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NASA Astronauts Return to Earth in SpaceX Crew Dragon

NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley returned to Earth from the International Space Station on Sunday. The duo made history in late May when they took a SpaceX rocket to the ISS, the first commercially run space flight in history. They undocked from the station on Sunday, landing later that day in the Gulf of Mexico. Both men said that the vehicle lives up to its name in terms of noise. “It sounds like an animal coming through the atmosphere with all the puffs that are happening from the thrusters and the atmospheric noise,” Behnken said. The two men are happy to be back but said they were honored to be part of this historic flight.

Read more on the story here

Hurley and Behnken made prank calls in SpaceX Dragon after landing

How well is SpaceX doing?

Mars Rover “Curiosity” is now 8 years old

Latest SpaceX prototype sent on short hop

The Ambiguity of Yoenis Cespedes

It’s doubtful that Yoenis Cespedes was so calculating in his latest inexplicable act of failed potential, sunk cost and disastrous lack of contract fulfillment that he planned to use the New York Mets’ gift for embarrassing dysfunction to give him air cover as he left the team for good. But that is exactly what happened as he used another legitimate excuse – COVID-19 and the available exit hatch of a no questions asked opt-out – to flee the organization and bail on the 2020 season.

Most of the after-the-fact assessments and analysis is centered on whether Cespedes or his agents informed the Mets that he was leaving or not. The organization asserted that they heard nothing from him, contacted him to no avail, and were stunned that he packed up his belongings and disappeared. Cespedes’s camp says they told the club.

There’s no way of knowing. If this was another player – one who did not have the history of mishaps and use of a language barrier as a shield from explaining himself – the Mets would be the odds-on favorite to have screwed up, again. Except Cespedes has just as checkered a past as the Mets do.

Reardless, this is an effective distraction from Cespedes abandoning the club under the guise of a reasonable excuse for doing so even if that’s not really why he left.

The pretense that he pulled the ripcord because he was worried about a family member who has pre-existing conditions and did not want to run the risk of bringing COVID home is one that cannot be argued. Given his love for golf, “par for the course” is an apt analogy for Cespedes. Comparable to his hamstring injury in 2017, the hip flexor and heel surgeries in 2018, and the still mysterious ankle fractures on his ranch as he was (supposedly) chasing a boar, what can the organization do other than take his word for it?

It’s suspicious, but there’s no viable way to prove one way or the other that he’s being disingenuous.

This has been the narrative from the time the Mets signed him to a 4-year, $110 million contract to retain him after the 2016 season. In those four years, he played 127 games and hit 28 home runs. That translates into one very good season while missing 35 games. The problem is it was amassed in four and he was paid a boatload of cash despite the settlement to reduce his salary for 2020 because of the non-baseball-related injury he suffered on the ranch.

That he agreed to reduce the salary was likely a warning sign that something like this was coming. When the season was delayed and the escape was available to him, it’s not a conspiracy theory nor is it an attempt to assassinate his character to speculate that he looked at the situation and came to the following conclusions:

  • There’s a good chance the season is not going to be completed
  • The Mets are playing terribly and if he keeps playing, he’ll run the risk of another injury hindering his opportunities for 2021
  • He wasn’t getting his full salary
  • No matter how he played, it would not impact the incentive-laden deal he’ll get in 2021 (the bet here is that he goes back to Oakland and the Athletics)

For all the “I-told-you-sos,” there is one person who did tell you so and was positioned to accurately gauge what would happen: former Mets general manager Sandy Alderson. Although the Mets needed a game-changing masher in the middle of the lineup to make a run to the postseason in 2015, Alderson was reluctant to trade for Cespedes in the first place not because Cespedes is a “bad guy” or a “clubhouse cancer” as many players are categorized, but because he had the reputation for mercurial behavior and when unhappy, he would simply check out. It’s precisely what he had done the season before when the Athletics traded him to the Boston Red Sox and he did not like Boston and made clear that he wanted out. The Red Sox obliged him and traded him to the Detroit Tigers where he played every day and played well. Was that in part due to his pending free agency? It’s impossible to say otherwise.

There were factions in the Mets organization who wanted no part of Cespedes especially at the cost of Michael Fulmer, but Alderson pulled the trigger and, for two months, Cespedes was a one-man wrecking crew, exactly what the Mets needed in helping them in their run to the National League pennant.

His star power and regular season Reggie Jackson imitation led to fans demanding the Mets re-sign him. Alderson did not want to; did everything possible not to; but with a push from the Wilpons and Cespedes himself willing to accept a team-friendly short-term deal, they reunited. The contract was technically for three years, but there was an opt-out after one and it was obvious that he wanted to cash in for the long term. In 2016, he hit 31 homers, finished eighth in the Most Valuable Player voting, won a Silver Slugger and helped the club to win the National League Wild Card. Then, after opting out, the Mets finally paid him over the long term. Alderson knew perfectly well that Cespedes was the kind of player who ran the risk of getting his money and deciding not to play; that the nagging injuries, displeasure over minor issues, and complacency would light the fuse for the deal to blow up in the club’s face.

And it did.

Those who are saying “I knew it” did not know anything. Everyone wanted him back not just because of what he could do, but because of what he did with and for the Mets. Even those who believed he would become disinterested once he got paid could nary have projected that he would not play at all.

While the organization, teammates, fans and media members behave exasperatedly at this latest sideshow, it’s easy to use hindsight to say that the club should not have re-signed him. The problem with Cespedes is that in 2015 and 2016, he mostly maximized his limitless potential and showed why he was a five-tool force who could do anything he set his mind to on the baseball field…when he felt like it. He felt like it when he wanted to get that massive contract. Legitimate injuries or not, after he was paid, he came across as a player who did not feel like playing and used those injuries as an excuse to sit, just as Alderson feared.

To a rational person, the organization trying to reduce his salary when he was injured doing something that fell under the umbrella of contract violations would be viewed as a chance he took and got burned for it. An athlete does not see it that way. The athlete sees it as “you’re trying to get out of paying me what you’re supposed to” whether the club is justified in its attempts or not. For Cespedes, with his “get out of playing free” card, there was no reason to play. So, he went home. Blame the Mets if you want, but Cespedes is the responsible party and is, somehow, even more devoid of credibility that the organization. If nothing else, that is a notable achievement during the doomed contract that, for the Mets, is thankfully winding down. It’s not what they had in mind when they signed him, but it’s an accomplishment, such as it is.

Federal Judge Makes First Statement Since Son Was Murdered

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On July 19th a man dressed as a FedEx driver shot and killed Federal Judge Esther Salas’s son, Daniel, and shot her husband 3 times. He is still hospitalized. For the first time since the incident, Judge Salas released a video detailing the event. “Daniel being Daniel, protected his father and he took the shooter’s first bullet directly to the chest. The monster then turned his attention to my husband and began to shoot at my husband, one shot after another.” Salas finished the video by thanking the first responders, law enforcement officers, doctors and nurses involved. She also raised a call for greater privacy protection for federal judges. “I can tell you from personal experience, it is a matter of life or death.”

See her video statement here

The suspect was found dead in his car

Salas calls for privacy protocols

Serving as a judge means “making tough calls”

An Oklahoma council member was doxxed by police officers

 

Most Exciting Video Games Yet to Release in 2020

As was proven in our Best Video Games of 2020 (so far) list, this year might be rough on us, but at least there have been some great games to play throughout the craziness. Along with the new PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X set to release this holiday, there are some very exciting games releasing between now and the new year. Here are the games that have us most hyped for the rest of 2020.

Cyberpunk 2077

Easily the most anticipated game of 2020, anyone with a current gaming system has heard of Cyberpunk 2077. The futuristic RPG is made by CD Projekt Redd, makers of the Witcher games. The game was originally announced way back in 2012, so everyone has been waiting literally this entire console generation to get their hands on the game. From what we have seen, the world offers so many diverse options for you, from shooting down all your enemies, to sneaking through the dark, to talking your way out of confrontations. Undoubtedly, Cyberpunk 2077 is the most exciting game to release in 2020.

Assassin’s Creed Valhalla

Keeping up with past games in the series, Assassin’s Creed Valhalla was leaked to everyone way before its official announcement earlier this year. Now that we finally got a look at the game, we know we will be leading the Viking’s charge on England. Following the booming success of Assassin’s Creed Odyssey, Valhalla looks to carry over much of the same elements, but with deeper combat, more conversation choices, and the ability to lead raids on villages. There are not many Viking games available out there, so we are definitely excited to combine the assassin gameplay we love with the brutalness of these invaders.

Halo Infinite

For the first time in five years we are receiving a mainline Halo game which will launch aside the Xbox Series X but will also be playable on PC and Xbox One. As of this writing, we have just gotten our first look at gameplay of the upcoming game and it looks beautiful. Master Chief was floating out in space and is saved by a UNSC pilot. All we know as of the moment is that the Banished are trying to reassemble a Halo Ring and will be the main enemies in this game. We also know that the game will feature some open world elements, letting Chief explore his surroundings more, access upgrades, and will have new weapons and equipment on the field, most notably a grappling hook.

Marvel’s Avengers

The Avengers were on top of the world until A-Day, a special holiday to celebrate their efforts. During this event, they were set up to fail in an event that would leak Terrigen mists into the surrounding San Francisco area, creating Inhumans, people that are given superpowers. Captain America is killed during the fight and the Avengers are disassembled. Fast forward five years and a superhero mega fan named Kamela Khan has proof that A-Day was not the Avengers fault and seeks to reassemble them. This game will see you play as a bunch of superheroes, with free updates coming in the future with more heroes and missions to lead the fight against the dangerous MODOK.

Marvel’s Spider-Man: Miles Morales

Sticking with the superhero theme, Marvel’s Spider-Man: Miles Morales is a direct follow up to the popular PlayStation 4 Spider-Man title but will be launching alongside the PlayStation 5 this holiday season. We do not know much about the game as of now, except that this will completely focus on Miles, the newest Spider-Man on the block as he gets used to his new powers and helps Peter protect New York.

Crash Bandicoot 4: It’s About Time

Following the success of the Crash Bandicoot N Sane Trilogy remake of the original games, it seemed like only a matter of time until we received a completely brand-new game in the series. It’s About Time is being developed by Toys For Bob, who helped with the development of the trilogy remake and lead development on the Spyro Reignited Trilogy remakes. This game is picking up right after Crash 3: Warped and will completely ignore all games released in the 2000s to bring the story in a new direction. Cortex is back from being trapped in the past and seems to be messing with time again and stealing ancient masks that give Crash new powers as he treks through a new set of levels placed throughout varying environments and time settings.

Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 1 and 2

The original Tony Hawk games were revolutionary when they first released. At the time, there was essentially no market for extreme sports games and the Pro Skater series essentially made everyone want to pick up a skateboard. While the series has fallen far over the past decade plus, there are still many people who hold a very heavy fondness for the original PlayStation games, so it makes sense that the first two games would be completely remade. Popular features and moves have been added in areas that were not there before making this an even better version of what was there before. We also need to mention the return of a majority of the original iconic soundtracks that helped make these games the sensations they were.

South Korean Church Leader Arrested Over COVID-19 Cluster

Lee Man-hee, 88 year old chairman of the Shincheonji Church of Jesus, was detained for questioning this weekend. He and the other church leaders are accused of under-reporting church attendance and hiding those infected with the novel coronavirus. Of the reported 14,336 cases in South Korea, 5,200 are church members leading the health authorities to question the churches compliance. The church and its leaders have denied the accusations and have said that they will do their best so that “the truth is clearly proved in court.”

Read more on the story here

South Korea’s tactic is aggressive testing and quarantines

Church leader arrested for fear of evidence tampering

Seoul flooding kills 6, 7 more missing

Wartime labor ruling strains Japanese-Korean relationship

 

Court Throws Out Death Sentence for Boston Bomber

On July 31st a federal appeals court overturned the death sentence for Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, one of the two Boston Bombers. Dzhokhar’s brother, Tamerlan, was killed in a gun battle a few days after the bombing. The appeals court claimed that Dzhokhar was less culpable than his brother, the mastermind of the terror event. “But make no mistake: Dzhokhar will spend his remaining days locked up in prison, with the only matter remaining being whether he will die by execution,” the judges said during the trial proceedings. The decision was made to overturn the death penalty, with the judges citing that “the judge who oversaw the case did not adequately screen jurors for potential biases.”

Read more on the story here

Read the appeal to overturn Tsarnaev’s death penalty here

Reactions to the overturned death penalty

ISIS death penalties may be overturned in effort to placate UK

Should the death penalty be abolished?

 

Microsoft Plans to Buy TikTok, Trump Gives Deal 45 Days

President Trump announced an intent to ban TikTok from app stores in the United States. This weekend Microsoft confirmed that they are in talks with the parent company of the popular video-sharing app, and is working with the US government as well. One of the concerns that many have had with the app is the lack of security and regulation. Microsoft plans to overhaul the app. They released the following statement: “This new structure would build on the experience TikTok users currently love, while adding world-class security, privacy, and digital safety protections,” Microsoft said. “The operating model for the service would be built to ensure transparency to users as well as appropriate security oversight by governments in these countries.” The deal is slated to be done by the 15th of September.

Read more on the story here

See the coverage on how Trump is handling the sale here

Would banning TikTok actually stop an information influx from China

Former Microsoft CEO calls TikTok purchase “exciting”

The sale could go through for $50 billion dollars

Zack Snyder firing verbal shots at Joss Whedon is true to form

Zack Snyder is going beyond the requisite promotional blitz for the “Snyder Cut” of Justice League (ETA 2021). He’s even abandoned the cryptic comments about Joss Whedon’s directorial effort in the critical and commercial disappointment of 2017’s theatrical release of Justice League by expressly saying he would have burned the Whedon footage and that he had no say in the studio’s selection of Whedon to replace him on the film.

Whedon League vs. Snyder League is probably not what Marvel or DC has in mind for a blockbuster, but it is somewhat interesting in a tabloid sort of way.

In Snyder’s defense, no filmmaker, writer or creator of any kind wants their work interfered with by an outsider. Producers and implementing their “suggestions” is a necessary evil. An idealistic director who will die on the hill of his vision has a choice: direct the film as written and risk losing financial support from the studio or acquiesce to commercial concessions.

Still, shifting responsibility to meddling entities has its limits. Many find Snyder’s style unpalatable. Had he had commercial and critical success with DC beforehand, the studio interference that pockmarked Watchmen and Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice would have receded, not increased with the passage of time. The financial consequences of another failure – this time with the massive expectations for Justice League – made it necessary to rethink the entire DC Universe.

As is commonplace, the cover story differs from the actual story and the perspectives of those involved is slowly revealing itself in dribs and drabs.

Snyder left the project due to the death of his daughter, an unspeakable tragedy. However, judging by the response to much of the Snyder-helmed DC Universe predominately ranging from lukewarm to outright bad, it stands to reason that there was studio reluctance to move forward with him and run the risk of damaging the brand further. At that point, DC had little alternative. Information given to the public said Whedon was hired to replace Snyder due to circumstances, but it was the type of move that could easily have been discussed in muted tones well beforehand with an “I wish we could…”, quickly shushed away with tight lips and resigned head shakes.

Trying to recoup on a doomed investment required a fundamental change in philosophy. Despite Whedon and Snyder both working in the world of comic books and fantasy, their styles are radically different, as are the results. Snyder has his ardent defenders, elucidated by the groundswell and eventual agreement that his version of Justice League would be released on HBO Max. His detractors present legitimate critiques saying he relies too heavily on beautiful cinematography and too little on fan-friendliness.

Whedon’s films are light escapism with less “oh, that’s what that meant!” symbolism. Snyder’s concepts are deeply buried, obscure and confusing.

Snyder had been roasted to such a degree that he was inedible. Whedon was an emergency takeout order to try and salvage the mess Snyder left behind, at least in the view of the studio and many fans. It wasn’t as if Snyder was fired. Whedon was portrayed as a friend of Snyder who took command of the project to complete it. Whether that is or is not the case is irrelevant. Even if they’re best friends, it does not necessarily mean their sensibilities will mesh to handle a project of this size. Creative continuity is vastly different from personal connection. In fact, a personal connection may hinder a workable professional partnership. Inevitably, there was a stylistic and narrative clash based on their aesthetics and how the men work. It’s comparable to “supergroup” music collaborations that look great on paper but face a complicated slog when they get into the studio. The results might be good; it might be profitable; but there’s little enjoyment in getting there.

This was a unique situation in that Snyder was forced from the project and it opened the door for the studio to put Whedon in hoping he could replicate Marvel’s efforts. Obviously, the landscape was radically different and retooling what was in place created a mishmash that few – least of all audiences – were happy with.

In these instances, when the bulk of the film has already been shot and needs to be spliced together, it’s unusual for a complete outsider who had nothing to do with the project to be called in to take over as director. This is true with a big budget film just as it is with a smaller film. The role of “director” is somewhat overblown. He or she is the on-set shot caller. In a film the scope of Justice League, there are probably 10 other people who could fill in as “director” and do a credible job of maintaining the overall vision of the piece, especially if it’s Snyder’s team taking over. It’s a collaborative effort. Asking the question as to why Whedon – who had no prior connection with the DC Universe – was tabbed to replace Snyder is not limited to wondering who could have finished this film alone, but extends to who could repair the entire DC Universe on the fly.

Did DC take advantage of Snyder’s personal tragedy to try and salvage something from a spiraling franchise that was a critical disaster and increasingly looked like it would lose significant sums of money once it hit theaters? Put it this way: had they wanted to plow on with Snyder’s concepts, they could have hired someone from his circle to complete the film. They didn’t.

Conspiracy theories are easy, but with the (over)hype surrounding the pending “Snyder cut” of Justice League and his recent statements about the original film that he implies was decimated by Whedon, it’s blatantly obvious that there was no creative happy zone between the two. One does films one way, the other another way.

Whedon’s Avengers managed to merge the sanctity of the comic while updating it for the screen and appealing to hard core fans and casual moviegoers alike. With much of Snyder’s work, if the viewer walked in unaware of any aspect of the story, it’s like dropping them in the middle of the forest. Whedon’s product is inclusive; Snyder’s is unwelcoming like an exclusive club where only a select few have the entire ring of keys and he does it intentionally as a wink to fellow comic book geeks.

The result with Whedon was not good, but the result with Snyder probably would not have been much better considering around two hours of it was left on the cutting room floor to adhere to the time allotted. Had Snyder accrued sufficient capital with the other DC films, his Justice League could have taken the same road as Marvel did with its epic Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame. As disappointing and disjointed as Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice was and for the deserved blame Snyder gets for it, there were telltale signs of studio interference such as the clumsy way in which the story was told, the abandoned plot points such as how Superman disagreed with Batman’s methods in favor of a preposterously formulated Lex Luthor scheme to pit the two against one another while creating Doomsday because his dad was abusive.

Snyder criticizing Whedon is tantamount to Joel Schumacher criticizing Tim Burton. It’s not identical, but it’s in the ballpark. With all the talk and the amount of time before the Snyder cut of Justice League is released, expect there to be more sniping. Judging by history, the polarizing Snyder’s reputation will not be any better after the fact. The problem for him is that by then, there will be no one else to blame.

One US Marine Dead, Eight Others Missing in Training Accident

An amphibious assault vehicle took on water during a training exercise off San Clemente Island in California. 15 service members were on the vehicle on Thursday. One marine was taken to La Jolla hospital and died from his injuries. Two others are listed in stable condition, but eight others are still missing. Search and rescue efforts continue into Friday morning. “We are deeply saddened by this tragic incident. I ask that you keep our Marines, sailors and their families in your prayers as we continue our search,” said Col. Christopher Bronzi, 15th MEU Commanding Officer.

Read more on the story here

The Navy and Coast Guard are conducting searches

This is the third time this decade that someone has died in a Camp Pendleton training accident

People band together to rescue humpback whales

Montana State Volleyball team wins academic award

Multimedia Intern

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