Watch brutal Xenomorph attack in new ‘Alien: Covenant’ trailer – CNET

Before we all get too excited about those new Earth-like planets discovered in the Trappist-1 star system last week, we should all watch "Alien: Covenant," the next installment in Ridley Scott's "Alien" franchise.

The new trailer, posted by 20th Century Fox today, almost feels like a romantic love story with a ship full of couples, and then the eeriness of the mission sets in.

In director Ridley Scott's "Alien: Covenant," the sequel to 2012's "Prometheus," the crew of colony ship Covenant discover what they think is an uncharted paradise.

But the crew is in for a surprise when they learn that this new utopia is actually a dangerous world that is home to the kind of creatures that gave us all nightmares from the original "Alien" movie.

The new trailer shows scenes of the crew exploring a breathtakingly beautiful world, unknowingly stumbling upon aliens eggs spewing facehuggers, screaming shipmates running through their ship, and best of all, more footage of Xenomorphs attacking.

The film stars Michael Fassbender (reprising his role as the robot David), Noomi Rapace (reprising her role as Dr. Elizabeth Shaw), Katherine Waterston, Danny McBride, Billy Crudup, Guy Pearce and James Franco.

"Alien: Covenant" opens on May 19 in the US, May 12 in the UK and May 18 in Australia.

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Watch brutal Xenomorph attack in new 'Alien: Covenant' trailer - CNET

Stellaris: Utopia Path to Ascension release date trailer – Gameplanet

Stellaris: Utopia brings even greater depth and variety to a game already celebrated for its story-telling power and near endless possibilities. Are you ready for perfection?

One of the core improvements in Utopia is the introduction of Ascension Perks. As your species advances and gains new traditions, it can choose how it wants to evolve as it is further enlightened. You can choose between a biological path, a psionic path or a synthetic path, with various options within these broad categories. Body, Mind or Machine - how will your species challenge the future?

Utopia Also Includes: Megastructures: Build wondrous structures in your systems including Dyson Spheres and ring worlds, bringing both prestige and major advantages to your race. Habitat Stations: Build tall and establish space stations that will house more population, serving the role of planets in a small and confined empire. Rights and Privileges: Set specific policies for which of the many species under your thumb will have the rights and privileges of full citizenship. Build an egalitarian paradise or follow a caste system. And even more improvements and updates, including (as is traditional with all of our paid content releases) free updates for every Stellaris owner!

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Stellaris: Utopia Path to Ascension release date trailer - Gameplanet

At BAMPFA, ‘Hippie Modernism’ Proves the Fight for Utopia is Far from Over – KQED

A year after the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive reopened in its sleek Diller Scofidio + Renfro-designed building, it plays host to Hippie Modernism: The Struggle for Utopia, an exhibition which did not surprisingly originate in the Bay Area.

Curated by Andrew Blauvelt for the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, Hippie Modernism arrives at the birthplace of the hippie with a thrilling survey of counterculture art, architecture and design from 1964 to 1974 or, as Blauvelt bookends it, a period of optimism from the beginning of the New York Worlds Fair to the end of the OPEC oil crisis.

If hippies, usually characterized by Timothy Learys turn on, tune in, drop out mantra, didnt (and dont) seem particularly interested in the design principles of modernism, Blauvelt argues in the exhibition catalog that the hippie modern is a slightly different beast, able to realize the democratic potential of new technologies while seeking a recuperation of the avant-gardes utopic dream of integrating art into everyday life.

On both floors of the BAMPFA, the expansive exhibition shows art integrated into new forms of everyday life: living spaces, wearables, publications, new media collectives, concert posters and artistic experiments that defy easy categorization. Conveniently built into the flow of the exhibition are immersive chill spaces meant to cocoon viewers from what might otherwise be an onslaught of information for those who didnt live through the era in question.

Ken Isaacs Knowledge Box (originally constructed in 1962) creates one such space, inside a 12-foot-tall wooden cube with 24 slide projectors positioned outside its six faces, pointing in. Viewers enter the cube through a round-cornered door and a two-minute slideshow begins, with black-and-white images culled from 1950s and 60s magazines flashing randomly on the walls, floor and ceiling. A soundtrack of collaged music and spoken audio recordings plays. The artworks title suggests we should be learning something from it by osmosis, but its much more fun to stand, turn slowly in awe and appreciation, then loop back around the cube and do it all again.

Even though the Knowledge Box is quite literally a white cube, many of the works escape institutional or architectural constraints. Tucked into one corner of the exhibition, film and photographs of Ugo La Pietras Per Oggi Basta! (Enough for Today!) show the Italian artist taking his practice to the streets of 1970s Milan. With a wooden A-frame structure he dubbed Il Commutatore (the switch), La Pietra switched his view of the city, laying against the A-frame at different angles to take in building tops, overhead trees and crisscrossing electrical wires.

Hippie Modernism makes clear that the objects on view are not simply artifacts of a subculture flying under the radar of mainstream media, but the output of a counterculture seeking to reclaim every aspect of public, private and political life. In many cases, these gestures appear completely absurd: inflatable homes, a car cover crocheted from videotape, or Franois Dallegrets enigmatic KiiK. Dallegret declared the stainless steel barbell-shaped object a unique, functional product to help cure body discomforts and mild obsessions. The KiiK is whatever you want it to be, though for external use only.

For children under the age of three, the accompanying poster reads, consult your kiikologist.

Absurdity was just one manifestation of the decentralized movements underlying earnestness. In display after display, Hippie Modernism showcases experiments in education, publication and building community, from the Colorado artists commune Drop City to the Community Memory Terminal, a coin-operated electronic bulletin board originally installed at Leopolds Records in Berkeley in 1973.

Its hard to view Hippie Modernism now and not have mixed feelings about the unrealized utopias presented within it. The ideas put forth still have the power to excite and feel new in part because the society these artists, designers and radicals sought to remake very much resembles the society we currently occupy. On my short walk to BART from the museum, signs of the Feb. 1 protest at UC Berkeley against a lecture by right-wing provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos were still visible, a fitting reminder that the struggle for utopia or basic civil rights isnt relegated to the past.

Hippie Modernism: The Struggle for Utopia is on view at the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive through May 21, 2017. For more information visit bampfa.org.

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At BAMPFA, 'Hippie Modernism' Proves the Fight for Utopia is Far from Over - KQED

THE SOUND OF MUSIC to Welcome New ‘Georg von Trapp’ on Tour in Hershey – Broadway World

The lavish new production of THE SOUND OF MUSIC, directed by three-time Tony Award winner Jack O'Brien, announces Nicholas Rodriguez as Captain Georg von Trapp, beginning March 21 in Hershey, PA.

"Rarely, but once in a blue moon the planets align in such a way to make both a director happy and his audiences even more so" said O'Brien. "Nicholas Rodriguez assumes the crucial role of Captain von Trapp in our wonderful THE SOUND OF MUSIC, bringing me not only pride that one of my own friends has turned up in the perfect role, but with the assurance that our audiences are about to hear this great music sung as beautifully as can be imagined. Nicholas's voice is one of the major theatrical gifts I've known, and any production lucky enough to snag him will glow with melodic pride! We welcome him, and envy those about to experience this remarkable evening!"

Nicholas Rodriguez joins a cast that includes Charlotte Maltby as Maria Rainer in her national tour debut and Melody Betts as The Mother Abbess, with Merwin Foard as Max Detweiler, Teri Hansen as Elsa Schraeder, Austin Colby as Rolf and Paige Silvester as Liesl. The von Trapp children are played by Elliot Weaver (Friedrich), STEPHANIE DI FIORE (Louisa), James Bernard (Kurt), DAKOTA RILEY QUACKENBUSH (Brigitta), Taylor Coleman (Marta) and Anika Lore Hatch (Gretl).

Completing the cast is Christopher Carl, Donna Garner, Robert Mammana, Darren Matthias, Carey ReBecca Brown, Woody Buck, Citln Burke, Maria Failla, Meghan Hales, Jillian Jameson, Mark Bradley Miller, Anna Mintzer, Julia Osborne, Zane Phillips, Rebecca Pitcher, Michael Spaziani and Emily Trumble.

THE SOUND OF MUSIC features music by Richard Rodgers, lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II, book by Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse, suggested by The Trapp Family Singers by Maria Augusta Trapp. This new production is directed by Jack O'Brien (Hairspray, The Full Monty, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, The Coast of Utopia), choreographed by Danny Mefford (Fun Home, The Bridges of Madison County and Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson) and music supervision by Andy Einhorn (Bullets Over Broadway, Rodgers & Hammerstein's Cinderella, Brief Encounter, The Light in the Piazza). The design team is comprised of Douglas W. Schmidt, set design (Tony Award nominee: 42nd Street, Into the Woods); Jane Greenwood, costume design (2014 recipient of the Special Tony Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Theatre), Natasha Katz, lighting design (Six-time Tony Award winner: Long Day's Journey Into Night, An American in Paris, Once, Aida, The Coast of Utopia, The Glass Menagerie) and Ken Travis, sound design (Aladdin, Newsies, Memphis). Casting by Telsey + Company/Rachel Hoffman, CSA.

THE SOUND OF MUSIC enjoyed extraordinary success as the first live television production of a musical in over 50 years when "The Sound of Music Live!" aired on NBC in December, 2013 and was seen by over 44 million people. 2015 marked the 50th anniversary of the film version, which continues to be the most successful movie musical in history. The spirited, romantic and beloved musical story of Maria and the von Trapp family will once again thrill audiences with its Tony, Grammy and Academy Award winning Best Score, including "My Favorite Things," "Do-Re-Mi," "Climb Ev'ry Mountain," "Edelweiss" and the title song.

A complete list of tour cities can be found below, and online.

UPCOMING TOUR DATES:

Rochester, NY February 28-March 5, 2017

Waterbury, CT March 7-12, 2017

Hershey, PA March 21-26, 2017

Buffalo, NY March 28-April 2, 2017

Schenectady, NY April 4-9, 2017

Memphis, TN April 18-23, 2017

West Palm Beach, FL May 9-14, 2017

Toronto, ON June 6-11, 2017

Washington, DC June 13-July 16, 2017

Cleveland, OH July 18-23, 2017

For more information, visit http://www.TheSoundOfMusicOnTour.com, or follow on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/TheSoundOfMusic, Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/SoundOfMusic, and Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/SoundOfMusicOnTour.

Nicholas Rodriguez (Captain Georg von Trapp). Broadway: Tarzan. Off-Broadway: Toxic Avenger, Almost Heaven, Death for Five Voices, Collette Collage, Bajour. Carnegie Hall: Guys and Dolls. Tours: Jesus Christ Superstar, Evita, Hair. Regional: Carousel (Helen Hayes nomination), Destiny of Desire, Mother Courage and Her Children, Oklahoma!(Helen Hayes Award), My Fair Lady (Helen Hayes nomination) and The Light in the Piazza at Arena Stage; The Ten Commandments at the Kodak Theatre; Beauty and the Beast, Wizard of Oz, Tarzan, The Buddy Holly Story at The MUNY; Mothers and Sons, LES MISERABLES, Master Class, Love!Valour!Compassion! at ZACH Theatre, South Pacific and The King and I at Casa Maana. Film: Sex in the City II (also soundtrack). Television: Madam Secretary, Nick Chavez on ABC's One Life to Live (GLAAD Award). His debut CD The First Time... is available at http://www.psclassics.com and via iTunes. http://www.thenickrod.com

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THE SOUND OF MUSIC to Welcome New 'Georg von Trapp' on Tour in Hershey - Broadway World

Utopia expansion for Stellaris coming in April, new trailer – PC Invasion – PC Invasion (blog)


PC Invasion (blog)
Utopia expansion for Stellaris coming in April, new trailer - PC Invasion
PC Invasion (blog)
The 'Utopia' expansion for Paradox's Stellaris has both a release date and price, setting galactic empires on course for new ideas in April.
Stellaris Utopia Gameplay Expansion Out In AprilAttack of the Fanboy
'Stellaris' Utopia Expansion Gets Dated - TrailerWorthPlaying.com
Stellaris: Utopia Dated, New TrailerGamers Hell
Wccftech -PCGamesN -YouTube
all 10 news articles »

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Utopia expansion for Stellaris coming in April, new trailer - PC Invasion - PC Invasion (blog)

New Utopia | Prometheism.net – Part 4

On Hong Kong Island most visitors will gravitate towards the cluster of international clubs in Shuang Wan, Central and its frenetic nightlife hub, Lan Kwai Fong. Another large cluster of island venues is located between Wanchai and Causeway Bay, discreetly hidden away in commercial buildings.

Over in colorful Kowloon, which has a dense collection of easy-to-access gay clubs along the MTR corridor, crowds throng through neon-lit high-rise canyons, going to/from shopping, eating or partying at innumerable entertainment venues from Tsim Sha Tsui up to Prince Edward. If you are looking for a bit of old Hong Kong, take a taxi to Kowloon City where traditional shops and restaurants are still managing (barely) to fend off encroaching redevelopment.

Hong Kongs population is nearing 8 million (thats over 300,000 Utopians).

Navigating the local gay scene is easy with our interactive Utopia Map of Gay & Lesbian Hong Kong:

Fruits in Suits (FinS) is an informal, gay professional networking event on each 3rd Tue of every month. Like-minded people mostly professional expats (but they welcome all local professionals to join in) come together in an exclusive private area for food, drinks and to chat, socialise with new people, network and promote LGBT rights in the territory. Add your review, comment, or correction

Founded by Filipino and Hong Kong GLBT, this club hosts meetings of the their GLBT Society and the 1000 strong Hong Kong Labour Party. They offer free legal advice and support service through sympathetic lawyers in Hong Kong and the Philippines. Utopia Member Benefit: DISCOUNTS on facility private hire, FREE legal advice, FREE meeting venue for GLBT societies. Add your review, comment, or correction

Pink Alliance aims to link LGBT organizations operating in Hong Kong, to assist them in their work and to provide a network for information in both Chinese and English. Pink Alliance also researches and campaigns on issues of key importance, as well as organising events to promote awareness of LGBT issues. Monthly meetings. Add your review, comment, or correction

Hong Kongs first gay social services center. The government funded center provides counseling, training workshops and a hotline to provide peer support for gay men. Closed Tue and public holidays. Add your review, comment, or correction

Gay and lesbian activities, support and services. Has the only face-to-face free counseling service for Gay people. Chinese only. Add your review, comment, or correction

A Hongkong-based non profit-making, non-governmental organization, established on 1st July 2003. They defend the human rights of sexuality minorities facing discrimination due to their sexual orientation and/or gender identity. WCHK effects this mission through advocacy, documentation, public education, oral history, cultural development, AIDS education on WSW (women having sex with women) and hosting monthly gatherings for lesbian, bisexual women and transgenders. Add your review, comment, or correction

Gay bookshop with large selection of local and imported books, magazines and videos to choose from as well as pride gifts. Add your review, comment, or correction

Gay-owned Koru Contemporary Art, specializing in modern sculpture, was established in 2001 to present a diverse range of contemporary international artists. A large selection of art featuring wood, bronze, stone, metal, glass, ceramic and mixed media sculpture, fine art, painting, prints and photography, may be found in their two gallery spaces, with a combined exhibition area of over 7,500sqf. Utopia Member Benefit: 5% DISCOUNT on art. Add your review, comment, or correction

Mainly gay, esp. weekends. Take a bus to Repulse Bay and then a ten minute walk, past the Welcome supermarket, to South Bay. The gay area is in front of the 40-story Ruby Court Bld. Some cruising around. Swimming possible. Bring insect repellent. UTOPIAN VERIFIED JUN 2014 Add your review, comment, or correction

This area seems to concentrate more gay-only men. Some nude sun-bathing (illegal) and action in the bushes (also illegal). Approach from South Bay Road. Steep path on the right-hand (sea side). Middle Bay is now so well-known that it is dangerous. For safetys sake it is better to make the 1-hour trip to Lantau Island and walk to the rather remote Cheung Sha Beach. UTOPIAN VERIFIED JUN 2014 Add your review, comment, or correction

MTR: TST or Jordan. Several cruisy facilities and lots of garden pathways. Most action takes place after 11pm. The park closes at midnight, but you can always leave (and enter) through the gate at Austin Rd (all other gates are closed after midnight). So dont panic when you are late and think you are locked up in the park. Mostly Asian guys under 40 years old. Add your review, comment, or correction

HONG KONG ISLAND Central, Lan Kwai Fong

Round-the-clock gay-friendly eatery with handsome staff. Popular for breakfast on Sun morning for those who have danced-til-dawn the night before. Add your review, comment, or correction

On any given Fri or Sat night after midnight, this Chinese fast food place (fried rice, fried noodles) is about 70% gay. When the clock hits 2am, the percentage rises up to 90%. Coming to Tsui Wah has become something of a ritual for late night partiers. Fish ball noodles are the signature dish here, and they also have simple sandwiches (i.e. two slices of white bread with luncheon meat and egg), steak, and acquired tastes such as stir-fried spaghetti! Add your review, comment, or correction

Large, bustling local eatery popular with groups of gays because of its inexpensive food and location close to the bars. Add your review, comment, or correction

KOWLOON Jordan, Mongkok, Tsim Sha Tsui, Yau Ma Tei

Foodie Alert! This tiny hole-in-the-wall has a disproportionate amount of international fame after recommendations by Newsweek, Time Out and celebrity chefs. Excellent dim sum at a reasonable price. Their dessert specialty is a succulent poached pear, so leave room. Sister branches in Jordan, Wanchai and TST. Add your review, comment, or correction

KOWLOON Tsim Sha Tsui, Yau Ma Tei

Located in east Kowloon, well off the tourist track (and overlooked by most locals), this quaint neighborhood stretch of eateries is certainly destined to be torn down and rebuilt into something gleaming, clean and modern. Too bad. Catch this slice-of-life from Kowloons past for cheap eats and loads of character while you still can. Add your review, comment, or correction

Pronounced dai gor, meaning big brother). A gay-owned, online menswear store aimed at the gay male market and at guys who like their t-shirts nicely fitted. Daigo is inspired by the beautiful and fashionable bros in Asia. They aim to provide great customer satisfaction by offering high quality and unique t-shirt designs that will be part of gay Asia and the gay community as a whole. Add your review, comment, or correction

Above Bohemian shop (take the stairway in the alley to the mezzanine floor). Gay mens undergear and clothing shop offers exclusive premium brand underwear, tanks, swimwear, shirts, and more including Andrew Christian (USA), 2EROS (Australia), Addicted (Spain) and NEWURBANMALE (Singapore). Utopia Member Benefit: 10% DISCOUNT. Add your review, comment, or correction

Look for the stairway entry marked #83 and 85, next to Express Korea Fast Food and walk up to 1/F. Gay-owned shop offering sexy branded undergear, toys, SM equipment, magazines, pride gifts and other rainbow merchandise. Open 5-9pm Mon-Sat (closed Sun). Utopia Member Benefit: 10% DISCOUNT. Add your review, comment, or correction

Gay-owned tanning studio established in 2004. They offer state-of-the-art tanning and collagenic equipment from Dr Muller, Germany. Tanning Studio was a sponsor of the Mr. Asia contest (2011, 2012, 2013). Utopia Member Benefit: 10% DISCOUNT on all tanning packages and lotions. Add your review, comment, or correction

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Travel & Resources: HONG KONG Gay Asia and Utopia

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New Utopia | Prometheism.net - Part 4

The board hoard: your guide to the best new board games – The Guardian

Between Two Cities challenges players to work together to build their ideal urban environment. Photograph: Owen Duffy for the Guardian

Each month, we play a stack of newly released tabletop games to help you find the ones youll love. This time, were building our vision of an urban utopia, hosting a dinner where we poison all our friends and cruelly attempting to ruin other peoples parties by poaching their guests.

3-7 players, 20 minutes, RRP 34.99 Designers: Ben Rosset and Matthew OMalley

Theres something about civic administration that seems irresistible to gamers. Ever since SimCity first hit computer screens in 1989, players have spent untold hours tweaking tax rates and manipulating zoning regulations in an effort to construct an urban utopia.

The drama, excitement and sex appeal of urban planning havent been confined to video games, though. Over the years, numerous board games have given players the chance to build the city of their dreams. Between Two Cities is one recent example, and it puts a slick, simple and addictive spin on the well-worn theme.

Rather than focussing on a single city, it challenges you to build two one each in cooperation with the players to your left and right. Each round sees you choose a pair of building tiles from a random selection. Youll place one in each of your cities and pass the remainder to the player next to you, repeating the process as the game goes on. Over time, your cities will grow, incorporating new buildings that score points based on how theyre grouped together. Shops gain you a bonus if theyre arranged in a straight line to form a thriving high street. Parks are worth more when clustered together in little green pockets. Houses lose almost all of their value if you build a factory nearby, and, just like in real life, offices are at their most successful when located next to pubs.

Youll have to confer with your partners to place tiles in the locations that maximise your score, and the result is an engaging, evolving puzzle that mixes competitive and collaborative elements to brilliant effect. It may not be a deep or realistic simulation of city management, but Between Two Cities is light, quick and deceptively cerebral. I cant wait to get it back to my table.

Also try: Quadropolis, Sushi Go!

Related: Suburbia review: Ballardian town planning on your dinner table.

2-12 players, 30 minutes, RRP 46.99 Designer: Tim Page

Raise Your Goblets casts you and your friends as power-hungry nobles vying for the throne of a fantasy kingdom. Rather than relying on political intrigue, lines of succession or simple meritocracy, though, youve decided to seize power by ruthlessly poisoning all of your rivals. Unfortunately, theyve all had the same idea, meaning that your upcoming dinner party is going to rack up an alarming body count.

The game revolves around a set of plastic goblets. At the beginning of each round, you randomly distribute tokens representing wine, poison and doses of antidote between them. After a few turns spent peeking into cups, secretly adding tokens or moving goblets around the table, youll all have to drink from the one in front of you. If it contains more poison than antidote, youre dead. Youll gain points for surviving at the end of a round, for killing off rivals and for consuming more wine than anyone else, and, after three rounds, the player with the highest score claims the crown.

To win, youll need to carefully observe your opponents, maintain an inscrutable poker face and make use of a selection of special abilities that can tip the chances of survival in your favour. Its a fun, light-hearted concept, and it leads to hilarity and recrimination as each round sees players meet with an untimely end.

This isnt the only simple, sociable game out there though, and while it looks undeniably impressive, its expensive for what it is especially as its suggested UK price is 50% higher than its European equivalent. If youre looking for a bit of duplicity and deduction at your next game night, there are other options, and unless youre irresistibly drawn to Raise Your Goblets sculpted cups and gemstone-like tokens, its worth giving some of them a look.

Also try: The Resistance: Avalon, Two Rooms and a Boom

2-5 players, 30-45 minutes, RRP 19.99 Designer: Daniel Solis

Belle of the Ball is another game focusing on high-society soirees, and, while it may not rack up quite as many deaths as Raise Your Goblets, at heart, its every bit as mean. You and your opponents take on the role of hosts who have unwittingly organised parties on the same night, and youll each try to attract the most glittering array of guests to your own get-together.

In the centre of the table is a line of cards representing potential attendees, each of whom comes with a set of topics theyre keen to discuss things such as politics, romance, military affairs or cheese. Your goal is to group characters with similar interests together, and that turns out to be more about who you exclude than who you invite. Youll start the game with a set of regret cards, which you can use to reject partygoers and attract someone else to your gathering instead. Pick a character whos already been declined by your opponents, though, and youll acquire any regret cards spent on them, giving you newfound flexibility in selecting the most desirable guests.

It means that rejected characters become more attractive over time, and combined with a set of Belle cards, which grant you special abilities and new ways to score points it elevates a simple set-building game into something far more cutthroat, where youll constantly have to adapt your tactics to the changing state of the game.

Belle of the Ball benefits from a surreal sense of humour and a distinctive art style, and while its default mode is simple enough for children to pick up, it comes with some optional advanced rules which emphasise its more competitive edge. With two players it can feel a little flat, but more opponents bring greater scope for interaction, and more rewarding ways to mess with your rivals. It all adds up to a family-friendly game that manages to be fun for grownups as well.

Also try: No Thanks!, Small World

What have you been playing this month? Let us know below.

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The board hoard: your guide to the best new board games - The Guardian

Government shakeups and political unrest are coming to Stellaris in its Utopia expansion – PCGamesN

Continuing their drip feed of information about the new features present in their Utopia expansion, Paradox have revealed some of the changes that are coming to Stellaris political systems. While the thrust of the Utopia expansion and the free Banks update is mainly to do with empire customization and ethics, it would seem odd if government reform was not included in these sweeping changes. If only government reform were so easy in real life.

If you're one for simulating governments, try these other 4X games.

The government rework will be available to all Stellaris players, with players now being able to create their own government rather than picking from a preconfigured list. You first off start with your Authority, which determines how the transition of power is handled. You can choose democratic rule where power is transferred every 10 years, an oligarchy where a new ruler is elected every 40 or 50 years, a dictatorship where power only changes hands upon a rulers death or an imperial system, where rulers rule for life and power is then passed down the bloodline.

For all the systems that involve the populace electing their leader, you need to take into account the separate political factions that are present in each empire. If youre supposed to be running an inclusive democracy, picking an authoritarian human supremacist for leader may cause some problems. You also have to consider Civics, which gives specific bonuses and should tie into the ethics of your empire. You start off with two Civics slot, with a third being unlocked via additional research. The Civics range from things like environmentalism, mandatory military service, open borders and so on. If you (or an armed populace) decide that the current government direction is not helping society, you can reform your government to change your Authority and Civics slot.

If you buy the Utopia expansion, would be political reformers gain access to certain advanced Civics and a special Authority. The new Civics can turn your empire into the Imperium of Man from Warhammer 40k, violently purging any other alien races and vastly boosting your military output. You can be an entirely mechanised society, where you start off with robot workers or you can be a society where you have another species as a dedicated underclass, used mainly as either cannon fodder or slave workers.

You can also have your empire be a psychically linked hive mind, where there is no need for internal politics as everyone obeys without question. The main downside with creating your own Borg civilization is that you can only assimilate other empires if you have advanced gene splicing technology. Otherwise, any conquered species will eventually die out as they are used to feed the hive mind. You can still perform diplomacy if you want to be a peaceful empire of collective consciousnesses, but non hive mind empires will initially distrust you.

Speaking of conquering species, you can now indoctrinate more primitive species before taking them over. This essentially involves feeding a planet propaganda until they start to line up with your empires ethics, where you can then march in and take over as the conquering heroes. This can also backfire, as the new Unrest stat means that citizens can resist certain policies and even stage an armed revolt if they are unhappy enough. Your efforts to make Ziltron-4 great again may end up with people staging a mass uprising.

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Government shakeups and political unrest are coming to Stellaris in its Utopia expansion - PCGamesN

Utopia is coming, with a basic income for all – The Times (subscription)

A perfect world seems impossible but a provocative new book says it is within our grasp. Its author tells Bryan Appleyard giving everyone a fixed sum can end poverty, cut crime and make healthcare cheaper

Rutger Bregman, a historian, is young and Dutch. These things matter. Opinions and ideas change quite quickly, he says, and Im 28, I have all the time in the world.

And being Dutch? The funny thing is that 15 to 20 years ago in the Netherlands there was this ideology that we were a guide country, a country that should guide other countries give most to development aid and these other things. Now we dont believe that any more.

Being young he can think big thoughts and reasonably expect to see them change the world. Being Dutch he has experienced the most startling case of collapsing postwar liberalism and rising illiberalism in the form of Geert Wilderss far-right Party for Freedom.

That collapse along

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Utopia is coming, with a basic income for all - The Times (subscription)

A peek inside the Downtown Project with Aimee Groth – Las Vegas Review-Journal

It was an audacious goal by any measure: to revitalize downtown Las Vegas in a new way, using new principles, all in just five years time.

Tony Hsieh, CEO of Zappos.com, invested a reported $350 million into the Downtown Project, which sought to revitalize and create a sense of community in downtown Las Vegas. With Hsiehs encouragement, journalist Aimee Groth spent more than four years following the project, enjoying access to Hsieh and his lieutenants and confidants, and the employees and aspiring entrepreneurs who became part of it.

Groth tells her story in The Kingdom of Happiness: Inside Tony Hsiehs Zapponian Utopia (Touchstone, $27). Though she judges the Downtown Project as unsuccessful relative to the heights that it had aspired to, anyway and even disillusioning, she gives Hsieh credit for his willingness to take on the project in the first place.

Groth calls her book the product of an evolution, from someone who just really bought into it and then turned into more of a skeptic.

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I see it partially as a memoir, Groth said of her book. I mean, it could be filed under psychology or sociology. I think it crosses genres.

She started reporting on the Downtown Project in 2013

at age 29.

I was always drawn to the psychology. That was the most interesting aspect to me, she said. Unlike other (reporters) that came through the downtown, I never saw this as an urban planning experience, or that it should be measured against other urban planning experiences. I thought of it as a social experience first.

The Kingdom of Happiness covers Zappos adoption of holacracy, or jettisoning a traditional corporate hierarchy in favor of self-organization. There are stories of downtown business owners whose ventures survived and failed, and stories of what happened to utopia-seeking dreamers when utopia wasnt realized.

And theres Hsieh. I think that he went into this project with good intentions, she said. I think that hes never experienced failure in his life until now, so Ill be very curious to see what he does with it over the next few years.

A spokeswoman for the Downtown Project said last week that Hsieh was out of the country and unable to be interviewed. However, the Downtown Project released a statement: Several Zappos employees, including Tony, have reviewed the book and have collectively noted well over 100 pages that we believe contain inaccuracies, misrepresentations, or flat out false statements throughout the final version. As a result, the book is not representative of Zappos or Tony or many others mentioned in the book, and is not officially endorsed by the company.

THE OUTCOME

Although the Downtown Project hasnt met the lofty aims voiced at its outset, Groth gives credit to Hsieh for what he has been able to do.

I think that if you walk downtown youll see that the area has improved. I would say there has been an upgrade, she said.

Owners of businesses that received financial support from the project got an opportunity they never would have gotten in terms of investment money, Groth added. And a lot of people got a lot of life experience.

Meanwhile, I know there are other cities that are in touch with the Downtown Project, seeking to learn lessons from it, she said. So I think its an ongoing conversation, and Id be very interested to see what happens five years from now, Groth said. Maybe theyll accomplish their mission in 10 years.

And, from a broader, more personal perspective, Groth said, the book is about pursuing your dream, really. Everyone comes to Las Vegas to pursue a dream. My dream was to write this book.

Contact John Przybys at jprzybys@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0280. Follow @JJPrzybys on Twitter.

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A peek inside the Downtown Project with Aimee Groth - Las Vegas Review-Journal

$168000 headphones to go on display – The New Paper

Have you ever wondered how much is a pair of the world's most expensive headphones? The Focal Utopia by Tournaire, which costs a whopping US$120,000 (S$168,000), is the answer. It will be on display at CanJam Global, the world's premier headphone audio expo, which returns to Singapore for this year's edition. The event will also feature other high-end headphones, such as the Sennheiser HE 1 (US$55,000) and the HIFIMAN Shangri-La (US$50,000). It will be held from March 11 to 12 at the Pan Pacific Singapore hotel.

Alphabet's Google and subsidiary Jigsaw launched on Thursday a new technology to help news organisations and online platforms identify abusive comments on their websites.

Called Perspective, it will review comments and score them based on how similar they are to comments people said were "toxic" or likely to make them leave a conversation.

It has been tested on the New York Times, and the companies hope to extend it to other news organisations, such as The Guardian and The Economist, as well as websites.

Perspective examined hundreds of thousands of comments that had been labelled as offensive by human reviewers to learn how to spot potentially abusive language.

Jigsaw product manager CJ Adams said the company is open to rolling out the technology to all platforms, without specifying whether that included larger ones such as Facebook and Twitter, where trolling can be a major headache. - REUTERS

Rumours about new iPhones normally centre on the screen or processing chips.

But a new report from 9to5Mac highlighted something that could be a little controversial for Apple's next iPhone - a camera that can map your face.

Apple may be considering a camera designed for authentication and augmented reality for its next high-end iPhone, according to a research note from Apple analyst Kuo Ming-chi of KGI Securities.

With a better sense of depth, the camera can tell how far away something is from the lens.

It could even generate something like a 3D selfie, 9to5Mac reported.

Adding such a camera seems to be a natural next step for Apple, as it already organises iPhone photos based on the subjects it recognises in the images, reported The Washington Post.

Experts said Apple's reported plan to use a depth-sensing camera for the feature addresses issues of people tricking facial recognition scans.

"You can get much more accurate readings. There are things that can mess with visual sensors. This sees through make-up to tissue," said Mr Chester Wisniewski of security firm Sophos.

He added that this type of camera will not be easily fooled - even a 3D-printed model of a face should not trick it.

The Nintendo Switch is just a week away from hitting the shelves in stores, and Nintendo has upped the hype by announcing three new games to the line-up of titles that will be available on March 3.

They are Shin'en Multimedia's Fast RMX racing competition and two Shovel Knight titles from Yacht Club Games - Specter Of Torment and Treasure Trove, reported CNet.

Fast RMX is exclusive to the Switch, while the other two are exclusive for a limited time.

The other titles slated to be available include Zelda, 1-2-Switch (28 minigames), Super Bomberman R, Just Dance 2017, Skylanders Imaginators and I Am Setsuna.

Nintendo also made announcements about the Switch eShop, including the news that Virtual Console games will not yet be available, and that users will have to perform a system update on launch day to access the store.

Good news for those who get irked by YouTube's unskippable 30-second advertisements that play before your video.

Google confirmed the plan to scrap such advertisements from next year to BBC's Newsround programme, adding that it wants to focus on "formats that work well for both users and advertisers".

Long unskippable adverts are seen as a nuisance by many viewers, and Google has introduced shorter formats.

One media agency told the BBC that the move reflected the difference between online video and linear television services.

"The 30-second ad is a legacy from TV times," said Mr Will Smyth, head of media at the Agenda21 agency.

"This will encourage advertisers to be more creative about the way they use the platform."

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$168000 headphones to go on display - The New Paper

Reese Witherspoon on New Zealand: ‘You can’t capture it in pictures’ – Newshub

Reese Witherspoon says her Instagram feed, full of pictures taken on her trip to New Zealand, doesn't do the country's beauty justice.

"It's the most beautiful country in the world - I've made a lot of movies all over the world, but this is my favourite place I've ever shot," she told radio station The Edge on Friday.

"You can't capture it in pictures. I would say to anybody who comes to New Zealand, don't just bring your iPhone - you need a major, amazing camera."

Witherspoon, who won an Oscar for her role in Johnny Cash biopic Walk the Line, is in New Zealand shooting Disney film A Wrinkle in Time with co-stars Oprah Winfrey, Mindy Kaling (The Office), Chris Pine (Star Trek), Storm Reid (12 Years a Slave) and Zach Galifianakis (The Hangover).

"We are making a movie," she told hosts Jay-Jay, Dom and Randell. "I know it looks like I'm just having fun with my girlfriends."

In the film, New Zealand stands in for the planet Uriel, a mountainous utopia populated by centaurs.

"We needed sort of magical locations because it's about going to other universes," said Witherspoon.

She promised to come back for a proper holiday.

"The food is wonderful, the landscapes are gorgeous, but most importantly the people have been so kind and so friendly, and have opened up their homes. We have all been just so touched by what a beautiful experience it has been."

Though she wouldn't tell what it's like flying across the seas on Oprah's private jet, she did reveal just where she keeps her Oscar.

"I keep it in my living room, and anyone who picks it up has to do a speech."

Newshub.

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Reese Witherspoon on New Zealand: 'You can't capture it in pictures' - Newshub

Utopian sci-fi survival horror game, PAMELA, enters Steam Early Access on March 9th New Screenshots – DSOGaming (blog)

NVYVE Studios today announced that P.A.M.E.L.A., the first-person, open world, utopian, sci-fi, survival horror game, will launch on March 9th on Steam Early Access. In order to celebrate this announcement, NVYVE Studios released some new screenshots that can be viewed below.

In P.A.M.E.L.A. you must survive against all odds by wielding unconventional technology as you explore Eden, an unforgiving paradise that explores the unforeseen consequences of humanitys craving for technological and biological advancement.

Adam Simonar, Studio Director of NVYVE Studios, said:

Several years ago, we formed NVYVE Studios with the goal of creating a game that took the survival genre, and built upon it with a hand-crafted sci-fi setting to create a wholly unique experience. The Steam Early Access launch is a culmination of those years, and will form a base for P.A.M.E.L.A., challenging players to explore and survive within the fallen utopian city of Eden. We are looking forward to working with the community as we continue to evolve P.A.M.E.L.A., adding new features and content in the run-up to a full commercial launch.

Marvin Maalouf, President and CEO of NVYVE Studios, added:

P.A.M.E.L.A. represents a bold step for us. Having previously utilised Unity in our architectural practise, were excited to bring those skills into game design. I am very proud of our incredible team Its been a dream come true for everyone involved. A lot of sacrifices, sleepless nights, long days, sweat and tears went into making the game and we hope the gaming community enjoys it. We see P.A.M.E.L.A. as the first in what will hopefully be a long line of quality titles to come out of the studio and want to show the world that a small team with a huge amount of passion can create beautiful, immersive and fun worlds for players to explore.

P.A.M.E.L.A. begins as your character awakens from cryosleep in Eden, a fallen utopian city. Pamela, Edens lone AI overseer, provides information on how to survive within the city while bestowing amplified abilities upon the player.

As you explore Eden, uncovering insights into the lives of individual citizens of Eden through discoverable data logs, you discover the tragic story behind the fall of Eden and learn about the way society used to function in this former utopia.

The game will feature over 200 unique pieces of loot and resources, ranging from food to building materials and hi-tech weapons and upgrades. It will also offer players hacking skills to unlock salvage containers or doors to access secret areas of the city.

Enjoy!

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Utopian sci-fi survival horror game, PAMELA, enters Steam Early Access on March 9th New Screenshots - DSOGaming (blog)

Knowledge can fight ignorance: New speakers series will shed light on Yemen – Detroit Metro Times

Its what you call cognitive dissonance, right? We send the bullets and bombs by ship (billions of dollars worth for Saudi Arabia), by proxy (military aid for Israel), and we even deliver our bombs and bullets ourselves (the recent joint UAE-U.S. force that saw SEAL Team 6 in a tight spot). But when it sends people running like hell, seeking a more stable life in the West, thats when were supposed to worry that they might be terrorists.

Its not very sporting to do so. Its sort of like burning down a hotel and then saying the guests running out of the inferno were probably arsonists, every last one of them.

These are, of course, all finer points if you already know that the United States has done to the Middle East what the English rock band the Who used to do to hotel rooms. Except the Who never left 1.3 million people dead. (Deaf, maybe.)

But wed wager that the people most likely to support Trumps initial travel ban think that the United States has entered the Middle East and transformed it into something like Disneyland, and people arent fleeing this new utopia so much as rushing to the West in hopes of reducing Christendom to a burnt, smoking cinder.

Which is why on major corrective would be to understand what is happening on the ground in the Middle East. Kind of a shocker to actually point that out, right? Well, there is a new speaker series started in the international city-within-a-city of Hamtramck to delve into just such issues. Its called the Hamtramck Monthly Forum, and this months event will focus on just whats happening in Yemen.

This event will feature actual special guests familiar with the region. Author and activist Phyllis Bennis, who directs the New Internationalism Project at the Institute for Policy Studies, has even written a book on the subject, Understanding ISIS and the New Global War on Terror: A Primer. Shell provide hard-won information, and will sign copies of her book at the end of the event. Also making an appearance will be Yemeni journalist Latifa Ali, a reporter, human rights activist, and a member of several charitable and nonprofit organizations.

If you cant go, (or, heck, even if you can: It might even make good preparation for the discussion) have a look at this half-hour documentary on the situation there to see what your tax dollars are doing, the woman-hating religious extremists theyre doing it with, and why any reasonable person would run as fast as their legs can carry them. Hamtramck Monthly Forum convenes to discuss Yemen War & Muslim Ban, at 2-4 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 25, 8625 Joseph Campau, Hamtramkc; 313-207-3904; discussion to be moderated by Bill Meyer and Hanan Yahya;suggested $5 donation;event co-sponsored by JVP-Detroit (Jewish Voice for Peace) .

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Knowledge can fight ignorance: New speakers series will shed light on Yemen - Detroit Metro Times

Anglea Henderson-Bentley: New take on Jack the Ripper an idea whose ‘Time’ has come – Huntington Herald Dispatch

There is a list on IMDB.com of 110 TV shows and movies that feature Jack the Ripper, a never-identified serial killer who was active in the Whitechapel district of London in 1888. So, exploring who he actually was is not a new idea.

But even though it doesn't really cover any new ground, the latest series featuring the notorious killer - ABC's "Time After Time" - still manages to be entertaining thanks to a charming cast and an unexpected romance set against a darker overall story.

Based on the 1979 novel and movie of the same name and executive produced by Kevin Williamson ("Dawson's Creek, "Scream"), "Time" stars Freddie Stroma as H.G. Wells, best known for the novels "The Time Machine" and "The War of the Worlds."

In 1893, the yet-to-be-published author shows his skeptical friends the actual time machine he has constructed. All but one friend - Dr. John Stevenson (Josh Bowman) - think H.G. is crazy, while John chides him for not having the courage to test his invention or finish his novel. H.G. must summon the courage, however, when he realizes John is Jack the Ripper and must follow John when he escapes into present-day New York City via H.G.'s machine.

H.G. is disappointed when he realizes the utopia he had hoped for doesn't exist in 2017, while John revels in the present, continuing to kill at every opportunity. John plays cat-and-mouse games with H.G. over the key to the time machine, which will allow John to go whenever he wants without fear of H.G. following him. To help track down The Ripper, H.G. befriends Jane (Genesis Rodriguez), the curator of the H.G. Wells exhibit at a downtown museum. But as H.G. and Jane grow closer, Jane finds herself in danger from one of the most notorious criminals of all time.

There is nothing fresh or new about "Time" - especially since it follows the plot of the movie and novel pretty closely. So I was pretty surprised to find it still manages to entertain, thanks to its solid love story foundation. Stroma and Rodriguez are so adorable with so much chemistry, you can't help but root for them as a couple, even though the idea of it is so far-fetched. And Bowman is the perfect combination of creepy and charming to make The Ripper work and be the major obstacle - other than time itself - to a Jane-H.G. coupling. The show even manages to work in some interesting social commentary as John decides his warped ways might actually fit in the world of 2017.

"Time" may not be a new idea, but based on the hour I've seen, I believe it is an idea whose time has come again.

"Time After Time" premieres with a special two-hour episode at 9 p.m. Sunday, March 5, on ABC.

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Anglea Henderson-Bentley: New take on Jack the Ripper an idea whose 'Time' has come - Huntington Herald Dispatch

Mardi Gras brings on the fun – Tullahoma News and Guardian

LIFESTYLES EDITOR

Kali Bradford

The final day of Carnival season, known as Mardi Gras, takes place on Tuesday. Carnival season began on Jan. 6, which is also known as Kings Day (Feast of the Epiphany).

Mardi Gras, French for Fat Tuesday, is the day before Ash Wednesday, which launches the 40 days of the season of Lent in the Christian tradition.

A Colorful History

Mardi Gras dates back thousands of years to pagan spring and fertility rites. The final day of the Carnival season, it is celebrated in many countries around the world mainly those with large Roman Catholic populations on the day before the religious season of Lent begins. Brazil, Venice and New Orleans play host to some of the holidays most famous public festivities, drawing thousands of tourists and revelers every year. -Photo Provided

According to the website, mardigrasneworleans.com, historians believe that the first American Mardi Gras took place on March 3, 1699, when the French explorers Iberville and Bienville landed in what is now Louisiana, just south of the holidays future epicenter, New Orleans.

They held a small celebration and dubbed the spot Point du Mardi Gras. In the decades that followed, New Orleans and other French settlements began marking the holiday with street parties, masked balls and lavish dinners.

When the Spanish took control of New Orleans, however, they abolished these rowdy rituals, and the bans remained in force until Louisiana became a state in 1812.

On Mardi Gras in 1827, a group of students donned colorful costumes and danced through the streets of New Orleans, emulating the revelry theyd observed while visiting Paris.

Ten years later, the first recorded New Orleans Mardi Gras parade took place, a tradition that continues to this day.

In 1857, a secret society of New Orleans businessmen called the Mistick Krewe of Comus organized a torch-lit Mardi Gras procession with marching bands and rolling floats, setting the tone for future public celebrations in the city.

Since then, krewes have remained a fixture of the Carnival scene throughout Louisiana. Other lasting customs include throwing beads and other trinkets, wearing masks, decorating floats and eating King Cake.

Louisiana is the only state in which Mardi Gras is a legal holiday. However, elaborate carnival festivities draw crowds in other parts of the United States during the Mardi Gras season as well, including Alabama and Mississippi. Each region has its own events and traditions.

Senior Center sets Mardi Gras, Black History Month celebration

The Coffee County Senior Citizens Center in Tullahoma will hold a celebration marking both Mardi Gras and Black History month at 6 p.m. on Friday in the activities room at the senior center.

We are celebrating black history and we thought with it being February, we would add a little flare by adding Mardi Gras with it, said center executive director Vickie Fulmer.

We are doing a lot of Mardi Gras-themed foods along with having the talented local band Utopia come and perform for us. We want everyone to know they are welcome to come and join in on the festivities.

Lead singer for Utopia J.T. Northcutt said the group is excited to come and perform for the celebrations.

Tullahoma is home for us and this is a great cause. We are just glad to give back to the community. There would be no us without the community, said Northcutt.

Northcutt also points out what both of the events have in common.

Its important to point out that Mardi Gras and that style of music is not that far removed from R&B, soul, jazz and other forms of the music. Both were influences of each other, he said.

Fulmer added that Fridays event is free to the public.

We want everyone to come and have a great time, she said. This is a family friendly event that all ages can enjoy. Also come out and see what we are doing here at the senior center. Lots of activities for everyone.

The Coffee Country Senior Center is located at 410 N. Collins St. in Tullahoma.

Last Hurrah Recipes

With Ash Wednesday marking the beginning of Lent, a 40-day period of fasting before Easter, Mardi Gras is the last hurrah of sorts, with participants indulging in their favorite fatty foods and drinks before giving them up.

Check out the following recipes to celebrate Mardi Gras appropriately.

King Cake

Ingredients

2 (.25 ounce) packages active dry yeast

1/2 cup white sugar

1 cup warm milk (110 degrees F/45 degrees C)

1/2 cup butter, melted

5 egg yolks

4 cups all-purpose flour

2 teaspoons salt

1 teaspoon ground nutmeg

1 teaspoon grated lemon zest

1 (8 ounce) package cream cheese

1/2 cup confectioners sugar

2 cups confectioners sugar

1/4 cup lemon juice

2 tablespoons milk

1 tablespoon multicolored candy sprinkles

Directions

In a large bowl, dissolve yeast and white sugar in warm milk. Let stand until creamy, about 10 minutes.

Stir the egg yolks and melted butter into the milk mixture. In a separate bowl, combine the flour, salt, nutmeg and lemon zest.

Beat the flour mixture into the milk/egg mixture 1 cup at a time. When the dough has pulled together, turn it out onto a lightly floured surface and knead until smooth and supple, about 8 minutes.

Lightly oil a large bowl, place the dough in the bowl and turn to coat with oil. Cover with a damp cloth and let rise in a warm place until doubled in volume, about 2 hours.

In a small bowl, combine the cream cheese and 1/2 cup confectioners sugar. Mix well. In another small bowl, combine the remaining 2 cups confectioners sugar, lemon juice and 2 tablespoons milk. Mix well and set aside.

Turn the dough out onto a floured surface. Roll the dough out into a 630 inch rectangle. Spread the cream cheese filling across the center of the dough.

Bring the two long edges together and seal completely. Using your hands shape the dough into a long cylinder and place on a greased baking sheet, seam-side down.

Shape the dough into a ring press the baby into the ring from the bottom so that it is completely hidden by the dough. Place a well-greased 2 pound metal coffee can the center of the ring to maintain the shape during baking. Cover the ring with a towel and place in a warm place to rise until doubled in size, about 45 minutes.

Meanwhile, preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

Bake in preheated oven until golden brown, about 30 minutes. Remove the coffee can and allow the bread to cool. Drizzle cooled cake with lemon/sugar glaze and decorate with candy sprinkles.

Andouille, Shrimp and Chicken Jambalaya

Ingredients

3 cups chicken broth, divided

1 1/2 cups white rice

1 pound andouille sausage, diced

1 large sweet onion (such as Vidalia(R)), chopped

3 green onions, or to taste, chopped

1 cup chopped celery

1 large green bell pepper, chopped

2 tablespoons Creole seasoning

2 tablespoons minced garlic

1 teaspoon hot sauce

ground black pepper to taste

1 (14.5 ounce) can tomato sauce

1 (14.5 ounce) can diced tomatoes

1 pound shrimp, peeled and deveined

1 cooked whole chicken breast, shredded

1 cup chicken broth

Directions

Bring 3 cups chicken broth and rice to a boil in a saucepan. Reduce heat to medium-low, cover, and simmer until the rice is tender and liquid has been absorbed, 20 to 25 minutes.

Heat cast-iron Dutch oven over medium-high heat. Cook and stir andouille sausage in hot pot until browned, about 5 minutes. Remove sausage from the pot with a slotted spoon, retaining any drippings in the pot.

Saut sweet onion, green onions, celery, and bell pepper in the sausage drippings until tender, 5 to 7 minutes. Season vegetable mixture with Creole seasoning, minced garlic, hot sauce, and black pepper; cook for 1 minute more.

Pour tomato sauce and diced tomatoes over the vegetable mixture; stir and add shrimp, shredded chicken, browned sausage, and 1 cup chicken broth into the tomato mixture. Bring the mixture to a boil, reduce heat to medium-low, and cook at a simmer until he shrimp are no longer translucent, 10 to 15 minutes.

Scoop rice into bowls and ladle jambalaya over the rice.

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Mardi Gras brings on the fun - Tullahoma News and Guardian

Chuck Huckelberry: Pima County sees the world as it is – Arizona Daily Star

The Arizona Daily Stars new Libertarian columnist suffers from a utopian worldview he sees the world as he wishes it to be, not as it is. (Jonathan Hoffman: Governments need to be reined in as matter of policy, Feb. 11).

Utopia is not reality. In the real world, economic development requires public-private partnerships to create job growth and community prosperity. The private sector will not be, and has not been, solely responsible for a communitys economic health.

I agree with Mr. Hoffman that it would be great if our nations corporations made expansion and relocation decisions based solely on the quality of a community and its benefit to their bottom line, and they invested their own money in infrastructure improvements such as new roads and utilities. But that is not reality, nor is it practical.

Economic growth is not solely one of providing incentives, either. It also requires community investment. Across the country, nearly every local community offers incentives, tax breaks and other deals to companies in an effort to retain employers and jobs and to attract new companies and new jobs to their communities. But the most successful communities are making considerable public investments in amenities and infrastructure, often through public-private partnerships.

Incentives are only one small part of the comprehensive economic-development plan the county is following to diversify and grow our local economy. We are making investments in infrastructure, workforce development, tourism amenities and more.

Critics of Pima County often make comparisons between Pima Countys and Maricopa Countys economies. Those critics should look at how much money local and state governments in Maricopa County are spending to achieve growth there. Over the past five years, hundreds of millions of dollars in state and local economic incentives have been given to large corporations in exchange for job growth there. Billions of public dollars are being invested in roads, light rail and airports, and Arizona State University is incubating new technology and bioscience companies across the Phoenix valley.

This is the world as it exists and this is the world in which we in Pima County must compete.

Mr. Hoffman and a few others are obsessed with the countys World View agreement in which the near-space technology company is leasing from the county a manufacturing and headquarters building and managing the countys new Spaceport Tucson. Was our World View agreement legal? Absolutely. We followed all state laws governing economic development. We are now defending that action in court after the Goldwater Institute sued us. I believe we will prevail on appeal.

Mr. Hoffman and others conveniently ignore that the county used a similar lease with Caterpillar. Moreover, Mesa, Gilbert, Chandler, Scottsdale and Peoria all signed agreements with private companies totaling more than $100 million that are very similar to our $15 million World View agreement, yet Goldwater didnt sue them.

The local debate over the World View agreement is all about local politics and last years election, and those politics are blinding some to the bigger picture. World View is part of a larger economic-development strategy to capitalize on our existing economic strengths to grow our economy.

Aerospace, defense manufacturing, technology and logistics are among our regions greatest economic strengths and we are working to develop the area around Tucson International Airport as an economic-development and high-wage employment center. The county and the entire metro community, including the airport authority, Tucson, the Pima Association of Governments and Tucson Electric Power have taken numerous steps over the past four years to remove barriers to economic expansion in this area and to build new roads and utilities to make the area shovel-ready for new employers.

That effort is paying off. Raytheon announced it is adding 2,000 new jobs to its already considerable local workforce. In the space technology sector, World View is adding 400 jobs and Vector Space is adding 200 jobs.

Pima County sees the world as it is. We know we need community investment and public-private partnerships to compete for jobs and prosperity in the real world.

Chuck Huckelberry is the Pima County administrator.

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Chuck Huckelberry: Pima County sees the world as it is - Arizona Daily Star

Utopia Opera Presents THE GRAND DUKE, 3/3-3/11 – Broadway World

On March 3, 4, 10, & 11 at 7:30pm,, Utopia Opera presents THE GRAND DUKE (words by W.S. Gilbert, music by Arthur Sullivan) in a fully-staged production performed with an 20-piece orchestra at the Ida K. Lang Recital Hall at Hunter College (695 Park Avenue). Utopia founder and artistic director, and Gilbert & Sullivan specialist, William Remmers, stage and music directs.

THE GRAND DUKE, the rarely-performed final Gilbert & Sullivan collaboration, features a discontented troupe of actors-come-revolutionaries planning a coup d'tat to replace their despotic leader with their theatre's manager. He's the most qualified man for the job because 1) he already knows how to run a business (and surely that's the same thing) and 2) because he has agreed to give his troupe the highest positions in his court in exchange for their support. The modern relevance should be self-apparent. Along the way, we see two duels, one ghost, four weddings (all with the same groom), a rigged roulette table, and bottles upon bottles of free wine. "It pulls out all the stops," says director William Remmers. "It's a show about performance, in theatre and in life, and it takes this theme to those two opposite ends: On one hand, given that most of the characters are actors, the jokes are faster, funnier, more stylized, and more dependent on the manipulation of language than in Gilbert's earlier work; the political satire is still bitingly relevant, but the soul of the show's humor lies in vaudeville routines and Wildean displays of repartee, all too believable coming out of the mouths of these thespians. On the other hand, the philosophical implications of subscribing to your role and committing to your part pose dark questions: must we always stick to the script that life has given us, even when we know it will have negative effects on the lives of others? The show's adventurous duality is matched, or perhaps even exceeded, by Sullivan's music. The score features late romantic harmonies, Viennese waltzes, French chanson, and comedy numbers that anticipate, with telescopic clairvoyance, the advent of modern musical theatre. It's pure fin de sicle decadence and a both a fitting send-off to the greatest musical Theatre Partnership of the 19th century and a sign of things to come in the 20th."

About Utopia Opera

Utopia Opera was founded in 2011 by artistic and musical director William Remmers. Striving to present the most entertaining operatic performances possible (for audiences and performers alike) while also maintaining a high standard of musical integrity, Utopia Opera is quickly establishing itself as a young and vibrant addition to New York City's vast operatic landscape, and was recently featured with two other indie companies on the cover of the August 2016 issue of Opera News.

In addition to providing young singers with performance opportunities, Utopia aims to share opera with a general audience and to reveal its modern relevance. A central part of that mission is realized through giving its audience and performers a stake in the direction of the company. Now in its sixth season, the company's past four seasons were chosen through votes cast on its Facebook page. Their 6th season began in September with Sondheim's ASSASSINS, which received more votes than any show in the company's history, and will conclude with Moore's The Ballad of Baby Doe and Tchaikovsky's Eugene Onegin. The seventh season vote is currently active on Utopia's Facebook page.

Tickets ($20 for general admission) are available online (with card) and at the door (card/check/cash). Tickets are available online at: TheGrandDuke.brownpapertickets.com

For press tickets, please contact info@utopiaopera.org

CAST

Ludwig: Ben Cohen Lisa: Kat Liu Julia: Hannah Spierman Ernest: Matthew Hughes Dr. Tannhuser: Kevin miller Grand Duke Rudolph: Martin Everall Baroness von Krakenfeldt: Hanne Dollase The Prince of Monte Carlo: David Tillistrand The Princess of Monte Carlo: Allyson Herman The Herald: Evan Henke The Costumier: Gary Slavin Gretchen: Ali Roselle Elsa: Emily Hughes Bertha: Nicholle Bittlingmeyer Olga: Catherine Leech A Hildebrand Noble: Ben Spierman A Windsor Noble: Roman Laba A German Noble: Matthew Walsh A D.C. Noble: Johari Frasier An Italian Noble: Eric Lamp An Aesthetic Noble: Sarah Marvel Bleasdale

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Utopia Opera Presents THE GRAND DUKE, 3/3-3/11 - Broadway World

Lenkom Theater: From Soviet utopia to post-modern dystopia – Russia Beyond the Headlines

In February one of Moscow's most celebrated theaters marks 90 years of bringing some of the finest works to the stage. Lenkoms performances are almost always sold out, and it was here that the world-famous rock opera, Juno and Avos, was first staged.

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Besides Soviet authors, Lenkom staged Ibsen, Tolstoy, Dickens and Rostand, which communist officials were not particularly happy about. Photo: Mark Zakharov, 1987. Source: Andrey Soloviev/TASS

The Theater for the Working Youth was established in the USSR in 1927, riding the wave of leftist ideas and universal access to art. In the evenings after work, young men and women could stage plays here. This was a socialist utopia, which soon ended. The theater then became professional and received a new name: Lenin's Komsomol Theatre (Komsomol was the Communist Youth Organization), or Lenkom for short.

Lenkom was supposed to stage contemporary plays that accorded with Soviet propaganda, but the theater tried to step out of ideological boundaries. Besides Soviet authors, it staged Ibsen, Tolstoy, Dickens and Rostand, which communist officials were not particularly happy about.

The young theater director, Anatoly Efros, came to Lenkom in 1963 and raised particular concern among authorities. His poetical, frank and profound direction stood out from Soviet clichs, and clashed with the socialist realist mold, and so in 1967 he was dismissed. However, he went on to even greater success, in another Moscow theater - Malaya Bronnaya. Efros productions are now classics of Russian art. After Efros' departure, Lenkom went through a period of decline.

A new golden era began with the arrival of director Mark Zakharov. In 1974 he stagedTill, a rollicking musical comedy about the Middle Ages and the Inquisition, but which really meant about something else. The audience understood the Aesopian language it used.

Soviet censorship did not at first understand his pungent and subtle play, initially not picking up on the obvious allusions to the country's horrid state of affairs. After the premiere, however, officials were shocked and wanted to shut down the production and fire the director, but it was too late. The news of the brazen play had spread throughout Moscow, and the lead actor, Nikolai Karachentsov, woke up famous the following morning.

Two years laterthe theater stagedThe Star and Death of Joaquin Murrieta, one of the first rock operas in the USSR. Even though it was based on a work by Pablo Neruda, the Chilean poet and communist, the Soviet authorities didnt like the plays format. They thought the genre of a rock opera was strange and dangerous.

At this time, Andrew Lloyd Webber'sJesus Christ Superstarwas rocking the world, and Zakharov and composer Alexei Rybnikov clearly drew inspiration from it. The sympho-rock music and half-naked girls of The Star and Death of Joaquin Murrieta shocked Soviet censors. The production was banned but nevertheless the premiere took place, having the impact of a bomb going off. The first viewers thought, "That's it. Now they're going to arrest us all."

Soviet actor Nikolai Karachentsov (L) as Till Eulenspiegel and actress Inna Churikova as Nele perform in the play Till based on Belgian playwright Charles de Coster's 1867 novel and staged by Mark Zakharov at the Lenkom Theatre in 1983. Source: Yuri Lizunov/TASS

World fame came with Rybnikov's next rock opera, Juno and Avos, based on poems by Andrei Voznesensky, and which premiered in 1981. The sad love story between a Russian count and a young Spanish lady in California touched the hearts of people from various countries. Fashion designer Pierre Cardin fell in love with the play and brought it to Paris and then New York, where the theater had to remain for two months, so great was its success.

Zakharov remembers that, "Pierre Cardin did a courageous thing. He had received threats over the phone, letters saying that he should not get involved with Russians! But he wasn't afraid. I thought that going on tour in Paris was utopic. The play was considered anti-Soviet, shaking our moral and artistic foundations. We were allowed to stage it no more than once a month and in no way during communist party holidays."

The play toured half the globe, had more than 1,000 performances, and is still being staged. It became the theater's calling card, with its snappy, vivid, and audacious style.

World fame came with Rybnikov's next rock opera, Juno and Avos, based on poems by Andrei Voznesensky, and which premiered in 1981. Photo: Yelena Shanina as Konchita and Nikolai Karachentsov as Count Rezanov in Alexei Rybnikov's rock opera "Juno and Avos", Lenkom Theater. Source: Rybchinskiy/RIA Novosti

Zakharov was able to assemble an incredible troupe of stage and film stars - Alexander Abdulov, Oleg Yankovsky, Inna Churikova, and others. It was often impossible to get a ticket to Lenkoms plays.

In the early 1990s, the theater officially changed its name to Lenkom, as it had long been informally known among the public. The name of Lenkom sounded like an expensive cosmetics brand, which suited the theater very well. While the Taganka Theater was an open political party, and the Sovremennik Theater impressed audiences with its honest depiction of modernity, Lenkom enticed with the lights of Broadway, promising a show and a celebration.

In recent years the theater has suffered many losses, especially as many stars passed away, but Zakharov is still at the helm. He sometimes invites one of Russia's most radical young directors, Konstantin Bogomolov, and occasionally he himself stagesThe Day of the Oprichnik, based on the novel by Vladimir Sorokin. This modern-day masterpiece describes a dystopia that is a veiled criticism of today's political establishment. Once again Lenkom is pushing the boundaries of what is possible and causing a stir.

In recent years the theater has suffered many losses, especially as many stars passed away, but Zakharov is still at the helm. Source: Sergei Fadeichev/TASS

Link:

Lenkom Theater: From Soviet utopia to post-modern dystopia - Russia Beyond the Headlines