Saturday 26 June 2021

False Positive Strives for Elevated Pregnancy Horror But Misses the Mark

The stress of being unable to conceive a child is a world of anxiety and disappointment unto itself. The time-honored ritual of peeing on the stick, only to be brought down by the sight of that sad, solitary red line; the crushing disappointment of failed IVF treatments: if you’ve been through it, or if you’ve been close to anyone who has, you know it can do a number on your brain. As the young aspiring mother played by Ilana Glazer says in False Positive, the pregnancy horror-drama Glazer co-wrote with director John Lee, “As a woman, this is the one thing I’m supposed to be able to do, and I can’t do it.”
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Glazer’s Lucy, an ambitious New York advertising executive, is of course wrong about a woman’s having just one central capability. But in her mind, jangled after yet another negative at-home pregnancy test, her inability to conceive feels like an affront to her selfhood. Her husband, Adrian (Justin Theroux), a typically sure-of-himself surgeon, has been trying to persuade her to see a fertility expert who also happens to be his mentor. Lucy reluctantly agrees. And sure enough, thanks to the scientific miracle of intrauterine insemination—abetted by suave, smiling Dr. Hindle (Pierce Brosnan), the man wielding the all-powerful syringe—Lucy finally becomes pregnant.

False Positive
HULU—2021 HuluPierce Brosnan plays a suave but vaguely unsettling fertility doctor in ‘False Positive’

There’s a complication, one that Dr. Hindle assures her is easily solved. But the solution involves a serious decision on the couple’s part. Lucy and Adrian see this quandary differently, and Lucy feels pressured, though she ultimately makes the choice that feels right to her. Dr. Hindle abides by her wishes, and Lucy’s pregnancy continues relatively uneventfully—though she senses that behind Dr. Hindle’s slick bonhomie, and all the hearty back-slapping going on between him and Adrian, something is not quite right.

Is Lucy being paranoid? Or is she just suffering, as several of those around her suggest, from the fog-headedness known as “mommy brain”? As Dr. Hindle’s perpetually beaming assistant, Nurse Dawn (Gretchen Mol), suggests, Lucy should be happy with the growing life inside her, with her devoted, successful husband, with the promise of the whole motherhood experience laid before her. So what, exactly, is wrong?

False Positive is framed as a horror movie: Its opening-credits sequence hints at bloody havoc to come, though its chills are mostly the psychological kind. Lucy quickly realizes that she’s losing control over what she refers to as her own “birth story,” a phrase Adrian mocks as being something she picked up on Instagram. The movie is set up so that we’re in tune with Lucy’s creeping paranoia: Adrian has a sneaky home-office safe where he keeps a secret…something. A scene in which he fastens a gold Cartier love bracelet to Lucy’s wrist, with its accompanying mini-screwdriver, cements his smug sense of ownership over his wife, and her womb. Dr. Hindle’s smooth moves have a sinister veneer: Even the way he praises Nurse Dawn for putting the perfect sploodge of lubricant on the speculum feels unctuously paternalistic, the self-satisfied purr of a lion who knows he’s king.

What’s more, Lucy is actively discouraged—by the men around her, of course—from seeking the counsel of a midwife (played by Zainab Jah). The point, in case you’re not getting it, is that although only women can bear children, men have an enormous amount of control over what happens to a woman before, during and after her pregnancy. False Positive even includes a sequence, replete with black-and-white historical photographs, in which a character gives a mini-history of how men have sought to “improve” the childbirth experience for women, without bothering to find out what they want or need.

Read more reviews by Stephanie Zacharek

Has human brainpower really deteriorated to the point where we need every movie’s ideas spelled out for us in signpost letters? False Positive has a lot going for it: Glaser, who brought such marvelous deadpan charm to Broad City, makes a hugely sympathetic mom-to-be, shifting through every believable gradation of joy and outright terror at the thought of what awaits her. Brosnan and Mol are terrific in their supporting roles, bringing the movie some much-needed semi-comical glints of ice. And Lee shows some visual creativity: As Lucy drifts into an anesthesia-induced sleep before a medical procedure, her unspoken anxiety manifests itself as a blood-red butterfly shape spreading across her face like a mask, an evocation of the hazy nightmare twilight that’s descending upon her like a possessive demon. Lee goes for, and sometimes captures, a jittery Rosemary’s Baby vibe; Lucy keeps trying to step out of the shadow of all those who know what’s best for her and her unborn offspring, only to be nearly subsumed by that amorphous, hungry shape.

But False Positive doesn’t sustain its most suspenseful ideas. The big revelation at the end is something of a letdown, and the movie’s final image spells out a metaphor that ought to have been left to suggestion. Historically, horror movies have very often been “about” something beyond their surface scares: a million and one very dull theses have been written about the fear-of-Communism subtext of 1950s creature features. But now it seems that more and more filmmakers are striving to make movies that qualify, for worse rather than better, as that thing we call elevated horror. In search of profundity, they’re boring us more than they’re scaring us—their intent becomes a Wile E. Coyote mallet, when the shivery insinuation of an IV drip would have been so much more effective. Thoughtful moviegoers want, and deserve, filmmakers to trust their intelligence, but False Positive doesn’t extend that good faith. It’s a moderately effective horror movie with a much better, creepier and more nuanced one nestled invisibly alongside, the unborn twin ghost of a movie that might have been.



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The Crown: Trainspotting's Jonny Lee Miller to play Sir John Major - BBC News

  1. The Crown: Trainspotting's Jonny Lee Miller to play Sir John Major  BBC News
  2. The Crown casts Johnny Lee Miller as Prime Minister John Major  Daily Mail
  3. The Crown season 5 casts Elementary's Jonny Lee Miller as John Major  digitalspy.com
  4. The Crown: Trainspotting and Sherlock star Jonny Lee Miller cast as PM Sir John Major in new season of Netflix drama  Sky News
  5. Jonny Lee Miller Cast as John Major in ‘The Crown’  Variety
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Judge appears skeptical as attorneys argue for Dominion suit to be dropped



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Prince Harry lands in UK after flying home from US amid security scare - The Mirror

  1. Prince Harry lands in UK after flying home from US amid security scare  The Mirror
  2. Harry is chauffeured to LAX to fly to London for the unveiling of a statue to his mother Diana  Daily Mail
  3. Prince Harry and Meghan Markle break silence over 'misleading' Oprah  Birmingham Live
  4. Princess Diana's Adventures With Prince Harry & Prince William  Access
  5. Prince Harry styles himself as Duke of Sussex, HRH on daughter Lilibet Diana's birth certificate  Daily Mail
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Is Windows 11 the beginning of the end for Skype? - BBC News

  1. Is Windows 11 the beginning of the end for Skype?  BBC News
  2. Here's what you're losing if you upgrade to Windows 11  TechRadar
  3. The first Windows 11 preview won’t come with Android app support and more  XDA Developers
  4. Microsoft unveils Windows 11 operating system  BBC News
  5. Windows 11 — here’s all the features Microsoft just killed  Tom's Guide
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Letters: McConnell unpatriotic on voting rights. Don’t silence history on racism.



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Biden to sign law designating Pulse nightclub site a national memorial, designate LGBTQ envoy



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Matt Hancock accused of Covid care home crisis and chumocracy – aide incident could be final straw



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Sir Richard Branson gains licence for commercial spaceflights



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Government accused of 'sowing confusion' over travel rules as airline boss slams 'variant scariant' - Sky News

Government accused of 'sowing confusion' over travel rules as airline boss slams 'variant scariant'  Sky News

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Konami announces multiplayer detective game Crimesight - Eurogamer.net

Konami announces multiplayer detective game Crimesight  Eurogamer.netView Full coverage on Google News

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Coronavirus weekly need-to-know: Eviction ban, male fertility, life expectancy & more



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Amaan Momand death: Pair killed man for crossing road in front of car - BBC News

Amaan Momand death: Pair killed man for crossing road in front of car  BBC News

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Friday 25 June 2021

Microsoft unveils Windows 11 operating system

The updated operating system has a new look and will let Android apps run on the Windows desktop.

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Microsoft unveils Windows 11 operating system - BBC News

  1. Microsoft unveils Windows 11 operating system  BBC News
  2. Microsoft releases another Windows 11 teaser ahead of the event - GSMArena.com news  GSMArena.com
  3. Windows 11 - live: Microsoft’s new ‘next generation’ operating system unveiled today  The Independent
  4. Windows 11 is being unveiled today, for real this time  Rock Paper Shotgun
  5. Why bad broadband could break Windows 11, new leak reveals ahead of launch event  Express
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Papa John's Trophy draw: Liverpool, Man Utd, Arsenal and Chelsea discover opponents - The Mirror

  1. Papa John's Trophy draw: Liverpool, Man Utd, Arsenal and Chelsea discover opponents  The Mirror
  2. Carabao Cup and Papa John's Trophy draws - watch live via Sky Sports YouTube stream  Sky Sports
  3. Wolves' Papa John's Trophy opponents revealed | Wolverhampton Wanderers FC  wolves.co.uk
  4. Carabao Cup and Papa John's Trophy 1st round draws - Arsenal, Chelsea, Tottenham U21s involved  Football.London
  5. West Ham U21s added to Town's Papa John's Trophy group  East Anglian Daily Times
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Rudy Giuliani has been suspended from practicing law in New York after a court found 'uncontroverted evidence' that he made 'demonstrably false and misleading statements' about the election



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Rudy Giuliani suspended from practicing law in New York over false election claims



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Pelosi announces special committee to investigate Jan. 6 riot



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Miami-Dade Fire Rescue says search and rescue efforts continue after an overnight apartment collapse



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Dinosaurs lived in the Arctic, research suggests - The Guardian

  1. Dinosaurs lived in the Arctic, research suggests  The Guardian
  2. Multiple dinosaur species not only lived in the Arctic, they also nested there  Phys.org
  3. Fossils: Dinosaur 'maternity ward' with remains of seven different species unearthed in the ARCTIC  Daily Mail
  4. Dinosaurs Nested in the High Arctic | Science  Smithsonian Magazine
  5. RESEARCH TEAM FINDS ARCTIC WAS DINOSAUR NURSERY  FloridaState
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The Biden Administration Is Extending the Nationwide Evictions Ban for Another Month

WASHINGTON—The Biden administration has extended the nationwide ban on evictions for a month to help tenants who are unable to make rent payments during the coronavirus pandemic, but it said this is expected to be the last time it does so.

Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, extended the evictions moratorium from June 30 until July 31. The CDC said Thursday that “this is intended to be the final extension of the moratorium.”

The White House had acknowledged Wednesday that the emergency pandemic protection, which had been extended before, would have to end at some point. The trick is devising the right sort of off-ramp to make the transition without massive social upheaval.
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White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the separate bans on evictions for renters and mortgage holders were “always intended to be temporary.”

This week, dozens of members of Congress wrote to President Joe Biden and Walensky calling for the moratorium to be not only extended but also strengthened in some ways.

The letter, spearheaded by Democratic Reps. Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts, Jimmy Gomez of California and Cori Bush of Missouri, called for an unspecified extension in order to allow the nearly $47 billion in emergency rental assistance included in the American Rescue Plan to get into the hands of tenants.

Ending the assistance too abruptly, they said, would disproportionately hurt some of the same minority communities that were hit so hard by the virus itself. They also echoed many housing advocates by calling for the moratorium’s protections to be made automatic, requiring no special steps from the tenant in order to gain its protections.

“The impact of the federal moratorium cannot be understated, and the need to strengthen and extend it is an urgent matter of health, racial, and economic justice,” the letter said.

Diane Yentel, president of the National Low Income Housing Coalition, called an extension of the eviction ban “the right thing to do — morally, fiscally, politically, and as a continued public health measure.”

But landlords, who have opposed the moratorium and challenged it in court, are against any extension. They have argued the focus should be on speeding up the distribution of rental assistance.



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Covid cases rise by 44% in just a week as UK records 16,703 more infections - The Mirror

  1. Covid cases rise by 44% in just a week as UK records 16,703 more infections  The Mirror
  2. UK records 21 Covid-19 deaths and over 15,000 new cases  Evening Standard
  3. Cornwall Coronavirus round-up June 24, 2021  Falmouth Packet
  4. A further 61 new Covid cases are confirmed in South Tyneside as borough total reaches 12,000  Shields Gazette
  5. UK records more than 16,000 new Covid cases for second straight day  Metro.co.uk
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The man who tested positive for Covid 43 times - BBC News - BBC News

  1. The man who tested positive for Covid 43 times - BBC News  BBC News
  2. The longest of Covids: the man infected for 10 months  The Guardian
  3. COVID-19: UK reports 16,703 new coronavirus cases and another 21 deaths  Sky News
  4. Covid-19: 72-yr-old man tests positive 43 times for 10 straight months | Oneindia News  Oneindia News
  5. Man (72) describes having Covid-19 for over 10 months  The Irish Times
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Fears for European holidays grow as Macron backs Merkel’s call for ‘co-ordinated’ Covid restrictions - The Independent

  1. Fears for European holidays grow as Macron backs Merkel’s call for ‘co-ordinated’ Covid restrictions  The Independent
  2. Holidays to Europe in doubt after Angela Merkel’s ‘quarantine the British’ demand  Telegraph.co.uk
  3. After 16 years of Merkel, EU summit could mark end of an era  The Guardian
  4. Britain's Covid travel policy is irrational and damaging  Telegraph.co.uk
  5. Merkel: Europe 'on thin ice' amid delta virus variant rise  The Independent
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It’s More Than Just Rain and Snow. Climate Change Will Hit Air Travel in Surprising Ways

A version of this story first appeared in the Climate is Everything newsletter. If you’d like sign up to receive this free once-a-week email, click here.


For those watching U.S. air travel spike as the COVID-19 pandemic fades, American Airlines’ recent announcement that it would trim its flight schedule may have come as a bit of a surprise. More and more people have been flying in recent months, and in response airlines have added flights to meet that demand, not taken them away.

American cited several operational reasons for the adjustment, including labor shortages at vendors that resulted from quickly ramping up from pandemic level staffing levels, but unsurprisingly the one I want to focus on here is “unprecedented weather.” In an email, an American spokesperson told me recent bad weather at the airline’s hubs in Miami, Chicago and Detroit had disrupted operations. The company is also monitoring extreme heat in Phoenix and thunderstorms in Dallas and Charlotte, the spokesperson said.
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I won’t make the case that this recent spat of bad weather is caused by climate change, but the cancellations across American’s schedule provide a good opportunity to look at how the effects of climate change might make air travel more challenging—both in terms of industry economics and the travel experience—in the coming decades.

Much attention has been paid to airline emissions, but surprisingly the need for the industry to adapt their operations to the challenges of extreme weather has received relatively little consideration. Still, there’s much to think about. A 2016 article in the journal Carbon & Climate Law Review offers a high-level overview: increased precipitation will lead to more frequent delays, extreme heat will damage runways and storm surge could damage infrastructure at a quarter of U.S. airports even under a moderate sea-level rise scenario. And that’s really just a snapshot. The article concludes that “every sector of the air transport industry will be affected.”

Any one of those factors could make for a story on its own. But I want to home in on one area that’s probably less obvious: extreme heat. Flying is one of those experiences where you hardly think about the temperature outside. You sit in an air-conditioned airport, board an often-freezing plane and exit into another air-conditioned terminal. It can be 100°F outside at your origin and 110°F at your destination without you ever taking off your sweater.

Behind the scenes, however, your airline is watching that temperature closely. Warm weather makes the air less dense, requiring planes to move faster to get off the ground. On extremely hot days, airlines often restrict a flight’s weight by cutting the number of passengers or restricting the plane’s cargo load. On rare occasions, extreme heat can lead airlines to cancel flights altogether. In the summer of 2017, American Airlines made news for canceling flights in and out of Phoenix because temperatures were too high for some planes to operate at all.

Even if planes are operating, extreme heat creates problems on the ground, too. In May, American Airlines started operating a cart on the tarmac in Phoenix to deliver water, Gatorade and popsicles to help keep employees from overheating, according to a report from FOX10 Phoenix. In many parts of the globe, particularly in parts of the Middle East, outdoor air temperatures are already approaching a level where staying outside for long periods of time can be unsafe.

Right now, heat-related problems happen rarely enough that even a frequent flier may not notice—but as temperatures rise that will almost certainly change. A 2017 study in the journal Climatic Change found that up to 30% of flights departing at the hottest part of the day may face weight restrictions in the coming decades. It seems safe to bet that we’ll see many more cancellations, too.

Climate change-related disruptions to flight schedules are the ultimate example of a “first-world problem,” and this obviously isn’t the most pressing climate concern. But I think it’s a useful example of how climate change will seep into areas we may not expect at a glance and, without a proactive attempt to address it, make life just a little worse.



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Dalian Atkinson: Jury fails to reach decision about second officer - BBC News

  1. Dalian Atkinson: Jury fails to reach decision about second officer  BBC News
  2. Dalian Atkinson trial: Jury discharged after failing to reach verdict on West Mercia PC Mary Ellen Bettley-Smith assault charge  Sky News
  3. Dalian Atkinson: jury discharged after failing to reach verdict on PC  The Guardian
  4. Jury fail to reach verdict on Pc accused of assaulting Dalian Atkinson  shropshirestar.com
  5. Dalian Atkinson: Jury fails to reach verdict on West Mercia Pc's assault charge  expressandstar.com
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Pasquotank deputies will stop assisting with Andrew Brown protests in Elizabeth City



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Live updates Thursday: 2015 police reports from Stephen Smith death probe; Murdaugh mentions



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Cosmic dawn: scientists hope to peer back in time to see birth of stars - The Guardian

Cosmic dawn: scientists hope to peer back in time to see birth of stars  The GuardianView Full coverage on Google News

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Uefa abolishes away goals rule in club competitions from next season - The Guardian

  1. Uefa abolishes away goals rule in club competitions from next season  The Guardian
  2. Away goals rule abolished for UEFA club competitions from 2021-22 season  Sky Sports
  3. UEFA votes to SCRAP away goals entirely from European competitions  Daily Mail
  4. Rangers and Celtic Champions League hopes impacted as UEFA scraps away goals rule  Daily Record
  5. UEFA abolishes away goals rule as major Champions League & Europa League change announced  Goal.com
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At least 64 killed in Ethiopian airstrike on Tigray market - The Guardian

  1. At least 64 killed in Ethiopian airstrike on Tigray market  The Guardian
  2. Ethiopia: Dozens reportedly killed and injured after airstrike on Tigray village  Sky News
  3. Ethiopia confirms Tigray airstrike, says fighters targeted  The Independent
  4. Market air raid kills dozens in Ethiopia's Tigray, say witnesses  Al Jazeera English
  5. Airstrike hit a crowded market in Ethiopia’s Tigray region, officials say  The Washington Post
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Meet Amanda Gorman's California successor as youth poet laureate: Alexandra Huynh



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Harry's 'lies' about Prince Charles casts doubt over other claims, royal expert says - The Mirror

  1. Harry's 'lies' about Prince Charles casts doubt over other claims, royal expert says  The Mirror
  2. Charles financially supported Sussexes until summer of 2020 - Clarence House  BBC News
  3. Prince Harry & Meghan Markle Plan Royal Exit In Lifetime Trailer  Access
  4. Prince Charles 'enormously hurt' by Harry's 'cut off' claims, says royal author  The Mirror
  5. Harry and Meghan didn't want to call Archie the Earl of Dumbarton because it contains the word 'dumb'  Tatler
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‘Like a bomb went off.’ Photos show tragic aftermath of condo collapse near Miami



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Mom of biracial teen seen on video being tased by state trooper plans to sue



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Thursday 24 June 2021

DeepMind uses AI to tackle neglected deadly diseases



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Watch rambunctious Outer Banks foal get the ‘zoomies’ as mom tries for peaceful meal



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Fire breaks out at Guy Richie's Camden pub - Daily Mail

  1. Fire breaks out at Guy Richie's Camden pub  Daily Mail
  2. Fire rips through Guy Ritchie's Camden pub with 10 fire engines and 70 crew on scene  My London
  3. London fire: 70 firefighters rush to tackle 'challenging' blaze in Fitzrovia pub  Express
  4. London: Guy Ritchie's Fitzrovia pub 'Lore of the Land' catches fire  Metro.co.uk
  5. Fire breaks out in kitchen of London pub owned by Guy Ritchie  Evening Standard
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Trump questioned if Kushner accomplished peace in the Middle East 'after all' amid recent Israel-Hamas violence, report says



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Clues to how birds migrate using Earth's magnetic field - BBC News

Clues to how birds migrate using Earth's magnetic field  BBC NewsView Full coverage on Google News

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"Loki" Just Confirmed That Loki Is Bisexual, And Director Kate Herron Said It's An "Important" Step For The MCU - BuzzFeed

  1. "Loki" Just Confirmed That Loki Is Bisexual, And Director Kate Herron Said It's An "Important" Step For The MCU  BuzzFeed
  2. Loki episode three recap: is this just Doctor Who ... with a big budget?  The Guardian
  3. Loki episode 3 has taken a big step forward for the MCU – here's why  TechRadar
  4. Loki Episode 3 Review: Lamentis  Den of Geek
  5. Loki episode 3 just changed the MCU forever in a crucial way  digitalspy.com
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Hungary’s Orbán cancels Euro 2020 trip to Munich after rainbow row - The Guardian

  1. Hungary’s Orbán cancels Euro 2020 trip to Munich after rainbow row  The Guardian
  2. UEFA rejects rainbow illumination as 'political content' | DW News  DW News
  3. Euro 2020: Uefa declines request to light up Allianz Arena in rainbow colours  BBC Sport
  4. Germany turns rainbow-coloured in protest at UEFA stadium ban  FRANCE 24 English
  5. UEFA criticised by LGBT+ groups across Europe over handling of homophobia  Sky Sports
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Euro 2020: crunch time for Spain, plus Portugal v France buildup – as it happened - The Guardian

  1. Euro 2020: crunch time for Spain, plus Portugal v France buildup – as it happened  The Guardian
  2. Euro 2020 LIVE updates as Spain face crucial Slovakia clash while Sweden take on Poland  Mirror.co.uk
  3. What do Spain need to qualify from Group E at Euro 2020?  The Independent
  4. Slovakia vs Spain and Sweden vs Poland - Euro 2020: Live score, team news and updates  Daily Mail
  5. Today at the Euros: Spain, Germany, Portugal, France have it all to play for in final Euro 2020 group games  Sky Sports
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Supreme Court rules for California motorist followed home by police



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Harvard astrophysicist says there may be a link between 'Oumuamua and UFOs - Daily Mail

  1. Harvard astrophysicist says there may be a link between 'Oumuamua and UFOs  Daily Mail
  2. Aliens ‘dropped SENSORS onto Earth using UFO probe that passed nearby’, Harvard professor claims...  The Sun
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Former Houston megachurch pastor Kirbyjon Caldwell reports to prison



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Aliens: Fireteam Elite - Official Trailer - IGN

  1. Aliens: Fireteam Elite - Official Trailer  IGN
  2. Aliens: Fireteam Elite out this August  Eurogamer.net
  3. Aliens: Fireteam Elite Confirmed for 24th August, Priced at $40  Push Square
  4. Co-op Shooter Aliens: Fireteam Elite Gets an August Release Date - IGN  IGN
  5. Aliens Fireteam Elite - Release Date Trailer | PS5, PS4  PlayStation Universe
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Lloyds to shut 44 more bank branches - is yours one of them? - Sky News

  1. Lloyds to shut 44 more bank branches - is yours one of them?  Sky News
  2. Lloyds to close another 44 bank branches  BBC News
  3. Lloyds Bank to close another 44 branches – live updates  Telegraph.co.uk
  4. Lloyds and Halifax to close 44 branches - see if your bank is affected  The Mirror
  5. Lloyds and Halifax branch closures: Is yours next to be axed?  This is Money
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‘Hyper-creepy’: Gavin Williamson mocked over One Britain, One Nation song - The Guardian

  1. ‘Hyper-creepy’: Gavin Williamson mocked over One Britain, One Nation song  The Guardian
  2. Education chiefs back campaign for school kids to sing 'patriotic' One Britain One Nation anthem  Sky News
  3. Education department challenged over support for One Britain One Nation day  The Guardian
  4. As a teacher, I can’t support this ‘One Britain One Nation’ nonsense  The Independent
  5. Schoolchildren made to sing ‘strong Britain, great nation’  The Independent
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Travel industry protests against Covid restrictions

Airline and travel firms want more help from the government amid tight rules on international travel.

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DeepMind uses AI to tackle neglected deadly diseases

The company’s technology maps out the shape of proteins, an otherwise costly and time-consuming process.

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Online Safety Bill 'catastrophic for free speech'

A new campaign claims it outsources internet policing to Silicon Valley.

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Are black holes racist now too? Cornell University's new Race and the Cosmos course explores issue - Daily Mail

  1. Are black holes racist now too? Cornell University's new Race and the Cosmos course explores issue  Daily Mail
  2. Down a black hole  Power Line
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FIFA 22 leaks reveal changes to menu, custom tactics & gameplay - Dexerto

  1. FIFA 22 leaks reveal changes to menu, custom tactics & gameplay  Dexerto
  2. FIFA 22 leaks and rumours including Beta, commentators, new FUT Icons and FPS boost  The Mirror
  3. FIFA 22 Beta Details And Images Leak From The PlayStation Network  PlayStation Universe
  4. How to get FIFA 22 closed beta codes: Start date, PS5 & Xbox Series X|S download  Dexerto
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William unimpressed that Meghan and Harry 'tried to hide Archie's birth', says author - The Mirror

  1. William unimpressed that Meghan and Harry 'tried to hide Archie's birth', says author  The Mirror
  2. Diana made Harry and William ‘promise to be best friends’ and ‘never let anyone come between them’, expert...  The Sun
  3. Prince Harry making it difficult to call for truce after waging war with royals  Geo News
  4. ‘You Can’t Find A New One’: High Demand, Low Inventory Leave Boat Buyers Adrift  CBS Minnesota
  5. Prince Charles gut-wrenching reaction to Harrys fallout on Fathers Day  The News International
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EU wants emergency team for 'nightmare' cyber-attacks

European Commission says recent ransomware attacks on US and Ireland have "focussed mind"

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GSK chief shrugs off concerns over leadership as she outlines vision - Financial Times

  1. GSK chief shrugs off concerns over leadership as she outlines vision  Financial Times
  2. Glaxo cuts dividend and looks to pipeline | Business  The Times
  3. GSK to slash dividend and spin off consumer division in radical shake-up  Telegraph.co.uk
  4. GSK boss promises sales of £33bn in attempt to head off activist Elliot  Yahoo Finance UK
  5. FTSE 100 set to hold on to gains as investors await key GlaxoSmithKline update and bitcoin jumps  Evening Standard
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Supreme Court Rules for Cheerleader Punished for Vulgar Snapchat Message


By Adam Liptak from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/3j4GHFQ

Wednesday 23 June 2021

Gabon is first African country paid to protect its rainforest



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Schumer says there is a ‘rot at the center’ of the Republican Party



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‘Offensive and demeaning.’ NC tribe wants school board to remove high school mascot



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Signs of geological activity found on Venus - BBC News

  1. Signs of geological activity found on Venus  BBC News
  2. Venus may still be geologically active after experts spot moving crust  Daily Mail
  3. Venus has huge land masses that jostle about like Earth’s continents  New Scientist
  4. The surface of Venus is cracked and moves like ice floating on the ocean – likely due to tectonic activity  The Conversation US
  5. NASA balloon used to detect 2019 California Ridgecrest earthquakes could spot Venus tremors  Daily Mail
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Watch bear and bicyclist get spooked in close encounter on woodsy British Columbia trail



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NASA sends squid from Hawaii into space for research - The Associated Press

NASA sends squid from Hawaii into space for research  The Associated PressView Full coverage on Google News

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Red Bull baffled by Mercedes F1 engine comments after French GP - Autosport

  1. Red Bull baffled by Mercedes F1 engine comments after French GP  Autosport
  2. Martin Brundle: Max Verstappen vs Lewis Hamilton worth the wait as Red Bull wrongfoot rivals in France  Sky Sports
  3. Crown begins to slip as Mercedes face hardest test in seven years  The Times
  4. 'Will' is on Pierre Gasly's side to return to Red Bull seat  PlanetF1
  5. Lewis Hamilton bracing himself for more misery at Austrian Grand Prix as Max Verstappen looks to open...  The Sun
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Man hits £1billion jackpot after launching bathroom business from his parents' shed - The Mirror

  1. Man hits £1billion jackpot after launching bathroom business from his parents' shed  The Mirror
  2. Victorian Plumbing IPO marks biggest debut on London’s junior market  Financial Times
  3. Victorian Plumbing shares surge in biggest ever float on London’s junior market  City A.M.
  4. Victorian Plumbing bursts onto Aim with 20 per cent rise on first day  The Times
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After Weeks of Declining Vaccination Rates in the U.S., They Went Back Up in June. Will the Momentum Last?

On April 8, more than 4.3 million people in the U.S. received a COVID-19 vaccine dose. But after that peak, the numbers began to fall. By June 3, the national seven-day average for daily shots given had dropped to 850,000.

But after that—with weeks to go before the Fourth of July, the date by which President Joe Biden wanted 70% of U.S. adults to have gotten at least one shot—the numbers began to creep back up. On June 7, according to U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) data, the seven-day average for daily vaccinations again broke a million. It shrank a bit after that, but was still close to 900,000 on June 15.
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While it’s common for daily numbers to go up and down, it’s somewhat surprising that this uptick would happen months after COVID-19 shots became widely available to U.S. adults. Vaccine supply now far outpaces demand. To keep shots going into arms, many states have done away with appointment requirements; opened mobile clinics and partnered with community organizations in areas with low vaccine uptake; and dangled incentives and cash prizes for those who get vaccinated.

But Loren Lipworth-Elliot, the associate director of Vanderbilt University Medical Center’s epidemiology division, says there may be a partial explanation that has nothing to do with those efforts: In mid-May, kids ages 12 to 15 became eligible to receive Pfizer-BioNTech’s shot.

There are about 17 million U.S. adolescents in that age group, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. As of June 21, 28% of them had received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and almost 18% were fully vaccinated. That means almost 8 million shots have been given in that age group alone over the last six weeks. “That’s definitely accounting for some of what we’ve been seeing,” Lipworth-Elliot says.

Dr. Mark Roberts, director of the Public Health Dynamics Lab at the University of Pittsburgh’s Graduate School of Public Health, agrees that childhood vaccinations are part of the explanation—but they’re probably not all of it, he says. “You’re seeing a fulfilling of that pent-up demand [for pediatric immunizations], but it’s not going to be huge,” he says, because 12- to 15-year-olds make up only about 5% of the U.S. population.

It’s hard to say exactly what else has been driving the recent uptick, but Roberts says it may have something to do with recent state-run incentive programs, like lottery drawings for vaccinated people. Ohio, for example, reported a 28% increase in vaccinations during the two weeks after it announced its Vax-a-Million lottery in May, compared to the week before the announcement.

Trends vary widely from state to state, Lipworth-Elliot adds. States with relatively low vaccination rates, like Florida, Tennessee and Alabama, are among those seeing recent increases in vaccinations, while daily tallies are logically dropping off in areas where most eligible people are already protected. And while vaccination rates are still lower among Black and Hispanic/Latino people than among white people in the U.S., federal data suggest the gap is narrowing slightly, driven particularly by the Hispanic/Latino population. Both trends, Lipworth-Elliot says, suggest health officials are getting better at bringing vaccines to populations that need them and chipping away at vaccine hesitancy by building trust within communities.

The fact that the CDC now says fully vaccinated people can safely go mask-free, socialize indoors and travel may also be encouraging some holdouts to get vaccinated, Lipworth-Elliot says. “People are seeing that there’s a lot of leeway and freedom given to people who are vaccinated, for good reason,” she says. TIME/Harris Poll data also suggest the CDC’s mask guidance encouraged some people to get vaccinated because they were concerned about the risks of others going mask-free in public.

It’s too soon to say if the positive momentum will continue; both Lipworth-Elliot and Roberts caution that variations in the vaccination data are common, and that it will take time to see how the trends play out. Already, daily averages are lower than they were a couple weeks ago.

But there are reasons for optimism. Shots may become available to kids even younger than 12 by the fall, which would open up a whole new swath of the population to vaccination. And in a recent Gallup poll, about a fifth of adult respondents who said they do not plan to be vaccinated—a group equivalent to about 5% of the U.S. adult population—said they were open to changing their minds. With about 65% of U.S. adults already vaccinated with at least one dose, building trust even within that small group could be the difference between making or missing Biden’s Independence Day goal.



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Democrats Bring Popular Efforts to the Senate. Why They Keep Dying

This article is part of the The DC Brief, TIME’s politics newsletter. Sign up here to get stories like this sent to your inbox every weekday.

Increasingly, it seems as though the substance of the legislation being bandied about at the Capitol doesn’t really matter. Instead, partisan fault lines are as predictable as Washington’s humidity, and both are swamping Democrats’ hopes of getting big-idea bills to President Joe Biden’s desk. If it weren’t so maddening, it would be laughable.

As soon as this evening, the Senate is set to take a vote on a massive voting-rights package that would undo restrictive bills that have made their way into state laws in places like Georgia, Florida and Arizona. Its backers describe it as an attempt to defend democracy itself, while its detractors say elections should be run by the states and not by Washington.
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But voters? They really like it. In fact, when partisan cues are stripped from polling and pollsters simply ask about the meat of the proposal, more than 80% of Americans agree that foreign interference in U.S. elections should be a no-no, that money is too prevalent in politics and that election security can be improved. When it comes to making it easier to vote—same-day registration, 15 days of early voting and nonpartisan redistricting commissions—support still stays north of 60%, according to Vox polling from the spring.

Still, Republicans are standing lockstep against what Democrats have titled the For The People Act. And Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin is standing with them—not because he disagrees with the Democrats’ bill on its merits, but because he says a partisan voting-rights bill could spark the kind of distrust and anarchy that besieged the Capitol on Jan. 6.

Instead, Manchin has offered his own compromise, notably including a voter-ID requirement that was missing from Democrats’ earlier draft. Progressives have long argued that such a requirement is unfair to minorities and elderly voters who may not have access to such documents, but liberal voting-rights maven Stacey Abrams blessed Manchin’s compromise attempt. Progressives like Sen. Bernie Sanders, too, signaled they could accept Manchin’s plan if it meant getting his vote. And the voter-ID question isn’t as partisan as many in the Democratic coalition had once feared: Monmouth polling out just yesterday found voter-ID requirements have the support of 62% of Democrats and 87% of independents. (Republicans, who for years have argued poor and minority voters were cheating the system in places without voter-ID laws, support the requirement with a whopping 91%.)

So even if the Democrats’ For The People Act goes down, Manchin’s compromise is going to get across the finish line, right?

No.

Manchin may have found the sweet spot on voting rights on policy, but he can’t change the politics of Washington. As soon as Manchin rolled out his proposal, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell tossed a bucket of ice water on it, saying Republicans still won’t put new federal curbs on what traditionally have been state affairs, and won’t support his plan. McConnell’s allies fell in line, sensing the merits in denying Biden a win at this point and reinforcing every toxic instinct of The Big Lie. Absent 10 Republicans siding with Democrats to open the door to an actual vote, the GOP can threaten a filibuster and shut down the Senate. So even though Manchin found a voting rights plan that is popular with voters on both sides, only lawmakers wearing blue jerseys are willing to stand with him.

If all of this sounds familiar, it should. It’s close to the pattern that’s been playing out for months on bipartisan and popular criminal-justice efforts that have drawn a broad and powerful coalition of backers. It’s the same dance with an infrastructure bill, whose details are also expected to emerge as soon as today. (Early signs suggest about $580 billion in new spending, although with almost two dozen Senators drafting the outline on legal pads, Post-It notes and magic markers, it’s become something of a muddle.)

Washington is also looking nervously at an Aug. 1 deadline to increase the federal credit card’s limit on red ink, a must-pass transportation bill by Sept. 30 and a raft of expiration dates through the summer and fall for COVID-19 relief programs up for renewal. Each is politically inert, broadly popular, but nonetheless far from guaranteed.

Lawmakers here in Washington respond to one thing above all else: power. So much energy in this town is spent chasing and defending it that it’s amazing that anything unrelated to that race ever gets finished. So when considering why GOP lawmakers are not even listening to their base’s support for the voting-rights package, it’s worth remembering that something can be simultaneously popular but not agenda-setting. Until there is a cost for inaction, Republicans aren’t going to bend. At least until there is an appreciable threat to their power.

Make sense of what matters in Washington. Sign up for the daily D.C. Brief newsletter.



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Raid on hideout of Myanmar militants sparks deadly shootout



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Three injured trying to save California teenager who drowned in lake, rescuers say



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