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Thursday, January 16, 2020

FIRST LOOK: Issa Rae and Kumail Nanjiani get caught in a murder mystery in ‘The Lovebirds’

Issa Rae has a long list of projects on the way including a starring role in the upcoming film The Lovebirds. 

The just-released trailer for the flick that also stars Kumail Nanjiani looks pretty hilarious and teases a glimpse at all the laughs that are sure to come from this unexpected rom-com directed by Michael Showalter (The Big Sick).

Issa Rae threw shade with a curve during Black-snubbing Oscar nominations announcement

Check out the official synopsis:

A couple (Issa Rae & Kumail Nanjiani) experiences a defining moment in their relationship when they are unintentionally embroiled in a murder mystery. As their journey to clear their names takes them from one extreme – and hilarious – circumstance to the next, they must figure out how they, and their relationship, can survive the night.

Watch the trailer:

The Lovebirds is set to premiere at SXSW

Issa Rae recently revealed the trailer for the highly-anticipated fourth season of her hit HBO series Insecure and announced it will return tot he small screen on April 12.

Issa Rae partners to open massive new Inglewood coffee space

She also stars in the upcoming film The Photograph alongside Lakeith Stanfield so there’s plenty to look forward to from this talented beauty.

Rae is set to write, produce, and star in a reboot of Perfect Strangers, an adaptation of the award-winning Italian film Perfetti Sconociuti, directed by Paolo Genovese in 2016. In September, news broke that Issa Rae will also produce and star in a re-imagining of the iconic film Set It Off. 

 

The post FIRST LOOK: Issa Rae and Kumail Nanjiani get caught in a murder mystery in ‘The Lovebirds’ appeared first on TheGrio.



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What my great-granddad, Nelson Mandela, would make of 2020 South Africa

Nelson Mandela's great-granddaughter says the former President wouldn't be '100% happy' with modern South Africa.

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A Windows 10 Vulnerability Was Used to Rickroll the NSA and Github

A researcher demonstrated the attack less than a day after Microsoft disclosed one of the most critical Windows vulnerabilities ever. 

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Africa's week in pictures: 10-16 January 2020

A selection of the week's best photos from across the continent and beyond.

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What's behind the fight for Libya?

The oil-rich North African country has been beset by a civil war for nearly a decade.

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History-Making WNBA Collective Bargaining Agreement Comes With Big Boost to Player Salaries

WNBA collective bargaining agreement

In a deal that is sure to send ripples through women’s sports, the Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA) has reached a tentative collective bargaining agreement for its players.

Pending ratification by the basketball players and the league’s Board of Governors, the WNBA and the Women’s National Basketball Players Association (WNBPA) announced that they have a new collective bargaining agreement.

“We approached these negotiations with a player-first agenda, and I am pleased that this agreement guarantees substantial increases in compensation and progressive benefits for the women of the WNBA,” said WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert in a press release.

“I want to thank the players, led by WNBPA President Nneka Ogwumike and the WNBPA Executive Committee, as well as WNBPA Executive Director Terri Jackson, for their hard work, innovative thinking and professionalism throughout the process. I also want to thank the league’s Labor Relations Committee and Board of Governors for their investment, commitment and leadership as we look forward to working together to make the WNBA a sustainable and thriving business for generations of women’s basketball players to come.”

Under the new agreement, the league’s top players should be able to increase yearly cash compensation to more than $500,000, which more than triples the current maximum wages under the previous deal. Other top players will get the chance to earn salaries upwards of $200,000 and $300,000. And for the first time in WNBA history, the average yearly cash compensation will exceed six figures, averaging nearly $130,000, resulting in an increase for all players from rookies to veterans.

“Cathy Engelbert, the first WNBA Commissioner, brought her perspective as a former women’s basketball student-athlete, her experience as a business professional and her passion for the game to these negotiations,” said WNBPA President Nneka Ogwumike. “We found common ground in areas that confirmed the league’s and the players’ intentions to not only make meaningful improvements in working conditions and overall professional experience, but also to improve the business with strategic planning and intentional marketing that will keep the WNBA front and center year-round.”

“With cautious optimism and trusting the league’s renewed commitment and investment, the players demonstrated a willingness to ‘lean in’ themselves and show an even greater commitment and investment in the W,” described WNBPA Executive Director Terri Jackson. “There are significant gains all across the board in this new agreement, and everything is in place for our players and the league to thrive.”

Highlights of the agreement:

  • Significant Increases to Player Cash Compensation and Benefits
  • Cash Compensation Triples to More Than Half a Million Dollars for Top Players
  • Enhanced Travel Standards; Expanded Career Development Opportunities; New Child Care, Maternity and Progressive Family Planning Benefits
  • League Launches ‘WNBA Changemakers’ Partnership Platform to Enhance Player Experience and Drive Business Transformation


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Portraits of Power: Ursula Burns

1914 translation by H. Rackham

“Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.”

Section 1.10.32 of “de Finibus Bonorum et Malorum”, written by Cicero in 45 BC

“Sed ut perspiciatis unde omnis iste natus error sit voluptatem accusantium doloremque laudantium, totam rem aperiam, eaque ipsa quae ab illo inventore veritatis et quasi architecto beatae vitae dicta sunt explicabo. Nemo enim ipsam voluptatem quia voluptas sit aspernatur aut odit aut fugit, sed quia consequuntur magni dolores eos qui ratione voluptatem sequi nesciunt. Neque porro quisquam est, qui dolorem ipsum quia dolor sit amet, consectetur, adipisci velit, sed quia non numquam eius modi tempora incidunt ut labore et dolore magnam aliquam quaerat voluptatem. Ut enim ad minima veniam, quis nostrum exercitationem ullam corporis suscipit laboriosam, nisi ut aliquid ex ea commodi consequatur? Quis autem vel eum iure reprehenderit qui in ea voluptate velit esse quam nihil molestiae consequatur, vel illum qui dolorem eum fugiat quo voluptas nulla pariatur?”

1914 translation by H. Rackham

“But I must explain to you how all this mistaken idea of denouncing pleasure and praising pain was born and I will give you a complete account of the system, and expound the actual teachings of the great explorer of the truth, the master-builder of human happiness. No one rejects, dislikes, or avoids pleasure itself, because it is pleasure, but because those who do not know how to pursue pleasure rationally encounter consequences that are extremely painful. Nor again is there anyone who loves or pursues or desires to obtain pain of itself, because it is pain, but because occasionally circumstances occur in which toil and pain can procure him some great pleasure. To take a trivial example, which of us ever undertakes laborious physical exercise, except to obtain some advantage from it? But who has any right to find fault with a man who chooses to enjoy a pleasure that has no annoying consequences, or one who avoids a pain that produces no resultant pleasure?”

Section 1.10.33 of “de Finibus Bonorum et Malorum”, written by Cicero in 45 BC

“At vero eos et accusamus et iusto odio dignissimos ducimus qui blanditiis praesentium voluptatum deleniti atque corrupti quos dolores et quas molestias excepturi sint occaecati cupiditate non provident, similique sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollitia animi, id est laborum et dolorum fuga. Et harum quidem rerum facilis est et expedita distinctio. Nam libero tempore, cum soluta nobis est eligendi optio cumque nihil impedit quo minus id quod maxime placeat facere possimus, omnis voluptas assumenda est, omnis dolor repellendus. Temporibus autem quibusdam et aut officiis debitis aut rerum necessitatibus saepe eveniet ut et voluptates repudiandae sint et molestiae non recusandae. Itaque earum rerum hic tenetur a sapiente delectus, ut aut reiciendis voluptatibus maiores alias consequatur aut perferendis doloribus asperiores repellat.”



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Impeachment Managers selected from Congressional Black Caucus

Reps. Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) and Val Demings (D-FL) have made history as the first members of the Congressional Black Caucus to be selected as managers for a president’s impeachment trial. It is also the first time women have been chosen.

READ MORE: Cory Booker: Impeachment trial could be ‘big blow’ to my campaign

In a statement, the CBC noted the “historic moment” for the caucus.

“As the conscience of the Congress, Members of the Congressional Black Caucus, including Representatives Jeffries and Demings, have worked tirelessly to ensure that our democracy remains intact and that the highest office in the land is no longer compromised,” CBC leaders write in the statement. “Indeed, Members of the Congressional Black Caucus were among the first to call for the impeachment of this President. Since Donald Trump was sworn into office, the Black community has suffered from repressive and racist policies to heightened incitement of racial violence and rising unemployment rates in our community.”

The appointment of Jeffries and Demings marks a “historic moment for the Congressional Black Caucus,” the statement adds. “This is the first time in history that members of the Congressional Black Caucus and women have been selected to play such a crucial role in a presidential impeachment hearing. Regardless of what happens, United States history will note that President Donald Trump was impeached by the House of Representatives. We must now look towards our colleagues in the Senate, on both sides of the aisle, to have the courage to stand for a fair and open impeachment process with evidence and witnesses.”

READ MORE: Which members of the CBC have spoken up about the attack on the Civil Rights Act of 1866?

Managers are tasked with making presentations before the Senate as to why Trump should be impeached based on the two articles of impeachment – abuse of power and obstruction of Congress – passed by the House. Managers serve a similar role to that of a prosecutor in a trial, in that they must present the case to the Senate. Ultimately, the Senate will decide whether to convict Trump and remove him from office, which requires 67 votes, or a two-thirds majority.

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Spike Lee First Black to Lead Cannes Film Festival Jury

Spike Lee

Film director Spike Lee has been appointed jury president for this year’s Cannes Film Festival, making him the first black person to hold this position.

“In this life I have lived, my biggest blessings have been when they arrived unexpected, when they happened out of nowhere. When I got the call that I was offered the opportunity to be President of Cannes Jury for 2020, I was shocked, happy, surprised and proud all at the same time,” writes Lee in a statement. “To me the Cannes Film Festival (besides being the most important film festival in the world—no disrespect to anybody) has had a great impact on my film career. You could easily say Cannes changed the trajectory of who I became in world cinema.”

After a 22-year absence, Lee returned to the Festival de Cannes competition last year with his film BlacKkKlansman. The film garnered the Grand Prix award there, followed by the director’s first Oscar for one of his many films.

On behalf of the Festival de Cannes, its board of directors, and its teams, Pierre Lescure, president, and Thierry Frémaux, general delegate, have welcomed back both the artist and the man: “Spike Lee’s perspective is more valuable than ever. Cannes is a natural homeland and a global sounding board for those who (re)awaken minds and question our stances and fixed ideas. Lee’s flamboyant personality is sure to shake things up. What kind of President of the Jury will he be? Find out in Cannes!”

The Festival de Cannes will take place from Tuesday, May 12, to Saturday, May 23, 2020. The Official Selection and the composition of the Jury will take place in mid-April. Lee is succeeding Alejandro G. Iñárritu, whose 2019 Jury awarded the Palme d’or to Korean director Bong Joon-ho for his film Parasite, which has just won the Golden Globe for Best Foreign Film.

“In closing, I’m honored to be the first person of the African diaspora (USA) to be named President of the Cannes Jury and of a main film festival. The Lee family sincerely thanks the Festival de Cannes, Pierre Lescure and Thierry Frémaux and the great people of France who have supported my film career throughout four decades. I will always treasure this special relationship. Peace and Love” Spike Lee, Da People’s Republic Of Brooklyn, New York.



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'1917' VFX Artists Had to Completely Rethink How Films Are Made

Sam Mendes’ war epic is presented as one continuous shot. Making the illusion work was no small feat. 

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Nile River dam row: Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan make draft deal

The initial agreement eases tensions between Egypt and Ethiopia over control of vital water supplies.

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Vincent Williams: Economic Empowerment Champion Supports Entrepreneurs

Economic Empowerment VP Vincent Williams

BE Modern Man: Vincent Williams

Entrepreneur, connector, economic empowerment champion; 48; Vice-President of Economic Empowerment, YMCA Metropolitan Chicago; Director, Illinois Small Business Development Center

Twitter: @bizbyvince

I am the director of business and entrepreneurship for the YWCA Metropolitan Chicago where I am in charge of programming and provide one-on-one business consulting to entrepreneurs, startups and growing business owners. My primary office is on the South Side of Chicago, where many of our clients are from under-served communities. Our goal is to eliminate racism and empower women, and what better way than through the power of entrepreneurship. The impact it has on the communities that we serve is outstanding as it enables men, women, and youth to see the power of drive, education, and economic empowerment through business. Providing resources is a key element of empowerment.

WHAT ARE YOU MOST PROUD OF IN LIFE?

I am proud of the modern man that I have become despite challenges and circumstances out of my control. I put my head into the books and completed a master’s degree in finance despite being looked at as just another statistic; being from the inner-city. As a product of the Chicago Public Schools, raised by a single parent and overcoming my own insecurities, I am honored to share my knowledge, experiences, and drive with disadvantaged youth as a mentor and speaker. I am also most proud of those that continue to be engaged in my life as mentors, family, and friends. It speaks volumes.

HOW HAVE YOU TURNED STRUGGLE INTO SUCCESS?

Despite not having the financial means to attend college, I bit the bullet and secured loans, worked odd jobs, completed my degree in marketing and went on to complete a master’s degree in management and finance. I wanted to eliminate the possibility of being passed up for a position because I did not meet their requirements of having a qualifying degree and experience. I sought out mentors that did not look like me—mostly because I was not able to identify many who did—and asked for their guidance and knowledge. Not all was good advice, but all was appreciated advice. I took the good and the bad and tweaked them to apply them toward my goals and ambitions. My current success as a mentor, entrepreneur, economic empowerment advocate, and executive is due to hard work, a solid work ethic, and the drive to not become a statistic. I feed off the negative energy of those that are not welcoming of diversity and make a difference when and where I can.

WHO WAS YOUR GREATEST MALE ROLE MODEL AND WHAT DID YOU LEARN FROM HIM?

My greatest male role model was a fictional father figure that I created. He was a combination of the men that were involved in my life and it included my brother, uncle, neighbors, a close friend’s father and those I looked up to at church. He had the same name as my [absent] biological father, but he was consistently present in my life, taught me to tie my shoes, square my shoulders, and provide a strong handshake, and to respect women and my elders. This is the man I wanted to become and I continue to strive to be: chivalrous and well received.

WHAT’S THE BEST ADVICE YOU’VE EVER RECEIVED?

The best advice that I ever received was from a white male mentor that took me under his wing and told me that I would go very far if I learned to play golf, kept my head down, and flew under the radar at work. This baffled me as I was typically the only black male in the office and hated golf. But, I learned to play and tweaked his advice and flew over the radar every chance that I got. My drive is always to be the best that I can be.

HOW ARE YOU PAYING IT FORWARD TO SUPPORT OTHER BLACK MALES?

I serve as the co-chair for an organization here in Chicago called Year Up that provides an intensive, yearlong training and internship opportunity for disadvantaged youth between the ages of 18-25. I serve as a mentor to them and participate in a monthly Men’s Circle that provides a safe space to vent and provide fellowship for whatever challenges they may be experiencing in life and work. I also participate yearly in the opportunity to host a group of African American high school males of a local charter school here in Chicago called Urban Prep at my offices, to tell my story, engage them in a team-building activity, and allow them to see a black male in corporate America and ask questions. I wish I had this opportunity growing up.

HOW DO YOU DEFINE MANHOOD?

Manhood defined is the right to walk in the world and experience all that it has to offer. This, with your head held high and a smile on your face, can only lead to positive energy being shared and absorbed. As society shifts toward non-binary descriptions and preferred pronouns, I plan to embrace the skin that I am in and the gifts that have been provided to me. The gift to share joy, knowledge, and love no matter what cards life deals you to play with.

WHAT DO YOU LIKE MOST ABOUT BEING A BLACK MAN?

I love everything about being a black man. I love the differences in our looks, the curvature of my nose, my stature and in my case, my lack of athleticism despite my athletic appearance. I get asked all the time, “Where did you play ball?” I respond with a shoulder shrug and ask if tennis counts. I enjoy that despite the apparent changes in socio-economic statuses today, and solid educational and work experiences that I have, I am pre-judged just because of the color of my skin. There is always that person or group of people that snicker and shy away or clutch their personal belongings tighter as I walk toward them or when I enter a room. It reminds me of why I want to succeed.


BE Modern Man is an online and social media campaign designed to celebrate black men making valuable contributions in every profession, industry, community, and area of endeavor. Each year, we solicit nominations in order to select men of color for inclusion in the 100 Black Enterprise Modern Men of Distinction. Our goal is to recognize men who epitomize the BEMM credo “Extraordinary is our normal” in their day-to-day lives, presenting authentic examples of the typical black man rarely seen in mainstream media. The BE Modern Men of Distinction are celebrated annually at Black Men XCEL (www.blackenterprise.com/blackmenxcel/). Click this link to submit a nomination for BE Modern Man: https://www.blackenterprise.com/nominate/. Follow BE Modern Man on Twitter: @bemodernman and Instagram: @be_modernman.

 



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Mississippi State Penitentiary must find prison cells for 625 violent offenders

Mississippi is grappling with where to house 625 violent offenders currently in need of jail cells.

Seven months after a state Department of Corrections report found that Mississippi’s prisons were unsafe and unsanitary and falling apart, prison officials have moved 375 maximum-security inmates to another jail, while 625 more inmates currently housed at Unit 29 of the Mississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman are in dire need of being relocated, according to CNN.

READ MORE: At least 5 Mississippi inmates die in one week after violent uprisings, now activists demand answers

“It is important to continue to address housing and infrastructure needs for the most violent offenders,” Commissioner Pelicia E. Hall said Monday, according to a news release put out by the Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC). “Moving the 375 inmates to the Tallahatchie County Correctional Facility in Tutwiler provided some relief to an overstressed system. However, there are additional close custody inmates at Unit 29.”

When Rayford Horton, state Department of Health environmental administrator, visited the facility at Parchman last year, he found inhumane living conditions, such as no power, no hot or cold water, leaky and inoperable toilets, moldy food and milk and food containing no expiration dates, exposed wiring, an inoperable garbage disposal and holes in the ceiling so that every time it rains, inmates would get water in their cells, according to CNN.

After his inspection, Horton wrote a report documenting his findings.

And Hall asked the state to increase her budget to help deal with some of the problems outlined in the report. “This facility, originally constructed in 1980 and renovated in 1996, has become unsafe for staff and inmates due to age and general deterioration,” Hall wrote in a budget letter for fiscal 2021 last summer where she requested $22.5 million to repair the unit and $35.6 million to hire nearly 1,000 open positions at three Mississippi prisons.

The jails are understaffed with hundreds of vacant positions, which is why MDOC cannot relocate the remaining 625 inmates to the vacant Walnut Grove Correctional Facility in Leake County because the department has insufficient staff resources to operate the prison.

Recently, at Unit 29 in Parchman, inmates were involved in clashes that resulted in the deaths of four prisoners, prompting rapper Jay-Z and Yo Gotti to get their legal teams involved in helping the prisoners sue the state. This spate of violence caused Hall to take steps to relocate the 375 inmates to a jail eight miles away.

Hov’s team sent a letter to Hall on Jan. 9 in which he accused Mississippi of “utter disregard for the people it has incarcerated” and promised to “pursue all potential avenues to obtain relief” if state officials didn’t make the necessary changes. “These inhumane conditions are unconstitutional,” the letter added. “The Eighth Amendment of the United States Constitution prohibits the infliction of cruel and unusual punishment and is violated when prison officials fail to protect against prison-related violence and when prison conditions fail to meet basic human needs.”

READ MORE: Jay-Z, Roc Nation file federal lawsuit against Mississippi prison officials, allege vile prison conditions

Hall said MDOC understands the urgency and is moving as quickly as it can.

“The department acted swiftly because of the violence …and a lack of manpower to restore and maintain order,” she said in a statement, according to CNN.

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Apple TV\+ Nabs Spike Jonze's Beastie Boys Doc 

Meanwhile, Netflix is about to unleash Miss Americana, its documentary about Taylor Swift .

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Angola's Isabel dos Santos: Africa's richest woman eyes presidency

Isabel Dos Santos, the daughter of Angola's former leader, is embroiled in a $1bn financial scandal.

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Hall of Fame Wrestler Rocky Johnson, father of Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, has died

Rocky “Soul Man” Johnson, the father of actor Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, has died.

READ MORE: Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson calls Elizabeth Warren ‘a baller’

The Canadian professional wrestler, who was born in Nova Scotia as Wayde Douglas Bowles, was 75 years old. His beloved World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) confirmed his death on their website, “WWE is saddened to learn that Rocky “Soul Man” Johnson (born Wayde Douglas Bowles), a WWE Hall of Famer, former World Tag Team Champion, and father of Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, has passed away.”

Rocky started wrestling when he was 16. He would go on to become a National Wrestling Alliance Georgia Champion and win multiple championships throughout his career, which spanned several decades. In 1983, the big guy joined the WWE and he started wrestling with Tony Atlas. The two men formed the first Black tag team, which they called “The Soul Patrol,” and they won the World Tag Team Championship in the World Wrestling Federation (WWF), reported PEOPLE.

Although Johnson retired from wrestling in 1991 his impact on the wrestling culture would live on.

He shifted his role from a superstar athlete to become a trainer. He was the trainer most instrumental in the development of his son, Dwayne, to become a wrestler.

Their bond has been noted by both of them. For Father’s Day in 2018, Dwayne penned a tribute to his dad on Instagram.

“Happy Father’s Day to this hardly ever smiling OG badass. Little boys by nature, look up to and idolize their old man. They want to be just like me, do whatever they do and are always looking for their approval. Funny thing is the day I stopped looking for that approval was the day I understood what it meant to be a man and more importantly, a father,” Dwayne wrote.

“That shift lifted me to a new level of gratitude for the tough love he always gave. Years later as a man and father of three girls, I know that tough love, is a helluva lot better than no love at all. I’ll take it. It’s made me who I am today. Grateful to the original Rock. #HappyFathersDay #KingStache #RockyJohnson,” he added.

READ MORE: The Rock surprises 100-year-old fan with lit birthday serenade

Rocky was married to Ata Maivia in 1970. They had Dwayne in 1972 but divorced in 2003.

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Dirty Money and Bad Science at MIT's Media Lab

The school's investigation shows that two separate scandals—over Jeffrey Epstein and OpenAg—were closely linked. 

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The Display of the Future Might Be in Your Contact Lens

Mojo Vision's prototypes can enhance your vision or show you your schedule—right from the surface of your eyes.

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The club from Reunion causing a stir in France

They are minnows located 6,000 miles from France but former Blackpool player Elliot Grandin hopes his Reunion side can continue their run in the French Cup.

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What Atlanta Can Teach Tech About Cultivating Black Talent

The city is rich in opportunity for African Americans, who are largely underrepresented in the industry. It's also poised to become a hotbed for AI innovation.

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This Apple-FBI Fight Is Different From the Last One

In 2016, the iPhone encryption debate ended in a draw. Don't count on 2020's scuffle over the Pensacola shooter's devices to play out the same way.

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Inside the Feds’ Battle Against Huawei

How Washington went to war against the Chinese smartphone giant, and how the runaway conflict could spell the end of a single, global internet. 

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Wednesday, January 15, 2020

A $100 Million Investment Pulls an EV Startup Out of Stealth Mode

Hyundai and Kia are backing Arrival, a startup British maker of electric delivery vans, a good use case for EVs.

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Jay-Z, Roc Nation file federal lawsuit against Mississippi prison officials, allege vile prison conditions

This week it was confirmed that hip-hop mogul and prison reform activist Jay-Z has sued the head of the Mississippi Department of Corrections and the warden of the state penitentiary.

The suit was filed on behalf of over two dozen prisoners who allege the two officials were willfully negligent in stopping the brutality that resulted in the deaths of five inmates over the past two weeks.

READ MORE: Colin Kaepernick opens up about the police shooting of a Black man that propelled him into activism

“These deaths are a direct result of Mississippi’s utter disregard for the people it has incarcerated and their constitutional rights,” reads the lawsuit, which was filed by Jay-Z’s lawyer Alex Spiro at the U.S. District Court in Greenville, Mississippi.

According to NBC News,  DOC Commissioner Pelicia Hall and Mississippi State Penitentiary Superintendent Marshall Turner are named as defendants.

READ MORE: Black Chicago man and other people of color, come forward, to call out clergy abuse

“We cannot treat people this way and it’s time to do something about it,” Spiro of the Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP law firm elaborated in a statement sent to the news affiliate.

Prior to the lawsuit Spiro sent a letter dated Jan. 9 to Hall and Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant on behalf of Jay-Z and rapper Yo Gotti (Mario Mims) which took specific issue with the “inhumane conditions in prisons operated by the Mississippi Department of Corrections.”

The lawyer also warned they were “prepared to pursue all potential avenues to obtain relief for the people living in Mississippi’s prisons and their families.”

“This unthinkable spate of deaths is the culmination of years of severe understaffing and neglect at Mississippi’s prisons,” the correspondence continues. “As Mississippi has incarcerated increasing numbers of people, it has dramatically reduced its funding of prisons. As a result, prison conditions fail to meet even the most basic human rights.”

It was also noted that, “people are forced to live in squalor, with rats that crawl over them as they sleep on the floor, having been denied even a mattress for a cot.”

The sternly worded message concluded with, “Roc Nation and its philanthropic arm, Team Roc, demand that Mississippi take immediate steps to remedy this intolerable situation.”

READ MORE: Uber driver graduates college thanks to passenger paying off her student debt

 

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Grieving Kenyan grandmother calls for better road safety

Kenyan Mary Wambui's daughter and grandson died after being hit crossing a major highway.

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Report: Black business owners are denied bank loans twice as often as white business owners

Black business owners are routinely denied bank loans, even if they have good credit scores and consistent annual profits.

More than any other racial group,Black entrepreneurs more frequently hear “no” when going after business loans, according to St. Louis Public Radio.

READ MORE: Stacey Abrams tackles voter suppression in new book due out in June

One case in point is Freddie Lee James and his wife, Deborah, who started Freddie Lee’s Gourmet Sauces in St. Louis back in 2010. The couple has a good credit score and $200,000 in annual yearly profits. Their barbeque sauce is currently sold at more than 1,000 retail stores across the United States and Jamaica, including Home Goods, Schnucks, Dierbergs, Straub’s and Hy-Vee, yet they can’t qualify for a business loan.

“We have 750-760 credit score. … We pay all our debts. We don’t have no problems with that. But they were saying that the sauce business is not generating enough capital to their standards,” James said to St. Louis Public Radio.

According to U.S. Federal Reserve statistics, Black business owners are denied loans by banks twice as often as white business owners. In 2014, when data was last made available nationally, more than half of all applications for bank loans from black-owned businesses were denied. This compares to about 25% of loan applications by white business owners in the same timeframe.

READ MORE:NAACP lawsuit claims Census Bureau is unprepared for count 

Deborah James said without bank funding, it’s tough to expand their business to achieve the bank’s requirements for volume. She said it’s impossible to reach the sales quota achieved by well-financed brands while working off of a small-business budget, according to St. Louis Public Radio.

To finance the business, the couple used $100,000 from Freddie Lee James’ 401(k) and then went to Justine Petersen, a St. Louis microlender, for help. The nonprofit organization works with small business owners to help them improve their credit and qualify for affordable loans.

Galen Gondolfi, a senior loan counselor and spokesman at Justine Petersen, said there are many business owners in the same predicament as the Jameses.’

“St. Louis’ seemingly provincial lending struggles not only with entrepreneurs that don’t historically ‘look like them,’ but (also) the types of businesses that are unique to these populations,” Gondolfi told St. Louis Public Radio in an email.

For Black entrepreneurs seeking basic financial opportunities, the fight continues.

The post Report: Black business owners are denied bank loans twice as often as white business owners appeared first on TheGrio.



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Oprah shuts down claims she’s planning a ‘tell-all’ interview with Harry and Meghan

On the heels of her stepping away from her role as executive producer on an upcoming Russell Simmons documentary, media mogul Oprah Winfrey has now come forward to shut down reports that she’s planning a tell-all interview with Meghan Markle and Prince Harry.

According to Fox News, Monday, Nicole Nichols, the chief spokesperson for the OWN Network, clarified that despite what was being speculated in the press, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex were “not in discussion for an interview” with the talk show host.

READ MORE: How Meghan Markle exposed racism in the British media (then bounced)

Last fall during an interview with journalist Bryony Gordon, the Duke of Sussex opened up about the Apple TV+ series he and Winfrey collaborated on, which he believes will highlight examples of “human spirit fighting back from the darkest places.”

Given the relationship between Winfrey and Harry, many assumed she would be the likely first stop for the royal couple to vent any of their frustrations about the attacks from the British press. But it appears that at least for now, that is not the case.

On the same day of Winfrey’s statement, Queen Elizabeth released a statement of her own, sharing her parting thoughts on her grandson’s sudden departure from his duties as a senior member of the royal family.

READ MORE: Gayle King checks royal family biographer over Megan Markle racial remark on ‘CBS This Morning’

“Today my family had very constructive discussions on the future of my grandson and his family,” she confirmed in the message. “My family and I are entirely supportive of Harry and Meghan’s desire to create a new life as a young family. Although we would have preferred them to remain full-time working Members of the Royal Family, we respect and understand their wish to live a more independent life as a family while remaining a valued part of my family.

“Harry and Meghan have made clear that they do not want to be reliant on public funds in their new lives,” the Queen. “It has therefore been agreed that there will be a period of transition in which the Sussexes will spend time in Canada and the UK. These are complex matters for my family to resolve, and there is some more work to be done, but I have asked for final decisions to be reached in the coming days.”

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Hip-hop artist: 'I'm called Satan when I rap'

"Mina the Veiled" is a Senegalese hip-hop artist who is often mocked because of her passion for rap.

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Missing Brooklyn teenager found safe and reunited with her family

Five days after a 14-year-old Brooklyn girl went missing, she was found safe and has returned home to her family.

READ MORE: Teen, who prompted citywide Amber Alert, confesses she staged her own kidnapping

When Jenna Hospedales, a freshman at the esteemed Brooklyn Tech High School, did not come home after school last Thursday, her family grew worried. Her mother, Jennelle Hospedales, phoned police to report her daughter missing and said she had never gone missing before. Also, the mom said there was no questionable activity on Jenna’s social media accounts, according to PIX11.

Crystal Hospedales, Jenna’s cousin, told CBS that this deeply concerned family because it was unlike Jenna.

“She is not a child who is super on social media. She’s not a child that dates. She’s not a child that has a wild side. She has never left home, so we are extremely concerned,” Crystal Hospedales said.

Jenna’s friends told the family that they last saw her boarding the G train at Fulton Street and South Elliot Place in Brooklyn around 3:15 on Thursday, Jan. 9. The NYPD 77th Precinct, who had asked for the public’s help in finding the girl, said she never arrived home. The family went all over Brooklyn, posting signs with the girl’s description and they also asked for help on social media.

On Sunday, Jenna’s mom pleaded with anyone who knew anything to help her find her baby girl.

“I hope she comes home,” Jennelle Hospedales told WCBS. “That’s all I want. I just want my baby home.”

READ MORE: Atlanta lawyer reported missing earlier this week found dead in hospital

On Tuesday afternoon, her prayers were answered. The family breathed a huge sigh of relief when Jenna was found and returned home. It is unclear where the teenager was and where she was found.

The NYPD took to Twitter to thank the public for their help.

“UPDATE: Jenna has been located and reunited with her family. We would like to thank everyone that showed concern and shared her information on social media,” the precinct tweeted.

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Elizabeth Warren makes debate case: Democratic woman can beat Trump

By ALEXANDRA JAFFE, STEVE PEOPLES and DARLENE SUPERVILLE Associated Press
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Elizabeth Warren made a forceful case for a female president and stood behind her accusation suggesting sexism by progressive rival Bernie Sanders in a Democratic debate that raised gender as a key issue in the sprint to Iowa’s presidential caucuses.

Sanders vehemently denied Warren’s accusation, which threatened to split the Democratic Party’s left flank — as well as the senators’ longtime liberal alliance — at a critical moment less than three weeks before voting begins.

“Look at the men on this stage. Collectively they have lost 10 elections,” Warren exclaimed on Tuesday night. “The only people on this stage who have won every single election that they’ve been in are the women.”

An incredulous Sanders responded: “Does anybody in their right mind think a woman can’t be elected president?” he asked. “Of course a woman can win.”

There was a final moment of tension between Sanders and Warren after the debate ended. Having shaken the hands of her other competitors, Warren was shown in video declining to shake Sanders’ extended hand.

With the Democratic field tightly bunched among four leading candidates, the debate offered an opportunity for separation. But none of the six candidates on stage had the kind of moment likely to reshape the race in the final weeks before voting starts. Instead, the debate was generally marked by a focus on weighty issues of foreign policy, climate change and how to provide health care for all Americans. Even when disputes emerged, most candidates quickly pivoted to note their larger differences with President Donald Trump.

For his part, Trump spent Tuesday night campaigning in Wisconsin, a state that is critical to his reelection effort. He tried to encourage the feud between Sanders and Warren from afar.

“She said that Bernie stated strongly that a woman can’t win,” Trump said. “I don’t believe that Bernie said that, I really don’t. It’s not the kind of thing Bernie would say.”
Despite such prodding, the debate stage drama was far from the explosion some Democrats feared. Candidates moved with ease through a variety of topics, disagreeing with each other but generally avoiding personal attacks.

Sanders did step up his attacks on former Vice President Joe Biden over his past support of the Iraq War and broad free-trade agreements. Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, who was mired in the middle of the pack, seized on Warren’s shifting positions on health care.

Billionaire Tom Steyer acknowledged making money from investments in the fossil fuel industry, but highlighted his decade-long fight to combat climate change, an issue that came up repeatedly throughout the night.

Pete Buttigieg, the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, sometimes struggled for attention in a debate that often featured points of conflict between his rivals. Perhaps his strongest moment came when he described how, as a military veteran who is vocal about his faith, he could stand up to Trump in a general election.

“I’m ready to take on Donald Trump because when he gets to the tough talk and the chest thumping, he’ll have to stand next to an American war veteran and explain how he pretended bone spurs made him ineligible to serve,” Buttigieg said. “And if a guy like Donald Trump keeps trying to use religion to somehow recruit Christianity into the GOP, I will be standing there not afraid to talk about a different way to answer the call of faith and insist that God does not belong to a political party.”

Questions surrounding war and foreign policy dominated early on. Sanders drew a sharp contrast with Biden by noting his own opposition to a 2002 measure authorizing military action against Iraq.
Sanders called the Iraq invasion “the worst foreign policy blunder in the modern history of this country.”
“I did everything I could to prevent that war,” Sanders said. “Joe saw it differently.”
Biden acknowledged that his 2002 vote to authorize military action was “a mistake,” but highlighted his role in the Obama administration helping to draw down the U.S. military presence in the region.
Several candidates condemned Trump’s recent move to kill Iran’s top general and his decision to keep U.S. troops in the region.
“We have to get combat troops out,” declared Warren, who also called for reducing the military budget.
Others, including Buttigieg, Biden and Klobuchar, said they favored maintaining a small military presence in the Middle East.
“I bring a different perspective,” said Buttigeg. “We can continue to remain engaged without having an endless commitment to ground troops.”
The debate featured just six candidates, the fewest of any such forum this cycle after escalating party rules prevented other candidates from participating. For the first time, not a single candidate of color appeared on stage. Every candidate was white, and four were men.
That was a stark contrast from the earlier days of the 2020 contest, which featured the most diverse field of candidates in history. The party is trying to navigate broader debates over how to reflect and embrace the crucial role women and minority voters will play in 2020. To defeat Trump this fall, Democrats need to ensure black, Latino and suburban voters are excited to vote for them against the Republican president.
The debate marked one of the final moments the senators in the race will participate in a campaign-related event before returning to Washington to sit as jurors in Trump’s impeachment trial. Those proceedings are likely to begin by the end of the week, making it difficult for senators running for president to spend time with voters Iowa in the contest’s final days.
“Some things are more important than politics,” Warren said. “I will be there because it is my responsibility.”
___
Peoples and Superville reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Bill Barrow in Des Moines contributed to this report.
___
Catch up on the 2020 election campaign with AP experts on our weekly politics podcast, “Ground Game.”

The post Elizabeth Warren makes debate case: Democratic woman can beat Trump appeared first on TheGrio.



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2021 Africa Cup of Nations: Cameroon FA announce change of dates

The Cameroon Football Federation announces that the 2021 Africa Cup of Nations will kick off in January due to the weather conditions.

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Scientists Fight Back Against Toxic ‘Forever’ Chemicals

The ubiquitous compounds known as PFAS are nearly indestructible. But scientists are learning to split their ultra-strong carbon-fluorine bonds.

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Can a Digital Avatar Fire You?

Samsung’s new artificial humans look, blink, and smile like us. But bots still shouldn't deal with complex human emotions.

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The Winner of ‘The Circle’ Opens Up About Life IRL

WIRED spoke with the winning contestant of Netflix’s reality show about the apartment, the rules of catfishing, and what’s next. (Spoilers ahead.)

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MIT Sloan launches MITx MicroMasters Program in Finance

The skills and expertise required for a career in finance are in high demand across industries and the world. To address this need, MIT recently launched the MITx MicroMasters Program in Finance, an online program taught by faculty in the MIT Sloan School of Management and the Institute’s fifth MicroMasters Program to date. Available on the edX platform, the program offers recent graduates, early- to mid-stage professionals, and other individuals interested in or already pursuing a career in finance an opportunity to enhance their financial skill set or to fast-track a master’s degree in finance from MIT Sloan.

“The MITx MicroMasters Program in Finance is part of MIT’s mission to make high-quality education accessible around the world. A pioneer and leader in the field of finance, MIT Sloan is uniquely positioned to drive awareness about financial issues, increase interest, and build skills,” says David Schmittlein, the John C Head III Dean of MIT Sloan. “This program is an exciting opportunity to give learners who cannot come to campus the knowledge, models, and tools needed to advance their careers.”

The MITx MicroMasters Program in Finance includes a bundle of five online courses in finance taught by MIT Sloan faculty on the edX platform. Drawn from the STEM-based curriculum taught on campus, all five courses mirror on-campus, graduate-level MIT coursework and cover topics such as modern finance, financial accounting, mathematical methods for quantitative finance, and derivative markets. Learners will gain a comprehensive understanding of global markets and learn to apply critical financial theories, models, and frameworks across all areas of finance.

MIT Sloan Professor Leonid Kogan, who teaches in the MITx MicroMasters Program in Finance, says, “Finance can fuel progress in the way people live, the health of our world, and the integrity of our global financial systems. MIT Sloan is a robust ecosystem of finance educators, research innovators, and industry practitioners with diverse and accomplished students and alumni working at the forefront of the field to solve high-impact problems and drive progress. The MicroMasters program enables students around the world to engage in this ecosystem and learn how to make a positive difference in finance.”

Heidi Pickett, assistant dean of the Master of Finance Program, agrees. “Finance is the backbone of how economies and companies operate. It is necessary in virtually every part of the world in both the private and public sectors. This program will help meet the growing and evolving needs of finance by training professionals and helping qualified individuals to fast-track their MIT master’s degree in finance.”

Learners who complete and pass each course in the program may apply to the MIT Sloan Master of Finance Program and, upon acceptance, earn credit for the work performed online. This educational pathway allows learners to complete the master’s degree quicker, with only two terms spent on campus at MIT.

The first available course in the MITx MicroMasters Program in Finance starts April 1. To complete this course as part of the program, learners must be enrolled prior to that date.

“We are proud to launch our fifth MITx MicroMasters program for learners around the globe in collaboration with MIT Sloan,” says MIT Dean for Digital Learning Krishna Rajagopal. “MicroMasters programs unlock the potential of learners with the drive and capability to tackle MIT courses, advancing their careers without interrupting their careers.”



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'Star Trek: Picard': Everything You Need to Watch Before the New CBS Series

Watching every piece of canon that's featured Patrick Stewart could take a while. Focus here instead.

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Now Stores Must Tell You How They're Tracking Your Every Move

California's new privacy law has spurred a torrent of online notices. But the law is also forcing changes offline, in traditional stores.

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Cats Are Making Australia's Bushfire Tragedy Even Worse

Cats are attracted to bushfire burn scars, where they hunt vulnerable survivors with merciless impunity. It's devastating for ecosystems.

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UN Secretary-General: US-China Tech Split Worse Than Cold War

In an interview with WIRED editor in chief Nicholas Thompson, António Guterres says the world's next major conflict will start in cyberspace.

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Chris Evans Goes to Washington

The actor's new project, A Starting Point, aims to give all Americans the TL;DR on WTF is going on in politics. It's harder than punching Nazis on the big screen.

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Bad Algorithms Didn't Break Democracy

And better ones won't save it. To get past misinformation and tribal rancor online, we need to face why people really want misinformation and rancor.

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Presidential Candidates on the Disunited State of America

Joe Biden, Elizabeth Warren, Amy Klobuchar, Donald Trump. We asked every White House hopeful to weigh in on how they would reverse the country's devastating polarization.

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Can This Notorious Troll Turn People Away From Extremism?

Steven Bonnell, known online as Destiny, has made a business of picking fights with alt-right carnival barkers and other partisan provocateurs.

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Biafra 50 years on: A grandmother's perspective on the war

Caroline talks to her granddaughter about living through the Biafran conflict, 50 years on.

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South Africa: 'When I'm surfing, I feel like everything is possible'

Mental health is an important topic for young people worldwide. In South Africa, one way young people are coping is with surfing.

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Tuesday, January 14, 2020

Remembering Nigeria's Biafra war that many prefer to forget

Fifty years from the end of Nigeria's civil war three people on the losing side reflect on its impact.

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Zeroing in on decarbonization

To avoid the most destructive consequences of climate change, the world’s electric energy systems must stop producing carbon by 2050. It seems like an overwhelming technological, political, and economic challenge — but not to Nestor Sepulveda.

“My work has shown me that we do have the means to tackle the problem, and we can start now,” he says. “I am optimistic.”

Sepulveda’s research, first as a master’s student and now as a doctoral candidate in the MIT Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering (NSE), involves complex simulations that describe potential pathways to decarbonization. In work published last year in the journal Joule, Sepulveda and his co-authors made a powerful case for using a mix of renewable and “firm” electricity sources, such as nuclear energy, as the least costly, and most likely, route to a low- or no-carbon grid.

These insights, which flow from a unique computational framework blending optimization and data science, operations research, and policy methodologies, have attracted interest from The New York Times and The Economist, as well as from such notable players in the energy arena as Bill Gates. For Sepulveda, the attention could not come at a more vital moment.

“Right now, people are at extremes: on the one hand worrying that steps to address climate change might weaken the economy, and on the other advocating a Green New Deal to transform the economy that depends solely on solar, wind, and battery storage,” he says. “I think my data-based work can help bridge the gap and enable people to find a middle point where they can have a conversation.”

An optimization tool

The computational model Sepulveda is developing to generate this data, the centerpiece of his dissertation research, was sparked by classroom experiences at the start of his NSE master’s degree.

“In courses like Nuclear Technology and Society [22.16], which covered the benefits and risks of nuclear energy, I saw that some people believed the solution for climate change was definitely nuclear, while others said it was wind or solar,” he says. “I began wondering how to determine the value of different technologies.”

Recognizing that “absolutes exist in people’s minds, but not in reality,” Sepulveda sought to develop a tool that might yield an optimal solution to the decarbonization question. His inaugural effort in modeling focused on weighing the advantages of utilizing advanced nuclear reactor designs against exclusive use of existing light-water reactor technology in the decarbonization effort.

“I showed that in spite of their increased costs, advanced reactors proved more valuable to achieving the low-carbon transition than conventional reactor technology alone,” he says. This research formed the basis of Sepulveda’s master’s thesis in 2016, for a degree spanning NSE and the Technology and Policy Program. It also informed the MIT Energy Initiative’s report, “The Future of Nuclear Energy in a Carbon-Constrained World.”

The right stuff

Sepulveda comes to the climate challenge armed with a lifelong commitment to service, an appetite for problem-solving, and grit. Born in Santiago, he enlisted in the Chilean navy, completing his high school and college education at the national naval academy.

“Chile has natural disasters every year, and the defense forces are the ones that jump in to help people, which I found really attractive,” he says. He opted for the most difficult academic specialty, electrical engineering, over combat and weaponry. Early in his career, the climate change issue struck him, he says, and for his senior project, he designed a ship powered by hydrogen fuel cells.

After he graduated, the Chilean navy rewarded his performance with major responsibilities in the fleet, including outfitting a $100 million amphibious ship intended for moving marines and for providing emergency relief services. But Sepulveda was anxious to focus fully on sustainable energy, and petitioned the navy to allow him to pursue a master’s at MIT in 2014.

It was while conducting research for this degree that Sepulveda confronted a life-altering health crisis: a heart defect that led to open-heart surgery. “People told me to take time off and wait another year to finish my degree,” he recalls. Instead, he decided to press on: “I was deep into ideas about decarbonization, which I found really fulfilling.”

After graduating in 2016, he returned to naval life in Chile, but “couldn’t stop thinking about the potential of informing energy policy around the world and making a long-lasting impact,” he says. “Every day, looking in the mirror, I saw the big scar on my chest that reminded me to do something bigger with my life, or at least try.”

Convinced that he could play a significant role in addressing the critical carbon problem if he continued his MIT education, Sepulveda successfully petitioned naval superiors to sanction his return to Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Simulating the energy transition

Since resuming studies here in 2018, Sepulveda has wasted little time. He is focused on refining his modeling tool to play out the potential impacts and costs of increasingly complex energy technology scenarios on achieving deep decarbonization. This has meant rapidly acquiring knowledge in fields such as economics, math, and law.

“The navy gave me discipline, and MIT gave me flexibility of mind — how to look at problems from different angles,” he says.

With mentors and collaborators such as Associate Provost and Japan Steel Industry Professor Richard Lester and MIT Sloan School of Management professors Juan Pablo Vielma and Christopher Knittel, Sepulveda has been tweaking his models. His simulations, which can involve more than 1,000 scenarios, factor in existing and emerging technologies, uncertainties such as the possible emergence of fusion energy, and different regional constraints, to identify optimal investment strategies for low-carbon systems and to determine what pathways generate the most cost-effective solutions.

“The idea isn’t to say we need this many solar farms or nuclear plants, but to look at the trends and value the future impact of technologies for climate change, so we can focus money on those with the highest impact, and generate policies that push harder on those,” he says.

Sepulveda hopes his models won’t just lead the way to decarbonization, but do so in a way that minimizes social costs. “I come from a developing nation, where there are other problems like health care and education, so my goal is to achieve a pathway that leaves resources to address these other issues.”

As he refines his computations with the help of MIT’s massive computing clusters, Sepulveda has been building a life in the United States. He has found a vibrant Chilean community at MIT and discovered local opportunities for venturing out on the water, such as summer sailing on the Charles.

After graduation, he plans to leverage his modeling tool for the public benefit, through direct interactions with policy makers (U.S. congressional staffers have already begun to reach out to him), and with businesses looking to bend their strategies toward a zero-carbon future.

It is a future that weighs even more heavily on him these days: Sepulveda is expecting his first child. “Right now, we’re buying stuff for the baby, but my mind keeps going into algorithmic mode,” he says. “I’m so immersed in decarbonization that I sometimes dream about it.”



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Senators Propose $1B to Outpace Huawei in 5G. That's Small Change

The plan calls for federal subsidies for R&D in next-generation wireless, but the sums pale compared with existing investments. 

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Cory Booker gets support from girlfriend Rosario Dawson after he exits 2020 race

Monday morning Democratic New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker announced his decision to drop out as a candidate in the Democratic presidential race, and now his girlfriend actress Rosario Dawson is coming forward to show support for her man.

According to the Daily Mail, just hours after the announcement the “Jane the Virgin” star took to Twitter to gush over her partner’s noble efforts and serving as an inspiration.

READ MORE: Sen. Cory Booker announces end to presidential campaign with no clear path to victory

 

“It was a difficult decision to make, but I got in this race to win, and I’ve always said I wouldn’t continue if there was no longer a path to victory,” Booker said in a statement to supporters on Monday. This not only tightens the race amongst the 12 remaining Democratic candidates, but it also makes former Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick the only Black candidate still standing. Entrepreneur Andrew Yang is the only other person of color in the Democratic race.

READ MORE: Dave Chappelle joins the ‘Yang Gang’; places his support behind Andrew Yang

Booker and Dawson first met back in 2017 while attending a fundraiser for former Maryland Democratic gubernatorial candidate Ben Jealous. They were both in other relationships at the time, but Booker, 50, aid he eventually mustered up the courage to get Dawson’s phone number and the rest is history.

During a CNN town hall last March Booker called Dawson, 40, an “incredible girlfriend”, and last September she echoed his sentiments by gushing, “I’m in love! I am absolutely in love, and it is so exciting,” while at the Toronto Film Festival.

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No shame in his game: Yung Joc confirms he’s a rideshare driver

Is Love & Hip-Hop: Atlanta star Yung Joc really working as a rideshare driver? Apparently so, and his reasons why may surprise you.

According to Complex, the former rapper turned reality star was recently spotted working as a driver and rather than skirting the issue, he confronted it head-on and then confirmed that really was him.

READ MORE: Yung Joc says he wasn’t a victim of the ‘Bad Boy’ curse

This week Joc shared a video on Instagram of himself driving around what appeared to be a customer. Critics seemed dismayed by the admission while others praised him for making an honest living.

“I just felt like it was an easy way to get some easy money downtown, I meet people,” he explained during the video.

According to a screenshot he subsequently shared, the service he is signed up with is called Pull Up N Go, a rideshare app similar to both Uber and Lyft.

READ MORE: Yung Joc explains why he was spotted wearing a gown

“Anybody need a ride,” he wrote. “I know they gonna hate but somebody wanna get wasted and get to their destination safe and sound. Download the app and I just might #PullUpNGo.”

Given that the app just launched many are speculating that he isn’t really a driver and is instead posting clips as a stunt to promote the service for a fee.

“A clip showing Yung Joc driving for an unknown ride-share app just surfaced on the internet. This is a genius publicity stunt and the person who sent the video to the blogs is probably in on it,” wrote one suspicious fan. “Any doubt that this is a publicity stunt is cleared by Joc plugging the app on IG.”

 

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Aston Martin's $189,000 DBX SUV Conquers the Arabian Desert

The luxury brand wants its first SUV to be a multi-terrain all-star, and that means leaving the pavement behind.

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