Blog Page 27

Target Donates Masks to Local Hospital

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There is a national shortage of medical supplies, especially masks, and hospitals are getting desperate. In the midst of this, a Target in Seattle stocked and sold N95 masks. After a photo and post were made on social media they immediately pulled the stock, stating that it was accidental. Target has announced that they will be donating their medical supply stock to the hospitals in Seattle. N95 masks are shown to filter out 95% of small particles in the air, making them a staple in the necessary hospital Personal Protection Equipment.

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More about the situation in Seattle 

Peninsula cases jump to 11

Tech companies in Seattle raise millions for COVID-19 research

University of Washington researches COVID-19

 

 

Domestic Violence May Spike During Time of Quarantine

While some may be happy for the upcoming weeks of working from home, others are bracing themselves. Domestic violence in the US is reportedly experienced by 1 in 4 women and 1 in 9 men, but it is known to be under reported. These statistics are for an average year, not including times of quarantine and social distancing. It is predicted that the rates of domestic violence will increase due to close quarters and the strain of job uncertainty of job loss. Calls to domestic violence hotlines have included mentions of coronavirus, with one woman saying that she was afraid to go to the emergency room after her partner strangled her because she didn’t want to catch the virus. There are resources available for those who still want to escape an abusive relationship.

Resources are available here

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Abuse doesn’t stop in times of pandemic

Concerns about domestic violence during quarantine are increasing

CDC recommendations for coronavirus

Spring Break and Mass Gatherings of Young Adults Still Occurring

If you ask anyone today they can tell you that there is a pandemic occurring. Many have chosen to self quarantine, vacations have been canceled, large group gatherings have been discouraged and sanitation methods have been stepped up. Yet there is one demographic who has decided to keep up the partying. College students and those in their mid to late 20’s haven’t given up their normal lifestyles.

While Miami has closed its beaches, other spring break destinations in Florida are flooded with partyers. The Surgeon General is urging social media influencers like Kylie Jenner to reason with her constituents. 20% of coronavirus cases in the USA have been in those under 45 years of age. It may not be deadly to the younger generation, but it can still be spread amongst more vulnerable populations.

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New reports show that younger generations are susceptible to COVID-19

Why are younger generations ignoring the quarantine?

Viral joke causing some hurt feelings

Current CDC guideline for COVID-19

 

Cirque Du Soleil Fires Over 95% of Their Staff via Video

Cirque Du Soleil, the Montreal based company, announced that over 4500 employees, 95% of their workforce, has been laid off. This includes not just performers, but creative and artistic directors and staff as well. The mass layoff was announced via a 2 minute long video that was emailed to all included.

One newly-unemployed member was not thrilled with how it was announced. “The tone was just weird, especially [from] a man I’ve met like once wearing Bono sunglasses.” Cirque Du Soleil is not leaving their employees high and dry, however, with insurance coverage and pay to last them, hopefully, through this pandemic.

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How is this pandemic affecting show business?

Disney Springs Cirque Du Soleil show canceled until further notice

Canadian companies begin mass layoffs

Those who took risky loans may now suffer due to COVID-19

Who Is The High-Ranking Government Official Blocking Austin Tice’s Rescue?

Austin Tice is a former marine who became a freelance journalist in 2011. He traveled to Syria in 2012 where he vanished. A few months later a video was sent showing a blindfolded Tice being forced to repeat Arabic prayers while insurgents shouted “Allahu-Akbar” in the background. Since that video there has been no sign of Tice, but his parents say they are certain he is still alive. Tice’s mother, Debra, says that the Trump administration has been much more helpful in efforts to rescue her son, but an unnamed official is blocking those attempts.

Read more about the story here

The Tice family is working to maintain awareness

7 years a prisoner. What should be done about Austin Tice?

Nesheiwat says that are actively working to secure Austin’s release

Will new security adviser keep up with hostage retrieval?

 

 

What to do with a character as iconic – and boring – as Superman?

One of the most entrenched characters, not just in pop culture but in culture in general is Superman. Since the character’s inception in 1938, the comic Superman made his debut in, Action Comics number 1, has become the consensus most valuable comic book in the world. The characterizations of the character have proceeded endlessly with little deviation from the basics of a humanoid, alien do-gooder whose sense of right and wrong falls conveniently in line with the American concept of government and justice.

Despite the character remaining largely unchanged, the actors who have played him onscreen have experienced a variety of problems in their careers and personal life. Much of it – according to them – due to the role itself and the pressure therein. This again came to light as Superman Returns star Brandon Routh made news recently by expressing the personal and career challenges he encountered after playing the title role in the 2006 film.

The reviews were good; the film was well-received by fans; it made money – but the sequel was shelved. Routh, expecting it to be a jumping off point for his career, descended not into the familiar Hollywood tale of substance abuse and overt self-destruction, but a more isolated addiction to World of Warcraft and a darkened personality in which he was not nice to people.

It’s Sesame Street compared to a Charlie Sheen-level downward spiral, but it sheds light onto the difficulty of the role and how fleeting the public’s reaction to any film involving that character can be. Even in the context of the supposed “Superman Curse” that, if believed, doomed 1950s TV Superman George Reeves and the man who epitomized the character being brought to life, Christopher Reeve, Routh’s fall was muted.

Since Superman Returns is back in the public’s attention, with the growing movement to create more “realistic” superhero films with Joker and the upcoming The Batman, there is bewilderment and debate in just how to handle the star at the center of the DC Universe: Superman.

The film itself evolved from the complex machinations of Hollywood, comics and property rights. The story was neatly encapsulated in the engaging film by the late Jon Schnepp, The Death of “Superman Lives”: What Happened? documenting the idea that originated with a Kevin Smith script, starred Nicolas Cage as the title character, was radically changed as it bounced around – keeping Cage – when Tim Burton came onboard to direct, and ultimately died off after the studio grew skittish from the risk of a negative reaction to a radically different take on the character.

The result was Routh and a direct sequel to Reeve in which Superman had left Earth and suddenly resurfaced. Hence the literal title detailing the basic plot of the Superman everyone recognized returning.

With Burton and Cage’s take, the chance of a polarizing response was higher. Either it would have hit as big as Burton’s Batman did or it would be an utter disaster, leaving fans enraged.

It was almost like there were a series of boxes that needed to be checked:

  • Handsome, do-right Superman saving his adopted home in its time of need? Check.
  • Cynical, beautiful Lois Lane holding out hope for humanity with her tamped down love for Superman dormant but intact? Check.
  • A deranged genius, Lex Luthor, bent on destroying Superman and conquering the world from his underground lair? Check.

Given the time, the potential dangers of a darker Superman and the need to recoup the exorbitant cost of the film, it’s entirely understandable that they took the safe route.

What the hard-edged, more creative films with ambiguous narratives have in common is the sense of desperation due to the sunnier or interconnected versions’ failure and that there were no alternatives but to do something different. Joker and the early buzz about The Batman are indicative of this.

The story of how Superman Lives came undone is likely far more interesting than Superman Lives itself would have been, showing exactly how labyrinth-like the attempt was and that it is borderline miraculous that the film was nearly made in the first place.

Categorizing the actors who played the role and how it is viewed as negatively impacting their lives is a spindly tendril at best.

Reeves was a 1950s’ character actor who reluctantly took the role. The heroic protector of “truth, justice and the American way” was a direct response to the communist threat during the height of the Cold War. As his career cratered due to being typecast as Superman, Reeves committed suicide. There are, of course, conspiracy theories as to whether he really did commit suicide.

Ironically, the last onscreen Batman, Ben Affleck, played Reeves who played Superman in the underrated but flawed Hollywoodland – a 1950s period piece that put forth several versions of the Reeves suicide or murder with a fictional private investigator as the principal protagonist.

You need a Venn diagram to keep track of all this and it’s still not as hard to follow as Zack Snyder’s misguided attempt at guiding the DC Universe.

For Reeve, despite his untimely end after being paralyzed in an equestrian accident and dying nine years later from the complications, he was never typecast as Superman. He had a noteworthy career on stage and screen in a variety of roles, light and dark.

The last Superman from Man of Steel, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice and Justice League, Henry Cavill, has a career that is moving along relatively smoothly.

This goes beyond the “look” of Superman and delves into the realities of Hollywood where Reeves and Routh were pedestrian actors who simply had the appearance to pull off playing the character. It is not a blight on their careers that the one big role they landed is what they’re known for and nothing much happened for them in the aftermath.

Every Superman has started with a classically handsome actor. The unusual look of Cage – quirky with an underlying edge of menace – was a giant step away from that blueprint.

The character has been largely unchanged during its entire television and film life. Unlike Batman, who has had multiple incarnations and is now known as dark and brooding due to the way he has been written in the 30 years since Burton’s vision came to life, taking Superman and casting him differently with Cage, by using a black actor (or actress), and turning it completely on its head would unleash too great a public outcry for the studio to spend the money to chance it.

Whereas the Cage portrayal involved an alien who was a savior to the world with a deteriorating mental state that hastened his physical decline and fatal loss to Doomsday, the way to fix Superman to succeed in the current climate does not need to be so extreme. Simply removing the tether in which good and evil is black and white could be enough.

The mistake in decrying the Cavill Superman – just like the Affleck Batman – is blaming the actors for doing their jobs with what they were given. Zack Snyder’s stewardship of the DC Universe might not have been disastrous in a financial sense, but it favored style over substance with rushed storylines heavy on symbolism too complex for most audiences to grasp or to be interested enough to keep track.

The character from 1938 has not evolved in a significant way, if at all. There is obvious fear in doing so. Still, how many people would rush out and wait in line to see a rehash of Superman in which he fights Luthor to stop him from holding the planet hostage no matter how updated or “different” the screenwriters tried to make it?

The Joaquin Phoenix Joker is a product of his environment with mental illness and social decay turning him into a murdering monster and icon for the plight of the faceless majority.

The Robert Pattinson Batman is in the nascent point of his crime fighting career when his evolution can go in different directions as he navigates his trauma and psychosis.

What could “X Actor’s” Superman be? Will he be dark? Will he be light? Will he be black? Will he be white? Will he be male? Will she be female?

None of that matters. What matters now is that the character has had every single ounce of what it was squeezed from it until there is no juice remaining and all that remains is a withering skin.

The unwarranted adherence to a “tried and tested” formula that has been tried and tested so many times that it no longer works should be abandoned for something fresh. The fear of so drastic a step is irrelevant because fans just don’t care anymore and are expecting nothing. It’s then that something interesting and unique can truly develop and usher in a new era for that iconic character whose original template is eight decades old and needs to be retired for good for it to be reborn and live.

Uber and Lyft Still Driving During COVID-19 Outbreak

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Rideshare drivers are still working during this period of social distancing and self-quarantine. Some say that they simply can not afford to not work. Both Uber and Lyft have supplied 14 days of paid compensation for those diagnosed with the coronavirus, but drivers aren’t satisfied. One driver suggested that the companies send out an email to their riders saying “that their drivers are risking their health in order to provide them a ride. Maybe even an acknowledgment from Uber and Lyft to thank the drivers for continuing to drive, which enables Uber and Lyft to run normally and for riders to get where they need to go.” This comment is specifically due to the decrease in tips that drivers are seeing.

Read more on the story here

Self-driving taxi testing has been halted until remission of COVID-19

Starbucks will soon have at home delivery in 48 states

How is this pandemic affecting the stock market?

Chipotle expands its delivery services

 

Tom Brady’s Stunning Departure from the Patriots Shouldn’t Be

All along, it seemed like a negotiating ploy. The idea of Tom Brady wearing a helmet and jersey other than that of the New England Patriots was as foreign as seeing any team’s iconic star leaving in a fit of pique, in search of money or as part of a search for respect that he mistakenly believes eluded him. The sides eventually coming together in a mutually advantageous deal seemed a foregone conclusion.

Except that the Patriots, under Bill Belichick, are not like other organizations that are chained to the past even for the greatest player in its history if not the history of the NFL.

Despite the different manner of business in the NFL and that historic luminaries Johnny Unitas, Joe Montana, Brett Favre, Joe Namath, Emmitt Smith and countless others have desperately clung to their playing lives by refusing to walk away – with up and down results – it still comes as a shock to imagine Brady as anything other than a Patriot.

Still, pigeonholing Brady ignores how he got to this position in the first place. The oft-told story of how he was overlooked as a college player and fell to the sixth round of the 2000 NFL Draft may be boring by now, but that he worked his way from irrelevance to being arguably the greatest quarterback in the history of the sport speaks to his stubbornness. That same stubbornness may have led to his departure from the Patriots.

Is he seeking something different? Did he want to finally be paid commensurately with his accomplishments after years of taking down-the-line salaries and leaving untold millions on the table so the rest of the roster could be filled with players to help him achieve the one main goal he and Belichick shared: winning the Super Bowl?

Was there ego involved where Brady would like to try and win without Belichick and shed the muted but lingering perception that as great as he is, other quarterbacks could also have won under Belichick and Josh McDaniels?

Technically, Brady broke up with the Patriots before they broke up with him. But it’s obvious the organization was indifferent or even went so far as to be uninterested in bringing him back. Whoever they get to replace him will be someone with whom Belichick thinks he can win a Super Bowl. That could be Andy Dalton, Cam Newton, 2019 Patriots backup Jarrett Stidham or someone else.

The egos here are not to be dismissed, though. Both Belichick and Brady have theirs and managed to coexist and thrive without those egos encroaching on each another and smothering the relationship. That was based on winning Super Bowls. If Belichick felt his best chance at winning another Super Bowl or more hinged on keeping Brady as his quarterback, then Brady would remain his quarterback.

There’s no question that Brady is finally, at age 42, showing the signs of age that he staved off for so long. He is essentially immobile. In 2019, his completion percentage, total yards, QB rate and touchdown passes were the lowest they have been since 2013. The difference between then and now is that he was 36 then and will be 43 when the 2020 season starts. How much longer can he play at a reasonably high level?

This could be categorized as a financial decision, but the financial parameters they placed on what they were set to pay Brady were bracketed by what he’s able to do on the field. Belichick deviated from his usual “thank you for your service” goodbye he generally gave to players when he issued a long statement expressing his admiration and love for Brady, but rest assured that if he felt 2020 Brady was still the same player he’s been for much of his two decades in New England, the Patriots would have re-signed him.

Thinking that Belichick has it in his mind to “prove” that he can win without Brady to somehow validate his coaching career is preposterous. His focus is on the team and the next game. Whether Brady, Dalton or whomever is his quarterback to achieve his goal is meaningless to him.

Belichick shows no sentimentality; no clinging to the past with concern as to how any move he makes will be perceived. This has been evident going back as far as the second year after the Patriots won their first Super Bowl with Brady and he cut Lawyer Milloy, causing a near mutiny in the locker room followed by a 31-0 opening game loss to Milloy’s new team, the Buffalo Bills, quarterbacked by Drew Bledsoe. Falling to 0-1 after a disappointing 2002 Super Bowl hangover season of 9-7 was beginning to make the 2001 title run look like a fluke. Belichick was showing the same dour and uncompromising personality traits as the guy he was when he got himself run out of Cleveland and was fired as Browns coach. He was on his way to repeating the trick in New England.

That Patriots team subsequently won 17 of its next 18 games and a second Super Bowl in three years. Suddenly, Belichick and Brady were in the early stages of their upward trajectory into history.

The cutting of Milloy and cutting, trading or allowed departures of key components of their Super Bowl titles included Mike Vrabel, Richard Seymour, Deion Branch, Wes Welker, Logan Mankins, Danny Amendola and countless others. Belichick discards a player a year too early instead of a year too late. Many coaches and executives talk about implementing such coldblooded tactics, but few follow through on their own or are granted the freedom from ownership to do so.

Belichick is the rare entity who is legitimately in charge of basically the entire football operation with limited oversight and wide leeway from owner Bob Kraft. He’s earned that with his constant winning. Specifically, he is not trying to validate his own greatness.

Is Brady? Even at his age and with his individual accomplishments and team hardware?

For a player whose work ethic stems from being ignored out of college and needing to fight for everything while playing for a coach so ruthless that he’d discard his star quarterback as soon as he showed signs of a decline, it’s highly possible that Brady still has lingering doubts he’d like to exorcise.

While achieving that is definitely possible, what Brady may find is that any team he goes to will not have the same structure as the Patriots do. It might take him some time to get the locker room in line with the seriousness he expects and it could frustrate him that he no longer has the youth and ability to overcome what will – not might, will – be lacking from what he’s had with Belichick for 20 years.

Of the two, the one with the most to lose here is Brady. He’ll get his money, but he might tarnish his legacy and prove the point of his detractors – inaccurate though it may be – that Belichick was the key and Brady was not.