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Wednesday, January 31, 2024

‘It shouldn’t be like this:’ Seven shot within two-mile radius off South Blvd. - Fox 46 Charlotte

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) — At least seven people were shot within a two-mile radius in southwest Charlotte. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police data shows it happened as a result of two separate shooting incidents in the span of 30 hours.

The first shooting happened Thursday night around 10:30 p.m. at the Lake Mist Apartments on the 1100 block of Lakemist Drive.

Police say a 15-year-old girl, a 19-year-old male, and a 21-year-old woman were seriously injured in the shooting, and an infant was also threatened. The 21-year-old, Yara Velasquez-Escobar, was pronounced dead Monday by hospital medical staff, and the case is now a homicide.

One witness told Queen City News that it happened in the parking lot near the apartment dumpsters. That witness spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retribution.

“It was about five minutes of argument, and multiple shots burst out. I saw one individual fall to the ground and a second individual fall to the ground,” said the witness. “Once the police arrived and secured the vehicle, I saw them remove a small infant out of the back of the car.”

Police have not named a suspect.

The second shooting happened less than two miles away, shortly after 3 a.m. Saturday, at the Flats at Arrowood Apartments on Lodge South Circle.

32-year-old Daron Markell Polk, 26-year-old Walter Humberto Ramos Murillo, and 25-year-old Nighstarr Trevon Luper all died as a result of that shooting, which also happened in the parking lot. A fourth victim remains in critical condition.

CMPD says they are not looking for any suspects at this time.

CMPD’s crime mapping tool shows that in the past four weeks, there have been one homicide and 15 aggravated assault incidents involving weapons in the two-mile radius off South Boulevard and E. Arrowood Road; 11 of those assaults involved guns.

“I am a born and raised Charlottean, and I’m prideful when it comes to our city, and it’s just getting worse,” said Flats at Arrowood resident Kelisa Gittens.

Gittens has called the Flats at Arrowood home for the past 13 years, but she says recently, the crime in the area has become too much to handle.

“My windshield was just shot out, the front windshield. Dropping to the floor at night, being awakened to heavy shooting. A lot of children around us [are] upset,” she said.

Following Saturday’s deadly shooting, she’s planning to take action.

“I’m definitely getting ready to set up a town hall meeting for my neighbors. I know a lot of them are unsure, scared, don’t know where to go,” said Gittens. “Even though we’re getting more crowded, it shouldn’t be like this. It just shouldn’t be like this.”

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Tuesday, January 30, 2024

‘Something like this in Coronado is very unique': 2 stabbed, suspect hurt during arrest - NBC San Diego

A peaceful Monday night in Coronado Shores was broken by the wail of police-car and fire-truck sirens after a man and woman were stabbed in an apartment.

Investigators said 911 operators got a call shortly before 9 p.m. from the front desk of one of the high rises about a stabbing incident. Responding officers found two victims at 1773 Avenida Del Mundo: a man and woman in their 60s, both of whom had been stabbed in the neck.

A short time later, police took a man in his 40s into custody. Coronado PD Sgt. Ryan Brennan said the three people knew each other but declined to specify their relationships. Brennan did stress that the attacks were not believed to have been committed randomly and that police thought that the community was no longer in danger after the arrest.

Brennan had said a crime like a double stabbing — or any stabbing — is rare in the tiny, tony island community.

"Something like this in Coronado is very unique," Brennan said. "Major crimes such as stabbing do not happen here with any regularity."

Brennan said that the suspect was "uncooperative" during the arrest and needed medical care afterward but added that "it is unclear how he sustained those injuries."

Both of the stabbing victims, whose wounds Brennan described as "very serious," were hospitalized after the incident but are expected to make a full recovery.

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Geno Stone: I feel like this was my breakout year - NBC Sports

The Ravens’ season came to an end with Sunday’s loss to the Chiefs and some of the players who were clearing out their lockers in Baltimore on Monday will not be returning to the team next season.

Safety Geno Stone could be in that group. After mostly playing as a reserve in his first three seasons, Stone made 11 starts and played 82 percent of the team’s defensive snaps during the 2023 regular season. He posted a team-best seven interceptions to go with 68 tackles and nine passes defensed in that action.

“I feel like I showed what I can do in this league,” Stone said, via the team’s website. “I feel like this was my breakout year. I came in four years ago with a bunch of guys and now we’re all free agents after this year. We didn’t want it to end this way. We wanted to win. We just know how close we were and we had the group to do it. To fall short, it doesn’t feel good for anybody.”

Kyle Hamilton and Marcus Williams remain under contract at safety for the Ravens and the team has fellow 2020 draft picks Patrick Queen and Justin Madubuike heading for free agency as well. Guard Kevin Zeitler, running back Gus Edwards, defensive end Jadeveon Clowney, and guard John Simpson are also part of a group of 23 impending free agents, so there will be a lot of hard decisions for the Ravens to make in the coming weeks.

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‘It shouldn’t be like this:’ Seven shot within two-mile radius off South Blvd. - Fox 46 Charlotte

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) — At least seven people were shot within a two-mile radius in southwest Charlotte. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police data shows it happened as a result of two separate shooting incidents in the span of 30 hours.

The first shooting happened Thursday night around 10:30 p.m. at the Lake Mist Apartments on the 1100 block of Lakemist Drive.

Police say a 15-year-old girl, a 19-year-old male, and a 21-year-old woman were seriously injured in the shooting, and an infant was also threatened. The 21-year-old, Yara Velasquez-Escobar, was pronounced dead Monday by hospital medical staff, and the case is now a homicide.

One witness told Queen City News that it happened in the parking lot near the apartment dumpsters. That witness spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retribution.

“It was about five minutes of argument, and multiple shots burst out. I saw one individual fall to the ground and a second individual fall to the ground,” said the witness. “Once the police arrived and secured the vehicle, I saw them remove a small infant out of the back of the car.”

Police have not named a suspect.

The second shooting happened less than two miles away, shortly after 3 a.m. Saturday, at the Flats at Arrowood Apartments on Lodge South Circle.

32-year-old Daron Markell Polk, 26-year-old Walter Humberto Ramos Murillo, and 25-year-old Nighstarr Trevon Luper all died as a result of that shooting, which also happened in the parking lot. A fourth victim remains in critical condition.

CMPD says they are not looking for any suspects at this time.

CMPD’s crime mapping tool shows that in the past four weeks, there have been one homicide and 15 aggravated assault incidents involving weapons in the two-mile radius off South Boulevard and E. Arrowood Road; 11 of those assaults involved guns.

“I am a born and raised Charlottean, and I’m prideful when it comes to our city, and it’s just getting worse,” said Flats at Arrowood resident Kelisa Gittens.

Gittens has called the Flats at Arrowood home for the past 13 years, but she says recently, the crime in the area has become too much to handle.

“My windshield was just shot out, the front windshield. Dropping to the floor at night, being awakened to heavy shooting. A lot of children around us [are] upset,” she said.

Following Saturday’s deadly shooting, she’s planning to take action.

“I’m definitely getting ready to set up a town hall meeting for my neighbors. I know a lot of them are unsure, scared, don’t know where to go,” said Gittens. “Even though we’re getting more crowded, it shouldn’t be like this. It just shouldn’t be like this.”

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Monday, January 29, 2024

Umm, quick question: Is a leg supposed to look like this? - MMA Junkie

Look, there’s not a hell of a lot we can really say about this.

We’re showing you a horrifyingly nasty image of a leg that has been bruised beyond true comprehension for most of us. You’ve been warned.

(And our headline? There is an understood and very rhetorical “Nope – sure ain’t” attached to the end of it.)

Takeru Segawa lost his bantamweight kickboxing title to Superlek Kiatmoo9 by unanimous decision Sunday at ONE Championship 165 in Tokyo. Takeru posted a photo on Instagram that showed him on crutches with his left leg heavily bandaged – and one of his upper leg almost entirely purple from Superlek’s kicks.

Takeru thanked fans for their support and said he will take a break to regroup. But the way that leg looks … Sheesh. A break seems like the least he could do for it.

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Umm, quick question: Is a leg supposed to look like this? - MMA Junkie

Look, there’s not a hell of a lot we can really say about this.

We’re showing you a horrifyingly nasty image of a leg that has been bruised beyond true comprehension for most of us. You’ve been warned.

(And our headline? There is an understood and very rhetorical “Nope – sure ain’t” attached to the end of it.)

Takeru Segawa lost his bantamweight kickboxing title to Superlek Kiatmoo9 by unanimous decision Sunday at ONE Championship 165 in Tokyo. Takeru posted a photo on Instagram that showed him on crutches with his left leg heavily bandaged – and one of his upper leg almost entirely purple from Superlek’s kicks.

Takeru thanked fans for their support and said he will take a break to regroup. But the way that leg looks … Sheesh. A break seems like the least he could do for it.

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Japanese arts like this picnic box entranced the West - NOLA.com

In this series, Lagniappe presents works from the collection of the New Orleans Museum of Art, with commentary from a curator.

A stacked Japanese picnic box, known as a jubako, made of a type of export porcelain commonly called “Imari,” (after the port where ceramics manufactured at the Arita kilns in northwestern Kyushu were loaded for export), is currently on view in Cafe NOMA, at the New Orleans Museum of Art.

Traditionally, tiered boxes were used to hold and present food for special occasions, such as celebratory New Year’s meals. This box, however, was most likely created as a decorative object for the Western (European or American) market, and not for utilitarian purposes.

The late 19th to early 20th centuries saw a period of intense interest and engagement with Japanese aesthetics by the West, giving rise to an art movement known as “Japonisme,” which was brought about by the forced reopening of Japanese-foreign trade in 1858.

Within decades, the new Meiji (1868-1913) government was promoting traditional Japanese arts and industries, particularly porcelain, textile and metal work, at international expositions such as the Vienna International Exposition of 1873. Western audiences were entranced not only by the tremendous skill and craftsmanship of these objects, but also by the unfamiliar forms, styles and approaches to decoration.

The elaborate underglaze blue, overglaze red and gold decoration that characterize Imari porcelains first gained popularity nearly 200 years before the manufacture of this box. During the mid-17th through early 18th centuries, Japanese potters satisfied Western demand for export porcelain when the long-standing trade with China was disrupted due to the Ming-Qing dynastic transition.

Once the Qing kilns were re-established, China quickly reasserted its dominant position in export ceramics. The Arita kilns continued to produce Imari for a primarily domestic audience, until the Meiji period, when international trade expanded.

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'I never imagined that something like this could ever happen again': Holocaust survivors share their Oct. 7 experiences - JTA News - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

(JTA) — Eighty-four years after Dov Golebowicz fled Poland with his family days before Germany invaded, the Holocaust survivor found himself facing an invasion once again when Hamas terrorists stormed his kibbutz of Nirim on Oct. 7.

For 12 hours, Golebowicz was trapped with his son, Gideon, in his safe room. His son fashioned a basic wooden contraption to secure the door, which does not have a lock. Five people from the kibbutz were murdered and five were kidnapped, of whom two remain hostages in Gaza. Zvi Solow is another Holocaust survivor to survive the attack on Nirim.

In the weeks after Oct. 7, Golebowicz was the subject of multiple news reports, including CNN, which invariably linked his Oct. 7 survival to his experiences in the Holocaust. Others who experienced horrors on that day — when 1,200 Israelis were killed and about 250 taken hostage — made similar comparisons.

Yet Golebowicz has significant reservations about making such a connection, saying it diminishes the memory of the Holocaust as a singular event in history.

“I’ve always felt we shouldn’t mix the two,” he told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. “While of course it was vicious, barbaric and horrendous, [Oct.7] was a one-day terrorist attack.”

Dov Golebowicz, pictured here with his daughter, survived the Budapest Ghetto and the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on his kibbutz, Nirim. (Courtesy Golebowicz)

Golebowicz is one of several Holocaust survivors to be caught up in the carnage on Oct. 7. All elderly — the youngest survivors are in their late 70’s — they say they have an important perspective to share, though they don’t all believe the same things.

Haim Raanan, who as a child survived the Budapest Ghetto, has no reservations about calling the Oct. 7 massacre “a second Holocaust.”

A founder of Kibbutz Be’eri, one of the Gaza envelope communities that was struck hardest on Oct. 7, Raanan said it was “pure luck” that he and his family members survived. More than 100 Be’eri residents died that day.

“I never thought that as a Holocaust survivor, I would need to hide for my life again,” Raanan said at an event on Tuesday at the residence of EU Ambassador to Israel Dimiter Tzantchev to mark International Holocaust Remembrance Day.

“I was shocked to see that eight decades after the Holocaust, the Star of David symbol has been painted once again on Jewish homes all across Europe and the United States to target and frighten them amid the devastating Oct. 7 massacre,” he said, referring to graffiti found in some cities that in some cases authorities have attributed to Russian agitators.

“It echoes the antisemitic persecution I suffered as a child,” Raanan said. “I never imagined that something like this could ever happen again.”

(L-R, sitting) Aharon Pacirkovsky, Haim Raanan and Menachem Haberman, all Holocaust survivors, pose with Erez Kaganovitz, photographer of the Humans of the Holocaust project, in Tel Aviv, Jan. 23, 2024. (Efi Yosefi)

Raanan called on the European diplomats in attendance to do more to combat antisemitism. The event also launched a new installation of the Humans of the Holocaust photo exhibition, in which Raanan features.

Erez Kaganovitz, the photographer behind the project, said attendees at the event were “awestruck” as Raanan recounted his stories of survival.

“How much suffering can one person go though in one in lifetime?” Kaganovitz told JTA. “Listening to him made me realize that when we say never again, it has to mean something.”

Holocaust survivor Gidon Lev, 88, shot to fame during COVID-19 when he became a star on TikTok. He launched his account, which racked up over 460,000 followers and millions of likes, together with his life partner Julie Gray in an effort to combat Holocaust disinformation and to promote his book. Three years later Lev closed the account, citing antisemitic harassment in the wake of Oct. 7 and the social media giant’s reluctance to take action.

“Before the war, we got antisemitic hate from garden-variety Nazis. Oh, how I long for those days. That was easy to refute and dispute,” Gray told JTA. But after Oct. 7, the “turning of the tide was abrupt and powerful,” she said.

“The same young people who had been following Gidon and cheering on his Holocaust education and messages of tolerance and critical thinking started calling him a supporter of genocide and even a ‘baby killer,’” Gray said.

“We both felt utterly defeated. We saw that many Jewish creators on TikTok stood up to this abuse and stuck it out but for us, living in Israel, dealing with the shock of all of it, and the sirens and the running to our shelter, it was too much,” she said. “It wasn’t the worst thing that happened, Oct. 7 was the worst thing that happened, but it really hurt. All the work we’d done seemed to have been meaningless.”

Elon Musk speaks with Holocaust survivor Gidon Levy at Auschwitz in Poland, Jan. 22, 2024. (Courtesy Julie Gray)

On Wednesday Lev and Gray returned from a trip to Poland, where he accompanied billionaire mogul Elon Musk and the conservative American pundit Ben Shapiro on a visit to the Auschwitz death camp.

After the visit Musk claimed that had social media been around during the time of the Holocaust, it would never have occurred. Like TikTok, Musk’s social media platform, X, has also come under fire for not doing enough to combat antisemitism.

Musk “struck me as a dangerous teenager,” Gray said, “drunk with power. He is of the ‘burn it all down’ ilk.” While he was attentive at Auschwitz, “greet[ing] Gidon politely and listen[ing] to him — sort of,” his talk afterward, in which he described himself as “aspirationally Jewish,” was a crushing disappointment and exposed a “real disconnect,” she said, adding, it was “like inviting an arsonist to a firefighting convention.”

After Oct. 7, Gray wanted to leave on one of the evacuation flights for American citizens. But Lev, whose son and grandson were serving in the reserves, insisted on staying. “I will not run again,” Lev told Gray.

The first time Mira Talalayevsky’s life was saved was on Sept. 29, 1941, when she was not yet 2 years old. Mira’s mother escaped with her from their home in the Kyiv ghetto the night before Jews were ordered on a death march to Babyn Yar.

The second time occurred on Oct. 8, 2023, when Talalayevsky’s home in Ashkelon received a direct hit from a Hamas rocket. Talalayevsky miraculously survived the rocket attack but sustained shrapnel cuts to her face and burns on her body from a fire that broke out in the house after the impact. Her house, and all her possessions, were completely destroyed.

“In my old age I am left with nothing and I have to start over,” Talalayevsky said.

Talalayevsky, 85, was too young to remember the night she was spirited away from the clutches of the Nazis, but said that over the years her mother had revealed every detail to her. When the Jews of Kyiv were rounded up to be transferred to the ghetto, Ukrainian guards were ordered to collect all their valuables. Her mother, an educated woman who knew German, was instructed to record every item that was taken.

Left; Photographer Erez Kaganovitz at work on his Humans of the Holocaust project. (Courtesy of Erez Kaganovitz); Right: Portrait of Michael Sidko, the last survivor of the Babyn Yar massacre, surrounded by bullets. (Erez Kaganovitz)

Her mother built a rapport with a guard she had witnessed secretly pocketing some of jewelry for himself. The guard later warned her that the Germans were coming in the morning to kill everyone in the ghetto and that night helped Talalayevsky’s mother escape on a freight train. “I only remember the constant feeling of hunger and cold from those years. My childhood was taken from me, but at least I stayed alive,” Talalayevsky said.

Eighty-two years later, Talalayevsky climbed into her bathtub when she heard the rocket siren. It seemed like the safest place to be in her apartment, which was old and without a safe room. A violent explosion shattered her house and Talalayevsky lost consciousness. She was eventually rescued from the rubble by her neighbors. The event has left her with lasting nightmares and without eyebrows, she said.

Three months later, Talalayevsky is still waiting for her apartment to be rebuilt. In the meantime, the government has transferred her to a newer apartment in the city. Talalayevsky credits the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews with being the first organization to reach out after the attack, providing Talalayevsky with material and emotional support. “As a woman of faith, it is very moving to hear that there are many Christians in the United States who care for me.”

Golebowicz, too, is living in temporary accommodations — a retirement home near the coastal city of Netanya, together with some of the other evacuated residents of Nirim. He said he fully intends to go back and live in Nirim as soon as possible.

“I shall return to my home where I have lived for 70 years and help in its restoration,” he said. “All the destroyed kibbutzim will be rebuilt and will flourish again, because the determination and spirit in Israel is strong.”

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'I never imagined that something like this could ever happen again': Holocaust survivors share their Oct. 7 experiences - JTA News - Jewish Telegraphic Agency
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Should you drive through a red traffic light like this in Japan? Confusing road rule explained - SoraNews24

If you’re driving in Japan, don’t be caught out by seeing red and green signals together. 

A lot of road traffic rules are pretty straightforward in Japan, but one situation that could make you freeze for a moment is when you come across a traffic light at an intersection that has a big red stoplight on it, but green arrows in all directions underneath.

▼ When you approach a red light while driving, your first instinct is to hit the brakes, so what are you meant to do at this intersection?

Well, in a nutshell, this is a sign to proceed through the intersection in all directions that are green.

▼ So why not just use a green light, and what’s the purpose of the red?

The reason why the red light is shown is because it signals that oncoming traffic is currently stopped at a red light. Unlike regular traffic lights, which simply display green to drivers and pedestrians travelling in both directions along the same stretch of road, these special traffic lights run on a differentiated system, whereby one lot of traffic is given right of way for set periods.

These types of lights are generally installed to prevent congestion at intersections where there are more right-turning vehicles than usual. This system assists these drivers by ensuring that oncoming traffic has stopped and pedestrian signals are red, therefore making it safe to proceed with right turns without having to slow down as much as they would otherwise.

▼ At this moment, all pedestrian signs at the intersection are red and the lights for traffic heading across the intersection from left, right, and straight ahead are red as well.

As long as the light above the green arrows remains red, the light for everyone else crossing the intersection remains red. So when their lights change, these lights do too, making things potentially more confusing for first-timers.

As the lights are generally aimed at drivers turning right, the amber light in the sequence above lets these drivers know that oncoming traffic is about to stop. When it hits red, the right arrow turns green, giving them the go-ahead to turn right.

So how do you know when to stop at these traffic lights? Well, all lights will switch off and the amber light will be shown, followed by…

▼…the red stoplight on its own.

The solitary red light is the signal for traffic to stop, until the green directional arrows appear again. Whenever these green arrows are visible, it’s safe to proceed in the directions shown, regardless of whether or not there’s a red light next to them, although it’s important to remain cautious in case pedestrians and cars don’t abide by the signals.

So what might initially be a confusing, head-scratcher of a system is actually a pretty ingenious one designed to keep things running smoothly while safeguarding drivers and pedestrians. It’s one of many interesting things to learn about on the roads, once you’ve gone through the rigmarole of acquiring a Japanese driver’s license!

Photos © SoraNews24
● Want to hear about SoraNews24’s latest articles as soon as they’re published? Follow us on Facebook and Twitter!
[ Read in Japanese ]

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Sunday, January 28, 2024

‘Can’t allow things to go on like this’ - Xavi Hernandez announces he will leave Barcelona at end of season - Football ... - Eurosport COM

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‘Can’t allow things to go on like this’ - Xavi Hernandez announces he will leave Barcelona at end of season - Football ...  Eurosport COM

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Saturday, January 27, 2024

What Will Podcasting Look Like in 2024? - Vulture

Robots; YouTube. Photo: Vulture; Photos: 20th Century Fox/Everett Collection, Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto via Getty Images

After the podcast world’s year from hell, many are looking to the New Year for a fresh start. But given how the rest of the media business is barely making it out of January, such hopes feel shaky. Nevertheless, it is a new year, and the podcast ecosystem has to contend with very big questions about what it is and what it’s going to be. Below are a few of the major threads that frame how I’m thinking about the months ahead, from YouTube to artificial intelligence to whether or not we’ll see more alternatives to the Big Podcasting model that defined the past half-decade.

That’s pretty much the question that’s popped up in almost every conversation I’ve had with podcast folks since the start of January, which, of course, is completely to be expected. After wall-to-wall bad news last year, everybody’s looking for a fresh start. The annoying answer is that “it depends.” in some senses, there’s only so much lower the podcast world as a whole can go, and as a few people wrote me — mostly confidentially, though not always — after my piece collating survey sentiment responses went out, one could find examples of podcast companies and publishers that actually improved their positions over the past year if one poked around enough. (Talkhouse was the lone shop that agreed to go on the record about this.) When I approach this question, I think about it along two lines: Will there be more layoffs? And will it be as hard for most creators, shows, and publishers to do business this year compared to last? You can break that second question down even further, since there’s a difference in stability between ad-driven operations (which is to say, most of the biggies) and direct support-driven ones. On that note, I’ve started to hear optimistic things about the former already. The latter, meanwhile, had always been relatively steady.

As for layoffs, I don’t think we’re done seeing more of them. For one thing, Audacy just filed for bankruptcy, which portends some amount of restructuring. But in general, the layoff question is equally applicable to the broader media, tech, and entertainment business that often host significant podcasting arms. It has not been an auspicious start to the year; since we turned over the calendar, we’ve seen Sports Illustrated’s parent company laying off “a significant number, possibly all” of its employees, putting the very existence of storied but long-withered publication in doubt; CondĂ© Nast announcing it was folding Pitchfork into GQ, triggering a wave of layoffs there that signals the likely end of that site as a music-review destination; and the Los Angeles Times drifting deeper into chaos. Elsewhere, staff cuts were made at Universal MusicHallmark MediaParamount GlobalAmazon’s MGM Studios and Prime Video. More waves in the video-game industry, despite having a particularly strong 2023: RiotUnity, Amazon’s TwitchDiscord. That’s just the big firms; the gaming site Kotaku has been keeping a running list, with the headline noting that almost 4,000 layoffs have hit the industry — and it’s not even February. Think tech is safe? Not so much: Amazon proper, TikTokmore Meta on the horizon, and Alphabet, parent company of Google and, well, YouTube, the big new podcast frontier.

Speaking of which, that’s the other thing everybody seems to want to talk about. “Should I be on YouTube?” “Am I leaving audiences and money on the table?” “Is it even appropriate for the stuff I’m making?”

The context is a growing conversation that’s reframing podcasting’s historical identity as an open-distribution technology primarily associated with audio content. These days, the rise of YouTube seems to have ultimately claimed most video-creation activity, and it’s drawing more participation from podcast creators.

I’ll show my cards here: I’m still not entirely sure how to think about the whole YouTube thing in terms of podcasting. As you can probably tell, I continue to write about podcasting as an audio-first ecosystem, and to the extent I’ve processed the YouTube thread, I perceive it more as a trend where audio creators are diversifying into YouTube either as an extended distribution point or a complementary expansion. I feel compelled to point out that this is a reversal, or an evening out, of a trend that first emerged a few years ago when a steady stream of YouTube creators diversified into podcasting in search of a business arm that offers more stability and less algorithm capriciousness than YouTube. Anyway, I’ve been monitoring the rash of reports and survey studies that are working to add clarity around listener behavior and YouTube, but often, I’m left with a feeling I’m not entirely sure what I’m looking at. Am I now old? Crusty? Washed? Unmoving in my mental models? Possibly.

Anyway, the challenge for podcast creators expanding into YouTube firmly lies in the fact that, well, they now have to play the YouTube game. Live by the algorithm, die by the algorithm. Do the image-thumbnail thing: provocative face? Excited face? Surprised face? “DON’T DO THIS!” “WORST MOVIE EVER.” It’s a brave old-new world.

I would’ve said that the emphasis going into this year is on sustainability, but that isn’t terribly precise. Rather, it feels like the aim is simply autonomy: Can teams create, succeed, and fail on their own terms rather than have their fates dictated purely by entities outside their control?

On that note, given all that happened last year, 2023 closed out with heavy skepticism around big ad-driven podcast publishers and growing enthusiasm around alternative models, in particular the worker co-op structure practiced by Maximum Fun and Defector Media. I’m fairly certain we’ll see at least a handful of teams follow through on that enthusiasm, and I’m eager to see what kinds of new shows and talent those ventures will support.

News of Pitchfork’s obsolescence instigated extensive discussion about the kinds of media operations that are possible these days. You can be very big, like the New York Times, or you can be sustainably/profitably small, like Heather Cox Richardson’s Substack, but you can’t really be in-between any more. This mirrors a lot of what we’ve seen in other media sectors, like film and video games, and this has led to further rumination about the death of the “middle” — and why that middle species of media is culturally important. “The middle can be more specific and strange and experimental than mass publications, and it can be more ambitious and reported and considered than the smaller players,” wrote Ezra Klein in his own elegy for Pitchfork. “The middle is where a lot of great journalists are found and trained. The middle is where local reporting happens and where culture is made rather than discovered.”

Seems to me that co-op shops like MaxFun and Defector, which realizes the combined value of groups, are models of that middle.

Yeah, yeah, it’s the shiny new thing of the moment. But the shadow of artificial intelligence looms over all creative work and podcasting is no different. Just as squeezed media companies are trying to figure out ways to automate (and dehumanize), say, various aspects of journalism as a product, so too will similar processes kick in across the podcast space. We already know of one major example: Spotify, stumbling and scraping for an idea on which to hang its future, began piloting an effort last fall to use AI tools to “scale” podcasts out into different languages. Whether it’s actually pleasurable or effective to listen to, I don’t know yet. Yesterday, Digiday published a report on how other big podcast publishers are thinking about those tools as means to advance other aspects of their businesses, like production assistance, sales processes, and “commercial message creation,” which I assume means using AI-generated voices to read ads.

Let’s say the quiet part loud. A considerable portion of this AI talk is corporate bullshit; a touch of spin to get investors excited or something. Part of the challenge navigating this thread is discerning what’s actually material and what’s just performative mumbo jumbo. There’s Spotify leaning away from editorially curated playlists toward algorithm-driven listening, and there’s the noticeable stream of pitches hitting my inbox about this or that podcast “integrating” AI into the creative in some or another, like a true-crime show claiming to feature a fully AI co-host, whatever that means.

I’m still thinking about the interview I conducted with Who? Weekly’s Lindsey Weber and Bobby Finger earlier this month about their AI stunt. Right now, it’s hard for me to think about the use of AI being anything greater than prop comedy within the context of podcasting. But technology moves quickly.

This is the perennial question most pertinent to me. Some bits and bobs on this point:

➽ 2024 is going to be newsy as hell for a simple reason: elections. A ton of publishers, podcasters, and news orgs (to the extent we have any left) will program into the category, which I imagine will naturally drive a ton of old and new listening — unless, of course, the seemingly inevitable Biden-Trump redux will cause more people to zone out than tune in. But it’s not just the United States we’re talking about. More than 60 countries, encompassing more than half of the world’s population, will be voting in what will be the biggest election year in history. (Vox’s write-up on the matter features a chilling subhed: “Will democracy survive it?” Hoo boy.) I haven’t seen a ton of trustworthy global listening data, but this would be an interesting year to keep an eye on that metric.

➽ The challenged state of the narrative podcast, let alone the limited-run series, has been much-talked about here and elsewhere, and it remains a subject I’m keenly interested in.

➽ Related to the YouTube section above, I’m curious to see the extent to which established audio publishers will start designing shows for dual audio-video purposes — and how that’s going to shape the aesthetic for most of the stuff we get moving forward.

➽ Areas I’m hoping to dip more into this year: actual plays, Canadian stuff, even more esoteric niches. The other day an acquaintance turned me onto something called the Beer & Brewing podcast, and I’ve since been schooled on the nuances of chillers in beer production.

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Looks Like This Veteran Didn't Need His Wheelchair After All - Newser

A New Hampshire veteran has admitted to faking his need for a wheelchair for 20 years to claim more than $660,000 in benefits he wasn't entitled to. Christopher Stultz, 49, of Antrim pleaded guilty in US District Court on Thursday to one count of making false statements. He faces a maximum prison term of five years when he's sentenced May 6. The US attorney's office said that, beginning in 2003, Stultz claimed he could no longer use his feet, causing the Department of Veterans Affairs to rate him as 100% disabled and increase his monthly benefits. He was also given money to buy and adapt special cars, per the AP.

Prosecutors said Stultz was "surveilled on multiple occasions" walking normally. In 2021, he used a wheelchair while inside a VA medical center in Boston, but after leaving, he stood up and lifted the wheelchair into his car, then drove to a mall and walked around various stores, prosecutors said. They said he did a similar thing after leaving a Manchester VA medical center the following year. Several witnesses also reported they'd never known Stultz to use a wheelchair over the past 20 years, prosecutors said.

(Read more veterans stories.)

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Friday, January 26, 2024

'And Just Like That' Season 3: Everything to Know About the Max Show - Us Weekly

Everything to Know About And Just Like That Season 3- From Possible Character Exits to Story Lines 003
Craig Blankenhorn/Max

Sex and the City spinoff series And Just Like That is returning for a third season — and the upcoming episodes are already the talk of the town.

The original series, which ran on HBO from 1998 to 2004, focused on Carrie (Sarah Jessica Parker) and her dating life in New York alongside her friends Charlotte (Kristin Davis), Miranda Hobbes (Cynthia Nixon) and Samantha (Kim Cattrall). Sex and the City expanded into two movies before Max revived the show in December 2021.

And Just Like That has since gotten viewers talking for a multitude of reasons. From killing Mr. Big (Chris Noth) off in the series premiere to Samantha’s absence and Miranda and Steve’s split, Sex and the City fans haven’t been thrilled about all the changes taking place on screen.

Showrunner Michael Patrick King, meanwhile, has stood by the Max show’s decision to take big swings.

“We did something that was hard to do, which is we took something familiar and did make it new,” King told Variety in February 2022. “For better and for worse.”

King weighed in on some of the reactions he saw on social media, adding, “I monitor in macro, not micro. I monitor in the drum beats: ‘This is the best thing I’ve ever seen! This is the worst thing I’ve ever seen. They should all be killed! I can’t live without them. The clothes are terrible, the clothes are great.’ I’m not into the minutia of anything.”

Keep scrolling for everything we know about the third season of And Just Like That:

When Will the Show Return?

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Craig Blankenhorn/HBO

Despite being renewed for a third season in August 2023, viewers will have a bit of a wait for more episodes. The decision came after the WGA and SAG-AFTRA both went on strike amid individual labor disputes with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers.

The dual strikes were resolved by the end of the year, but And Just Like That’s premiere date has been delayed to 2025.

Where Did the Main Story Lines Leave Off?

Everything to Know About And Just Like That Season 3- From Possible Character Exits to Story Lines 997
Craig Blankenhorn/Max

During the second season finale, which aired in August 2023, Carrie and Aidan (John Corbett) parted ways after rekindling their romance for a third time. It remained up in the air whether Carrie and Aidan would reunite after his sons were all grown up. Regardless of the split, Carrie moved out of her iconic apartment into a new space with a cat.

Miranda, meanwhile, made amends with Steve (David Eigenberg) and they agreed to be friends following their divorce. She later crossed paths with recent ex Che Diaz (Sara Ramirez) and the former couple got to a better place as well.

As for Anthony (Mario Cantone), he struggled to make a commitment with boyfriend Giuseppe (Sebastiano Pigazzi). After Anthony found out that his ex-husband, Stanford (Willie Garson), became a Shinto monk, he was able to move forward with his own life and with Giuseppe.

Nya (Karen Pittman), for her part, found out she was elected to the American Law Institute, but it was her personal life that needed more attention. At the end of the episode, Nya crossed paths with the Michelin chef (Toussaint Feldman) again, which hinted at a possible romance.

Meanwhile, Lisa Todd Wexley (Nicole Ari Parker) revealed that she miscarried her child and attempted to deal with the loss.

Seema’s (Sarita Choudhury) journey wrapped up with her deciding not to travel with her director boyfriend, Ravi (Armin Amiri), to Egypt. Instead, she agreed to wait for him while he spent five months shooting a movie.

Will There Be Character Departures in Season 3?

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Craig Blankenhorn/HBO

In January 2024, Daily Mail reported that Ramirez was dropped from And Just Like That because her character was unlikable. Ramirez didn’t address the news at the time, but they did take to social media to call out the film and television industry for punishing actors who have spoken out in support of Palestinians amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Palestine.

In the post, Ramirez used the past tense while discussing their role as Che on AJLT. Max has yet to confirm Ramirez’s exit or return.

Can Fans Expect Aidan to Return in Season 3?

Everything to Know About And Just Like That Season 3- From Possible Character Exits to Story Lines 000
Craig Blankenhorn/HBO

After his highly anticipated return, viewers were shocked to find out that Aidan wouldn’t be a consistent presence on the hit Max series. In the season 2 finale, Aidan returned home to Virginia, where he lived with his three teenage sons, after his youngest child got into a car accident. Aidan asked Carrie to wait for him to make his permanent move back to New York — in five years.

“Aidan believes now that bad things happen when he’s not there,” King said during an August 2024 episode of AJLT’s companion podcast. “He admits to [Carrie] that he’s really the home for these three boys — and that’s who he’s always been.”

Aidan and Carrie spent the night together before his departure but it is unclear what their future will look like in future seasons.

Will Samantha Be Back?

Everything to Know About And Just Like That Season 3- From Possible Character Exits to Story Lines 001
Courtesy of Max

After appearing in six seasons of Sex and the City and two movies, Cattrall opted out of the Max series due to a falling out between her and Parker. Cattrall said she had no plans to reprise her role as Samantha but she ultimately filmed a cameo for season 2.

According to multiple outlets, Cattrall didn’t interact with Parker or King on set and taped the scene by herself. This presumably means Cattrall’s onscreen appearance was likely a one-time situation.

What Is the Vision for Season 3?

Everything to Know About And Just Like That Season 3- From Possible Character Exits to Story Lines 002
Craig Blankenhorn/HBO

King previously hinted that Carrie and Seema’s trip to Greece offers a glimpse at the next chapter of the show.

“I knew it was going to end before anything that Carrie and Seema would be sitting on a beach in Greece looking out at the horizon, that it would not end with Carrie and Aidan,” he said on AJLT’s companion podcast in August 2023. “Our only little tip to you, the audience [and] the people who are watching and wondering what we’re thinking.”

King continued: “There’s a little, tiny thread of what we’re thinking at the end, which is Seema says, ‘Well we ran at love, and where did that get us?’ And she goes, ‘I’m waiting five months and you’re waiting five years.’ And Carrie goes, ‘Well, I may get some time off for good behavior.’ You would only say that if you’re already going, ‘It’s not gonna be five years.’ She’s very cute, but she does go on to say, ‘There will be others.’”

What Does the Cast Want to See?

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Craig Blankenhorn/HBO

In December 2023, Nicole Ari said she would like to see Lisa’s relationship with her husband get more screen time, telling PureWow, “I think we’ll see more of LTW, hopefully with Chris Jackson, who plays Herbert.”

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