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Monday, October 26, 2020

Fox News president, anchors quarantine after virus exposure: report

A group of Fox News staff were advised to quarantine after traveling on the same aircraft as someone who later tested positive for COVID-19.

After a flight from New York from Nashville, a group of Fox News employees was told to quarantine after one passenger subsequently tested positive for COVID-19.

Read More: Trump coughs as he tells Fox News he’s healthy, ready for rallies

The New York Times reported the people exposed included Jay Wallace, the president of Fox News Media, Bret Baier, the chief political anchor, Martha MacCallum, the anchor of Fox’s The Story and Dana Perino and Juan Williams, two hosts of The Five. A Fox representative did not confirm any details, citing the need to keep private health information confidential, according to the Times.

Everyone on the flight was told to get tested for the coronavirus as well as quarantine. The NYT reported it is not clear if more than one person was infected with the virus. According to the report, the anchors who were impacted by the threat of coronavirus are expected to hist their shows remotely. The report found that Fox was one of the first to resume in-studio programming and production despite the COVID-19 pandemic.

According to the report, Fox News staff have taken precautionary steps such as wearing masks and social distancing despite not always reporting the severity of the virus. The Times reported that Fox staff members on the ground in Nashville were regularly tested by both the network and the Commission on Presidential Debates.

As theGrio reported, a woman died on a plane due to COVID-19. In July, the passenger, in her 30’s, experienced shortness of breath while waiting to travel from Arizona to Texas. She was given oxygen but died on the plane. It is unclear whether the woman, who had underlying conditions, was aware of her coronavirus status before she boarded the plane.

Positive cases of coronavirus are growing in the United States as more states report deaths are rising again. According to theGrio, confirmed infections per day are rising in 47 states, and deaths are up in 34.

Presidential advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci recommended a nationwide mask mandate to prevent a winter surge.

“Mask mandates might be tricky to enforce, but it might be time to call for them,” he said, according to theGrio.

Read More: Giuliani, awaiting COVID-19 results, coughs while slamming Biden on Fox News

“There’s going to be a difficulty enforcing it, but if everyone agrees that this is something that’s important and they mandate it and everyone pulls together and says, you know, we’re going to mandate it, but let’s just do it, I think that would be a great idea to have everybody do it uniformly.”

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The post Fox News president, anchors quarantine after virus exposure: report appeared first on TheGrio.



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Pandemic Quiet Is Helping Humans Eavesdrop on Rare Dolphins

Researchers are hoping to use the opportunity to get a better handle on the language of Australia's endangered Burrunan dolphins.

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Booker Prize: Ethiopian writer Maaza Mengiste on The Shadow King

Ethiopian writer Maaza Mengiste has been shortlisted for the Booker Prize for her book, The Shadow King.

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These Twin Sisters Graduated At The Top Of Their Doctoral Program

Obtaining a degree from an accredited college or university is no easy feat. Two twin sisters were always able to excel in their education together, now they are celebrating another milestone together—graduating at the top of their class in their doctoral program.

LaTonya and LaToya Harris made news back in 2010 when they graduated from high school as the top two students in their graduating class as reported by the Dallas Morning News. After high school, the Texas-born twins went on to earn their bachelor’s and master’s in sports management from UT Austin before continuing on to obtain their second master’s degree in clinical nutrition and their doctorate degrees in chiropractic medicine at Parker University in Dallas.

The sisters recall naturally wanting to accomplish their goals together growing up as they both cheered on the other to excel in their academic pursuits. “We don’t recall a time when we haven’t liked the same things. Our parents always left the decision up to us. They always wanted us to do what we wanted, and they never forced us to do anything the same. We both agree that we wouldn’t change anything about our journey because we understand that God planned it to happen exactly as it has, even if we didn’t,” the twins said in an interview with Because Of Them We Can.

“Your best friend gets to come to work with you every day. We are more efficient because we already know what each other is thinking,” the Harris sisters said to Because Of Them We Can. “We can just look at each other and know what needs to be said or done next. We make one another so much better.”

The sisters went on to say that their ultimate goal is to open their own clinic and create a scholarship for people of color pursuing careers in the medical field. “We feel we work much better together than apart,” the sisters added to Because Of Them We Can.

“We would love to have established our own practice in addition to a scholarship fund and mentorship program for minority doctors…We desperately want to help change the narrative of healthcare.”

 

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✊🏾✊🏿✊🏽—Being #BlackAndExcellent runs in this family! In 2010, these Texas twins graduated high school as valedictorian and salutatorian and they’re set to do it again! They’ll be graduating this December with their second master’s in #ClinicalNutritian and their doctorate degrees in chiropractic medicine, nabbing the valedictorian and salutatorian honors for the second time..🙌🏽. — LaTonya and #LaToyaHarris are remarkable to say the least. They went to the same college, shared a dorm room, and got their bachelor’s and master’s in sports management from #UTAustin, and continued to #ParkerUniversity together. — Their mother, #GailHarris, took to social media to share how proud she and her husband are of their daughters, saying, “We are honored to be their parents.” — ☕..sip slow, stay ‘In the Know’ and follow @InTheKnowRadio for more #BlackNews.

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Google's Lower-Cost Pixel Gets a 5G Upgrade. Here's Our Take

The company's two Pixel 4A options are the top Android phones to buy if you don't want to splurge.

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How to Carve a Pumpkin—From a Pro Sculptor

We asked a master sculptor and puppeteer how to make a scary-good jack-o-lantern.

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My Twitter Addiction Got So Bad, I Had to Block Myself

But wait—does that mean I'm addicted to the blocking software?

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Climate change: 'Dangerous and dirty' used cars sold to Africa

Millions of polluting and unsafe used cars from rich nations are exported to Africa and Asia.

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National Urban League Teams With Pepsi to Launch Black Restaurant Accelerator Program

Pepsi has announced that The National Urban League is launching the Black Restaurant Accelerator Program which is expected to boost approximately 500 Black-owned businesses over the next five years.

The PepsiCo Foundation is providing a $10 million grant to fund the program. The money will provide current and aspiring Black restaurateurs with access to the necessary capital, training, mentorship, and other services that are needed to run a successful business.

“This is a game-changing program that will provide Black restaurateurs with access to business-building resources tailored to meet their specific needs,” said Marc H. Morial, president and CEO of the National Urban League, in a written statement.

“Our understanding of the local business environment and community paired with subject matter expertise from PepsiCo team members will give business owners a leg up as they look to grow.”

Through National Urban League Entrepreneurship Centers in 12 different cities spread across the United States, the Black Restaurant Accelerator Program will help Black entrepreneurs gain access to loans and capital that are not typically available due to biased community perceptions and gentrification challenges.

“This is a key component of the broader investments we’re making to bolster Black-owned restaurants and small businesses, which has never been more critical,” said Jon Banner, executive vice president of PepsiCo Global Communications and president of PepsiCo Foundation.

“We’re honored to build on the important work the National Urban League is doing to diminish the barriers that limit possibilities for Black-owned foodservice businesses and create economic mobility that propels individuals and communities.”

Starting in the first quarter of 2021, the National Urban League will start accepting applications for the Black Restaurant Accelerator Program. Black restaurateurs who are interested in receiving updates for the program can go follow this link. You can learn more about Urban League Entrepreneurship Centers and other workforce development programs by visiting NUL.org.



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THE MIDNIGHT SKY starring George Clooney | Date Announcement | Netflix
Is anyone out there?


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Mark Kelly’s Been To Space. Can He Make it to Capitol Hill?

Mark Kelly isn’t the first former NASA astronaut to run for office, but if he’s elected he’ll be the only one to make it to Congress on his first shot.

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An Algorithm Blocked Kidney Transplants to Black Patients

A formula for assessing the gravity of kidney disease is one of many that is adjusted for race. The practice can exacerbate health disparities.

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Tyler Jacks, founding director of MIT’s Koch Institute, to step down

The Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT, a National Cancer Institute (NCI)-designated cancer center, has announced that Tyler Jacks will step down from his role as director, pending selection of his successor.

“An exceptionally creative scientist and a leader of great vision, Tyler also has a rare gift for launching and managing large, complex organizations, attracting exceptional talent and inspiring philanthropic support,” says MIT President L. Rafael Reif. “We are profoundly grateful for all the ways he has served MIT, including most recently his leadership on the Research Ramp Up Lightning Committee, which made it possible for MIT's research enterprise to resume in safe ways after the initial Covid shutdown. I offer warmest admiration and best wishes as Tyler steps down from leading the Koch and returns full time to the excitement of the lab.”

Jacks, the David H. Koch Professor of Biology, has served as director for more than 19 years, first for the MIT Center for Cancer Research (CCR) and then for its successor, the Koch Institute. The CCR was founded by Nobel laureate Salvador Luria in 1974, shortly after the federal government declared “war on cancer,” with the mission of unravelling the molecular core of cancer. Jacks became the center’s fourth director in 2001, following Luria, Nobel laureate and Institute Professor Phillip Sharp, and Daniel K. Ludwig Professor for Cancer Research Richard Hynes.

Aided by the championship of then-MIT President Susan Hockfield and a gift of $100 million from MIT alumnus David H. Koch ’62, SM ’63, Jacks oversaw the evolution of the Center for Cancer Research into the Koch Institute in 2007 as well as the construction of a new home in Building 76, completed in 2010. The Koch Institute expands the mission of its predecessor by bringing life scientists and engineers together to advance understanding of the basic biology of cancer, and to develop new tools to better diagnose, monitor, and treat the disease.

Under the direction of Jacks, the institute has become an engine of collaborative cancer research at MIT. “Tyler’s vision and execution of a convergent cancer research program has propelled the Koch Institute to the forefront of discovery,” notes Maria Zuber, MIT’s vice president for research.

Bolstered by the Koch Institute’s associate directors Jacqueline Lees, Matthew Vander Heiden, Darrell Irvine, and Dane Wittrup, Jacks oversaw four successful renewals of the coveted NCI-designated cancer center stature, with the last two renewals garnering perfect scores. In 2015, Jacks was the recipient of the James R. Killian Jr. Faculty Achievement Award, the highest honor the MIT faculty can bestow upon one of its members, for his leadership in cancer research and for his role in establishing the Koch Institute.

“Tyler Jacks turned the compelling idea to accelerate progress against cancer by bringing together fundamental biology, engineering know-how, and clinical expertise, into the intensively collaborative environment that is now the Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research,” says Hockfield. “His extraordinary leadership has amplified the original idea into a paradigm-changing approach to cancer, which now serves as a model for research centers around the world.”

To support cross-disciplinary research in high-impact areas and expedite translation from the bench to the clinic, Jacks and his colleagues shepherded the creation of numerous centers and programs, among them the Ludwig Center for Molecular Oncology, the Marble Center for Cancer Nanomedicine, the MIT Center for Precision Cancer Medicine, the Swanson Biotechnology Center, the Lustgarten Lab for Pancreatic Cancer Research, and the MIT Stem Cell Initiative. In addition, Jacks has co-led the Bridge Project, a collaboration between the Koch Institute and Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center that brings bioengineers, cancer scientists, and clinical oncologists together to solve some of the most challenging problems in cancer research. Jacks has raised nearly $375 million in support of these efforts, as well as the building of the Koch Institute facility, the Koch Institute Frontier Research Program, and other activities.

Jacks first became interested in cancer as a Harvard University undergraduate while attending a lecture by Robert Weinberg, the Daniel K. Ludwig Professor of Cancer Research and member of the Whitehead Institute, who is himself a pioneer in cancer genetics. After earning his PhD at the University of California at San Francisco under the direction of Nobel laureate Harold Varmus, Jacks joined Weinberg’s lab as a postdoctoral fellow. He joined the MIT faculty in 1992 with appointments in the Center for Cancer Research and the Department of Biology.

Jacks is widely considered a leader in the development of engineered mouse models of human cancers, and has pioneered the use of gene-targeting technology to construct mouse models and to study cancer-associated genes in mice. Strains of mice developed in his lab are used by researchers around the world, as well as by neighboring labs within the Koch Institute. Because these models closely resemble human forms of the disease, they have allowed researchers to track how tumors progress and to test new ways to detect and treat cancer. In more recent research, Jacks has been using mouse models to investigate how immune and tumor cells interact during cancer development and how tumors successfully evade immune recognition. This research is expected to lead to new immune-based therapies for human cancer.

Outside his research and MIT leadership, Jacks co-chaired the Blue Ribbon Panel for the National Cancer Moonshot Initiative, chaired the National Cancer Advisory Board of the National Cancer Institute, and is a past president of the American Association for Cancer Research. He is an elected member of the National Academy of Science, the National Academy of Medicine and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Jacks serves on the Board of Directors of Amgen and Thermo Fisher Scientific. He is also a co-founder of T2 Biosystems and Dragonfly Therapeutics, serves as an advisor to several other companies, and is a member of the Harvard Board of Overseers.

Sharp will lead the search for the next director of the Koch Institute, with guidance from noted leaders in MIT’s cancer research community, including Hockfield and Hynes, as well as Angela M. Belcher, head of the Department of Biological Engineering and Jason Mason Crafts Professor; Paula T. Hammond, head of the Department of Chemical Engineering and David H. Koch Professor of Engineering; Amy Keating, professor of biology; Robert S. Langer, David H. Koch Institute Professor; and David M. Sabatini, Professor of Biology and member, Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research.

“Jacks is a renowned scientist whose personal research has changed the prevention and treatment of cancer,” says Sharp. “His contributions to the creation of the Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research and his leadership as its inaugural director have also transformed cancer research at MIT and nationally. By integrating engineers and cancer biologists into a community that shares knowledge and skills, and collaborates with clinical scientists and the private sector, this convergent institute represents the future of biological research in the MIT style.”

After Jacks steps down, he will continue his research in the areas of cancer genetics and immune-oncology and his teaching, while also stewarding the Bridge Project into its second decade.

“It has been a privilege for me to serve as director of the MIT Center for Cancer Research and the Koch Institute for the past two decades and to work alongside many of the brightest minds in cancer research,” says Jacks. “The Koch Institute is a powerhouse of research and innovation, and I look forward to the next generation of leadership in this very special place.”



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Discover the Right Social Media Platforms for Your Business With This $30 Bundle

Technology has made it easier than ever to launch your own business. However, the digital world also presents business owners with a number of challenges. For one, online businesses need to use social media in order to gain brand recognition. It’s not as simple as creating a Facebook page and calling it a day, either.

You need to learn the fundamentals of digital marketing and social media in order for your business to thrive. However, choosing the right platforms for your business is important. For example, if your company offers B2B services, you definitely won’t be hitting the mark with a TikTok account. Luckily, the 2020 Social Media Marketing Bootcamp Certification Bundle contains all of the knowledge you need to create a winning social media strategy that attracts customers to your brand. This bundle normally costs $2,093, but you can purchase it today for $29.99, or 98% off.

The 2020 Social Media Marketing Bootcamp Certification Bundle features seven courses on how to effectively use the most popular social media platforms available to businesses. The first course you should tackle is the Social Media Strategy course. It illustrates why social media is important for online business. Also, it helps you determine which platform to use based on your target audience. And ultimately helps you create a social media strategy to reach your marketing goals.

Once you have a solid foundation for social media, you can choose the right platform for your business. The Facebook Marketing and Facebook Advertising courses are great introductions to Facebook that will teach you how to create and optimize your Page while creating engaging ad campaigns. The LinkedIn Marketing course offers similar insights with specific tips on how to grow your network and maximize your reach.

Most online businesses use social media to reach their audience, but most aren’t using them effectively. If you want to create a social media strategy that attracts and engages the right audience, you need to learn how to use the right platforms, and the 2020 Social Media Marketing Bootcamp Certification Bundle can teach you how for just $29.99.

 


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'Nigerian' stowaways held after tanker stormed in UK

Seven stowaways, believed to be Nigerians seeking asylum, were handed over to Hampshire Police.

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Egypt sex attacks fuel 'feminist revolution'

Women and girls are fighting back against sexual harassment like never before.

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Confederation Cup: Moroccans RS Berkane win first African title

Morocco's RS Berkane win the Confederation Cup as they beat Egyptians Pyramids 1-0 in a hard-fought contest in Rabat.

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Is anyone out there?


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Sunday, October 25, 2020

Silencing gene expression to cure complex diseases

Many people think of new medicines as bullets, and in the pharmaceutical industry, frequently used terms like “targets” and “hits” reinforce that idea. Immuneering co-founder and CEO Ben Zeskind ’03, PhD ’06 prefers a different analogy.

His company, which specializes in bioinformatics and computational biology, sees many effective drugs more like noise-canceling headphones.

Rather than focusing on the DNA and proteins involved in a disease, Immuneering focuses on disease-associated gene signaling and expression data. The company is trying to cancel out those signals like a pair of headphones blocks out unwanted background noise.

The approach is guided by Immuneering’s decade-plus of experience helping large pharmaceutical companies understand the biological mechanisms behind some of their most successful medicines.

“We started noticing some common patterns in terms of how these very successful drugs were working, and eventually we realized we could use these insights to create a platform that would let us identify new medicine,” Zeskind says. “[The idea is] to not just make existing medicines work better but also to create entirely new medicines that work better than anything that has come before.”

In keeping with that idea, Immuneering is currently developing a bold pipeline of drugs aimed at some of the most deadly forms of cancer, in addition to other complex diseases that have proven difficult to treat, like Alzheimer’s. The company’s lead drug candidate, which targets a protein signaling pathway associated with many human cancers, will begin clinical trials within the year.

It’s the first of what Immuneering hopes will be a number of clinical trials enabled by what the company calls its “disease-canceling technology,” which analyzes the gene expression data of diseases and uses computational models to identify small-molecule compounds likely to bind to disease pathways and silence them.

“Our most advanced candidates go after the RAS-RAF-MEK [protein] pathway,” Zeskind explains. “This is a pathway that’s activated in about half of all human cancers. This pathway is incredibly important in a number of the most serious cancers: pancreatic, colorectal, melanoma, lung cancer — a lot of the cancers that have proven tougher to go after. We believe this is one of the largest unsolved problems in human cancer.”

A good foundation

As an undergraduate, Zeskind participated in the MIT $100K Entrepreneurship Competition (the $50K back then) and helped organize some of the MIT Enterprise Forum’s events around entrepreneurship.

“MIT has a unique culture around entrepreneurship,” Zeskind says. “There aren’t many organizations that encourage it and celebrate it the way MIT does. Also, the philosophy of the biological engineering department, of taking problems in biology and analyzing them quantitatively and systematically using principles of engineering, that philosophy really drives our company today.”

Although his PhD didn’t focus on bioinformatics, Zeskind’s coursework did involve some computational analysis and offered a primer on oncology. One course in particular, taught by Doug Lauffenburger, the Ford Professor of Biological Engineering, Chemical Engineering, and Biology, resonated with him. The class tasked students with uncovering some of the mechanisms of the interleukin-2 (IL-2) protein, a molecule found in the immune system that’s known to severely limit tumor growth in a small percentage of people with certain cancers.

After Zeskind earned his MBA at Harvard Business School in 2008, he returned to MIT’s campus to talk to Lauffenburger about his idea for a company that would decipher the reasons for IL-2’s success in certain patients. Lauffenburger would go on to join Immuneering’s advisory board.

Of course, due to the financial crisis of 2007-08, that proved to be difficult timing for launching a startup. Without easy access to capital, Zeskind approached pharmaceutical companies to show them some of the insights his team had gained on IL-2. The companies weren’t interested in IL-2, but they were intrigued by Immuneering’s process for uncovering the way it worked.

“At first we thought, ‘We just spent a year figuring out IL-2 and now we have to start from scratch,’” Zeskind recalls. “But then we realized it would be easier the second time around, and that was a real turning point because we realized the company wasn’t about that specific medicine, it was about using data to figure out mechanism.”

In one of the company’s first projects, Immuneering uncovered some of the mechanisms behind an early cancer immunotherapy developed by Bristol-Myers Squibb. In another, they studied the workings of Teva Pharmaceuticals’ drug for multiple sclerosis.

As Immuneering continued working on successful drugs, they began to notice some counterintuitive patterns.

“A lot of the conventional wisdom is to focus on DNA,” Zeskind says. “But what we saw over and over across many different projects was that transcriptomics, or which genes are turned on when — something you measure through RNA levels — was the thing that was most frequently informative about how a drug was working. That ran counter to conventional wisdom.”

In 2018, as Immuneering continued helping companies appreciate that idea in drugs that were already working, it decided to start developing medicines designed from the start to go after disease signals.

Today the company has drug pipelines focused around oncology, immune-oncology, and neuroscience. Zeskind says its disease-canceling technology allows Immuneering to launch new drug programs about twice as fast and with about half the capital as other drug development programs.

“As long as we have a good gene-expression signature from human patient data for a particular disease, we’ll find targets and biological insights that let us go after them in new ways,” he says. “It’s a systematic, quantitative, efficient way to get those biological insights compared to a more traditional process, which involves a lot of trial and error.”

An inspired path

Even as Immuneering advances its drug pipelines, its bioinformatics services business continues to grow. Zeskind attributes that success to the company’s employees, about half of which are MIT alumni — the continuation of trend that began in the early days of the company, when Immuneering was mostly made up of recent MIT PhD graduates and postdocs.

“We were sort of the Navy Seals of bioinformatics, if you will,” Zeskind says. “We’d come in with a small but incredibly well-trained team that knew how to make the most of the data they had available.”

In fact, it’s not lost on Zeskind that his analogy of drugs as noise-canceling headphones has a distinctively MIT spin: He was inspired by longtime MIT professor and Bose Corporation founder Amar Bose.

And Zeskind’s attraction to MIT came long before he ever stepped foot on campus. Growing up, his father, Dale Zeskind ’76, SM ’76, encouraged Ben and his sister Julie ’01, SM ’02 to attend MIT.

Unfortunately, Dale passed away recently after a battle with cancer. But his influence, which included helping to spark a passion for entrepreneurship in his son, is still being felt. Other members of Immuneering’s small team have also lost parents to cancer, adding a personal touch to the work they do every day.

“Especially in the early days, people were taking more risk [joining us over] a large pharma company, but they were having a bigger impact,” Zeskind says. “It’s all about the work: looking at these successful drugs and figuring out why they’re better and seeing if we can improve them.”

Indeed, even as Immuneering’s business model has evolved over the last 12 years, the company has never wavered in its larger mission.

“There’s been a ton of great progress in medicine, but when someone gets a cancer diagnosis, it’s still, more likely than not, very bad news,” Zeskind says. “It’s a real unsolved problem. So by taking a counterintuitive approach and using data, we’re really focused on bringing forward medicines that can have the kind of durable responses that inspired us all those years ago with IL-2. We’re really excited about the impact the medicines we’re developing are going to have.”



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50 Cent said ‘Fu*k Donald Trump’ after recent support

50 Cent circled back after ex-girlfriend Chelsea Handler called him out

50 Cent said “Fu*k” President Donald Trump in response to his former girlfriend, comedian Chelsea Handler’s public chiding. Handler also jokingly alluding to rekindling their relationship if he were to denounce Trump.

On Sunday, 50, whose real name is Curtis Jackson, posted on Twitter and Instagram, a video of an interview between “The Tonight Show” host Jimmy Fallon and Handler, The Hill reported.

Read More: 50 Cent says ‘vote for Trump,’ slams Biden’s plan to tax the rich

“Fu*k Donald Trump, I never liked him. for all I know he had me set up and had my friend Angel Fernandez killed but that’s history. LOL,” 50 Cent tweeted.

In the interview, Handler noted that Jackson was her “favorite ex-boyfriend,” saying she was disappointed by his “endorsement.”

“He doesn’t want to pay 62 percent of taxes because he doesn’t want to go from 50 Cent to 20 Cent,” said Handler. “I had to remind him that he was a Black person, so he can’t vote for Donald Trump, and that he shouldn’t be influencing an entire swath of people who may listen to him because he’s worried about his own personal pocketbook.”

The “endorsement” stemmed from 50 Cent’s reaction to a screenshot of Democratic-nominee Joe Biden’s supposed tax plan.

As theGrio previously reported, 50 Cent shared a screenshot of CNBC infographic, taken out of context, highlighting that Biden’s plan would increase state and federal tax rate for top earners.

Read More: 50 Cent doubles down on Trump endorsement: ‘Don’t want to be 20 Cent’

50, alongside rappers Ice Cube and Kanye West, has received backlash from Black social media groups for assoicating himself with the Trump administration.

Regardless, White House officials like Trump’s senior campaign advisor, Katrina Pierson, are elated by the rapper’s “endorsement.”

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Tanzania elections: Why pop stars are hailing President Magufuli

Hugely popular "bongo flava" musicians are kept on a tight leash when it comes to politics.

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Trump says GOP retaining Senate will be ‘very tough’

Republicans in Senate are in danger of losing the majority

President Donald Trump admitted that it will be “very tough” for Republicans to retain the Senate in the upcoming election while in a private donor fundraiser.

“I think the Senate is tough actually. The Senate is very tough,” Trump said on Thursday at the Nashville Marriott, according to the Washington Post.

Read More: McConnell’s challenger: ‘You’ve been there for 36 years. How’s it looking, Kentucky?

“There are a couple senators I can’t really get involved in. I just can’t do it. You lose your soul if you do. I can’t help some of them. I don’t want to help some of them,” the president continued.

The attendee who attributed the president’s words is under anonymity as the event, held before the last presidential debate between Trump and Democratic-nominee Joe Biden, was a closed-door gathering.

Despite Trump anticipating some Democratic Senatorial candidates having the upper hand, he is adamant that Republicans can take back control of the House.

Senate election strategists say the Republican party has doubts about retaining the Senate and gaining in Congress, because of the president’s “unscripted, divisive rhetoric and his low poll numbers in key states,” WAPO reported.

Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), the highest ranked member in the upper chamber, is anticipating his own replacement, saying in a recent radio interview that he has a “50-50” chance of losing to Amy McGrath, a former Marine fighter pilot and Democratic politician.

Read More: Lindsey Graham calls for investigation into Jaime Harrison’s fundraising

As theGrio previously reported, newcomer Jaime Harrison is raising more money than Sen.Lindsey Graham, a matter that Graham wants investigated.

Senator Susan Collins of Maine has the potential of losing to Speaker of the Maine House of Representatives, Sara Gideon, according to Bangor Daily News.

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Health agency halts Santa Claus coronavirus vaccine plan

The Trump administration’s vaccine effort has been criticized over what is viewed as political interference

According to a report in the Wall Street Journal, the Department of Health and Human Services cancelled a coronavirus vaccine advertising plan that would have provided Santa Claus performers, including Mrs. Claus and performing elves, with early access to a COVID-19 vaccine in exchange for touting its benefits to the public.

“This was our greatest hope for Christmas 2020, and now it looks like it won’t happen,” Ric Erwin, chairman of the Fraternal Order of Real Bearded Santas, told the Journal.

Read More: COVID-19 vaccine trial paused after participant gets ‘unexplained illness’

White House spokesman Brian Morgenstern told the Journal that President Trump was never informed about the plan to use Santa performers to promote the vaccine.

Dubbed as “Operation Warp Speed,” the Trump administration’s vaccine effort has been criticized over what is viewed as political interference in an important scientific process. With the president repeatedly promising the approval of the vaccine by Nov. 3, he has been accused of trying to use the vaccine for his own political gain.

The plan would have cost taxpayers $250 million and was intended to “defeat despair” and “inspire hope” through TV, radio, online and podcast ads.

First suggested by HHS assistant secretary, Michael Caputo (who is now on medical leave), the public service ad campaign has been criticized by Democrats for being “politically motivated rather than being purely intended to promote public health,” the Journal said.

Expressing skepticism about the safety and effectiveness of the proposed vaccine, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he will create an independent task force to review vaccine candidates before distributing any vaccine to New Yorkers.

Read More: Cuomo may withhold COVID-19 vaccine from New York

As coronavirus cases spike throughout the country, there is no indication that a vaccine will be ready for widespread distribution before the end of the year. In the absence of an effective vaccine, and to prevent further spread of the virus, Dr. Anthony Fauci suggested last week that a national mask mandate might be necessary.

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Pregnant women of color more likely to get COVID

The CDC has released information showing that Black and Hispanic women are at a higher risk

Pregnant women of color are more likely to get infected with COVID-19 and face hospitalization.

The Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has released information showing that Black and Hispanic women are at a higher risk of getting the coronavirus than white women while they’re pregnant.

Read More: Kelly Rowland announces she’s pregnant with second child

In Magic Valley, Idaho, a doctor from St. Luke’s said this inequity has been happening nationwide, KSAW, an ABC News affiliated television station serving Boise, Idaho, reported.

“It’s probably very consistent with what we see nationally. Women of color in Idaho, maybe not many of the African Americans, but we probably see the Latino population twice as frequent hospitalizations,” said Clarence Blea, maternal-fetal medicine specialist at St.Luke’s Hospital.

Blea cites financial-related issues like getting affordable access to healthcare and cultural-related concerns as reasons for increased exposure to the virus. Nationally, underlying health issues in communities of color are also cited.

The Hispanic and Latino community in the Idaho public health system has had difficulties social distancing because of cultural differences, according to KSAW.

Read More: ‘RHOP’ star Ashley Darby pregnant with second child

“When you are asking a community that prioritizes large family gatherings, which is not just something they enjoy doing but is something that is a part of their culture and identity, then it does become more difficult to help that person understand why it’s important to stop that practice,” Brianna Bodily, South Central Public Health District Public Information Officer, said.

Dr. Blea told pregnant women of color they should follow her safety precautions: “Take care of yourself from a nutritional standpoint. Address your prenatal visits, do what you can to have this access, do what you can to distance and protect yourselves.”

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Detroit native opens first cider mill in the Motor City

The family-owned enterprise Detroit Farm and Cider is a first-of-its-kind for the majority-Black city

As a kid, Leandra King loved visiting the cider mill every autumn, but visits were limited as the trip required traveling outside county borders.

Now, the Detroit native has recreated the classic fall tradition in her hometown after launching the first cider mill in the Motor City, WXYZ reports.

“It was one of my fondest memories, going to Parmenter’s,” King told the local ABC affiliate. “I’ve been to Blake’s. I just remember going to Yates as a kid, and I just wanted to recreate that for the city of Detroit.”

Leandra King, founder of Detroit Farm and Cider (via website)

According to research by American Express, Black women are starting businesses at the fastest rate of any racial group. Since 2007, the number of firms owned by African-American women has grown by 164%.

Read More: Entrepreneur Mahisha Dellinger coaches Black women to take their business from the set up to the blow up

The family-owned enterprise is called Detroit Farm and Cider, and it’s a first-of-its-kind for the majority-Black city. It’s located in a mostly residential area on the city’s west side. The roughly four-acres cider mill also resides in a neighborhood with a rich history, the outlet said.

“So, this used to be Peck Elementary School. It was Divinity of the Sacred Heart before it was Peck Elementary School, and the city knocked it down,” King told 7 Action News while touring her orchards that consist of 139 fruit trees.

Last weekend the cider mill launched its first official season. It has everything you’d expect to find at a cider mill: cider and doughnuts, pumpkins and hay rides. But it also has some unexpected features like goats, a solar powered farm operation, fudge, a bonfire area, beehives, a rock wall tree, a zip line, local food vendors and live music.

Read More: Dr. Venus Opal Reese is empowering Black women to launch businesses

Admission to Detroit Farm and Cider is free. Hayrides are for purchase, while food and drinks are can also be obtained with food stamp benefits. Making sure Detroit Farm and Cider is affordable and beneficial to the surrounding community is one of King’s top priorities. She’s currently offering a discount for Detroit Public Schools.

The Midwestern city’s population of about 670,000 is nearly 80% Black. With a median household income of less than $29,500 in 2018, about 36% of Detroiters live in poverty, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

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Jaime Harrison talks historical campaign and building a ‘New South’

EXCLUSIVE: The South Carolina U.S. Senate candidate weighs the historical nature of his enthusiastic campaign to unseat Sen. Lindsey Graham

Jaime Harrison is on a mission to unseat longstanding U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham in South Carolina in the upcoming 2020 election, and with tens of millions of dollars raised and enthusiasm around his campaign, he just might be able to do it.

Of course, this is no easy feat by any measure. Harrison, who is a Black man running as a Democrat to beat an incumbent Republican in a red state, understands the political and historical nature of his campaign.

If elected, Harrison would become the first Black Democrat to serve as a U.S. senator from the Palmetto State and only the second Black senator in the southern state’s long, storied history.

Read More: Jaime Harrison breaks fundraising record for senate race

Democratic Senate candidate Jaime Harrison addresses supporters at a drive-in rally on October 17, 2020 in North Charleston, South Carolina. Harrison is running against incumbent Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC). (Photo by Cameron Pollack/Getty Images)

Following in the footsteps of other Black history-making politicians like former President Barack Obama and vice presidential nominee Kamala Harris, Harrison would also become only the 11th African American to win a U.S. Senate seat.

But Harrison says winning Graham’s seat goes beyond the superlative “first” or being on the shortlist of Black political success stories. He’s also weighing the racist lineage of politicians who came before him and served in the very seat he hopes to claim on Nov. 3.

“This was a seat of John C. Calhoun. This was the seat of Strom Thurmond,” Harrison tells theGrio during a recent exclusive interview.

Read More: Lindsey Graham photographed with leader of white nationalist group Proud Boys

“This was the seat of a man called Ben Pitchfork Tillman, a man who was governor of South Carolina. He changed the Constitution because he didn’t want a Black person to ever be governor. But he was also a senator and he would go to the floor of the U.S. Senate and talk about the joys of lynching of Black folks.”

What’s more, Harrison acknowledged that, if elected, he and current Republican Senator Tim Scott, would also make history as the first state to have two Black senators serving at the same time.

Jaime Harrison, left, Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC), right. (Photo: Getty Images)

“It really is about closing the book on the Old South and writing a brand new book called The New South,” said Harrison. “And I think it will send a signal not only to South Carolina but to the region, but all across the country that we are making progress, that we are moving forward. And we’re doing it together. So I think it will be tremendous and I hope and pray that it happens.”

The 44-year-old candidate’s journey to politics is a classic story of the American Dream — particularly growing up Black and poor in America’s post-Jim Crow South. Born to a teenage mom in Orangeburg, South Carolina, Harrison says he was raised by his grandparents who had only a fourth and eighth-grade education.

Read More: Obama urges South Carolina voters to elect Jaime Harrison

“We didn’t have much in Orangeburg, but, you know, we were still rich in terms of the values that were in my family. My grandparents taught me the value of hard work. They taught me the value of helping other folks. And those are the things that still live with me to this very day,” he said.

Harrison was able to channel those values into an impressive rise to attend Yale University and Georgetown Law School and eventually working as an aide for longtime U.S. Congressman Jim Clyburn, who now serves as House Majority Whip and later the first African-American executive director of the House Democratic Caucus.

Harrison also briefly worked as a social studies teacher to ninth graders in South Carolina and worked for a non-profit helping to improve the college and career pipeline for low-income youth. As a senator representing the entire state, he hopes to create more pathways for other young people to live out their own version of the American Dream.

South Carolina’s history of slavery and segregation is not lost on Harrison, in fact, he hopes his potential election win serves as an opportunity to begin building new bridges in the South — one that is inclusive for all.

Read More: Graham appears to imply Black liberals are not welcome in South Carolina

Graham
South Carolina Democrat Jaime Harrison and GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham (Credit: Jamie Harrison and U.S. Gov’t)

His opponent Lindsey Graham recently caused shock waves when he appeared to suggest that Black people were only welcomed in South Carolina if they’re conservative.

“I care about everybody. If you’re a young African American, an immigrant, you can go anywhere in this state. You just need to be conservative, not liberal,” Graham said during a forum that was supposed to be his second debate against Harrison but was canceled after Graham declined to test for COVID-19.

Harrison says Graham’s comment only further illustrates why it’s time for a new senator in town.

“Lindsey Graham is a relic of an old south. And I’m talking about building a new South, one that is bold, that’s inclusive, that’s diverse,” Harrison said.

“When you are a U.S. senator, you represent all of your people, Black, white, Latino, Native American, Asian American, and you represent them regardless of their political ideology, regardless of their religion, regardless of their sexual orientation or gender identity.”

Democratic Senate candidate Jaime Harrison waves to supporters before speaking at a drive-in rally on October 17, 2020 in North Charleston, South Carolina. Harrison is running against incumbent Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC). (Photo by Cameron Pollack/Getty Images)

Harrison said he wants his election to be a turning point for the South, in which racism is a thing of the past. “We can’t be silent in the face of bigotry, in the face of hatred and division. It’s important that all of us stand up and say enough is enough,” said Harrison.

“If folks can stand up … and just let their words be spoken through their vote, we will change the direction of this country, we will change the direction of the lives of many people, and we’ll bring hope back to communities all across this state.”

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DJ Boof says Wendy Williams staff is ‘afraid to speak up’ as concerns for her health grow

The veteran TV host of ‘The Wendy Williams Show’ stammered and appeared unwell during Friday’s episode

Wendy Williams has a history of health issues that have caused her to time off from her morning talk show, The Wendy Williams Show, but she has always recovered and returned to the airwaves.

This week, however, left fans of the program concerned that signs of declining health may be showing during her tapings.

On Friday’s episode, Williams, 56, appeared to be stuttering through her dialogue during the “Hot Topics” segment. When discussing singer Adele‘s upcoming appearance on Saturday Night Live, which took place Saturday night, Williams referred to the multi-Grammy winner as “Hodel,” quickly acknowledging her gaffe. As the host continued, she stammered through her speech and appeared to be delivering her dialogue with labored breathing, taking multiple pauses.

Wendy Williams, the host of “The Wendy Williams Show,” has drawn concerns about her health after Friday’s episode. (Via screenshot)

A staff member even tried to intervene to get her mind back on track during the segment.

Williams misspoke again as she scolded Adele fans who criticized the singer for only hosting SNL and not doing a musical performance. Grammy-winning singer H.E.R. was the night’s music guest.

Williams called people who criticized Adele’s thin figure for being jealous and said those who said the “Hello” singer looked horrible were “mealous.” Once again, the veteran host acknowledged that she did not say “jealous.”

READ MORE: NeNe Leakes calls out Wendy Williams, Andy Cohen: ‘They both need my help’

DJ Boof, Williams’ former disk jockey, said Sunday on social media that he suspects that Williams is unwell. He made the comment while responding to a fan who suggested that she stop the show’s production, as seen in a screengrab by The Jasmine Brand.

“Wendy you need to stop your show and seriously get help,” one fan wrote on Instagram, accusing her camp of “just watching you spiral instead of sending help shame on them.” The user concluded by saying that they will not be watching the show until she checks into a rehabilitation center.

DJ Boof, confirming that he departed the show due to Williams being stubborn, replied to the post saying: “Y’all have no idea what’s really going on and everyone there is afraid to speak up because they don’t wanna lose their jobs.. this is going to play out bad.. i feel sorry for the workers and victims.”

READ MORE: Lifetime set to begin production on Wendy Williams biopic

Williams, who has been transparent about struggling with drug addiction in the past, disclosed that she had been residing at a sober house to deal with an addiction to an undisclosed substance back in 2019.

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Election could stoke US marijuana market, sway Congress

Cannabis initiatives on the ballot in multiple states will draw voters who could influence other races, including the tight U.S. Senate battle in Arizona

Voters in four states from different regions of the country could embrace broad legal marijuana sales on Election Day, and a sweep would highlight how public acceptance of cannabis is cutting across geography, demographics and the nation’s deep political divide.

The Nov. 3 contests in New Jersey, Arizona, South Dakota and Montana will shape policies in those states while the battle for control of Congress and the White House could determine whether marijuana remains illegal at the federal level.

Already, most Americans live in states where marijuana is legal in some form and 11 now have fully legalized the drug for adults — Alaska, California, Oregon, Washington, Nevada, Colorado, Michigan, Illinois, Massachusetts, Maine, and Vermont. It’s also legal in Washington, D.C.

In conservative Mississippi, voters will consider competing ballot proposals that would legalize medicinal marijuana, which is allowed in 33 states.

This May 20, 2019, file photo, shows a marijuana leaf on a plant at a cannabis grow in Gardena, Calif. (AP Photo/Richard Vogel, File)

Nick Kovacevich, CEO of KushCo Holdings, which supplies packaging, vape hardware and solvents for the industry, called the election “monumental” for the future of marijuana.

New Jersey, in particular, could prove a linchpin in the populous Northeast, leading New York and Pennsylvania toward broad legalization, he said.

READ MORE: Michigan Gov. Whitmer signs bill expunging certain marijuana convictions

“It’s laying out a domino effect … that’s going to unlock the largest area of population behind the West Coast,” Kovacevich said.

The cannabis initiatives will draw voters to the polls who could influence other races, including the tight U.S. Senate battle in Arizona.

In Colorado, one supporter of legal cannabis could lose his seat. Republican Sen. Cory Gardner, who is struggling in an increasingly Democratic state where some in the industry have lost faith in his ability to get things done in Washington.

Despite the spread of legalization in states and a largely hands-off approach under President Donald Trump, the Republican-controlled Senate has blocked cannabis reform, so under federal law marijuana remains illegal and in the same class as heroin or LSD. That has discouraged major banks from doing business with marijuana businesses, which also were left out in the coronavirus relief packages.

“Change doesn’t come from Washington, but to Washington,” said Steve Hawkins, executive director of the Marijuana Policy Project. “States are sending a clear message to the federal government that their constituencies want to see cannabis legalization.”

The presidential election could also influence federal marijuana policy, though the issue has been largely forgotten in a campaign dominated by the pandemic, health care and the nation’s wounded economy.

Trump’s position remains somewhat opaque. He has said he is inclined to support bipartisan efforts to ease the U.S. ban on marijuana but hasn’t established a clear position on broader legalization. He’s appointed attorneys general who loath marijuana, but his administration has not launched crackdowns against businesses in states where pot is legal.

Joe Biden has said he would decriminalize — but not legalize — the use of marijuana, while expunging all prior cannabis use convictions and ending jail time for drug use alone. But legalization advocates recall with disgust that he was a leading Senate supporter of a 1994 crime bill that sent droves of minor drug offenders to prison.

Elizabeth Owens protests on the steps of New York City Hall in support of the proposed Fairness and Equity Act, which would attempt to reform racially biased arrests in regards to marijuana possession in New York state. (Photo by Andrew Burton/Getty Images)

Even if there are lingering doubts about Biden, the Democratic Party is clearly more welcoming to cannabis reform, especially its progressive wing. Vice presidential nominee and U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris of California has said making pot legal at the federal level is the “smart thing to do.”

Familiar arguments are playing out across the states.

Opponents fear children will be lured into use, roads will become drag strips for stoned drivers and widespread consumption will spike health care costs.

Those backing legalization point out the market is already here, though in many cases still thriving underground, and argue that products should be tested for safety. Legal sales would mean tax money for education and other services, and social-justice issues are also in play, after decades of enforcement during the war on drugs.

An added push this year could come from the virus-damaged economy — states are strapped for cash and legalized cannabis holds out the promise of a tax windfall. One Arizona estimate predicts $255 million a year would eventually flow for state and local governments, in Montana, $50 million.

READ MORE: Black techies behind Veriheal seek to de-stigmatize cannabis

Despite the pandemic and challenges including heavy taxes and regulation, marijuana sales are climbing. Arcview Market Research/BDSA expects U.S. sales to climb to $16.3 billion this year, up from $12.4 billion in 2019.

In New Jersey, voters are considering a constitutional amendment that would legalize marijuana use for people 21 and over. It’s attracted broad support in voter surveys. If approved, it’s unclear when shops would open. The amendment also subjects cannabis to the state’s sales tax, and lets towns and cities add local taxes.

In this March 22, 2019 file photo, shows marijuana buds being sorted into a prescription jar at Compassionate Care Foundation’s medical marijuana dispensary in Egg Harbor Township, N.J. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez, File)

The Arizona measure known as Proposition 207 would let people 21 and older possess up to an ounce or a smaller quantity of concentrates, allow for sales at licensed retailers and for people to grow their own plants. Retail sales could start in May. State voters narrowly rejected a previous legalization effort in 2016.

If Montana voters approve, sales would start in 2022. Montana passed a medicinal marijuana law in 2004 and updated it in 2016. The proposed law would allow only owners of current medical marijuana businesses to apply for licenses to grow and sell marijuana for the broader marketplace for the first year.

Perhaps no other state epitomizes changing views more than solidly conservative South Dakota, which has some of the country’s strictest drug laws.

The sparsely populated state could become the first to approve medicinal and adult-use marijuana at the same time. However, legalizing broad pot sales would be a jump for a state where lawmakers recently battled for nearly a year to legalize industrial hemp, a non-intoxicating cannabis plant.

Meanwhile, a confusing situation has unfolded in Mississippi, after more than 100,000 registered voters petitioned to put Initiative 65 on the ballot. It would allow patients to use medical marijuana to treat debilitating conditions, as certified by physicians. But legislators put an alternative on the ballot, which sponsors of the original proposal consider an attempt to scuttle their effort.

Hawkins is among those already looking toward 2021, when a new round of states could move toward legalization, including New York and New Mexico.

“There is clearly a tide,” Hawkins said. “We are moving toward a critical mass of states that … will bring about the end of federal prohibition on cannabis.”

___

Associated Press writers Michael Catalini in Trenton, New Jersey; Bob Christie in Phoenix; Stephen Groves in Sioux Falls, South Dakota; Amy Beth Hanson in Helena, Montana; Emily Wagster Pettus in Jackson, Mississippi; and Nick Riccardi in Denver contributed.

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