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Tuesday, August 11, 2020

Will Smith to produce dramatic reboot of ‘Fresh Prince of Bel-Air’

Morgan Cooper’s trailer for a new version of the ‘Fresh Prince of Bel-Air’ gets the green light

It’s happening.

When filmmaker and Fresh Prince of Bel-Air superfan Morgan Cooper set out to do a trailer for a dramatic reboot of the show he likely wasn’t thinking it would actually happen. Maybe he figured showing off his filmmaking skills might net him some interest to further his career.

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(Credit: NBC)

As it turns out, via the power of social media, the 3:57 trailer found its way to Will Smith who loved the rethinking of the show that helped make him an international superstar.

Now, according to The Hollywood Reporter, Cooper has signed on as co-writer, co-director and co-executive producer for the Fresh Prince of Bel-Air reboot.

Original producers Smith, Benny Medina and Quincy Jones along with show creators Susan and Andy Borowitz are onboard and are shopping the newly imagined series to streamers including Netflix, HBO Max, Peacock. The show will be co-produced by Smith’s Westbrook Studio and Universal TV.

A scene from ‘The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air’ reboot trailer

Cooper will be working with showrunner Chris Collins whose resume includes The Wire, Crash and Sons of Anarchy. The reboot is being billed as a one-hour series that will be a dramatic retelling of the classic sitcom, taking a deeper and more serious dive into the issues of being a Black man in America in the contemporary landscape.

Smith, along with the late James Avery, Janet Hubert Whitten (and then Daphne Maxwell Reid), Alfonso Ribeiro, Karyn Parsons, Tatyana Ali, Joseph Marcell and Smith’s rap partner DJ Jazzy Jeff in a recurring role, starred on the NBC sitcom that ran from 1990-1996. Along the way, it sent Smith, already a rap star, into a new stratosphere. The show became one of the network’s most popular and beloved sitcoms.

Cooper did the trailer in March 2019. By April, Smith had met Cooper and interviewed him for his YouTube channel.

“That’s an idea that is brilliant,” Smith told Cooper about the trailer in their interview. He asked the filmmaker what made him come up with it.

“I grew up watching the show since I was 5,” Cooper told Smith. “I remember seeing what you did onscreen so it’s always been a part of me. I remember driving down 71 in Kansas City and I was just thinking about the show. I remember driving under this overpass and when I came out, I had the idea. It hit me like a ton of bricks and I knew I had to tell the story.”

Watch the entire interview and the trailer below:

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Activist’s arrest in Portland galvanizes Black Lives Matter

Authorities say the prominent activist, Demetria Hester, won’t be charged following her predawn Monday arrest

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — The arrest during a Portland, Oregon protest of a Black woman who became a leading activist in the racial justice movement after she was assaulted by a white supremacist three years ago has galvanized local and national Black Lives Matter groups.

Demonstrators took to the streets again Monday night and police broke up a protest outside a police precinct substation after they said protesters shined strobe lights at officers and hurled eggs and water bottles at them.

Nine people were arrested when clashes broke out at the protest that lasted into early Tuesday morning, with some protesters throwing rocks and golf balls in the mayhem. One officer suffered an arm injury in a scuffle for which she was treated and released from a hospital, Portland police said in a statement.

Read More: Portland protest strives for peace as U.S. forces drawn down

Portland has endured more than two months of often violent, nightly protests since George Floyd was killed in Minneapolis, including weeks of clashes between protesters and federal agents dispatched to the city by President Donald Trump in to protect a federal courthouse that was a focus of the demonstrators.

Authorities said the prominent activist, Demetria Hester, won’t be charged following her predawn Monday arrest after a protest that started Sunday night and turned violent outside the union headquarters for Portland’s police.

In this Aug. 18, 2017, file photo, Demetria Hester speaks during a press conference in Portland, Ore. (AP Photo/Steven DuBois, File)

Hester, 46, had been booked on suspicion of disorderly conduct and interfering with a police officer during the protest. Hester’s arrest drew a sharp rebuke from national Black Lives Matter activists, who are increasingly focusing on demonstrations in Oregon’s largest city.

After her release, Hester told reporters that she would keep protesting and joined others in announcing plans for a fundraiser to send Black mothers to Washington, D.C.

“I was born and bred to do this. This is a dream come true,” Hester said. “This is a revolution and we’re getting reparations.”

Hester and 15 other people were arrested during Portland’s 73rd consecutive nights of protest, when a group of about 200 demonstrators gathered at a park and then marched to the union headquarters building, where some people set fires outside the building and launched fireworks at officers.

Two officers were injured, including one who was burned on the neck when a firework exploded, police said. Police declared that the event was a riot shortly after 10 p.m. and began arresting people, including Hester.

Trump again seized on the protests in the city where he has harshly criticized local Democratic officials and said on Twitter that Portland was “out of control.” He urged Democratic Gov. Kate Brown to bring in the Oregon National Guard.

Civil rights groups in Portland and members of the international Black Lives Matter organization, who traveled to Portland, decried Hester’s arrest and said the city was at the center of the racial justice protest movement.

Portland police officers walk through the Laurelhurst neighborhood after dispersing protesters from the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office early in the morning on Saturday, Aug. 8, 2020 in Portland, Ore. (AP Photo/Nathan Howard)

“The struggle here in Portland has become almost ground zero because what we’ve seen under this administration is the kind of flexing that we haven’t really seen in our generation, ever,” said Janaya Khan, co-founder of Black Lives Matter Toronto. “People only protest when politicians and policies and police have failed to protect them. ”

Hester gained prominence in 2017 when she was assaulted by a white supremacist while riding a light-rail train. The man who attacked Hester, Jeremy Christian, stabbed two men to death the following night and critically injured a third man when they came to the defense of two Black women — one of them wearing a Muslim head-covering — who were being harassed by Christian.

Read More: Portland protesters file lawsuit against U.S. government

Hester gave emotional testimony this spring at Christian’s murder trial. Christian was convicted and given two life sentences without possibility of parole.

Hester has reappeared in public this summer as one of the main organizers of a group of mostly white parents who have been protesting nightly. She leads marches each night, using a bullhorn to chant in a voice cracking with fatigue.

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A New Survey Links Vaping to Higher Covid-19 Risk

A Stanford University report shows that teens and young adults who use e-cigarettes are five to seven times more likely to test positive for the virus.

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U.S COVID-19 Cases In Children Spike 90% As Schools Begin To Reopen, Report Says

Georgia

COVID-19 continues to keep the country in quarantine and practicing social distancing to prevent the spread of the virus. With the dawn of a new school season, many schools have started to reopen in different states despite concerns from parents and warnings from various experts. This week, a new report shows that within the last four weeks, young children have seen a 90% increase in overall new cases as a result.

According to a report by The American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children’s Hospital Association, over 380,000 children have tested positive for COVID-19 since the pandemic started and represented 9.1% of all cases across the country. The new data also showed that between July and August there has been a 90% spike in COVID-19 cases in children. States like Illinois, Florida, North Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, Arizona, and California have reported high increases in new COVID-19 among school-aged children. The new report counters President Trump’s previous statements saying children were nearly immune to the virus. 

Other states like New York have opted to provide more remote learning options for parents to protect kids without disrupting their learning. According to ABC7 News, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced this week that over 700,000 students will be participating in a blended in-person and online curriculum with 26% of students opting for digital-only remote learning.

“Our numbers reflect the work of everyone in this state, and the number of ICU patients and hospitalizations have reached new lows again,” Gov.Andrew Cuomo told ABC7 News. “That is extraordinary given where we were just a few months ago. We are fighting on two fronts to protect our progress: We are fighting against the rise of cases across the nation, and we are fighting against lack of compliance within our own state.

 



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Conservative pundit Ben Shapiro goes viral reciting lyrics to ‘WAP’

Cardi B catches wind of his skit and says, ‘I can’t believe conservatives soo mad’ her hit song

The ‘WAP’ song continues to cause controversy throughout the nation.

This time, right-wing pundit Ben Shapiro took to his show and read the lyrics, dispelling the notion that this is a song that has feminist overtones.

READ MORE: Viola Davis responds to viral request to join ‘WAP’ video

“This is deep guys. This is what feminists fought for. This is what the feminist movement was all about,” Shapiro said to his viewers. “It’s not really about women being treated as independent, full, rounded human beings. It’s about wet ass p-word. And if you say anything differently you’re a misogynist.”

Shapiro is the co-founder and editor of the conservative website The Daily Wire

Listening to Shapiro’s reading of the lyrics is truly cringe-worthy. Writer Jason Campbell, who is a frequent critic of Shapiro, shared the clip with only the caption, “Ben Shapiro reads ‘WAP’ lyrics.” 

Cardi B responded tweeting, “I can’t believe conservatives soo mad about WAP.”

She also shared a fan-created video of Shapiro reading the lyrics while juxtaposed over the official video of the song with laughing emojis. 

Fans also criticized Shapiro’s shaming of the song. One fan retweeted a 2012 tweet by the pundit which said, “Fact: Rap isn’t music. And if you think it is, you’re stupid.” 

James P. Bradley, a conservative who is currently running from congress, said that he “accidentally” heard the song. He said it made him “want to pour holy water in my ears and I feel sorry for future girls if this is their role model!”

Cardi has been playfully defending her single, and the controversy around it. She recently retweeted Dictionary.com who said that searches for “WAP” are up over 9,000%. 

READ MORE: Cardi B, Megan Thee Stallion cause internet frenzy with release of ‘WAP’

The song has also sparked a debate about the sexual content of male rappers versus that of female rappers, the agency of women’s sexuality, and more. With celebrities like former NFL player, Larry Johnson and rapper CeeLo Green chiming in to condemn the single.

Despite the criticism, “WAP” is the number one single on iTunes, Apple Music, and Spotify. 

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A Homeless Crisis Looms Over America As More Than 30 Million Face Eviction

Coronavirus

The coronavirus pandemic has made the U.S. economy spiral out of control, now, the potential eviction of 30 million Americans may put the country into another pandemic.

Last weekend, President Donald Trump signed an executive order that required administration officials to “take all lawful measures to prevent residential evictions and foreclosures resulting from financial hardships caused by COVID-19.”

Trump also required cabinet officials to identify funds that could be used to aid distressed renters. According to NPR, none of Trump’s orders neither bans evictions outright nor provides rental assistance because both actions must be approved by Congress. Additionally, housing activists say it will do little to avoid the situation.

When the coronavirus pandemic began in March, many states paused evictions in order to protect the millions of suddenly unemployed workers from losing their homes. Those eviction bans are expiring at the same time the $600 federal unemployment benefit has expired. The benefit allowed many Americans without a job to put food on the table while paying bills, including rent.

“Now you’re in a moment where you still haven’t gone back to work, most government benefits have stopped, and the rent is still due,” says the Aspen Institute’s Zach Neumann, who founded the COVID-19 Eviction Defense Project.

Neumann estimates of the 110 million Americans who live in rental housing, at least 30 million are at risk of eviction by the end of September.

“There’s tremendous urgency,” adds Diane Yentel, president and CEO of the National Low Income Housing Coalition. “There are millions of renters who can’t sleep at night because they don’t know what they’re going to do if they become homeless.”

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed an executive order Wednesday to extend the state’s protections for tenants who have faced financial hardships related to COVID-19 until Sept. 4. The state’s new Tenant Safe Harbor Act also prevents a court from issuing an eviction warrant against those tenants.

However, even when bans are in place, tenants can have trouble understanding whether they’re protected or not. In Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis extended an eviction ban for another month but the extension only allows renters who can prove they’ve been hurt by COVID-19 to appeal for more time to pay what they owe. The ban technically doesn’t stop evictions according to Jamos Mobley, an attorney in Orlando.

“A lot of folks hear that we’ve had an extension, and they’re going to assume they’re protected. And that’s just not the case. Evictions are moving forward. They’re being filed. They’re being served,” says Mobley, who also works for the Legal Aid Society in Central Florida. “I think our next pandemic, if nothing is done, is going to be a homeless pandemic,” he says.



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Denver police investigating arson house fire that killed Senegalese family of 5

The community responds overwhelmingly and raises almost $200K to send the family’s remains back to Africa

A house fire killed three adults and two children who were Senegalese immigrants and it is being investigated as a homicide. Authorities have determined that fire was intentionally set by someone who fled the area. 

Djibril and Adja Diol and their 3-year-old daughter, Kadidia, died along with Hassan Diol and her infant daughter, Hawa Beye. Djibril Diol was an engineer and the brother of Hassan Diol.

READ MORE: Bronx Zoo operator apologizes for 1906 display of African man in monkey cage

According to a local news station KMOV4, Joe Montoya, division chief for investigations at the Denver Police Department, said the fire was deliberately set but would not discuss details. 

“I cannot get into the details right now. We are relying on the expertise of the Denver Fire arson investigators, the ATF, and some of the evidence collected at the scene,” Montoya said. 

He also said that the investigators are being “very open-minded” and looking “at every possible angle.” 

The Colorado chapter of the Council of American Islamic Relations is calling for an investigation into the idea of racial bias. 

“Because the family members who perished in this tragedy are members of minority and immigrant communities, it would only be prudent to investigate the possibility of a bias motive,” said Krista Cole, acting board chair for CAIR-Colorado.

Montoya said that “if at some point we determine it was hate-motivated or bias-motivated, then we will definitely share that with the community.”

Denver mayor, Michael Hancock, expressed his condolences to the family and encouraged the community to contribute to a GoFundMe for the family to help send their remains to their homeland. 

READ MORE: GoFundMe created by George Floyd’s brother raises over $1.5M in a day

“We are saddened by the loss of a loving Dad, a nurturing husband, and a caring brother to all of us,” the GoFundMe reads, “Please help the family with the cost of sending the bodies back home for a proper burial.”

At the time of publishing, the community has raised over $178,000, more than the initial goal of $150,000.

The family lived on the lower level of a two-family home. All five perished, while the family upstairs jumped to safety. 

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‘Get Out’ star LaKeith Stanfield causes concern after cryptic posts

Friends and fans go to social media to ask for someone to check-in on the actor during a presumed moment of crisis

LaKeith Stanfield, star of the Academy Award-winning film Get Out and the hit FX series Atlanta, scared some fans yesterday after a series of cryptic Instagram posts. 

Stanfield posted a video of himself pouring liquor into an empty pill bottle. Underneath the post, he wrote, “I like to be by myself because I can hurt myself and no one tells me to stop or fakes like they care.” 

READ MORE: LaKeith Stanfield hopes his new music will inspire others to ‘face your demon’

In a separate post, he wrote, “Reality is boring and moves too slow and no one is trustworthy.” He also wrote that he’d like to be “inside” because “outside is crazy.” 

The posts, which were posted with the comments disabled, were later deleted. In fact, all of his posts were deleted. 

However, supporters were able to capture the images and ask for someone to help the actor on Twitter.

Stanfield’s posts, just a day before the actor’s 29th birthday, were alarming enough that fans and some celebrities began calling for people to reach out to him. 

Comedian Patton Oswalt expressed his concern and later shared that through a mutual friend that “just got confirmation that LaKeith is okay. Sorry if I overreacted.” He encouraged people to reach out to someone they hadn’t spoken to in a while and check in on them. 

Stanfield went on to later post, “I’m ok everyone! I appreciate everyone checking in on me but I’m good. I’m not harming myself. Much love.” The post ended with a red rose emoji. It is the only post on his Instagram page. 

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His publicists, Platform PR, also posted that he is “well.” While saying that the “love you all have is appreciated.” 

READ MORE: Lakeith Stanfield blasts Black media platforms, Charlamagne Da God claps back

The actor will soon be reuniting with his Get Out co-star, Daniel Kaluuya for the civil rights movie, Judas and The Black Messiah, based on the life and death of Black Panther Party leader, Fred Hampton

The film is produced by Ryan Coogler and the trailer is getting good early reviews. 

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Find Your Path to AI Success with DataRobot Pathfinder

Introducing DataRobot Pathfinder 

The potential impact AI will have on the global economy has been estimated to numbers so large — about $13 trillion by 2030 (McKinsey) – that they have become hard to conceptualize on the local level. Even with all the research and media around AI, many executives are still perplexed as to how AI can improve the profitability of their individual organizations. From the difficulties of choosing the right use case to the intricacies of adopting predictions into existing workflows, AI comes with a wide array of challenges that prevent organizations from maximizing the returns on their AI investments.

Enter DataRobot Pathfinder, the industry’s leading resource for practical guidance on how to effectively implement AI. Pathfinder is an online library of more than 100 use cases dedicated to helping you discover relevant use cases and understanding how they can be deployed within your organization. These use cases include agnostic applications of AI, such as forecasting demand, scoring new leads, and reducing customer churn. They also include industry-specific applications of AI, such as reducing hospital readmissions, predicting insurance claims’ severity, and preventing anti-money laundering. 

Pathfinder eliminates the noise to show you what you should prioritize in your roadmap. The tool is also developed around a proven technical and business framework to show how you can implement AI. By familiarizing yourself with this framework, you can understand how to apply AI to even more unique problems that your organization faces. 

With its combination of actionable use cases and applicable best practices, Pathfinder helps you expand your adoption of AI. The tool not only helps data scientists uncover more efficient ways to build and deploy models, but also shows business executives and analysts how they can embed predictions into their decision processes. The content shown on Pathfinder is driven by the collective knowledge of more than 35 of DataRobot’s data scientists, and compiles the knowledge these data scientists have accumulated through decades of academic and industry experience. 

Discover Use Cases

Pathfinder is home to 100+ use cases across more than ten industries. Our data scientists have curated the use cases on Pathfinder to ensure that they are not only relevant but also representative of their industries. DataRobot does not share customer data, personal data, or sensitive use cases on Pathfinder. 

You can benefit from Pathfinder by discovering use cases which your organization may not have considered before. You can filter the use cases based on their business and technical parameters. This includes the ability to filter by industry, problem type (i.e., regression, classification, time series), and value driver, which helps you find use cases that align with high-level business objectives, such as increasing revenue, decreasing costs, and improving customer experience. 

The tabs displaying each use case are designed for you to intuitively explore and identify relevant use cases, which can be sorted based on their popularity, impact, and complexity. While these are broad generalizations that need to be followed up by a deeper analysis of your organization’s unique position, they can give you a quick, high-level overview of which use cases may fit with your organization’s current data science maturity. For instance, organizations only beginning to implement AI should select low-hanging fruits, such as use cases that are high in impact but low in complexity. 

pathfinder 1

Understand Use Cases

Pathfinder’s use cases are currently segmented by Executive Summary and End-to-End. While Executive Summary only offers high-level overviews of a use case, End-to-End provides detailed guides on how a use case can be implemented from both technical and business perspectives. Pathfinder has more than 30 End-to-End use cases, and more are being released on a regular basis. 

With Pathfinder’s End-to-End guides, you can understand how to build models for specific use cases and deploy their predictions into your decision environments. 

On the technical side, Pathfinder helps you frame use cases into data science problems and reveals the features you will need to train your models. The tool also shows step-by-step tutorials on how to interpret and evaluate models using the DataRobot AI platform. 

On the business side, decision environments are the methods by which predictions will ultimately be used for business decision-making. Pathfinder will guide you towards understanding which stakeholders should consume the predictions, how they will consume the predictions, and what actionable decisions they can make to impact real-world business processes. 

pathfinder 2

Share Use Cases 

Once you have explored Pathfinder and identified use cases relevant to your organization, you can shortlist these use cases by bookmarking them. These bookmarks will appear on your personal AI roadmap and be saved for future viewing. You can easily share your roadmap with colleagues, who can then curate your list and select specific use cases to add to their own roadmap. 

pathfinder 3

Find Your Path to AI Success Today 

Pathfinder is available for free to the general public. Whether you are just starting your journey or are years into deploying use cases, Pathfinder will help you uncover new opportunities to expand your AI footprint. We are thrilled to be a small part of your efforts to generate greater value for your organization through automation and optimization. 

Use Case Library
Find your path to AI success with Pathfinder

100+ practical use cases at your fingertips

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Best Unlimited Data Plans: T-Mobile, AT&T, Verizon

All the major US carriers have options that let you stream as much as you want. We've laid out how they work, and which will give you the most bang for your buck.

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BROWN GIRL Jane Partners SheaMoisture For New $250,000 Fund For Black Beauty Brands

Malaika Jones Kebede,

The new conversations centered around racial injustice have caused a revolution in many industries, demanding corporations to diversify everything from their workforce to the products being sold to consumers. This week, Brown Girl Jane, a plant-based beauty and wellness company, announced its new initiative and partnership with SheaMoisture to amplify Black entrepreneurs within the beauty industry.

#BrownGirlSwap is an initiative designed to amplify and support Black-owned independent beauty and wellness brands in the industry. The initial idea started as a pledge to swap out your beauty products with Black-owned companies which developed into a more intensive program. “This year has been such a whirlwind [for us] with so many things happening. [We conceived the idea in] early June at the time as a lot of the social justice movements [with] a new focus [around and economic empowerment],” said Malaika Jones Kebede, CEO of Brown Girl Jane in an interview with BLACK ENTERPRISE.

“My team and I really wanted to start something that was simple and doable but that would potentially have a ripple effect and so we came up with the idea of the brown crosswalk, which really is a simple idea asking consumers to pledge to just swap outside of their everyday beauty and wellness products for those made and by Black women founders and owners.”

The grant will help cover a new entrepreneurship program offering business-to-business mentorship with seasoned executives from SheaMoisture and beauty conglomerate, Unilever in addition to a virtual summit presented by both brands centering around Black beauty creators in September called The Black To Business Summit.

“It’s important for us to create and partner on opportunities and spaces that encourage the growth of women of color in business. Our Community Commerce purpose-driven business model enables us to invest in Black female entrepreneurs around the world. As a brand, we have always invested in the underserved, by providing access to opportunities and resources which help to create lasting value for entrepreneurs and their communities,” said Cara Sabin, CEO of SheaMoisture, in a statement to BLACK ENTERPRISE.

“We were so inspired by BROWN GIRL Jane’s three dynamic founders, and the ability of other Black beauty founders to build dynamic businesses. Our brands connected even further over the shared mission to support and uplift these businesses as we continue SheaMoisture’s long history of meeting Black women’s unique needs in personal care.”

 

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Hey, Tribe! ⁠ ⁠ Supporting black businesses, especially those owned by women of color (WOC), has always been important. Now, even more so. ⁠ ⁠ Recognizing the importance of supporting WOC in the wellness and beauty industry in particular, we invite you to join us in @BrownGirlSwap. ⁠ ⁠ WHAT IS IT? ⁠ ⁠ How many of us buy wellness and beauty products that could easily be swapped for Black-owned WOC brands? Nail polish? Serums? Um, CBD tinctures? Lipstick? Candles?⁠ ⁠ The list goes on and on. The @BrownGirlSwap calls on you to consciously commit to swapping FIVE of your common daily products for a brand that is owned by a WOC. This is an easy, simple way to start and put your (real) dollars behind change.⁠ ⁠ So, Sisters and Allies- join the @BrownGirlSwap and show us just how easy it really is. Tag #BrownGirlSwap in your videos, pictures and posts to encourage your friends to join in.⁠ ⁠ #browngirlswap

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Foodies and Factory Farmers Have Formed an Unholy Alliance

Their swipes at fake-meat products—Impossible Burgers, Beyond Meat, and all the rest—are pretty much the same.

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Al-Shabab militants in shoot-out in Somalia prison

At least 10 people are killed in a heavy exchange of fire at a jail in Somalia, officials say.

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Russia becomes first nation to clear coronavirus vaccine

Scientists are sounding the alarm that the rush to start using the vaccine before Phase 3 trials could backfire.

MOSCOW (AP) — Russia on Tuesday became the first country to clear a coronavirus vaccine and declare it ready for use, despite international skepticism. President Vladimir Putin said that one of his daughters has already been inoculated.

Putin emphasized that the vaccine underwent the necessary tests and has proven efficient, offering a lasting immunity from the coronavirus. However, scientists at home and abroad have been sounding the alarm that the rush to start using the vaccine before Phase 3 trials — which normally last for months and involve thousands of people — could backfire.

Speaking at a government meeting Tuesday, Putin said that the vaccine has undergone proper testing and is safe.

Read More: Dr. Anthony Fauci says a coronavirus vaccine may be coming in 2021

Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a cabinet meeting at the Novo-Ogaryovo residence outside Moscow, Russia, Tuesday, Aug. 11, 2020. (Alexei Nikolsky, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)

“I know it has proven efficient and forms a stable immunity, and I would like to repeat that it has passed all the necessary tests,” he said. “We must be grateful to those who made that first step very important for our country and the entire world.”

The Russian leader added that one of his two adult daughters has received two shots of the vaccine. “She has taken part in the experiment,” Putin said.

Putin said that his daughter had a temperature of 38 degrees Celsius (100.4 Fahrenheit) on the day of the first vaccine injection, and then it dropped to just over 37 degrees (98.6 Fahrenheit) on the following day. After the second shot she again had a slight increase in temperature, but then it was all over.

“She’s feeling well and has high number of antibodies,” Putin added. He didn’t specify which of his two daughters — Maria or Katerina — received the vaccine.

The Health Ministry said in Tuesday’s statement that the vaccine is expected to provide immunity from the coronavirus for up to two years.

Putin emphasized that vaccination will be voluntary,

Russian authorities have said that medical workers, teachers and other risk groups will be the first to be inoculated. Deputy Prime Minister Tatyana Golikova said that the vaccination of doctors could start as early as this month.

Read More: U.S. government gives Moderna Inc $472 million for coronavirus vaccine development

Professor Alexander Gintsburg, head of the Gamaleya Institute that developed the vaccine, said that vaccination will start while the Phase 3 trials continue. He said that initially there will be only enough doses to conduct vaccination in 10-15 of Russia’s 85 regions, according to the Interfax news agency.

Russian officials have said that large-scale production of the vaccine will start in September, and mass vaccination may begin as early as October.

Russia has registered 897,599 coronavirus cases, including 15,131 deaths.

When the pandemic struck Russia, Putin ordered state officials to shorten the time of clinical trials for potential coronavirus vaccines.

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Laboratory to conduct research on the coronavirus (COVID-19) in order to diagnose, test and develop a vaccine. (Photo by Pedro Vilela/Getty Images)

Becoming the first country in the world to develop a vaccine was a matter of national prestige for the Kremlin as it tries to assert the image of Russia as a global power. State television stations and other media have praised scientists working on it and presented the work as the envy of other nations.

Gintsburg raised eyebrows in May when he said that he and other researchers tried the vaccine on themselves.

Human studies started June 17 among 76 volunteers. Half were injected with a vaccine in liquid form and the other half with a vaccine that came as soluble powder. Some in the first half were recruited from the military, which raised concerns that servicemen may have been pressured to participate.

Read More: UK coronavirus vaccine prompts immune response in early test

Amid Russia’s rush to become the first to create a vaccine, the U.S., Britain and Canada last month accused Russia of using hackers to steal vaccine research from Western labs.

As the trials were declared completed, questions arose about the vaccine’s safety and effectiveness. Some experts scoffed at Russian authorities’ assurances that the vaccine drug produced the desired immune response and caused no significant side effects, pointing out that such claims need to be backed by published scientific data.

The World Health Organization said all vaccine candidates should go through full stages of testing before being rolled out. Experts have warned that vaccines that are not properly tested can cause harm in many ways — from a negative impact on health to creating a false sense of security or undermining trust in vaccinations.

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Solve the Covid-19 Testing Crunch, Win $5 Million

For decades, governments and private organizations like Xprize have put up prizes to spur scientific innovation. But how much can contests help in a crisis?

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San Francisco Was Uniquely Prepared for Covid-19

Why did an American city beset by inequality and dysfunction face the onset of the pandemic so well? Because history left it ready for this moment.

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South Africa: Gabola church 'connects with God by drinking alcohol'

South Africa's Gabola church believes in connecting with God by consuming alcohol.

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Monday, August 10, 2020

Coronavirus and South Africa's toxic relationship with alcohol

A ban on drinking highlights a legacy of the country's racist past but threatens it economic future.

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Three restaurants in Istanbul that are redefining a cuisine as old as the city itself

Traditional Turkish food is known around the world, but three restaurants in Istanbul are redefining a cuisine that is as old as the city itself.

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How airplanes counteract St. Elmo’s Fire during thunderstorms

At the height of a thunderstorm, the tips of cell towers, telephone poles, and other tall, electrically conductive structures can spontaneously emit a flash of blue light. This electric glow, known as a corona discharge, is produced when the air surrounding a conductive object is briefly ionized by an electrically charged environment.

For centuries, sailors observed corona discharges at the tips of ship masts during storms at sea. They coined the phenomenon St. Elmo’s fire, after the patron saint of sailors.

Scientists have found that a corona discharge can strengthen in windy conditions, glowing more brightly as the wind further electrifies the air. This wind-induced intensification has been observed mostly in electrically grounded structures, such as trees and towers. Now aerospace engineers at MIT have found that wind has an opposite effect on ungrounded objects, such as airplanes and some wind turbine blades.

In some of the last experiments performed in MIT’s Wright Brothers Wind Tunnel before it was dismantled in 2019, the researchers exposed an electrically ungrounded model of an airplane wing to increasingly strong wind gusts. They found that the stronger the wind, the weaker the corona discharge, and the dimmer the glow that was produced.

The team’s results appear in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres. The study’s lead author is Carmen Guerra-Garcia, an assistant professor of aeronautics and astronautics at MIT. Her co-authors at MIT are Ngoc Cuong Nguyen, a senior research scientist; Theodore Mouratidis, a graduate student; and Manuel Martinez-Sanchez, a post-tenure professor of aeronautics and astronautics.

Electric friction

Within a storm cloud, friction can build up to produce extra electrons, creating an electric field that can reach all the way to the ground. If that field is strong enough, it can break apart surrounding air molecules, turning neutral air into a charged gas, or plasma. This process most often occurs around sharp, conductive objects such as cell towers and wing tips, as these pointed structures tend to concentrate the electric field in a way that electrons are pulled from surrounding air molecules toward the pointed structures, leaving behind a veil of positively charged plasma immediately around the sharp object.

Once a plasma has formed, the molecules within it can begin to glow via the process of corona discharge, where excess electrons in the electric field ping-pong against the molecules, knocking them into excited states. In order to come down from those excited states, the molecules emit a photon of energy, at a wavelength that, for oxygen and nitrogen, corresponds to the characteristic blueish glow of St. Elmo’s fire.

In previous laboratory experiments, scientists found that this glow, and the energy of a corona discharge, can strengthen in the presence of wind. A strong gust can essentially blow away the positively charged ions, that were locally shielding the electric field and reducing its effect — making it easier for electrons to trigger a stronger, brighter glow.

These experiments were mostly carried out with electrically grounded structures, and the MIT team wondered whether wind would have the same strengthening effect on a corona discharge that was produced around a sharp, ungrounded object, such as an airplane wing.

To test this idea, they fabricated a simple wing structure out of wood and wrapped the wing in foil to make it electrically conductive. Rather than try to produce an ambient electric field similar to what would be generated in a thunderstorm, the team studied an alternative configuration in which the corona discharge was  generated in a metal wire running parallel to the length of the wing, and connecting a small high-voltage power source between wire and wing. They fastened the wing to a pedestal made from an insulating material that, because of its nonconductive nature, essentially made the wing itself electrically suspended, or ungrounded.

The team placed the entire setup in MIT’s Wright Brothers Wind Tunnel, and subjected it to increasingly higher velocities of wind, up to 50 meters per second, as they also varied the amount of voltage that they applied to the wire. During these tests, they measured the amount of electrical charge building up in the wing, the current of the corona and also used an ultraviolet-sensitive camera to observe the brightness of the corona discharge on the wire.

Scientists observe the ion “glow” of corona discharge in an electrically ungrounded object (left) compared to a grounded object (right). Courtesy of the researchers

In the end, they found that the strength of the corona discharge and its resulting brightness decreased as the wind increased — a surprising and opposite effect from what scientists have seen for wind acting on grounded structures.

Pulled against the wind

The team developed numerical simulations to try and explain the effect, and found that, for ungrounded structures, the process is largely similar to what happens with grounded objects — but with something extra.

In both cases, the wind is blowing away the positive ions generated by the corona, leaving behind a stronger field in the surrounding air. For ungrounded structures, however, because they are electrically isolated, they become more negatively charged. This results in a weakening of  the positive corona discharge. The amount of negative charge that the wing retains is set by the competing effects of positive ions blown by the wind and those attracted and pulled back as a result of the negative excursion. This secondary effect, the researchers found, acts to weaken the local electric field, as well as the corona discharge’s electric glow.

“The corona discharge is the first stage of lightning in general,” Guerra-Garcia says. “How corona discharge behaves is important and kind of sets the stage for what could happen next in terms of electrification.”

In flight, aircraft such as planes and helicopters inherently produce wind, and a glow corona system like the one tested in the wind tunnel could actually be used to control the electrical charge of the vehicle. Connecting to some prior work by the team, she and her colleagues previously showed that if a plane could be negatively charged, in a controlled fashion, the plane’s risk of being struck by lightning could be reduced. The new results show that charging of an aircraft in flight to negative values can be achieved using a controlled positive corona discharge.

‘’The exciting thing about this study is that, while trying to demonstrate that the electrical charge of an aircraft can be controlled using a corona discharge, we actually discovered that classical theories of corona discharge in wind do not apply for airborne platforms, that are electrically isolated from their environment,” Guerra-Garcia says. “Electrical breakdown occurring in aircraft really presents some unique features that do not allow the direct extrapolation from ground studies.”

This research was funded, in part, by The Boeing Company, through the Strategic Universities for Boeing Research and Technology Program.



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Leslie Odom Jr. says he almost quit ‘Hamilton’ film over pay equity

The actor’s performance as Aaron Burr in the original cast of the Broadway musical earned him a Tony Award.

Leslie Odom Jr. is speaking out about how he almost walked away from the Disney + film adaptation of Lin-Manuel Miranda‘s acclaimed Hamilton due to pay equality. 

Odom Jr.’s performance as Aaron Burr in the original cast of the Broadway musical earned him a Tony Award. But the actor told Dax Shepard on the actor’s Armchair Expert podcast that he was still in negotiations for his salary the day before the film was set to begin shooting. He was not prepared to set foot on set unless producers came correct with the bag, Yahoo! News reports. 

“They came to me with an offer, ‘Leslie, we’re shooting tomorrow,’” he said. “And I’m like, here’s the thing: This is it. This is my area of expertise. This is all I have. This is my life’s work on the stage too. And so I just can’t sell it away for magic beans. I can’t give it away.”

Read More: Disney+ makes Hamilton accessible to all

2016 Tony Awards - Show
(Photo by Theo Wargo/Getty Images for Tony Awards Productions)

Odom says he wanted to be paid the same as his white colleagues in the same position.

“So I can ask CAA [Creative Artists Agency], what does my white counterpart, what does Aaron Tveit make to do Grease Live! on TV? What does he make to do Grease? This is Hamilton live, right?” he said. “So when I found out what he made, Dax, I didn’t ask for a penny more. I didn’t ask for one penny more, but I said, ‘You must pay me exactly what that white boy got to do Grease Live! That’s the bottom line.’”

Read More: Colin Kaepernick signs first-look deal with Disney

He continued: “The day before we shot that movie I called out. I was not kidding. I was not coming to work the next day to do the movie. You know, I was not kidding. It was a principle for me and sometimes it doesn’t work out. Sometimes they look at you and go, ‘We’re just not paying it,’ and you have to go, ‘That’s OK.’”

Odom hopes more Black performers and content creators take a stand and demand their worth in Hollywood. 

“I love my white liberal friends, love white people, but, you know, don’t be in the streets talking about Black Lives Matter if my Black life doesn’t matter,” he said. “Like, essentially, don’t wait for the f***ing cops to kill me before my Black life matters. If my Black life matters, make sure I can take money home to feed my children.”

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Trump rushed out of briefing room after shooting outside the White House

The president confirmed the shooting to reporters and praised the Secret Service for their swift response.

President Donald Trump had to be evacuated from a press briefing on Monday evening due to a shooting outside the White House.

Once he returned to the briefing room minutes later, Trump confirmed the shooting and praised the Secret Service for having his back.

“There was a shooting outside of the White House and it seems to be very well under control. I’d like to thank the Secret Service for doing their always quick and very effective work,” he told reporters, according to NBC

READ MORE: Trump reportedly reached out about adding his face to Mount Rushmore

President Trump Holds A Press Briefing At The White House
WASHINGTON, DC – AUGUST 10: A U.S. Secret Service officer stands watch outside of the James Brady Press Briefing Room after shots were reported near the White House August 10, 2020 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

“It was the suspect that was shot,” Trump added, noting that no one else was injured.

A senior administration official also confirmed the shooting happened close to Lafayette Square. The man at the center of the incident is now in custody.

Once Trump returned to the podium to resume the briefing, the Secret Service also tweeted: “The Secret Service can confirm there has been an officer involved shooting at 17th Street and Pennsylvania Ave. Law enforcement officials are on the scene.”

A follow-up post said, “the investigation into a USSS officer involved shooting is ongoing. A male subject and a USSS officer were both transported to a local hospital. At no time during this incident was the White House complex breached or were any protectees in danger.”

When Trump returned to the briefing room, he shared that he had been taken to the Oval Office. 

“I feel very safe with the Secret Service. They’re fantastic people. They’re the best of the best. They’re highly trained,” Trump told reporters. “They just wanted me to step aside for a little while just to make sure that everything was clear outside.”

He added, “I don’t think the person breached anything,” he said. “I don’t believe anything was breached. I asked that question.”

There are conflicting reports about whether the suspect was armed or not, but officials said the man was shot in the chest by a Secret Service officer. 

The man was reportedly unconscious when he was taken to George Washington University Hospital. 

The briefing room was placed on lockdown immediately after the president was swiftly ushered out, according to reports.

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The White House Announces a Plan to Speed the Rollout of 5G

The Pentagon will share part of the wireless spectrum, allowing telecom carriers to reach more areas with fewer cell towers.

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Focus on Africa: A tale of Africa’s 60-year history

A look at the key historical events In Africa since the launch of BBC’s Focus on Africa radio programme in 1960.

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This Marco’s Pizza Franchise Owner Grows Her Pandemic-proof Business

Pizza franchise

While COVID-19 has ravaged some sectors of the U.S. economy, the pizza industry has experienced unexpected growth. Major pizza franchise brands are announcing they’ve hired tens of thousands of people, and plan to continue. Stephanie Moseley, franchise owner of Marco’s Pizza, took advantage of this opportunity and opened a second location during the coronavirus pandemic.

Moseley, a seven-year veteran of the Air Force, was working as an intelligence analyst with top-secret clearance, running a division that oversaw the highest—and fastest-flying—aircraft ever built. In 2016, she tasted her first Marco’s Pizza and knew right then she wanted “a piece of the pie.” In November 2018, she opened her first location in Newport News, Virginia. In May of this year, she opened her second location in nearby Suffolk.

Stephanie Moseley – Retired US Air Force Veteran

What was your experience like when you opened your first Marco’s Pizza franchise?

Rough! I had the wrong leadership, and I took too long to recognize that and take action. Finally, I came to the realization that if I wanted to succeed and become a multi-unit owner, the structure I had in place would not get me there. To find the right person to fill the key role of general manager, I verbally advertised, and I hired a staffing agency so they could help me identify someone with a wealth of experience and who could understand my vision for growth. In October 2019, I hired Jason Gorman and have never looked back. Almost immediately, I saw an increase in sales. Jason understood operations and people. He focused on the team members that were engaged, and let the others go. He decreased service times for pizza delivery from an unacceptable one hour, to the industry standard of 30 minutes.

We went from poor sales to break-even, and up and up. We recently reached our weekly high sales record and sales are up 150% over last year. Some of the leadership at Marco’s headquarters said they had never seen a turnaround like that so quickly.

My key takeaways from that experience were that right leadership structure matters, and although operations and marketing are equally important, no matter how much marketing you do, you can’t keep and grow customers if your operations are failing.

Wow, that’s quite a start. How did you push through that, when so many people would have given up?

I grew up in the 1960s in the South and was taught that I always had to go out and be self-assured and confident. My parents told me that if I was ever facing adversity channel this: “You’re a Moseley—you can do anything.” I also spent a lot of time reciting the Prayer of Jabez, “Oh, that you would bless me and enlarge my territory! Let your hand be with me and keep me from harm so that I will be free from pain.”

Both of those helped me tremendously. But also, I couldn’t stand the thought of selling my business, pennies on the dollar, to someone else when I knew all I was missing was a strong right hand, and then watching it thrive under them and all they did was hire a strong general manager.

Lastly, I had a tremendous support system around me. My Franchise Business Leader and Regional Director of Operations, Jennifer Serra, and Angie Lara, really embraced my determination to succeed with the brand and supported me tremendously. Also, the veteran community in this area is strong. As a veteran, I received a lot of support and I’ve been able to return that support by being the sole sponsor of a local contest called “Military Hero of the Week.” We’ve also been able to donate free pizzas to first responders and hospital employees during the COVID-19 pandemic.

When you were approached by corporate to purchase an existing second location nearby, what was your decision process on saying yes, and how is it performing now?

That was an easy decision, but it was frightening because we are in the middle of a pandemic. As restaurants started closing around me, I didn’t know what to expect. But once we saw our sales climbing, I

knew that we had the right business model at the right time, and I needed to seize on that. I knew that Marco’s would do well in both a good and bad economy and I am honored to be able to safely provide a high-quality product to families as they navigate their new normal.

The second store had a good general manager in place, so I appreciated that. We made some changes using some of our lessons learned at the Newport News location, and in May we started seeing revenues in Suffolk, which started at a pretty low weekly range, move up to more than break even and now we have consistently doubled sales in just two short months, and are up 134% over last year!

With growth like that, what’s next?

I’m currently in negotiations for multi units: five or six more over the next three years. I have promoted Jason to director of operations over both locations, and his wife, Sarah, is my marketing executive responsible for both locations. I anticipate opening our Yorktown store by the end of the year.

It gives me great pride to be able to take young people and watch them grow and fulfill their dreams. I’m helping them reach their goals as they help me reach mine.

I want to eventually grow to 10 locations, providing my employees with growth opportunities to become assistant general managers and general managers as we build a team of strong leaders.

Please share some advice you have for our readers that has helped you be a successful business owner.

  • Humble yourself and ask for help
  • Be agile
  • Eliminate failure as an option
  • Go with your gut!


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