SpaceX, NASA watch weather for historic astronaut splashdown on Sunday – Space.com

SpaceX is ready to return its first NASA astronaut crew to Earth, but a potential tropical cyclone brewing in the Atlantic could cause delays.

The SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft, called Endeavour, is scheduled to splash down off the Florida coast on Sunday afternoon (Aug. 2). Its crew, NASA's Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley, is wrapping up a historic two-month test flight, the first orbital trip by astronauts on a commercial spacecraft. Their splashdown will also mark the first water landing by American astronauts since the Apollo-Soyuz mission in July 1975.

"Everybody remains 'go' for a return, and we cannot wait to get Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley back to Earth, but of course, we have some weather pending," NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine told reporters Wednesday (July 29) from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. "We look forward to seeing if that's going to be within the realm of what is possible."

Related: How NASA and SpaceX's Demo-2 will make a historic splashdown

That "weather pending" Bridenstine referenced is from a storm system the National Hurricane Center (NHC) has dubbed Potential Tropical Cyclone Nine. Current forecasts from the NHC place the storm system squarely on Florida on Sunday just ahead of SpaceX's splashdown target time of 2:48 p.m. EDT (1948 GMT).

"We're going to watch the weather very carefully," said Steve Stitch, manager of NASA's Commercial Crew Program. "We have a series of [landing] sitesand many days in the future, so we'll watch this tropical storm ... we'll kind of take it day-by-day."

Currently, Behnken and Hurley are due to undock from the space station on Saturday evening at 7:35 p.m. EDT (2335 GMT) and prepare to head home. If all goes well, the Endeavour capsule will fire its engines to leave orbit on Sunday for an afternoon splashdown.

In photos: SpaceX's historic Demo-2 test flight with astronauts

SpaceX has seven potential splashdown sites around the Florida panhandle to choose from. They include drop zones offshore from Cape Canaveral, Daytona and Jacksonville on Florida's east cost, and near Panama City, Pensacola, Tallahassee and Tampa on the west coast. Wave height, wind speeds, lightning, rain conditions and other factors will all determine which splashdown sites SpaceX will pick.

"We're really looking for two sites to be go before we undock," Stitch said, adding that the agency will hold off on a final decision until an hour before undocking, or even call of the departure if needed. "The beauty of this vehicle is [that] we can stay docked to the space station."

Behnken and Hurley launched May 30 on SpaceX's Demo-2 mission to the International Space Station. The mission is a two-month shakedown cruise to test if SpaceX is ready to fly operational astronaut missions for NASA. SpaceX has launched uncrewed cargo missions for NASA for years and is one of two companies (Boeing is the other) with a multi-billion-dollar contract to fly astronauts to the station.

The Crew Dragon spacecraft has performed flawlessly in orbit, NASA and SpaceX officials said. The Demo-2 astronauts have tested its ability to hold up to four astronauts at a time, with the only major unknown ahead: splashdown.

"That's a really big deal," said Benji Reed, SpaceX's director of crew management. "It's very important, and it's part of that sacred honor that we have for ensuring that we bring Bob and Doug back home to their families, to their kids and making sure that they're safe."

If bad weather looks like it could delay a Sunday splashdown for Crew Dragon, NASA and SpaceX will postpone this weekend's undocking to no earlier than Monday (Aug. 3), with splashdown likely coming a day later, Stitch said.

"So we'll have to evaluate the weather each day and just see things how things unfold," Stitch said. "We have plenty of opportunities here in August and we're in no hurry to come home."

Even as SpaceX prepares to return Behnken and Hurley to Earth, the company is already gearing up for its first operational mission, called Crew-1. The spacecraft for that mission is nearly complete at the company's headquarters and factory in Hawthorne, California and will be shipped to Cape Canaveral soon, Reed said.

The Crew-1 astronauts NASA's Michael Hopkins, Victor Glover and Shannon Walker, and Japan's Soichi Noguchi are with the vehicle this week, Reed added. That mission is currently scheduled to launch in late September.

Yesterday, NASA also announced the four astronauts to launch on Crew-2, SpaceX's second operational flight, in early 2021. That mission will launch astronauts Shane Kimbrough and Megan McArthur, both of NASA; Akihiko Hoshide of Japan and Thomas Pesquet of the European Space Agency. McArthur is married to Behnken, and her Crew-2 mission will launch on the same Dragon ship Endeavour as her husband, NASA and SpaceX said.

Meanwhile, as SpaceX prepares to return the Demo-2 astronauts to Earth, NASA is counting down for another milestone event: a launch to Mars.

NASA's Mars 2020 Perseverance rover is poised to launch toward the Red Planet tomorrow (July 30). The mission, which will collect samples of Mars for eventual return to Earth, deploy a helicopter and seek out signs of ancient life, will launch atop a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. Liftoff is set for 7:50 am. EDT (1150 GMT).

Editor's note: You can watch NASA's Mars rover Perseverance launch live here, courtesy of NASA TV. The webcast will begin at 7 a.m. EDT (1100 GMT). SpaceX's undocking and splashdown of the Demo-2 crew will also be webcast live.

Correction: An earlier version of this article misspelled the name of ESA astronaut Thomas Pesquet.

Email Tariq Malik attmalik@space.comor follow him@tariqjmalik. Follow us@Spacedotcom, Facebook and Instagram.

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SpaceX, NASA watch weather for historic astronaut splashdown on Sunday - Space.com

Atlas 5 launch timeline on the Mars 2020 mission Spaceflight Now – Spaceflight Now

This is the launch timeline to be followed by the Atlas 5 rockets ascent into space from Cape Canaveral with NASAs Mars 2020 mission. Launch is scheduled for Thursday during a two-hour window opening at 7:50 a.m. EDT (1150 GMT).

The 197-foot-tall rocket will arc to the southeast from Floridas Space Coast on its fourth flight of the year. It will be the 85th Atlas 5 launch overall since United Launch Alliances workhorse rocket debuted in August 2002.

The timeline below ends with the conclusion of the primary mission, the deployment of the Mars 2020 spacecraft on an interplanetary trajectory toward Mars

Follow live coverage of the countdown and launch in ourMission Status Center.

A video overview of the Atlas 5 launch sequence also describes the major milestones on the Mars 2020 mission, and a map below shows the Atlas 5s expected ground track toward the southeast from Cape Canaveral, culminating in separation of the Mars 2020 spacecraft from the Centaur upper stage over Indonesia.

T+0:00:01.1: Liftoff

T+0:00:35.2: Mach 1

T+0:00:47.1: Max-Q

T+0:01:49.3: Jettison SRBs

T+0:03:27.6: Payload Fairing Jettison

T+0:04:22.1: Main Engine Cutoff

T+0:04:28.1: Stage Separation

T+0:04:38.1: Centaur Ignition 1

T+0:11:27.9: Centaur Cutoff 1

T+0:44:59.5: Centaur Ignition 2

T+0:52:50.1: Centaur Cutoff 2

T+0:57:32.8: Mars 2020 Separation

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Follow Stephen Clark on Twitter: @StephenClark1.

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Atlas 5 launch timeline on the Mars 2020 mission Spaceflight Now - Spaceflight Now

Every Pirates Of The Caribbean Movie In Chronological Order – Screen Rant

Pirates Of The Caribbean is a huge franchise that's run for five movies so far, and here's the chronological order for the series.

Here's every Pirates Of The Caribbean movie in chronological order. Prior to 2003's original Pirates Of The Caribbean movie, pirate films were considered box-office poison by studios. High-profile flops includedCutthroat Island and Disney's animated adventure Treasure Planet. Faith in Pirates Of The Caribbean, which was based off the iconic ride, was so low that at one stage an alternate, straight to video movie potentially starring Christopher Walken as Jack Sparrow was considered.

Instead, Disney rolled the dice on the project and it paid off beautifully. The movie's witty script combined with Gore Verbinski's assured direction made the first Pirates Of The Caribbean a juggernaut success. The movie has spawned four sequels to date, with the franchise having grossed nearly $5 billion collectively. In 2020 it was confirmed that Margot Robbie would front a new Pirates spinoff, though no real story details for this new entry have been revealed just yet.

Related: Pirates Of The Caribbean 5 Cut A Mermaid Syrena Return Appearance

The Pirates Of The Caribbean movies don't use roman numerals so unless viewers have been paying attention over the years, the exact viewing order can be confusing. Here's the chronological order for the series.

While Johnny Depp's Jack Sparrow might be the uniting factor between each installment, the first three movies centered around the love story between Keira Knightley's Elizabeth and Orlando Bloom's Will. Pirates Of The Caribbean Dead Man's Chest and At World's End were shot back to back and the reviews for both were mixed, with their excessive runtimes and the overabundance of subplots being a source of criticism.

Neither Knightley nor Bloom returned for the fourth entry Pirates Of The Caribbean: On Stranger Tides, which instead had a romantic subplot between mermaid Syrena and missionary Philip. The story focused on the hunt for the Fountain of Youth, but while reviews continued to be mixed, the movie was another runaway success. Pirates Of The Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Talesis the most recent instalment, with a literal ghost from Jack's past - played by Javier Bardem - coming back to seek revenge. In addition to the Margot Robbie Pirates Of The Caribbean spinoff, a sixth film to be helmed by Dead Men Tell No Tale's co-director Joachim Rnning and potentially starring Karen Gillan is also in the works.

Next: Pirates of the Caribbean: Why Jack Sparrow Changed The Black Pearl's Name

Hamilton Origins Explained: Why Lin-Manuel Miranda Wrote A Founding Father Musical

Its pronounced Paw-rick, not Pad-raig. Now thats out of the way, a brief introduction. Padraig has been writing about film online since 2012, when a friend asked if hed like to contribute the occasional review or feature to their site. A part-time hobby soon blossomed into a career when he discovered he really loved writing about movies, TV and video games he even (arguably) had a little bit of talent for it. He has written words for Den of Geek, Collider, The Irish Times and Screen Rant over the years, and can discuss anything from the MCU - where Hawkeye is clearly the best character - to the most obscure cult b-movie gem, and his hot takes often require heat resistant gloves to handle. He's super modern too, so his favorite movies include Jaws, Die Hard, The Thing, Ghostbusters and Batman. He can be found as i_Padds on Twitter making bad puns.

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Every Pirates Of The Caribbean Movie In Chronological Order - Screen Rant

Ti’Air Riggins: Prolonging the function of brain implants – MSUToday

July 27, 2020

TiAir Riggins is a doctoral candidate in the Department ofBiomedical Engineering. Shehas been named the recipient of theNational Institutes of Health Blueprint Diversity Specialized Award in Neuroscience and plans toadvance MSUs ongoing research on implanted neurotechnology.

I was honored and a bit awestruck recently when I learned I had received a National Institutes of Health Blueprint Diversity Specialized Award in Neuroscience.

This award is significant around $500,000 as I transition from graduate studies to a tenure-track career in academia with neuroscience-based research. It will help me fund the rest of my graduate studies, four years of postdoctoral training, plus travel and conference attendance to further my doctoral experiences.

As a transfer student with a nonlinear path in grad school, I suffered from imposter syndrome and carving out a welcoming place for myself to grow as a scientist. At my previous institution, I was told that I did not have what it takes to be an independent researcher by two previous advisers,and it affectedme immensely.

I came to MSU looking for a mentor who was invested in my growth as a scientist. And I found her.

My research is with Erin Purcell, an assistant professor of biomedical engineering and electrical and computer engineering. I am a graduate assistant in her Regenerative Electrode Interface Lab, which is part of theInstitute for Quantitative Health Science and Engineering (IQ), where Dr. Purcell is an investigator in theNeuroengineering Division.

As a member of Dr. Purcells research team, I have already co-authored a review article and carved out new hypotheses related to our investigations of reactive astrocytes surrounding implanted neurotechnology.

Im looking forward to spending thenextsix yearsinvestigatingthe impact of implantable neurotechnology on normal to reactive astrocytes. They are the star-shaped glial cells that regulate the transmission of electrical impulses in the brain.

My goal is to develop strategies that prolong the function of implants in patients. Potentially, it could improve probe stability - something MSU is building a strong foundation to do.

I hope to uncover knowledge about brain foreign body response to probes that will allow researchers to develop strategies to create long lasting probes. Also important, I hope to develop pedagogical skills critical to matriculating students and advance mentoring of underrepresentedstudents in the field.

Earning this award not only makes me feel more confident in my writing and research abilities, but it validates the feeling that I belong, and that I have something significant to contribute to the field of neural engineering. Knowing that I have funding throughout my postdoc, lets me know that I am a step closer to my dreams - running my own lab.

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Ti'Air Riggins: Prolonging the function of brain implants - MSUToday

Facial Recognition Market 2020 Size, Share Growth, Trend, Industry Analysis and Forecast to 2025 – Market Research Posts

Global Facial Recognition Market Report concentrates on the strong analysis of the present state of Facial Recognition Market which will help the readers to develop innovative strategies that will act as a catalyst for the overall growth of their industry. This research report segments the Facial Recognition Market according to Type, Application and regions. It highlights the information about the industries and market, technologies, and abilities over the trends and the developments of the industries.

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NEC (Japan) offers integrated solutions, components, services, and integrated solutions for computing and communications applications. NEC develops and markets its facial recognition offerings under the products segment public safety, and offers 2 solutions, namely, NeoFace Watch and NeoFace Reveal.

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Global Facial Recognition Market Research Report 2019-2025

Chapter 1: Industry Overview

Chapter 2: Facial Recognition Market International Market Analysis

Chapter 3: Environment Analysis of Facial Recognition Market

Chapter 4: Analysis of Revenue by Classifications

Chapter 5: Analysis of Revenue by Regions and Applications

Chapter 6: Analysis of Facial Recognition Market Revenue Market Status.

Chapter 7: Analysis of Facial Recognition Market Industry Key Manufacturers

Chapter 8: Sales Price and Gross Margin Analysis

Chapter 9: Marketing Trader or Distributor Analysis of Facial Recognition Market

Chapter 10: Development Trend of Facial Recognition Market Industry 2019-2025

Chapter 11: Industry Chain Suppliers of Facial Recognition Market with Contact Information

Chapter 12: New Project Investment Feasibility Analysis of Facial Recognition Market

Chapter 13: Conclusion of the Global Facial Recognition Market Research Report

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Global Face and Voice Biometrics Market 2025 Real Time Analysis & Forecast of COVID 19 Impact on Top Manufacturers: 3M Cogent (USA), NEC…

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3M Cogent (USA)NEC Corporation of America (USA)AcSys Biometrics Corp. (Canada)AGNITiO S.L. (Spain)Cognitec Systems GmbH (Germany)Nuance Communications, Inc. (USA)Eurotech S.P.A (Italy)Ivrnet Inc. (Canada)Kimaldi Electronics, S.L. (Spain)National Security Resources (USA)Neurotechnology (Lithuania)PSP Security Co. Ltd (Hong Kong)SAFRAN Group (France)Sensible Vision (USA)Sensory, Inc. (USA)Suprema, Inc. (Korea)VoiceTrust eServices, Inc. (Canada)VoiceVault, Inc. (USA)

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Global Face and Voice Biometrics Market 2025 Real Time Analysis & Forecast of COVID 19 Impact on Top Manufacturers: 3M Cogent (USA), NEC...

The winners and losers of the big tech congressional hearings – The Guardian

Congressional hearings are an accustomed ritual, a set piece in the institutional grand opera of American politics. On this side the congresspeople, on their own turf and playing by their own rules. On the other the witnesses, unhappy in the unaccustomed role of being called to account.

For Messrs Bezos, Cook, Pichai and Zuckerberg, 29 July was not a good day. But the legislators went home happy.

Background: The hue and cry has been rising in recent years that big tech is too big, too powerful, and engages in monopolist behavior. Thus this hearing.

America has never been more politically divided in my lifetime, and yet the committee showed bipartisan energy in dragging the CEOs over virtual coals. Democrats are of course in a comfort zone with their fangs in the flesh of an abusive corporation. As for Republicans, there are old-schoolers who really believe all that stuff about free markets and thus are instinctively anti-monopoly. Then there are the Trumpkins who hate big tech because its denizens are fact-driven and literate and thus loathe everything about the current administration. Oh, and Bezos owns the Washington Post, which is very disrespectful indeed.

What the congresspeople wanted: To utter memorable soundbites highlighting the perfidy and iniquity of the witnesses organizations, for use in rallying political support. The session was billed as an Examination but it wasnt, congressional staff had already generated millions of pages of damning evidence. Thus the dialogue was mostly of the form: Here is testimony that you did this awful thing. Did you do this awful thing? (CEO starts stammering.) Sorry, my time is short. Here is testimony that you did this other awful thing. Did you do that awful thing?

It was easy for them to enumerate awful things. Google and Facebook run an advertising duopoly that is annihilating publishers and journalists around the globe. Amazon operates its marketplace and also sells on it, creating irresistible incentives for bad behavior. Apple acts as an explicitly monopolistic gatekeeper for apps that want to reach its 25% of all mobile devices, which live in the pockets of a well-heeled and desirable demographic.

Ranking the CEOs: Jeff Bezos was the best, offering short clear answers and, when he didnt have them, saying so. Sundar Pichai was the worst, refusing straight talk even when in a strong position.

Then theres this from Bezos: The rest of the world would love even the tiniest sip of the elixir we have here in the US. Um, I dont think so.

Biggest problem: The absence of Microsoft, which has been in trouble for monopolistic behavior since code was carved on stone tablets.

Biggest lies: Tim Cook claiming that developers who didnt like the App Store have lots of other places to go, for example Xbox. Mark Zuckerberg saying: Cookies is not a big part of how were collecting information. Bezos feigning surprise at a marketplace seller crying foul over shoddy governance.

Congress roll of honor: Chairman David Cicilline for oratory. For zeroing in on Googles at-best-sleazy dealings with Genius lyrics and Yelp. For highlighting the implicit conflicts in selling on a market you own. For pointing out that optimizing for engagement can optimize for anger and hate.

Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal for her argument that Amazons controls against its staff using Seller data to compete against them are somewhere between feeble and laughable. For highlighting Facebooks habit of convincing upcoming rivals that acquisition is preferable to being crushed. For pointing out that in Googles ad ecosystem, it is simultaneously on the buy-side and the sell-side while also offering broker services; as she points out Theres a reason we have laws against insider trading.

Congresswoman Val Demings for highlighting Googles merging of advertising and tracking data so her search history, Gmail data, and travels round the web are all merged in a single database. Ewww.

Congresswoman Mary Gay Scanlon for rubbing Bezoss face in what looked like scandalously predatory pricing in the diapers.com episode.

Congressman Jerry Nadler for zeroing in on the devastation of the publishing industry and the journalism profession.

Congress walk of shame: Featuring Republicans for endless high-decibel whining about how the big techs are censoring conservatives. And a tip o the hat to Congressman Jamie Raskin who dunked on them, pointing out that on any recent day most of the top posts on Facebook are alt-right propaganda: If Facebook is trying to suppress conservative speech, theyre doing a terrible job at it.

Closing words: From Chairman Cicillines wrap-up: This hearing has made one fact clear to me. These companies as they exist today have monopoly power. Some need to be broken up. All need to be properly regulated and held accountable their control of the marketplace allows them to do whatever it takes to crush independent business and expand their own power. This must end.

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The winners and losers of the big tech congressional hearings - The Guardian

Whats royalty got to do with folk music? The amazing story of Cecil Sharp House – The Independent

This place feels very important, but I dont know why yet, said Billy Bragg, wandering into Cecil Sharp House in 1986. Many of us have felt something similar, slipping from busy north London, though the English country garden, into the UKs first dedicated folk arts centre.

First opened in 1930, the building holds all the tension of the 20th centurys battles over the definition of folk music and who it belongs to. Visitors will feel it in the architectural push-pull between blunt, right-angled utilitarianism (formal rectangular halls for dancing, rectangular windows for light) and mystical curves of wooden carvings of green men, dragons and bawdy Morris men. For at Cecil Sharp House (CHS), town meets country, academia jostles with vernacular tradition and all three classes collide.

On its 90th birthday, CSHs chief executive, Katy Spicer, reminds me that we can trace those tensions right back to 1898, when the middle-class Folk-Song Society was founded to collect and preserve folk songs and tunes primarily from Britain and Ireland. They found and filed songs for the nations cabinet of curiosities just as other Victorians collected shells, ferns and fossils. Prominent members included Lucy Broadwood, Frank Kidson and Anglican priest Sabine Baring-Gould. Letters stored at CSH reveal the fierce rivalry between many of the collectors as they competed to discover the best, oldest or most obscure peasant tunes.

Sharing the full story, not just the headlines

In 1903, Cecil Sharp joined the fray, recording material from the old singing men and women of the country villages. Now widely acknowledged as the founding father of the folk revival, Sharp, the son of a slate merchant, became interested in folk tradition after observing a rare group of Morris dancers performing at the village of Headington Quarry near Oxford at Christmas 1899.

The composer Ralph Vaughan Williams began collecting songs the same year. There is a feeling of recognition, as of meeting an old friend, said Williams, which comes to us all in the face of great artistic experiences. I had the same experience when I first heard an English folk song, when I first saw Michelangelos Day and Night, when I suddenly came upon Stonehenge or had my first sight of New York City the intuition that I had been there already.

In 1911, the English Folk Dance Society was founded to collect folk dance including Morris, sword and country dances, and to publish and teach them. Sharp died in 1924 and CSH was built to keep his legacy alive. It comprises a library for Sharps book collection, a large hall for social dancing and high-profile concerts and two smaller classrooms downstairs for teaching.

But, says Spicer, in September 1940, Cecil Sharp House was hit by four bombs, destroying the front entrance, stairwell and a musicians gallery in the main hall. Fortunately, the library remained largely intact, and its rare books were already in Cheshire for safekeeping. The remaining collection was packed up and moved to Oxford.

CSH was patched up after the bombing with blitz spirit classes continuing in the basement. And after the war the musicians gallery was replaced by a lively, abstract mural by English artist Ivon Hitchens, depicting the English folk dances and traditions (although some spot the presence of UFOs). Hitchens worked on the mural for three years before it was finally completed in 1954. At 69 x 20ft, the mural was the largest in the country at the time.

The 1950s saw a second folk revival, perhaps as part of a postwar search for national identity. In 1951, the young Princess Elizabeth was photographed swooshing her skirt during a Canadian square dance, making folk dancing an aspirational activity. Meanwhile, the collecting of folk songs (led by Alan Lomax in America and Ewan MacColl in the UK) became strongly associated with left-wing activism. Whereas Sharp and his rivals romanticised the rural life, this second wave of collectors gathered working-class songs from the working classes of both town and country.

Folk singer Shirley Collins remembers first attempting to visit CSH aged just 19 in 1955. Outside the building I saw the stone that says, In memory of Cecil Sharp, who restored to the English people the songs and dances of their country, she tells me. But would they let me in? No. It was ever so posh back then and they did NOT want to let me in. The class system was so pronounced then. I was made to feel quite ashamed of my working-class background. But I persisted. I had been told how many songs were in that library. I was determined to get in and the snobs were almost equally determined to keep me out!

Looking Sharp: the exterior of CSHnear Regents Park in London inMarch 1971 (Hulton Archive)

The 85-year-old Collins, who released her ninth solo album this month, continues: Princess Margaret was made president in 1960 and I remember seeing the photographs of her in beautiful frocks surrounded by all her ghastly courtiers, and I thought: whats royalty got to do with folk music? This music belongs to people of my class. Anyway, when I finally got in I would leaf through the books and when a set of words jumped out at me I wrote them down and took them home for my sister Dolly to play on the piano. If I liked the tunes, I would learn them. It was quite a laborious process.

She remembers that: Somebody would sit with me in the library to make sure I didnt purloin anything. And, actually, I did although much later. In the 1970s I was leafing through the journals of Lucy Broadwood and found her writing about a song she had recorded called Gilderoy. I looked at the lyrics and half of one whole verse was asterisks. She had put in a note to say they werent suitable to be included in her journal. Part of her hypocritical Edwardian sensibility.

That really made me want to find the song, so I asked to see her collection and was, reluctantly, shown to a neglected side room full of dust with papers all over the floor. Some of them had clearly been chewed by mice. Eventually I found the song and learned to play it. But also there I found a letter to Broadwood from a shoemaker and great radical thinker from Horsham called Henry Burstow, who knew 400 songs. It said: Dear Madam, thank you for sending me your book of folk songs. What a lovely, got up book it was. It was so courteously written I had to bung it in my handbag. I thought a mouse would have nibbled it if I didnt. I like to think I rescued it. I eventually handed it back about three years ago and I wish I hadnt. Owning that letter was one of the greatest pleasures of my life.

Collins struggled not only with the snobbery of CSHs management, but the reverse snobbery and sexism of the left-wing folk scene.

In her frank and erudite 2018 memoir, All in the Downs, she writes that: Ewan [MacColl] was a looming figure you couldnt ignore, although I had taken an instant dislike and mistrust of him the first time I heard him sing. I found him pretentious and pompous. His habit of turning a chair round, straddling it backwards, before tipping his head back and cupping one ear with his hand made me giggle it looked so silly. This image of him hovers into my mind occasionally; I try to dismiss it as quickly as I can, along with the memory of the evening he invited me to his home to look at his collection of books. He was already undressing the minute I walked through the door. I fled, furious that Id wasted the money on the bus fare. But I have to acknowledge he sang some very fine songs.

Competitors arrive for the diamond jubilee festival of the English Folk Dance and Song Society at CSH (Getty)

Today she tells me that MacColl was a self-invented person puffed up with rules and regulations. I mean, I have rules of my own. It bothers me that anybody with a guitar today can sit in an expensive bedroom and write what they call a folk song, because folk is the music of the labouring classes and it goes back centuries. Ewans rule about singing in your own accent from your own area was ok, but he was so brutal about it. And it was hypocritical because Ewans voice was invented. He was equally brutal in his criticism. He once compared me to a Jersey cow lumbering along, words dropping from my mouth like jujubes [fruit candy drops]. He called me the Lady Baden Powell of English Folk Song. I thought, Christ Ewan, Im a darned sight more working class than you are!

American-born folk singer and feminist songwriter Peggy Seeger, MacColls second wife, has admitted that she was partly responsible for MacColls strict rules. She heard a Cockney lad singing American blues songs by Leadbelly and, in a blog, recalls being doubled over in my seat, gasping with laughter. I had to be taken out of the room. Most unprofessional, but I couldnt help it. I am North American. Woody Guthrie, Jean Ritchie, Big Bill Broonzy, Leadbelly, et al, used to come to our house in Washington. I knew what the song should sound like and the manner of delivery and the insertion of Cockney vowels into a southern USA black prisoners song just sounded funny.

But it was this policy which drove MacColl and Seeger to CSH, in quest of songs from MacColls birthplace, Salford. As a communist, she tells me, Ewan always felt he was stepping into enemy territory. I performed there with my brother Mike but never with Ewan, probably because they knew darned well we would do a lot of political songs. When we got our gold badges, the formally dressed conservative members were on one side of the aisle and the casually dressed folk song lovers were talking and laughing on the other. It was like a Montague Capulet wedding!

But we went along to the library together in 1956-57 and I remember poring over recordings. They had records and tapes, even wire recorders. The archive was in this little room, 7-8ft square, with a central table. We spent hours down there it was a fug, trying to breathe because Ewan was a smoker can you believe they let smokers sit there like that? Ewan struggled a bit with the manuscripts. I always thought he was dyslexic, although I never said anything.

Seeger says that after they became a couple they attended a few dances at CSH. He didnt dance but I did. The problem was the unlockable couples who came together, leaving me stuck with poor lonesome men many of whom danced better than me because I didnt know the English dances. I ended up sitting in corners or playing concertina with the band. But I did love to watch the dances.

Folk music maintained its popularity through the 1960s and early 1970s. Members of rock band Fairport Convention were drawn to the traditional tunes after folk singer Sandy Denny joined in 1968. In the summer of 1969 the bands bassist Ashley Hutchings began visiting Cecil Sharp House, conducting research he and Denny ploughed into their seminal folk-rock album, Unhalfbricking (1969).

Shirley Collins poses with passengers on a train inJune 1970 (Getty)

Nothing resonates like an old song, the bands guitarist Richard Thompson told the music press. To sing something beautifully written, and then refined over hundreds of years, that still has meaning and urgency, that still creates vivid pictures in the mind, is a deeply rewarding thing. I think we hoped the band would achieve some mainstream popularity, so that we could bring the tradition a little closer to peoples lives. This has happened more in Ireland and Scotland, but the English still seem to see their own culture as an embarrassment or a novelty its that post-empirical confusion.

But by the end of the 1970s folk music was slipping from fashion. Malcolm Taylor OBE started working in CSHs library in 1979 and only left his post in 2014. So, he tells me, I straddle the gap between the postwar revival and the modern era. Initially the dance side was much more proactive. Sharp hoped to channel our traditions through the school system and he was quite successful. People of my generation all did a bit of country singing and dancing at school, mostly based on his arrangements.

But Taylor says that by the time he arrived things needed to change. The folk scene was on its knees. Performers who made their names in the 1960s and early 1970s were really struggling. One of my favourites was a chap called Tony Rose who couldnt get gigs. Stars like Martin Carthy and John Kirkpatrick managed to stay afloat by diversifying, going into theatre.

The tiny room where the archives were kept was incredibly dusty. The manuscripts were in boxes that were all falling apart. They werent acid-free. The mission was to create a properly controlled environment that was equal to the importance of the material. I dont think we ever quite achieved that, but I found a spare room in the basement and occupied it. Money was always an issue.

During the 1980s, many folk lovers believed CSH should be sold to fund a cheaper building in which the collection could be stored. The sale of the house in the late 1980s was a huge issue, Taylor tells me. Membership was plummeting. Money was so tight. War broke out. It was awful. These very polite middle-class people resorted to terrible tactics on both sides of the argument. The library was a shuttlecock in the middle of the whole row. People kept calling me from America, offering to buy the archive and it was hard not to let it go because those universities had the facilities to look after it properly.

In the end, a group of more than a thousand Friends of Cecil Sharp House united to save the building. Taylor was relieved. It meant he could carry on with his efforts to reorganise the library: Let me tell you, thats not easy when most of your material is anonymous! The woman who started the week before me resigned after a few days saying the job was impossible.

Taylor tells me that the oldest manuscripts date from the late-19th century, but some of the books go back to the 1600s. The Play for Dancing Masters dates back to 1651. Cecil Sharps diaries and letters to his wife are there. I love all the correspondence between the collectors, revealing the intensity of the rivalry between them. Its such a pleasure reading about George Butterworth going down to Sussex to collect songs like The Banks of Green Willow, only to find somebody already working there.

When Taylor first started at CSH, the chair of the committee was Ursula Vaughan Williams, who lived around the corner in Gloucester Crescent the same road as Jonathan Miller, Michael Frayn and Alan Bennett.

Peggy Seeger celebrates Pete Seegers 90th birthday at New Yorks Madison Square Garden in May2009 (Getty)

Taylor recalls walking past Bennetts Lady in the Van when Williams invited him for lunch. Im a working-class bloke from Bermondsey, with a chip on both shoulders, and these people all seemed very posh to me, he says. But they were all amazing. Champagne socialists, sure. But perhaps the most liberal people I met in my life. I learned so much from them. Ursula would always start lunch with her latest aperitif something like Cinzano and grapefruit juice. You had one of those and youd struggle to sit straight through lunch. Then she served coffee that made your scalp twitch!

It was during Taylors time at the house that Billy Bragg first walked in, to seek the librarians assistance when he made his 1998 album, Mermaid Avenue, setting previously unheard Woody Guthrie lyrics to music. Taylor recalls all the celebrities whove engaged with CSH through the years, from David Essex to Jarvis Cocker. He tells me that artists like Jeremy Deller (most recently responsible for the Thank God for Immigrants posters that have appeared in peoples windows during the pandemic) and playwrights like Lee Hall (the writer of Billy Elliott) came in: his work is all about the dignity of the working class.

Taylor laughs about the time when one of Mick Jaggers representatives called up one day asking to buy some of CSHs original material. I said it wasnt for sale. The guy said, but Micks decided hes been most inspired by the Appalachian mountains. I said, I dont think Id agree with that!

Robert Plant came in just after hed made that bluegrass album with Alison Krauss [Raising Sand, 2007] so I showed him that collection of Appalachian music. He kept saying: Thats one of Alisons... I said: Yeah, but she got them from here. He hadnt realised. He bought around 50 worth of books and handed over his gold credit card. I remember thinking he might not have noticed if Id added a few zeros to the bill. We could have used 5,000!

Taylors legacy is The Full English: an online archive of all CSHs folk songs, plus those from other collections around the country.

The trouble with people like Sharp was that they cleaned everything up. The sex, drugs and rocknroll were all expunged and trust me, it was all in there originally! Songs in which the man knocks on the womans door and she sends him away trust me, in the original hes less likely to have wandered disappointed into the night. But when they wrote them down they recorded the songs accurately, so we can dig back to the truth of the tradition. And we have.

Rachel Unthank, of Northumbrian folk trio The Unthanks, went to meet Taylor in the early Noughties, fearing an atmosphere of stagnant traditionalism. But she quickly bonded with him over a mutual love of Robert Wyatts music. She remembers trawling through some big, heavy volumes of songs, when I came across a slim, delicate book with birds on the front. Its in this book that I found the song Ill Mount the Air on Swallows Wings a love song, only four lines in length. I was drawn to this song about love and longing and I already felt a kinship with the book.

She recalls reading a quote from one source singer that said: The modern singer must use the same imagination and flexibility in adapting the other verses as did the original singers. This spoke to me. It told me that any preconceived fears I might have had about a library of traditional song as being precious and museum-like could be put to rest. This quote was giving me permission to find my own relationship with the song, and to take it on another journey. I liked the song, but I had no idea it would turn into the sprawling 10-minute title-track of our next album or that I would have so many treasured memories of singing it live.

Throughout the Noughties, Katy Spicer tells me, the house has played host to all sorts, from the auditions for the first Harry Potter films so many boys dashing about in round glasses to the BBCs Electric Proms, including a really memorable night in 2008 when Goldfrapp filled the hall with giant paper baubles and so much equipment our electricity couldnt cope!

Folk fiddler Sam Sweeney winner of the BBCs Folk Musician of the Year 2015 did some of the research at the library but is most connected to CSH through his role as artistic director of the National Youth Folk Ensemble (NYFE). We run a course in October and another at the February half term, he tells me with our first gig of the year at Cecil Sharp House. I remember the first year: tensions were so high. We turned up at the house and did our warm-ups with butterflies in our stomachs. Then we got a tour of the Vaughan Williams memorial library and the kids spent over an hour looking through the manuscripts. It was incredibly cool and took all the pressure off. Some of these young people had never come across this kind of material before. They learn their songs from YouTube. They didnt realise that CSH has the original transcriptions of some of the tunes they were playing.

Sweeney says the genius of the archive is the way you can search through it geographically. I remember one girls jaw on the floor as she found a tune from her village. Even though the archive is all online, quite a few of them have taken trips back to talk to the librarians and find songs from their own towns and villages. Nothing beats the physical connection you get looking at the paper, deciphering the old handwriting of the collectors. You realise the journey these songs have taken through the aural history to the scholarly collectors of the early 20th century to the kids uploading it today.

Sweeney remembers committing an enormous faux pas when I performed at CSH with my trio, Leveret. We used to perform in the round, rotating every few numbers so the audience didnt have to spend the whole night staring at the same persons back. I remember when I moved so that I was facing the mural I said, Oh god, Ive got to spend the next four tunes staring at THIS! There was a horrible backlash from the audience. The mural is sacred.

No such stress with the NYFEs first concert which he says was a magical evening. The premiere of this massive project that had been years in the making. The hall was full, the kids played phenomenally well. Theyll all tell you how much I cried.

Rachel Unthank performs with The Unthanksat the Cambridge Folk Festival in 2019 (Getty)

Hayden Thorpe, former frontman of Mercury-shortlisted indie pop band Wild Beasts, played music from his highly acclaimed low-fi solo debut, Diviner, at CSH in December 2019. Its such a wonderful place, full of all the charm and chaos youd expect, he says. Id been planning to play the grand piano, but it turned out the stage wasnt strong enough to support the grand piano and I ended up using the practice piano from upstairs. Carrying your piano downstairs is a rite of passage for any pianist, because once you know the true weight of the instrument you respect it that much more!

Thorpes cockles were warmed when a clog dancing group met on the night of my gig, so several mature ladies were sharing my bathroom and had to go through my dressing room to get to it. I became quite au fait with clogs that night. That sort of thing never happened when I was touring with an ear-shredding rock band!

Thorpe says: The hall has a certain brisk expectation that you just turn up and do it. It expects you to be able to play your instrument and sing a song. Folk music always had that. Other kinds of music could learn from the attitude. In the end, I didnt even use a microphone. And it was a very special night.

Alas, all performances at CSH have ceased during the pandemic. The 90th anniversary was scheduled to have been marked with concerts from Barnsley Nightingale Kate Rusby. Across the summer, folk fans were expecting to attend the London Folk Festival there, along with gigs by Thea Gilmore, India Electric Co, Jackie Oates, Oysterband and Peggy Seeger.

Ive had to cancel my tour and, at 85, I seriously doubt there will ever be a time Ill perform again, Seeger tells me. Ill be too old by the time Covid is finished. That grieves me, not having one final concert. I would like to do one final public meeting with Shirley Collins, where the two of us can talk about our experiences. We are so different and yet our paths crossed at such a crucial time in 1956-57. So much pivoted around CSH. I hope they find a vaccine soon. And I hope CSHs doors reopen in time for women like me and Shirley to walk back through them.

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Whats royalty got to do with folk music? The amazing story of Cecil Sharp House - The Independent

City Council hearing highlights social disparities of COVID-19 – The Philadelphia Tribune

Dr. Ala Stanford, founder of the Black Doctors COVID-19 Consortium, is calling on the citys major hospitals to break down the barriers for providing coronavirus testing.

During a City Council virtual hearing on the racial and ableist disparities of COVID-19, she suggested that all Philadelphia hospitals that received millions of dollars in CARES Act funding should open their doors from 9 a.m. to midnight to make it more convenient for residents to be tested.

"The hours are 9 to 5," Stanford said. "There are no hours on the weekends. How are people supposed to get tested?"

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Stanford also said making people show identification or obtain physician referrals can keep people from getting tested.

People retreat and recoil when they hear that, she said. Its like asking them to sign something thats 20 pages long with a vocabulary that they may not understand. The reality is you need a persons name, you need a date of birth and you need a way to contact them. When we test people on the street at Broad and Olney or at 52nd and Market, those were the only three pieces of information that we needed.

The hearing was held by the Council Committee on People with Disabilities and Special Needs, chaired by Councilman Derek Green and the Committee on Public Health and Human Services, chaired by Councilwoman Cindy Bass.

Too many of our citizens have been disproportionately impacted by this pandemic, not only from a public health perspective but also from an economic perspective, Green said.

That experience is not only in the African-American community, but also in the Latin community as well as the disability community. All of these communities were having major challenges in reference to public health before COVID-19. What COVID-19 has done has only illuminated the disparities that many people in our city are dealing with every day.

We as elected officials, as members of the executive branch, of the general public, those who are leaders in our community, need to do what needs to be done to address this issue, he continued.

Philadelphia Health Commissioner Dr. Tom Farley said current city data show marked disparities of the coronavirus impact by race and ethnicity.

As of last weekend, the Philadelphia Department of Public Health reported 846 COVID-19 deaths in African Americans, 461 deaths in whites, 146 deaths in Hispanics and 49 deaths in Asian Americans.

COVID-19 seems to following a pattern of other health problems, Farley said.

African Americans have higher mortality rates than whites for a wide range of diseases and injuries from heart diseases to diabetes to homicides. These disparities are one result of structural racism in our society that reaches back across generations.

The exact mechanisms by which this legacy affects COVID are not fully clear, but we can speculate about. People of color are more likely to work remotely and are more likely to be front-line workers and risk their exposure to the virus, he said.

The legacy of redlining in our city means that Black and Latino city residents are more likely to live in crowded housing, where they are unable to safely quarantine or to isolate if sick.

Farley highlighted the Public Health Departments new COVID-19 Racial Equity Response Plan.

Racial disparities of COVID-19 infection are representative of deep-seated problems so they will not be eliminated easily or quickly, nonetheless we will take the steps in our plan to reduce deaths and continue to look for additional opportunities to solve this problem, he said.

The plan includes increasing access to COVID-19 testing, tracking racial and ethnic disparities, conducting community outreach, preventing chronic health conditions, protecting essential workers, preventing spread in congregate settings such as nursing homes, shelters and prisons and a new contact tracing program.

Weve worked with partners across the city to expand testing access with an intentional focus on Black and Latino neighborhoods, Farley said. There is more to be done but we have made significant progress.

One of those partners is the Black Doctors COVID-19 Consortium, which city officials have promised to pay $1.3 million to test Black residents over the next six months.

The consortium has tested 8,000 people in Philadelphia since April, through partnerships with local Black religious institutions.

I formed the organization because Black people in Philadelphia were being diagnosed and dying at a rate higher than any other group and there was not a concerted effort to decrease that death and disease on April 16 when we started, Stanford said.

As of last week, the number of Philadelphia residents tested for coronavirus jumped from 1,500 per day to more than 3,000, Farley said.

Of the people tested so far, for whom we have race and ethnic information, 54% of those tested were African American, 27% were white and 9% were Latino, he said.

During the hearing, Koert Wehberg, executive director of the Mayors Commission on People with Disabilities, underscored how COVID-19 has impacted people who are disabled.

When COVID hit, many people with disabilities were in congregate care facilities, nursing homes, group homes, personal care homes (and) correctional facilities and unfortunately over half of the people who succumbed to COVID had an underlying health condition or disability, he said.

Abrupt changes in routines have resulted in people with intellectual developmental disabilities having increased behavioral issues and issues with home care. Weve heard heart heartbreaking stories from folks who are afraid or unable to leave their homes, since this all started, as a result as their change of routine and difficulty in obtaining PPE (personal protective equipment) for themselves of their home care workers.

Originally posted here:

City Council hearing highlights social disparities of COVID-19 - The Philadelphia Tribune

HRC and SHOWTIME launch initiative to support LGBTQ businesses during pandemic – Metro Weekly

Dog Days at Miss Pixies Photo: Rachl Davis

The Human Rights Campaign and SHOWTIME have announced a new initiative to support businesses serving the LGBTQ community particularly LGBTQ people of color, women, and transgender individuals during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The initiative, named Queer to Stay, will identify LGBTQ-led businesses and encourage lend them financial support so they can continue operating.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, many LGBTQ-led organizations experienced a loss of revenue during the month of June, when patrons are typically more likely to frequent LGBTQ businesses as part of Pride Month.

That has exacerbated a downward trend in the number of LGBTQ-specific spaces that has continued since the 1980s, due to larger societal trends, including assimilation, gentrification of traditional LGBTQ neighborhoods, and the rise of dating apps.

Businesses who wish to receive support may apply by submitting applications by 11:59 p.m. on Friday, Aug. 15. Recipients who have been approved will be notified later in the summer.

We know that businesses like bars, restaurants and coffee shops often serve as affirming and welcoming spaces for LGBTQ+ people including young people who may not have supportive families or communities at home, HRC President Alphonso David said in a statement.

With a global pandemic and its economic impact threatening to shut down queer spaces, its important that we support and preserve those that have provided a place for LGBTQ+ people to express ourselves freely, find community and be our authentic selves. We are grateful to collaborate with SHOWTIME on this initiative to protect and preserve LGBTQ+-serving spaces.

According to research from the Human Rights Campaign, the COVID-19 pandemic has disproportionately impacted the transgender community, notably transgender people of color.

In April, polling indicated that LGBTQ respondents who are more likely to work in front-line jobs or jobs affected by closures were more likely than their cisgender peers to express concern about the pandemics impact on their finances.

And additional research has shown LGBTQ people are more likely to be unemployed or to have lost work hours compared to the general population, again with transgender people and LGBTQ people of color bearing more adversely affected.

See also: Advocates urge authorities to combat disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on the LGBTQ community

According to a study by the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, Black applicants who applied for Paycheck Protection Program loans were treated poorly or unfairly compared to their white counterparts.

As the nation continues to navigate the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic, there is uncertainty as to when businesses, including LGBTQ+-serving establishments, will return to usual.

As such, the initiative aims to be intentional about supporting LGBTQ businesses owned or led by people of color, to ensure they have enough financial resources to remain viable.

We are proud to continue our long-standing relationship with HRC this year by bringing aid to beloved and crucial LGBTQ+ locations, Michael Engleman, the chief marketing officer of Showtime Networks Inc.

SHOWTIME has a history of telling diverse, complicated, authentic stories with a marked emphasis on LGBTQ+ creators, characters and storylines. Our sincere hope is that this step marks only the beginning of a focus on spaces that are key to both the history and current lifeblood of the LGBTQ+ community.

Read more:

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Dr. Rachel Levine says transphobic attacks perpetuate a spirit of intolerance

Stella Immanuel: Doctor retweeted by Trump accused gays of homosexual terrorism

Read this article:

HRC and SHOWTIME launch initiative to support LGBTQ businesses during pandemic - Metro Weekly

State Sen. Holly Mitchell, MLK CEO Joined Cherished Futures for Black Moms & Babies Workshop for Deep Dive Discussion on Birth Inequities in Los…

State Sen. Holly Mitchell, MLK CEO Joined Cherished Futures for Black Moms & Babies Workshop for Deep Dive Discussion on Birth Inequities in Los Angeles

Keynote speaker Sen. Holly Mitchell (DLos Angeles) joined a lineup of visionary leaders to address Black infant mortality and patient experience and safety for Black mothers and birthing people.

LOS ANGELES, July 24, 2020 Communities Lifting Communities (CLC), the Public Health Alliance of Southern California, and the Hospital Association of Southern California (HASC) hosted a unique virtual workshop on addressing birth inequities in the Black community on Friday, July 24. The event was part ofCherished Futures for Black Moms & Babies, a collaborative effort to reduce Black infant deaths and improve patient experiences and safety among Black moms and birthing people in South Los Angeles, the South Bay and the Antelope Valley.

The Honorable Holly J.Mitchell deliveredopening remarks and discussed SB 464, the California Dignity in Pregnancy and Childbirth Act. Mitchell shared how she authored the bill and shepherded its passage.She also sharedher vision for respectful, equitable maternity care especially for Black mothers, and her steadfast support and call to action for perinatal care providers.

Following months of tireless advocacy, Mitchell saw SB 464 signed into law in October 2019. Aimed at improving outsized infant and maternal mortality rates that have long hurt Black families, the legislation she championed mandates hospitals, alternative birth centers and clinics that provide birth services implement implicit bias training and track relevant statistics.

Black women deserve better, Mitchell stated in 2019. Bias, implicit or explicit, should no longer impact a womans ability to deliver a full-term baby or to survive childbirth.

At the event, Martin Luther King, Jr. Community Hospital CEO Elaine Batchlor and Perinatal Services Manager Tammy Turner shared how the facility is implementing an equity focus, and best practices that have led to improved outcomes for Black birthing women. The hospital has received statewide attention for its c-section rates, which stand at less than a third of the state average. The facility attributes its success to a unique birthing model that adds laborists and midwives to obstetrics teams.

Attendees also heard key themes from aJuly 12Listening Sister Circle that convened Black pregnant and parenting people, community advocates and birth professionals who live or work in South Los Angeles, South Bay or Antelope Valley on specific recommendations to hospital partners participating in theCherishedFuturespilot program.

We believe this work cannot be done for Black women without Black women, said Dana Sherrod, Perinatal Equity Manager for the Public Health Alliance of Southern California, and project lead forCherished Futures. We are intentional about bringing Black women, our voices, and lived experiences to the decision-making table.

In Los Angeles County, Black women and families continue to disproportionately experience higher rates of infant and maternal mortality and morbidity compared to other racial or ethnic groups. Research shows that factors such as education, income, and health status to do not fully explain the gap, but rather points to systemic issues such as racism and toxic stress throughout a womans life, which negatively impacts birth outcomes.

Through a two-year grant from Health Net and in partnership with CLC, HASC, and the Public Health Alliance of Southern California (Alliance), theCherished Futures for Black Moms & Babiespilot initiative is uniting decision-makers from local birthing hospitals, public health, health plans, community-based organizations, advocates and patients to co-design systems-change interventions at three levels: clinical, institutional and community.

Cherished Futureshas a cohort of five participating hospitals: Antelope Valley Hospital, Cedars-Sinai, Centinela Hospital Medical Center, Dignity Health-California Hospital Medical Center and Providence Little Company of Mary Medical Center, Torrance.

To learn more about the work being done by Communities Lifting Communities (CLC) andCherished Futures, please visit https://communities.hasc.org/cherished-futures.

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State Sen. Holly Mitchell, MLK CEO Joined Cherished Futures for Black Moms & Babies Workshop for Deep Dive Discussion on Birth Inequities in Los...

Twin Cities Black clergy hope to seize power of the moment – Union Democrat

MINNEAPOLIS The Rev. Edrin Williams, pastor of one of the most racially diverse churches in the Twin Cities, quickly launched an emergency food distribution center when rioting after the death of George Floyd destroyed neighborhood stores. Now he's taken on another role as well: dispensing food for thought to white faith leaders grappling with how to combat racism.

"I get calls nearly every day from around the country and even one from Switzerland," said Williams, of Sanctuary Covenant Church in north Minneapolis. "They ask, 'What should we be doing?'?"

The national spotlight on racial inequities has injected new energy and placed new demands on African American religious leaders, long at the forefront of civil rights movements. Many are orchestrating their largest-ever food relief projects, fielding outreach from allies, working to quell community tensions and exploring new strategies to combat racial injustice.

A group of Twin Cities Black pastors has been discussing a proposal with Gov. Tim Walz to create a Minnesota "social compact" that would forge new investments and public policies to begin erasing racial inequities. Wayman African Methodist Episcopal Church in Minneapolis is preparing to launch a project to transform one Minneapolis public school into a culturally appropriate model for Black achievement.

Minnesota's evangelical community has created what it hopes will be a $1 million fund to support African American churches. Many Black pastors are in demand for speaking and consultation. And, for the first time, their food programs are attracting armies of white volunteers.

"There's something special happening at this moment," said Williams. "People are seeing the (racial) barriers who haven't seen them before. There's a captive audience."

Bishop Richard Howell of nearby Shiloh Temple International Ministries marveled that while participating recently in a panel before largely white religious leaders, the first question directed to him was, "What is systemic racism?"

"There's an openness to hearing us finally in a manner we haven't seen before," said Howell. "I've been preaching 40 years, and I've never seen our friends listen to the facts, and the painful facts, of African American history. We have an opportunity to share what we know with those who don't."

Whether it's just a flash of racial consciousness, or something deeper, is the big question, he said.

On a recent Friday, Williams stood in front of about 90 volunteers in his church parking lot. Wearing shorts, a T-shirt and face mask, he bowed his head and said a prayer moments before hundreds of neighbors streamed in to pick up groceries and other goods.

With the Cub Foods across the street still boarded up, they stopped at tents with signs announcing what was inside apples, carrots, diapers. It's a massive undertaking created in just two months, assisted on the ground mainly by white volunteers from cities and suburbs.

How to tap that surge of support from individuals, religious groups, businesses and philanthropy and harness it to tackle institutional racism is a topic of great discussion. While grateful for the support, many Black faith leaders worry that volunteers leave with no greater understanding of the racial inequities that shaped the community they're serving.

That understanding, along with deeper personal relationships in the Black community, are needed to become strong allies for change.

"If George Floyd hadn't taken place, we wouldn't have these relations," said the Rev. Runney Patterson of New Hope Baptist Church in St. Paul. "We've had some in the past, but they fizzled out. I tell (white) pastors, 'Don't come here just to feel good.'... My hope is we can build real relationships and be intentional about it."

Bridging such divides has long been a mission of the Rev. Richard Coleman of Wayman AME Church. He oversees a monthly Bridge of Reconciliation luncheon for pastors and community leaders of different races focused on supporting north Minneapolis.

During this month's Zoom meeting, Coleman announced that his church and the Minneapolis nonprofit Hope United CDC planned to organize a network of community partners to help transform one Minneapolis school into a model for academic achievement by offering training for cultural competencies, curriculum, mentors and other services.

The project would mark Wayman's 101st anniversary.

"With the moment, the killing of George Floyd, we wanted to pick something big and significant that can really make a difference," Coleman said. "There's a lot of energy right now. To deal with the problems in the Black community requires a systemic approach, and I believe we are in that space now."

The Rev. Alfred Babington-Johnson, CEO of the Stairstep Foundation in Minneapolis, also hopes to seize the moment. He and other clergy involved in His Works United, an ecumenical collaboration of African American religious leaders, have been talking with Walz and staff about a sweeping proposal to address racial disparities in housing, health, wealth and education.

It is designed to have Black-led organizations develop the capacity to address their community's issues, he said.

Sitting at his desk, Babington-Johnson pulled up a PowerPoint slide listing about a dozen Black-led organizations behind the plan, including the Minnesota Black Chamber of Commerce and the Phyllis Wheatley Center in Minneapolis. Community supporters include the Minneapolis Regional Chamber of Commerce, Greater Metropolitan YMCA and Minneapolis St. Paul Regional Economic Development Partnership.

"We're having some very hopeful conversations with government, with corporate leadership," said Babington-Johnson. "What we have is the opportunity to be of service, because the whole society is riveted" by the inhumanity surrounding Floyd's death.

Other Black clergy are forging different paths. The Rev. Stacey Smith, senior pastor at St. James AME Church in St. Paul, typically isn't orchestrating protest marches. But she felt compelled to organize a clergy march last month, during which hundreds of faith leaders prayed silently while walking the streets of Minneapolis and St. Paul where violence had erupted.

The idea took shape on a Sunday night, when she began e-mailing invitations. By Tuesday morning she found herself walking past Floyd's memorial in the largest march of faith leaders in memory.

"It was an outpouring unlike anything I've seen," she said.

Smith's church already is running a food program. Now she'd like to offer counseling and support for people suffering from trauma, whether from the COVID-19 pandemic, poverty or racism. She had considered the idea earlier but is convinced now is the time.

African American churches are getting support from other corners. Transform Minnesota, the umbrella group for Minnesota's evangelical Christians, was planning to raise money to support African American churches suffering financially because of COVID-19. That idea kicked into high gear after Floyd's death. It launched the One Fund with a goal of raising $1 million before the anniversary of Floyd's death on May 25, said Carl Nelson, CEO of Transform Minnesota.

"It's one way to tangibly respond to the disparities we're now talking about," Nelson said.

As faith leaders look ahead, they remain hopeful, but guarded, about the prospects for societal change.

They recall that police killings of other Blacks nationally and locally, including Jamar Clark in 2015 in the Twin Cities, have ignited public attention and mobilized communities. But the outcry subsided.

"These things have been cyclical," said Babington-Johnson. "The difference this time is that folks are becoming aware of the inhumanity (confronting Blacks) in different and deeper ways and the need for society to change."

___

(c)2020 Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

Visit the Star Tribune (Minneapolis) at http://www.startribune.com

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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Twin Cities Black clergy hope to seize power of the moment - Union Democrat

Don’t be fooled! Elon Musk says Warren Buffett isn’t quite the ‘kindly grandfather’ he’s cracked up to be – MarketWatch

Warren Buffett has said he wouldnt invest in Tesla. On top of that, the Berkshire Hathaway bosss right-hand man once claimed that Elon Musk may overestimate himself.

Musk, for his part, admitted back in May that hes not the biggest fan of Buffett.

Two months later and not much has changed, apparently. When Musk was asked in a recent New York Times interview whether he thought Buffetts overrated, heres how he responded:

He has managed to create a great image for himself as a kindly grandfather, which is maybe overstating the case.

Buffett, not the kindly grandfather hes cracked up to be? Gasp!

OK, thats not a particularly vicious jab theyve both heard much worse but its pretty clear theres at least a bit of animosity between two of the richest men in the world.

This feud isnt exactly new. The deep-pocketed duo stole headlines back in May 2018 when Musk said in a call with analysts that Buffetts concept of economic moats is lame. Buffett returned fire saying, I dont think hed want to take us on in candy.

But are there enough competitive juices flowing for Musk to send this classic clip to Buffett after he briefly passed him on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index earlier this month?

When asked that question by the Times, Musk responded: I did that!? Deny!

Of course, Musk has been drinking the milkshakes of many of his haters lately, with Tesla having more than tripled so far this year. Buffett, on the other hand, has taken some heat as Berkshire has lost more market value in 2020 than all but a handful of publicly traded U.S. companies.

Read: Buffetts lost some of his mojo, says longtime Berkshire shareholder

Tesla TSLA, +0.05% shares were up almost 2% in Mondays session, while Berkshire BRK.A, -1.44% was stuck in the red. The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -1.13% , S&P 500 SPX, -0.73% and tech-heavy Nasdaq COMP, -0.04% were all moving higher.

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Don't be fooled! Elon Musk says Warren Buffett isn't quite the 'kindly grandfather' he's cracked up to be - MarketWatch

Tor Browser 9.5.1 Download – TechSpot

Tor is a network of virtual tunnels that allows people and groups to improve their privacy and security on the Internet. It also enables software developers to create new communication tools with built-in privacy features. Tor provides the foundation for a range of applications that allow organizations and individuals to share information over public networks without compromising their privacy.

Note: You can also download the latest beta version, Tor Browser 10 Alpha 1 here.

Individuals use Tor to keep websites from tracking them and their family members, or to connect to news sites, instant messaging services, or the like when these are blocked by their local Internet providers. Tor's hidden services let users publish web sites and other services without needing to reveal the location of the site. Individuals also use Tor for socially sensitive communication: chat rooms and web forums for rape and abuse survivors, or people with illnesses.

Journalists use Tor to communicate more safely with whistleblowers and dissidents. Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) use Tor to allow their workers to connect to their home website while they're in a foreign country, without notifying everybody nearby that they're working with that organization.

Groups such as Indymedia recommend Tor for safeguarding their members' online privacy and security. Activist groups like the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) recommend Tor as a mechanism for maintaining civil liberties online. Corporations use Tor as a safe way to conduct competitive analysis, and to protect sensitive procurement patterns from eavesdroppers. They also use it to replace traditional VPNs, which reveal the exact amount and timing of communication. Which locations have employees working late? Which locations have employees consulting job-hunting websites? Which research divisions are communicating with the company's patent lawyers?

A branch of the U.S. Navy uses Tor for open source intelligence gathering, and one of its teams used Tor while deployed in the Middle East recently. Law enforcement uses Tor for visiting or surveilling web sites without leaving government IP addresses in their web logs, and for security during sting operations.

Welcome Screen

Our old screen had way too much information for the users, leading many of them to spend great time confused about what to do. Some users at the paper experiment spent up to 40min confused about what they needed to be doing here. Besides simplifying the screen and the message, to make it easier for the user to know if they need to configure anything or not, we also did a 'brand refresh' bringing our logo to the launcher.

Censorship circumvention configuration

This is one of the most important steps for a user who is trying to connect to Tor while their network is censoring Tor. We also worked really hard to make sure the UI text would make it easy for the user to understand what a bridge is for and how to configure to use one. Another update was a little tip we added at the drop-down menu (as you can see below) for which bridge to use in countries that have very sophisticated censorship methods.

Proxy help information

The proxy settings at our Tor Launcher configuration wizard is an important feature for users who are under a network that demands such configuration. But it can also lead to a lot of confusion if the user has no idea what a proxy is. Since it is a very important feature for users, we decided to keep it in the main configuration screen and introduced a help prompt with an explanation of when someone would need such configuration.

As part of our work with the UX team, we will also be coordinating user testing of this new UI to continue iterating and make sure we are always improving our users' experience. We are also planning a series of improvements not only for the Tor Launcher flow but for the whole browser experience (once you are connected to Tor) including a new user onboarding flow. And last but not least we are streamlining both our mobile and desktop experience: Tor Browser 7.5 adapted the security slider design we did for mobile bringing the improved user experience to the desktop as well.

Other

What's New:

Tor Browser 9.5.3 is now available from the Tor Browser download page and also from our distribution directory. This release updates Firefox to 68.11.0esr, NoScript to 11.0.34, and Tor to 0.4.3.6.

Also, this release features important security updates to Firefox.

The full changelog since Tor Browser 9.5.1 is:

All Platforms

Note: We are aware of a bug that allows javascript execution on the Safest security level (in some situations). We are working on a fix for this. If you require that javascript is blocked, then you may completely disable it by:

The full changelog since Tor Browser 9.0.5 is:

All Platforms

Build System Windows

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Tor Browser 9.5.1 Download - TechSpot

SpaceX’s Starlink Satellites Ruined This Photo of the NEOWISE Comet – Futurism

Over the past year, SpaceX has been launching hundreds of small broadband internet-beaming satellites into low-Earth orbit as part of its Starlink constellation. The tally as of June: 540.

While the promise of reliable and fast satellite internet accessible from pretty much anywhere in the world sounds pretty promising, not everybody is happy. As it turns out, the tiny satellites are way brighter than anybody was expecting and thats bad news for astronomers.

Over the last couple of months, countless reports have emerged of frustrated astronomers having their observations ruined by Starlink satellites appearing as bright streaks of light.

In the latest instance, images taken of the spectacular NEOWISE comet by astrophotographer Daniel Lopez were completely photobombed by Elon Musks Starlink satellites, as Space Telescope Science Institute astronomer Julien Girard pointed out in a tweet.

If there are lots and lots of bright moving objects in the sky, it tremendously complicates our job, Smith College astronomer James Lowenthal told The New York Times last November. It potentially threatens the science of astronomy itself.

Theyre so bright, in fact, that some are visible to the naked eye. In fact, onlookers keep mistaking them for UFOs, according to news reports from December.

The brightness is due in part to the fact that the Starlink satellites are orbiting Earth at much closer distance than most an operational altitude of roughly 550 kilometers, rather than the usual medium-Earth orbit (at 20,000 km) or geostationary orbit (at 36,000 km) used by other kinds of satellites, like those that provide GPS and communication services.

SpaceX has also claimed that theyre bright early on because theyre still climbing in orbit after launch, and will eventually spread out and become dimmer over a period of several months.

Luckily, SpaceX claims its working on a number of solutions.

Early attempts to paint the underside of each satellite with an anti-reflective coat of paint seem to have only been partially successful.

SpaceX is now trying out a new method: launching satellites with a cool pair of sunglasses. The space company is planning to mount retractable sunshades,called VisorSat, to each of the satellites to block sunlight from hitting its reflective parts the main reason theyre so bright SpaceNews reported in May.

The companys latest batch of Starlink satellites,which launched back in June, included a just single unit with such a sunshade. Its still unclear if the solution will appease astronomers.

SpaceXs most recent Starlink launch, 57 satellites each equipped with a VisorSat sunshade, had to be delayed due to weather earlier this month. The launch is now planned for July 29.

If no solution is found, astronomers could be struggling with bright Starlink satellites ruining their observations for many years to come. SpaceX already has permission from the Federal Communications Commission to launch tens of thousands of Starlink satellites to bring global internet coverage to the world.

More on Starlink: SpaceX Is Now Taking Requests for Starlink Beta Testers

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SpaceX's Starlink Satellites Ruined This Photo of the NEOWISE Comet - Futurism

Here’s Why NASA’s Next Rover is Bringing a Mars Rock Back to Mars – Futurism

Homeward Bound

In a matter of days, NASA is set to launch its Perseverance rover to Mars.

One curiosity of the mission is that Perseverance will be bringing a rock back to the Red Planet that scientists believe originated on Marsroughly 600,000 to 700,000 years ago, as the BBC reports for a fascinating scientific reason.

The rock, first discovered in the deserts of Oman in 1999, is one of nine materials that NASAs rover will take with it. These materials, housed inside a device on the rover called Sherloc, will serve to calibrate Perseveranceslaser and spectroscopy instruments. In other words, itll be a control to make sure that if Perseverance finds evidence of ancient life, itll know for sure.

Well look at the calibration target in the first 60-90 days and perhaps not again for six months because we think the instrument is really very stable, Luther Beegle, principal investigator of Sherloc at NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory, told the BBC.

But if we start seeing interesting things on the surface of Mars that we cant explain in the spectra, then well look back to the calibration target to make sure that the instruments working correctly, he added.

The eventual goal is to collect interesting rocks, seal them in a small tube, and leave them behind on the Martian surface to be returned by later missions.

READ MORE: Nasa Mars rover: Meteorite to head home to Red Planet [BBC]

More on Perseverance: NASAs Next Rover Will Bring First-Ever Microphone to Mars

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Here's Why NASA's Next Rover is Bringing a Mars Rock Back to Mars - Futurism

NASA’s Next Rover Will Bring First-Ever Microphone to Mars – Futurism

No country has ever successfully sent a microphone to Mars. As a result, weve never heard the eerie sounds of the surface of Red Planet.

Even if only a few minutes of Martian sounds are recorded from this first experiment, the public interest will be high and the opportunity for scientific exploration real, famed astronomer Carl Sagan wrote in a 1996 letter to NASA, as quoted by the Planetary Society, a nonprofit space exploration advocacy group.

But with NASAs Perseverance mission launching in just a single week if the weather plays along that all may change. The agencys next-gen Mars rover is outfitted with not just one but two microphones.

Afterthe crafts six month journey through the solar system, the two microphones attached to NASAs Perseverance rover could finally offer us a tantalizing first: a chance to listen to what Mars actually sounds like.

One microphone, on Perseverances Entry, Descent and Landing (EDL) system, was designed to make sure the rover makes it down to Mars unharmed. Thanks to accompanying video, we could soon, for the first time ever, get to watch and listen to a Mars landing.

The second is part of the rovers SuperCam instrument, which builds on Curiositys ChemCam, a laser beam that heats and vaporizes rocks to determine what chemicals theyre made of.

The microphones could also tell us about the rovers health.

Hearing how the mast swivels, the wheels turn, or hearing how other instruments sound can also be an important engineering diagnostic tool, said Greg Delory, the CEO and co-founder of space hardware company Heliospace and an advisor to the SuperCam team, in the statement.

Previous attempts at recording the sounds of Mars with a microphone quickly turned into an uphill battle with plenty of setbacks.

The Planetary Society, co-founded by Sagan in 1980, jumped into action in the mid-1990s to finally bring a microphone to Mars. Initially, the team was hoping to attach one to NASAs Mars Polar Lander mission, set to launch in 1990.

They got to work and after raising $100,000, they came up with the Mars Microphone, the first crowdfunded scientific instrument to fly to another planet, according to the Society.

The original Mars microphone we built was a smart little box, about 5 centimeters on each side, weighing 50 grams, Delory said. The microphone was built for extreme environments, and we tested it enough to know how robust it was.

Unfortunately, a NASA committee dismissed the idea. A second chance to have it attached to Frances Netlander mission in 2007 cropped up, but the mission was canceled in 2004.

Several years later, a different microphone made its way all the way to Mars mounted to NASAs Phoenix lander in 2008. In yet another unfortunate turn of events, the microphone had to be deactivated prior to the launch due to a technical glitch.

The closest the Earth has come to hearing the sounds of Mars was in December 2018, when NASAused InSights seismometer and air pressure sensorto capture something approximating sound. However, recordings had to be pitched and sped up to hear.

Lets hope Perseverance makes it to Mars in one piece. Only then will be able to get to hear the sounds of an alien planet.

READ MORE: Perseverance microphones fulfill long Planetary Society campaign to hear sounds from Mars [Planetary Society]

More on Mars rovers:NASAs Mars Rover Spent the Weekend Shooting a Weird-Looking Rock With a Laser

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NASA's Next Rover Will Bring First-Ever Microphone to Mars - Futurism

Russia Just Tested a Military Satellite That Kills Other Satellites – Futurism

Space War

Last week, Russia tested what U.S. military officials believe to be a dangerous new anti-satellite weapon.

In short, the Russian satellite Cosmos 2543 demonstrated that its capable of approaching another satellite in orbit and shooting it down, C4ISRNET reports. And that demo, amidst international talks about demilitarizing space, has the Pentagon concerned.

The actual weapon worked sort of like a Russian nesting doll: Cosmos 2543 first deployed a sub-satellite that then launched a projectile at the relative speed of 250 kilometers per hour. There was no target, and the satellite was only near another Russian satellite for the demo, but U.S. military officials see the test as a show of force.

This is further evidence of Russias continuing efforts to develop and test space-based systems, General John Raymond, Space Force Chief of Space Operations, said in a statement provided to C4ISRNET, and consistent with the Kremlins published military doctrine to employ weapons that hold U.S. and allied space assets at risk.

The U.S. State Department sees the weapons test as a sign that space warfare is a growing threat worthy of greater attention, C4ISRNET reports. And officials couldnt resist taking a jab at Russia along the way.

This event highlights Russias hypocritical advocacy of outer space arms control, with which Moscow aims to restrict the capabilities of the United States while clearly having no intention of halting its own counterspace program, Assistant Secretary of State for International Security and Nonproliferation Chris Ford said in the statement.

READ MORE: Russia conducted anti-satellite test in space, says U.S. Space Command [C4ISRNET]

More on space warfare: The Pentagon Wants Sentinel Satellites To Deter Space Warfare

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Russia Just Tested a Military Satellite That Kills Other Satellites - Futurism

Star Wars: Dark Legends Will Reveal Secrets of Sith Immortality – Screen Rant

The upcoming Star Wars book Dark Legends will reveal the ancient secrets of Exegol - and the mystery of the Sith's quest for immortality.

George Mann's upcomingStar Wars tie-in book,Dark Legends, will reveal ancient secrets of Exegol and the Sith quest for immortality. According to Matt Stover's novelization ofStar Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith, the ultimate goal of every Sith is to find a way to conquer death. As powerful as a Sith may be, though, they can never truly become a Force Ghost in the manner seen by Jedi such as Qui-Gon Jinn and Luke Skywalker, because that involves submitting yourself to the will of the Force - the very opposite of Sith philosophy.

The Sith may not technically be able to conquer death, but they can still come pretty close, as revealed inStar Wars: The Rise of Skywalker. There, the Emperor mysteriously returned from the dead. The film itself was silent as to just how this was possible, but tie-ins have gradually fleshed it out. It seems the Emperor's spirit survivedReturn of the Jedi, and fled to a clone body secreted on the Sith bastion of Exegol. This is a technique known as Essence Transfer, and the experience appears to have made Palpatine even more powerful in the dark side of the Force. There are still a lot of unanswered questions about Essence Transfer, not least the fact a Sith spirit has previously been unable to travel cosmic distances before finding a host. But it seems some of those secrets may well be revealed in George Mann's upcomingStar Wars book,Dark Legends.

Related:Star Wars: All 30 Light & Dark Side Force Powers In Canon

Mann participated in the annual Lucasfilm Publishing Panel at this year's San Diego Comic-Con@Home, and there he talked a little about the book. It's essentially a sequel to his previous work,Myths & Fables, and serves as a collection of in-universe legends. Like real-world myths, many of these have an element of truth to them, and apparently one of the tales inDark Legends will explore the Sith quest for immortality. As Mann explained:

"Another example is a story set on Exegol, which was great fun to do, because I was writing that just in the runup to the film coming out, and being able to hear a few of the little secrets about what was going to happen. And we're exploring in that, that kind of whole thing that the Emperor was trying to do, that whole Sith quest for immortality and this is an ancient story about a Sith who's tried before to win immortality, and the price of that - the price of immortal life, and what it does to a person who can achieve it, or get close to it. Like most of these kind of Grimm's Fairy Tales, you have a sting in the tail of most of these stories, so no one gets what they quite expect by the end of the tale."

This ancient Sith's quest for immortality appears to have been successful enough to make their way into Sith legend, so they can safely be called a forerunner of Palpatine himself. But Mann suggests things didn't turn out well; he's fashioned these stories on Grimm's Fairy Tales, meaning people don't always get what they want. Presumably that means there will be a major cost to the Sith quest, with Palpatine learning lessons from the legend but choosing not to duplicate it.The history of the Sith planet Exegol is currently shrouded in mystery. According to the junior novelization ofStar Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, it was a once-fertile habitat that was despoiled by the Sith, who consumed the world's resources. Hidden in the depths of the Unknown Regions, it was presumably found by Sith explorers who used the Force to safely chart a path through the maelstrom. They recognized its potential as a major stronghold, although there may well have been others as well; thus when the Sith Empire was defeated millennia ago, the survivors took Exegol as their base.

Star Wars: Dark Legends will be available at your local book store on July 28th, 2020.

More:Star Wars Confirms The First Jedi DIDNT Serve The Light Side

X-Men: Cyclops' Brother is Back, With a HUGE Secret

Tom Bacon is one of Screen Rant's staff writers, and he's frankly amused that his childhood is back - and this time it's cool. Tom's focus tends to be on the various superhero franchises, as well as Star Wars, Doctor Who, and Star Trek; he's also an avid comic book reader. Over the years, Tom has built a strong relationship with aspects of the various fan communities, and is a Moderator on some of Facebook's largest MCU and X-Men groups. Previously, he's written entertainment news and articles for Movie Pilot.A graduate of Edge Hill University in the United Kingdom, Tom is still strongly connected with his alma mater; in fact, in his spare time he's a voluntary chaplain there. He's heavily involved with his local church, and anyone who checks him out on Twitter will quickly learn that he's interested in British politics as well.

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Star Wars: Dark Legends Will Reveal Secrets of Sith Immortality - Screen Rant

The Old Guard: Biggest Unanswered Questions From The Netflix Movie – Screen Rant

Though Netflix has yet to confirm a sequel to The Old Guard starring Charlize Theron, some big questions surrounding the mythology remain unanswered.

Netflixs new action-drama The Old Guard leaves some big questions unanswered, likely because of plans to expand the story into a trilogy of movies. The Old Guard follows Andy (Charlize Theron), the leader of a team of immortal warriors whose self-assigned mission it is to fight on the right side of history. The team includes Booker (Matthias Schoenaerts), Joe (Marwan Kenzari) and Nicky (Luca Marinelli), soon to be joined by a new Immortal, U.S. Marine Nile Freeman (KiKi Layne). Things grow more complicated when the teams secret is uncovered by former CIA agent Copley (Chiwetel Ejiofor), who hands evidence of their immortality over to pharmaceutical company CEO Merrick (Harry Melling). Merrick wants the Immortals captured so he can discover the secret to immortality and the end of disease for all.

Based on Greg Ruckas original comic series of the same name (Rucka also served as writer on the production), The Old Guard proved a refreshing take on the superhero genre, treating the characters abilities as both a gift and a great burden. Though Netflix has yet to announce a sequel, the movies ambiguous ending does effectively set up a potential sequel. Indeed, director Gina Prince-Bythewood confirmed in an interview with Digital Spy that The Old Guard was planned as the start of a trilogy, explaining that Rucka always envisioned this as a trilogy. I know where the story goes, and its pretty great. So if the audience is eager for it, theres definitely more stories to tell. It therefore makes sense for The Old Guard to leave some of its biggest questions unanswered as a way of tickling audience curiosity and encouraging demand for a sequel.

Related:The Old Guard Cast Guide: Where You've Seen Each Actor Before

With this in mind, there are some major questions left unanswered, and not just the ones set up by The Old Guards final scenes. Rucka explained that he wanted to make it really clear that the first story is not concerned with the how or the why of their immortality, likely to keep the story action-driven and avoid being weighed down by too much exposition. His statement also indicates an intention to explore the mythology further should a sequel be green-lit. Below are some of the biggest questions from The Old Guard that fans want answered.

One of the biggest questions posed by the Netflix movie is how the team became immortal in the first place. It is something the heroes ponder themselves, and the audience receives no answers. Does immortality manifest randomly? Is it the result of some genetic mutation akin to that of the X-Men? Some divine gift bestowed on a select few? What is certain is that none of the characters seem to hold the answers, but perhaps more will be revealed in future.

Andys age becomes something of a recurring joke throughout the film. Nile asks her about it repeatedly, but Andy maintains that she does not remember how long she has been immortal. While this could be true and she has in fact forgotten her early years, it is just as likely that Andy prefers to keep that part of her life private. What The Old Guard does reveal is that Andy predates the other warriors by many centuries. She spent time being worshipped as a goddess, and it is suggested that Andy was once known as the Queen of the Amazons, Andromache, and battled Heracles. Safe to say she has been around for an exceptionally long time, though it would be interesting to know exactly how long and to uncover more of her history.

The Old Guard established that though long-lasting, immortality is not permanent. No one knows when or why Immortals become mortals again, but the warriors do know their fate is unavoidable. Around halfway through the movie, Andy realizes that she is not healing from a stab wound she suffered, indicating she is now mortal. When she is later captured, her sudden loss of immortality puzzles Copley and Merrick, and the audience is equally left without an explanation. It is possible that, much like the comics, the movies will not delve into the how of immortality but rather focus on the impact it has on the characters. A sequel would therefore see Andy reckon with her newfound mortality without attempting to explain it.

Related:Every Song In Netflix's The Old Guard Movie

Is there a chance that Andy might regain her immortality? Her friend and fellow Immortal Lykon, thus far the only Immortal to lose his ability, died in combat. It therefore remains possible that immortality could return just as it went away, or that there is a way for it to be regained. Even if Andy herself is content to die, perhaps her team members are not ready to lose their fearless leader and friend and will seek to restore her abilities.

Quynh (Veronica Ngo) was Andys partner and friend for hundreds of years until they were both captured during the European witch hunts. After failing to die from hanging, a group of priests decide to separate the two women and trap Quynh in an iron maiden, sending her to the bottom of the sea where she could never be found. In the movies most haunting scene, viewers witness Quynh being forced to drown, die and be reborn over and over for five centuries. She was trapped in her metal coffin for hundreds of years yet, by the movies end, it is revealed that Quynh has finally escaped. How? Viewers will have to wait for a sequel to find out.

The two never met, but it is likely that Quynh also had visions of new Immortals, much like Andy and the team had when Nile first died. She approaches Booker only a few months after he is exiled from the immortal group for his betrayal, and he finds her waiting for him in his apartment. What does Quynh want with him? It is likely she approached him as a way of getting to Andy; whether she wants to reconnect with her old companion or seek revenge is unclear, though the latter seems more probable given the suffering she endured.

Later in the movie, Copley reveals that the Old Guard has saved hundreds of people throughout history, many of whom would go on to save humanity in some way, be it by preventing a nuclear catastrophe or by making some life-altering scientific discovery. Is it just coincidence? Does the team save so many people that, merely through the laws of probability, some were bound to go on to play crucial parts in directing human history? Or could it be that some higher power is controlling their actions, pointing them in the right direction like pawns on a chessboard?

Could there be other Immortals in the world that the Old Guard are unaware of? Or people much like Nile, lying dormant and ignorant of their immortality, until the time of their first death? It is doubtful that throughout the entirety of human history, only seven Immortals have existed. Perhaps a sequel to The Old Guard would see the team confronted with others like them.

Next:The Old Guard Ending & Sequel Setup Explained

X-Mens Olivia Munn Wields Psylockes Sword To Disastrous Results In New Video

Laura is a news and features writer at Screen Rant, having written on film, television and culture for a number of print and online publications since 2016. She most enjoys speaking to actors and filmmakers about their projects, having interviewed the likes of Sir Patrick Stewart, Robert De Niro, and Melissa McCarthy. Otherwise, she can usually be found re-watching the same five sci-fiction/fantasy shows for the umpteenth time, at a film festival or laughing at X A-12 memes. Follow her @laura_potier to discuss whether Legally Blonde or Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping most deserves to be crowned the best film in cinematic history. Citizen Kane who?

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The Old Guard: Biggest Unanswered Questions From The Netflix Movie - Screen Rant