Sunday 25 July 2021

Several Arrested as Thousands Protest Lockdown in Sydney

SYDNEY — Thousands of people took to the streets of Sydney and other Australian cities on Saturday to protest lockdown restrictions amid another surge in cases, and police made several arrests after crowds broke through barriers and threw plastic bottles and plants.

The unmasked participants marched from Sydney’s Victoria Park to Town Hall in the central business district, carrying signs calling for “freedom” and “the truth.”

There was a heavy police presence in Sydney, including mounted police and riot officers in response to what authorities said was unauthorized protest activity. Police confirmed a number of arrests had been made after objects were thrown at officers.
[time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”]

New South Wales Police said it recognized and supported the rights of free speech and peaceful assembly, but the protest was a breach of public health orders.

“The priority for NSW Police is always the safety of the wider community,” a police statement said.

The protest comes as COVID-19 case numbers in the state reached another record with 163 new infections in the last 24 hours.

Greater Sydney has been locked down for the past four weeks, with residents only able to leave home with a reasonable excuse.

“We live in a democracy and normally I am certainly one who supports people’s rights to protest … but at the present time we’ve got cases going through the roof and we have people thinking that’s OK to get out there and possibly be close to each other at a demonstration,” said state Health Minister Brad Hazzard.

In Melbourne, thousands of protesters without masks turned out downtown chanting “freedom.” Some of them lit flares as they gathered outside Victoria state’s Parliament House.

They held banners, including one that read: “This is not about a virus it’s about total government control of the people.”

A car protest rally is also planned in Adelaide, which is also under lockdown, with police warning they will make arrests over unlawful activity.

By Friday, 15.4% of the nation’s population aged 16 and above have received both jabs for COVID-19.

“We’ve turned the corner, we’ve got it sorted. We’re hitting the marks that we need to make, a million doses a week are now being delivered,” Prime Minister Scott Morrison said. “We are well on our way to where we want to be by the end of the year and potentially sooner than that.”

The federal government said it will send thousands of extra Pfizer doses to Sydney while adults in Australia’s largest city are also being urged to “strongly consider” AstraZeneca in view of the scarcity of Pfizer supplies.

 



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/2UIIHde

Fatuma Kadir: Girl who went missing from her home in Bolton found in London - Sky News

  1. Fatuma Kadir: Girl who went missing from her home in Bolton found in London  Sky News
  2. Fatuma Kadir: Parents' plea to find missing Bolton schoolgirl, 11  BBC News
  3. Urgent police appeal to find missing schoolgirl - and people she travelled to Birmingham New Street with  Birmingham Live
  4. Fatuma Kadir: Girl, 11, discovered in London after vanishing from Bolton home  Evening Standard
  5. Missing Fatuma Kadir, 11, 'went to London to set up clothing business'  The Times
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3iJAOfB

Thousands march in Budapest Pride to oppose anti-LGBTQ law - The Guardian

  1. Thousands march in Budapest Pride to oppose anti-LGBTQ law  The Guardian
  2. Budapest prepares for Pride but for many LGBT+ people it is a worrying time to be in Hungary  Sky News
  3. An act of defiance: Pride set to go ahead in Budapest despite Orban’s LGBT+ offensive  The Independent
  4. Budapest Pride march is a protest against anti-gay laws, say organisers  The Guardian
  5. Thousands join Pride event in Hungary as LGBTQ people face growing hostility  CNN
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3kRmxAj

A possible tropical depression is looming. That’s why South Florida is under flood watch



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3i39x8K

A third of states have passed more restrictive voting laws. Here's what you should know



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3zKbqgP

First images of Derek Chauvin in prison are released



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3rzgNw5

Vaccine Requirements Loom in New York City: 'Time for More Mandates'



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3y2ReG9

A United Airlines flight was evacuated after a teenager AirDropped a photo of an airsoft gun to other passengers, report says



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3wWGXu0

California family say they were treated like criminals on a Southwest flight because their toddler wouldn't keep his mask on



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3iIuoxf

Saturday 24 July 2021

What You Didn’t See on TV at the Tokyo Olympics Opening Ceremony

Well, these Games have somehow begun. The Opening Ceremony for the Tokyo Olympics, a year delayed, publicly opposed in a host country that has spent north of $20 billion on them—nearly triple the original budget—went off Friday night on a humid 82-degree evening Tokyo, in an Olympic Stadium eerily quiet since it was devoid of its traditional horde of excited spectators.

You could have spent a better part of the night staring at the colors of the empty seats: patterns of white, red, forest green. In normal times, tens of thousands of fans from around the world would have filled them, lighting the stadium with flash bulbs, and celebrating the athletes marching in the parade of nations. Tonight, the scoreboard warned the approximately 900 stakeholders and special guests in attendance—dignitaries including First Lady Jill Biden and French President Emmanuel Macron—to “clap. Do not sing or chant.” (The protestors outside the stadium—who could be heard inside during quieter moments—had no issues chanting.)
[time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”]

In March 2020, when the International Olympic Committee (IOC) postponed the Games for a year, this night was supposed to celebrate the world’s triumph over COVID-19. It would be the party of all parties to cheer what the Olympics are purported to be all about—the power of the human spirit, especially when rallied against a common enemy like SARS-CoV-2. Instead, for the select few in attendance, it was almost like celebrating a wedding without the bride and groom. And that lack of fulfillment spilled over to the television audience, who also witnessed a far more subdued affair than in years past. The stadium floor served as a stage, and the clapping from the few people here had that polite theater vibe. The absent roar that usually marks the host country’s entrance couldn’t help but stand out. When the public address announcer asked for a moment to remember all who died in the pandemic, the place felt downright funereal.

No matter, these Olympics are happening, Japan’s state of emergency and positive Covid tests and all. The day before the ceremonies, their creative director, Kentaro Kobayashi, was fired because of a joke he made about the Holocaust in the 1990s. This development somehow fit the moment: it was yet another blow to the already-reeling Tokyo Games. On Monday, a composer for the opening ceremony resigned because he bullied childhood classmates, including those with disabilities. And earlier this year, the head of the Tokyo 2020 organizing committee, Yoshimoro Mori, made sexist comments and was forced to resign.

The show still provided some memories. Tap dancers on the wooden tables, for example, gave the night a catchy rhythm. Essential workers carrying the Olympic flag was a welcome touch. Naomi Osaka lit the Olympic cauldron. Tokyo made the most of it.

Live from a hollow venue in Tokyo, here are six things from the Opening Ceremony you might not have seen on TV.

1. Sad non-spectators.

A few hours before the Opening Ceremony, hundreds of people crowded outside the entrance of the Olympic Stadium, taking selfies near a statue of the Olympic rings and Jigoro Kano, the founder of judo. A metal fence near the Japan Olympic Museum divided the could-be spectators from the media and other workers entering the venue: some pressed against it, getting as close to the Olympics as they could. “It’s the Olympic Games,” said Borja Berecibar, a web developer who lives in Tokyo, through the fence. He was there with his wife. “If I can’t see it, I wanted to at least come here to feel it. It’s so sad.” He wishes the Games were delayed until next year. Like many in the throng, a few hundred strong, socially not-distanced, Berebicar wondered why he and others couldn’t be inside the stadium, perhaps in socially distanced in seats, if people were permitted to gather, with little regard for social distance. Just a few yards away, Yoshiko Kimura brought her husband and three children, aged 5, 9, and 11 because she feels the Olympics are a “once in a lifetime happening” and she wanted her children to “feel the atmosphere” even if they couldn’t enter the stadium.

2. Why the workout?

One of the first scenes of the ceremony featured a woman running alone on a treadmill, an apt metaphor for the world’s running in place in its fight against COVID-19. “All over the world, there are many other solitary athletes like her,” said the Tokyo 2020 media guide distributed to press shortly before the start, by way of explanation. “They are all individual, separate ‘points’, but they are connected by an invisible bond.” The runner, by the way, was Arisa Tsubata, a nurse and boxer who won a national championship just two years after taking up the sport.

TOPSHOT-OLY-2020-2021-TOKYO-OPENING
Jewel Samad—AFP via Getty ImagesNurse/boxer Arisa Tsubata performs during the opening ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games, at the Olympic Stadium, in Tokyo, on July 23, 2021.

3. Sense of direction.

In the bowels of the stadium, near where the athletes lined up to enter the ceremonies for the scaled down parade of nations, hung a true catch-all sign that captured the essentials that the pandemic has prioritized. It told the Olympians to keep their distance, that the marching entrance was 60 meters ahead of them, and that the “toilet” was 250-meters behind them. What else, really, does an Olympian need to know?

4. Go Ghana.

Despite that order that people in the stadium not sing or chant, the Olympians from Ghana, as they entered the dark tunnel under the stadium onto the parade of nations stage, sang away—and had fun doing it. The volunteers assigned to cheer the athletes as they entered appreciated the Ghanian enthusiasm. It was a nice break from a fairly staid parade. After all, once they came into the stadium, several Olympians spent the evening sitting around tapping on their phones.

OLY-2020-2021-TOKYO-OPENING-GHA
Hannah McKay—AFP via Getty ImagesGhana’s flag bearer Nadia Eke leads the delegation during the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games opening ceremony’s parade of athletes, at the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo on July 23, 2021.

5. Australian Rules.

In a quite unscientific survey of delegations entering the tunnel, during a portion of the parade of nations, we vote Australia—a country that has stood out for its Covid-control measures—as the most socially-undistanced crew.

6. Cardholder Intel.

For each each delegation that came into the stadium, a local volunteer carried a white placard, with the country’s name written in a dialogue bubble found in manga, Japanese comics and graphic novels. Their outfits featured manga tones. We asked the woman who held the Great Britain sign her favorite things about the country. She mentioned the Beatles and the Sherlock Holmes books. Behind her was the British Virgin Islands placard holder. His favorite? “Sherlock Holmes.”

Opening Ceremony - Olympics: Day 0
Matthias Hangst—Getty ImagesFlag bearers Hannah Mills and Mohamed Sbihi of Team Great Britain leads their team out during the Opening Ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games at Olympic Stadium on July 23, 2021 in Tokyo, Japan.

We wanted to ask more eager placard-holders about their favorite aspects of their assigned nations. But an official told us we weren’t allowed. In a state-of-emergency Olympics, the rules will rule.

Read more about the Tokyo Olympics:



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3iF9dfF

SC police got phone data of Josephson’s alleged ‘fake Uber’ killer. Here’s what they found



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/2TvYmMl

Iowa man with guns at Chicago hotel 'didn’t mean to startle'



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3Bx2Rr7

Met Office storm warning for campsites and caravans - BBC News

  1. Met Office storm warning for campsites and caravans  BBC News
  2. UK weather: Britain faces another day of 88F as 2.3MILLION staycationers hit the road  Daily Mail
  3. Thunderstorms set to hit Wales today in new Met Office yellow weather warning  Wales Online
  4. Basingstoke residents urged to be careful when taking to the roads this weekend as heavy rain moves in  Basingstoke Gazette
  5. Met Office issues yellow alert for damaging hailstorms today - see list of areas  The Mirror
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3rtkGCZ

FBoy Island and Sexy Beasts Represent the Best and Worst of 2021’s Trashy Summer Dating Shows

You know the summer TV season is in full swing when the new reality dating shows start to sound like fake NBC series from 30 Rock. Too Hot to Handle, Are You the One?, I Wanna Marry ‘Harry’—these are the high-concept, low-I.Q. series that keep us mildly amused when it’s too humid out to think. But this July is a banner month even for hot trash summer. First Netflix unveiled Sexy Beasts, which sends singles to meet potential mates done up in SFX makeup worthy of David Cronenberg. HBO Max counters, on the 29th, with FBoy Island, a resort-set dating competition that challenges three women to separate the nice guys from the cads. It’s impossible to hear the title without thinking of Jack Donaghy’s beloved MILF Island.
[time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”]

Although the trailer for Beasts caused a brief eruption of incredulity on social media, there is nothing shocking about the existence of these two extremely silly shows. What’s truly surprising is the gulf in quality between them. FBoy happens to be a funny, addictive, shrewdly executed twist on a familiar format. I can’t say the same for Beasts, which gets old as soon as you get over the novelty of people in Halloween drag deliberating over whether they “feel a connection.” When it comes to entertainment value—the only criterion by which it’s fair to judge this stuff—the distance between good and bad trash can be vast.

NetflixA first date in ‘Sexy Beasts’

Beyond its furry, greasepaint-caked, The-Masked-Singer-meets-Love-Is-Blind exterior, Beasts harkens back to the low-budget cable dating shows of the aughts: Blind Date, elimiDATE, Next. While the makeup is elaborate, the format is simple. A man or woman whose face is obscured by a custom animal, sci-fi or horror mask has three one-on-one chats with similarly disguised singles of the opposite sex. (Normally I would complain about the lack of queer couples, but in this case, I think the LGBTQ community lucked out.) Following an elimination that ends with a glimpse of what the person who got cut looks like without the zombie mask, the remaining contestants go on longer dates and a final selection is made. The freshly scrubbed couple shares a kiss for the cameras, though who knows if they ever so much as see each other again.

All of this is executed with the least possible effort or ingenuity, from the generic bar where the first dates take place to the casting, which must’ve prioritized cockiness over all other traits. Eliminations take place, for unknown reasons, at a posh British country estate dubbed the Sexy Beast Manor. Instead of an on-camera host, we get voiceover narration from comedian and Catastrophe star Rob Delaney, who sounds like he’s being held hostage in some sort of Mystery Science Theater 3000 scenario. “Could you fall in love with someone based on personality alone?” he asks in the intro. But the conversations are so shallow, I’d hate to think they offer an accurate glimpse of anyone’s personality. And it’s not as if participants get zero information about each other’s looks; body shape, skin color and sense of style are all on display.

Ultimately, Beasts is just dull—the only real sin for a summer reality-TV confection. Episodes that top out at 25 minutes feel twice as long and culminate in no great desire to hit the “next episode” button. So (and here’s something I never thought I’d type) thank heavens for FBoy Island. Like Love Island, Temptation Island and, sure, MILF Island before it, FBoy transports a couple dozen hot people to the kind of luxury-beach-resort backdrop where even non-exhibitionists might plausibly wear swimsuits all day. At the center of the game are three gorgeous women, Sarah, Nakia and CJ, looking to get into serious relationships with men who really care about them. Of their 24 chiseled suitors, half are self-identified Nice Guys—guileless dudes who really have come to find love—and half are FBoys (a cleaned-up version of the obvious profane slang term) competing solely for a cash prize.

HBO Max‘FBoy Island’ host Nikki Glaser

In the wrong hands, a premise like this could yield the same sexist schlock that is standard for this kind of dating show: look at these poor, stupid girls falling for all the old womanizer gambits. This is where FBoy’s smart execution makes all the difference. Crucially, the women not only come off as relatively intelligent and perceptive, but also generally have each other’s backs, collaboratively sleuthing to sniff out FBoys and saving each other from unpleasant dates. It’s a refreshing change from the catfights that The Bachelor and its clones are always serving up. With a few fun exceptions, the show also conceals from both viewers and the other men whether each contestant is a Nice Guy or an FBoy. This shatters the illusion that it’s easy to tell who’s who, while also maintaining suspense and allowing us to play along from home.

I binged through the six episodes sent for review, each one clocking in around 45 fleet minutes, and they deliver some pretty enjoyable twists. Some have to do with FBoys pulling off devilishly believable Nice Guy acts; one contestant outed as an FBoy even, confusingly, seems to have convinced himself that he’s actually playing as a Nice Guy. The subsequent chaos makes for a classic reality-TV “huh?” moment. But, without giving too much away, some of the best surprises involve well-timed rule changes and other tweaks to the format, all gleefully rolled out by host and executive producer Nikki Glaser. An advisor to the women and a gentle antagonist to the FBoys, Glaser, a comedian, brings just the right level of self-aware humor. “We watch these shows… and we laugh with the people we’re watching them with,” she has said. “But the shows rarely make fun of themselves or acknowledge the fact that what’s happening is hilarious.”

FBoy Island is not trying to be anything more than a sudsy summer distraction. And by that metric, it’s a masterpiece. In contrast to Sexy Beasts, which never gets more entertaining than it is in the trailer, the show gets better—juicier, funnier, occasionally sexier, more original and compelling and clever—the more time you spend with it. As streaming services thirsty for cheap content pile on interchangeable reality fare, that’s worth celebrating. Two decades into the reign of reality TV, and with all due respect to Jack and Liz, it’s a pleasure to see some of the genre’s torchbearers do more than the minimum.



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/2WffWoY

Stonehenge may be next UK site to lose world heritage status - The Guardian

  1. Stonehenge may be next UK site to lose world heritage status  The Guardian
  2. UNESCO strips Liverpool of world heritage status  Al Jazeera English
  3. Fears Edinburgh could lose world heritage status over giant 'bin hubs'  Telegraph.co.uk
  4. Why could Stonehenge be stripped of world heritage site status?  The Guardian
  5. World Heritage Sites: How are they selected? | Inside Story  Al Jazeera English
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3iySdHC

Ad men sacked to improve gender pay gap win sex discrimination claim - The Guardian

  1. Ad men sacked to improve gender pay gap win sex discrimination claim  The Guardian
  2. London: Middle-aged white men win sexism case after company addressed gender pay gap  Metro.co.uk
  3. Ad men win sex discrimination case after sacking in JWT agency's diversity drive  The Times
  4. Two men win sexism case after being sacked in company's drive to plug gender pay gap  Mirror.co.uk
  5. View Full coverage on Google News


from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3xWQRgq

Printer ink pricier than champagne finds Which?

According to a Which survey a pint of printer ink could cost up to £1,300.

from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3hZhThN

How the U.S. Is Spearheading Efforts to Thwart Chinese Cybercrime

On July 19, the White House accused the Chinese government of supporting a hacking operation, revealed in March, targeting Microsoft Exchange Server software. The view from the U.S. intelligence community is that Chinese state security played a role in illegally accessing email services on a server used by governments and some of the world’s biggest companies, including military contractors. The Biden Administration also accuses China of hiring “criminal contract hackers who carry out both state-sponsored activities and cybercrime.”

Though the Administration’s response doesn’t appear to include the sorts of sanctions that have been imposed on Russia, a far less important commercial rival than China, its statement featured considerably stronger language about China’s pattern of “irresponsible and destabilizing” behavior in cyberspace, behavior unworthy of a country with pretensions to global leadership. The White House knows that comment will draw a prickly response from Chinese officials.
[time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”]

Unlike Donald Trump, President Biden showed up for this fight with China backed by lots of friends. In fact, Washington has the backing of every member of the G-7 and NATO, a group that includes nations traditionally reluctant to criticize the Chinese government too aggressively. These allies are mostly unwilling to contemplate sanctions against China, at least at this point, and the E.U. says only that the latest attacks came from Chinese territory rather than explicitly calling them state-backed. But the White House statement made the point that the Biden Administration is working actively toward a common cyberapproach. There’s no question that the joint statements from the E.U., U.K., Japan, Canada, Australia and New Zealand will confirm Chinese suspicions that Biden means to divide Europe and allies from China where possible and to build broad technology alliances with an eye to confronting China’s bid to set new rules in cyberspace.

Cyberespionage is a fast-growing threat. Among the world’s most powerful countries, each government knows that an attack on the critical infrastructure of another invites retaliation. China can attack the U.S., but its leaders know the U.S. can hit back. That’s why most of the action in cyberspace among cybersophisticated nations is focused on stealing secrets and intellectual property. The bad news is that there are no enforceable rules that limit a government’s ability to share its cybertools with outside actors like hackers.

The ransomware charge that the Biden Administration has leveled at China is serious. In 2020 alone, the total known cost of cybercrime was over $1 trillion in global losses, more than double the costs in 2018. Hospitals have also faced a surge in ransomware attacks.

For now, no warning from Washington, coordinated with allies or not, will halt Chinese hacking operations. The scale of cyberthreats is growing, and Biden hasn’t found the right combination of carrots and sticks to make much difference. The Administration promises “further actions to hold [China] accountable.” That leaves future sanctions on the table.

For now, the Chinese have lost significant face. They’ll respond with statements that remind Washington and the world that the U.S. doesn’t always behave “responsibly” in cyberspace either. Beijing will also threaten some of the other countries that joined the U.S. condemnation, including by warning of less access to the Chinese marketplace for their companies.

The clear message from all this is that the U.S.-China rivalry is escalating, and no one has yet figured out a way to slow the momentum.



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3ByoS9e

Report: 'QAnon Shaman' in plea negotiations after mental illness diagnosis



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/2TwEbht

Youth violence likely to explode over summer, UK experts fear - The Guardian

Youth violence likely to explode over summer, UK experts fear  The Guardian

from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3zt6KM1

Jadon Sancho: England winger completes £73m move to Manchester United from Borussia Dortmund - BBC Sport

  1. Jadon Sancho: England winger completes £73m move to Manchester United from Borussia Dortmund  BBC Sport
  2. Jadon Sancho signs for Manchester United | New Signings 2021/22  Manchester United
  3. Jadon Sancho: Manchester United sign England winger from Borussia Dortmund for £73m  Sky Sports
  4. Manchester United announce Jadon Sancho signing as Ole Gunnar Solskjaer gets star in £73m deal  Daily Mail
  5. United complete the transfer of Sancho  Manchester United
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/2TB067e

UK business activity at four-month low due to staff shortages amid ‘pingdemic’ – live - The Guardian

UK business activity at four-month low due to staff shortages amid ‘pingdemic’ – live  The Guardian

from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/36WsmEk

Elliott Wright announces wife Sadie has miscarried at five months pregnant - Daily Mail

Elliott Wright announces wife Sadie has miscarried at five months pregnant  Daily MailView Full coverage on Google News

from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3hWrFRA

Don’t fall for Republicans’ partisan bluster, Miami. Biden takes wise action on Cuba | Opinion



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/2V51GyC

Drug kingpin's empire brought to its knees by mobile phone video - Liverpool Echo

  1. Drug kingpin's empire brought to its knees by mobile phone video  Liverpool Echo
  2. Heroin and crack cocaine gang leader jailed for eight years  Runcorn and Widnes World
  3. Leader of Cheshire county lines drug gang is jailed  The Chester Standard
  4. View Full coverage on Google News


from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3iLtwbo

Zuckerberg wants Facebook to become online 'metaverse'

CEO wants users to work, game and communicate in a virtual world, often using VR headsets.

from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3iCqia1

Trump's sway tested in race for open mid-Ohio US House seat



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3xZQAJz

World Heritage Committee agrees not to place Great Barrier Reef on ‘in danger’ list - The Guardian

  1. World Heritage Committee agrees not to place Great Barrier Reef on ‘in danger’ list  The Guardian
  2. Why is the Great Barrier Reef in trouble? A simple guide  BBC News
  3. Unesco risking own ‘credibility’ over effort to reclassify Great Barrier Reef as ‘in danger’, Australia says  The Independent
  4. Australia holds its breath on whether the Great Barrier Reef will be labelled 'endangered'  Daily Mail
  5. Whether or not the Great Barrier Reef is listed as ‘in danger’ won’t alter the fact it is at risk from climate change  The Guardian
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3eKijXa

Top international official in Bosnia bans denial of genocide



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3hYWiG7

As many as 100 CIA officers have now suffered from ‘Havana Syndrome’



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3hZbQKb

Thunderstorms set to hit Wales today in new Met Office yellow weather warning - Wales Online

  1. Thunderstorms set to hit Wales today in new Met Office yellow weather warning  Wales Online
  2. Met Office issues yellow alert for damaging hailstorms today - see list of areas  The Mirror
  3. Met Office issues official thunderstorm weather warning - with lightning strikes expected today  Bristol Live
  4. August heatwave: Will UK temperatures soar again next month?  The Independent
  5. Thunder and wind warnings for Devon and Cornwall as Met Office forecast stormy weekend  Cornwall Live
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3wZDLxC

1 in 5 new COVID-19 infections in LA are in fully-vaccinated people. Most of them have mild symptoms, or none at all.



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3kSeC5B

Friday 23 July 2021

Bankers and advisers would net £275m from Morrisons takeover - The Guardian

  1. Bankers and advisers would net £275m from Morrisons takeover  The Guardian
  2. Bankers and advisers to collect £300m from planned Morrisons takeover  Financial Times
  3. Morrisons takeover triggers £300m fees bonanza  Telegraph.co.uk
  4. US private equity firm given deadline to place rival Morrisons takeover bid  Evening Standard
  5. Morrisons shareholders to vote on Fortress-led takeover bid on 16 August  City A.M.
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3wXCN54

The Pandemic Forced Thousands of Businesses to Close—But New Ones Are Launching at Breakneck Speed

Stephen Natoli needed to act fast when the COVID-19 pandemic hit. He was desperate to keep his business, Natoli’s Italian Deli in Secaucus, N.J., open, and retain his workers. But with all his customers suddenly homebound, event catering—which accounted for half his revenue—completely seized up. Individual orders like pizza slices and sandwiches also took a hit. There were no obvious options to bolster the company’s prepared food sales.

So Natoli took a leap, and dramatically pivoted the business. He moved all the seating outside and turned the indoor space into a small grocery market, stocking kitchen staples and fresh produce. The demand was so great that he opened a grocery store in another area of town, which he later sold. Now, his food services are bouncing back, but he has no intention of returning to the way things were: the groceries are there to stay.
[time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”]

“We picked up about 20-to-25% of the business we lost in catering,” Natoli says. “I decided to keep that 20-to-25% and when catering comes back, I want to bang that on top.”

Last year, lockdowns and other COVID-19 containment measures hit businesses so fast that many couldn’t withstand the shock. Now, as the economy rebounds, the extent of the damage is becoming more clear. But despite the glut of business closures, there are a few comforting signs. For one thing, the pandemic has spurred business creation, both in terms of entrepreneurial startups and also new products and services at existing firms. What’s more, firms that outlive the pandemic may end up more resilient and prosperous in the future because they will better cater to home-based lifestyles, new digital habits and other societal shifts that took place over the past year.

“The best thing we can do for the economy to recover is to allow what’s going to happen to happen,” says José María Barrero, assistant professor of finance at the Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México who studies how U.S. workers and employers are reacting to the pandemic-era norms. “Trying to cryogenically freeze the economy where it was in February of 2020 is potentially going to hurt more than help due to the extent that things have changed permanently or persistently.”

In the spring of 2020, as shutdowns swept the country, more than 3 million businesses stopped operating. A widely cited study from The Hamilton Project, a branch of the Brookings Institution, found last year that 400,000 businesses had permanently closed by June 2020. A more recent estimate from the U.S. Federal Reserve estimates that 200,000 businesses with employees boarded up between March 2020 and February 2021—about 25% to 33% above the norm—with smallest enterprises faring the worst. The final tally of business deaths may end up higher, as the federal Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) initiative ended in May and owners continue to grapple with overdue credit bills, deferred rent and other expenses.

Closures of such proportions have been devastating to business owners, their employees and their communities. But COVID-19 also acted like a forest fire that cleared brush for more resilient growth and fresh green shoots. Applications for new businesses jumped in the latter half of 2020 to the highest rates in the 17 years that the government has tallied such figures, according to a University of Maryland analysis. The pace has stayed high through 2021. Following the economic upheaval of the 2008 Great Recession, by contrast, business applications declined.

https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/KUVjo/2/

It may appear that this trend is simply a byproduct of laid off or unhappy workers trying to find independent ways of earning a living. But John Haltiwanger, a University of Maryland economics professor who authored the study, says that the influx in businesses that are likely to hire employees—which generally need more resources to get off the ground than one-person firms—is probably “driven by new market opportunities” brought about by the pandemic. For instance, a third of the increase in new business applications came from non-store retailers—a direct result of the shift to remote interactions between businesses and customers. In other words, for all its damage, the pandemic is also spurring innovation.

“Startups play critical roles in restructuring,” says Haltiwanger, before adding a crucial caveat. “What we don’t know is how much of this will stick. There’s enormous uncertainty, but startups are oftentimes the experimenters out there. There’s lots of evidence that they are often more capable of doing major innovations—not just technological innovations, but changing the way they’re doing business.”

In normal times, there’s a constant churn of new business systems and technologies replacing outdated ones—a process known as “creative destruction,” a term popularized by Austrian economist Joseph Schumpeter in the 1940s. Major events can expedite that process because less efficient firms die off en masse, leaving a void that savvier or nimbler firms can fill.

During the pandemic, even firms as large as Disney had to adapt. Around the time that the company released the live-action Mulan via its Disney+ streaming service for an extra fee of $30, CEO Bob Chapek explained on an earnings call that the pandemic had made the company consider “alternative ways” of reaching audiences beyond movie theaters.

Since then, the company has released a number of films in the same fashion. And although theaters have at this point largely reopened, the company is giving audiences the choice to see its July releases Black Widow and Jungle Cruise on the big screen or at home. It may have been possible for the entertainment juggernaut to bypass theaters before the pandemic. But given the risk of jeopardizing its relationships with the theater chains, there was no urgency for it to try. After theaters closed, the company had little to lose in giving direct-to-streaming a whirl—and plenty to gain, considering Disney+, which launched in 2019, is in a knife fight for subscribers against rivals like Netflix and HBO.

One of the biggest business shifts was adopting technologies that allowed companies to reach their employees and customers remotely. In a July 2020 survey of nearly 900 executives from all industries around the world, McKinsey & Company found that companies transitioned to digital solutions far quicker than they had thought possible before the pandemic. In some cases, what was assumed to take close to two years ended up taking less than a month. The survey also found that most of the technological changes were likely to last beyond the pandemic. When asked why such changes weren’t implemented prior to the pandemic, more than half of the executives said that they hadn’t been a top business priority.

https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/IDuOB/3/

That was precisely the case at Coucou French Classes, a language school and cultural center with locations in New York, Los Angeles and Minneapolis. In March 2020, the school asked all current students to finish out their classes over the video conferencing tool Zoom. But with enough cash on hand to cover expenses through September, cousins Léa and Marianne Perret, who co-founded the business, initially thought that life would return to normal after a few weeks, and that the best move would be to shut down operations for that time.

They scrapped that idea pretty quickly, as it became apparent that the situation was getting worse and that they were sitting on a potential opportunity: people stuck at home indefinitely were looking for ways to occupy their time. They began enrolling new students for online classes—students not just from the three cities where Coucou operates, but from all over the United States, Canada and even Europe.

“We had been trying to develop an online class product for a while before that,” says Marianne. “We never had time to give it thought or get it going. It was something that we had on the back burner for a while, and then it was like, ok, bam, let’s do it.”

The digital transition spurred other business ideas. The company developed new courses and class schedules, built out new workbook materials and optimized every aspect for the digital experience. “We feel like we’ve done three years of work,” says Léa.

Coucou is enrolling for in-person instruction again, and the classes are at capacity. Given that demand, the cousins plan to expand their physical presence in regions where they see the most interest, based on online enrollment. The online classes will continue going forward, and will also serve as a backup option if students need to make up a class, or if the city shuts down for stormy weather or another wave of COVID-19 cases.

Such pivots are happening across the business landscape. A May study from the International Journal of Disaster Reduction ​​found that 63% of U.S. small businesses surveyed last summer had changed how they served customers, while 56% had changed how they procure supplies. On the digital front, 49% of the firms had increased their social media presence and 41% had shifted to online sales.

Not all those businesses initially thrived. Firms that changed the way they served customers, for example, experienced higher probability of income loss and a longer anticipated time to recovery, in part because of the increased upfront investment that may be required. The study notes, however, that if a business can withstand the short-term pain of such a pivot, it may ultimately end up stronger.

“In the long run, these changes can result in being more resilient,” says Maria I. Marshall, an economics professor at Purdue University who has studied business survival in the wake of climate disasters and who co-authored the study. “Resilience is not just, ‘did I come out of this the same as when I came in.’ Resilience means that you have adjusted something that would make you better off. Even if your profits stay the same, your business has changed in a way that makes you more resilient to the next nonnormative shock.”

Indeed, experience alone gives businesses a type of resilience. Those that reacted to the pandemic, whether by pivoting to new business lines or navigating bureaucracies to get a PPP loan, can fall back on their knowledge the next time disaster strikes.

Natoli, the New Jersey deli owner, feels like he’s been through it all. He applied for a PPP loan (which he credits with getting the business through the toughest months). He figured out how to get personal protective equipment like masks and gloves for his employees. He transitioned his catering options from family-style trays to COVID-friendly, individually packaged items. And, of course, he built out a grocery business. With each challenge, Natoli has learned about what it takes to adapt.

“I feel that we could turn this negative into a positive, but not overnight,” he says. “But over a few years, we might actually come out of this thing stronger. Like anything, if you’ve experienced something once or twice, and you survive, then you have a different confidence level and you know you can do it.”



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3BFxkn8

The Last Letter From Your Lover Falters Often, But Its Illicit Romance and Gorgeous Costumes Go Straight to the Pleasure Zone

Even if we’re all doomed to decree, at some point about something or other, “They just don’t make ’em like they used to,” the comforting reality is that there’s always someone trying. How many times have we tolled the death knell for the romantic melodrama, only to have someone strive, even with only moderate success, to resurrect it? Ben Wheatley’s 2020 version of Daphne Du Maurier’s Rebecca is one recent example. Now here comes another, Augustine Frizzell’s adaptation of Jojo Moyes’ romance novel The Last Letter From Your Lover, starring Shailene Woodley and Felicity Jones as, respectively, a love-starved London society wife circa 1965 and a modern-day journalist who has lost her appetite for romance.
[time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”]

If you think of The Last Letter—which begins streaming on Netflix on July 23—as a descendant of movies like David Lean’s Brief Encounter and Irving Rapper’s Now, Voyager, it’s bound to suffer by comparison. Yet even if The Last Letter hovers around the Close, But No Cigar reading on the melodrameter, there’s something subliminally enjoyable about it. A beautiful amnesiac, a selection of fascinating uptight-chic mid-’60s ensembles, a luxurious locale or two, even a Persian cat who wanders very briefly through the movie, bestowing a casual blessing with its plume tail: In adapting Moyes, Frizzell has paid attention to certain details that go right to the pleasure zone. Even when the story falters, or becomes astonishingly silly, there’s still plenty to keep you gazing at the surface.

Read More: How to Write a Romance Novel in 2021

Woodley plays Jennifer, a young American married to Joe Alwyn’s Laurence, a rich and very stiff English industrialist whom she barely seems to know. In fact, she doesn’t really know him, at least as the movie opens: she has suffered a terrible accident—the scar on her cheek, barely noticeable with a bit of coverup or hidden behind the curve of her hair, clues us in to that shard of the story. As a result, she has lost her memory, and so she swans around unhappily in a large London house that means nothing to her. Then she removes a book from a shelf, and a letter falls out.

Meanwhile, in the present day, Jones’ Ellie rises from the rumpled bed of her last conquest—she can’t even remember his name—and rushes off to her newspaper job. The paper’s longest-running “women’s page” editor has died, and as Ellie digs through the publication’s archives—with the help of one of the most charming newspaper librarians ever, Nabhaan Rizwan’s Rory—she discovers first one love letter, and then several more. These are letters that were exchanged by Jennifer and her roguish—but sweet—journalist lover, Anthony (Callum Turner). Somehow, this affair precipitated Jennifer’s accident. Ellie keeps digging through the archives, looking for more clues to the mystery of this woman’s life.

Last Letter From Your Lover.
Parisa Taghizadeh/NETFLIX—© 2020 NETFLIX, INC.Felicity Jones and Nabhaan Rizwan in ‘The Last Letter From Your Lover’

The Last Letter toggles between two stories and two eras: Ellie is the modern woman who has freedom but who’s too cynical to open herself to love; Jennifer is the woman who made a comfortable marriage, only to learn she’d struck the wrong bargain. Jennifer’s story is the more compelling of the two, not least because she gets so many lavish period details to swim around in: Some of the action unfolds on the French Riviera (the movie uses Majorca as a stand-in), which means we get to see Laurence and Jennifer driving—in a convertible, natch—along spiraling, treacherously gorgeous seaside roads, the chiffon scarf Jennifer has tied around her coif rippling just so in the breeze. Jennifer’s poor little rich woman wardrobe includes many, many pillbox hats and a tasteful cranberry Balenciaga-style trapeze coat with a slightly zany bow at the back—a signal that although Jennifer needs to be serious, befitting her marital status, she’s really longing for fun. (The costumes are by Anna Robbins, whose credits include Downton Abbey.)

The 1965 scenes also feature the best music, including not just go-to favorites like Aretha Franklin’s “Do Right Woman, Do Right Man,” but less frequently heard nuggets like Nancy Sinatra and Lee Hazlewood’s swervy, swoony “Summer Wine,” as well as Doris Troy’s sinuous 1963 ballad “Whatcha Gonna Do About It”—the latter used in a steamily romantic London nightclub scene so potent that could be a movie by itself.

Read more reviews by Stephanie Zacharek

Frizzell is both an actor and director (her first film was the 2018 dropout comedy Never Goin’ Back), and if she can’t always keep the plot running on a track that makes sense—well, who needs sense? She’s alive to small things, like music and sunlight and Jennifer’s perfect Cleopatra cat-eye, lifted directly from the mad early Dick-and-Liz era and dropped handily into ours. The actors seem to know what page Frizzell’s on: Jones’ Ellie has the eagerness of a forest chipmunk, which is not so interesting, but there’s a streak of cruelty in her, too, which is. She’s best in the scenes where Ellie’s doubts cloud her judgment. And although Woodley seems, at first, to be not quite comfortable in Jennifer’s elegantly dressed skin, in the end, there’s something touching about her reticence. Woodley looks great in the clothes. But as Jennifer, she also seems to be sending a Morse code through them, as if she knows they’re failing to tell her what kind of woman she wants to be.

The Last Letter From Your Lover is a far from perfect romantic melodrama. But what matters is how it strives to keep that genre breathing. Maybe streaming audiences will be the saviors of melodrama, now that big-screen audiences seem to care mostly about a noisier breed of spectacle. That’s ironic, considering there’s no greater crash-up than falling deeply in love at the wrong time, with the wrong person. Sometimes it helps to have a movie experience into which you can pour all those feelings, whether they’re immediately combustible or they flamed out long ago.



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3iDV820

UK tech giant founder Mike Lynch can be extradited to US



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3kLbEA2

UK tech giant founder Mike Lynch can be extradited to US

Lawyers for Autonomy's founder, Mike Lynch, say he will fight the US authorities' bid to try him for fraud.

from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3xYypEe

UK tech giant founder Mike Lynch can be extradited to US

Lawyers for Autonomy's founder, Mike Lynch, say he will fight the US authorities' bid to try him for fraud.

from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3xYypEe

Hands on: OnePlus Nord 2 review - TechRadar

Hands on: OnePlus Nord 2 review  TechRadarView Full coverage on Google News

from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3eKAvQi

California sues Activision Blizzard over alleged harassment

One of the world's largest gaming companies is accused of endemic discrimination and harassment.

from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3iAX4ID

Inflation spike temporary, says BoE deputy governor



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3By1VCM

Inflation spike temporary, says BoE deputy governor

The recent pick up in price rises is not expected to last, says Bank of England deputy Ben Broadbent.

from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/2W9yEyh

Katie Price flaunts the results of her lip and eye lifts in new clip after plastic surgery - Daily Mail

Katie Price flaunts the results of her lip and eye lifts in new clip after plastic surgery  Daily MailView Full coverage on Google News

from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3hX5db1

US border agents seize 15 giant snails



from RSSMix.com Mix ID 13001087 https://ift.tt/3iB75p8

SEO Improvement in 2024

https://en.ereferer.com/user/page/gene-d-robles-19 https://rentry.co/wyv99mo5 https://rentry.co/kbiby ======================================...

start entrepreneur online - how to start entrepreneur online