Monthly Archives: April 2021

Asia-Oceania Judo Championships: Know the Indian squad, get schedule and watch live streaming in India – Olympic Channel

Posted: April 11, 2021 at 6:13 am

Jasleen Saini, Avtar Singh and Tulika Maan will all be looking for good performances to boost their Olympic ranking points. Watch live!

Indian judokas will be looking to gather as many ranking points as possible at the Asia-Oceania Judo Championships 2021, which begins on Tuesday at Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.

The Asia-Oceania Senior Championships, organised by the International Judo Federation (IJF), will offer ranking points to qualify for Tokyo 2020.

The qualification rules state that the top 18 in the world across weight categories, as of June 28, 2021, will earn a direct spot in the Olympics.

Apart from the top 18, a continental ranking list will be prepared and the highest-ranked players on the list will be allowed an Olympics spot, subject to one player from each country in each weight category.

The Asia-Oceania Championships is the final event before the June 28, 2021 deadline for Indian judokas to stake their claim for moving up the ranking charts for Tokyo 2020.

There are no Indians in the top-18 in any weight category and they can only make the Tokyo Olympics through the continental quota. There are 10 spots available per weight category for both men and women in Asia.

As things stand, only Shushila Devi Likmabam (ranked 44th), who competes in the womens 48kg category, is eligible for a place at the Tokyo Olympics through the continental quota. Watch the Asia-Oceania Judo Championships live in India!

She will be looking to add some more ranking points at the Asia-Oceania Championships and solidify her position.

However, Rio 2016 Olympian Avtar Singh (61st in mens -100kg), Tulika Maan (58th in womens +78kg) and Jasleen Singh Saini (57th in mens 66kg) will all be looking to move up in their respective categories.

Over 200 judokas from 30 countries will compete in the tournament.

Men

60kg: Gulab Mohsin Ali

66kg: Nitin Chauhan, Jasleen Singh Saini

73kg: Pawan Kumar, Ajay Yadav

81kg: Divyanshu Puri

90kg: Karanjit Singh Maan

-100kg: Avtar Singh

+100kg: Karambir

Women

48kg: Shushila Devi Likmabam

52kg: Ritu Verma

57kg: Yamini Mourya

63kg: Unnati Sharma, Inunganbi Takhellambam

70kg: Garima Chaoudhary

-78kg: Indubala Devi Maibam

+78kg: Tulika Maan

All times are in India Standard Times (IST)

Tuesday, 6 April

Women: 48kg, 52kg, 57kg - 10:30 AM IST

Men: 60kg, 66kg - 10:30 AM IST

Wednesday, 7 April

Women: 63kg, 70kg - 11:30 AM IST

Men: 73kg, 81kg - 11:30 AM IST

Thursday, 8 April

Women: 78kg, +78kg - 11:30 AM IST

Men: 90kg, 100kg, +100kg - 11:30 AM IST

Friday, 9 April

Mixed team competition - 10:30 AM IST

Live streaming of the Asia-Oceania Judo Championships in India will be available on the official YouTube channel of the Judo Union of Asia.

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Asia-Oceania Judo Championships: Know the Indian squad, get schedule and watch live streaming in India - Olympic Channel

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China v Russia v America: is 2021 the year Orwells 1984 comes true? – The Guardian

Posted: at 6:13 am

It may just be coincidence that Russia was piling military pressure on Ukraine last week at the same time as China noisily rattled sabres around Taiwan. Spring, to mangle Tennyson, is when a young mans fancy turns to war and that twisted maxim may even apply to ageing thugs such as Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping.

Russia and China are moving into ever closer alliance. While there is no evidence of direct collusion over Ukraine and Taiwan, presidents Putin and Xi are doubtless fully aware of each others actions, which have an identical, mutually reinforcing effect: putting the wind up Joe Bidens untested US administration.

Whats now unfolding could be portrayed as the ultimate fulfilment of George Orwells nightmarish vision, in his dystopian novel, Nineteen Eighty-Four, of a world divided geographically, politically and militarily into three rival super-states: Oceania (North America plus Britain), Eurasia (Russia and Europe), and Eastasia (China).

Publication of Orwells book in 1949 coincided with the formation of the US-led North Atlantic Treaty Organization (Nato) and the emergence of Joseph Stalins Soviet Union as a nuclear-armed power. It also saw the proclamation of the Peoples Republic of China by Mao Zedong. Yet these were early days.

Orwells prediction of an endless, three-way global confrontation proved premature. China needed time to develop. The Soviet Union eventually imploded. The US, declaring a unipolar moment, claimed victory. Yet today, by some measures, Orwells tripartite world is finally coming into being. 2021 is the new 1984.

If China and Russia are presently ganging up on the US and its satraps, thats par for the course in a world where no one superpower is allowed to dominate the other two. In 1972, Richard Nixon sought Chinas help against the Soviets. Maybe the US and Russia will one day combine against Beijing. As Meat Loaf sings it, two out of three aint bad.

Advocates of a multipolar world will say this is too simplistic, and that the strategic balance is more subtle and complex. Tell that to people in Ukraines eastern Donbas region and occupied Crimea, who face a deeply unsubtle Russian military build-up along the line of contact.

The consensus among analysts is that Putin is not about to invade. So what is he up to? Apologists suggest he was provoked by a Ukrainian decree last month declaring the re-taking of Crimea, seized by Russia in 2014, to be an official government objective and by renewed talk of Ukraine joining Nato.

A more banal explanation is that Moscow is pressurising Kiev to break the stalemate in the so-called Minsk peace process after the latest Donbas ceasefire collapsed. Putin enjoyed a big, but fleeting, ratings boost after Crimeas annexation. Last month, he used a lavish televised rally marking its seventh anniversary to recapture lost popularity.

It seems he failed. Russians are preoccupied with the coronavirus pandemic (and the incompetent official response), falling incomes, and a worsening socio-economic outlook. More than ever, Putins Soviet empire restoration project appears irrelevant, especially to younger people.

Putin is under fire at home from supporters of the much-persecuted opposition activist, Alexei Navalny, and over corruption allegations. Only 32% of Russians trust their president, according to a recent Levada Center poll. Seen this way, the Ukraine build-up looks like a calculated distraction for domestic political purposes.

Yet Putin may also be deliberately testing US and European resolve. He will not have forgotten how George W Bush pledged undying support to Georgias newly democratic government in 2005, then ducked out when war erupted with Russia in 2008.

As analyst Ted Galen Carpenter noted last week, Bidens White House has likewise affirmed unwavering US support for Ukraines sovereignty and territorial integrity in the face of Russias ongoing aggression in the Donbas and Crimea. This looks, at best, like a hostage to fortune, and at worst, a cruel deception.

The parallels between Washingtons excessive encouragement of Ukraine and Bushs blunder with respect to Georgia are eerie and alarming, Carpenter wrote. The US and Nato would no more go to war with Russia over eastern Ukraine than they would to save South Ossetia, he suggested. And if they did, well, thats world war three right there.

This is where truly global danger lies in the hazy gap between words and deeds in the intensifying trilateral struggle between superpowers. Will Putin, goaded by Bidens killer insult and numerous intractable disputes, call the US presidents bluff? On the other side of the world, will Xi?

Chinas surly leader looks like a man prone to brooding. He has suffered many slights at the hands of the west, including accusations of genocide in Xinjiang, brutality in Hong Kong, and aggression in the seas around China. What drives him now as his forces besiege Taiwan?

One answer is that Xi may also hope to divert attention from domestic problems. Maybe he faces unseen challenges within Chinas communist party. More probably, he would like to mark Julys centenary of the founding of the CCP by finally conquering what was the last redoubt of Chiang Kai-sheks nationalists.

Taiwan reunification would seal Xis legacy. Ever closer personal, strategic and military ties with Putins Russia mean that he would face no pushback from that quarter, and some applause. The Taiwanese vow to fight, but cannot prevail alone. Only the Americans really stand in his way.

Is Xi simply trolling the Washington proles? Or will he defy them and make a move on Taiwan soon? The Orwellian nightmare for Biden and the west would be a simultaneous Russian invasion of Ukraine and a Chinese attack on Taiwan.

Oceanias choice: a war on two fronts, or humiliation all round. Welcome to Winstons world.

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Experience the tropics and exotics – epicureasia.com

Posted: at 6:12 am

Global citizens are proving that the current pandemic is only intensifying the desire to travel once the green light is given. Not only that, the desire to experience luxury travel in exclusive settings is building up into a crescendo. The record-setting single-day sell-out of Oceania Cruises 2023 Around the World in 180 Days voyage was proof of that. Seasoned travellers will know that during these pandemic times, it is wise to travel with a cruise line that is reputed for high-end cruise experiences accompanied by uncompromising standards and service, not to mention exceptional on-board amenities and facilities that uphold the pristine conditions that Covid times demand.

Oceania Cruises has now opened for booking 127 inspiring late-2022 and early-2023 voyages. These journeys cater to flexible schedules with a range of itineraries ranging from 7 to 77, cruising to exotic destinations that will take ones breath away, whether its the allure of Tahiti and the islands of French Polynesia, or South America which takes centre stage this season with its vibrant cities of Rio de Janeiro and Buenos Aires and the wild appeal of the Amazon. Featuring 272 ports of call and 284 overnight or multi-day stays, these itineraries will offer passengers many tempting options that meet their expectations for a rich and diverse experience.

A cruise with Oceania Cruises is special, with the high points of your experience beginning the moment you step on board its ships. Oceanias on-board restaurants provide impeccable fine dining experiences and serve sumptuous cuisines by a team of chefs headed by world-renowned Executive Culinary Director Jacques Pepin. Satiate your appetites with Toscanas authentic Italian classics; Polo Grills succulent steaks; Jacques Parisian bistro favourites; The Grand Dining Rooms refined Continental cuisine and gourmet vegan delights; or Red Gingers bold Asian flavours. The epicurean will enjoy these memorable dining experiences at any time they wish with open seating and no dining surcharges. For an exclusive and private evening, Marina and Rivieras La Reserve by Wine Spectator will enscounce up to 24 bon vivants in a cosy ambience with private vintage wine pairings for their exclusive dinner.

From dining to cooking, the cruise lines Culinary Centre also engages epicureans with classes conducted in a state-of-the-art teaching kitchen with fully equipped workstations. Participants gain a deeper appreciation of the seasonal produce at respective destinations when they accompany chefs in shopping excursions at local markets as part of Oceania Cruises Culinary Discovery Tours. Epicureans will discover the satisfaction of eating farm-to-table whether its exploring a fish market in Rio de Janeiro or a winery in Madeira.

Oceania Cruises incomparable crew is on hand to ensure that passengers enjoy a five-star hotel-at-sea experience in all aspects, both off-shore and on-board. Its staff-to-guest ratio is an impressive 1 to 1.6, but most importantly, its the calibre of its front-line crew, from the butlers and concierges to the suite and statement attendants, that make all the difference.

Find out more about Oceania Cruises 2022-2023 Tropics & Exotics Collection here or call +65 6225 1322.

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Quote EPICURE to enjoy up to US$300 on-board credit per cabin for bookings made before 31 May 2021

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Fast Retailing reports 22.9 percent increase in H1 profit – FashionUnited UK

Posted: at 6:12 am

The Fast Retailing Group reported a decline in revenue but a large jump in profits in the first half of fiscal 2021 with consolidated revenue totalling 1.2028 trillion yen, down 0.5 percent and operating profit rising to 167.9 billion yen, up 22.9 percent. The company said in a release that rise in profit can be attributed primarily to large increases in profit from Uniqlo Japan and Greater China including Mainland China market, Hong Kong market, and Taiwan. Uniqlo Japans March same-store sales including online sales increased by 40.2 percent, while total sales including online sales increased by 41.5 percent.

On the other hand, due to severe impact of Covid-19, Uniqlo South Asia, Southeast Asia & Oceania (Southeast Asia, Australia, and India), Uniqlo North America, Uniqlo Europe regions and the companys Global Brands segment reported considerable declines in both revenue and profit. The first-half consolidated gross profit margin improved by 2.2 points to 49.9 percent, while first-half pre-tax profit rose to 171.4 billion yen, up 13.7 percent and profit attributable to owners of the parent rose to 105.8 billion yen, up 5.4 percent.

Uniqlo Japan revenue expanded to 492.5 billion yen, up 6.2 percent and operating profit rose to 97.8 billion yen, up 36.6 percent, while first half same-store sales increased by 5.6 percent due to strong sales of products such as loungewear and Heattech blankets as well as buoyant sales of core fall winter items along with ultra stretch active jogger pants and other items in the sport utility wear range.

The companys online sales rose to 73.8 billion yen, up 40.5 percent in the first half. Uniqlo Japans first-half gross profit margin improved by 2.9 points to 50.7 percent.

Revenues at Uniqlo International dropped to 521.8 billion yen, down 3.6 percent and operating profit rose to 67 billion yen, up 25.9 percent. Uniqlo Europe and North America saw sales struggle in the face of severe Covid-19 conditions, but performance in East Asia was broadly strong. The Greater China region reported large rises in both revenue and profit as the Mainland China market along with the Taiwan market and the Hong Kong market witnessed further improvements in profits. Uniqlo Greater Chinas gross profit margin improved by 4.7 points, while the South Korean operation posted a slight operating profit compared to an operating loss in the previous year.

Uniqlo South East Asia & Oceania reported sharp declines in both revenue and profit as the operation was adversely impacted by temporary store closures and restrictions on movement caused by Covid-19. However, Vietnam reported ongoing strong sales and a large rise in profits. Uniqlo USA reported a large decline in revenue and a larger operating loss, and Uniqlo Europe also reported large declines in both revenue and profit in the first half. However, Russia achieved double-digit growth in same-store sales and a large rise in operating profit as stores were not required to close temporarily in that market and sales of winter items proved strong.

The GU business segment achieved a steady year-on-year performance in the first half, with revenue totalling 132.6 billion yen, up 0.3 percent and operating profit standing at 15.8 billion yen, up 0.4 percent. The company added that first-half same-store sales held steady due to strong sales of the sweat-style knitwear, double-faced sweatshirts, and loungewear and other items that satisfied customer demand for stay-at-home clothing.

Global Brands revenue declined to 54.5 billion yen, down 22.2 percent and the segment generated an operating loss of 8.1 billion yen compared to a 0.7 billion yen profit recorded in the first half of fiscal 2020. Theory fashion label reported large declines in both revenue and profit as performance worsened in the United States and Japan in the face of Covid-19, while Japan-based PLST brand reported a large decline in revenue and a slight operating loss following a reduction in customer visits primarily in urban areas. France-based Comptoir des Cotonniers brand reported a large decline in revenue and a wider operating loss on the back of temporary store closures.

Image: Uniqlo website

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Whats Donald Trump up to these days? I tried to find out via Instagram – The Guardian

Posted: at 6:10 am

What do US presidents do once they leave the White House? Barack Obama kite-surfed with Richard Branson. Jimmy Carter returned to his peanut farm and found that it was $1m in debt. George W Bush got into painting.

Its early days, but Donald Trumps post-presidential life has been just like his presidency: non-traditional. Aside from setting up an eyebrow-raising new website, and releasing wannabe tweets as official statements, hes spent most of his time inside his new home at Mar-a-Lago, the giant and exclusive resort he owns in south Florida.

We know very little about what hes doing there, and after the unavoidable spectacle of his presidency, many people are probably comfortable with that. But for those still interested we decided to take a virtual holiday there, and look inside the gilded walls of Mar-a-Lago via the only way we could: Instagram.

Using the Instagram page that collects all the public posts geotagged Mar-a-Lago, anyone can comb through thousands of photos and videos to see whats been happening inside its gilded walls, and catch glimpses of what Trump has been up to.

We know already that he recently crashed a wedding, giving a speech where he railed against Biden and China before raising a toast to himself, and then the happy couple. But thats not everything. Heres what we found from guests photos:

Taking photos with fans is something all past presidents do. But there is still something unique about how Trump lives at his own resort, wakes up in the morning and walks throughout his new home taking photos with its paying members.

In one video uploaded recently from Mar-a-Lago, Trump suddenly appears as a couple pose for engagement photos. He was also spotted wandering around a car show on 21 March hosted at the resort. And in March he appeared at a fundraiser for the Big Dog Ranch Rescue, a charity linked to Lara Trump that was recently in the news for spending almost $2m at Trump-owned properties in the last seven years.

Trump has been mingling with Mar-a-Lago members for many years now. During his early presidency he even crashed a wedding right after receiving news of a North Korean missile test, while hosting the former Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe. Trump told the wedding guests that he had bumped into the newlyweds earlier and tried to cajole Abe over to them. I said to the prime minister of Japan, I said, Cmon Shinzo, lets go over and say hello. Theyve been members of this club for a long time. Theyve paid me a fortune.

The House minority leader, Kevin McCarthy, was the first top Republican to signal the party wasnt abandoning Trump after the attack on Capitol on 6 January, when he appeared in a photo with Trump at Mar-a-Lago three weeks later.

This seemingly opened the gates for Republicans to make the pilgrimage to Palm Beach and hobnob with Trump. Many of them have uploaded their photos with him to Instagram, or can be spotted in photos uploaded to the app. This includes the 25-year-old House representative from North Carolina Madison Cawthone, the former press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders, and the Republican extremist from Georgia Marjorie Taylor Greene.

On 13 March a delegation of Alabama Republicans also presented Trump with a framed resolution at Mar-a-Lago, which declared him one of the greatest and most effective presidents in the 245 year of this republic.

In many ways Mar-a-Lago is just another US venue where people dont wear masks. Given the lack of mask-wearing at Trumps White House, where he hosted at least one super-spreader event in the Rose Garden, its not surprising that many Mar-a-Lago guests are also mingling mask-free.

But theres something still striking about seeing so many maskless people inside a building owned by a former president who contracted Covid himself, had access to the best information about it, and whose mismanaged response to the crisis saw half a million Americans die from the virus.

In one video uploaded on 13 March, the charity fashion show for Big Dog Ranch, (called Wine, Women and Shoes) is in full swing inside a huge function room. The room seems to be filled with hundreds of people. Another photo shows a slide projected on to a screen that reads More than 47,000 lives saved since 2008, referring of course to the dogs.

None of the guests seem to be wearing masks, but the staff serving them are. Some may be vaccinated, but Covid is still very much a risk at Mar-a-Lago. The charity event took place just six days before the resort was partly closed due to an outbreak among its staff.

Unless you count the Trump family, Sylvester Stallone is the only celebrity Ive been able to find in photos taken at Mar-a-Lago. From the date and caption it looks like he was there having dinner on 6 March when he took a photo with a fellow guest.

In another photo uploaded less recently on 20 December, we can also see Roger Stone having a good time with another guest. Their caption on the photo reads Only positive comments please he was far nicer than someone else!

You may have seen the photo already of Trump posing with Stephen Miller in his Mar-a-Lago office its by no means exclusive to Instagram.

Seemingly set up to project an all-American work ethic (that we know from the last four years Trump doesnt have), whats most striking about the photo is the bottle of coke hidden behind Trumps phone. Two days earlier, Trump had called on his supporters to boycott companies speaking out about Georgias new voting law which, funnily enough, included Coke.

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Donald Trumps net worth dropped by one-third during his presidency – FOX 6 Milwaukee

Posted: at 6:10 am

FormerPresident Donald Trumplost a great deal of money during his four years in theWhite House, new data shows.

Forbes released its annual billionaires list on Tuesday, which found the former president ranked at1,299. Last year, he was ranked at 1,001 and in 2019 at 715.

Trumps net worth was roughly $3.5 billion in 2017, according to the publication, dropping to $2.1 billion in 2020 and ending up around $2.4 billion in 2021.

Trump made it clear during his presidency on numerous occasions that he was not getting richer in the White House.

In 2019, for example, the former president estimated that it had cost him anywhere between $2 billion and $5 billion to serve as president.

"I wouldve made a fortune if I just ran my business I was doing it really well," Trump said at the time.

Trump still is the only billionaire to serve as president, Forbes noted.

Read more at FOXBusiness.com.

Former President Donald Trump endorsed Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson on Thursday, April 8, but the senator hasn't said if he's running for re-election.

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Former President Trump’s PAC has $85 million on hand as he prepares for midterms and possible 2024 run – CNBC

Posted: at 6:10 am

Former U.S. President Donald Trump speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Orlando, Florida, U.S. February 28, 2021.

Octavio Jones | Reuters

Former President Donald Trump's political action committee has amassed a war chest of more than $85 million as he builds an operation meant to take on his enemies and possibly fuel another run for president in 2024.

Save America, Trump's leadership PAC, heads into the second quarter with that gargantuan sum of cash on hand, according to a person with direct knowledge of the matter who declined to be named as the fundraising data has not been made public.

The PAC raised more than $30 million from late November through December, and finished last year with $31 million on hand, Federal Election Commission filings show.

This person did not say how much the PAC raised in the first quarter, noting that it files disclosures semiannually, which means the public likely won't see details on Trump's fundraising success until the summer. The total also does not include the cash on hand for other Trump-affiliated PACs, including the Trump Make America Great Again Committee.

Trump has significant resources to deploy as he looks to influence the 2022 midterm elections, when Republicans will try to make inroads in both the House and Senate. Democrats currently control both chambers of Congress.

Trump, however, has targeted Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and promised to back GOP "primary rivals who espouse Making America Great Again and our policy of America First." The former president turned on McConnell after the senator said Trump bore responsibility for the mob of his supporters that stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.

Trump is expected to speak at the Republican National Committee's spring retreat this weekend. He has not ruled out running for president again.

Meanwhile, Trump has become involved in the battle brewing between Republican lawmakers and corporations who have come out against a new law in Georgia that critics say restricts voting. The former president falsely claimed widespread fraud cost him the 2020 presidential election in the state, and urged Georgia officials to overturn President Joe Biden's win there.

"It is finally time for Republicans and Conservatives to fight backwe have more people than they doby far! Boycott Major League Baseball, Coca-Cola, Delta Airlines, JPMorgan Chase, ViacomCBS, Citigroup, Cisco, UPS, and Merck," Trump said in a statement Saturday.

Major League Baseball announced a day earlier that it would pull its All-Star Game out of Atlanta after Georgia's latest voting bill was signed into law by Republican Gov. Brian Kemp. MLB is reportedly moving the game to Colorado.

Trump's $85 million haul also arrives as he is reportedly looking to create his own social media network after being banned by both Twitter and Facebook.

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Revisiting 2016’s ‘Donald Trump’s The Art of the Deal: The Movie’ and the Comedy of the Trump Era – International Policy Digest

Posted: at 6:10 am

Two writers discuss why satirizing Donald Trump is exceedingly difficult.

Will Mann: At the height of the 2016 presidential primary, right as there was the collective bafflement that hey, the host of The Apprentice could actually win the Republican nomination, comedy website Funny or Die released Donald Trumps The Art of the Deal: The Movie, a 50-minute presentation where Johnny Depp, under heavy prosthetics, played the then future-president. The film was released exclusively to the Funny or Die website on February 26, 2016.

I remember watching it and loving it at the time. It felt subversive, unapologetically in-your-face, and very much deliberately mocking its central target for ridicule. Moreover, at the end of it, Depps Trump comes from the future of 2017 to tell his 1980s counterpart that he will indeed become president one day. It seemed like a ludicrous joke at the time but instead became an eerie, all-too-prescient prediction, making the movie stand out even as comedy sought to capitalize on the Trump administration for the four years of its existence.

The film claims to be a TV movie-of-the-week written, directed, and starring Trump himself, and was considered long lost (it was preempted by Monday Night Football in 1988Trump was furious) until director Ron Howard, in a cameo, explains how he came across the original film reels. It turned up at a yard sale outside Phoenix, Arizona, Howard explains, claiming he had to physically wrestle it from a nice woman named Jenny, [who was] much stronger than she looked [and] very persistent. Once the presentation is over, Howard once again speaks to the camera and says Wow. That wasawful. I mean hauntingly bad, it kind of wants to make me rethink my passion for filmmaking. You know, we should probably pretend that this film, and in fact Donald Trump, never even existed.

The film features an all-star cast that includes Patton Oswalt as Merv Griffin; 30 Rocks Jack McBrayer as Trump Tower architect Der Scutt; Kristen Schaal as the voice of Trumps receptionist Gloria (whom Trump refers to solely as Deborah); Jacob Tremblay as the typical 80s kid Trump recounts his life story to; The Fonz himself, Harry Winkler, as former-New York City mayor Ed Koch; Christopher Lloyd as Back to the Futures Doc Brown; and even two of the hosts of my favorite podcast, How Did This Get Made?: Paul Scheer and Jason Mantzoukas. Depp as Trump walks a rotating cast of curious young boys through his life story and career, as the film recounts many of Trumps pre-presidential controversies, including the destruction of priceless Art Deco sculptures at the future site of Trump Tower and Trumps feud with former NFL commission Pete Rozelle (Andy Richter).

It all just felt like a minor coup at the time, more than just a gimmick. It leaned into its own inherent ridiculousness, such as when ALF was depicted as being the best man at Trumps wedding to first wife Ivana (Michaela Watkins). Funny or Die was sticking it to Trump through the power of satire. We simply thought the movie would be a chance to capitalize for what seemed to be a brief time in U.S. history where we were captivated by the prospect of Donald Trump actually running for president. They even got Kenny Loggins, known for classic 80s movie theme staples like Footloose, Im Alright from Caddyshack, and Danger Zone from Top Gun, to contribute a typically corny and 80s-sounding theme song. The song itself is surprisingly catchy and very evocative of the era, as well as the type of self-promotion Trump himself would indulge in.

Now, re-watching the movie 5 years after the fact feels like youre seeing a template for how many in the comedy field would address Trump in the four years of his administration that followed. I think its fair to say that you agree with that assessment?

Rigel Kaufman: If anyone is nave enough to think that the era of Donald Trump parody is finally over, is mistaken. The horse was beaten to glue long before Saturday Night Live sunk its anti-Midas clutches into it, yet the beating will continue long into the future. In The Art of the Deal: The Movie, that prophecy is spun, and the left-leaning politic of almost every creative outlet in the United States is showcased. As Donald Trump still lives and breathes, and his presence in a headline still gathers eyes, he will be a leading topic. Dissidents and the politically disillusioned are looking for a way to upset things, the easiest way being supporting things that establishments tell them to hate. Most Trump coverage is not positive. In other words, Hollywood probably helped to get Donald Trump elected, and continues to ensconce him as a pariah-Marilyn-Monroe.

Parody operates on a bell curve of exaggeration vs payoff. On the far left side of the curve, we have Johnny Depp as Donald Trump offering a child a steak that he pulled from his desk. On the far right side of the curve, him defending Hitler from criticismhard-hitting stuff, I know. And somewhere in the middle are the three or four actually funny moments in The Art of the Deal: The Movie, far too few to justify its 50-minute runtime, but enough to examine the framework that every attempt at Trump satirization has obeyed, and why fundamentally these have all been failures, both comically and as political rhetoric:

Impression: Donald Trump talks and looks a certain way, lets copy him.

Yuge, appending Ok? to the end of sentences, talking in exaggeration, gesticulating drawing a wire tight with both forefingers and thumbs, and your standard-fare haircut, suit, and tan gags. At once an elementary form of comedy and the only sphere in which the jokes ever land, because they at least mandate timing.

Current Events: Donald Trump did or said an outlandish thing recently, lets bring that in somehow. There are endless, endless lists of forced and genuine controversy, including but not limited to: dumping his container of koi food during the Shinzo Abe visit; being a Russian spy; saying 7/11 instead of 9/11; releasing his tax returns; golfing too much; enough people complaining about one of the businesses he owns; being impeached; refusing to condemn certain groups; condemning certain groups; saying something provocative to the press, etc. Strictly referential humor and every reference has had all novelty tapped. Nobody on either side of the aisle laughs at these jokes, they simply nod or shake their head with the same solemn frown.

Political Browbeating: Donald Trump is defined by a shortlist of politically incorrect stances, some of which are more or less topical right now; we must contest one or all of these. About as funny as government programming, these are the face-the-camera moments where the Trump fiction commits suicide ad nauseam. Whereas current events at least have the boon of the few days between when they happen and when theyre exhausted, these public service announcements are harped into the same pit of oblivion as words repeated out loud too many times: meaningless combinations of syllables that convey an idea independent from the words they form. If there were ever a panacea to clever humor, this would be it.

Tagline History: Quotable tidbits that still persist in the public memory: small loan of one million dollars. Sloganeering that tries and fails to be weaponized, instead coming off as cheap disparagement or catch-phrasing. Filler.

Name-calling: Self-explanatory.

Mann: I think that how you tie this in to how Trump has been depicted these past four years is very interesting. I think part of what made The Art of the Deal: The Movie stand out when it was initially released was that you had someone who was already a very well-known celebrity running for president. We already knew who he was, the type of person he was, and most, but not all, of the controversies that would be generated on the campaign trail. A media narrative didnt have to adapt or invent a character (think about what The Onion did in terms of depicting Joe Biden, whose jokes and characterization still follow him even now during his actual presidency), or ridicule a candidate once we started to understand who they were, a la Tina Feys depiction of Sarah Palin on Saturday Night Live.

But what I appreciated about the movie at the time was that it acknowledged that Donald Trump was this bigger-than-life character who comes off, in both the movie and in real life, as a sleaze-ball and a doofus. He also feels intrinsically tied to the 1980s in particular, this sort of Gordon Gekko come to life, the embodiment of the decade of excess itself. The corny Kenny Loggins song, the 80s movie-of-the-week vibe, the constant appearances of celebrities and characters from pop culture, it all resonated because it felt like the movie was making fun of the way that Donald Trump saw himself.

But unfortunately, now it feels like the movie was playing into Trumps own narrative ever so slightly in order to upend it, make fun of it, and point out its inherent ridiculousness. For example, its odd to have scenes featuring Depp-as-Trump dancing and rapping with actors portraying the iconic 1980s rap group the Fat Boys. Then again, the man himself danced to a spoof of Drakes hit song Hotline Bling while hosting Saturday Night Live during his actual presidential run. Go figure.

But, as you previously noted, the movie also displays some of the difficulty in depicting a character as well-known and, to put it mildly, flawed as Trump. The meta-joke of the movie is that its a vanity project for him, and that notion is committed to fully. But that formula also prevents any sort of self-reflection or nuance. The Trump as depicted in The Art of the Deal: The Movie, is, for all intents and purposes, a caricature. That proves to be difficult to reconcile when, in a few short months, he becomes the new reality we are all collectively forced to deal with. His inherent ridiculousness was already pointed out even before this movie came out, and people, literally tens of millions of voters, still fell for it. What exactly does that say about the point the movie was trying to drive home?

In re-watching the film for the first time since its initial release recently, it definitely did not hold up as well as I was expecting, becoming a victim of diminishing returns. Moreover, the whole thing feels rather pass at this point. For example, it feels weird that ALF shows up, but Rudy Giuliani doesnt. Sure, there are moments that still ring true, such as when Trump keeps replacing the boys who ask him about his life story until he gets a white one. But, if anything, the movie feels like its the final capstone on who Trump used to be, pre-presidency. Trump-as-president was a different beast altogether, which makes this satire feel more toothless in retrospect. Your thoughts?

Kaufman: The problem which most people have already realized subconsciously, is twofold:

All of the political tropes are taken verbatim. Because the creators of this and every other Donald Trump parody have decided that political signaling is the most important part of their satire, modifying his positions too much for the sake of comedy muddies the waters. So instead, these are played as straight as possible. No minds are being changed, instead, positions are being fortified on both sides. And naturally, these arent funny. There is no subversion outside of occasional wordplay.

All of the non-political tropes are played up. The problem is Donald Trump is already an exaggerated person, and too much exaggeration is counterproductive to both humor and rhetoric. Trumps linguistic quirks are funny, having him shout them over a megaphone is annoying. Trumps appearance is funny, turning him into an orange clown with an afro is unneeded. Trump already throws out lots of childish insults, you dont need to have him call people stinky doo-doo heads.Humor, like most good things, is a difficult balancing act where things from the extremes of the bell curve must be pulled towards the middle to be made clever instead of hackneyed or bombastic. Parody and satire live or die by the subtle jabs that sneak up on you. Occupying a dissonant perspective that attempts to both persuade via ridicule and entertain via ridicule is not only impossible but will actively hamper your ability to do either. Perhaps the entire industry has by chance forgotten how to be funny and fallen prey to the same traps and tired frameworks all at once for five continuous years. It seems unlikely.

The individual problem is Donald Trumps humor potential is maximized when you hold up a mirror, and even then, the comedy was never a grand trove. The larger problem is humor demands novelty, subversion, and timing, which the Trump satires actively dispose of. The grand problem is that political humor has been circling the toilet for over a decade because all opinions both formal and farcical are coming almost exclusively from one quadrant of the political compass, in which the list of topics that are verboten is ever-growing, yielding content hegemony and the simultaneous politicization and sanitation of fictionat the peril of, at best, consumability, at worst, artistic freedom to be even slightly provocative.

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Revisiting 2016's 'Donald Trump's The Art of the Deal: The Movie' and the Comedy of the Trump Era - International Policy Digest

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The National Archives won’t be able to host Donald Trump’s tweets on Twitter – Yahoo Tech

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TipRanks

After a volatile first quarter, Q2 has kicked off in style, and the major indexes sit at or hover near all-time highs. The government bond market has also been steadying as yields have pulled back after rising higher earlier in the year, soothing investor fears that inflation could get out of hand. Moreover, the economic recovery seems to be gathering steam at a faster pace than anticipated. We had been expecting the data to improve about this time, and early signals are that the recovery is absolutely on track, said Hugh Gimber, J.P. Morgans global market strategist. This is the period where the forecast of a strong recovery in growth is starting to look more like the fact of a strong recovery in growth. Against this backdrop, the analysts at J.P. Morgan have pinpointed 2 names which they believe are set for strong growth in the year ahead; both are expected to handsomely reward investors with at least 80% of gains over the coming months. We ran them through TipRanks database to see what other Wall Street's analysts have to say about them. Tencent Music Entertainment (TME) Well start in China, where Tencent Music Entertainment is the offspring of Chinas giant online venture company, Tencent, and Spotify, the Swedish streaming company that makes music and playlists easy. Tencent Music has seen consistently strong sales and earnings for the past year, with the top line growing year-over-year in each quarter of 2020. The Q4 report showed $1.26 billion in the top line, the highest in the last two years, along with 12 cents per share in earnings, up 33% year-over-year. Strong streaming revenue, which showed 29% growth, helped drive the results. And, Tencent Music, through its variety of apps, is the top music streaming service in the Chinese online market as shown by the 40.4% yoy increase in paid subscribers during Q4. In its quarterly results, the company reported 4.3 million net new users in Q4, to reach 56 million active premium accounts across its apps. That said, the stock has pulled back sharply recently, as like many other high-flying growth names, worries regarding an overheated valuation have come to the fore. But pullbacks often spell opportunity, and covering the stock for JPM, Alex Yao notes the strong subscription growth, as well as the potential in the companys other businesses, online ads and long-form audio, for monetization. We believe TME is entering a healthy development cycle with successive growth engines: 1) music subscription remains the core revenue driver with consistent paying ratio improvement, 2) ads revenue ramps up quickly, and 3) active investments in long-form audio initiative, which could become a new growth driver in 2022 and afterwards," Yao noted. To this end, Yao puts a $36 price target on TME, suggesting a one-year upside of 84%, to back his Overweight (i.e. Buy) rating on the stock. (To watch Yaos track record, click here) Overall, TME has a thumbs up from Wall Street. Of the 11 reviews on record, 7 are to Buy, 3 are to Hold, and 1 says Sell, making the analyst consensus a Moderate Buy. The shares are priced at $19.50, and their $30.19 average price target implies an upside of 55% for the months ahead. (See TME stock analysis on TipRanks) Y-mAbs Therapeutics (YMAB) The next JPM pick were looking at is Y-mAbs, a late-stage clinical biopharma company with a focus on pediatric oncology. The company is working on the development and commercialization of new antibody-based cancer therapeutics. Y-mAbs has one medication Danyelza approved for use to treat neuroblastoma in children age 1 and over, and a broad and advanced pipeline of drug candidates in various stages of the clinical process, as well as five additional products in pre-clinical research stages. Having an approved drug is a holy grail for clinical biopharmaceutical companies, and in 4Q20 Y-mAbs saw considerable income from Danyelza. The company announced at the end of December that it had agreed to sell the Priority Review Voucher for the drug to United Therapeutics for $105 million. Y-mAbs will retain the rights to 60% of the net proceeds from the sale, under an agreement with Memorial Sloan Kettering. Also in December, the company announced a license agreement with SciClone. The partnership gives Y-mAbs and Danyelza an opening for treating pediatric patients in China. The agreement includes Mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Macau, and is worth up to $120 million for Y-mAbs. The company has entered other agreements making Danyelza available in Eastern Europe and Russia. Danyelza is Y-mAbs flagship product, but the company also has omburtamab in advanced stages of the pipeline. This drug candidate saw a setback in October last year, when the FDA refused to file the company's Biologics License Application, proposed for the treatment of pediatric patients with CNS/leptomeningeal metastasis. Y-mAbs has been in steady communication with the FDA since then, with a new target date for the BLA at the end of 2Q21 or early in 3Q21. These two drugs one approved and one not yet form the basis of the JPM outlook on this stock. Analyst Tessa Romero writes, Our thesis revolves around the de-risked nature of the pediatric oncology pipeline. Our recent KOL feedback is enthusiastic about use of lead asset Danyelza in patients with high-risk neuroblastoma (NB). For second lead asset omburtamab in NB metastatic to the central nervous system (CNS/LM from NB), while the Refuse to File last year and subsequent regulatory delays were certainly disappointing, we still see a high probability of approval for the product in the 2Q/3Q22 timeframe Looking ahead, Romero sees an upbeat outlook for the company: Coupling our anticipation of a healthy launch for Danyelza, with regulatory/clinical momentum expected in the near- to mid-term, we see shares poised to rebound and see an attractive buying opportunity at current levels. The analyst puts a $52 price target on YMAB shares, implying an upside of 86% for the year ahead, and supporting an Overweight (i.e. Buy) rating. (To watch Romeros track record, click here) Overall, the Wall Street reviews break down 3 to 1 in favor of Buys versus Holds on Y-mAbs, giving the stock a Strong Buy consensus rating. The shares have an average price target of $61.25, suggestive of a 121% upside potential this year. (See YMAB stock analysis on TipRanks) To find good ideas for stocks trading at attractive valuations, visit TipRanks Best Stocks to Buy, a newly launched tool that unites all of TipRanks equity insights. Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the featured analysts. The content is intended to be used for informational purposes only. It is very important to do your own analysis before making any investment.

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The National Archives won't be able to host Donald Trump's tweets on Twitter - Yahoo Tech

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Milwaukee Asks to Sanction Donald Trump Over ‘Baseless’ Election Lawsuit – Bloomberg

Posted: at 6:10 am

Donald Trump speaks during a farewell ceremony at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, on Jan. 20.

Photographer: Stefani Reynolds/Bloomberg

Photographer: Stefani Reynolds/Bloomberg

Donald Trump and his lawyers should pay more than $65,000 in legal fees to Milwaukee County and face additional sanctions for filing a baseless lawsuit trying to overturn the result of the presidential election, Wisconsins biggest metropolitan area told a judge.

The former president never had a valid reason to sue to toss out Wisconsins 3.3 million votes, a long-shot effort that would have paved the way for the states GOP-dominated legislature to appoint a slate of electors more favorable to Trump, the county said in a filing Thursday in federal court in Milwaukee.

Trump never offered any legal or factual basis for his breathtaking request, and none exists, the county, a heavily Democratic area in a swing state, said in the filing. The relief he sought was entirely baseless and amply justifies the imposition of sanctions.

Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers filed a similar request last week seeking $145,000 in legal fees incurred by the state. Trump and his allies sued unsuccessfully more than 60 times as they tried to overturn election results in battleground states like Wisconsin, which narrowly went for Joe Biden. A federal appeals court affirmed the rejection of Trumps Wisconsin case, and the U.S. Supreme Court denied review.

Read more: Trumps Effort to Hijack Wisconsin Election Could Cost Him

Also on Thursday, former Trump campaign attorney Sidney Powell asked a judge to deny a similar request for sanctions against her in a separate suit she filed in Wisconsin to overturn the election result. Powell represented a Trump voter in that case, which also failed. The state is seeking $106,000 in legal fees from Powell, saying her case alleging a vast voter-fraud conspiracy involving a complicit voting-machine company, foreign hackers and communist money was too far-fetched to justify it being filed.

But Powell, who was ditched by the Trump campaign after going public with the extent of her conspiracy theory, argues the request for fees comes too late and affronts common sense.

Defendants motion is, in essence, a request that the Court conduct a review and issue a decision on the merits of Plaintiffs evidence without trial or evidentiary hearing, Powell said. While the case was pending, Defendant aggressively opposed the Court hearing the evidence at all, much less deciding its merits.

Read More: Powell Sued by Dominion for $1.3 Billion Over Fraud Claims

(Updates with filing by Sidney Powell)

Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.

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Milwaukee Asks to Sanction Donald Trump Over 'Baseless' Election Lawsuit - Bloomberg

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