalgia for the Lightis a gorgeous, moving, and deeply personal odyssey into both Chilean history and the furthest reaches of space.

Tuesday, July 14

Short + Feature: Lost Pets

PickleandGates of Heaven

Featuring an introduction by Criterion Channel programmer Penelope Bartlett

Do all dogs go to heaven? Two documentary filmmakers explore mortality and mourning through the experiences of pet owners. InPickle,Amy Nicholson profiles a couple of extreme animal lovers, interviewing them about the menagerie theyve cared for and buried over the years, including paraplegic possums, emaciated cats, and morbidly obese chickens. Errol Morriss debut feature,Gates of Heaven,immerses viewers in the community surrounding two pet cemeteries in Napa Valley, California, blending sincerity and satire to spin its quirky subject into a surprisingly expansive study of human nature.

Wednesday, July 15

Directed by Miranda July

Featuring the 2019 documentaryMiranda July: Where It Began

The fearless, brilliantly idiosyncratic films of writer-director-actor and all-around polymath Miranda July combine arrestingly oddball whimsy with astute, emotionally penetrating observations on intimacy, sexuality, loneliness, and human connection. Beginning her career as a performance artist immersed in the riot grrrl scene of 1990s Portland, Oregon, July found her way to film with her pioneeringJoanie 4 Jackieproject, in which she curated and distributed feminist video chain letters of underground movies made by women across the country. With her acclaimed featuresMe and You and Everyone We KnowandThe Future,July established herself as one of American independent cinemas most distinctive voices, a bold, relentlessly imaginative artist who finds cosmic insight in the everyday.

Features

Me and You and Everyone We Know,Miranda July, 2005

The Future,Miranda July, 2011

Shorts

The Amateurist,Miranda July, 1998

Nest of Tens,Miranda July, 2000

Shorts fromJoanie 4 Jackie

Transeltown,Myra Paci, 1992

Dear Mom,Tammy Rae Carland, 1995

The Slow Escape,Sativa Peterson, 1998

Hawai,Ximena Cuevas, 1999

No Place Like Home #1 and #2,Karen Yasinsky, 1999

Gigi (from 9 to 5),Joanne Nucho, 2001

Ophelias Opera,Abiola Abrams, 2001

La Llorona,Stephanie Saint Sanchez, 2003

untitled video,Sujin Lee, 2002

Joanie 4 Jackie: A Quick Overview,Shauna McGarry, 2008

Thursday, July 16

Three Starring Jane Fonda

Few actors have dominated an erafor their work both on- and offscreenthe way Jane Fonda did in the 1960s and 70s, when she emerged as one of the most acclaimed performers of her generation as well as a zeitgeist-defining cultural icon for her fierce political activism. All made at the peak of her career, these three films showcase Fondas nuance, impeccable comic timing, and versatility: shes larger than life as an intergalactic bombshell in the cult sci-fi extravaganzaBarbarella;riotously funny as a bourgeois housewife who takes up armed robbery in the barbed slapstick satireFun with Dick and Jane;and at once prickly and disarming as a divorced woman fighting for custody of her daughter in the Neil Simonpenned ensemble farceCalifornia Suite.

Barbarella,Roger Vadim, 1968

Fun with Dick and Jane,Ted Kotcheff, 1977

California Suite,Herbert Ross, 1978

Friday, July 17

Double Feature: Girls and the Gang

Mona LisaandGloria

Featuring an audio commentary forMona Lisaby director Neil Jordan and actor Bob Hoskins

Two gritty 1980s crime classics distinguish themselves with ingredients all too rare for the genre: heart, humor, and strong female protagonists. Set in Londons sordid criminal underworld, Neil JordansMona Lisastars Cathy Tyson, Bob Hoskins, and Michael Caine in a surprisingly affecting, romantic neonoir about the complex relationship that develops between a glamorous call girl and a small-time mobster. Then, the great Gena Rowlands goes from gangsters girlfriend to gun-toting action hero in John Cassavetess offbeat, New York-set thrillerGloria,in which she acts as avenging angel for a young boy on the run from the mob.

Saturday, July 18

Saturday Matinee:Miss Annie Rooney

As Shirley Temple grew up before the eyes of America, this delightful comeback vehicle offered her a chance to shine in a new kind of film: a charming teenage romance, complete with jive-talking, jitterbug-mad bobby soxers. She displays her patented pluck (and receives her first on-screen kiss) as starry-eyed fourteen-year-old Annie Rooney, who pines for nerdy classmate Marty (Dickie Moore) even though his wealthy family looks down on her working-class background. When Annies father (William Gargan) invents a new form of synthetic rubber, however, it may just be her ticket to love.

Sunday, July 19

100 Years of Olympic Films: 19122012

Originally scheduled to begin this month, the Tokyo Olympic Games have been postponed, but you can still celebrate a century of Olympic glory with this monumental collection. Spanning fifty-three movies and forty-one editions of the Olympic Games,100 Years of Olympic Films: 19122012is the culmination of a massive, award-winning archival project encompassing dozens of restorations by the International Olympic Committee. The documentaries collected here cast a cinematic eye on some of the most iconic moments in the history of modern sports, spotlighting athletes who embody the Olympic motto of Faster, Higher, Stronger: Jesse Owens shattering world records on the track in 1936 Berlin, Jean-Claude Killy dominating the Grenoble slopes in 1968, Joan Benoit breaking away to win the Games first womens marathon in Los Angeles in 1984. In addition to the impressive ten-feature contribution of Bud Greenspan, this stirring collective chronicle of triumph and defeat includes such documentary landmarks as Leni RiefenstahlsOlympiaand Kon IchikawasTokyo Olympiad,along with captivating lesser-known works by major directors like Claude Lelouch, Carlos Saura, and Milo Forman. It also offers a fascinating glimpse of the development of film itself, and of the technological progress that has brought viewers ever closer to the action. Traversing continents and decades, reflecting the social, cultural, and political changes that have shaped our recent history, this remarkable movie marathon showcases a hundred years of human endeavor.

The Games of the V Olympiad Stockholm, 1912,Adrian Wood, 2016

The Olympic Games Held at Chamonix in 1924,Jean de Rovera, 1924

The Olympic Games as They Were Practiced in Ancient Greece,Jean de Rovera, 1924

The Olympic Games in Paris 1924,Jean de Rovera, 1924

The White Stadium,Arnold Fanck and Othmar Gurtner, 1928

The IX Olympiad in Amsterdam,dir. unknown, 1928

The Olympic Games, Amsterdam 1928,Wilhelm Prager, 1928

Youth of the World,Carl Junghans, 1936

Olympia Part One: Festival of the Nations,Leni Riefenstahl, 1938

Olympia Part Two: Festival of Beauty,Leni Riefenstahl, 1938

Fight Without Hate,Andr Michel, 1948

XIVth Olympiad: The Glory of Sport,Castleton Knight, 1948

The VI Olympic Winter Games, Oslo 1952,Tancred Ibsen, 1952

Where the World Meets,Hannu Leminen, 1952

Gold and Glory,Hannu Leminen, 1953

Memories of the Olympic Summer of 1952,dir. unknown, 1954

White Vertigo,Giorgio Ferroni, 1956

Olympic Games, 1956,Peter Whitchurch, 1956

The Melbourne Rendez-vous,Ren Lucot, 1957

Alain Mimoun,Louis Gueguen, 1959

The Horse in Focus,dir. unknown, 1956

People, Hopes, Medals,Heribert Meisel, 1960

The Grand Olympics,Romolo Marcellini, 1961

IX Olympic Winter Games, Innsbruck 1964,Theo Hrmann, 1964

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Celebrate Past Olympics and More on The Criterion Channel in July - Cord Cutters News, LLC

Her Case To Be In Congress Is Unique. Shes Running Because She Doesn’t Think It Should Be. – BuzzFeed News

DAYTON, Ohio Desiree Tims moved back home on a Tuesday. That Saturday, the Ku Klux Klan marched on Courthouse Square. Two days later, devastating tornadoes whipped through the area. A few months after that, a mass shooting in a popular nightlife district left nine dead.

During her decade away in Washington, DC, Tims completed a White House internship, worked for two prominent senators, and earned a Georgetown Law degree by taking night classes. If she left with one takeaway, it was that so few of those she observed in power and so few of her peers close to power had life experiences remotely comparable to hers.

Black. Born to a teenage mother. Raised by her grandparents in a neighborhood many political professionals obsessed with labels would simply identify as working-class if white people lived there. First in her family to attend a four-year college, but after easy As at public schools, a mental grind at a private university. The question she was always sure everyone was asking: Can this little Black girl from West Dayton do it?

Its a question that now underpins her campaign for Congress in Ohios 10th District. When Tims returned last year, her name on the deed of the brick ranch she grew up in, she hadnt planned to seek office so soon. But the tragedies that had visited Dayton accelerated the timeline. And this moment, 2020, groaning under the weight of crises that have magnified the injustices put upon people of color, has the makings of upheaval that could carry someone like Tims.

She won her primary in April with 70% of the vote, but without the national progressive energy or attention that recently lifted young Black congressional candidates such as Jamaal Bowman and Mondaire Jones against white, establishment-aligned choices in New York. The victories encouraged Tims, who would be the districts first Black representative. As the country confronts the truth that for so long, so much has been decided by so few people who are too alike, she frames her run quite literally as a fight for representation.

I get very passionate about it, because it's very frustrating when you see that up close, the neglect that is consistent in the halls of Congress, Tims, 32, said in an interview at her childhood home. So instead of begging and advocating people to do the right thing, let's just replace them.

Unlike Bowman and Jones, who are running in safe Democratic districts, Tims is attempting to unseat Rep. Mike Turner, a nine-term Republican. Democrats have targeted him for years without success, but Turners margin of victory was cut by more than half between 2016 and 2018, from 31 points to 14. Black turnout in the district dropped from 73% to 59% between the two previous presidential elections and was 43% in 2018, according to data provided by Tims polling team. Her advisers see a path where the combination of a young Black candidate and a base motivated to defeat President Donald Trump who carried the district by 7 points last time turns out enough votes to win.

Tims announced her candidacy days after the shooting last August. Dayton hasnt had much of a rest since. The coronavirus pandemic has hit hard, with a recent spike in COVID-19 cases prompting the mayor, and days later the governor, to require masks in public places. The national outrage over systemic racism after the deaths of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor also has been profound in a city where the 2019 KKK rally, which attracted only nine members, was an emotional and financial burden. Tims participated in the anti-racism protests here in May. And she views several disturbing incidents like the six bullets fired through the storefront of a local Democratic Party headquarters where a Tims sign and Black Lives Matter sign hung in the windows as a threat to her.

Sometimes when you're living in the whirlwind of history, you cant appreciate the fact that you're in it, said Bob Mendenhall, a Tims supporter and co-owner of Blind Bobs, a tavern in the neighborhood where last years shooting occurred. Like, the old world is dead, and the new world hasn't arrived yet. And we are in this transformational period. I try to find a silver lining. Maybe COVID-19 can make us all slow down for just a second, and reflect on what we want this country to be.

Tims has scored nice endorsements from the senators she worked for, Ohios Sherrod Brown and New Yorks Kirsten Gillibrand. And Gillibrand has joined forces with two other senators with national profiles, Cory Booker of New Jersey and Kamala Harris of California, to raise money for her campaign. Tims, though, is largely unknown to voters here a point the National Republican Congressional Committee, in defense of Turner, stressed in an April memo. Before the primary, her name had never appeared on a ballot. She hadnt been preparing for this her entire life. Her middle school language arts teacher, now the head of a local teachers union and excited about her candidacy, recalled Tims as a bright and enthusiastic student, but never pictured her as a politician. Nan Whaley, Daytons mayor and one of the savviest Democratic activists in the state, has known Tims for barely a year. To her supporters, this only reinforces that Tims has the fresh eyes the district needs.

Symbols and substance rarely have an opportunity to be handmaids for each other, said Rev. Peter Matthews, Tims pastor at the McKinley United Methodist Church. The fact that she would bring a Georgetown Law degree back to West Dayton and offer herself for service, thats a pretty big deal. For other young kids, not just African American, but kids of all stripes in a city desperate for hope, shes putting herself out there front and center.

Tims walks through a neighborhood in Dayton, Ohio.

Tims grandfather Papaw, she called him loved watching Wheel of Fortune. He would try to play along, but guessing the words was especially tough for him. He hadnt made it past the first grade in Opelika, Alabama. There were fields to work, a family depending on any ounce of income he could contribute. Eventually hed be part of the Great Migration from the Deep South to the Midwest, from sharecropper to steelworker, settling first in Middletown, Ohio.

I always remember him sitting at the table, spelling the words out, Tims said. He was always still learning the language of English. All of the time he was like, What is this word? How do you spell this word? And, you know, Im doing something else, and Im like, Yeah, yeah, yeah, add an E. I didnt appreciate it at the time, but not everyone was sitting with their grandparents or their parents, teaching them English, and how to spell, and how to say things.

Tims mother and father were 18 and 20 when she was born and divorced not long after that. She grew up in the tiny ranch, with her mom and her maternal grandparents Papaw and Grandma and for a while her great-grandparents. My grandmother was the matriarch, and her word meant a little more, Tims recalled. There were few kids her age on the block. She would cut through the backyards of the cul-de-sac to go play with friends at the Y or walk to visit her dad, who lived nearby with his parents.

They were a family of workers. Tims mom went back to school to be a nurse. Papaw worked at a steel mill in Middletown for years, commuting a half-hour each way after moving to West Dayton. When they talk about the Midwest and Middle America, they show this white guy with Popeye arms, like toot toot, like coal mines and steel mills, Tims said. And Im like, yeah, there are Black people in the steel mills. There are Black people who are coal miners.

Middletown, coincidentally, is the hometown of J.D. Vance, whose 2016 memoir Hillbilly Elegy tapped into a white working-class zeitgeist that surrounded Trumps election. The book became highly politicized Vance used it to promote a conservative point of view. But Tims sees him as somewhat of a kindred spirit. Until the end of it, she said, that book is amazing. I thought he nailed it. She recalled the part where, while studying at Yale, Vance panicked over which fork to use at a fancy dinner. I was like, I feel seen.

Politics was always in the background. Grandma paid close attention. And Tims recalled accompanying family to civil rights marches, but not quite processing the experience. I was like, Oh, were going to a festival or a parade. I didnt get it.

Tims excelled at Paul Laurence Dunbar High, named for the Black poet and playwright from Dayton. For college she chose Xavier, a Jesuit school in Cincinnati close enough to family, but far enough to have her own life. She was soon in another world. I got a D, she said with a gasp. When she asked classmates who were coasting how they got by, she learned how their time at private or wealthier public schools prepared them, or how a paper they wrote in 10th grade could be recycled for college.

I was pissed because I felt like I got cheated, she said. I missed a lot of parties in college because I was in the library. And a lot of times it was the dictionary to the left of me, an actual reading assignment to the right.

The lesson was not lost on her. She would think of Papaw playing Wheel of Fortune with his pencil, writing down the words he didnt know.

How, she would wonder, can I drive back up I-75 to Dayton and say its too hard?

Tims at the Truman Bowling Alley in the White House.

Tims graduated from Xavier in 2010 and into the aftermath of the Great Recession, a period of slow recovery that was particularly hard on millennials like her.

Im seeing people who graduated in 2009 working at the mall, Tims said. That wasnt the deal. I could have worked at the mall in high school, which I did. The deal was that I get a good-paying job after traumatizing myself through nights and nights of library studying.

She thought she had that job, or that she was at least on the path to it, as a credit manager for Wells Fargo near Cincinnati. But the company was restructuring after its 2008 acquisition of Wachovia and laid off Tims after only a few months. She had just bought a new car, just signed a new lease. Talk about a quarter-life crisis, she said.

Tims with her grandfather at her graduation from Xavier.

Tims spent her nights browsing CareerBuilder. Her grandmother spent hers watching MSNBC, tuned into the young presidency of Barack Obama, and picturing her granddaughter as part of it. Tims had knocked on doors for Obama in 2008, but the family had no Washington connections to work, no favors to call in. Grandma, though, insisted she try for a White House job. I was like, You need to clasp your pretty little hands together and get on your knees and pray for Procter & Gamble or General Electric, Tims recalled. She just kept nagging me about it.

It wasnt until months later, after Wells Fargo had rehired and relocated her to Virginia, that the White House called Tims to follow up on the internship application she had completed in five minutes and long forgotten. She was so sure a friend was playing a joke that she hung up the first time. But the timing was convenient. She was miserable in her new job as a personal banker. She had accepted the posting because she figured shed at least be closer to Virginia Beach, a favorite vacation spot. In reality she was more than 200 miles away in McLean, an affluent DC suburb.

Things in Washington were like that for Tims. Her surroundings could be disorienting, if not intimidating. On the first day of her White House internship, she had no idea she was sitting next to Valerie Jarrett, the Obama confidant, until starstruck colleagues made a fuss. Her work included a rotation through the Office of Presidential Correspondence, where she read all of Obamas hate mail, and through the Office of Public Engagement, which Jarrett ran.

I was never much enamored by people like Valerie Jarrett, Tims said. I was inspired by them but it wasnt like ooh and aah, because I was on a mission to get the information, to bring it back home.

Tims had opportunities to stay at the White House after the internship ended but wanted to learn more about policy and legislation. She said she submitted her rsum to Browns Senate office at least five times before being hired to work on civil rights, judicial, and education issues. She later moved on to Gillibrands staff, where she specialized in agriculture and womens issues. Eventually she was elected president of the Senate Black Legislative Staff Caucus, but she could not shake the same feelings she had at Xavier: that her life experiences, not just her skin color, placed her squarely in the minority.

What I found was most of those people are from privileged backgrounds, regardless of race or sexual orientation, Tims said. How are you relating to someone who said they cant afford groceries on Friday? They dont understand what its like to ration out gas, because you cant take all of your trips, because you need to make sure this full tank lasts two weeks.

Tims point of view was beginning to align with her own political ambitions, but first she wanted to get away from Capitol Hill. She took a job at a childcare advocacy group while studying law at Georgetown and thinking of all the ways she would use what she learned in Washington to help Dayton.

Its a challenge, because she didnt come to it the way some do, Brown said in a telephone interview. But itll make her a better public official, because shes seen it from the outside [and the] inside that way.

Tims in the Oregon District in Dayton, Ohio, one block from the mass shooting site.

The Oregon District, one of Daytons oldest neighborhoods, is a particular point of pride in the city. The brick-covered East Fifth Street features buildings dating to the 1800s and a lineup of establishments known for solid pub food, craft beer, and live music.

Early the morning of Aug. 4, 2019, a 24-year-old man opened fire outside Ned Peppers, a western-themed bar, killing nine and wounding more than a dozen. The people of Dayton barely had time to process this another tragedy after the Memorial Day tornadoes that damaged or destroyed hundreds of buildings in the region and plunged Daytons drinking water system into chaos when Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, a Republican who as the states attorney general had courted the gun lobby, visited that evening.

Do something! Mendenhall, the proprietor of Blind Bobs, cried out as DeWine spoke, starting a chant that became a demand for tougher gun safety measures.

It also fit into the broader theme of Tims soon-to-launch congressional campaign.

Turner, the Republican incumbent, has won high National Rifle Association ratings, thanks to his staunch opposition to gun control. His views, though, began to shift after his daughter and a family friend found themselves across the street from Peppers when the shooting began. A few days later, Turner announced his support for several measures, including magazine limits and a red flag law. But suddenly Tims case against him had a fresh angle: He had come late to something that was good for Dayton. Its not an easy district, Brown said, but theyve had so much pain in the last two years.

The Ohio 10th includes all of Dayton and surrounding suburban and rural areas. (Comedian Dave Chappelle lives in the bucolic village of Yellow Springs.) Whaley, the mayor, sees the race as tough but winnable. I think she'll need tremendous turnout out of Dayton, particularly West Dayton and Trotwood and Jefferson Township, she said. This could be an interesting year for this district.

Turner, 60, has waffled a bit in the Trump era. Unlike other Republicans, he labeled the presidents Twitter attack last summer against four Democratic women of color in Congress as racist, but then toed the party line by voting against a House resolution to condemn it as such. He called Trumps telephone call asking Ukraine to investigate former vice president Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee for president, alarming. Then, at a hearing during the impeachment inquiry, Turner defended Trump, earning the highest political currency the president can offer: an approving tweet. Turner did not respond to requests through a spokesperson to comment for this story.

The Ohio Democratic Party and other allies, such as the abortion rights group Emilys List, are helping Tims litigate Turners voting record and paint him as too close to Trump. Unlike other young progressives whove risen in politics in recent years, Tims candidacy is not defined so much by one or two policy demands. Her primary opponent, a young scientist from the suburbs, aligned himself with Bernie Sanders by promoting ideas like Medicare for All. Tims advocates for a public option and expansion of Obamacare. She briefly worked for the League of Conservation Voters, which has endorsed her, but the words Green New Deal dont appear in the two sentences she dedicates to the environment on her website. She speaks more passionately about local concerns, such as the food deserts in Dayton neighborhoods. If youre searching for comparisons among her would-be generational peers in Congress, shes neither Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the New Yorker who has embraced Sanders democratic socialist agenda, nor is she Abby Finkenauer, the Iowan who practices a Midwest pragmatism.

Tims campaign is more centered around education and other institutional failures and grounded in her perspective that the system presents a cycle of barriers to all but a privileged few. I often feel like I got lucky, and I dont think you should be lucky to get into a White House internship, to work on Capitol Hill, she said. I certainly worked hard, but I see so many people I went to school with at Dunbar who are also hard workers, and they didnt get those same breaks.

The message transcends race, but she understands her race is relevant sometimes unpleasantly so to the conversations happening right now.

After attending a Democratic presidential debate near Columbus last fall, Tims and a Black aide were stopped by suburban police while trying to find late-night food. The officers said the car, driven by the aide, was suspicious because it had pulled away from a business that had been closed for hours. They ran the plates and found that the owner had an expired drivers license. Tims, the passenger, interrupted several times as one officer questioned the aide and another approached her side with a flashlight, according to dashcam video and audio obtained by the Dayton Daily News. The encounter never escalated beyond Tims asking for the first officers badge number. In a tweet she sent while they were pulled over and later deleted, Tims asserted she was being harassed for being a brown woman who knows her rights.

At home last month, Tims said she still believes she and her aide were racially profiled, but that after seeing the video she drove the hour to Genoa Township to meet with the police chief and express regret for how she handled the situation. I was like, look, obviously theres bias on both sides, she said. We were looking for directions, Im super hungry, it was a very long day, and I apologize for my perception of what I thought was bias.

Chief Stephen Gammill stood by the officers in a telephone interview this month, saying he didnt believe they could have known the drivers race before approaching the car. He added that he appreciated Tims visit.

Im chalking it up, Gammill said, to a long night at the debate and maybe other experiences shes had in her life.

Tims speaking with Bob Mendenhall of Blind Bob's in the Oregon District in Dayton, Ohio.

And that, really, is the point of the campaign. The experiences of Desiree Tims this little Black girl from West Dayton, as she internalized it for all those years form the core of every argument she makes to be the next representative for West Dayton.

Putting herself out there carries a cost. Her campaign manager says they have taken appropriate steps to document threats with law enforcement. Tims sees and hears more nasty and racist vitriol than ever on social media and in her community. The burden of speaking out fell on her when a local state senator asked if COVID-19 rates are higher among Black people because the colored population does not wash their hands as well as other groups. As a child, marches were fun, a chance to follow. As a Black candidate, protests over systemic racism and police brutality bring an expectation to lead.

Tims worries that a Facebook post advertising her plans to participate in a May 30 protest in downtown Dayton made her a target. As she drove to the protest that morning, she noticed her car, which had been parked in her driveway, had a tire losing air. The problem? Several screws had spiraled their way in. Thats what stuck with me its not a nail, she said. When she left the protest that afternoon, she received the call that the Greene County Democratic Party headquarters in nearby Xenia, where signs for Tims campaign and Black Lives Matter are prominently displayed, had been shot up overnight.

A month earlier someone had chucked a piece of concrete through the storefront window. There have been no arrests, and the cases are closed. An official with the Xenia Police said there was no overt indication of a racial motive or hate crime. Doris Adams, the party chair, believes otherwise, recalling arguments shes had at parades with those who criticized the partys support for the Black Lives Matter movement. They didnt leave a calling card saying it was that, she said. But that was the window they hit. Both times.

Rev. Matthews, Tims pastor, drove her to survey the damage from the bullets after she realized the screws had ruined her tire. Obviously I was full of dismay, but I had to remind her that heroes live with courage out loud, he said. I think these instances have reminded her that shes doing the right thing.

They have. So, too, have the instances that reward Tims hope that voters, not just in the Ohio 10th but around the country, are ready for new representation, whether thats Jamaal Bowman or Mondaire Jones in New York, or Cameron Webb in Virginias 5th District. Webb, who won a four-person primary last month, would be the first Black doctor to be a voting member of Congress. Like Tims, he is trying to pull off an upset in a Republican-leaning district that Democrats see as competitive.

Its certainly inspiring to see people in my generation, millennials to see Black people, to see gay people, to see people whose great-great-grandfather wasnt a state senator go run for Congress and win, Tims said.

Tims points to her large margin of victory in the primary, a contest where she was able to win white, Black, and Latino votes across the districts urban, suburban, and rural areas.

The common denominator is we all want opportunity, she said. We all want access to the American dream. And that is the best language that I can speak: opportunity. So people definitely are taking a look Can this little Black girl from West Dayton do it? And the answer is, I've already done it.

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Her Case To Be In Congress Is Unique. Shes Running Because She Doesn't Think It Should Be. - BuzzFeed News

Reframing cancel culture through the lens of celebrity gossip – LaineyGossip

(This is the latest installment in our Long Read series. For previous entries, please visit the Long Reads archive.)

Yesterday morning, Harpers Magazine published a letter written and signed by 50 public figures including J.K. Rowling, Malcolm Gladwell, Gloria Steinem, Salman Rushdie, Margaret Atwood, and so many more. The letter condemns the concept of public shaming for weaken[ing] our norms of open debate and toleration of differences in favor of ideological conformity. Although never explicitly mentioned, it can basically be read as a condemnation of cancel culture in the wake of protests and calls for reform.

Rowling, youll remember, faced backlash for both posting and defending her transphobic tweets and views. In 2016, Margaret Atwood was criticized for her support of a letter that demanded that the University of British Columbia provide reasons for firing one of its instructors after an accusation of sexual assault. Ironically, Atwood was trending this week for seemingly calling out transphobes by sharing an article about the spectrum of biological sex.

Obviously, the letter was supported by many people. But there were many others who called out its misguided direction and oversimplification. The one line that sticks out to me is, the way to defeat bad ideas is by exposure, argument, and persuasion, not by trying to silence or wish them away. Thats definitely why the world erupted in protests, right? Because the exposure, argument, and persuasion that Black lives do indeed matter was going over so well with everyone?

Like many people who decry the disintegration of free speech, it completely ignores the socio-political contexts in which these conversations take place.

The argument also grossly overstates the impact something like cancel culture has on someones right to free speech. Everyone is free to share their opinion. It doesnt mean that people have to like it, support it, or even engage with it. No one has taken away J.K. Rowlings platform. Some of us have just agreed that what she says is sh-t.

This letter is part of a much larger idea that has been floating around in my head for a while, but especially in the past few weeks. In the wake of the protests, many people have been cancelled and have had to own up to their anti-Black racist actions, especially those in the past. Last week I wrote about Shane Dawson, and two days ago Cody wrote about Terry Crews unnecessary defense against the myth of Black supremacy. Even in the past few months, people like Ellen, Doja Cat, Camila Cabello, and Lea Michele have all been cancelled.

But what does it mean to be cancelled? I dont think most people have a clear definition. For some, its a boycott - of their music, their movies, and their work. For others, its a hashtag. I see a #SoAndSoisOverParty trending every week. In its simplest form, cancel culture is public humiliation. For people who rely almost entirely on the support of the public, the idea is that being cancelled can result in an experience that hopefully leads to atonement and correction for the injustice for which the person was cancelled. Its a reckoning for people who arent normally held accountable for a lot of the things they do.

What Im interested in exploring is what happens after someone is cancelled. Can they come back? Should they even be allowed to? When I originally conceived of this piece, I wanted to do a deep dive of cancel culture. It was going to be about whether or not we should cancel people and what the main arguments of both of those sides were. But weve already had those conversations.

Vox wrote an incredible dissection of the issue, including tracing it back to its roots in the Black Civil Rights movement. According to Vox, cancel culture was the modern version of the boycott and bubbled up into the mainstream through Black Twitter. Time Magazines Sarah Hagi wrote about the power that cancelling has to give voice and power to people who historically havent had it. Even The New York Times has weighed in, writing a sort of Cancellation 101.

I highly recommend reading all of the above. Each piece encourages a nuanced conversation about a subject that can be so incredibly polarizing and emotional. Those who are against it point to its ability to shut down discussion and its oversimplification of often complicated circumstances. Those for it see it as a tool for the masses to hold those in power accountable in the only way they can. And after going back and forth for half a decade, you would think that we would have come to some sort of conclusion.

Yet here we are in July 2020 talking about cancel culture. And it has somehow become even more polarizing. So rather than examining cancel culture, I want to reframe it through the lens of celebrity gossip, because thats what we do here at LaineyGossip.

In todays world, cancel culture has now become part of the celebrity ecosystem. As long as social media exists, and as long as we continue to pay attention to what celebrities do, there will be cancel culture. That last point is important too. Cancelling someone by very definition means that at some point they were scheduled. The power and privilege that celebrities have comes directly from the people who support and love them.

At its core, this celebrity-fan relationship is built on trust. We trust that they will entertain us, maybe even that they will represent us, and that their lives are something that we can learn from. This is particularly evident whenever someone gets cancelled because youll see immediate tweets all like, [this celebrity] is cancelled, but thank god [other celebrity] is unproblematic. The idea of the unproblematic fave or the only white man I trust belies that we have a deep belief that the people (or at least the image we have of them) we prop up onto these public platforms will use them responsibly.

When someone breaks that trust, people feel betrayed and disappointed. And once that trust is gone, the whole relationship disintegrates, which is why theyre cancelled. Which means that even if someone maintains commercial success or retains their platform, their social capital and impact are lessened. Its why even years after someone is cancelled, it continues to come up.

Weve already established that cancelling has little impact on someones career, especially the more powerful they are. I mean, Prince Andrew is literally in a picture with a woman who has accused him of sexually assaulting her when she was a minor, and he still gets to decide whether or not to golf in Spain this year. Very often, audiences dont have the same power to administer real consequences. But as the NYT article explains, cancelling is ultimately an expression of agency.

This idea of trust might also explain why cancelling has grown in the zeitgeist. Have you ever been in a relationship where a lack of trust f-cks up other relationships? Over time, weve become more suspicious of celebrities, expecting a downfall to be right around the corner or carefully examining their apology to see whether theyre actually sorry or they want to save face.

So back to my original question. Looking at it from this angle, how does one return from being cancelled? Well, just like when someone breaks our trust in real life, it depends. Theres the severity of the breach, the frequency with which it happened, how long ago it happened, and whether or not someone has grown since. Ultimately, people have to work hard to gain back a persons trust and they have to prove time and again that they changed.

Even still, the unique part about looking at this issue from a trust standpoint is that it acknowledges that there will always a small amount of mistrust. I want to use a Lady Gaga and Beyonc quote from "Telephone" as an example because it perfectly encapsulates what Im trying to say. Also Im gay.

You know Gaga, trust is like a mirror. You can fix it if its broke

...but you can still see the crack in that motherf-cking reflection.

Its that crack in the mirror that outraged people when Kevin Hart explained that he was tired of having to apologize. There was more to the story, but at its core, people were mad that he confirmed what we were thinking: he wasnt ever sorry in the first place.

Therein lies the key to who should and shouldnt come back from being cancelled. Its the desire to grow, change, and to do better. Its the vulnerability of admitting when youre wrong and trying to learn from it. Its being open to criticism and taking responsibility for the hurt that youve caused.

Because cancel culture isnt about preventing people from making mistakes. Thats frequently an argument used against it, but its ill-informed. Cancelling really is about getting celebrities to see the consequences of their mistakes, an important part of the learning process. If you never see any backlash for your actions, how are you going to know if theyre bad?

When it comes to celebrities and famous people, its hard to know whats going on in the background. Which means that while I want to believe that everyone who apologizes truly means it, we know from experience that that isnt true. How can we tell if someone has actually grown and put in the work? Its hard. Years and years of a lack of accountability have made famous people feel entitled to their fame and fortune. Its made men like R Kelly and Harvey Weinstein feel as though theyre above the law.

I think thats maybe why the bar is set so high for people. If the public is going to be convinced that youve changed, theyre going to need a lot of proof. And by now, celebrities know that. Remember when they taught us in school that everything you put on the internet is forever? I feel like people never truly understand how important that piece of advice is. Todays celebrities should know that cancel culture is an occupational hazard. That having to answer for your present and past behaviour is on the job description of being really famous.

Are there cases where it goes too far? Of course. But completely writing off cancel culture as a threat to free speech does a great disservice to the conversations it forces us to have. Ironically, the letter that J.K Rowling and so many others signed ignores all that nuance. By lamenting the oversimplification and emotional reaction intrinsic in cancel culture, theyve oversimplified and emotionally reacted to it themselves!

Perhaps we need to shift the way we view what cancelling looks like. At the centre of this issue is a discussion about the kinds of people we choose to put our trust in, and whether they continue to deserve that trust. The past few weeks have been the Facebook Friend Purge where we really consider whether those with fame are responsible enough to have it. And in doing so, theres an important conversation about how those people have looked and acted a certain way for most of history.

I think the fact that we even have the ability to do this and to hold people accountable is incredible. Its like a class action lawsuit. Theres power in numbers. Cancel culture took away Roseannes show. It brought to light the atrocities of Harvey Weinstein. Even yesterday, it made Halle Berry reverse her decision to play a trans character in a movie (and if you dont understand why thats important, watch Disclosure ).

It is not true that cancelling is always final. While its possible to recover, the work involved emphasizes how fragile but important that trust is. Even with its flaws, if cancel culture makes someone think twice before hitting that tweet button, maybe thats not such a bad thing?

Excerpt from:

Reframing cancel culture through the lens of celebrity gossip - LaineyGossip

This Hindi book on Indian secularism could have exposed liberals, but it was ignored – ThePrint

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When a card-carrying secular intellectual challenges the secular orthodoxy of our time and it draws a blank by way of a response, you know that secularism is indeed in a deeper crisis in India than you imagined. Either smug in its ever-shrinking cocoon. Or resigned to its defeat. Or both.

The intellectual is Abhay Dubey, a well-known scholar based at the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies (CSDS), with an impressive body of published work. He is a trailblazer for doing social science in Indian languages and a familiar commentator on television. Once a card-carrying Communist, he is known to be a fierce critic of the Bharatiya Janata Partys (BJP) politics, unlikely to defect to their camp. The challenge to secularism comes from his latest book, Hindu-Ekta banam Gyan ki Rajniti [Hindu Unity vis--vis Politics of Knowledge, published by Vaani Prakashan] that was released in February this year, at the height of anti-Citizenship (Amendment) Act movement. This is the first detailed, well-researched yet provocative book-length critique from a secular perspective of some of the most cherished beliefs of Indian secularism.

In any other country, such a publication would have triggered passionate political debates, responses, and rejoinders. Nothing of that kind happened in the last six months. I have not been able to locate a single serious review so far.

The initial non-response could be a function of language. Abhay Dubey writes in Hindi, and rather demanding Hindi at that (I had to consult dictionary a couple of times). You cant hold it against him, unless you believe that he must dumb-down to the level of babalog Hindi understood by the English-speaking elite. But it is not hard to see why his argument has not travelled to the secular intellectuals that he critiques. This underlines his point about the disconnect between the English speaking middle-class world of liberal-secular ideology and the rest of India.

The deeper reason for silence around Dubeys book could be that it confronts us with an inconvenient truth. It leads us to conclude that if the secular project stares at a historic defeat, it has no one else to blame. It is silly to think that secular politics has been defeated just by some clever and devious political machinations of Narendra Modi or Amit Shah. In the last instance, Dubey holds that the defeat of secular politics is a defeat of secular ideology. This ideology drew and started believing in a caricature of its adversary, floated self-serving myths about the past, subscribed to formulaic understanding of the present and trusted reluctant warriors and non-existent allies to fight the battle for secular India. Dubey holds a mirror to us: the harsh truth is that this defeat is very well earned. We cant refute his argument, for we know it to be true. Yet we cant accept it, for it unsettles our ready-made map of the world we inhabit.

Also read: Hate is hot in India. Colder ideas like constitutional patriotism must work harder to win

Abhay Dubey must be commended for picking up the courage to say that secularism tripped itself by systematically misunderstanding the Sangh Parivar. The arrogance of the Westernised Left-liberal-secular elite made them dismiss the intellectual lineage of Hindutva ideology because it drew inspiration from a religion. This hubris made secular ideologues overlook basic facts about the Sangh Parivar: that it draws upon the social reformist tradition within Hinduism, that its exclusion of Muslims has been successfully complimented by a campaign to include lower-caste Hindus, that it has successfully negotiated its way with modern constitutional democracy, that by demonising it as merely Brahminical and Fascist, we mislead ourselves and fail to understand the reasons for the rise of this ideology. The book prepares us to take on the real adversary, not just a straw-man.

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This is related to the complacent reading of Indias past and present that secularists have perpetuated. Dubeys book shows us how secular historians had convinced themselves and everyone else that Hindu was merely a statistical majority, that the deeper diversities this label covers were more salient, that, therefore, a project of Hindu consolidation was ruled out. This led to the lovely yet lazy belief that the existence of pluralism, composite culture and the moderating logic of democratic politics would negate the possibility of Hindu majoritarianism. Dubey alerts that such a reading distracted us from recognising the historical truth that the self-description of Hindu evolved much before colonialism, mainly in reaction to then ruling political identity of the Muslims, that Hindu unification is a long term structural process aided by modern society, modern law and the logic of modern competitive politics. By moving from politically correct language to a historically correct account, this book helps us understand why Hindutva ideology hasbecome commonsense and why secularism appears anti-Hindu.

Also read: Hindutva rise must be pinned on historians who told us Hindus, Muslims lived peacefully once

No wonder, this distorted understanding led to a myopic politics. Abhay Dubey points out the well-known weaknesses of secular politics: exclusive focus on defence of minority rights, inability to speak against minority communalism with the same force as Hindu communalism, and the tendency to gloss over Congress inconsistencies and failures in upholding secular principles. He also makes bold to question many other secular political strategies: the idea of an imminent revolt against Brahminism, bahujan unity as an antidote to majoritarianism, dependence on dominant OBC castes and better-off communities within Dalits to carry out the project of social justice and fight for secularism, or the assumption of Dalit-Muslim unity. The failure of these strategies is for everyone to see.You may not agree with all of Dubeys critique, or with his historical interpretation in each case. Yet the books project ofidentifying and confronting the weaknesses of secular ideology and practice at this moment of its worst crisis must become a project of our times. This would be painful, but willingness to face it is a sign of confidence, evading this is a sure sign of death.

Abhay Dubey provides us with a resource to undertake this project. He identifiesalternative but overlooked voices within the secular camp that cautioned against such simplistic understanding and short-sighted politics. He draws upon historian Dharma Kumar, sociologists Satish Sabarwal, Imtiaz Ahmed and D.L. Sheth, political scientists Suhas Palshikar and partially Rajni Kothari and Rajeev Bhargav as sources of an alternative understanding that is prepared to look at the inconvenient facts and proposes a more nuanced course of action. We need to takethis quest further to MahatmaGandhis own candid engagement with the Hindu-Muslim question, to Rammanohar Lohia and his followers, and even to Right-leaning thinkers like Dharmpal and Nirmal Verma.

Any such attempt would obviously invite the charge of kowtowingto the powers-that-be, if not of being a closet Hindutva supporter. The author anticipates this reaction and offers a mature response: If so, I would overlook [such a reaction] as a product of despair born out of the continuous defeat of liberalism and secularism in our public life. The only way to respond to this historic setback is to face up to the mistakes of secularism and do a course correction. Abhay Dubey has started this conversation. Let us hope that this early silence would be followed by vigorous debates. An English translation of this book could be the first step in that direction.

The author is the national president of Swaraj India. Views are personal.

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This Hindi book on Indian secularism could have exposed liberals, but it was ignored - ThePrint

Freeing the World of Nuclear Weapons: Arms Control Today interviews Hiroshima Mayor Kazumi Matsui – Arms Control Today

July/August 2020

As the site of the first atomic bomb attack, Hiroshima has served as a vital center for education about nuclear weapons and their effects. The people of the city, along with those of Nagasaki, have been steadfast in their advocacy for abolishing nuclear weapons. The survivors of the U.S. atomic bombings on Japan, the hibakusha, have worked to communicate their experience to global citizens and leaders. Kazumi Matsui, Hiroshimas mayor since 2011, has played a major role in that effort. He serves as president of Mayors forPeace, an assembly of thousands of cities worldwide devoted to protecting cities from the scourge of war and mass destruction.

In response to the coronavirus pandemic, Hiroshima is planning to scale back large gatherings and instead hold virtual events marking 75 years since the August 6, 1945, bombing. Matsui spoke with Arms Control Today on June 23.

Arms Control Today: Seventy-five years after the first nuclear test explosion and the atomic bombings that destroyed your city and Nagasaki, what message do you, as the president of Mayors for Peace, and the people of Hiroshima, including the hibakusha, have for others around the world about living under the dark shadow of nuclear weapons?

Mayor Kazumi Matsui: In August 1945, two single atomic bombs dropped on the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki instantly reduced them to rubble, taking more than 210,000 precious lives. With almost 75 years since the bombings, the hibakusha, those who barely survived, still suffer from the harmful aftereffects of radiation. While their minds and bodies are in pain, they, together with other members of the public, continue to make their appeal that no one else should suffer as we have.

However, today, the nuclear-armed states possess about 13,000 nuclear warheads. The destructive power of every one of them is far above the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. These weapons could be used by accident or for terrorism. The current situation is far from what the citizens of Hiroshima, including the hibakusha, have been seeking for so long.

This is because the nuclear-armed states and their allies consider nuclear deterrence as essential for their security assurance, prioritizing the pursuit of only their own misguided national interest. However, this poses a grave threat to the survival of us all, the whole of humanity.

The current global coronavirus pandemic is a transboundary crisis that touches us all. We are experiencing firsthand that we can confront and defeat common threats through solidarity and cooperation. Based on what we have learned from this experience, we must build a robust global coalition of citizens everywhere to address and solve global security challenges, especially nuclear weapons. We must not take action based on self-centered nationalism.

I sincerely hope that everyone in the world will share in the hibakushas message and join us in realizing a peaceful world free of nuclear weapons.

ACT: There are now fewer and fewer hibakusha and fewer people who have witnessed the devastation of the atomic bombings. What can be done over the next 75 years to remind current and future generations of the experiences and the messages of the survivors of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings and the health impacts of the use of nuclear weapons? Are we at risk of forgetting?

Matsui: The average age of the hibakusha has exceeded 82. With their unshakable conviction that no one else should suffer as we have, they have conveyed their experiences and their desire for peace to younger generations. However, if we leave this important task of passing down to the future generations to the hibakusha alone, then unfortunately, sooner or later, there will no longer be anyone able to do so.

In order to ensure that the hibakushas messages will be faithfully inherited and shared with future generations, the City of Hiroshima conducts various initiatives.

The Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum exhibits belongings and photos of victims along with the words of their bereaved family members. Each item conveys to visitors the memories, sentiments, and the pain and sorrow of the victims and the bereaved. In addition, displays on the harm caused by the radiation tell the world of the inhumane nature of nuclear weapons. We encourage all world leaders and their fellow citizens to visit this museum to see the long-term catastrophic effects of the atomic bombings for themselves.

We also have a project to train A-bomb Legacy Successors, volunteers who pass down hibakusha experiences and their desire for peace on their behalf. Today, 131 successors are engaged in such activities.

We also make videos of hibakusha testimonies and collect memoirs in collaboration with the government. We are translating these into many languages so that all can understand their tragic experiences.

We intend to continue our efforts to enrich and expand these and make them available physically and online to share the messages of the hibakusha with the younger generation, who are the future of our society.

ACT: You and others have noted that "vital nuclear arms control agreements are being abandoned, budgets for development and production of new nuclear weapons are growing, and the potential for nuclear weapons use is too dangerous to tolerate. We are badly off course in efforts to honor the plea of the hibakusha and end the nuclear threat. On an international level, how can and should the world get back on track toward nuclear disarmament?

Matsui: We see unilateralism is rising in the international community, and exclusivity and confrontational approaches have increased tensions between nations. Now, the international situation surrounding nuclear weapons is very unstable and uncertain. But why is that? Fundamentally, policymakers should tackle issues, even if they are rooted in local contexts, from a global perspective. However, they are more likely to jump to a short-term compromise, which results in the current international situation.

In order to break the status quo of dependence on nuclear deterrence and get back on track toward nuclear disarmament, it is essential to mobilize civil societys shared values and create a supportive environment to give world leaders the courage to shift their policies.

Those shared values and desires of civil society aim at securing every citizens safety and welfare. As a nonpartisan organization made up of the very heads of local governments responsible for realizing that goal, Mayors for Peace implements a number of relevant initiatives.

Specifically, by utilizing its network of more than 7,900 member cities in 164 countries and regions, Mayors for Peace conveys the realities of the atomic bombings and works to increase the number of people who share in the hibakushas message. In this way, we can build a consensus among global civil society that the elimination of nuclear weapons is key to the peaceful future we need. This consensus will serve as the foundation for a collaborative international environment in which policymakers around the world can take decisive steps forward toward the total elimination of nuclear weapons.

I sincerely hope that all states, including the nuclear-armed ones, will engage in good-faith dialogue led by world leaders who wholeheartedly accept the earnest wish of the hibakusha, that is, the realization of nuclear weapons abolition as soon as possible. Through this, they will surely share wisdom and come up with an approach to make substantial progress in nuclear disarmament and nonproliferation.

ACT: What more can be done at the local level, especially by the younger generations, wherever they may live, to support global efforts for nuclear nonproliferation and disarmament?

Matsui: As I understand it, what civil society is sincerely seeking is to secure the publics safety and welfare. But when it comes to big global challenges to the peaceful existence of humanity as a whole, such as the abolition of nuclear weapons, we should not limit our solutions to the framework of nation-states. Solutions should also be based on that sincere desire of civil society at the grass-roots level across the world. I believe that we should spread awareness of this throughout civil society.

My hope for younger generations, the future of our society, is that they will start thinking about the preciousness of their daily lives, which are supported by rules based on mutual trust. Hopefully, they will then understand that this is exactly what peace is and think what they can do to preserve it and take action.

In civil society, which is based on democracy, if every person develops such concepts of peace and takes action accordingly, it follows that policymakers will be elected who can realize our common wish. It is also not a dream for them to become policymakers themselves.

If more people come to envisage a future different from the past and work to realize it, they will become the drive to change the world.

Mayors for Peace puts emphasis on peace education aimed at raising awareness among younger generations as part of its intensified efforts. Through our various programs, we nurture young leaders who engage in peace activities proactively.

ACT: What more can Japans national leadership do to move us closer to the peace and security of a world without nuclear weapons?

Matsui: As the only country to have experienced the devastation caused by nuclear attacks, Japan has a responsibility to share the hibakushas sincere desire to abolish nuclear weapons with the world and take the lead on various initiatives to make that a reality.

Japan has a role in international society as a bridge between the nuclear-armed states and the states-parties of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons to foster and promote dialogue and cooperation. To realize abolition as soon as possible, Japan can and should do even more to fulfil this role. I hope this will happen from the bottom of my heart.

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Freeing the World of Nuclear Weapons: Arms Control Today interviews Hiroshima Mayor Kazumi Matsui - Arms Control Today

Could the VR headset be the next Peloton? – TechCrunch

Funding for virtual reality startups has grown more sparse over the past couple years, as investors have grappled with extended timelines for mainstream adoption. Meanwhile, connected fitness has exploded, gaining attention amid shelter-in-place as companies like Peloton have seen huge user gains with Mirror recently selling to Lululemon for $500 million.

FitXR wants the virtual reality headset to become the next hot-seller in the connected fitness space.

The startup, which develops the popular VR exercise app BoxVR, tells TechCrunch it has just closed $7.5 million in Series A funding led by Hiro Capital. The funding was structured with $6.3 million in equity investment alongside a $1.2 million loan from Innovate UK, a UK government org. Other investors include Adam Drapers BoostVC, Maveron and TenOneTen Ventures.

FitXRs game BoxVR, has become one of the better-known purpose-built exercise apps available for VR devices. The boxing title adopts a Guitar Hero-esque interface influenced by Beat Saber but focuses on more physically demanding movements like quick uppercuts and jabs. The startup sells the app, which is available in the Oculus Store, PlayStation Store and Steam, for $29.99, with additional content packs going for $9.99.

BoxVR screenshot via FitXR

Working out in VR has slowly grown into a common use case for headsets thanks to the physical movement required for some of the more frantic titles.

Beat Saber, which Facebook acquired last year for an undisclosed amount, was one of the first titles to fully realize the opportunity.

Earlier this year, a16z-backed VR studio Within launched a subscription exercise app called Supernatural. Late last year, SF-based YUR raised $1.1 million in pre-seed funding for their VR exercise software.

The virtual reality market has had a lot to gain from shelter-in-place, but supply chain problems with the industrys top backer, Oculus, left VR studios with plenty of missed opportunities. All of Oculuss headsets, including its $399 standalone Quest headset, have been sold out or in low supply since the beginning of the year, a development that has negatively impacted the growth of an industry that is increasingly reliant on Facebook.

VR headsets dont have heart rate monitors or other fitness-tracking capabilities, but VR developers do have access to plenty of motion data from how much and how quickly a users headset and controllers are moving.

FitXR uses this data to calculate calories burned and lets users set personal goals for how many calories theyd like to burn in-app on a daily basis.

For now, FitXRs BoxVR sits solely inside the VR headset, but as the company looks to scale its team of 20 further with this funding, the companys leadership is teasing an interest in having its world grow beyond the headset.

We look at our own usage of the product and we dont think it should be constrained to virtual reality, FitXR CEO Sam Cole told TechCrunch. But I think the sticking point for us is that we believe the most fun way to work out is in a VR headset. And therefore the strong focus from us as a company is to continue to build and innovate in that space.

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Could the VR headset be the next Peloton? - TechCrunch

A local animation studio and a virtual reality developer find their footing during the COVID-19 situation – Winston-Salem Journal

The coronavirus pandemic has been both a blessing and a curse for Out of Our Minds Animation Studios in Winston-Salem, said Danny Oakley, the companys creative director.

The animation and virtual realty company has lost some anticipated work amid COVID-19 but is still experiencing an uptick in business.

Were getting a lot of clients who still need to get content out, Oakley said.

Business is also well at Looking Glass XR, a virtual reality/augmented reality software developer in Winston-Salem that often works with Out of Our Minds on projects.

John McBride, who owns Looking Glass XR with his business partner Sunny Lindenthal, said two projects wont happen this year because of the virus but other projects have taken their place.

We are getting interest that I dont think we would have gotten without COVID, McBride said.

From graphics to animation

Out of Our Minds was previously a graphic design studio called The Creative Source before switching to animation in 2000.

The companys owners are Oakley; Rebecca Jones, project director; Keith Hobgood, illustration director; Derek Cernak, animation director; John Cernak, founder; and Lori Cernak, administrative director.

Out of Our Minds work includes short films and the 2008 film The Little Wizard: Guardian of the Magic Crystals.

The companys main bread and butter is 2D and 3D character animation. It also does motion graphics, visual effects for films and virtual reality.

Right before the pandemic hit, we were lucky we had a stable of jobs in and we were doing some visual effects for some feature films and stuff like that, Oakley said.

During these times, when some live action productions have not been able to happen at the scale or speed that they have in the past, animation is there to help fill in the gap, he said.

Richard Clabaugh, a local filmmaker, has worked with Out of Our Minds on different projects.

Now, they handle 98% of visual effects work that comes my way, and I subcontract to them, Clabaugh said.

Most recently, Clabaugh was the VFX (visual effects) and post-production supervisor for the movie Becky, and Out of Our Minds was one of the primary visual effects companies for Becky.

The company has always worked with ad agencies.

Content is king, Oakley said. Everybody has got to have content for social media or content for quick ads that need to run in front of YouTube videos and that kind of stuff.

Out of Our Minds works with a variety of companies. It does animation for the marketing department of WestRock, which has three Forsyth offices.

Cook Medical, a medical device manufacturer with a division in Winston-Salem, has been working with Out of Our Minds for more than 20 years.

They do animations for us product and procedural animations, said John Devlin, global director of marketing for the endoscopy division of Cook Medical.

He said the animations are made primarily for doctors to provide a better understanding of how the companys medical devices work and what types of procedures are being done.

Out of Our Minds has been working with a national deli brand on virtual reality training.

Its been something theyve been doing, but now that the pandemic has come they are sort of ramping up the VR training, Oakley said.

Out of Our Minds is creating virtual environments so that the brands trainees can learn how to do things such as slice meats on a machine or decorate a display in a grocery store.

They put on a headset, Oakley said. Weve created the grocery store and they can sit there and decorate a case and have a trainer present.

Extended reality

When Looking Glass XR was formed in 2015 then as Looking Glass Services, its owners bought a $5,000 Matterport camera that captures a 3D-digital copy of any physical space such as a restaurant or apartment. The intention was to use the new technology to see how it might fit into the business world, starting with the real estate industry.

You can put a headset on and walk through the property and feel like you are there, McBride said.

As the market matured, Looking Glass focused on building training software for virtual reality headsets to be used by different industries and institutions.

You can teach any type of subject matter inside the headset, McBride said.

One of the companys biggest projects last year was building a VR African safari for the North Carolina Zoo.

McBride said the zoo renewed the project for this year, but when COVID-19 hit it was put on hold. The same thing happened with a project for Krispy Kreme Doughnut Corp.

He said Looking Glass had a contract pending with Krispy Kreme to start a VR training platform for front-of-the-house staff on the companys point-of-sale system.

Basically, you would put the headset on and it would look like you were in a Krispy Kreme store, McBride said. It was like a video game.

Staff would help virtual customers place their orders.

Still, that project gave the team at Looking Glass an idea to make a VR video game called Galaxy Donutz that they hope to release in January 2021.

Just as it had those two postponements, Looking Glass got a contract with Avita Medical, a clinical and commercial company that develops and markets respiratory and regenerative products. Looking Glass will create VR training, to be delivered in December, for Avita Medicals ReCell spray-on skin for the treatment of burns.

McBride said Avita Medical would normally put a doctor or professional on a plane to go to a city to train people in person on the use of a product.

Now, they will mail out a VR headset, and the training will be inside the headset, he said.

Looking Glass has done two projects with Fidelity Investments and hopes to do a third.

McBride said Fidelity started experimenting with VR training about a two years ago for its customer call centers.

Their test pilot was so successful they decided to roll it out, he said. We helped write software for them to make that happen.

New and growing opportunities

Virtual production is an area that Out of Our Minds has started working in and plans to continue doing as more people in the film industry look for help in creating computer-generated sets and backdrops.

Oakley said COVID-19 is accelerating that sort of workflow and production.

They can film with a limited crew and not have to travel, Oakley said. They can have these completely generated landscapes or animate them.

Most of the work by Looking Glass has been in the VR space but it is getting into augmented reality, which McBride describes as where people put on googles and walk around still seeing the real world.

It augments that real world and points out things to you either shows you where things are or helps you identify points of interest, he said.

The company pitched an idea to the U.S. Air Force and has been invited to give a virtual demo.

Looking Glasss project is called Flight Line of the Future, an augmented reality solution for U.S. Air Force ground crew.

McBride said ground crew typically walk around planes to do flight checks with a clipboard or a tablet.

With Flight Line of the Future, they would put on a headset, be hands free and have a personal assistant with augmented reality.

That virtual personal assistant could help them and do the checklist for them similar to the way the fictional artificial intelligent system J.A.R.V.I.S helps Tony Stark/Iron Man in the Iron Man movies.

Ryan Schmaltz, director of the Media and Emerging Technology Lab at UNC School of the Arts, has collaborated on some projects with both Out of Our Minds and Looking Glass.

He sees a lot of opportunities in the use of virtual reality and augmented realty.

Virtual reality is when you put on a head set and you are taken to an entirely different place, and augmented reality is when you overlay your surroundings with digital content, Schmaltz said.

In the future, he expects to see a lot more developments for all immersive technology in gaming, productivity/office, narrative storytelling/virtual reality filmmaking, and health and wellness.

Now with COVID-19 in the picture, Weve sort of crossed over into a world where virtual reality and augmented reality are becoming much more applicable, he said.

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A local animation studio and a virtual reality developer find their footing during the COVID-19 situation - Winston-Salem Journal

Global Virtual Reality (VR) Market 2019-2025: Expected to Rise at a CAGR of 32.9% – ResearchAndMarkets.com – Business Wire

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The "Virtual Reality Market: Global Industry Analysis, Trends, Market Size, and Forecasts up to 2025" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

This report predicts the global virtual reality market to grow with a CAGR of 32.9% over the forecast period from 2019-2025.

The report on the global virtual reality market provides qualitative and quantitative analysis for the period from 2017 to 2025. The study on virtual reality market covers the analysis of the leading geographies such as North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, and RoW for the period of 2017 to 2025.

The report on virtual reality market is a comprehensive study and presentation of drivers, restraints, opportunities, demand factors, market size, forecasts, and trends in the global virtual reality market over the period of 2017 to 2025. Moreover, the report is a collective presentation of primary and secondary research findings.

Porter's five forces model in the report provides insights into the competitive rivalry, supplier and buyer positions in the market and opportunities for the new entrants in the global virtual reality market over the period of 2017 to 2025. Further, Growth Matrix gave in the report brings an insight into the investment areas that existing or new market players can consider.

Report Findings

1) Drivers

2) Restraints

3) Opportunities

What does this report deliver?

1. Comprehensive analysis of the global as well as regional markets of the virtual reality market.

2. Complete coverage of all the segments in the virtual reality market to analyze the trends, developments in the global market and forecast of market size up to 2025.

3. Comprehensive analysis of the companies operating in the global virtual reality market. The company profile includes analysis of product portfolio, revenue, SWOT analysis and latest developments of the company.

4. Growth Matrix presents an analysis of the product segments and geographies that market players should focus to invest, consolidate, expand and/or diversify.

Key Topics Covered

1. Preface

1.1. Report Description

1.2. Research Methods

1.3. Research Approaches

2. Executive Summary

2.1. Virtual Reality Market Highlights

2.2. Virtual Reality Market Projection

2.3. Virtual Reality Market Regional Highlights

3. Global Virtual Reality Market Overview

3.1. Introduction

3.2. Market Dynamics

3.2.1. Drivers

3.2.2. Restraints

3.2.3. Opportunities

3.3. Porter's Five Forces Analysis

3.4. Growth Matrix Analysis

3.4.1. Growth Matrix Analysis by Component

3.4.2. Growth Matrix Analysis by Device Type

3.4.3. Growth Matrix Analysis by Technology

3.4.4. Growth Matrix Analysis by Application

3.4.5. Growth Matrix Analysis by Region

3.5. Value Chain Analysis of Virtual Reality Market

4. Virtual Reality Market Macro Indicator Analysis

5. Global Virtual Reality Market by Component

5.1. Hardware

5.2. Software

6. Global Virtual Reality Market by Device Type

6.1. Head-mounted Displays

6.2. Projectors & Display Walls

6.3. Gesture-tracking Devices

7. Global Virtual Reality Market by Technology

7.1. Immersive

7.2. Semi-immersive

7.3. Non-immersive

8. Global Virtual Reality Market by Application

8.1. Consumer Electronics

8.2. Commercial

8.3. Healthcare

8.4. Aerospace & Defence

8.5. Other Applications

9. Global Virtual Reality Market by Region

9.1. North America

9.2. Europe

9.3. Asia-Pacific

9.4. RoW

10. Company Profiles and Competitive Landscape

10.1. Competitive Landscape in the Global Virtual Reality Market

10.2. Companies Profiled

10.2.1. Oculus VR, LLC

10.2.2. Alphabet, Inc. (Google)

10.2.3. Leap Motion, Inc.

10.2.4. Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd.

10.2.5. Microsoft Corporation

10.2.6. HTC Corporation

10.2.7. CyberGlove Systems Inc.

10.2.8. Magic Leap, Inc.

10.2.9. Sony Corporation

10.2.10. Eon Reality, Inc.

10.2.11. Other Companies

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/44yk2m

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Global Virtual Reality (VR) Market 2019-2025: Expected to Rise at a CAGR of 32.9% - ResearchAndMarkets.com - Business Wire

Will virtual-reality gyms let us work out in the pandemic? – The Economist

Put on a headset and fight your way to fitness: a VR gym marries gaming to exercise

by Michael Gold

In the darkness, my hands glow neon-blue. I turn my head and glimpse a set of buttons hovering in the air. I press one of them and am transported into a stadium where a crystal spins in front of me; a similar one spins in the far distance. All around me, flashes of electricity signal that Im about to enter a wild skirmish. I grab some handles and start to chest press.

This is Black Box vr. Its billed as the worlds first virtual-reality gym and occupies an unassuming grey building in downtown San Francisco. Aside from the unavoidably analogue showers, locker rooms and protein-powder dispensers, the experience is almost entirely digital. You enter a private chamber, the size of a large walk-in closet, which has been kitted out with exercise cables and a retractable arm that keeps your chest in place while you perform a succession of weight-bearing routines. Having strapped on a vr headset, you are swept away to a virtual arena where you fire your weapons by repping intensely, in order to destroy your enemys crystal before he destroys yours. Your scores are placed on a leaderboard where you can compare your achievements with those of other gym-goers (currently you compete against a computer but Black Box hopes that soon youll be able to take on other cubicle-dwellers).

Ryan DeLuca, the companys founder, wants to cultivate the level of addiction among his gyms users that you find among hardcore gamers. Black Box aspires to emulate the success of blockbuster titles such as Fortnite and League of Legends, habit-forming games that ensconce their players in fantasy and escapism. That level of exploration, immersion and discovery is not something that people are typically able to do while exercising, says DeLuca.

I did not find the experience entirely intuitive. During a trial run, my squatting, jerking and jiggling caused the headset to slide down my face. Adjusting the grip to the point that it sat snugly, without making me feel like the circulation to my brain had been cut off, was a fine balance. I flailed my hands to locate the required handles, frantically trying to find the right set of cables for the required exercise. I certainly felt stimulated, if rather overwhelmed.

Others are true believers. Marco Chiang is a software engineer based in San Francisco. At his peak, he used to go to Black Box almost every day and moderated its fan channels on social media. He and his friends would post monthly progress photos of their increasingly chiselled bodies. One of them worked out how to hack Black Boxs weightlifting system so he was able go back three or four times a day without getting tired, just so he could raise his standing on the leaderboard.

Black Box reconciles two contradictory currents in Silicon Valley. Our atomised culture which is currently exacerbated by the coronavirus pandemic was pioneered in this part of the world. Its now possible to live a life thats digitally enmeshed but entirely sedentary: scrolling through social-media feeds, summoning food with the tap of an app, chatting to friends through a webcam. Yet there are few places where exercise and fitness classes are more popular. Yoga, weights, barre, high-intensity interval training, Pilates, boot camp and other crazes all have a foothold in the Bay Area, where until recently heaving herds of people leaped, bent and sweated together.

Not all exercise freaks are convinced by the concept behind vr workouts. Jenny Xu, who is teaching quarantine-friendly online fitness classes, reckons that many people wont be willing to shell out for an expensive headset. She also thinks that intense exercise may compound the phenomenon of vr nausea, an effect that some people feel when movement in the simulated world falls out-of-sync with the body.

Xu is touting a fitness game of her own. Her augmented-reality app, Run To My Heart, is set in an alternate universe in which humans have been turned into literal potatoes on couches. Joggers are provided with a virtual companion who encourages them and develops, the further you go, from running buddy to friend to romantic interest. This avatar recounts titbits about landmarks they are passing and gives them updates about other app users whom they might know.

Black Box was forced to close when a shelter-in-place order was issued in San Francisco on March 16th in response to the outbreak of covid-19. The company had assured its clients that headsets were disinfected after every use but, in the current climate, the idea of sharing one with a total stranger is about as appealing as licking a car tyre.

Still, perhaps vr exercise has a better chance of thriving in this strange new world than more conventional gyms and yoga studios. After all, social distancing was already part of the package at Black Box. Silicon Valley is keeping millions of people productive, fed, watered and somewhat sane in these fraught times. Maybe it can also keep us fit? There is certainly demand. When lockdown began to bite in China in February, fortnightly sales of yoga mats and rowing machines in the country leapt by 250% on the previous year, according to Reuters.

Of course, another solution to the exercise conundrum may be staring us in the face or rather under our feet. As an avid runner, I was bemused by headlines proclaiming a running boom due to coronavirus. On my regular jog a week-and-a-half into lockdown, I emerged alone from the green expanse of Golden Gate Park onto the sun-kissed boardwalk of Ocean Beach. True, there was no one around then. But with low barriers to entry, there is enormous scope for running to grow. Amid the proliferation of streamed workouts and Instagram classes, perhaps the main beneficiary of the closure of gyms will be the most primal exercise of all. And if you really need a technological fix? Xu plans to launch her app around the end of the year. Though if you wait that long, you may have turned into an actual potato.

ILLUSTRATION EWELINA KARPOWIAK

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Will virtual-reality gyms let us work out in the pandemic? - The Economist

Retailers: the opportunities of AI and virtual reality – Out-Law.com

The images of long queues of people leading into popular outlets in the days immediately after the reopening of the 'non-essential' retail sector show that many consumers remain committed to the high-street in spite of concerns regarding the spread of Covid-19 and the social distancing measures in place. This will have brought a level of assurance to retailers concerned about just how the coronavirus crisis will impact their businesses, with many shoppers still nervous to leave their homes and turning to online shopping.

The face of retail and how the public shop has arguably changed forever, and further uncertainties in the medium and longer term require retailers' consideration too not least how the seeming acceleration of the shift towards more remote working and reduced occupation of city centre office space could shape the future of the high-street.

Retailers will therefore have to fight harder than ever for customers. Their challenge is to make the shopping experience as convenient and enticing as possible. This is not something retailers alone can fix government and local authorities have a significant role to play in helping, whether through planning measures and greater levels of funding, tax breaks or incentives, or the provision of more flexible, open and attractive amenities and spaces. For retailers, though, now more than ever before is the time to explore how technology can help them meet the challenges ahead.

Many major retail brands, including L'Oreal, Amazon, ASOS and Boots, are investing heavily in new VR marketing tools which utilise AI technology. These tools, including the Zeekit app featured recently by BBC's 'Click' show, allow online customers to create a virtual model of themselves through their mobile or other camera-enabled devices. This online model can then "try-on" items such as make-up, hair colour, and clothing.

Some organisations are going a step further and seeking to develop 3D experiences involving video technology or virtual headsets, allowing the customer to have a more immersive and "real" experience essentially enabling them virtually to "try before they buy" as they would do in store.

As the retail sector begins to adapt and embrace the use of such AI technology, so the law is likely to adapt too to address the new and significant legal and ethical questions that arise.

Retailers seeking to take advantage of emerging technologies need to be conscious of the intellectual property (IP) law framework and undertake due diligence to identify the owners of IP rights in the technology they wish to use so as to establish and agree any licensing conditions. In some cases retailers may consider investing in the development of their own technology or do so in collaboration with others in both cases it is vital to consider how best to protect and harness the IP developed at the outset, including in the context of AI-led inventions.

In Europe, the regulation of AI is a central plank ofthe European Commission's digital strategy, with the prospect of new bespoke rules being developed around liability.

The move to personalise and provide for a more immersive retail experience using technologies like AI involves harnessing customer data in ways and in volumes that will not previously have been envisaged by most retailers. This requires retailers to be alive to their responsibilities under data protection law.

Retailers will be familiar in many cases with collecting customer contact and payment details, but the new types of data they may gather about customers from using new technologies could include highly sensitive information, such as body images and measurements, which would be classed as biometric data for the purposes of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) biometric data is one class of what is considered to be 'special category' data under the GDPR to which a higher standard of protection applies.

Retailers will need to think about how the data protection principles can be applied to these marketing and service tools and provide transparency notices to consumers, letting them know how their data will be used and how they can exercise their rights. Importantly, this processing of a consumer's data will also require their express consent. If the means of delivering this experience is provided by one or more third parties, then these entities will also be considered 'controllers' for the purposes of the GDPR due to their autonomy in determining the collection and processing of such the data and the consumer's consent to processing will also need to expressly extend to them.

Clearly retailers will be keen to ensure that the delivery of privacy messages and consent requests do not disrupt or distract from the customer journey, so careful consideration is required as to how to manage this within the legal requirements.

Where third parties or subcontractors are involved in the development, use or hosting of these technology solutions, not only do retailers need appropriate agreements in place to ensure clarity on IP, they also need to cover the responsibility for and ownership of data and to allocate risks and responsibilities for data protection compliance depending on the role of each party, be it as controller, joint controller or processor.

The penalties for failure to meet the data privacy legal duties are potentially severe for businesses, with fines of up to 4% of global annual worldwide turnover or 20million, whichever is greater, possible. However, a raft of guidance is available to help businesses, including recent recommendations the UK's Information Commissioner's Office and Alan Turing Institute set out on explaining decisions made with AI.

While there will be new issues and challenges retailers will encounter in adopting new technologies, businesses must embrace the opportunities those technologies present. Those retailers who adapt and change quickly and embrace AI and VR online and in-store will be best prepared to survive the immediate threats posed by the coronavirus crisis and keep pace with the changes we expect to see to the retail sector in future.

Nadia Zegze and Stephanie Lees are legal experts in the retail sector at Pinsent Masons, the law firm behind Out-Law.

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Retailers: the opportunities of AI and virtual reality - Out-Law.com

First Scientific Study Using Virtual Reality to Treat Chronic Pain at Home Finds AppliedVR Platform Feasible, Scalable and Effective – Business Wire

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--AppliedVR, a pioneer advancing the next generation of digital medicine, today announced results from the first randomized controlled trial (RCT), evaluating virtual-reality-based (VR) therapy for self-management of chronic pain at home. The study, which was published in JMIR-FR, found that a self-administered, skills-based VR treatment program was not only a feasible and scalable way to treat chronic pain, it also was effective at improving on multiple chronic pain outcomes.

With the COVID-19 pandemic severely disrupting Americans ability to seek care in clinical settings safely, demand for home-based virtual care has skyrocketed, forcing providers, insurers and policymakers to expand access to digital medicine. Todays study sought to demonstrate the feasibility and efficacy of people using the AppliedVR program at home on themselves to manage their chronic pain. The team conducted a rigorously designed study that compared VR to the same treatment delivered in an audio-only format, and found that VR was superior at delivering on desired outcomes.

The study analyzed data from 74 people who suffer from chronic lower-back or fibromyalgia pain over a 21-day period and showed that participants using AppliedVRs EaseVR program significantly reduced five key pain indicators - each of which met or exceeded the 30-percent threshold for clinically meaningful. On average, participants noted that:

People with chronic pain often have limited access to comprehensive pain care that includes skills-based behavioral medicine. We tested whether VR that was self-administered at home would be an effective therapy for chronic pain, said Dr. Beth Darnall, AppliedVRs chief science advisor, who co-authored the study. We found high engagement and satisfaction, combined with clinically significant reductions in pain and low levels of adverse effects, support the feasibility and acceptability for at-home, skills-based VR for chronic pain.

AppliedVRs EaseVR program helps patients learn self-management skills grounded in evidence-based cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) principles, along with providing biofeedback and mindfulness strategies. The program was designed by AppliedVR, in partnership with the top pain experts and researchers, to improve self-regulation of cognitive, emotional and physiological responses to stress and pain. AppliedVR has already been shown to be an effective treatment for acute pain in hospital settings.

Chronic pain is an extremely costly and complex problem for the U.S. healthcare system. The CDC reports that a staggering 20 percent of U.S. adults suffer from it, with nearly one in 10 experiencing high-impact chronic pain. A previous Johns Hopkins study published in The Journal of Pain found that the annual cost of chronic pain is as high as $635 billion a year, which is more than the yearly costs for cancer, heart disease and diabetes. As pain is often treated with pharmacological interventions, including opioids, which can be costly over a lifetime and have short- and long-term side effects, many providers are now turning to digital medicine as an effective CBT that supports their larger treatment toolbelt.

This study is a fundamental step for advancing a clinically proven, noninvasive and safe digital therapeutic like VR for chronic pain, and demonstrates our platform is both viable and efficacious, said Josh Sackman, co-founder and president of AppliedVR. Living with and managing chronic pain daily can be a debilitating and costly challenge, and many patients suffering from it can feel hopeless and desperate for any relief. So, as we engage in and accelerate more in-depth clinical research, we want them to know that were committed to making VR a reimbursable standard of care for pain.

AppliedVR has applied the studys results to expand its program to eight weeks, which will be tested later this year in additional RCTs. The company recently partnered with University of California at San Francisco (UCSF) to study how digital therapeutic platforms, including virtual and augmented reality, can be used to improve care access for underserved populations. AppliedVR also is advancing two clinical trials with Geisinger and Cleveland Clinic to study VR as an opioid-sparing tool for acute and chronic pain - specifically the companys RelieVRx and EaseVRx platforms. The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), recently awarded $2.9 million grants to fund the trials.

About AppliedVR

AppliedVR is pioneering the next generation of digital medicines to deliver safe and effective virtual reality therapeutics (VRx) that address unmet needs and improve clinical outcomes for patients with serious health conditions. Its evidence-based, non-invasive treatments immerse and engage patients to help drive measurable clinical outcomes. As the most widely used and deeply researched therapeutic VR platform, AppliedVR is the first company to make VR therapeutics widely available in clinical care, having immersed more than 30,000 patients in over 200 hospitals. AppliedVR has established world-class research and commercial partnerships and continues to build the infrastructure to accelerate the mass adoption of VRx. To learn more about AppliedVR, Inc., visit: https://appliedvr.io/.

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First Scientific Study Using Virtual Reality to Treat Chronic Pain at Home Finds AppliedVR Platform Feasible, Scalable and Effective - Business Wire

Bringing the benefits of in-person collaboration to the virtual world – MIT News

Over the past few months, while many workers were adjusting to a newfound reliance on Zoom meetings and Slack messages, employees at companies including toy designer Mattel, banking giant BNP Paribas, and the multinational energy corporation Enel Group have been collaborating in shared spaces. Theyve been using whiteboards and sticky notes to organize ideas, and even finishing up work sessions with handshakes and high fives, all without the slightest concern of contracting Covid-19.

Thats because theyre meeting virtually on the platform of Spatial, a startup using augmented and virtual reality to improve remote collaboration. The platform works on most virtual reality headsets available today, simulating the experience of in-person meetings with life-like avatars, dynamic sound, and interactive controls. It also allows users to generate and manipulate content including 3D models, images, videos, and PDFs, with simple hand gestures and voice commands.

Spatial is a collaborative, holographic, augmented reality solution, Spatial co-founder and Chief Product Officer Jinha Lee SM 11 says. You can teleport to someones space, work as an avatar sharing that 3D space, and use it instead of a screen to manage a project, present an idea, and more.

An example of Spatial's virtual workspaces.

The company has been working with design and innovation teams at large companies since its founding in 2016. Now, in response to the Covid-19 pandemic, Spatial has made the enterprise version of its platform free for everyone. It has also created a web browser version of the platform so users can enter spaces without a headset.

Before coronavirus, most of our interest was from enterprise, Lee says. They were big companies interested in using Spatial to connect remote office spaces or review 3D models and large data sets and things like that. After coronavirus, interest went up 1,000 percent, and a big part of that was from smaller businesses, hospitals, schools, and individuals.

The new offerings are part of Spatials long-term mission of accelerating a future where people can enjoy meaningful, productive interactions without sharing the same physical space.

Experiments in virtual creation

Growing up in Korea, Lee describes himself as a wannabe artist, and he brought that perspective to the University of Tokyo, where he studied electrical engineering as an undergraduate.

To me, the computer was really frustrating to use, because its 2D screen and mouse is kind of a frustrating tool as a creator when you want to express yourself by using gestures, or when youre building things, Lee says. A computer doesnt capture human creativity well.

Lee joined the Media Labs Tangible Media Group as a graduate student in 2009, where he worked on projects including a 3D interface that sits on a desk like a computer, and a fashionable wristwatch that uses a raised metal ball for an hour hand, allowing visually impaired people to feel the time display as easily as others can see it.

[The watch project] was an opportunity for me to see that you can use your idea not only for research, but also to help people solve real problems in the world, Lee remembers. That was a big transitional moment for me.

After leaving MIT, Lee worked at Samsung for four years, where he led its Interaction Group that created new user interfaces, including a platform that allows people to share content from their phones to nearby television screens in order to create things like song lists, photo albums, and maps of restaurants.

That helped me confirm that the computer really has to be used by people, not a person, Lee says. It has to be collaborative.

Following his experience at Samsung, Lee met Anand Agarawala, who had created BumpTop, an interface for organizing information on computer desktops similar to how one might store files on an office desk. The pair realized they shared a vision for improving virtual collaboration, and partnered up to create an augmented reality platform that used avatars to help simulate in person interactions.

Facilitating real connections, virtually

The platform the founders created is designed to be easy to use while providing all the most important features of in person and online collaboration. To get started, users upload a photo of themselves that is used to generate a 3D avatar. From there, they can enter virtual workspaces with people from around the world, drawing on whiteboards, reviewing 3D objects, and sharing windows or apps from their computers.

Spatial works on all the major virtual reality headsets, including the Hololens, Oculus, and HTC Vive, leveraging their motion tracking and spatial audio features to simulate the experience of standing next to someone.

When you can capture peoples creative expressions and gestures, it shortens the gap between what users think and what is visually in front of them, Lee says.

Users can pull in files from their computer or use gestures, like holding two fingers in the air, with voice commands to search the internet, populating the virtual environment with web results.

Spatials platform has radically changed workflows for remote teams an unfortunately large segment of the workforce at the moment.

Theres a lot of Zoom fatigue right now, and I think the biggest reason why is because the video format really forces you to be 200 percent focused when youre presenting or listening, but you cant do something together, Lee says. You cant be in this space, looking at things together and pointing at things. This feeling that were in the same space can only be achieved through a 3D physical office, and thats some of what Spatial is trying to achieve in virtual form.

Remote teams at Mattel, for example, traditionally used email and Slack messages to plan designs, then shipped 3D printed prototypes to multiple offices for review. With Spatial, workers can upload 3D models to their virtual workspace at any stage of the design process and invite different stakeholders to check them out. Reviewers can walk around the object and enlarge it during inspection, then leave comments and other markings for the team to consider.

The design and engineering industries make up a big part of Spatials customer base, but the company is also working with large financial institutions, biotechnology companies, and software companies in Silicon Valley.

Since making Spatials platform free, Lee says theyve been getting a lot of interest from academic institutions looking for innovative ways to interact with students, and from hospitals trying to improve connections between doctors and patients.

Those interactions are much different from a product teams design review, but they still benefit from Spatials personal virtual environment, which Lee thinks can aid creativity as well as collaboration.

Creativity is about connecting dots your thoughts which could seem unimportant or random until they are connected with others, Lee says. In Spatial, ideas can be shared with others much quicker than through video calls, and in much more raw form, through your gestures, notes, or drawings. In this way we are hoping to help remote teams stay creative as a group even when distributed.

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Bringing the benefits of in-person collaboration to the virtual world - MIT News

COVID-19 Impact On Global Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality (ARVR) Market Research Report Strategies, Shares, Trends, Growth Analysis Forecast to…

"Global Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality (ARVR) Market Assessment Report: Present & Forecast Evaluation"is a comprehensive blend of qualitative and quantitative analysis in terms of Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality (ARVR) market size, demand, revenue, gross margin, value, and volume. The whole research study is segmented based on regions, product type, application, and top companies operating in Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality (ARVR) Market. The report begins with the introduction on Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality (ARVR) Industry, drivers, restraints, trends, PEST analysis, PORTERs Five Forces analysis. The macro-economic factors, Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality (ARVR) manufacturing cost, industry chain structure and pricing analysis are conducted. The pandemic impact in terms of production, demand, profit, growth scope is covered in our latest report updated in June 2020.

Browse More Details Or Receive Free Sample Copy With Graphs & Charts: https://www.reportscheck.com/shop/global-augmented-reality-and-virtual-reality-arvr-market-research-report-2015-2027-of-major-types-applications-and-competitive-vendors-in-top-regions-and-countries/

The Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality (ARVR) production, market performance over past and present years, opportunity mapping, investment feasibility and growth orbits are specified in this research report. The regional markets share of every industry player, product type and application is studied which is as follows:

Top Companies Involved in Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality (ARVR) Industry are:MetaSamsung ElectronicsGoogleSonyMicrosoftFOVE VRVuzix CorporationLeap MotionHTCAvegant GlyphAugementaZeiss VR OneAtheerPokmon CompanyFacebookOculus RiftGoProEon RealityRazer OSVRVuzixCyberGlove Systems

Top Product Types Evaluated are:Head-Mounted Display (HMD)Handheld DeviceHead-Up Display (HUD)Projector and Display WallGesture-Tracking DeviceOthers

Top Applications studied are:Entertainment & MediaGamingHealthcareAerospace & DefenseManufacturingRetailEducationOthers

To derive the vital Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality (ARVR) Industry aspects like market share, revenue, production, demand various primary interviews and interactions are carried out with industry experts like VPs, CEOs, Marketing Managers, R&D Managers, distributors, national sales mangers of top companies. Primary and performance analysis is carried out by interviewing the distributors, traders, dealers and more. The most crucial segment like Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality (ARVR) Market competition and trends is studied in this report.

Ask Any Query, Request Custom Information or View Report TOC: https://www.reportscheck.com/shop/global-augmented-reality-and-virtual-reality-arvr-market-research-report-2015-2027-of-major-types-applications-and-competitive-vendors-in-top-regions-and-countries/

The report evaluates the positive and negative impact of ongoing situations on Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality (ARVR) Industry with forecast opportunities and CAGR value. The historical and present industry situations, market trends, technological innovations, regulations, upcoming technologies, and challenges are covered. The Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality (ARVR) Market revenue is expected to surpass US$ XX Million by 2021 with a growth rate of xx.xx% from 2021-2027.

Regional Perspective and Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality (ARVR) Analysis:

The market scope and regional division include North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Middle East & Africa, South America, and Rest of the World. The industry presence in the Asia-Pacific region is expected to expand at a good pace due to the increase in production facilities, existing players developing new opportunities and new players emerging in Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality (ARVR) Market. North America is expected to reach a higher market share followed by the European region. Demand for Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality (ARVR) products and its relevant applications across different market segments is growing rapidly.

Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality (ARVR) Market Analysis Based on Top Companies:

After the market competition and overview by top players, company profiles of every Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality (ARVR) Industry player is provided in detail. This segment covers the company overview, business portfolio, production details & description, vital financials, developments, SWOT analysis, and more. Top companies across the globe are profiled in this research study. The report can be customized based on the users choice and more players can be added as per requirements.

The forecast Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality (ARVR) industry vision covers the market size estimation, growth driving factors, risk analysis & mitigation, new entrants SWOT analysis, and investment feasibility.

Key Assessments & Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality (ARVR) Market Research Report Highlights:

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How Pupil is using virtual reality to help house hunters – The Independent

The reassuring message from James Marshall is: dont worry too much if you fail all your GCSEs. He did. He dropped out of school aged 17 before he could fail his A-levels too. It would be fair to say I was not overly academic, he says. And now he is CEO of Pupil and doing for the interiors of houses what Google Street View has done for the exteriors. All floor plans are wrong, says Marshall. His venture Spec aims to fix that.

Two and half years ago Marshall walked into the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors headquarters in London and had a meeting with the director of international standards. He said: We believe everyone has been mis-sold properties because they are being mismeasured. Especially in London. To which the standards supremo replied, Yes, we know.

Marshall, born in 1984 near Ross-on-Wye in Herefordshire, initially went into hospitality after leaving school, then into finance, and acquired a grounding in real estate (losing his shirt on a piece of land in Herefordshire a good learning experience). He met his co-founder Oliver Breach (equipped with A-levels and a degree in religious studies) through friends in the midst of the 2008 financial crisis and they eventually joined forces. But their breakthrough moment occurred in 2014 when they encountered virtual reality for the first time.

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How Pupil is using virtual reality to help house hunters - The Independent

Focus on Virtual Reality Benefits to Healthcare in Wales Tech Week – Business News Wales

VR is Good For You and For Your Doctor is the title of a panel discussion on July 16 at 16:00, one of over 80 virtual events taking place in the first ever Wales Tech Week July 13-17.

VR is Good For You and For Your Doctor features Rescape Innovation CEO Matt Wordley, Product Development Director Kevin Moss, and Dr Michelle Smalley, a Clinical Psychologist working in Intensive Care Units in Royal Glamorgan and Prince Charles Hospitals in Cwm Taf Morgannwg University Health Board, as they discuss the very human benefits VR has brought to frontline NHS teams facing COVID-19, and the potential to roll out this technology and increase the adoption of VR in a range of future medical treatment plans.

The virtual session is one of over 80 webinars, workshops and digital events in the first Wales Tech Week, a unique, interactive digital festival created by Technology Connected, the organisation that champions the Welsh technology industry and promotes its social and economic impact. In its inaugural year, Wales Tech Week has been designed to showcase the breadth, strength and diversity of Wales thriving technology industry, shining a light on its people and businesses to a global audience.

Rescape Innovation is a pioneer in the use of VR to support patient recovery and rehabilitation, and in the past few months theyve been working closely with Cwm Taf Morgannwg University Health Board and the Centre for Trials Research at Cardiff University using virtual reality for the first time to help reduce anxiety and stress amongst NHS staff tackling the pandemic.

Using their DR.VR, which already has a proven track record in reducing anxiety levels of patients in intensive care units, Rescape has produced really positive results in evaluating VR as a useful aid to support the mental health and wellbeing of frontline medical staff whove been putting on the headsets and zoning out and its helped them get through it.

Dr. Smalley said:

Roles radically changed on March 13, with a dramatic increase in stress and anxiety amongst frontline medical and nursing teams for both themselves and their loved ones. My role pivoted to focus on staff wellbeing and support, and trying to limit burn out, so we worked with Rescape to bring in DR.VR headsets to see if it would prove a useful aid in reducing anxiety, and give the medical teams some much needed relief.

Being a clinical psychologist in unprecedented times has called for unprecedented measures to help support staff. From the moment I tried these headsets out myself, I realised their potential for helping with anxiety and stress, but we have to be evidence based in our approach.

The DR.VR Frontline Relief evaluation is available on the new FutureVision.Health web platform, a portal set up to promote the benefits of immersive technologies in healthcare. The main results from the evaluation suggest that staff found using VR was an enjoyable experience, and they would recommend use to their colleagues to aid relaxation and for reducing stress. In particular, staff valued the meditative spaces and breathing exercises.

Rescape Innovation CEO Matt Wordley said:

As a Welsh company using pioneering technology to reduce pain and ease anxiety in healthcare, Wales Tech Week gives Rescape a great opportunity to talk about our COVID evaluation with a healthcare professional, and look at the enormous potential for VR for both patients and NHS staff. Weve already had interest from a number of hospitals across the UK, and future projects will feature VR benefits in maternity, Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease(COPD), informational impact and more as we look to increase the adoption of VR in a range of medical treatment plans.

Avril Lewis MBE, managing director of Wales Tech Week organiser Technology Connected said:

Our world is rapidly changing, and now more than ever its clear just how important technology is in our daily lives, enabling and enhancing the way we live and work. With Wales Tech Week, our goal is to showcase the incredible talent and innovation that exists within our industry, giving a global platform to the organisations and people that make up our 8.5 billion a year technology sector. A sector that will be fundamental in accelerating the recovery of our national and global economies post COVID-19.

VR is Good For You and For Your Doctor register on: https://technologyconnected.eventbank.com/event/vr-is-good-for-you-and-for-your-doctor-24781/home.html https://technologyconnected.eventbank.com/event/vr-is-good-for-you-and-for-your-doctor-24781/home.html

The evaluation is available on http://futurevision.health/research/

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Focus on Virtual Reality Benefits to Healthcare in Wales Tech Week - Business News Wales

GTA makers secretly working on virtual reality version of game where headset lets you live out crime lord fa – The Sun

'LEAKED' information regarding the Grand Theft Auto (GTA) publisher could imply a virtual reality version of the game is in the works.

Rockstar Games, which is also behind Red Dead Redemption, is said to be gearing up for its next game to be entirely in VR.

2

This is according to a LinkedIn post from development studio Video Games Deluxe.

It says that it's "now gearing up for a new project, a AAA open world title in VR for Rockstar.

"2020 marks our 7th year of working exclusively for Rockstar in Sydney and we are excited to taking on this ground breaking project."

GTA is one of those AAA titles so fans are getting excited about a potential VR release.

2

Video Games Deluxe previously worked with Rockstar on a VR version of the game L.A. Noire: The V.R. Case Files.

So their LinkedIn post sounds legitimate.

Gaming experts are predicting that a VR version of GTA would be based on an old game rather than an upcoming edition.

Currently, any other information about the project is scarce so the GTA VR rumours are just speculation.

It could be the case that a completely different AAA title is getting turned into a virtual reality adventure.

We won't know for sure when or if gamers will be exploring Los Santos in a VR headset until official word from Rockstar is given.

What is VR? Virtual reality explained

Here's what you need to know about the revolutionary tech...

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In other gaming news, Call of Duty has banned 'OK' as an in-game gesture over fears it's a hate symbol.

A specialXbox event in Julycould see the reveal of a second next-gen console.

And, PS5 and Xbox Series X games graphics will be movie quality, according to a Fortnite boss.

What are your thoughts on VR gaming? Let us know in the comments...

We pay for your stories! Do you have a story for The Sun Online Tech & Science team? Email us at tech@the-sun.co.uk

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GTA makers secretly working on virtual reality version of game where headset lets you live out crime lord fa - The Sun

Potential Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic on Global Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare Market Report 2020 Key Companies Google, Augmedix,…

Rising number of corona virus cases has impacted numerous lives and led to numerous fatalities, and has affected the overall economic structure globally. The Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare has analyzed and published the latest report on the global Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare market. Change in the market has affected the global platform. Along with the Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare market, numerous other markets are also facing similar situations. This has led to the downfall of numerous businesses, because of the widespread increase of the number of cases across the globe.href=mailto:nicolas.shaw@cognitivemarketresearch.com>nicolas.shaw@cognitivemarketresearch.com or call us on +1-312-376-8303.

Request Free Sample Copy of Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare Market Research Report@ https://cognitivemarketresearch.com/servicesoftware/virtual-reality-in-medicine-and-healthcare-market-report

The major players in the Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare market are Google, Augmedix, Medsights Tech, Orca Health, EchoPixel, Brain Power, Aira, Microsoft, AccuVein, Atheer . Some of the players have adopted new strategies to sustain their position in the Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare market. A detailed research study is done on the each of the segments, and is provided in Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare market report. Based on the performance of the Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare market in various regions, a detailed study of the Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare market is also analyzed and covered in the study.

Report Scope:Some of the key types analyzed in this report are as follows: Software, Hardware, Service

Some of the key applications as follow: Hospital, Clinic, Medical Research Center, Other

Following are the major key players: Google, Augmedix, Medsights Tech, Orca Health, EchoPixel, Brain Power, Aira, Microsoft, AccuVein, Atheer

An in-depth analysis of the Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare market is covered and included in the research study. The study covers an updated and a detailed analysis of the Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare market. It also provides the statistical information of the Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare market. The study of the report consists of the detailed definition of the market or the overview of the Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare market. Furthermore, it also provides detailed information for the target audience dealing with or operating in this market is explained in the next section of the report.

Read Detailed Index of full Research Study @: https://cognitivemarketresearch.com/servicesoftware/virtual-reality-in-medicine-and-healthcare-market-report#download_report

The report also provides detailed information on the research methodologies, which are used for the analysis of the Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare market. The methods are covered in detail in this section of the report. For the analysis of the market, several tools are used for the extraction of the market numbers. Among the several tools, primary and secondary research studies were also incorporated for the research study. These were further analyzed and validated by the market experts, to increase precision and make the data more reliable.

Moreover, the report also highlights and provides a detailed analysis of the drivers, restrains, opportunities, and challenges of the Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare market. This section of Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare market also covers the updated information, in accordance with the present situation of the market.

According to the estimation and the analysis of the market, the Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare market is likely to have some major changes in the estimated forecasts period. Moreover, these changes can be attributed to the changes due to economic and trading conditions across the globe. Moreover, several market players operating in the Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare market will have to strategically change their business strategies in order to survive in the market.

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Reasons for Buying this Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare Report1. Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare market advertise report helps with understanding the Basic product segments alongside likewise their potential future.2. This global Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare report offers pin-point evaluation for changing competitive dynamics.3. The Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare market supplies pin point analysis of changing competition dynamics and keeps you in front of competitors4. Original images and illustrated a SWOT evaluation of large segments supplied by the Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare market.5. This report supplies a forward-looking perspective on different driving factors or controlling Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare market gain.6. This report assists to make wise business choices using whole insights of the Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare and also from creating a comprehensive evaluation of market sections.Note In order to provide more accurate market forecast, all our reports will be updated before delivery by considering the impact of COVID-19.

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Potential Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic on Global Virtual Reality in Medicine and Healthcare Market Report 2020 Key Companies Google, Augmedix,...