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‘Dilbert’ Creator Scott Adams Claims Dilbert Animated Show Canceled Because He’s White

Scott Adams, creator of the critically acclaimed Dilbert comic strip is claiming racism is the real reason why the animated television series version of his world-famous comic strip was canceled.

One could say Adams was being sarcastic but in 2016 he responded to a question on Quora about why the Dilbert animated series wasn’t successful and Adams claimed there were three main drivers of the cancellation.

Many Twitter users believe Adams was just being outright racist for his comment.

Other users quickly pointed out that the Dilbert animated series was not a highly rated show for UPN and claimed Adams is showcasing his own white privilege by claiming it was canceled for reasons not related to the actual ratings of the show itself.

It’s worth noting that UPN premiered eight new shows during the 2000-2001 season and only one of them starred black actors. Two of the five shows that were canceled along with Dilbert did, in fact, star black actors so it puts the narrative of UPN wanting to “focus on an African-American audience” in question at the very least.

Co-Founder of ReOpen Maryland Group Catches COVID-19

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Tim Walters, co-founder of ReOpen Maryland, “crashed” this week and ended up in the emergency room. “I thought I was actually having a stroke … turns out I had COVID,” he said. ReOpen Maryland has worked to sue Governor Larry Hogan over the lockdown measures, and has organized flash mobs of mask-less people. Walters posted videos on Facebook discussing his diagnosis that have since been taken down, ranting against wearing masks. Walters is also refusing to answer questions to help with tracing the origin of the infection.

Read more on the story here

Videos of Tim Walters have been removed on Facebook due to “vitriolic” lashback

Walters claims he contacted everyone he was in contact with before diagnosis

Maryland reports 327 new coronavirus cases

As cases in Maryland rise, hospitalizations decline

 

And…Michael Keaton(?) as Batman…again?

The stunned reaction to the news that Michael Keaton was in talks to reprise his role as Batman in The Flash was greeted with almost – but not quite – the same level of shock minus the horror when he was given the part by Tim Burton in the first place, more than 30 years ago.

Multiple outlets have reported that Keaton is set to return to the costume that launched him to the A+ list of movie actors, made him a global star and haunted him for years.

For many actors, such a move so long after the initial burst of stardom and longtime uncertainty and regret would be little more than attempt to regain lost relevance. Keaton, however, has achieved just about everything any actor could want. He’s well-liked by fans and critics alike; he was in blockbusters; he was in small, artsy films; and he has become a respected character actor after shunning the Hollywood headliner position exemplified when the film poster changes from “MICHAEL KEATON IS…” at the top to “and Michael Keaton as…” at the bottom.

To culminate the transition, he won a Golden Globe and was nominated for an Academy Award and other prizes for his lead role in Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance), which was a blatant final attempt to once and for all reconcile with his Batman experience. He even returned to the superhero genre as the villainous Vulture in Spider-Man: Homecoming.

Perhaps Birdman was cathartic in that he was finally able to express on film the negatives accompanying stardom from a comic book movie, let go of the love-hate relationship he had with the Batman character and could consider donning the cape and cowl as DC rebuilds its franchise.

Time has clearly healed the wounds. When he backed out of the third installment of Batman, he seemed relieved. He sought a then-preposterous amount of money ($15 million), was ambivalent about moving forward after Tim Burton left the franchise, and in reading between the lines from statements and interviews, did not want his career defined by that one gig.

His passive aggressive comments about playing Batman are exemplified in the clip below.

He put on a happy face and promoted the film while jokingly(?) complaining about the suit. As every actor has discovered, the dream of being cast as Batman can quickly descend into a nightmare with the performance secondary or outright ignored in the context of the suit, the special effects and the pyrotechnics. Christopher Nolan’s Batman trilogy moved away from that and created a nuance and noir reality that provided Christian Bale greater freedom to inhabit the role rather than the suit.

The dual-edged sword of the fame, fortune and worship has vexed those who took these franchises seriously. Burton only lasted two films, as did Keaton; Val Kilmer lasted one as Keaton’s replacement. Nolan lamented how the amount of work he put into the three Batman projects elicited critical acclaim and discussion about the moral and ethical quandaries, but was greeted with a large segment of fans and critics who discarded his movies immediately after seeing them and demanded to know who would be the villain in the next one as if he’d just completed a pulpy piece of trash that was filmed guerilla-style over the course of four days. The work is secondary to instant gratification. It saps the joy out of of it.

This complication flummoxes actors who see what they are doing as art but still want to make money. Few can do both. Keaton transitioned from Batman and spent the past three decades forging his second career like Clint Eastwood’s Will Munny in Unforgiven where he compromised out of necessity, succeeded and accrued the seed money for his family by fulfilling a series of contract killings in the Wild West, then started a dry goods business in San Francisco, where he prospered.

Established and respected, Keaton can return to Batman with no fear of it damaging what he has built. There is still little known about The Flash other than it had numerous rewrites and directors and that Ezra Miller will play the title character. DC is in the process of restructuring its franchise after the disappointing Zack Snyder-helmed series of films were a general miss with critics and audiences alike. Rather than trash the whole thing, gut it and start from scratch, many of the actors who want to return are getting the opportunity to do so. Gal Gadot, Henry Cavill, Margot Robbie, Miller – they’re still playing their characters as the realization set in that the problems with the films were not actor-related. Ben Affleck chose to move on from being Batman, but that was due more to his personal issues than the inherent challenges with the character.

Burton’s version of Batman with Keaton epitomizing the duality was a drastic turn from the campy Batman of Adam West. It was a departure for Keaton who, before then, was viewed primarily as a comedic actor. The selection of Keaton was in line with Burton’s quirky sensibilities and personal vision that diverges from conventional wisdom. When he was gone, the studio and production staff went back to the “handsome playboy” model with Kilmer and George Clooney. Whereas Burton was aggressive and innovative, the new creative team played it safe and hewed close to what fans expected. Had Burton done that, Keaton would have been laughed at for the mere mentioning of his name as a possibility to play Batman.

He was laughed at, mocked and subjected to rage from hard core fans who clung to their vision of a darker Batman and saw it being sabotaged before it got started.

Now there’s no “Aaaggh! Michael Keaton?!?

Instead, there’s a sense of nostalgia and admiration for his subtle performance as he and Burton ushered in a renaissance of the genre from what it was to what it could be. Even if the part in The Flash is minor, there’s an underlying sense of acceptance from the actor that took years to achieve. He fought against being typecast for so long that at age 69 and with a filmography befitting the actor he strove to be, he can go back to being Batman with none of the baggage he tried so desperately to shed.

Zuckerburg Loses Over $7 Billion After Advertising Boycott

Several companies have pulled advertising from Facebook in the last month, dropping the value of the companies stocks. It has also pushed Mark Zuckerburg himself down to fourth place on the Bloomberg Billionaire Index. Unilever, one of the largest advertisers in the world cut ties, citing a “failure to police hate speech” and perpetuation of disinformation. They join Verizon, Honda and Hershey in the list of companies who are pulling ads. Coca-Cola has stated that they will cease working with Facebook for a month and then re-evaluate. Today, in response to this, Zuckerberg stated that Facebook will now be prohibiting hate speech in its ads.

Read more on the story here

Read the latest statement by Mark Zuckerberg here

Coca-Cola is suspending advertising on all social platforms

Trump administration asks Facebook to censor calls to topple statues

Videos targeting California representatives removed from Facebook

 

Multiple States Roll Back Reopenings in Wake of High Coronavirus Cases

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Florida and Texas are re-implementing some restrictions after a surge of coronavirus cases. On-site consumption of alcohol has been suspended in Florida. Texas went further and totally closed all of the bars, restricting seating in the restaurants that remain open. While Florida are the two states rescinding some of the reopening, other states are delaying their next phases. Of the 30 states experiencing new coronavirus cases, Arizona, Arkansas, Delaware, Idaho, Louisiana, Maine, Nevada, New Mexico and North Carolina are holding off on allowing the reopening of restaurants and businesses.

Florida rescinded alcohol services statewide

You can’t drink at the bar, but you can take it to go in Florida

Vice President Mike Pence calls expanded testing across the country a success

Texas closes down bars for a second time

California is one of the states experiencing surges of COVID-19

 

150 Pakistan International Airlines Pilots Grounded Due to Fake Licenses

In May a Pakistan International flight crashed into houses, killing 98 people. The incident has been under investigation ever since and was determined to be “human error.” During the first landing attempt the two pilots were reportedly not following standard operating procedure and were, in fact, discussing the coronavirus outbreak. It turns out that the airline screened their staff last year and discovered that at least 150 of them carried fake or “bogus” licenses. In fact, the probe discovered that “more than 260 of the country’s 860 active pilots had fake licenses or had cheated on exams.” They did not pull them from duty and are only just now prohibiting them from flying.

Read more on the story here

Pakistan’s aviation minister blames coronavirus for the deadly Karachi plane crash

Jordan gets new coronavirus cases

Pakistan is having “twitter wars”

Funeral arrangements are being made for Air Force Pilot killed in crash

‘The Expanse’ Star Cas Anvar Accused of Sexual Assault and Harassment on Twitter

Multiple women have come forward on Twitter stating they were sexually assaulted, harassed, or aggressively preyed upon via messaging and at conventions by Cas Anvar, an actor and one of the stars of the hit Amazon sci-fi space series ‘The Expanse’.

It all seemed to start with a single tweet from a woman who says she was pressured to join Anvar in his hotel room at a convention when she was just 17-years-old, he gave alcohol to, and forcibly kissed. Another Twitter user replied saying one of her friends was assaulted by the actor.

Another woman on Twitter says she met Anvar at a convention several years ago and began receiving “dark” messages from him.

This then leads into Twitter users beginning to show screenshots of direct and other messages showing to be from Anvar himself.

Anvar was routinely viewed as a ‘great guy’ and someone that is down to earth and sort of ‘normal’ by fans. He has a history of supporting good causes and being genuinely interested in helping others. He’s even gone so far as to add social commentary on tough subjects such as sexual assault of women.

As of right now Anvar has not released a statement of any kind since these accusations have made the rounds and began trending on Twitter. So far the only response from anyone affiliated with the show at this point is James S.A. Corey, the creator and writer of the novels the show is based on.

What happens next is unknown. At minimum there is an assumption there should be the expectation of Anvar being questioned and responding to these allegations, or an investigation by law enforcement.

Ahmaud Arbery Murder Suspects Officially Indicted in Georgia

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It wasn’t too long ago, back in February actually, that three white men chased down Ahmaud Arbery, a black man, and shot him multiple times after he ran past them. One of the men filmed the incident while another used his pickup truck to repeatedly block his path. In a flurry of changing stories and national public outcry, the three men involved were arrested under murder charges in May. Finally, yesterday a grand jury officially served up the indictment of murder. Each man faces 9 charges: 1 count of malice murder, 4 counts felony murder, 2 counts aggravated assault, 1 count false imprisonment and 1 count criminal attempt to commit false imprisonment.

Read more on the story here

One of the suspects filmed the killing of Ahmaud Arbery

Georgia has passed hate crime legislation

Levi Stadium flew a Black Lives Matter flag

Coronavirus cases are rising in Georgia

Fauci States They Were Never Told to Slow Down Testing

On Saturday, at a rally in Oklahoma, President Trump said that he had asked that testing be “slowed down” to keep the US numbers steady. After the fact his advisors claimed that the statement was made in jest. Dr Fauci confirmed this during a congressional hearing. He testified that Trump has never directed him to slow down the testing of coronavirus. “I know for sure, and to my knowledge, none of us have been told to slow down on testing. That just is a fact. In fact, we will be doing more testing.” He went on to say that they are working on more contact tracing and so will, in fact, be ramping up testing for coronavirus.

Read more on the story here

See Dr. Fauci’s testimony here

Dr. Fauci hopes for a coronavirus vaccine by late 2020

Is institutional racism a factor in the spread of coronavirus?

What is going on around the world as the “second wave” of COVID-19 hits?

 

Where The Last of Us Part II fails and succeeds (SPOILERS)

Warning: the below content will sometimes explore the massive spoiler content of The Last of Us Part II. Only read on if you have finished the game or do not mind being spoiled on certain parts of the game’s story.

The Last of Us Part II has been a very divisive game since elements of its story were leaked to the public. I avoided spoilers and even trailers to go into this game as blind as possible. Ever since those spoilers came out, though, people have been either talking down this game for having a terrible story or praising it as one of the best. I find myself somewhere in the middle of the two extremes.

Now that I have gone through the entire experience, I want to take a chance to talk where I think the game succeeds and fails—both on a story standpoint and the game overall. Everything mentioned here is my opinion and mine alone, but they are my observations from my time with the game.

Succeeds at: Being more Last of Us

The Last Of Us Part II': everything you need to know, release date ...

In terms of gameplay alone, this is as close to the first game as I think possible. Aside from new weapons and additional upgrades, someone could easily mistake this for being the first game. All of the controls are the same, and the objectives in each area are very similar as well. On the one hand, it would be nice to see Naughty Dog try new ideas with the gameplay, but on the other, it is a formula that had success in the first game and returns here. Yes, it is filled with very basic stealth and action mechanics, but they get the job done enough. The main selling point of this game was always the story anyway.

Fails at: It is not another Joel and Ellie adventure

The Last Of Us 2' Has The Largest Install Size Of Any PlayStation ...

Since the trailer that revealed Joel would have a presence in this game released, I was looking forward to another adventure with both of these beloved characters. Unfortunately, that trailer was a bait-and-switch that swapped Joel out with Ellie’s new friend Jesse. Joel was hunted down and murdered in front of Ellie in the first hour of the game.

After these events, you imagine this to be a tale of revenge for Ellie. While half of the story is that, the other half focuses on Abby, Joel’s killer, and trying to redeem her (we will get more on that in a second). It is disappointing to go into a story expecting to play a full game as Ellie, only to have her locked away from you for somewhere between 8-10 hours. It makes the story feel needlessly lengthy with minimal payoff at any point.

Succeeds at: Another emotional story

Why is The Last of Us Part II getting so much hate online?

As you would expect from Ellie watching Joel die in front of her, this is another emotional tale that, at its best moments, dives deep into their history. Everything from Joel’s surprise museum visit to a museum for Ellie’s birthday, to Ellie learning about the events at the end of the first game, were my favorite moments. Even the final conversation between the two where they decide they will attempt to rebuild their relationship the day before Joel is killed nails home the regret Ellie must be carrying with her.

It is not just Joel that has an impact on Ellie in this game, though. Her love interest Dina is a nice inclusion, although their love can feel rushed during certain moments. You can also tell how Tommy and Ellie have grown closer in the years since the first game and the effect Joel’s death has had on them both. Jesse adds an interesting third wheel dynamic as the recent boyfriend of Dina and is a loyal friend until the end.

Even the half of the game I wasn’t a fan of saw the emotional toil characters like Lev and Yara are dealing with in their unique situation and the tragic sibling love the two of them have for each other, risking their life so Lev can live the life he needs. They go through so much, and their journey, while brief and unresolved, is one of the stronger in the game.

Fails at: About half of the story is unneeded/unwanted

The rest of us: 'The Last of Us 2' trans controversy, explained

As mentioned before, only about half of The Last of Us Part II focuses on Ellie in her quest for revenge on Joel’s killer. Unfathomably to me, the other half focuses on trying to make the player care for his killer Abby.

The very first moment we are introduced to Abby, she is hunting Joel down, as her father was the doctor Joel killed who was going to operate on Ellie at the end of the first game. The way Naughty Dog delivered the story, though, does not reveal that until long after Joel is killed, a character who we have seen progress and become a father figure to Ellie. When the game shifts to her perspective, we see an aggressive person who prides herself on being better than her peers, only wishes to kill anyone in her way, and has a group of friends that are as undeserving of redemption as her. Seeing her group slowly killed off is supposed to make us feel for her loss, but when we know from the very beginning that these are the bad guys, it is hard to feel anything for them.

Abby does turn a corner and wants to help Lev and Yara, but that only made me care for them, not her. Abby is still an unlikeable character in my mind that never sees her justice. She just happens to get away with whatever she does every time. We wanted to follow Ellie’s journey hunting down Joel’s killers. We got half a game that does that without resolving anything (and goes against Ellie as a character doing what needs to be done), and the other half dedicated to a throwaway redemption arc that is not deserved.

Succeeds at: Gorgeous, creepy environments

Naughty Dog: Who cares what a character's sexual identity is ...

The Last of Us Part II is a beautiful game in about every way you can see. The character models are incredibly detailed, the close-up of weapons show their details, and oh my gosh, the environments are a sight to behold. The overgrown buildings, the infected dark rooms, and the overall rainy city of Seattle are all great looking and perfectly convey the apocalyptic state the world is in.

My favorite thing with the world’s design that Naughty Dog pulled off is the storytelling in small areas. Finding notes scattered everywhere and seeing the decomposed bodies of people who lost the fight for survival is harrowing and fits the tone. The only time I have seen it done better is in the Fallout series. Each environment has its own story to tell, and everyone feels worthwhile to seek out and explore.

Fails at: Lackluster side characters (Abby’s story)

The Last of Us 2 Director Responds to Self-Insert Accusations

Outside of Lev and Yara, most of the side characters are throwaway characters in Abby’s story. Owen can be argued as a deep, interesting character, but virtually anyone affiliated with the wolves are annoying typical military stereotypes. The leader Isaac is the usual general who wants to solve everything with war, Manny is the usual grunt who lives for killing, and Mel is just the girl inserted in the story to give Abby jealousy issues. They never show anything beyond that. They are cardboard-thin characters that never amount to more than when they are introduced.

At least with the characters on Ellie’s side of the story, you see them show varying emotions and interactions with each other. They are much more profound than their counterparts and, for that reason, earn their spot in the story. They argue they joke, they care for each other, and reminisce. All of Abby’s peers have one shtick and never go beyond that.

Succeeds at: Explaining the consequences of the end of the first game

The Last Of Us Ending - YouTube

Joel’s actions at the end of the first Last of Us directly impacts almost everything in this story. Seven years ago, we knew Joel wiping out the Fireflies was a big deal outside of him saving Ellie. The sequel shows us the effect that had on Abby, driving her to be obsessed with hunting down Joel, as well as lying to Ellie led to her pushing him away. There were consequences for his actions, and while we did not see them right away in the first game, they lived on into this story.

Fails at: Setting up the future well

The Last of Us Part 2 Ending Explained

While this might not be that big of an issue, we are left with so many questions at the end of The Last of Us Part II. Ellie lets Abby escape for the third time in the game, presumably to find the Fireflies, and Ellie walks into the woods to maybe be on her own and leave her former life behind. Those are guesses because there is no indication of what the plans for either person are going forward and frankly does not make me excited for what a third game in the series could bring. Again, not that big of a deal when looking at Part II on its own, but it leaves the potential for the sequel to focus on Abby, which is not ideal.

Succeeds at: Telling a contained story (for the most part)

The Last of Us 2 Seattle Day 1 collectibles guide (Ellie) - Polygon

Piggybacking on the last “issue,” I am glad to see this game tell a contained story. Ellie’s search for revenge and Abby’s redemption had varying effects on me, but they never stray from those ideas with unneeded filler in the Seattle chapters. Both characters have unique arcs that do not include needless ideas that fail to add to building up the world around them. Even with disappointing side characters, the paths the main characters go on are direct and to the point.

Fails at: Leaving the player satisfied or wanting more

The Last of Us Part 2 Chapter 9: Santa Barbara Walkthrough ...

By the time I finished The Last of Us Part II, I was ready to be done with the game for hours. As stated above, I believe Abby’s story was unneeded and a chore to get through. I feel the same way about the final chapter in Santa Barbara. In the last few hours of the game, you will witness multiple places where the story could end, and it just does not. The additional scenes do not add anything that could not have been addressed before in Seattle. The final group you fight through to get to Abby grow the world, but what reason do we have to fight them besides that it keeps Abby in the area for Ellie to find her? It is unneeded padding that makes the game feel more of a slog than anything else at the end.

How do they reward the player with their time spent? With letting Abby go, Ellie not being able to play the song to remind her of Joel anymore, and Dina leaving. Not everything has to have a happy ending, but at least with the first game they presented us with a situation that made us think. Was Joel right to save Ellie? They further push home why he had no regrets for his actions, but there is no situation close to that in this game. Ellie will still go on with her PTSD illusions of Joel dying, and she got no payback, no lessons learned, and no family to return to.

Succeeds at: Not putting too big an emphasis on deaths (outside of Joel and Abby’s dad)

The Last of Us Part 2 leaks contain massive story spoilers ...

Of course, Joel’s death in the beginning hours of the game is the motivation for Ellie to have this journey, as is Abby’s father’s death to hunt down Joel. Outside of those two, the game does not dwell on the deaths of side characters. Abby hardly mentions her friend’s deaths in the grand scheme of things to the point that it does not affect her outside of the moment. The same thing is true with Ellie and Dina. Jesse is gunned down in front of Ellie, and the only ever mention of Dina’s child’s father is through a journal entry later in the game. They keep the story moving, but at some point, it does help hammer home how throwaway some of these characters are.

Fails at: Building up Abby’s fear

Who is Abby in The Last Of Us Part 2? New character made their ...

Abby has a genuine fear of heights that is continuously beaten over your head as you play her. Admittedly, this led me to consistently having her fall to her death in multiple parts of the story for my enjoyment. With such an emphasis on her fear, you would think it would pay off for something down the line, but this is only used to let you know she is very scared when crossing a high bridge across buildings. No judgment here for that, I would also be deathly terrified, but the multiple times her fear is brought up is only for that one scene. It is never mentioned again once throughout the game. For as much emphasis, the story puts on Abby being afraid of heights; they throw that idea away when it is not needed anymore.

Succeeds at: A heartbreaking ending

Review: The Last of Us 2 is Naughty Dog's greatest game | VGC

While I am not a fan of the ending, you can feel Ellie’s broken heart as she comes to grips with not being able to play Joel’s song anymore and remembering their final conversation. They had probably been distant from each other for about a year before Ellie was willing to start building up their relationship again. They had just agreed to work on Ellie forgiving Joel for him to be taken from her. That is the most heartbreaking part of the ending to me personally. Yes, Dina has left Ellie, but as Ellie tells her before leaving for Santa Barbara, that is her choice.

Fails at: That ending being fulfilling

The Last of Us Part II: First hands-on impressions of gameplay ...

This ending does not justify Ellie letting Abby go free. In my opinion, that event goes very much against her character overall and does not pay off the previous 20 hours of cut-scenes and gameplay. Since Abby and Lev are still together, that leaves Naughty Dog room to have a story focused on those two if they want it, but I would have instead had them decide a way for either side story to end. In all fairness, Ellie had no chance against Abby in a straight-up fight between the two, but her giving up when she has won and finally put her motivation for the entire game to the side feels like a slap in the face. There was nothing to fuel this decision; she only imagined Joel for a split second and backs off. That vision should have given her more fuel to finish off Abby, and that’s why I find the ending of The Last of Us Part II disappointing.