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Tuesday, October 1, 2019

Erica Mena and Safaree Samuels expecting first child together

It looks like Erica Mena and Safaree Samuels have been hiding a pretty big secret.

The Love & Hip Hop stars who are set to wed on October 7 revealed they are expecting their first child together on Tuesday.

The pair shared the good news with a photo shoot showing off Mena’s growing baby bump on social media and by the looks of her, she’s well on her way to welcoming a new bundle of joy.

Erica Mena has one son from a previous relationship and this will be baby No.1 for Safaree Samuels.

Erica Mena appeared on Love & Hip Hop NY for years before jumping on to Love & Hip Hp Atlanta.  Samuels joined Love & Hip Hop Hollywood shortly after his split from longtime love, Nicki Minaj. 

‘Love & Hip Hop’ star Erica Mena and boyfriend BUSTED near Atlanta

Fans have watched Erica Mena navigate some pretty toxic relationships over the years, including a drama-filled romance with former Love & Hip Hop costar, Cyn Santana and Bow Wow.

Just last year, she and her former boyfriend, Clifford Dixon were arrested after reportedly arguing so loudly it prompted someone to call the police. While witnesses reported hearing someone get slapped, there was no evidence of physical harm on either person, but witnesses also alleged Dixon kicked in a locked door to get to Mena. He was arrested for criminal trespass because the incident went down at Mena’s home and she was charged with possession of marijuana after cops found weed and THC wax in her kitchen.

SO MESSY: Safaree Samuels claims Nicki Minaj cut him with a knife

According to reports, Mena and Samuels plan to film their upcoming nuptials for Vh1.

The post Erica Mena and Safaree Samuels expecting first child together appeared first on theGrio.



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An interdisciplinary approach to accelerating human-machine collaboration

David Mindell has spent his career defying traditional distinctions between disciplines. His work has explored the ways humans interact with machines, drive innovation, and maintain societal well-being as technology transforms our economy.

And, Mindell says, he couldn’t have done it anywhere but MIT. He joined MIT’s faculty 23 years ago after completing his PhD in the Program in Science, Technology, and Society, and he currently holds a dual appointment in engineering and humanities as the Frances and David Dibner Professor of the History of Engineering and Manufacturing in the School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences and professor of aeronautics and astronautics.

Mindell’s experience combining fields of study has shaped his ideas about the relationship between humans and machines. Those ideas are what led him to found Humatics — a startup named from the merger of “human” and “robotics.”

Humatics is trying to change the way humans work alongside machines, by enabling location tracking and navigation indoors, underground, and in other areas where technologies like GPS are limited. It accomplishes this by using radio frequencies to track things at the millimeter scale — unlocking what Mindell calls microlocation technology.

The company’s solution is already being used in places like shipping ports and factories, where humans work alongside cranes, industrial tools, automated guided vehicles (AGVs), and other machines. These businesses often lack consistent location data for their machines and are forced to adopt inflexible routes for their mobile robots.

“One of the holy grails is to have humans and robots share the same space and collaborate, and we’re enabling mobile robots to work in human environments safely and on a large scale,” Mindell says. “Safety is a critical first form of collaboration, but beyond that, we’re just beginning to learn how to work [in settings] where robots and people are exquisitely aware of where they are.”

A company decades in the making

MIT has a long history of transcending research fields to improve our understanding of the world. Take, for example, Norbert Wiener, who served on MIT’s faculty in the Department of Mathematics between 1919 and his death in 1964.

Wiener is credited with formalizing the field of cybernetics, which is an approach to understanding feedback systems he defined as “the scientific study of control and communication in the animal and the machine." Cybernetics can be applied to mechanical, biological, cognitive, and social systems, among others, and it sparked a frenzy of interdisciplinary study and scientific collaboration.

In 2002, Mindell wrote a book exploring the history of cybernetics before Wiener and its emergence at the intersection of a range of disciplines during World War II. It is one of several books Mindell has written that deal with interdisciplinary responses to complex problems, particularly in extreme environments like lunar landings and the deep sea.

The interdisciplinary perspective Mindell forged at MIT has helped him identify the limitations of technology that prevent machines and humans from working together seamlessly.

One particular shortcoming that Mindell has thought about for years is the lack of precise location data in places like warehouses, subway systems, and shipping ports.

“In five years, we’ll look back at 2019 and say, ‘I can’t believe we didn’t know where anything was,’” Mindell says. “We’ve got so much data floating around, but the link between the actual physical world we all inhabit and move around in and the digital world that’s exploding is really still very poor.”

In 2014, Mindell partnered with Humatics co-founder Gary Cohen, who has worked as an intellectual property strategist for biotech companies in the Kendall Square area, to solve the problem.

In the beginning of 2015, Mindell collaborated with Lincoln Laboratory alumnus and radar expert Greg Charvat; the two built a prototype navigation system and started the company two weeks later. Charvat became Humatics’ CTO and first employee.

“It was clear there was about to be this huge flowering of robotics and autonomous systems and AI, and I thought the things we learned in extreme environments, notably under sea and in aviation, had an enormous amount of application to industrial environments,” Mindell says. “The company is about bringing insights from years of experience with remote and autonomous systems in extreme environments into transit, logistics, e-commerce, and manufacturing.”

Bringing microlocation to industry

Factories, ports, and other locations where GPS data is unworkable or insufficient adopt a variety of solutions to meet their tracking and navigation needs. But each workaround has its drawbacks.

RFID and Bluetooth technologies, for instance, can track assets but have short ranges and are expensive to deploy across large areas.

Cameras and sensing methods like LIDAR can be used to help machines see their environment, but they struggle with things like rain and different lighting conditions. Floor tape embedded with wires or magnets is also often used to guide machines through fixed routes, but it isn’t well-suited for today’s increasingly dynamic warehouses and production lines.

Humatics has focused on making the capabilities of its microlocation location system as easy to leverage as possible. The location and tracking data it collects can be integrated into whatever warehouse management system or “internet of things” (IoT) platforms customers are already using.

Its radio frequency beacons have a range of up to 500 meters and, when installed as part of a constellation, can pinpoint three dimensional locations to within 2 centimeters, creating a virtual grid of the surrounding environment.

The beacons can be combined with an onboard navigation hub that helps mobile robots move around dynamic environments. Humatics’ system also gathers location data from multiple points at once, monitoring the speed of a forklift, helping a crane operator place a shipping crate, and guiding a robot around obstacles simultaneously.

The data Humatics collects don’t just help customers improve their processes; they can also transform the way workers and machines share space and work together. Indeed, with a new chip just emerging from its labs, Mindell says Humatics is moving industries such as manufacturing and logistics into “the world of ubiquitous, millimeter-accurate positioning.”

It’s all possible because of the company’s holistic approach to the age-old problem of human-machine interaction.

“Humatics is an example of what can happen when we think about technology in a unique, broader context,” Mindell says. “It’s an example of what MIT can accomplish when it pays serious attention to these two ways [from humanities and engineering] of looking at the world.”



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A new act for opera

In November 1953, the Nationaltheater in Mannheim, Germany, staged a new opera, the composer Boris Blacher’s “Abstrakte Oper Nr. 1,” which had debuted just months previously. As it ran, music fans were treated to both a performance and a raging controversy about the work, which one critic called “a monstrosity of musical progress,” and another termed “a stillbirth.”

Some of this vitriol stemmed from Blacher’s experimental composition, which had jazz and pop sensibilities, few words in the libretto (but some nonsense syllables), and no traditional storyline. The controversy was heightened by the Mannheim production, which projected images of postwar ruins and other related tropes onto the backdrop.

“The staging was very political,” says MIT music scholar Emily Richmond Pollock, author of a new book about postwar German opera. “Putting these very concrete images behind [the stage], that people had just lived through, produced a very uncomfortable feeling.”

It wasn’t just critics who were dubious: One audience member wrote to the Mannheim morning newspaper to say that Blacher’s “cacophonous concoction is actually approaching absolute zero and is not even original in doing so.”

In short, “Abstrakte Oper Nr. 1” hardly fit its genre’s traditions. Blacher’s work was introduced soon after the supposed “Zero Hour” in German society — the years after World War Two ended in 1945. Germany had instigated the deadliest war in history, and the country was supposed to be building itself entirely anew on political, civic, and cultural fronts. But the reaction to “Abstrakte Oper Nr. 1” shows the limits of that concept; Germans also craved continuity.

“There is this mythology of the Zero Hour, that Germans had to start all over again,” says Pollock, an associate professor in MIT’s Music and Theater Arts Section.

Pollock’s new book, “Opera after the Zero Hour,” just published by Oxford University Press, explores these tensions in rich detail. In the work, Pollock closely scrutinizes five postwar German operas while examining the varied reactions they produced. Rather than participating in a total cultural teardown, she concludes, many Germans were attempting to construct a useable past and build a future connected to it.   

“Opera in general is a conservative art form,” Pollock says. “It has often been identified very closely with whomever is in power.” For that reason, she adds, “Opera is a really good place to examine why tradition was a problem [after 1945], and how different artists chose to approach that problem.”

The politics of cultural nationalism

Rebuilding Germany after 1945 was a monumental task, even beyond creating a new political state. A significant part of Germany lay in rubble; for that matter, most large opera houses had been bombed.

Nonetheless, opera soon bloomed again in Germany. There were 170 new operas staged in Germany from 1945 to 1965. Operationally, as Pollock notes in the book, this inevitably meant including former Nazis in the opera business — efforts at “denazification” of society, she thinks, were of limited effectiveness. Substantively, meanwhile, the genre’s sense of tradition set audience expectations that could be difficult to alter.

“There’s a lot of investment in opera, but it’s not [usually] going to be avant-garde,” Pollock says, noting there were “hundreds of years of opera tradition pressing down” on composers, as well as “a bourgeois restored German culture that doesn’t want to do anything too radical.” However, she notes, after 1945, “There are a lot of traditions of music-making as part of the culture of being German that feel newly problematic [to socially-aware observers].”

Thus a substantial portion of those 170 new operas — besides “Abstrakte Oper Nr. 1” — contained distinctive blends of innovation and tradition. Consider Carl Orff’s “Oedipus der Tyrann,” a 1958 work of musical innovation with a traditional theme. Orff was one of Germany’s best-known composers (he wrote “Carmina Burana” in 1937) and had professional room to experiment. “Oedipus der Tyrann” strips away operatic musical form, with scant melody or symphonic expression, though Pollock’s close reading of the score shows some remaining links to mainstream operatic tradition. But the subject of the opera is classical: Orff uses the German poet Friedrich Holderlin’s 1804 translation of Sophocles’ “Oedipus” as his content. As Pollock notes, in 1958, this could be a problematic theme.

“When Germans claim special ownership of Greek culture, they’re saying they’re better than other countries — it’s cultural nationalism,” Pollock observes. “So what does it mean that a German composer is taking Greek tropes and reinterpreting them for a postwar context? Only recently, [there had been] events like the Berlin Olympics, where the Third Reich was specifically mobilizing an identification between Germans and the Greeks.”  

In this case, Pollock says, “I think Orff was not able to think clearly about the potential political implications of what he was doing. He would have thought of music as largely apolitical. We can now look back more critically and see the continuities there.” Even if Orff’s subject matter was not intentionally political, though, it was certainly not an expression of a cultural “Zero Hour,” either.

Opera is the key

“Opera after the Zero Hour” continually illustrates how complex music creation can be. In the composer Bernd Alois Zimmerman’s 1960s opera “Die Soldaten,” Pollock notes a variety of influences, chiefly Richard Wagner’s idea of the “totalizing work of art” and the composer Alban Berg’s musical idioms — but without Wagner’s nationalistic impulses.

Even as it details the nuances of specific operas, Pollock’s book is also part of a larger dialogue about which types of music are most worth studying. If operas had limited overlap with the most radical forms of musical composition of the time, then opera’s popularity, as well as the intriguing forms of innovation and experiment that did occur within the form, make it a vital area of study, in Pollock’s view.

“History is always very selective,” Pollock says. “A canon of postwar music will include a very narrow slice of pieces that did really cool, new stuff, that no one had ever heard before.” But focusing on such self-consciously radical music only yields a limited understanding of the age and its cultural tastes, Pollock adds, because “there is a lot of music written for the opera house that people who loved music, and loved opera, were invested in.”

Other music scholars say “Opera after the Zero Hour” is a significant contribution to its field. Brigid Cohen, an associate professor of music at New York University, has stated that the book makes “a powerful case for taking seriously long-neglected operatic works that speak to a vexed cultural history still relevant in the present.”

Pollock, for her part, writes in the book that, given all the nuances and tensions and wrinkles in the evolution of the art form, “opera is the key” to understanding the relationship between postwar German composers and the country’s newly fraught cultural tradition, in a fully complicated and historical mode.

“If you look at [cultural] conservatism as interesting, you find a lot of interesting things,” Pollock says. “And if you assume things that are less innovative are less interesting, then you’re ignoring a lot of things that people cared about.”



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WATCH: Beyonce’s dad, Matthew Knowles reveals he has breast cancer

Matthew Knowles is fighting breast cancer.

The man who’s best known for the years he spent managing his superstar daughters Beyonce and Solange announced the news during a sit-down interview with Michael Strahan for Good Morning America that will air Wednesday.

A short teaser was released on Twitter on Tuesday and in it, we see Bey’s father opening up to Strahan about his diagnosis.

Mathew Knowles says Beyoncé wouldn’t be as successful if she was a dark skin Black woman

“How was it to tell your family about the diagnosis?” Strahan asks Knowles in the snippet.

So far, information about the diagnosis is scarce, but we’re sure more details will come out during the exclusive interview.

October is breast cancer awareness month, and most people tend to believe the disease only affects women. Knowles’ case is a reminder that the disease also affects men, particularly older men.

 Beyonce’s daddy Mathew Knowles is producing a Destiny’s Child musical

Back in April, Matthew Knowles announced plans to produce a musical about Destiny’s Child. 

“I want to pull back the curtain,” Knowles said in a statement posted on his website. “I feel it’s time to give the world an opportunity to hear, see and feel the victories and failures that I’ve had as a husband, father and manager who risked everything in pursuit of fulfilling dreams – those of mine and others.”

According to Knowles, the production is being developed for Broadway and London’s West End and is slated to premiere in 2020 in Houston, TX.

Check out the official description:

Survivor: The Destiny’s Child Musical will start its roller coaster tale at the point of humble beginnings and travel through a captivating storyline addressing the layers of evolution – good and bad – that Knowles faced during his pioneering climb into the music industry. Ultimately, the story shares the message that building a dream takes sacrifice, even at the cost of everything and everyone you love.”

The post WATCH: Beyonce’s dad, Matthew Knowles reveals he has breast cancer appeared first on theGrio.



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The last legal sex workers in Tunisia

Many state-regulated brothels have closed amid pressure from women's rights and religious opponents.

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Verbal autopsies used in push to better track global deaths

By CHRISTINA LARSON and MIKE STOBBE Associated Press
KIGALI, Rwanda (AP) — One afternoon last month, a young woman with a tablet computer sat next to Alphonsine Umurerwa on the living room couch, asking questions, listening carefully.

She learned that the woman’s 23-year-old daughter, Sandrine Umwungeri, had been very sick for about a year, gradually becoming so weak she stopped leaving their tin-roofed home in a hilly section of Rwanda’s capital city. The family thought she had malaria.
Medicines from a local pharmacy didn’t help. In March, she died.

The interviewer asked: When did Sandrine begin to feel weak? Did she have a fever? Did her skin take on a yellow hue? Each typed answer determined the next question to pose, like following a phone tree.

This was a “verbal autopsy” — an interview in which a trained health worker asks a close relative or caretaker about a recently deceased person. Increasingly, health officials are using these tools and their computer algorithms to learn more about the global course of human disease.

About 50 countries have attempted verbal autopsy projects, and the list is growing. On Tuesday, Bloomberg Philanthropies — a major funder of international health data initiatives — announced it will devote another $120 million over the next four years to continue projects in 20 previously funded countries, and add five more.

That includes money for verbal autopsies, as well as cancer registries and other programs intended to help developing countries gather accurate data about the health of their citizens.

“With more and better data on causes of death, more countries can save more lives,” said Michael Bloomberg, the philanthropy’s founder, in a statement.

The work is badly needed, experts say.

An estimated 60 million people in the world will die this year, and half will have no death certificates or other record describing what killed them. Most of these will be in low- and middle-income countries, particularly in Africa and parts of Asia.

That means the common understanding of overall disease and mortality trends in the developing world often relies upon broad estimates and guesswork. So do the decisions many countries make about which health problems to prioritize and tackle.

“The scale of the problem is really quite staggering,” said Lucia D’Ambruoso, a University of Aberdeen researcher who has studied verbal autopsies. “There’s a moral imperative, as well as analytical one, to be able to shine a light on those otherwise invisible deaths.”
To be sure, knowing what’s killing people can be tricky even in developed countries.

For example, though the United States requires doctors to sign death certificates, recent studies suggest some doctors put down certain conditions as a default, which is one reason why some experts believe heart disease has been over-reported as a cause of death in the U.S.

But it’s far more problematic to collect accurate data in countries where only a fraction of deaths occur in hospitals, or with doctors present.

In Rwanda, only an estimated 20% of deaths occur in hospitals, and there is just one licensed doctor for every 8,000 people, according to data from the Rwanda Medical and Dental Council.

The current verbal autopsy campaign was pioneered more than 50 years ago, in small physician-led research projects in Africa and Asia.

One milestone study was conducted in India. In the late 1990s, trained interviewers — not doctors — went into the homes of people who had recently died. They asked close relatives about the symptoms and events that preceded a loved one’s death. Small teams of physicians later used the interviews to determine the cause of death.

The Million Death Study, as it was called, suggested that India had far more malaria and smoking-related deaths than the World Health Organization had estimated, but only a quarter of the HIV deaths that WHO expected.

Clearly, verbal autopsies have drawbacks. They rely on grief-stricken people to clearly recall clinical details. And the validity of results may vary depending on who’s answering the questions, what questions are asked, and how responses are interpreted.

Some health advocates — including the philanthropists Bill and Melinda Gates — have pushed for other methods like minimally invasive tissue sampling, a technique in which fine needles are inserted into a dead person’s body, gathering samples from different organs for rapid analysis.

But such sampling has limitations, too. It requires specially trained technicians, and samples have to be taken and shipped for analysis within 24 hours after a person’s death.
Verbal autopsies “are much better to do that than do nothing, which is the only alternative” in some countries, said Peter Byass, a researcher at Sweden’s Umea University who is an expert on verbal autopsies.

The New York-based organization Vital Strategies began working with the Rwandan government in 2015 to develop a verbal autopsy program, using Bloomberg and other funding.

The project trained government health workers — who already provide health and hospice care in homes — to conduct the verbal autopsies.

About 2,700 verbal autopsies have been done in nine small pockets of the country. That’s not enough to provide a good look at national death trends, but the government is planning to scale up the work in coming years to achieve a nationally representative sample.
At first, neighbors sometimes perceived the verbal autopsies as intrusive. But over time, most people have come to accept them.

“When we explain to them why we do this, in the end they will understand and answer our questions,” said Janvier Ngabonziza, who conducts the interviews in a rural area called Rwamagana.

The verbal autopsy of Sandrine Umwungeri was conducted by Leonie Mfitumukiza, who had met her mother through her job as a community health worker. After allowing several months for the family to rest and grieve, she had come to ask about Sandrine’s illness.
Respectfully, and pausing often to offer comfort and consolation, Mfitumukiza followed the standardized set of questions about Sandrine’s symptoms. The information she gathered will be run through a computer algorithm to assign a cause of death.

The solemnity was broken when a family friend walked into the home carrying a giggling 2-year-old girl. It was Blessing, Sandrine’s daughter, now being raised by her grandmother.
Afterward, Mfitumukiza said she believes Sandrine died of type 1 diabetes, not malaria. But she noted her job that day was to gather information, not to draw any conclusion.
___
Mike Stobbe reported from New York.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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Troy Van Voorhis named head of the Department of Chemistry

Troy Van Voorhis, the Robert T. Haslam and Bradley Dewey Professor of Chemistry, has been named head of the Department of Chemistry, effective Oct. 1.

“I am delighted that Troy Van Voorhis will lead the chemistry department,” says Michael Sipser, dean of the MIT School of Science and the Donner Professor of Mathematics. “Troy has been a core member of the department, known for his outstanding research in physical chemistry as well as for his contributions to education and the department’s climate. I look forward to working with Troy on Science Council.”

Van Voorhis has served as associate head of chemistry since 2015, working with then-department head Timothy Jamison and, most recently, with Professor Stephen Buchwald, who has served as interim department head since July 2019.

In addition to his service to the department, Van Voorhis recently co-chaired the Working Group on Curricula and Degrees for the MIT Stephen A. Schwarzman College of Computing. He has also contributed to discussions on opportunities for the School of Science in the college. 

Van Voorhis says, “I look forward to working with the department in my new role and will continue to support the growth of our chemistry community’s research, education, and outreach programs.”

“Troy is an excellent choice to head up chemistry and provide leadership for the members of our department. He has a strong record of scientific accomplishment and devotion to education and to MIT students,” says Buchwald, the Camille Dreyfus Professor of Chemistry.

“I am grateful to Steve for his service to the department as interim head. I thank Mei Hong for chairing the search committee, as well as the committee members for their efforts,” says Sipser. “I am deeply indebted to Tim Jamison for his outstanding leadership during the previous four years. Tim, who has recently become associate provost, leaves the Department of Chemistry in excellent shape.”

Van Voorhis’ research lies at the nexus of chemistry and computation, and his work has impact on renewable energy and quantum computing. His lab is focused on developing new methods that provide an accurate description of electron dynamics in molecules and materials. Over the years, his research has led to advances in light emitting diodes, solar cells, and other devices and technologies crucial to addressing 21st-century energy concerns.   

Van Voorhis received his bachelor's degree in chemistry and mathematics from Rice University and his PhD in chemistry from the University of California at Berkeley in 2001. Following a postdoctoral fellowship at Harvard University, he joined the faculty of MIT in 2003 and was promoted to professor of chemistry in 2012.

He has received many honors and awards, including being named an Alfred P. Sloan research fellow, a fellow of the David and Lucille Packard Foundation, and a recipient of a National Science Foundation CAREER award. He has also received the MIT School of Science’s award for excellence in graduate teaching.



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The Latest: Buttigieg says he raised $19.1M in 3rd quarter

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Latest on the 2020 presidential candidates’ third-quarter fundraising (all times local):

6:15 a.m.
Pete Buttigieg (BOO’-tuh-juhj) says he raised $19.1 million for his presidential campaign during the third fundraising quarter of the year.

Though not as large of a sum as the field-leading $24.8 million he raised last quarter, the figures released by the South Bend, Indiana, mayor on Tuesday demonstrate that he will have resources heading into the final months before the Iowa Caucuses in February.
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders also released his total for the quarter and reported raising $25.3 million.

The numbers don’t have to be reported to the Federal Election Commission until Oct. 15.
Buttigieg has raised more than $51 million since entering the race as a longshot contender last winter.
___
6 a.m.
Bernie Sanders says he raised $25.3 million in the third fundraising quarter from 1.4 million donors while also bolstering his presidential war chest with an additional $2.6 million transferred from other campaign accounts.
The Vermont senator says he’s now collected $61.5 million from 3.3 million individual donors since launching his White House bid in February, making his average contribution $19.
Sanders says 99.9% of his donors have yet to reach contribution maximums and can give more.
Sanders’ campaign says September was his top fundraising month of 2020 and that Monday, the final day of the three-month quarter, was his presidential campaign’s second-best overall fundraising day.
Sanders’ total exceeds the $24.8 million South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg collected last quarter to lead the crowded 2020 Democratic presidential field.
___
12:30 a.m.
Democratic presidential candidates were pleading for campaign cash in the waning days and hours of the third quarter of fundraising.
With Iowa’s caucuses looming in February, a sense of urgency is growing among the candidates as the primary contest turns into a fierce battle for a limited pool of cash. That money could make the difference between staying in the race and heading for the exits.
Those who continue to muddle along in the lower tier of candidates will face challenges paying for advertising to amplify their message. They’re also likely to struggle to reach fundraising thresholds set by the Democratic National Committee to qualify for future debates.
Top-tier candidates like Joe Biden, Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders are expected to be among the leaders in the money-raising field.

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Everything You Need to Enjoy One Tech-Free Day a Week

If you're going to ditch your phone for a technology shabbat (and you totally should), you'll need a few bits of gear that date back to the disco era.

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Netflix, Save Yourself and Give Me Something Random to Watch

I want off the Netflix carousel. Please give me an "I Feel Lucky" button for entertainment.

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The Timeless Futurism of Jeanette Winterson's 'Frankissstein'

The author's latest novel reanimates Mary Shelley's classic for a world where life and identity have all new meanings.

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Never too late: Rapper Too $hort is first time dad at age 53

Rapper Too $hort is a father for the first time at the age of 53, according to TMZ.

Stacey Dash released from jail after domestic dispute with husband

The “Blow the Whistle” rapper and girlfriend Sue Ivy had a daughter Yani Shaw  in December. It’s news to us after the two kept their baby girl’s birth on the low.

Now the new poppa is planning to let us in on life as a father in a new documentary with Ray J and his manager, David Weintraub, about raising little girls in Hollywood.

There’s no word if Too Short will be one and done when it comes to having another baby, but we know it’s all about babies for Ray J and Princess Love who are expecting their second child next year.

The couple made the announcement via a series of family photos showing off Love’s growing baby bump, PEOPLE reports. Both shared the images on Sunday to their individual Instagram pages, noting that their baby is due January 2020. They are already parents to 15-month-old daughter Melody Love.

“Somebody’s gonna be a big sis 👶🏽🍼 New addition arriving Jan 2020 @melodylovenorwood @rayj#2under2 #Blessed,” Princess shared on her own Instagram account.

Love’s announcement featured photos of Melody rocking a t-shirt that read, “big sis.”

Ray J and Princess Love tied the knot in August 2016 after four years of dating. They welcomed their daughter two years later in May 2018.

After revealing his wife’s first pregnancy back in 2017, Ray J explained on The Real that they had been trying to grow their family.

Is Dwayne Johnson returning to his wrestling roots?

“It was special, because we was tryin’ for a while,” he said at the time. “It’s not as easy as people think. Some people go on tour and get everybody pregnant. But for me, it was love and we took our time.”

Back in March, Ray J told Us Weekly that he was already thinking about baby number two.

We can’t wait to see what this documentary entails.

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Stacey Dash released from jail after domestic dispute with husband

Clueless actress Stacey Dash has been released from jail after she was arrested and accused of assaulting her husband Jeffrey Marty.

Stacey Dash ARRESTED for domestic violence against husband, claims self-defense

On Sunday, Dash was arrested by Florida police and seen on body camera footage handcuffed by authorities for a domestic violence call involving a physical altercation with Marty, the Pasco County Sheriff’s Office told PEOPLE.

Dash, however, is reportedly the one who initiated the 911 call to report abuse but police allegedly didn’t see any marks on her face and body at first look. Since they saw marks on Marty they arrested Dash instead, because she “pushed him and slapped his face,” which left “red scratch marks” on his left arm TMZ first reported.

“Stacey actually called the police because she was attacked by her husband. He choked her and she was defending herself,” said her manager, Sean P. Jackson. “When the police arrived, they couldn’t see any physical marks on her, but they did see them on him.”

Jackson said his client was acting in self-defense.

Dash was released on $500 bail and according to a statement released by Dash, she said she “had a marital dispute in their Tampa, FL suburb.”

“No charges were pressed by her husband, however, Deputies arrested Ms. Dash peacefully, as a formality,” the statement read. “Ms. Dash’s husband appeared in court today, September 30th, on her behalf and Ms. Dash was released from the Land O’ Lakes detention facility. No further legal action is pending.”

The statement also tried to clear up earlier reports that they said were inaccurate.

“The marital dispute, while personal and unfortunate, has since been blown out of proportion. An earlier report on TMZ.com said her manager told TMZ that she was attacked by her husband — both the sources relationship to Ms. Dash and the events of the evening were misrepresented.”

REPORTS: R. Kelly wants OUT of jail because its unfairly strict

It continues: “Ms. Dash is a domestic abuse survivor from a previous relationship and has championed for other abuse victims to speak up,” the statement added. “The untruthfulness being reported saddens Ms. Dash and her family — no further comments will be made and we ask that Ms. Dash and her family’s privacy will be respected.”

Although Dash’s lawyer says she’s a victim, the internet was not as supportive once they heard Dash got arrested.

Stacey Dash is best known for her role in Clueless but caused quite a stir as a very vocal supporter of Donald Trump. She landed a gig as a correspondent for Fox News before being ousted and had a short-lived plan to run for Congress in 2018.

The post Stacey Dash released from jail after domestic dispute with husband appeared first on theGrio.



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