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Friday, August 16, 2019

Marlon Ways says social media to blame for today’s culture of “canceling” comedians

Comedians who make “questionable statements” run the risk of being “canceled” which has now become somewhat embedded into today’s culture and that’s something Marlon Wayans frowns upon.

Marlon Wayans wishes daughter ‘Happy Pride’ and claps back at trolls for hateful comments

The comedian opened up to Buzzfeed about how today’s “cancel culture” has made it challenging to be funny and the delicate dance it takes between keeping it real and authentic without offending folks.

“My job is to talk about all the things people are scared to say,” Wayans said. “My job is to go into these dark topics and go in these dark caves and come out with this elixir called ‘the laugh.’”

But being honest has hurt some comedians’ careers and he says social media has a lot to do with it.

“Social media alerts the media, which then tells the message that everybody should be as sensitive about every topic, but that’s not true,” he explained. “Comedians, we’re supposed to speak our voice and we’re supposed to find what’s funny. That’s my job. It’s like telling a fireman, ‘You can’t go into that burning building.’ Well, how am I gonna save lives?”

Some of his famous peers like Kevin Hart have dealt with backlash for telling offensive jokes. Hart, for instance, got caught in a whirlwind of criticism after decade-old homophobic tweets resurfaced and caused him to step down from hosting this year’s Academy Awards.

Recently comedian Chris Rock outraged folks with a social media post that took aim at white mass shooters. Some argued that it was racially insensitive to assume mass shooters are likely to be white men.

Wayans doesn’t subscribe to saying sorry for a joke and says he “personally doesn’t believe in apologizing.”

“You know, freedom of speech,” he said. “What happened to that?”

R. Kelly was a ‘no show’ at pretrial hearing in Chicago

He said a comedian’s style shouldn’t result in his career going up in smoke for testing out material.

“I’m just up there exploring the joke,” he said about testing out material at comedy clubs. “It takes about a year to two years to get that joke good enough to where you’re gonna wanna say it out loud in a special. We say dumb shit in order to say smart shit,” he said. “But it takes time, and so the audience has to give us that time to work on the material before we present it to you in a special. And then you can judge.”

 

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R. Kelly was a ‘no show’ at pretrial hearing in Chicago

R. Kelly may have thrown in the towel because he reportedly refused to show up in court for a pretrial hearing on Thursday.

“The defendant was to be brought to court today. That was all worked out. The sheriffs were going to be bringing him over,” explained Cook County Assistant State’s Attorney Jennifer Gonzalez said.

R. Kelly sits in solitary while allegations eat away at him, lawyer says

“As I understand it, he refused transport and so that is why the defendant is not before your honor today,” Gonzales said, according to NBC News.

Kelly is in the Metropolitan Correctional Center in downtown Chicago awaiting trial on a number of sexual abuse crimes, and the hearing was a routine part of the evidentiary process. The hearing before Cook County Judge Lawrence Flood still was held.

Kelly’s attorney, however, said the claim that he refused transport is “not 100-percent true” but wouldn’t elaborate.

“I don’t want to discuss matters that I discussed with the U.S. Marshals Service in open court,” Greenberg said. “Suffice it to say, the Marshal Service says that moving Mr. Kelly is a large undertaking.”

As previously reported, the embattled R&B singer is having quite a tough time behind bars, as he waits in federal custody to face charges behind multiple allegations of sexual misconduct with minors, according to his attorney.

R. Kelly charged with criminal sexual abuse; no-bond warrant set by judge

Steve Greenberg said his client is downright miserable and frequently gets emotional, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.

“He’s dealing with a lot of stories that have been made up. He’s not a fighter. I’ve seen him cry when he talks about the situation,” Greenberg told the Sun-Times.

However, Greenberg said Kelly is determined to “fight for the truth” to get out.

Kelly is charged with child sex crimes in multiple states and is currently being held behind bars in Chicago.

Kelly’s next court day is Sept. 17, and the Judge let both sides know that an R. Kelly absence better not happen.

“We’ll have Mr. Kelly here then,” he said.

The post R. Kelly was a ‘no show’ at pretrial hearing in Chicago appeared first on theGrio.



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Surprise! Uber and Lyft Do Not Like NYC’s New Ride-Hail Rules

The regulations are particularly less than ideal for the companies because New York is among their largest urban markets.

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Gadget Lab Podcast: The Dirty Wars Inside Google

WIRED senior writer Nitasha Tiku dives deep into her September cover story about internal turmoil at Google, the so-called happiest company in tech.

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Reality TV Meets Crowdsourced Medicine in Netflix's Diagnosis

The seven-episode show falls somewhere between Dateline-ish daytime television and a nerdy online social experiment.

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Adobe Fresco for iPad: Price, First Look, Release Date

We dabbled with Adobe’s new drawing app, which aims to be a one-stop shop for aspiring and professional digital artists.

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Josh Hawley Says Tech Enables 'Some of the Worst of America'

From social media addiction to antitrust regulation, the freshman senator from Missouri wants to take on Big Tech in big ways.

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The Bonkers Tech That Detects Lightning 6,000 Miles Away

If lightning strikes near the North Pole, and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound? Yes, because a global sensor network is always listening.

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Second Life Is Plagued by Security Flaws, Ex-Employee Says

A former infosec director at Linden Lab alleges the company mishandled user data and turned a blind eye to simulated sex acts involving children.

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Huawei allegations: Uganda denies spying on Bobi Wine

Chinese telecoms firm Huawei and the Ugandan government deny hacking into Bobi Wine's WhatsApp chat group.

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Kenya Airports Authority auctions abandoned aeroplanes

The Kenya Airports Authority has overseen auctioned planes abandoned at Nairobi's Wilson Airport.

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Sub two-hour marathon 'like stepping on moon'

Breaking the two-hour marathon barrier would be "like stepping on the moon", says word record holder Eliud Kipchoge.

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Thursday, August 15, 2019

Zimbabwe protests: Opposition vows to defy police ban on rally

Police say anti-government demonstrations in Harare are banned, prompting fears of a crackdown.

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Data-mining for dark matter

When Tracy Slatyer faced a crisis of confidence early in her educational career, Stephen Hawking’s “A Brief History of Time” and a certain fictional janitor at MIT helped to bolster her resolve.

Slatyer was 11 when her family moved from Canberra, Australia, to the island nation of Fiji. It was a three-year stay, as part of her father’s work for the South Pacific Forum, an intergovernmental organization.

“Fiji was quite a way behind the U.S. and Australia in terms of gender equality, and for a girl to be interested in math and science carried noticeable social stigma,” Slatyer recalls. “I got bullied quite a lot.”

She eventually sought guidance from the school counselor, who placed the blame for the bullying on the victim herself, saying that Slatyer wasn’t sufficiently “feminine.” Slatyer countered that the bullying seemed to be motivated by the fact that she was interested in and good at math, and she recalls the counselor’s unsympathetic advice: “Well, yes, honey, that’s a problem you can fix.”

“I went home and thought about it, and decided that math and science were important to me,” Slatyer says. “I was going to keep doing my best to learn more, and if I got bullied, so be it.”

She doubled down on her studies and spent a lot of time at the library; she also benefited from supportive parents, who gave her Hawking’s groundbreaking book on the origins of the universe and the nature of space and time.

“It seemed like the language in which these ideas could most naturally be described was that of mathematics,” Slatyer says. “I knew I was pretty good at math. And learning that that talent was potentially something I could apply to understanding how the universe worked, and maybe how it began, was very exciting to me.”

Around this same time, the movie “Good Will Hunting” came out in theaters. The story, of a townie custodian at MIT who is discovered as a gifted mathematician, had a motivating impact on Slatyer.

“What my 13-year-old self took out of this was, MIT was a place where, if you were talented at math, people would see that as a good thing rather than something to be stigmatized, and make you welcome — even if you were a janitor or a little girl from Fiji,” Slatyer says. “It was my first real indication that such places might exist. Since then, MIT has been an important symbol to me, of valuing intellectual inquiry and being willing to accept anyone in the world.”

This year, Slatyer received tenure at MIT and is now the Jerrold R. Zacharias Associate Professor of Physics and a member of the Center for Theoretical Physics and the Laboratory for Nuclear Science. She focuses on searching through telescope data for signals of mysterious phenomena such as dark matter, the invisible stuff that makes up more than 80 percent of the matter in the universe but has only been detected through its gravitational pull. In her teaching, she seeks to draw out and support a new and diverse crop of junior scientists.

“If you want to understand how the universe works, you want the very best and brightest people,” Slatyer says. “It’s essential that theoretical physics becomes more inclusive and welcoming, both from a moral perspective and to get the best science done.”

Connectivity

Slatyer’s family eventually moved back to Canberra, where she dove eagerly into the city’s educational opportunities.

After earning an undergraduate degree from the Australian National University, followed by a brief stint at the University of Melbourne, Slatyer was accepted to Harvard University as a physics graduate student. Her interests were slowly gravitating toward particle physics, but she was unsure about which direction to take. Then, two of her mentors put her in touch with a junior faculty member, Doug Finkbeiner, who was leading a project to mine astrophysical data for signals of new physics.

At the time, much of the physics community was eagerly anticipating the start-up of the Large Hadron Collider and the release of data on particle interactions at high energies, which could potentially reveal physics beyond the Standard Model.

In contrast, telescopes have long made public their own data on astrophysical phenomena. What if, instead of looking through these data for objects such as black holes and neutron stars that evolved over millions of years, one could comb through it for signals of more fundamental mysteries, such as hints of new elementary particles and even dark matter?

The prospects were new and exciting, and Slatyer promptly took on the challenge.

“Chasing that feeling”

In 2008, the Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope launched, giving astronomers a new view of the cosmos in the gamma-ray band of the electromagnetic spectrum, where high-energy astrophysical phenomena can be seen. Slatyer and Finkbeiner proposed that Fermi’s data might also reveal signals of dark matter, which could theoretically produce high-energy electrons when dark matter particles collide.

In 2009, Fermi made its data available to the public, and Slatyer and Finkbeiner —together with Harvard postdoc Greg Dobler and collaborators at New York University — put their mining tools to work as soon as the data were released online.

The group eventually constructed a map of the Milky Way galaxy, shining in gamma rays, and revealed a fuzzy, egg-like shape. Upon further analysis, led by Slatyer’s fellow PhD student Meng Su, this fuzzy “haze” coalesced into a figure-eight, or double-bubble structure, extending some 25,000 light-years above and below the disc of the Milky Way. Such a structure had never been observed before. The group named the mysterious structure the “Fermi bubbles,” after the telescope that originally observed it.

“It was really special — we were the first people in the history of the world to be able to look at the sky in this way and understand that this structure was there,” Slatyer says. “That’s a really incredible feeling, and chasing that feeling is something that inspires and motivates me, and I think many scientists.”

Searching for the invisible

Today, Slatyer continues to sift through Fermi data for evidence of dark matter. The Fermi Bubbles’ distinctive shape makes it unlikely they are associated with dark matter; they are more likely to reveal a past eruption from the giant black hole at the Milky Way’s center, or outflows fueled by exploding stars. However, other signals are more promising.

Around the center of the Milky Way, where dark matter is thought to concentrate, there is a glow of gamma rays. In 2013, Slatyer, her first PhD student Nicholas Rodd, and collaborators at Harvard University and Fermilab showed this glow had properties similar to what theorists would expect if dark matter particles were colliding and producing visible light. However, in 2015, Slatyer and collaborators at MIT and Princeton University challenged this interpretation with a new analysis, showing that the glow was more consistent with originating from a new population of spinning neutron stars called pulsars.

But the case is not quite closed. Recently, Slatyer and MIT postdoc Rebecca Leane reanalyzed the same data, this time injecting a fake dark matter signal into the data, to see whether the techniques developed in 2015 could detect dark matter if it were there. But the signal was missed, suggesting that if there were other, actual signals of dark matter in the Fermi data, they could have been missed as well.

Slatyer is now improving on data mining techniques to better detect dark matter in the Fermi data, along with other astrophysical open data. But she won’t be discouraged if her search comes up empty.

“There’s no guarantee there is a dark matter signal,” Slatyer says. “But if you never look, you’ll never know. And in searching for dark matter signals in these datasets, you learn other things, like that our galaxy contains giant gamma-ray bubbles, and maybe a new population of pulsars, that no one ever knew about. If you look closely at the data, the universe will often tell you something new.”



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Eric Reid blasts Jay-Z for partnering with NFL ‘It looks like your goal was to make millionsby assisting the NFL in burying Colin’s career’

Carolina Panthers safety Eric Reid slammed Jay-Z for paper chasing by forming a partnership with the NFL and helping to further “bury” Colin Kapernick’s career.

Jay-Z defends NFL deal with Roc Nation, talks Kaepernick

Social media was abuzz when the Roc Nation founder sat down Wednesday with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell and answered questioned about his new role co-producing the Super Bowl Halftime show and also contributing to Inspire Change, a foundation the NFL started in response to public outrage over their mishandling of Kaepernick’s peaceful #TakeTheKnee protest.

“For me it was about action. What are we gonna’ do with it? … everybody knows I agree with what you’re saying [in Kaepernick’s underlying message]. So what are we gonna do? … [Help] millions and millions of people, or we get stuck on Colin not having a job.”

When asked, would he kneel or would he stand, Jay responded: “I think we’re past kneeling. I think it’s time to go into actionable items.”

Reid, Kapernick’s friend who also protested alongside him criticized the rapper Wednesday night on social media, TMZ reports.

“These aren’t mutually exclusive,” Reid wrote back … “They can both happen at the same time! It looks like your goal was to make millions and millions of dollars by assisting the NFL in burying Colin’s career.”

Jay has many questioning his move but in an audio clip released by TMZ, he defended the partnership saying it was a necessary next step after Charlemagne the God asked him about partnering with the NFL when Kap is still unemployed.

The Kaepernick Effect: Is Jay-Z’s new deal with the NFL a conflict of interests?

“No, I don’t want people to stop protesting at all. Kneeling — I know we’re stuck on it because it’s a real thing — but kneeling is a form of protest. I support protest across the board. We need to bring light to the issue. I think everyone knows what the issue is — we’re done with that,” he added. “We all know the issue now. OK, next. What are we moving (on to) next? …And I’m not minimizing that part of it because that has to happen, that’s a necessary part of the process. But now that we all know what’s going on, what are we going to do? How are we going to stop it? Because the kneeling was not about a job, it was about injustice.”

When asked why Kaepernick wasn’t added to the deal, Jay answered:

“You’d have to ask him. I’m not his boss. I can’t just bring him into something. That’s for him to say.”

NYC radio DJ and Kaepernick’s longtime girlfriend Nessa Diab took to social media confirm that the Super Bowl winning quarterback was left out of the conversations.

The post Eric Reid blasts Jay-Z for partnering with NFL ‘It looks like your goal was to make millionsby assisting the NFL in burying Colin’s career’ appeared first on theGrio.



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Historic NABJ Convention gives Black journalists the props they deserve

High school girl dies after participating in basketball drills in sweltering heat

A high school basketball player died after practice and officials are exploring whether the sweltering August heat was a contributing factor in the student’s death.

Black lacrosse player files lawsuit over Athletic Association ban and calls out death threats and n-word taunts from white players

The father of 16-year-old Imani Bell learned that his daughter died Tuesday after running outdoors where temperatures soared while participating in a basketball drill. Sources told the news outlet that the girls running the drills did not get a water break.

“My baby is gone,” the grieving father told WSBTV.

According to the outlet, first responders were called after Bell collapsed and was found unresponsive around 6 p.m. at Elite Scholars Academy. She was reportedly running uphill and became overheated.

Medical personnel initially got Bell’s pulse back but she died later at Southern Regional Medical Center, according to the outlet.

“We are very saddened by the loss of one of our students this evening. The school district is here to support the family of the student and all school staff and student body,” the Clayton County school district officials said in a statement.

Illinois High school responds after graduates are caught on video screaming ugly racist language

Story developing.

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Join Us at Black Men Excel To Honor Jesse Jackson, Our Champion For Equal Opportunity

Civil rights leader Rev. Jesse Jackson has been among the powerful influencers in my life for some 40 years. I remember as a high school junior in Norfolk, Virginia, attending an assembly in a jam-packed arena with thousands of other students listening to his inspirational message which urged us to stay drug-free and focused on academic achievement.

Using a series of rhyming maxims – “If my mind can conceive it, my heart can believe it, I know I can achieve it!”…”Down with dope, up with hope!” – the founder and president of the Rainbow Push Coalition closed that speech with a call and response that brought us to our feet, loudly declaring in unison: “I am somebody!”

A decade or so later, as a BLACK ENTERPRISE editor I would be among those who covered his historic run for the White House in 1988 – his first foray into presidential politics was during the 1984 race – in which Jackson came in second in the Democratic primaries with over 1,200 delegates, more than any runner-up in history at that time. He leveraged that position at the Democratic National Convention to rework the rules for selecting a Democratic Party nominee, making the process more equitable and inclusive.

Jesse Jackson as the ‘Conscience of the Nation’ 

In recent years, I have had the privilege to participate in and work closely with his team on The Wall Street Project Economic Summit, which has served as major catalyst in the diversification of capital markets for more than 20 years. In fact, WSP has resulted in black-owned investment banks and asset managers gaining significant bond and equity underwriting and money management assignments, respectively, from corporate America.

Those represent but a few milestones that have left me, along with millions of others, forever transformed by his decades of fearless, visionary leadership.

Regardless of age, gender or generation, Jackson undoubtedly has played a huge role in uplifting the lives of people of color, the working class and the disenfranchised. As such, he has been our unyielding champion for equal opportunity over five decades, fiercely fighting for parity in issues ranging from civil and voting rights to workforce and business diversity in Silicon Valley. Due to this relentless drive for African American economic advancement and political empowerment, it is fittingly that he will receive the Earl G. Graves Sr. Vanguard Award at our Black Men Xcel Summit held at the JW Marriott Turnberry Miami Resort and Spa Aug. 28 – Sept. 1. .BE Founder and Publisher Graves says of the civil rights icon: “He has been vital in articulating the concerns, needs and aspirations of black Americans from every corner of this country. He addresses himself to the legacy of our past struggles for civil rights and embodies much of our hopes for a future in which equal opportunity for all Americans is woven into the fabric of our society.”

The accomplishments of the man known as the “Conscience of the Nation” confirms that assertion. A testament to the breadth and depth of his works can best be expressed by two of the greatest honors he has received. In 2000, President Bill Clinton awarded the nation’s highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, to Jackson; and, in 2013, the South African government bestowed upon him their highest civilian honor, the National Order, the Companions of OR Tambo. Also called the “Great Unifier,” he has challenged America to be inclusive and establish just and humane priorities for the benefit of all. He has brought people together on common ground across lines of race, faith, gender, culture, and class.

Born in Greenville, South Carolina in 1941, the North Carolina A&T State University graduate who began his activism as a student deferred completion of his Master’s Degree to work full-time for the late Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King as an organizer for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), and later director of Operation Breadbasket program. Ordained in 1968 – the year in which King was slain by an assassin’s bullet–Jackson carried forward the equal rights agenda with the development of Operation PUSH (People United to Serve Humanity) in Chicago in 1971 to expand educational, business and employment opportunities for the disadvantaged and people of color. In 1984, the year he made his first run for the White House, Jackson launched the National Rainbow Coalition, a social justice organization based in Washington, D.C devoted to political empowerment, education and changing public policy. By 1996, the Rainbow Coalition and Operation PUSH merged to form the Rainbow PUSH Coalition to continue the work of both organizations and to maximize resources.

Jesse Jackson

(Wikimedia)

The ‘Shadow Senator’ 

Throughout the years, Jackson became an international figure who took on national health care, a war on drugs, peace negotiations between Palestinians and Israelis, ending apartheid in South Africa and installing democratic practices in Haiti, among other issues. His two presidential campaigns collectively registered more than 3 million voters, becoming a powerful force in a series of national, state, and local contests. In 1991, he would gain election as the “shadow senator” of Washington, D.C., advocating for statehood for the nation’s capital and promoting the “rainbow” agenda. Moreover, he was appointed by President Clinton and Secretary of State Madeleine Albright as “Special Envoy of the President and Secretary of State for the Promotion of Democracy in Africa.” In this official position, Reverend Jackson traveled to several countries on the African continent and met with such national leaders as President Nelson Mandela of the Republic of South Africa.

In addition to his other global campaigns for human rights and equity, he was on the front lines in the development of “reciprocal trade” between African Americans and corporate America. Jackson, who effectively used boycotts against major corporations to open doors for minorities, employed a different strategy to diversify the financial and tech sectors. For example, he acquired shares of publicly traded companies to press them as a shareholder to hire minority firms. Ariel Investments co-CEO and founder John Rogers, a major supporter of his initiatives, maintained that Jackson’s approach gave him access to attend annual meetings, and speak with corporate directors and CEOs as a means to “highlight the successful partnership between minority and majority companies.”

His Contribution to Black-Owned Businesses

Through it all, the impact of Rev. Jackson’s WSP has been palpable. Top-ranked black financial firms were tapped for the largest transactions on Wall Street and in Silicon Valley. For instance, these companies were involved in the industry-transforming initial public offerings of Goldman Sachs in 1999; Prudential Financial in 2001; Google in 2004; New York Stock Exchange in 2006; Visa in 2008; General Motors in 2010; Facebook in 2012 and Snap, Inc. in 2017, just to name a few milestone transactions.

And Jackson continues to fight. During last year’s Economic Summit, he recounted African Americans’ tumultuous history and the need to continue our focus on multigenerational wealth building.

“African Americans have journeyed through four stages of a 400-year struggle. Stage one – ending slavery after 246 years in bondage; Stage two – ending the Jim Crow era with its mass lynchings and terror campaigns; Stage three – securing the right to vote; and currently, Stage four – securing access to capital, industry, technology and deal flow in the U.S. economy,” he told attendees. “We are in the early days of stage four. We have freedom in our lives, but we don’t have equality. There are some steps the African American community can take to move closer to gaining equality and the fruits that will come with the successful navigation of stage four of the struggle. It’s the simplest way to begin building wealth. We must save money to invest in building a future. It’s time to consolidate that earning power for the welfare of the community.”

Let’s come together at BMX to salute him as well as commit to joining him in the next leg of our ongoing battle for economic parity.

Register now for Black Men Xcel

 

 



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A$AP Rocky speaks on Swedish court conviction in assault case

A$AP Rocky is disappointed that he didn’t beat his assault case and now has a conviction under his belt.

A$AP Rocky testifies in Swedish court: ‘We didn’t want to provoke these guys’

The rapper took to Instagram to thank his team for riding with him from the beginning to a rocky end after he was jailed for an altercation with a fan in Sweden.

“I am of course disappointed by today’s verdict,” the rapper said Wednesday, Page Six reports.

“I want to say thanks again to all of my fans, friends and everyone who showed me love during this difficult time,” he added. “Imma keep moving forward. Thank you to my team, my management, attorneys, label and everyone who advocated for justice.”

A$AP Rocky was found guilty of assault and handed a conditional sentence after a street altercation in Stockholm on June 30 was caught on video.

The rapper, and two members of his entourage, were convicted by a Swedish court on Wednesday.

The Stockholm District Court said in its ruling that the performer’s claim of self-defense was rejected.

“The defendants have claimed that they acted in self-defence. Based on statements from two witnesses, the court finds that the defendants were not subject to a current or imminent criminal attack. Therefore, they were not in a situation where they were entitled to use violence in self-defence. Nor could they have perceived themselves to be in such a situation.”

The conditional sentence means that A$AP Rocky will be subject to a probationary period of two years.

The court also awarded damages to the victim “for violation of his integrity and pain and suffering.”

The defendants were also ordered to repay legal expenses to the state.

A$AP Rocky responds to fans

A$AP Rocky returned to the United States last week and spoke directly to his fans about his “scary, humbling” detainment prior to the announcement of his conviction.

According to Pitchfork, the rapper took the stage at the Real Street festival in Anaheim, California and performed for the first time since being released from jail in Sweden, where he had been held since early July.

He kicked off his set wearing a retro mask from “The Incredible Crash Dummies,” before finally removing it to addressing the crowd about the pink elephant in the room.

Petition earns 260,000 signatures to change Trump Tower address to Barack H. Obama Ave.

“Everybody listen, I know you was praying for me,” the rapper, whose real name is Rakim Mayers, told the screaming audience, before opening up about his time in the Swedish jail.

“Y’all know how happy I am to be here right now,” he began. “I wanna say this though. When I was away—hold the mosh please, this a sentimental moment!—what I experienced was crazy…. It was a scary, humbling experience but I’m here right now. God is good. People who ain’t even f**k with me felt sympathy. People was praying for me, that uplifted me when my spirits was low. I can’t thank y’all enough, man, that was crazy. Hip-hop never looked so strong together.”

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Catch Rockets With a Helicopter? Yep, That's the Plan

SpaceX was the first to bring a booster back from space and use it again. Other companies are now following in its footsteps—kind of.

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10 Best Laptops for 2019 (MacBook, Chromebook, Windows 10)

These are the best Windows 10 Notebooks, MacBooks, and Chromebooks WIRED has tested.

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AI Algorithms Need FDA-Style Drug Trials

Opinion: Algorithms cause permanent side effects on society. They need clinical tests.

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Petition earns 260,000 signatures to change Trump Tower address to Barack H. Obama Ave.

A petition to change Fifth Ave. in front of Trump Tower to Barack H. Obama Ave. has picked up 260,000 signatures and could end up renamed once the Donald leaves the Oval office.

Jay-Z defends NFL deal with Roc Nation, talks Kaepernick

By Thursday, the MoveOn petition earned 260,881 signatures and was making waves across the internet with dozens of people signing on in hopes that the request would be taken up by NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio, The NY Daily News reports.

“We request the stretch of Fifth Avenue between 56th and 57th Streets be renamed ‘President Barack H. Obama Avenue.’ Any addresses on that stretch of Fifth Avenue should be changed accordingly,” the online petition reads.

Once Trump leaves office (hopefully in 2020), it’s likely he’ll return to his beloved penthouse in the 58-floor skyscraper. Can you imagine the poetic justice of him having to repeat Obama’s name over as his address?

The petition also states as reason for the change that former President Obama had been honored in Los Angeles in May when a highway was renamed and it gives Obama praise for “saving our nation from the Great Recession; serving two completely scandal-free terms in office; taking out Osama bin Laden, the mastermind behind September 11th, which killed over 3,000 New Yorkers.”

Elizabeth Rowan, the creator of the petition said while the city normally doesn’t name streets after people who are alive, she thinks it’s doable to push for a change in policy.

“I am sure the conditions can be changed,” she told Newsweek Monday.

Cardi B releases clip of sit-down with Bernie Sanders to talk raising minimum wages

De Blasio doesn’t care for Trump either and told Buzzfeed in late July:

“He doesn’t understand New York City. And when his presidency is over, really soon, he will not be welcome back in New York City.”

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Truckers Gain More Freedom, Thanks to Tech’s Watchful Eye

Proposed federal rules would give truckers more leeway in taking breaks—because regulators already know when drivers are driving and not driving.

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Lizzo’s 2-year-old song ‘Truth Hurts’ might still qualify at 2020 Grammys

Lizzo’s breakthrough hit “Truth Hurts” is a two-year-old song, but it still has a chance at the 2020 Grammy Awards.

Typically older songs that become hits long after their initial release — from Pharrell’s “Happy” to John Legend’s “All of Me” — can compete at the Grammys when a live version of the song, released during the current Grammys eligibility period, is submitted.

But “Truth Hurts,” which was released as a stand-alone single in 2017, qualifies for the 2020 Grammys because the song was never submitted for contention in the Grammys process and it appears on an album released during the eligibility period for the upcoming show. Songs and albums released from Oct. 1, 2018 through Aug. 31, 2019 qualify for next year’s awards, and “Truth Hurts” appears on the deluxe edition of her album “Cuz I Love You,” released this year.

So far, the platinum-selling “Truth Hurts” has peaked at No. 4 on the all-genre Billboard Hot 100 chart. It has reached at No. 2 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop songs and Hot rap songs charts, respectively.

Normally if an artist submitted an older song — that appeared on an older album — it would not be allowed into the Grammys’ process. But “Truth Hurts” has the go-ahead and its fate will be decided when the Recording Academy and a group of music industry players meet in September at an annual gathering to choose what makes it on the ballot, what genres certain songs belong to, who really qualifies for best new artist and more.
A representative for the Grammys didn’t reply to an email seeking comment.

It’s part of a streak of good luck for Lizzo, who has dominated the music scene this year, appeared on dozens of magazine covers and earned praise for promoting body positivity and denouncing fat shaming. Though 2019 has served as her breakthrough, she released her debut album, “Lizzobangers,” in 2013. Her team has had that album and its follow-up, 2015’s “Big Grrrl Small World,” removed from streaming services because Lizzo wanted her musical journey to begin with 2016’s “Coconut Oil,” her debut EP on Atlantic Records.

In the past, acts have won Grammys with live versions of their songs because their songs have become hits long after its release. Pharrell’s Oscar-nominated anthem “Happy,” which appeared on the “Despicable Me 2” soundtrack and was released in mid-2013, eventually topped the charts in 2014. At the 2015 Grammys, a live version of the song competed for in the best pop solo performance category, and won the honor.

That same year John Legend’s “All of Me,” which also hit the No. 1 spot on the Billboard Hot 100 chart long after its release, competed in the same category with a live version of the tune. “All of Me” appeared on Legend’s 2013 album, “Love In the Future.”

At the 2012 Grammys, Adele won album of the year with “21” as well as record and song of the year with “Rolling In the Deep.” The following year she submitted a live version of “Set Fire to the Rain” — the third No. 1 single from “21” — and won best pop solo performance.

Beyoncé nabbed best female pop vocal performance at the 2010 Grammys with “Halo”; the following year a live version of the pop ballad competed in the same category.

Train’s megahit “Hey, Soul Sister” was featured on their 2009 album “Save Me, San Francisco,” but the song took off in 2010. It won the band their first-ever Grammy when a live version of the song was awarded best pop performance by a duo or group with vocals at the 2011 Grammys.

Because Lizzo’s “Truth Hurts” had not appeared on an album that qualified for previous Grammy eligibility, it could still compete at the 2020 show though it has been widely available for two years. Because Train, Pharrell, Legend and Adele’s songs were featured on albums that qualified for previous Grammy inclusion, their songs were disqualified unless a live version was submitted.

At the 2020 Grammys, Panic! at the Disco — whose song “High Hopes” set a new record as the longest-running No. 1 song on Billboard’s Hot rock songs chart this year — are likely submitting a live version of the track since the song and the album it appears on, “Pray for the Wicked,” qualified for the 2019 Grammys. “High Hopes” peaked at No. 4 on the all-genre Hot 100 chart.

It wasn’t clear if Drake’s new compilation album of previously released songs — featuring tracks like 2013’s “Girls Love Beyoncé” and 2010’s “I Get Lonely” — would qualify at the Grammys. The album, titled “Care Package,” debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s 200 albums chart this week.

Representatives for Drake and Panic! at the Disco didn’t immediately reply to emails seeking comment.

Though Lizzo released the singles “Juice” and “Tempo” from her latest album, “Truth Hurts” has become her most successful song. The track got a major boost after it was featured in the Netflix film “Someone Great,” released on April 19, the same day Lizzo dropped her album, “Cuz I Love You.” ”Truth Hurts” wasn’t originally featured on the 11-track “Cuz I Love You,” but her record label released a deluxe version of the album — featuring three more songs including “Truth Hurts” — on May 3. “Truth Hurts” marked Lizzo’s first entry on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.

Nominees for the Grammy Awards will be announced on Nov. 20 and the show will air live from the Staples Center in Los Angeles on Jan. 26, 2020 on CBS.

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Halle Berry shares NSFW birthday pic

Jets’ Le’Veon Bell wants to be No. 1 on field, in rap game

Le’Veon Bell was in fifth grade when he simply couldn’t shake music from his mind.

The creative beats. The grooving basslines. The raw lyrics.

He was hooked on it all, just like football.

“That’s when I really realized I loved music,” the star running back recalled in an interview with The Associated Press at the New York Jets’ facility. “I remember 50 Cent, he had dropped the album ‘Get Rich or Die Tryin’, and I saved up my own money to go to Walmart and I bought the CD. I listened to the CD and I just remember thinking, ‘Man, 50 Cent is so cool. I want to be like 50 Cent,’ you know?”

Well, plenty of youngsters want to be like the 27-year-old Bell, who has been one of the NFL’s most exciting and dynamic players throughout his career. His focus is squarely set on winning and returning his name to the conversation about the best running backs in the game after sitting out all last season in a contract dispute with the Pittsburgh Steelers.
But he has similar lofty goals for his burgeoning rap career.

“For real, I want to be No. 1,” Bell said. “I want to hit the No. 1 song, the No. 1 Billboard (song), that’s what I want to do. I want to eventually get better and get to those music shows, making songs with the great ones and things like that.”

Bell and his middle school buddies would spend lunch breaks tapping their pencils against cafeteria tables, creating makeshift beats. They’d go back and forth, freestyling lyrics. No topics were off limits: school, home, friends, sports, girls — whatever came to mind.

By the time Bell got to Groveport High School in Ohio, he noticed he was a little better than everyone else, and not just on the football field.

“I was around guys that said they could rap, too,” Bell said. “When people would just throw a beat on and they’d try to freestyle at the top of their head, and I could just do it for like five minutes straight without messing up, and staying on beat and other people couldn’t do it, I’m thinking like, ‘Oh, I’m better than you at freestyling.'”

Bell recorded his first song when he was 15, kept at it during college at Michigan State and got to know his way around a music studio the same way he deftly navigated opposing defenses. During his second season in Pittsburgh in 2014, he dropped his first music project.

“There’s been no looking back since,” Bell said. “I’ve been showing everybody I’ve been able to do it, I’ve been proud of it. I’ve been striving for it and I want to be the best at it. Just kind of how I take football, because I love it.”

Bell has faced some backlash over the years from people who simply don’t like his music or think it’s an unnecessary distraction from football. That criticism ramped up last year, when he sat out the entire season with the Steelers in a contract dispute. He signed a four-year, $52.5 million contract with the Jets in March. When he makes his debut for New York, it’ll be the first time he plays in a game in more than 19 months.

“Everybody has their own opinion and that’s why I don’t really take offense to it,” Bell said. “I just try to do what I can to feed the fans that do like it. I just try to keep giving them what they like, so they’re going to spread the word and maybe they find somebody else who likes it, and that’s why the fan base keeps growing.

“You’ve got to deal with trolls and things like that, but I accept that. I just continue to do what I do, what makes me happy, because I know that at the end of the day, people are behind me.”

Snoop Dogg is one of them — “We’ve got a song together, but I don’t know when I’ll drop it” — and the late Mac Miller was one of Bell’s closest friends. Miller, who died last year, encouraged Bell to keep working and artists and producers will want to create music with him.

“Just because I made a name for myself in football,” Bell said, “doesn’t mean I’ve made my name in the music game yet.”

Speaking of which, Bell went by the stage name “Juice” on his first several projects, but recently decided to drop it and go by his given name.

“It was an alter ego at first,” he said. “It’s not an alter ego anymore. It’s just who I am. That’s what I’m doing. Yes, I play football, and I do music. This is Le’Veon Bell. … This is me: football player, rapper, entertainer, however you want to look at it.”

Bell released an action-packed, cinematic-style video for his new single, “Slide,” on Tuesday night. Directed by Christian Breslauer, it features the running back in military gear slowly dropping upside-down from a ceiling before a “Call of Duty”-style gun battle.
He plans to release an EP later this month before the regular season begins, and has a catalog of nearly 500 recorded songs that are mixed and edited. It’s the result of spending entire weekends holed up in his Florida studio with his engineer during the offseason. He has another 200 or so songs that just need a little work.

Bell is deliberate with his music, just as he is with his running style. He’ll record a song and then wait several weeks before deciding if he truly likes it.

He also never writes out any of his lyrics. He’ll take a beat into the studio and spit lyrics on the spot.

“That’s how you make the best music, when it’s literally raw emotion,” said Bell, who ranks Drake as his No. 1 artist.

He’s focused on fine-tuning his vocals and experimenting with different styles. He was more melodic in his first few projects, but is a bit more hardcore lately.

“People kind of like this, what I’m doing, so I’m going to ride this wave until they want something else,” Bell said. “I think that’s what an artist’s supposed to do, you know?”
With the season about to kick off, football comes first now. But music will always provide the soundtrack on auto-play in his mind.

“I love music, man,” Bell said with a big smile. “I love making music and I’m going to continue making music.”

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Are Country Music Awards voters shunning ‘Old Town Road’ nominations?

Though Lil Nas X has broken chart records and become a streaming juggernaut with his breakout country rap hit “Old Town Road” with Billy Ray Cyrus, the song faces an uphill challenge to get a nomination for a CMA award.

Ballots have gone out for nominations for the Country Music Association Awards, but some voters are struggling to decide how to recognize the musical phenomenon of the year, which has become the longest running No. 1 song in the history of Billboard’s Hot 100.

Billboard decided “Old Town Road” wasn’t a country song and pulled it off country charts early on, but the song made enough of an impact anyway that it became eligible for a number of CMA categories this year, including single of the year and song of the year. CMA voters, which include musicians, producers, songwriters, touring professionals, country radio employees and others, vote in three ballots with the final nominations typically being announced in late August or early September. The award show will air Nov. 13.

But there are already signs that the song isn’t getting wide support. It failed to get enough votes in the major song categories. The song only earned enough votes to be considered in the musical event category on the second ballot, which went out to voters Monday.

Shane McAnally, one of country’s biggest hit-makers who has written for Sam Hunt, Kacey Musgraves, Kenny Chesney and more, said he’s been impressed with the way the song has resonated with fans, but it never felt country to him.

“I just think country people do not see that as a country song,” said McAnally, who is co-president of Monument Records and one of three producers on NBC’s song competition series, “Songland.” ”Pop listeners think it’s a country song.”

The song’s genreless approach by mixing trap beats with a Nine Inch Nails sample and Western-themed lyrics appealed to millennials on TikTok but took Nashville’s music industry by surprise. While pop, rap and rock artists have gotten CMA nominations before, it’s a lot harder to earn a nomination without broad support among Nashville’s labels and country radio.

Nelly was nominated for musical event in 2013 with Florida Georgia Line for “Cruise,” but that was a country song with a rapper added to the remix. Nelly’s earlier collaboration with Tim McGraw on “Over and Over” in 2004, which was primarily promoted as a rap song, did not earn any nominations from the CMAs.

“I will be shocked if it makes the final ballot,” McAnally said of “Old Town Road.”
Still McAnally pointed out that non-country acts can still surprise at the CMA Awards, such as when John Denver, largely considered a pop-folk artist, won entertainer of the year in 1975, prompting Charlie Rich to set fire to the card with Denver’s name during the broadcast.

David Macias, president of Nashville-based entertainment company Thirty Tigers, which works with Americana artists like Jason Isbell and John Prine, said Billboard’s decision to not classify the song as country probably just reinforced CMA voters who weren’t inclined to vote for it anyway.

“I haven’t really decided what I am going to do where that’s concerned,” Macias said. “There’s no doubt it’s the musical cultural phenomenon of the year. I am on the fence on whether or not it sits in there. It deserves some recognition, and frankly no matter what happens on the voting part, it will be interesting to see what the CMA does.”

Hunter Kelly, a veteran country music journalist, was surprised that the song didn’t get enough early votes for single of the year, but he said its qualifications for the musical event category seemed undeniable.

“If you talk about a musical event, it’s still 19 weeks at No. 1,” Kelly said. “It’s the all-time No. 1 on the Hot 100, so as a musical event, it totally deserves a nomination.”

During the voting period, labels or management agencies often engage in lobbying efforts that include advertisements in music industry publications. Representatives for Lil Nas X’s label, Columbia Records, did not respond to the AP for comment about the CMA voting.
Kelly said that since “Old Town Road” didn’t originate in Nashville and Lil Nas X is not signed to a Nashville label, there’s fewer voters emotionally or financially invested in seeing it nominated.

At the very least, “Old Town Road” has proved that lightning can strike twice in the same place with the re-introduction of Billy Ray Cyrus to a new generation, McAnally said. The mullet-wearing Cyrus was last nominated for a CMA in 1992 when he won single of the year for his own ubiquitous, danceable hit “Achy Breaky Heart.”
“That’s pretty crazy,” McAnally mused. “He wasn’t going away. You can’t discount that.”

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Philadelphia gunman in custody after hourslong standoff

A gunman who opened fire on police Wednesday as they were serving a drug warrant in Philadelphia, wounding six officers and triggering a standoff that extended into the night, is in police custody, authorities said.

Philadelphia police Sgt. Eric Gripp said early Thursday morning that the man was taken into custody after an hourslong standoff with police.

The shooting began around 4:30 p.m. as officers went to a home in a north Philadelphia neighborhood of brick and stone rowhomes to serve a narcotics warrant in an operation “that went awry almost immediately,” Philadelphia Police Commissioner Richard Ross said.
Many officers “had to escape through windows and doors to get (away) from a barrage of bullets,” Ross said.

The six officers who were struck by gunfire have been released from hospitals, Gripp said.
Two other officers were trapped inside the house for about five hours after the shooting broke out but were freed by a SWAT team well after darkness fell on the residential neighborhood. Three people who officers had taken into custody in the house before the shooting started were also safely evacuated, police said.

“It’s nothing short of a miracle that we don’t have multiple officers killed today,” Ross said.
Police implored the gunman to surrender, at one point patching in his lawyer on the phone with him to try to persuade him to give up, Ross said.

“We’re doing everything within our power to get him to come out,” Ross said during the standoff. “He has the highest assurance he’s not going to be harmed when he comes out.”
Temple University locked down part of its campus, and several children and staff were trapped for some time in a nearby day care.

Police tried to push crowds of onlookers and residents back from the scene. In police radio broadcasts, officers could be heard calling for backup as reports of officers getting shot poured in.

“I was just coming off the train and I was walking upstairs and there were people running back downstairs who said that there was someone up there shooting cops,” said Abdul Rahman Muhammad, 21, an off-duty medic. “There was just a lot of screaming and chaos.”
Dozens of officers on foot lined the streets. Others were in cars and some on horses.

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives said its agents responded to the scene to assist Philadelphia police.

President Donald Trump and Attorney General William Barr were briefed on the shooting, officials said.

Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney said he was thankful that officers’ injuries weren’t life-threatening.

“I’m a little angry about someone having all that weaponry and all that firepower, but we’ll get to that another day,” Kenney said.

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Jay-Z defends NFL deal with Roc Nation, talks Kaepernick

A day after Jay-Z announced that his Roc Nation company was partnering with the NFL, the rap icon explained that he still supports protesting, kneeling and NFL player Colin Kaepernick, but he’s also interested in working with the league to make substantial changes.

The Grammy winner and entrepreneur fielded questions Wednesday at his company’s New York City headquarters alongside NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell. When directly asked if he would kneel or stand, Jay-Z said: “I think we’ve moved past kneeling and I think it’s time to go into actionable items.”

He then added: “No, I don’t want people to stop protesting at all. Kneeling — I know we’re stuck on it because it’s a real thing — but kneeling is a form of protest. I support protest across the board. We need to bring light to the issue. I think everyone knows what the issue is — we’re done with that,” he added. “We all know the issue now. OK, next. What are we moving (on to) next? …And I’m not minimizing that part of it because that has to happen, that’s a necessary part of the process. But now that we all know what’s going on, what are we going to do? How are we going to stop it? Because the kneeling was not about a job, it was about injustice.”

Jay-Z has been among the biggest supporters of Kaepernick, who sparked a fissure in the NFL when he decided to kneel when the national anthem was played before games to protest the killings of blacks by police officers. Some called him unpatriotic, and he has not played for the NFL since he opted out of his contract with the San Francisco 49ers in 2017. Earlier this year, the NFL settled a lawsuit brought by Kaepernick and Eric Reid that alleged that owners colluded to keep them from playing in the league (Reid criticized Jay-Z’s new deal with the league).

When asked why he didn’t involve Kaepernick in the new Roc Nation-NFL deal, Jay-Z said: “You’d have to ask him. I’m not his boss. I can’t just bring him into something. That’s for him to say.”

Jay-Z also said he and Kaepernick had a conversation about the new deal but offered no details about what was discussed.

Kaepernick didn’t comment on the deal, but tweeted about his social justice work Wednesday.

“Today marks the three year anniversary of the first time I protested systemic oppression. I continue to work and stand with the people in our fight for liberation, despite those who are trying to erase the movement! The movement has always lived with the people!” he wrote.

The NFL and Jay-Z’s entertainment and sports representation company announced Tuesday they were teaming up for events and social activism, a deal Jay-Z said had been in the works over the last seven months.

“First thing I said to Roger was, ‘If this is about me performing at the Super Bowl, then we can just end this conversation now,” Jay-Z said.

The league plans to use Roc Nation — home to Rihanna, DJ Khaled and other stars — to consult on and co-produce its entertainment presentations, including the Super Bowl halftime show. The NFL will also work with Jay-Z’s company to help its Inspire Change initiative, created by the league after an agreement with a coalition of players who demonstrated during the national anthem to protest social and racial injustice in this country. Those demonstrations were sparked by Kaepernick kneeling during the national anthem in 2016.

“Everyone’s saying, ‘How are you going forward if Kaep doesn’t have a job?’ This was not about him having a job. That became part of it,” Jay-Z said. “We know what it is — now how do we address that injustice? What’s the way forward?”

Jay-Z added that “the NFL has a huge platform and we can use that huge platform.”
“I believe real change is had through conversation, real conversation and real work … and what better way to do it than where the conversation first took place.”

Jay-Z has turned down invitations to perform at the Super Bowl, even rapping about it in a song. Rihanna has also turned down the gig.

Jay-Z said he is not performing at the 2020 halftime show, which his company will co-produce, and said he turned down the offer in the past because he “didn’t like the process.”
“You take four artists and everyone thinks they’re playing the Super Bowl, and it’s almost like this interview process,” he said. “I think the process could have been more definite.”
Maroon 5 headlined this year’s halftime show and when it was announced that Travis Scott was to join as a special guest, reports surfaced online that Jay-Z didn’t want the rapper to perform. Jay-Z acknowledged that was true, but clarified it didn’t have anything to do with Kaepernick.

“My problem is (Travis) had the biggest year to me last year,” Jay-Z explained, “and he’s playing on a stage that had an M on it. I didn’t see any reason for him to play second fiddle to anyone that year and that was my argument.”

Goodell also answered several questions Wednesday. When a reporter asked a question, looking at both Goddell and Jay-Z, the rapper said: “Are you asking me?”

“I’m not the commissioner yet,” Jay-Z said as the room burst into laughter.

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At Twitter, It Seems No One Can Hear the Screams

Twitter’s brass at an event this week struggled to balance the platform’s reputation for viral rage with the conversational mecca it wants to become.

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Actually, Gender-Neutral Pronouns Can Change a Culture

In 2012 a non-gendered pronoun dropped into Swedish discourse. Today it's widely used—and it's nudging people to see the world a little differently.

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A Strange Radioactive Cloud Likely Came From Russia

In 2017 a plume of radioactive gas wafted across Europe. A study now shows it probably stemmed from a nuclear accident in southern Russia.

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Google Assistant Now Lets You Send Reminders to Other People

Hey Google, is this the future of passive-aggressive exchanges at home?

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Wednesday, August 14, 2019

Zimbabwe FA bans its former president, Philip Chiyangwa, for life

The Zimbabwe Football Association (Zifa) bans its former president Philip Chiyangwa for life for 'bringing Zimbabwean football into disrepute.'

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Planning for life after football in Nigeria

Onome Ebi is a Nigerian footballer. She tells the BBC how she manages her finances and plans ahead.

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Henry Golding Might Star in the Next 'G.I. Joe' Movie

The 'Crazy Rich Asians' lead is in talks to play Snake Eyes. Also, Netflix is adapting a 'New Yorker' sci-fi story.

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Caster Semenya: Double Olympic champion 'never felt supported' by women in sport

Olympic and world champion Caster Semenya says she has "never really felt very supported" by other women in sport.

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Baltimore principal says ‘race-baiting’ police officer humiliated him in front of his son

A Baltimore high school principal is speaking out about how he was treated like “the n-word” by a white police officer in one of the city’s suburbs in late July.

Vance Benton, principal of Patterson High School in East Baltimore, claims he was insulted and demeaned by the officer in Owings Mills, Md., as he and his teen son watched the arrest of a young Black male a block from their home.

Benton was not involved in the crime that police were investigating but said he wanted to make sure the Black man at the scene of the incident was being properly handled by the officers.

READ MORE: Baltimore mayor makes Office of Civil Rights independent to avoid police conflict of interest

In an interview with The Baltimore Sun, Benton detailed the July 29 experience, during which the white officer approached him and “ranted” about how people try to hinder investigations. He also warned Benton: “Don’t you buck up at me.”

“Did you see me buck up or even raise my voice?” Benton said he asked his son. “I told him that’s how Black boys and men get killed by the police when police choose to see things that are not there.”

The officer, whose name is being withheld by the department, then shined a flashlight in Benton’s face. When Benton asked for his name and tried to read his badge through the light, the policeman asked: “‘Can you even read?’ Then he spelled out his name “in an exaggerated way,'” Benton told The Sun.

“He saw me as the ‘n-word’ and not as a Black man with his son. He saw me as another opportunity to degrade someone and he relished that opportunity to do it in front of my son,” Benton said.

READ MORE: Family of man arrested and handcuffed with rope led by officers on horseback demand to see body camera video

The officer then told his son, Taj, that “I will be seeing you again,” implying the teenager is bound for trouble and run-ins with the law.

Benton alerted the county’s new police chief Melissa R. Hyatt and about the policeman’s “innate racial biases and belittling actions,” writing in a letter that he experienced “degradation, disrespect and humiliation,” according to The Sun.

“The lives of innocent citizens, especially those that are African American, are in jeopardy if (the officer’s) innate racial biases and his belittling actions to ‘bait’ citizens into being arrested aren’t analyzed and addressed immediately,” Benton wrote in the letter.

Baltimore County police confirmed the matter was under investigation and have refused The Sun’s request for the release of the officer’s bodycam footage.

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CELEB PHOTO GALLERY: ’47 Meters Down: Uncaged’ red carpet premiere

Black lacrosse player files lawsuit over Athletic Association ban for calling out death threats and n-word taunts from opposing white players

A Black high school lacrosse player says potential future college scholarship are on the line after enduring violent, racist taunts from opposing teams in Florida.

During a press conference last week, 17-year old, Luther Johnson V, who plays for Christopher Columbus High School in Miami, met with members of the media to discuss his suspension from playing both football and lacrosse during his senior year, a decision his lawyer are calling out as being racially motivated.

Johnson maintains he’s been banned from sports by the Florida High School Athletic Association because of how he reacted to racist taunts from players who attend Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, while playing a game where he was the only Black student on the field, Local 10 news reports. Johnson says racial slurs, including the n-word and death threats, were hurled at him from these students.

After returning from that suspension, Johnson played in another game against Belen Jesuit Preparatory School and received an additional unsportsmanlike call for “targeting.”

READ MORE: Oprah Winfrey reveals why she was moved to tears when Tarell Alvin McCraney pitched her ‘David Makes Man’

According to WVFN, Johnson’s attorney Rawsi Williams said two independent lacrosse coaches reviewed the game footage and disagree with the ban.

“Not one coach who reviewed that agreed to a year ban, or even a few games,” Williams said. “They were saying these are in-game penalties.”

The Florida High School Athletic Association banned Johnson from high school sports for the full football season and the first half of the upcoming lacrosse season, a decision Johnson contends could cost him a college scholarship.

“That’s my future, my college future, for playing sports if I want to play sports,” Johnson told reporters.

His high school coach, David Dunn, agrees.

“Him not being able to play his senior year, that would be devastating to him and his family,” Dunn said.

READ MORE: Black home buyer who found KKK memorabilia in cop’s home receives death threats

Johnson’s attorney announced last Friday that the family is filing a lawsuit in civil court against the Florida High School Athletic Association, alleging their decision was unfair and racially motivated.

“Luther was playing against Marjory Stoneman Douglas [High School]. He is not only the only African American kid on his team. There, he was the only Black kid in the whole game,” Williams said.

Johnson and his attorney said the other players from Stoneman Douglas were using racist language and making death threats in the moments leading up to the plays in question.

The suit seeks to have Johnson’s season-long football and half-season-long lacrosse ban lifted.

Johnson’s legal team has launched a social media campaign to support lifting the ban using the hashtags #HelpUsFightForLJV and #LetHimPlay and are calling on supporters to contact state leaders and the FHSAA with calls on his behalf.

They are requesting immediate reinstatement of Luther Johnson to play all sports without restriction, or that he be allowed to play all football games this season while missing only some lacrosse games next spring; and, an investigation of the racially discriminatory treatment at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas game.

Williams is also seeking a court hearing for an emergency motion for a temporary restraining order against FHSAA’s ban on Thursday.

“If that order is granted, our motion is granted, that means he gets to go out there and play,” Williams told WSVN. “Those items are necessary to stop the board’s actions in its tracks, so that Luther can play while the lawsuit is determined.”

READ MORE: Black teen becomes second Parkland shooting survivor to commit suicide in a week

Luther Johnson, the player’s father, told reporters his son maintains a 4.0 GPA and had several letters of interest from Ivy-League schools. But now, he concerned that the suspension could threaten his son’s college prospects.

“Playing sports is one love that I have, and I just don’t want to stop over a decision that people make, and I can’t make,” the younger Johnson said. “I’m just ready to get back on that field.”

The post Black lacrosse player files lawsuit over Athletic Association ban for calling out death threats and n-word taunts from opposing white players appeared first on theGrio.



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Cardi B releases clip of sit-down with Bernie Sanders to talk raising minimum wages

Cardi B has released a short clip from that sit-down she had back in July with2020 presidential candidate Bernie Sanders questioning the Democratic contender about his agenda to help folks make a livable wage.

Cardi B teams up with Bernie Sanders to film 2020 campaign video

“What are we gonna do about wages in America?” the Money rapper asked during a convo at Ten Nail Bar in Detroit.

She then discussed her former challenges paying her monthly bills, The Daily Mail reports.

“For example, as a New Yorker — not now but when I was not famous — I felt like no matter how many jobs I get I wasn’t able to make ends meet,” the 26-year-old said.

Cardi opened up about why she became a stripper saying her $200 a week supermarket job didn’t cut the mustard.

Sanders complimented Cardi on her “’excellent and important” question and explained his plan for raising the minimum wage to $15.

“Right now we have tens of millions of people making what I call starvation wages,” Sanders said. “How do you pay your rent? How do you pay for food? How do you pay for transportation? You can’t.”

Last month, Cardi teased that she teamed up with Sanders to shoot a commercial to discuss how to include young people in the political process and they discussed a number of issues affecting underrepresented communities.

Cardi B schools her fans on the difference between race and ethnicity: “Schools don’t teach this to people”

Sanders wrote on Facebook last month: “Cardi B and I had a great conversation about the future of America. Together, we’ll get millions of young people involved in the political process and transform this country. Stay tuned for our video coming soon!”

Tuesday Cardi wrote: “So I know this is long over due but here it is ! A couple of weeks ago I asked my followers if you all had the chance to ask a Democratic candidate a question, what would that question be? The topic that was mentioned the most by all of you was about raising MINIMUM WAGE.

“I got the chance to ask @berniesanders about this, and these are his answers. Keep sending your questions, we will be addressing more of these soon.”

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Stacey Abrams beefs up plans for Fair Fight 2020 ‘We have to make certain every eligible American can cast a ballot in 2020’

Stacey Abrams has upgraded plans for her voter’s rights organization Fair Fight 2020 that includes training activists to protect voters against election abuse, intimidation at the polls and interference in next year’s election.

Stacey Abrams says she is “as capable” to be president in 2020 as others

Abrams and her aide Lauren Groh-Wargo sat down with the AJC to discuss their extended plans to fight against voter suppression in 20 states ahead of the presidential election.

When asked if the Georgia Democrat plans to run against Brian Kemp again for the governor’s seat in 2022, she pivoted and spoke about her passion for helping voters get a fair shot during elections.

“My political future will be determined in the future. But my present and the work that needs to be done before my party chooses the nominee will be focusing on electoral opportunities and fighting voter suppression,” Abrams said.

“We have to make certain that every eligible American can cast a ballot in 2020 – and that work has to start now.”

Abrams said she intends for Fair Fight 2020 to have a hand in ensuring that voter processes are adhered to counter potential attacks by the opposing party.

“We’re going to be operating in 20 states. The goal is to ensure there is infrastructure in every single one of those states. Where voter protection processes aren’t something that wait until September of 2020 but they stay in place for the duration of 2020,” she revealed.

“The goal is going to be for us to have meaningful effects on ensuring that voters know their rights, they have access to ballots, that they will be able to effectively counter what Republicans will be doing. The reality is that we don’t know what the contours of their attacks will be, on top of what’s already in place …

White man arrested after spitting in Black girlfriend’s face over slave game

Abrams said her organization’s work will extend beyond the presidential races.

“This is focused on not simply the presidential election but also the Senate races that are so critical and the down-ballot races that for many states determine who draws the maps for redistricting,” she said.

“My responsibility is to ensure that every American who is eligible to vote has the right to vote in the upcoming elections. Elections are not about politicians. They’re about people having their say. And my responsibility, if I truly believe in this mission, is to focus on that outcome and not any ancillary effect it has on me. If I do my work, I’ve done my job as an American.”

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Shift to renewable electricity a win-win at statewide level

Amid rollbacks of the Clean Power Plan and other environmental regulations at the federal level, several U.S. states, cities, and towns have resolved to take matters into their own hands and implement policies to promote renewable energy and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. One popular approach, now in effect in 29 states and the District of Columbia, is to set Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS), which require electricity suppliers to source a designated percentage of electricity from available renewable-power generating technologies.

Boosting levels of renewable electric power not only helps mitigate global climate change, but also reduces local air pollution. Quantifying the extent to which this approach improves air quality could help legislators better assess the pros and cons of implementing policies such as RPS. Toward that end, a research team at MIT has developed a new modeling framework that combines economic and air-pollution models to assess the projected subnational impacts of RPS and carbon pricing on air quality and human health, as well as on the economy and on climate change. In a study focused on the U.S. Rust Belt, their assessment showed that the financial benefits associated with air quality improvements from these policies would more than pay for the cost of implementing them. The results appear in the journal Environmental Research Letters.

“This research helps us better understand how clean-energy policies now under consideration at the subnational level might impact local air quality and economic growth,” says the study’s lead author Emil Dimanchev, a senior research associate at MIT’s Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research, former research assistant at the MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change, and a 2018 graduate of the MIT Technology and Policy Program.

Burning fossil fuels for energy generation results in air pollution in the form of fine particulate matter (PM2.5). Exposure to PM2.5 can lead to adverse health effects that include lung cancer, stroke, and heart attacks. But avoiding those health effects — and the medical bills, lost income, and reduced productivity that comes with them — through the adoption of cleaner energy sources translates into significant cost savings, known as health co-benefits.

Applying their modeling framework, the MIT researchers estimated that existing RPS in the nation’s Rust Belt region generate a health co-benefit of $94 per ton of carbon dioxide (CO2) reduced in 2030, or 8 cents for each kilowatt hour (kWh) of renewable energy deployed in 2015 dollars. Their central estimate is 34 percent larger than total policy costs. The team also determined that carbon pricing delivers a health co-benefit of $211 per ton of CO2 reduced in 2030, 63 percent greater than the health co-benefit of reducing the same amount of CO2 through an RPS approach.

In an extension to their published work focused on the state of Ohio, the researchers evaluated the health effects and economy-wide costs of Ohio’s RPS using economic and atmospheric chemistry modeling. According to their best estimates, an average of 50 premature deaths per year will be avoided as a result of Ohio’s RPS in 2030. This translates to an economic benefit of $470 million per year, or 3 cents per kWh of renewable generation supported by the RPS. With costs of the RPS estimated at $300, that translates to an annual net health benefit of $170 million in 2030.

When the Ohio state legislature took up Ohio House Bill No. 6, which proposed to repeal the state’s RPS, Dimanchev shared these results on the Senate floor.

“According to our calculations, the magnitude of the air quality benefits resulting from Ohio’s RPS is substantial and exceeds its economic costs,” he argued. “While the state legislature ultimately weakened the RPS, our research concludes that this will worsen the health of Ohio residents.”

The MIT research team’s results for the Rust Belt are consistent with previous studies, which found that the health co-benefits of climate policy (including RPS and other instruments) tend to exceed policy costs.

“This work shows that there are real, immediate benefits to people’s health in states that take the lead on clean energy,” says MIT Associate Professor Noelle Selin, who led the study and holds a joint appointment in the Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences and Institute for Data, Systems and Society. “Policymakers should take these impacts into account as they consider modifying these standards.”

The study was supported by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Air, Climate and Energy Centers Program.



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WATCH | Corinne Foxx and Sistine Stallone, two of Hollywood’s brightest new stars, debut in ’47 Meters Down: Uncaged’

White man arrested after spitting in Black girlfriend’s face over slave game

They say what’s done in the dark will come to light and that appears to be the case for a white man and his Black girlfriend’s bizarre bedroom slave game that resulted in a call to the cops.

Black home buyer who found KKK memorabilia in cop’s home receives death threats

Tampa police answered a call of a nasty verbal fight between Kenneth Atkins and Ashley Edwards that took a turn for the worst when Atkins spit in her face because he didn’t want to play a role in her game “slave and slaver,” according to an Aug. 6 affidavit, The NY Daily News reports.

“Ashley stated she wanted to play slave and slaver because she is African American and he is Caucasian,” according to the Manatee County Sheriff’s office report. “Kenneth did not wish to partake and became verbally aggressive.”

Things got heated and Atkins pushed back and spat in his girlfriend’s face, police reported.

Sounds like he played anyway…

Atkins was also arrested for simple battery although he denied hitting Edwards.

Oprah Winfrey reveals why she was moved to tears when Tarell Alvin McCraney pitched her ‘David Makes Man’

Atkins can reportedly still have ‘consensual contact’ with Edwards but is scheduled for arraignment on September 8.

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DeepMind's Losses and the Future of Artificial Intelligence

Alphabet’s DeepMind unit, conqueror of Go and other games, is losing lots of money. Continued deficits could imperil investments in AI.

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Dell XPS 13 (2019) Review: A Great Compact Laptop

With that dreaded nose cam fixed, the Dell latest XPS 13 is an ultraportable delight to use. Read our full laptop review.

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BREAKING NEWS: A$AP Rocky CONVICTED of assault by Swedish court

A$AP Rocky has been found guilty of assault and handed a conditional sentence after a street brawl in Stockholm that was caught on video.

The rapper and two members of his entourage were convicted by a Swedish court on Wednesday, following a viral fight in the Swedish capital on June 30.
The Stockholm District Court said in its ruling that the performer’s claim of self-defense was rejected.
“The defendants have claimed that they acted in self-defence. Based on statements from two witnesses, the court finds that the defendants were not subject to a current or imminent criminal attack. Therefore, they were not in a situation where they were entitled to use violence in self-defence. Nor could they have perceived themselves to be in such a situation.”

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Megan Thee Stallion “hot girl” video shoot shut down in LA