For Washington there is no evidence that the COVID 19 originated

For Washington, there is no evidence that the COVID-19 originated in a Chinese laboratory

The American secret service assured in a report published on Friday that it had no evidence that the COVID-19 was manufactured in a laboratory in China without deciding on the origin of the pandemic.

• Also read: The conspirator François Amalega calls for defying the ban on fireworks

Washington writes it has no information to support the recent claim that three scientists at the Wuhan virology lab were among the first to contract COVID-19 and may have self-generated the virus.

The Office that Coordinates All American Intelligence Agencies (ODNI) writes in this declassified report that scientists at the lab have performed genetic manipulations on coronaviruses related to COVID-19.

However, the United States has “no information” that it has done so with the COVID-19 virus itself (SARS-CoV-2) or a closely related strain.

The release of this report, destined for Congress, comes three months after lawmakers requested more information on what American intelligence knows about the origins of COVID-19, which emerged in China in late 2019.

The ODNI, when excluding the theory of genetic engineering, ensures that the various intelligence agencies are divided between two theories and does not decide: a natural occurrence of the pandemic, for example through animal transmission, and a leaked laboratory accident.

The coronaviruses studied in the Wuhan laboratory together with the Chinese army “were too distant to have been involved in the genesis of SARS-CoV-2”, according to the document, which firmly rejects the hypothesis of a biological weapon.

The summary report also challenges the theory that three of the scientists working on coronavirus in that lab contracted COVID-19 when it emerged.

Washington writes that in the fall of 2019, some researchers fell ill, some with COVID-19 symptoms, some not. The intelligence agencies “continue to believe that this information does not confirm or disprove any hypotheses about the origins of the pandemic, since the researchers’ symptoms could have been caused by numerous diseases,” the report continued.

The majority of the scientific community supports the wild animal transmission hypothesis.

For Washington, there is no evidence that the COVID-19 originated in a Chinese laboratory Read More »

Rihanna is stepping down as general manager of her Savage

Rihanna is stepping down as general manager of her Savage X Fenty brand

Music industry star Rihanna is stepping down as CEO of her lingerie brand Savage X Fenty five years after founding it.

• Also read: Rihanna and Taylor Swift are among the richest self-made women according to Forbes

• Also read: Rihanna shares never-before-seen photos of her first pregnancy on Instagram

The young American will pass the torch to Hillary Super, former CEO of American fashion, home decoration and beauty company Anthropologie Group. She will be the new CEO of the lingerie brand, first reporting to Vogue Business and then being picked by The Guardian.

Rihanna will step down from her role as day manager in favor of chairwoman of the board.

“It has been a great experience to see how our vision for Savage X Fenty has had such a profound impact on the industry over the past five years. For us, this is just the beginning […] I am very grateful and happy to welcome Hillary Super as our new CEO – she is a strong leader and focused on ways to improve our company,” the woman said in a statement.

Hillary Super will lead the company on June 26th.

As the company Savage

Rihanna is stepping down as general manager of her Savage X Fenty brand Read More »

Cagliari praises the Peruvians for supporting Lapadula quotA whole country

Cagliari praises the Peruvians for supporting Lapadula: "A whole country on our side"

Great recognition. Gianluca Lapadula recorded one of his best seasons in Italian football, culminating in the long-awaited promotion to Serie A. The “Bambino” had a tough road ahead in the playoffs of the tournament and the fans of the Peruvian team were present and supported him in every playoff Matches. In this sense, after returning to the highest category, Cagliari used its social networks to address Inca fans with emotional words.

“This season gave us the opportunity to have an entire country by our side: there were so many Peruvians following and supporting our team, both on social media and in the stadiums throughout the B series! Many thanks to you, “read the message dedicated to the archipelago through their social networks.

Cagliari praises the Peruvians for supporting Lapadula quotA whole country Mensaje of Cagliari. Photo: Cagliari.

It should be noted that the 33-year-old forward was the figure of the team led by Claudio Ranieri. The Italian-Peruvian soccer player was not only voted player of the tournament, he also became the competition’s top scorer.

YOU CAN SEE: Will he face Messi? Miguel Araujo is leaving Europe and all indications are that he will sign with an MLS club

Gianluca Lapadula talks about his future

Asked about an offer from Alianza Lima, the best player in Serie B made a clear statement about his continuity. “I have nothing against anyone. I love all of Peru very much. I still have two more years of contract in Cagliari and I feel very good, very good,” he told América Deportes.

How many goals has Gianluca Lapadula scored in Cagliari?

Gianluca Lapdula was named Serie B top scorer. The footballer managed an impressive tally of 25 goals throughout the season.

Gianluca Lapadula increased his international value at Transfermarkt

According to the specialist portal Transfermarkt, the “Bambino” increased its value on the international market after promotion to Serie A from 2.20 million euros to 2.70 million euros.

Cagliari praises the Peruvians for supporting Lapadula: "A whole country on our side" Read More »

Canadian police are considering a criminal investigation into the Titan

Canadian police are considering a criminal investigation into the Titan submarine implosion that killed five men

Canadian police are considering a criminal investigation into the catastrophic implosion of Titanic’s tourist submarine, which killed five men as the mothership returned to port.

Superintendent Kent Osmond of the RCMP told a news conference today that consideration had begun on whether or not a criminal investigation was necessary.

The supply ship Polar Prince arrived in St. John’s Harbor, Newfoundland on Saturday morning and docked around 8:15 a.m. local time as the sun broke through the morning haze.

Crew members looked somber as they received a briefing aboard the ship that sailed eight days ago with 24 people on board, five of whom died in the submarine disaster.

Police and safety investigators were seen boarding the ship after Canada’s Transportation Safety Board (TSB) announced it was launching an investigation into the deadly implosion of the deep-sea vessel.

Superintendent Osmond said: “Today the RCMP opened an investigation into the circumstances leading to the deaths of the five people aboard the submersible Titan.”

The relief vessel that launched the doomed Titan submersible has returned to Canadian harbor after the submarine's disastrous implosion that killed all five men on board

The relief vessel that launched the doomed Titan submersible has returned to Canadian harbor after the submarine’s disastrous implosion that killed all five men on board

Investigators from Canada's Transportation Safety Board (TSB) board the Polar Prince, the main supply vessel for the Titan submersible, after it arrives in St. John's Harbor

Investigators from Canada’s Transportation Safety Board (TSB) board the Polar Prince, the main supply vessel for the Titan submersible, after it arrives in St. John’s Harbor

Crew members are seen aboard the Polar Prince, the main supply vessel for the submersible Titan, after the vessel returned to St. John's Harbour

Crew members are seen aboard the Polar Prince, the main supply vessel for the submersible Titan, after the vessel returned to St. John’s Harbour

Osmond said: “Today the RCMP opened an investigation into the circumstances leading to the deaths of the five people on board the Titan submersible.”

“A team of investigators has been assembled with the sole purpose of answering the question of whether or not a full investigation is warranted.”

“Such an investigation will only proceed if an examination of the circumstances indicates that a criminal or federal or state law may have been violated.”

“It would have been inappropriate for the RCMP to take this action during recovery efforts.

“Following the announcement by the US Coast Guard earlier this week, we will now address the circumstances that led to these deaths.”

“Our investigators have been engaged and active in this manner since this morning.”

The Polar Prince had participated in a massive search operation for the Titan about 435 miles south of St. John’s that ended Thursday with confirmation that the submarine had imploded deep underwater, likely shortly after Sunday’s launch.

TSB investigators could be seen boarding the Polar Prince shortly after she docked in St. John.

TSB’s Cliff Harvey said at a news conference that interviews had taken place with those on board and they were not making any arrests.

TSB officials said they were tasked with finding out why the incident happened and reducing the likelihood of it ever happening again.

TSB said the voyage data recorder records all audio signals from the bridge and that these logs are being reviewed.

OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush, pictured here, was on board the ship when it imploded last time during the expedition

OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush, pictured here, was on board the ship when it imploded last time during the expedition

Rib boats have also been spotted, appearing to be towing the Titan submersible’s launch platform away from the Polar Prince and further along the harbour.

Tourists also gathered at the dock with morbid curiosity, and some posed for selfies with the Arctic Prince in the background.

A man who photographed the scene said to his girlfriend, “Oh wow.” How neat. Tragic but neat.’

Polar Prince is a decommissioned Canadian Coast Guard icebreaker now owned by Miawpukek Horizon Maritime Service Ltd and chartered by extreme tourism company OceanGate as a support vessel for Titan’s deadly dive.

OceanGate founder and CEO Stockton Rush was killed aboard the American company’s submersible along with prominent British-Pakistani businessman Shahzada Dawood and his son Suleman Dawood, British adventurer Hamish Harding and French Titanic expert Paul-Henri Nargeolet .

Two Canadian Coast Guard (CCG) vessels involved in the search operation also returned to the port of St. John’s Friday night, with one remaining at the scene of the disaster.

A crowd gathered at the dock to watch the return of CCGS Terry Fox and CCGS Ann Harvey while CCGS John Cabot stayed on site providing assistance and assistance to the salvage and recovery operations.

In a statement issued ahead of their ships’ arrival in port, the CCG said, “The Canadian Coast Guard extends our sincere condolences to the family and friends of the crew of Titan for their tragic loss.”

“Search and rescue operations are complete.”

Now authorities from the US and Canada have begun investigating the cause of Titan’s deadly implosion.

The US Coast Guard said on Friday that no formal investigation had yet been launched as maritime authorities are still busy searching the area where the ship was wrecked.

The wreckage was about 12,500 feet underwater, several hundred feet from the Titanic wreck she intended to explore.

The Titan submersible (above) catastrophically imploded on the Atlantic seabed during a dive to the Titanic wreck, killing the pilot and four fare-paying passengers

The Titan submersible (above) catastrophically imploded on the Atlantic seabed during a dive to the Titanic wreck, killing the pilot and four fare-paying passengers

The launch platform used for the Titan submersible is being towed by the Polar Prince as Canadian officials launched their probe into the deep-sea vessel's deadly implosion

The launch platform used for the Titan submersible is being towed by the Polar Prince as Canadian officials launched their probe into the deep-sea vessel’s deadly implosion

Some tourists snapped morbid selfies on the dock as the Polar Prince returned to port

Some tourists snapped morbid selfies on the dock as the Polar Prince returned to port

The Polar Prince, the main supply vessel for the Titan submersible, arrives at the port of St. John's in Newfoundland, Canada, on Saturday

The Polar Prince, the main supply vessel for the Titan submersible, arrives at the port of St. John’s in Newfoundland, Canada, on Saturday

The polar prince can be seen on Saturday.  When the ship launched eight days ago, there were 24 people on board, but five died aboard the doomed Titan submarine

The polar prince can be seen on Saturday. When the ship launched eight days ago, there were 24 people on board, but five died aboard the doomed Titan submarine

Crew members wearing orange hard hats could be seen on the deck of the ship, which returned to port with five fewer souls on board than the 24 with which it sailed eight days earlier

Crew members wearing orange hard hats could be seen on the deck of the ship, which returned to port with five fewer souls on board than the 24 with which it sailed eight days earlier

Police officers speak to crew members aboard the Polar Prince as the ship arrives in port

Police officers speak to crew members aboard the Polar Prince as the ship arrives in port

Canadian officials board supply ship as investigation into Titan disaster begins

Canadian officials board supply ship as investigation into Titan disaster begins

Police officers are seen aboard the Polar Prince after returning to St. John's Harbour

Police officers are seen aboard the Polar Prince after returning to St. John’s Harbour

The Polar Prince launched the Titan submarine on Sunday and participated in the search for the OceanGate expeditionary submarine after it went missing

The Polar Prince launched the Titan submarine on Sunday and participated in the search for the OceanGate expeditionary submarine after it went missing

The US Coast Guard led the first search and rescue mission, which was a massive international effort likely costing millions of dollars.

Investigating the cause of the disaster and any attempt to salvage wreckage from the seabed is likely to be difficult and tedious.

“It’s an incredibly unforgiving environment down there on the seabed,” said Rear Admiral John Mauger of the Coast Guard’s First District.

Meanwhile, Canada’s TSB said a team of investigators had been dispatched to St. John’s to “collect information, conduct interviews and assess the incident.”

In a brief statement confirming the investigation, the safety agency said: “The TSB is launching an investigation into the fatal incident involving the Canadian-flagged vessel Polar Prince and the privately operated submersible Titan.”

“In accordance with the Canadian Transportation Accident Investigation and Safety Board Act and international agreements, the TSB will … conduct a safety investigation into the circumstances of this operation of the Canadian-flagged vessel Polar Prince.”

“A team of TSB investigators is traveling to St. John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador to gather information, conduct interviews and assess the incident.”

“In the coming days we will coordinate our activities with other authorities involved.”

The TSB said it would not investigate any civil or criminal liability for the disaster and was conducting investigations to “promote transportation safety.”

It wasn’t entirely clear who would have the authority to lead the disaster investigation, which is bound to be complex and involves multiple countries.

The Titan submersible was registered in the Bahamas, but OceanGate, the company that owned and operated the vessel, is based in the US.

OceanGate was headquartered in Everett, Wash., but appears to have suspended operations after it was confirmed that the Titan, with the company’s CEO on board, was lost.

Titan’s mothership, Polar Prince, now flies the Canadian flag and those killed were UK, Pakistani, French and US nationals.

Officials from Canada's Transportation Safety Board (TSB) exit the Polar Prince after conducting interviews as a preliminary step in their investigation

Officials from Canada’s Transportation Safety Board (TSB) exit the Polar Prince after conducting interviews as a preliminary step in their investigation

One person exits the Polar Prince on Saturday appearing to be hiding their identity behind a hat, mask and sunglasses

One person exits the Polar Prince on Saturday appearing to be hiding their identity behind a hat, mask and sunglasses

The Polar Prince arrives in port just as Canada's TSB said an investigative team was dispatched to St. John's to

The Polar Prince arrives in port just as Canada’s TSB said an investigative team was dispatched to St. John’s to “gather information, conduct interviews and assess the incident.”

The Polar Prince, the main supply vessel for the Titan submersible, arrives at the port of St. John's in Newfoundland, Canada, on Saturday morning

The Polar Prince, the main supply vessel for the Titan submersible, arrives at the port of St. John’s in Newfoundland, Canada, on Saturday morning

Crew members are seen aboard the Polar Prince as it arrives in the port of St. John's in Newfoundland, Canada on Saturday morning

Crew members are seen aboard the Polar Prince as it arrives in the port of St. John’s in Newfoundland, Canada on Saturday morning

As the search and rescue operation concludes, US and Canadian authorities have begun investigating the cause of Titan's deadly implosion

As the search and rescue operation concludes, US and Canadian authorities have begun investigating the cause of Titan’s deadly implosion

Polar Prince is a decommissioned Canadian Coast Guard icebreaker now owned by Miawpukek Horizon Maritime Service Ltd and chartered to OceanGate

Polar Prince is a decommissioned Canadian Coast Guard icebreaker now owned by Miawpukek Horizon Maritime Service Ltd and chartered to OceanGate

The Polar Prince is flying the Canadian flag and those killed were citizens of England, Pakistan, France and the USA

The Polar Prince is flying the Canadian flag and those killed were citizens of England, Pakistan, France and the USA

The National Transportation Safety Board said Friday that the US Coast Guard had classified the loss of the Titan submersible as a “serious marine casualty” and the Coast Guard would lead the investigation.

An NTSB spokesman said the information was shared by Coast Guard officials with agency management and that the NTSB joined the investigation.

The US Coast Guard has not confirmed that it will lead the investigation.

Coast Guard Headquarters said the Coast Guard First District in Boston will discuss future operations and plans, but didn’t say when.

A spokeswoman for the First Circuit told on Saturday morning that the Coast Guard was unable to provide any new information regarding the investigation.

The Titan took off at 8am last Sunday and was reported overdue in the afternoon after the Polar Prince lost contact.

Rescuers brought ships, planes and other equipment to the area and began a desperate but ultimately futile search for survivors.

Any hope of finding the crew alive was dashed early Thursday when the Coast Guard announced debris had been found on the seabed.

The submarine wreckage was not far from the wreck of the Titanic, a British ocean liner that sank in 1912 after striking an iceberg on its maiden voyage, killing more than 1,500 people.

A significant part of any investigation will likely focus on the Titan’s unconventional design itself and its creator’s refusal to undergo independent safety testing.

The Titan was neither registered as a US ship nor certified by international security authorities. And it hasn’t been classified by a maritime industry group that sets standards in areas like hull construction.

Stockton Rush, CEO of OceanGate, who was piloting Titan when it imploded, previously complained that regulations can hinder progress.

“Holding an outside company abreast of every innovation before it is put into practice is anathema to rapid innovation,” Rush wrote in a blog post on his company’s website.

Canadian police are considering a criminal investigation into the Titan submarine implosion that killed five men Read More »

Beijing heatwave clouds long weekend sets multi day temperature record

Beijing heatwave clouds long weekend, sets multi-day temperature record – ABC News

Beijing and parts of northern China are facing record-breaking temperatures and authorities have urged people to limit their time outdoors over a long bank holiday weekend

From

SIMINA MISTREANU Associated Press

Jun 24, 2023 5:59 am ET

• 2 min reading

The Nanjiao Observatory in southern Beijing recorded temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius for the first time for a third straight day on Saturday, according to the China Meteorological Administration.

Temperatures in nearby Hebei Province and the port city of Tianjin have also soared to over 40C in recent days, prompting authorities to issue “red” alerts during extreme weather conditions.

In China’s four-tier weather alert system, red indicates the most severe conditions that pose potential health and safety risks.

Other countries in Asia have been experiencing deadly heatwaves in recent weeks, which scientists say are being made worse by rising global temperatures caused in part by burning fossil fuels.

Beijing experienced its second-warmest day on record on Thursday, when temperatures rose to 41.1°C (106°F). It was also the highest temperature ever recorded in China’s capital in June.

On July 24, 1999, the city reached its all-time high of 41.9 °C (107 °F).

Chinese meteorologists say the current heat wave was caused by warm air masses associated with high pressure ridges in the atmosphere, compounded by thin cloud cover and long daylight hours around the summer solstice.

The hot weather coincided with a three-day holiday, the Dragon Boat Festival, which features rice dumplings and racing boats powered by paddler teams.

Beijing weather authorities urged residents not to exercise outdoors for long periods of time and to take measures to protect themselves from the sun.

Temperatures in the capital were expected to drop to around 34°C (93°F) on Monday before rising again later next week.

___

Beijing heatwave clouds long weekend, sets multi-day temperature record – ABC News Read More »

The uprising in Russia could trigger a sell off in US

The uprising in Russia could trigger a sell-off in US stocks and a flight to safe-haven assets, analysts say. Investors should know the following:

Watch what happens over the next 36 hours.

That was the advice of a financial analyst as US investors woke up on Saturday to news of an armed insurgency against Moscow led by Yevgeny Prigozhin, leader of Russia’s powerful mercenary organization Wagner Group.

Others speculated that the crisis in Russia could push US stocks lower as some traders had already bet on a sell-off after markets reopened on Monday amid a surge in geopolitical risk.

Ultimately, developments in Russia suggest that President Putin’s leadership is rapidly weakening and that resources may be diverted from the war with Ukraine. It’s too early to say how this will affect Wall Street, but the risk of desperate measures by Putin may make some investors nervous,” Edward Moya, senior market analyst at Oanda, said on Saturday.

A simmering feud between Prigozhin, the leader of the mercenaries who have fought alongside Russian military troops in Ukraine, and the Russian Defense Ministry came to a head early on Saturday when Prigozhin successfully tricked his troops into attacking a Russian military outpost near the border with Ukraine to overtake. which the military used as a command center for overseeing the war.

Amid the mix of reliable information and unfounded speculation, market analysts have struggled to understand the situation and its potential impact on financial markets and the global economy.

The main theme that has surfaced so far is that US stocks could suffer if the military fails to quickly quell the insurgency. Why should something that could potentially end the war in Ukraine – which has been a specter of markets since Russian forces invaded February 2022 – negatively impact equities?

The answer is that chaos breeds uncertainty, which is anathema to markets – especially when it could disrupt global oil and food supplies.

“I would bet that this will lead to more uncertainty, which will have a negative impact on risk in general … in the short term at least you see higher geopolitical risk premia – in the longer term there are indeed risks on both sides: will this lead to the collapse of the Russian front and the war ends?” said Neil Wilson, chief market analyst at Finalto, in a note to clients on Saturday.

Others pointed out that the crisis comes at a difficult time for US markets, while Michael Antonelli, market strategist at RW Baird & Co., tweeted that the crisis must be “bearish” for US stocks.

The S&P 500 index

SPX closed its worst week since March on Friday as a string of rate hikes in the UK and across Europe last week sparked fresh fears of a global recession. Some analysts noted that the decline quickly followed signs that investors were becoming more optimistic after a sharp rally that took stocks to their highest levels in 14 months. There are concerns that this change in sentiment could herald an eventual capitulation and downtrend in stocks.

Sven Henrich, founder and chief strategist at Northman Trader, noted that the CBOE Volatility Index VIX, the so-called fear gauge that gauges stock market volatility expectations over the next 30 days, managed to finish below 13.5 last week lowest since January 2020, although shares declined.

Should stocks continue to fall, it would mean that fresh lows on the Vix have once proved a reliable counter-indicator, suggesting that investors had grown too complacent before being hit by a shock.

Asian markets will be the first to react to the latest developments Sunday night Eastern time, but derivatives traders, who use CME Group’s Globex platform to trade swaps that track the value of US stock indexes, are already betting for a sell-off.

Meanwhile, an asset that trades reliably 24/7, BTCUSD, is down just 0.8% to $30,675, a slight drop after hitting a year-high late last week.

Where might investors seek safety when markets turn chaotic?

Finalto’s Wilson said investors could seek protection in the forex market, where US dollar DXY, Swiss franc USDCHF and perhaps euro EURUSD and British pound GBPUSD could benefit from a surge in demand. More “de-risking” could push investors into highly safe government bonds like US Treasuries TMUBMUSD10Y, which could help lower yields. Bond yields move inversely with prices.

Wilson reckons that European indices “may be more exposed to de-risking due to the composition and proximity to Russia and the war in Ukraine.” He also pointed to the possibility that the crisis could hurt the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite in could soar if investors decided to take refuge in quality growth stocks like Apple Inc. AAPL, Nvidia Corp. NVDA or Microsoft Corp. MSFT to look for those who helped boost this year’s market rally.

Whatever happens, the outcome of the crisis should be clearer within the next 35 hours, Wilson said.

“…[H]”How the market opens after the weekend depends on what happens in the next 36 hours…it could all be over by then,” Wilson said.

Regardless, Melbourne-based Chris Weston, head of research at online broker Pepperstone, will be among the first to interpret Monday’s market reaction.

Until then, he warned against investors reading too much into the situation as analysts’ insight into a very complicated geopolitical situation is “poor”.

“The humble market participant would simply say that they have no head start when it comes to knowing how this is playing out and that our visibility of reading this through to the markets is poor at this time – the information is often biased and it’s hard “To really know what facts are and what they are for.” Impact…will this lead to real regime change, failure, or perhaps market shock?” Weston told MarketWatch in comments.

“At this point we just don’t know, but it feels like we’re going to get enough clarity on potential outcomes and even timelines over the next 24 to 48 hours – at which point the prospect of a slight decline in the Risks increased on Monday, and of course it is.” “We will be watching crude oil and EU assets closely,” he said.

Terry Haines, founder of Pangea Policy, said in an email to clients that the ongoing uncertainty fueled by the Wagner uprising reveals the fragility of the Putin regime and could slightly increase the chances of a Ukraine victory.

But Haines also acknowledged that it is an “evolving and unstable situation with multiple facets that collectively contribute to geopolitical uncertainties to which markets typically react negatively.” Investors also need to consider that if this uprising fails, it could be “replaced by stronger Russian control” or lead to more instability if “Wagner falls apart.”

Along the same lines, Jim Bianco, head of Bianco research, brought up a joke aimed at all the geopolitical analysts who suddenly flocked to Twitter.

Markets may take one look at this crisis and see it as “a bullish development after initial volatility,” Kobeissi Letter editor-in-chief and founder Adam Kobeissi told MarketWatch in his comments.

“Finally, the end of the war in Ukraine is the market’s key geopolitical driver right now, and if that increases the likelihood of a peace deal and/or a Russian withdrawal from Ukraine, that’s likely to be perceived as bullish over the next few weeks,” he said .

He advised investors to keep an eye on oil and gold prices as these could be particularly sensitive to developments.

“If this leads to more conflicts, oil CL.1, bond TMUBMUSD10Y and gold GC00 are set for a rebound,” he said.

The uprising in Russia could trigger a sell-off in US stocks and a flight to safe-haven assets, analysts say. Investors should know the following: Read More »

The Flash will be lucky enough to finish third at

The Flash will be lucky enough to finish third at the box office this weekend

The Flash will be lucky enough to finish third at

Here’s a short list of words and phrases not to appear in stories about the second week of your big, expensive superhero movie: “Catastrophic.” “More than 70 percent decline.” “Gloomy.” And of course, “Morbius-esque.”

And yet it is precisely that fate that awaits The Flash this weekend, as Friday night’s box office numbers have confirmed early predictions that speedster Barry Allen would throw himself straight off a cliff on his second weekend at the market – and that isn’t one of those forgiving events, Looney Tunes-style cliffs that give you a minute to soar before reality kicks in; No, this idiot is going under.

Specifically, Warner Bros.’ superhero film is expected to hit a somewhat shocking third place in sales this weekend, behind both Pixar’s Elemental – which is doing much better with viewers despite a poor opening weekend – and Across The Spider “ by Sony. Verse, now in its fourth weekend. In fact, Flash might have a hard time even getting third place considering that Jennifer Lawrence’s new comedy No Hard Feelings does better than expected – and again, Flash does a lot worse.

Specifically, Andy Muschietti’s superhero film is expected to gross about $15 million this weekend (according to THR), meaning it’s down at least 70 percent in a single week. This is so bad that it moved Hollywood journalist Matthew Belloni note that The Flash is now battling for the ignominious title of ‘worst box-office hit for a superhero movie this century’ with, you guessed it, Sony’s Morbius. (The price dropped from $39 million to $10 million in a week when many memes sold but few tickets last April.)

The only glimmer of hope for Warner Bros. – he’s in the miserable position of having to promote a film from a previous DC Films regime that arrived with enormous baggage from both a creative and PR perspective, and is now struggling hard when it comes to audience retention is that the film does a little better internationally. $99 million in its opening weekend, including $13 million from China, means the $200 million film might at least not lose money.

The Flash will be lucky enough to finish third at the box office this weekend Read More »

Kawakami Steve Kerr on the Warriors moves We felt

Kawakami: Steve Kerr on the Warriors’ moves – “We felt we needed a change” – The Athletic

SAN FRANCISCO — The trade speaks for itself right now, especially since the Warriors can’t say anything about the surprise deal that sends Chris Paul to the Bay Area and Jordan Poole to the Wizards until it becomes official on July 6.

Yes, the mere fact of swapping a moody 24-year-old on a long-term contract for a dour Hall of Famer inductee 38-year-old on a very short-term contract goes a long way to explaining the Warriors’ state of mind and finances parameters at this moment. Add to that the lineup of two hardened talents, Santa Clara’s guard Brandin Podziemski and Indiana’s big man Trayce Jackson-Davis, and you have a loud topic that’s hard to miss.

New general manager Mike Dunleavy Jr., Joe Lacob, Kirk Lacob, Steve Kerr and everyone else doesn’t need to say the words: they still love their dynastic core of Stephen Curry, Draymond Green and Klay Thompson, but after the struggles and because of the Last season’s stresses meant they needed to make some important changes to the rest of their squad. They want to make themselves harder. Stronger in the face of adversity. More efficient and consistent in playoff situations.

The warriors don’t have to say the words. But after Friday’s press conference introducing Podziemski and Jackson-Davis, and days before anyone on the team was allowed to discuss the Paul acquisition, Kerr explained the general terms of the Warriors’ offseason goal.

“We’re going to be very different,” Kerr told me. “The last thing I will do is say anything about a team that just won a league a year ago and then struggled through a difficult season. Did an amazing run at the end of this year. I love this group that we’ve had for the past few years.

“But the most important point is that we felt that we needed a change. That didn’t mean we needed an overhaul, but we did need some kind of change. I think everyone in the organization felt that. And it feels like we’ve made a pretty significant shift without giving up our identity and our sense of who we are as a team. I think all in all it’s a very positive change.”

There is obviously a high risk. Just eight months ago, Warriors leadership was unanimous in favor of granting Poole a four-year, $123 million contract extension that doesn’t begin until next season…when he’s expected to score more than 30 points a game in Washington. Even on Friday, none of the Warriors employees I spoke to expressed any regrets about this deal.

But the Warriors had to change a few things, both stylistically and financially, to try to catch up with the champion Nuggets and the rest of the Western Conference powers and earn a way out of the dreaded second payroll by the next offseason. The Poole for Paul deal (which includes the Warriors also sending 2022 first-rounder Patrick Baldwin Jr. to the Wizards) deducts nearly $100 million in future salary obligations — which otherwise collect through luxury tax penalties That money stayed on the books for seasons to come — and also gives the Warriors their best second-perimeter playmaker since Shaun Livingston. Additionally, if Paul goes through another injury-related season, the Warriors may opt out of his non-guaranteed $30 million in 2024–25 or trade the contract for another high-paying player.

GO DEEPER

The Warriors crown wild draft day with a trade between Baldwin and Jackson-Davis

Paul is also a notable scowler and combatant on the pitch; He had his tense moments with the Warriors just like he did with just about everyone else. Additionally, he rarely turns the ball, struggles on defense and is just the kind of adult the Warriors have been yearning for this season break after their experiences with Poole, James Wiseman and several other teenage draftees.

Here’s what Dunleavy said Thursday night after the draft when I asked him if he intended to attract the kind of players that would make the Warriors tougher next season:

“Yes, I would say ‘competitiveness’ – there is a competitiveness,” Dunleavy said. “We picked a few people with pretty good track records. Apparently Trayce, age four (college game); Brandin has only really played for a year, 21 years old but guys who have a sample of going out and getting things done. I think given the feedback from our team and coaches this year we had to go back to the competitive/tough factor.”

Podziemski is a sharp-shooting minor guard who led in WCC rebounds (8.8 per game) last season and said he hopes to average a triple-double very quickly in his NBA career. A slightly undersized, tall man who can’t shoot jumps, Jackson-Davis was a Naismith Defensive Player of the Year finalist and blocked 2.9 shots per game last season. Records abound from both of their college careers, and none of it suggests they shy away from anything.

“I like the fact that they both have a lot of college experience,” Kerr said. “I think that’s really helpful. Trayce played over 120 college games. It’s meaningful. It just means you’re ahead of the curve when you get here. That means you’re further along than you otherwise would be. The guys from the last few years are doing a good job, they put in a lot of work. But they have to reach the level that an older player is already at.

“We feel like we have a really good, competitive group. And there will still be places available. Everyone will get a fair chance to earn playing time.”

Of course, everything has to work on the basketball court too. The Warriors have a unique style of play with Curry, Klay and Draymond and have been incredibly successful at it. This is based on ball and player movements, curls, cuts and screens. Nobody dominates the ball. Everyone moves it to the open type. That doesn’t have much to do with what Paul has been playing for the last few years, when he thrived as a ball-dominant pick-and-roll type who you don’t often see slicing away and shielding the ball to close spaces for others create or set him to start a catch-and-shoot from a distance.

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But the Warriors can make adjustments during periods of play. Kerr has done this before, most notably in the Kevin Durant years (when the Warriors did a few more isolation sets at Durant’s suggestion) and when Livingston led the second session during the Curry minute break. As Kerr pointed out Friday, it’s not as if they’re totally averse to pick-and-roll basketball, either. Next season they will have an additional extremely capable ball handler to take over if Curry is out, or available as an alternate option if Curry is out.

“If you think about the Lakers series and maybe the last game of the Sacramento series, we did a high pick and roll hundreds of times, over and over,” Kerr said. “This obviously makes Steph deadly. But it also limits your opportunities to cause offense elsewhere, and it puts a lot of strain on Steph’s shoulders.

“If we want, we will obviously be able to implement this style better. But also about getting Steph off the ball. One of the strongest strengths we’ve had on this team is Steph’s versatility when playing on or off the ball.”

The idea is to give the Warriors another way to challenge the defense. Paul can implement his attacking style with the second unit (perhaps igniting Jonathan Kuminga’s rim-running game), and then he can potentially close halves alongside Curry and Klay and let them both sprint around screens off the ball while Paul defends probing and pressuring in its own way.

“One of the things Steph said … I think his most telling quote after the Lakers series was that we didn’t have enough variety to score,” Kerr said. “And with Steph, it was all a high pick and roll. The whole series. We just couldn’t do enough. When we did our best, this team had a lot of good passes, a lot of connectors, a lot of people who knew how to play with Steph, free him and use his gravity to make layups or take shots on the other side of the floor.

“We have to keep that variety in our game somehow. We lost a lot of that this year. Hopefully next year we can win some of that back. … When we needed a bucket, we relied on Steph/Draymond’s tall pick-and-roll. It’s our best piece. This is our 98 mph fastball. But if you throw that far enough in the middle, it’ll hit someone in McCovey Cove. And that’s what happened against the Lakers, we just didn’t have the variety. We didn’t have a transition like Steph said.”

As Dunleavy and Kerr point out, the Warriors still have several roster spots left, which is exciting for them but also a little scary given that they are fairly thin leading up to this point. They’ll be in even worse shape if Draymond doesn’t re-sign in July, but the Warriors are steadfast in his belief that he will return to the roster.

So deducting Poole and Baldwin saved them a lot of money going forward. (I’ve been told the Warriors are now projecting next season’s payroll commitments near $420 million, which is slightly more than was suggested earlier this week, but of course things are changing. Next season, it could be down to $320 (millions or less if they want.) With Paul, they feel more versatile and tougher. They’ve got a few talented newbies who could win Kerr’s trust relatively quickly. They’re a little slimmer. They’re a lot older. They’re different, and the Warriors, with a new GM and mounting pressure to claim another title in the Curry era, definitely wanted something different this offseason.

The TK Show: Go to Tim Kawakami’s podcast page on Apple, Spotify and The Athletic app.

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Chris Paul’s move is Mike Dunleavy Jr.’s gonzo contest for the title

(Photo: Jed Jacobsohn/NBAE via Getty Images)

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