Letters to the editor: August 8, 2020 – Opinion – Austin American-Statesman

A logical consequence

of too many guns?

The National Rifle Association argues we need more, not fewer, guns to be safe.

They would have us believe that only a "good guy with a gun" can stop a " bad guy with a gun."

So what are we to do when a "good guy with a gun" shoots another "good guy with a gun?" Isnt that a logical consequence of too many guns?

Richard W. Rew, Austin

Not wearing a mask and

complicit in her demise

Re: Aug. 5 article, "Too many are selfish: U.S. nears 5 million cases."

Quoting from the Aug. 5 article, Veronica Fritz said, "I won't wear a mask unless I absolutely have to," and "... I believe God will take me where I'm supposed to go. So if I get COVID and I die from COVID, it's not my decision."

Really? Isn't she complicit in her demise with this line of thinking? And, those she will take with her when she goes may have other plans. James 4:17 states, "If you know the right thing to do and don't do it, that, for you, is evil".

Jeri Porter, West Lake Hills

Investigation should

extend beyond antifa

Sen. Cruz,

I understand you (held) a hearing on the alleged "antifa" agitators infiltrating the Black Lives Matter protests. Antifa stands for "anti-fascist," so I hope that you will also investigate:

* White supremacists such as the "Umbrella Man" vandalizing property during the George Floyd protests in Minneapolis, falsely blamed on "antifa."

* The Lafayette Square assault by federal agents.

* Federal agents in camouflage uniforms dispatched to cities run by mayors of the opposing political party, without their request, to intimidate citizens exercising their First Amendment rights and forcibly detaining citizens in unmarked vehicles.

* A lack of similar action toward armed protesters shouting to be allowed onto the House floor during a protest at the Michigan state Capitol against the states COVID-19 safety measures.

Will historians be called to testify, comparing these actions to those of fascist groups that toppled democracies in Germany, Italy and Argentina in the past century?

Bill Reiner, Austin

Like an old-style duel, but

random and anonymous

Regarding the Black Lives Matter killing, Austin police union president (Ken) Casaday tweeted that (Garrett) Foster "was looking for confrontation and he found it." Actually, that might be said of both men.

Texas allows men to legally carry their guns into some emotionally charged situations and encounter other armed men with opposing views. There, someone who believes he sees a threatening gesture, can kill, claim self-defense and expect to be held blameless. Its just like an old-fashioned duel, only more random and anonymous. I wonder what civilized people would think of such an arrangement.

Thomas Barbour, Austin

Just the extreme chaos

the Russians were after

Love conspiracy theories? Trump is the most obvious one. Did you read the Mueller report? Of course not, why bother with factual investigations! The Russians used bots to divide our country even more than it already was, creating chaos with misinformation. Whether wittingly or not, Trump has greatly assisted that goal. Is it really that hard to see, folks?

He sucks up to Putin and alienates our allies, denies science, panders to racists and lies with every breath he takes while doing nothing about COVID-19 except trying to con you believers into voting for him again. Now we have the extreme chaos that Russia wanted and an upcoming election that he will undoubtedly contest.

Putin's stooge has excelled at his task, dooming this country and every democracy in the world if elected again. Read "The Manchurian Candidate." Makes for a great conspiracy theory.

Steve Donovan, Austin

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Letters to the editor: August 8, 2020 - Opinion - Austin American-Statesman

Poker in Print: The Godfather of Poker (2012) – CalvinAyre.com

There are many poker biographies available, and to some students of the game, those who have succeeded in the most recent era are most useful for those aspiring to greatness. However, in this weeks Poker in Print, we focus on an autobiography written by perhaps the most iconic poker player who has ever sat down to play the game we all love.

The Godfather of Poker is the story of Doyle Brunson, also known as Texas Dolly, who famously won two World Series of Poker Main Events in back-to-back years with the final hand of 10-2.

Brunson, who retired from tournament poker in 2018 after 50 years at the felt, covers mostly his early years in this fascinating book which harks back to a long-gone era of cowboy hats, pistols at dusk and playing poker for a living when even taking a seat in some games was to endanger your life.

Brunsons autobiography (the book is co-written with Mike Cochran) covers everything you can imagine and plenty more. As Nolan Dalla calls him in the book, Brunson is the Babe Ruth of poker, and its easy to see the similarities. Brunson may have become the Godfather of poker as it is today, having been born 87 years ago in 1933, a full six years before the second World War, but he was a young man once and this book revisits that era.

From gunfights to mobsters, stabbings to a recovery from cancer, Brunson is a survivor. Not just an everyman, but a journeyman who has rattled along in life and poker like they were two tracks straddled by his own steam train, which, slow and steady, has continued on its path all these years.

Doyle Brunson may have gambled for his life literally with a gun held to his head as youll discover in the book, but hes also gambled for millions of dollars and proved himself beyond the rigours of poker eras that have come, gone and come again.

Brunsons life-story actually makes you forget about the minutae of the game and thats no bad thing. Hie life is filled with huge, chapter-marking moments such as his leg break which ended what was a promising career as a basketball player and the death of his daughter.

You can buy Doyle Brunsons autobiography The Godfather of Poker right here, right now in ebook form. Just 7.55 at its current price, its a fast and fascinating read through the man who oversaw so much of the modern poker era build around the tables he played at.

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Poker in Print: The Godfather of Poker (2012) - CalvinAyre.com

Heart meets humour: how Young Offenders put Cork on the map – The Guardian

When the cast and crew of The Young Offenders appeared on the streets of Cork to film scenes for the third series of the TV show, word quickly rippled across the city.

Crowds formed in hope of catching a glimpse of the action, creating a boisterous hubbub right up until the moment cameras started rolling, at which point everyone would shut up and maintain a hush until filming stopped. The denizens of Cork wanted to hear the dialogue, after all. And they didnt want to do anything to screw up the show.

It was like a party, then you could hear a pin drop, said Pat OConnell, a fishmonger who appears in the show with other traders in the English market. You take pride in the show. You know theyre going to do it right.

He was not referring to the central characters. Conor MacSweeney and Jock OKeeffe, hapless teenagers with atrocious haircuts, bumfluff and a yen for stealing bicycles, seldom do anything right. They bumble through Cork, through life, in one misadventure after another. Other characters are scarcely more competent.

But the makers of the series a TV comedy now in its third season on RT and BBC Three, spawned by a 2016 feature film of the same name are clearly on the ball. The film scored 100% on the critic aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes, and the TV show has won a growing fanbase in Ireland and the UK. Disney has snapped up its creator, Peter Foott, to write a comedy.

Variously described as a coming-of-age sitcom and a comic portrait of the adolescent male, The Young Offenders has gifted Cork something it appreciates: attention.

Game of Thrones enticed busloads of tourists to Northern Ireland, Derry Girls and Normal People advertised the respective appeals of Derry and Sligo, and, with less fanfare, The Young Offenders is doing the same for the compact port city that straddles the mouth of the River Lee in Irelands south-west, population 210,000.

Fans across the world share their enthusiasm on social media. Before Covid-19 hit, some visited Cork to soak up the vibe and take selfies at locations from the series.

It showcases the beautiful streetscape, said Joe Kavanagh, the mayor. Its wonderful to have Cork city showcased on international TV. The show portrays Cork in a very natural light.

Arguably a criminal light, too. Conor and Jock enjoy thieving, or trying to thieve, though material gain seems to matter less than dodging and taunting their would-be Garda nemesis, Sergeant Tony Healy, who flounders in pursuit.

The mayor sees no dent to civic pride. Theyre not hardened criminals, theyre just chancers. Nobody gets injured. The Cork humour shines through very strong. Ive watched every episode of the show. I watch it again and again.

Sharon Corcoran, director of economic development and tourism for Cork county, lauded the shows impact. Were pleasantly surprised that its been such a success in the UK. The profile of Cork has been raised; its shown as lively and entertaining.

Episodes where Conor and Jack trek into the countryside excursions that seldom go as planned display a breathtaking landscape of mountains and beaches, said Corcoran. We would be very surprised if there wasnt an economic spin-off from the show.

For Paul Moynihan, a spokesperson for Cork city council, the characters resilience echoes the citys recovery from economic blows in the 1980s. Setback after setback, and they just get on with things.

The Young Offenders is the brainchild of Foott, from Monkstown, County Cork. The discovery of a cocaine haul off the coast of west Cork inspired him to write a screenplay about two teenagers who set off on bikes to find it. Foott shot the film on a shoestring with mostly local actors and crew.

Few anticipated international success, said OConnell, the fishmonger. When you look at where it started and see where they ended, its been incredible. I have to scratch me head, like. Its huge, huge. They just had that magic ingredient.

Its not poverty porn. Every episode shows something lovely through the grit and grime

Loosely set amid the council estates in north Cork, storylines revolve around the friendship between Conor, played by Alex Murphy, and Jock, played by Chris Walley. They navigate poverty, boredom, the mysteries of sex, a vindictive school principal and Billy Murphy, a knife-wielding nut-job. Jock also has to deal with an abusive, alcoholic father.

Corks sing-song accent and slang spices the dialogue, prompting locals to marvel that outsiders can understand it. Might regular viewers master Corks singular relationship with the English language? Kavanagh, the mayor, grinned and shook his head. Never happen.

Shane Casey, the actor who plays Murphy, said Cork bore a mild chip on its shoulder for playing second fiddle to Dublin but fizzed with pride and a sense of difference from the rest of Ireland. The show features Cork as a character in itself.

Casey left school at 16 and worked as a decorator before becoming an actor. Id be more linked to these characters because I am working class. The Cork I knew growing up was rougher than it is now.

Coffee bars, gourmet restaurants and legions of tech workers Apple has its European HQ here have transformed the city, but grittiness endures, said Casey. We put a microscope on it but in a humorous way. We wont get away with anything if it doesnt have heart.

Critics of Irelands low corporate tax regime argue that Corks biggest offender is Apple, which has been accused of dodging billions in tax.

The show avoids poverty porn, he added. Every episode shows something lovely through the grit and grime the show is not taking the piss out of Cork.

And the series garners praise from other quarters. Michael Waldron, assistant curator at the citys Crawford art gallery, said: Cork gets a bit of flak for its own sense of self but the show has all the heart and humour of the city: it really has those two things at its core, no matter what shenanigans are going on. The show tacitly references a beloved depiction of the city from the Crawford collection: an 18th-century work by John Butts, View of Cork from Audley Place, is the exact spot where Conor and Jock regularly sit to muse on life.

Meanwhile, James Windle and Katharina Swirak, criminologists at University College Cork, have credited the sitcom with astute observations about young peoples socio-economic exclusion since the Celtic Tigers collapse in the late 2000s. This is in stark contrast with common political and media depictions portraying young offenders as one-dimensional violent scumbags or entrepreneurial predators, they wrote last month.

Craggy Island is fictional but Father Ted, which some critics rank second only to Fawlty Towers in the list of TV comedy greats, draws fans to Inishmore, an island off County Galway, for the annual Friends of Ted festival, or Ted Fest.

Game of Thrones brings tens of thousands of fans to locations in Northern Ireland, where most of the saga was filmed, generating an estimated 50m in 2018 alone.

Tourism Ireland made a behind-the-scenes film about Normal People, the TV version of Sally Rooneys novel, to lure fans to Sligo. Derry is planning Derry Girls tours and other attractions linked to the Channel 4 show.

Ballykissangel, a Sunday-night BBC drama, came off air in 2001 but the official Visit Wicklow website still mentions the village of Avoca as a central location for the series.

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Heart meets humour: how Young Offenders put Cork on the map - The Guardian

Daily Crunch: Trump bans transactions with ByteDance and Tencent – TechCrunch

Trump escalates his campaign against Chinese tech companies, Facebook extends work from home until the middle of 2021 and Netflix adds support for Hindi. Heres your Daily Crunch for August 7, 2020.

The big story: Trump signs orders banning US business with TikTok owner ByteDance and Tencents WeChat

Both orders will take effect in 45 days, but its specific impact is unclear since Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross will apparently not identify what transactions are covered until then.

This comes after Trump had already said that he was banning TikTok unless the app is sold to an American owner. (Specifically Microsoft, which has acknowledged that its in acquisition talks.)

TikTok hit back against the order by saying that it was issued without any due process and would risk undermining global businesses trust in the United States commitment to the rule of law.

The tech giants

Facebook extends coronavirus work from home policy until July 2021 Facebook has joined Google in saying it will allow employees to work from home until the middle of next year as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.

Netflixs latest effort to make inroads in India: Support for Hindi Netflix has rolled out support for Hindi, a language spoken by nearly half a billion people in India.

Judge says Uber, Lyft preliminary injunction ruling to come in a matter of days Lyft argued that reclassifying drivers as employees would cause irreparable harm.

Startups, funding and venture capital

The rules of VC are being broken The latest episode of Equity discusses rolling funds and how they could change the VC landscape.

Mashroom raises 4M for its end-to-end lettings and property management service The startup pitches itself as going beyond the tenant-finding service to include the entire rental journey.

Wendell Brooks has resigned as president of Intel Capital Anthony Lin, who has been leading mergers and acquisitions and international investing, will take over on an interim basis.

Advice and analysis from Extra Crunch

How to pick the right Series A investors Its important for founders to get to know the people coming onto their board, and Jake Saper of Emergence Capital has some thoughts on how to do that.

IoT and data science will boost foodtech in the post-pandemic era Three must-dos for post-pandemic retail grocers: rely on the data, rely on the biology and rely on the hardware.

Survey: Tell us what you think of Extra Crunch Like Extra Crunch? Dont like Extra Crunch? Tell us why!

(Reminder: Extra Crunch is our subscription membership program, which aims to democratize information about startups. You can sign up here.)

Everything else

Civic tech platform Mobilize launches a census hub for the 2020 counts critical final stretch The new site, GetOutTheCount.com, will amplify nonprofits census efforts and collect them in one place.

Federal judge approves ending consent decrees that prevented movie studios from owning theaters U.S. District Court Judge Analisa Torres cited the rise of streaming services like Netflix as one of the reasons for her decision.

The Daily Crunch is TechCrunchs roundup of our biggest and most important stories. If youd like to get this delivered to your inbox every day at around 3pm Pacific, you can subscribe here.

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Daily Crunch: Trump bans transactions with ByteDance and Tencent - TechCrunch

Mark Zuckerberg Becomes the Third Centibillionaire of the World after Facebook Stock Hits Record High Following the Roll Out Of Instagram Reels -…

On Thursday, Facebook founder and CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, just became the worlds third billionaire to cross the $100 billion mark. Zuckerbergs net worth is now more than $100 billion for the first time since the social media giant has enjoyed a soaring stock price amid the coronavirus pandemic. According to a report published by Bloomberg, the 36-year-old billionaire joins fellow tech titans Bill Gates and Amazons Jeff Bezos, both of whom have already crossed the $100 billion mark. Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos, and Bill Gates are reportedly the only individuals in the world worth at least $100 billion, according to Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

The net worth of Facebook CEO is mainly derived from his stake in Facebook, and Zuckerberg has a 13% stake in the worlds largest social network - Facebook. The founder of one of the largest tech companies and other executives of online companies have enjoyed a mind-boggling accumulation of wealth during the coronavirus pandemic since people are locked into their houses and spend more time on their devices.

Mark Zuckerberg gained nearly $22 billion during 2020, and Jeff Bezos earned more than $75 billion. The staggering numbers have put the CEOs of tech giants under intense scrutiny. Last month, Facebooks Mark Zuckerberg, Apples Tim Cook, Jeff Bezos, Googles Sundar Pichai had to testify before Congress to defend allegations that the power and influence of these tech giants are out of control.

Currently, Microsoft, Apple, Alphabet, Amazon, and Facebook have market valuations equivalent to nearly 30% of the United States gross domestic product. Mark Zuckerberg founded Facebook from his Harvard University dorm room back in the year 2004 which is now the worlds largest social media platform. The 36-year-old billionaire says that he plans to give away 99% of his shares in Facebook over his lifetime.

Facebook stock hit a record high following the rollout of Instagram Reels. Reels allow users to create and share short videos on Facebook-owned Instagram app. The feature integrated into Instagram allows users to create and edit 15-second clips, much like the popular video-sharing platform- TikTok. Reels will be made available to users in over fifty countries including the United States, the United Kingdom, Japan, Australia, and India. Instagram Reels is touted to replace ByteDances TikTok. It is interesting to note that TikTok is reeling under the pressure of bans in some markets such as India and the United States.

Read next: How Rich You'd Be If You'd Invested $1000 in These Companies

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Mark Zuckerberg Becomes the Third Centibillionaire of the World after Facebook Stock Hits Record High Following the Roll Out Of Instagram Reels -...

What can we learn from our spending habits during Covid-19? – The National

Our lives have been radically changed by Covid-19, and this was especially true when stay-at-home measures were in place in the UAE. For the first time in many peoples lives, we were stuck either working from home or on furlough if our companies were temporarily closed. To the detriment of economies around the world, people had far fewer options to spend money.

Ive always been a big proponent of tracking my spending every day. I use a free spend tracker app called Spending Tracker and the process takes me only about 30 seconds each day. It gives me access to great information and allows me to know exactly where my money is going.

Its important to only spend money on the things that really give you what you need, not just momentary bursts of pleasure

Zach Holz

I started to notice a new phenomenon during the lockdown. I was having no spend days days in which I didnt spend a single dirham. I was cooking for myself, not using my car and was unable to shop like I used to. Ive always been naturally inclined towards saving, so as soon as I saw this in my Spending Tracker data, I was excited and tried to have as many no spend days as possible.

And it wasnt just me who wasnt spending. In my home country, the United States, the normal savings rate is about 4 per cent, which is terrible, but thats a topic for another article. However during the Covid-induced lockdown, the savings rate in the US shot up to more than 30 per cent, according to the US Bureau of Economic Analysis. I couldnt find similar data for the UAE, but imagine it was similar, if not more extreme as there are many people here who come from communities where saving is a much more ingrained habit.

With people spending a lot less money, I think there are lessons to be drawn from this that could benefit our financial lives even when Covid-19 is a distant memory.

One key idea of financial independence is that spending more money doesnt automatically lead to more happiness. Its important to only spend money on the things that really give you what you need, not just momentary bursts of pleasure during retail therapy sessions that quickly fade and leave you wanting more.

Could the things we didn't spend our money on during the lockdown be things we could continue to NOT buy when our lives returned to "normal"? Could we reform our spending habits and be able to save more money and reach our financial goals? I hope so, but only if we examine what we did not spend money on and think about how that changed us.

A few categories that saw a significant decline in spend were on things like brunches, entertainment outside the home, clothes, travel, beauty treatments and certain services such as non-live-in maids. Im sure that if you look at your own life, you can find the areas you werent spending money on as well. Here are a few key questions to ask yourself to help use that information:

There are many types of spending that dont make our lives better. Sadly, we are usually so accustomed to those actions that we dont even think about their effects or if theyre necessary. Covid-19 and the lockdown it triggered could be the opportunity we needed to break out of some of our spending habits, but it takes a bit of self-reflection. Dont waste a crisis, use it to improve your life.

Dubai schoolteacher Zach Holz (@HappiestTeach) documents his journey towards financial independence on his personal finance blog The Happiest Teacher

Updated: August 6, 2020 08:42 AM

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What can we learn from our spending habits during Covid-19? - The National

SPIRITUALLY SPEAKING: A trip to the movies – Wicked Local Sharon

He wondered if normalcy was something, like vision or silence, you didnt realize was precious until you lost it. -- Cassandra Clare, author

It was a risk. I know. Maybe even kind of a little dangerous. Taking this one chance, after 136 days of being locked up and locked in and prevented from enjoying one cherished past time in my life, thats been with me since I first saw the flicker of shadow and light projected onto a screen, as a little boy at the Wollaston Theater, my childhood palace of dreams.

This past Saturday, I went to the movies again.

It was an impulse decision. Reading the paper, I noticed a story about one of my favorite movie theaters here in eastern Massachusetts, the West Newton Cinema, reopening, after being shuttered since last March. Ive seen upwards of 100 movies there, probably more, in my adult life, so many Saturday nights with pasta at Comellas next door and then a film. Its not a cookie-cutter venue, a cinema one to infinity kind of place, a suburban movie factory located next to the mall, that shows mostly superhero flicks and other blockbusters.

No. West Newton Cinema is as local as local gets. As theater as theater gets.

Opened in 1937, the movie palace has been welcoming viewers into its quaint and cozy building for 83 years, showed its first film in the midst of the Great Depression, and has been entertaining movie buffs like me ever since. Stroll through the heavy wooden front doors as you pass under a marquee filled with titles of current attractions, and then get your ticket from a live person in a booth and enter a spacious lobby, the smell of real homemade popcorn and melted butter making your mouth water. Once a true movie palace, the Cinema boasted of being able to seat more than 1,000 patrons for a single screening, but now it has six screens, showing both art house and popular fare. Its been owned and operated by the same pair of brothers David and Jimmy Bramante (and now their families) for the past 42 years.

I had to go to the movies. I had to somehow get an experience of normalcy and comfort in the middle of the craziness we now call 2020 in this world.

I had to go.

And so, my friend Kacey and I did go, as we have so many times before, making our way up the lobby stairs to theater five, where we found our seats in the third row and also found ourselves the only patrons in the room. The theater has strict COVID guidelines, requires a mask and social distancing and limits capacity to only 25 folks per viewing, but in the end, we had nothing to worry or fret about.

Then the lights dimmed and the projector kicked on and there up on the screen of dreams was Casablanca, the classic 1942 film about life in wartime Morocco and lost love and broken hearts and fighting Nazis and a world all caught up in tumult and fear. It felt like watching a story from a million years ago and a story from right now. At least thats how I romantically imagined it, as I watched tuxedo-clad Humphrey Bogart and the elegant Ingrid Bergman exchange snappy dialogue and stolen kisses and drink champagne at Ricks Caf Americain.

Heres looking at you kid.

Its hard to put into words how deeply grateful and blessed I felt to be doing something so normal as going to the movies and munching on my popcorn, and arranging my long legs over the seats and staring up at the screen, where at 24 frames per second, I was reminded of how much I love films. And art. And a shared creative experience, not just a solo viewing of another movie on Netflix, as I push back in my La-Z-Boy, day 137 of COVID-19.

I know with more than 149,000 already dead in the U.S. from the virus, and millions more infected and the disease now reigniting across the country, my joy at returning to the movies may seem kind of trivial or even insensitive, considering how many folks are struggling right now. And yet, ask anyone who is sick and tired, just exhausted from the COVID marathon that is not near over yet, and I know theyd tell you that they, all of us, we just need a little taste of normalcy right now. Something to soothe our souls and lift our spirits. Something as simple as going to the movies.

As Rick says to Ilsa in the dramatic final scene of Casablanca, Im no good at being noble, but it doesnt take much to see that the problems of three little people dont amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world. Someday you'll understand that.

Someday we may look back on these intense times of COVID and understand, maybe even see how we grew and stretched as humans and children of God, and were each called to be our best selves in these days, courageous, even noble. But for now?

Im going to the movies.

The Rev. John F. Hudson is senior pastor of the Pilgrim Church, United Church of Christ, in Sherborn (pilgrimsherborn.org). If you have a word or idea youd like defined in a future column or have comments, please send them to pastorjohn@pilgrimsherborn.org.

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SPIRITUALLY SPEAKING: A trip to the movies - Wicked Local Sharon

World Music Innovators Turning Jewels Into Water Fuse The Spiritual With Digital On Their New Album – Recording Academy | Grammys

Peace, hope and love. That might sound a bit clich these days, but theres arguably nothing more we all need these days than just that. And thats what DMV-based artist/producer/musician Mannywellz (ne Emmanuel Ajomale) brings to the creative table with his blend of R&B, hip-hop and West African influences its music from the soul, as he calls it.

Born in Nigeria, Mannywellz came to the United States with his mom and siblings in 2003 at only nine years old. Several years later, in 2012 something happened that changed the course of his life and his rising music career he became a recipient of the federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which protects people brought to the U.S. as children but currently holdan unlawful presence, and allows them to legally work. In September 2017, the current administration tried to put an end to DACA and called on Congress to come up with another solution by March 5, 2018. On that day, thousands of Dreamers from across the country took over Capitol Hill to protest and lobby members of Congress to pass legislation that would protect them, and Mannywellz joined in, performing his song "American Dream"to kick off the march. That same year, a compilation album that Mannywellz was a part of with other DACA artists American Dreamers: Voices of Hope, Music of Freedom was released and won a GRAMMY Award for Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album.

While the future for many DACA recipients is still uncertain, being that we're in an election year, Mannywellz hopes to see change, like a path to citizenship and a plan that "keeps us safe and makes us feel welcome in this country,"he says. Although being a DACA recipient has played a huge role in Mannywellz's career and life, it's not the only thing that defines him.

"Being a DACA recipient is a part of my story,"he says. "But at the same time, I'm not just a DACA recipient. I'm Black. I'm human. I love Jesus. I love people. So I always try to create a balance where people can just hear me for who I am through my art."

Before his new single "Floating"drops on July 31, Mannywellz took part in an interview with GRAMMY.com to discuss his forthcoming new music, collaborating with fellow Nigerian artists like Wale and VanJess, the meaning behind "Oulala,"and how he's holding up during the pandemic.

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So, things are a bit different for artists right nowactually, for everyone. How are you hanging in there with everything going on?

I'm doing well for the most part. I think the last month was the hardest month in this quarantine just being home all the time and everything that's going on in the media and what happened with George Floyd. So I actually didnt create the whole of last month. I came out for the protests, and Im just researching and trying to learn, and I guess yeah I couldnt create, to be honest. But, this month has been good and the months before June were pretty good as well. Mentally, spiritually, physically, all that stuff. I feel good.

Do you feel like everything that's happening currently is spurring some new ideas in terms of music?

Musically, yes and no. I haven't really recorded anything, but I was just kind of like jotting down a few things and my thoughts and things like that. It motivated me, and made me realize that I have a bigger purpose.

I'd love to start by turning the clock back a bit and just asking how you got into music? What inspired you to start making music?

Everyone in my family pretty much does music. My dad's also a musician so I grew up watching him perform and then eventually performing with him at different events here and there. And I have a cousin in Nigeria who raps. My siblings are great vocalists. They don't necessarily want to pursue a music career, but were all musically inclined. Music is something that I grew up with. I was pretty much born into it.

Do you have any favorite artists?

My favorite artist is Asa. I believe she's based in France, but I dont remember what year. I was a little younger and I heard just one song and I just teared up. And at that point I realized that music was so powerful. If a song or a melody can move you to tears, there has to be some kind of power behind it.

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For sure, sometimes it's the lyrics or sometimes it's just their voice that moves you to tears. What would you say it is about Asa that drew you in?

It was a little bit of everything. Her voice, her tone, her words, her word choice, her lyrics, they're just very potent. A lot of her songs were pretty much similar to what I do they speak on everything, how shes feeling. From love to social injustice to, you know, relationships with parents or relationships with God and things like that. I think I was just really able to connect with her point of view because I feel like I have a similar point of view.

Speaking of your point of view, one song Id love to touch on is "American Dream."One line that stuck out to me is: "If its my own way, I'll tell her no way."How did you feel when your mom told you you're moving to the United States?

So, we were trying to come to the States for a while before that. My dad was here, so we tried and got denied. So, after a while I really just got tired of trying, and I didnt even care much because I was young and I just wanted to play. So, when she told me, deep down I was like, "Oh, cool, I dont really care. I dont even care to go anymore."So, thats why I chose those words, if it was my own way, if I was given a choice, I probably would have just stayed. But Im grateful for my journey in life.

From your perspective, how would you describe the American Dream before you got here, and what it means to you now?

Before I got here, we were being told that America was kind of perfect. A land full of milk and honey, which it kind of is, but unfortunately everyone isn't given the same opportunities based on your class and based on your race. I guess we face those things everywhere in the world, but that wasnt in the package that was being sold to foreigners outside the United States.

Several years later, in 2003, you find out you were accepted as a DACA recipient. How has that changed your life?

Being accepted as a DACA recipient was great. It created a lot of opportunities for me, career-wise. It's created a lot of opportunities for other individuals who are working to get an education, to feel a little safer. But, on the flip side, theres no path to citizenship. I feel like we're being bought out because each year, to renew your DACA status, the prices keep going up, and I also just heard that they reduced the renewal time to 12 months. Which is crazy, so every year you have to pay $600-plus to just stay in the country, which is unfair. Even though the Supreme Court ruled against Trump's plans, I heard the DHS is still declining new DACA applicants, which is just really crazy. Im grateful for being a DACA recipient, but its a struggle within itself because were trying to get people that are DACA recipients situated, while trying to create a path to citizenship.

We're in an election year.What changes would you hope to see for immigrants, specifically for immigrant children?

A path to citizenship. A plan that includes undocumented immigrants, a plan that keeps us safe and makes us feel welcome in this country because, for a lot of us, this place is home. I came here when I was 9, and I'm 26 now, and I havent been back to Nigeria though I am connected to my culture and Im really proud to be Nigerian I live here and this is where I've been for the last 17 to 18 years. I just pray that the next administration includes us in their plans.

You touched on being in touch with your Nigerian roots, and I hear that a lot in your music. You go from R&B to hip-hop and theres West African influences, too. Is that intentional or does it happen naturally?

I want to say its both sometimes it just happens naturally. Naturally, my tone and my vocals, I guess they sound African or Nigerian when I sing, and even sometimes when I speak my accent comes out. At first it was really intentional because I wanted to create a sound that was inclusive of both worlds, being that I am exposed to Afro music, or Nigerian-Afro music. But Im also exposed to hip-hop, from Jay-Z to the big dogs like Beyonc and 50 Cent. I always wondered what it would be like to create a sound that blends different genres, so a lot of genre-blending. Right now, were really big on the R&B, soul Afro combo, but as time goes I want to expand it to like possibly some funk or maybe some rock, some country and other things.

Your music also just feels really good.

Yeah, thats very intentional. Im also naturally just a feel-good, optimistic, sometimes silly person. So, I always want to make sure that the listeners get that vibe. When Im sad, I also want them to grasp that feeling. However Im feeling at that moment, I want them to feel it.

The 2018 EP you came out with, SoulFro, whats the meaning behind the name of the EP?

SoulFro, so, "from the soul." That kind of like just flows through other genres R&B, soul, hip-hop, a little bit of jazz in there, a little bit of rock and trap hip-hop. Just like music from the soul, with Afro elements that touches any genre.

Youve got an upcoming album, Mirage.When does that come out and will we hear the same influences?

That comes out in September, but I think this project is more so just focused on the R&B, soul sound with Afro elements.

And you just filmed a music video for the single, "Floating."

Yeah, so we plan on rolling that out in the next two weeks. The single drops on Friday, [July] 31st. And then two weeks later we should be coming out with the music video for it.

What can we expect to hear on "Floating"?

Oh man, I think you should expect something groovy and something vibey, soulful, something that just moves you and makes you do like a little two-step. You don't have to do too much dancing, you dont have to know how to dance to move to this song. It features VanJess a Nigerian-born, American-based duo. Theyre also just like the homies and theyre amazing.

You've also collaborated on the song "Love and Loyalty"with Wale. How do these collaborations come about?

So, Wale hit me on Instagram and said he was a fan of my stuff and wanted to work, so we just started texting. Sending ideas back and forth and I was like, "Yo, Im coming out to L.A. next week,"and we linked up in the studio and just made a bunch of songs after that. Wed come back to the DMV and link up. So whenever were in the same city we try and link up.

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How involved were you with creating "Love and Loyalty"?

The producers name was Sango, so I didnt produce this song. But outside of that I was involved in top to bottom from writing the hook and laying it down and doing my part, and just collaborating with Wale on how to make sure the hook really stands out. So, we came up with like one or two ideas and went back and forth and edited it. It was a really collaborative effort, and the beat was just really dope so we didnt even touch or edit much with the beat.

Before COVID, you went on tour throughout the U.S. with Jidenna. Was that your first experience on a U.S. tour?

Yeah, for sure. Prior to that I did a really small college tour, but it wasnt anything crazy. But that was my first, official tour. Earlier this year, before COVID, we did my own headline tour, which was also dope.

How do you like performing live? Your shows sound so energetic and like you've got a great connection with the audience. Did that come naturally?

I want to say it came naturally because I just grew up watching my dadand studying the greats perform. I wasnt this good like five years ago, but with time I just got more comfortable with being onstage and I really enjoy it now.

Ive heard that at your live shows, you sometimes have the crowd say "Oulala"? And you also have a clothing brand called Oulala. Whats the meaning behind that phrase?

Oulala is "happy to be alive" thats the meaning we gave it. And that just came about, I think this was pre-tour, when I started recording SoulFro in 2016. I was just talking to my younger brothers and I was like, "I think we need a tag,"and we came up with Oulala. But I didnt understand how big and how important Oulala would be to me, and what I see it being to people. It just kind of grew to where some people might not even remember my name but theyre like, "Yeah, Oulala!"Ill take that any day, because at the end of the day, what I do is bigger than Mannywellz. Its to contribute something to this world.

You've said that your mission in life is bigger than music, but music is the starting point. What is your mission in life?

Part of my mission, or my purpose, is to really do Gods work. To spread hope and have people know about Jesus. In whatever way that I can, directly or indirectly creatively through music, through fashion, whatever it is that I want to step into. And just do my everyday life. Thats why I say its bigger than me, because whenever Im not singing, Im still a servant of the most high. I have to live my life according to what He has planned for me, what He wants me to do.

What does your family think of your chosen career in music?

They love it. I think now they're appreciative, and I think me making that decision is also inspiring to them. Because ever since I was young, whenever I wanted to do something I would just find a way to do it, or get it done. Im an inquisitive person. I like to ask questions. Even if I know something, I just want to be sure of it. So, theyre really supportive. They buy merch, they buy tickets to a show, they dont ask for free handouts because they want to see this get to another level, so Im just really appreciative. Whenever I have new music theyre the first to hear it and critique it.

You've also talked about challenging cultural norms through music. Can you talk about that?

This is a big topic, but I think toxic masculinity is really interesting to me. Men don't cry, men don't wear pink, men dont do this, men dont do that. Women dont do this, women dont do that, and its like, why? And I understand there are certain things that God just created that men or women are able to do more than the other, but theres certain things that we both can do. Like the WNBA should not be getting paid less. They pretty much dont even get paid. Things like that. I just always wonder why that exists. And I always want to break that, especially even being a Nigerian man. How to treat a woman, and how to respect your wife. I really want to follow what the Bible says because Jesus really broke all cultural norms, and all social constructs. If you really look into His life, thats what he came to do. Whatever Jesus did is what I want to do.

I also want to touch on the album you were on, American Dreamers: Voices of Hope, Music of Freedom. What was it like finding out it was nominated for and won a GRAMMY?

That was amazing. I really did not expect anything from that project. Steven Weber reached out, told me who he was and what he was doing and they were working on a project that was going to be collaborative with DACA recipients, and I was automatically sold. So I presented it to my team and we got right to work laying down some vocals and some instrumentation. A year later, I hear that its about to be nominated and then I got to L.A. right around the GRAMMYs and I heard that it won, so I really didnt expect anything out of it. Thats the beauty of life sometimes. We chase certain things, which is good, but theres certain things that just happen when were doing the right thing. The right thing to me at that time was to just do the work and be obedient.

Lastly, I know you participated in the DACA march in 2018. How will activism continue to play a role in your music and your life in general?

I think its going to continue to play a big role because I dont know how to shut up when things dont look right. And I think thats a good problem to have, so I think its always going to be a part of who I am, in the music space and outside of the creative world. If somethings wrong, I want to know why its wrong or why its happening. If Im able to help fix it, Im down for the cause. And if Im not, Im pretty sure I might know somebody thats able to do something about it.

Yvonne Orji On Her First-Ever HBO Comedy Special, Faith & Celebrating Black Joy

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Ram Temple a great place to take plunge into the pool of spirituality, will promote spiritual tourism, says Tourism Minister Prahlad Singh Patel – New…

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Saying that from time immemorial pilgrimages have been one of the most powerful motivator and a boost to travel, Union Minister for Culture and Tourism Prahlad Singh Patel said that the grand Ram Temple will boost the religious/spiritual tourism in the country.

Mr. Patel said that spiritual tourism has proven resilient to the pressure borne by the global recession because it is then not seen as a luxury but a travel with a purpose.

Adding further, the minister said, Ayodhya, the birthplace of Lord Ram, is a great place to take a plunge into the pool of spirituality. The city is dotted with temples and is one of the most venerable cities of ancient India. Ancient beliefs say, the gods themselves created this city. This is a great moment of faith and spirituality.

He further stated that the concerned ministry, under its Swadesh Darshan Scheme- Integrated Development of Theme Based Tourist Circuits is developing tourism infrastructure across the country. Ram katha gallery and park, Ram ki paidi, development of Guptarghat and Laxman qila ghat, rejuvenation of Ayodhya street, multipurpose hall at Digambarakhada etc. are some of the components to be covered in the project.

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Small Changes Can Lead to Big Results | Spiritual and Physical Wellness – ChicagoNow

By Sheri McIntosh, Saturday at 11:49 am

When I was in college, I decided that I would become a vegetarian. I thought I would immediately give up all meat and animal byproducts. My vegetarian experience lasted two weeks. I did the process wrong. I should have taken steps to become a vegetarian. I should have started with vegetarian days instead of thinking I could do it immediately.

When we decide we want to make changes we need to make realistic goals. We want to lose 10 pounds in a week, and when we do not reach that goal we are frustrated. It took years to gain weight, yet we want to become slim in weeks. In fact, if you do lose weight fast you are more likely to gain it back because you have not learned how to sustain healthy eating habits. Think about it this way, if you lose pound a week that is 26 pounds in a year. We should tell ourselves that gradual is okay. Taking small steps can lead to big results. If you want to lose weight, think about small nutritional changes you can make. Search the Internet for healthy recipes. Instead of eating a dessert everyday try eating dessert every other day. Use smaller plates to reduce portion size. Replace unhealthy snacks with healthy ones. For example, you can eat cucumber slices with light vinaigrette dressing. Instead of eating potato chips try making your own zucchini chips. (The following link provides a recipe for zucchini chips. https://www.allrecipes.com/recipe/242066/easy-baked-zucchini-chips/)

Being fit is part of overall health. However, if you have not exercised since high school, you should not try to run a marathon day one. That can lead to frustration or injury. (Stay safe with your exercising.) If you are just starting to exercise you should start slow. For instance, you can take a ten-minute walk or slow jog. As time goes on you can increase time and speed. If walking or jogging is not your cup of tea, YouTube has free exercises for beginners. There are fitness groups you can join to help you with the process. If you can afford it and want to spend the money, you may want to consider a personal trainer to help you get started.

Living a healthy lifestyle is an ongoing journey. There are no quick fixes. Do not fall for advertisements that promise quick results without any effort. If you decide you want to make changes start small and gradually improve. You may experience setbacks or not see results as fast as you would like. Do not give up.

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Small Changes Can Lead to Big Results | Spiritual and Physical Wellness - ChicagoNow

Life and Death Meet in Spiritual Arrog Adventure – GameIndustry.com

Hiya game fans! Modern Gamer here for another exciting and bizarre Saturday morning review. So let me start off with my recent stories. So I have some sad news to share. Recently two relatives of my husband recently passed away (within weeks of each other). Funerals are hard for me. For some reason looking at dead bodies makes me think theyre going to jump up and scare me, (ridiculous fear I know) aside from the sorrowful goodbyes because we are going to miss them. So why did I bring up the funerals? Well, the game I played is a wonderful puzzle game that walks you through a bizarre world of death at its different stages. I say its bizarre because I dont think my editor knew what he was going on when he assigned it to me. So let me tell yall about it.

First, the story is about the passing of life. It walks you through an old woman whos going through the journey of letting go. It has a series of really neat puzzles that are guided through stars and constellations. If anything it helps you relax as you play. But then I died after I solved the puzzles and from then on it was about remembering all the waking life. It was almost spiritual I would say. I think what the developers did was great and if this is based on the South American tradition of what people go through in death. It is amazing! The puzzles are a lot of fun too. If anything its relaxing and (if youve lost someone recently) I think it would be a kind of therapy after the funeral.

The artwork is amazing! I was surprised to learn that it had been done with unity. Im not really into game engines as much as I used to be, but I say this because its all hand-drawn. I mean this literally looks like a freakin coloring book! Its all 2D! Its also in black and white. Being into the 2D animation, I have to say is brilliant. Black and white allow for so much time to focus on hand-drawn art. The animation isnt as easy as it looks and literally your life goes by in seconds. Then you look up and its been like hours. Seriously I give these guys major cudos. The detail is fabulous especially if you like those sketch type line drawings. Exquisite!

Lastly the puzzles, its intermediate and but it gets a bit harder as it goes on. I have to say that it was really fun over all. I think everyone should give this a try. Aside from Evans Remains, this is one of the most relaxing puzzle games Ive ever had the pleasure of playing. Before I log off I would like to say that my husband and I are fine. We miss our loved ones, but are happy they are no longer suffering. Thanks for taking the time to listen to this Saturdays Modern Gamer review!

Thats all for now! Catch ya next Saturday! Curious what the Modern Gamer does in her spare time? Check out woodlingsart.com and patreon.com.Shurale to find out!

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Relive the final descent of SpaceX’s Crew Dragon spacecraft – Spaceflight Now

A video from SpaceX shows the companys Crew Dragon capsule plunging toward the Gulf of Mexico, then unfurling a series of parachutes to slow the spaceship carrying two NASA astronauts from 350 mph to a relatively gentle 15 mph for splashdown Sunday.

The dramatic tracking video released by SpaceX late Monday shows the capsule deploying two drogue chutes at an altitude of around 18,000 feet, or 5,500 meters, while moving at about 350 mph, or more than 560 kilometers per hour.

Moments later, four giant orange and white main parachutes fired out of mortars on the side of the Crew Dragon capsule at an altitude of 6,000 feet (1,800 meters), then began opening to their full size to slow the spaceship from 119 mph (191 kilometers per hour) to around 15 mph (24 kilometers per hour) before splashdown in the Gulf of Mexico around 34 miles (54 kilometers) off the coast of Florida near Pensacola.

The successful return to Earth with NASA astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken closed out a 64-day test flight, the first orbital mission by astronauts on a U.S. spaceship since the retirement of the space shuttle in 2011. The commercial capsule was built and is owned by SpaceX, the private space transportation company founded by Elon Musk in 2002.

The successful two-month test flight to the International Space Station sets the stage for the first operational flight of a Crew Dragon spacecraft later this year. That mission will deliver four astronauts to the space station for a stay lasting around six months.

Hurley and Behnken named their reusable Crew Dragon spacecraft Endeavour after NASAs retired space shuttle, on which both astronauts flew earlier in their careers.

The Dragon Endeavour spacecraft launched May 30 atop a Falcon 9 rocket from the Kennedy Space Center, then autonomously docked with the space station May 31. During their two months on the orbiting research complex, Hurley and Behnken assisted the stations other three crew members with maintenance, scientific experiments, and a series of spacewalks to complete a multi-year effort to upgrade batteries on the labs solar power truss.

Hurley and Behnken boarded their Dragon spacecraft Saturday and undocked from the space station, heading for an on-target splashdown Sunday in the Gulf of Mexico.

For more details, read our full story on the splashdown of the Dragon Endeavour spacecraft with Hurley and Behnken. Additional photos of the Crew Dragons splashdown, and views of Hurley and Behnkens exit from the spacecraft and return to shore via helicopter, are posted below.

The photos also show numerous private vessels approaching the spacecraft after splashdown. NASA and SpaceX officials say they will reassess their security and ocean clearance policies before the next Crew Dragon splashdown.

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Follow Stephen Clark on Twitter: @StephenClark1.

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Virgin Galactic’s Supersonic Jet Is a Commercial Failure in the Making – Motley Fool

Last week, Virgin Galactic (NYSE:SPCE) delayed its first commercial space flight again: this time to 2021. However, the buzzy aerospace start-up offered investors and fans a new reason to be excited, announcing that it had completed the initial "Mission Concept Review" for a new supersonic jet that would travel at Mach 3 (three times the speed of sound, or roughly 2,300 miles per hour).

Virgin Galactic's management appears to be very excited about this concept. Earlier this year, then-CEO (and current chief space officer) George Whitesides argued that the annual revenue opportunity from supersonic passenger travel could be $10 billion to $15 billion. Unfortunately, the business plan is unlikely to live up to the hype.

The design concept revealed by Virgin Galactic calls for a small cabin seating between nine and 19 passengers, along with a triangular delta wing and engines supplied by Rolls-Royce. Rolls-Royce has experience in this area, having built the engines for the Concorde supersonic jet decades ago. The plane would reach Mach 3 at an altitude exceeding 60,000 feet.

Virgin Galactic envisions a flexible cabin that could support luxurious business class and first class seating. The company noted that the proposed supersonic jet would be able to use existing airport infrastructure. Virgin Galactic also mentioned using sustainable aviation fuel to reduce emissions.

Image source: Virgin Galactic.

The commercial failure of the Concorde -- the only supersonic jet ever to see regular passenger service -- is a big reason for caution. Despite high hopes initially, airlines lost interest due to development delays and cost overruns. Only 14 Concorde jets were ever used for commercial flights, and the only customers were British Airways and Air France, which faced government pressure to fly the Concorde, which was developed by a British-French joint venture.

Aside from the high cost, there were numerous problems with the Concorde concept. Most notably, many countries (including the U.S.) have banned supersonic flights over land due to the "sonic booms" that come from breaking the sound barrier. While the FAA is reviewing its noise standards for supersonic flight, it is not reconsidering the ban on supersonic flight over land. Unless policies change, these restrictions dramatically reduce the addressable market for supersonic travel.

Supersonic travel is also extremely environmentally unfriendly. The Concorde burned about 6,700 gallons of fuel per hour. Next-generation supersonic jets are likely to burn five to seven times as much fuel per passenger as comparable subsonic jets, according to the International Council on Clean Transportation. Leaving aside the cost of all that fuel, the environmental impact could lead to regulatory issues and cause many people to avoid supersonic flights. Using sustainable jet fuel (such as biofuels) would only partially address this issue.

A Mach 3 jet would make round-trip travel in one day feasible for 85% of the most popular global airline routes, according to Virgin Galactic's management. That may be true in theory, but the nature of time zones limits the utility of long-haul supersonic travel.

For example, on the popular New York-London route, a traveler taking a 6 a.m. flight out of New York wouldn't get to London until 2 p.m., assuming a realistic gate-to-gate travel time of three hours. That might be fine if the goal is to squeeze in a single two-hour meeting. But if you need a full day in London, a traditional subsonic redeye flight is more convenient, given that virtually all full-service airlines have flat-bed seats in international business class today. By contrast, taking a supersonic redeye flight would mean arriving in London with no time to sleep.

Supersonic travel would be more useful on transpacific routes -- assuming the plane had sufficient range. Many major routes from the West Coast to Asia and Australia are 6,000 miles long or more. The Concorde didn't have enough range to serve such routes. Virgin Galactic may opt for greater range, but that would come at the cost of even higher fuel burn.

The Concorde supersonic jet was a massive commercial failure. Image source: Getty Images.

Whereas the Concorde at least aimed to serve moderately wealthy passengers (with the potential to seat up to 128 customers), Virgin Galactic's Mach 3 concept is basically a high-speed luxury business jet. Ticket prices will be lower than the $250,000 Virgin Galactic plans to charge for brief trips into space, but not by all that much.

Sales of large, long-range business jets have been lackluster in recent years. Virgin Galactic is unlikely to do any better. The appeal of a jet capable of flying Mach 3 will be severely limited by the acquisition cost, operating costs, environmental impact, and lack of utility for many heavily traveled routes.

Perhaps Virgin Galactic will find a way to add range, mitigate environmental impacts, and bring the cost of supersonic travel down to a reasonable level. However, I wouldn't count on it, and neither should you. Investors should hope management sticks to its main niche of space travel and doesn't throw away lots of money trying to develop a supersonic jet that is extremely unlikely to be profitable.

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Virgin Galactic's Supersonic Jet Is a Commercial Failure in the Making - Motley Fool

Clearfield will be next city to bring UTOPIA Fiber internet to residents – KSL.com

CLEARFIELD UTOPIA Fiber is coming to Clearfield.

On Thursday, UTOPIA announced a $13.8 million agreement with the city to build a fiber-to-the-home network, giving the city's 32,000 residents access to some of the nations fastest internet speeds.

The first home is expected to be connected in late 2020. Clearfield will be the 15th Utah city to have residential service through the inter-local agency. UTOPIA started as a group of 11 cities that joined together in 2004 to bring fiber internet to residences and businesses in their areas. The group lays down fiber optic cables, then leases the infrastructure to local internet service providers so residents can choose from a variety of providers.

Its already been a busy year for UTOPIA. In February, the company announced West Point would be getting residential service; in April, it finished the infrastructure build for Morgan; and in July, it announced a project to help fight wildfires. And thats all with internet demand surging. UTOPIA saw sign-ups actually grow from June to July a pattern that has been consistent since the pandemic took hold.

Clearfield Mayor Mark Shepherd said the citys population is expected to increase by nearly 50% by 2040, and he believes the agreement with UTOPIA is key to a successful economic growth in the city.

"Our residents require better internet options, the freedom to choose from multiple providers, faster speeds, and affordable prices," Shepard said in a statement. "UTOPIA Fiber has been delivering that for our business community and were excited to expand fiber access to every home in the city."

Once the network is constructed, residents can choose between 13 service providers via UTOPIA Fibers open access model. Prices begin at $65 per month.

With the coronavirus pandemic driving internet usage to record levels, UTOPIA executive director Roger Timmerman said in a statement the new infrastructure will help Clearfield residents better adapt to a world that is going more and more online.

"Clearfield residents will now have the power to work remotely, participate in distance learning, access telehealth, and stream video on multiple connected devices, without the slowdowns or buffering of a typical network, Timmerman said.

The $13.8 million projects is being financed through revenue bonds issued through UTOPIA Fibers sister agency, UIA, and backed by the city. Like all UTOPIA Fiber projects since 2009, the Clearfield build will be paid for by subscriber revenues.

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Clearfield will be next city to bring UTOPIA Fiber internet to residents - KSL.com

What if humans weren’t the center of every narrative, but instead animals were? – Berkshire Eagle

By Jennifer Huberdeau, The Berkshire Eagle

WILLIAMSTOWN A black panther rises from a river; a lioness, at its edge, dips a toe into the water as a lion stands guard. Behind them, myriad animals roam a hillside that leads, in the distance, to the ruins of a city, where only broken skyscrapers remain.

The panther gazes into the distance, beyond the viewer, who is of no importance; of no consequence, anymore. Is this a dystopian view of the future, or a non-human animal utopia?

"Animals will return to the vacuum left by humans," we are told by artist Lin May Saeed, in the minimalist text accompanying "Panther Relief."

In this wall relief, as in all of her work, animals non-human animals as she refers to them are always front and center. Saeed's work, seen in her first solo museum exhibit, "Lin May Saeed: Arrival of the Animals," on view at The Clark Art Institute's Lunder Center through Oct. 25, centers around the lives of animals and human-animal relations.

"She is a storyteller who takes narratives from mythology, from theology, from different stories and she thinks about what would happen if humans weren't at the center of every single narrative and if we weren't so anthropocentric," said Robert Wiesenberger, associate curator of contemporary projects at The Clark. "As she tells these stories, you'll see subjects about animal subjugation and oppression; animal liberation; cohabitation with humans as a kind of utopian possibility for the future. All of that is done, I think, with a lightness of touch and even a sense of humor. I think in all of those ways, she's a really distinctive artist. I don't know of any other artist today who focuses on animals with this particular commitment to them."

The materials Saeed uses to create those stories are as distinct as the subjects of her artwork. The Berlin-based artist of German-Jewish and Iraqi descent, prefers to sculpt with a readily available material: polystyrene foam, better known as Styrofoam. The non-biodegradable plastic, easily salvaged by the artist, not only lends itself to carving, but is for the artist, a reminder of the impact of humans on the environment.

"She's very aware that its very environmentally disastrous. She's interested in transforming it. She is interested in it for several reasons," Wiesenberger said. "It's easy to get. It's cheap. It's much easier to sculpt than stone. For her, the history of sculpture is such a man's world, very masochistic. It's about who has the strength to make huge sculptures of heavy materials; who has the funds to have a studio and to have assistants. The fact that she can do all of this on her own is very important to her; very empowering.

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"On the other hand, the history of animal welfare and animal rights is overwhelmingly a women's world. For Lin May Saeed, it is maybe one explanation of why the history of art and the history of animals have rarely overlapped and when they do, its very unfavorable to the animals. So for her, she's trying to create a new iconography of interspecies solidarity. We are all animals; our fate is intertwined."

The unfavorable intersection of art and animal histories begins Saeed's career-spanning show, in a cave-like entry way filled with art of past artists woodcuts by Niccolo Boldrini and Albrecht Durer and studies and drawings by Felix Bracquemond, Theodore Chasseriau and Michael Snyders that use animals as window-dressings, secondary subjects and food. Only two drawings, one by Eugene Delacroix and Rosa Bonheur, both 19th-century French artists, feature their animal subjects, a tiger and a lioness, predominantly in their images.

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The retrospective begins in the next gallery, introducing Saeed to the audience with some of her more easily accessible works steel gates that depict parables and other tales. Here, she, like many artists before her, tells the tale of St. Jerome and the lion. But, unlike those before her, in Saeed's "St. Jerome and the Lion," the man does not dominate the space or command the viewer's attention. The lion is not subjugating itself, as in Durer's "Saint Jerome in His Cell" in the previous gallery, but an equal in placement, height and prominence.

In another gate, "Toreador," Saeed flips the traditional narrative of the bullfighter and bull. Here, her gate shows the bull triumph over its would-be assassin. And yet, the story changes again, in "The Liberation of Animals from their Cages XXIII/Djamil Gate," in which a masked human is breaking the bonds of a camel.

The gallery moves on to her Styrofoam reliefs and sculptures, where in the center of the room two sculptures, "Calf" and "Pangolin" stand upon their shipping crates, as if celebrating their liberation. "Pangolin," newly created for the exhibit, is Saeed's latest commentary on the treatment of animals.

The pangolin the only mammal completely covered in scales and often called "the world's most-trafficked animal in the world you've never heard of" accounts for at least 20 percent of the illegally trafficked animals in the world. Although the sale of pangolins is illegal, the mammal is still highly sought out for its scales, which are used in Chinese medicine, and for its meat, which is considered a delicacy.

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"It's also believed to be one of the original hosts of the coronavirus," Wiesenberger said, referring to studies that suggest COVID-19 likely emerged from recombination of viral genes in bat and pangolin coronaviruses that resulted in the evolution of SARS-CoV-2 and its jump to humans.

Both liberated non-human animals gaze awestruck upon the brightly-colored "Hawr al-Hammar/Hammar Marshes," a bio-diverse marshland utopia in which reed islands float by water buffalo. The real marshes exist in southeastern Iraq, part of the Mesopotamian Marshes, which are thought to be the basis for Eden. The marshes have seen their share of human intervention. Drained by Saddam Hussein, they were restored in 2003, but by 2015 had seen their waters recede again, prompting a shift from farming and fish to a tourism economy.

In the next gallery, Saeed's work envisions an uprising of non-human animals in her drawing "War," and examines the consequences of human dominance with "Cleaner," a humanoid figure in hazmat-like clothing, holding an animal covered in oil.

The show ends in another cave-like atmosphere, this time, with Saeed's interpretation "Seven Sleepers," a Christian and Islamic parable in which seven men escape religious persecution in a cave. They break bread and fall asleep for 300 years, reawakening in a time when their faith is the major religion and they are persecuted no more. In some versions of the story, the seven are accompanied by a dog in the cave or guarded by a dog.

Saeed, in her sculpture "Seven Sleepers," makes the dog one of the seven, moving past the idea that all seven sleepers were humans.

"Once you start scratching on this topic of animals and animality, you quickly get to almost every issue we're grappling with today, whether its environmental, human rights, or the pandemic we're experiencing. It's all there but it's in stories that are accessible to people and relatable. A lot of us love animals, but it's hard for us to square our love of specific animals with the way we treat non-human animals as a whole. It's just really tough to explain. But, in this utopian world [created by Saeed], we move beyond that. It might seem like a crazy world, but it might be the only answer we have."

If you'd like to leave a comment (or a tip or a question) about this story with the editors, please email us. We also welcome letters to the editor for publication; you can do that by filling out our letters form and submitting it to the newsroom.

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What if humans weren't the center of every narrative, but instead animals were? - Berkshire Eagle

Katie Taylor open to fight with former UFC champion Cris Cyborg – Pundit Arena

Katie Taylor remains open to the possibility of welcoming Cris Cyborg Justino to the realm of professional boxing.

Dubbed a legacy fighter by promoter Eddie Hearn, Taylor reportedly wants to see out her career with the biggest fights possible rather than rest on her laurels and coast to an undefeated professional record.

The Bray boxer will be put to the test in her next outing, when she will rematch Delfine Persoon and aim to remove any doubt following the pairs controversial first bout.

Taylor vs. Persoon II will take place on August 22 at Hearns Matchroom Fight Camp in London.

Having successfully negotiated the captivating rematch, Hearn revealed in a recent IFL TV interview that Taylor is hoping for some fascinating match-ups including clashes with Amanda Serrano, Cecilia Braekhus and former UFC featherweight champion Cris Cyborg.

Hearn said: She wants Persoon, she wants Serrano, she wants Braekhus, she wants Cyborg. Im not saying shes done after that, but thats what motivates her.

While Cyborg possesses devastating power in her hands, as well as some kickboxing experience, she would understandably be considered a significant underdog against Taylor under boxing rules.

Legendary MMA referee John McCarthy has compared a potential Taylor vs. Cyborg bout to the professional boxing debut of Conor McGregor, who was stopped in the 10th round of his clash with Floyd Mayweather three years ago.

McCarthy told Sky Sports: For Cris to step into the realm of fighting a boxer like Katie Taylor, its a tall order. Thats a Conor McGregor trying to take on a Floyd Mayweather. Thats usually not going to go good for you. The same as if Katie Taylor tried to step into a MMA ring. Thats not going well for her against Cris Cyborg.

If Cris is going to do boxing, obviously shes got to have a name shes going against, but I would say pick a name thats not quite Katie Taylor!'

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Katie Taylor open to fight with former UFC champion Cris Cyborg - Pundit Arena

Nelson Cruz has the mask needed to help us take down all the robot cyborgs (Video) – FanSided

Nelson Cruz, Minnesota Twins. (Photo by Brace Hemmelgarn/Minnesota Twins/Getty Images)

Nelson Cruz just donned the greatest mask weve ever seen since Darth Vaders.

Cruz is a man, hes 40 and hes got a mask designed to take down the cyborgs. We know theyre coming because eventually, theyll get here and were not going to be ready for them. If The Matrix, Terminator and Back to the Futuremovie franchises taught us anything, it is the future cannot be trusted, especially when youre dealing with cyborgs. They dont care about your feelings at all!

Thankfully, Cruz is like Tom Brady and Paul Rudd in that he doesnt age. When these vicious blood-thirsty robots attack our planet, probably from within because some scientist will let them out of the laboratory, Cruz will be ready to go full-onBear Jew on all those stupid, idiot robots. While hes no Eli Roth, he does play the same sport Teddy Ballgame once did, so weve got that going for us.

It doesnt matter if your star slugger ghosts you ahead of a Sunday matinee or even your ace pitcher pops his Achilles on a nationally televised game on FS1, as long as Cruz has a bat in his hand and a mask like this, we know that we can beat the robots. We have to believe we can. It wont be easy, but Commander Cruz has our backs and will lead us to victory, one swing at a time.

If we didnt like Cruz so much and he wasnt wearing that sweet Dominican flag t-shirt, we may have been convinced he was a cyborg. You can never be too sure. Then again, he did walk through a bunch of fake virtual fans as the champion of real life he is. If he was a cyborg he would never be able to do such a thing. Its one of the few Is he a human or is he a cyborg? tests we have.

We care about the man behind the mask more than youll ever know, as Cruz is our only hope.

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Nelson Cruz has the mask needed to help us take down all the robot cyborgs (Video) - FanSided

Canadian Julia (The Jewel) Budd to fight Jessy Miele in Bellator 244 co-main event – Vancouver Courier

Canadian featherweight Julia (The Jewel) Budd will face Jessy (The Widowmaker) Miele on Aug. 21 in the co-main event of Bellator 244.

It's the first fight for the 37-year-old from Port Moody, B.C., since January when she lost her featherweight title to Cris Cyborg at Bellator 238.

The main event at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Conn., sees two-division Bellator champion Ryan (Darth) Bader (27-5-0 with one no contest) defend his light-heavyweight title against Russia's Vadim Nemkov (11-2-0).

Bader also holds the Bellator heavyweight championship.

Budd (13-3) had not lost since November 2011, running up a 11-fight win streak prior to facing Cyborg. She is 7-1-0 since signing with Bellator in 2015.

The 35-year-old Miele (9-3) has won four straight and five of her last six. She was slated to meet Leslie Smith at Bellator 241 before the card was cancelled due to the global pandemic.

Lightweight Lance Gibson Jr., Budd's stepson, takes on Shane Kruchten on the undercard.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 7, 2020.

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Canadian Julia (The Jewel) Budd to fight Jessy Miele in Bellator 244 co-main event - Vancouver Courier

Teen Titans Go!: The 5 Best (& 5 Worst) Episodes, According To IMDb – Screen Rant

Teen Titans Go! has quite a reputation with many fans with some episodes being ranked very highly and others very lowly. Here are 5 of each.

Teen Titans Go! has quite a reputation with many fans. While it follows the Teen Titans cast that's been around since the mid-2000s, the content that is there is nothing like the fans would've thought of. This had led to many fans that don't like the show at all.

RELATED:5 Ways Teen Titans Go! To The Movies Proved To Be The Best Teen Titans Movie (& 5 Times It Fell Short)

That being said, there are plenty that also really like the show and believe it has some form of merit in one way or another. As such like everyshow, there are plenty of good episodes but also a lot of bad ones. Here are the 5 worst episodes of the show as well as 5 of the absolute best according to IMDb.

Starting this list is one of the worst episodes in the series. Called "Easter Creeps", the general synopsis of the episode is how the Tooth Fairy plans to take over Easter and it is up to the Teen Titans team to stop it.

RELATED:Teen Titans Go!: 5 Ways It's Actually A Good Reboot (& 5 Ways It's Just Bad)

As entertaining as the synopsis may sound to some people, it didn't really hit a lot of people when it first released. The running gag for this episode, in particular, is that the Easter Bunny wants everyone to eat his chocolate eggs and how it seems to be the second time someone wants to take over Easter.

One of the better episodes of the show is a part of a four-part storyline. When it aired it totaled to almost an hour in the broadcast. This episode is mostly a Cyborg focused episode where he gets trapped within an alternate reality called "The Night Begins To Shine."

It is there that an evil dragon wants to steal Cyborgs song for its own nefarious purposes. Although it was only the first episode, it was a decent way to set up a couple of crescendos that eventually come through in the later episodes.

The "Bottle Episode" is the 29th episode of Season 3. It is here that the Teen Titans end up being trapped inside a giant bottle within their living room. It is there that they spend the majority of the episode talking about their past songs, wins, and their numerous injuries.

Essentially outside of that and a song or two, they spend the majority of the episode trying to figure out a way to get out of a bottle. Not much else really.

The second part of the four-part episode series, "The Day the Night Stopped Beginning to Shine and Became Dark Even Though It Was the Day Chapter Two: The Story in Your Eyes" is focused on Beast Boy's side of the story. Where he feels the loss when he doesn't have his best friend Cyborg around.

However, things begin to change when he goes to find himself and meets a legendary musical artist.

Waffles is one of the more straightforward episodes of Teen Titans Go. Essentially, it is about how Cyborg and Beast Boy play a little game: Who can last the longest by only saying the word waffles?

Throughout the entire episode, it goes through extreme lengths on simply talking in the language of waffles from the waffle song to Beast Boy flirting with Raven. By only saying waffles. It ispretty astonishing how far the episode is willing to go by just saying waffles.

The third part, "The Day the Night Stopped Beginning to Shine and Became Dark Even Though It Was the Day Chapter Three: Playing Hard to Get" has the Teen Titans travel back to the reality where Cyborg is currently stuck in.

When Beast Boy returns back to Titans Tower, he tells the rest of the team that he has found one of the members and that they need the rest of them. When they learn they can't sing anymore, the Titans use the song Forever Mine to travel back to the other reality. A decent episode that leads to the crescendo that happens in the next episode.

After a series of comments where the boys are more superior then the girl members of the Teen Titans. These sexist comments essentially create an issue where the characters create a competition in order to truly determine which gender is the best.

After Beast Boy and Cyborg loses to Starfire and Raven, they start to act like girls. To stop this, Robin attempts to give cooties to Raven and Starfire in order to bring the boys back.

The final part of this entire event, "The Day the Night Stopped Beginning to Shine and Became Dark Even Though It Was the Day Chapter Four: Night Begins to Shine", the Teen Titans and the musicians face off against the evil dragon and its forces.

All of this in order to take control of the Night That Begins To Shine. After the band that was introduced in the earlier episodes succeeds in destroying the dragon through their music they begin to rebuild the world and everyone sings the Night That Begins To Shine.

The worst episode of the entire series according to IMDb.In spite of the title of the episode, Slade himself doesn't actually show up in the episodeat all. Cyborg and Beast Boy decide to have a clown to party with which terrifies Starfire.

RELATED:Teen Titans Go! 10 Powerful Character Cosplays

However, the Clown ends up going insane when Cyborg and Beast Boy modify it and it thengoes on to ruin a lot of children's entertainment everywhere.Due to the false advertising of the episode, this episode is easily the most hated.

In contrast to the worst episode is the best episode according to IMDb. 4o% 40% 20% is kind of a precursor to the day that night stopped series of episodes as it is about the song of the Night Begins To Shine. The song eventually got really popular with a lot of people.

RELATED:Teen Titans Go! To the Movies: 100+ Hidden Easter Eggs

It is a Cyborg focused episode that talks about his strength and will come from the song rather than his actual cybernetic body. The episode went on to be enjoyed by both fans and critics, as it still remains the highest-rated episode currently.

NEXT:Titans: 20 Strange Things About Robin And Starfire's Relationship

Next 10 Most Chilling Quotes From American Horror Story (So Far)

Richie Nguyen is an aspiring comic book creator and journalist living in Calgary Alberta. A lover of anything pop culture since childhood, Richie Nguyen is sure to write plenty about the newest comic book, manga and movie news. Having written journalistic coverage during his time at Mount Royal University's Calgary Journal, as well as interning in Tourism Calgary, Richie has plenty of experience writing things from general news to listicles. Outside of work, Richie actively plays video games, spends time with his family and friends, and of course drawing to one day achieve his dream.

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Teen Titans Go!: The 5 Best (& 5 Worst) Episodes, According To IMDb - Screen Rant

Cyborg Actor Ray Fisher ‘Will Not Relent’ When Speaking Out About Joss Whedon and Producers – Epicstream

More people are starting to speak up about toxic work environments and besides the people over at the Ellen show, Cyborg actor Ray Fisher has named Joss Whedon for abusive behavior on the set of Justice League, calling out producers Jon Berg and Geoff Johns for being enablers. With Fisher getting backlash for his statements, he is adamant about making Whedon, Berg, and Johns accountable for their actions.

Fisher posted:

We dont know the specifics of the risks that Fisher is taking, but it has been said that he cant go into detail about these abuses because of an NDA he had signed with Warner Bros; if anything, WB is said to have the right to sue him if he speaks out about his experiences making Justice League.

So far, we dont have any solid details on what Whedon did on set, but some word is going around that he was being very rude and arrogant in front of everyone, trashing Snyders original plans for the movie. Take note that Snyder had left the project due to the loss of his daughter, so you could say that trashing on him would have been in very poor tasteif these rumors turn out to be true.

We dont know how Fisher plans on moving forward with these statements, but I have a feeling that the public is now behind him. If WB does intend to keep him quiet with an NDA, then its just going to turn out worse for the studio.

Hopefully, Fisher gets to speak his truth, because I just want to know what exactly went down on that set.

For now, fans wait for Snyders original version of Justice League which is set to hit HBO Max sometime in 2021.

Read Also: DC Star Ezra Miller Reportedly in New Controversy Compared to WB Sex Scandal

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Cyborg Actor Ray Fisher 'Will Not Relent' When Speaking Out About Joss Whedon and Producers - Epicstream