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RadioRob

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  1. Published by Reuters By Nichola Groom (Reuters) – U.S. renewable energy developers have delayed or scrapped several big battery projects meant to store electrical power on the grid in recent months, scuttling plans to replace fossil fuels with wind and solar energy. At least a dozen storage projects meant to support growing renewable energy supplies have been postponed, canceled or renegotiated as labor and transport bottlenecks, soaring minerals prices, and competition from the electric vehicle industry crimp supply. One previously unreported dispute over a delayed California storage project has even wound up in court. The slowdown in utility-scale battery installations threatens the pace of the U.S. transition away from fossil fuels as the Biden administration seeks to decarbonize the grid by 2035. The delays could pose a threat to power reliability in states that already depend heavily on renewable energy like California. Storing power is considered vital to the expansion of solar and wind energy because it allows electricity generated when the sun is shining or wind is blowing to be used at the end of the day when consumers need it most. The delays span states including California, Hawaii and Georgia, with battery providers including Tesla and Fluence warning of disruptions to supply, according to a review of regulatory documents, corporate statements and interviews with project developers and power providers. The delays, some of which have not been previously reported, range from several months to a year, according to the Reuters reporting. “I have not seen a nascent industry challenged on so many fronts,” said Jamal Burki, president of IHI Terrasun Solutions, the U.S. energy storage arm of Japanese heavy equipment maker IHI Corp. European energy storage projects are also facing delays, but that region lags the United States in the development of grid-scale storage, making the issue less pronounced. Ben Guest, fund manager at Gresham House Energy Storage Fund, which invests in battery projects in Britain, said he has seen two- to three-month delays in projects primarily due to component shortages and shipping challenges. Energy storage makes up about 3% of U.S. operating clean energy capacity and has been growing rapidly. Installations soared 170% in the first quarter to 758 megawatts, according to the American Clean Power Association, roughly enough capacity to power 144,000 homes. But the pace is dipping below forecasts. Energy research firm Wood Mackenzie told Reuters it may revise down its current outlook for U.S. storage installations of 5.9 GW this year because of the rising evidence of market disruptions, after 2021 installations came in at about two-thirds of what it initially expected. Prices for lithium-ion batteries, three-quarters of which are produced in China, have soared as much as 20% since last year as lithium and nickel costs rise, COVID-19 lockdowns disrupt manufacturing, and transport constraints slow shipments. Robust demand from EV producers for batteries has also been a headwind, industry players told Reuters. Battery manufacturers are favoring the EV market because their orders are more predictable compared to the lumpy, project-based orders from power storage developers. “When the pullback happens, it’s felt worse by the storage industry than it is by the electric vehicle industry,” said Andy Tang, vice president of energy storage and optimization at storage developer Wartsila. “We’re a difficult customer.” Recent turmoil in the solar industry, caused by uncertainty over potential tariffs on Asian imports, has also impacted storage development. Constructing storage alongside solar allows facilities to claim a federal tax credit that does not exist for standalone batteries. The Biden administration this week announced it would waive tariffs for two years on panels from countries impacted by a Commerce Department investigation, an attempt to revitalize solar installations. SUMMER CRUNCH These obstacles have raised questions about the fate of some 14.7 gigawatts of U.S. battery storage in development, some of which state authorities had hoped would be in place to prevent blackouts as early as this summer. Among recent delays is 535-MW of storage Ameresco Inc is developing for Southern California Edison, one of the state’s biggest utilities. It expects just a portion of the project — about 300 MW — to be online by its August target. Ameresco did not respond to a request for comment. Central Coast Community Energy (CCCE), which purchases power on behalf of 430,000 customers in five California counties, is also facing delays of six clean energy projects, including 122 MW of storage, needed to meet state-mandated clean energy requirements, according to spokesperson Catherine Stedman. The developers of the projects, originally meant to come online this year and next, have warned of delays between six and 12 months, Stedman said. CCCE and Silicon Valley Clean Energy Authority, its partner in several projects, meanwhile, have sued developer EDF Renewables over its termination of contracts for the Big Beau solar and storage project that started generating power last year. EDF in March had asked to increase the price for the project’s still unfinished energy storage component by $76.8 million — a 233% increase, according to the complaint filed May 9 in California state court in Santa Clara County. EDF did not respond to a request for comment. The disruptions have concerned state officials, already dealing with perennial power shortages during peak summer demand. Governor Gavin Newsom said in April that the state had been counting on new battery storage projects, many of which were procured following rolling blackouts in August 2020, to shore up summer reliability. “Delays in the online dates of these projects are a very real concern,” California Public Utilities Commission spokesperson Terrie Prosper said in a statement. OPEN-ENDED PROBLEM Energy research firm Rystad said that given the large appetite for batteries from a surging EV market, global supplies for utility storage projects are not expected to be able to meet demand in the medium-term. That’s a problem, the International Energy Agency says. Battery storage needs to reach 585 GW by 2030 to decarbonize the global power sector, a 35-fold increase from 2020. “If you can’t get the batteries manufactured and reliably delivered at a price point that is coming down… you’re going to slow the ability of batteries to accelerate the transition,” said Jim Kapsis, founder of climate technology advisory firm the Ad Hoc Group. In Hawaii, utility Hawaiian Electric is seeing delays in solar and storage projects it contracted to help replace the state’s only coal-fired power plant, set to retire in September. The developer of four projects, Canada’s Innergex Renewable Energy, revealed on a conference call last month that it was seeking to renegotiate the terms of the deals – including price and timing – after receiving force majeure notices from its battery supplier, Tesla. Hawaiian Electric spokesperson Sharon Higa said the utility expected just 39 MW of the 378.5 MW of solar and storage it procured to be in service prior to the AES coal plant retiring. Innergex and Tesla did not respond to requests for comment. Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk acknowledged earlier this year in a conference call that the company had prioritized EV battery supplies over stationary storage. Fluence, meanwhile, said in a conference call last month that it has issued force majeure notices on three contracts because its battery suppliers in China were not able to fulfill their obligations. It said it had also raised prices on new contracts by 15% to 25% and would price future contracts based on raw material indices to guard against volatility. (Reporting by Nichola Groom in Los Angeles; Additional reporting by Susanna Twidale in London; Editing by Richard Valdmanis and Lisa Shumaker) View the full article
  2. Published by AFP Pro-Trump supporters stormed the US Capitol following a rally by the then-president on January 6, 2021 Washington (AFP) – The investigation into last year’s assault on the US Capitol by a mob of Donald Trump’s supporters is entering a public phase, with two weeks of blockbuster televised hearings slated to start Thursday. The seven Democrats and two Republicans who make up the House of Representatives committee probing the insurrection will set out exactly what happened on January 6, 2021 and who they believe aided the ringleaders. A final hearing in September is expected to reveal the committee’s finished report, outlining its findings and recommendations to prevent such attacks in the future. Republicans including House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy say the committee is partisan and “not conducting a legitimate investigation” — an argument that has been rejected by a Trump-appointed federal judge. What has the committee been doing? The panel has issued around 100 subpoenas and has conducted around 1,000 interviews, with star witnesses including two of Trump’s children — Ivanka and Don Jr. — as well as his son-in-law and senior advisor Jared Kushner. Investigators have collected more than 100,000 documents, including emails, texts and official White House photographs allowing the committee to dig into the goings-on in and around the Oval Office. What have we learned? Revelations around who knew what and when have largely dripped out via court filings in civil cases involving potential committee witnesses and separate criminal cases against the insurrectionists. Among the most explosive was a trove of text messages between Trump’s chief of staff Mark Meadows and lawmakers, media allies and the Trump family urging the then-president to call on his supporters to end the riot. Other texts among more than 2,000 handed over by Meadows show Ginni Thomas, the wife of US Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, agitating for the election results to be overturned. What will the hearings reveal? The committee will seek to distill a sprawling, multi-faceted year-long probe into a compelling narrative that will “paint a picture as clear as possible as to what occurred,” chairman Bennie Thompson told reporters. Investigators hope to set out through public testimony the role the Trump White House played in the campaign to overturn his 2020 election defeat by Democrat Joe Biden. Those efforts allegedly include an illegal scheme to send fake “electors” — the people appointed to vote for president in the state-by-state “Electoral College” — to Congress. They also take in an authoritarian plan to seize voting machines and the alleged plot to delay the certification of Biden’s win through the violence at the Capitol. Investigators want to get to the bottom of a 187-minute delay before law enforcement was beefed up to protect the Capitol and learn why there is a gap of almost eight hours in White House logs of Trump calls as the violence played out. Will anyone face charges? A federal judge ruled in March that Trump more likely than not committed a crime in the run-up to January 6, 2021. While the Justice Department is prosecuting more than 800 suspects for alleged lawbreaking at the Capitol, the committee itself has no powers to issue indictments. The panel is expected to turn over evidence to federal prosecutors but has not announced whether it will recommend charges, a largely symbolic gesture. How will the hearings work? The committee will hold prime-time hearings at 8:00 pm (0000 GMT) on June 9 and 23, bookending 10:00 am hearings on June 13, 15, 16 and 21. Testimony is expected to be accompanied by visual illustrations such as text messages, photographs and videos. Thursday’s hearing is set to feature testimony from US Capitol Police officer Caroline Edwards, the first to be injured by rioters, and filmmaker Nick Quested, who recorded the first moments of violence. J. Michael Luttig, a former federal judge who advised Trump’s vice president Mike Pence, is expected to testify. Other witnesses could include Marc Short, a chief of staff to Pence, Justice Department official Richard Donoghue and Jeffrey Rosen, Trump’s last attorney general. All four were party to much of the relevant discussion between Trump’s election defeat and the insurrection two months later, investigators say. Will they change any minds? Supporters see the committee’s work as vital in ensuring one of the darkest episodes in the history of US democracy is never repeated. Yet Democrats worry the hearings could be seen as another “partisan” attack on Trump, imperiling bipartisan efforts at reform and obscuring the broader story of a slow-moving coup attempt aided by a violent insurrection. “The top issues for most US voters have nothing to do with the January 6 insurrection, unfortunately,” Democratic analyst Mike Hernandez told AFP as his party faces tricky midterm elections later this year. “Inflation, gas prices, school shootings, school safety and reproductive rights are all issues that more Americans care about.” View the full article
  3. Published by Reuters WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said on Thursday that talks aimed at reaching agreement on bipartisan gun legislation are making good progress and pledged quick Senate action if a deal is reached. (Reporting by David Morgan) View the full article
  4. Published by BANG Showbiz English Samantha Jones will feature in the story for ‘And Just Like That…’ season two. The ‘Sex and the City’ revival is returning for a second series and showrunner Michael Patrick King has revealed Kim Cattrall’s character – who was referenced via text message exchanges with Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah Jessica Parker) – will play a part in the upcoming episodes. Asked if the characters will still be in contact in season two, he told Variety: “Yes!” Carrie and Samantha met off-screen during the finale after Carrie scattered Mr. Big’s ashes, and King admitted each writer on the show “has a different version of what happened” during their reunion. He said: “It’s very funny, because every single one of the writers has a different version of what happened during that conversation. “So, I think there was some Champagne. I think there was a grownup back and forth, and a love affair that they realised that something’s more important than being afraid to heal. “I’m sure they had a great night. To me, they had a great night and things became resolved. Once Carrie let go of an old, old love, one of her current loves came back in.” Kim isn’t expected to reprise her role on screen, but she recently insisted Samantha will “live forever”. She said: “I think the character of Samantha was awakened 25 years ago and she will live forever. “She’s your best friend, and she’s someone who will tell you the truth. Because she’s been there and done that. “I love her so much. But she lives in a time and a place, and I honour that.” Kim previously claimed she only found out about ‘And Just Like That…’ when fans did. She insisted: “I was never asked to be part of the reboot. I made my feelings clear after the possible third movie, so I found out about it like everyone else did — on social media.” Kim has been locked in a feud with her former co-star Sarah for several years and she insisted she never considered her castmates to be her friends. She said of their relationship: “I guess it’s how you define friends. I think we were colleagues. My colleagues aren’t my friends. It was professional.” View the full article
  5. Published by BANG Showbiz English Federal prosecutors claim R Kelly “poses a serious danger to the public”. Prosecutors in the US have recommended that the ‘I Believe I Can Fly’ singer should serve at least 25 years in prison for sexually abusing women after girls after he was found guilty of racketeering and trafficking last year. In a sentencing memo filed this week, prosecutors said he “preyed upon children and young women for his own sexual gratification” for decades by relying “upon his fame, money and popularity”. They added: “He continued his crimes and avoided punishment for them for almost 30 years and must now be held to account.” The 55-year-old singer – whose first name is Robert – plans to appeal the ruling once he has been given his sentence, and his lawyers have argued he should be jailed for a maximum of around 17 years under federal sentencing. However, prosecutors described his offences as “calculated, methodical, and part of a long-standing pattern”. They continued: “The government has little doubt that if afforded an opportunity to offend again, the defendant would do so. “He poses a serious danger to the public. His actions were brazen, manipulative, controlling and coercive. He has shown no remorse or respect for the law.” Kelly had pleaded not guilty to racketeering and violating a federal law making it illegal to transport people across state lines for prostitution, but the five women and seven men of the jury found him guilty on just their second day of deliberations. Kelly is due to be sentenced on June 29. He is still awaiting child pornography and obstruction charges which could lead to further convictions and jail time. The singer has pleaded not guilty to all criminal charges against him and has repeatedly claimed he is innocent of any alleged sexual misconduct over the years. In 2008, he was acquitted of child pornography charges. View the full article
  6. Published by Reuters By Jennifer Rigby LONDON (Reuters) – The World Health Organization said on Thursday its latest investigation into the origins of COVID-19 was inconclusive, largely because data from China is missing, another blow to its years-long effort to determine how the pandemic began. The report from the WHO expert panel said all available data showed the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19 probably came from animals, likely bats, a similar conclusion to the U.N. agency’s previous work on the topic in 2021 that followed a trip to China. The missing data, especially from China, where the first cases were reported in December 2019, meant it was not possible to identify exactly how the virus was first transmitted to humans. The findings are likely to add to doubts it will be possible to determine how and where the virus emerged. They will also inject urgency into the effort to overhaul the WHO and its health emergency procedures as the agency strives to reassert itself after years of criticism over its handling of the pandemic. The WHO says the report, the first of several expected from the panel, is also about drawing up a better way to probe the origins of future outbreaks. WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus wrote to the Chinese government twice in February this year in pursuit of more information, the report showed, although the authors also said China had provided some data on request. The origins of the pandemic, which has killed at least 15 million people, have become politicised. Scientists say it is important to establish what happened to prevent similar outbreaks. LONGER IT TAKES, HARDER IT GETS But the team on the panel – known as the Scientific Advisory Group for the Origins of Novel Pathogens (SAGO) – said it was still impossible to do so because of a lack of data. They also say there are “recognised challenges” in investigating “such a long time after the initial outbreak”, although their work would continue. “The longer it takes, the harder it becomes,” Maria Van Kerkhove, a senior WHO official on the SAGO secretariat, told a briefing, adding the WHO will support all ongoing efforts to better understand how the pandemic began. “We owe it to ourselves, we owe to the millions of people who died and the billions of people who were infected,” she said. The report said no new information had been provided on the possibility that SARS-CoV-2 was introduced to humans through a laboratory incident, and “it remains important to consider all reasonable scientific data” to evaluate this possibility. Reflecting the political wrangling that has dogged the drafting of the report, it includes a footnote outlining how members of the panel from Brazil, China and Russia disagreed that further studies were needed on the lab hypothesis and suggested nothing had changed since the previous WHO-China joint report on origins, published in March 2021. The latest report also includes a framework for how to pinpoint the origins of future outbreaks, which WHO has said is the panel’s central aim, rather than drawing conclusions on COVID-19. Jean-Claude Manuguerra, SAGO Co-chair said monkeypox was an “illustration of how much we need this global framework” to find out how future pathogens emerge. When the panel was set up in October, WHO emergencies chief Mike Ryan said it was the “best chance… it may be our last chance” to understand the origins of the coronavirus. The report also includes a long list of recommendations for further studies that could shed more light on COVID-19’s origins. They include seeking information on the earliest cases in Wuhan, China, as well as further studies around the animal market in Wuhan that was identified early on as a potential location for the virus’s jump to humans. The 2021 report called a lab leak “highly unlikely” and suggested the most plausible theory was a spillover from animals. A later U.S. intelligence report said both theories remained plausible, although it too leaned towards natural origins. (Reporting by Jennifer Rigby; additional reporting by Emma Farge; editing by Barbara Lewis) View the full article
  7. Published by Al-Araby This week, Democratic Senator Jon Ossoff and Republican Senator Mitt Romney issued a letter to US Secretary of State Antony Blinken calling for an investigation into last month’s killing of Palestinian American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh. With this letter, they are joining a bipartisan group of House lawmakers in pushing for a transparent investigation into the killing of Abu Akleh, who was on assignment in the West Bank town of Jenin when she was fatally shot in the neck. The evidence, including eyewitness accounts and a recent Palestinian probe, points to the Israeli military as the perpet… Read More View the full article
  8. Published by Radar Online Mega NBC and Savannah Guthrie came under fire after Guthrie quickly disclosed how her husband worked for Johnny Depp’s legal team right before an interview with Depp’s lawyers, Radar has learned. The startling admission and “quick disclosure” came Wednesday morning as Guthrie was preparing to interview Camille Vasquez and Ben Chew on NBC’s Today program. Mega “A quick disclosure, my husband has done consulting work for the Depp legal team, but not in connection with this interview,” the 50-year-old NBC broadcaster told her audience just before introducing Depp’s powerhouse legal team. “So with that aside, let me ask you, did you speak to your client right after the verdict?” she then asked Vasquez and Chew, charging straight into the interview. But NBC and Guthrie’s clear conflict of interest hardly when unnoticed, because producers from other morning television programs quickly called out the network and the Today host for their “unforced error.” “Just before Savannah Guthrie conducts her interview with Johnny Depp’s lawyers, she discloses that her husband was a consultant for the Depp legal team,” Justin Baragona, formerly of Mediaite, wrote. Mega Surprisingly, other rival producers gave Guthrie credit for the “quick disclosure” and argued that it would have been sketchier if she did not disclose her husband’s consulting work with Depp’s lawyers at all. As RadarOnline.com reported, Guthrie also interviewed Amber Heard’s lawyer Elaine Bredehoft last week, but the Today host either forgot or willingly chose not to disclose her husband’s close connection to Depp’s legal team during that interview – something that also didn’t go unnoticed by Jezebel’s Caitlin Cruz. “I know objectivity in journalism is a way to uphold the status quo, but I do think this is a cut-and-dry example of Interviews You Should Give to Your Colleagues,” Cruz wrote immediately after Guthrie’s interview with Vasquez and Chew. “Today has been covering the couple’s ongoing legal battles in the United Kingdom, and Gutherie actually got their engagement exclusive back in 2014.” “In fact, I would argue Guthrie’s husband’s consultancy relationship, which is likely financial, deserves an on-air disclosure to viewers of one of the nation’s largest morning news programs,” Cruz continued, indicating Guthrie should have handed the interview off to a colleague. “There are so many anchors and reporters at Today; Guthrie did not have to be the anchor to take both of these interviews.” Mega Guthrie married her husband, Michael Feldman, in 2014. Besides Feldman’s legal consultation work with high-profile personalities such as Depp, the 53-year-old public relations and communications consultant is also a former political advisor who served as former Al Gore‘s traveling chief of staff during the former vice president’s unsuccessful 2000 presidential run. View the full article
  9. Published by Reuters LONDON (Reuters) – Jailed Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny scolded Google and Meta Platforms Inc on Thursday for shutting down advertising, a step he said had undermined the opposition and thus was a gift to President Vladimir Putin. Navalny, by far Russia’s most prominent opposition leader, casts Putin’s Russia as a dystopian state run by thieves and criminals where wrong is cast as right and judges are in fact representatives of a doomed lawless country. In a written address to the Copenhagen Democracy Summit, Navalny, who is currently in a Russian jail, said technology was being used by the state to arrest dissidents but that it also gave an opportunity to get to the truth. “The Internet gives us the ability to circumvent censorship,” Navalny said in the address, a copy of which was posted on his official blog. “Yet, at the same time, Google and Meta, by shutting down their advertising in Russia, have deprived the opposition of the opportunity to conduct anti-war campaigns, giving a grandiose gift to Putin.” Neither Google nor Meta immediately responded to a request for comment on Navalny’s remarks. Both companies paused advertising targetting users in Russia in March, just days after Russia invaded Ukraine. Navalny earned admiration from the disparate Russian opposition for voluntarily returning to Russia in 2021 from Germany, where he had undergone treatment for what Western laboratory tests showed was an attempt to poison him with a nerve agent in Siberia. The Kremlin has repeatedly dismissed Navalny’s claims about Putin, who it says has won numerous elections in Russia since 2000 and remains by far the country’s most popular politician. It has dismissed Navalny’s assertion that Russia poisoned him. Navalny, a former lawyer who rose to prominence more than a decade ago by lampooning Putin’s elite and voicing allegations of corruption on a vast scale, said the titans of Silicon Valley had a lot of questions to answer. They would have to decide, he said, whether or not they were really “neutral platforms” and whether or not users in democracies should operate under the same rules as those in repressive societies. “How should the internet treat government directives, given that Norway and Uganda seem to have slightly different ideas about the role of the internet and democracy?” he asked. “We love technology. We love social networks. We want to live in a free informational society. So let’s figure out how to keep the bad guys from using the information society to drive their nations and all of us into the dark ages.” (Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by Mark Heinrich) View the full article
  10. Published by New York Daily News NEW YORK — A new movement is taking center stage on and off Broadway — and just in time for Pride Month. Stage productions with Black and gay narratives are no longer the understudies on the New York theater scene. These include the Tony-nominated hit musical “A Strange Loop” and baseball-themed play “Take Me Out,” the 2022 Pulitzer Prize-winning “Fat Ham,” the insightful Off-Broadway dramas “soft” and “what the end will be,” as well as the Theater Row adaptation of “B-Boy Blues.” “A Strange Loop” is nominated for 11 awards, including best musical, original score, book of a musical and orchest… Read More View the full article
  11. Published by Reuters By Jonathan Stempel NEW YORK (Reuters) -A federal judge on Monday rejected Kevin Spacey’s bid to dismiss a civil lawsuit in which fellow actor Anthony Rapp accused the Oscar winner of making an unwanted sexual advance during a party at Spacey’s Manhattan home in 1986, when Rapp was 14. U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan in Manhattan said there was a genuine factual dispute about whether the now 62-year-old Spacey forcibly touched Rapp’s “intimate parts” to gratify his own sexual desire. Kaplan said Rapp, 50, who is seeking compensatory and punitive damages, can pursue claims of battery and intentional infliction of emotional distress. The judge dismissed an assault claim because Rapp brought it too late. A lawyer for Spacey did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Spacey has in court papers “categorically” denied Rapp’s accusations. Rapp’s lawyer Peter Saghir declined to comment. Once among Hollywood’s biggest stars, Spacey fell from grace after Rapp accused him of misconduct in October 2017, and more accusers came forward. Last month, British authorities authorized criminal charges against Spacey for alleged sexual assaults against three men between 2005 and 2013. Spacey could formally face the charges if he entered England or Wales. The actor’s awards have included Oscars in 2000 for best actor in “American Beauty” and in 1996 for best supporting actor in “The Usual Suspects.” He also won a Tony in 1991 for best featured actor in a play in Neil Simon’s “Lost in Yonkers.” Netflix dropped Spacey from his starring role in “House of Cards” after accusations began surfacing, and the series finished without him. In the alleged 1986 encounter, Spacey grabbed Rapp’s buttocks, lifted him onto a bed and laid on him before Rapp “wriggled out,” court papers say. Rapp has said under oath there was no kissing, undressing, reaching under clothes, sexualized statements or innuendo, and the encounter lasted no more than two minutes. He sued Spacey in September 2020 and invoked the Child Victims Act, a New York law giving accusers a since-expired window to sue over abuses from decades earlier. (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; editing by John Stonestreet and Lisa Shumaker) View the full article
  12. Published by The Boot When CMT announced that they would be co-sponsoring an LGBTQ+ artist activation event at CMA Fest — the first of its kind at a major country music festival — rainbow flags and heart emojis abounded across social media. Many of the Facebook comments, however, told a different story. “Depraved and disgusting!” wrote one embittered country fan, while another complained that “It’s a music awards show and should not be about anything else.” This particular user seemed to be confusing CMA Fest (the four-day musical festival happening in Nashville this week) with the CMA Awards set to take place in N… Read More View the full article
  13. Published by XXL Mag Boosie BadAzz is making headlines again for controversial statements concerning the LGBTQ community. On Wednesday (June 8), DJ Vlad aired the latest segment of his new interview with Boosie BadAzz, during which the Baton Rouge, La. native addressed being called out for his 2007 song titled “They Dykin,’” where he references having threesomes with bi-sexual women. “Me having threesomes doesn’t mean I support gay marriages,” Boosie BadAzz said at the 1:30-mark of the interview. “That doesn’t mean that I support transgender stuff. A lot of transgender people, the ones that be coming in my DM and … Read More View the full article
  14. Published by The Spun By Daniel Bates A gesture of support during UFC Vegas 56 quickly turned ugly for rising flyweight contender Jeff Molina. Molina earned a split decision win over Zhalgas Zhumagulov on Saturday. But much of the weekend conversation surrounding the fight stemmed from negative comments that Molina received over his decision to wear shorts celebrating Pride Month. “It’s not even about being an ally,” Molina said in his post-fight press conference. “I’m not saying I’m not, but just be a decent [expletive] person. Just be a decent human being.” “And judging someone and trying to justify it with relig… Read More View the full article
  15. Published by Reuters By Daniel Trotta (Reuters) – A group representing 600 Texas families and backed by the American Civil Liberties Union sued Texas Governor Greg Abbott on Wednesday to stop state officials from treating transgender healthcare for minors as a form of child abuse. In February, the Texas governor ordered the Department of Family and Protective Services to open child abuse investigations of families that provide minors with transgender care such as estrogen or testosterone treatments or hormone blockers that delay the onset of puberty. The measure was part of a wave of initiatives by Republican governors and legislators affecting transgender rights across the country, with some state laws banning trans girls from participating in female sports and others targeting access to healthcare. The governor’s press office did not respond to requests for comment on the lawsuit. The Department of Family and Protective Services, which is named as a defendant along with Commissioner Jaime Masters, said it could not respond to specific investigations or comment on litigation. In a previous lawsuit on the matter, the Texas Supreme Court found in a partial ruling that the governor could not direct the Department of Family and Protective Services to investigate families for providing medically necessary transgender healthcare, but it limited the protection to the specific plaintiffs. The wider case is pending. In this case, the plaintiffs are three named Texas families plus 600 more who are members of the Texas chapter of PFLAG, a national network that supports transgender and other queer youth. Their suit, filed in Travis County District Court, asks the court to block state child abuse investigations over transgender care. Healthcare providers consider such treatments necessary for many teens who identify as transgender, providing them support until they are old enough to consider more permanent hormone therapies or surgery. Republican politicians have argued their campaign aims to protect kids from irreversible procedures they may later regret. (Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Lincoln Feast.) View the full article
  16. Published by BANG Showbiz English Christina Aguilera feels “connected” to her LGBTQ+ fans. The 41-year-old pop star shot to fame in the late 1990s with hits such as ‘Come on Over’ and ‘Genie in a Bottle’ and penned an open letter to her lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender fans where she noted that they had both endured “struggles” as they have fought to be heard. She said: “I’m all about people standing up for what they believe in, which is why I think the LGBTQ+ community feels connected to me. We’ve all come from the struggle; We’ve all had to fight to be heard.” The ‘Dirrty’ hitmaker went on to explain that when she first started her career, she was encouraged to act a certain way for the pop scene but eventually broke out of the convention with her 2002 album ‘Stripped’. In the letter – printed in this week’s edition of PEOPLE -, she said: “When I came onto the scene with songs like ‘Genie in a Bottle’ and ‘What a Girl Wants’ in 1999, I had a hard time feeling like I had to look and act a certain way to fit into the pop star mold. But I did not want to be this safe, conventionally pretty, precious thing. So, for my 2002 album ‘Stripped’, I decided, ‘I’m just going to be myself.’ It was the first album where I told stories that I really believed in — stories about my own personal struggles and the domestic abuse I witnessed in my family growing up.” Back in 2002, Christina release the song ‘Beautiful’ and the music video depicted a gay couple kissing and a transexual coming to terms with their identity, a move which Christina is now “proud” of upon reflection because those things were once considered “taboo.”. She added: I was also proud to put a spotlight on the LGBTQ+ community with my “Beautiful” music video, which features a gay couple, as well as a trans woman. I wasn’t thinking too much about it beyond wanting to show people owning who they are. It was somehow taboo at the time, but it represented something so true. “ The ‘Candyman’ singer concluded her letter by reminding her gay fans that she will be performing for them at L. A Pride on Saturday (11.06.22) as she claimed that there is “nothing like” performing for the LGBTQ+ community because they are “her people.” She added: “I’m going to be headlining L.A. Pride on June 11, and there’s nothing like performing for my LGBTQ+ fans. I feel safe with them to express myself however I want, whether it be through a huge ballad or something super sensual because they appreciate it all. I get to be as colorful and loud as I want to be. They’re my people. “ View the full article
  17. Published by BANG Showbiz English Dwyane Wade is “afraid every moment” his daughter leaves the house. The 40-year-old former NBA star’s 15-year-old offspring Zaya came out as trans two years ago and he admitted he’s constantly worried about her safety because of how people “perceive her” in the world. He told CNN at the TIME100 summit: “As blessed as it is for my daughter to have parents who can support her, I’m still afraid every moment she leaves the house. “And not just because of gun violence, but because of the way people perceive her in this world.” Dwyane went on to urge lawmakers to spend a day with Zaya to understand the impact anti-trans policies have on her life. He added: “To me, it’s a joke. This is our life. We live this. When you’re out there making rules, if you’re not experiencing this. Come and live a day with my daughter. Come and see how it is to walk through this world as her.” The former sportsman is proud of Zaya – who he has with former partner Siohvaughn Funches – for having the confidence to be herself from such a young age. He said: “I went years without telling my chef that I don’t like cilantro on my burger — as an adult, it took me years to have the confidence to say that. “My daughter, at eight years old, had the confidence to say, ‘This is who I am. This is who I want to be.’ “ Dwyane – who also has Zaire, 20, with Siohvaughn, Xavier, eight, with Aia Metoyer, and Kaavia, three, with wife Gabrielle Union – previously admitted he had learned a lot from Zaya. He said: “I didn’t know anything, I really wasn’t knowledgeable about the LGBTQ+ community. “What it has done is it opened my eyes and my ears to something greater and bigger than I, and my daughter has allowed us gracefully to be her support system.” View the full article
  18. Published by BANG Showbiz English Steve-O wants to get breast implants for his live tour. The ‘Jackass’ star – who has earned a reputation for wild and daring stunts as part of the iconic franchise – is keen to go under the knife to shock audiences at his live shows. On a recent episode of the ‘Steve-O’s Wild Ride’ podcast, he asked ‘Botched’ plastic surgeon Dr. Terry Dubrow: “I’ve been dying to ask you about this, what can you tell me about men getting breast implants?” “I’m at a point with all of my crazy antics that the bar is so high that I’m actually planning for my next tour. “And for my next tour I’ve decided that it’s called the ‘Steve-O’s Gone Too Far’ tour, and I’m just trying to be so crazy, and one of my ideas is to get breast implants.” The 47-year-old star would love to get a boob job and film the whole process over a few months before screening it during one of his live shows. He took his top off for the surgeon to look at his pectorals, and admitted he wants “to go as big as” possible. Terry responded: “You have enough room, you could probably do a D or double D. If you keep it in for six months, that’s getting maybe past the point where your skin will retract. “So you might want to do a C-cup, and then get them out after three to six months and you won’t have to have a skin-reducing procedure and a bunch of scars.” Meanwhile, Steve-O also revealed his goals of crashing a car into a wall to test the air bags, but he’s worried about the potential impact it could have on his new bust if he goes ahead with the procedure. He said: “I recently bought a smart car for the purpose of crashing it into a brick wall to make sure that the airbags work… “After I get my boob job, I want to crash the car into a wall to do a fun bag test.” Terry replied: “They won’t get injured, breast implants are incredibly tough.” View the full article
  19. Published by BANG Showbiz English Kylie Minogue says her legal battle with Kylie Jenner “had to be done”. The 54-year-old singer successfully blocked the beauty mogul from trademarking the shared name five years ago, and now she has insisted the situation was “just business”. Appearing on ‘Watch What Happens Live’ this week, she told host Andy Cohen: “When I was named Kylie, I think I met one person older than me called Kylie. So it’s kind of unusual. “I’ve spent a lifetime protecting my brand and building my brand so it was just something that had to be done.” The ‘I Should Be So Lucky’ hitmaker pointed out the pair “came to an agreement”. At the time, Minogue’s lawyers provided the US Patent and Trademark Office with a list of reasons why the trademark shouldn’t be granted. While Jenner was described as “a secondary reality television personality”, the singer was hailed as an “internationally-renowned performing artist, humanitarian and breast cancer activist known worldwide simply as Kylie”. Cohen asked if she had to call up the reality star’s mum Kris Jenner, and while the Australian musician didn’t, she’s up for meeting the famous family. She added: “No, but I’d love to meet them.” In 2014, Jenner applied to trademark ‘Kylie’ for her cosmetics and clothing business, but Minogue was already selling products like fragrances, clothing and furniture under the name. In 2017, the Patent Office rejected the application, although it’s said she appealed the decision. Minogue previously insisted she never expected the trademark dispute to cause such a sensation. She said: “It’s hilarious that it caused such a kerfuffle. “I think she has done amazingly well, but I think it’s just important that people know that there is room for more than one Kylie.” And she has admitted in the past that she was upset when her legal team branded the ‘Keeping Up With the Kardashians’ star a “secondary reality television personality”. She added: “I was so upset when I heard that. I said, ‘Who said what?’ What I heard back was, ‘That’s lawyer speak.’ “ View the full article
  20. Published by BANG Showbiz English The Duke and Duchess of Sussex’s son Archie was targeted by white supremacists “for being mixed race”, a court has been told. Christopher Gibbons, 38, is accused of describing the three-year-old boy – who was born Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor – as an “abomination that should be put down” in an online “terror” podcast. In that podcast, Gibbons and fellow host Tyrone Patten-Walsh, 34, also called for Prince Harry, 37, to be prosecuted and “judicially killed for treason” for being married to 40-year-old Meghan, whose mother Doria Ragland is African-American, while her father, Thomas Markle, is Caucasian. The pair are said to have despised mixed-race relationships and used the couple’s marriage as an example on their ‘Black Wolf Radio’ show. Gibbons, from Carshalton, South London, and Patten-Walsh, of Romford in East London, deny encouraging acts of extreme right-wing terrorism through their podcast for almost a year between March 3, 2019 and February 9, 2020. Gibbons denies a further accusation of spreading terrorist publications by uploading videos to an online hoard titled ‘The Radicalisation Library’ from April 2018 to February 2020. Prosecutor Anne Whyte QC told Kingston Crown Court both the accused are “dedicated and unapologetic white supremacists” who hold “extreme right-wing views”. She said: “They thought that if they used the format of a radio show, as good as in plain sight, they could pass off their venture as the legitimate exercise of their freedom of speech. “In fact what they were doing was using language designed to encourage others to commit acts of extreme right-wing terrorism against the sections of society that these defendants hated.” Gibbons and Patten-Walsh allegedly approved of the murder of Labour MP Jo Cox, 41, in 2016 by a far-right thug – as well as Brenton Tarrant’s 2019 shooting spree at mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, which left 51 victims dead during Friday prayers. They also referred to victims of the 2017 Manchester Arena suicide bombing that claimed the lives of 22 people as “s****”, a jury heard. Patten-Walsh allegedly also called the perpetrator of the attack “a sand n*****”. The accused also allegedly made anti-Semitic remarks and painted black and Asian men as rapists in their podcast. Their trial continues. The vile revelations from the court case come after It comes after Harry and Meghan – formerly known as Meghan Markle when she worked as an actress before she married into the British Royal Family – celebrated daughter Lilibet’s first birthday on Saturday (04.06.22) during Queen Elizabeth’s long weekend of Platinum Jubilee events. View the full article
  21. Published by DPA The Polestar3 SUV is only the beginning. The Swedish-Chinese joint venture is planning to launch a new car every year from now on. Stefan Isaksson/Polestar/dpa Polestar’s selection of cars is growing, and the Swedish-Chinese electric car brand says it’s now planning to launch its first SUV in October, with several more models set to follow in the coming years. The joint venture from Volvo and Geely has announced that its third car will be a five-seater electric SUV with self-driving potential, available for order before production starts in China and the USA in spring 2023. The car does have a name – Polestar3 – but not much else: Polestar has not yet announced prices or given any concrete information on technical data such as performance or battery capacity. But the makers are promising one key feature: a range of up to 600 kilometres. The car is also set to offer all-wheel drive powered by two motors. In addition, the Polestar3 is supposed to have all the necessary sensors and software on board to be able to drive autonomously in the near future. According to the makers, the Polestar3 marks the start of a series of unveilings, with one new model series to be launched to market every year in the coming years. View the full article
  22. Published by BANG Showbiz English Cher has teamed up with Versace for a Pride Month collection. The ‘Believe’ hitmaker is delighted to have worked with her “dear friend” Donatella Versace on ‘Chersace’, with all proceeds from the limited-edition capsule collection being donated to Gender Spectrum, a charity which works with LGBTQ children and young people. She said: The music icon and Donatella Versace are teaming this month on “Chersace,” a limited-edition capsule collection with all proceeds benefiting Gender Spectrum, a charity that works with LGBTQ children and youth. “Donatella and I have been dear friends for a lifetime. It just felt right for our very first collaboration to be one about LGBTQ Pride and celebrating a community that means so incredibly much to both of us. We wanted to make a fun collection supporting a good case, and we hope you like it.” Donatella added in a statement: “It has always been a dream to collaborate with Cher, and it’s finally come true. I’m delighted that we can support such a brilliant charity that has such a positive impact, particularly on young people.” The ‘Chersace’ collection includes a baseball cap, socks, and T-shirts bearing the fashion house’s iconic Medusa motif and the Versace logo redesigned to read ‘Chersace’. In addition, the baseball cap – which retails at $395 – and T-shirts also include Cher and Donatella’s signatures, with the tops having the words ‘Celebrating Love and Unity’ on the back. Prices for the collection stars at $125 for a pair of socks and rises to $3,350 for a diamante shirt. The Versace website includes a short video on the collection. It features a model saying: “Two icons, both alike in diva energy. In Pride Month, where we celebrate the scene. From long-held friendship to new love and unity. Where Cher and Versace make, Chersace.” The fashion brand also shared details of the collection on their Instagram account, and explained to fans the work of Gender Spectrum. They posted: “Gender Spectrum works to create gender sensitive and inclusive environments for all children and teens by providing online programs, resources and information that young people, parents and families can use to further their understanding of gender and learn the value of parental and adult support.” View the full article
  23. Published by Raw Story By Bob Brigham Pride month has generated a giant controversy in the Christian literature world after posting a “Books to Read for Pride Month” guide. “Eerdmans Publishing Company, founded in 1911, has been a leading publisher of academic and faith titles over the last century, including ones by William Lane Craig, Mark Noll, Richard Muow and N.T. Wright. Its commentaries are found on pastoral bookshelves across the world. But the publisher this month endorsed Pride Month,” Christian Headlines reported Tuesday. “Several Christian leaders this week spoke out about the publisher’s stance on Pride… Read More View the full article
  24. Published by Reuters By David Morgan WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A former member of Donald Trump’s cabinet will attempt a return to the U.S. Congress in Montana and California Democrats concerned about crime may oust one of their own as voters head to the polls in midterm primary elections in seven states on Tuesday. Voters in South Dakota, New Jersey, Iowa, Mississippi and New Mexico will also cast ballots in nominating contests that will set the competitive field for Nov. 8’s elections, which will determine control of Congress for the next two years. With President Joe Biden slumping in the polls and soaring inflation souring voters’ moods, Republicans are expected to win control of the House of Representatives and possibly the Senate, which would bring Biden’s legislative agenda to a halt and give Republicans the power to launch distracting and possibly politically damaging investigations. In Montana, Ryan Zinke, who served as interior secretary under Republican former President Trump, is running for a newly created House seat that the state gained thanks to population growth and the once-a-decade redistricting process. Zinke, who served in Congress previously, faces four Republican challengers, some of whom claim that he is too liberal or lacks commitment to the state because his wife’s residence is in California. Zinke was accused in an inspector general report this year of using is position as head of the Interior Department to advance a development project in his hometown and lying to an ethics investigator. He has denied wrongdoing. South Dakota’s conservative Republican governor, Kristi Noem, faces a challenge by Steven Haugaard, a member of the South Dakota House of Representatives. Noem has been mentioned as a possible vice presidential running-mate if former President Donald Trump seeks election again in 2024 or as a White House candidate in her own right if he does not. The winners of each of those Republican primaries are favored to win in November. CALIFORNIA SHAKEOUT A pair of races in California will also illustrate liberal-leaning voters’ frustrations with spikes in homicides and gun violence. Polls show that San Francisco’s progressive district attorney, Chesa Boudin, is likely to be pushed out of office in a recall vote. A replacement would be chosen by the city’s mayor, London Breed, a Democrat who has criticized Boudin but has not taken a stance on the recall. In Los Angeles, Rick Caruso, a billionaire developer and former Republican, is battling U.S. Representative Karen Bass and a host of other liberal candidates in the mayoral election. Caruso, who has spent more than $30 million of his own money in the campaign, made crime the centerpiece of his candidacy in a city that saw homicides reach a 15-year high in 2021. That forced Bass, a longtime progressive champion in Congress, to move to the center and pledge to put more police on the streets. Caruso and Bass could be headed to a runoff, polls show. NEW JERSEY, IOWA CHALLENGES Republicans in New Jersey and Iowa will also be picking challengers to embattled incumbent House Democrats: Representatives Tom Malinowski in New Jersey and Cindy Axne in Iowa. Former state Senate Republican leader Tom Kean Jr., the son of popular two-time Governor Thomas Kean, leads a crowded Republican field to challenge Malinowski. Malinowski, a two-term incumbent who entered Congress by flipping a Republican seat in 2018, won reelection by defeating Kean by 1.2 percentage points in 2020. Since then, his prospects have been weakened by redistricting and by a House ethics investigation after reports that he failed to disclose hundreds of thousands of dollars in stock trades. “It was a nail-biter in 2020 and his district has become a little more favorable for Republicans. So it’s going to be a significant challenge,” said Benjamin Dworkin, director of the Rowan University Institute of Public Policy & Citizenship. In Iowa, three Republicans are vying for the chance to challenge Axne: businesswoman Nicole Hasso, construction consultant Gary Leffler and former state Senator Zach Nunn. Nunn, the only Republican contender who has held elective office, boasts a string of endorsements from high-profile party luminaries including Trump’s former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and several sitting House Republicans. (Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Scott Malone and Alistair Bell) View the full article
  25. Published by DPA A red and black cable with a USB-C connector and a Lightning connector from Apple on a white cable. Mobile phones and other electronic devices in the European Union are to have standardized charging equipment from 2024, negotiators from the European Parliament and the 27 EU member states agreed on Tuesday. Christoph Dernbach/dpa Mobile phones and other electronic devices in the European Union are to have standardized charging equipment from 2024, negotiators from the European Parliament and the 27 EU member states agreed on Tuesday. “After a decade, finally one standard (USB-C) will charge them all,” said Anna Cavazzini on Twitter, a German Green EU lawmaker involved in the talks. “This will save resources and our nerves,” she added. The EU legislature and EU countries clinched the deal after pushing for companies to make charging equipment for mobile phones and other portable devices more uniform since 2014 with original proposals dating as far back as 2009. The agreement comes despite industry resistance. Apple in particular, has criticized the regulations as hampering innovation. The US tech giant argued the move could cause many existing products to be needlessly thrown away. Under the agreement, USB-C is to become the standard charging socket in the EU. Among the other electronic devices included in the agreement are tablets, e-readers, digital cameras, headphones and headsets, and portable speakers. The regulation also allows consumers to purchase charging equipment and devices separately from one another. A longer phase-in period applies for when the regulations enter into force for laptops to adapt the products to the new charging requirements. The idea of the regulation is to cut down on electronic waste and improve consumer satisfaction. The European Commission estimates disposed chargers generate 11,000 tonnes of e-waste every year. The commission introduced a proposal for universal phone chargers back in September 2021 in response to calls from the European Parliament and the European Council, the EU body representing the 27 EU member states. The quick conclusion of talks between the two sides demonstrates how close both positions were. Negotiations on EU legislation between the member states and the EU legislature in practise drag on far longer. The EU legislature and the 27 EU member states must now adopt the regulations before their entry into force. (L-R) a USB-C, an Apple Lightning and a Micro-USB cable can be seen next to each other. Mobile phones and other electronic devices in the European Union are to have standardized charging equipment from 2024, negotiators from the European Parliament and the 27 EU member states agreed on Tuesday. Mohssen Assanimoghaddam/dpa View the full article
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