Remembering the startups we lost in 2020 – TechCrunch

Even in a non-hell year, running a successful startup is a tremendous lift. After the events of 2020, however, no doubt many already lean businesses are hanging on by the skin of their teeth. For every company that saw increased interest in their offerings during the pandemic, there were several that simply couldnt make it through the finish line.

Weve put this list together for several years now. Its not a fun task, but it seems worthwhile to commemorate the startups that have closed up shop over the past 12 months. (Some of them were acquired by larger companies before shutting down, but all of them began their life as startups, and it still felt worthwhile to mark the end of their stories.) It also offers an opportunity to examine those issues from a bit of distance to see if there are any broader takeaways for the community at large.

This years list is among the most diverse weve done, ranging from standard smaller-name closures to big blockbuster crashes like Quibi and Essential . For some, the pandemic was the final nail in the coffin, but in many cases, cracks in business models were already starting to surface well before COVID-19 ground the global economy to a screeching halt.

Atrium (2017-2020)

Total Raised: $75 million

Atrium, a 100-person legal tech startup founded by Justin Kan, shut down in March after failing to find an efficient way to replace the arduous systems of law firms. The startup even returned some of its $75.5 million in funding to its investors, including Andreessen Horowitz.

The shutdown comes after the platform had pivoted just months earlier, laying off in-house lawyers and turning into a clearer SaaS play. Ultimately, Atriums failure shows how difficult and unprofitable it could be to disrupt a traditional and complicated system.

The closure came just three years after it launched with the goal to build software for startups to navigate fundraising, hiring, acquisition deals and collaboration with their legal team.

Essential (2017-2020)

Total Raised: $330 million

Image Credits: Darrell Etherington

Big plans, big names and a boatload of money should have been enough to buy Essential a lengthy runway. Sure, Essential was entering a mature and oversaturated market, but the Playground-backed startup was doing so with $330 million in funding, a team of top industry executives and some genuinely innovative ideas.

When I spoke to the company at launch, an executive outlined a 10-year plan to become a major player in both the mobile and smart home categories. Ultimately, the company was able to eke out just under three years of life after coming out of stealth. And while it did give the world a promising handset, its connected home hub never arrived.

Timing, broader marketing issues and troubling allegations of sexual misconduct were all contributing factors that stopped Essentials big plans dead in their tracks.

HubHaus (2016-2020)

Total Raised: $11.4 million

Image Credits: HubHaus

HubHaus, founded by Shruti Merchant, was a long-term housing rental platform rooted in the belief that adult dormitories would take off. The startup targeted working professionals in cities, and raised only around $11 million in known venture capital. When it came to raising a Series B, Merchant says the company struggled to close and lost investor interest due to WeWorks failed IPO.

After then pivoting to a self-funded company, HubHaus was just finding footing when the coronavirus pandemic arrived in the United States, drastically hurting the rental market (as shown by Airbnbs public struggles, as well). The housing company eventually decided to close down in September, leaving landlords, members and vendors in limbo and bringing on a fresh sweep of critique and controversy.

Affordable housing continues to be an issue in the Bay Area, and HubHauss departure from the scene underscores this truth.

Hipmunk (2010-2020)

Total Raised: $55 million

Image Credits: Hipmunk

Hipmunk, founded by Adam J. Goldstein and Reddit co-founder Steve Huffman, was one of the first travel aggregation platforms on the market. The company put together information on flights, hotels and car rental all into one place so consumers could compare and contrast prices with ease.

The focus was enough for the platform to get acquired by Concur, but now after four years, the travel startup shut down. Notably, the travel startups closure wasnt necessarily tied to the coronavirus pandemic. The site officially went dark on January 23, months before lockdowns came to the United States.

IfOnly (2012-2020)

Total Raised: $51.4 million

Photo: Thomas Barwick/Getty Images

IfOnly had created a marketplaces of exclusive events such as goat yoga a business that faced obvious challenges during the pandemic. The startup was actually acquired by one of its investors, Mastercard, late last year, but the acquisition wasnt announced until IfOnly revealed over the summer that it was shutting down.

Mastercard also said IfOnlys team and technology are still part of its Priceless experience marketplace: The IfOnly platform will continue to help advance our Priceless strategy and our combined team will be even better positioned and equipped to deliver exclusive experiences for cardholders globally.

Mixer/Beam Interactive (2014-2020)

Total Raised: $520,000

Image Credits: Microsoft

Microsoft shut down its Twitch competitor Mixer this year, handing off its partnerships to Facebook Gaming. The service had its roots in the software giants acquisition of Beam Interactive shortly after the startup won TechCrunchs Startup Battlefield in 2016.

Before giving up, Microsoft made some big investments in Mixers success, most notably signing streaming superstars Ninja and Shroud to exclusive deals. (They became free agents after the shutdown.) However, Microsofts gaming chief Phil Spencer said the company suffered from starting out pretty far behind the biggest players in the streaming market.

The Outline (2016-2020)

Total Raised: $10.2 million

Image Credits: The Outline

Despite a busy year of innovation and venture for news media platforms, The Outline, which branded itself as the next generation version of the New Yorker was shut down. The media site was started by Josh Topolsky and had an explicit focus on serving millennials with a digital-first news media brand.

The shutdown was part of a broader layoffs at Bustle Digital Group, which acquired the publication in 2019. Pre-acquisition, The Outline had already scaled back its editorial staff and refocused on freelance articles. (Input a tech site that Topolsky founded for BDG continues to publish.)

Periscope (2015-2020)

Periscope went out with more of a whimper than a bang. The startup was acquired by Twitter before it had even launched a product. With Meerkat bursting on the scene that year at SXSW, Twitter went on the offensive, buying the startup to build out its own live video offering.

Periscopes run was decent as far as these things go, and its technology will live on as part of Twitters video offerings, even after the app is officially discontinued next March. But in the end, Periscope was a shell of its former self. In fact, this is a rare instance where the pandemic may have actually delayed its shutdown.

The company notes, We probably would have made this decision sooner if it werent for all of the projects we reprioritized due to the events of 2020.

PicoBrew (2010-2020)

Total Raised: $15.1 million

Image Credits: PicoBrew

The company made beer-brewing machines that used coffee pod-style PicoPaks, then expanded into other categories like coffee and tea, but never quite attracted enough customers to make the business viable. It sold its assets earlier this year to PB Funding Group a group of lenders recruited by then-CEO Bill Mitchell in 2018 to keep it afloat.

Its possible that PicoBrew will live on in some form, as PB Funding Group says its seeking buyers for the companys patents and other intellectual property, and that it will keep the website running in the short term so that the machines dont stop working.

Quibi (2018-2020)

Total Raised: $1.75 billion

Quibi CEO Meg Whitman speaks about the short-form video streaming service for mobile Quibi during a keynote address January 8, 2020 at the 2020 Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images)

More so than any tech company in recent memory (with the possible exception of Theranos), Quibis existence feels like a fever dream. $1.75 billion in funding later and what do we have to show for it? Fierce Queens, a nature documentary about female animals. The HGTV-style program, Murder House Flip. And, of course, The Shape of Pasta. A show about pasta.

Early reports of the services demise seemed premature if only because there was seemingly no way a company could burn through that much capital that quickly. By late-October, however, it was over. All that is left now is to offer a profound apology for disappointing you and, ultimately, for letting you down, founders Jeffrey Katzenberg and Meg Whitman wrote in an open letter.

Sometimes startup failures are bad timing. Sometimes its just plain bad luck. With Quibi, the diagnoses of what went wrong can be summed up in one word: everything.

Rubica (2016-2020)

Total Raised: $15 million

Image Credits: Rubica

Rubica spun out of security company Concentric Advisors with the aim of offering tools that were more advanced than antivirus software, while still remaining accessible to individuals and small businesses. CEO and co-founder Frances Dewing said that when customers cut back on spending during the pandemic, the company tried to shift its focus to larger enterprise, but it failed to convince investors there was a business there.

We were all really surprised given how relevant and needed this is right now, she said. Investors didnt agree with that or see it in the same way.

ScaleFactor (2014-2020)

Total Raised: $104 million

Businessmans hands with calculator and cost at the office and Financial data analyzing counting on wood desk. Image Credits:Sarinya Pinngam/EyeEm / Getty Images

ScaleFactor was a startup claiming to offer artificial intelligence tools that could replace accountants for small businesses; it blamed the pandemic for cutting its revenue in half and forcing the company to shut down.However, former employees and customers told Forbes a different story that ScaleFactor actually relied on human accountants (including an outsourced team in the Philippines) to do the work.

While its hardly unprecedented for a startup to fudge the truth about their level of automation versus human labor, this reportedly resulted in error-filled accounting for ScaleFactor clients. (Responding to a fact-checking email, former CEO Kurt Rathmann said the email was filled with numerous factual inaccuracies and misrepresentation and declined to comment further.)

Starsky Robotics (2015-2020)

Total Raised: $20 million

Self-driving trucks startup Starksy Robotics began with this first, and problematic truck. Image Credits:Starsky Robotics

In 2019, our truck became the first fully-unmanned truck to drive on a live highway, Starsky Robotics co-founder and CEO Stefan Seltz-Axmacher wrote in a Medium post in March. And in 2020, were shutting down. After five years and $20 million in funding, the autonomous trucking company shut its doors that month. It wasnt for lack of ambition or demand it seems safe to assume theres still a bright future for self-driving trucks.

Ultimately, however, Starsky wont be along for that ride a fact Seltz-Axmacher blames largely on timing. A crowded market is certainly at play, as well, with countless companies currently pushing to bring autonomous technology to the road.

Stockwell/Bodega (2018-2020)

Total Raised: $10 million

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin

Founded in 2018 by ex-Googlers, Stockwell AI shut down after being unable to find business for its in-building smart vending machines that stocked everything from condoms to La Croix. The company blamed the current landscape (also known as the global pandemic we are experiencing) for its closure.

Stockwell AI, formerly known as Bodega, was well-funded and well-known, with more than $45 million in funding from investors that included NEA, GV, DCM Ventures, Forerunner, First Round and Homebrew. Still, even venture capital couldnt make vending machines work well enough.

Trover (2011-2020)

Total Raised: $2.5 million

Image Credits: Trover

Another travel-focused startup bites the dust as the coronavirus limits the chance to safely explore the world (let alone your neighborhood). Trover, a photo-sharing hub for travelers acquired by Expedia, shut down in August. The startup was founded by Rich Barton and Jason Karas and was meant to connect people travelling to the same places. The startup had quite the life: it began out of the remains of TravelPost, a travel review site, and got scooped up by its parent company when it only had $2.5 million in funding. Unfortunately, its nine-year journey is over for now.

View original post here:

Remembering the startups we lost in 2020 - TechCrunch

Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Peloton, Apple, IAC, CarMax and more – CNBC

A monitor displays Peloton Interactive Inc. signage during the company's initial public offering (IPO) across from the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York, U.S., on Thursday, Sept. 26, 2019.

Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.

Peloton The exercise equipment stock jumped more than 11.7% and hit an all-time high after Peloton announced that it planned to buy equipment manufacture Precor for $420 million. The deal could help Peloton ramp up production to meet strong demand.

IAC Shares of IAC jumped more than 14.1% on Tuesday after announcing it is spinning off its full stake in video software company Vimeo. Vimeo will become an independent publicly traded company after the deal closes, expected in the second quarter of 2021.

Apple A gain of 2.9% helped Apple offset losses in the major indexes given the iPhone maker's $2.2 trillion market cap. Investors accredited the equity's strength to reports that Apple is advancing plans to manufacture self-driving cars by 2024, a massive undertaking the tech company has dubbed Project Titan.

CarMax The auto retailer reported quarterly per-share earnings of $1.42, topping the consensus estimate of $1.14 a share. Revenue also came in above Wall Street forecasts. But CarMax shares fell more than 8% after the company reported that comparable used-vehicle sales dropped 0.8% compared to a FactSet consensus estimate of a 1% increase.

Carnival, Norwegian Cruise Line, MGM Resorts Travel-related stocks came under pressure amid lingering concerns about the new coronavirus strain from the U.K.Carnival lost 5.9%, Norwegian Cruise Line fell 6.9% and Royal Caribbean dipped 3%. MGM Resorts fell 0.5%. Delta Air Lines, American Airlines and United Airlines all slipped more than 2.5%.

Sportsman's Warehouse Shares of the retailer surged 39.6% after the company said it agreed to be bought by Great American Outdoors Group. The parent company of Cabela's will pay $18 in cash per share of Sportsman's Warehouse, above the stock's Monday closing price of $12.65 per share.

RealReal Shares of the luxury clothing company popped 10.3% after Baird initiated coverage of RealReal with an outperform rating. The Wall Street firm called RealReal a "compelling open-ended growth story."

Rent-A-Center Shares of the furniture and electronics rental company added 1.2% after Loop Capital upgraded Rent-A-Center to buy from hold. The investment firm said in a note that the company's acquisition of Acima was a "game changer."

Illumina Illumina shares advanced 2.3% after Piper Sandler upgraded the maker of gene sequencing technology to an overweight rating. "llumina is well-positioned as the leader in NGS [next-generation sequencings], and we believe it can maintain and grow its position by continuing to lower sequencing costs and taking advantage of datascienceadvancestoimproveshort-readperformance," the firm said in a note to clients.

with reporting from CNBC's Jesse Pound, Pippa Stevens and Tom Franck.

Here is the original post:

Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Peloton, Apple, IAC, CarMax and more - CNBC

Activism platform actionable helps users be proactive about the causes they love – TechCrunch

In 2016, when the world felt like an entirely different place, Jordan Hewson launched a platform called Speakable. It was meant to let news readers take action on a cause or issue in the very moment they cared most: while reading a news article about it. The company partnered with publishers and NGOs to deliver an action button, right on the publishers website.

Skip forward to today, and people have become far more proactive about the causes they care about. Thats why Hewson is launching a new product called actionable, a library of actions mapped across dozens of causes, giving the user a clear view into how they can do something about the things they care about most.

Though donations are an option across the platform, there are other methods by which users can take action, including volunteering, contacting your representatives and signing petitions.

We were founded before the 2016 election, said Hewson. And Speakable was based on the hypothesis that if we didnt make action easy, people wouldnt do it. But so much has changed, politically and socially, that people are really breaking down the doors to find out ways that they can help in this moment that were in. So we really wanted to be able to provide our users with a platform where they can proactively seek out things that they want to do and deepen their community experience.

Issues on the platform include Education, Equal Rights, Environment, Health, Migration, Politics, Poverty, Racial Justice and more. When a user clicks on an issue, actionable breaks the results down into the type of action the user might take, from donating to volunteering to signing petitions. The platform also drills down into the specific mission of the organization to give users a clear look at how theyre spending their resources.

When Speakable launched, it offered its services for free in the hopes of scaling up rapidly. Today, the platform charges a 3% service fee for donations made through the platform, but Hewson doesnt see that as the companys primary revenue generator.

Rather, Speakable is partnering with brands to sponsor action buttons for their own purpose-based initiatives. Hewson explains that might take the form of a matching campaign or sponsoring the ability for you to reach out to your legislator on a certain issue, giving the publishers another way to generate revenue, as well as Speakable, while scaling campaigns and initiatives on behalf of the brand partners.

The company is currently partnered with about 90 publishers and, via an API, aims to list all the nonprofits that exist in the States.

Interestingly, actionable doesnt necessarily rank or curate the NGOs on its platform in an effort to maintain neutrality among nonprofits, according to Hewson.

Speakable has raised $2.5 million since inception. It has also powered 10 million actions, with the majority of those actions coming in 2020, with 5.2 million actions taken this year. Just this past week, in fact, Speakable facilitated more than $1.3 million in donations in a single day to Feeding America in partnership with the TODAY show.

The team is about 15 people. Sixty percent identify as women at the female-founded company, with 20% identifying as BIPOC and 10% identifying as LGBTQI+.

Original post:

Activism platform actionable helps users be proactive about the causes they love - TechCrunch

One final $100M ARR company and the startups we want to meet in 2021 – TechCrunch

As we head toward the exits of 2020, we have one more name to add to our roll call of private companies that have reached the $100 million annual recurring revenue (ARR) milestone. Well, one and a half.

But before we get into Nexthink and give Coalition a honorable mention, lets talk about the startups were looking for in 2021.

The $100 million ARR list came together by accident, a quirk of a news cycle that happened to have a few companies reach the threshold when I was in transition back to working at TechCrunch. So, when I got back into our WordPress install, the group of companies that had each recently reached nine-figure revenues was top of mind.

But looking at $100 million ARR companies proved less useful than we might have hoped. Mostly what we managed was to collect a bucket of companies that were about to go public.

That was always a risk. As we wrote at the time:

Perhaps the startup market would do well to celebrate the $50 million ARR mark even more loudly. At $50 million ARR, a startup is scaling to IPO size. Thats the goal, after all.

This is our aim for 2021.

If your startup is approaching the $50 million ARR mark, or the $50 million annual run rate threshold, I want to hear from you. Drop a line if your startup has an annualized run rate between $35 million and $60 million, is privately held, and you are willing to chat about how quickly it is growing. (The Exchange first raised this idea in November.)

The Exchange explores startups, markets and money. Read it every morning on Extra Crunch, or get The Exchange newsletter every Saturday.

But thats next year. Today, lets chat about Nexthink, what the hell digital employee experience is and whats good with cyber insurance and why its helping Coalition grow rapidly.

Nexthink is a venture-backed software company with headquarters in Lausanne, Switzerland and Boston. According to PitchBook, Nexthink raised external capital in modest amounts from 2006 until 2014, when the startup picked up a $14.5 million Series D. That round was its first worth more than $10 million.

From there, Nexthink was a venture capital success story, presumably scaling quickly as it raised two larger rounds in 2016 and 2018 worth an estimated $40 million and $85 million, respectively. Nexthink was valued at a little over $558 million (post-money) following its 2018 round.

How did it attract so much external funding? By building digital experience monitoring software. Which, after doing a bit of research this morning, appears to be software aimed at tracking what corporate end users are doing with devices and how well software running on those devices perform.

See the original post here:

One final $100M ARR company and the startups we want to meet in 2021 - TechCrunch

Tencent-led consortium will lift stake in Universal Music to 20% – TechCrunch

Tencent is further strengthening its ties with music giant Universal Music Group as it continues to dominate the Chinese music streaming market.

A consortium led by Tencent and comprising Tencent Music Entertainment, the internet giants music spinoff, is set to buy an additional 10% equity stake in UMG from French media conglomerate Vivendi SA, TME said on Friday.

The round values UMG at 30 billion, or $36.8 billion, and will increase the consortiums stake in the music company to 20%. TME continues to hold a 10% equity interest in the consortium, of which other members are not disclosed.

The transaction reinforces TMEs commitment to strengthening its strategic partnership with UMG.TME looks forward to an ongoing and deeper collaboration with UMG as both companies work together to bring unparalleled service and product offerings to artists and fans inChinas booming music entertainment market, the company said.

The transaction is expected to close in the first half of 2021 and is subject to regulatory approvals, TME noted.

In August, TME and UMG said they were launching a joint label to discover, develop and promote Chinese artists domestically and to the world.

Tencent has been pally with all three music label giants, which have been licensing content to the Chinese firms music-focused apps. Both Warner Music and Sony Music Entertainment bought shares in TME when the latter went public in Hong Kong.

Warner Musics SEC filing earlier this year showed that it had sold a small stake to Tencent. And one should be reminded that Tencent also had a deal with Spotify from 2017 when the two swapped stakes.

See original here:

Tencent-led consortium will lift stake in Universal Music to 20% - TechCrunch

‘Greenland’ offers grim take on how humanity will respond to a comet impact – Space.com

Watch out: Spoilers ahead for "Greenland."

If a threatening comet was bearing down on Earth with no hope of deflection, what would happen next?

The Hollywood film "Greenland," which will premiere on video on demand on Dec. 18, looks at the effects of the fictional yet convincing Comet Clarke, a large comet that has split into still-hefty pieces. In the movie, the comet takes scientists by surprise because it came from another solar system, making its orbit more difficult to predict echoing the emerging science of interstellar objects we've spotted near Earth.

Scientifically speaking, the movie does a decent job at discussing real-life comets even without the benefit of a science advisor.

Related: Biggest space movies to watch in 2020

Newscasters in the film draw direct parallels to the Tunguska event that saw a small-body explosion flatten trees in Siberia in 1908. The shockwaves from Clarke's impact echo eyewitness reports from a small asteroid breakup in Chelyabinsk, Russia, in 2012. The movie also shows fireballs from Clarke's fragments hitting the atmosphere, which is plausible given other cometary reports.

Sadly, there seems to be an absence of scientific effort in the film to track the comet's specific path, or to explain how comets and asteroids are monitored in general. While part of that can be explained away by saying it was too late to save Earth from Comet Clarke, it would have been nice to mention NASA's Planetary Defense Coordination Office, which in real life studies scenarios for deflecting asteroids and comets or for informing the evacuation of affected populations in case of a coming impact. NASA and its partners track the sky regularly for threats and happily, they haven't found anything imminently worrying yet.

Starring Gerard Butler ("300," "How to Train Your Dragon"), Morena Baccarin ("Firefly," "Deadpool") and Roger Dale Floyd ("The Walking Dead"), "Greenland" follows the problems of a family that at first, appears to be among the most fortunate on the planet.

Just prior to and then in the middle of a house party, John Garrity (Butler) receives automated messages on his phone and television advising him that the Department of Homeland Security wants him to evacuate Atlanta. He and his family have been selected to ride out the comet's impact in an isolated bunker, thanks to his specialized work as a structural engineer. But he needs to drive to Robins Air Force Base, roughly two hours south, first to catch the plane out to the bunker.

Trouble is, Garrity's neighbors don't get the same alert and they realize that, in the words of Garrity, "Something weird is going on with this comet" and they weren't invited to the bunker. The news is still cheerily talking about how you can see the comet in daylight when the first shockwaves hit the house mid-party. Before long, panic strikes.

It quickly becomes clear that this comet is no mere flyby event. Rather, it's a civilization-killer, with one of the fragments estimated at nine miles (15 kilometers) in diameter, about half as big as the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs 66 million years ago, and likely enough to wipe out cities around the world after it collides with the Earth, which in the movie is predicted to occur somewhere in Europe.

With two days to go before the big hit, Garrity, his estranged wife Allison (Baccarin) and diabetic son Nathan (Dale Floyd) race to an air force base, where they are stranded in a bureaucratic mess that echoes what many of us have experienced during international travel. Lost medication, family separation and a pressing takeoff time start the events of the movie really rolling. Everything becomes very sad and difficult to watch only 30 minutes after the two-hour film begins.

While older viewers may recall the (slightly) more lighthearted and "America will save the world" attitudes depicted in the 1990s films "Deep Impact" and "Armageddon" that also covered cosmic collisions with Earth, "Greenland" features no wisecracking Bruce Willis situation. You quickly see the looting, violence and general chaos that takes hold when society breaks down.

Presidential alerts flash constantly on cell phones, the news shows harrowing scenes of destruction, and local grocery stores quickly empty of essential goods. To be honest, you may find "Greenland" a tough watch after 2020 and the effects of the pandemic, but then again, escapist disaster films may be just the antidote you need after a long year.

Happily, within this melee comes some moments of hope. You see the military personnel who, like today's medical workers, willingly put their lives on the line to help. Dale Floyd manages to overcome the sad, sick child trope for a memorable performance as he attempts to sew his family back together. Also watch for Scott Glenn ("The Right Stuff" movie from 1983), who makes a brief appearance late in the film; his performance is a tear-jerker, showing that even at age 81, Glenn sure can hold anyone's attention.

"Greenland" is less a tale about overcoming a comet collision and more a documentary-style discussion of what happens to people living on a planet under such peril. The film is not an easy watch, but the story will stick with you for the science, the memorable performances and the ambiguous ending.

Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

Originally posted here:

'Greenland' offers grim take on how humanity will respond to a comet impact - Space.com

What was the Star of Bethlehem? – Space.com

As the well-known story in the Gospel of Matthew goes, three Magi, or wise men, followed the Star of Bethlehem to Jerusalem some 2,000 years ago. And after consulting with King Herod of Judea, the men found newborn baby Jesus in the little town of Bethlehem. Whether such an event really happened in history is difficult to prove, but if it did, what was the Star of Bethlehem?

This is a question scholars have long pondered, not just from a religious or historical perspective, but from a scientific one, too. Plenty of theories have been proposed, from an astronomical event to an astrological horoscope, but thanks to modern astronomy, scientists are getting closer to an answer.

"If what is in the New Testament is a historical account of something, then that historical account requires an explanation," David Weintraub, a professor of physics and astronomy at Vanderbilt University in Tennessee, told All About Space in an email. "As an astronomer, you want an astronomical explanation."

Related: As heavenly bodies converge, many ask: Is the Star of Bethlehem making a comeback?

We know that Halley's Comet was visible in the sky in 11 B.C. However, as the Magi trekked toward Jerusalem and on to Bethlehem, it seems unlikely that they followed a comet because its position would have changed as the Earth rotated, so the comet would not have led them in a single direction. What's more, in the ancient world, comets were often regarded as bad omens.

"For Christmas cards, it makes a nice picture having a comet and a tail but in those days comets up in the sky were usually a harbinger of impending disaster," Grant Mathews, a professor of theoretical astrophysics and cosmology at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana, told All About Space in an email.

Related: Was the Star of Bethlehem a star, comet or miracle?

We can also rule out novas and supernovas. Either event would have resulted in a detectable remnant, but astronomers have not found anything that might date back to this time.

Furthermore, had the Magi followed one, they probably would have walked in a circle. "You can't follow a star from Baghdad to Jerusalem to Bethlehem," Weintraub said. "Stars don't do that. They rise and set, and they don't sit in the sky."

Such an event would surely have been seen by others at the time, too. Although novas are reportedly quite rare, you'd still expect to find other historical accounts of a large, bright event in the sky.

Other theories suggest a supernova in the Andromeda galaxy as the cause, as described in a 2005 study published in journal The Observatory. Although it's possible to see the galaxy with the unaided eye, it wouldn't have been possible to see a star going supernova and exploding within it even with the help of a telescope.

Related: Best telescopes 2020: Top picks for beginners, viewing planets, astrophotography and all-arounders

This leads us to one of two possibilities. The first is that the Magi were making an astrological interpretation of the sky. The fact that they needed to ask Herod for directions when they arrived suggests they were not being led to their final destination by a single bright object.

Astrology was widely used at the time, and with the Magi coming from Babylon, it's plausible that they were astrologers. And due to a particular alignment of planets and stars, they may have read a hidden meaning among the stars, leading them to King Herod. For example, Jupiter's display could have been of great significance here, as astrology associated the planet Jupiter with royalty, so the moon passing it in the constellation of Aries on April 17, 6 B.C. could have heralded the birth of Christ.

Related: Images: World's oldest astrologer's board

"Modern astronomers don't put any credence in astrology, but 'modern' is important in this context," Weintraub said. "What's important is what people thought 2,000 years ago. Astrology was a big deal back then. The explanation I have found that makes the most sense is that it was astrological."

The other, more astronomical explanation is that there was indeed a bright object in the sky a conjunction between planets and stars. A conjunction occurs when two or more celestial bodies appear to meet in the night sky from our location on Earth. These events can continue every night in a similar location for days or weeks. If the wise men were to follow the moment of conjunction, it's possible they would have been led in a specific direction.

Related: 'Great conjunction' of Jupiter and Saturn will form a 'Christmas Star' on the winter solstice

Astronomer Michael Molnar suggested that a conjunction theory might be correct in his book "The Star of Bethlehem" (Rutgers University Press, 1999). If the "star" was the result of a conjunction (and this historical event did really happen), then there are a number of different alignments that could be the culprit.

Perhaps the most promising, and the one favored by Mathews, is an alignment of Jupiter, Saturn, the moon and the sun in the constellation of Aries on April 17, 6 B.C. This conjunction fits with the story for a few reasons. First, this conjunction happened in the early morning hours, which aligns with the Gospel's description of the Star of Bethlehem as a rising morning star. The Magi also lost sight of the star, before seeing it come to rest in the place where baby Jesus lay in the stable. This could have been the result of the retrograde motion of Jupiter, which means that it appears to change direction in the night sky as Earth's orbit overtakes it.

"Normally, planets move eastward if you're following them in the sky," Mathews said. "But when they go through retrograde motion, they turn around and go in the direction that the stars rise and set at night [westward]."

Two other conjunctions around a similar time also look promising. One is the meeting of Jupiter, Venus and the star Regulus in the constellation of Leo on June 17, 2 B.C. Without the aid of a telescope, the two planets would appear as a single "star," brighter than Venus and Jupiter individually. Another conjunction occurred in 6 B.C., between Jupiter, Saturn and Mars in the constellation of Pisces. But neither of these latter two conjunctions match the description in the New Testament as closely as the conjunction that occurred on April 17, 6 B.C.

Although scientists have ruled out several possibilities, we may never know for sure what the Star of Bethlehem was or if it even really happened, barring some remarkable archaeological finding. But it's a question that comes up year after year, and it will continue to pique the interest of scientists and historians alike for many years to come.

"Nothing in science is ever case closed, nor is it in history," Mathews said. "We may never know if the Star of Bethlehem was a conjunction, astrological event or a fable to advance Christianity. Maybe it was simply a miracle."

Additional resources:

This article was adapted from a previous version published in All About Space magazine, a Future Ltd. publication.

View original post here:

What was the Star of Bethlehem? - Space.com

The Jordan 6 Rings Reverses The Classic Bred – Sneaker News

Only two weeks shy of 2021, the Jordan 6 Rings has received a sizable confidence boost. In the past month alone, the silhouette has surfaced multiple times: the first a striking nod to the Aqua AJ8, the next a motorsports-inspired black and white, and the most current a reinterpretation of the iconic Bred colorway.

The latter, though, isnt quite as straightforward as any of the aforementioned. While the silhouette would typically reflect its inspiration near exactly, the pair here opts for a shade marginally distinct, one thats more pink than the Bulls-reminiscent reds often employed. Everything from the patent leather mudguard to the lace lock and chenille fixtures are hued the same, contrasting that of the black neutrals used along the rest of the mesh upper.

Grab an official look at these here and expect to find them at Nike.com likely within the coming months.

In other news, the Nike Kyrie 7 Rayguns is releasing first thing this January.

Where to Buy

Make sure to follow @kicksfinder for live tweets during the release date.

Mens: $170Style Code: 322992-060

See original here:

The Jordan 6 Rings Reverses The Classic Bred - Sneaker News

Official Images Of The Air Jordan 35 Morpho – Sneaker News

For the release of the past few inline Jordan flagships, the brand has consistently offered Guo Ailun his very own set of PEs. And, clad in white and blue, the Air Jordan 35 is poised to keep to tradition, its now officially revealed Morpho colorway a tribute to the Chinese athlete.

Far more straightforward relative to the basketball stars past creations, the AJ35 speaks mostly by way of its color, sprinkling brighter, cool toned accents atop a frame balanced by white at its mudguard and black along its lace unit as well as its collar. On-theme blues, then, quickly steal the spotlight, dotting atop the strings and dressing much of the tooling, Eclipse Plate, and side profile. Whats more, a bit of iridescent paneling can be found spaces above, its Jumpman branding loosely complementing that of the Chinese text at the heels hangtag.

Grab a detailed look at these here and expect them to release in China on December 24th.

Where to Buy

Make sure to follow @kicksfinder for live tweets during the release date.

Mens: $180Style Code: CZ8153-100

See the article here:

Official Images Of The Air Jordan 35 Morpho - Sneaker News

Ray Allen Shows Off the Air Jordan 1 Switch on Instagram but This Pair Is an Exclusive Player Edition – Yahoo Lifestyle

Christmas arrived a bit early this year for NBA legend Ray Allen after Jordan Brand gifted him a special pair of Air Jordans.

Allen shared a new iteration of the unreleased Air Jordan 1 Switch on Instagram yesterday. Unfortunately for sneaker fans, this colorway wont be releasing to the public.

This version of NBA icon Michael Jordans first signature shoe is presented in a simple black and white color scheme and features a zipper underneath the ankle collar that allows the wearer to rock the shoe as a high or a low top. It is equipped with various ankle collars and shoelaces sporting several color options including red, blue, orange and yellow. Capping off the look is a matching white midsole and a black rubber outsole.

The shoe comes packaged with a card featuring a special message from the Jordan Sports Marketing Team as reads, As 2020 comes to a close, our team wants to express our gratitude and appreciation to you for being a part of our Jordan Brand Family. 2020 will be a year that is hard to forget. Throughout this year each of you have shown resilience, strength and courage to adapt and continue to represent Jordan Brand with unrelenting commitment.

At the time of publication, a release date for the Air Jordan 1 Switch has not yet been announced.

In related Air Jordan news, a new sneaker collaboration between Clot and Jordan Brand is reportedly in the works after a first look at their upcoming Air Jordan 14 Low surfaced on social media.

More from Footwear News

Sign up for FN's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

Read this article:

Ray Allen Shows Off the Air Jordan 1 Switch on Instagram but This Pair Is an Exclusive Player Edition - Yahoo Lifestyle

Will we see Jordan Nolan in the Penguins lineup this season? – PensBurgh

Probably the most notable thing to come out of Jim Rutherfords media session on Monday was the way he talked up AHL addition Jordan Nolan.

Rutherford was complimentary of Nolans game, and confirmed that he will be in camp and will have an opportunity to earn an NHL contract.

Said Rutherford: We will bring an American League contract to camp. That will be Jordan Nolan. We like this player. We will see how camp goes. At any time, we can flip his American League deal to an NHL contract. He brings a dimension to his game that is important for teams.

So what do we make of this? Is it just typical preseason hot-air to leave the door open for a veteran? Or is seeing him in a Penguins uniform something that is a legit possibility of happening this season?

The thing that sticks out to me a little is the brings a dimension that is important to teams line, because, well, it has been a reoccurring theme for the Penguins the past couple of offseasons to bring more of a sandpaper and grit element to the roster. It has not really worked out well.

It is not really a huge surprise that the Penguins are leaving no stone unturned when it comes to their forward depth because it is one of the big unanswered questions heading into the season. There are a lot of bodies there, but not really a lot of guarantees. Especially offensively.

So lets talk about Nolan and if he has a spot here.

At first glance, it is difficult to see it.

Nolan did not play a single game in the NHL this past season, and since the start of the 2018-19 season has played in just 14 games. When he has played, he has not really made much of an impact. No offense, his possession numbers have been bad relative to his teammates, and he really does not solve the biggest need the Penguins have for their third-and-fourth lines. Someone to provide a spark offensively.

When everybody is healthy they already have a pretty strong collection of defensive forwards in those spots. Is Nolan a defensive upgrade over Teddy Blueger, Brandon Tanev, or a healthy Zach Aston-Reese? Or Evan Rodrigues, Mark Jankowski, or Colton Sceviour for that matter? We know he is not going to outscore any of them, and if he is not a defensive upgrade (and I am not sure that he is) then what is the point?

There is nothing wrong with players that provide physicality and rattle some cages from time to time. But there has to be something else there along with it to make it all worth it. Some kind of an offensive impact, or a shutdown presence, or an ability to drive possession. You can not just add grit for the sake of grit. My fear is that this would be grit for the sake of grit.

Having said that, the fact the Penguins have so many forwards on the roster right now that it is going to be awfully difficult for Nolan to crack this lineup. Especially with no preseason games to make a case for himself. Instead, I see this as a contingency plan, and the safety net of a body with NHL experience, for what could be a strange season full of uncertainty. You hate to think about it, but you have to prepare for the possibility that you are going to be missing players at some point this season and perhaps multiple players, even for an extended period of time due to illness or injury. The former could absolutely be an issue at some point given the numbers around the country. We also know the latter always seems to be an issue for this team.

That is what I see Nolan is here for. In case they need to fill a roster. Because from a hockey standpoint his only potential role is as a bottom-six forward, and almost certainly a fourth-liner. When it comes to the bottom-six there are at least eight or nine forwards that are starting the season ahead of him for one of those spots.

Realistically speaking it is an organizational depth move, and Rutherfords comments strike me as him just talking up a player they added to the organization with the understanding that they might need him. Whether or not they could have signed a better potential option for that role and that spot is certainly a debate worth having. But in the end I think the only way we see Nolan playing in an NHL game for Pittsburgh is if a lot of people are out of the lineup for one reason or another. There is just no actual hockey reason for it to happen otherwise.

Go here to read the rest:

Will we see Jordan Nolan in the Penguins lineup this season? - PensBurgh

Cameron Jordan says ejection vs. Chiefs helped him catch the birth of his daughter – Saints Wire

Things didnt go quite as planned for Cameron Jordan on Sunday. He was ejected late in the New Orleans Saints game with the Kansas City Chiefs for throwing a punch at an opponent, which he still says wasnt intentional, though hell be quick to add was a mistake he cant afford to make.

But things have a funny way of working out. Jordans wife Nikki went into labor just before kickoff, so Jordans ejection gave him a head start on rushing to the hospital to be with her and welcome their third child:

Jordan relayed the sequence of events to NFL Networks Jane Slater on Tuesday, saying: My wife had her water break pregame, then I get ejected for a punch that wasnt intentional 70 plays or so into the game still marinating on that and my daughter Chanel Jordan was born two hours later.

Talk about a roller coaster ride, going from a frustrating disqualification in a huge game to a new addition to the family. The Jordans are tight-knit, having traveled together to see Cams father Steve inducted to the Minnesota Vikings Ring of Honor last season. In other years, their son Tank is usually dominating other players children in two-hand touch games on the sidelines.

But theyve struggled like many other families amid the COVID-19 pandemic; Jordan has talked before about his decision to sleep in separate rooms after Saints games until clearing testing protocol. Heres hoping for more happy days ahead for him and his growing family.

See the rest here:

Cameron Jordan says ejection vs. Chiefs helped him catch the birth of his daughter - Saints Wire

Official Images of the Air Jordan 11 Adapt – HYPEBEAST

As the first Jordan Brand sneaker to feature Nikes power-lacing Adapt tech and the first high-top silhouette to make use of Adapt in general, the Air Jordan 11 Adapt is undeniably a shoe of firsts. Now, were receiving another piece of news from this futuristic iteration of the Air Jordan 11: a look at its official images ahead of its late December release.

While the white patent leather mudguards and toeboxes plus the heel pieces equipped with Michael Jordans #23 may be all classic Air Jordan, the rest of the upper puts forth a high-tech, high-concept look. Gone is the base layers standard ballistic mesh and fabric eyestays, replaced instead by a technical, translucent TPE that shows off the black eyestay anchors. These anchors hold together the thin tensile laces that criss-cross the black fabric tongue, and pops of flair are provided by an infrared strip across the tongue plus an infrared heel Jumpman the latter of which appears under the TPE base, much like the aforementioned eyestay anchors.

Zoom Air-equipped midsoles retain a familiar shape, artfully including the Adapt systems power and control unit in a way thats much more subtle than other models like Nike Basketballs Adapt BB 2.0. The lacing system can be controlled from an app on the wearers iPhone or Android device, or, if a more manual method is desired, they can also use the midsoles visible plus-minus buttons. These buttons also light up when the shoe is in use, and their color can be controlled from the app. The Air Jordan 11 Adapt is completed by an icy blue outsole with pops of infrared, and also comes with a wireless charging board.

Expect the Air Jordan 11 Adapt to release via Nike SNKRS on December 30, priced at a handsome $500 USD.

For more footwear news, check out HYPEBEASTs 10 Best Sneakers of 2020 list.

Go here to read the rest:

Official Images of the Air Jordan 11 Adapt - HYPEBEAST

Michael Jordan Poisoned the Locker Room so Badly His Wizards Teammates Refused to Buy Him a Retirement Gift – Sportscasting

Even if you arent a diehard NBA fan, you probably know all about Michael Jordan. During his time with the Chicago Bulls, His Airness became a global icon and a living legend; he was seemingly unstoppable, capable of willing his team to not only victory but six championships. MJs time with the Washington Wizards, however, was a different story.

If Michael Jordans time in Chicago was the stuff of legends, his stint with the Washington Wizards was an unpleasant epilogue that no one really wanted to read. In fact, MJ apparently became such a problem behind the scenes that NBA legend Wes Unseld said he poisoned the Wizards locker room.

RELATED: Michael Jordan Did Fear One Player on the Basketball Court

In the world of sports, its a fairly normal practice for players to retire after winning a championship; everyone, after all, wants to go out on top. Michael Jordan did just that in Chicago but wasnt able to stay away from basketball for long.

Jordan, of course, joined the Chicago Bulls out of college and took the NBA by storm. While it took him a bit of time to overcome the Detroit Pistons and their Jordan Rules, MJ eventually got over the hump. The Bulls claimed three-straight championships in 1991, 1992, and 1993; after a brief retirement and baseball career, His Airness returned to Chicago, won three more titles, and retired again.

Jordan, however, couldnt stay away for long. In 2000, he joined the Washington Wizards as part-owner and president of basketball operations; the following fall, he decided to suit up as a player for a last hurrah.

RELATED: Michael Jordans Former Coach Says the Bulls Became a Better Team Without Him

For basketball fans, seeing Michael Jordan return to the court was a dream come true. Unfortunately for the Washington Wizards, the living legends presence didnt translate into on-court success.

During his time in Washington, D.C., Jordan played 142 games over two seasons; he averaged 21.2 points, 5.9 rebounds, and 4.4 assists per outing and the Wizards failed to make the playoffs during either campaign.

That production wasnt the problem, though; if anything MJ proved that he was still incredibly talented, regardless of his age. There was a different issue in D.C., however.

While Jordan was never the greatest teammate in Chicago, he was able to carry his team to victory. In Washington, though, he wasnt able to make the Wizards a success. Instead, the team was stuck in an awkward situation, with an aging legend, rather than a long-term solution, as the main attraction.

During his time with the Wizards, Jordan didnt pull any punches; he criticized his teammates publicly and questioned their desire. While its one thing to push everyone to the brink in pursuit of a championship, things will land a bit differently on a mediocre team thats not even headed for the playoffs.

RELATED: Michael Jordans Brutal Trash Talk Once Ruined a Teammates Career

Even at the time, it was clear that Michael Jordan and the Washington Wizards werent a match made in heaven. Things in the locker room, however, may have been even worse than we thought.

During his time with the Washington Post, Mike Wise had an off the record conversation with Wes Unseld about Jordans comeback with the Wizards. While the details remained off the record for years, we now know what the D.C. legend said.

The most damning thing I remember hearing. And God rest his soul, I can give up his anonymity now: Wes Unseld told me this, Wise explained on a recent episode of Slates Hang Up and Listen podcast. He said, Michael has been great for many of us in this organization in ways that has raised the value of the franchise, has made us respectable in other ways. And yet, hes poisoned the locker room.

Understandably, Wise asked Unseld how he knew that Jordan had ruined the locker room. The big man responded with a damning piece of evidence.

How do I know that? I just went around and asked every player if they would chip in for a retirement gift for him, give him something nice. All of them turned their backs on me, Unseld explained, according to Wises retelling. And [Wise] said, Every player? And [Unseld] goes, Unanimous.

Purely based on his playing career, Michael Jordan is deservedly considered an NBA icon. As a teammate, though, His Airness could apparently leave something to be desired.

Stats courtesy of Basketball-Reference

Original post:

Michael Jordan Poisoned the Locker Room so Badly His Wizards Teammates Refused to Buy Him a Retirement Gift - Sportscasting

Commentary: The most gratifying thing about writing commentaries is the feedback – SW News Media

The most gratifying thing about writing these commentaries is the feedback I get. It doesnt matter if the feedback is positive, or negative (though I like the positive kind better). Feedback tells me Im having an impact. Feedback also helps me to inform my thinking. The only time I ignore feedback is if it lacks civility.

A recent commentary covered the county board, and the lack of candidates for the seats. I got the following responses from Commissioner Barbara Weckman Brekke. I thank her for allowing me to quote her here.

Thank you for the congratulations. It has been a crazy busy year of county business. Sometime when we can meet in person again, I would love to chat with you regarding the column you wrote about county commissioners. I agree that County Commissioners are compensated well, but I am not sure the column communicated the depth and breadth of the duties (if they are done well). Every day I am in conversations about and wrestling with topics around significant, long-term policies and actions having to with things like: child and adult protection, jail policies, how to keep people out of jail and out of trouble (as this is the best way to save taxpayer $$ and have a safer, healthier county), how to influence policies/laws/regulations at the state and federal levels that impact Scott County, etc.

So, I hope you will be up for such a conversation in the spring. It will be nice to meet with folks face-to-face again.

And:

Yes, feel free to use parts of my email about my work as a County Commissioner. Some days I spend more than 8 hours on county meetings and business!

The Commissioner is correct on all counts. They are well compensated. And those who choose to do well, have a wide variety of duties. In my opinion, the Scott County Board of Commissioners does a pretty good job. My previous commentary wasnt about the quality of their work. It was about the surprising (to me, anyway) lack of opposition candidates for seats. Maybe its because theres nothing especially controversial happening right now. Or maybe its because voters in Scott County were just too consumed by the national election. Or maybe people just dont care.

While my previous commentary touched on the fact that there are no educational or experience requirements, neither Commissioner Weckman Brekke nor I mentioned the one, informal requirement for County Board members, and others in government.

Common sense.

The Quote: Common sense is the knack of seeing things as they are, and doing things as they ought to be done. -Josh Billings

Thom Boncher is a retired marketing communications manager, former Jordan City Council member and Jordan resident since 2003.

Visit link:

Commentary: The most gratifying thing about writing commentaries is the feedback - SW News Media

Ty Jordan named Pac-12 Offensive Freshman of the Year, Utah football gets eight on All-Pac-12 team – Salt Lake Tribune

(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Utes running back Ty Jordan (22) runs for a touchdown, in PAC-12 football acton between Utah Utes and Washington State Cougars at Rice-Eccles Stadium on Saturday, Dec. 19, 2020.

| Dec. 22, 2020, 9:56 p.m.

Ty Jordans promising true freshman season for the University of Utah yielded a top Pac-12 honor on Tuesday afternoon.

Jordan, a revelation over the Utes final three games this month, was named Pac-12 Offensive Freshman of the Year. That honor spearheaded Utahs haul of conference accolades as four Utes made All-Pac-12 first team, while four got second-team nods.

Jordan, a three-star recruit from Mesquite High School in Texas, was expected to contribute immediately, but he surpassed any reasonable expectation.

In five games, Jordan ran for 597 yards and six touchdowns on just 83 carries for a yards-per-carry average 7.2. The final three games of the season, all Utah wins, saw Jordan rush for 468 yards and all six touchdowns, while being named Pac-12 Freshman of the Week after all three wins.

Jordan is the first Utah player to be named Pac-12 Freshman of the Year and only the second Ute to win one of the leagues yearly awards. Buffalo Bills rookie Zack Moss was named Pac-12 Offensive Player of the Year after his senior season in 2019.

Offensive lineman Nick Ford, linebacker Devin Lloyd and kicker Jadon Redding all were named to the first-team, along with Britain Covey, who made the first team as a return specialist.

UTAHS ALL-PAC-12 HONORS

Nick Ford, OL (First-team offense)

Devin Lloyd, LB (First-team defense)

Jadon Redding, PK (First-team special teams)

Britain Covey, RS/WR (First-team special teams)

Ty Jordan, RB (Second-team offense)

Brant Kuithe, TE (Second-team offense)

Sataoa Laumea, OL (Second-team offense)

Mika Tafua, DE (Second-team defense)

More here:

Ty Jordan named Pac-12 Offensive Freshman of the Year, Utah football gets eight on All-Pac-12 team - Salt Lake Tribune

Longhorns in the NFL: Week 15 LilJordan Humphrey scores first career touchdown – Burnt Orange Nation

LilJordan Humphrey, WR New Orleans Saints

Get you some LJ!

Humphrey caught his first two career passes in the Saints loss to Tampa Bay, with one of those being a 17-yard touchdown reception. LJ has spent the majority of his first two years in the NFL on the New Orleans Saints practice squad, playing in only seven games. However, with Michael Thomas now on Injured Reserve, Humphrey suited up and made the most of it. Now all three of the Longhorns wideouts from the 2018 team (Duvernay, Johnson, and Humphrey) have scored in the NFL.

Colt McCoy, QB New York Giants

Well, if you ever wondered what a Texas-OU game between Colt McCoy and Baker Mayfield would be like, you kinda-sorta got a taste of it Sunday night. McCoy played relatively well in his second start of the season, throwing for 221 passing yards with zero touchdowns and zero turnovers.

The Giants offense stalled in the red zone three separate times and turned it over on downs twice, including this, um, interesting play call from Freddie Kitchens. Offensive coordinator Jason Garrett tested positive for COVID-19 and missed the game while quarterback Daniel Jones was scratched due to lingering ankle and hamstring injuries.

And in classic Colt McCoy fashion, he took the blame for the loss after the game even though it really wasnt his fault.

If McCoy gets the nod again next week, hell face the Baltimore Ravens with New York one game back in the NFC East.

Brandon Jones, DB Miami Dolphins

This play was overturned and wiped out a Dolphins touchdown, but lets just enjoy it anyway.

Six total tackles for the rookie and the Dolphins continue to hold onto the final wild-card spot in the AFC.

Adrian Phillips, DB New England Patriots

Wanna hear a wild stat? In his seven years in the NFL, Adrian Phillips had never recorded a sack, until Sunday.

Charles Omenihu, DL Houston Texans

Kris Boyd, CB Vikings

Malcom Brown, DT Saints

DOnta Foreman, RB Titans

Geoff Swaim, TE Titans

Kenny Vaccaro, S Titans

Read the original here:

Longhorns in the NFL: Week 15 LilJordan Humphrey scores first career touchdown - Burnt Orange Nation

Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain Is Back, And Jordan Henderson Is Very Excited About It – The Liverpool Offside

In the 75th minute of Liverpools game against Crystal Palace this past weekend, Liverpool twitter (and people sitting in their houses) synchronously began chanting:

Fan favorite, and player most likely to host his own game show, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain stepped on the field for the first time this season. While fans were obviously excited to see the enigmatic midfielder back on the field, they werent the only ones amped up.

Very nice to see Ox back, said Liverpool captain, Jordan Henderson.

Hes been working extremely hard to get back. Looking sharp again and I thought he did well when he came on.

Despite it just being a 15 minute run out to knock some rust off, Ox did manage to provide an assist for Mohamed Salahs second goal of the game. In fact, Ox completed 10 our of 10 passes, including two long balls. While it was pretty much a training ground session at that point, it was still nice to see Ox moving well and pinging the ball around.

[T]he more minutes he can get, the better really because hes a big addition to our team, continued Hendo the Magnificent.

Weve got a little bit of a break going into the next game but after that it comes thick and fast. So we need to be ready for that.

Somehow, Jordan Henderson and the gang have not only managed to navigate a disastrous run of injuries during an insane fixture, they managed to win their group in the Champions League and top the Premier League table at Christmas yet again. With players like Ox returning to the fold, Liverpool might just manage to keep their run for the title steaming ahead.

Read more:

Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain Is Back, And Jordan Henderson Is Very Excited About It - The Liverpool Offside

South Norfolk Jordan Bridge increases toll rates starting January 2021 – WAVY.com

Posted: Dec 21, 2020 / 11:37 PM EST / Updated: Dec 21, 2020 / 11:37 PM EST

CHESAPEAKE, Va. (WAVY) South Norfolk Jordan Bridge (SNJB) officials on Monday announced their toll rate increase on Monday, which occurs annually.

Starting Jan. 1, 2021, drivers taking the SNJB can expect to see their bill go up. Those in passenger vehicles, mopeds, and motorcycles using prepaid accounts will now pay $2.65, up 10 cents from 2020s toll of $2.55.

Pay-by-plate customers in a two-axle passenger vehicle are charged by mail for $5.75 per trip about 30 days after travel in a two-axle passenger vehicle.

The toll rate for all vehicles with three or more axles (including cars with trailers) starts at $5.75 per crossing and may increase based on the time of travel and method of payment. Peak hours are weekdays from 5:30 a.m. 9:00 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m.

Off-peak rates apply during all other weekday hours, weekends and select federal holidays.

E-ZPass drivers are eligible for the bridges promotional offers including the new Santas Shortcut to Savings which provides unlimited free travel for all passenger vehicles on Christmas Eve, Dec. 24, 2020.

For more details on billing information, click here.

Stay with WAVY.com for more local news updates.

Read the original post:

South Norfolk Jordan Bridge increases toll rates starting January 2021 - WAVY.com

Abuse against shop workers has increased during the pandemic it is time to take action to protect them – British Politics and Policy at LSE

Emmeline Taylor reports how attacks against shop workers have increased during the COVID-19 crisis, exacerbating an already problematic situation. Such incidents are often dismissed as business crimes and therefore somehow victimless, rendering a change in the law necessary.

Respect for Shop Workers Week was established by the Union of Shop, Distributive and Allied Workers (Usdaw) as part of their Freedom from Fear campaign in 2002, to highlight the issue of growing abuse and assaults against shop workers. Last year, a report, Its Not part of the Job highlighted not only the alarming rates at which shop workers were suffering physical assaults, but also the devastating consequences. The reports of violence revealed instances where employees suffered broken bones, were stabbed with knives, lacerated with smashed bottles, lost sight due to eye injuries and been punched. Yet the impact of violence and verbal abuse stem far beyond physical symptoms; such encounters can leave long-lasting mental health issues including anxiety and, in the most severe cases, post-traumatic stress disorder.

Shop workers and the pandemic

In March 2020, the British Retail Consortium released its findings from its annual retail crime survey. It revealed incidents of violence and abuse against shop workers had risen to 424 per day in the period from 1 April 2018 to 31 March 2019, up 9% from the previous year. In the same month, the Association of Convenience Stores (ACS) reported findings from their survey which estimated 50,000 incidents of violence against shop workers, a quarter of which resulted in injury. In addition, they estimated that 83% of people who worked in the convenience sector had been subjected to verbal abuse over the past year. Both reports found a concerning increase in the use of weapons in attacks on shop workers. The ACS survey found almost 10,000 of the reported attacks in convenience stores involved some sort of weapon; 43% involving a knife and 5% involving a firearm. Attacks with axes, hammers and syringes were also reported.

These already alarming figures were released just prior to the severity of the impact of COVID-19 becoming apparent, and before lockdown restrictions were put in place in March 2020. Sadly, the situation was about to get a lot worse. Despite being recognised as essential key workers during the COVID-19 crisis, shop workers have actually seen the levels of violence and verbal abuse directed at them soar during the pandemic. As customers have become agitated by restrictions, queues, and limits on stock, some have directed their frustrations at public-facing employees working hard to serve their communities.

Usdaw reported that abusive incidents toward shop workers had doubled since the outbreak of COVID-19. Respondents to their survey reported being spat at, coughed at, and sneezed at when asking customers to practise social distancing. Some stated that they had been pushed and verbally abused when trying to enforce buying limits on in-demand products. On average, retail staff were being verbally abused, threatened or assaulted every week during the crisis, compared with once a fortnight for 2019.

Almost two-thirds (62%) of the 4,928 workers surveyed said they had experienced verbal abuse since 14 March, while almost a third had been threatened by a customer and 4% had been assaulted. When averaged across all three million workers in the sector, it amounts to a staggering 3,500+ assaults every day. While not all shop workers suffer to this extent, some actually experience much worse with 1 in 6 reporting being abused on every shift.

Retail workers are one of the most vulnerable sectors in the city in terms of violence and yet they are being neglected and ignored. Its always just classed as a business crime but we need to recognise the human collateral.(Police Officer)

Tackling violence against shop workers

Industry campaigns such as Usdaws and the Co-ops Safer Colleagues, Safer Communities campaign have resulted in some initial positive steps by government and it looked as though much needed action would be taken to protect those serving their community in shops across the country. In February 2020, the Prime Minister pledged in Parliament that We should not tolerate crimes of violence against shop workers, and in March 2020, Alex Norris MP introduced the Assaults on Retail Workers (Offences) Bill 2019-21 to make certain offences, including malicious wounding, grievous or actual bodily harm and common assault, aggravated when perpetrated against a retail worker in the course of their employment. It is due to have its second reading in January 2021 having already been postponed twice.

It is time to take action to protect such vital key workers and ensure that they can do their job without being fearful of abuse or physical assault. Such incidents are all too often dismissed as business crimes and therefore somehow victimless; but lets not forget that behind each and every statistic is a person who has directly experienced violence or verbal abuse while simply doing their job.

____________________

About the Author

Emmeline Taylor is a Reader in Criminology at City, University of London.

Photo by http://www.naipo.de on Unsplash.

Read more here:

Abuse against shop workers has increased during the pandemic it is time to take action to protect them - British Politics and Policy at LSE