Saturday, 3 July 2021

Three New Music Documentaries Celebrate the Cosmic Connection Between Artist and Audience

In Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson’s radiant documentary Summer of Soul, an account of a star-studded concert series that took place in a Harlem park during the summer of Woodstock but received far less attention, a fiftyish gentleman who attended the shows as a kid, Musa Jackson, describes the experience as if it were a dream. Only when he saw footage of the performances, stored away for some 50 years, did he realize how overwhelming this event—a showcase of great Black performers, staged for a nearly all-Black audience—had been: “You put memories away,” he says, “and sometimes you don’t even know if they’re real.”
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If part of a musician’s skill is knowing just where to put which notes, the other, more elusive gift is knowing how to spin a dream between performer and listener. This summer, as musicians and audiences alike reacquaint themselves with the pleasures of live music, three documentaries help connect us not just with what it means to be an artist, but with the equally crucial act of being a listener, of becoming part of the crackling circuit between artist and audience. To be a fan is to be part of a community, and Questlove’s Summer of Soul, Edgar Wright’s The Sparks Brothers and the Hulu docuseries McCartney 3,2,1 remind us of the ways music unites us, whether we’re nestled shoulder to shoulder with likeminded people or plugging in more intimately via headphones or Airpods.

In the six-episode McCartney 3,2,1, premiering July 16, superstar record producer Rick Rubin sits down with once-and-forever Beatle Paul McCartney to walk through some of the signposts of his career, as well as some songs that simply present the opportunity for an amusing anecdote or two. The series, directed by Zachary Heinzerling, is so relaxed that you almost forget you’re watching a veritable rock’n’roll god in action. One minute he’s sitting at the piano, playing a trio of chords that can be mixed and matched into a nearly infinite garden of delights; the next he’s revealing the secrets of an isolated vocal track laid down practically a lifetime ago.

Read more: ‘This Film Was My Chance to Correct History.’ Questlove on Summer of Soul and the Oscars

McCartney 3,2,1
HuluPaul McCartney and Rick Rubin in Hulu’s ‘McCartney 3,2,1’

I know what you may be thinking: Who needs more Beatles stuff? Even people who love the Beatles don’t always love people who love the Beatles, as anyone who’s gone on a first (and last) date with an obsessive Fab Four mansplainer can attest.

But the intimacy of McCartney 3,2,1 makes it hard not to feel some tenderness for this megastar, now 79, whose band shook something loose in the world. To hear McCartney reflect on the early days is to be reminded that he and his bandmates started out as kids, honing their chops by playing live shows in humble venues. They didn’t even have a tape recorder to help them work out their ideas. “We were writing songs that were memorable not because we wanted them to be remembered,” McCartney tells Rubin, “but because we had to remember them. A very practical reason, really.”

Yet fandom, even at the level inspired by the Beatles, is never an end in itself. It’s also a beginning, an open door to rapture, to finding your place in the world—and, sometimes, to creating new work that builds on the old. Filmmaker Edgar Wright (Shaun of the Dead, Baby Driver) has long adored the art-pop act known as Sparks, and The Sparks Brothers, now in theaters, covers the duo’s 50-year-plus career in voluminous, affectionate detail.

Brothers Ron and Russell Mael are the performers behind Sparks: born and raised in Los Angeles, they started their first band there in 1967, though their career didn’t ignite until they decamped for London. Circa 1974, the time of the duo’s first big U.K. hit, “This Town Ain’t Big Enough for the Both of Us,” Russell was a string-bean glam-rocker with a curly mop of hair, a teenybopper idol spinning out semi-surrealist lyrics. Ron, glowering behind the keyboard, favored a narrow smudge of a mustache that’s either Hitlerian or Chaplinesque, depending on your mood.

Although this sounds like an unlikely formula for success, Sparks have endured. The Mael brothers continue to make and release strange, innovative albums, and they’ve written a movie, Annette, directed by Leos Carax, which was chosen as this year’s opening film at Cannes. And while their brand of avant-garde weirdness has attracted loyal fans over the years, their influence may be best measured by the number of musicians and bands they’ve inspired. The movie’s trailer touts Sparks as “Your favorite band’s favorite band,” and sure enough, one artist after another shows up in The Sparks Brothers—Beck, Thurston Moore, Flea—to pay homage. Over the years, clueless critics have at times accused Sparks of stealing musical styles they’d in fact originated. They were so ahead of their time that they were practically ahead of themselves.

The Sparks Brothers - Still 1
Sundance InstituteA still from ‘The Sparks Brothers’

Artists reach us by surprising us, even if that just means telling us old stories in new ways. But Summer of Soul, now in theaters and streaming on Hulu, shows us another side of that equation: The way an audience’s mere presence—its energy and love, manifested in a sea of faces and bodies—can reach an artist, perhaps moving him or her to tears.

Summer of Soul, which broke the sales record for documentary acquisitions out of Sundance after winning major awards there in January, is Questlove’s account of a series of concerts known as the Harlem Cultural Festival, held during a six-week span in the summer of 1969. The location was Harlem’s Mt. Morris Park—now known as Marcus Garvey Park—and the turnout for these free shows was spectacular. Television producer Hal Tulchin filmed the performances, resulting in 40 hours’ worth of material. But Tulchin couldn’t interest anyone in releasing the footage commercially, and it languished in storage until Questlove rescued it. He has artfully assembled that footage here, combining it with present-day accounts from people who were there, either performing on-stage or watching from the audience.

It’s hard to believe—or maybe it isn’t—that a festival with so many showstoppers has eluded mass attention until now. A very young Gladys Knight, already possessed of a very big voice, storms the stage with her Pips. Stevie Wonder, at the time only 19 and dressed in a killer apricot and chocolate suit-and-shirt combo, starts a number on the keyboards before wending his way over to the drums—because he can play those too, and he’s not about to let anyone forget it. Sly and the Family Stone breeze onto the stage like a gust of psychedelic butterflies. Mahalia Jackson, dressed in a hot-pink caftan like a heaven-sent cloud, soars high with Martin Luther King Jr.’s beloved “Precious Lord Take My Hand,” a young Mavis Staples, awe-struck, singing at her side.

The 5th Dimension performing at the Harlem Cultural Festival in 1969, featured in the documentary SUMMER OF SOUL. Photo Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2021 20th Century Studios All Rights Reserved
Searchlight PicturesThe 5th Dimension performing at the Harlem Cultural Festival in 1969, featured in the documentary ‘Summer of Soul.’

All of these acts are extraordinary. But the real miracle of Summer of Soul is the audience, vast and varied and nearly all Black: Whole families had come to the park, picnics in tow. We see giddy toddlers wriggling and jiggling, taking to heart Sly Stone’s entreaties to dance to the music. Some young women wear neat shift dresses and straightened tresses; others splash out in African prints, their hair natural, a style that had only recently become popular, in parallel with the Civil Rights Movement. This audience, standing together and filled with joy, was marking the creation of a new world, one that’s still coming into being half a century later.

One of the festival’s younger, groovier acts was the Fifth Dimension, who’d recently scored a number-one record with their floaty medley of “Aquarius” and “Let the Sunshine In” from Hair. A few years earlier, they’d released an album keyed to another huge hit, Jimmy Webb’s “Up, Up and Away.” The album’s cover featured the group huddled together—wonderfully, ridiculously—in the basket of a hot-air balloon.

In one of the most moving sequences of Summer of Soul, the Fifth Dimension’s Marilyn McCoo, interviewed in the present day, explains why she and the other members of the group—including her husband, the thoroughly charming Billy Davis, who also appears in the film—were so happy to be invited to perform at the festival. Among Black audiences, McCoo says, there was a sense that the Fifth Dimension “weren’t Black enough.” It meant a great deal to her and her fellow musicians to play before, and feel embraced by, her own people.

As McCoo and Davis watch younger versions of themselves on a screen that we can’t see, McCoo says—betraying the shyest trace of a tear—“We were so happy to be there.” And so the dream circuit between audience and artist is complete, so cosmically whole it’s impossible to tell where one begins and the other leaves off.

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M&S Bank branch closures reflect shift to online

All 29 in-store branches are shutting on Friday, ahead of the withdrawal of M&S Bank from current accounts.

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Experts say Hubble is 'beyond repair' despite NASA insisting there are 'multiple options' for a fix - Daily Mail

  1. Experts say Hubble is 'beyond repair' despite NASA insisting there are 'multiple options' for a fix  Daily Mail
  2. NASA still trying to identify what took Hubble offline  Ars Technica
  3. Former NASA astronaut and Shuttle boss weigh in on fixing Hubble Space Telescope  The Register
  4. NASA's James Webb telescope is 'go' for launch on Halloween  Daily Mail
  5. NASA's Hubble Space Telescope explores 15 million light-years far spiral galaxy M83; Watch  Republic World
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Elsa now a Category 1 hurricane with Florida in its forecast. Hurricane watch for Haiti



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We Taste-Tested 10 Hot Dogs. Here Are the Best.


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Friday, 2 July 2021

Jasmine Hartin claims she was abandoned by Andrew Ashcroft's family over fears about 'bad press' - Daily Mail

Jasmine Hartin claims she was abandoned by Andrew Ashcroft's family over fears about 'bad press'  Daily Mail

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How the Delta Variant Affects Whether You Should Wear a Mask or Not

As infections involving the new Delta variant of the COVID-19 virus continue to increase around the world, including in the U.S., health experts are yet again revisiting advice about who should wear masks and when.

On June 28, the Los Angeles County public health department advised all people, including those who are vaccinated, to wear masks in most indoor public settings, based on the fact that nearly half of the virus from cases in the county that were genetically sequenced now belong to the Delta variant. The variant, first identified in India, is far more contagious than previous strains of SARS-CoV-2, and could cause more severe disease. Then the World Health Organization reaffirmed its advice that vaccinated people continue to wear masks when in public settings as a precaution. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) has still not changed its guidance for vaccinated people, last revised in May, which states that fully vaccinated individuals can resume most of their normal activities, without masks. CDC director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said in a broadcast interview that vaccines continue to protect against the Delta variant, and that it’s more important for unvaccinated people to wear masks to protect themselves from getting infected. But she did acknowledge that local and state policies could decide to be more stringent because of rising cases of infections with the Delta variant.
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That’s the case in L.A. county. Studies show that vaccines provide people with sufficient protection from getting sick with COVID-19, but even vaccinated people can still get infected and experience symptoms, albeit milder ones and very rarely. That’s why Los Angeles health officials issued the recommendation for all people, vaccinated or not, to wear masks indoors in grocery stores, theaters, workplaces and restaurants when not eating, since it’s hard to know whether other people in those environments are vaccinated. The advice comes just after the county had relaxed social restrictions and allowed restaurants, retail and entertainment facilities to open as more people were vaccinated.

Dr. Muntu Davis, health officer for L.A. County, says the decision is based on the continued uncertainty about how much vaccine immunity protects against the Delta variant. Early data from Israel suggest that even fully vaccinated people can become infected with the Delta variant, which isn’t entirely surprising since studies show that the vaccines are about 80% effective in shielding people from getting COVID-19. Since there is a chance, even though it’s small, that vaccinated people can still get infected and potentially pass along the virus to unvaccinated individuals, asking vaccinated people to wear masks in public is “prudent,” says Davis. He says that in making the recommendation, officials considered the fact that four million people in the county are unvaccinated, and that by all accounts, vaccinated people who do get infected could experience no symptoms or mild symptoms and therefore might not know they can transmit the virus.

Local health officials across the country may soon be facing similar decisions. Nationally, nearly 70% of adult Americans have had at least one shot, but that number is much smaller in some parts of the country, making those areas at higher risk for outbreaks involving the Delta variant.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and chief medical advisor to the White House, has said that the best way to slow or stop the variant is to vaccinate as much of the population as possible, as quickly as possible. Variants like Delta only emerge when the virus is reproducing and making copies of its genetic code; and it can only do this freely in someone with little immune defenses to counter infection—such as unvaccinated people.

The unvaccinated continue to be the most vulnerable to getting infected and becoming potentially severely ill with COVID-19, since the variant is highly contagious. Preliminary reports from Australia using close-circuit cameras that monitored how long people known to be infected had been in contact with people who eventually become infected suggest the Delta variant doesn’t need much time to hop from one person to another.

“The Delta variant is more infective, more contagious. So given that it is so contagious, and that there are wide swaths of the country that don’t even have 50% of people vaccinated in the U.S., then I think that the mask recommendations are absolutely in line with how we’ve been approaching the pandemic from the get-go,” says Dr. Kirsten Lyke, professor of medicine at the University of Maryland School of Medicine who is leading some of the COVID-19 vaccine trials. “I personally err on the side of caution, and wear a mask indoors and out even though I’m vaccinated. I just think we’ve been surprised enough by COVID-19 that I’m not sure we fully understand the Delta variant, and the degree to which it is transmissible.”

Lyke says that vaccinated people can have “some degree of comfort” if they are unmasked and outdoors, as the CDC suggests, but that everyone, vaccinated or not, should “continue to be wary. There are micropockets of people who are not vaccinated. And the Delta variant is just going to roar through them.”

Vaccines and masks are an insurance policy for everyone, says Davis. “We think of vaccines like seatbelts. If you were in an accident, you’re less likely to have a serious outcome.” Given that there are millions of people still unvaccinated—and remaining uncertainties about how likely it is that a vaccinated person can spread the virus—the mask recommendation makes sense, he says, “while we are watching and learning more about the Delta variant. It’s not a requirement, but a recommendation for everyone to continue to wear masks in those settings where they don’t know if people are fully vaccinated or not.”



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Coding error spotted in Tim Berners-Lee NFT sale

An error has been spotted in a video displaying the original source code for the world wide web.

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Most Christian Colleges Will Never Be a Safe Space For LGBTQ Students. But They Must Still Do Better To Affirm and Support Us

As a queer person of faith born and raised in the Seventh-day Adventist Church, I have only ever attended Christian educational institutions. I am a graduate of Andrews University, the Church’s flagship school in Berrien Springs, Michigan—a university that prides itself in empowering students to make a change in the world.

Like many evangelical and Christian denominations, the Seventh-day Adventist Church believe that being LGBTQ is a sin, and that life-long celibacy is the only acceptable response to a LGBTQ person’s sexuality. As long as the official Seventh-day Adventist teachings on gender and sexuality remain the same, campuses like Andrews will never be a completely safe environment for LGBTQ people. But there will always be LGBTQ people in the Church—in many instances, it is their only community—just as there will always be LGBTQ people in Church-affiliated spaces. It is necessary, then, that our Christian universities and colleges are held accountable for the ways they treat LGBTQ people on campus.
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Eliel Cruz Graduation Day
Courtesy of Eliel CruzCruz at his graduation ceremony in 2015.

During my time at Andrews, I faced discrimination and anti-queer prejudice. It was widely-discussed that there were resident advisors who would harass students suspected of being queer; professors who would preach the dangers of homosexuality at the beginning of class. I began advocating for LGBTQ protections out of necessity, having found myself in a situation where I felt unsafe and still afraid to ask for support for fear I’d be penalized—or even expelled—simply because of who I am.

In a statement, Andrews University writes that all current students—including those identifying as LBGTQ—are protected under Title IX legislation against “bias, harassment and assault.”

Read more: We Have a Once-in-a-Generation Opportunity to Protect LGBTQ People From Discrimination. Will the Senate Take It?

This is a shared experience for many LGBTQ students on Christian college campuses across the U.S. (as well as at religious-affiliated high schools where disciplinary actions, suspensions and even expulsions are common). As Mother Jones reported recently, LGBTQ students at Christian colleges have been forced to navigate widespread homophobia, the promotion of conversion therapy, being outed to friends and family and losing on-campus jobs due to their sexuality.

In my junior year, I helped create AULL4One, Andrews’ unofficial gay-straight alliance (GSA). Our inaugural members—a single-digit group—first met off-campus at a supportive faculty member’s house, full of fear they’d be reprimanded simply for attending. As I began working to push Andrews to become a safer place for LGBTQ students, I felt like I was under scrutiny by some faculty members. And after I wrote about my experience as a queer person in the church and an organizer on campus, I learned of an administrator who had considered “involving legal counsel” to have my piece amended—to ensure, specifically, that I not represent that Andrews had “recognized” or “endorsed” a gay-straight alliance.

(“Andrews University never has reprimanded or threatened legal action against any person for truthfully sharing their perspective and experience. And it never would,” the University responds. “However, Andrews University must preserve its ability to respond to unfair and untrue statements.”)

But we LGBTQ student leaders persevered and successfully pushed the school’s administration to make progress. In its statement, Andrews University cites the 2016 formation of an “LGBT+ Task Force” which has implemented updates to the student handbook centering LGBTQ students’ experiences. “The University is committed to creating a safe and caring climate where such diverse groups are treated with dignity and respect,” the handbook’s new language reads in part, “in keeping with their value as persons created in the image of God.” The task force also created an official LGBTQ group, HAVEN, which was recognized the year after I graduated in 2015. So the school is now actively working with LGBTQ students on campus, and the sky has not fallen.

Read more: ‘This Isn’t Just About a Pronoun.’ Teachers and Trans Students Are Clashing Over Whose Rights Come First

Since my graduation, I’ve returned to the campus to meet with queer students. They’ve spoken of a mostly-inclusive community among their peers, with students emboldened or prepared to speak up against anti-LGBTQ behavior. And they’ve shared their gratitude for supportive staffers and allies among Andrews faculty—the support of some faculty members, albeit at times strained by their jobs, is what allowed me to survive my time on campus—while noting the “known” presence of professors vehemently against LGBTQ people.

I recently spoke with a 22-year-old current Andrews student, who shared a specific incident: “One of my professors was comparing homosexuality and bestiality. He was like, ‘I’m probably going to get in trouble for saying this, and I’ll probably get fired one day, but blah, blah, blah.’” (The student adds that he took a complaint to Andrews’ vice president of diversity—a role recently created at the university—who he believes took steps to deal with the issue.)

The student’s other criticisms were primarily those of a leader trying to make his campus a better place for LGBTQ students who follow him—they ring all too true. His biggest frustration is the inability to promote “LGBTQ issues,” be that community resources, sexual education or events that can be construed as pro-LGBTQ. As an unofficial group, AULL4One is still blocked from being officially present on campus; HAVEN is limited in its programming beyond the support group-style environment it provides LGBTQ students in meetings.

“Work is now underway to create an approach to campus education that will help University faculty, staff and students better respond to, care for and understand our LGBT+ population,” Andrews’ statement continues, in order to create an environment in which LGBTQ students “have the opportunity to find personal, academic and spiritual nurture.”

Here though, the onus shouldn’t be on LGBTQ students to push an administration to acknowledge and support them, or have to take on the burden of finding ways to make their campus safe. This work must instead be centered in the university’s ethos; a new-found sense of urgency, and initiative, is needed to shift campus landscapes. If Andrews really is ready and willing to undertake the work—as it should—then it must support The Equality Act, as should all Christian schools.

The Equality Act is a historic piece of legislation that would codify protections for LGBTQ people by amending the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to include sexuality and gender identity under protected classes. It would provide explicit, consistent protections for LGBTQ people nationwide regarding employment, access to housing, credit, public services, federally funded programs—and in education. (More than thirty current and former LGBTQ students from Christian colleges and universities across the country are included in one recent class action lawsuit challenging their schools’ conduct.)

Many evangelical and Christian denominations, including the Seventh-day Adventist Church, oppose the legislation. They argue that it infringes on their religious freedoms, and jeopardizes their eligibility for federal funds. (The Alliance Defending Freedom, classified as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, has been preparing to fight for the ability to discriminate on the evangelical campuses for many years, financed by the National Christian Charitable Foundation.) But federal funding would not be threatened if schools simply did not discriminate against LGBTQ students who are, after all, merely trying to get an education. And if a Christian institution’s theology prohibits them from treating LGBTQ students with decency and respect, then perhaps the theology isn’t as rooted in love as they claim.

I am pushing for the passage of the Equality Act as an alumnus of Andrews University, taking up its call to create change in the world. It is time for Christian campuses to adopt a more authentically Christ-like approach to LGBTQ people—and be held accountable for the harm caused when that’s not the case.



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Supreme Court upholds restrictive Arizona voting laws in test of Voting Rights Act



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Coronavirus latest news: 'Remain disciplined' or face a new wave in Europe, warns WHO - Telegraph.co.uk

  1. Coronavirus latest news: 'Remain disciplined' or face a new wave in Europe, warns WHO  Telegraph.co.uk
  2. European region Covid cases jump 10% as WHO calls for Euro 2020 monitoring  The Guardian
  3. WHO warns new COVID wave inevitable in Europe as cases rise  Al Jazeera English
  4. UEFA Euro 2020: WHO Sounds Alarm As Covid-19 Cases Soar  NDTVSports.com
  5. Covid-19 global updates: Coronavirus cases rise in Europe for first time in 10 weeks as delta variant spreads  The Washington Post
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Ewan McGregor's 20 best movie performances – ranked! | Movies - The Guardian

Ewan McGregor's 20 best movie performances – ranked! | Movies  The Guardian

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Jeremy Heywood’s widow questions Greensill inquiry chief’s independence - The Guardian

Jeremy Heywood’s widow questions Greensill inquiry chief’s independence  The Guardian

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Biden bringing message of comfort, unity to Surfside



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Trump Organization CFO Surrenders to Authorities in New York

The Trump Organization’s longtime chief financial officer surrendered to authorities in New York to face state tax charges after a grand jury indicted him and his employer in the first criminal case against former President Donald Trump’s company.

Allen Weisselberg, 73, went through a freight entrance to avoid cameras awaiting his arrival at District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr.’s lower Manhattan office Thursday, one day after a grand jury indicted him and the company in an extraordinary challenge to the former president.

The exact charges he’s facing will be unsealed later in the day, but are expected to involve unpaid taxes on benefits extended to Weisselberg, according to a person familiar with the issue who asked not to be identified discussing confidential matters. Trump isn’t expected to be named in the charges, but they ratchet up the pressure on Weisselberg to cooperate against his boss.
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Weisselberg’s cooperation could lead to a more expansive case against the company and raise the prospect of a historic and politically charged prosecution of a former president. With a trial unlikely before next year, Weisselberg will have months to decide whether to fight the charges or plead guilty and possibly strike a deal with prosecutors. A Trump executive for four decades, Weisselberg has unique insight into the former president’s finances and business deals.

Trump has slammed the probe by Vance, a Democrat, as politically motivated. “They will do anything to stop the MAGA movement (and me),” he said in a June 28 statement, referring to his campaign slogan to “Make America Great Again.” Former Trump senior adviser Jason Miller tweeted on Wednesday that a case against Weisselberg would be a “political disaster” for Democrats because it didn’t include Trump.

Trump Organization lawyer Ronald Fischetti said last week that the district attorney’s case appeared thin.

“In my more than 50 years of practice, never before have I seen the district attorney’s office target a company over employee compensation or fringe benefits,” he said in a June 25 interview. “The IRS would not, and has not, brought a case like this.”

But a number of legal experts said the charges against his CFO raised the potential legal jeopardy for Trump.

“The question is not whether this is the strongest case they can make against the Trump Organization, but whether this is the strongest case they can make against Weisselberg,” said Jeremy Temkin, a former prosecutor. “The pressure on a potential cooperating witness changes significantly when they are in the caption of an indictment. This is all about putting pressure on Weisselberg and getting him to cooperate.”

Prosecutor Focus

Vance’s investigation initially focused on the Trump Organization’s reimbursement, through Weisselberg’s office, of hush-money payments made by Michael Cohen, Trump’s former personal lawyer and fixer. In the run-up to the 2016 election, Cohen paid two women claiming to have had affairs with Trump.

The district attorney’s investigation has since grown into a review of the company’s dealings with a variety of outside business entities, including Deutsche Bank AG and Ladder Capital, where one of Weisselberg’s sons works. New York Attorney General Letitia James earlier this year joined the criminal probe, while also maintaining a separate civil investigation of the company’s business practices, particularly its valuation of properties.

Prosecutors have also examined an array of perks that the Trump Organization bestowed on favored employees, including Barry Weisselberg, Allen’s son, who managed Trump-run New York City properties like Wollman Rink before those concessions were revoked by Mayor Bill DeBlasio this year. He was provided a rent-free apartment in a Trump building starting in 2005, Bloomberg reported.

The Trump Organization also paid the private-school tuitions for Allen Weisselberg’s grandchildren. Such perks are usually taxable as income, and failure to report them could be a crime.

To convict the Trump Organization or Weisselberg of tax fraud, prosecutors must show they had an intent to defraud, and must prove the value of those benefits and the taxes underpaid.

“Payroll taxes are due on income,” said Susan Hoffinger, a criminal tax attorney and former prosecutor in the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office. “If those fringe benefits are considered income, they owe payroll taxes on that.”

—With assistance from Sophie Alexander, Jeremy Hill, Erik Larson and David Voreacos.



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Supreme Court strikes down California law requiring disclosure of political donors



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Supreme Court upholds Arizona's GOP voting restrictions, paving way for new curbs nationwide



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Miami condo rescue work halted over fears remaining structure will topple - The Guardian

  1. Miami condo rescue work halted over fears remaining structure will topple  The Guardian
  2. Miami building collapse: Bodies of two children, aged 4 and 10, found in rubble  Sky News
  3. New video shows water gushing into Surfside condo basement moments before collapse  The Independent
  4. Water filmed pouring into basement of Miami condo minutes before its collapse as death toll hits 18  Daily Mail
  5. Miami building collapse: Bodies of two children, aged 4 and 10, found in the rubble  The Mirror
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Miami condo rescue work halted over fears remaining structure will topple



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PlayStation has bought another developer - Eurogamer.net

  1. PlayStation has bought another developer  Eurogamer.net
  2. PlayStation Acquires Nixxes, a PC Porting Specialist - IGN  IGN
  3. Sony PlayStation acquires Nixxes Software, developer of PC ports  Polygon
  4. Sony Acquires Dutch Developer Nixxes to Beef Up First-Party Tech Support  pushsquare.com
  5. Bluepoint Games Twitter bio states it's "fully independent" despite PlayStation acquisition rumors  Gamesradar
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Wimbledon 2021: Cameron Norrie sets up potential Roger Federer clash - BBC Sport

  1. Wimbledon 2021: Cameron Norrie sets up potential Roger Federer clash  BBC Sport
  2. Key Takeaways From Roger Federer’s Wimbledon First Round Match  Last Word on Baseball
  3. Wimbledon 2021: Cameron Norrie thrashes Alex Bolt to set up potential Roger Federer clash  The Independent
  4. Federer vs Gasquet live stream: how to watch Wimbledon free from anywhere  TechRadar
  5. Roger Federer made John Bercow look 'an embarrassment' in unearthed Wimbledon snub  Express
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Trump Organisation CFO Allen Weisselberg surrenders in criminal case over company’s business dealings



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Four reasons why Gap is closing its shops in the UK

Four reasons why the former High Street favourite is closing its shops in the UK and Ireland.

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In South Florida, developers often demand exceptions to rules. Champlain Towers got several



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11 Dreamy Candles to Capture Your Summer Mood



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A Texas high school teacher died while hiking after being swept down a mountain by rushing water after heavy rain



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McCarthy reportedly makes 'stark threat' to Republicans over Jan. 6 committee



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Top Trump Organization executive to plead not guilty after grand jury indictment



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Thursday, 1 July 2021

Fan who caused Tour de France pileup arrested: Report



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Loki: Episode 4 Review - IGN

  1. Loki: Episode 4 Review  IGN
  2. Loki episode four recap: a time-shatteringly great watch  The Guardian
  3. Loki episode 4's death and credits scene explained  digitalspy.com
  4. Loki Episode 4 Review: The Nexus Event  Den of Geek
  5. Loki episode 4 recap: the best one yet?  TechRadar
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Videos show massive flooding in Zion National Park as roaring waters cause destruction



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Mom arrested in killings of 3 children, California cops say. ‘Out of the blue tragedy’



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Age-related immune response heterogeneity to SARS-CoV-2 vaccine BNT162b2 - Nature.com

  1. Age-related immune response heterogeneity to SARS-CoV-2 vaccine BNT162b2  Nature.com
  2. Is the SARS-CoV-2 delta variant threatening vaccine efficacy?  News-Medical.Net
  3. Drugs research update: Will we get a cure for COVID-19? | COVID-19 Special  DW News
  4. Safety, tolerability, and immunogenicity of an inactivated SARS-CoV-2 vaccine (CoronaVac) in healthy children and adolescents: a double-blind, randomised, controlled, phase 1/2 clinical trial  The Lancet
  5. Is mild COVID-19 in children due to stronger antiviral innate immunity in the upper airway?  News-Medical.Net
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Bank of England’s Haldane warns of ‘very nasty surprise’ if inflationary pressures aren’t nipped in bud – business live - The Guardian

  1. Bank of England’s Haldane warns of ‘very nasty surprise’ if inflationary pressures aren’t nipped in bud – business live  The Guardian
  2. Bank of England Chief Economist Haldane Sees 4% Inflation in UK This Year  Bloomberg
  3. Bank of England’s Haldane: Inflation to be nearer to 4% by end of year  Evening Standard
  4. BoE chief economist warns on inflation but says COVID could deliver supply side benefits  Yahoo Finance UK
  5. Haldane: Bank of England Approaching a "Dangerous Moment", sees 4.0% Inflation in 2021  Pound Sterling Live
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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HMS Defender: Russia's Putin accuses UK and US of military provocation - BBC News

  1. HMS Defender: Russia's Putin accuses UK and US of military provocation  BBC News
  2. Even if Russia had sunk UK warship, it would not have caused World War Three, says Putin  Sky News
  3. HMS Defender: Putin claims UK warship near Crimea deliberately tried to test Russian military response  The Independent
  4. Putin boasts even if Russia had sunk HMS Defender it would not have caused WW3 because West ‘can’t win tha...  The Sun
  5. Russia accused of threatening Dutch warship on patrol with Britain's HMS Defender  Sky News
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Police find and arrest spectator who caused mass Tour de France crash - Cyclingnews.com

  1. Police find and arrest spectator who caused mass Tour de France crash  Cyclingnews.com
  2. Mark Cavendish cements comeback with emotional win at Tour de France  The Guardian
  3. Tour de France 2021 - Mark Cavendish: More stage wins and the green jersey not beyond Manx Missile  Eurosport.co.uk
  4. Tour de France stage 5 – Live coverage | Cyclingnews  Cyclingnews.com
  5. Tour de Hoody: Will echelons be the only chance for rivals to attack Tadej Pogačar?  VeloNews
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HRC Files Lawsuit Challenging Florida’s Transgender Sports Ban—and Announces More To Come

LGBTQ civil rights group The Human Rights Campaign (HRC) announced on Wednesday that it has filed a federal civil rights lawsuit challenging Florida’s “Fairness in Women’s Sports Act,” which Gov. Ron DeSantis signed into law on June 1 banning transgender women and girls from taking part in women’s sports. HRC argues that the law violates both the Constitution and existing federal anti-discrimination law.

HRC also announced plans to file similar challenges to anti-trans laws in Arkansas, Mississippi and Tennessee in the near future, marking the first time it has taken legal action in those states.
[time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”]

“We have seen an unprecedented attack on transgender young people, which requires an unprecedented response,” HRC’s President Alphonso David tells TIME of the group’s decision to bring litigation. “We’re [all] entitled to equal protection under the law. And what this law does is discriminate against transgender girls. It treats them as second class citizens.”

Working with the law firm Arnold & Porter, HRC brought the suit on the behalf of Daisy, a 13-year-old trans girl in Florida, as well as her parents. (HRC granted Daisy a pseudonym to protect her identity, and is only identifying her parents by their first names.) “Playing sports makes me feel like I fit in, the thought of not being able to play next year scares me,” Daisy said in a statement. “I’m going to be lonely and sad if I can’t play.”

Read more: Andraya Yearwood, a Star of Hulu’s New Changing the Game Documentary, Talks Life as a Trans Athlete

Daisy started to express her gender identity at age 4, according to the suit, and started receiving gender-affirming medical care in middle school. Now a rising 8th grader, Daisy plays basketball, softball, and is a goalie on three soccer teams, per the suit. She’s only ever played on girls’ teams, the litigation continues, and has never encountered opposition from her teammates, rival players, coaches or parents of fellow athletes. But Florida’s new law will force Daisy to either play on a boy’s sports team or drop out entirely. Not everyone in her life knows she’s trans, the suit adds, alleging that by forcing Daisy off her teams, the law also outs her as transgender.

“It is a very helpless feeling to know that people think our daughter does not deserve the rights to play sports with her friends—she has been playing with them for the last seven years and it has not been an issue,” her parents said in a statement. “Taking this right away will only further isolate her from her peers… As her parents, we just want her to be happy.”

Governor DeSantis Orlando theme parks roundtable
Joe Burbank—Orlando Sentinel/Getty ImagesGov. Ron DeSantis listens during a roundtable discussion with theme park leaders on Aug. 26, 2020.

HRC is challenging the law on several grounds, including violations of the 14th Amendment, which guarantees Americans equal protection under the law, and Title IX’s prohibition of sex discrimination in education. Gavin Grimm, a trans teen in Virginia who challenged his school’s bathroom ban in 2015, made similar arguments in a lawsuit that prevailed before the 4th Circuit Court last year—a victory the Supreme Court let stand on Monday. (On June 16 the Department of Education also said that it interprets Title IX to extend to protections for LGBTQ students.)

Florida is one of seven states that have passed laws banning transgender girls from playing on girls sports teams this year, though lawmakers in several of those states have failed to provide examples of transgender women or girls having an unfair advantage in their state—or instances in which they were aware of trans athletes at all. (In a June 1 press release, DeSantis had argued that his state’s legislation was in the name of protecting “fairness,” saying, “As a father of two daughters, I want my girls, and every girl in Florida, to compete on an even playing field for the opportunities available to young women in sports.”)

Trans rights advocates argue that the surge of anti-trans legislation that has swept state legislatures—HRC calculates over 250 anti-LGBTQ bills have been introduced in 2021 alone—represents a moral panic, and is intended to further a conservative political agenda.

“They are targeting the most vulnerable members of our community in order to score political points. It’s shameful,” says David, speaking about lawmakers proposing such bans. “They’re grasping at straws, and they’re looking to appeal to a base, based on fear and misinformation.”

And when asked if HRC plans on filing litigation in states besides the four announced Wednesday, he put it simply: “Stay tuned.”



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Google cracks down on financial-scam adverts

Regulators and campaigners say more needs to be done.

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Google cracks down on financial-scam adverts



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Galveston County, 400 miles from the Texas-Mexico border, declares an emergency over 'border crisis'



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Labour: Keir Starmer's leadership in turmoil as poll finds 69% of members would prefer Andy Burnham in charge - Sky News

  1. Labour: Keir Starmer's leadership in turmoil as poll finds 69% of members would prefer Andy Burnham in charge  Sky News
  2. Chance of holding Batley and Spen as low as 5%, say key Labour figures  The Guardian
  3. Keir Starmer's Labour has an India problem  Telegraph.co.uk
  4. Keir Starmer will not resign if Labour suffers another defeat at Batley and Spen by-election, party insists  The Independent
  5. George Galloway has galvanised Muslim hoodlums in Batley and Spen to further erode our failing democracy  iNews
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China's 'one-child policy' left at least 1 million bereaved parents childless and alone in old age, with no one to take care of them



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COVID-19: Nearly 2,000 cases linked to Scotland fans watching Euro 2020 games - Sky News

  1. COVID-19: Nearly 2,000 cases linked to Scotland fans watching Euro 2020 games  Sky News
  2. Massive Covid outbreak after England vs Scotland hits 1,300 fans who went south  The Mirror
  3. Covid: Scotland football fans linked to nearly 2000 virus cases | HeraldScotland  HeraldScotland
  4. Covid Scotland: Almost 2,000 coronavirus cases linked to Euro match attendance according to Public Health Scotland  The Scotsman
  5. More than 1,000 Covid cases in Scotland linked to people watching Euro 2020 football matches  Wales Online
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Head-on crash kills 20-year-old man and hurts others, Lexington County coroner says



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'Sit back with the popcorn' - Jamie Carragher's verdict on Rafa Benitez taking over at Everton - Liverpool Echo

  1. 'Sit back with the popcorn' - Jamie Carragher's verdict on Rafa Benitez taking over at Everton  Liverpool Echo
  2. Everton set to appoint Rafael Benitez as manager after he agrees three-year deal  BBC Sport
  3. Editor’s Column: Rafa, lad… Did you REALLY have to go and do that?  Empire of The Kop
  4. Everton new manager LIVE - Rafa Benitez appointment, James Rodriguez talks, Merih Demiral boost  Liverpool Echo
  5. Ex-Gerrard manager linked with Rangers raid before ink dry on controversial contract  Rangers News
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More Inside a Creative Couple’s Sustainable Catskills Getaway



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China and Argentina join forces to bully Britain over Falkland Islands – ‘Colonialist!’ - Daily Express

China and Argentina join forces to bully Britain over Falkland Islands – ‘Colonialist!’  Daily Express

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Death toll rises in Florida condo collapse



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Penny Lancaster reveals suicidal man she saved was a university student struggling with Zoom - Daily Mail

  1. Penny Lancaster reveals suicidal man she saved was a university student struggling with Zoom  Daily Mail
  2. Fiery Loose Women clash as Janet rages 'ridiculous' Penny won't let her speak  The Mirror
  3. Loose Women in chaos as Janet Street Porter clashes with Penny Lancaster and pair trade digs on air...  The Sun
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Shortlist for the Royal Observatory's Astronomy Photographer of the Year 2021 is revealed - Daily Mail

  1. Shortlist for the Royal Observatory's Astronomy Photographer of the Year 2021 is revealed  Daily Mail
  2. Here Are 16 of the Best Astronomy Photos of 2021  Gizmodo
  3. Astronomy: Photographer of the Year shortlist revealed - CBBC Newsround  BBC News
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Northern Ireland Protocol 'conflicts' with Act of Union, but lawful given parliament actions, judge finds - Belfast Telegraph

Northern Ireland Protocol 'conflicts' with Act of Union, but lawful given parliament actions, judge finds  Belfast TelegraphView Full coverage on Google News

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Wednesday, 30 June 2021

SpaceX to launch second rideshare, pressuring small-launch industry - Ars Technica

  1. SpaceX to launch second rideshare, pressuring small-launch industry  Ars Technica
  2. SpaceX launch today: Sonic booms expected as 88 satellites sent into space  The Independent
  3. Elon Musk's SpaceX Transporter 2: Falcon 9 launch time and where to watch it live  Cambridgeshire Live
  4. Watch a SpaceX rocket ace landing on a drone ship in stunning new video  Space.com
  5. SpaceX launch this week will feature first onshore rocket landing since December – Spaceflight Now  Spaceflight Now
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Britons resume borrowing as economy reopens in Covid crisis - The Guardian

Britons resume borrowing as economy reopens in Covid crisis  The GuardianView Full coverage on Google News

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Oakland police chief fumes after city slashes law enforcement funding amid crime surge



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Boaters watch cliff collapse along Lake Superior in Michigan



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Patrick Mahomes’ fiancée shares pic with baby Sterling during beach vacation



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United Airlines bets on travel boom with big plane order

The US airline announces its largest aircraft order to date, for 270 Boeing and Airbus planes.

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Miami building collapse – latest updates: Bidens to tour scene as new photos show rotting basement days before - The Independent

  1. Miami building collapse – latest updates: Bidens to tour scene as new photos show rotting basement days before  The Independent
  2. WATCH: Miami-Dade officials provide update on Surfside condo collapse  Washington Post
  3. Miami condo collapse prompts questions over role of climate change  The Guardian
  4. Miami condo collapse shows how the U.S. keeps getting disaster response wrong  NBCNews.com
  5. Miami building collapse: 9/11 investigators to look into disaster as death toll rises to 11  Sky News
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Teneo PR firm boss quits over drunken misconduct claims

Declan Kelly steps down over what he called "an inadvertent, public and embarrassing mistake".

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5,000-year-old hunter-gatherer is earliest person to die with the plague - The Guardian

  1. 5,000-year-old hunter-gatherer is earliest person to die with the plague  The Guardian
  2. 5,000-year-old man had the earliest known strain of plague  Daily Mail
  3. Discovery of Black Death bacterium in 5,000-year-old body shows ancient roots of medieval plague  ABC News
  4. Earliest strain of plague found in 5,000-year-old Latvian man, and it was mild  Haaretz
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Dalian Atkinson: PC Benjamin Monk jailed for ex-footballer's death - BBC News

  1. Dalian Atkinson: PC Benjamin Monk jailed for ex-footballer's death  BBC News
  2. Family of Dalian Atkinson urge England players to remember him while taking knee  The Guardian
  3. Dalian Atkinson death: Police officer jailed for 8 years for manslaughter of former footballer  Sky News
  4. Bootlace marks proved Dalian Atkinson was kicked at least twice in the head  shropshirestar.com
  5. Dalian Atkinson: Police officer who killed ex-footballer jailed for eight years  The Independent
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Lake Norman’s beach will open July 4 weekend. Here’s what you need to know.



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Supreme Court says no right to hearing for some immigrants



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