In Amazons clever Upload, theres an app for the afterlife – The Boston Globe

There has been no shortage of TV shows about the boons, the flaws, and the threats of digitizing the human mind, not just Black Mirror, the top manufacturer of tech nightmares, but Westworld, Altered Carbon, Devs, Years and Years, and many more. But Greg Danielss new TV series, Upload, is a digital-mind story with a singular identity, one that blends sci-fi with romantic comedy, social satire, and, wedged in there neatly, crime drama. The closest thing Ive seen to it is Her, the bittersweet Spike Jonze movie where Joaquin Phoenix falls in love with an operating system; but Upload is very much its own thing, and a good thing at that.

Watching the Amazon series, whose entire first 10-episode season is available Friday, I marveled at the way Daniels has set up the world of 2033. Its hard enough to create an earthbound sitcom premise thats sturdy and distinct, but Daniels has done that while toggling among a number of different realities not terribly unlike The Good Place, from his Parks and Recreation cohort Michael Schur. On the show, which is an elaborate vision of self-driving cars and 3-D printers that make food, humans nearing death can have their consciousness uploaded to an online afterlife of their choice. Once bodiless, theyre catered to by the human programmers who monitor them in their heaven. When an upload has a question, they shout Angel, and the programmer shows up to help sitting at a computer with a mic in the human world, by avatar in the virtual world.

If it sounds complicated, it isnt, and the rules of the Upload-verse unfold easily and, when it comes to bits about avatar vanity and advertising in heaven, comically. By the way, the nature of an uploads stay in heaven where he or she can change the weather as a human might change a TV channel depends entirely on their survivors; theyre the ones who pay monthly for the uploads residence, and each luxury the upload desires in heaven has a price tag for their survivor on Earth. Thats how Daniels cleverly brings capitalism into his concept; even when it comes to immortality, money is the bottom line, and there is a clear class structure. If David Foster Wallace had written a TV comedy, it might have looked a little like Upload in terms of the commercialization and branding of eternity.

The Upload story line revolves around a guy named Nathan (Robbie Amell), who dies young and winds up in a relatively hoity-toity heaven thanks to the generosity of his girlfriend, Ingrid (Allegra Edwards). Hes a somewhat thick-headed and self-centered guy, and shes a superficial dimwit (with her long blond hair, she struck me as Bad Alexis, a cold version of the daughter from Schitts Creek); so they make a fitting pair. But in his afterlife, Nathan is beginning to deepen, and Ingrid is beginning to drift. And Nathan and his programmer angel, Nora (Andy Allo), are developing feelings for each other, even though the rules forbid relationships between uploads and angels. Nora, a lovely person whose romantic life in the real world is wanting, also begins to realize that Nathans death in a self-driving car may not have been as accidental as it seemed.

Theres something eerily timely about Upload, as its central romantic pair are not able to touch skin to skin. It made me think of this moment of social distancing (along with the 2007 series Pushing Daisies), as longing comes to the fore and becomes an end in itself. But theres also something universal about the show, as it takes on immortality our hunger for it, its grand promises, its inevitable shortcomings. The show isnt a brainy enterprise like The Good Place, but it certainly gestures toward big questions about the soul and whether its the sum of our history and our personality or something more, something ineffable. Also, what if anything happens to notions of religious afterlife, and the spectrum of heaven versus hell, when a form of heaven is available for a price?

The acting is good enough all around, although a few of the characters notably Ingrid and her family, but also Nathans family are underdeveloped. If there is a second season, I hope Daniels and his writers will attend to some of the shallower characterizations. Allo is the only standout as a woman whose intelligence and sincerity drive much of the story line. In a world of ones and zeroes, zeroes and ones, her humanity is a welcome sight.

UPLOAD

Starring: Robbie Amell, Andy Allo, Allegra Edwards, Chris Williams, Kevin Bigley, Owen Daniels, Zainab Johnson

On: Amazon. First season available Friday.

Matthew Gilbert can be reached at matthew.gilbert@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @MatthewGilbert.

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In Amazons clever Upload, theres an app for the afterlife - The Boston Globe

Decade’s best No. 2: Lancers set out on mission in 2013 to win baseball state title and did just that | News, Sports, Jobs – Williamsport Sun-Gazette

SUN-GAZETTEFILEPHOTOLoyalsock players celebrate after winning the 2013 PIAAClass AA state championship against Beaver, 5-4, at PennState. It was the programs second state title and first since 2008.

EDITORS NOTE: This is a series looking back at the Top 10 high school baseball teams, coaches, games and players from the last decade.

Those watching Loyalsock warm up throughout the 2013 season could have used a translator when trying to decipher what the letters and numbers on their shirts represented.

QC68.8.

What read more like an obscure radio stations calling card was actually a message. The QC represented quiet confidence and the 68.8 stood for the distance between home plate at Loyalsock and Penn States Medlar Field at Lubrano Park. The message was clear: Loyalsock was on a mission to reach the state final.

And they did. Loyalsock won the Class AA state championship as well, capturing the programs second state crown since 2008 and joining Montoursville as the only area teams to ever win baseball state titles.

The road to high school baseball immortality, though, felt at times like it stretched out 68.8 light years instead of miles. Loyalsock overcame one of its best players leaving it at midseason, a series of injuries and a painful district final loss to reach its ultimate destination and goal. Nothing came easy and maybe that is why it meant to much then and likely means even more now.

It really is a dream come true, Loyalsock coach Jeremy Eck said while holding his son Elijah following the dramatic 5-4 state championship win against Beaver. Every one of these guys has so much heart and theyre all gamers.

This journey really began in 2012 when seven decorated freshmen who would go on to help Loyalsock win 90 games and two state titles in four year arrived. That team went 22-3 and captured a district championship before losing to Philipsburg-Osceola in the first round of states. With all those players back as well as talented senior captain Ethan Moore, Phil Krizan, Caleb Robbins, Bailey Young and Rocco Lupo, to name a few, Loyalsock appeared poised to take the next step.

And following a 9-5 early-season loss against South Williamsport, Loyalsock certainly looked the part of state title contender, winning 13 straight games. Kyle Datres and Luke Glavin already had committed to pitch at North Carolina and Duke, respectively and formed a dynamic duo. Datres, though, was limited early in the season because his basketball season went deep into March. Moore stepped in brilliantly filled a huge void, allowing just one run that season and going 4-0 with a 0.34 ERA. Moore opened the season with 26 2/3 straight scoreless innings and Loyalsock backed its pitching with a potent offense which helped it outscore opponents by five runs per game. Datres, Robbie Klein and Jimmy Webb all hit over .400 and Tommy Baggett drove in 26 runs. Moore delivered a series of big hits in key situations, showcasing his leadership all year as the teams only senior starter.

There were thorns in the roses, however. In addition to a player leaving the team, Loyalsock also suffered a big blow when it lost center fielder Nick DiFrancesco to a season-ending injury. Moore was nearly lost for the year as well, but fought through a painful back injury. Other players were banged up as well and Milton hit a walkoff grand slam to stun Loyalsock, 10-7, in its regular-season finale.

It seemed that game was a sign of things to come because districts was a grind. The state title journey was nearly over before it started when Towanda built a 3-0 first-inning lead. Despite managing just four hits, Loyalsock escaped with a 2-1 victory before facing rival Montoursville in the semifinals. In a battle of heavyweights, Loyalsock again found a way to beat an excellent team. Webb cut down the lead runner at home from right field in the top of the seventh, Datres threw a three-hitter and Robbie Klein drew a walk-off walk as Loyalsock won, 2-1, and clinched a state tournament berth.

Loyalsock was just getting by and, ironically, it might have been a loss in its next game which ignited the state championship push. The Lancers had swept the regular-season series from Hughesville but the Spartans denied them a second straight title, winning an epic district final, 7-5, in nine innings. Loyalsock overcame a 5-1 seventh-inning deficit to force extra innings but Hughesville was the one celebrating at Bowman Field and the loss took an already motivated team to another level.

Instead of the loss breaking Loyalsock apart, it pulled it closer together. A band of brothers then started their march toward Penn State, outscoring three straight district champions who were a combined 61-8 by a 23-6 margin, starting with a 6-0 win of one-loss District 2 champion Lakeland.

It just shows that anything is possible if you work together, Moore said following the Eastern final. Thats what were doing and its a great feeling. Im so proud to be on this team.

It shows what kind of team we have. Were fighters, said Webb, who finished his scholastic career with an area decade-high 151 hits. No matter what happened during the year someone always stepped up and weve never given up.

That showed in the quarterfinals against District 3 champion Delone Catholic. Loyalsock trailed, 5-1, in the third inning before scoring three times in the fourth and pulling within one. The game was then suspended two days due to rain and Moores two-run double ignited a big fifth-inning rally as Loyalsock won, 9-5.

It was a actually a blessing in disguise because (two days earlier) we didnt come ready to play and we got off to a terrible start and we knew if things continued that way it wasnt going to be pretty for us so we came back and turned things right around, Datres said after throwing four scoreless innings of relief. We talk to each other every day about how much we want it. We wanted it more than them and it showed.

An extra day of rain made Datres eligible to pitch in the Eastern Final against a Salisbury team which had romped its way to 25 wins. Salisbury featured three pitchers who had ERAs under 2.00, a stacked lineup and were coming off a 9-5 quarterfinal win against Hughesville. It appeared it would be all hands on deck for pitching duties, but Glavin delivered the performance of his young career, throwing a complete-game three-hitter as Loyalsock routed Salisbury, 8-1, and captured the Eastern Region championship. Every Lancer produced at least one hit, symbolizing how complete this team had become.

A lot of people were lost this season and were still a little banged up, but it was a great team win, Moore said afterward. What it took today was heart and desire and we definitely had that.

They had a seasons worth of it against Beaver (20-1) in the state final. This was a back and forth game against a team which had not allowed a run in three straight state tournament games and it was a microcosm of the entire year. Datres pitched another gem but Salisbury tied the game with two outs in the seventh. Unfazed, Loyalsock attacked in the bottom of the inning when Robbie Klein was hit by a pitch and Robbins ran, going to second on a perfectly-placed Moore bunt. Baggett was intentionally walked and the stage was set for Bailey Young to deliver arguably the most memorable hit in program history. Young lived every high school players dream and smashed a walk-off single. Loyalsock had traveled those 68.8 miles and Robbins sprinted the final 180 feet like he was wearing a jet pack.

After all the ups and downs, Loyalsock had become Pennsylvanias Class AA king.

Were a family and when you get to this point you have to be a family. You cant just have a bunch of guys trying to get it done, Eck said. You have to come together as one unit and were doing that right now. I love these guys. They give me everything they have. Me and the coaches would do anything for these kids and its great to get this opportunity.

And they would earn another one just a year later. But again, Loyalsock would travel a long and winding road there.

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Apex teaser hints that resurrecting may have corrupted Revenant – Dot Esports

Screengrab via PlayApex

Revenants rampage in Apex Legends could be a side effect of his immortality. The latest teaser hints that the simulacrums excessive resurrections may have corrupted his systems over time.

The teaser shows a research note on Project 617, Hammond Robotics callsign for Revenant. The note states that although the simulacrum is operational, each data transfer can slowly degrade his programming and possibly lead to a system-wide corruption.

We hypothesize this corruption will compound at an exponential rate; It is likely that the subject will experience significant program collapse if transference is repeated indefinitely, the note reads.

The research note lines up with established facts about Revenant. Previous teasers show a Hammond Robotics employee stating that the simulacrum crossed the line a hundred rezzes ago, evidencing the repeating nature of his comebacks.

The date of the research notes also provides an approximate timeframe for the experiment. Apex Legends likely takes place two or three decades after the tests, which would line up with Revenants character trailer.

Revenants corruption disabled a part of his programming called the ego retention system. It tricks simulacra into seeing human versions of themselves instead of their synthetic appearance, and Revenants rampage is tied to a failure in that part of his programming.

Popular season four motifs such as Revenant and Hammond Robotics will make a comeback in Apexs fifth season, titled Fortunes Favor. Loba, the next legend, lost her parents by the hands of Revenant and will seize the opportunity for her revenge.

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Apex teaser hints that resurrecting may have corrupted Revenant - Dot Esports

Digital Afterlife Is Less Than Heavenly In Amazon’s ‘Upload’ 05/05/2020 – MediaPost Communications

Heaven is merely a mouse click away in the new Amazon Prime series called Upload.

The problem is, this particularversion of heaven is not altogether heavenly. And that might be because it is not positioned specifically in the marketing materials as heaven per se, even if it does offer prospective customers anattractive vision of a deluxe digital afterlife.

But heaven? Not exactly, learns this shows protagonist, a young man named Nathan (played by RobbieAmell).

Nathan becomes a somewhat reluctant new resident of digital heaven after he suddenly dies in theultimate tech-era mishap -- a fatal smash-up following a software glitch in the operating system of the driverless car in which he is riding.

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While beingrolled down a hospital hallway on a gurney, and being told he will die at any moment, Nathan is more or less forced to sign a bunch of papers full of words that he will have no opportunity to read. Inthis way, he rather carelessly signs his afterlife away. The large print giveth and the small print taketh away, right?

The place where he ends up might bepurgatory. Or you might call it heaven lite. The ad copy positions it this way: The best years of your life could be when its over.

This is part of the advertising and promotional materials for a virtual posthumous destination called Lakeview,one of a variety of such places managed by a tech company called Horizen.

Thats Nathan in the photoabove taking in the view from the balcony of his new home in this sprawling mountain facility. In a nice touch, the producers have used the very real Mohonk Mountain House in New Paltz, N.Y. as theirexterior stand-in for the fictional Lakeview.

The marketing is not unlike the kind of effort you would see in the real world for a retirement community --only this is a place for post-retirement where one is supposed to live forever.

Although the time frame of Upload is notspecified, it appears to be in the reasonably near future -- perhaps the mid- to late-2020s. This near-future world is rendered with great care. It seems as if it has evolved seamlessly from our own.We recognize it instantly, and then again, we do not.

The prime mover behind Upload is Greg Daniels, a show creator and executive producerassociated with top-of-the-line comedy hits such as The Office (the U.S. version), Parks & Recreation and perhaps most notably, King of the Hill, one ofthe smartest TV comedies ever made.

Although Upload takes a decidedly lighthearted look at its subject matter, this show somehow manages tomake a number of serious observations about our high-tech world and where it is going.

Uploadraises intriguing questions about immortality and life (both real and virtual). In this show, a persons soul is really the sum total of the data that has been collected by othersabout him.

It is from this data pile that Horizen rebuilds each person into a virtual version of his- or herself. In this way, the virtual afterlife thecompany promises is not that much different from the life each person was living in real life in the first place.

Among other things, before he perishes inthat car crash, Nathan is seen in a supermarket where he is bombarded by advertising messages tailored especially for him, since everything he has ever done or bought in his life has been collected ina huge database that appears to be entirely available to anyone who wishes to use it to sell him things.

In fact, this is one of the aspects of Lakeview thatis less than heavenly: Marketers of well-known brands still want his money -- from the man peddling Orbit chewing gum in the Lakeview lobby to the sodas and salty snacks he has to pay for in hisrooms minibar.

Upload is streaming now on Amazon Prime Video.

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Digital Afterlife Is Less Than Heavenly In Amazon's 'Upload' 05/05/2020 - MediaPost Communications

Twin intimate portraits of Natalie Wood from her daughter – Los Angeles Times

Natalie Wood is a cinematic icon who had received three Oscar nominations by age 25 and whose films included Splendor in the Grass, Rebel Without a Cause and West Side Story. Since her drowning in 1981, however, her legacy has been colored by speculation and lurid tell-alls, fueled at least in part by the reopening of the police investigation into her death decades later.

None of those accounts, though, had the intimate knowledge of the actress home life afforded in both a new HBO documentary and a memoir from Woods daughter, actress Natasha Gregson Wagner. Natalie Wood: What Remains Behind and More Than Love is each a vivid portrait of Natalie Wood, the person.

Its been an organic process of my personal growth, Gregson Wagner says of why she was finally willing to share her mothers story as she knew it. The 49-year-old says she and her family had always been advised not to sustain supposition about her mothers death by responding to it, even when it included accusations that Robert Wagner, Woods husband and Gregson Wagners beloved stepfather, was involved.

Years of therapy, being in a happy marriage and becoming a mother prepared her to talk about this publicly without feeling defensive, she says. Im stronger now.

Also, she admits, Emotionally staying young or childlike, I felt was a way I could stay connected to my mom. Gregson Wagner was 11 when her mother died.

Gregson Wagner took the title for her book, More Than Love, from a phrase her parents would exchange with each other: I love you more than love. The words appear on Woods tombstone. Its a deeply intimate chronicle of life with her famous mother and how Woods death devastated the family.

She also produced and conducted interviews in Natalie Wood: What Remains Behind, directed by Laurent Bouzereau (Five Came Back). The documentary benefits from the participation of some of those closest to Wood, including Wagner. The film is more about the legendary actress and her career than the mother-daughter relationship in the book, but it too focuses on the person, not her death.I didnt want to do an investigative, reportage kind of film; this is the story of a family, says Bouzereau. This was a story of love. I never felt the pressure of having to be a reporter or a detective. That wasnt the point of the film at all.

There is likely no single definitive chronicle of any complex life, and many valid points of view can seem to conflict. These friendly portraits omit certain infamous stories associated with Woods legend true or false, such tales arent addressed and the two works come down firmly on the side that her death was an accident.

Actress Natasha Gregson Wagner today.

(Brigitte Jouxtel / HBO)

More than anything, they paint a private portrait of the public figure. Gregson Wagners book overflows with remembrances of Woods love and her own extreme attachment to her famous mother. When the author reviewed a treasure trove of Woods personal writings, she was stuck by the twentysomething Woods drive to educate herself, wanting to be deeper than just a movie star ... growing and probing and looking within.

Despite other depictions of Wood, here she is a strong personality: the boss, the engine of her family and captain of her career. She would arrange everyones daily schedules and social calendars. She was one of the first actresses in the studio system to successfully demand some control over film selection, equal pay with male costars and eventually, profit participation.

Bouzereau, who has been making documentaries about cinema for 25 years, says: In a sense, you look at her choices of her films and they become autobiographical. When you look at her trajectory as an actress, you see the evolution of cinema. She was making movies with filmmakers like Paul Mazursky and Sydney Pollack, who were just beginning their careers, making movies out on the streets for someone who had grown up on sound stages, that must have been shocking and yet she wasnt afraid of any of that. When she passed away, she was going to direct; she was going to be in a play.

I found her extremely modern and relevant. Today, shed be working with Tarantino and Spielberg and directing.

Bouzereau says the Wood film that best reflects that journey is Splendor in the Grass, the drama she made with Elia Kazan and Warren Beatty: That movie shows a journey of empowerment, which I think she went through herself.

Splendor takes its title from William Wordsworths poem Ode on Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood. The filmmakers chose the title of What Remains Behind from the same stanza: Though nothing can bring back the hour / Of splendour in the grass, of glory in the flower; / We will grieve not, rather find / Strength in what remains behind.

Natalie Wood, husband Robert Wagner and daughters Natasha Gregson Wagner, left, and Courtney Wagner in Hawaii, 1978.

(HBO)

Though the film and book are devoted to the person, they couldnt ignore the circumstances of Woods death. That meant getting Wagner to revisit that night on camera.

Natasha and I knew that would be the make-it or break-it aspect of the film. If it didnt have the impact we thought it should have, we wouldnt make the documentary, said Bouzereau. It was an amazing revelation, how open he could be on the matter.

Gregson Wagner says, We wanted it to feel like an intimate conversation my stepfather and I would have had without the cameras ... about a night that changed our lives forever.

This film feels like weve released this burden from our family like a balloon at the beach or a kite it goes up into the sky and its gone. Were all lighter because of it now.

I also own the fact that well never know for sure what happened to my mom, because she was alone the night she died ... But she wants us to carry on. We are what remains behind.

Trailer for the HBO documentary, Natalie Wood: What Remains Behind

"More Than Love"

By Natasha Gregson Wagner300 pgsSold by: Simon and Schuster Digital Sales IncASIN: B07Z421Y2T

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Twin intimate portraits of Natalie Wood from her daughter - Los Angeles Times

Read. Dream. Share. Children’s Book Week is May 4-10 – Shreveport Times

Samantha Bonnette Published 1:41 a.m. CT May 3, 2020

Samantha Bonnette

These times they are a changin! Just last week, we were thinking about plans to reopen, but with the governors extended stay at home order, it looks like well be staying home a little longer. But dont worry; plans are underway to implement curbside pickup service at select Shreve Memorial Library branches beginning Monday, May 18. Youll soon be able to return your library books and check out new ones. More details are coming soon. Until then, I encourage you to take advantage of the many digital services available through the librarys e-branch.

This week, we are celebrating Childrens Book Week. The annual celebration takes place May 4 through May 10. Childrens Book Week is the longest-running national literacy initiative in the country. This years Childrens Book Week theme is Read. Dream. Share. We encourage you all to celebrate the joy of reading at home and join in the celebration by using hashtag #BookWeek2020atHome on social media.

The librarys e-branch has great resources to find childrens books online. TumbleBooks Library is one of my favorites! With TumbleBooks, you can enjoy animated, talking picture books and a different story each day with its Story Book of the Day feature. Children can see a storybook come to life, read-along with a storybook classic, or read an e-book all by themselves. You can access TumbleBooks Library through the Shreve Memorial Library e-branch or download the app to your smartphone or tablet.

Another great digital resource for childrens books is Overdrive Kids Zone. Available through Overdrive, an online resource of e-books, audiobooks, and movies, Overdrive Kids Zone is an area made exclusively for kids and teens. In the Kids Zone, you will find Overdrives collection of childrens e-books and audiobooks all in one place. Login to Overdrive or the Libby app, click Kids, and enter the Kids Zone. Once there you can download these e-books and audiobooks to your smartphone, tablet or computer.

Whatever you do, I hope that you find time to share the joy of reading with others. Be sure to follow @shrevememorial on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram for virtual storytimes, craft programs, and future updates including our reopening plans. Until we meet again, always remember to dream, discover, do!

Childrens Book Week Titles on Overdrive

In celebration of Childrens Book Week, below are titles from authors who were scheduled to be at the 2020 Shreve Memorial Library Childrens Book Festival. Unfortunately, the festival, planned for May 9, 2020, was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. These titles are available on Overdrive.

Boy + Bot by Ame Dyckman (fiction, e-book)

One day, a boy and a robot meet in the woods. They play. They have fun. But when Bot gets switched off, Boy thinks hes sick. The usual remedies applesauce, reading a story dont help, so Boy tucks the sick Bot in, then falls asleep. Bot is worried when he powers on and finds his friend powered off. He takes Boy home with him and tries all his remedies: oil, reading an instruction manual. Nothing revives the malfunctioning Boy! Can the Inventor help fix him? Using the perfect blend of sweetness and humor, this story of an adorable duo will win the hearts of the very youngest readers.

Whoosh! written by Chris Barton; illustrated by Don Tate (nonfiction, e-book)

A cool idea with a big splash. You know the Super Soaker. Its one of the top twenty toys of all time. And it was invented entirely by accident. Trying to create a new cooling system for rockets, impressive inventor Lonnie Johnson instead created the mechanics for the iconic toy. A love for rockets, robots, inventions, and a mind for creativity began early in Lonnie Johnsons life. Growing up in a house full of brothers and sisters, persistence and a passion for problem solving became the cornerstone for a career as an engineer and his work with NASA. But it is his invention of the Super Soaker water gun that has made his most memorable splash with kids and adults.

The Fourteenth Goldfish by Jennifer L. Holm (fiction, e-book)

Galileo. Newton. Salk. Oppenheimer. Science can change the world but can it go too far? Eleven-year-old Ellie has never liked change. She misses fifth grade. She misses her old best friend. She even misses her dearly departed goldfish. Then one day a strange boy shows up. Hes bossy. Hes cranky. And weirdly enough he looks a lot like Ellies grandfather, a scientist whos always been slightly obsessed with immortality. Could this pimply boy really be Grandpa Melvin? Has he finally found the secret to eternal youth? With a lighthearted touch and plenty of humor, Jennifer Holm celebrates the wonder of science and explores fascinating questions about life and death, family and friendship, immortality and possibility.

Shreve Memorial Library transforms Caddo Parish lives with resources, services and support to create a better world. Focusing on service priority areas of creating and maintaining young readers, stimulating imagination, providing lifelong learning, information fluency, and ready references, and informing citizens, Shreve Memorial Librarys 21-branch system is maintained by a parish-wide property tax millage to support the informational, educational and recreational needs of its constituents. For more information, visit http://www.shreve-lib.org, like on Facebook, and follow @shrevememorial on Instagram, Twitter and Pinterest. Remember to dream, discover, do Shreve Memorial Library and you!

Read or Share this story: https://www.shreveporttimes.com/story/news/2020/05/03/read-dream-share-childrens-book-week-may-4-10/3072677001/

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Read. Dream. Share. Children's Book Week is May 4-10 - Shreveport Times

Op/Ed: Dealing with the absurdity of human existence in the face of converging catastrophes – Rossland Telegraph

ByLonnie Aarssen, Professor of Biology, Queens University, Ontario, via The Conversation

Homo sapiens means wise human, but the name no longer suits us. As an evolutionary biologist who writes about Darwinian interpretations of human motivations and cultures, I propose that at some point we became what we are today: Homo absurdus, a human that spends its whole life trying to convince itself that its existence is not absurd.

As French philosopher Albert Camus put it: Man is the only creature who refuses to be what he is. Thanks to this entrenched absurdity, the 21st century is riding on a runaway train of converging catastrophes in the Anthropocene.

Discovery of self

The critical juncture in the lineage toward Homo absurdus was described by evolutionist Theodosius Dobzhansky: A being who knows that he will die arose from ancestors who did not know. But evolution at some point also built into this human mind a deeply ingrained sentiment that one has not just a material life (the physical body), but also a distinct and separate mental life (the inner self).

Theodosius Dobzhansky. Wikicommons

Human self-awareness led to the evolution of cognitive skills that were game-changers for gene transmission success. In our degree of endowment for these skills, our ancestors had the edge over all other hominids.

But the trade-off for this was self-impermanence anxiety a recurrent fear that, in bringing eventual material death, time inevitably also annihilates all that one has done and all that one has been, and that soon it will be as though one had never existed at all.

Buffering for a troubled mind

However, natural selection also gave our ancestors primal impulses that served to buffer the worry of self-impermanence. These involve two novel and uniquely human fundamental drives: escape from self and extension of self.

Both are reflected in a prescient passage from the great Russian author, Leo Tolstoy:

For man to be able to live he must either not see the infinite, or have such an explanation of the meaning of life as will connect the finite with the infinite.

Extension of self connecting the finite with the infinite involves what I call legacy drive: the desire to leave something appreciable behind that will endure beyond mortal existence.

Delusions of symbolic immortality involve three principal domains:

Parenthood: Shaping the minds of offspring to mirror the defining characteristics of ones own selfhood (i.e. values, beliefs, attitudes, conscience, ego, skills, virtues, etc.);

Accomplishment: Earning recognition, status, or fame through talents or deeds that evoke admiration, trust, respect, or astonishment from others;

Identifying with or belonging to something larger-than-self: Membership or belief in a particular cultural world view, one based, for example, on concepts like patriotism, political ideology or religiosity/spiritualism.

Escape from self

For those less driven to produce a legacy, there is escape from self Tolstoys not seeing the infinite. Most commonly, this is achieved through distractions, deployed through what I call leisure drive, an intrinsic disposition to be easily drawn to indulgence in opportunities for enjoyment.

Typically, these involve motivations that hack into the brains pleasure modules and have deep evolutionary roots associated with meeting core needs (e.g. survival, social affiliation, mating, endearment, kinship) that rewarded ancestral gene transmission success.

Modern domains of leisure drive are manifested in many cultural norms and products designed to trigger these pleasure modules like toys, stories, games, aesthetics, social entertainment, consumerism, humour, recreational sex, yoga, meditation, inebriation and psychedelics.

The essential consequence of these distractions lies in arresting the mind firmly in the immediate present, thus temporarily but effectively shielding it from the dread of the infinite, wherein the self ceases to be.

For some, placing the mind firmly in the present may be accomplished by simply keeping busy with purposeful toil or mundane routine. As American philosopher Eric Hoffer put it: A busy life is the nearest thing to a purposeful life.

Work hard, play hard

The delusions of legacy drive and the distractions of leisure drive both help to mitigate the worry of self-impermanence. Strong selection for these drives thus propelled copies of our ancestors genes into future generations.

But self-impermanence anxiety has always lurked stubbornly beneath the surface, repeatedly demanding more and better delusions and distractions. And so, from a long history of striving for an untroubled mind, the effects of natural selection ramped up in momentum, I suggest, like a runaway train.

These drives to work hard and play even harder have fuelled the frenzied and relentless march of progress that we call civilization. With this, our cultural evolution has generated a large menu of available delusions for chasing after legacy, and distractions for chasing after leisure. And this has given us a world of environmental catastrophes that are annihilating other species and their habitats at an unprecedented rate.

Sustained genetic selection for legacy and leisure drives then has generated two dire consequences for humanity: A civilization now moving ever faster toward collapse on a global scale, and an evolved psychology that is now breeding an escalation of human despair anxiety disorders, depression and suicide.

In other words, the growing demands of these drives (resulting from biological evolution) are starting to exceed the supply rate of available domains (generated by cultural evolution) for satisfying them. It becomes harder and harder, therefore, to meet an ever-increasing need for distractions and delusions, including those needed to buffer the mounting eco-anxiety from living in a collapsing civilization.

Living with Homo absurdus

How can we manage our human predicament, now that we are Homo absurdus?

I have suggested that a new model for cultural evolution might come to our rescue involving a kind of biosocial management, based on facilitating and implementing a deeper and more broadly public understanding of, and empathy for, the evolutionary roots of human motivations, especially those associated with our responses to self-impermanence anxiety.

Homo sapiens means wise human, but the name no longer suits us. As an evolutionary biologist who writes about Darwinian interpretations of human motivations and cultures, I propose that at some point we became what we are today: Homo absurdus, a human that spends its whole life trying to convince itself that its existence is not absurd.

We must learn how to successfully regulate our frenetic drive to convince ourselves that our existence is not absurd. And this requires that we at least understand how we came to be so driven.

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Op/Ed: Dealing with the absurdity of human existence in the face of converging catastrophes - Rossland Telegraph

Egyptian Emeralds Slot Weaves the Magic of Scarab Beetle – TimesOfCasino

In an important development for online gaming enthusiasts, a new Egyptian Emeralds slot game has been released. The game has been released by Playtech, leading gaming software supplier in the world, and the highlight of the game is its journey that takes you back to the ancient roots of Egypt. In the game, reels are ruled by the scarab beetle, which demonstrates a range of magical powers that can help you win big.

There are a total of 10 paylines and 5 reels in the game. The combination will do its best in order to make you win, and the best part of the game is that number of symbols has been restricted to a small number a total of six only. This makes sure that one will not get overwhelmed by the huge number of symbols that are otherwise part of such games. Thats not to say that the small number of symbols doesnt mean that they are not up to the task. In fact, these are very well in accomplishing their work.

In ancient traditions of Egypt, Scarab Beetle was known for its immortality, protection, and resurrection. Accordingly, this game also uses wild scarab beetle, which plays a crucial role in helping you win big here. Once it occupies middle reel, the feature of scarab respin will come into play, and before the respin actually starts, the beetle will land on three different positions.

For another landing, you can go for another respin. Its quite apparent that beetle knows how to do its work, and while you make money as the beetle is flying, you can also try your luck in order to win big in Slot Wars. Overall if you break into the top 40 then you get paid handsomely.

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Egyptian Emeralds Slot Weaves the Magic of Scarab Beetle - TimesOfCasino

Westworld Never Fixed Its Villain Problem – The Atlantic

Read: Why TV is so worried about free will

That flaw had been nagging at me for each of the seasons eight episodes, which dispensed gory action with practiced efficiency but felt hollow nonetheless. The shows villain problem was crystallized in the season finale, Crisis Theory, in which the vengeful robots Dolores (played by Evan Rachel Wood) and Maeve (Thandie Newton) faced off against the trillionaire mogul Engerraund Serac (Cassel) and Rehoboam, the colossal AI that he used to impose order on human affairs. Rehoboam, a glowing red sphere that pulsated with energy and spoke in philosophical riddles, was impressive; its demise, which involved flicking a few switches to turn it off, was less so. For the most part, the threat of big data was amorphous and faceless.

The storytelling impulses that led Westworld creators Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy down this narrative path are understandable. Despite its sci-fi trappings (futuristic robots et al.), Westworld has been fundamentally concerned with human behavior from its first episode, analyzing the depravity of Westworlds attendees alongside the developing consciousness of the hosts (the robots built to populate the park). Designed only to mimic reality, the hosts ended up shattering it, rising up against Westworlds visitors and owners to assert their newly developed independence. The first season turned out to be a curious and arresting parable of how violence is a universal language.

Ever since that robot revolution, Westworld has been stuck trying to find newer angles on the same question: What happens when you combine advanced machine learning with humanity acting on its worst instincts? The second season responded to that prompt by advancing the shows world-building. It revealed that Delos, the parks corporate owner, was gathering information on visitors and perhaps looking to make robotic clones out of them, thus inventing a form of artificial immortality. But the plotting was molasses-slow, charting the further disintegration of the theme park over the course of just a few days, and only teasing any exploration of the outside world at the very end.

So Season 3 went full speed ahead with its narrative, starting with Dolores finally being set loose on society and wreaking havoc, and ending with the world descending into an apocalypse, with cities engulfed in rioting and chaos. Westworld the park was largely forgotten. Rehoboam exploded the creepy implications of Deloss surveillance a thousandfold by functioning as a global oracle of sorts. Because the machine was plugged into everyones public and private lives, Serac could use algorithms to literally shape the future, partly by murdering any humans who might rebel. Caleb (Paul) was one such human, enlisted by Dolores to serve as an ally in her quest to topple Rehoboam.

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Westworld Never Fixed Its Villain Problem - The Atlantic

Is it possible to become immortal? This Russian says yes and even has a plan! – Russia Beyond

Getty Images, Personal Archive

Alexey Turchin, 47, from Moscow has been researching the topic for years. According to him, going digital is our best chance to live forever.

Stuck in self-isolation, like many of us these days, Alexey Turchin isnt sitting idly. He is not only working on his new book entitled Immortality, but is regularly collecting vast amounts of data about himself - from DNA in his toenail clippings and details about his dreams to sound recordings and things he does everyday. Why?

A dedicated life extensionist and advocate for digital immortality, he believes that one day humanity will see the emergence of artificial intelligence so strong that it could download this personal data into its system, thus, allowing a person to live forever.

As he says, accumulating such data is only one of at least three options available to us right now.

The second option is simply to survive until the creation of strong AI. The main cause of death in humans so far has been aging and if we could learn how to counter it we could live up to 3,000 years, he says. Countering aging is just a first step to achieving immortality in this scenario. If we die, we dont live long to see the creation of technologies that will allow humans to transform our bodies into cyborgs, for example, and ultimately download ourselves into a supercomputer.

Alexey and his roadmap to personal immortality

Then there is a third option - cryonics, i.e. preserving the body and/or the brain in low-temperature liquid nitrogen in the hopes that one day humanity will be able to resurrect them and somehow scan the brain to create a digital copy in a supercomputer.

But when exactly such AI will come to being? Not sooner than in 500 years, Russian researcher says.

The development of AI is going rather fast, but we are still far away from being able to download a human into a computer. If we want to do it with a good probability of success, then count on [the year] 2600, to be sure, he notes, adding that simpler and imperfect versions of such AI might even emerge in the next two decades.

As he thinks, the ongoing coronavirus outbreak might even play a role in the development of research in this respect. The pandemic will increase the public interest in biology, virology and life extension, because Covid-19 has a tendency to strike older people more often. Hence, well see that we need a more efficient healthcare system to deal with such threats. This might potentially lead to medics getting more power in determining our research priorities and bring humanity closer to extending average life expectancy, Alexey argues.

Humanity will inevitably see the emergence of digital immortality in some form, but what we are currently seeing in movies and TV shows like Transcendence or Black Mirror is not something well see in reality, the researcher says. I enjoy Westworld, but its not 100% correct. Every TV show must have a conflict to be entertaining, but in real life its not always the case, he explains. There, super AI is often portrayed as soulless or imperfect, but its not necessarily going to be that way.

In his view, the ideal situation will be when humanity invents an AI that will be a friend to humanity: It will be interested in preserving human values and will be able to create a complete model of our history and recreate each individual as part of this simulation. Thus, allowing us to live only twice.

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Everyday Religion: What was the nature of the resurrected Jesus? – Winston-Salem Journal

Q: In the last column, you wrote about what Jesus did after he died. Was he a person or a spirit?

Answer: Christians have been thinking about the life, death and resurrection of Jesus since the beginning of Lent. The accounts of his post-resurrection activities are important to the question asked by the reader. What was the nature of the resurrected Jesus?

We have scriptural evidence that the resurrected Jesus was involved in human activities. They gave Jesus a piece of fish and some honeycomb, and He ate it, Luke 24:4243, says. According to Luke 24:39, Jesus said, Look at my hands and my feet. It is I myself! Touch me and see; a ghost does not have flesh and bones, as you see I have. And John 20:27, he said to doubting Thomas, Put your finger here; see my hands. Reach out your hand and put it into my side. Stop doubting and believe. When Jesus appeared and disappeared in several places, He baffled people and seemed to be a spirit. In some situations, it was strange that he was not recognizable by his disciples and Mary Magdalene. The faithful are led to believe that he maintained his physical body with spiritual powers or as Thomas Aquinas said, Christs body, though real, was glorified.

Paul believed that faithful humans could be born again with a spiritual body like Christ. He writes about the different kinds of bodies in 1 Corinthians 15:45-47, The first man Adam became a living being; the last Adam, a life-giving spirit. The spiritual did not come first, but the natural, and after that the spiritual. The first man was of the dust of the earth; the second man is of heaven.

Noted here are a few verses from 1 Corinthians 15:3554 to present a broader view of the question: How are the dead raised and with what kind of body? What you sow does not come to life unless it dies. When you sow, you do not plant the body that will be, but just a seed. God gives it a body as he has determined. It is raised in power. It is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body. If there is a natural body, there is also a spiritual body. The dead will be raised imperishable. For the perishable must clothe itself with the imperishable, and the mortal with immortality. When the perishable has been clothed with the imperishable, and the mortal with immortality, then the saying that is written will come true, Death has been swallowed up in victory. For Paul, the resurrection was the foundation of the faith.

Q: Could you write more about the soul?

Answer: This answer will be a brief overview. The soul has been defined in several ways. Some people believe that it is the living being. Others belief that it is the part of a person that guides behavior, and it lives after the body dies. The concept of the soul could be 200,000 years old. Some Hindus and Buddhists believed in the immortal soul. In Jesus time, people believed in a resurrection after death not the immortality of the soul. In Genesis 2:7, we find, And God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul. The word soul in some passages in the Bible simply meant life; however, did this verse mean that God gave man a soul?

The doctrine of a separate soul was a Greek concept. Socrates believed in the immortality of the soul of a virtuous person. He thought that the soul brings life and is imperishable. Plato believed in the immortality of the soul which had existed before the body. Later, Augustine thought the soul acknowledged truth; therefore, it was immortal. Some of the early Christians accepted the Greek idea that the soul was created by God and placed in the body at conception. Presently, Judaism, Christianity and Islam proclaim that immortality is achieved by the resurrection of the body on the day of judgment.

The immortality of the soul is a matter which is of so great consequence to us and which touches us so profoundly that we must have lost all feeling to be indifferent about it.

Pray that we understand our need to support and protect each other with guidance from God, health professionals and good common sense.

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Everyday Religion: What was the nature of the resurrected Jesus? - Winston-Salem Journal

A Race with Love and Death by Richard Williams review: the Briton who raced for Hitler – Telegraph.co.uk

Sporting immortality often seems somewhat arbitrary: why do Fred Perry and Stanley Matthews remain household names when the great jockey Sir Gordon Richards is largely forgotten?

One can see, however, why the racing driver Richard Seaman has passed from our collective consciousness, despite being the dominant Briton in the sport in the years before the Second World War.

He was not all that well-known in his own time, even after winning the German Grand Prix in 1938: in Britain the public had little time in those days for what was seen as a toffs sport and, as Seaman himself noted, the press only covered motor racing when there was a juicy fatality.

Had he lived longer he might have clocked up enough wins to secure an irrevocable place in the pantheon of national heroes; but he was killed after crashing into a tree during the Belgian Grand Prix in June 1939. He was 26.

There was also a wilful element in the subsequent British amnesia where Seaman was concerned. He was tainted by the crowning honour of his career: the invitation, approved by Hitler, to drive for the German Mercedes-Benz team, at that time the best in the world.

When he signed up with Mercedes-Benz in 1937, it was approved of by the political classes of both countries as a useful bit of soft diplomacy. But as the international situation deteriorated, not everybody thought he should have politely joined in with the Nazi salutes on the podium after his Grand Prix win; and with his funeral in Knightsbridge held a matter of weeks before the declaration of war being dominated by a six-foot-high wreath of white Madonna lilies bearing the Fhrers condolences, uncomplicated mourning of a great Briton was not possible.

In the words of Long John Silver, You cant touch pitch and not be mucked, lad. But now Richard Williams one of our most elegant sportswriters and author of a fine book on Ayrton Senna has written a biography of Seaman that seeks to remind us of his unfairly expunged sporting achievements and also, in an undogmatic way, defend him against charges of excessive enthusiasm for the Nazis.

Dick Seaman and what an appropriately virile name for a star of this most Freudian of sports was born to well-off parents in 1913. This book is able to explore its subjects pre-fame life to a degree unusual in biography, as Williams has struck on a little pot of gold: an unpublished memoir by Seamans mother, Lilian.

The book often reads like a mums-eye-view. There is some comedy, albeit rather poignant, early on, when Dick starts to become seriously interested in racing at Cambridge, and Lilian indulges in subterfuge to hide his dangerous activities from her elderly, sickly husband and, at the same time, conceal the full extent of his fathers disapproval from Dick. Later on, the story becomes tragic when Dick and his mother are estranged because of his marriage to a German girl.

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A Race with Love and Death by Richard Williams review: the Briton who raced for Hitler - Telegraph.co.uk

Lord of the Rings: Why Gandalf Is Actually An Angel | Screen Rant – Screen Rant

Although it wasn't explicit inThe Lord of the Rings, Gandalf is an angel in Middle-earth lore. Even before the release of Peter Jackson's movie trilogy, Gandalf was one of the most famous characters in fiction. Wise, powerful and friendly, the wizard accompanied Bilbo Baggins on his journey to meet Smaug inThe Hobbit and later plots the downfall of Sauron using just a handful of regular Hobbits and a wild-haired ranger inThe Lord of the Rings. After Ian McKellen portrayed the character on film, Gandalf's stock rose further, transforming into a household name and cementing a cinematic legacy to go alongside his literary immortality.

Both the movieand book versions ofThe Lord of the Rings' story leave Gandalf's origins and powers intentionally vague. It's easy to accept magic in a world where Elves and Dwarves are commonplace, and even the wizard's resurrection from Gandalf the Grey to (the far more epic) Gandalf the White is explained without going into great detail. To both Frodoand the audience, Gandalf is mysterious stranger come to aid them in a time of great peril. As with all things Tolkien, however,The Lord of the Rings only touches the tip of Gandalf's story, and his full history reveals far more celestial origins than themain narrative alluded to.

Related:Lord Of The Rings' Faramir Change Was Good For The Two Towers

Gandalf was original a Maia calledOlrin, created by Eru, Tolkien's equivalent of God, at the very beginning of time. The Maiar were sent down to Middle-earth alongside another order of divine beings called the Valar to help shape the world, and wandered the land in a variety of different forms, largely unbeknownst to the Elves and men of Middle-earth. Not all Maiar were classified as wizards - only 5 of their order were selected for this role by the Valar,and the decision came as a direct response to the growing threat of Sauron. Alongside Saruman, Radagast and 2 other figures (don't worry about them), Gandalf returned to Middle-earth, this time in his familiar grey form, and with the intention of ending Sauron's dominion. The divine origins of the Maiar are the source of their "magic," and Gandalf's resurrection inThe Two Towers is also a direct result of his connection to Eru.

The spiritual side of Middle-earth is largely glossed over inThe Lord of the Rings andThe Hobbit, with Gandalf presented more as a mystical old man than a servant of God sent from the heavens to restore peace. Indeed, the existence of Eru, the Valar and Maiar is explored in more detail withinTolkien's posthumously-publishedThe Silmarillion, and in some of the appendices that now accompany editions of the famous trilogy. While the truth of Gandalf's existence isn't necessary to the core story, it does add context to the happenings inThe Lord of the Rings, and lifts the aura of mystery surrounding the wizard. However, those who only dipped into the main trilogy would be left mostly unaware that Gandalf (and by extension Radagast and Saruman) were actually the closest thing to an angels in the tapestry of Middle-earth.

Even in deeper Tolkien lore, the Maiar aren't explicitly labelled as "angels," but the parallels between Middle-earth spirituality and real-world theology is clear. Eru is essentially the monotheistic God of Christianity and other religions; an all-powerful and all-seeing benevolent ruler and creator. Meanwhile, the Valar serve as an analogy for archangels, the most trusted and loyal of Eru's servants and higher in rank compared to the everyday angels, the Maiar, whose job is to serve the mortals their master created. Furthering the parallel, Melkor (later known as Morgoth) is akin to Lucifer - a former archangel who grew hateful and attempted to enslave and corrupt God's creations.

The religious analogy runs deep, but serves no real purpose to the main story ofThe Lord of the Rings. Had Tolkien's landmark trilogyfully explainedGandalf's origins and divine stature in the midst of Frodo's quest to destroy the ring, the character might not have attracted the same level of popularity, but it's interesting that a figure most fans recognize as the archetypal fantasy wizard is actually something entirely different.

More:Lord Of The Rings Changed A Major Bilbo Moment In The Movies

Disney+: Every New Movie & TV Show Coming In May 2020

Craig first began contributing to Screen Rant in 2016, several years after graduating college, and has been ranting ever since, mostly to himself in a darkened room. Having previously written for various sports and music outlets, Craig's interest soon turned to TV and film, where a steady upbringing of science fiction and comic books finally came into its own.Craig has previously been published on sites such as Den of Geek, and after many coffee-drenched hours hunched over a laptop, part-time evening work eventually turned into a full-time career covering everything from the zombie apocalypse to the Starship Enterprise via the TARDIS.Since joining the Screen Rant fold, Craig has been involved in breaking news stories and mildly controversial ranking lists, but now works predominantly as a features writer.Jim Carrey is Craigs top acting pick and favorite topics include superheroes, anime and the unrecognized genius of the High School Musical trilogy.

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OPINION, Viewpoints: Mark Murphys Journal of the Plague Year, week six – Savannah Morning News

Editors note: Savannah physician Mark Murphy is chronicling his experience during the coronavirus pandemic in a personal journal, which he is sharing for publication.

My wife and I were riding bikes when we first saw the owls, high up in the crook of a massive live oak tree heavily draped with Spanish moss.

The owlets were fuzzy things, wide-eyed and staring, their heads swiveling about nearly 360 degrees in a manner that seemed to defy biology as they took in the new world around them. Their parents were a broad-winged pair of Great Horned Owls, with fishhook talons and saffron beaks, soaring silently from limb to limb and tree to tree in unaccustomed daylight. One of the parents fluttered overhead and landed by the nest, bringing food to the owlets. Seeing that was spectacular.

I was off early that day because a couple of my telemedicine visits had cancelled. During a "normal" week, I would never have been home early enough to see the owls. Im usually up at 4 a.m. and doing procedures by 6:30, working through lunch and often into darkness, without respite, adapting to the unrelenting needs of a patient population who demand my ready availability.

But not now.

An unseen enemy has humbled me. The novel coronavirus SARS CoV-2 -- COVID-19 -- has reordered my life, restructured my days, and reminded me of that fundamental truth which I should have already known all too well: That we, and the entire society we live in, are made of very fragile stuff. Life is precious and miraculous, and yet we take it for granted, every aspect of it, assuming the false pretense of our own immortality while simultaneously failing to recognize how intrinsically connected we all are, both to one another and to the amazing planet we live on.

In 1972, MIT meteorology professor Edward Lorenz presented a paper which posed the question "Does the flap of a butterflys wings in Brazil set off a tornado in Texas?" The idea Lorenz was positing became widely known as an explanation of chaos theory called "the Butterfly Effect." The modern epidemiologic version of the Butterfly Effect is this: A single strand of RNA, encapsulated in an envelope of protein, made the jump in December 2019 from a creature of another species to one of our own in Wuhan, China.

The rest is history.

That first COVID 19 patient never knew what it was that he had. We dont know his name, what he looked like, or even whether he lived or died. But his illness has changed the entire world. Its unprecedented and cataclysmic, a once-in-a-lifetime event.

My grandmother used to say that "Every cloud has a silver lining, if you look hard enough." Its certainly hard to find a silver lining all of this, with millions of people sick, thousands dying and many, many people out of work. But sure enough, as we were biking back home after seeing the owls on a warm, sun-dappled spring day, I found it.

Seeing the owls made me realize that having an opportunity to slow down and absorb some of the worlds beauty is not such a bad thing. Tiny miracles like that one surround us every day, but we often too busy or too distracted to appreciate them.

To be certain, these are trying times. The threat of contracting COVID 19 is always there, lurking about in the shadows. My medical practice is going to be financially stressed for months, and perhaps longer. But I am blessed with a loving spouse, healthy children and grandchildren, and the opportunity to help others at work every day. All of this has given me a gain renewed perspective about what is truly important in lifeand about what is not.

In recent years, encouraged by the influence of social media, people have tended to be tribalistic, emphasizing their differences instead of focusing on the shared aspects of the human condition. The practice of medicine has taught me that human beings are actually far more alike than they are differenta viewpoint the pandemic has only reinforced. Perhaps, as we make this collective journey through the dark realm of pestilence, we will begin to understand that our species shared destiny links us all inextricably to one another. And perhaps, amongst all of the virally-induced heartache, we will more readily comprehend that the fate of Homo sapiens sapiens as a species is largely dependent upon how much we care for each otherand upon our avid stewardship of that singular blue orb, careening through the vast emptiness of space, that we all call home.

Mark Murphy is a local physician and author. Contact him at heeldawg@aol.com.

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OPINION, Viewpoints: Mark Murphys Journal of the Plague Year, week six - Savannah Morning News

X-Men Anatomy: The 5 Weirdest Things About Apocalypse’s Body – CBR – Comic Book Resources

The name Apocalypse should strike fear into heroes, both mutant and human alike. En Sabah Nur has even been known to face down the gods themselves. His notoriety and abilities areboth biological and technological. The despotic shepherd of evolution has displayed extraordinary power on countless occasions, befitting of his ominous and intimidating title. Unlike other evolutionary fanatics like The High Evolutionary, Apocalypse is far more hands-on-- he's more than happy to force his view of how life should progress with an iron fist.

With En Sabah Nur, it all comes down to his belief in the "Survival of the Fittest" mindset. If something is weak, it does not deserve to live to see the strong futurehe envisions. Given his own powers, abilities and natural acumen for all sorts of things, he certainly practices what he preaches. So, what exactly is it about Apocalypse that makes his genetic makeup so unique?Here's a look at his anatomy, which may glean some information about the villain's staying power..

RELATED:X-Men: What Happened to Moira MacTaggert After House of X?

One of the technologies he is seen using the most is the armor he was given by the Celestials. This gave Apocalypse an amazing power spike, making him strong enough to go toe-to-toe with gods. In one such battle, Apocalypse ran afoul of a young, pre-Mjolnir Thor. With one headbutt, he forced the young god into retreatand Thor said he could feel that the blow almost broke his neck.

RELATED:X Of Swords Can Prove WHY Gwenpool Belongs With the X-Men

Even before the Celestials appointed En Sabah Nur as their evolutionary agent, Apocalypse was immortal. One of the longest living mutants, Apocalypse benefits from a seemingly infinite lifespan via his mutations. This is likely a largecomponent of his "Survival of the Fittest" school of thought, as he presumes he will live through everything that comes to pass. It is important to note, however, that his immortality does not mean he is invulnerable.

Luckily for Apocalypse, his appointment as the agent of evolutionary change on the Celestials' behalf has afforded him a way to bolster his immortality. Should the villain take a lot of damage, his augmented body can enter a stasis that allows him to heal from injuries that may have otherwise stayed with him. This ability coupled with his natural healing factor makes sure he can return at full power whenever he is defeated.

RELATED:X-Factor: Williams & Finch Variant Homages Lee & Williams' X-Men

Apocalypse has had an interesting relationship with the techno-organic virus over his existence. Most infamously, he infected Cable with the virus, which became a part of the character's lifelong struggle and the diminishing of his power. He has also instructed his underlings to utilize the virus in other ways, like taking over spaceships and other technology. When Apocalypse made Angel into Archangel, his metal wings were made from similar techno-organic means.

On one occasion, Apocalypse's understanding of the virus allowed him to step in and help cure Professor Xavier of the affliction. While uncharacteristic of the villain, both he and the X-Men were in conflict with Stryfe at the time, so it is likely he saw value in having Xavier live. The final and most intriguing relationship En Sabah Nur has with the techno-organic virus is that it appears to revitalize him. On the rare occasion Apocalypse is killed, the virus appears to bring him back to life.

RELATED:X-Men May Be Marvel's Latest 'Secret Invasion' - But WAY More Horrifying

Apocalypse isvery hard to harm. His body is resistant to a plethora of damage types and his endurance is among the most formidable in the entire Marvel Universe. While there are certainly ways to defeat Apocalypse, simple brute force rarely works. His aforementioned healing factor, Celestial augmentations and his molecular makeup work in tandem to make him nigh-impervious.

Apocalypse isresistant to some of the most powerful energy sources in the Marvel Universe, including a shout from Black Bolt. Black Boltis able to crack planets in two with his sonic capabilities -- so knowing Apocalypse has endured one of his attacks is quite impressive. En Sabah Nur also holds the power to take in energy and absorb it to bolster his defensive capabilities, similar to other mutants like Bishop.

RELATED:X-Men: Does Krakoa Fit Into Marvel's 2099 Future?

Proving he is indeed the fittest for survival, Apocalypse is able to completely control his molecular structure. Using this power, he is able to grow to large heights, shrink his form, fashion his limbs into weapons and even constrict his foes with his body, similar tohow Mr. Fantastic often fights. This manipulation also affords him incredible defensive abilities, reinforcing body parts with extra mass if needed or contorting in unusual ways to dodge attacks.

In addition tousing his molecular structure manipulation for combat, Apocalypse can perform other extraordinary tasks like morphing himself into machinery -- most notably, Celestial technology. This allows him to merge with it and understand it better. When coupled with his Celestial technology, Apocalypse can also manipulate his body to grant himself additional superpowers or employ deceptive, shape-shifting tactics to infiltrate and blend into crowds.

KEEP READING:X-Men: How House of M's Hero DESTROYED Marvel's Mutant Future

Dragon Balls Most Disappointing Saiyan Is [SPOILER] - Which Makes No Sense

Gary is a writer on all things Marvel and hails from Newcastle, England. His favourite heroes are Nova, Moon Knight and Elixir of the X-Men. He also likes listening to Japan and brooding on balconies in old buildings.

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X-Men Anatomy: The 5 Weirdest Things About Apocalypse's Body - CBR - Comic Book Resources

We’re in a golden age of TV re-runs. Soon they’ll be the only thing on – CBS46 News Atlanta

(CNN) -- Nick Offerman never knew he was part of a TV juggernaut.

"We were never a hit -- it's one of the huge misconceptions about the show," he tells CNN, reflecting on his seven years playing curmudgeonly local government director Ron Swanson on the NBC comedy "Parks and Recreation."

"We were a critical darling ... but for some reason we didn't catch on with the fast food crowd," Offerman adds of the show, which is returning next week for a one-off special to benefit Covid-19 relief efforts. "We remained a Reuben sandwich. We never crossed over and became a McDonald cheeseburger."

But years after it came off the air, the show's transition to Big Mac is complete. "Across history, we know a great many artists in every field who died penniless and uncelebrated, and then later on people said, 'Oh, this Beethoven stuff is not half bad,'" Offerman muses. "It's just wonderful that the advent of streaming services have allowed our show, which was more of a culty sensation, to reach a much wider audience."

It's hardly a boastful statement. Old TV has never been more fashionable, and "Parks and Rec" is one of a small clutch of shows from the 2000s and early 2010s to achieve levels of success unthinkable during their original runs.

Despite a wealth of new, expensive original programming to compete with, it was the ninth most-watched show on Netflix at the end of 2019, according to an image shared by media strategist Scott Lazerson at October's Wall Street Journal Tech Live conference. (Netflix are notoriously guarded about revealing their own viewing figures).

Topping the list was one if its contemporaries, "The Office," which also came from the minds of creators Michael Schur and Greg Daniels. "Friends" was in second place, a full 15 years after its final episode aired, and other mature programs like "Grey's Anatomy" and "NCIS" were in the top five.

Many of those shows are in the process of being pried away by new upstart streaming services; "The Office," which was streamed for about 52 billion minutes in 2018 according to Nielsen data referenced by NBC in a news release, will move to that network's own service next year -- while the rights to "Friends" and an accompanying reunion special are the crown jewel of HBO Max, which launches next month.

Meanwhile, there are popular podcasts dedicated to "The Office" and "Scrubs," hosted by their stars, while other cast members from the group of shows -- like Chris Pratt and John Krasinski -- have gone on to become stalwarts of the Hollywood summer blockbuster cycle.

"I don't think I've ever watched an episode of anything more than once in my life," Offerman says. "But now it's become a thing where people choose their shows, like 'Parks and Recreation,' and it's their medicine they treat it the way I treated 'Abbey Road' or 'OK Computer.'"

"It's the first time in the history of entertainment that we can say, 'Oh, that's so great that the show gets to stick around in this way, where people can access it,'" he adds.

And it's a good thing they can -- TV and film productions are shut down across the Western world due to the coronavirus pandemic, and if those standstills go on for months and cause a belated lull in new programming, old TV may be all we have next year.

Judging by our current viewing habits, that won't be a problem. But the endless successes of a few old comedy programs -- often at the expense of big-budget originals -- beg some simple questions: why are we still so obsessed with old TV? What does it take to create a hit on such a scale? And, in the era of streaming services and endless choice, will a new show even reach those heights?

You could argue "The Office" is the show of the 21st century.

What started as a long-shot adaptation of the workplace-based BBC original turned into the millennium's prevailing piece of comfort viewing, running for nine highly rated seasons on NBC and then finding immortality online.

"There was an awareness that this show's going to be around for a long time," Justin Spitzer, who joined the show in its third season and stayed on as a writer and producer until its final year, tells CNN. "'The Office' truly was that cliche of lightning in a bottle, where you had all the right elements come together."

Still, even he couldn't have predicted its enduring success.

The show remains so in vogue among millennials and Gen Y-ers that it's spawned a re-watch podcast hosted by two of its stars, Jenna Fischer and Angela Kinsey -- a trend more recently picked up by "Scrubs" stars Zach Braff and Donald Faison, which also enjoys cult fandom.

Eighteen-year-old indie megastar Billie Eilish even sampled dialogue from "The Office" on her song "My Strange Addiction."

"The fact that it has stayed so popular for so long, and that there is this whole other generation discovering it, is amazing," Spitzer says. "Comedy modes change so much through the generations -- it's really rare to see that this vein of humor is as popular now as it was back then."

It's surprising that so many viewers found solace in a show based in the kind of workplace they turn on the TV to escape.

But another writer on the show, Caroline Williams, says that accessibility was key to its success. "It's the busy, ensemble element of it -- there's so many different people that you're inevitably going to know someone who resembles someone on the cast," she tells CNN.

"It's standing the test of time because it's not cynical," she adds -- and Offerman agrees that viewers return to the same shows for some good-natured humor.

"I certainly have a sense of nostalgia for a time when people were more neighborly," he says. "I feel like there's been a lot of cynicism in modern comedy, there's been a lot of negativity.

You can still say 'I love you' while making people laugh," he goes on. "That's my best guess as to why people find 'Parks and Rec' so welcoming. It has a sense of optimism in humanity."

"Friends," with its young, good-looking cast and aspirational location, forgoes some of those programs' accesibility -- while hospital-set shows like "Grey's Anatomy" and "Scrubs" hardly replicate most viewers' day-to-day routines -- but all stick to the central tenant of good, kind fun that Offerman highlights.

For all their on-screen talent and studio backing, even those involved admit their shows wouldn't have succeeded without perfect timing.

"'The Office' was made in a time when there were fewer options, in a time when you had to appeal to a wider audience," Williams says. "There were only so many networks and you had to have content that was for the whole family -- you didn't have a choice," she says. "Shows now are more niche, so they have a more limited perspective, fitting a particular audience."

It's helpful, too, that "The Office" and its contemporaries surfed the streaming wave at just the right time.

"A big part of (their success) was iTunes coming along," Spitzer says. "For the first time, people could catch up on shows and start to binge shows ... who knows if this show would have been anything without iTunes."

At the same time, "those are the final crop of shows before there was so much streaming, and so many different options of things to watch." Since then, "we segmented the market into so many places that very few shows are able to put together a large audience like that."

It might explain why today's big shows have far briefer moments in the spotlight. "Tiger King," like "Love is Blind," "You" and "Sex Education" before it, has already come and gone this year -- capturing the internet's imagination for a week or two, before disappearing back into the abyss of the Netflix library.

Offerman and his wife Megan Mullally, the star of "Will & Grace" and various other comedic ventures, still keep half an eye on new offerings -- "'Fleabag' and 'Killing Eve' are the big winners in our household," he says -- but it's hard to ignore that the idea of a show sustaining an audience's interest for 24 weeks a year, nine years in a row, suddenly seems antiquated.

He predicts there likely will be future TV juggernauts -- but they'll look or feel different.

And Spitzer is less convinced. "Shows come along that are big and have everyone talking," he says, citing "Tiger King" as the most recent example. But those are "flashes in the pan ... I can't imagine there's going to be one show that gets that big an audience (as 'The Office') again. Is there going to be a show that has that cultural impact? It's hard to imagine."

Now, a new challenge faces the TV industry -- and it's giving writers and actors plenty of food for thought.

Fans of "Parks and Recreation" will soon see how the characters they love are responding to the coronavirus pandemic, with a scripted special set for next week on NBC. The episode was shot remotely and won't have "all the bells and whistles" of a normal installment, Offerman says, but he praises the effort to get it on air.

Imagining an episode of "The Office" set in these strange times, meanwhile, Spitzer says: "I can see Michael being the kind of guy who doesn't pay any attention to social distancing and breaks quarantine immediately."

"They'd be no greater pain for him than being socially isolated ... he would find a way to make the staff come into the office because he couldn't bear to be alone. That's what I bet the story would be," he adds.

Back in the real world, though, the Covid-19 crisis is wreaking havoc in Hollywood, moving writers onto video conferencing apps and shutting down shoots entirely.

"I have a pilot right now that was supposed to shoot and shut down right before (it started)," Spitzer says. "All the pilots right now are being asked to write back-up episodes."

"If this were to last a year, it's sort of unfathomable," says Spitzer. "Even if the shutdowns end pretty soon, I don't know how quickly people will be excited about 100, 150 people crews working closely with one another in poorly ventilated sound stages. It's going to be interesting how it affects the industry."

If there can be a "winner" from the standstill, however, it may well be old TV.

"There will not be a fall TV season for the first time in history," media analyst Rich Greenfeld tells CNN. "For streaming services, life gets more difficult the longer this goes on -- they're going to run pretty dry on fresh content by the end of the year and they'll have to live on catalog" if productions can't start back up soon.

"Right now would be the best time to launch a streaming service in history because you've got everyone stuck at home," Greenfeld notes. HBO and NBC are doing just that in the next few weeks, while newer additions to the market include Apple+ TV and Disney Plus (HBO and CNN share a parent company, WarnerMedia).

For the time being, Netflix is seeing peaks in traffic so high that it had to lower bandwidth in Europe to avoid overwhelming the internet. The service added a stunning 16 million subscribers in the first quarter of 2020, it announced when reporting its earnings on Tuesday.

But how long that boom will continue might depend on the strength of the back catalogs.

"If anything, maybe that speaks to an ever higher liklihood of shows like 'The Office' and 'Scrubs' and 'Grey's (Anatomy)' continuing (to grow) when newer shows aren't being made -- and all we have are the existing quantity of shows that have been produced up to now."

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We're in a golden age of TV re-runs. Soon they'll be the only thing on - CBS46 News Atlanta

FALLEN is Modern Mythology Unafraid to Delve Into the Deities Dirt – Monkeys Fighting Robots

If one were to combine the biopic Party Monster with Neil Gaimans American Gods, the result would look like Fallen, a Kickstarter-produced comic created and written by Matt Ringel and drawn by Henry Ponciano. Several gods from the pantheons of the Greek, Norse, Shinto, and Aztec mythologies are banished to Earth and cut off from their kin while retaining their power and immortality.

The first issue introduces us to some of the now-earthbound Olympians, including Zeus, Athena, and Apollo, and a contingent from Asgard, such as Loki, Thor, and Odin. For our divine friends, it is on Earth as it was in the heavens, i.e., spending much of their time drinking, womanizing, and collecting wealth. Here, though, its 1986 New York City, and theyre celestial mobsters running nightclubs and the like. So, same stuff, different century.

One way the gods keep power is imparting some of their might and immortality to a human ward. This is done as a condition of their exile is, they can no longer directly affect the world of people. The wards can step in and influence the rabble on the gods behalf, so the gods can still be, well, gods. This all changes when Zeus is murdered in his penthouse. His right-hand man, Casper Clay, is now on the hunt for the killer.

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(Bad news: Zeus is dead. Good news: Hercules isnt on the hook for a Fathers Day gift.)

As Ive said here before, I love indie comics, especially ones that have been crowd-funded. Even books not at the level of a Big 2 product are still pieces of art requiring a village to create. It also represents a level of courage, putting your vision out to the public and asking them to fund it. For many creators, its their first foray into publishing and placing work in front of an audience is daunting.

Fallen is well-done on several fronts. It looks and reads like a book published traditionally. The storyline of gods on Earth isnt new; very little under the sun is new. The key is adding enough variables to make it original, and Matt Ringel did that. Its not a stretch to imagine the gods as mafioso, but turning them into club kids and drug dealers and inserting them in NYC in the mid-80s is a unique premise.

Ringels dialogue is excellent. The gods talk like ordinary people. They have normal emotions. It feels like reading about regular folks because the script is well-written and doesnt go all-in on heavy descriptors and flowery prose. Its straight-forward. Its a gritty story with a gritty feel. These beings are doing shady things, and you feel that sensation of being on the outside of the law and the establishment.

The art is stellar. Henry Ponciano not only provides a well-drawn book, but the layout and framing are well done. Too many times in self-published books, creators try to reinvent the wheel and do crazy layouts with a tendency to be more distracting than creative. The pages of Fallen are laid out in a way that provides more detail, allowing the reader to better feel the environment while following most of the basic rules of comic book layout.

The story is dark, and the scenes and colors represent that. Fallen doesnt feel like a breezy Marvel production or one of DCs epics. This book has a back-alley feel dripping from every page. The immoral dealings of the gods are represented with noir-infused beauty.

(Tom Hiddleston & Chris Helmsworth they aint.)

Its a quick read because the story moves fast. The plot is lean with no extra fat. It gets where it needs to be with efficiency, but that doesnt mean it lacks detail or depth. You get a strong vibe from each character as to who they are, what theyre about, and the methods theyre willing to use to achieve their goals. Toben Racicots letters fit perfectly. While sticking to the basic all-caps tradition, Racicot adds just a touch of flair, allowing them to shine while not detracting from the art. For me, the best letterers are the ones following the rules while standing out amongst their peers. Racicots letters are recognizable the same way a Jim Lee- or Adam Kubert-drawn panel is.

Fallen provides a new spin on an old tale and does it by infusing the story with dirt, grime, and some godly magic. Fallen is a must-read for lovers of mythology, crime dramas, or well-constructed comics.

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FALLEN is Modern Mythology Unafraid to Delve Into the Deities Dirt - Monkeys Fighting Robots

Dairy drives help keep pride in the dairyland – WAOW

AUBURNDALE, Wis. (WAOW) -- In a time of struggle for dairy farmers, Auburndale High School and many others are doing what they can to show support.

The last month and a half has been a lot of trials and tribulations, said Kylie Brown. She's a teacher, mother, and she milks cows every week on her brother's dairy farm.

She knows in many ways, its just been a stressful time for everybody

Her brother, Adam has been selling his milk for ten dollars per hundredweight. In order to break even, he should be selling for at least sixteen dollars.

Mark Cournoyer, FFA Director at Auburndale High School said, Everybody got quarantined, restaurants closed, and the demand for cheese and other dairy products fell by the waist side.

In the Auburndale School District, families love their farms. When the yearly ride your tractor to school event was canceled this week, they all shared videos online.

There are 76 dairy farms in the school district. So, the FFA and student leadership team started a dairy drive.

The response has been unbelievable, said Cournoyer

They raised $550 dollars for each week of the drive. The school is adding locally-sourced dairy products to the student meals they send home.

Cournoyer said, This week, theyre going to be getting two blocks of cheese, a gallon of butter, and a gallon of milk.

They're focusing mainly on cheese because it cuts down the amount of milk on the market by ninety percent. In other words, ten pounds of milk equals one pound of cheese.

It also has a longer shelf life for families. Cheese is milks step into immortality, said Cournoyer

As the market fills and prices fall, community members in Auburndale and across Wisconsin are rising to the challenge.

Cournoyer said, Ive been here for almost twenty years and Ive never seen people step up in the way that they have for our dairy farmers here in central Wisconsin.

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Dairy drives help keep pride in the dairyland - WAOW

True History of the Kelly Gang is all style – FanSided

Justin Kurzels True History of the Kelly Gang has great performances and sleek style, but not much to say of substance about the Australian outlaw.

Ned Kelly, a figure of Jesse James like stature in Australia, is a mostly murky figure. He was a bushranger and an outlaw who became an icon in his home country as much for his helmet and bulletproof armor as his lawlessness. But despite various attempts to put his story to screen, its not particularly clear what his deal is.True History of the Kelly Gangisnt going to change that.

The True History of the Kelly Gang is director Justin Kurzels take on the narrative and hes done his damndest to hit the marks of successful modern sensibilities: Dark, sexy, queer. Nicholas Hoult even lounges menacingly in nothing but garters. But despite strong performances and moments of greatness,Kelly Gang never coalesces, and it never figures out quite what it has to say about its legendary protagonist.

The film is based on the 2000 novelThe True History of the Kelly Gang and thus takes its historical accuracy cues nothing you are about to see is true from there. The first 40 minutes follow a young Ned (Orlando Schwerdt) as he comes of age on his familys backcountry farm, his dad (Ben Corbett) a drunk, his mom (Essie Davis) forced into sex work, a British sergeant (Charlie Hunnam) always lurking around, before hes sold to bushranger known as Harry Power (Russell Crowe). When Ned later returns home a young man (1917s George MacKay), family trouble and a sadistic British constable (Nicholas Hoult) set into motion a chain of events that lead Ned to outlaw immortality.

Without a doubt, the performances areKelly Gangs crown jewels. Crowe is wonderful, clearly having the time of his life as a mischievous bad influence, and Hunnam and Hoult both sink their teeth into their respective roles as villainous, occupying Brits. (Hoult, to be fair, gets the more extravagantly psychotic material; Hunnam more in magnanimous savior mode.)

As Ned, MacKay does his best with a character weve pretty much seen before. Hes a man forced to violence out of a sense of familial responsibility foisted on him too young with a bottomless well of both mommy and daddy issues while devolving increasingly into manic madness and self-mythologizing because surprise! he has a sensitive streak. The best of MacKays performance is bracingly, intensely physical, but his most impressive scene may be the one of the more vulnerable moments Ned shares with an English teacher hostage.

But, with all due respect to MacKay, Davis is the films true star as Kelly matriarch Ellen. Shes a magnetic and terrifying piece of work and you never for one second doubt her power to keep all these men truly, every single one of them under her sway. From an innuendo-laden dinner conversation to a jail cell confrontation, Davis electrifies every scene shes in.

In addition to stellar performances, Kelly Gangalso has moments of true beauty, stunningly composed shots leveraging the full visual power of the Australian bush and the dramatic, eye-catching aesthetic embraced by the outlaws.

However, as a sum of these parts,The True History of the Kelly Ganglacks cohesion, momentum and ultimately, impact. Neds glaring parental problems its no surprise to learn Kurzel directed MacKay to approach scenes with Davis like he would a romantic partner arent particularly interesting, nor really is his quasi-romance or motivating conflict. The story simply drags, feeling much longer than its two-hour runtime.

Furthermore, for film lauded as gender-bending, transgressive and queer, it falls short of committing to any of those three things. The party line for why the men wear dresses into battle is that men are afraid of what they dont understand and men fear crazy. If his father, brother or any of the men in Neds gang are motivated otherwise, its not made text. And despite all the codifiers of intimacy and a romantic relationship between Ned and his best friend Joe (Sean Keenan) not to mention overwhelming sexual tension between Ned and Fitzpatrick in their first meeting plausible deniability abounds. (That said, the other lines of sexual attraction inKelly Gangare a Pandoras box of Oedipal complexes, pedophilia and power trips so maybe Ned and Joe are well enough left alone.)

Ultimately,Kelly Gangdoes not seem know what to do (or what it wants to do) with all the imagery, aesthetic and cultural signifiers it references. For all the monologues and speeches, theres no real sense of how the film understands Ned and his legacy or how a gender-bending punk rock veneer might elucidate some valuable truth about his story. Its sleek and stylish, and then its over.

There is a sharp, bold and visually stunning telling of the Ned Kelly myth somewhere in The True History of the Kelly Gang, but in the end, its too long, too uncertain and too flat to be legendary.

True History of the Kelly Gang is available on digital and on demandApril 24.

For more, explore the Reviews section at FanSided.com.

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True History of the Kelly Gang is all style - FanSided

What We Do in the Shadows is a vampire comedy about being stuck at home – The Verge

Theres something soothing about watching a bunch of vampires be absolute morons on television every week. Theyre undead, capable of incredible feats, dark magic, and, in most cases, have been alive for hundreds of years. They should possess at least a little more finesse than Michael Scott. And yet, the bloodsucking clowns of What We Do in the Shadows are so very bad at being immortal monsters, which means they are excellent at comedy.

FXs TV series, based on the Taika Waititi film of the same name, returned for a second season just as funny as ever. Like the movie, the show follows a trio of vampires this time, they live on Staten Island as opposed to the New Zealand of the films living together in a derelict old manor. Nandor (Kayvan Novak), Laszlo (Matt Berry), and Nadja (Natasia Demetriou) are hundreds of years old and also total dorks. Theyre bad at most things they do, but as long as they dont accidentally stumble into sunlight or fall on a wooden stake, theyll get over it. (It turns out, vampirism is a very potent form of failing upward.)

While this is extremely similar to the movie its based on, the TV version of What We Do in the Shadows fleshes out its mockumentary antics with a few additions to the formula: namely, a familiar, Guillermo (Harvey Guilln) who serves them in hopes of becoming a vampire, and Colin Robinson (Mark Proksch), an energy vampire who looks normal but feeds off the ambient misery of everyone around him.

Colin and Guillermo are the reason What We Do in the Shadows works as a show, two regular-looking dudes juxtaposed against their goth reality show roommates that also have their own normcore sociopathic tendencies. Colin, in particular, gives the show a feeling very similar to The Office. As an energy vampire, he feeds off everyones annoyance and goes out of his way to be obnoxiously corny and irritating. (One very good Colin bit involves him incessantly saying updog as if it were a joke no one had ever heard before.)

Like the best work of show creator Jemaine Clement (who co-wrote the film with Waititi), theres a lot of fun to be had with taking the iconography of the occult and supernatural and putting them in front of the mundanity of the mockumentary. What happens when theyre haunted by a very petty ghost? Or deal with animal control when it captures one of them in bat form? Or accidentally get a pet zombie?

Watching What We Do in the Shadows is oddly cathartic while social distancing. Maybe its because the vampires of the show are also isolated in a fashion, unable to see the sunlight and absolutely kooky as a result. Maybe, What We Do in the Shadows argues, immortality wouldnt make you cool or fearsome, but instead really freaking weird. In that way, its kind of like watching a reality show about patently awful people. Maybe you have your flaws, but hey: youre not that bad!

If youve spent any of the last month on Twitter, the corniest social network, you might have noticed a meme going around where people ask each other to pick their preferred quarantine house. Simply put, the tweets list groups of people, real or fictional, and asks which set you would like to shack up with while social distancing. Like all bad memes, theres very little logic to them other than asking people to argue for the posters amusement, and this makes them consistently unfunny at least until the lists get so baffling that the meme loops around to becoming funny again.

Its a bad meme, but its one that feels appropriate for understanding why What We Do in the Shadows is so fun to watch. Like in this silly Twitter exercise, no one in their right mind would probably want to share a home with a bunch of vampires. But after watching What We Do in the Shadows, why not? It could be fun. I wouldnt recommend vampirism as a quarantine hobby, but being weirder? Sure. We could stand to be a little weirder.

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What We Do in the Shadows is a vampire comedy about being stuck at home - The Verge